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Frid8y, June 27, 1986·

Pll{l8-10- ~ Daily Sentinel

"

----~lbrie&amp;--~
Portland man hurt in wreck
A Portlanc;l man was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital, treated
and released for lacerations to the left elbow he suffered In a two-car
accident on Ohio 124 In l.ebBnon Township Wednesday.
Louis W. Smith, 46, was driving westbound oo 124 at 4 p.m. when
the vehicle he was driving drifted lett d the renter line colliding with
an eastbound car driven by Kimberly K. Lute, 22, Pomeroy.
Smith's car was damaged mocl&gt;rately and Lute's llghtly. Smith
was taken to the hospital by the Meigs County Emergency Service.

Boster
World -Court rules U.S.
legislation
aid
to
Contra
rebels
illegal
approved
THE

l.egislatk)n, sponsored by Rep.
Jolynn Boster, D.Calllpolls, to
strengthen the Ohio Department of
Health's program for medically
handicaped children was signed by
Gov. Richard F . Celeste Tuesday.
The new law, effective Sep-·
tember:. renames the existing
NEW HAVEN, W.Va. (UP!) - Appalachian Power Co.'s
Crippled Children's Services Pro·
Mountaineer Plant Thursday completed its 347th day of continuous
grain and renames It the Program
operation, which company officials said was a world record ilr a
for Medically Handicapped Child·
major coal· fired , power generating statkln.
ren and !'l'Vises lis statutory
The previous record of 346 days had been set only last March by
authoritY.
another West Virginia faclllty , the 6«1 ,(1)(). kilowatt Unit 2 at
The legislation makes several
Monongahela Power Co.'s Harrison Plant near Clarksburg. It was
substantial changes In the statutory
the 1.3· million kilowatt Mountaineer Plant's previous mark of 332
authority for the program, in order
days of continuous operation, set In 1984, that the Harrtson Unit 2
to ensure flexibility and economy In
surpassed three months ago.
the use of state resources.
Appalachian Power Is one of eight operating companies in the
Included within this flexibUity ,
seven-state American Electrtc Power System, headquartered in
according to Boster, is the ability to
Columbus, Ohio. Monongahela Power Is one ct three In the five-state
ensure that tax dollars are used
Allegheny Power System.
only when other payment services
During its latest record run , Mountaineer's single generating unit
are unavailable.
produced mol'l' than 8 billion kilowatt hours ct electricity and burned
It also requires the Public Health
mol'l' than 2,967,001 tons of coal.
Cooncll to adopt IUies to determine
The Mountainff'r Plant was placed in commercial operatkln in
medical and financial elglbillty for
198J.
treatment, elglbillty standards and
an appeal process for service
providers.
"House BUI6141s a rea!Hrmatlon
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports seven calls
ri. our state's commitment to
Thursday; Rutland at 2:58p.m. to Columbia Township for Candy
ensure that all medically handiHartley to O'Bienness Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 3:56p.m. to
capped children receive the highest
the Middleport pool for Christy Bareswilt to Veterans Memorial
quality ct medical care," Boster
Hospital; Racine fire department at 4:04p.m. to a brush fire at
said. "When a !amlly has limited
Harris Farms, Portland; Middleport at 7:18p.m. to Bailey Run Rd.
means to pay for that care, the
for Phyllis Morris to Holzer Medical Center; Syracuse at 8; 34 p.m. to
assistance must be given In order
College Rd. for Randy Cross to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
that treatment not be delayed or
Middleport at 8:47 p.m. to 5ffi Headley for Blanche Gilkey to
foregone .
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 10:14 p.m. to Fifth St. for
"The bUI also recognizes that tax
Mae Hubbard Io Veterans Memorial Hospital.
dollars are finite and must be
managed judiciously Ill provide the
greatest benefit for the lflrgest
number of children," she
continued.
Individua ls whose last names start with H, I and J havetwodaysto
The department ci health has
purcase vehicle renewal reglstratklns. Power of attorney must
Def'ded this legislatkln for a long
accompany your application if a tttie Is not registered in your own
tbne, according to Boster, so its
name or If the IItle Is joint. Power of attorney documents may be
responsibilities can bettE!' be de·
obtained at the license bu!'l'au, 186 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy. For
fined and effectively serve hand!·
further Information, call992-20&amp;1, Monday Wednesday and Friday; 9
capped children.
a.m. to 4 p.m.; Tuesday, 10 a .m. to 8 p.m.; Thursday, 9 a.m. to 12
The program provides diagnostic
noon; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon.
and treatment services to Ohio
children who are potentially or
actually medically handicapped.
Continued from page 1
"Many parents and providers are
conrerned that the word 'crippled'
tax Increase" pleased Reagan, said statement of what he called "mild carries negative connotations and
Speakes.
support" for the budget, saying he Is outdated," Boster said. "During
The Senate gave the budget. preferred instead to "sneak It ttto committee hearings, several wit·
which does not require the presi- the (printed) record.''
nesses testified that the name
dent's signature, final congres·
change Is king overdue.''
s!onal approval oo a voice vote just
The law, which went through
The budget , written by a Houseafter midnight with few senators in Senate conferenre committee that numerous redrafts rNer the last
the chamber. Final approval came approved it earlier In the evening, three years, was JBSsed by unanlrn·
only minutes after the House was drawn to meet the Gramm· ous votes In the House ct Represen·
passed the compromise budget, Rudman balanced budiget law tatlves and the OhiO Senate.
333-43.
requiring no more than a $144
Congress then went oo a two- bllllon deficit next ftscal year,
week Independence Day recess.
which begins Oct. 1. The budget
Senate GOP leader Robert Dole came In at $142.6 billion.
Veterans Memorial
of Kansas, opted not to read his ·

Plant sets world rerord

Squads get seven calls

Vehicle registration reminder

Congress ...

HAGUE , Netherlands
The Wor!(l Court today
found the United States guilty of
violating International law by supporting Contra rebels lighting to
overthrow the Nicaraguan govern·
ment and ruled Washington must
-make reparations.
The series of rullngs, most of
them by a 12.J vote, came after nine
months of deliberation on Nlcara·
goa's suit charging that U.S.
support for the Contras was Illegal.
The landmark decision was
anxiously awaited by Nicaragua,
but It Ukely wW be Ignored by the
United States, whlch walked out of
the proceedings last year.
By a 12-3 vote, the eourt said it
"rejects the justification of collective self-defense" maintained by
(UP!) -

File for divorce
'

Filing for a dissolution of their
marriage In Meigs County Com·
mon Pleas Court are Judy L.
Mattea, Middleport, and Michael
A. Mattea, Pomeroy.
Filing for a divorce charging
gross neglect of duty Is Martha
Ferguson, Middleport, from Charles Ray Ferguson, In care ci
Thomas Roush, Middleport.
Granted a dissolution were
Nancy Ohlinger and James Ohlin·
ger. Nancy Ohlinger was restored
by the court to her former name
Ackerman.

Speaker announced
Rev . Theron Durham will speak
at Sunday evening services, 7:30
p.m., at the Church of Chrtst in
Christian Union, Hobson.

Admissions- Mildred Lambert,
Middleport; Blanche Gilkey,
Middleport.
Discharges -Corey Van Reeth,
Lottie Bradford, Henry Sayl'l',
Gladys Moore, Ray Clark, Ill'lla
Proffitt, Clal'l'nce Proffitt, Ida
Young, Lana Barnett.

To meet Sunday

'·
I
: Vol. 21 No. 20

CLEVELAND iUPI) - Thurs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
5100 p.m.
numbers:
7100 p.m.
Daily Number
1100 p.m.
755.
Ticket sales totaled $1.127.759,
24 Hour Oepooltory &amp; fr•• lank ly Mall.
with a payoff due of $198,455.
PICK-I
6499.
PICK4 ticket sales totaled
Mombor f.D.t.C.
$169,596.50, with a payoff due of
~·ond Strf'C'I
2'2 1:! .Jackson !\~'f' .
!llh Strrl'l
$76.349.
'dason. W.Va .
1:.o1n1 Pk'asanl. W.Va .
"(".vi Iaven , \\' .\ ',1.
TIJ{iiU
ti~ ·ll:H
Rl.! ·21l'l
PJCK4 $1 straight bet pays
$8,100. PICK-I $1 box bet pays $675. ....!..._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:..___ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

By NANCY YOACIIAM
Thn...&amp;nllnel Siaff
TIJPPERS PLAINS- Although efforts have been
uhdcrway to secure supplemental ftnanclng for the
proposed Tuppers Plains sewage disposal project,
there appears to be "little alterm~tlve to the present
funding mechanism," according to KlmbBll W.
Shields, grant consutlant.
Even with an Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency grant to pay about 85 percent of the costs to
install the Tuppers Plains system, the Meigs Olunty
Commissioners were In hopes supplemental fUnding
could be obtained.
In a letter to tile commissioners, Shields said he
attempted to locate additional grant dollars through
·both state and federal sources Including Farmers
Home Administration, Appalachian Regional Com·
mission, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban

Times-Sentinel Staff
' GAlLIPOLIS - The ice piers
lying just upstream from the
I Gallipolis Boat Launch have long
'' served as a refuge dunng extreme
l wt&gt;ather.
: In severe winters, boatshavetled
up at Ihe piers when Ice floes on the
' river make their journeys
, hazardous.
' In broiling summers, local chlld1ren trying to escape the heat often
I see the piers as 10.to-ll foot
1high-diving platforms. Despite
1danger from undercurrents, the
site has always been a popular one
lor swi mming.
A few children have died there,
the most recent of whlch was
116-yea r-old Gallipolis yout h on June
21. For that !'l'ason, a city resident
has begun a letter-writing campaign aimed at having the piers
removed .
"It' s a grea t place to have tun, I
won't deny that ," said E.M. "Ike"
t Wiseman of 417 First Ave. "But the
currents around those piers are
dangerous, there are severe under·
currents thel'l'. It's an attractive
' nuisance to those kids, they don't
I know what chances t~ey're
taking."
Piers never used
i Wiseman, who has lived near the
ice piers for two years, said he
sometimes hears children yelling
1 for help In the water.
: "Those piers are never used ," he
said. "They haven't been used In
years- some.o! them don't have
1rings to tie up to.''
' Although factory dumpings of

I

SUMMER

I'
I

WOMEN'S CLOTHES

LADIES SWIMWEAR
REDUCED

30°/o

LADIES' IIMT

LADIES BLOUSES

30°/o

REDUCED

LADIES'

BEND OVER SLACKS

SUMMER SUITS

REDUCED

30°/o

ALL IN COTTON

30%-SO%

Rlduted

LADIES LONDON FOG
SPRING &amp; SUMMER

40°/o

Pomeroy, Ohio
MEN'S

Prt1111ts

SWIM TRUNKS
&amp; SHORTS
REDUCED

20°/o

!111EN 'S
WORK UNIFORMS

LONG &amp; SHOll SUM sr.n

REDUCED 20%

Reduced

I

30%·

!

IEDUaD

IY AII"'W II 51101'1 SUM

REDUCm

20°/o

•

'

By JIM WEIDEMOYER
Times-Sentinel Siaff
GALLIPOLIS - Southeastern
:Ohio Emergency Medical Services
Inc., whlch has attempted to lu!'l'
. Gallla County hack Into member·
shlp for the past month, should
; appoint a new director Monday
night, according to Interim director
· Eric A. Kulu!.
· But, before the 7 p.m. dinner
;meeting at Bonanza In Jackson
Monday, county commissioners
and board or trustees will consider

20°/o

KNIT SHIRTS

REDUCED

20°/o

•N'S

MEN'S

OIAMBRAY StiRTS

SliTS &amp; SPORT
COATS

LONG &amp; SHORT SlEEVE

REDUCED

MEN'S

DRESS &amp; CASUSL
PANTS

20°/o

20°/o

Deaths ......................... A~
Editorial ...................... A-2

-A-3

Sportll ........................ C-14

,.
10 Sectiona, 74 Pageo 50 Cent•
A Muhimedie Inc . NIWIPIPer

blades of grass grow where there Is now only one."
The Tuppers Plains project has been on-goingsince
1978 when a "connector ban" on installing any type
sewage facility to buildings in the area was Imposed
by OEPA. Due lo leaching problems with the
clay-based soU In the Tuppers Plains area, an original
OEPA ban was Imposed in 1972. The original ban was
never enforced.
The present ban will not be lifted until disposal
- problems are corrected and the proposed project will
remain at a standstill until a final public hearing is
held to Iron out remaining difficult ies. Since January,
the commissioners have been awaiting word from
OEPA to schedule the hearing.
Tuppers Plains Is not alone with its problem, as
other rural communities In thestatehavebeen told by
OEPA to upgrade their sewer systems. According to

Shields, "OEPA has begun to move aggressively to
Insu re compliance" with state and federal clea n
water sta tutes. Acceptable standards must be met by
July 1, 1988, Shields said.
As it stands, approximately 150 Tuppers Plains
property owners would benefit from the proposed
system. Those property owners are to pay the
remaining 15 percent of costs to install their individua I
systems. A sewer district would be formed in the area
and the system would be owned and managed by the
commissioners. Once the system Is In operation,
customers would be charged a S5.54 monthly user's
fee to pay for periodic Inspection and rnalntainance.
According to figures from the commissioners,
Meigs County has already spent $00,000 on
engineering fees for the project which is estimated at
a total cost of $625,001, OEPA 's share of the project
amounts to $515,440.

Area jobless
rate declines
By KEVIN KELLY

,.
&lt;

heat and chemicals make the
winter water temperature warmer
than II was In the winter of 1913,
when damage to packet boats from
ice floes prompted the building of
the two piers closest to land (the
third was added between 1913 and
1923), United Press International
reports from January 1917 Indicate
that large trains of Ice could cause
extensive damage to all but mas·
slve concrete structures along the
Ohio River.
Samuel French, assistant chief of
operations at the U.S. Army Corps
of Engineers post In Huntington,
said the piers are still necessary to
navigation.
Emeraency structure
"It's an emergency-type structure for when you get Ice situations
on the river, and the pers break up
the sheets of Ice and don't let them
hurt the boat," he. said.
French, whose bobby Is studying
the history f1 navlgatkln rn the
river, said the piers were used
ex tensively durtng winters In the
1970s, particularly that of 1977,
when larl!l' portions of the river
were completely !f02£'D. Most ct thf.
traffic then consisted of tows
carrying salt for the highway
department and gasoline bari!I'S.
"U yoo get a gasoline tow oot
there, it 's a pretty volatile situation," French said. " U the Ice Ill rts
the boat, you could have spills or
any kind of catastrophe.
"There's a set (of Ice piers) In just
about every major town oo the
river," French said. "They're still
doing what theY were designed and
(Continued on A.Jl

taking back the management of
Ohio Valley Heath Services Foun·
dation in a special informal discus·
sion at 5: JJ p.m.. SEOEMS Assistant Public Relations Officer Clinton
Burley said.
.
The special meeting was called
by Athens County Commissioners,
according to Burley.
SEOEMS had changed manage·
ment from the foundation to an
onsite dlrector at the end of May.
The service changed management
In May because the SEOEMS board
was dissatisfied with the follnda ·
lion's management , Kulu! said.

...........,,
·.·

-

.'.

-~

..

.
~

•

·.~.- 'fl. , I&gt;&gt;

·C.

~·.··

Ice piersthen and now

,.;

•

&lt;

1:~~ • lj,

~ t' ~

-.

'The Gallipolis Ice piers, constructed earlier In the century,
were buDI lo !Mli'Ve as a refup!
for rlverboals when k:e cloged
the Ohlo River, as shown In lhe
photo above from the collection
of the Dr. Samuel L &amp;8sard
Memorial Ubrary In GalllpoU&amp;.
Becllll!le wlnlers are no klnp!l'
as severe as In the past, the
piers, as seen lodlly at riP!,
have become an attraction for
lll'ell youths. 'The need lor the
piers Is helng queslloned by a
Gallipolis man ooncemed about
• recent drowning. •

Athens commissioners, however,
fear the board is making decisions
without the commissioners' con·
sent, Burley said. The service is
funded by each of the four count ies
that It serves.
Barring any major decision to
revert back under the llundatlon,
one of the three finalists for the
organization's director position wUI
be oUered the post In the dinner
meeting, Burley said.
The board has reviewed 40
applicants in the las t month and
narrowed the Ust to three June 11 .
The three men still in the running

Include llrmer State Rep. Ronald
H. James of Proctorville, former
director of Central Medical Emer·
genrles Dispatchers Charles Wal·
ters of Cleveland, and Richard
Muntis, director of the Ohio Association of Emergency Services.
All t hrre were invited to the
attend the dinner meeting but only
James has acknowledged he will
deHnltely be present. Walters will
be contacted by phone and, accord·
lng to Kulu!, Muntls" status Is not
definite.
SEOEMS had been under the
foundation's management since

1979. During that time a foundatlf?n
!'l'presentlve would visit the
SEOEMS stations a few hours of a
few days of the week, Kum said.
With the new onsite director
system, the director will be present
everyday to handle problems.
The cost ci an onslte dir.octor
should be less than what SEOEMS
paid til' foundation, $48,000, according to Kuhn.
SEOEMS, whlch serves Athens.
Vinton, Lawrence, and Jackscn
count ies, approached Ga uta Coonty
Commissioners earlier tills month
(Continued on A.J)

Tax bill backers fearing public backlas h

Reduced 200/o-50%

I LOT MEN'S

DRESS SHIRTS
SHORT &amp; LONG SlEEVE

1/2 PRICE
111E PLAN MEANS RELIEF - Sen. Bob Packwood,
&amp;Ore., held • Sl biD In hl8 hand
, as he told aew1111en earlier tb11
' week he would raUter eee that
doDar In the pocket .. the
WOJtdnl man tballllllhe pldlet,
of bli baMieae, whklh he said ill
the pal ,. his tax plan. (UPI)

I

BAHR CLOTHIERS
MIDDlEPORT

I

\

•

••

By JOSEPH MJANOWANY
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
twc tax reform bills have littlediscussed provisions that could
c11,use many Americans who expect
tax cuts to suffer Increases the first
year - ~ prospect causing new
concern among some lawmakers
who fear a public backlash.
Although theY have received little
publicity, the provisions are a
standard part of the tax overhaul
measures passed by the House and
Senate, which would l!l'nerally limit
or drop tax deductions In exchange.
.
for lower rates.
By doing
. that, sponsors argue,
.

.

.,

Thnes&amp;ntlnel Siaff
GALLIPOLIS - Unemployment
in aU area counties except for
Jackson County decreased in May,
preliminary figures from the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services
revealed Saturday.
The figu res, prepared In cooperation with the U.S. Department or
Labor's Bureau of Labor Statistics,
are not seasonally adjusted, OBES
advised. Except for Athens County,
joblessness in area counties remained above 10 percent .
The jobless rate in Gallia County
had inched upward by one-tenth of a
percent during April. OBES reported it went down 1.8 percent In
May, from 12.3 percent to 10.5,
mean ing that an· estimated IJ,.lXI
people in the county 's approximate
work force ofl2,600 we!'l'empklyed,
In May l!l!fi, Gallia's unemployml"nt rate was 9.5 percenl.
Meigs County's unemployment
continued a slide begun In March, :
falling by 1.8 percent from 12.7
percent in April to 10.9 peroent in
May. OBES said an estimated 8,000
people in the county's 9,®person
work fo rce were employed in May .
Meigs' unemployment stood at
11.3 (lEO'cent in May 1985, OBES
said .
Jackscn County, which fell from
12.7 percent to 12.4 percent in April,
increased 1.1 percent to 13.5 percent
in May. OBES said an est im ated
1,100 people oot of the approximate
work force of I2,1ll0 wl"re out of
work in May. The county's unemployment rate was 10.4 percent in
May 19!fi.
Economically hard·hlt Lawrence
County, after posting a two-tenths
d a percent increaselnjoblessness
during April, decreased Its unem·
ployment rate in May, ftgu res
showed . Joblessness went down
six-tenths of a percent from 11.2
percent In April to 10.6, meaning
21,400 of ihr county's estimated
23,!00-person work force was
employed.
A year ago, Lawrence's unemploymenl ratr was set at 9.2
percent .
With an un&lt;"mployment rate of
12.2 percent in April. Vinlon Cou nty
posted the smallest decroaS&lt;' in Ihe
area during May , falling one-tenth
of a percent 10 12.1 percent,
compared to a May 1985 jobless rate
of 15.2 percenl . OBES said approxi·
mately 500 people ou t of the
county's work force es timate of
3,!rn were wilhout work in May .
With a continually sliding unem ·
ployment rato since March, Athens
County's joblessness was sel at 7.8
percent in May. down 1.2 percent
from the !&gt;percent figul'l' of April.
OBES .said roughly 21,!ll0 our of a
work force estimate ci 23,600 were
employed du1ing the mont h.
The May eslirnale is closer to
Athens' Ma)' 19&amp;'i figure of 7.1
percent.
AnOBES su"'cy showed employment ha s grown in Ohio by 2.9
perrent, or 128.000 jobs. with all of
the gai ns found in nonmanufacturing. The galn was
. primarily in the services sector,
which grew by 11 ,000 jobs, reaching
a new total of 1.016 million. Other
non·manufacturlng · gains were
noted In construction, wholesale
trade, retail trade, finance, Insurance and rea l es tate and
government.
I

[SEOEMS weighs candidates for director's post

MEN'S CLOTHES
MEN'S
MEN'S COLOIED
SHORT SLEEVE
Sport &amp; Dren Shirts

OVEI FACTOIY INVOICE

BDUaD

1 Rack Summer
Skirts, Clam
Diggus &amp; Slacks.

LEVI DENIM
JR. &amp; MISSY

COATS &amp; JACKETS
REDUaD

I
I

30°/o

REDUCED

1 Rack Shom,
louses, Big Blausts,
Big Jcxbts &amp; Slacks

DRESSES

614-992-6614

30°/o

REDUCED

LADIES' liVI

20°/o ro 30°/o

Jim Cobb
Ch•vrolet Oldsmobile
·cadillac

TOPS &amp; SHORTS

SIIEVELESS, SHORr &amp; LONG SI1EVE

Ill'veloprnent, U.S. Ill'partment of Commerre
Economic Development Agency, the Ohio Depart·
ment of Natural Resources, the Ohio Water
Ill'velopment Authority and the Ohio Department of
Development.
Most agencies contacted by Shields reported grant
monies were either unavailable for this type project
or unlikely to be awarded with85 percent OEPAfunds
already In place.
"The alternative to borrowing the balanre," said
Shields, "Is not to build the system.''
However, he pointed out, It should be recognized
that "the Meigs County Commissioners and their
consulting engineers have achieved the maximum
amount of grant dollars available from OEPA."
Shields called this "a dlsllnctlon In Itself."
Shields concluded . "! regret the tack of a simple,
less costly solution, or that we canoot make two

:Area man seeks
: re~oval of piers
By PW McCALLISTER

PEOPLES BANK

Ohio weather:
'
Showers possible

;Lack of outside funding clouds Meigs project

..

7100 p.m.
1100 p.m.

JwJr~.~.: .... s.1-s

BIISnfM....... .. ,....... ,, .... JH
Comic&amp;-TV ............... lnilert
ClaMIIIeds ......... J&gt;.3..4.H-H

I

.-

frldoy ......... 9.00 a.m. To 3100 p.m. - 5130 p.m. To
Soturdoy............................................... 9100 a.m. To
DRIYI.JN &amp; WALK·UP WINDOW HOURS
Monday thru Thunday .......... ........ ...... ll30 a.m. To
frldoy ................................................... l130 a.m. To
Saturday .......... .... ........ ............ ............ 1130 a.m. To

tmts

soc

age C-1

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, June 29. 1986

C&lt;lpyrigh10d 1986

To Serve You!

LADIES SUMMER

This Wttk Only!
Sale ends Sunday.29th

•

Sheriff sing Saturday

Lottery winners

Along

The !rials and tribulations of an inventor
are examined by James j. Kilpatr.ick - P~e A-2

Benefit sing Saturday

We Are Open 49 Hours
A Week

Memhers of the Shade River
Masonic Lodge wiU obsE'rve St.
Jolin's Day Sunday at the Chestesr
Unlled Methodis t Church.
Members and famillles are Invited.

CheveHes
Novas
and Delta 88's
and all De111os.

Grange
centennial Bob Hoeflich discu88es moves IO prot~t
__ Page B-l ~M_e_~__u__un_~_·s_c_h-ildre
__n___P_
~_e_~_s______~

The court ruled that by "certain
Washington "in connection with
military and paramilitary activi- attacks on Nicaraguan territory In .
1\llJ and 1984," the United States ·
ties in and aga\nst Nicaragua."
The court sa d that In "training, was guilty of using force against ·
arming, equipping, financing and Nica ragua and that In mining the ,
supplying the Contra forces," thl' harbors and autbJrlzlng overDights
United States was "In breach or Its of the country in 1984 it had violated .
obligations under customary law the sovereignty · of the Central •
not to lnterfel'l' in the affairs of American nation.
another state.''

Weather report

BY JANnEN &amp; CASJAWAY

,'

Wimbledon play continues

The Mason, Gallla and Meigs:
Crusade for Christ will have a;:
The third annual Gallla County benefit sing at 7 p.m. Saturday at-;
the Hysell Run Hollness Church.' .
Ill'puty Sheriffs Assn. charity
located on Route 124 at Hysell Rungospel sing wUI be held at 6 p.m.
Saturday at the Gallla County
near Rutland.
The singers will be Kim Williams
Fairgrounds on Route 35. Gates will
Family, Circle and the New Life
open at 5 p.m. and singers will
include The Gabriels Quarters, The Singers. The Crusade for Christ will
also hold a business meetl'ng at 10:
Sheklnah , The Kyger . Valley
Quartet, The Sunshine Quartet , The a.m. Saturday at the library In ,
Point Pleasant, Rev . Clyde V.
Ctncords, and the Full Gospel
Henderson, crusade pl'l'Sidcnt,.
Travelers.
Refreshments
will
he
South Central Ohio
available
on
the
grounds.
announced.
Partly cloudy and humid today,
with a chance of showers and . - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _thunderstorms thls afternoon and
highs near 90. Mostly cloudy
tonight, with a chance of showers
and thunderstorms and a low in the
low 70s. Mostly cloudy Saturday,
with scattered showers and thunderstorms and highs between 85
and 90.
The probability of precipitation Is
40 percent today and 50 percent
tonight and Saturday.
Winds will be from the southwest
STOP BY ONE OF OUR CONVENIENT
at 10 to 15 mph today and tonight.
LOCATIONS IN MASON,
Ohio Extended Forecast - Sun·
day through Tuesday: Fair through
POIN'l PLEASANT.OR NEW HAVEN
the period, with highs ranging from
CHANCES ARE WE'LL BE OPEN.
the mid 70s to the mid Ills each day.
Overnight lows will range from 55
LOBIT &amp; INSTALLMENT HOURS
(o 65 early Sunday and mostly lit the
Monday thru Wedneoday ....... ............ 9.oci a.m. To 3.00 p.m.
50s Monday and Tuesday
Thuroday
.......... .......... .. .... ...... .............. 9100 o.m. To 12 noon
mornings.

Hospital news

But Sen. Ernest Hollings, D· S.C.,
warned that the wdget was not
good enoogh to av&lt;id automatic
budget cuts this fall under GrammRudman because new ecommlc
estimates would p.tsh the deficit up.
Gramm· Rudman rEquires that, If
the deftclt target is not met,
automatic budget cuts take effect.

Sund ay .

•

the tax system will be fairer.
However, the bills contain a
surprise In their first year: they call
tor tax deductions to be curtailed
Jan. 1, but for the lower tax rates
not to go Into eUect untU July 1.
As· a result , critics say many
people who exJlECt to be "winners"
under the tax bills may Instead be
shodted with a tax increase or rnly
a modest cut in the nrst year.
Most of those socked with the
increase are people who 'likely
would Itemize deductions, altlvugh
the (l'ovlsion could also hurt many
non·ltemlzers, especially twoIncome couples who would lose

their marnage penalty deduction
under both bills or lOOse who have
Individual retirement account contributions that would mostly be
gutted by the Senate plan.
In the montiiS of tax reform
debate on Capitol Hill, the issue
prompted little dlscusskln. But now
that k seems certain a tax reform
bill wUI become law this year, the
matter Is starting to receive new
attention.
Several lawmakers - most
notably Senate Republican leader
Robert Dole and Sen. Lloyd Bent·
sen, !).Texas - have complained
the publlc may feel "tricked" If

•

Congress cont inues to boast thattax
!'l'form wUI mean substantial tax
cuts for most Amertcans, when in
reallty the bUiscouldcauseunantic·
lpated Increases tt the first year.
Also \lllrrylng some lawmakers
Is the time In which tlvse lncreases
would be mtlced - In the midst of
an election year.
U the final version of tax rdorm
goes into effect Jan. 1, 1987, most
people likely will not notice much c1
a difference untll their 191!7 tax bills
are due (\pril 15, 1988 - a year In
which tll're wiU be election contests
for the presidency, one·third of the
Senate and the en tire HouSf!.

�...
June 29, 1986

Commentary and.perspectiVe
iunllav 'timea• jtntinel
A Division of

8~

Third .'\ve.• G..UipoUs, Ohio Ill Court St., Pomeroy. Ohio
(614 ) w;-~m

..

(6141 992·2156

ROBERT L . WINGETT
Publisher

HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Edllor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsber-Conlroller

ETTI\01986
A MEMBER of Thr Unlled Press Intrrnallonal, Inl and Dally Prrss Assocla ·
!Jon and the Amer ican NI:'W spapPr Publishe-rs Association .

LEITERS OF OPINION are welcome . They shoukl llt" I@Ss th11n D1 ~·o rd s
lOng . All l('tter s an•subj ec:·t toed lti ng and m.~ st be s4:n ed with name. add ress and
telephon e numb~&gt;r. No un slgnro !('tiers w\11 be publish('(! . l.cttNs should be in

good

la sh~ .

June 29, 1986

FO~

Newman a genius? Or Is Newman a
ron artist?
My own guess. after roodlng a
-raft of material, ts that Newman
probably Is a genius. His name one
day may rank with such familiar
names as Faraday, Watt and
Ampere. F~r thl' moment, how·
ever, a decent skepticism Is bl
order.
For the record, Newman Is 49
years old. He lives just rutslde

Lucedale, Miss. He has no formal
higher education, but be Is obviously an original thinker and a
self-taught electrical engineer. He
blvents things. He has patents on
such devices as a rain deflector ilr
autorrobile wbldshields and a
gadget for extracthig juice from
fruit while the fruit Is stlll on the
tree.
After 17 years of labor, Newman
flied tor a patent In Marrn 1979 rna

WORn\ STAf. ·TElEE.I&lt;"""-

HULME

""'

Leaves no doubt
"Mankind will never forgive us" if thl' superpowers did oot put a ca p oo
rhe nuclear arms race.
Those were the words of an ailing Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev after he
and President Jimmy Carter signed thl' SALT 2 nuclear treaty in a
glittering ceft'mony at an opulent palace in Vienna on June 18, 1979.
The lfl'aty permitted some advances in nuclear weapons on both sides.
l'€&lt;lUired the superpowers to retire a certain number of weapons, and
gen~rally established a parity of thl'ir arsenals.
Jt. represented an extension of a p·ornise by the United States and thl'
Sov{et Union that holding down an eJq:iosionof nuclearweaponsof w.~rfare
would serve the interests of bolh sides.
•·
After the signing, conservatives on Capitol Hill, reinforced by the
Reagan ·presidential candidacy, mounted a major campaign to defeat
ratification of thl' lft'aty. Then lhl' ensuing Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
killed any hope of Senate approval ofthl' treaty.
B~t when Reagan assumed office in 1981, he pledged oolto undercu llhl'
unratified treaty and to stay within Its limits as long as the Soviets did not
undermine it.

Reagan's advisers had put II in various ways, and aUseemed jubilant
tllat tile United States would no longer adhere to thl' pact whose time had
run. out. Secretary of State George Shultz claimed that while the United
States was no longer curbed in its military buildup by the treaty , it would
exercise restraint. Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger said thl' United
States would not longer be bound by the treaty.
Gen. Edward Rowny, chief st rategic arms adviSer, said SALT 2 "is
behind us." And deputy White House press secretary Larry Speakes said
the treaty "is no longer in existence."
In effect. all of the above said In one way or anothl'r tllat the treaty is
dead.
Reagan could not bring himself to use a term of such finality in
discussing his drastic decision to break our of lhl' treaty. But when Jl'essed
by r.eporters, hl' said: "I think you can trust what Larry said."
The president confessed at his last new,; conference, "I was always
hostile to that treaty because It did not reduce weapons."
He Insisted that his action would not lead to an arms race. He believes
InStead that the Soviets will be more willing to deal now.
· Around thl' time Reagan was moving to scrap the treaty, the Soviets
clune up with a new proposal for major cuts in bng-range strategic
--:eapons and a 15-to W.year new lease on life for thl' anti-ballistic missile
r~aty that has no cutoffdale, but can be renounced byeithl'rside within six
months.

•Administration officials see the ABM proposal as way to block the "Star
~rs" defense system Reagan Is determined to promote.
;There are no doves in tile adminlstratkm. Reagan Is marching to his own
drl)mmer these days. Arms control advocates oo Capitol Hlll are branded
as "Soviet supporters" by Reagan aides.
;ills renunciation of thl' tft'aty will permit thl' United States to forge
a~('ad now with plans to ann tile 13lst B-52 bomber with cruise missiles,
aud thl'n moll' of the same.
The question is: Will Americans and thl' world feel safer from a nuclear
roofiict because tllere will be mof(' B-52 bombers armed with cruise
rnls~Ues in the U.S. arsenal ?

..

letters to the Editor
Real community seroice
'Gallipolis Is Indeed rich to have
clitzens such as Homer Pellegrinon
a6d Paul Knotts, who arewtillng to,
are capable of, stepping In to
rU/1 our city as acting manager.

and
•

,As attorney for the city, I know
tlJire are Jl'Oblems. These two
gmtlemen did as well and better
t!1Rn- the "professionals." Paul. In
~r\lcular, came to rur rescue
whon out bcal government was In
ctiS!S. Not only did he Immediately
re!itore order and harmony. but he

.

asked nothing in ft'lurn for his
ronslderable effort and time. He
has been paid nothing for tbe three
montha he has workl&gt;d for us on a
daily basis, and has even tifered his
help In thl' fu tu re.
f look forward to working with
our new city manager. but I feel
secuf£' knowing that we have such
people In our community.
Thank yru. Homer and Paul.
Sincerely,
Douglas M. Cowles
Gallipolis

Quality, dedication hailed

'

.

For a number of years, as a
member of the Pomeroy Emergency Squad, I hl'lped give aid to
vilitlms of varnus types of accl·'
depts and Illnesses. Last Monday, I
became the "victim."
As a result of that accident, the
q\iailty of service and dedication
gl"en by the volunteers of lbe unJt
becameveryclearto me. The calm
ani! efficient man~r In which they
collducted themselves did a Jot to
ease the mental anguiSh and the
diScomfort of my accicl&lt;'nt.
John and Rick Blaettner. Chris

Shank and others! did not koow (or
recognize) are to be commended
for thl'lr professbnallsm. And the
people of oor area can be thankful
that we t!ave Emergency Units that
are ready to give aid in limes of
distress.
I also wish to thank Dr. Price and
members of the VMH Emer~ncy
Room staff for their excellent care.
Nor do I want to forget those friends
who called or sent cant!. Your
concern Is appreciated.
Jim Soulsby

nnan __~(C_on_tm_u_ed_tro__m_A_·l_l______________________________________________
them ."

addr!:'Sslng Issues. not pt&gt;rsonallties .

lri thl' y&lt;'ars tha 1 passed, the administration frequently called thl' Soviets
hand on tile treaty. and claimed violations by the Kremlin by deploying
what thl' United States viewed as a new missile, thl' S-25, and breaking
ott.::r provisions by coding its testing.
But nevertheless, it appeared to be in the U.S. interests to abide by the
treaty.
Last wcek, thl' president, faced with decisions on introducing new
weaponry, made It quite clear that he had decided to renounce the treaty .
Up to that time, there had been various Interpretations of a May 27
statement t)1at tile United States might no longer abide by the treaty if the
Russians did not stop tlleir violations. That announcement was ~wed by
many lawmakers as leaving Reagan an rut where he rould retreat from
the tough stand if he wanted to.
The decision has upset allies, Influential members of Congress, arms
control advocates, and has befUddled the Soviets. Sen. Joseph Elden,
D-Del .. charged that Reagan's arms rontrol pollcy had fallen under tile
influence of "right-wing adviSers" who want to destroy thl' whole
framework of nuclear arms limitation.

~a

Page-A-2

Enforcement dlfllcul
The greatest problem with safety
at the piers Is tbe !act that city
pollee canoot enforre any ordlnan·
·ces keepblg people off the piers
because they are technically Ue
within thl' slate of West VIrginia. he
said. WISeman has not checked the
possibility of the Coast Guard
enforcing safety at the site, he said.

Genius or con artist?_____Ja_m~es_J_.K_i_lpa_tr_ic_k
WASHINGTON - Have you
heard of Joe Newman's Revolution·
ary Energy Machble? No? Yru
may be bearing quite a lot about It
this summer. In response to a roun
order, the National Burea\1 of
Standards Is about to file a r!p(lrt oo
the machine. A bit later, the rourt
will make the report public, and we
will have some clues to a question
that Is attracting mum attention in
Congress and ln the press: Is

oovel kind of electrical rrotor. His
claim Is that the motor produces an
output ol energy far In excess d Its
Input. His theory Is that aectromag.
~tic energy can be stored and
applied in ways oot heretofore
thought possible.
His claim Is bolsterro in Impressive ways. At least ll scientists and
engineers have filed affidavits In
support of his Invention. His
backers say the Newman motor
could effectively revolutionize the
production of energy. They envision
a day when large-scale Newman
generators would replace conventional plants fueled by roal, oil cr
nuclear energy. Smaller motors
conceivably could replace Internal
combustion engines. The prospect .
Is breathtaking.
The Patent and Trademark
Office Isn't holding its breath. After
a ru rsory examillatlon. tile PTO In
1984 rejected Newman's application. His purported Invention, said .
the PTO, "smacks of perpetual
motion." The Board of Patent
Appeals beard his appeal and .
sneered: "Such a machine Is
lmposslble."·Dr. Robert E. Hebner, ~­
speaking tor tile Bureau of Stand· .
arm, ftled a declaration in the Court
ti Aweals ilr the Federal Circuit.
The thrust of his declaration, said
Ju"'e Pauline Newman (no k!ni.ls
that "the applicant's device maybe

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Piige-A-3

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

SEOEMS

Wiseman said he has written
leners to congressmen, senators,
the corps of engl!lft'rs, First
Avenue residents and the city
commiSsiOn .. He said lbe letters
remind each recipient ti tbeyouth's
death last week, that the l*!rs are
"outdated and dilapidated ," and
that "someo~ comes along once a
year and puts a diving board and
ladder up thl're. and the 1\ids use

Settlement made '::

·.

BARBERTON, Ohio (UP!) PPG Industries Inc. of Pittsburgh
has agreed to a settlement for
alleged violations o! state air .
pollution standards at Its Barberton · ·
manufacturing facility.
;
Attorney General Anthony J. ·
Celebrezze Jr. Friday announced :
the settlement, which Includes :
moll' than $600,!XXl In contributions ·
to the Summit County city.
·
PPG Industries operated four :
coal-fired boilers at the chloralkalie man\!ll!cturing process
plant In Barberton .

thein."

He Is asking that the piers be
removed , and until they can be
taken out, that everything on each
pier which might help children
climb the piers be removed, he
said.
"I've seen the river when II was
Iced all tile way across, and I've
never seen any boats tied up out
thl're;· Wiseman satd. Of thl'
possible reception to his campaign,
Wiseman said "I'm sure everyone
who
lives along thl' river will
_tc_on_tln_ued_rro_m_A-1_1- - - - !IJ pport It."

Marcla Karr

Marcia Karr joins
Carleton trustees

STARTS WED., JULY 2
FOR 1 WEEK ONLY!

a max."
Thl' Mississippi Inventor has run
into a tough row to hoe. When his
appeals through the Patent and
Trademark Office were exhausted,
be ftled suit In U.S. District Court
here In Washington. asking an
order to compel the Issuance d a
patmt.

"We are gathered here to say your guess is as good as mine."

( US P S!:$-800 J
Publ is hed eac h Sunday, 825 Third Ave ..
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
lls hlng Company / Multimedia, Jnc. Se·
cond class postage pakl at Galllpolls ,

Futile to appease ____Ja_ck_A_n_de_rs_o_n_&amp;_D_al_e_V._an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - Syrian l'tvol·
vement In anti-American terrorism, which we have been calling
attention to for months In the face of
the Reagan administration's apparent obsession with Ubya, Is at
last getting some of thl' Jl'ESS
attention it deserves. But there has
reen a strange silence about tiE
othl'r major sourceofterrorthat we
identified: Iran.
Stranger still is the willingness ti
two powerful victims of lr8lJ ilrn
terrorism - thl' United States and
France- to seek accommodatiOn
with Ayatollah Ruhoilah KholllE!nl
In tile hope of appeasing his
fanatical hatred d the West.
Kowtowing to Khomeinl has berome thl' new diplomatic game In
Washington and Parts.
This Is Irony of truly staggering
proportions. If any victims of
Khomelnl should realize the !Utllity
of trying to do business with him,
It's France and thl' United States. II
was terrorist tnspired and directed
by Khomebli who slaughtered 59
French paratroopers and 241 U.S.
Marbles on a single day In 1983 at
the Beirut airport. And tt Is
Khomelnl's terrorist chieftains who
kidnapped French and American
hostages and were holding them
last week despite appeasement
gestures by lhl' French and U.S.
governments.
We've reported on the Secret
Reagan administration tilt mward

Iran In the Persian Gull war, which was succeeded by the fanatic
has Included active consideration of fundamentalism rJ. Khomelnl.
clandestine arms shipments to
Whatever tile true nature of
Khomebll. Now we can reveal that Rajavl's Ideology, one thing is
the secret negotla lions over anns clear: He seems to be thl' only one
!llpply and release of American who can mobilize significant opposl·
hostages have involved members ti lion to Khomelnl inside Iran. The
the National Securtty Council and a Mojahedln claim to have mounted
former official of the ClA
more than :ilXI anti-government
Meanwhile. the French have derronstratlons within Iran in tile
gone a step fUrther. While still last year. They have a videotape
continuing to sell arms to Ira:j. they sholling the "commencement exer·
have quietly begun to sell to Iran as else'' of 2.000 guenillas In Iranian
well.
Kurdlstan last October.
In a shameless act of appeaseWhile such dalms are difficult to
ment, the French government also check out In Khomebll's Iran, the
forced our of their oountry the
ayatollah's wrathful response to thl'
Iranian exile with the best chanre of Mojahedln's cpposltlon has indioverthrowing Khomelnl: Massoud
rectly ronfirmed Rajavi's claims
Rajavl, head ti the People's that be is a serious threat to the
Mojahedin.
regime. Many of the tens of
Given rurdruthers, Rajavi would thousands ti Iranians Khomeinl
not be thl' ftrst choice to replace has executed were Mojahedin
Khomebll. He has- been shrilly . memtErs. ·
anti-West-ern !n the past, and
And w]jJe Khomelnt showed little
advocates a suspiciously extremist concern about other opponents who
philosophy that might be called
are In exile in France, he has been
"Islamic Soclallsm."
adamant In his demands tllat tile
But fuljavi has pledged to hold French turn Rajavl over to htm.
free elections within six months
"The (Mojahedln) are a criminal
after be ousts Kmmelnl, and a group whose hands are stained with
Mojahedbl official told us the blood of rur people's dearest
Iranians who support fuljavl wwld children,.. an official message
insist that he keep ]js JrOmlse,evm
fulminated last April 15. "If the
If hl' trted not to. "DeDVJCracy Is ail
French wish to change their
that is left lor them." the ct!lclal attitude towards Iran, lhl'y must
explained, ootlng rroderate Iran- uproot the (Mojahedin) bases ... .
Ians' cruel disappointment when
Throw the (Mojahedln ) out of your
the oorrupt dictatorship d the shah
oountry! ,, It Is only then tllat our

Ohio 45631 . Entered as second class

TAWNEY STUDIOS

people will believe that France Is a
friendly country."
With thl' French hostages in
Lebanon bl min~. France capitulated and forced fuljavi to leave
"volunta rily" several weeks ago.
He found refuge In Iraq, much totbe
chagrin of Iranian officials. They
had something entirely different
planned: Rajavl's arrest by Interpol during a brief layover in
Switzerland, followed by his extradition to Iran.
Evidence ti tile Iranians' inten·
lions was obtained In an Intercepted
telephone conversation just before
Rajavi's departure from Parts. The
conversation was between Iran's
amblssador In Bern, Switzerland,
Ail NematoUahl, ahd a deputy
Jl'tlne minister In Tehran named
Beshara!. The ambassador related
his contacts with Interpol attempt·
lng to establish that Rajavl was a
criminal who should be arrested
when hl' landed In Switzerland.
Nematoliahl: "I myself have
given them some documents based
on (the Mojahedln 's) own acknowledgments In their newspapers. In
rur rote, we also said that we would
give I hl'm some more later."
Beshara!: "And tben, despite all
these. they are still holding back?"
Nematollahl: "No, well . ... They
say. ·we cannot do what you want
lfi to do; consequently, we won't let
him In at all.' "

"Well, you don't hear anyone In
the admlnistrallon shouting about
South Africa."
"So we .can relax knowing that
we'll' up to our necks in quiet

Doonesbury
'

\ • +1

., •

.

. .·"

"·i 't :
.

.·.

~'·'

.

424 SEC. AVE., GAWPOUS

'
Member: United
Preu JntE'rnallonal.
Inland Dally Pres s Association and th e
Ohio Newspaper Assoclatlon , National
Advertising Representative, Branham

Ne'toll'spaper Salt'S. 733 Third Avf.'nu e.
N("N York. New York 10017.

Ohio weather

SUNDAY ONL \'
SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier or Motor RO\Ite

Ohio Extended Forecast
Monday through Wednesday

Fair Monday with a chance of
showers bl the sou th Tuesday and a
chance &lt;i rain Wedneday. lllm will
be !n the mid 50s to low 60s. Highs
will range between 7S and 85
Monday and Tuesday and betwC&lt;'n
80 and 85 Wednesday.
South Central Ohio
Parttv cloudy today wit h a
chance ol showers and a high in the
mid Ills.
The probability of precipitation is
30 percen} today·

Fam1.•y f i Ies suit

Quiet diplomacy_______A_rt_Bu_ch_wa_ld
"What Is our poilcy bl South
"With Communists they work,"
Africa?" I asked Nattily, a top- Nattily said. "But sanctlonsagablst
ranking source at the State a frtendly fascist power would burt
- Department.
the people we are trying to help."
"We deplore wha t Is going on
"That means your chance of
theft' and will take tough measures using sanctions could hurt our
to see that tile South African raatlons with South Africa?"
government chan~s Its ways."
"Correct. I thlnk Secretary of
"What kind of measures?" I State George Shultz summed It up
asked.
best oo the evening news when
"We will threaten them with the asked if the U.S. would levy
only thing the Botha government sanctiOns, he replied, 'No." '
"What do you say to Bishop Tutu
understands- quiet diplomacy."
"What (ltal) kind (unital) of quiet when he calls on thl' U.S. to Invoke
diplomacy?"
sanctions?"
" It wou ldn't be quiet If I told yru,
"We don't say anything to Bishop
would It? I can only reveal that In Tutu If we can hl'lp 11. Our policy Is
our experience, the more you raise to ft'main neutral in South Africa."
your voice, thl' less Influence you
I then asked Nattily, "does It
have. But ~we can go In through the bothl'r you that Botha has instituted
blck door there Is always a chanCE a state of emergency and anyone
we can make a deal with Bctha." . can be locked up lor no reason?"
"Of course It bothl'rs us, and we
"·What If you can't?"
"Then we rontlnue our cplel , Intend to bring It up at tbe next quiet
diplomacy. hoping the South Afrl· dplomacy meeting bl Pretoria.
can leaders wW see the light.''
You are aware that President
"Does quiet diplomacy really Reagan sent Botha a very tough
work?" I asked.
rote about the South African
"All tile time. We've used tt In martial law edict."
every fascist country In the wcrld,
"Old it have any effect?"
and It's never failed."
"No. but that Is the lldvantage of
"You mean governments have quiet diplomacy. Very lew people
stopped beating up people In the ltnow that Botba told Reagan to
streets after you come In with stu!! 11."
Q.D. ?"
"That's a foreign policy?"
" Youhave totake mywordforlt.
Nanny said, "Do you have a
The quieter you are about human better one?"
rtghts' violations, the bener be·
'I might go for the sanctions If I
haved the foreign government Is was bankrupt In Ideas."
about lockblg up people."
'Forget it. We're on top of this
"WHat Is wrong with blstltutlng thing. We've war-gamed It from
economic sanctions agablst South one end of Foggy Bottom to the
Africa?"
ether. In llrelgn aUalrs there Is a
"They didn' t work."
tlnie to shout and a time to
"Then why don't we have them whisper."
against Cuba?"
• And?"

malllng maltl'r at Pomeroy . Oh io. Post
OHIC'f'.

diplomacy?"
"To quote thl' Secretary of State
when asked on ooe of the morning · : ·
news shows ff we had thl' situation , · :
under control, his answer was, ; :;
' Yes,"'

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LOS ANGELES tUPIJ- Claims
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city of Beverly H!lls on behalf of
relatives of a jewelry stof£' manager killed by a shl'riff' s rna rksman
who miStook him for a robber.
Attorney Melvin Belli fU!P the
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pollee ti misronducr In the death of
Hugh Skinner. thl' manager of the
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Skinner, 64 , was killed late
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�Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Midd!eport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Eastern hand boosters voice
concerns with school board

MAKING AN APPEARANCE- 'lbe Juan !Ia, the
iJnly operating stemwheeler In the AEP River
Transportation Division, wW be at the Glilllt&gt;Oifi

River ~reallon Festival July t-5, each da,y from II
a.m. WilD 6 p.JJL

Last operating ·stemwheeler
will visit Gallipolis festival
GALLIPOLIS - Following this
year's theme of "Liberty: Our
Symbol Qf Freedom," the 21st
annual Gallipolis River Recreation
Festival will feature another lady
- a sternwheeler known as the
Juanita.
The Juanita is the smallest vessel
and the only sternwheeler in the
fleet of modern towboats operated
by the American Electric Power
System on the Ohio and its
tributaries.
It v.ill be one of the featured
ex hibits - docked at the city's
parkfront public use area- fromll
a.m. to 6 p.m. July 4 and from 11
a.m. until 6 p.m. July 5.
AEP's fleet of 24 towboats and
nearly 500 barges primarily moves
coal to its power plants up and 001111
the river. The Juanita, however,
spends most of Its time as a harbor
boat for the three-quarter-mlle-iong
fleet at Lakin , W.Va.
Occasionally, people along the
river will see the Juanita moving
coal from a coal Joadout near
Pomeroy to the Gavin power plant
just across the river on lite Ohio
shore.
"TbeJuanita's appearanre at the
River Recreation Festival will give
visitors a chance to see the l~t
known working stern wheeler oo the
Ohio River," said Gale R. Rhodes.
~neral manager oft he AEP River
Transportation Division.

Emergency runs
POMEROY - Five calls were
answered by local units Friday, the
Meigs Coonty Emergency Mfdlcal
Services reponed.
At midnight Middleport went to
Gravel Hill for an auto fire;
Rutland at12: '!I a.m. took Charles
McGrath from Romine Road to
Veterans Memorial Hospital ;
Pomeroy at 8:26 a.m. took Opal
Cummings from the Maples Apartments to Pleasant Valley Hospital;
Rutland at 5:38 p.m. took Dwight
Hysell from Hysell Run to Holzer
Medical Center, and Tuppers
Plains at 6: 50 p.m. took Mary
Rankin from Ohio 7 to Camden·
Clark Hospital in ParkersaJrg,
W.Va .

2 thrifts acquired
CLEVELAND iUPli - Two
Ohio sav ings Institutions near
Cleveland ruive been acquired by
First Nationwide Bank. a subsldtary of First Nationwide Corp .. It
was announced Friday.

"She still has her original sternwheel and she still as two coal
a. ming stoves - one in the engine
room and one in the pilothouse- to
keep the pilot and the deckhand
warm In cold weather."
The harbor boat has •a 135IDrsepower Genera I Motors diesel
engine to turn its paddlewheel. In
comparison, the division's newest
towboats have 5,00().horsepower
engines. Weighing under 00 tons,
the Juanita sits only 3.9 feet deep in
the water and can muster six to
seven mph when it isn't pushing
bar~s.

The original Juanita - with a
wooden hull- was built In the 19lJs
for O.F. Shearer &amp; Sons, forerunner
of lite AEP River Transportation
Division. Jn 1954, the vessel was
equipped with a steel hull a new
cabin structure. in 1984, the Juanita
again received a new steel hull.
Besides the obvious sentimental
reasons, the Juanita is kept in
operation because it is economical
for its J:Ajrp:&gt;se. "She a.ms very
little fuel," Rhodes said. "She Is,
however. replaced by a modern
towing vessel during high water
when the current gets sw ot."

S. K. VAIDYA, M.D.

Opsnlng Ju/g 1ff
EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP .
FABRICS &amp;
CRAFTS
395 37 STAlE IT. 7
IEEDSYilLI, OH.
PHONE 985-4202

UROLOGIST
IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE
THAT HE WILL BE AVAILABLE
FOR SEEING PATIENTS AT
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
POMEIOY, OHIO
BY APPOINTMENT ONLY

PLEASE CALL 304·675-6060

ere
sees·
That's entirely possible, you know. Already,
over 45 doctors are participating in Advacare,
the health mamtenance organization that
your employer can offer to provide just about
every medical and surgical benefit you'll ever
need-for a single monthly premium. And
doctors know the advantage of seeing a good
doctor occasionally.
·
What does that mean to you? That
Advacare has some important advantages to

you in getting the finest medical care available in
the region.
To take advantage of the Advacare advantages, call your doctor-ask if he or she is participating. Then talk to your employer or AdvaCare
at 446-5283. Advacare
• •
headquarters is at Holzer
~ ~
clinic, 385 Jackson PikeAd • '
Gallipolis, Ohio. .

Meigs County Court handles 49 .cases
costs, fishing without valid llcen~;
Charles Bandy Jr .. Kenova, W.Va.,
driving whlle Intoxicated , $2i0 and
oosts; three days In jail or attend
driving school and If attends school
Jail sentence and $100 ct One
suspended; 00 day license suspension; speeding. costs; left ct center,
oosts; Alfred Ia McKnight , Pome·
roy, driving whlle Intoxicated, $250
and costs, three days In jail and 00
days license suspens!Qil; $100offlne
suspended if driving school Ls
attended aiong with three days In
jail; RonnyWise,Bakersville,N .C..
assured clear distance, $25 and
costs; Rodney D. Cremeans. Torch,
Jell of renter. $\5 and oosts; Donald
Spurlock, Tuppers Plains, driving
under suspension, $75 and rosts,
three days In jail; three days and
$2i of fine suspencled u license
obtained In lJ days; James Barnes.
Racine, unsafe vehicle, $10 and
costs; David Carnahan. Reedsville,
no motorcycle rnoorsement , $40
and costs, 30 · days to obtain
enoorsement, speeding, $23 and
costs; Arlie E. Malone, Racine.
driving while Intoxicated, $150 and
costs; six months In jail suspended
all but 15 days, license suspension
lffi days and two years probation.
left of center, costs; Mike Harrison,
Midd leJXlr1. no motorcyc le endorsement, $100 and oosts, 15 days in jail,

POMEROY - Forty-nine cases

Albert Brown
POMEROY - Albert Bro1111, 00,
Mount Vernon, Ohio, formerly of
Pomeroy, died June 18 at Mount
Vernon.
Mr. Brown was bo!'ll Feb. 15,
1917, at Pomeroy, a son of the late
James and Lula Smlth Bro1111. He
was formerly employed al the
Parkersburg Rig and Reel Co. in
Pomeroy and moved to Mount
Vernon when that business was ·
discontinued.
He was retired as a foundryman
from the Cooper-Bessemer 0&gt;. He
belonged to the Chu rch of lhe
Namrene and served In lite U.S.
Marine Corps during World War 11.
Surviving are his wlfo', ~rnice
Bolin Brown of Mount Vernon ; a
son, Joseph Bro1111 of Mount
Vernon; a daughter; Judy Coogle of
Fredericktown, Ohio; and three
grandchildren.
' Besides his parents, he was
p)'eeeded In death by two brothers,
Charles Brown and Jackie Brown.
· Serv ices were held at 10 a.m.

June 21 at the North Dilley FuJPral
Home In Mount Vernon and burial
was In Ire Mound View Cemetery
there.

Henry A. Wallace
VINTON- Henry A. Wallace 55
Detroit, Mich ., died 'l'hur.i!lay ~ ~
Detroit hospital.
He was born May 2. -1931 in Kerr,
to the late George and Ada Scruggs
Wallace. He was a former resident
of Evergreen and wa s employed by
the Qrevrolet Division of GMAC.
Surviving are five brothers,
Alexander Wallace of Detroit,
Leroy Wallace of Kerr, George
Wallace of Austin, Texas, Charles
Wallace, Columbu s, and Austin
Wallac e of Co!umrus; and thrre
sisters, Gertrudt' Davis o!Washlng ton. D.C .. Ad a Lewis of Ollumbu s.
and Brenda King of Columbu s.
He was preceded in death by one

sister.
Arrangement will be an nounced
by McCoy-Moore Funeral Home
Vinton at a later time.

Mason school board
delays building vote

were processed in the weekly

session of Meigs County Court
Judge Patrick W. O'Brien.
Seven defendants forfeited qonds
and they are Eugene Pahl, Bartlett.
$50; Steven Bassham, JacksonviliP,
N.C., $50; Clifton Anderson, Lexington, Ky.. $70; Stephen Skipp,
Racine. $50; Darrell Clark, Vienna,
W.Va .. $50, all posted on speeding
charges; Willard Miller , Pomeroy,
$1'\, failure to control, and Ktmali
Moore, Langsville. $45, assured
clear distance.
Fined on speeding charges were
Hobart Cundiff. Middleport $21 and
costs; Josep h Longmire, Vienna,
$21 and costs; Michael Skeens, New
Lexington, $'l'l and costs; James
Newell, Chester, $21 and costs;
Eliz&lt;ltx•t h Shimko, Warren. $15and
costs; Herman Ferrell, Dexter,$~
and costs; Melvin Burris, Belmont,
$21 and costs; Karl Fialer, Athens,
$X! an d costs; Russell Wood,
Huntington, W.Va., $26 an d costs;
Wendell Kerr, Parkersburg,
W.Va .. $2.1 and costs; Michael
Lively, Chelyan, W.Va .. $23 and
cos rs; Petty L. Johnson, RavmsW()(){f. W.Va ., $:&gt;JJ and costs; Chad
Craie)', Cal dwell. $23 and costs;
Dan Thompson. The Plains, S:&gt;Jland
cos ts; Patrick Hurley, Cheshire,
$'22 "nd (&lt;Jsts: .Joseph R. Proffitt ,
Racine, $21 and costs; Larry D.
Carnahan. Long Bottom. $23 and
costs; Waym· Williams. Mlddle1Xll1, $22 and costs; Nicholas Rehl,
Columbu s, $25 and costs; Steve
Coil. Pla in City . $21 and msts; Rony
Martin. Columbus, $23 and costs.

By ROBIN NANCE
cut1tng spending. and my feeling is
Times-Sentinel Stall
that we are In a close financial
POINT PLEASANT - In a
situation. Sometimes when vouare
meet lng Friday night , members of
in a close financial situa tion .vou
the Mason County Board of Educa - have •o !)aSS up good opportunities
Ot hers fined were William Jen ·
tion postponed a vote on the
like this." Sa uer said.
kin
s J r.. Park('l'9burg. failure to
proposal for accept ing a donated
According to Barker. the money
display va lid ta gs. $10 and costs;
building for New Haven Elemen Susan Ba rnes. Racine. S25 and
IJiry School until more definite cost needed Is in the bond construction
account.
figures could be obtained .
President Blll Withers sai d hr
The board members did decide felt the board should pursue the
to Sl'lld a letter tot he people of New matrer and mak e a decision after
Haven reflecting their interest In the facts and figures have been
the building.
obtained.
An approxlm ate cost of $00.001 to
According to Barker. the ooard
$65,001 for taking down. moving members will have to reach a
and reassem bH ng the bJ IIding was decision withln two weeks.
submitted by Bill Barker, superinInsurance bids for fis cal vear
tendent of Mason Oltinty Schools. 1986-87 were a nother ma tter of
The building has been donated to rusln·ess in the meeting.
the school system by a loeal
The board pa"ed a proposal to
company. and If accepted will accept a fleet insurance bid from
serve as a multtprupose room for City Insurance of $3),299, the
New Haven Elementary. Barker lowest bid submitted. a $~.000
declined to reveal the company's Increase over last :v.ear . Th e
name.
Insurance wtll cover all school
. It the building proposal Is system buses, driver's education
passed, the money to transr.ort and cars. and other school vehicles.
reconstruct wtll be taken from the
The board also pas sed pror.osals
bond construction fund . However. to accept a $3.U6 bid for perforthe bulltng Is not new and will need mance bond coverage, a $41.&amp;15
some repairs, Barker said. Barker bid for property insuranCP and a
also added that like all public $2,009 bid for bo iler and machinery
buildings, this one would have to Insurance, all from Point Insumeet state safety requirements.
rance and all the lowest bids
Board member 'Ibm Sauer said submitted .
the building was an excellent
Board action included matters of
opportunity, but he has mlsg:lvlngs personnel also. The board ac·
a bout accepting It due to low funds . cepted the resignation of Diana
"I have trouble spending that Drummond. teacher at Beale
much money. We have talked of

89

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suspension, two cllar~s of disorderlY cooouct while Intoxicated, $3)
and costs, transporting a firearm in
a motor vehicle, oosts and forfel·
ture of a .38 caliber revdver;
WOllam Lavender, Syracuse, defective exhausts, no baffle plates rr
muffler, SlO and costs, no motorcycle rnoorsement. $50 and rosts;
Roy L. Buchanan, Coolville, driving
uncler suspension, $500 and oosts;
Michael Ga rd, Reedsville, fatju ret o
display license plates. $10 and
oosts; Danny Haddox, Pennsboro,
W.Va .. overload. $227 and oosts;
Kathleen Nally. Pomeroy, failure
to yield. $10 and costs.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

A
II=' .

CLEVELAND (UPII- Frida y's
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Daily Number
786
Ticket sa les totaled $1.223,508.50,
with a payoff due of $817.51&gt;1.50.

rSUPERIOR

'C
va are"'

10 suspe~ded if enoorsement obtained withln 30 days; John MaJe.
zewskl, Point Pleasant, driving
while intoxicated, $2i0 and oosts,
three days In jail and Ill day ticense
suspension; William E. Eakins,
Racine, driving whlle Intoxicated,
$lXl and cost s, 00 days In jail and
license suspended lndennitely, a
second driving. while intoxicated
char~. $lXl and costs. six months
in jail and license suspended
indefinitely, left of center, costs. no
child restraint, costs; Jom H.
Casto. Pomeroy, driving while
intox icated, $250 and msts, three
days in jail and 60 days license

Ohio Lottery

Veterans Memorial

Carats:
They're good
for your eyes.

The Sunday T.,.,..Sentinei- Page-A-6·

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

Area deaths

•

EAST MEIGS - Missing band Uons for 1986 and approved $150 In
'lbt! char~ for each addlllonal
Instruments and band camp were matching funds for the Chester year Is $64 at Chester and $72 at
up for discussion Thursday night PTO. Tbere was a motion on Tu~rs Plains. The bid of Jeff
when the Easstern Local School mileage for some members of the Russell at $1.005 was accepted for
District Board of Education met at coachlng staff•but It died for lack of painting lite exterior of the Riverthe high school.
asecond.Itwasagreedtoadvertlse view School. The board wtll conA delegation from the district's fo r bids oo lunch room commodities . tJnue to accept bids on a used truck
band boosters, with Presldel!l and Janice Weber was authorized
needed In the dlstrtct.
Rosemary Keller as spokesperson, to attend the AU Vocational ConferA special mretlng was set for
met with the board.
ence In Dayton, JulY 28-ll.
.JulY 10 and the next regular
It was reported that a number of
The board entered Into a oontract
mretlng for July 29. Both wtll start
band Instruments purchased by the with Dodson Brothers, Parkers- at 7:30 p.m. at the high school. All
boosters cannot be located an'd. burg, w ,va., tor termite control at
ooard members except Kathy
accountedforandthe boardandthe the Chester and Tuppers Plains Manicke were present for the
administration are being asked to schools. The first year fee at
meetin g along with Superintendent
look into the matter.
Chester will be $840 with a two ,;ear Richard Roberts, Treasurer Eloisp
The boosters also expressed warranty and $9:!) for the first year
Boston and Tuppers Plains Prlnciconcern about band camp coming at the Tuppers Plains School.
pal Wendy Halar.
up in July and over the fact there is r - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -no band director since James
Wilhelm, director, has resigned.
The board Indicated that It is
seeking a replacement for Wilhelm
and hopes to have the position filled
in time for band camp.
The lxlarr,l adjusted approprla-

'

June 29. 1986

June 29, 1986

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REG. &amp; DIET

FREE, MT. DEW

COCA

14'/z
CANS

Pluo Taa
&amp; Dop.

COLA

$299

., MILK

"

.

·:-~~
-~

.

'4

�Page A-6 The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

r----

June 29. 198~

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plee111nt, W. Va.

Pomeroy:....Midtlaport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point Plea1111t, W.Va. ·

Local Briefs:·-- Appellate judges stay Georgia executior(

Grand jury issues 2 indictments
I

JACJ&lt;SON, Ga. (UP!) - A
condemned prtsoner who has had
three heart attacks on death row
received a stay 11 hours before he
was to die in the eiectpc chair for
slaying a south Georgia pollee

'

GALLIPOLIS - Two men were Indicted by the GaWa County
grand jmy Friday after a two-day sessiOn.
·
Robert W. Parsons, 30, Virgie, Ky., was lndlctoo t&gt;r an alleged
rape violation in September 19!6, and Eric T. Carter, 18. Rl. 1,
Gallipolis, was indicted on a breaking and entering charge at
Gallipolis Ice Co., 709 First Ave., filed earlier this rrnnlh.
Thr jury examined a total of nine cases.

Canoe race open for entries
GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce, Bob
Eyans Farms Canoe Uvet)', and Long John SUvers Seafood Sho~
art' sponsoring thE' Americas Cup of canoe races as part of this
yea ( s River Recreation Festival.
The race will be hE'Id Friday at 4 p.m. at the riverfront andwlll he
open to all residents of Gallla County. The raC{, course involves a
d('('p wa ter start, four straight paddling sections and three turns.
Separa te heats will be run If team registratiOns exceed 10.
Par1icipants should be 18 years old or older.
Bob [ ,·ans Farms Canoe Livery wlll provide canoes. life jackets
and paddles. Awards are being provided by Long John Silvers.
Official entr,• and waiver fomrs may be obtained from the
Ga llipoli s Arra Chamber of Commerce at16 Stale St.

,chief.
Son Fleming, 56, was granted a
repr1eve by the 11th U.S. Circuit
Coort of Appeals in Atlanta hailing
Friday's schedule!tl'Xecutlon and
was moved back to death row from
a ready cell near the electrtc chair.
The state attorney general's
office asked Supreme Court Justice
Lewis Powell to overturn the stay,
but the court was not expected to
act on the motion before Monday.
Fleming's lawyer, Ken Shapiro,
said the inmate has sulfered three
heart attacks on death row and his
condition worsened Tuesday with
the execution of Jerome Bowden, a
mentally retarded man convicted

Tobacco lease deadline Tuesday
GAL LIPOLIS - Gallia County tobacco producers are reminded
~ : 30 p.m. Tuesday is the deadline for leasing tobacco to or from a
farm for thr I9R6 crop year.

Meigs petit jury cancels session
POMEROY - A mffting of members of the petit jury !l'beduied
for Mond a)· in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court has bPen
ca nrrllcd and jurors are not to report.

Mullins Brothers set for show
GALLIPOLIS - Following an appea ranre earlier this week on a
~ashv ill e radio sta tion, the Mullins Brothers are now rehearsing for
th!'ir next live appearanC!' in the country music capitol.
The spot on WSM Radio provided the brotllo&gt;rs with their first live
radio appearance and thl:'ir first win on lllo&gt; station's "Big Brrok"
contest at the Stockyard Restaurant in Nashville.
Thr group is now scheduled for a r~urn appearance In the
semi·fina l competi tion July Sat 9 p.m. Winner cithat round WUifP to
the finals Aug. 12 for a chance to win a major recording contract, a
book ing engagement at the Stockyard, an appearance oo "Nashville
Now·· and a performance at ltv' Grand Ole Opry.
·'We've be&lt;&gt;n In a few tri-state contests but this could be rur big
break." explained Randall Mullins. ··we would like to thank all the
readers who have turned into listeners. and knowing you folks will be
tunf'd in on thr 8th just might help us win again."

·Accident hospitalizes Meigs girl

dtherobhery·murderofawoman worklnghlslastshiftbeforemovtng
In 1976.
to Florida.
Fleming, his nephew, James
The circuit court granted F1em·
Fleming, and friend, Heney Willis, lng wr Indefinite stay of executiOn
killed Ray City, Ga., Pollee Otief until 11 can hear Shapiro's argu ·
James Giddens In 1976 while re was ments that his client was tried

Jim Cobb .
Chevrolet Oldsmobile
Cad ac

TRUCKLOAD
OF
. RED RIPE ·

3
BIG
DAYS
Tuetday, llednetday&amp; Thartday

WATERMELONS

July 1, 2 atd 3

OPEN JUL-1 4th
8 A.M. nL 10 P.M.

Pomeroy, Ohio
614-992-6614
Presents

GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallla
Coonty men were arrested and
placed in the county jail Friday and
Saturday for drug trafficking.
Richard K. Booten. :!i, Rt. 1,
Bidwell, was arrested Friday night
for two counts of selling marijuana
and two counts of selling cocaine
tx&gt;tween Novemherl985andFebru·
ary of this year, according to the
Common Pleas arrest warrant.
Arlie R. Frye, 29, Addlscn, was
arrested Saturday morning for one
count of selling marijuana.

OVEI FACTOIY INVOICE

AftRAOE
PRIClS GOOD
AU WHIC

Novas

GALLIPOLIS - One Galllpolis
Volunteer Fire Department truck
responded to an automobile fire
Friday night on Portsmouth Road.
According to tllo&gt; statiOn report, a
1981 Ford pick-up, owned by Joyce
Gibson. Rt. 2, Vinton, caught fire at
7:58p.m. in front of WJEH·WYPC
Radio studios.
Gasoline, \\1rlng and hoses werp
Ignited as a result of a broken fupl
line. No damage es timate was
made.

99

25 LB.

thevettes

Fire damages truck

I

for arguments.
,·
ShapirO said the trial was unla!£ :
because tlv' original (J'osecutO( •
turned down eight of 10 potentia! :
black jurors for no reason
•

~jj;;;;;;;;;;____iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•

2 jailed on charges

'

•'

W1fairly .Thecourtdldnotsel adat~ :

and Delta 88's
and all Demos.

CRIMSON
.SWEET
EACH

This Week Only!
Sale ends Sunday 29th

•t

POMEROY - A 2-ycar-old Tuppers Plains girl was struck by a
car Friday night on Ohio 7 In Orang&lt;&gt; Township.
Mary A. Rankin walked out in front of a southlxlund car driven b&gt;'
Jeffrey B. Shriver. 21, Reedsville, according to the state highway
patrol. Thr patrol said Shriver swerved in attempt to avoid striking
Rankin but was unable to avoid contact.
Troopers said Rankin had seriOus visible Injuries and was taken to
Ca mden-Clark Memorial Hospital. Parkersburg, W.Va., by tlv'
Tuppers Plains Emergency Squad .
A Camden-Clark spokesperscn sa id Saturday that Rankin was
taken to their hospital but was then transferred to Childrrn's
Hospital, Col umbus. where slv' was listed in poor condilbn in the

$129

SUPERIOR

SALE STARTS SUN., JUNE 29, ENDS TUES., JULY 1, 1986

LUNCH MEATS

POLISII

SACE

I LB. PICO.

SLB. PICO.

$499

in rrnsivP care unit .

Theft from city business probed
GALLIPOLIS - Cit y police are investiga ting the theft of a
40-gallon drum containing aluminum cans and a piDne bell from
Hi·Lo Oil. 1188 Eastern Ave. on Thursday or Friday.
Carl Blnwr. manager of HI-La, reported that the theft took place
some time betwl'f'n 11 p.m . Thursday and 5 a.m. Friday.
In or t.or policr news. Thomas Hogan. 19, Mount Clemens, Mich ..
was citf'd Friday for squealing tires.

mu
17

~

2.99

~or 99C

Liberty Sa~ings .
~ For All With·fi.~

Candy Ban

50 baas to 1!'1
20-30 cat: container.

Variety lo
choose from .

Specials.~-~·

3.44 G2J

APIU

~--·

·women's Summer Purses

siZes 10·13.
Our 1.17, 6 l'n. loyw'l'llbo
locn; '~- J.ll, 1.47

20°/o OFF REG. PRICE

Chair Pads ..

CHUCK ROAST

FULL CASE

HALF CASE

*6

*3

S.2.97

TOMATO

JUICE
12/42 oz.

3Pkg~5

L
E

.t4

Aluminum Foil
Perfect for freezing,

OUI 2.27 Ptrg. • ooltllght bulbi In vour choice of
40·. 110·, 75-, 01 lOD·W. Stock
up at this great price.

blkin&amp;, cookin&amp; foods.

HALF
JASE

~2

HALF CASE

$ 89

*7

$350

CASE

CASE

ITEM

SUMMER SANDALS
OFF · REG~ PRICE .
Sa~e No~•Liberty Sa~lng1 For All

20°/o

.4

White And

Cotoo

~

Sale I'm eat. lnterlo! point; not whHe,
cotoo far walls 01 e"NnQ whne onty.
J\)1 ··· · ... Gat., 7.91
, .... ~- ..... .. JQ5 . .. Gat.,1Q.I7
lxt.iorGioet. OM llaJIIiPrtmlf •. lal., 10.17
JQI.

lo-Mft--·

24.97 ,~":'.
......
.
.
- 4 • 00 Rebate
Cool
20• 97 '"'" NolAlbole

DOROFARE

CATSUP

32 oz.

Coleman 40-ft. capacity

1'10ROFARE

121
18 oz.

241
10 1/c oz.

24/.

241
16 oz.

Me~
lllbOIIf-.o Ill""'~~

Cooler Chest.
Sold in Sportinc Goods

tAR·B·QUE
SAUCE

STORE HPURS
Mon.-Fri. 9 to 8

Tues., Wed,
Thur1. 6 S•t.

16 oz.

OOROFARE

lif,IC. or C.S.

CORN
. '

CASE

HALF
CASE

.nEM
LIGIIT

241
16 oz.

4 oz•.

12/

FUU

$sao

THOROFARE eREEtl

LIMA BEAMS

BEAMS

24/

241
16 oz.

1m

&amp;COKE

IR

~

*4 *2
QUANTITY

FUlL
CASt

HALf
CASE

ITEM
HSHIS

6/

LOYALTY

241

HAMB..HR

12/
•
S2 oz. •1

SO/

NA~Y

BEANS

tsso TOMATOES

DILL SLICES

BAUARD

*tooo tsao BISCUITS
$SOO'

POPf.YE

SPINACH

FULL

CASE

241
15 oz.

s 1~.

"oz.

HOTDOG

POP
6/2 LITER

10/S LB.

FULL CASE

241

67

OEMERIC

FLOUR

QUANTITY

DINNER BElL

ASST. R.AVORS

2S LB. BAO

HALF ·

HALF CASE

*6 · *3

THOROFARE

.SUGAR
FULL

FUU CASE

LB.

12"x25'.
QUANTITY

FRUIT48/VtDRINKS
PIIITS

$ 09

DOMINO

THOROFARE
APlU 14 I

OAILY'S ''LITTLE HOG"

BAKED BEANS
oz.
with tubular stack frame .

OCI'fllcipolyesiOf/nylon. FW

SLB. PICG.

BONELESS

Childr111'1 Stacie Chain

Our 6.27 Pkg. 6 ..... ....,.,

lube IGCIII o1 eosy..:are

.

49

ALLENS O~EN
12/28

61 . &amp;I

t5

SLB. BOJ

Trash Baas

Big Ban~/

Women's Dress Heels
SAVE 2 QOfo. 30 %.40 Ofo IEG~~~ICE

unn•FtS•

241

hz.
241
f4 u.

ldOLE

ttso DILL PICKLES

t6

oz.

$1

HALF

CASE

�Page-A-8-The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-GaHipolis, Ohio.-Point P1a_,t. W. Va.

INitiiT

U.S. appeals court delays
espionage . trial for 1 week

@·

Engineer James Baird said Saturday. 1be road wll
be opened to mallltalned traffic later lu the week.
Local traffic can use either IngaDs Road (Coonty
Road 29) or NorthuP'Patrlol Road (Counly Road 00)
as detours, as Indicated lu the map above.

BRIDGE CLOSING SET - Uncoln Pike (GaJDa
County Road 40) wDJ be closed allhe hoilorn ll Niday
hiD (approximately 0.6 mile south !l Ohio 141)
Monday at 6: SO a.m. to replace a!unctlonallyobsolete
bridge wllh a COinlgaled rnellll arch pipe, County

June 29, 1988

By PAMElA A. Maei.EAN
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) - A
federal appeals court ordered a
week's delay In the Jerry Whit·
worth espionage trial so It could
rule whether the trial . judge had
Improperly undercut the pro&amp;eCU·
"lion's case, as prosecutors contend.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court d
Appeals Frklay ordered the trial
halted ·untU July 7 to allow
proS&lt;'Clltnrs to argue that a rullng
from the bench gJves the accused
spy a "significantly greater chance
d acquittal."
Govel'lllnellt attorneys wUI urge
the appeals court to erase U.S.
District Judge John P. Vukasln's
decision that pl'OSl'CIItors must
prove Whitworth knew Navy secrets he allegedly stok&gt;werepassed
along to the Soviet Union.

team. They have contended
tl\rol,lghout ttl&gt; three-month trial
that Whitworth did not know
tntlnnatlbn l)e allegedly passed to
Walker was going to the Soviets.
They suggested In repeated
questioning of witnesses that Whit·
worth belleved the material was
sold to Israel oc the military
llJbllcation Jane's Fighting Ships.
The appools court order wa.s
Issued atly two hours after govern·
ment attorneys sought the delay
and asked tor a ruling tram thi;'
higher court.
It also delayed tor a week the
sch~led start of closing argu·
ments on Monday.

Section riD

•

'

Ohio man charged
ELKINS, W.Va. tUPil - A
Lancaster. Ohio. man races mari·
Juana charges after pollee arrested
him and confiscated more than 2'30
pounds of the Illegal weed.
Richard Pentrack was charged
wlth possession with intent to
deliver controlled substances Wed·
.nesday night.

Fot1eiting bonds for speeding
were Keith R Miller, 22, Columbus,
$14; Jack 0. Waugh Jr., 22. St.
Marys, W.Va., S~; Paris H.
Roland. 39, Athens. $45; Timothy A.
Auxier. 28. Graytown, $41 ; Allison

Z. Haw kins. 22. Columoos, $39;
.James B. Simpson, 18, Proctorville,
$43; Billy L Gipson, 45, Cin cinnati,
Sn: Hallie E. Miller Jr., U, Grove
City, $40: Michael S. Dunlap, 23,
Sy lvania. W : J a mes A. Weher,19.
Indianapolis. Ind .. $:Il; Frank W.
Kalman Jr., 46. Twinsburg. $38:
Larry S. Cadle, 37, Oendenln,
W.Va., S&lt;W: Lori L. Stewart. 19,
Syracuse, $41: Arnold J. Fields, 53,
Charleston. W.Va., $44; J ames R
Theaken, 59, Charlotte. N.C., $41 ;

'
Vukasln ruled Wedhesday the
government was bound by the strtCt
language d the Indictment that an
espionage convlctkm was dependent on the government ha~
proved that Whitworth lmew tile
Soviet Union received the !lee~
he allegedly stole.
:
The judge refused Friday ·to
overturn hls order.
;
Whitworth. 46, Davis, Calif., 1$
acrused of passing Navycrypt1:111'a·
phlc secrets to the Soviet Union
through confessed spy ring leader
Walker between 1974 and 1983 Ill
exchange for $332,(00. He also laces
tax evasion charges.

RD'UALIS'OC WORK - 1&amp;11

waa a banner year In rltuall811c
work for the Melp County
Pomona Grange. '~be degee
learn was so oulll&amp;anllnl that II
waa Invited lo coafer the fifth
dep:ee at lhe Nllllooal GraniJ:I!
Cooference held In Columbus.
NeiBe Vale waa master, Gerald
Hoffner, the organist, and the
group Is pictured with Mr. and
Mn. Waller Kirk, the state
master and Ids wUe, and Mr.
1111d Mn. Lewis Tabor, the
nallonlll lll88ler and Ids wUe,
back row. Makmg up lhe team
were left lo right, front, Dorothy
Gill, Wanda Slarkey, Betty
Story, Je1111 Radford, Bemlce
Sllyder, Enuna Marie Bolton,
Md Dorothy ColweD; 1111d back
row, Eddie Uw Howery, Lucy
dol Dye, Adrian Holcomb, J&gt;o.
rotJcy Morrison, (Mrs. Vale,
master) Glenna Clark. Deloris
Nelson, and Hoffner, organist.

r----------------------

Star prosecu tlon wltntss John
Walker, confessed spymaster of an
espionage ling, has testified that he
'
never told Whitworth that SEC)'('!
David w. Paugh, 27, Sallsson, $41;
Navy codes and other lnilrmatlon
Karen s. Gentry, 36, Milford, $44; were relng handed over to ttl&gt;
Jeffrey J ustice, 28, Columoos, $43; Soviets.
and· Nettle , J. Daniels, 52, Rt. 2,
The judge's order was a major
r_B_id_w_
el_I._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _v_Ic_to_ry_to_r_Whl_t_wo_rt_h_'s_de_re_n_se~

If your condition is causing you
concern, you'd better not wait ...

POOLS SUPPLIES
AND CHEMICALS
IN STOCK
CPC CHEMICALS
900f. AVAILABLE

CHLORINE

m1n.

IIR•allmal IIIUDJifM
S65 JACKSON PillE

GAWPOUS

CH

Grange centennial: 100 years of fellowship, service

LET

CONVERSION VAN

URGENT CARE
CENTER

Custom conversion by Century Motor Coach, finished In dark blue
with light gold metallic striping, loaded with equipment Including
v.s engine, auto. overdrive trans., p-steerlng &amp; brakes, air cond.,
am·lm cassette stereo, tilt wheel , cruise control, del ay wipers,
power windows. p-door locks, 4 Captain's chairs. folding rear
couch, corner close~ lee box, window blinds, 6 bay windows,
lighted ruMlng hoards, Continental ·spare tire kit. rear ladder,
rally wheels &amp; new radlaltlres. This Is our own previous rental van
and is prtced to sell.
.

FAMILY PRACTICE AND PEDIATRICS

HOLZER
CLINIC

- J U L V C"l

Get Your
Pool Ready
for July 4th

1

..

Just

LOCATED AT OUR MAIN CLINIC
ON AT. 35 IN GALLIPOLIS
PHON•••I-1117

~~

'9' 90000

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY, 5:00P.M. TO 9:00P.M.
WEEKENDS AND HOLIDAYS 1:00 P.M. TO 9:00P.M.
' NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY

$140,000 INVENTORY OF MEN'S &amp; LADIES'
WEAR WILL BE SOLD AT CITY HALL AUDITORIUM
(old senior high buildi.ng) LOCATED 2 BLOCKS
ABOVE MEIGS INN ON MAIN Sl.

York Clothing
House

· SALE STARTS PIOMPn Y AT 9:30 A.M.
MONDAY MORNING

.

.

June 29. 1986

Area court concludes
traffic cases
.
GALLIPOLIS- AGallia County
resident was fined $!ll plu s costs
and placed on probation for 18
months In Gallipolis Municipal
Court Frid ay aft er driving a motor
vehicle while under license
suspension.
Joe D. Wilmoth. 36, .307 Upper
River Road, was also senlenced to
serve six months In Gallia County
Jail. but the term was suspenck&gt;d
during his proba lion.
Two counts or carrying a con·
cealed weapon against Charles M.
Javins, 24, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, wer€'
dismissed as misdemeanors and
refiled as felonies at the request of
the city solicitor. A separate charge
of theft agalnst Javins was dis·
missed at the solicitor's ri'Oursl.
A case charging Billy G. Long·
worth, 31 , Rt. l Bidwell, with
possessing fireworks for retail sale
was dismissed due to an improper
serving of the cou rt summons.
Fine and costs were suspended in
a case trYing Wllliam K. Brogan.
22, Nitro. W.Va .. for driving a rmtor
cycle without eye protection.
Johnnie McCoy , 19, Rt. 2. Gallipo.
Us, was fined $17 for carrying an
open container. Fined $10 for
speeding was John E. Gills Jr., 64,
3ll Third Ave.
Gary K. Callahan. 34 , Eureka
Star Route, for driving an unsafe
velllcle; and Tony W. Floyd, 34, Rt .
4, Gallipolis, defective exhaust;
each !ortelted $40 bond.

.

By CHARLENE HOEI'UCH
Tlme&amp;Senltnel Staf1
POMEROY - A celebration of
the centennial d the Meigs County
Pomona Grange. organized on
June 20, 1886, wJII he held at 6:30
Monday evening at the Grange hall
on the Rock Sprtngs Fairgrounds.
Following a family style picnic on
the grounds, a program w!U he held
and among those to he.honored are
three who have been members or
.the organl2atlon lor more than 70
years.
· The oldest In membership Is
Maude Holcomb, 76 years. wlth
: ·: Homer and Belva Willard running a
: · : :Close second with 70 and 74 years
· . .;respectively. ·
· ·; : Also t,o he recognized are past
· masters. Fred Goegleln. 1944-1951;
Stanford Stockton , 1963-1970 and
~979J~; Robert Reed, 1981·'1983
a nd ·the presiding master, Paullne
Atkins, 1984,19fl6; and deputies,
Oma Starkey. Mrs. Atklns, and
Mendel and Ellzaheth Jordan.
Hl!l'l'ORY
The Idea of organized effort,

cooperative work and social tEtter· County Pomona Grange on June ll.
men! through the medium of some 1886 - 100 years ago Monday.
kind o1 organl2atlon Is as old as thr
There were 40 charter member.
human race.
the dues were40cent s, and the first
In this country these principles- master was the late E. W.
the principles upon wlllch the Rutherford .
Grange was rounded- date back to
pioneer days when necessity L'Om·
L~TYLE IMPACI'
pelled our forefathers to cooperate
Through the years the Meigs
lor mutual assistance and County Pomona Grange has had an
protection.
impact on thecommunltyaswellas
The Grange has been character· the lifestyle of Its members.
!zed and described as a friend of the
1n 1900 the Meigs County Grange
farmer. a promoter of wholesome Fair Board was organized and after
rural living, a supporter of com- holding two fairs at the Southeast·
munity endeavors. a legislative . ern Experiment Farm at Carpen·
force, and a frat~mltyd fellowship. ter and one at Albany. the Gra.. ge
Organized on a national level in turned Its support to the Meigs
1867, It alleviated . some of the County Fair.
hardships suffered by the farmers
Always concerned about youth,
In theyears·followlng theCivU War. State Deputy J . Harley Musser and
Just live years later the Ohio the Meigs County Extension Agent
Stale Grange was chartered and George Kreltler met with the Meigs
the following year 26 subordinate County Fair Board to discuss a
granges were organized In Meigs youth program, and In 1933, the
County with a "parent" group Meigs County Junior Fair, still held
called the Ohio County Councll.
In conjuctlon with the Sl&gt;nlor Fair.
The Council was dissolved and a was started.
charter was granted to the Meigs

Grange youth activities were
expanded as the country moved out
of the depression. Student loan
programs were set up, personal
Improvement, talent and the prince
and princess conies ts were started,
and degrre and drill teams were
organized. Meigs County's first
prince and princess sent tot he state
contest were Jerry Snowden and
MOdred Stockton.
Education for women, particu·
larly in the homemaking areas of
cooking and sewing, has been a part
of the Grange program as well as
support for legislat ion on women's
rights.
As early as 1911 the Meigs County
Pomona Grange passed a resolu·
tlon and presented It at the state
convention in Columoos suwortlng
the amendment to give women the
right of franchise.
Through the years the Grange
has been a k&gt;gislative pillar.
particularly on rural and farm
related Issues. The Grange has had
an impact on leglslatkln relating to
education, marketing, road im·

provements, mall and health services, as well as a variety of
conservation and other &amp;sues.
One of the oldest and strongest
features of the cooperative work of
the organization has been the
mutual lnsuranoe companies, de·
signed to provide protection to
Grange members at a cost considerable less than tltat provided by
private companies.
COMMUNITY SERVICE
Community service has always
been as trong forte with the Grange
wlth natklnal , state and local
projects relng canied out.
The Meigs County Pomona
Grange through the years made
large donations to the local polio
fund in the 19!1l's after several
reSidents were stricken with the
disease.
There were contriootions to the
Magnetic Springs Polio Founda·
tlon, the Red Cross, the Friendly
Hills. Grange Camp, the National
Youth Fund , to mentkln a few .
In 1900, a large contriootlon was

made to the new 4-H ooUdlng
constructed at the fairgrounds , and
suwort has been given time and
again to the Meigs Museum.
Members through the years have
contributed In various ways to the
local hospitaL Supplies and equipment were given from time to time
to Meigs General Hospital. When
Veterans Memorial Hospital was
buUt, the Grange took on the project
of furnishi ng a room .
For the past 10 years, members
have been making stuffed toys tor
the "toys for tots" program at
Velerans and annually give severa l
dozen handmade &lt;bllsand animals.
LOOK TO FUroRE
Monday night, Grange members
will reflect on accomplishments of
the past hundred years and give
appreciation to kmgtlme members
and others who have contributed.
But at the same time. they'll look
to future programs and proj ectsto making the next 100years just as
significant as the past hundred
years.

SALE' AT CITY HALL

-

NAME BRANDS AU DEPAUMENT

EVERYTHING MUST GO!

r

--...
1

.I

i It
I

$7 s

AU

Suits
All

Sport Coats

SJ6Q.S255

$2 S

&amp;

sso sa:~~i7S

Men's
Dress Slacks.
VAl.. S TO 145.00

Ail Weather Coats $40sn~~~iso
All

AU LADIES'

Winter
Jackets

Levi's

$700

$25
RIG. 170-1165

ALL ROLFS

Billfolds

ssoo

HG. 1!7.50
WAADIIOBf CLOSHS W/LOCKS
Full

(l6 I 21 I 611
wldttt 1'111 lhtlf • h•nglng

b~r

• n'llx lmum CIPICit r • btkld

tnMIIel SJtln Brown finish .

RIG. 132.00

$800
NOW

ALL

Dress Belts
¥AWES TO S16.50

AU

AU

AU AIIROW

AU AllOW

Florsheim
Shots

Sharf Sleew
Dna Shi1s

long Sleeve
Dress Shirts

Flannel
Shirts

$2500
llt:G. 190.00

S1700

$600

$600

$400

IIG. TO 169.95

lEG. 121.00

HG. 10 124.00

JIG. 10 111.00

AU AllltOW

ALL

&amp; SPliNT

Men's Socks

ALL JANnEN

AU JANTZEN

Swim
Wear

Hawaiian

Shirts

$600 .

saoo

REG. TO IU.OO

REG. 131.00

w•

AU JANTZEN

Shorts&amp;

Tennis Shorts

Knit Shirts

$700

$700

UG. 125.00

IIG. TO 121 .50

Sl oo

IJIIIT 12 I'IS.
lEG. 10 $4.00

SAMSONI11

Attache
Cases

AU

ME~'S

Pajamas
Robes

ssoo

IOLD SIJIOIIIGI 1110.1

SALE AT CITYtHAU

I ILOCIS AIOYI •101 1111
OIIMA.. Sl.

hM had the "Toys for Tots" project lor youngsters
confined to Veterans Memorial Hospital. Hundreds of
ha~~dmade solt·!!rulptured dolls and anlmafi have
been given to the project. Here one Is being presented
to Ultle Lana Barrett, two-yeiii'Oid daughter of Ann
1111C: Charlie Barrett, by Teresa Collins, R.N., al
pallenl Ill Veterans.

ilL

LONGTIME MEMBERS - Belva and lbner C.
WUlard hold Ihe record In Meigs County fort he rouple
having the ITIO!It years of membership In the Grange,
a combined lolal of 14-: years. Mrs. WWard joined

• ••

··.'••

;:

grange In Jt12 and her husband became a member In
1916. 1be eouple,IIIIU'l'led 68 years last rmnlh, wDJ 1M!'
lllilOIII the members hooored at lhe cenlenntal :
';
celebration ol Melp County Pomona Grange.
•

".'••
.•
'

Only ;
exemplary ritualLsllc 10-ork by .
Grange youth Is even oomidered ~
by lhe Ohio Grange for Its ' :
annual convention. In 19:15, when •
Grange membership here was :.
over 2,000, Melgsj:ounty's de· : :
gree team was Invited lo present .
the Rose DrW lor the sixth , •.
de p-ee al the convention in ·•·
Marietta. Paullne Aikins was :
the drll captain, Wid Catherine :
Shenefield, pianist. Making up
the team, left to right, were
(unknown), Carol Sal&lt;ier, (unknown), Donna Holler, Sharon
t\lldnll, Anna King, Melva Fae .:
Jordan, and back row, Barbara • •
Bolin, Rosemary Salser, Lana :
Tumer, Rachael Burbridge, •
Betty Leonard, l)nna llolln, · ·
Mildred Stockton, and Janice
Story, with P1111ine Atkins, driB •
ROSE DEGREE -

MEN'S

Basic
Levi's

Neck
Wear

SlQOO

$300

JIG. 126.00

YEARS OF CARING - One ol the moat
oulslandlng lealures ll Gr1111ge work In Melp Coonty
Is communlly serY!ce. Through the years oonirllJu.
tlons have been made Into almosl every sepnent the hospitals, museums, youth programs, Individual
fund drives, service and health organlzatkn11. 'Ibis Is
the lOth year that ihe Melp County Pomona Granae

,,

~~

REG. 10 111.00

VAlUES TO 111.

MANY OTHER lltMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION-PRICED FAR BELOW WHOLESALE PRICE

·SALE LOCATION:
CITY HALL AUDITORIUM

ELB

NOW

ENniE STOCI

REG.

ALL SALES CASH!
ALL SALES FINAU
NO LAYAWAYS-NO ALTERAnONS
. NO EXCHANGES &amp; NO REFUNDS
'WE CANNOT YARY FROM THIS POLitY .'

captain.

.
•

'

.•

.

�.·f:J:::u:::ne:::·:2::9·:1;9;:8;:8======~~======;P;omeroy~~-'-~M~idd~lepo~~rt~-~G~a~ll~ip~o~lis;·~O;;;h;;io~P~o;;;in;;t;;Piea;;;;sa;;;n;;t,;;;W~.~V~a;;;·=====Th~e~S~u~n~da~y~Ti~t~me~s-~Sen~t~in~e~I-~Page~~-~B~-3

Gallia book route given ·.:

·t Melinda Kay Hill becomes bride
~ of Terry Scott Patterson May 3 ·.

NOW!
'

We Reserve

Right To
. limit Quantities

AND EARN
MONEY FOR
YOUR
NON-PROFIT
ORGANIZATION.
IT'S ALL NEW

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

298 SECOND.·ST. ·
POMEROY,
OH. PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, JULY 5, 1986
'

AT

POWELL'S

$ 9.9
Cube Steak ••••• i:·••• 1

BUCKET

$1
39
Lunch Meat ...~·::~·•••

SUPERIOR

_

KY. BORDER

59&lt;
oz.
W·•eners •••••••••••••••••
12

PKG.

Ground .Beef •• ~~ ••••• 99&lt; Bacon ••••••••••••••••• 2I
COLUMBIA

_ oz.
12

$

1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Chuck Roast ••••••••• 89&lt;
. ARMOUR BEEF,·PORK &amp;
Chicken Patties •••• $)59
FRESH PORK BUTT ·
$· 39
Steaks/Roast........ 1
LB.

Now You Can
Help Your
Favorite
Non-Profit
Organization
Earn Money
Just By Saving
Your Sales
Receipts From
Powell's
Supermarket. ·

: RACINE - In lA ceremony at the handkerchlel which was carried by ·
•Racine United Metlxldlst Church~ the bride's mother at her wedding.
~ May 3, Mellndl! Kay HW, daughter ' She also wore a pearl necklace and
·of Henry and Kay Hlll, Racine, and earrings belonging. to. her .
Teny Scott Pattera&gt;n, son of· Jim grandmother.
and Llncla Patterson, also ()I
Attendants were Becky MkJns, ·
Racine, exchanged weddlr\g vows. maid of honor; Sonia Keams,
The Rev. Roger Grace per- cousinctthebrlde,andM:&gt;nlcaHlU, ·
fonned the double- rlng ceremony sister &lt;t the bride, brideSmaids.
before an altar decOrated with Amber Kearns couslri of the bride ·
baskets of white double petunias was flower gtri, and Grant -Circle;
and fern. Blue candles were used in cousin ,of the groom, was rtng
the windows. Music was presented bearer.
by Mrs. Lee Lee, organist, and
The attrodants wore blue floBrent Pattel110n, prather ol the
wered tea-length dresses, and tbi&gt;
groom, vocalist and guitarist.
flower girl was In a blue and white
Given in marrlagt&gt; by her parents dress and carried a white lace
and escorted to the altar by her wnbreUa co\oTed with blue silk
· father, the bride wore a goM~ of flowers. .
t;l!!eta trimmed tn lace with · . Best man for till' groom was
-embroidered floral motif. The Tyro!ll' Brlnager, Racine. Ushers .
neckUlle, worn off till' shoulders, were Jeny Wolle and Joe Roush,
•was fashioned with lace and puffed also of Racine.
.sleeves. The waist was accented
The mother of the bride&gt; wore a
•with lace and simulated pearls, and street-length gray and wh,te dress .
• the train fetured ruffles around till' The groom's mother was in a
.bottom.
lavender and white dress and both
• She wore a Juliet cap a lace with motlll'rs had blue double carnation
•simulated pearls from which fell a corsages surrounded With ooby's
·veil of Illusion with floral lace breath and blue rllilons.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Scott Patter.ron
A reception was held in the
• motifs. She carried a cascading
: bouquet of blue and white silk church social room. The bride's and yellow flowers and topped with bride.
. nowers. Arranged In her bouquet tllble featured a three-tiered tounThe couple res ide in Racine. The
the traditional miniature bride and
, was her grea_t-grandmotlll'r's lace tain cake decorated wlth blue, pink groom.
bride is a graduate ofSouthen High
Serving were Charlotte Wams- School, and the groom, also a
ley, Ca rol Wines, and Sharon graduate of Southern. served two
Kearns, aunts of the bride. Guests years in the U.S. Army and will
were registered by Teresa Wines attend Hocking Technical College
ann r."rl.&lt;"' Hill . rousins ol the rn the fa U.

Wednesday, July 2: Baum Addition, 2: 10-2: 40; Keno (No. side oi
Keno Bridge ), 3: 1Xl-3:30; Success
Road (near 39060 ). 3:45-4:15;, Long
Bottom (Post Office), 4:25-4: 55;
ReedsvUJe (Reed's Store l. 5: IIi·

Blacksmith class
has
openings
RIO GRANDE - The School of

•

:Kava/chic, Pietrick trade vows

•Everytime you shop at
Powell's Supermarket,
save your sales receipt
and turn it in to your organization.

Nectarines •••••••••••• 49&lt;
LB.

BROUGHTON

2

0/
/0

M.llk ••••••••••••••
GALLON

$ 149

59(
Ex.· Lg. Eggs.:~!·.•.•..
$1 09

GRADE A

$ 99 DAIRY LANE
Ice Cream .... ~'!~!L•···
Vmegar ••.•.•.• .":~:... 1
HEI~Z CIDER or WHITE

CAME.LIA-4

R~LL PKG.

Toilet T1ssue ••••••

2I $1

MAXWELL HOUSE MASTER BLEND

COFFEE
39

oz.

$669

linit I Per Customer
Good Onlr At Powell's S..rmarlcot
OHtt Expirtt Sat. Julr 5, 1916
STS·

SHURFINE SUGAR
SLB.
BAG

$129

linit I Ptr CultOMer
Good Otllr AI Powell's S.rmarlcot
m
OHtr Expirtt Sat, ..ly_S, I 916

BANQUET

TV Dinners ••••~:.o:••••• 79(
CHEER DETERGENT
147

oz.

$499

Limit I Per Customer
Goaol Onlr At Pnell's S.rmarlcot
OHtr fylrtt Sat. JulyS, 1916
STS

PAGE

•••
••
••

PAPER TOWELS
JUMBO
ROLL

3/Sl

limit 3 Por Customor
GOod Only AI Powlll's ~onnor..t
STS
•- OHer Expires Sat., Jvlr S, 1916

•

•••••••

•The official of your organization can turn the
sales receipts in periodically for a 1% CASH
REBATE on the total
purchase value of the
receipts turned in I
•The
more receipts
handed-in. the more
money your organization will receive!

OES chapcer co mee~
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline·
chapter OES meets Thursday, 7: J);
p.m. Past Matrons roserverefresh'·
ments; wear Past Matron dresses.:

; POMEROY- Linda Ana Koval·
chlk and Doogias Mark Pietrlck
exchanged wedding vows JutE 28,
at the Holy Rosary Catoolic Church
ln Newburgh, Ind.
The bride Is the daughter of
Ro!J'r and Sandr• Kovalchik,
Newburg, fonner Pomeroy residents, and tIll' groom is till' !Dn of
Francis and Ruth Pietrlck, Knoxviii&lt;&gt;, Tenn.
Maid of honor was Shannon I..N'
Riley, Evansvllle, Ind., and brides·
maids were Vonda Farey, Elber·
:feld, Ind.; Vicki Pietrick and Julle
. P letrick, Knoxville, Tenn., ooth
· 5isters of t IJi&gt; groom.
. Tim Noluch, Buffalo, N.Y. was
, best man, and groomsmm were
; Rn!J'r Kovalchik of Newburgh ,
. jlrottv&gt;r of tbi&gt; bride , Spenser
: Huston , Yonkers, N.Y .. and Leo
: Magrini, Dallas, Texas. Usbi&gt;rs
. }YI're Dean Malicoat, Jeff Barkley,
: both of EvansvUle, and Brian
· Kovalchik, brother of the bride,
:)'lew burgh.
A recepton was held at the Holy
l=losary Ca ttnUc Church School
talc.
The bride graduated from Hocking Technical CoU~e with an

assoclall' degree In mi..llcal assist lng and is employed by Dr.

l'hroOOre J . PavUck.
Pietrlck graduated from Holy
Cross College with a bachelor of
ans In economics and ·
1
•
IS a sa es

Homestead Living is announc ing
opening s In Be g inni ng
Blacksmithing.
Beginning Blacksmit hing begins·
July 14 and includes basic forge
techniques such as forge welding.
· heat treatment, scroll work, bending, upsetting, fuU erfno and draw•
ing ou1.
For Informat ion on registration.
contact RioGrandeCollegeat t6141

supervisor
Norton.
They willforreside
In Co.
Evansville, 245-5353 or toll free in Ohio at
Ind.

Tops

SJQOO

l-tro282-7:DI.

Summer
Sweaters

Skirts

In

5 : 50-7 : ~.

linda Ana Kovakhic Pietrick

•Have an official of
your non-profit organization (Church, school.
scouts, Jaycees, etc.)
stop in and register at
Powell's Supermarket.

Tuesday: CTRP, 11:15-11 :45;
Children's Home. 11 :45-12: 15;
Hunt's Store, 12: 500-1: 15; Eno
Store. 1'30-1:55; Africa Road.
2-2: 30; Roush Lane, 2:45-3: 15;
0\eshlre, 3:20-3: 50; Addison, 44:30; Addavllle School, 4:40-5:05:
R&amp;R Trailer Cl. , 5: 15-5:45;
Georges Creek, 6-6: 30; Kanauga
5th Ave., 6:35-7; K&amp;K Trailer Ct.,
7:10-7:45.
Wednesday: LeGrande, I0-10:ll;
Raccoon Trailer Ct. .10: 45-ll: Cora.

POMEROY - Bookmobile ser· 6: 05; Tupper's Plain s (Lodwick's),
vice in Meigs County Is broughlto 7:05-7: 50; Chester !Fire Station 1.
you by tre Meigs County .Publlc 8: 05-8:35.
Library under oontract with the r - - - Ohlo Valley Area Libraries.
Monday, June 30: Ca llll'nt er
(Laura's Store). 3:10-3: 40; Dexter
(Church! , 4:10-4: 40: Dan ville
(Church !, 5:15-5: 45; Rutland (Civic
Center) , 6: :ll-7: 30.
NOW
Tuesday, July 1: Portland (Post
Office) , 2:10-2:40; Letart Fall !EfOPEN
fie's Restaurant), 3:05-3: 50; Racine
(Bank), 4:35-5:35; Syracuse (Pool!.

•

LB

ll:15-IJ 30; J:X&gt;er Cr&lt;rk
12 : ~12 : 50; Ewington, 1:15-1: 35;·.;.
Allee, 1:45-2: ll:. Vinton, 2:45-3: ll; :
Morgan Center, 3 : 50-4 : ~.
•
Tlrursday: Centmary Junibo1.
ll·ll:ll; Nortlrup, 11:35-11:50; Old;
Bailey Church, 12:15·1:15; Hannart·
Trace Road, Dickey Chapel, 1:.10-2:·:
SR 1!10, 2:05-2:45; Mudsock, 3-3:ll; •
Valley View Mennonite Church, :
3: 404; Patriot, 4:10-4:40; Cadmus, :
4:50-5: 15; Gallla. 5::ll-6; Center ..
point, 6:15-6: 30; Centerville, 6:45-;
7:15.
:.
Friday· No route oollday
••
·
'
·
::
·•

Meigs bookmobile route planned

BOX

HERE'S HOW IT
WORKS:

Church~:

GALLIPOLIS- The Dr Sa muel
Bossard Memori al Library
announces Its Bookmobile schedule
for the week of J une lJ 10 July 5.
Monday: Pinecrest, ~: 45-10; Sun
Valley, 10:05-10:35; Quail Creek,
10:45-11:15; Rodney, 11 : ~· 11:40 ;
Jordan's Gas, 11: 45-2; Rodney
Village, 3:30-4 :15; Gallia Metro
Estlltes, 4: ll-5:15; Kerr, 5:ll-5: 55;
Bidwell, 6: 10-6:ll; Harrisburg,
6:40-7:05; Valley View Apts., 7:107:25; RloGrande Estates, 7:30-8:11.
L.

Sl 500

Point
Pleasant

$550

Oq

Per Double

ALl

Roll

Odd Lots &amp; Seconds

Bathing
Suits

Coverups

All Paper
American Made.

S2SOO

SJQOO

WE ALSO HAVE:
PASTE, BORDER AND AU
ACCESSORIES

•
!
:

0pen:.Mon. I hru Frr.· 10 a.m.
·5:30 p.m. Sat. 10 to 4
420 Main Street
Pt. Pleasant
675-6210

••

!
•
:

Jo Rice. Owner

336 Second Ave ., Downtown Gallipolis

..

t~;;;;;;;;;;~~~=~~·~~·~··~·~··~·~··~·~··~·~··~·~··~··~·~·;••;•;••;••;•;••;•;••;•;••;•;••;•;••;•;••;••;•;••;•~.•:
•

\,!,.~
&lt;~(),

~

~Broyhill •••

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.
OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTILITY

and

•Epidural Deliveries
•Tubal Repairs

·&amp; SNl'()fJ&lt;.
fURNITURf CO.

COR~IN

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

•

675-6700

lOCATED: Suitt 1I 4 Modi&lt;al OHko luilding, at Ploownl Valley Hospital
Peint Plll•nt W. Yo. 25550

•

I .:.

I

'

' I

,...,'\ ,:

Shop at •••.

POWELL'S
SUPER
'MARKET

·~·
:;;~[)t:l=

....and earn
money for
your organization!

S..lct •

A DIVISION OF RICE'S FURNITURE

STURDY COLONIAL STYLING

Action .

2 ROOMS &amp; HALLWAY $49 95
FRONTIER
CLEANING
SYSTEM
P.O. lOX 1170, GAlLIPOLIS
446·7470

JULY 1
THRU
OCTOBER 31

$

YOUR CHOICE OF THREE
BEDROOMS AT ONE PRICE .

-

L-'-"1...1_,_
-··-·o(_....,_
. . .. . -·..,.-

I~::.I
955 Second Ave.

~

~ ~ --- l-

799

lndudes: Triple DrtiMf,
lt'irrar, ,_,
Halbaar4 Clwst ani

Hutch

Ni;tt Stanl.

OO C~

COR~IN ~

SNY()fl&lt;.
fURNITURf CO.
446-1171

Gallipolis, Ohio

.

. •'

'.·
'

I

MAPLE OR PINE OR OAK

SAVE ON IHE FINES1 IN
CAIPO CAIEI

'

�Paga 8-~ Tha Sunday Tmes-S8ntinel

June 29. 1986\

P0fll8!'0Y-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plelunt. W. Va.

.

June 29, 1"986

The Sunc;tay Till*-ltntlnai-Paga- B-5 ·

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

I

· MANUFACTURERS' ~ -~
ALL WEEK
f
.

I .

··--·--······
STORE
.FOR DETAILS
---------····- ;
S~E

.

'

"DEDICATED TO SERVING Y,OU"

.

SMAlL END

U.S.D.l. CHOICE
BO..LEW ·

I
I
I

RIB
STEAK

I
I

I
I
I

II
I
•

ll

STEAK
u.s.D.A.
CHOICE

$179

ll

.

_/

$)89

PIICE SAVE.

.

PAPER TOWELS

3~~~~$1

FlESH LEAN

GROUND
CHUCK

19

SHUR FINE
GAL.

$149

89(

CHUIPT~N

DIP

WIENERS

: ·~

~

T·B

STE

u.

79C

BONELESS

·~~~~0

ttU NT'S

FIOSTING
MIX

POTATO CHIPS

Tomato

c:::·$ p9

oz.

Ketchup
44

oz.

~;:;:;;;::;;;;......-----1

SOLO

PINE-SOL
. LIQUID

3 oz.

BOX

3,'
I

CUPS
16 oz .

89.(

.

AU FLAVORS

----1

AUTOMA11C

liD IIPI

YANISH

2°/o
. MILK

~~

PARTY

.

. ::.S119
BROUGHTON'S

oz.

U.S. NO. 1

PlASnC

Ill IIPI
TOMATOES

-

sonv

HOT DOG
AND

HAMBURGER
. BUNS
.-

.
.

8 oz.

PIG.

49&lt;

.LJ.

59

• ·• • ·

WASII:INGfON
#-

"

.=_··

S119

HEAD LmUCE

S9C

BIG VAWY 20 0!.

FROZEN

HEAD

ifMoNAoEZ. 89&lt;
WAGNER

ORANGE
DRINK u oz.

69&lt;

59 (

ICiaiG

~~

$149

11

•
·
~-'------'---~

FISH
$199
STICKS 13 oz.
. .... ..,.,.
STRAWBERRIES

NECTARINES ·

.

CIIIIIIIS

Ll.

KINGSFORD

$199

,

20LI.
BAG

GAUON

liD OR WillE SEEDlESS

FIISH

GRAPES

BROCCOLI

SHOUT

STAIN
. REMOVER

11.

99C

IIIKH

79C

GE:DIGlA PEACHES

:Sl89

99 .(

_c,_._..;;.__~-1

100
J---

P:OTATOES

VAN dt KAMP'S

GENERIC

WHITE
PAPER
PLATES

$299

EA.

$119

LOIIFAT.IIP

~

Watermelons

BOWL CLEANER
12

LB.

PRINGLES

69&lt;
79&lt;

IIPPI.E

POTATO ~M;o"~
CHIPS

6.S 01.

KlAn 16 oz. BAG

MARSHMALLOWS

$179 N~G"l

$119

112 GAL

09

69C

LB.

SHU. flESH

14

11 _

CHUCK ROAST

PORK
SAUSAGE

Sl-39

Ll.
•

••

•

• •

=~~~D

$ .79
2
10 LB. BAG .

couNniY nME

CUTLERY
24 CT. PKG.

18 oz.
lOX

~~~:~L ~~- $1 79
POST

::~~

$169 .

:gxoz.

69 (

PRICE SAVER

ELBOW 32 oz.
MACARONI
PRICE SAVER

16

oz.

WIDE EGG
NOODLES
PRICE SAVER

n

PIZZA QUICK

SAUCE

PLOCHMAN'S

!}

MUSTARD

69&lt;

2

69(

01.

RAGU

I O.S OZ.

$139

14 01.

a oz.

79(

FIENCH,ITAUAN, 1,000 ISLE
. VlASIC

I'

DILL
.
RELISH ·10 oz.

..

YLASIC HAMBURGER

9
6
1----~-C-AR-ESS---1 ~~~~S

320Z.

BATH
SOAP

VLASIC

49&lt;

.~ARBECUE
SAUCE 21 oz.

49C

TOASTIES

LEMONADE u or.

WISHBONE
.....__ _ _
_
--t
SWEETHEART
DRESSING
HEAVY DUTY ASSORTED

--~

POST

$2 49
S2 99

12 oz.

CHARCOAL SPAGHETTI

•
'I

PKG.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

STOIEMADE

$

ll.

79 (

120Z.

f

2Oft

MILK

I . . ..

STEW
MEAT

· BROUGHTON'S

$129

BATTER

BONELESS

LB.

LB.

~' $119

FISH 'N

CHOICE

GROUND FIISH

$139

LB.

BACON

ENGLISH
ROAST

KENTUCKY BORDER

U.S.D.A.

19

SPARE
RIBS

$129'

Ll.

I
1

69C

LB•

DAILY

ICE
CREAM

LB.

$139

PLATTER

U.S.D.A. CHOICE
BONELESS

COUNJRY STYLE

CHUCK
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BOLOGNA ·

SEVERAl TIMES

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CHEESE

~.

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$179 i

LONGHORN

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IO.LESS

flESH

CHARCOAL ~

CHICKEN
STEAK

.:.

$199

ll

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RELISH

100Z.

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MT. DEW

59&lt;

S1 19
59&lt;:~
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8-16 oz.

aonLEs
Plus

D1p0sit

�Page- B-6~ the Sunday Times-Sentimll

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

Community calendar I area happenings .

Dagmar Celeste to begin internship
.

t

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Dagmar Celete, wife of Gov .
Richard F. Celeste, begins a
three-week internship at Newark's
Shepherd Hill Hospital Monday as
part of her seH-deslgned master's
degree program on alcoholism and
drug abu'se ministry.

·'

SUNDAY
KYGER - The BradburyJenkins fu&gt;unlon .noon Sunday,
KygPr Communlty Building. Bring
table service.
.
GALLIPOLIS - Cromllsh fam ily reunion has been cancelled due
jo' lllness In the family .

POINT ROCK -Victory Quartet
at Columbia Chapel Christian
Church Sunday, 2 p.m.
POINT PLEASANT- Birch!leld
reunlon Sunday, basket dinner at
noon, Harman Park In Point
Pleasant, W.Va. Swimming
available.

: RIO GRANDE - Outdoor wor-!bip service on church lawn,
Sjrilpson Chapel United Methodist
Church, Sunday. 10: ll a.m. Music
~ Steve Yates.

DEXTER - David Nelson at
Dexter Church of 'Christ Sunday,
10:30 a.m. Potluck dinner follows.

·.:::LECfA- Walnu t Ridge Church
~11 have Rev . Orville Canico in
jlervia&gt;s, ~&lt;ith the Stapelton Family
~inging. Su nday, 7:30p.m.

CHESHIRE - Kyger Creek
At hletic Boosters meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., KygPr Creek High
School.

: ·PATR!af - Patriot United
Church special setvicc
Su nday, 7:ll p.m. P.A. casta,
~astor, to speak.

GALLIPOLIS - Lighthouse As·
sembiy of God 'Women's Ministries
meet Monday,'i p.m., at chu{ch.

..•

~ethodist

MONDAY

- TUESDAY

•

: POPLAR RIDGE - Eddie Mol~oha n to be at Poplar Ridgl' FWB
Church, Sunday 7 p.m.

KYGER - Cheshire Township
Trustees meet Tuesday, 6 p.m ..
township building.

. GAGE - Salem Baptist Chruch
to ha,·e New Life Quartet in
servic&lt;'S. Sunday, 7 p.rri. Rev .
, .'David Saunders to speak.

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

BIDWELL - A laymen day
' service Sunday. 10:45 a.m., Mt.
Carmel Church, . Bidwell. Main
'· speaker eva ngelist Jerry Sims.
: Afternoon service, 3 p.m.. Rev.
; Jeny Madkins.

Cornrnunity corner
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Times-Sentinel Staff
: · So what arc you waiting for?
l Isn't the $50
JllizP enough to
you

to

.COmpete?
' Well, you have
;a liTtle more time .
:to come up with a ·
,"f&gt;omeroy fla g .
design.
: The deadline has been l'xtended
to July 10, but that's is- Chaimnan
'Mary Pol"ell reports.
: The contest is sponsoi«&lt; by the
Pomeroy Area Chamber of Com·
.inerce and the businesses are
~nxious to get a design, have It
reproduced on flags, and begin
hying them downtown
.Now, about that design - should
be no more than three rotors on a
background color. And nothing too
complicated. Remember it has to
be reproduced on a !lag. It would be
nice i! it depicted somet hing
specific about Pomeroy.
The judging will be done by a
committee with historic and artistic
abilities and we'll tell you who thcy.
are later.
So.... what are you waiting for.
Just this reminder.
The Ca rleton School buses on the
road are transporting men and
women to the Meigs Industries at
Syracuse, and the same school bus
stopping rule applies.
Just because schools are out for
the summer, doesn't mea n that
regular bus safety rules are
suspended.
Aft er five years of oorresp:mding,
Brenda Ballard finally got to met
her penpal.
Brenda has jus1 returned from
Portales, N. M. here she spent a
week with Sheri Heflin and
famil y. The two got "acquainted"
through Christian Youth Correspondence In Oc tober '81.
The flight to New Mexlro was a
''first" for Brenda and she has a
long story of flight changes,
cancellations. and layovers getting
!her&lt;•. But once at Portales, things
were grea t, she says. The temperarure oovered around a hundred but
s ince there was no humidity, It
didn't seem hot at ali, she says.
While there she and Sheri, who' s
just 15, took the family car and did
lots of sightsee ing.
But now il 's back to work. Brenda
for the past five years has been
employed at Arcad ia Nursing
Home.
The Gaul reunion was held In
Tipton, Iowa and the families from
here traveled there for the gettogether.
And this year was special. All
three of the "Victor Ga uls" were
there. Victor Gaul, !Jl, an Iowa
cousin, Victor Gaul, 41, of Washington C.H., a fomner Meigs Countian,
made it, and his son, Victor Gaul
Jr.. now ll, of Kettering traveled to
Tipton for the reunion. It was quite
an oo::aslon.
·
Incidentally, Victor Sr., Is a

Singer to appear
Rlli'LAND - Gospel singer,
Johnnie Belinda, will be at the
Rutland Church of God Sunday and
there will also be a baptismal
service following morning worship,
Pastor John Evans announces.

Aglow to meet
GALLIPOLIS - Women'sAglow
Fellowship meets Tuesday, Date's
Smorgasbord. Complete meal be·
fore 7 p.m. meeting with speaker
Marie Show.

POMEROY - Installation of
officers, Drew Webster Post 39,
American Legion, 7 p.m. dinner
Tuesday.

supervisor lor Hoover Universal in
Greenfield, and his son, works as a
body mechanic for Ford.
Jake and Mildred st U! spent the
winters In Florida and return to
Meigs County for tlte summer.

.

I
Ntabt .wDI IE Splns&lt;red ~ 0.0.
RtJI'LAND - Rutlind BoWbun· Mcintyre Pal'k-Dlstrlct at Raccoon
ters Tuesday shoots ha~ been Creek Coonty Park.
cancelled and Will be IEld lnStNd at
Chooile from · arts and crafts,
5 p.m. on saturdays at ranae- rec)'l!lltlon cr nature p-ograms.
followlng shoot hunting; videos will 'Nights are Thursdays, July 10, 17,
be shown at club house.
and :14, Time ts 7 to 9 p.m.

-

~

lleallb
GALUPOUS ·- Gailla County
Board of Health nEets Wednesday,
9 a.m., courthouse basement.
Deadlne set
GALLIPOUS - Deadline for pie
contest regl.stratk&gt;n Is July 1.
Register by application at County
Extension Office.
Runun~~~~:e

~Tot Day

SW~T GIOUP

· CHILDIIN'S AIHUnc

NilE &amp; WILDCAn
-SIZE$ 12 1/t·S

1/4 TO 1/2
stephanie Jeanne Deaver

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Alderson

Alderson anniversary to be noted
· MIAMI, W.Va. - Mr. and Mrs. Mrs. Alderson is the daugh ter ri the
Harold R. (Eunice) Alderson, iateJohnW.andArthaM. Hornsby :
Miami, W.Va., will celebrate their &lt;1. Gallia County.
They are the parents of l:k1nny R.
50th wedding anniversary July 18.
Alderson,
Chicago; and Lana R.
The couple married July 18, 1936
Ferrell;
Gallipolis
. Another daughat Charleston, W.Va. He Is the son
ter,
Annette
is
deceased.
They also
ri Ira Alderson and Ida ll. Rigg.
have live grandchildren and two
great grandchildren.
There will beanq&gt;en reception at ··
the Church of the Nazarene in ·
Miami, W.Va ., Ju ly 19, !rom 1 to 4 ·
SYRACUSE - London Pool in p.m., in honor of the annlversary.
Syracuse is ofterlng Jts second
session of swimming lessons start- . . - - - - - - - - - - - ing July 7. Childrm should be over
three years of age. Also advance
lifesaving classes will be' held
(1111
starting July 8. Residents wishing
mort · lnfomnatbn are to call
002·7717. Instructor is Zane Beegle.
11

Swimming lessons

Due to the July 4th holiday,
submissions for the July 6 edition ci
lhr Sunday Times-Sentinel should
be made no later than noon
Wednesday, July 2.

Never tkere lie
S116Gii1ttte ""··. .

RACINE -The Rev . and Mrs.
Stephen T. Deaver, Racine, announce the engagement and ap·
proachlng marriage of their daught~r. Stephanie Jeanne Deaver, to
Darryl R. Wilson, son of Mr. a nd
Mrs. Rufus Wilson, Frankfort, Ky.
Miss Deaver Is a graduate of
Federal Hocking High School a nd
the Cumberland College in Willi·

amsburg, Ky . Shr Is employed by
Cumberland Cbllege.
Wilson graduated from Franklin
County High School and Is anending OJmbertand College.
An outdoor wedding will be held
tbe garden of Dr. and Mrs. James
Taylor, Williamsburg, Ky. at ll
a.m. on Aug. 2.

Euler- Stump
RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Robert
K. Euler, Pinch, W.Va. announce

the engagement of their daughler,
Lori A., tD E. Gerald Stump, son &lt;1.
Mr. and Mrs. James V. Stump,
Grantsville, W. Va.
Lori Is the granddaugher of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold G. Roush, Racine.
~ nd Mrs. Ethel M. Euler, Letart
Falls.
' The bride-elect is a graduate of
Herbert Hoover High School and

Glenville Sta te College and is
employed by Augusta County
Schools in Stauntoo , Va.
St ump graduated from Ca lhoun
County High School and attended
Glenville State College and is
employed by Peoples Life Insurance Co, in Staunton , Va.
The open church wedding is
planned for 7:30 on Aug. 16 at Mt.
Tabor United Methodist Church,
Pinch, W.Va .

OFF
WOMEN'S
SANDALS

Charleen Jean Summers
Edgar R. Woods

Lori ~- SIDes

Lori A. Euler

Deaver Wilson

Early deadline

They like that - it give's Urm a
chance to cut grass year 'round, but
then there's no snow to slx&gt;Vel.

The !lrstlady's degrCP IJ"ogram,
arranged through the faculty oftlr
Methodist Theological School In
Delaware, combines study of the
Bible, theology , chu rch history and
mi11Lstry, with specialized courses
on chemical dependency Issues and
!&lt;lpervlsed field placements.

Can1t

GALUPOUS - Tiny Tot Day
Camp !!fSSJOn II is July 7·18,
Raccoop Creek County. Park. sponsored ~ 0.0. Mcintyre Park
District. Camp ts for chUdrm 4 to 6
years old. Actlvltle$ Include arts
and crafta, nautre awareness, sing
along, llliJlle5 and hayrides. Fee Is
S:!i per chUd and they sllluld bring
sack lunch. Time Is 9a.m. to 2p.m.
For Information oc reglstratk&gt;n.
call 446-4612 extmsbn 256.

sale
PORTER - Items for Porter
Church rummage sale next week
should IE brought to the John Fllh dinner
HARRISONVILLE - Scipio VoDuncan residence on SR 160, %
mile north of Alrter. Sale will be lunteer fire department Is lpORSOr·
ing a Captain D's ftsh di!Uier
there Instead d. 111 church.
Sunday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Cost $4
Swlnunlng le980118
adult and $2 children umer 12. All
CHESHIRE -Swim lessons wDI you can eat of !Ish, hush puppies,
be d.fered at Kyger Creek pool by cole slaw, !rmch fries and tossEd
the O.O.Mclntyre Park Otstrict, salad.
July 7 to July 18. Classes are 9a.~ .•
9-14 year old beginner swim; 9:45
a.m.. 5-8 year old IEgtnner swim; IOIIe !amlly l'alllln
10:30 a.m., Waterbaby Swim, 1-4
RACINE -John and Annie Cox
yean; old; 11: 15, lntennedlate Rose family reurion Sunday, home
swim and ooon, advana&gt;d beginner of Jim and Karen Werry near
swim. Classes last 45 minutes. To Morning Slar, Court Street Road,
register oc for Information, call Racme. Addltmallnfonnatkln may
446-4612, extension 256.
be obtained by Calling 9«9·29l&gt;.
Family night
GALLIPOLIS - Family Fun

Time's a-waistin'l

•

~ent ice

Rm'LAND - Rutland Village
Council meets 7:30 p.m. Tuesday,
civic center.

I

Board

The Sunday Time•Sentinei- Page- B-7

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gellipolil, Ohio-Point Pleesant, W.Va.

June 29, 1986

If IIAII &amp; CIIIOIII

10%-25%

Stiles - Hammond

OFF

CHESHIRE - Mr.and Mrs. Beauty salon in Gallipolis.
Hammond Is a graduate of
Ja mes Stiles of Cheshire announce
Southwestern
High School and Rio
the engagement and aprroaching
marriage of their daughter, Lori Grande College. He is employed by
Lynn Stiles to Ronald L. Hammond, the GaUla County Local School
son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald
The open church wedding will
Hammond, Patriot.
The bride-elect is a graduate of take place July 12, 6:30 p.m., at
Kyger Creek High School and Cheshire Baptist Church. A recepBuckeye HUis Career Center. She is tion wUI follow in the church
employed by Sheer Pleasure fellowship room .

Sy~m.

The Shoe Cafe
300 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.

I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~

ARE YOU
INTERESTED IN
GOSPEL MUSIC?

Swnmers - Wood
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. ~ Wed·
ding plans have been completed by
Edgar R. Woods and Charleen Jean
Summers. Miss &amp;tmmers Is the
nela&gt; of Miss Bonnie Morgan of
Faimnont, W.Va. Woods is the son
of Rev . and Mrs. Bobby Woods, Pt.
Pleasant, W.Va.
The open~hurch wedding will
take place July :ll, Bellemeade
United Methodist Church, Pt.

ll .

Pleasant.
Miss &amp;tmmers is a gradu ate of
Falnnont East High School and
attends the West Virginia University School of Nursing.
Woods Is a graduate ri Pt .
Pleasant High School and attends
tlr West VIrginia University School
of Nursing.
The couple will reside in
Morgan town.

Sanders - Tawney

MONUMIIII

Jesus Now Productions Would Like
To Promote Gospel Music
In Point Pleasant, Gallipolis &amp;
Middleport Areas.

If You Are Interested In Bringing Gospel
Music To Your Areas. Please Fill In Blanks
&amp; Mail To:

GALLI PO US - Plans have tJ&gt;en
completed for the marr1age of
Kelly Jean Sanders and Lawrence
Michael Tawney.
The open church wedding will
take place Sarurday, July 12, at

Gallipolis Christian Church at 2: ll
JESUS NOW PRODUGriONS
p.m. A reception will follow in the
fello~hip hall.
Rt. 2. Box 367. Point Pleasant. W. Va. 25550
Miss Sanders Is the daughter of
1. I am a Gospel ...uslc Lov8f_5outhern_Country__contempotlr;
Mr. and Mrs. Carl R. Sanders,
2. How many concerts do you attend a year1, _ 1_ 2_3 4 6_8
GaUlpolls. She attended GaUia
3. Price yru would pay to attend
S 3 $5 $7 - - Academy High School and Is
4.
'Mlich
areo
ore
yoo
!Tom
Point
Pleasant
Gallipolis
employed~ Johnson's PicPac .
_
_
Middloport.
Othot
-Tawney is tlr son d. Mr. and Mrs.
5.
\Murt
groups
would
like
to
hear
_
_
_
_
McKameys_Sponcen
Lawrence Tawney, Gallipolis: He
_ ___,iOIC.
RIO GRANDE - Blazer Family anended GallIa Academy High
Reunion Will be Sunday, July 6 at School and Is employed by GalllpoOTHER COMMENTS:- - - - - - - - - - - - - the Bob Evans Farm Shelterhouse. lis Foodland.
Potluck dinner at 12:30 p.m.
. . . : : : : : __ _ _ _ _ _J~:=:=:::::::::::~~:::::::::::~~~:::::::=:::~~~~~

CARPO CLEANING
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Chapel Hill Church of Christ ·
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Galllpolla, Ohio_4~6_31_ _

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w-..,,

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-

HUNTINGTON, W.VA. - Plymale reunion will be Sunday July 6,
Camp Mad Anthony Wayne, three
miles past Veterans Administration Hospital In Huntington. fu&gt;glstration begins 10: 30 a.m.. potluck
dinner at 1 p.m.
For Information, ca ll 446-4670 In
Gallipolis.

LOGAN
POMEIOY, Cll.

A Mmage'From The Bible ...
WHY THE CHURCH IS IMPORTANT
William B. Kughn
The S&amp;Yed Added To Tho Cllaroh
"Prai.!ing God. and ha•i"' favour with all the p«&gt;pk. Altd tht Lord lldd·
ed to the church daily such as should be (who were being) loWtd" (Acts
2:47).
1. The IJ'O'fth oflhe obllftb: 'The Lord" i.sGod,lnwhomtbecburclahad
ns U!VIne ongm and which was according to His etemll purpose. ''AddU"
denotes increase or growth. "The church " is mmed to in the AmeriStandard Version as "to them," and in the Revised Standlrd Version u
"to their number." embracing the ones who 'lhldly r«eiwd /Iii word"
and "were baptized," which numbered ·"about th~e ••ooualtd 101111"
(Acts 2:41), "Daily "literally means day by day. "Such .., 1hould bu11wtl"
were the ones rescued from sin by the power of God's word, ud belJII de.livered from their sins in baptism we"' separated unto ChriJt. Bel1,iPI·
rated unlo Christ, they we"' added together by the Lord, formula
tbe
church. The church, the body of Christ, experietlced arowth on tbe ylt
was established. As the grain of mustard seed, It continued to pow,
expanding its borders "in o/1 Judof!fl, oltd in Samllri4. altd ulltO tlw.
uttermrut part of the earth .. (Acts I :8).
2. The f•arowtnc" ud ''aam.," p - ue tltto ..,., 8oth laelude
"hearing " the word; "believing" the word; "repenti"'_" of sinJ; IIIII beiDa
"baptized" for the remission of sins (Acts 2:22,37,38). The Lord, "who
gi•eth the increcue" (l Cor. 3:6) continues to add to the church OD a "diJ
by day" basis the ones who a"' being saved in the wne way. The chuteh Is
equally imponant today, for the saved are added to it! The cbun:b and the
saved are inseparable!
SaiYldoa And FelloWihlp Ill Chrlot ·Tho Cllard
"Therefore l endure all thing• for the tlec1 ·, sd:e, thot t.W, ""'1 IIIIo obtain the salvatio• which i.r in Chri.!t l11ru with etrmal flory ...wtlw 11111111
that are at Ephesus, and the faitltfol in Chri.!t Jesru" (2 Tim. 2:10; Epll.
1: I).
.
I. "Sal..,tion " illhe otata of dtu..r.- IIIII ,_....,: Spiritual deliverance and preservation from sin a"' In Christ, and bein1ln Christ, 1ft!
in His body, lhe church.
2. The ''faitlf/ul" are Ia Chrlat: "Sainu" signify the saved who 1ft!
separated from sin, and consecrated to God In lhe church, while '1tdl!lfi'.l"
describes the action of the faith exercised by the uved. The ..,...,. ' and
''faithful" ""' the same who enjoy the fellowship in Chrilt, the cbun:b
where "redemption through hi.! blood... tloe fo,_r..,.... of silu... ud .. all
•pirirual bleSJing•" are (Eph. 1:7,3). ""SalWJtion ud "thefaitlofiJ" belnJ
in the church make the chun;h imponantl
Christ Ia The Satluar Of Tht Body· 'l1oe C....
"For rhe hu•band iJ the head of the wife,""".., Chrilt il tM Mild of
rhe church: and he i.! the ••viour of the body" (Eph.S:23).
I. "S•viour" lllplfloo lbe- who ... NH IIIII pa
••: Chrilt, bavina
given Himself on the cross, became the Deliverer and Pramer "of tiN
church, which is hi.! lx&gt;dy" (Eph. 1:22,23),
2. Clullt IIDcllfJod tltto chiutb, ooUIDa '- ..-rt uto ta.l: He preserved or perfected the glo~ of the church, lioelng ber from ''•pot "'
wrinkle or ony such thing' ao ILl to pmerve her "holy a114 willlovt
blemiJh" (Eph. 5:26.27). He will not deliver or pmerve any other botty or
church, but His own. The church is lmponut becaUJe It II the ...,. _.,
the Lord will deliver and p"'servel
·
For Fne Bible C&lt;lt••P IJIIdtDce Coane, Wrltlo".

Plymale reunion

Write or calr for booklets
showing memorials in full
color with sizes and prices.

F-350

6.9 litre diesel engine, 4 speed lr.tnsflission, P.steering &amp; brakes, am radio,
dual fuel tanks, West Coast mirrors, cab lights, new rear tires &amp; just 28,000
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Jam" 0 . Buah. Mgr.
Ph. 388· 8803

WHY PAY MORE FOR AN OFF BRAND
FREEZER WHEN YOU CAN SAVE UP TO
$1 00 ON A NEW HOTPOINT FREEZER•••
'

CASH &amp; CARRY- NO DEALERS

Mr. and Mr.r. Milton Brewer

Brewer
anmversary
to be noted

Let Ua Help You
Plan Your Wad.lnt

•

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Brewer, Rt. 3. Box 419,
Caillpolls, will note their 45th
)Vedding anniversary ,July 6.
Mrs. Brewer Is the formf'r
Pauline Day, and daug hter of the
jate Clarence and Lena Day.
Brewer Is the son of thi' late Rev .
and Mrs. E.E . Brewer.
• · The couple married July 6,1941 in
Gallipolis, the Rev. Jennings Cremeans officiating. They arc the
parents of two daughters, Jan
Duncan. GaUipoiL~ and Sharon
Elllolt. Dover, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs. Brewer are
members ri the Galli~lls First
Church -ct the Nazarene. He retired
from Sea rs of Gallipolis, and she Is
retired !rom Ga llipolis Developmental Center.
. The Brewers' daughters are
requesting a card shower for the
anniversary.

.. ...

.

, ...._ ......

· ~------

.......

~

could fill a book.

SJ995
Grooms tux FREE with 6 or more.

HASKINS-TANNER
HIIJRS
Mon. &amp;r.. 9-8
lues , Wtd , lhur
Sat g . ~

332 s..,ond, Gottipotis, OH .
614· 446-0676
t\kn"•

lfl eur

Siuc¥ JH66"

l-----------------------::-1

gealth Care:

I\What

you and your
,, f,UI!UY Should krtow ...
.

Get your

,.

I

Living Room
•Dining Room and

available
for seniors

fiNANCING AVAILABLE~ BIING YOUI TIUCKDILIYDY IXTIA - WI WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD!!

about the ~ges ·
in health care

we offer complete tuxedo rental
service to help you look your belt
on tha special day. Priced from

Job Bank

GALLIPOLIS - Looking for
work In today's uncertain economy
can tJ&gt; a frustrating and overwhelming experiena&gt;. In ftve Ohio
counties, people 50 a- ader, seeking
1\iU or part time employment are
benefltiJ!g,trom local Job Banks.
Studies show that older workers
have records as good as or better
than youngPr workers in terms of
Interpersonal l'!'lationships, depen·
dabUity and job commitment.
Business owners who hire older
wi!rkers lind that they can bring
stability to'lhe work plaa&gt; and they
olt8! serve as role mode Is to
yO(.nger workers.
11 you are plannlng to hire,
cqaslder the older worker. can
444i:'1!XXl and speak with the job
counselors at the GaUia County Job
84Dtc, located in the Senior Citizen ·
Center , 2:lJ Jackson Ptke.

What you should know

Hall Carpet
AS AOVlmSID
CIITH£

FOR

PHIL DOIIAHII
SHOW

614-446-7441
56 STATE STREET-GAUIPOUS
HOUIS lOiOO A.M. TO 6t00 P.M.

You know about rhe many advances that
have been made in health care in recent
years. But health care is changing in
other ways, too. Woiy5 that will alfect
how you and your liunily receive care
and how it's paid for.
Since ew=ryone will come in contacr
with the health care system sooner or
l:ttei; ir's important you wtderstand how
the sysrem Is changing and what to
expect in the furure.
Now there's a free booklet available to
help you learn about rhe changes in
health care and what they will mean to
you. The booklet is called "Changes In
Health Care: What lf&gt;u and lbur JWn.
fly Should Know, • and ir's yours free.
il&lt;oot!l&gt;l to )00 by

In clear, understandable language. it
will tell you about the new ways that
health care is being made available,
changes in health care plans, and the
new systems that are being tried to hold
down rhe cost of care.
10 get your free copy of "Oxmges in
Health~ • just call
toll-free 1-800-MED• .
NEWS. Do it tOday. Make .
sure you know about the
changes in health care
and how they will a1kct
you and your liunily in
1'
the furure.

1-800-MED-NEWS
Cwnry M«&lt;lcd Suckl):

We want you to know where health care is headed.

�Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Beat of the bend
By BOB HOEFLICH
'llmee-Sentlnel Staff
Foreanned Is forearmed!
We all know
that ''It can't
happen here'' but
It can.
Recently a five
year old Meigs
County girl and
her guest. an
eight-year-old girl from Kentuck)i,
decided to ride bicycles from one
home to another.
Now this is in a quaint . rural area
where there should be no problems.
However. enroute to the second
house, they stopped their bicycles
and moved to the edge of the mad
when they heard a car approach' lng.
The car stopped and two men in
the vehicle attempted to entice the
children to get Into the vehicle.
Fortunately, they had been trained
not to get into vehicles with
strangers and they fled to the rouse
to which they had been enroute.
Had either of the girls been oo the
road alone, it would probably ha,·e
been a different story- a sad one.
So- It can happen here and with
· summer underway it would be a
good Idea for parents to make sure
their children are accompanied by
other children on these little jau nts
no matter how safe and secure the
neighborhood appears to be.

June 2$. 1986 :

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

Go with the children; -~t can happen here___ _;,___ _
had caught an Oh\0 record, four
pound, 12 ounce small mouth bass
whUe fishing In the Old Ohio at
Pomeroy.
Howeve:·. Game Protector Keith
Wood burst the balloon by reporting
that the record In Ohio for a small
mouth bass stands at seven pounds.
eight ounces.
And to make It worse, Keith sa id
tha t that the fish caught by
Foulkmd was not a small mouth
bass but a striped bass and theOhlo
record for that type fish Is li
pounds, two and tJu·ee quarters
ounces.
Shucks! Wet!, Keith, maybe you

sbJuld have seen the one that got . activities w111 he held. Meantime,
away.
· .
" you can make a donatkm through
·- Jo Ann Eads 742-ll78 or Marcia
WhatwlththeblgJuly4thhollday ElliOtt 742-22.'33.
'
comlng up and aU that accompanylng action, you ought to have your
Teflnls Is up and coming In
blood pressure checked and you can popularity and ool only that butt he
de that oo Wednesday. July 2, a tthe
better you get the more profitable It
Harrisonville Senior Citizens Club Is. Some of those professionals are
building - that's the Scipio Fire knocking down big bucks.
House- from 2 to 4 p.m. Members
The Middleport Recreation Comof the ~utland Emergency Squad mission will be o!fertng tennis
wlll bern hand to check you out.
lessons at General Hartinger Park
And. bY the way, the Rutland beginning the week of July 7.
Squad Is opening a fund drive to Instructor will be Shawn Baker, son
raise $3,!XXJ for the purchase of air of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Baker, and
bagsforuseataccldents. Aroundof he Is excellent so you have a good

cpportll!litY to team the game and
the techniques.
·
Cost of Instruction wUI be $J5 for
one hour sesskms. You can pick up
all the details. bY calllng Shawn at
992-5523 or Judy Crooks at 992·2704.
Grandparents, you probably are
yielding more Influence on those
grandchildren than you mlght think
so hang In there.
The following was wrillen to Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Haptonstatl by their
granddaughter, Michele:
My grandparents' oouse Is very
old ,
It' s seen many happy days;

$ 19
•G.
26 .9•

Feohmu 1ofet y gri lle,

1&amp;1'11 carrying

ROLLING FAN STAND

liO. $10.99

Do keep smiling.

1 T•ar Over The C~r
I $49 hchCII'Ige.
O.tolltln StoN.

$8

1 ;olid lfate. VHF/UHF. AC operation.

I,.
-

noon.
Friday: Closed for Independence

Day.
Menus consist of:
Monday: Hamburger crumbles
ln cream of mu shroom soup,
noodles. buttered broccoli, biscuits,
fruit cup with coconut.
'1\Jesday: Macaroni and cheese,
beets, stewed tomatoes, wheat
bn&gt;ad, chocolate chip cookies.
Wednesdii,V: Pinto beans wor h
ham, cheese cubes. salad. cornbread, crushed pineapple in lime
jelto.
Thursday: Fried chicken.
mashed potatoes, green beans,
rolls. pear half.
Friday: Closed. Independence
Day.
Choice of beverage \11th each
meal.

Meigs seniors
announce
activities
POMEROY - The Meigs Eounty
Senior Citizen Center, Mulberry
Heights, has scheduled the following actlvltes fort he week of June ll
to July 4:
Monday: Square dance, I to 3
p.m.
Tuesday: Area Agency on Aging
Regional Advisory Council. 10
a.m.; chorus, l to 2 p.m.
Wednesday: Social Security field
representative, 10 a.m. to noon ;
bingo, Ito 2 p.m.
'lbul'!ldii,V: Ceramics, 10 a.m. to 2
p.m.
.
Frldll,l': Closed for Independence
Day.
The center will sponsor a driver's
refresher course, "55 Alive Matull' Driver," produced and
endorsed bY AARP, on Tuesday.
July 29 and Wednesday July 30.
from 1 to 4 p.m. dally. Training bY
Esther Smith, AARP volunteer.
Cost Is $7 per person and a
certificate will be awarded to those
completing the two-day course.
Some Insurance companies recognlze this course as a means to
discount for auto premiums. Call
the center at 992-2161 to register.
The Senior Nutrition Program ts:
Monday: Creamed chipped beef
on biscuit, whole kernel corn.
broccoli, vanilla pudding and
peaches.
'1\Jesday: Ham loaf, au gra tin
potatoes, brussel sprouts, cookie.
Wednesday: Sloppy Joe on bu n.
cole slaw, peas and carrots,
pineapple marshmallow delight.
'lbul'!ldii,V: Macaroni and cheese,
spinach, peas. fruit cup.
Choice of mUk, coffee, tea or jure
with meals. Call no later than 9a.m.
to make meal reservation.

·Open house set
GALLIPOLIS- A birthday open
house has been planned for Varney
Clendenin. All friends and former .
students are Invited to attend the
event, Sunday, July 6 at Grace
United Methodist Church. 2 to 4
p.m. Guests are asked not to bring
,gttts.

-~

I

: ! FOR

Gallia seniors
set events

I

lLOYD ADVANCES- Number two seed Ou1s
Evert-Lloyd returns a forehand to IeBow American

S7

122 . widt ,

n: long

SOllY, ItO IAIMCtiiCII.
Al LW"f J Pill SlOftl .

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I Choice ol country,
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Batteries ore not indudtd.

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casnm TAPEs

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Whitt or btige 40"
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Get 4 90-min. topes I I Eortllfone colors.
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U" " IWIIIIU, IIi. Ut .tt . , .

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Kat!Q&lt; Horvath during third rowld action at
Wbnbledla Saturday. Lloyd won. (UPI)

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games.
Rob Deer's two-outtwo-run home
run In the fifth tied the score 5-5.
Both runs were unearned after Ben
Ogilvie reached base on Detroit
first baseman Dave Bergman's
error.
The Tigers took a 5-3 lead with
four runs in the founh . Kirk Gibson
singled, Evans walked withtwOout ,
Chet Lemon and Pat Sheridan each
had RBislnglestochasesiJirterBUI
Wegman and Tom Brookens
greeted reliever Bob Gibson with a
two-run double to right center.
The Brewers loaded the bases
agalnst Detroit starter Randy
O'Neal In the first Inning. O'Neal
had to leave the game when Cecil
Oxlper' s line single caroomed o!f
his right collarbone.
Dave LaPoint tnheritol the bases
loaded situation and gqt Ogllvle to
hit Into an RBI!orceoutand BU!y Jo
RobiOO\Ix to hit Into an RBI
grourxlout as the Bll'Wl'rs took a 2-0
lead.
Kirk Gibson cut the Tigers deficit
to 2-lln the bottom of the first with
his fourth oome run In the last four
games and his ninth of the sea110n.
Milwaukee added an unearned

l i r~ed. Appro1c 18"

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OAKVILLE, Ontario (UPi l ( Leadlng money winner Greg Norman rt Australia , who barely made
the J&gt;.hole cut. roared into conten·
I tlon with a course record-tying
; 10-under- par 62 Saturday to tie
Andy Bean for the lcad mldway

I

through the thtnl round of the
S850.1XXl Canadian Open.
The 31-year-old Norman, who
won the Las Vegas Invitational and
the Kemper Open eariler this year,
had 10 birdies, an eagle on the par-5
13th hole and two hogeys to go to

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Screen print detignl.

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Grea t 1election of
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12 fOO.,

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Rebot• dtroh
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MEXICO crrv (tm) - When !IOOCer's ...,_event opened
one monlh and 51 malc:hee aao. Brazil wu favored to win Its fourth
World Cup.

Sl
Il11o.
st.•9
Clear, white or colon.
I 11 -o\ln&lt;e •ize.

But Bnrdl Is back home, and Sunday at 2 p.m (EIJI') Argentina
and Weet Gennaey meet bi m,-.-a A2Jeca Stldlum to
detennlne which team will receive the 101d pld F1Ft\ Wodd Cup
trophy from Mexico President M1311el de Ia Madrid.
In a pre-loumament poD oondueted amonr; l,tlt ol the 7,500

OllOFOUY•
I IEMITY lOfiOII

writers who came to Mexico, only 13 forecaat Aqentma and West
Germany In the final. t\rpntlna had 1001e support, but tile Germans
were pen 111t1e chance.
In Salunlay's third-place pme at l'llebla, pla,yed before a m&gt;wd
o1 30,010, France beat Belstum f.% In extra time on pills by
Jean-Man: Ferreri, Jean-Pierre Papin, Bernard Genl,lnl and
Manuel Amaros. Belr;lum's pah came from Jan Celllrm•s and
Nloo Ctae.en.
U West Gennaliy can ltAip Arpntlna. tlle11 II piQiablf wll )lin
BrazD and I~ as tllfte. time champloM. Its prrv1ou11 v1c1or1e!1
came In 11M and 19'14, while llllnllloed I!ICOIIIIIn 1N1 and IMt
Arlentlna. which woa at lane In 19'18 ud llnlllhed lleCilnd In the
lnllupl'lll compeWon In tt30, cantes tile addltlllaal ·~lblllly ol
Latin America - no European team 11M _, In tbe Weetem

Sl'll'f NIIIT

1milS'/WOMEN'S I PACIMIOIS
rtiiTl SCUffS

World Cup at stake today

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$10·

SPOIT AllllfTt

WIMBLEDON, England (UP! ) - Defending
champion Boris Becker encountered his nrs t taste of
trouble Saturday before advancing to the fourth
round rt Wimbledon along with Martina Navratilova
and Chris Evert Lloyd.
Two more high seeds weren' t as fortunate, trough,
as Stefan Edberg and Claudia Kohde- KUsch were
wiped out on another bright, sunny day, with the
temperature reaching 100 degrees.
Registers 14 Aces
Becker registered 14 aces, but· saw his service
broken for the first tinne ln three matches lndefeating
Paul McNamee of Australia 6-4, 6-4, 4-6, 64. The
service break came In the final game rt I he thlrd set
and cost Becker the only set he has dropped here.
The 18-year-old West German could be in i:lr even
further trouble in the fourth round when he goes
against 13th seed Mlkael Pernfors, the man who beat
him in the quarterfinals of the French Open.
Pernfors, playing his first tournament on grass.
advanced with a 2-6.- 6-4.-6-3, 6-1 victory over Texan
Sammy Gtammalva.
"To lose in the quarterfinals of the French rea Uy
hurt," said Becker. who has been knocked out of his
last fou r tournaments in the quarterfinals. "I want to
win this time."
Navratilova, In quest of a fifth successive
Wimbledon crown, swept the first 10 games In
clainnlng a 64l, 6-2 decision over Kristin Kinney, white
Evert Lloyd took eight of the last nine games to defeat
Kathy Horvath, 6-4, 6-1.
Navratilova has dropped 11 games in three
matches, and proclaimed a desire for someone to
provide her a challenge so she can work her game into
shape for an expected final against Evert Lloyd. The

run in the fourth the makethescore
3-1 when Loo Whitaker committed
an error on Gantner's grounder up
the middle. The error allowed Deer
to scan&gt; from second base. Deer
had singled and gone to second on
rookie Dale Sveum's single.

top seed next faces Isabelle Demongeot, ranked 118th
In the world, and Evert Lloyd. with bY far the tougher
draw , has to contend with No. 16 KathY Jordan.
Beat Uoyd In IB83
Jordan, a 6-4, 6-1 winner over Melissa Gurney, heat
Evert Lloyd In the third round rt Wimbledon In 1983,
the only time In Ci Grand Slam championships Evert
Lloyd failed to re~c h the semifinals.
"Kathy Jordan 1s dangerous," the Sl'COnd sreded
Amerran said. "I'm going to be real psyched-up for
her because I know she's very capable of upsetting.
anybOdy."
Edberg, the fifth seed and considered to be a strong
challenger hen&gt; because of his prowess on grass. ran
Into his personal jinx In bowing to Miloslav Mecir, 6-4,
6-4, 6-4 . In three career meetings, Edb?rg has yet to
take a set from the Czecooslovaklan, ranked llth In
the world.
"He played out of his mind and there wasn't too
much I could do today," Edberg said. "You have to
give credit to him, he didn't make any mistakes."
Kohde-Kilsch, seeded fourth among the women ,
has been bothered recently bY back problems and
offered little resistance to Italian Raffaella Reggi .
bowing, 6-4, 6-1.
Gels Pair 01 Breaks

A pair of service breaks enabled Reggl to jump to a
5-2 lead In the opening set. and in the second set
Kohde-Kllsch could oold service only in the fourth
game.
·
Mats Wllander, the second Sfl'd. defeated
Australian Mark Kratzmann, 64, 6-4, 2-6, 6-1. and next
meets wild ca rd entry Pa t Cas h ol Australia, woo
advanced with a 6-1, 6-4, 6-7 (3- 7), 7-5 decision over
American Jay Lapidus.

Blue Jays 7 Yankees 4
NEW YORK (UP! ) - Lloyd
Moseby slammed two home runs
and knocked In fou r runs Saturday
afternoon, leading the Toronto Blue
Jays to a 7-4 victory over the New
York Yankees.
The defeat was the Yankees'
ninth straight at oome, marking
their longest home losing streak
since the 1915 season, when they
dropped nine straight games at the
Polo Grounds. The last Yankees
home victory was May 25 against
California.
Jimmy Key, 6-5, scattered seven
New York hits to galn the decision.
Loslng pitcher Joe Ntekro, 7-6,
lasted only 12-Jlnnings, surrenderIng four earned runs on four hits.

Toronto jumped ahead 2-0 in the
top or the ~rst when, with (1M' oot,
RanCI' Mulllnlks singled and Mo-

seby followed wi th a home run to
right field, his lOth homer of the
season.
In the second inning, Niekro gave
up singles to Rick Leach and Ernie
Whitt before walking Tony f ernan·
dez to load the bases. Niekro then
wild-pitched Leach home and
walked Mulltnlks ro reload the
bases. Moseby drew an RBI walk to
raise 1he margin to 4-0. .
The Yankees scored In the fourth
on a sacrifice Oy bY Mike Easter,
driving In Don Mattingly, who had
singled, advanced to second on
Dave Winfield's single and moved
to third on an Infield out.
Toronto scored two runs In the
filth for a 6-11ead. Moseby led ott
with his second homer of the game
and Jesse Barfield knocked in a run
with a single.
Gary Roenlcke hit a two-run
homer in the bottom of the six th, his
third of the season, to cut the New
York deficit to 6-3.
Mets 5 Cubs 2
CHICAGO (UP! I· R.ay Knight
lashed a two-run, bases-loaded
single to left field In the ninth Inning
Saturday to lead the New York
Mets to a 5-2 victory over the
Chicago Cubs.

INonttan back in contention for Canadian title

AI.SO SOLO SIMIIATilYt
NtOilDtl Ml, ~~~ U."
U" WllllllfHI, IK.IIt."
24 "1'i1LUIAII, .C.I16.tt

. DETROIT (UPI ) - Lance Par:rlsh's strigle to left with two out In
. the seventh Inning scored Kirk
!Gibson with the tie- breaking run
and Darrell Evans followed with
1
•two-run home run Saturda y to give
the Detroit Tigers a 8-5 victory over
the Milwaukee Brewers.
Kirk Gibson started the seventh
Inning rally with a two- out spinning
grounder off loslng pitcher Bob
Gibson, 1-1, that Milwaukee second
baseman Jim Gantner mu!fed for
an error. Kirk Gibson took second
on I he play when the ball kicked oft
I Gantner's glove into soort right
lneld. Parrish followed bY drilling a
i single to left to brmk a 5-5 tie.
· Ray Searage relieved Gibson and
' Evans drilled a 1-0 pitch Into the
upper deck In right for his 12th
home run.
BUI Campbell, 2-2, picked up the
victory pttchlng the final 3 2-3
Innings without allowing a run and
striking out three. Campbell came
on with one out In the sixth and
runners on first and third . Roblli
Yount hit Into a dOuble play to end
the Inning.
The victory was Detroit's fourth
straight . and ninth In the last 12

I

~

~II"

June 29, 1986

: Lat~ Detroit rally gives Tigers 8-5 win

IFOLDAILE VINYL
I(HliSilOUIIGE

I IIG.
'''·"

Section

Becker, Lloyd advance
in Wimbledon tourney.

Their love Is ever prese-11
And I pray God hears my plea.
To let me mean to mY grandchild ,
What my grandparents mean to
me.

Well - you know how fis h storiPs
go.
The other day WP published a
plctun&gt; of a young fisherman ,
Stephen Foulkrod. who thought he

GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus for the week of June lJ to
July 4 at the Senior Citizen Center.
2320 Jackson Pike are:
Monday: Chorus, I to 3 p.m.
Tuesday: STOP/ Physical fit ness, 10:ll a.m.
Wednesdii,V: Crown City blood
pressure check, 1 p.m.; Vinton
Bible study, 1 p.m.; Card games, I
to 3 p.m.
Thul'!ldii,V: Bible study, 11 a. m. to

'imes- Jtntintt

lliiDWIIITIYEUYISIOII

1

handle.

.

Sport

1

I
I 12·111CII' POilAIU lUCK

3·SPEED 20" PORrABLE FiN
plo~t•c blade\, convert

But, somehow never seems to
sbJ)V Its age.
.
The door Is aways open.
And 1 feel so welcome there;
Grandma bakes ' rhy favorite
coo!&lt;ies,
Grandpa brings me new shoes to
wear.

I

in uort.

IOIIJ, Ill UIICJif(IS.

ISS
I So11e on 4-oz . bollle
I

IJLUSJJII'flmft.

Hemisphere.

6-under-par 210 through the rounds .
The 62 Norman soot Saturday
helped him to overcome an evenpar 1l on Thursday and a 4-over 76
on Friday.
"The cut Friday was at149 and I

had 148," said Norman. "I was so
sure I wasn't In, I'd deaned out my
locker, packed my bags and made a
plane reservation before Andy
North (woo had 149 ) told me.

4.

' .. ~

O'NEAL INJURED - Detrlot pltdler Randy O'Neal sulfered a
bruised collarbone and was removed from the pme against MDwaukee
In the llr9tlnnlnll: Saturday. He L&lt;; comfolied here by teammate Alan
Trammell, Tiger shortstop. (UPI)

Douglass holds off Player, hikes lead
By GENE CADDES
UPI Spons Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohlo (UP! ) - Dale
Douglass held off a charging Gary
Player Saturday with ~ 3-under par
68 on tbe Scioto Country Club course
and lengthened hls lead to four
shots aft~r three rounds of the U.S.
Senior Open Championship.
Douglass, who let! by two strokes
after the opening round and bY
three following play Friday, 11'·
fused to wilt as Player, six soots off
the pace when the day began,
sizzled the Scioto Country Club
course with seven birdies the first 12.
holes. Douglass has a 54-hole total rt
7-under par :.DG, while player stands
at 210.
Player, the PGA SeniOr Tour's
leading money winner, Inched to
\11thin two shots of the lead when he
birdied the 12th, but Douglass, who
·made the turn at 2-under par 34,

answered with birdies of his own on
12 and 15.
Player. needing only a par for a
6-under 65, which would have tied
the record for a Senior Open
ChampiOnship, bogeyed the final
hole when he missed the fairway,
hit his second shot into a trap and
then just missed a 6-foot par putt.
That (lit Douglass up bY five
soots, but the leader gave one of
those back when he bogeyed the
187-yard, par-3 17th.
Jim Ferree, paired with Dou·
glass, remained In contention much
of the day. Ferree was lour under
par and only three sools behind
after he birdied No. 13, but ran Into
difficulty and bogeyed the 15th, 16th
and 18th. He finished the round with
an even par n and a54-h0tescon&gt;of
212. tied with Harold Henning six
shots behind Douglass. Henning
had a third round 11).

Peter Thompson, with a third
round 11), was alone in fifth place at
214, foUowed by Chuck Workman
and Bruce Crampton , both who had
73s, at 215.
Player had five birdies on the
front side, starting with a Il- foot
putt on No. 1, and made the turn at
4-under par 32. He added birdies rn
the tenth and 12th and parred the
rest of the way until the ftnal hole
bogey.
Douglass had birdies on the 3rd
and 4th holes. lost a shot when he
drove in the rough oil the 5th, but
rolled in a 6-footer for a birdie on
No.8.
He birdied No. 12 with a 5- foot
pllt, No. J5 with a 20-footer and
picked up only his second bogey of
the day when he missed the 17th
green and failed to get up and down .
Chi Chi Rodriguez, who captured
the Senior Tournament Players

Championship last weekend, was at
216, along with Jack Fleck and Bob
Toski , whlle two-time defending
champion Miller Barber was
among a group of five at 217. That
group alsO included Ken StUI , woo
began the day tied for socond with
Feree.

Autopsy fails to
reveal .cause of death
SACRAMENTO, Ca!H. (UPI)
- J\n autopsy on the body ol.
Cleveland Browns delenslve
back Don Rogers, who died
following a "tame' bachelor's
party the day before be was to be
married, falled to plllpolnl lhe
e&amp;ll'le of death, a Sacramento
. Cooiily Coroner's spolresman
said Satunlay.

!Michael Andretti captures Chase Grand Prix pole position
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EAST RU'IT!ERFORD, N.J. (UP!) - Michael
1 Andrettl Saturday became the first driver to top the
100 mph mark over the Meadowlands course whi'n he
won the pole for the Chase Grand Prix at a speed of
100.W3.
Andrettl's father, Mark&gt;, was the second-fai!lest
qualifier with a speed ol99.74 mph, placing father and
son In the front row for the second time this Season.
The Andrettls also started In the front row In the ttrst
CART race rt the season in Phoenix, but Marlo was
the pole-sitter.
Mario Andrettl had won the pole the IJ'E'YloUS two
y!'llrs of the three-year old race. Michael Andrettl
earned his second pole this se~~son, with the. other

II.
ll

comlng at the Mlller American :mIn West Allis, Wis.
Roberto Guerrero, the fastest driver In Friday's
qualifying, could not Improve on his time of 99.412
mph and will start third, next to AI Unser Jr. Danny
Sullivan qualllled ntth In Rick Mears' bac~up car
after his Penske PC-15 Chevrolet developed
problems. The 100- lap race around tb? 11-turn,
l.lB-rnlle Meadowlands course Is scheduled i:Jr 1: ll
p.m. E111' Sunday.
"I don't think It could have run much better than
that," Michael Andrettl said oC hls Kraco-STP·Lean
Machine March. "1. think It (the track) mlght have
been a little more slippery than (Friday) , but I think
we.lrnproved our car a bit, so It sari of evenol rut. "

With Michael leading the championship standings
and Mario In third place, the Andrettls have been
dcimtnattng the CART circuit, with three wins In ftve
races between them.
"I think It's great," Michael Andrettl said. "I hope
we can keep It up, keep It In the famtly. I think It's
pretty much been a great year for both of us."
"We've atfuost got to pinch ourselves," Marto
Andretti said. "We'll' always going to cherish this.
We're healing the odds, that's what we're ~tng."
With Indy cars topping the 200 mph mark In
qualifying at oval speroways such as lndlantpOIIs,
Mario Andll'ttl said the average fan may not be able
to appreciate the significance of topping the 100 mph

mark at the Meadowlands.
"Someone could say 'I went 100 mph today on the
turnpike and It was no big deal,'" he said. "You're
golng through five gears here. It's over 2.000 shifts per
race. When you're dclng toose high sjl('eds, you're In
!ltlh gear the whole way. Here, you go from Il mph to
170 mph. You're always accelerating and
decelerating."
Guerll'ro said a broken drive shaft kept him from
tn ·tng to Improve his time.
"I only got a couple of laps In the car betlre It
happened." he said. "I was just sort of feeling things
out. It's a long race and we just hope that we can
finish ."

�..

: ·Page- C-2- The Sunday rmes-Sentinel

( Dodgers beaten

.'

Say what you will about the St.
·•
• Louis Cardinals. but )'011 can't
• accuse them of Inconsistency.
•
Game in and game ou t, you can
always count on them not to score
"We tried to bunt all night and
• runs. For 17 innings Friday night
against the Philadelphia Phillies, couldn 't,., I figured ""'d take three
they were the same inept team that swings at hittJng it," Herzog sa id .
• Manager Whitey Herzog has grown "And we get a strtkeout and t..u fly
balls."
•. "tired of.
In the American League, it was:
..,
"We can't execute," Herzog said
Detroit 4, MilwaukEe 2 In 11
~ after the Cardinals feU to the
.• PhWies 2-1 in 17 innings, snapping a innings: Boston 5. Baltimore 3;
, six-game win streak. "We can't gel Minnesota 6, Kansas City 4;
Toronto 14, New York 7; Oak land S,
~ a runner over from second. Every
Chicago 6; Cleveland 6, California
night, it's the same stuff."
••
Mill Thompson singled home 3; and Seattle 6, Texas 5.
Astros 6, Dodll;ers 0
John
Russell from second base in
•
At Houston, Mike Scott tossed a
;; the 17th inning for the winning run.
~
The game marked the third 2-1, two-hitter and Bill Doran and Kevin
.• extra-inning game for the Cardi· Bass each cracked !Dlo home runs
., nals in their last four outings. St. to lead the Astros. Scott, 7-5,
allowed oo!y first-and fourth-inning
~ Louis has played the most extrasingles to Ken Landreaux in
~ inning games in the National
·• League and is 7-9 in those recording his second shutout of the
season. He struck rut 11 to increase
.• encountrrs.
·•
The Cardinals threatened to his major leaguP.leading total to
~ score in the 12th inning. Vine.&gt; 148.
Braves 5, Padres 4
; Coleman hit a two-out single off
At Atlanta , Ozlie Virgil delivered
• Steve 13edrosian, who then intentionally walked Dzzie Smith to face Dale MurPhYwith a sac rifle.&gt; fly in
Tommy Herr. Bedrosian was the eighth inning to lilt the Braves.
•, charged with a balk, moving the Gene Garber, 4-1. was the winner.
: runners to Sl'Cond and third, before Tim Stoddard. 1-3. took the loss.

JULY 1-JULY 5
COME IN AND REGISTER, DRAWINGS
'
TO BE HELD MONDAY, JULY 7 FOR:
T-SHIRTS
.

~

POSTERS
GIFT CERTIFICATES
STORAGE JACKETS
ON THURS., JULY 3 RENT THE "LUCKY"
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.·

_ Driving a turbocharged Porsche
-: 944, the 43-year-oid English· born
;: road rac.&gt;r shaved two seconds off
• : the JTevlous track record.

GOOD EFFORT- Philadelphia's Glenn Wilson ides m valniocaieh
a ball oil the bat of St. Louis' Bob Fol'!ldl mfifth mnlllg of Friday's

17-inning tOt. The Phlb won, H Fonidl received a triple ootiD pla.y.
(UPI)

.: ·

Baker, teamed with Ross
•: Cheever, Bruc.&gt; Frenzel and
~- Tommy Grunnah and gunning for
-: -his fourth win at the rustic track,
-: wlll lead a field of 60 cars in a
: · 24-hour grind that begins at 3 p.m.
~ Saturday and ends at 3 p.m.
•: 9-lnday.
' · Second on the grid in the

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Baker wins pole position Friday

,·' GARRE'ITSVILLE . Ohio iUPIJ
- Freddy Baker of Kirtland set a
.Nelson Ledges record of 1: 16.ml on
.; the twisty two-mile 13-tum course
• Friday to win the pole position for
: · the seventh running of the :M-hour
.. · racP known as the "LongPSt Day at
: Nelson."

•

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OPIII MONDAY AIID FIIDAYS TIU I P...

and Clay Hudson 3-for-4 against
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Alt er bsing to Foodland to start
th(• wPrk. G&amp;J rreled off 'octories
aga inst Holzer. 12-9. and Adva
Care. 12-8. Ra!or Minnis notched
both wins supported by Bill Looka doo, who went 6-for-8 in the two
games combined including one
home run.
But the first -place Free A~ents
f!'fusl'd to relinquish any ground by
win ning its only game of t he wwk. a
well-eartlfd 6-4 victoty over tl"&lt;'
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recorded the win backed by 4-for-4
hitting p!'rform ana's from Jeff

Swe&lt; her and Brant WUson.
The Ohio Company did man age
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to hold on to S!'COnd place. Louis
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:: By Unittod Press International
· : British golfer Ca rol Swa llow was
: · bit ten by a poisonous snake as sh&lt;•
• ' was lining up a shot during thP
-: Dutch Oppn goU championship
: · Friday in Hllversum . Hoiland. An
: : onlooker sucked the venom from
: Swallow's leg and a doct or treated
: · the wound , enabling the golfer to
: . resume playing. Swall ow failed to
· · make the cut .

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1982
••

GALLIPOLIS - E lliot' s 76,
Foodland and G&amp;J Aut o each won
t)l'icr this past week in softball but
failed to gai n any ground on Ca llia
Cou nty Umpire's League-leading
Free Agents.
Elliot's downed Adva Caf!' 19·6
and hrld on to beat Foodland 12·11
for its two wins . Pitcher Bob Nelson
hurled both victories and Barry
Burnett went a combined 7-for-9 in
both games.
Before losing to Elliot' s, Food·
land earned wins against G&amp;J,l2-5,
and BarUes &amp;Jaymes. l8-13. Randy
Finney recorded both wins as Gene
Layton wr nt 4-for-4 against C&amp;J

By United Press lntemationat
Defensive back Craig Swoope. a
: · fourt h-round draft choice out of
: Illinois. and free-agent linebacker
. · Dennis Johnson slgnro cont racts
• Friday with the Tampa Bay
· . Buccaneers. Swoope is the S«"ond
: · draft pick signed by the Bucca·
:- neers. who lost first-round S!'lect ion
- · Bo Jackson to baseba ll 's Kansas
:; City Royals. Johnson played with
; • Tampa Bay last smson .

MUFFLERS

•·.·.

.

June:l9~

w... ~, .... :~t,••

:: Sign grid contraciS

•.

.•

over Tom Gullikson when play was
Becker returns to Center Court
called Thursday due to darkness. today for the third time to mPrt
When the second-round match Paul McNamee.
resumed Friday, the West German
"He's an AW!tratian and he
needed only 15 minutes to conclude knows how to play on grass," said
the set at 6-2.
the No. 4 seed . "The match will be
Becker fired 18 aces In the match, very ditficult. As defending cham·
three after play resumed, and said pion, everybody's going out there
Gullickson bad no answer to his and trying llO percent ID beat me
serve.
and I have to try lal perc.&gt;nt."
"He was I rying many things, but
In other featured matches, aUin
he couldn't break me," Becker the third round, women's top SEed
sa id. "I had too good a rhythm, I Martina Navratllova meets Ameri·
just overpowered him.
can Kristin Kinney, ranked No. 96;
"With each win I get more No. 2 Chris Evert Lloyd meets
confident and I scare opponents Kathy Horvath; men'ssecondseed
more when I go further and Mats Wilan&lt;Er plays Australia 's
further. "
Mark Kratzmann, ranked No. 121;
No. 6 seed Joakim Nystrom was and fifth-seed Stefan Edberg meets
defeated Friday by Ramesh Krish- Mlloslav Mecir of Czechoslovakia,
nan of India , 6-7 (6-81, 6-2, 7-6 (S-6), who has won both ct their previous
6-4. Krishnan, born In 1961, the year . meetings.
his father Ramanathan reached the
Navratllova, seeking her fifth
singles semifinals at Wimbledon, straight Wimbledon singles title,
used his steaczy baseline game to Friday defeated American J ane
assure an unseeded men's semlfi· Forman, ranked No. 159, by a 6-0,
nallst for the lOth consecutlve year . 6-4 score. In the ft rst set, Forman
After defeating the Swede, Krish- won just three points on her serve.
nan attrtbuted his victory to "luck"
"The ftrst set was too easy, then
and downplayed his ability.
she started hitting some passing
"I missed a few at net. but you shots," said the six· lime Wimhave to understand I'm not that bledon singles champion.
good at net." he sa id. " II was a very
"Blllle Jean (King) asked if I fell
close match. I think the Wimbledon the pressure of making II five in a
grass suit s me hetter than it suits row, I sa id I don't think about it as
rum."
pressure because Wimbledon is
"He came in on the right points," Wimbledon. whether you 've won
Nystrom said. "He has a very good two or ten, but It lthe streak) will
game for grass, his ball stays low make II that much sweeter if I win .
ali the time and· he can hit hard It's very, very special."
shots also. though II looks like he's
Robert Seguso, who ousted No. 3
not hitt ing the ball very hard."
seed Jimmy Connors in the first
The only remaining seed in round, lost to South African Christo
LPndi's half of the draw Is No. 10 van Rensburg 5-7, 6-4, 6-0, 6-2 In a
Tim Mayotte. who erased Tomas third-round match. Ranked No. 214,
Smld 6-4,6-2,2-6. 6-2 in a third-round van Rensbu rg survived the threeround qualifying tournament to
match.
LRndl. holder of the U.S. and reach the main draw .
French titles but never a finalist
here. had no trouble with Amos
Mansdor1 of Israel, advancing to
the fourth round wit h a 6-2. 6-4, 6-4
victory , surrendering just nine
points on serve in I he final two sets.

Dl&amp;e-G)'II'mMium

·.::Men's
softball
league
results
.

The place for car fanatics.

DETROIT tUPII - Jim Kropfeid of Cincinnat i Friday upped his
qualifying speed for the 78th
running of the Budweiser APBA
Gold Cup.
In the Miss Budweiser turbine
boat. Kropfeid averaged 1.26.872
mph the 2.5 mile course for two
laps.
Qualifying and testing continue
on Saturday with the Gold Cup itself
starting at noon Sunday.

PICKS UP WW BALL- Number one seed Martina Na•ratDova
picks up a low baD from Jane Foreman &lt;I the UnltedStatesdurin~their
Friday match at Wimbledon. Martma won, 6-0 and &amp;-4. (U PI)

.•'

OPEN JULY 4th

.•••

..
'•

LVNE (;ENTI!JI SOIEDULI!

r--------:---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

.··'

.·....-·~:;:::;;;;;:::~:;:::;;;;;:::~~~

•
•

seeded challenger as Wimbledon's
fifth day guaranteed the presence
of a SUfPr1se men's seml-finalist.
Becker, the 18-year·old defending
champion, held a &amp;-4, 6- 3, 2-2 lead

111 Annive1111g Spe~isl/1

striking out Herr.
In the 13th, Willie McGee led ctf
wmnnloobleforSt. LouisalldAnczy
Van Slyke drew an intentional
walk. Hel'20g did not bunt and let
his next three batters swing away.

The Sunday Times·Sentinei- Page 1 C; 3

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant W. Va.

: ·: By FREDERICK WATERMAN
' .
UPI Sporls Writer
, • WIMBLEDON, England tUPI)
. ; . : - Boris Becker gained confldenc.&gt;
: ·, ; while I van Lend! lost another

__ ends in 17 rungs;
By JOE ILLUZZJ
UPJ Sports Writer

Hiss

... Becker .gains confidence; Nystrom loses

·c ardinals streak

•

. .June 29,

June 29. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipc)lia, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

HOURS

M011. thru Fri. I to I'
Saturday I· to 6 1
5_unday ' to J

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
PH. 446-9335
DAVE MICHAEL
MANAGEl
''

I·

I

�Page--c-C-4-The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

June 29, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea111111t. Vt/. Va.

.June 29, 1986

Bean has l stroke lead in Open

Giants outlast Reds in 12 innings, 7-6
American L e3gue- Canseco. Oak
&amp;I ; Joyner. Cal. Hrbl'k , Mlnn and

Majors
NATIONAL LEAGUE
By tJnMed Press lnlernallonal

East

w

L l'cl GB
21 .691
31 .551 91\
· Philadel phia ...
36 .4i8 141";?
. St . Louis ........ 32 38 .457 16
. Chicago ..... ..... 29 40 .420 18%
Pittsburgh . .... . 28. 41 406 19%
West
Sa n Franr isco . 40 33 548

New York ...... .
· MontrPa l. .

47
38
11

Homaon .. .. . .... .

39

3.3

.542

San Diego .. .... .
Atlanta .......... .
· Los An~ele s ....
Clnctnnali . .... ..

37
36
34
30

35
36
39
40

.514

.500

.466
.429

1,.;
2 1h

3li
6
8%

Friday's Rt&gt;suUs

gam es each team has played 1

Atlanta 5. San Diego 4
Innings

National League- Honeycutt , LA
1.93: Tudor, StL 2.23: Scott . Hou 2.35:
Forsch. StL 2.42: KnepP"r. Hou 2.45.

Phil adC'Iphia 'l , St. Louis 1. li
innings
N£'w York at Chicago . ppd .. rain

2.18: Darwin, Mll2.40: Higuera . Mil
2.45; Hurst, 8os 2.1!1: Hou gh. Te..

SUnday's Games

Philadelphi a at St. Louis
Nrw York at Chicago

Amer ican League- Clem ens, Bos

L l'ct GB
25 .&amp;18
32 .562 6
38 l 1 .535 8
:Mllwa uk&lt;'&lt;' ...... 36 34 .514 9\6
36 34 514 9!1,
Clevelan d .
Toront o........... 38 36 .514 9 1;,
35 35 .500 tO ~
Detroit

"'
41
46

30 45 .400 1012
Friday's Results
DE'! roil 4. Milwaukf'£' 2. 11 innlngs
Bos ton 5, Baltimorf' 3
Minnesota 6, Kansas Cit y 4

• Toronto 14. New Yor k 7

Oakland 8. Chicago 6
Cli'Vi'land 6, Californ i a 3

. Sea tllr 6. Trxas 5

Sunday's Games :

Toronto at Nrw York
Milwa ukee at Detroit. 2
Bos ron a1 Ball lmorr
K ansas Cit y at Mlnnrsota
Clr vPland at Ca lifornia
Chica go al Oakl an d
• • Tex as a t Seattlr

.·

Amer ican League- Aase, Balt 19;
Righelti, NY 16: Harri s. TPx. and
HPrnandez. Oct 14 : Stanley, Bas 12.

American Lt&gt;ague
(II Innings)

squeeze
buntI In
thatAldrete
situation,"
Craig. "But
knew
can satd
hit a
lot d fly balls. so I let him hit
away."
Although the Giants weren't able
to win n until the 12th, Cincinnati
manager Pt&gt;te Rose toought his
club gave San Francisco too many
easy runs too early.
The Giants had enjoyed leads of
5·1 and 6-2 bt'fore Dave Parker tied
It 66 with a three- run homer In the
seventh. Three d ttl" Giants' first
six runs were set up by three Reds'

Innings to get the victory. The Reds
used 19 players In the game,
Including five pitchers.
·
Altoough the Reds are stilt sruck
In last plare In the National League

Home Runs

NaTional Lt&gt;agu e - Marshall, LA
17 · Davis, Hou 16; Pa rker, Cln and
Stubbs, LA 15; Schmidt. Phll14.
· American Lt&gt;ague - Joyner , Cal ,
Barfield, Tor and CanS&lt;'Co, Oak 19:

:· Brunansky , Gaettl and Hrbek , Mlnn ,

• ' Kingman. Oak and Parrish, Det 17.
Runs Batted In

National Lt&gt;agu• - Schmidt. Phil
• 52: C.Davls, SF 51; Carter, NY 50;
; • Parker, Ctn 49: Da vis. Hou 48.

worried.
.
"Thls was ·just one game to·
·rught," t... said. "We can stUI win
two out of three against the Giants
in this series, which Is just what we

errors.

"We didn't help (starting pitcher
BUll Gullickson oot defensively,
which is very uncharacteristic of
us," said Rose. "It seemed tlke
every time we made a mistake,
they capitalized."
Errors by the Reds gave the
Giants two easy runs in the fourth.
On a double steal of third and
second by Scott Garrelts and Randy
Kutcher. catcher Bo Diaz threw
wildly Into left field to allow
Gamlts to score and left fielder
Ertc J:Qvis let t~ ball roll past him
to permit Kutcher to score.
In ttl" sixth, an error by first
baseman Rose when he failed to
catch pickoff throw from pitcher
Carl Willis a llowed Jose Uribe to
move to second and eventually
score.
Greg Minton, 34, ttl" seventh
Giants pitcher. workPd ttl" final two

Rio Grande squad in tourney finals

MISSES BIRDffi - Andy Bean, Bradenwn, Fla.. lets go wilh some of
his frustration alter missing a bll'dle putt on the seventh .b'l'een in
Ontario Friday. ( UPI)

Nieves, Plesac (111 and Cer one,

START WITH

Parrish. W- Hernandez . (3·3t:
L-Piesac (4· 51 . HRs-MIIwaukee,
Sveum tJI ; Detroit , Gibson 181.

~tf/

Bosoon 000 003 181 - 5 15 I
Bltmr ..010 000 200 - J_ 7 0
Clemens. Sambito t9l, Stanley (91
and Gedman : Dixon . Bordl t61, Snell
(81. Havens 181. Aase l9l and
Dempsey. Pardo. W-Ciemens (14 Dt: L- Dixon (6·6). HRs- Boston,
Armas 121: Ba ltimore, Murray 2

LAWN·BOY STEEL DECK
SPECIAL 703!). 21" PUSH
MOWER WITH FAMOUS LAWN·
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DECK VAWE.
• Lawn·Boy two·cycle eng&lt;neno messy otl 10 check or change.
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• Rugged 14gauge steel deck
• Comlonable. easy·t&lt;r
use controls
• Fu ll one·yeat
hm&lt;t ed

.

Toml

2M 000 332- 14 19 2
NY _HI 210 000 - - 7 18 ~

son

{14 ).

.
.::..1'ranactions

AVOIDS PICKOFF -San Francisco's Jose Uribe gels back safely to
first bse as a pickoff throw starts to tiQUb'l out of the mitt ol RA!ds' Pete
Rose in sixth Inning ol Friday's J2.1nnlng maratbon. The baD went Into
lhe RA!ds dugout, Rose was charged with 1111 error and Uribe went to
third. The Giants eventually won, 7-8. (UPI)

Baseball

Chicago tNL1 - Purchased the
cont ract of right -handed reliever
Davp Gumpert from Iowa of the
American Associa tion !AAA I: opt I·
oned right bander Jay Baller to

Clvlnd ..300 1100 1103 - 6_ 6 0
Call! 000 wo 1100 - a u o
Schulze, Oelkers 151, Notes 171,
Camac ho 191 and Bando: Will and
Boone. W-Noles 11·11 . L-WIII tB·61 .
HR-Cieveland, Hall 112 1.

DECKS

' I owa.
:·
Houston - Senl)(&gt;ft ·handed pitcher

$26900
RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
CHESTEI
ONLY

985·3308

• ·II' Ike Madden to Tucson of Ihe Paci fic
Coast League I AAA 1

_ Los Angeles - Placed third baseman Bill Madlock on the 15-day
disabled list: called up third base·
"

m an

J eff Hamilton

from

Albu·

• querqu e of The Pacific Coa st League
• iAAA I.
New York tALl - Signed cat cher
: John Ramos, a fifth- round choice In
the June d r art, and asslgnPd him to

Fort Lauderda le of t he Flor id~ Stai r
League lA).
New York tN LI - Signed fr ...
agent pitcher Andrew Taylor , a
s•lectlon In the Jun&lt;" draft. and
assigned him to Llttl• Falls of the
New York · Penn Lt&gt;ague lAI.
. Phil adelphia - Return&lt;'d the con ·
• tract of lefl ·handed pitcher Mlk•

•
:
•
•
:

'.'

osu
\

~ M addrn to Houston ; r eacqulrf'd
: contrac t of rE'Iit've-r Rocky ChildrPss
• from the Ast ros.
. .

~

___.. wvu

CCA TREATED Y.P.

the International Lt'agur t AAAl;

opt ioned ri ght bander Don Gordon to
Sy ra cuse.

•

College
Chapman - Named Matt Fischer

sports Informat io n direc ror . Paul
·: Kahn women' s ba sketball coach,
.. Linda La y(' men's water polo coach,
, and Dir k L eathPrm an men' s vol lr y ·

•

ball coach.

FoolhaO
Cleveland - Pl aced quarterback

8 ft. 10ft. 12 ft.
5.13

2x6 '3.24 4.15 5.65

7.57

2x8 '4.63 6.06 7.93

9.25

m
m

2x10 '6.55 7.95 9.49

13."

0

4x4 '4.77 6.75 8.00

9.99

6x6

14.11 18.••

25.10

1x6

2.86 3.42

4.56

• Paul McDonald on waiver s.

:• - Tampa Bav - Signed defen slvr

&lt;
back Craig SwoopP, a fourth -round
: .. draft pick , andf rre-agent llnl'backer
•• Dennis .Johnson.

.
.· ;•
,•

:: Patton lunes up

;~

;.
.;

•
·'
,•

By tJnHed l'ress International
In the final tune-up for Sunday's
$li,!ID Grand Prix. Beezle Patton
topped an 18-cnt ry field to win
Friday's $7.500 timed first jump-off
at the 17th annual Lake Placid
Horse show .

•. - -----..-:·
· Top hitters
•'
.......
..
••
.·
.•'•. c. .
r B&lt;JSf'd on 3.1 plull' aPP"aranl"""f'!i 1 ro. of
('artl rnm l"la~ pLr ~ tod l
Nat!OIIal l.oroap4'

~ i.Wrll'!i

~ a hrhpd.

71 'Ill 41:! !Jj ;r,o
5ll 21 ~ ll 7.1 .317
Rlll2 :II T1 ..112
lib ~2 4.~ 82 -~

, ·nn. ~

.-·-·

Brwn.

sr

Br~ .

MH

H&lt;&gt;n\ . Mrl

Sax . LA
Sl'hmdl.
I.W s~. Hoo
Hrnndi'~

11 3;2 .l li 81.lJ')
61 '[!\ ~ fiR ..ll\
662ft] J} "75 .:B'}

R11r . 1)ur

66142

Kn~h r . l'"

.·

'.

..·•

-·

00 2"/l .11 8S .JII
Ill )1,\ .j4J 76 JJ[I

~!i. R~

Voo nr . Ml

!:&gt;r-Im. M
E:a.slr, NY
Mn n¥1)' .
llrl*. Mil
Rk'fo. Bas

n.-u. Tor
Jark.s n. Ci
Bmln1 c

~

72 .2!11

American Lti!IIH'
li 217 ~ 5 9:1 .JM
~ 214 40 77 .360
72Jli 5fi ICE .341
6~ 216 :YI Ill ..tl9
73 m 49 1t:Nl .ll9
1) :Ji.1 5:.1 a; .ln
7l 2S'l tO 91

.:m

72 28:1 47 93 .322
56 182 Jl !B .3l9
Ill )II .'JJ 76 ,:U5

I

...;a

2x4 '2.16 2.85 3.59

LANDSCAPE TIMBERS

'2.99

,...m

-m
&lt;

;a

&lt;

MIRAClE HOME REMEIX
AnEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE.

carolinaANDLumber
Supply company
312, 6th Street

675·1160

The road to your
student loan
leads·to The C&amp;S Bank.
Thi s is the time of year when man y students are
looking for financial help fur the fall tet·m. The C&amp;S
Bank can help with student loan s.
Our student loa ns ca n be used at any four-year
accredited college_.or university , not just the ones listL·d
above.
If you have questions or need more information . call
Mrs. Steph anie Stov er. our student loan profess io na l at
the C&amp;S Bank of Gallipoli s at 446- 0662.

Point Pleasant

Store Hours: Monday to Friday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m ..
Saturday 8 a.m. to 12 noon

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

25 Court Street

Silver Bridge

Plaza

Member FDIC
Spring

Valley

Cheshire advanced to ti&gt;' semifinal game with wins over Adda v!lle, 18.(), Friday and Bidwell . l0-8,
Saturday morning. despit e an
eight -strikeout perlormance from
Bidwell pitcher Angi e Saunders.
Luciana Scott hurled both victories.
including a lO·st rikeout performance against Addav ill~ . Both
losers were eliminat&lt;'d .

home runs from Stephanie Varney
and Karen Kerns. The loss was
Vinton's first of the tournament .
Rio is the only unde featoo team
remaining in the tourney and mu st
1P beaten Twice today 10 be
eliminated . Rio's opponent will be
the winner of Ches hi rP.Vinton B
game playC'd Sa turday night .

penalized.
Love. the son of noted golf
Instructor Davis Love II, had six
birdies to go with two bogies.

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

•••

BIG FOOT
IS COMING
TO GALLIPOLIS!
Watch This Paper For
further Details

:;waterford
•
~ edict keeps
: ~ horses from
·1.Erie races
.
By PORIA SMrrH

UPI Sports Writer
Waterford Park has announced It
will cancel the stall of any oorse
· taken from it s Chester, W.Va.
· backstretch to run at new Eric
: Downs. locat&lt;'d abou t 125 miles
· northeast. near thf' Pennsy lvania
: shore of Lake Erie.
Waterford Racing Secretary 'fed
· McKenna said thf' edict, which
; went Into effect May 23 - the sa me
: day Er ie Downs opened on the old
Commodore Downs grounds - is
•: not pointed at keepmg horses away
• from its new competition.
' "It pertains to any horseman woo
· Is stabling here and abusing
· privileges by training thf'ir horses
, here and doing 1hc bulk of ti&gt;' ir
• racing elsewhere." McKeon• said.
! He aJso said he would not cancel tlr
•: stall of a horse taken away fl·om
Waterford for an occasional race
elscwherP.
• "We allow that." he said. "II
happens every day. The horsemen
know 14·hat this mean s. The horse·
men know woo This is intended for."
:
But the print&lt;'d !'diet it self docs
: not allow for such generous
, Intl'rpretation .
• The entries sheet dlsl ributed to
horsemen Mav I!\ said :
;
" Effective Fr idav. Mav 21. 1986:
"Any hot'SC stabled at Waterford
Park that runs at Erll' I:ki\.\ns will
lose their stall at WatC!'ford. t\o
exceptions. This rule will be
enforced! ! Any trainer sta bl&lt;'d at
Wa terford wtxi also plan s to have
'sta lls a t Eric Downs must contact
Ted McKenna."
Eril' Downs Rac ing Sec reta ry
: Frankie Haimrrl, former ly racr

- Toronto - Call&lt;'d up left · handed
: pltchor St ove Davis from Sy racuse of

RIO GRA NDE - Rio Grande
advanC&lt;"d to the 1 p.m. champion·
ship game today of the Gallia
Cou nl y Gir ls Junior Softball
League double-('llmination tournament Friday night wit h a win over
Vinton B.
Rio breez&lt;od by Vinton 214 behind
the pitching of Kim Waugh and

a

Moore; Tanan a, Hernandez (9) and

Alexander, Cerulli 141. Acker (5!.
Henke (7) and Whitt, Martlnoz:
Guidry . Drabek !31. Holland 161.
Fisher !71, Shirley 181and Wynegar.
Ha sS&lt;'y . W-Acker 12·31; L- Fisher
14-4 I. HRs-Toronto, Iorg 121, Bar·
field 119). Fernandez t41 ; New York ,
Mallingly 1131. Grlfrry t9 t. Hender·

year. "But If I k!!eP setting up the (150) .
By ROBERTO lliAS
putts, I'll really have a good round
Bean, 33, of Lakeland, Fla .. was
UPI Sports Writer
· bl'fore it's over."
!·under after nine holes and rolled
OAKVILLE. Ontario (UP!!
Azlnger, a non-winner In four In a 15-foot putt on the par-4 lOth
The rain 'had stopped by the time
Andy Bean was ready to tee off. so It years on the Tour, had a 00 for a hole for a birdie before chipping to
was natura l tha t he exhibit some total rl. S-under 139. Davis Love Ill , four feet for another birdie on the
the rookie woo Is atop the dr iving par-5 13th.
dry humor.
A poor chip resulted In a bo~FY oo
"I was in the clubhouse eating distance standings. shot a 69 Friday
the
15th, but Bean promptly birdied
lunch while the morning group was to share third place at 4·under 140
the
16th before three-putting for par
with
Ernie
Gol17lllez.
out there getting wet," Bean said.
the
par·5 18th.
on
At
HI
were
first-round
co·
leader
"Maybe l shouldn 't say that. It
A21nger,
26, of Bradenton. Fla.,
Hale
Irwin
(68-73)
,
Bob
Murphy
might he me under the weather
(71-70
),
Bob
Tway
(70.
71
),
Mac
started
on
the hack nine and
next time."
Bean shot his second straight O'Grady (73-68) and Dave Barr balanred three birdies with two
3·under·par 69 Friday to notch a (70.71 ) of Richmond, British bogies, making ttl" turn at 3-under.
He then sank birdie putts of !Oand
one-shot lead over Paul Azlnger Columbia.
12 feet on the first and fi ft h ooles,
afl er two rounds of the $8.'ill,OOO
Canadian Open.
Four players arc grouped at respectively.
"I'm happy with the round ,
Bean. thtrd on the current PGA 2·under )42 while a logjam at J.
Tour money list with $404,474 and a under 143 Included three·tlme especially because ttl" rain didn't
two-time winner this year, has a winner Lee Trevino (74-69). course hun ," said Azinger, who has four
36·hole total of 6-under 138 on the designer Jack Nicklaus (74-00) and top 10 finist... s and $168,285 In
7,102-yard Glen Abbt'y Golf Club defending champion Curtis Stran ge winnings to date.
A2inger declined comment on an
(73-701.
cou rsr.
"I have had varied success on
Following tI&gt;' round . the field was incident on the 11th hole, where he
this layout," said Bean, who shares cut to 76 players who scored 4·over hit Into t t... right rough only to watch
the Glen Abbl'y course record of 148 or better. Among toosefaitlng to In amazement as a spotter picked
JO.unck'r 62 with Leonard. Thomp- qualify were 19!!i U.S. Open winner up his ball and threw it back onto
son but who missed Ihe cut here last Andy North 11491and Craig Stadler the fairway. The player was not

r;W;es;t·;P;a;rke;r;ln;s;ls;ts;h~e~ls~n~·t~~w~a~nt~to~d~o.~". . .iiiii..~iiiiiiiiii

KC _ . 100 ot0 004 - t9 I
Mlnn ..300 200 lOx - 6 9 o
Bankhead . Black 16 1, Gublcza (8 1
and Quirk; Smithson, Pastore 191.
Atherton (91 and Salas. W-Smlthson
17-61: L- Bankhead 13·11.

:-·Leaders

•

Davis raced to third on a single to
right-center by Chris Brown and
scored easily on Aldrete's sacrifice
fly to medium left .
"I toought about using a suicide

Mlwk 010 010 too 00 - 29 ~
Detrt 200 ooe ooo 02 - u 2

(i]T .

-·
...

:

National Lt&gt;ague - Reardon. Mi l
17; Smith, Hou 16: Gossage, SO an d
Worrell, StL 13; Franco, Cin 12 .

.534

St:'attle ....... .....

... ,

Saves

Linescores

.542

%
Kansas City.... 37 36 .507 2\-2
Chicago .... ..... . 30 41 .423 8\&gt;
Minnesota
30 42 .41 7 9
Oakland .... ...... 30 45 . ~0 10!1,

~

Strikeouts

125: Higuera , Mil and Will , Cal 101;
McCaskill . Cat 96: Morris. Det and
Ri jo, Oak 94 .

AMERICAN LEAGUE
East

\\'est
Ca liforn ia ....... 39 33
Texa s ............. 39 34

2.87 .

Valenzuela. LA lll: Welch, LA 89 ;
Gooden. NY 88: Smith. All~ . .

San F ra ncisco at Cin ci nnati

Bo ston
NPw York .... ...
"'Baltimor(' ..

AmE&gt;rlcan League- Cl £&gt;m ens, 8os

National Lpague- ScOtt . Hou 148;

· Mont r£'al at Pitts burgh
Los An ge les at Hou ston
San Diego at Atlant a

•
•
•
:
•·

H£~nd&lt;"rson ,

Hou ston 5, Los An grlf's 0
San Francisco 7. Cin cinnat i 6. 12

·:
·•
.·
:
••

American Leagu£' -

NY 46: Cangelosi, Chi 33: Wiggin s.
Bait 20; MoS&lt;' by, Tor 19; Reynold s,
Sea and Wilson. KC 18.
l'ttchlns Victories
National Lt&gt;ague - Rawley, Phil
and Valenzuela . LA 10-4: Knepp!'r.
Hou 10·5: Fernandez. NY 9·2:
Krukow, SF 94; Mahler. All q.~
American League- Clemens, Bos
14·0: Boddlcker, Batt, l0·2: Boyd. Bos
9·5: Higuera, Mil !&gt;6; McCaskill, Cal
IH Langston . Sea . Leibrandl. K.C
8·5: Witt . Cal 8-6.
Earned Run Average
iBas&lt;d on 1 Inning x number of

Pittsburgh 7. Montn•al1

,.

Mattingly, NY 55; Ba rfield, Tor 54 .
· Slolen Bases
Nat ional Lt&gt;ague- Coleman, StL
43: Duncan, LA and Raines. Mtl 31;
Davis. Cln 30: Doran, Hou 25 .

By .tiCK VANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPI) - San
Francisco manager Roger Craig
says he wUI do just about anything
to keep his first place Giants rolling
- Including playing all night.
And that's about what It took
Friday night and early Sarurday.
In a 4-hour, 31-mlnute maratoon
that started at 7:38p.m . Friday and
ended at 12:09 a.m. Saturday, ttl"
Giants edged Cincinnati 7·6 when
Mike Aldrete produced a game·
winning sacrifice fly In the 12th
Inning.
"I didn'tthink ltwasevergolngto
end," said Craig, who made four
pitching changes in the seventh
inning. "But I'll play at! night ~ I
have to In order to win."
The game went on so long that
Giants' second baseman Rob
Thompson was able to set a dubious
major league record . Thompson.
woo had been thrown out trying to
steal second In the fourth, slxth and
ninth Innings, was nabbed for a
record fourth time In the 11th
Inning.
But CraJg wasn't complaining.
"Aggressive play - stealing,
hitting and running - that's why
we're in first place," he said.
"We' re scratching and clawing and
doing the unexpected and winning.
"It's tough to win a long game
like this on the road because the
ott...r team has the last bat. But we
kept battling...
Tied &amp;-6 since the seventh inning,
ttl" Giants got their decisive 12th
going when Chili Davis drew a
one-out walk from Scott Terry, 0.2.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-S

Pomeroy- Middleport- GallipoU.. Ohio-Point PleaS!Int, W. Va.

sec retary at Waterford and Darby
Downs. near Columbu s. Ohio. sai d
several trainers had canreled out of
Erie rac!'S ix'cau se of the ord(•r.
" I think it's a cheap soot mySI'li. "
Haimerl said . " I don't t»lleve in
doing !hilt , Horseracin g is all over
• The country. and we soould all be
working toge thcr."
Ha rry Buch, chairman of the
West Virginia Raci ng Commission.
agrees with Halmert's assessment
but says he has no legal autootity to
fight til&lt;' order.
"I don 't like it. " said Buch, an
atlomey in Whecllng. W.Va . "I
ca llf'd the wneral manager at
Wat erford and told him I was
extremely displeased with That
order. that it was not in tl'e best
interests of racing and tha t it was
not in the bl'st interes ts of Water·
ford ..."
The call apparently did no good .
McKenna affirmed the order was
still in effect Jure 23 and said he
knew nothing about Burh 's rEquest.
" If 1 could tak e some action. I
would ," Buch addC'd .

Fails new standards
By UnHed

l'ress lntematlonal

Michigan prep sta r Antoony
Pendelton will not attend the
University of Iowa to play basket ball this fall becau se he failed to
meet new NCAA entrance stand·
ards. Pendleton, a 6-foot-4 guard,
had the mandatory 2.0 grade·polnt
average, · but apparently failed to
reach the ACT or SAT guidelines
and declined to retake either hy
June 14 - his last chance before
school starts this fall . NCAA
DiviSion I athletes must score 660 on
the SAT or 13 on the

3

The Do-lt-Yourself Specialists

castro/

l

Kit chrome

99¢

Cleaner

Rog. 1.39,112701

CarWash

the Standard
of performance

1 29
2 19

89¢

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•
Sale 1.49, Reg . l .99. 112637

l.iquidJfax

49.95

Reg. 2.89. lf2665

Paste Wax

Reg. 3.n. #2661

Zemco

•

2 88
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10W30
Motor Oil

Reg. 1.09,Umit12

•

Perfection .
Car Wash Sponge

Cruise Control
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Bonded Refined
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with exchange

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Your Choice

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•

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with e•change
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Full2 Year
Mlr's Warranty

100% Factory Tested

Champion Spark Plug.s
For Surer Starts. Tune -Up With Champions.

79¢

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72 Month Warranty

exchange 10.00 011. Reg . 59.86

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209 Upper River .Rd.'
Gallipolis, Oh•

a£]

•

OPEN 7 DAY$ A.WEEK
Store houro 8 :30a.m. tD 8:00p.m. Mornloy throuW. Friday.
8:30 a:m. 1D 8:00 p.m. 111Urdly ..d 10:00 a.m. ID &amp;:00 p.m. Su.ndly

�PII!Je- C-6- The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

June 29, 1986

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

•

~omeroy-Middlapcirt- Gallipolis,

The Sunday

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Clemens fans 11, records 14-th.in row
By LOU RABD'O
UPI Spo"" Wrller
Roger Clemens pitched a blt too
fine for his own liking Friday night .
Clemens struck oot 11 and
scattert'd seven hits over eight
Innings to lead the Red Sox to a 5-3
victory over the Baltln\ore Orioles.
In raising his record to 14-0.
Clemens Crt'pt within one triumph
of tying the American League
record for most victories from the
start of the season. Baltlrnore's
Dave McNally, ln l!lffi, and Cleveland's Johnny Allen, In 1937, each
started off 15-0.
The victory, though, was not
vlntage Clemens In the rtght·
hander's eyes. He even thought he
was too close to the plateonsomeof
his pitches.
" I was disappointed that I let
them back In the game in the
seven! h," Clemens said abou t the
Orioles ' two-run lnnlng. "Some·
times. I felt I was around the plate
too much. I made some good
pitches and finally got some guys
out."
Eddie Murray paced the Orioles'

Bird cops honor

"1NS urn STRAIGIIT - Roger Clemms or Boston won his 14th
straight game Friday night. (UPI)

Name winners of recent
Chester Jamboree contests
CHESTER - The Diester Bowhunt ers &amp; Archery Club recently
held their a nnual two day
jambort'!'.
The event co nsisted of a a:! target
tree stand shoot, a a:! target coon
shoot. ll target big game sh:&gt;ot, and
a a:! target small game shoot.
Taking top places in the tree
stand event were first, second and
third lis ted in that order:
MF.~ S
Thoma ~

;\A O.A.$: Ra ndy Whff'l{&gt;r. Mikf'
and Mik£' Frasca .

Ml:..J'l"S A CLASS: SIC'\'&lt;' Biiteman.
WOMENS Q.ASS: Su&lt;' F\&gt;rlm'. Lvnn

CUBS U.ASS' Joey SmJth .
PEE WEE O..ASS: Josh 'r'o1 lsoo and
Pammy Cad£'.
Taking top pla('('S ln th£' Big gall'lf C'\.'m t
were:
MENS AA CL~ : John Young, Jeff
Dl&gt;nnlson and Tl'rry BroNn.
MENS A U.ASS' Randy Wht'Oter, J&lt;.vtn
Dlll and Bill Sl.m.

MENS B a..ASS: Tom Batey , Paul Searls

and Larry comrn.

CUBS O..A~ : .Jilf"Jo' Smtih.
Ta k.ln~ lop placrs In 1~ f'OOn stnot rvent

wr rr:
MENS M CLASS: &amp;l m Smith and John
Young.
MENS A CLASS: Rogc&gt;r Starctl('f, Randy
Wh({&gt;IC'r and HC'nry Cade.

WOMENS CLl\SS: Angi£1 Smith and Lv rm

\' oun~

·
JUt•olORS O..ASS: Kl' lly Pan;ons, Olartl{'

LawVlll

and Scon Starc:-hff

~:

MENS A

Brure Nclgk'r. sam

PEE \'lEES: Jos h Wilson , Missy Smith,
Pammy Cade, Jason Roush. Ranetta
WIK'elcr and Justin Roush.
Taking top pi ~ fo r OOt h days with a

!X)SSiblc 1.8Xl points were:

MEN: Mik(' ~mas . 1710: John
lim; Tl'O)' Brovm, 167'0.

~Pocket

ENERGY PERFORMER

Wins Florida title
By United Press lntematlonal
David Bishop held off two final·
round challengers with an evm -par
71 Friday to win the South Florida
PGA Junior Chamionship at the
Polo Cl ub Course. Bishop. 17,
finished with a 140 over the
6,020-yard coul'St' after opening
with 69 Thursday. In the girls
division ..lenni Barr. 17. shot a 149
for a two·stroke vl rto~· over Mary
Dunne. 14.
Di•n~ Dickman, the 1~ runner·
up in the Broadmoor Ladies
Invitational Golf Toumament, Fri·
day oustrd def!'ndlng champion
and University of Tulsa teammate
Klm Gardner. Both players shOt an
even-par 73 over the 6.392-yard
Broadmoor Ea st course, but Dick·
man &lt;;(lptured one hole in the round .
Dickrfl'an was heaten 0
by
Gardrrr for the tit !~ last year.

1BM •

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Record casseHes from FM , AM ,
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player! Matching t7' -high
speakers. ltl3-1221

FROM MONDAY, JULY 7TH THROUGH FR1DAY,
JULY 11TH we will discount the price of each
fixture in our stock by an addtional 5% each
day off marked price. The percentage off grows
daily for 1 week. 5% off on Monday, 10% off on
Tuesday, 15% off on Wednesday, 20% off on
Thursday and 25% off on Friday. Come in and
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Check Your Phone Book tor thelllllllalllleiC Store or Dealer Nearest You
EVElY FIXJUU IH STOCK IS INCWDlD IN THIS SAl£
•ALL SALES FINAL • NO REFUND • NO RETURNS
We nstrWt till rllhl tolltoit quaniHIH 111 •ch purchan. Quantitieuro limited.
All subit&lt;t to prTor salt.
PatiJ ~iscount dots "'' opp!y to spociol wdtr.

;

GALLIPOLIS - In su mmer
:yOuth diamond action Friday night.
Hannan Trace and I he Dodgers
were victorious In Pony League:
tbe Sluggers won In Girls Senior
softba ll; the White Sox and Sena·
tors in Little League; the Put -on
:,Shop and Smashers in Girls Junior
Softball and the Astros and Stars in
:'i:fe.BalL
: :Hannan Trace beat Grren ll 4·2
-With Unroe hurling the win sup·
'(Drted offensively by Brumfield at
;Memortal Field. In the following
-game, the Dodgers edged Green I
ll·S (Dwered by the pitching and the
111!tlng, a home run, of Brian
Morrts.
: The Sluggers slipped by the Kool
;~&lt;;~ts 54 behind the hitting of B.
Dunner, a triple, and Sara Thomas.
a .single. at the Water Treatment

?!ant
girl's softball.
irhe In White
Sox blanked the
Yankees 26-0 as Hurt smacked two
singles, three triples and a double in
Little League act ion at Memoria1
, Field . The Sena tors latrr downed
the A's 12-4 behind the pitching, 16
sirtkeouts. and hitting, a triple and
double, of Ryan Young. Rod Young
also had two singles and a double
for the winners.
In girls junior softball. the Put-on
Shop pounded the Rockets 21·2 as
Davis smashed a triple and John·
son and Eskew laced two singles
·oapiece. In the IDUowlng game. the
Smashers edged the Bombers 25-24
as Brown hit a doubleandtrtpleand
,'o\apman · connected for two
aoubles.
The Astros outsrored the Comets

Toledo results

SCR-2t by ReoiiO!Ic
i

winner Ardtle Gr11f!n, Dr. Craig Matthews, and Dewey Smith.

Gallia summer league results

AM/FM Car Stereo
Minimus• -7 by Realistic

REED READIES - Pomeroy banker Bruoe Reed lines up a chip

shot on the lOth hole to p:x!e Ns group that consists of Reisman trophy

11995

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Complete With Our Lightweight Low As S20 Per Month on CltiL.Ino•
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Copies personal casseHes in half
What a value! Auto-reverse plays · the normal time ! Dolby ' B NR.
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both sides of tape . #14-1033,

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rfQijllii'\9 10MI, li~l lhll'lfW IOnO-d ll!.lnct IIYIItml 100 COti'IPUIIfiltcl ltMCtl. FCC reg rltlf.cl, Not lor UN on party li~s. We llfVict whit wt Ifill

•CitiUne revolving credit from Citibank. Payment may va~ dtpenclir'lg 011 balance.

RED PIN STRIKE PAYS 51 oo
BLUE PIN STRIKE PAYS 75&lt;
BROWN PIN STRIKE PAYS SO&lt;

ARCIUE GRIFFIN prepares to
oo the lOth hole,
but as luck would have II a bad rolland tailspin jrDduoed a near mls8.
Grftlln pointed out, rnwever, that lis golf game was lmpromg.

OPENING 3 P.M.

Scenes from DileS charity golf tournament...--------1------------

Off

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BOWEEN 10 P.M.-MIDNIGHT

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JULY 4TH

Clarinene•· t 17 by Realistic

1

KANAUGA, OH.

RT. 7

on High-Speed "All·in-One" AM/FM
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Stereo System

GAUIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

DAILY DISCOUNT
PROGRESS FIXTURE SALE

SKYLINE LANES
"BOWL FOR CASH"

• Tone/PuiH' Dialing
Unbelievably low pri&lt;:e! Make and take calls all
around the house. even outdoors! Folding handset fits in shirt pocket, or in a pouch you can attach to your belt. Get yours now! N43-555

1885 EASTERN AVE.

tl

Gil Perreau lt , the long-time
Buffalo Sabres center who announced hi s retirement earlier this
month, Friday indicated he may
return next season. Speaking at a
City Cou ncil ceremony In his honor,
Perreault said he might try to signa
newrontract with the Sa bres. As an
expansion tea m In 19'10, the Sabres
made Perreault their first-ever
draft pick.

L.ow At 120 Per Month
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W. VA. ELECTRIC
SUPPLY
COMPANY

•

By UnKed Press lntemallonal

L.ow At $33 Por Month
On CIIIL.Ine •

"tBMfTM tnternationsl8us•·
ness Machines Corp,

F"'d OIJ1 no,. vour nM orton Commercral
Bc." Cl•" g e~~ · Pl&gt;"'CI ,.,,, rne • " ll!lijV ot'"ormer
can l e@ D 0" '&gt;dv•rg you mone~ """'1!!&lt; anc:l
~umme r Cd l' !o• c omol! re rntrJ rm• loOn lo&lt;l~~

Name Select Team ..-P-EE_"_WE_E_s_:J_os_h_w_uson_.P_•m_m_y_Cad_•·....L-- - - - - - - --1
By United Press International
The Amateur Basketball Associ·
ation of the USA has named the
12-memlx'r Wom~n·s Select Team
that will compete in the Canadian
Invitational Tournament next
month.
· The tea m will be coached by
· Chris Weller of the University of
Marvland. Team members are
gua~ds Suzie McConnell from Penn
Sta te, Tracey Hall of Ohio State,
Susie Gardner from Georgia, Alisa
Scott of Mississippi and Michelle
Edwards from Iowa; guard·
forwards Belitta Croley of Km·
rucky and Lisa Long from Iowa;
forwards Shanda Berl)' of Iowa,
Vicki Bullett of Maryland and
Cherie Nelson from the University
of SouthPm California; and centers
Chana Perry of San DirgoStateand
Trrsa Spau lding of Brigham Young
University. The team began train·
ing Fridav at the U.S. Olympic
Training Center in Marquette,
Mich

The time bettered the 1: 57 3-5 st't
by Boliloat Blueoonnet In Montreal
In 1984. The previous lx'st track
record IWS 1: 58 Sl't by Speedy
Crown In 1972 and ~ ' Art In 19~ .
'

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614 -713 -%331
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~·Art

DUOFONE"' ET-415 by Radio Shack

"Uf OU1i:anld.ng apmmt"r rrnpmul' ~ b..;MD&amp;"

WOMEN: Anglo Smith, 13ll.
JUNIORS: Kelly Parsons. l'i~.
OJ IE: .Joey Smi th. 11::0.

Ty Roush, former Rivtnide winner and cuJTmt golf pro, Unes up a
putt on the 14th hole.

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI I trotted a 1:57 2-5 mUe
Friday nlght at Scioto Downs, the
fastest trotting rnlle by a geldlng
aver a %·mile track In the sport of
harness racing.

Shop Now for These Low Prices!

Monitor tlllra

You~ .

FORMER Govemor dames A. Rllocles lakes a break In the action

'

Op'Art sets harness racing record

COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL

e Shaps
• Officn

.,.

SOMETHING NEVI

BUILDINGS

Lynn

CUBS U.ASS: Joey SmJth.

drove In five runs, Including three
with a seventh-Inning tnmer, to
(Dwer the Blue Jays ln .a slugfest
that reaturt'd 37 hits. Lloyd Moseby
added three RBI, and Darnaso
Garcia tied a major-league record

llad1e lhaek

MENS AA O..ASS: Mike Thomas and JeH

Smith and Kfn Roush .
MENS B O.ASS: Tom Batey.
WOMENS CLASS: Sue F\'rlm.'.
Young and Angle Smith.

·

Mariners 6, Ranaers ~
At Seattle, Jim Presley homerfd
with one rut In the seventh to snap a
5-5 tie and propel the Mariners. 'It
was Presley's 15th homer of the
season. Ma« Young, 7-4, worked
the final 2 2·3 Innings to pick up the
lrlctory. Jeff Russell, 1·1, took the
loss.

I

were:

Parsons and Charlie LawsOn.o;.

1nc11- &amp;, Anaeill 3
At Anaheim, Calli., Cory Snyder
delivered an RBI flelder' ~cholce !n
the ninth Inning, and Fran Mullins
added a two-run single to lift the
Indians. Dickie Noles, 1-1, pitched 2
1·3 Innings for the victory. Ernie
Ca macho got the last rut !Or his lOth
save. Mike Witt, who aUowed six
hits, fell to 8-6.

tourt'd with Glen

Parsons and Charlie Lawson.
CUBS U.ASS' Joey Smllh.
PEE WEES: Josh Wilson. Pammy Cade.
Jason Roush. Missy Smith and Justin Roush .
Taklng top pla('('S In t hP sma. DgamE' e'o1.'11!

Dennlsoo.

A's 8, WhllelsOx 6
Oakland, Calif., JoSI' Canseco
and Mike Davis each hit three· run
homers In a seven-run sixth to un
the A's and Bill Mooneyham. 2·2.
A's starter Chris Codlroll pitched 5
1-3 Innings of. no-hll baU before
leaving with a sore el tnw. Stcye
Ontiveros got his sixth save. Gene
Nelson, 4-4. took the loss.

Blue Jays 14, Y111llees 7
At New York, Jesse Barfield

MORTON

WOMENS O.ASS: Sue F\!rin(', Angie
Smith and JackJ(' Searls.
JUNIORS O.A$: Kelly Parsoos. Billy

You ng and Paula 811:l'A·n.
•
JU NIORS U.A$· Krll" Parsons BUiv

·

By United Press International
Boston Celtic Larry Bird Friday
was named winner of Seagram 's
1986 NBA Player of the Year . Bird
finished in the top 10 in scortng,
rebounding, steals. free-throw per·
centage and 3·(Dlnt percentage.
Bird finished with a league-high
76.43 rat ing In Seagram's compu·
terized ranklngs. Philadelphia for·
ward Charles Barkley was second.

with lour doubles for Toronto. Jim
Acker, 2-3, beat Brian Fisher, 4-4.

nat! 6 In 12 lnnll)gs; and Phlladel·
phia 2, St. Louis lin 171nnlngs. New
York at Chicago was rained oot.
'naers 4, Brewers 2
At Detroit. Klrk Gibson hit a
two-run homer with one out In the
lith to 11ft the Tigers. Lou Whitaker
led off by singling otf Dan Plesac,
4·5, and took second on Alan
Trammell's sacrifice. Gibson then
homered Into the upper deck In
right to make a winner of rt'llever
WUlle Hernandez, 3-3.
Twins 6. Royals 4
At Minneapolis, Kent Hrhek
trtpled home a first-Inning run and
srort'd on an error by catcher
JamleQu!rk to sparktheTwlnsand
Mike Srnlthson, 7;6. Keith Atherton
recorded the fl~al out for his third
save. Scott Bankhead, 3·1, took the
loss In his fourth major-league
start.

attack with two homers, one In the
second Inning and one In the
seventh, giving him 11 for the
season. The power surge came
befort' 52,159 fans, the second·
largest crowd In Orioles history .
"i rea lly didn't have my good
sluff untU about the third Inning,"
said Clemens, who needs five more
consecutive vlctortes to tie Rube
Marquard of the New York Giants,
who began the 1912 season wllh 19
straight triumphs.
"But I knew that ~ I could keep
Ba ltln\ore's lead to on£' run, the
guys would get me some runs ."
Clemens gave up a walk to
Murray and a slngl£' to Ca l Rlpken
to open the ninth. Joe Samblto
relieved and retirt'd on£' batter,
before Bob Stanley entert'd to get
the last two auIs for his 12th save.
Boston scored thri'P runs In the
sixth Inning to take a 3·1 lead otf
Ken Dixon, 6-6, on RBI singles by
Bill Buckner, Jim Rice and Don
Baylor.
In the National League, It was
Pittsbu rgh 7, Montreal 1; Houston
5, Los Angeles O; Atlanta 5, San
Diego 4; San Francisco 7, Clncln·

: ToLEDO. Ohio iUPI I- E. II' ..
driven by Russell Swartz. won
fr)day night's fea lun&gt;d pace al
'Toledo Park Raceway, nine lengths
3hi&gt;ad of J.W. Shooter.

Wilder acquitted
'

'

· 8y United Press lntemallonal
' The trial of a Sa n Diego State
University football player accused
df assaulting gymnast Kurt Tho·
mas has ended in a hung jury. San
Diego Municipa l l":out1 jurors
1ltursday were 9·3 in favor of
acqui1tlng Michael Wilder, 22,ofthe
miSdemeanor battery charge in·
wiVing Thomas. Wilder, a safety
on the 1986 Aztecs' footba ll team,
was acqultted on a second battery
charge.

29· 2Jl(Dwered by two home runs by
Canaday. Justice hit three triples
for the losers In Tee-Ball action on
Spruce Strt'et. The Stars outlasted
ttl' Ran!;{'rs 21·17 as Hatley hit two
triples.
In Tee-Ba ll at the Water Plant
earlier this week, the Star s also
de feated the Astros 22-15 asS. Kist'r
and Matt Halley wrapped oot four
hits each and B. Burcham collected
thri'P. The Comets also downed the
Rangers 25-19 behind the hitting of
E. Nehus and D. Mirchell, four hits
aplcee, and A. Bush, S. Facemire
and K. Wood, thri'P hits each.

Jackson to hn~~t
5-K race July 4
JACKSON- Domino's Pizza wUI
again sponsor the annual 5K (3.1
mUes) lndepetldence Day ~e In
Jackson on July 4, starting at 10
a.m. There Is no entry fee.
There will be over 50 trophies
awarded to the top ftnlnshers and
the top finishers In each age group.
In addition there wUl be several
door prtzes awarded with pre-race·
day entrants being given priority.
Entry forms can be obtained by
wrttlng to Domino's Pizza, 502 East
Main In Jackson or by ca Ulng (6141
286-3126, 286-2153 or 786-IB51.

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WEBER

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YOUR CHRYSLER-DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER

liVER lOAD,.,..,, ,.......,,
Phone 446-7826 I ,Open Mon.·Sat. a a.m.-5 p.m.

446·0842

300 THIRD AVE.

GALLIPOLIS

�June 29, 1

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

~imts- ieutinet Section D-

Cleveland gridder Don Rogers, 23, dies suddenly

DON ROGERS

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (UP!)The Sacramento County coroner
planned to perform an autopsy
Saturday on Cleveland Browns
safety Don Rogers. a former UCLA
star who collapsed and died at age
23 on the day before his planned
wedding.
Rogers collapsed Friday morn·
ing in his family's Sacramento
rome after rep011edly attending a
bachelor's party the night before,
and was rushed to a hospital but
doctors failed to rev ive hbn ,
officials said.
Cause of death 'was listed by
doctors at th&lt;' hospital as cardl-

pubnonary arrest - a shutdown of
the heart and lungs - but an
autopsy was scheduled for Saturday, a spokesman for the (!Groner
said.
The spokesman said the results
probably would not be known until
Monday.
Asked if drug use could be
Involved In Rogers' death, Mercy
Hospital spokeswoman Connie Huff
replled, "There was no sign of
that. "
Rogers was to be married
Saturday. He had attended a
bachelor party Thursday night and
left early, accordl~g to friends .

"This Is a tragedy &lt;t unlll'lievable this tragedy. Don w~s a fine young
proportions," UCLA coach Terry man, and our hearts go out to his
Donahue said. "Don was one &lt;t the family In thls time of sadness. We
greatest play~ In UCLA hlstocy, l'l'ally don't have any details at this
and had his wholeiUeahead ofhbn. u~. ··
This Is a great klss and we feel for
Loren Willeford, S&lt;'!lior investigahis familY."
tor tor the coroner's office, said
Rogers was selected co-player &lt;t Rogers collapsed Friday morning.
thegamelnUCLA'sl983RoseBowl Famlly membars called an ambu·
vlctocy over Michigan after he lance, he said, and Rogers was
interecepted three passes. He also taken to Community Hospital In
played In till' 1984 Rose Bowl Sacramento at about 11 :15 a.m.
against Dllnols and had two PDT.
lnterreptlons.
Willeford said Rogers then was
UCLA athletic director Pete transferred to Mercy San Juan
Dalls said: "AU of us at UCLA are Hospital In Carmichael, which Is
deeply slDcked and saddened by better equipped to hand!&lt;' such

emergencies.
Frances Sutz, a spokeswoman for
Mercy Hospital. said Rogers was
unconscious when he arrtved at the
larger hospital at 1:25 p.m. PDT.
Sutz said attempts to J'e'Jive Rogprs
were unsuecess!\11, and that be was
declared dead in the ('Tncrgency
room at 4:31 p.m.
Wiiieford sa id doctors in' the
Mercy emergency room listed
"cardlo-pulmonary_arrest" as tbe
cause of d&lt;'ath but that such a
no!at ion was routine procedure In
cases Uke this.

.:iiliHilUUUUUU!lll!l!¥ *'~4UIIUiilliiiUIUIIUUii!t*:: uljUUUIIIIIIIWUUIIM: ~UIIIIIIIUIIIIIillllll~lfuqlllljiUIIIII!!IIII!!UIW:

Jim Mink Chev.-Oids is having a Gigantic: No-Tent Sale.

WE

EED TO

OYE 'E

OUT

CHECK THESE FANT AS TIC BUYS.

'

- ,.,

June 29, 1986

'

AEP courisel critical of acid rain legislation ·
COLUMBUS- The development
o! n&lt;'W technologies to burn coal
cleanly Is tht;eatened by ~slatlon
now befol'l' Congress, according to
A. Joseph Dowd, senior vice
pres ident and general counsel of
American Electric Power $('n;Jce
Corp.
Speaking at the annual meeting
of the Ohio Mining and Reclamation Association here, Dowdpolnted
out that AEP has extremely close
ties to Ohio'~ coal Industry. With
nine large, coal-fired power plants
In Ohio, AEP Is the biggest
purchaser of Ohio coal.
Iri 1985, AEP consumed about 41
percent of Ohio's coal output enough to keep nearly 3,&lt;XXl Ohio
miners on the job. He also noted
that AEP's two Ohio mines tunneled about $126 million In payroll
and benefits and $24 milllon In

porchases of goods and sen;ices
into the state's economy last year.
Dowd asserted that, while a
number of factors threaten Ohio's
coal lndustcy and with It the
Industrial and commercial customers of Ohio's electric utilities, the
predominant threat Is that ot costly
acid rain controls.
" Any governmental policy that
threatens to Increase the cost of
electric ener:gy to our customers,
thereby Inhibiting or reducing their
use of a product, elecrlclty, should
be of the greatest coneern to both
the electric utility and the coal
tndustrJes," Dowd said.
In describing the two bills oo acid
rain ·..,w before Congress, Dowd
noted that, If the controls on
emissions stated In either of tt&gt;:Jse
bills become Jaw, "our nation won 't
have the resources left m acceler·

Area personnel file

ate the development of new
technologies."
Stafford Bill
Dowd said that the Jill introduced
by Sen. Robert T. Stafford, R-Vt .,
declares ali power plants 35 years
old or older to be "new sources" for
purposes of sulfur dioxode and
nitrogen oxide.
"On Januacy 1, 1991, under this
biii, all such sources, not matter
how old, would be required to meet
the currenl, vecy stringent 'new
source pa-formanre standards' for
sulfur dioxide and nitrogen axld&lt;'or shut down," he said.
On Dec. 31, 1991, ali plants,
Including older ones, must meet a
0.7-pound sulfur dioxide emission
llmliatlon or have their future
operation limited to a finite number
of hours, Dowd said.
"'lli? future operation of planls
that are emitting above 0.7 pounds

By HARDIAR KRISHNAN
UPJ
Writer
DALLAS (UPii - Employees
enjoying good relations with the
boss do get ahead faster than those
who don't In most organizations but
a management expert says this can
have positive, as well as negative,
bnpact In the workplace.
"No doubt, this promotes yesmen wbo Ingratiate themselves
with the boss and can lead to
situations where good perform&lt;'rs
who fight for their rtghts don't get
ahead. But some good also can
come out of this In terms &lt;t
establishing good working relationships and Increasing productivity
throughout the organization," says
Gerald R. Ferris, management
professor at Texas A&amp;M University
In College Station.
In his study on "The Role of
Leadership In the Employee Withdrawal Process: A Constructive
Replication," Ferris says the qualIty of working relations with the
boss needs to be studied In greater
d&lt;'tali than has been dOD(' so far to

Light Saddle brown, 9 pass., air, cruise, tilt, AM-FM
stereo, roof rack with deflector, chrome styled
wheel and only 41,974 low miles. New Astro trade.

1982 OLDS DELTA 88 ROYAll 4 DR. SEDAN

Light gray fern. This automobile has had excellent
care. New 98 trade. New Premium radial tires. Compare &amp;Save on this one.

David K. Snyder

1983 BUICK REGAL 2 DR.

Medium blue with dart blue landau top, one local
owner. Tilt, cruise, AM-FM stereo, and chrome
styled wheels. New Delta trade.

1981 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX

What can we say- this L.J. model has ita II. lots of
class here. New 86 Cutlass trade. It's also local.

1985 FORD BRONCO II

1984 OLDS FIRENZA 4 DR.
We sold it new. Auto trans .• custom interior, AM-FM
stereo with cassette. Save a Bunch htrt.

1981

S 4 DR.

Light Champagne in color with Saddle cloth seating.
V-8 equipped, locally owned. Just traded this week.
Priced right.

'.

'

1982 BUICK REGAL LIMITED 4 OR.

Charcoal gray finish with slate gray vinyl top and
matching interior. Power windows, power door
locks and much more. New Premium radial tires.
New Camaro trade.

1984 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

1982 FORD ESCORT 4 DR

Two-tone silver and charcoal. This is truly a beauty,
only 31,000 actual miles, air, auto. trans. and power
steering. New Olds trade.

19.81 CHEV. MONTE CARLO

Two-tone brown and tan. auto. traiis .• power steering, air con d.. custom cloth interior. Very, very nice
inside and out. New Chevrolet trade.

Two-tone gray fern, V-8 equipped, tilt, cruise, AMFM w/cassette, 60-40 seat, Rallye wheels. We sold
it new - S-10 Blazer trade.

The most outstanding Monte in the tri-county area.
Just traded this week. V-8 equipped, tilt. cruise,
AM-FM stereo, two-tone paint, custom CL interior.
Must be seen to appreci~te.

1980 CHEV. CHEVETTE 4 DR.

. 1985 CHEV. CAVAUER 2 DR.

1982 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 4 DR.

Clean as a pin inside and out. Dove gray exterior
with matching interior. New Cavalier trade. It is a
sharpie.

*
iilfllfillllflltltll!fit rill

Custom clot~ int~rior. auto. trans., air, Rallye
wheels and pnced nght. Russet exterior with Saddle
tan custom interior. Only 13.000 miles.

Here is another beauty. Silver with burgundy vinyl
roof. Sharp inside and out. Compare anywhere priced for Quick Sale.

Chevrolet- Oldsmobile Inc.
1616

E~STERN

AYE., GALLIPOLIS, OH.

446-3-672

f i;i t :mItrtflIllIIIIIIIIItIIltn''i 'iii 111111111llfllllfifltlllif :mlllttlIIlltllllltflllllllt~ i ffllllttrtlllllllmhlltti (~'i llhihhii!HIIiffllllll!#,4ff mllhmllflllll~;nlfl tltllltlt ttllltltltltm iC ~ffillltlltltIIIt l'!ltfttlllm;-tl~

POINT PLEASANT - David K.
. Snyder ha s been appointed admln. lstrator of Pleasant Valley Hospital's Nursing Care Unit, after
· having seJVed the last four months
as acting administrator.
A graduate of Rio Grande College
and Rio Grande College of School
Nursing, Snyder holds a bachelor's
degree in bu siness administration,
• a nursing degree and Is a licensed
· nursing home administrator.
He Is a member of the American
College of Health Care Adm)nlstrators, Health Care Financial Management Association, West Virgini a Organization of Nurse
Executives and the National
League of Nursing.
"Mr. Snyder's background, experience and demonstrated ability as
acting administrator have prepared him to accept the challenges
and responsibilit ies of this position." said Michael G. $('ll;u-ds,
PVH ex('CU!Ive director.
Snyder and his wife. Patricia,
reside in Ga llipolis.

year."
Dowd cl aimed tilat the Stafford
bill "miects the most ex treme,
cosily and wasteful approach to
acid rain control Imaginable. 11
calls for retrofitting flue-gas
scrubbers on rrorethan 700 powers.
"And all of this work would have
to be oompleted and In place by tile
end of 1991, about 4'h years from
now, " Dowd said.
Waxman Bill
The second bill, introduced by
Rep. Hency Waxman, D-Calif.,
chairman cf the House Subcommit ·

develop models that can be used to
benefit the entire organization.
Ferrts said he studied~ different
pairs of boss-subordinate relationships In a t&gt;:Jspltal envtronmept and
found the results no different from
pi'I'VIous studies oo similar relations hips In Industri es and
corporations.
"It Is now possible to generalize
that good working relationship with
the boss In any organization helps
an employee to move up faster than
those who don't enjoy such relationships," he said.
Ferrts said the employees who
belong to the "In-group", that Is
tbose who get closer to the boss,
may not always be the producers
but a rc more likely to be tltl' ones
who receive the rewards.
"They aren't the ones who st&gt;:Juld
necessarily be promoted if W&lt;' truly
believe In a periormance-based
reward system. The question is how
do these 'in-groups " get esta blished
in the first place or t&gt;:Jw ooes an
employee get Into this group. Here,
we don't have enough dala and W&lt;'

on Health and the Environment ,

the coal and electrtc utility Industries, Dowd asserted.
The Waxman bill would require
sulfur dioxide emission reductions
In two phases, Dowdexpained. The
first phase calls for a reductk&gt;n of
five million tons ;yearly by January
1993 and a further reduction of five
million tons by Januacy 1987.
To effect these reductions, he
said, the blli would require, on a
stat&lt;'Wide basis, that electric utility
sulfur dioxide emission rates aver·
age no mol'!' than 2.0 pounds by 1993
and no more than 1.2 pounds by
1997. Additionally, utility nitrogen
oxide emission rat('S wruld be
limited to .6 pounds, tir current
limitation applicable to new sources, on a stat&lt;'Wid&lt;' average basis
by 1997.
"This blli Is bein~ sold to the

p.~bllc on the basis that it would
limit rate Increases to residential
customers tolD percer.t through the
Imposition of a hall-mill tax on
kilowatt IDurs supplied by !ossllfueled generating plan rs. It is not at
a!l.clear that there would !)?enough
tax money In the kitty to do the job,"
Dowd claimed .
"Here the midwest faces a
dilemma. Even If there were
enough money in the kitty, our
industrial and commercial customers would st ill t)?ar the full,
unbuffered brunt of the costs
associated with the Waxman bill. It
doesn't really make much difference to the breadwinner who klses
his job because his plan t closes or
moves away that his electric bill is
going to go up by only 10 per~nt.
"Without a job, he won't be able
to pay his bills anyway," Dowd
concluded

need to do more research .
"But It Is clear such 'In-groups'

are present in evecy organization
and since that Is obvious, the
quesllon then Is how b?st Ill tackle
that situation."
The boss-subordinate relationship can help determine whether an
employee Is working hard, abSents
himself !rom work or &lt;'Ven predict
employee turnover, Ferris said.
As in a divorce case, he said, the
boss-subordinate !'l'latlonship may
have detertorated so much that it
would be advisable for an employee
to quit. But In other cases, It may
not be so serious and the relati:lnship can be salvaged, especially
when an employee Is a good
periormer. he said.
"There are pienly of reasons
people might quit other than not
llklng their boss. but it's an
Important factor to eonsider. It also
is true that some subordinates who
are closest to the boss will abuse
that relationship. We need more
study In this entire area to
determine t&gt;:Jw this type of relation·

ship can help improve the overall
productivity of w organizatkln."
Ferrts said a good working
relationship is not merely the boss's
responsibility but the subordinat('S'
as well.
"Pr&lt;'Vk&gt;us studies also show that
it is easy to conclude that the boss
must d&lt;'Velop, monitor and control
relationships wit hsubordinates, but
that's only a part d it. Subordinates
must also assu me simil ar
reponsibility.
" It doesn't always have to be
based oo manipulation of the boss.
An employee can get into the
In-group by beln!l' a star performer
and if the boss Is competent, this
quality will be recognized. Good
relatk&gt;nship with the boss need not
always be dlsfunetlonal. It do('Sn't
have to be negative.
"Office politics goes on in every
organization but we don't llke to
admit it. What we need to recognize
Is IDw best to turn it into a
productive coneept."

New device discourages employee theft
By 11011 WEI!STER
UPJ Bw;Jness Writer
LOS ANGELES (UPit - To
some employees, stea lin g $10 fro m
an employer Is just ifiable "combat
pay" for working a tough shift. To
others, on-the-job thievecy can be a
form of revenge for a low sa la ry .
Regardless of the motive. and
although only about 10 percent of
the workforC&lt;' actively engages in
on-the-job !heft. it appears employees are steal ing as much as S21
bil lion annually frol'l') thei r
employers.
On average, a retail store loses
$10 per shtlt per clerk. according to
a recent sun;ey by the I'\ at ional
Mass Retailing Institute.
Robert Carpenter, president of
Commercial Guardian Inc .. may

have a solution forcompanie'sbeing
robhed from the inside.
Ca rpen ter's Anaheim, Ca lif.
company is beginning fu U produc·
tion of a micropi'OCE'ssor-controlled
cash register it says virtually
eliminates the opportun'lty to steal.
"It's hard to resist where th&lt;'re is
temptation," Carpenter said.
"For the dishonest employ('('s, it
prevent s theft . For the honest
employees. they' ll have no worries
about accuracy in counting change
and no suspicion of theft ," he said
" Lif(' will be easier for them."
The cash register, called the Cash
Guardian 100. is the product of an
right -year. $8 million research
p!1lgra m by Commercial Guardian
and Baskin-Robbins Ice Cream Co .
its parent.

GALLIPOLIS - Mary McFarland Kr-opka of New Haven has
been appointed operations manager for AdvaCare, :1!5 Jackson
Pike. Sponsored jointly by Holzer
Clinic Inc. and Blue Cross of
Central Ohio, AdvaCare is a hea lth
mainlenance orga nization designed to deliver high quality health
care In a cost-efficient manner.
Mrs. Kropka was previously
Jly HARDIAR KRL'&gt;HNAN
employed by Holzer Medical Cen UPI Business Writer
ter for live years, whe~she worked
DALLAS
tUPI ) - Th&lt;' payment
In various positions within the
runs
Into
the
multimllllons but It is
nursing admlnlstratkln and acnot
of
cash.
It Is of people, some llO
counting departments. Her most
recent poslti:ln was man ager of mUiion of them.
The windfall has come to Pro$('IV
continuity of carr at Veterans
Television
from China.
•
Memorial Hospital In Pomeroy.
For
that
"payment,"
the
inde·
A lifelong area resident. Mrs.
Kropka graduated from Wahama pendent television production company In the Dallas suburb of
High School and from Marshall
Ga
rland wUI offer the CCJ"V, the
University, receiving her BBA,
national
television network in the
CHARWITE, N.C. - Pic 'N' magna cum laude, with a minor In
communist
countcy, "A Hard Road
&lt;Pay Stores Inc. has promoted Ed . political science and her master's In
to
Glory,"
a
two-hour documentary
'Skaggs from sen lor training roordl· business admlnlstnitk&gt;n.
on
the
hlstocy
of black American
:nat or tn training department manWhile at Marshall, she partk'lathletes.
ager, said Richard Gainer, vice patro In the Gamma Beta Phi
Bob Briner, 50, preslden t of
:pres ident, director of &lt;DillOrate Society, an honorary business
Pro$('rv, says his company
association, the Management Asso-personnel.
•
Skaggs, 29, came to Pic 'N ' Pay In ciation, and was appointed to the couldn 't have asked for betlf r
terms.
'September 1979 after graduating National Dean's Ust.
__
in fact, he Is so happy he refused
from Cumberlan d College in KenMrs. Kropka resides with her
to
disclose the details of the deal
tucky with a bachelor's d&lt;'gree in husband , Roger, and 10-month-old
except
that the program will be
psychology. he started as a store son, Joshua , In New Haven.
aired In July and wUI bewatchro by
an estimated llO mUllon people, by
far the largest single television
audience In the world.
"It Is a vecy, vecy exciting
prospect for our company. The
COLUMBUS- The Ohio Assocl- teaching methodology , activities of Chinese have the largest television
~t lon of Realtors wlll sponsor a real the Ohio Olvlsk&gt;n of Real Estate, audience In the world. Anyone in
estate Instructor's workshop July 7 and rml estate education from the televlsllon programming will understand what It means to have
from 9 a. m.-4 p.m . at the FawC&lt;'tt administrators' viewpoint.
The ooe-day program Is certified access to that kind of audlenC&lt;'.
Center !or Tomorrow, 2400 Olenfor siX hours of continuing educa·"l cannot gtve you the d\JIIar
,tangy River Road , Columbus.
tion credit. Cost Is $25, which figures but the Chinese have g!ven
Includes hutch.
us the right to sell eommerclal spots
The worksiDp Is required of all
within that program and we can
Realtors' Institute Instructors at
For more Information, contact keep the funds generated from the
Institutions of higher learning who OAR's Education Department at sponsors. You can figu re out how
have not attended a woc ks IDp since 228-fr675. The Ohio AssoCiation of many major International eompan1982, and Is recommended br all Realtors, with approximately les keen on securing the Chinese
real estate rontlnulng education 33,0XI members , Is · the largest market would like to be rur
Instructors.
professional trade assoclatkln In the sponsors. Just think of only the U.S.
Topics covered wOI Include Buckeye State.
and Japanese companies woo

would be intef('Sted."
Briner, who constantly travels
around the world in search of
markets for his company's produc·
Uons, said tbe competition In the
lndustcy is Intense because of the
phenomenal growt h of televis ion
throughout the world.
"Major markets are coming up
&lt;'Vecywhere both in the Unit ed
Stat.,; and overseas and so to be
able to get a market like China Is
significant ," he . said. "We can
deliver our product through any
number of' systems like cable,
satellite, closed circuit and all these
systems are constantly expanding.
A produ ction company like ours
must always be on the lookout for
new markets."
Pro$('n; Television Is a woollyowned subsidiary of Pro$('JV, an
International r:narketlng and management firm In Washington, D.C.
The subsidlacy concentrates on
tennis but In recent years has
offered d.her sports and entffialnment productk&gt;ns.
B~er said his firm sells Its
productions for cash in overseas
markets. The China deal was
different, h&lt;' said, because of
government rfglllatlons.
But he said the non-cash arrangement became attractive because d.
tbe audience size and the potential
to attract eommerclal advertising.
" It all slarted way hack when rur
relatbns with China were normalIzed. I was the first sports executive
to visit China after that. I was the
chairman of the Men's International Professional Tennis CouneU
and I was able tn develop klts of
contacts there. That was the
beginning of our relationship."

POl NT PLEASANT- Joy Cline,
• B.S.N.. R.N .. has been appointed
·: assistant director of nursing servi: ces at Pleasant Valley Hospital.
· Mrs. Cline has been employed as
. a registered nurse at PVH since
• 1973. She gradua ted from the
-Char les ton General Diploma
.School of Nursing In 1966 and
received her bacbelor's degree In
: nu rsing from Marshall University
"In May 19&amp;l. She has worked In
• many capac It les whUe at PVH,
: most recently as a nursing
·supervisor.
"We are vecy pleased to announce the appointment of Mrs.
CliO(&gt;," said !n('Z Howes , B.S.N.,
R.N .. said. "She has been an asset
to Pleasanl Valley Hospital In her
previous capacit ies and wlll be an
even grmter asset as assistant
director of nursing services."
· Mrs. Cline and her husband,
Richard. reside In Point Pleasant.
They have two chUdren, Lisa, 18.
and Shane, 14.

le('

Is an especially serious threat to the

Academic eyes worker-boss relationship
Jim•"""

1983 BUICK LeSABRE ESTATE WAGON

of sulfur dioxide but below 1.5
pounds wruld be Umlted to a total of
10,0)) IDurs of operation. Those
with emissions would ir allowed
only 3,0)) more hours of operation,
no matter whal their life
expeclancy.
"To put th is in perspective," he
said, "there are only 8,700 t&gt;:Jurs In a

Mary McFarland Kropka
manager trainee, became a training coordinator in 1982 and then was
promoted to senior tra ining coordinator In 19lli.
As training d&lt;'partment manager, Skaggs will be responsibi&lt;' for
the training and development of all
store managers for Pic 'N · Pay and
Baret! She(' Stores.

-OAR plans workshop July 7

The machine accepts cash
through lour slots and automatically dispenses exact chanw. At no
lime during a transaction Is the
cash drawer opened . At the close or
business. th&lt;' machine can be
programmed to lock theday's cash
Into a secured steel vau It and to
prov ide a n aud it or daily
transact ions.
In 1984, retailers nationwide lost
about $26 billion, or 2 percent of the
value of ali retail sales. through
employee theft. hone&gt;~ mistak('S
and other unrecovered i:lsses.
according to the National Ma ss
Reta iling Institut e.
Of that total , more than S21 billion
was lost through PmployC&lt;' theft.
th&lt;' institute's study said. Rbbberirs
accounted for almosl Sl billion In

Television producer locates
eager market outside U.S.
Briner said his company also has
roncluded another aireement to
telecast ll hall-hour shows In China
!)?ginning Januacy 1988.
"That agi'I'Pmenl Is already In
place. We haven't announced wha t
we will be Jl'oduclng but It will be In
sports. That's ali i arn tell ~u. W&lt;'
wlll have the same arrangement for
commercial spots in tt&gt;:Jse programs as well.
"In China, personal relationships
are everyt hing and I had the ir~efit
of establishing that over several
years. So this time when I sa t with
their officlais, It was my contact in
the Mln lst:Iy of Sports who paved
the way for us."

losses; shoplifting $1.3 billion; and
vendor theft a bout $2.6 billion
annually .
ConvenienC'!' storrs and fast food
restaurants are hardest hit by
employ€(' theft , with annual i:lsses
totalin g rrorr than $700 million and
S7rxl million respectivPiy. the study
sa id.
Liquor stores b ilow close behind
with annual losses of $640 million
attribu ted to employee theft.
Commercial Gua rdian has in sta lled thr!'!' or the mochlnes In
Baskin -Robbins i ~ cream parlors
and Initial plans call for the
company to install about thrw or
four mac hines a lll'&lt;'k for tll&lt;'
r·emainder of the ;year n a variety
of buslne=. Carpenter sa id.
Commercial Guardian inlt !ally
plans to sell rlle $15.~ cash
registers to !ranchise o11ners and
owners of small retail outlets.
rather than to natio nwire retail
chains.
·
"The buying time and decisionmaking prOC&lt;'SS Is longer in large
chains," Carpenter sa id , adding
that he has held discu ssions with
representatives or most of the
large-sca le retail chains.
• Carpenter said the c~sh registers
would pay for themselves in a year
in a store that posts annual sales of
S!iXl.OOO or more and has the normal
ralc of employee theft and
shrinkage.
Field tests or rhr new machines
have been encouraging .
"One starr rf1)0rled its profit s
went up 30 jl{'rcent. What went up
wasn't the profits but the amount.cl
cash they kept ." Carpenter said.
"That ca n mean the difference
between success and failure for
small volume and inner cit y storrs.
" If they can't keep the cash that
comes in. the)· can't expand and
certainly can'l survive."

PROOUcr ORIENTATION - The llalf 11 Mane Deslpen Salon,
'l80 F1nt Ave.,&gt;G•lllpolla, (lllrilclplled iDa Nex111 piiJGJct orleolatlon.
on- pl'l!lelll were, from lefl, 'nna Aleo, Carolyn Burris 1111d Diana
&lt;AidweiJ. Not llhown Is Cindy Sexton. The lnolruclor, al rlJlhl, Is Dtlrleen
Carp!nier.

�Page-0-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 29, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
11

illlt·lll'lllll'lll
St~l VII:I~S

Help Wanted

B.a,y litter wenttd In my home
luhtn ar• Apprott. 30 twe a
week. C11i t14 848 2883 1ft1r

3 00.
11

Halp Wanted

12

Situations
Wanted

Certified teachtr V~~lth Mesttrs
Degr• In reading t.Oing stu
dints IK -81 ., tutor sny II!Jbiect
_., her homa k)c•tld In Mkldl•
pon Emphuls on r1.:tlng phon
lea and comprlh~nsion Stu·
dlnt1 scfledule own hours
Fee It&amp; 00 per hour Cell 614

892·11227

Work wanted • carp~nter
roofing, 1idlng gutten
deling, new llddition, axp
or hour Fr11 "tlmele

273·4710 d
MYSTERY FARM- Till!; week's 11\l'slery !ann,
featured by the Meigs SoU w.d Water &lt;Alffiervatlon
Dl&lt;ltrlct, Is located somewhere In Meigs County.
Individuals wishing to participate In the weekly
conll!st may do so by guesslngthefann'sowner. Just
mail, or drop oft your guess to the Dally Sentinel, ll1
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45'769 or the Galllpolls
Tribune, 1125 Third Ave., GaWpoUs, Ohio, 45631, WJd
you may win a S5 cash prize from the Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your name, address and

construction, maintenance, and
stocking of ~X&gt;nds
In an attempt to answer these
qu estions the construction of a IX&gt;nd
should be considered on a case by
case basis. We would be happy to
discuss with yoo the things you
should consider before deciding to
buDd a !Xlnd such as site selection.
soil suitability, mtended purpose,
cost, Habillty, and maintenance
This brings us to the subject of
maintenance Once a pond Is
mnstructed the work has often only
begun In order to Insure a long ll!e
for your pond It must be protected
from llvestock and weeds must be
controlled In the control of weeds It
Is important to first Identify the type
of -reeds present. Then select a
proper control measure based on
the uses of the pond You may

By Patty Dyer
District Cmservatlonist, SCS
GALLIPOLIS - Those rot,
humid summer days ar e now upon
us All dunng the winter we looked
forward to this time, but row we are
o!len heard complaining about the
hot weather, and daydrea mlng
about sitting under a shadetree
alongside of a IX&gt;nd with a fishing
!Xlle In oor hands
There are many good fishing
s ~X&gt;ts In Gallla County, but the most
widespread and !X&gt;PU!ar of these
S!Xlts include privately owned
IX&gt;nds. properly constructed, man·
aged, and main tamed, asmall!Xlnd
can give countless hours ol relaxa
tlon and rec reation to ourselves and
neighbors.
We have been receiving numer·
ous questiOns recently In regards to

EASY

Nltd Avon reprN.-.tltlvlll .,
Gallipolis.,.. Free nan up fH ,
limtted t•me Call today 814

ue.215e

11

S.llklll - 91Z·2156
R1'1111 - &amp;75-1333

PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
" VIRGINIA CREW,
E:~~~ec:utrix of the Est•te af
LESLIE M PRICE,
~ecoooed, PLAINTIFF

vs.

"fHE FARMERS BANK

:

~~~~~~~Ng:

POMEROY, OHIO. ot ol ,
DEFENDANTS
,
NOTICE OF
•
P1UBLIC SALE
· C11o No 24,432
P.uriU•nt to the order of
the Probete Court of Meigs
Coonty, Ohio. In Cue No.
24 ~ 432 , I wdl offer for sale

at publtc auctton on Juty 18.

1986, ot 10:00 o'clocl&lt; A
M ; at the door of the Meigs
County Courthouae. Pom"'""' Ohio, the followmg de·
scribed real 111111 •tueted
'" ihe Cou ntv of Meigs. i1
th• State of Ohto, and in the
Vtltage of Pomeroy. and
bo~ndod

and described 11

folkJwa, tO •WFt

Begtnning at the North
we:\1: corner of a lot formerly
belonging to the estate of J
Vtnc-tnt, decl!las&amp;d; thence
Sollth 1 1 I'&gt; dog East of 1 1 4

faai. thence South 861ft deg

.J wllt to the eut side of a

NOAH'S ARK ANIMAL PARK
Schools church•. CO"l).-.y
ptcruct birthd ay plrtt• .,d
temity reun10n1 Cell 814 384·

2108 .. 1-800·282·2167

- - - - - - ·k:1 wtll not be responsible for any
debts contracted for by anyone
oth•r thsn myulf Aoy A Pack
SINGLES Me•t other~~ ftvm
your eree end elt8W'here All
8981 Don 't be ton lily H H C ,
BOA 81 , lerv8Sy, WV 26676

4

Giveaway

Long httrecl k1nen s to good
home Call after 5 61 4 446

7693

2 female puppleJ a..gln. 6
week old Csn 614 446-2724
3 small dogs 2 ell white, 1 bl.:k
Bt whfte Call 61 4 379 2756
Full blooded stiYer P•raum cat

c."
304-675 7686
D11ct'tUnd mt• male dog

Year

old Call614-44 6·76 00

4 puppttt wormed &amp; hu hid
shots Shepherd m1• Ce ll 61 4 ·
446 7313
Several wood pellets to gNt
away Ftrat come, f1 rst &amp;el'\ltt
bat•• lnqu1re tn parton at
Gelhpohs Da1ly Trtbune Otfrce.
825 Thtrd Ave , Galhpol11

small ltreet. thence nonh 3
deQ welt 31 feet ; thence M1xed pupptll 6 weeh old Can
north 37 dog oost 110 ioet 8U 388·9634
to~ place of begirintng, 3 very n1ce k•«en• that .-e ltttee
beii1g the north part of lot tr11ned Call614 446·9287.

No 474 tn 11111d aty of Po·

meroy, and being the same

property conveyed by B F

Biggs, et ux, to Cathlrme
Zweifel. by dead doted Do-

1 year old pupp1" helf Border
Colhe· half German Shepherd
Celleh11r 5 614· 446 7685

camber 19, 1882, and rec:ordad in Book &amp;8. at page

2 lovaty klt1en1 to a good home .
Call 814· 441 -)897

390 of the Deed Recorda O'f
Moigo County, Ohio.
Betng the same rulestate

30 acres standm g hay 1n
Rodney area Call 614 246

conveyed to Mrt James H
CltHord, the Grantor herem

byjlomoo H-Clifford by deed

,_,dod
p...

on Doed Book 135,
405 of the Moigs
C~nty Deed Records
' 8eference

2'1:1. page 17

Deed

Vol

MeogoCounty

O.d Records

$aid premises ore ap·
proioed at 818,600 00 and

944e

Female pure bred Dob e rrn~~n 8
week old Call814 446 4697
7 6 week old pupp1es pert Collie
part German Shepard Free to
good home 614 84 3 6421
FrH to a good hOme German
Shepherd end P1t Bull m1xed
Housabroken, tra1n_. to co mmand Celt 614 843-6421

mqwt be sold for not lesi
thlfl two·th1rds of stud ap·
pr•ed value The terms of
• • and payment of the
putchaae money shall be for
c•~h. 1n full. 11 the tune of

Appro• 1 y, ton of coal to
gvaaw•y 61 4· 7&lt;12· 2502

the

Bleclc male dog long he11ed 1
year old Also 3 cell end 3
lcttfen a Call 614 -742 -3188

••te

Virgmia Crew,
._: Executr~x of the Estate
of -lealle M p,...~,. rl,.,l'! .. ,..~

18] 22. 23, 29,

(7)

6. 4tc

In Memory of Estell G.
link who passed away
: June 24, 1985.
n. world may chan1e from
~year to year,
Aid friends from day to lily
8111 never w1ll the one '"
: love
from memory pass away
Sadly m1ssed by w1fe and
fa mil
2

In Memoriam

2 mall 1 female German She·
pherd PJP• to g•veaway 614 ·
7&lt;12 3086

8 game roostert wrth no spun
111 tratler p11t Me191 Htgh
School on County Ad 25
Me l• dog. black &amp; wh1te, 8
months old. hp shott 304 -

675·2320

Khten1. 2 male, one fem1le

30. 675·7217
Kjnena to
7242

QlVII

IWIY 304

AUCTION APPRECIATION
Thanks to all merdllnts.
f11ends, stall who pve dona·
t10ns and support for 1 SUC·
cessfulltJCtlon on June 20th.
The Resident sol
Mtddleton Estates
9

Wanted To Buy

9

Wanted To Buy

We pty c•h for Itt• model cl"n
1uMllc:.n
Jim Mfnlt Ct.~ ·OJdt Inc
Bill Gtn• Johnton

IU·4otl·31172

TOP CASH p.W for '83 model
end n8W'If used cars Smtth
8u1di·Ponti.::, 1911 Eastern
Ave . G..llpolie Call 814-448·

2282

Old furniture, tlbltl , chn.
cupb bookc1111, ice bo•n.
1ron beds, chelts, wicker.
cond Celt 814 448 3758

WANTED TO BUY und wood.
cool hoot. . SWAIN'S FURNI·

TURE. 3rd 6 Olive St GeiiiPCJ·

Ill Coli 11 4-4otl·3159

Aeuonlbty prfced 14•70 mo- Went• junk 1ut01 C1ll 814·
bile home with 1-1'12 1cr• of 388·9303
land Prefer location ., G1INpolil
ar11 C1U 304 876-1728 lifter Usld Mobile Hom• C1l 8145PM weeicdiYI anytlmt WM- 4oti·0175
kends
HouH on l.nd oontrKt, pr.ttf·
Buyff'tg dilly gokf. lllvlf COI'It. rlblt¥ AddiYIIII or Ch•hlr•
nngs, JIWelry, rtlrtl'lg Wlrl. ~d KYllO' Dtot. f3,000 down eon
COinl, ll;l'gt CUrr.,cy Top pri· 114·317 7583.
cea Ed Burkm Barber Shop,
2nd Ave Mtddleport. Dh 614· .tteddlrbaek chllrl. good cond
992 3476
304·117&amp;-3788

t:=~::::::;r:l:::::;:?~~~==
J
sales

Lost and Found

'
In t.vlng mtmory of Joaeph
Ett.worth lil1ell Ml11itlg and
rhilting of you on this your IIIOth
blr)ftdiY Wt love lnd miu you

10 1 Furnrturt clolh•. certm·
tct d11h11 , antiques lawn
Ieeder. crafts . pound pupp ies
10ft aculpturld dolls curt•ln•
bed spreeds.Jota fab nc. more at
Shtrley A"owood 1), mtle out l1f
Thurman Rt 279 Cell814·812·
7183

4 Fmalty Y~rd Sale Joot 30 1:
July 1 9am to 4pm . D11ht1,
doth11. toys. ttc 5 mllec out
Bul.v•U• Rd Swlaher R11 nelrt
to Shrine Club
ht Time 6 Fam1ly July 4&amp; 6, Frl
&amp; Set Hom '"terlor, tuppllt'·
ware, m11c 5150 Jay Dr
3 Fam•ly July 1 a 2 In front of
J A 1 rettaur~nt Chlthtre
Oh1o

Pomeroy- ·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Garegesale July 1 .-.d2 Ematt
Wh1t1heed . Reed1ville 011
heattng stove. curtsinl, cu
sh.ona. clothing m small dukll,
fumort end mens .. ,.. Miec
900a m
J uty 3rd. 4th snd 5th Lamps,
end tab I" p1ltows, 1\1 g1. toy I.
toy ch•t. computor, COft11utor
tsble, 4 ~nett TV with I'Mfio.
~erosene h11ter; 1tc First houH
past Church tn Chester
July 2nd and 3rd Btthany
Church, St Rt 124. Rsctne.
Oh1o

b1neries Many mora
103 Brick St Pomeroy
July 1,2,3

Oerege Nle July 1, 2, 9 4 00
Rlggscrut Addit1on . ebon
E H S Medicine cllbintt, toy
chest bldsprtldt, curt1ln1,
toys. cklth• eduh 1nd chddrens
Doria Well
3 famity yerd 1111 July 1,2
McKtnzte Ridg1 Rold off B1
1hen Rd Tlble t:hain. clothlt,
mite
•
Ylt'd 1111. Gordon C11dwall
Tupp•• Pllinl Juty 4-5
Robert Arnolds rtJidence
For•t Run Ad 3rd trailer eftllt'
For•t Run Church July 2end 3

9-4

Powell 's, Fifth St .. Alcina July
1 through 5 9 00 ttl dark 6
fanull•· largt vanety good clo·
thing, m11c tttma
4 family On Rt 124., Rac~t~e
behind M110nlc Lodge Good,
cl11n clothing, books mise
ittml. July 1,2 3 fmm 8 00 to
5 00 Dennie Hill r•ld.,ts
Gar~tt 11le at Art Millett Wed
July 2 and Thur July 3, from 10
em to • pm on Whh• Htll Ad
Rutland. C~thng, whet· nots,
chrlltmae dtcoratkJns, dish...
quill tope, ettd lots mot1 W1tch
for 1rrowa. 11h mile on 1Jt taft
tum off eftM leevlng Autl1n«t
North Meln 8t

Two femily Antlqu•wood bed e.
stone jars. qullta, ch1lra, collecttft itema. cloth•.lho•, rad~ .
tabt1, fruIt jaq One mile off 124
bttw..,. Portl.,d .,d Long
Bottom-witch for aegns R1ln Of'
thine June 30, July 1,2,3
Edg.-lrM• Phonll14 843

1334 8 00·1.00

14 mile on 143 .r Humphrey 1
Feed grinder, New Hollend Hay
Squ"•er·CondiUonlr. chest
diiP ffeutr, clothH. weight
bond!, oct. CoU 114·11e2 311&amp;9
1

1,2,3 8:00 3:00.

July 2 and 3 . Hou11 betide
PI11Hr1 8 :30 · 4 :00 3 flmlty

-·---.. PfPieiiiiiiiif ....
&amp; Vicinity

WW( Ado E. lltoollond Chlldron

. . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 •• •• •••••• •••• • ·-·

3 •.Announcements
•

•

SWEEPER and ltwlng machine
replir pena. lnd aupplill Pick
up end cMNvery, 01'1111 V~ewm
Cl .. ner. one half mila up
Oeorg• CrNi Ad Call 614-

4otl·0294

Found · m11e Be11et1 hound, red
collar, Grttnbrl~r Eet1t11 304·
876 3816 Green
Found Cow In Btthtl church
.,.. hat teg with number r. •r
Call 304·876 3266

882 2481

HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES-

Serve Pin time ., tht Army
Natkl&gt;nal Gu1rd end •ttend col
leg t full time We provide up to
118.000 In ectucationtl ex·
pens•. PLUS. good pay and
od training 304-676 -3960or
BOO 842·311 19

yrs long Haul tome experience
hllpful c.u 81&lt;1-992- 8751

Help Wanted

The Metgs County Health Department wtll be
acceptmg applications until July 3, 1986 for a
part-time R.N. to work three (3) days per week
m Public Health Nursing.
Requires knowledge and experience m assessment and &amp;valuation skills . Must be currently
licensed in State of Ohio. Acari s necessary and
must be able to work independently.
Resumes can be mat led or brought to the Meigs
county Health Department. P.O. Box 631,
Mulberry Hts., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Allen·
lion : Jon D. Jacobs, Administrator.
The Me1cs County Health Department IS an
[qual Opportun1ty Employer

The Me1gs County Health Department will be
accepting applications. until July 3, 1986 for a
full time R.N. in the Pre -Natal Clinic.
Qualifications must be currently licensed tn
State of Ohio , be able to assess and evaluate
the Pre-Natal Clients , and worli independently.
Salary, hours and fringe benefits wtll be discussed on tnlervtew.
Resumes can be mat led or brought to the Meigs
county Health Department , P.O. Box 631 ,
Mulberry Hts .. Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Attention Jon D. Jacobs. Admmistrator.
The Me1cs County Health Department IS an
Equal Opportuntty Employer

BIQ 5 Famtly June 30..July 1

July

6

1

-· --p·c,,;;-e;c;y-Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

·- --·Gallipolis - - ·
&amp; Vicinity

f76 · 1 ~;;;;;;-;~;;;;::i;;o,;-;;;;;;
fumlture. blby swmg

Uaed w11her 304 675 7429

Workl Book-Chlklcrtft. repr•
eentathlea needed . P1rttimt, full
time, QUirlntMIIVIilable, 304·

r

Trillllll- 445-2342

COMMO~Np[~:s COURT

Pert timer Avonl lntur1nce
blnef1t11 Avonl 15 10 etan1
Avonl 814 992 7180

contact the local Co-operative
Extension O!llce or your local Soil 25704
and Water Conservation Dlsb'lct
lor assistance.
Technician
The third area o! questions have Dlttrlct
Gallia So1l &amp; Wltet' Contlr\lltlon ASSEMBLERS WANTED! Eem
centered around stocking o! ponds Dlttrict. 529 J~ebon P•k•. LtJ 10 teo 00 a day euambhng
dilplay clowns Sif'll)le, profit•·
Specific stocking recommenda· Room 308-C, Gallipolis. Dhlo bit matltltls-pettarn atppUed
45831 Conttct P•tty Dyer,
ttons lor )Our specific pond and type 814-oM&amp; 8887 Dt1line Juty Send lllf· lddrtlled stamped
HIWU L1nding, P 0
&lt;1 llshing desired are available by 14 Sal1ry Negoclabl•b•sldon tr'IVIIope,
Box 13493, Orlando, Florid•
education end uperlanct
contacting the local SoU Conserva- Needed P.rtOn lnter•ted in 32859
tion Service
pror1kit~ng CGniiiVItkln of our
and wetlt' mourcae Job RN LPN to do lnturenca phy11·
The Gai!Ja SoU and Water soU
r.-ponaibillt•• Workmg with eels ln Po int Pl.. tant and
Conservation District Is selling Blue Diltrlet owned a~uipment (in- at rroundll"'g areas. Csr .,d
phone necenary Part· tlme
Gill, Channell Catfish and Large- ckldlng 2 no·IUI grlln drllht tnd a work, 1· 304-3C3·9444 after 10
no ·tUI corn plenter) WOfklng
mouth Bass. Orders need to be wtth l1ndownen In diVIioping om
conHrvltion practiCII I I WI·
placed by August 8th
terw1ys, diversions . ponds .
U you have specific questions on dralnega
SYittml ltC Ability tO Govemment Jobs 116,040
IX&gt;ndS or IX&gt;nd management, or conduet turveys, and oompl11a f69. 230·yr Now htrlng C•ll
80&amp; 687 6000 Ext R 9805 for
would like to place an order lor fish anglnear.,g de111Jnt of oonaer current federal htt
vauon practictl
)Ou may contact the office by
LN•In C0"1).,ion with tldarty
calling 44&amp;11687 or stop by the office E11y A11embl'( Workl f714 00 lady
in Huntington W V1. Celt
per 100 GuarentMd Payment
at !ll9 Jackson Pike, Room :m.c In No Sales Details· Stnd 30&lt;1·713 6861
llampMI envtlopa Elan 6847
the Spring Valley Plaza.
Co· DrNM wanttd Mu1t bl 23

33482

Public Notice

Mond..,, TuaediY. Wadn•dlv.
8 mit. hom Point PIHIIM on
fh 2, It fll'trvdl . llby furQhurl
lnd mflceMiniOUI.

Yord Solo.

July

1, 2. 110 3rd

Strllt. M110n Fumhurt. llera·
lint hut•. fen1. elothlng, crib

Flll diiGI.tl

WORK !

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH

DIECTOR OF CONTINUING EDUCA'DON
Rio Grande College/ Comm111ity College amounces a
position available as Direcwr of Continuinc Education.
Off-Campus, Spectal alii Summer Programs. The post·
lion IS a twelve I!Klllth admmistrative aRJ(lmtment.
Responsibilities mclude development ard Implementation of cootinuil'l education programs, course selec·
tion, development alii evaluation of programs alii monrtonnc budget. Knowledge of, alii abthty to, relate to
business, tndustrtal and commllltly orpmzations required. A demonstrated abtlity to wolil successfully in
an academic setting Computer and comm1111cation
sktlls, as well as strong mteriJeiSOnal relations, and
motivation to be a seH·starter IS eJII)ected Masters
Degree prefened.
Interested persons should send resume, letter of tn ·
terest, names of references before the dead Ime of
July 8. 1986 to .
Personnel Offtcer
Attention - Continumg Education
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande College/Communtty College
Rto Grande, OH. 45674
Rio Grande College lo on Equal
Opporlun•ty I AffirmatiVe ActiO n Employer

P0 No 8438

TECHNICAL SERVICES CLERK

Roo Gran• Coii1C1/Com11unoly Coll.oonnounclllho optn1n1
lot apoo"lon of ftthnlcal Sotvlets Clolk In tilt D0¥1s llbrory
lipoltlllc dirlttly to lho D•oclol ~till Ublary, tflo position IS rtS·
IIOIIIiblo for 11-.. IIVolvlll&amp; ICqttlsotiqn tl II typos tl llfnly
11.W0; Hslstittc intill ltfGC'IIiii&amp;Of -~to ill flldtd to tflo
tolhden, wort toitfl-lc ldol11il1nlon Ill -111c bullplltJ conllots for llbntly )IUfdl-: osslstila In MPOtvlllon tlllltdettt Mtployoos; 11sblil1 potrons • ,.. ofllbllty ooktlolllltd
f*lmlill .a. dolill 11 roqulllod by tflo OiNitor.
llnittttltllltllfftleallo.. for tho po111ioo illl*l* lbllitllo 1ypt a..,.
niMI of SO IOido,. ntlnuto, Mw•balltlooMits ill tlllfd pr-·
oillllliaa 1tilt 111; 11ooiduvidfl101 of dMtllllblltd 11111111 to
work
llld""' toitfl till polltic; provillt ...... of
pd lllitllll 111d Ofll co-.ICII!otl sWill.
AIIM11 two ,..,. ~ posts..:onoiiiY tducatlon Is 111tfmtd and
Ollt par of bookkltDina. purchoslna. debt proem and/ or 1ocord

itldoptn-

k:r.nc•xparlt~~&lt;tlsraqulrtd
PI IIICI II dnKiblo.

lalmnt Hbrory or book tradux·

lntemltd 11011011 should sond 111111 tl lntorat, nouN, jn·
clorllnc
•oton till dotdllnt ot July 3, 19H to.

"'"'"*

!!~;~!'!:~~Off~~loi:•~,tComn~nhy College

Need to work hsy tobtcco
moWing &amp; yard Y~~Grk General
mechanics, carp.,try, weld1ng

• pointing Coli 114·251·1337

Would like to eit with tklerly
person 1110 wtll do cl1an.,g Cell
614 448-3007 or 614 -448

6213

Will do gen~rel hou se cleanmg
C.ll 81 4·99 2-3228

Will do baby alttlng m my home
Call 614-992-6687
Will do wtllpaparing and p1tnt
lng Experienced. references,
rNtonlblaratn tr11 eetlmltM,
304 676 -1629

B

Business
0 ppo rtun ity

I NOTICE I

1B Wanted to Do

33482

3418 Entllt'Pnle. Ft Ptere• Fl

3 Announcements

ASSEMBLY

1714 00 per 100 Guaranteed
psym~nt . No 11lll Oet:alll aand
ttempld envelopt Elan 715
3418 Emerprlll, Ft Pierce, Fl

M1ch1111C needed lnGIIIIpolia to
maintain small fiHt of GM light
duty trucks Exper11noed in
folklwlng· HEI. manutl trsns
IYQslons, dlfftrential, IUIPtn·
tlon lyl'ttma, engln11 ttc Send
rti!Jme to lobby Ritter. P 0 .
Bok 92:47, Huntington, WV

•
Ponds offer summer recreation

work
remo·
by JOb
304

21

telephone nwnber with your card or letter. No
telephone calls wU1 be accepled. AU contellt entries
should be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m.
each Wednesday.ln caseol atle,the lnclvldual wlllse
letter has the earllesl postmark wU1 be declared the

winner. Next week, a GaWa County lann wU1 be
featured by the Gallla Sol and Water Conservation
Dl&lt;ltrict. The June 2:1 GaWa plmlre In the Sunday
Tlm...S.ntlnel was the Kall llw1e8on Fann,
operated by Rob and Connie Massle,SpringlleldTwp.

AnENTION FRIENDS &amp;
CUSTOMERS
Thank you for your patronaee. We •nt to let
you know that the Wallpaper Mtll Outlet Is not
connected Wltllany other
'MIIIpaper store.
It is Operated by
MARIA HOAFAT

lNG CO recommends that you
do bu••n•• with peopl1 you
know •nd NOT to send monl'(
through ;lhe mail until you hive
1nv11l1Qited the oftenng
A gold•n o pportunlly join
fr•endlv home toy partin the
lladlf for 31 YUI'I Openings for
man~gers and dalllf'l, Wt h1ve
thelttglltend bll111n• in PlrtY
plan No caeh tnVIItmtnt. no
cltlwering or ooMecting Elm big
monev plus bonu ..s and tr1ve1
tncentiv• Call now 1011 fru to
Carol Oav 1-800 227 -1610
Prtced lo 1111 Night Club on At
7 3mtiMf'OrthofPomaroy 05
l~quor license w ith carry-out belr
end w1n1 newly remodalld Cell
814 ·992 6891 snyt1m1

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION
JULY 2, 1986
10:00 A.M.

On St. Rt. 93, four miles north of McArthur,
Ohio at the former residence and place of
business of Rich Johnson.
AUTOS: 1975 Che v Monte Carlo, 60,000 mtles, extra
c~an , 1973 Pontta c 2 dr. HT, 1971 Ponttac Convertt ·
b~ - these two cars all! n1ce With only a~roxtmalely
70,000 mtles 1973 Chev wreckef wtth Holmes 440
boom , 1946 Ford ptckup V-E (re storable), also a late
40's Chev Motor 6 c ~ , good Three motorcycles, 14
ft alum John Boat, boat motor
TOOLS: cha m hoist. t1re change r, hand tools, power
saw, work bem:hes, t1 res, belts, hoses, add1ng
machme, old scales, motorcycle pamt &amp; part bms of
mtsc. ~rts, etc
FURNITURE: Ant1que brn ss cash reg1ster, H1ghboy
dresse1. other dressers, round oak table, old cook
stove, deep freeze, two refngerators, old trunk, 18 old
washboa rds, approx 30 lanterns, dtshes, bottles, old
m1lk bottles, cannmg jars, dolls, bteycle, tncycles,
guns &amp; MUCH MORElli
BUILDING SUPPLIES Approximately 40 new slorm
doors , 25 new wmdows, tnstde doors, ch1mney for a
tratle r. kttchen counter tops, smks &amp; tubs l ots of goo·
dtes betng pulled from the corners
Come on out. bring your lawn chairs , spend the
day!!!
FOOD AVAILABLI!!
TERMS· Cash or Check with Posttive f. D.

AUCTIONEER: RODNEY HOWERY

698-7231

June 29, 1986
21

Bu1lneu
Opportunity

32 Mobile Home•
for S1le

Atltlursnt tor 1111 Loceted In
Pt. P.... M1 Attractlvt Offlf.

Coo 114-4oti·HII

flormer c..-w•h for l. .t Can
be usld u carw11h or othtr
bUSinlll LoQittd fl PI, Pie•

_, Coli 11 4·4otl-81111

114,000. 30.. 112·3111.

11n

2403
23

6001 .. IU 742-3147.

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,

rid iiOOYM your pi.-.o' t blautlful
ton1, call 1Dday, Wardl K..,
Of

382• .

178·

lli~ al bldlt:

Hornet for Sale

• bedroom houM firtpltce. 3
ml touth ofG.tllpoUe. t29,900

burner. n•

•1871 M1nalon 1&lt;1•70. 1 Ox20
porch a IWning, underpinning,
2 bdr • bath Y,, llvlngroom.
ceiling tan kitchen, etove. refrig •
den. flraolsca, AC, waaher.
drylf C•11814·3B8·9850

Clrltlt in bedroom,

ttova • refrtg. t4,800. Mun

mo. tor mot'a Info. PIMH clll

114-812·2218

1974 Stardust 2 bdt., 2 bath,
OR, LR, ppando new : furnac:e,
carpet, hal Wltlr heat• .C1II
61.t-o448-3917 lVII

191M 14a70 Overlend Park
m..,ut by Holly Patk. 2 bdr ..
l~rge beth with garden tub
shower lUll Unfufnllhld. lived
In 1 yr Total electric, lnd\.tdtl
b'ock. elec. wire &amp; bruklt' box.
good condltkm For more lnfor
mation pl ...• call 614 441
1880 liberty 141'11&lt;1. 2 bid

room. unfumlshtd. vinyl under
pinning lnch..dttd Mult IIIII Cell
304-173-15173
--------:-:1178 10a10 Alan MoblleHomt
2 btdroofl'lll, all .... pertlllty
fumilhld with smell porch on
,.,ted lot On INCh Grove Ad
Rutl1nd 14000 81&lt;1·742·
2738 anytime
1172 12•80 Eloon• Moblll
Hom1 whh eMily detached
10x21sun porch Mutt retocat1
Front kttc:h.,, 2 bedroom, fur·

3011·895·3313

fiOOO tU·91B·U27
------:-:--:-:-:·lc1174 12xl0 ol-lc 2 bod•oom

3 IN', full buemWtt. large lot,
ln·eround pool 304-n3·1418

mobile hornt A C • underpin·
nfng, p_.latfy fumlahed Asking

~lcatx~cutlve typ1 home
1q ft llv 1re1, lnground

3100
pool,

with or whhout ecrNgl S A
180, 4 mi from Holltr La••
optton 1 po11dbllity Call 814·

44e·7322

Nice 11173 Eutople 81!1 ft party

tum . •a.200 Nloe 1873 Ar-

lington eo ft . partly turn
ooll can e14-241·1ZI4
15.200 CaH 11•·4ot8·1340.
1881 MonoiOft 70x1411vod In 7 1889 Eloona 2 bdr. 12•80. with

!bedroom home. 111CT•. Iarge
Ieite Horne hM firtplata, wood.
ooal, oM, hot wlter hMt, new
kitchen L•rv• yltd with child,.,. , woodtn piiiY' centet Morn·
fng Stll ar11 C1ll 814·948·
2103

82U

nlohod,

porch, good cond , or wHI trade
for c•mp•. •4. 300 Call 81&lt;1

441·1511

City a..korogo. 81•·448·93•0
33

Farms for Sale

wm sell or tr~• small farm w1th
mobile one. C1ll 1fter 5, 814·
25e·U07
48 1cre finn, Little l!lull Skin
C•ll814-2150-11 U 1111 or trade
34 A. Fwm At 1 Leon Mike
OHor 1 104-ell-1428
188 •c••· t..un area. lerge
houu, 2 bams. own•flnandng,

304-H5l410

,or ule 3 br home. 12 tcr• land
ptu1 8 loti. 71 Ford. 2000
tractor 1: all tQulpmant. ntw
bam 4 held Htttford cattle. will
Mil all tOQMhlf or IIPifltt

n3·187B II!Y11ma&lt;&gt;&lt; n3·11 57
afiii'Op.m

MOBILE HOMES MOVED In·

lUrid. rNionlbll t"'t•. C•tl

36 Lot•

1 9B2 Clavton 12x80 111 elec

7 scr• wlrh compl111 mobile
hom1 hook up Bam, In Ch1111r
arH Atklng •10,000 C•ll

l Acreage

30 ... 171-2331

1 987 HO.I'Y P~tk 12d0 2
bedroom pattlaltv furniehed

114 88&amp;·3121

Alh10fl building loti whh DUbhe
-rot air f4.100 304·18!· Willi,
mobilt homtt ,.mmed,
3398 .. 891-3193
304·e7S 2331

older hornt. bam oth• build·
1ng1. 2 pondl. ucelltnt MIMing
1ncludllll 3 g• • oil wei ... 1M
mtn•ll• •eo.ooo 1 104 241 -

3 bdr hOuH, 28 Vfnton St.
131 000 Contact DIVid Adii'M
, ·151 3-&lt;131· 2927

A TRAINING/DEVELOPMENT FIRM
OFFERS
' MARKETING
'PUBUCATIDNS
'BUSINESS
CONSULTING
'GRNT WRITING
'BROCHURE
. DESIGNS

PROVIDING A VARIETY OF CONSULTANTS
FOR YOUR BUSINESS AND INDIVIDUAL
NEEDS!
514 SECOND AVENUE, SUITE 200
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 45631
(614) 446-8016

Nice 3 or 15 bedroom Mlmt.

bti!Uttful 'oc.ation, l•rl' tot JUit
bMn remodeled Only 2 mil•
frorntwononAt 1•1 DVeftoolllng Debblt Drive, 146,000 Call
304·175· 5108 or 304-1715-

Newly-W1d1 Dr11m Hou u
Av1llllble immedlltely· 1 compl•t• refurbished two bedroom
homa with newl well to wall
carpeting end coordmatlng d repari• provided G1r191 w1th
opener, g111d1n spot. and many
other utrll B1theflrttto bve ln
thll lmmaculete home located et
101!115 2nd Ave In GaiUpolll For
mora detsll1, phone Dtnile et
CoJonltl Propert1n 814· 286·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

3 bdr home Will accept one
child, oo peb, ref Csll81 4-446·

928 First Av• 6 room house
Call 814 448·3945
2 bedroom turn11hed house tn
Middleport Cell 614-99 2 5304
3 bedroom, Hartinger Perkway
tn Mkfdleport 1200 per month

Coli 114 992 7883

2 bedroom Duplex houu pertllltv f\lrnlahed Low util ities. ln
Pomeroy C1ll dave. 614 992 2381 or 814-992 2609 even
lngs
OPEN HOUSE - Sl turdev.
June 28th. 1 6 p m 3 bed rooms, 2 car garage, centrl atr
end htlt. nlce netghbothOod,
1300 par mon1h plue depoatt
and refarences 3rd hou se on
rtght side of Staff Hou1e RoiMI 11
approached from Muon County
F1lrground Road Wat ch fo r
atgns
2 or 3 bedroom home conve
nlently located 1260 mont h
plus dspostt 2 bedroom apart
m.,t , HUD spproved 1200 per
month plus depoltt 2 story 3
bedroom brick hom• . 1 '!.a baths ,
b~~~tnent . fen ced yard 2 bad ·
room honM tn M11on . full
b11ement e nd garege Home•
teed Realty Droller 304-675·
6640 01' 882 2406

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

Close to school• end sto r.. in
M1ddlaport Csil 614·992·

.. 304 676-792e

Unfurn11hed mobile hom• for
rent In Middleport Call 814·

Furnished apt 2 bdr •116
131 Vr 4th Gallipolis Watlf pd
Call 614 -&lt;148 "18 lifter 8pm

Trailer tor rent 1!1 Tuppllt's Plains
2 bedroom 1176 plus uulitlll
end depostt 814 687 3487

Older COUPIII 2 bdr , Utlltill
partly p1ld t1 50 mo. Clll
30 4 876-5104 or 304 878
5386 or 304-676 7926

992 2598

- . , . . . ' - - - - - - ·IC-

In Rscma 2 bedroom . large
yard close to tchool• Call

614 367·7148

N1 ce 2 bedroom mobH1homeon
nt ce lot on Rout h l1ne, Che
ah• ra. Ohto Call304-773· 5828

Apartment
for Rent

2 tKh furn11hed apt nii'Nty
redecorated n1ce loc.e tton .
adult s only no pets Call 614
446 2404
One bdr ell electrc, fum11h1d
Mlults ref &amp; sec dep S200 mo

Call 614· 446 -2236 or 614 -

446-25et

2 bdr upsta1r1 ep t
refug arato r, c1ty get
$176 mo plus dep
ut1htln. Garfield Ave
446-7544

stove &amp;
&amp; waler,

You pey
Cell614-

1 bedroom apt for rent B111c
rent start• 8215 1 month that
rnci udes all uttht1et Dep01tt
requited of 8200 Contact V1l·
lege Menor Apt Middleport
614·992-n87 Eq us l Housmg
Oppo rtunity
2 bedroom total elec apt 1n
Pomeroy Acrou from F~re
S t ttiOn 614-992 621! or 614·

992 7314

Pomeroy 2 bdr Naylor• Run,
• 175 mo S100 deposrt, yerd,
patio Call afte r 6pm 6 14-992·

68e6

Apartmen1 tor rent tn Syra cuse
Large 2 bedroom, S196 per
month Depo11t r&amp;qulfed Call
6149926687 900 to 500
pm
After 6 00 p m Call
614 992 5732
2 bedroom fur n .. hed ept in
Middleport Alluttlitlet Piid C1t1
614 992·606 4
Unturn1t hed apartment tor rent
1 bedroom wuher and dryer.
stove and retugerator No child
ren or pet1 614 992· 2807
1 bed room turn11hed ept Ut th
t1e1 pertta ll y furn11hed No pets
614 9 49 -2263

2 bedroom mobll1home 1), m1le
Jtrrlcho Ad Call eft tr 5 00

3 room apartment everythl(lg
fu1n lt hed prh11t1 e ntra nce.
ground floor utilities pa id.
$260 month 304-675-6730

For r.m, 14dl5, fur ntthlld 14
Burdlttf Add 304 875·6 372
Call anrt•m•

m Po1nt Pl1111nt Aduhs only

1 bedroom furnished ap.tJtment
N o p!tt a 304 676· 1388

Real Estate General

WOOD REALTY

1179

For 1111 by owner large houll 1n
tvwn by grlda schoot 129.600

Coli t14·4otl·9758

GROCERY SALE
Truckload of grocery ite'"s - canned goods. fruits
and vegetables lluch more'

THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1986
7:00 P.M.
CASH AND CARRY
FOOD STAMPS WILL BE ACCEPTED

WHOLESALE HOUSE GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS JULY 10, 7:00 P.M.
NEW CARPET &amp; FURNITURE
JULY 24, 7:00 P.M.

Qu.tity home, newly remodal.t
choke loe~~t100 on College Ad
S\'tlcull, rww complete kitch..,
an• laundry. air condittaned.
llrtiiOt 814·982·8324
Govtnnent hornet from 11 (U
rep•lrl 01llnquent w propertv
RIPOII"IIonl Call 805·187·
1000 Eat H 9806 for current

..-u..

8 r.am houu 1 2acr• Doubt•
c•r g~~r-aa Locatld on Roll Hill
la!'galn priced 120.000 Calt
81 p-878-2613

ANTIQUES AND
COLLECTABLES SALE

ANOTHER OUTSTANDING ASSORTMENT OF FINE
ANTIQUES - DO NOT MISS THIS MONTHLY SAL£ :
First ltme attenders will not be disappointed

HOWERY AUCTION HOUSE
5 MILES WEST OF ATHENS, OHIO ON RT. 50 APPA·
LACHlAN HWY.

75% Off Sticker Price on Everything

Rooms fo r rent. diY week
mo nth Galhe Hotel C1ll 814
446·9680 Rant as low at 112 0
mo nth

· Meigs Mobile
·Home &amp; Ports

: 900 E. Main St.
' Po1111rof, 011.
0, coli 614-992·5587

44

TONY 'S GUN REP AlAS , IClOPI
bore 119ht1ng, f1ctory reblu.mg.
houra t 00 ttll derk . call 304·

175 4831

Will ll mlon Meat M1rk1t ,
U S 0 A Pnme Bae1 Stle, Ski•
11 29. Front qtl •1 08, Hind
Qts 11 70 U S D A Choice
btef Sale Sidel •1 21, Fronts
11 06 Hindi 11 82 Price in·
cludH cutting, wr1pping and
frHZing Whole Prlmll Cuts
Whole Rlbeyes12 141b IYM'III
13 90 lb Whole New Yon
StriPI 12 14 tb IYirl(lt 14 05
lb Chotce TenderUon M 99 lb
Shon Loin U 51 lb Full Lom
13 215 lb Price lnctudll cutting
Oepolit required Guatanteed
tender Ct ll 304 8715 5383 ,
P01nt Pleatlnt,' W VI
Powtr cement fin isher. 3'12 HP
Ch1mp10n. used very hnle.

f400 304 671 20e8

8 HP 11 1 ton ) log 1phner. Warm
Morn ing stove, calt 304 876
3028 after 5 p m

Real Estate General

46 Space for Rant

SEE ONE OF THE

"CLELAND CLAN"

COUNTRY MOBILE HomePtrk,
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy
Large loti Call 814-992 7479

TO HELP YOU BUY AND SELL

Trailer SPace~ Send Htll Road
convenient to tchools, store end
hoapna l City sewer available
Inquire Ronlee , 304-875 4600
between 9 00 and 4 00 we..._
d iYI
Trailer lot on C1mden St Pt PI
160 per month 304-676-7171

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
Goo d gu cook etove . used Qrt¥
woo l carpeting 91 3 Second
Awe Gllllpohl, 614· 446 2116
Goo d Hotpotnt d•shwllhar 2 yr
old butcher bloc* top. t126
Clal 61 4 -446 7522

He will milk the marlcet to halt fOU
bay or sell your proP.ertyl The
Cleland Cia• has the pull!

Used bedroom sutte complete
tw1n mat1 re11 aet, bunk beds
ace ch111 br•u bed, qulin 111e
weter bed Call 614 o\46 1171
Rlfrtgerator harvest gokl 1125
refrigerator white frost free
$150. retngeretor tlde by 11d1
t 196, upnght freezer 196,
Kenmore washer 175 Whlrtpool
w11her 196. GE wet her 8150.
dryer hervett gold 196 electriC
range hervnt gold t96 electriC
renge 30 '" coppertona t126.
ellt'tttc range harvest gold 30 '"
$125. el.ctnc ••nge .ye lo~~~el
oven •1 60 bedroo m suite 176
Skaggs Appliances Upp• R1ver
Rd

CLELAND REALTY INC.

608 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

NEW LISTIN G - UTART - L1ke new - m1de and out'
Completely remodeled home oo la~ge lot Excellent condo
non Garage new roof &amp; s1dong Only S27.~l0 00

61··4ot6·739e

NEW USTING - POMEROY - 21ots woth 5 bedroom older
home Needs work Could be rental unot Ask1n g$1 2,000 00

Kenmore 18 0 cu ft 111 trostl..s
top frHzer· refng wtth f.ctory
inatelled 1c1 maktr 10 montha
old Almond color with aeemleu
Imer, power m•z•r &amp; 1n e• cond
eJktng 1650 Owner mov1ng
Call 814· 446-7161

OWNER WANTS OfFER I- RACINE - Have yoo been look
ong lo1acreage woth a noce house' Th iS 3 4bedroom ranchos
nghl tor you and yom lamoly Famoly room noce workshop
eleclnc BB heal

H11 end hers Lezy boy ch11r1, 120
each Ce ll 614· 256 6837 o r

614 446·2715

NEW USTING - POMEROY - 1\\ st01y dde1inme woth 3
bed10oms donong 1oom and rear palio ONLY $15 ,000 'lO

Med1um·elzed wood or colll
burntng BuCk Stove, M60
Electric range, 1200 080 C•il
614 742 2339 or 614 -898·

POMEROY - Stalely 2 story home ontow n 7moms, 3 bed
rooms. I\\ baths basement, noce hont s1ttmg po1ch
$25,900 00

Tn Sttr Compact Sw .. per
ns Of best offer Csll 614·
992 7 124

CHESHIRE - 1986 Man soon mobole rome on rented lot
Beautolul uno! woth 3 bedrooms elec forced aor heat w1th
cenhal ao1 lnsulat1on package lor etlocoency REDUCED
PRICE TO 1 14!100 00

992-2259
992·6191
949-2660
992·5692

Off iCE
......... ..
HENRY E CLELAND JR . .. ..
JEAN TRUSSELL ......... ..
DOTTIE TURNER . -

U.S. DEPT. HUD
PROPERTY DISPOSinON-BR
200 N. HIGH STREET
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43215

NEW LISTINGS!

AFFORDABLE

LIVING

IO'I.ll HOUSING
OPPORTUNITY

Coli 114·992 1714

5119 9 lnsrallld

8H •11 &amp;010 or 114·992·
2720

Real Estate Gener.al

rOom houst, 11h bath, g.-ege,

Central AC, for up
to 14x70

LIQuor Permit 02·02X (Mkldl• :
port) for ..le prtce negotiable
For tntormatton, caH 0 Hunter .

Antiques

Furn11hed room 1115 Utilhtll
pd 919 2nd Gslllpohs Share
bath Stngle male Call 614
44 6 4416

3 room• used cupettng Wit"
ped. sole 2 chalts 304 6715
4034

on Gr~vlt Htil, Middleport, Ohio

FURNITURE: Small romer cupboard roli 1[4) to le cabnet 12 tm
walnut ~e sale, rutstandong French stand onlald .,th b1ass and
with brass heads, caiVOO 6 pc pallor set.,lh r[4)elegsand ong1
nal upholstery, large laney oak s~eboard w1th marble lop, exira
line chair caiVal &amp; claw feel. w~l heads an d dragon, EDISON
CYLINDtR RECORD PLAYER oak olcilen cabonet With flour bon,
mahogany secretary, Pnmrtwe cupboard Burl walnut drum ta
ble, oak cheval! dresser, hogtlboy dressers,Vocboan waln ut m11
~e lOll dresser, and other dressers. EXTRA laney "lUare lable,
!Xher square oak tables, round oak ~ estallables oak 3 ooor
1ce box 4 pc w~ker set ondudong couch, lable i!lld 2 cilaors
other w1cker ~eces 1 hom chair and stool, IJ'gan stool, wall tele·
phones, llafwalls, h1al' oak beds, oak stan dsand srrell tables
sets ol chaors ridud1ngpress backs, rockers ondudongMAIN IN
MOUNTAIN, wood churn wolh dasher ttunks poclure frames
mantel clock .,th hoosheads, VIOLIN MARKED SlRADIVARIUS'
MISC.. Fenton Beremese lamp ~gned and dales, lamp by
Cha1ies Pa rker, 20" curved sides ~ag glass lamp, old posl
cards, washboards, coffee gnnde1, many more smalls 1n
eluding glassware, Fenton 3 pc console dated 1920 set ol
Zane Gray books Stooeware mcludmgatone 5 gal. Ham 11ton
and Jones churn highly decorate:! (1epalred) , Sh1nslon. w
Va Wilktnson and f lem1ng (lo ne blue flower). large Zanes·
Ville, Oh1o 111 ma~ked HC Ward WholesaleStonewareDepot
8th St Blue and wh1le wate1coolers With Redwmg, AP Oonaghho Jars 1ncludmg ~. I, and 2 gal •zes Salt jar marked
Graham Packong Co Parkersburg W Va More poeces IncludIng exira lils, elc MUCH, MUCH MORE
Clean rest rooms. plenty Pllklna, tnSide load 1nc in case of
bid •either.
FOOD AVAILABLE
TERMS: Cash or Check With Pos1t1ve 1.0.
AUCTIONEER: Rodney Howery. 614 -698·7231

1224

Zero• 3300 II Cop ter 304 676
1244

HOUM for 1111 In Middleport 4
bl4foom, 2 11ory Com• tot
wltlo aorooo 114·992·8972

SUMttiR SPECIAL

23.000 btu ltr oond, 10.000btu
air cond for sala. 304 876

24 round by 4 deep pool, pu .,.
&amp; tand filter. au clean.ng equiP
ment and ao llf &amp; w1nter cove rs
304 67 6 4367 after 6 p m

114 892·&amp;018

SUNDAY, JULY 6, 1986, 11 A.M.

30. 175 1915

For 111e wool rugs 9x12 150
each 304 675 n71

For rent Sh~ep1ng Rooms and
light house keepmg room1 Park
Central Hotel Call 614 448
0756

114·18!·3871

7

refrigerators,
Appllenc11.
betide Stone
446 7398

Snrt w.. her I dry", tlr•

54 Misc. Merchandise

Ptckens Used Furniture Good
qual1ty us ed fum 1ture Open 9 to
6 or c all for appo1ntmen1
304 675 646:i or 6715 1460

IIUST SELL £VERYTHING-NEW TIIUCKLOAO
FRI.-SAT.-SUNDAVS ONLY
Pillows, Rae 119.99 Your Prico 15 00 stt Jewelry, Socks,
Watches, Sun,losses. Cos1111tlcs. f1aunnes. lltsc.llane·
111s Items. Still about SIOO.OOO.OO stock to stll. Don't
miss the barpins of the yearl locattd 11 Jet of lit 35 &amp;
lit. 160 close to Holzer Hosp1tal R Thaler Ford Bide
Please do not call any of Fruth's Phar1111cy. Th1nk you ttems after Items to choose from.

APPLIAN CE S

••oo

1971!1 Chevv Monz•
Alpin• st•eo whh bt Alpin1
sp11kar11260 304-112-3:)87

Antique wood beds, 150 each
304 676 n11

Furnished Rooms

tenth 1e1• 111y care. nice
netghborhood 126 500 Call

In Middleport 5 room, 1 beth
remodeled home Alf
condhion vlnyla 11dmg. axc.t·
ltn\ neighborhood. pnctd to sell

53

Furn ished 2 bdr apt utihtl•
partially p1ld Call 304 875
5104 or 675 6386 or 304 875

6e17

FOIIII FIIITH ..AIMACY IIGI IIGI
WABHOUSI SAU COH1111UIS 2 MOll
WIIIIIIDS. JUlY 4th, 5th, 6th AND
JUlY Uth, 14th, 15th.

USED

Valley Furniture. new &amp; used
lerg• sectiOn of QUehty fu rn itu re 1218 Euurn Ava
Gslhpohs

2 bdr apt. downtown S190
without utUiti11, 1295 with
utiHtles Deposit required Clll
814 446 2129 8 OOtm · 5pm

H
oU .. '"besem.,t.
Ch•t• garege.
v111age one
1 I·I::::J~![!!:!!!!:~~~[=====
rooml,

n•ly

MahonglftY dune ubin .. and
buflot 304·e71·3781

12

County Appl11nce. Inc Good
used eppllsncet and TV selt
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Set 614-446 1699 827 3rd
Ave Galhpohs, OH

House&amp;. epal1rntnt for linat•
Call 304 1576 5104 or 304

45

SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE

GOOD

7926

44

54 Mite. Merchandl18

Wllhlfs, dryers.
reng11 Sk1gg1
Upper Rtvtr Ad
Crest Moltl 614

675-&amp;386 Of 304 676 792e

2 bedroom S1 00 depo1lt
$176 p1r month You PlY
utilities Call 614 992 2394 af
ter dark

APARTMENTS mob1le homes
houa• Pt Pl euanl and G1ll1 p0·
hi 614 -446 8221

30. 176·14e3

•ns

6914

61 Household Goods

Ollv• St., Ollllpolis New &amp; ulld
wood·CO_.Itov•. 8 pc wood LR
eu ltt 1388. bunk beds 1199
•ntron reclln.. •as, new &amp;
usld btdroom suH•. rangn
wringer Wllherl, &amp; shoaa New
Uv1nvroom tul111 t199 11599,
i.-nps, 1110 biiYtng coat &amp; wood
etov.. 0111 814-448 31 as

Nicety furnished mobile home,
eff aPt . ctmral air and he• In
city. adultl only Call814-441·

2 bdr utilltlll Plrtlally fum ,
mo Call 304-875 &amp;104

12tt80 two bedroom furntshed
t185 per month 'plus depo11t
1nd utllitill Cell 614 -992 -

7479

Apartment
for Rent

0338

e55e

1t5e

114·UI·2419

44

2 bdr furn or unfurn COPY•
nlunt lo e~tion, Upplf Alver R d ,
all 'U1:ilit1et patd ucept IIIKtrlc
Sec dep req C1ll 814· 446·

&amp;110

2 bdr 136 Second Ave good
neighborhood. refer ences &amp;
depoelt Call 61 4·446 -3949 or

f4700. Coll814·918·3825

ouoo 304-171-2•n

Rt:nl ols

1973 12x80 Ariln;ton front
kitchen, mul'l b• eold French

448·9340

'R£SUME WRITING
'DR£SS FOR SUCCESS
'INTERVIEW TECHNIQUES
'CAREER COUNSELING
'WORKSHOPS/SEMINARS
'CLUB ORGANIZAnON
CONSULTING

2 bedroom hOmt, large lot, 501
RldQt Avt. Rio Grandt, Oh 2
bktdll from COIItll, coal fur·
naOa hilt Sun.r or r11tr1111enc
hOlM Now rentld . By appotntm•t Cell 814-182 7424

114-981 3594

3 bdr houM 8 m1l• out of Pt
Plea11nt 1260 mo . plus depoeh C•ll 614-446 4802

GUINTHER-KISER ENTERPRISES

....

water and tpproved rold to each
lot R1110nlbly priced will
flnanct. 10 percent down C111

1973 1 :b81S Utopit. 2 bdr •
front 11'1 room, owner mulf 1111
French Cky Brokerage 61&lt;1·

Re(rtodeled home overlooking
Ohio rlv•. 7 rooms, vinyl•
lkllng, lnsulltad, trlpll trKk
wlrtdowe. p1rtltl b.lemtnt, fuel
oil or fof'ce air furnece with .td
on wood • coal tum.ce lncktdll mobile home lfte and
utltitlll In plact 121,100 or
howu l"d roed front1g1

f21 ooo. Conl14·317 0447"'
114 317 0418
Malgo Co, Ohio- 143 oet•.

1 to 5 acr11. ptrtllity wood1d
lou. Tupper Plsint snd Chitter.

1873 Dougl• mobile homt.
1&lt;~•ISB , 3 bedrDGma, 1 _blth.
good condHion, 304-878-4038

_ _.:...._ _ _ _ _ _ ,,

3 bdr home. clo11 to town, 2
blth• ptrtly tumlshld a ..
hlllt tow utllltl• Call814· 241·

441-1221

1982 Flootwood 3 bdr , 2 full
botllo, -~ oloctric For ...,.. '4'"1.--'H'ou=a"'a" s',......fo='r-.;R::e-::n:;:--t
lntormetlon cell lft:tr 4PM.
814o311·11133

171·H41

' Coli doyo et4·441-1111 "' 1724
evenings 814-448·1222

L••• purct111e •grMm ..t pos·
aiiH Very nice hom• whh 3
btdrooms, ltvingroom wlth fir ..
pliCa, 2 bathl, l1rge country
khce-tn. hobby room. IIUIMiry
room. full b11ement, 2 car
gftge. cantril vacuum tyttem,
.tr ·c:ond. dtc:M. I woodld ICfll

Building sltee 3 to 17 ecrea 3
mlltt Wilt of HMC Call 614

814·2411·80481'/tnlngl

a.

31

36 Lots 8o Acreage

Hornette, 14&amp;70,
cOftd. 2 br, woodburn•. 3 ton
centr1l air unit. f12.000. 304·

HomMinc, 114·441-U40.
1873 Llbany 2 bclr , wood-

W•t• well• teMcecltnd drilled
Free •tlmltll C1ll 814-892-

19111 MMiiOn 1.tx70, CA. Ill
lftctrto. lived In 7 mol. C.ll

114·192·2218
uc. Price reduced 1 zxeo z bdr 2
ktta, Rt. 21 a. msny eatrat. Cell

UHd mobile hom11 l•g•t
1t11011on In tht l f t l. FlnMdng
rJalltblt, French City Mobil•

Profeuional
Services

bootd, 304 175·1600

PHONE 114·4oll·7274.

1873 luon 3 br. tum .. cenual
.tr total elec , comer lot bldg,
chaln -llnk tan ca. 304· 773-

Downtown GallipoUa Cltl 114lnttm1donal MIUII BulldlngM•·
nutacturer Saltctlng builderdialer In eomt open ,,... High
J:Dtinflll profit in our growth
lnduotry. 13031 711-3200 EXT

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMEI KEIIEL' S OUAUTY
MOilLE HOME BALES. 4 MI.
WUT, OAWPOUI. RT 31

undarp•nnlng, partiiiiT fur ~
nlshad, great oond tlon .

1812

.

32 Mobile Homee
for Sale

ttet Wlndoor 2br,l.,.ldtchon
a ltvint room. 2 porch• •

r..tlblllhed bulln•• tor 1111.
Indoor miniature golf couru.

441·11222

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-0·3

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

SINGLE FAMILY ACQUIRED PROPERTIES

BIDS RICIIVEO UNTIL 4:ll P.M. 7/9 /16
200 North Hogh llr•l, 71h floer
BIDS OPINED 10:00 A.M. 7/10/ lb Propo&lt;ty Disptllillon - (6141469-6901
OUlSTANDING STARTER HOII£- Nothingto oo but move
1n. Att1act1ve 3 BR home tn Green Schools hasrecentlybeen
recarpelat and ratecoratat inckldes Ill baths, n.:e !«. one
car garage Good neoghborhood lor kids $47 900
SliGHT COSMETIC SURGERY w1ll make yoo awmner onth1s
home Owner ready to lel 1l go tor $34,000 P1ck up Ill th1s
horne and 1ncrease you1 equ1ty easily 3 BRs, I bath, LR,
kitchen I car garage, flallol. Gas heat CA

FOR RENT - Immaculate 2 bedroom home. Excellent
neighborhood . New wall to wall carpeting and coordinating dlllpenes provided . LOW UTILITIES!!
PHONE DENIS( at COlONIAL PRf.oP£RnES

Real Estate General

·HUD properties are avaolable lor Slieto al penom rtprdle" ~ taee colo!. ~~~~on. ••· morilal
stotus., Notionalllri&amp;in. HUD MIJMS lho rillrt loreicliiiY or all bids I01111'1UIJ ~tonoollty or
lorfty iiiiiY bids Bids wtll ill accopted from sl ~IIIIStod .,.ties 1nc:ludorc owror OCCUI*I&lt;Y,
::::duals ond
HIGH IIIDS Will II£ IITER.NiD MSID 011 THE HIGHEST II£T BID fO
HUO PROPERTIES ARE SUBJECT 01 PIIIOR SAlE. BU'IER MUST 081AIN 00 ANMCI!IG

-m"

ATHENS COUNTY -UNINSURED
CAll"
122105-203

l

,, '

AOORm

lox 92, Ra&lt;k 11. tCoolvillol

2

19,741

1500

MEIGS COUNTY - UNINSURED
t2715t·203

212 Rock St.

tPomoroyl

3

111,9DO

1

500

Apartment
for Rent
lOll CttAIIOE II IAIIIUT la•UD[';OSIT ~ESEIIUT Ill EFFICTTMl UIIIUT lltOIUY tli PDtS IItShOO OOili.. O.
L£$$ OF Til LISTIIIQ PltC£, UO l UST ll SUMIR£0 liTH ltlttt liD
TO U1 »&gt;t/ 01 • OM TO NOPD1'15 CONTACT A lUI. ISiiTI 110111 Ql AlifNT Of TOUII utOIL
.. D..OWIIO "OP8'fiSOIIWMdSMUCON1IJCn AIIIJKIRID IT UllfOII .... 30, 19t6, (0NST"IYIA
(OIMIIUII' ANt MAT COWIM TOt1 PIOCIUII aacuna .&amp;U.IAI.U COMIICRfOI Til SA~.~' Of SICtnlllf.
•LDNOfiiTI'S PKUIIOIY M AtlfaiiDIIPII!II«A1M.OFNUIDJIOIIf111IPIIJO MUSt COM'AMN
fOUOWIIG PIOVISI)IIUtell:tfll HOFT II CONTI:Ilf1''I TtiS 1M.IH 1011 FIUIICQ IY llf filA ~ltMT.
GAGI, 1t1 ACCirfA*I OF filS mlmMT 1Y tiiD IS COinltGINT UPOM Til AllfltOifll tf 1M 10 . . _ M

• FOR RENT

tf. Myrtle Beactt, new
; condo, overlookinc
ocean. Accommodates
, 6. fully furnlslled.
O,tn Available Wtell of:

AUGUST 2·9
AUGUST 16-23
AUGUST 23·30

Special Discount lut 2
WilkS of Au(llt.

CALL 446·2734
OR 446·2206

KRISTI DRIVE - Atiracllice
ble hvlllg SfliCe, mce vtew
baths, fueplece, familY room,
car garage, heat PUII'Il wrth
AmACTIV£ BRICK HOllE on appmx. 6 acre. Over 1400 II
ft 111 the me 3 8R ranch n Kyaer Creek Scliools Partial bese·
ment With woodbumer, 1\! balhs, beautifulprden w/ plenty
t1 cab111el space. large ~rdl!n aree. All lor $50,000
·

WISEMAN •aL ESTAlE AGOf~Y-446-3644

KIITGAM U Ttl Tal Ttl SMI n 0.0\Q "

"'" Amll • ' TO tlnUIII naPmn

REDUCEDIIMOBIL£ OOIIE (f RARE CHARM - RARE VA·
LUEI 14'x70' Tnulfllh, lu!unously custommade Includes
~rge ltvtng room, garden tu b, beaut1ful k1lcil en, and 100re all
sett111g 011 96 acres Call us to 'see th1s ooe today!
'
N2015
CENTURY 21 Southern Hills R. E., Inc.

FOR ADDITONAL INFO .
CONTACT: MR . JIM MISSOURI
614 / 469 -2232

�rP age-D-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
64 Misc. Merchandise

-114 Misc. MMchendiae

June 29. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plaaunt. W.Va.
66 Building Suppliea

111

Farm Equipment

71

Real E1t1te General

lnltrumehta
lulldlng Motoriolo
ltodl, ·bridt, IIWif pip•. Win·
dowa. llntlll. etc. Ct.udl Win·
tllrl, Rio Grendt, O . Ctl 114-

Clllehtn'l UHd Tire Shop. 0..,.,

1,000d,., - 12. 13. 14. 18.
18.·.:11.1. I mil• out At. 211.
Cell e14·ZIII·IZ51. •

-lc

Building mlttrl.la. cement,
bloclt 111111... yard or dtllltery.
Oelllpolle Block Co .. 123V. Pine

EIIANI ENTERPRISES. Joe~·

St.. Ool!lpolil,
441·2713.

"'"· Oh. 114·211·8130.

1cho hlmm•ra *81 . 78 to
1211.15 . Huaqv1rna UWI,
Echo IIWI, Yll'dm.n mowtn.
NIW. UMd, til makll. Chllder~

56

Ohio

,

Cill 114·

Peta for Sale

t.w Supply, Koontz-SIIor Ad ..

Sltm.. klntnt . AKC Chow

pupiH•· Ntw puppiee. klntnt.
Coil 448-3844 tit"' 7PM.

64 Misc. Merchandise

~h.

Round khch.n table with letf

Queen size hlde·ewey

;nd 1 thaira. •so. Kindlewood
woodbumer uald 2 a.. aona
MID.
Wit.,. "''"' 30 ....
lilt Ultd 2 YMII good lhiPI
•so. 3 cushion Norwalk Oouc:tl

0260. 304-876·2267.

AKC Reg. Mlnltture Deachund
ftrn"t puppy. Hu hid ehota.

Coli 11'4·441·7920.

bed,

o..

56 Building Supplies

175. CIM 814·216·

1

Jwo rwninga. 1· 7x8 t100. 1·

BUY BACK'S
1. New Hlll'lgl ltHI door
blanka, nidcs 1nd tcretch• 1115
to 126 ea.
2. Thermal pain an t~erm~l break
IIUminum WlndOWII8Yirlllil81

Twin bdr . .. it• • beda, e driiWeJ
~r••• &amp; mirror. niQhtltMd. all
with formice 10ps. 4 poatw
double bed , etten 6 old f..hi·
..,., dr•ter. Ward• mo11ie

C!-"et'l, 1creen, projKtor a.
1plictr ,,50. Call 61"·2681393 or 81.t-418-2708 .

teble taw. band tiW . Cell

614·446·8131

titer

6.

1 filh ~arium, cotin table, 2
Inside doort . Cal 614 ·""8·

•••
7. 4xB•.,. toung groo\le waffla

3732.

boerd utlfior gtued B t8.9fL

21" color TV Megnevox t50. 10
IPIId bike t85 . Cell 814·""•·

8 . 4.Sx %l Toong groove pty ·
wood B $10.95 .

4189.

9. 4!•8• VJ 4 ply l)lvwooct

U.99.
10. •.~~~a. v. ''"''" ply~~Wod a
14.49.
11 . 4x8•'1• N lv.g• peneling
12.99.

Ceramic kiln large 3 deckb '"d
molds . Electric ironer (on

loHml. Coli 614·446· 1489.

12. a· redwood atain picnic table
whh 2 bend'IM 139 .96 .
13. Prehung interior doora all

Ntw Ttttament dMtgn embroid . ery qulh, h8fldmlde by church
group $100. Call 304 ·937-

2881 "'304·418·1997.

•ins end flnl1h11 t29 .96. ·
14. Prehung ltMI ptnel doo!'lall
til.. 189.95 .
115. Wood prefinilhed vinyl
wraped colonial trim 7 pc. 1100.

1981 cue dozer 3608 canopy,
Winch, 6 WIV bllde. 4 llllle
towbov. me111 bed buil1 ' on
ramp a, ball hitch . 427 Chevy
truck .,gine. P-ue eir lift.
Cheat..- ede. 814-985-3&amp;67.

11. Primed t11rdrop wood trtm
11 .00 7 pc.
17. K· k.ll bridl c:omen 11 .00
P• bo111. 12 box 110.00.
18. 32" x78" Y. therm~:l ttm ·
ptred gl•• reg . 179.95 now

'

New Holland mow ing mtchlne.
tt-v Teddlf. Fokt down camp1r.
114·742·3114.
-1977

a

Dodge R1m Cherger.

da.p ainka 8 gredt t58 .96.
21 . StaNdees tteel comtr einkl

Slight P1in1 Demeo•- Flahlng
errow ttgn t2791 Ltghted, nonerrow t2811 Non -lfghted t2391
fr• I.Uertl · Few left. SN
toull,. . 1- 800 · 432 · 0183 ,
fnytime.

Ml 123.95 e1. 3 ut1 1nd ~

1298.

ALL GRAVELY'S, RIDERS &amp;
WALKERS IN STOCK AT
DEALER'S COST
ALL SNAPPER'S RIDERS, SELF
PROPELLED MOWERS, PUSH
MOWERS AT DEALER'S COST

o.... 4420 ......

Ohio.

M1111y Fll'fUIOn, New HoiiMd,
Buo/1 Hot Soloo • 80Nic41. OvN
40 wtdtreotonto chootetfom

S .E. Ohio.

trec10ra, 1000 toola .

Utility btdt. SPL: 30'x40'xl'
wlth 15'lill' eUder 6 3 ' ttrV,
door. K,2151 trtettd . Iron
Horse lldga. 114-332-t?-48
coll-et.

D-.t dol.,wery goodcond. •••Y
bl«&lt;e. •a.ooo. Ctll 1114~2•15·
8241.
T0-30 trec:tor tl,IIIS. NewldH
o.,. bounce mowtr t411. New

Form Supply, II 4·441·
2118.

63

71

Livestock

....

John Dooro 3300 ell Mol.

Olun" G o• plttform
OIMner K 1111 pltlform Z row
c. h ..
JDhn o..,. 4S doubla v11 bett

pltttorm 2 row corn he.t.
New Jot.n DMrt 442&amp; combine

no. int. tll .. 1·11.
Ronlmpl. l Supply, St. Rt. 41
North, w... UnkJ,., Ohlo. Ctll

113-144-3023 .

Boline 1110 wi1h 38 r.ct. mowr.g
diOk 4 tt. cyclt bll'. •900.

114-H2· 7468.

New Holl1nd 1 ft tulybind,
exc•llent. Gehl 95 Grinder
mbl..-. 21 ·• mill megnet.. E•c:
oond. 304-273-G 115.

1Z Holltein heifer~ 1 yr. old, 2

1817 Chevy Impel• 311· 32&amp;

Htrlford 1 yr. old. Ctll 61 4·
381·11413 or 114·471-1472.
'

HP. red. bl..::k int..-lor, PS. PI, 2

2 ynr old Urmualnlullfor1111.
Pure bred . Also ~right freezer.

Cllll1'· 371·6218.

Atlbltn Hor••· puttbred Art·
bllfl ttud •rvlet. Sptcltl dit ·
oountt to yOUth groups . R. • J .
Ar.bl.,,, leon. W. Va. 304.·

mowwr~,

blltrl, Ntw

Hollilnd '1:13, JD 14Ttugll'flld

wagon, JD 15 dltk. whe•t drill,
pfent
lp~ldera,
Ntw ldN 2 row com picker.
othtr fitld I'Mdy IQUipmtnt.
Howe·a Ftrm Mtchlnery . . Rt.
124 • Msvltew Rd. Jtcbon.

H"tt••· m.,._.,.

ENDS JULY 5TH

304· 937-2211, no
..,.,ingl.

64

~ntwer.

c:tU

Hay &amp; Grein

FOf Nit: Now taking ordera ior
h.., out oi 1111 tltld .. 90 1 bele.

814·949-21149.
H•v

and mulch hllv, 75 canta a
bile. Alao flriWood. no to•.

304· 773·11 81.

="=4=·29=1·J68~44~-~~~~~!!![====

814·384·3146.

1710. L••

dr• MOO. Co 114·:181·S82Z.

1971 Flb.,gleu Nove 327- 32&amp;
HP chromt englnt, M - 22 , C 1pd.

trent. Cllll14 ·112·1941 .
1881 CamillO PS, PI, tlr, new
.~..

., 4-448·0051.
1979 c...-.,rolet

14.200. Coil

..

Rou• t.ne. l.,c ttfhr with

1177 Ctprtoa Clllelc:, low mi·
l...lt. tacellent coru.litton . Ctll

114·91Z·IZU.

v.,.,

11M fiord t1 ,200. firm. Nllds
int..-lor work.
tit•l• body
work. lO.t-171 · ~11 .
1912 flied fOI'd Eap. low ml·
~Idled, .," roof . 814-

441·0311.

74 Chevy Mellbu, 4 dr, "-'"•
good. botly needt e little IIIIJIOrlt.

304·176·MH.

1111 'tvmouth TC 3 Heriron
httchNclc. 4 •· tif con d. Dolby
•trto, front whMf dtlve t 1 500

.. -

-

· 304-918·3038.

7.1 .Monte Ctrlo, IC, pb. pl. 11.
good cond. tm..fm. MW e11h1ust

tyetem. ••••• brekt light.
61.000. OReowntr.eJCtreattrim
a enowtlr•. 304-171-1143.

ten

1111 T-lird. lotded. IIIUrnl
loan. 304-171·4271 aft.. I

enter
living room
a view
the crty,
I and chandelier 12x 14
study with solid cherry I , fir!f)lace and fren ch doors
thai lead to a glassed solarium; formal dining with bay win·
dow and two bu ilt-in china cabinets; eat-in ~tchen ; spa·
cious master bedroom w1th office or sewing 1oom ad1acent:
two large bedrooms upstairs offer an abundance of storage
rncludrng a cedar closet: 2\\ baths; 16x34 family roomwith
carpet, stone fireplace with insert; screened summer
porch with paddle fan; covered patio with a brick grill; 2
car garage. gas heat, cent. air; 14xl6 gardenm shed and
satellite dish on IJOperty. Shown by appointmenl only.

Real Eatata Gener11

STUTES REAL ESTATE
BONNIE STUTES - BROKER
JIM STUTES- REALTOR

446-4206

NEW USnNG SRLING IIEIOW COST - 3 redroom
hOJT'j!, llitchen. knchenette, hutch. lui basement, ;:jus 4
to 5 room garage apartment. 4 miles from Gallipolis,
lnwer Rrver Road. Good w~w d river. Sacr~cing 25%
due to poor heahh. $.12,000.
#2128
IIOVE IN NOW tothis rew 31Edroom. I ~ bath rilldt
hofrj!. Call for molt deta r~.
#2008
I RAN OUT OF FINGERS counting all the extras rnth5
~vely home. Startrng with 4 oodrooms. 2 full baths.
18'x 2B' famitj room , living room, full blsement, 2 car
l!illage. plus a lot more all s!uallll on I acre more or
less.

PAUL SANDERS- 379-2152

11l7&amp; Contin•ttl 2 door, auto. ,
1&amp;50. Stndvt Auto Stitt 61 4·

NEW LISTING -SPACIOUS QUALITY BUILT HOME
- 3 bedrooms, formal dlrllg room, lg. master
bedroom, 2 '"ep~ces. fulllllsernmt, 217 baths. 2 car
l!illage. All thG and more for a very good prce ...
#2142

992·7403.

#2093

1971 Cougtr 2 door, tuto ..
1500. Sendvs Auto Sel• 11 4·

VILLAGE WARMTH - Thi; o~er .home is ~ good
condoon. has 2 bedrooms, d~ng room. kichen. full
basement. w1ap porch. garage and mce deep ~1.
P1l:ed to sell in tlwl 20s.
112079

992-7403.

1971 Volarie :Z door 1uto ..
1400. Stndwt Auto Stl• 111 4·

992·7403.

1912 Ford boon, sw, ec, new
racU•I dr11. very c._n whht. •

FINANCING IS THE SElliNG PACKAGE ON T!tS
HOllE - Assumab~ loan with 1110 d110n payment.
Approx. I acre. 3bedroom framerandt, I yearo~ with

ue8o .. .,.., "''"· 304·•2·
3200.

secluded's~rng.

Reel Esteta General

#2106

SPECIAL! - 54 acres more o11ess. Has marketable

tonry 1Uppliea. Mount•in $11t1

timoor. Call for more informafun today.

Block. Rt . 33, Naw Heven. W.

Va. 304-882·2222 .

#2131

Real Estate General

CENTURY 21 Southtm Hills R. E., In:.
Real Estate General

Virginia

£

c---D

IB

8mtth

IE AllOR

REAL ESTATE

RE51PtNT I,r, L . I NV[.ST M(NT$ • CO ~IoltRCIAL

THE FAMILY WILL LOVE IT HERU - This
hofrj! o"er.; 1728 sq. ft., 3BRs. I ~ baths, ~us
sOOYier rn basement. gal~y kitchm "
comp~te~ equipped. LR, fam r~ room, d~~g
room, carpetilg central arr/heat pump, rear
deck overklol:s Raccoon Creek. Call iJr an
appoirtment
$8,000 - II ACRES - CH £SHIRE TWP. Vacant land. Sept&gt;: tank on 1J(1lerty. Call fo1
more information.
PRICE REDUCED I 10.000 - ONE OF THE
LARGEST RESIDENTIAL LOTS ON S!COND
AVE. - Older home offers 34 BRs. lR.
k~dten, 00, FR, bath, unattached garage. Call
for more detai~ tooay.
EDGEIIOIIT DRIVE- ClASSY CAPE COD IN
PERFECT CONDITION - This home offer.; 3
BRs. kitl:hen with rJN, displ., range and refri&amp;,
dllllg room, iving rQOm wnh IIOOdbr.rnng
fireplace, family room, woodburn111, two lllths,
foyer, gas heat. alm051 new roof, im!Mdilte
PlliSeSSiin.
DANVIllE AllfA- CLOSETO MEIGS MINES
- 67 acres m/1, nee home offers 3 SRi, 2
baths, kitchen w/ rJN, displ., doub~ ovl!l, elec.
furnace, carpet. Barn on prqlert'j 24xll with
loft. Call trxlay u infonratim.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SEll- HAS REDUCED
THE PRICE BY$10.000 - 132.9 acresm/ lin
Walnut Twp .. Ph ~ory home has 3 BR, bath.
42x94 bam, ~rge tobacco base. Call for an
appointment
COIIIIERCIALIIIILOING- PERRY IWP.NfAR COllA -60CO sq. ft.steel b~g. , deal lor
anyme in truck~&amp; drilling ll m~~ g
busi1esss. Owne1 may conside1 leasing ll
financ~g. Call for more lntormaoon.

.

I

acres fenced . Suburban

h~Jing

will

1reat in this meptonally smart 4 lx!drm. Lg. rms-l&gt;r antiques
1:011ntry kitchen, bosement. Recently remodeled new carpet and wali
paper. Quick possession.
HOlE AND BIG OPPORTUNITY-Very attractive rtmodeled 3bedrm,
, I ~ baths, gorden tub, Il'x25' krtchen, row solid oak cabine~ . pan·
try, la~ndry r"! .. sc,reened porch. NEW GARAGE:18'x40'. heat. water,
'200 "'"n' 12 xl4 door. Abusrness opportuMily )'OU can't pass. Mid

,$50$.

.

'

NEW UsnNG - IF YOU UK£ IMDNtDUALITY AND
TIIEES call us to shoo ·)llu this ~eam~ g "l" shaped
raiSed ranch. It has a clwm al of rts (Jolin wnh 3 batlls.
4 bedrooms and 1 pleasant d~~g room ;ust rrght for
cand~ light dlflners. The flflljy room rad etes
~ospitality whelt lin! doon ~ad to sh~ed paoo.
Don't m~ ill opportunity to take the lrn stepto lEtter
INin~

Call OliO.

#2126

CAPE COD- Attractive nrnodeled 31Edroom home
near t110n. Newer vinyl s ~~g gas furnace, carpet and
w~dows. etc. 2 car 111rag~ central ar and basement.
$53 . ~0..
#2134
VACANT LAND - 127 acres. more or less. M~eral
ngh~ , lrontage on Lilt~ Paregon Rd
#2029
ENGLISH MANOR DESIGN - 2 story stmeand frame
with full basement.Locatoo rn tile cfl 31Edrooms. 2'h
balhs. diningroom. 2 car garage and ITlJch molt. Call
for complete detar5.
#2069
S£T UP AND READY TO MOVE INTO - Extra ni::e
mob1le home. (}Nf'E r nc~d rng range, refngerator.
washer and dryer. under prnnng. Large loing room,
n&lt;e s~e bedrooms, all srtuated on 1.5 acres more Of
~ . $17,000.
#2105

HOllE PWS 20.4ACRES - Owi'EI has moved out of
state and is anxious to 'sell this very ni:e 3 redroom
ranch. features ~rge k!chen and din~g comb~oo
fueloil furnace p~s IIOOdburner. centralar Very ~ce
30x36 garage p~s lots more.
#2062

110,000 - Neat housund ~. rice shade trees. rural
water available. Come ond see what $10,000 will buy.
#2103
FANTASTIC PRICE - 14'x75' mobile rome with
acre more or 1155 inprowd kJt. Storl!le burkl~g. Horre
has 2 bedrooms, 2 boths, utility area. INing room,
krtcher1. Prced to sell at $13,500. Hr.rry, don't mrss
out
#2098'.
HANDY PERSON'S SPECIAL! - 2 bedrooms, t car
garage. gas heat. Canvenient to sdtool 01d stllppog.
Call for more detli~. $26,500.
#2116 .
4.5 ACRES IOIE 01 US$- Small blrn, all trl~b~.
rural water av~llble, mnenl rCht! inc ~ded .
#20!14.
SPACIOUS ~WTY ltlllT flliiE - Gallipot~ ·
schoo~. t'mn Twp. ~ flllllires 3 l!drooms. 3~
baths, dNid«l bMnn, hilt puffll. IKep~ce. 9&lt;1:1es
more or less 111 flltllcaflld. Picni: area. 110n prrvate
stocked lake. c..n oow.
#2065
REDWOOD flAil( - 3 bedroom ranch. 2 full baths,,
ni::e kitchen. livrl&amp; 1oom with fir!ll~ce. f~t ~tlocatw ·
at Bufaville Rd. City school system.
#2007-

NEW USTING- VACANT LAND- 40 acres more or
less. Marketab~ tmoor, tobacco base, rural water
avar~ b~. $8,000.00.
#2110

REDUCED.LETYDUR TENANTS IIN&lt;E YOUR PAYMENTS2lfllartment duplux. hch 1111rtment contains livin&amp;room,
kitchen, bath , 2 bedrooms, m5llent location. This could
be just for you. Call for more info.
H2045

•

NEW LISTING - THE ULTIMATE IN ELEGANCE .:.
Restingon beautMy ~ndscaped grounds that stretch
to an imposrng 2 acres, three ca1peted l!drooms, 2
baths. formal entry. dK1~ g and liv~g rooms, exquGie
20'x40' in-ground pool comp~te~ enoompassed by a
li®tlll brick pr•acy fence. These are rust a few d tlwl
additionallar too numerou s to rnentron elab01ale
leatures containlll w!hrn thGtllrre. let us show )llU
thG home today'
H2129

ILACIIIUIN IIEAlTY -446-0001.

p.m.

Block. brick. mort1r and me·

875-

446-6610

......,d. Coil 11 4-:181·1122.

mil•. 114·911·4322.

Reel Estate General

. ·SOUTHERN HILLS R.E .. INC,

btndl • • with Hdl bot~~ft·.
phofteltillt. lthltd COIIupeable
IIDM Dldcty, _ortlntl own.- "'•
nutl. 'n ,000 lftatf mlltt. Near
ntw uhtult. IM 11 flit. 1 •

playM, 40 wen power booster,
Crager S ·T whltil, chrome .
triCtlon ben, tlr thockt. rtd
ptlnt odglntl. Otrtgektpt, mint
condition. 20,100 orlgin•l

ASHADY DEAL
Lotty trees nearly hide this pleasant 41Edroomhome with an
English Tudor accent. But mce yw see rt. you 'll find it irre·
sistibfe. Un~suafly large family room, 3111ths and a very nice
kitchen. 5 ~cres, city schools. Price reduced to $89,000.

[

CMIIIIIoc: Fi-d. Toll·
men' lcaroe model, double.,lh

2 dr. Monu
station wagon, auto, oneowner.
1&amp;99 . John' I Auto Stl•. lui•·
vllt Rd. OtllpOiis, OH.

Chevy C1mero liO engine, tuto, good cond .. ,.bulh
motor. ntW tlr•. Call 814·379 -

REALTOR'

74

1977 Camtro 310 hMdera. 4
t;eed trantml•tion , white inle· ·
rior. black a11111t. AM-FM tape '

113·144·3023.

RAILROAD TIES . Blh feet bv 8
indt11 by 10 i'lch•. ea. per tit,
dlliwred . 8111 Sltc:k. 814-992·

•on
r•ro.

INtt.

Coli 114·448-0137 .

droo. 8

87 Nova 18 with 4 tpd., new
clut"', pr11surt 111ete, T.O.
belling. 4 oloo Cflovy Rolley. 4
niW DIY'Oft
tir•. Good

bOdy, oil_.,

IB

'

S036.

ua_. Hev E~ipmtnt.
John DNrt 530 Rd . btl•.

Pann'a WerehouM, Wtlaton,
Ohio. 8 to 5, 6 dtyt. Ctll

loed«&lt;. exc. tond. 12.&amp;00. Cell
11C· 317 ·0447 or IU ·387-

"'"~•""'
· Col
..37d
;
__
_
_114·291,
___
tftN
.,M.

1971 Datsun 200•15. 5 apd.,
t1.500 thtrp. CeH 114-"11 ·

114·211·

John DHrl MO raktw· frt .whl.
John Deert 894 rllce.
Donahue hyd. btle fork.
Ross lmpL &amp; Supply, St. Rt. 41
North, WNt Union, Ohio. Call

Colll14·441·t311.
1977 XA7 Morcur; Coopr AC.

1110 Toycne Corola. 2 dr.
hltCiftltaclk wtltl .. " roof, 1004

2310.

MF No. 12 be.., 11,195. I ft. 2
My teddlf tll50 . II ft.. dNm

IHC 990 9' mowtr-cond.

71 Muttan'g ll4 cyl., goo'd cond.

84 Chtvetle :Z dr . AM ·FM
Cllllftt, low mlle~ge •4.200.

dollars. Long 110M HP trKtor.
O.liv!lft Ml&gt;t ... 8tl . CaM Larry
&amp; - · 814-291·1122.

Now Hollond 150 Rd. boiof.
John DNrt •to Rd. btler.
Johnn DNre 338 aq . bll.,-.
John D"'' 2.tT biller.
John DNrl t•T billf.
Badger round bll•. ·
John DMre 1217 mower-cond.

., 4·248-9101.

Ltvlng hint. 60 cent• eech . Cell

1981 Long dieni trector. Ovtr·
worked? Nev•r. Morehortlt Plf

6522.

good tltow cer. 13.000. C1ll

0485 .

H1ylng equipment, 8 h . hevtMnd.

rill•.

dr .. fender aklrtl, exc. tond,

418·1012.

ea
1491. Coli t181.
11 4-281·
Ideabolw
hty condition•
NH I:Oh=·=C.=I=I
1522.

mowot' 11.485. Col

Auto• for Sale

o..,. 4&amp;00 dlllll .t whl.

John

Int. 48 hay btler, Int. h-v rake.
Int. 93 •tf propeHed combine.
Call IU -3118·1483 or 81•·
471·1472.

THIS SALE

home roof c:oeting 122.95,

Sears KenmortaMimg m~cttlne
tor llle. tilce new . t1 26. or bl1t

3128.

Blll"' $1/e ol the Vel'

23. 5 pl. tlumlnumtlver mob~•

2218.

Of

Bltek mila poodle. 7 wttlct old.

304-876·2288.

119:95.

742·3081.

otter. 304·175· 1U6

Call 30•·875-4614 or 895·
35.8 .

159.96 B gn1d1.
22. 4pc. aoKd o*and breea tJ.th

.Zanlth floor model color T.V.
EJtcalllflt condition . tl 60. 614-

Jocbon.

tors with werrenly over 7'&amp; ullld

skinlna 28 "•10.. n .99 ...
20. 22 " x33" "elftJH1 steel 10'

11 4-992·5987. 1979. Pinto.
New parts. •soo. Call614-992·

U.S. 31 -~

114·291·1461 .'

JIM' S FARM: .EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 31 W. OollpoW.,
Ohio. Coil 114·448·11777, ovo.
114·448-31512 . Up front O'tc·

U9.95 .
18. Rock fKe bmwn traillf

••eo. 318 Mometic, 4x4. C1ll

Cft OSI • SONS

Female. wolf hybrid pup, 7wb ..
thott tnd wormed. iJifttle, intelligent, cutt beyond worda. 121
Awaloosa filly, 3 yHra old, 1-4
htnda, gl!"'tle end brokt t200.

3. 8' aluminum pl!lo door~ let
f199 .95 weith 1creen .
4. Octog1n led titnev glaa
windowa U9.95.
S. 15 lite pine French door~ 8
grid• 189 .915 .
·
I . 4l81111f• Mesonitt under ley·
ment t29 .96 ee., 4x4lll 1/.l n .oo

Farm Equipment

Tr.; nsporl .1111111

City

John

61

lo•

f1 .00. 304·171·1171.

Now buying lhtll com or eer
corn. C1ll forlttet1 quo111. Aivw

UttdCoiNI"a
JDFP no itt. 111 1·1 ·17.
John o.... 1100 hydrv. dl•ol.

,\ l I'Jt \ l1d.k.

1174 CIIOYv lmf!Oio 310, , • .
eeoo. CoR 114·44C·
2t14 .......
PI, AC.

round bllll, 110.00. 114·742·

2177.

Good mlr.ed hey on the w•gon;

SI ::pi II' '

• oaft1111tte line of ntw • ueect
.. uipment. largllt 11lectk»n In

171.

114·742·2581 .

t49.95 to 179.96.

Ill

Coli 114-742·

plovful.
3184.

CLOSEOUT'S
SURPWS

*250, like new .· Call 11 4-446·
4482.

81 4-2!6-8403,
Red femtlt Oobermen . 11
months otd. Regiltlftd . Very

BUILDERS

.10x20 $250 . Woodburner

lO"

Aegilter«&lt; DoMrm~n pup. Rtd
femalt . . .cetlent pedigrH.
Good temper.wnent t125 . CeN

II

·w.
the
golden touch.

Auto• far S1l1

N.v• Wit. 11 .DO lli:lh. AltO big

2217.

or trede. Allklng •110. Ctl

I

814·248-IIU tftN 1:00PM.
~'I'' 8quor0 boloo' flom ltSI.

Good quaNty hey. Ctn
trom
mow or w11f0n. t1 .00. WtVne
Aouoh. luhon ftoMI 11 4·1149·

62 Wanted to Buy

Low loy Tri A~ trtlltr tor' ult

CFA Hlmiii!Yin. PtrliM 1nd

So. Four1h Ave ., Mkldleport.

1932.

69 For Sale or Trade

OrJOonwynd Ctttery Ktnnel.

.-om~nce

bookl 270 for 176, white
wooden table t25 . See •• 251

uc:. sh11pt

CALL 614·137·1011
COLUI!BUS, OHIO

114·H2·7141.

Vinton, Oh. Cttle14-388·8114.

for ule: Harltqu.,

3\S acres in country
10 miles from
Gallipolis ..

241·1121.

PIMtk= cllttm lttfl IPIUOVild,
HPIIc tria. pl . .k:
cuiVW't-. ~I culveftt. RON

cunom oo"*illitg f17 .10 per
ocro. Coil 114·441·2121 or

LOT FOR SALE

=J=une::=2=9=·=1=9=86=;;;:;:;;======::::r=~P~ome~ro~y~M~idd;leport-Gallipcilis, Ohio-•P•o•in•t•Piaa•san~t!,.w•.•v.a.IIIII!!~---IIII!!!!The!!!!!l.•s.un•da•y•n•.,..••S•.t•''•inei•-•Patllige•D•·•5•·1.

'

4ACR!S OVERLOOKING THE OHIO RIVEt- Ed1eof town. 7rms.,l..
vely liv. rm .. sitting rm .. lorn111 diing, 3 B, I ~ baihs lull bsml 1
outbldgs., 2 car prage. Fru~ trees and excellent prden spot. '
•IRICK AIID FRAIE CLOSETO HOllER- Desirable home and~" ·
tion-SR 160. ASI&lt; to ins~e t~s beautiful ranch. 3BR, country
. k~chen, family
Carport, I o:re m/1. Low $50s.·
' MIGI££N
- SQueezing Penn~s! Buy a n~e little
~H. bath, ~rtchen, front porch, vinyl s~ing.
YOUi oiriPwtVATE PAH - Cloy Top. 3 o:res m/.Gracious coun·
a pin 28'x60 home. 3BR. 21111hs. garden tub,
and dishwasher. Formal diring, wbfp in liv. rm.
bar. JO'x36 barn, 3 doors ond loft.
.··:·... ,.,.•.,.t'oT-$SSOO: 33 ACRES-$15,1100; City lot- Low
UYIRG: Bi·~vel ~us 5 o:res. 3 lx!drmt, III bath~
..,~.,-,.,.,.,1om . rm., 1car lli'J"·Lollis oflreesand'good garden
ttl Rodney Bidwell Rd.

103 ACRES 11/ l, SPRINGFIELD TWP.
Approx. 96 A. tillab~. o~er home has 5 BRs.
bath, lR, kitchen. county water, 40xW po~
bkfg., 40di0 tobacco lllrn. va1ilus otlwlr
ootbuikb1gi.
GENTUIINI'S FAR II - 35 acres MIL. m0511y
tillab~. 3 miles north of Rodney. Spri1g well
and country water, fenced and cross fenced,
tcbacco base. Very rice 3or 4 l!droom ~anch
style home w~h kldten, LR, bath, ~reezeway,
woodburning fireplace. Call fo r an
appoiltment. .

ENJJY 1IIE FRUITS OF
. ~~:re;
m/1, apple trees, cherry •ees. P'Jm trees,,
strawberTY patch.' Ni:e ho~re. dlers 3 Ills,
lllth, lR, kitchen, cajpel, ni::e frmt fXIrch fol
111~ying the cool summer ewen11111.·caH for an
appoiltment.

COMfORTABLE LMNG PRK:m AT $19.900!
- This attractive home olfer.; 2 BRs, lllth,
lichen with range, dnllg room, LR, carpet, I
car unattachflf garag~ situated on two lots. Call
today.

DUPLEX 4 SALE - GreBt i1vestrnent for the
buyer. locati!l on Graham Schoolltil:l. EJch
unt offers 2 BRs, l~_,groom,batll, Wen and
~ove, 1ef~ . rJN, and displ, llundry, llrge
carport, central ar, and storage area.

home offers 1378 sq. ft. pils a fulllllsemll1t.

CLOSE TO TOWII - Ni&lt;E me story home
featu1~gkicheo, LR.fami~ room , d~llgroom,
full basement, carpeting gas heat ely water,2
car unattached bkick 111rage.
PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP -Love~ tllmeoffers
3 BRs, 3111tlls,equjlped ktchen, 14x44 lam itt
room, din~e, frep~ce. 2 car attachflf garage.
20x40 pool and sateH~e dis~ Call b an
appoi1tmenl
«MMiER HAS REDUClD THE PRICE ON THIS
LOVELY HOII£ lo $59,000 whch inc~des 2
acres, m/1. Home offer.; 4 BRs, 2 baths, lR,
klthen, dining area with pat» dcxrs and
IIOOdburnlil, caipeting heat pump, cent. air,
full basment 2 car 111rage. lots d trees and
flower.;. Addiionalland can 12 purchased wth ·
l'oose.

WAitT TO DO A unu FAUING TIIS
SPIING1 - We have a new lilting with .11.4
acres m/1, SfJI'III tobacco lllse, ~ce rilldt style
home offer.; 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ~rge lR,
lichen, tun basement hardwood filoiS, ~1111
fX1rch and rear pafu. Just off Rl 35, near
Rooney.
.
PRICE REDUCED TO $85,000! 200 ACRES
M/~ · FRONTS ON RACCOON ClEEK ·
A~rox . 65 acres tilable and 135 acres woods.
Comfortable two story home offers 4BRs, bath,
klchen, Irving room, famitt room, two
fi1ep~ces. bam, 2 ~rge screened fXIrches.
love~ quiet setting.
TH£ KIND YOU HAvt IN IIINDI - .BricX
ranch withit walkitg disance sdtoqls and
doWntown shoppil~ 3 BRs, bit~ LR, ~tcllen,
d~~g room w/burt-in ch~a cabilet, famly
room in baseml!l~ gas heat, firepace. attached
garage.

'*

f«&lt;RIH GALUA ESTATES - Morgan TwP,.
100x!ll0 lol Allmg $3,000. Owner vd
consder financing.

BRs. lllth, LR, d~~g 100m and kitdtl!l.
Situated on 2 lois oo Rt. 160 in Vrnllll. Calf for
an appoittmenl
· '

BRICK HOllE -ROUSH LANE- This ~vet-,
Three bedrooms. LR is L-shape:f w~h frl!ll~ce
and dn~g area, v.oodburnng stove in
basemll1t 1\7 bath~ garage. Call lor more
info11nallin.
COIIIIERCIAL M IISIDEHTIAL -This rine
room two story home featu1es two Illtits, dn~g
room. kitchen with new cabnets, dishNasher.
carpet~g fireplace, lui basement, gas heat.
block 3 ca1 galllge. ~nyl sd~g. Level lot with
highway !rootage on Upper Rl 7.
LOG HOllE Wlllt 12.04 ACRES- Th6 rome
oilers 1,080 SQ. It lllsement, 2 stone
firep~ces, ·ITonta&amp;e 111 St. Rt. 233,
SoulhNestern School District. Call for more
informatlin.
24 ACRES 11/L HARRISON IWP. - CLAY
UCK MlAD - Roling land, well on 1JO!IIii1Y,
bam·- and tlbacco base. Call for more
informaoon.
THIS HOllE DEMANDS AnENTIONI - 1.86
acres,.m/1, 2,024 SQ. It~ livng space. OttEr
wfstand~g features ncfude fR with bricl&lt;
firep~ce. lR wth trep~ce, 3 BRs, 2 lllth!
formal d_,ing, rew~ remodeled kitchm, carpet
Uvou~out. electric fumace central ar, 2 lllr
attached garage with OJIIIIIers, sat~lite d5h,
fenced backyard, ni::e garden space. let us
show )W this hofrj! today.
GRfAT LOCATION- REDUCED PRICE, NICE
NEIGHIORHOOD - All these thilg; describe
this all bli:k, lllnch style home just olf Rt. 35.
This home oilers 3 BRs, I\! baths, LR, fll,
equ~pi!l kitchen, fuM basement CO\Iered
pati:l, na flat fenced lllckyard. Callloday.

. - Situated 111 two wooded lois thli ~ve~

QfAROLAIS HILLS - 3. 24 acres, rrore or
less; owner fnancitg .availlble.

.

HARRISON IWP. - CIEIIEENS RD. -53
ACRES 11/l - 4 BR home offtrs kitchen, LR,
bath, e~trc BB heat, carpetllg llx42 st!el
btlg. w~h woodbuming stove. barn and 3
sheds. Call for more tnformatlin.
~DISON IWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
acres m/1. all woods. Old 111m m JJoperly.
$21,000.

VINTON ARfA - I ACRE 11/l - Nbaclive
ranch hofrj! features 1104 sq . ft .. 14x26 lR,
eat-in ktchen. bath, attached garage,addiilnal
~ can be fXirchased.
STARTtR HOllE OR RENTM. INCOIIE 119.~ - 3 BR home offers lR, ktchl!l,
bath, 2 car unattached garage, fenced yard.
Call for informatlin.
RACCOON CREEK HO liESIT£ - Offers
swlnmng boatng and l6 h~ g. Lot size ~
IOOxWO and has eloctr~ity, water tap and
sept~ tank. Call for more detar~.

~oome' offers.J BRs. 2111111;,

kitchen, LR. lamii
room, lui baslml!lt,dec~ garage, gas heat and
cent. air. Call tolay.
~

THIS IS AII£Aim- Owners 11ve tltis one the go~en
touch 1 3 bediiiiiiiS, 2~ blths, famitj mom, folmal
l•11g and d~n1 room. pkis 11!-in kichen. fbne rns •
all the extras.
$43,500 - OVERLOOKING THE 1)110 RIVER - 3
bedroom brick ranch, srtuated on awro&gt;c. 3 acres.
Owner.; moved out d t110n.and want a deal. Call and
make an appoiltment today.
112047

• 3 014 IE DROOl IIICK- Excellent location. LR. mod. kitchen w/ buiH-in appliances in cluding
: microwave, family room w/ woodbumingfireplae. Just in lime fo1 summer fu n. 16x32 in-ground
pool.
;t... .. •
NICE I ACI£ LOT - Close to Ihe 1rver. 328' frontage on Rt. 7. $55 DO.
ARQfiTECT DESIGNED - Quality buin 3 bed1oom
br!:k and cedar home. Excellent design, ncludes lrv~g
room. equipped k!chen, forrml d~lrg heat IJlmp illd
oversiled garage. There ~ much more to see. $79.000
#2061

· INCOME PROPERTY- COIIIIERCtAl- RENTAL- OFFICE'SPACE or RESIDENTIAL- This
property located on 35 West and is JJesenlly being used as a residence and rental. Rental unit
has 2 bedrooms, Iilith. mod. kitchen w/ appliances. liv. room, lots of closet space. I car garage.
Vey nice. Residental has LR. 2 BR, l\7 bath,lg. ~tchen w/ all applrances, 1 car garage. Lg. back
covered patio used by both units. Nice level lawn. Th is property has many possibilitres. Excellent
cond~ion . •

NEW USIING - 5 ..:rES ~nd rmpmved w!h aerobi:
septic ian~ ru11l water. concrete patil, barn, 2 metal
ooildrlgs, fruh trees, garden area and pa~ure. Lo~ ~
road frontaga
#2139

1.40 ACRES 1101( 01 LESS- Vacant land. l ocatal in city schools distrrct.
WHEN THIS FAR I WAS IUILT IT HAD YOUR FAMILY IN MIND- This house boasts 91ooms,
new carpet, woodburner and vinyl siding. It is Slgu~ecf by 32 acres, equrpped wrth a 2 car gar.
oaeand has 3 more outbu ildines. Add to all this a state roote and Gall ipolis schools. and this be·
comes a bargain priced in the fihies.

5 ACRES more or less vacant ~nd wrth lots ~ woods
near Eureila. Aerobic seplic and rural wate1 ncklded.
Good view river. On~ $7 .~0
#2123

'*

COUNTRY UVING- 25 acres more or less. Tobacco
base, barn. ~us 3 bedroom home .,th large lflng
room, dK1_,g 100m.
#2058
.ASSUMABLE 9\ll% IIIG. - Cozy 2 bedroom lllnch
wrth fi1ep~ce in Wash~gtoo school distrct On
Neighborhood Rd. Low, low month~ payrrent. 'h aCie
yard. $26,900.
#2084

NEW USTING - .6 mr~ off Rt. 35, \\ acres
m/l 36x35 conc1ete block bid&amp; present~
.eed as paint and lxidy shop, mobile home
hookup on IJoperly.
! •

NEW HOllE -Ill MEDIATE POSSESSION l.ds of room for the kds and a nice garden. This
attractive hofrj! offers 3 BRs, lR, k~chen. 2
11111\S, formal dn~&amp; sundec~ lull basem111t.
Call fol more detai~.

HOllE WIIH A HfART! - Well constructed famiy
home whh foep~ce. eat-in khchen, attached 2 car
garage. Cove led deck. heat pump, central ar.fiat law n.
convenienl locatron. W!h~ 2 miles of hospital.
$54,000.
#2031

UNUSUAL WATERWAY ~ROP£RTY- 2 ACRES more or less of woodland with 600ft. of Raccoon
: Creek frontage and boat docks. TOTAL PRIVACY. Mod. 3 BR home features breathtaking view
overlooking creek from a contemporary glass florida room, 14x 16 formalliv. rm ., 2 baths, den,
mod. kitdlen , complete with stove, refrig.. utility room w/freezer, washer, drye1. Call also be
purchued with ldditional 2 ocres ll 200 ft. more creek frontage with 1 28x48 garage. Th is is a
very unique and secluded prope_rty. If ywlrke pnvacy and boating th ~ ~a must to see. Reaso·
nllbly priced.

SPRING VAllEY ESTATES - Tii·level tllme
oilers 3 BRs. 2 baths, nee equipped k~chen .
L·shaped LR, dinlrg area. 24xl2 famr~ room
wlh woodbum_,g fi1eplace. gas hea~ cent. air.
2 car 111rage. Call today.

TillS HOllE HAS AU Ttl THINGS YOU
WAIITII 4 BRs, equjlped ~dten, 2 baths
(master bath· has a wh~~Q. LR, carpeting,
6100 SO. FT. BUILDING - Solid amc1ete
heal pump, cent ar, attachi!l garage, above
walks. 20o It ITonlage on SR 7 _, Crown Ci~.
~nd pool. Just minutes from bvn at
former~ used as lurnRure factory. Ideal for
Centenary.
.
· retail sales or manufactur~ g business. ·
BE THE FilS! fAll flY It THIS Nlw HOlE\

COli mY CHAR II- Niceo~er llirre offers 3

lARGl S'ACIOUS HOllE- QUALITY CONSTRUCTION- FIAT YARD- Professionally lands·
This lovely randt lias rt all!!! formal entry, liv. rm w/lg. window , forma l dining room. wrfe
opproved kitchen, lots of cabrnets, double over~ s, bar off krtchen, spacious famrly r00111 features
WB liretJiace and slrdong door to back palro for lots of fam rly cookouts. 2 ceramrc trle baths. Jig.
!~rooms II luger than rest!. central air. exc. ~eaton . (Green School Orstrrcl $63.500.
cape!~

,&lt; ,_

.JI:

RUSTIC RANCII .
so'.n.- This home is Syr.;. old and inpeokconortron.
·custom ·
3 BR 1~ blths i and liv. rm . beautiful country frreplace plus woooburner,
:trated deck ond breezeway to 'garage and an incrlllible view. This home is much l11ger than it
·appears to be.
:2.9 ACRES. lORE OllfSS -3 red room hn.,.. inlths, L~. FR w/woodburner, mod. ~tchen,
:ill in &amp;ood condition. New 24x24 8arttttOilC'SI!Ial barn. All rs fenced. Garden area. Crty
'schools. $32,500.
:oouiLEWIDE -Owner needs to sell. 1.590 acres, mo1e or l_ess, 3 bedroom ranch, 2'1laths, IOI·
.malliv. room , form~ I dining room, family room, 1,920 SQ. h. hvrng space. 21arge covered patros.
'City schools. Priced at $38,000.
LOOKING FOR AFAR II!- 561! acres, 1500 lb. tobaccb base, barn, huge work garage, carport,
'swimmin&amp; pool, 3 SR. full basement, complete kitchen, dining and 2 patios, plusmm.

Ulf.AT STAlTER HOllE -Why oot buy oow and be settled in by school season? Aone a_cre lot

with stDropiRd 1340 IQ. ft.~ 3carpetid bedrooms, formal din In&amp;. krtchen, lg. hv. rm. w~h wb.

So 111 •IIOOd stort and call todoy obool tliis m~ ·20s bargai1 .

ONLY 13.1110 DOWN - ~at includes down payment and closinfl costs. IO'h% fixed rate. Con·
ftlltloaaiiOIII..Ciosed in 5to &amp;weeks, monthly payment$370.00 P.l. Lovely ranch. 3 bedrms ..
ta. kitchen w/lots af cabiets and oil appliances. Coverlll beck porch, llfl&amp;e. large FLAT back
ylllt. Ciiy schools.
"

'

NEW USTING - NEED ALITTLE PIECE.ANOQUIET7
- II so, then take a look atth6 1972 Academy mobile
home. Pafu, underpinned, range, refrigerator. Located
next to Tycoon lake. Ideal summer hofrj!.
~136

WANT TO DO FISHING M HUIITING1 - 118 ac1es
more ll less wooded land. 8~8· hunting bui~ll~
Stocl&lt;ed ponds. sevellll feet road froritage. Drilled
well.
#2027

'*

J . Merrill Carter
Phyllla Loveday
Jim Cochran

1

COIIIIEICW. - tmAIIIMT - Seatilg lor 54,
repeat cusWrners. mobile i'ome SPICe included.
*1025
PRICE REDUCED TO $29.!KIO.OO- Clvner mu~ sell
th~ 3 bedroom ranch on Georges Creek Road off 9!7.
Includes garage and over 'A acra
#2140

NEW USTING- TOO IINIY CHILDREII TO LNE IN A
SHOE - Need I bJaer home but thnk yOU can't
afford~ This one wil !XI!t ywtess than $40.000. lor 4
bedrooms, 2 batlls, f111itj room, iv~g room, utrlity
room. Call lor an appoiltlll!nt todoy.
112ll3

SPRING VALLEY - The ne~hluhood speaks b1
itsen. ThG charmingone lbor ;:Aan very IO! ij ktlj)t rome
offers a lot of lrvrng space. 3 1•. bedrooms, 2 lllths,
equrpped krtchen. spacous 10!11 mani:Uied lot.
112120

ON THE RIVER - Nice btg form hoose. 7acres more
or less ~ '"er boltom.lots ~ road Irootage on Rt. 7.
#1087

SPACIOUS SPUT LEVEL - Very nee home. 3
bedrooms. t '1, baths, lots of cabitets cand counter
space rn klchen. Horre has been wet mantanlll,
extra n~e lawn.
#2072
NEW LISTING - 95 ACRES lllRE OR LESS ·
Includes 2 story unfrn~hed cabil, 2 car 111 rage and
prod. Nice s~e orchard. klts ~ ooolls.
*2135
NEW LISTING - 1984 t4'x70' mobi~ home and 5
acres r11and. Home has gab~ roof. 31Edrooms, 1\\
baths, cathedral ceilitg in livng room and Uchen.
Rural water, sepoc tank, garden a1ea and pasture. Bam
illd 2 metal storage build~~~~#2139
NEW LISTING
PICTURE YOURSELF HEREI •
Nature's beauty maniests itse~ arwnd th6 3 bedroom,
2 bath brick hofrj! with basemll1t. 10 acres r11ush
country sening with a rushing stream, tilled gardens
and pond. Near R~ Grande.
N2133

150.000 - 2 story hofrj!. 2 car IJrage, 3 l!drooms.
den, f01ma l dinilt wlity room. poved dr•e. SRuatoo
on 10 acres more or less.
#2076
5 ACRES 1101£ 01 LESS - 1969 Schul mobrle
home, well, ~~ small barn. all rn KJger Creek
school system.
#1040

PRICE REDUCED $30,000.00 - 3 lx!droom 1 '~ ~ory
frame home. 2 car Llllltached t~nge. situated on 3.5
acres more or less.
#2006
SUNIUST - l.oc.aoon pkis charm plus value. 3
bedrooms, III both, forrral d•mg room, 2 car
garag~ Ran~ refr'cerllor, dishNasher. washer and
·dryer included. Mom wil love beng conver~ent to
everyth~g.

Becky Lone
Liz Long
Pltrick CoelUM

R•ltor 379-2184
Realtor 446·2230
Realtor 446· 7881

JUDY DEWITT

PARK-LIKE SmfNG- Dri 15.8 .:res mo~e or less on
SR141. lots of woods. Property borde~ with Mclnty10
Pa1k. 4 yr. old 311edroom rilldl with Buck stove, 1\\
bath, pkls more. Priced lo sell at $45.000.
#2112

BROKER

388-8155

#2037
lloollor 446·0468
Roallor 1176 ·3968
lhellor 441·11165

�Page-D-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ponwoy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point

P11111nt.

June 29.

W. Va.

J.una 29, 1986
72

1983 Camaro Z28. 20.000
mtiM, tocalowner, kJaded ,.char·
coli gray, mu1t tell . 304-87158,3 aft• 5 p.m .
,9~

Truckl for Sale

74

Motorcycl81

O"ocjgt VIA PS, PB,
AM -FM r8dio, 4 new rlldllltirN,

with O\'lrdrlve. flbargl 111
•pper, axe. cond. Call . 114·

82,995. Co11514·288·a&amp;22.

387·0384.

Oids Cutl .. , C1l1i, eood

,. Ford F· 11Q, 4-WO. euto,
"'"'·· lhort wheel bllt. good

oolfd. 304-675-3724 or 875·

74!)0.

oond. A,.lng 13&amp;00. Coli a14·

441·7181.
ROIODElfD HOII - New bath, aerobe
septic system, p~mb~g, roof. I~ covein~
klchen imprQ'Jemenls. l.arl!ll f~t ~t. 14x:ll
separate buiklil&amp; Rn~hed rnsde •. sutab~ for
office. Also one car garage. Located JUSt off StRt.
160, 4 mies from Ho~er . Haipital. Ask~g
$31 ,!JKl.
N318

1878 .DOdQe 1AI 4x4 euto., PS,
PI, AM -F.M 18.000 mil• on
3t0 tnglne, I'IIW p.intvtry good
cond ..Aeklng U,HO IIIOM~era
4rwey 111ow bllde 1980 . Trlde
or belt offer moving, Call

114·441·2745.

For 1111 or trlde 1883 7150
Hond1 lib I'IIW, U.OOO mllll.
Will treda for good Cllr or truck.

C.ll a14·24&amp;·5223.

71 Ko.;,.ooki 900 D.O.C. 4 cyl ..
lolded drtlltt, with K-Q IMt.
New ~ .... 1Ubat, Qrocke.s •
chllln. hit offer thl1 wMkend.
Ste It Rt. 7 &amp; Routh lana. Call

a14-311a·lll22.

1111 Cheyenne Chevrolet 'Big
10' 'A ton, tuto , PS , Pl. new

114·388·8752.

blgl, 9.000 mllu. 15&amp;0. Honde
460 Scrembltr 20.000 mllu.
0326. Coli a14·3117·010a.

81 Hondt 610 il good condl·
tton. asso Ctll 61 • ·992-&amp;144.
FOI 111e: 1982 Hond1 71ii0
cu•tom. New tlrll. crtlh btrl.
INick rftt, CNIII control. 814·

949·2134.

tirw. 71,000 mll11, 13,000.

c.n 814·448·4292.
GREAT LOCATION FOR A NEW HOME
~pring Valley Subdivisron. Two large Jots. Each Jot is 101.8 by
:t71 .2 City ater, city sewer. and natural gas are available.
·SPECIAL th rs week. Boy one or two.
~456

LEADINGHAM REAl EST AlE Real Estate General

Honda

19815 ChiY'f "'- 'ton pick· up.
Auto.. 17.000 mil•. Sell or

•ecte for Clf of ....... VIIUI. C.U

614·742-3119.

BEAUTIFUL CEDAR HOII- Th~ ,rytishchalet
home on a large nice~ laadscaptl! IIi ~
cooternporary living on 31evels. IncUdes 3BRs
w~e designed knchen wth dinette living room
fami~ rooo1 and rec. room and a bath on lliCh
level. Extra features such as woodbumer, wet
bar. ~~rap arrund deck 01/erklokilg private
16x32 in·ground pool, Very comfortab~ and
liva~ home. Pri:ed at $84,!XJO.

·Q!ItD£JI OlDY - ln:ious okt 3 bedroom,
co~ill brick r811ililcent of the Civil W.r era.
lormal dining, parlor. family room. 2 huge
fi'epllani'us one in the basemen~ 2'h baths. B~
shady lawn and 2 extra lots. 18luced to
~.llXI.

#Ill

If ONLY 'VERY BEST' - is yrur crderia,
!Xlrlsiler..... .large Iami~ room, forma I dililg and
large living room, each \lith river ~ew. 4 ~r~
bedrooms. lots of closets and 2 ~rge sttrag~
rooms. Beautiful new carpet central ar and an
rn·ground pool. 2.7 acres. One rri~ from
downtown. Reduced to $95,000.
#134

~245

81 Ford Atnger tnn:k , 4 whtel
drive, 1m1ll equity.
belanc.. 10.000 mn... 304&amp;76· 7842 .

••ume

1980 Oatam pickup. long bed
with fUitrgilll topper. tuto·
matic trtnt. low milttge, good
tir• . nooo. firm . 304-876·

2054 .

73

Vans S. 4 W.O.

78

Boats and

FROM Tl£ PAGES Of HOUSE BEAUTIFUtru~ a near pe~ home that ... sat~fy the
'hard to please . Gorgeous livrng room wdh
marble facer! lrep~ce, deep p~ carpeting and
gtall&gt; ~tio doors to alarge screened PiTch. You'll
breathe a srgh of refill when yru see the s~e of
the 3 farge bedrooms and 2 (!leamilg cerami:
bat~. Ktchen mcludes range, oven, diihwasher
and large eat~g area \lith lots !i windows and
vrew of a .wooded ravine. The family room
rncludes bur~·rn bookcases and comer wndow~
Check ltle quality ligl1t IOO!Jres. drapes and
shades. 2 car fllrage and basement LocatsJ in
town on a large shady, welllandscapaj lot at the
end of the street Pr~e rsJuced from $93,000to
$89,1lXJ. Owner has ptJrchased another home
ou1 of the rea irld MUST SElL Look at this
oufstandmg home and if yw don\ like tl'e new
pr~e. make us an !ifer.
·
#141.

r

COUNTRY SEITING - All electric ranch . home
situated on .83 acre . Three bedrooms, large living
room , dining area, and large kitchen, full basement
with woodburner, one car prage. 16'x32' inground
swimming pool. REDUCED S35,00U.OO.

'HOBSTEmR REALlY, Cal (614) 742-3092
Real Estate General

SEllDUPATIEEIAIID.,WIIIUOfiiiMust sell this 3 bedroom tn:k ranch 11ata1 off
Rl .141 in a quiet .n!Wlborhood. lncbfes 11r111
eat;n kkhen. Irma rmrn, fnily 100111 with
woodbumer and I car 11raae. Priced to move at
$41,![().

m9

MT AGOOD FEELING - Thii 3 IEdroom
rar1ch ;.es you nice filar plln whVI alklws
1~ sq. ft. but feels much lar~r. Partial
bisernent and carport. Very well mailtairoo.
Beautlul setting in QU~t ne~hborhood .,;thrn
Nlkilg d~fance of ta.vn. $39,000.
N221

'IllY NOW" - Toda is
the tme to invest~ ahomeyw11enj!yfor m~ny
years. See th~ 3 IEdroom rirlch wdh fuM ·,
basement, 2 IEths, carfXIII and approx. 2 a:res.
$48,:1!0.

.

N238

1982 Chev. 4x4 305 V· 8. auto,
short bed. 12.000 mil•. 18,600

k&gt;en. Mil 16,200. Ctll814 ·446 -

7018.

1979 Dodge window ven, 380
angln•. euto, AC , PS . P8. good
oond. Cell 614-2ol6·5294 .

1988 Aunllbout, lnboerd, OMC.
all equip. Cell 614-288·2827.

814-441-7404, m•uge.

115 ft. boat with OUt· bolfd
motor, 75 HP. Cd 814-992·
7039 after 4:00.

CM~OT.

8800 mlln

Fully mtld equipped, Including
b1g1 . New uhtulti· VGC .

with 40 HP EvinNde outboard
.,d treiler. 614·986-3327.

1700. C1ll 114·992-6a86 or
28 toot pontoon
a14·982·11037.

1981 Honde CB 7150 Cultom.
lighted trwel trunk-sport felr·
lng . New rtlr tire. E.C . 8000
milet. Ctll 814-992 -6037 or

814·992-llli88.

1975 XL250 Honda motorcycle,
dirt or ltrM1, mint cond. with
e•trl full Knobby tire. 304-876 ·
8894.

bott, 80 HP
Mercury, SIMiilflll, stereo, trill If,
Price: with motor 13800., with·
out motor 119915. CtU d..,
814-992-2391 end night 814-

992·2609.

12 ' V bOttom alurrinum bo.t. 2
twWel 181!1, carpeted 12150.

304-875· 68150 .ttw 15

p.m.

Ranger ba" boat. 18', 86 HP

end bim,
tow-low trailet. steinl811 ltHI
prop. 13600. Firm. 304-882·

motor,

power tilt

1982 Honda CB 900 cuttom,
2600 mll11, 12600. 304· nl2692.
9126 or 773·96a5.

fllDUCED FIOI $72,000 TO $59 t10- NOW
$5UIOftl - This ilan '*lei 2 sttiry home that

has been comptetety llnOVIIIId~ 3

. laree bedrooms, HI baths, I~
wdh
firepllce, dinilg, eat.ffrkkdlen dlui divded
baslment Situated on 3 .:res \lith a very II)Od
locatiln near Buckeye Hills.

WHAT ARE THE
rrodem home lor $36,!ll0?

rt yw call
today on this 3 BR wth par1iai1Esernent. E!lra
nee kithen, YollOd stov~ 2sforage buiktilgs and
2 acres. Just can't be rea~

N320

ABOUT HALF Of YOUR IIClRiiGAG(

bedroom .home, 6 rooms il all,
fumac~ new chmney wdh coaiVMJod stove.
44x bam \lith 1400 sq. ft. m/ 1, ~ concrete in
part as shop area. Excelent tn autorepars and
sbrage. S. tn acres !i crop ar111, ~me pasture
with ba~nce in woods. Trail r~es esfab!Ehed for
· bikes or horses. Tobacco base, mineral ri~~
ilcluded wih coal vein reportoo. Allfor $49,000.

n

COUiflrl COIIFOIT AT ITliESr - f'ter\ty of
eiJOW room rnsm and out w/lhis very ~r~
beMful brd rinch Mth full baslment VetY
well buit home 1m 4 Ills, 3 mmptete taths,

mrmal dilin~ f)lJs lar~ titdlen \lith dilette, 2
fireplaces, m110Und •mmilg pool, wrap.
around deck. 2carfllraal!,and more. 4) .:res of
ground, 7 of whi:h are clenlllliUrd llluse.
$96,!XJO for alliJ $86:00 for illuse and 1 ac.

~~ by renting lhe bri:k twil
live in tl'e story frame \lith
knchen and bath. I side of twin slfgle has
lR, 00, knchen and bath. lui basement, other
side has 2BRs,LR, k~chen and bath.!Niner may
help finance1$69,000.

t

NUl

1322

*113

USTING - I was plea sant~ surprisoo and
lookilg for a good okter lnme in ta.vn
yw will oo too llilen you see Ire oulstand~g
woodwork in this 3or 4redroom, I~b ath home.
Includes a large kitchen, family room, foyer,
basement and garage. If woodwork turns yru on
re sure and see this. $55,500.
'
~you 're

. This home has rt all. 3 ll!drm. jancll locatsJ •

•

•
•

aloog Roush Rd. Kyger Creek Schools. ful tasernent .,;th rec.
rm. Cent. air. WBfP, in-ground 16'x32' swimmll~ oool. ~ acre •
lot. Well and rural water. Great location for famrly. Price •
$54,900.00.
•

•
•
•

NEW LISTING - LOCATED ALONG LOW TRAFFIC •
STREET - This 3 redrm. home, family room and fenced
yard is anxiou sly awa itrng your visit Price $36,000. •

•

•

RED BRICK HOME - Located in Gallipolis Full base· •
ment. Cen. AC , nat. gas furnace.Fireplace. House is in ex· •
cellent condition, so just "move in ". Price $49,900 . •

•
•

NEW USTING - 3 ood room home on Kalhy Drive, near •
. Holzer Hospital. Low traffic area , large l»ck yard . WBFP. •
Gallipolis City School Oistrict. Price $45,000.
•

•

•

•• FOR RENT-One 2 bedrm. apt., 2nd ftoor near golf •
. course. $200 plus deposit. M&gt;ULTS ONLY!
•
•
•
•

FARM - 282 ACRES - Located on blacktop road . Re· •
modeled house, 8 outbldgs 100 acre botlom land. OC· •
CUPY NOW FOR $130,000.
.. •
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS..... , •
..CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON

SCHULT'

•udesVt

MO. Ita MaJO ..:. 2 lui

baths, specill
QUIIIy llitdlen, 111 elec1r~
well insulallld, cenbJI 6. On rice 120xl20 kJt
Mth utilities irl pllce incfuditg rural Wiler.On g,
RL 325 rar Sout!lwiSUi n Hi(h School and
grade SChool. Pri:ed at $26,M!Ofor Ill Would sell
separate. $26.MlO. .

125 ACRE. 11/ L tiiEU lOCATED FARM UNIT
wnh 60-70 acres ~ good la~ng crop land. Has
grade "A" dairy set up with bul cooker and
pilefile milkers. Well buitt okler lum home,
far~ barn, com crib, machne storage. Coonty
water. Appro•t I mi~ of Racmon Creek !rootage
wlhii)Od access lor irrigation, water supply and
recrealiln. All kleated 1mile south of U.S. Rt.li
oo Adilllsvilfe-Cora Road. Partial filanc~g
possil~ to quallied buyer. Listed at $100,000.
COAL MINER'S DREAM - Here is a super
buy for anyone in the Vinton area. Located!
.Ju~ north. of Vinton on St. Rt 160. Pretty 3
ll!droom home wifh 1~ bat~. W!ry ni:e far~
kkhen, lllge living room and far~ 4~ acre
lot \lith in.grourd pool iWld sman pond .
$46,![() bujys ~ and we can [Ill you
filanced!

#118

N317

UKE NEW - Quality buik,exceli!nt state
repair of 19 )'liar old home. Full tlisement I\;
finilhed wrth firep~cet . Three nice size
IEdrooms. HI baths, convenient kitchen, dning
and living room area. Two car garage wdh
carport Two storage build~gs . ~I oo I ocre.
more or less, of land. Asking $59,810.
#321

n32

BIG PRICE REOUCTION!!I- 62.8 a: res, Greer1
T111nship, 1400 feet of state highway fronfllge.
Was $40,000, now $33,000. G~EAT Rl~ LARII
LOT D£VELOPMENT. If you don't l~e my tJice, ·
make an offer.
41138

--.

rJ r t J

Home
Improvement•

ploltor ..., ..,.. Low
c.ne~4-Z&amp;a· 11&amp;a .

UVESTOCK BONANZA - Second to None 380 acres m/1, 100 ac. crop, 150 ac. pasture,
130 oc. woods and misc., 6500' mal frontage.
4000' m/1 of new l!nC/l. Excel!!nt hill top ~ew
from present home. Collkl ea~~ be dil~ed rn
three or more SOIIIIer units.Tofala sk~ gpricefor
entire unt Reduced to $235,000.
#335

Woodwor'&lt;
· Carper Cioa11~

can: [614)446-8016 ·

Now arrange the elrctea letlem to
lorm IM surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the abOve canoon.

tO% DISCOUNT DURING JUNE &amp;JULY ONLY

I

(Answers
Jumbles: PECAN BLIMP BEMOAN VISION
Answer The ;ogger OJisited the veterinarian because of
this - HIS " CALVES" WERE IN PAIN

a. Heating

EJrttriOr &amp; lntll'kH' lt\Jeeo. PI•·
11r • pl•llr reptlfl. Low

C•lla14·2&amp;a·1182.

rat•.

Steniey StMmM' 2 room min·
!mum UO Ptr room. Galt ..
Meigs- VInton Count111. 1·100.

2454.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
COJ. Fourth end Ptne
Oelllpolit, Ohio

Pkon• 114-448-3888 or IU·

448-4477

Good· 1 ERctvlting, b~aemtntl,
foot~rs . drivi'Weys. s~tic tlnkl,
lendsceping. Cell anytime 614·
441·4537, Jam• L. DaviSon,
Jr. owner.
Bidwell Cnh Feed Store now
h1ndllng 4" pllltlc drain pipe&amp;
fitting . Call 814-388-9688 .

Trtnc:t"tlng Service: water, g ...

tnd electric. Free eatimatea.

304·773·a839.

83

86

General Hauling

Coal, lim•tone. gravel, etc
Dtllvtred 1 ton and up . J im

Excavating

86

General Hauling

Jemu Bov• Water Service. Alao
paola tilled . Call 614·266· 1141
or 114-446·f176 or &amp;14-4487911 .

87

Upholstery

TRI STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1183 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.
614· 448-7833 or 614· 446 ·

CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTRUCTION
g,,l•g $Pfel•l

SCHWUUNG NOW 101,

'Roofing 'Siding
•continuous
Guttering
•Fencing
• Remodeling
Call today ....

446-4514
ar 446-4841

1833.

A &amp; M Fumiture MenufeC1uring,
St. Rt. 7. Crown City, Oh. Call
614·265-1470. cell Eve. 614·

446 - 3438 . Old 81

new

Uphottered .

Ktn ' l Weter Service. Wells,
cl11trns, poolt and waterbedl
fMI.ct. Cell 814-387-0823 or
814· 367-7741 or 304·875·

1247.

Mowrey' • Upholltering 1erving
tri countverea21 vesu. The bill
in fumiture uphol11ering. C1ll

304 · 876 · 4164 for free
ealima1•.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

304·67a.a1a2.

Real Estate General

HOBSTffiER
REALTY
Geo. S. Hobstetter, Jr.
NEW LISTiNG - Fairview
Hgts.. lovely ranch home,
sits on one acre. Features
three bedrooms, large bath,
nice living room, kitchen
and dining .comb .. ltility
room, big dou bfe car garage.
~iet and private. Asking
$48,500.00.

ACRES located at Long Bot·
fom . Ohio- 45 acresof bottom land. Land borders
Forked Run Stale Park at .
AFFORDABLE HOME WITH A POOL! - THIS R~Oi
rear of property'
,~ ~:S.'~;~~:N~YfJLSDING ~D BRICKTRIM. 3BEDROOMS, 2
~=-~::::;;:::=~
KITCHEN, NI CE DINING AREA, 16x32
FOR OOOL DAYS, ATTACHED
Real Estate General
GARAGE,,
UNIT. A LOT OF HOME FOR
~ ~'~UIN·· JUST MINUTES fROM HOllER HOSPITAL JUST

CEDAR HOME - Immaculate tour bedroom home. 2 ~
baths, livrng room wdh fire·
place, recreation room, for·
mal dining room. burlt·in
kitchen with breaktaslroom,
famrly room, lull basement.
~ tuated on three acres. Cen·
tral heat and air. Reduced to
$115,000.00.

Colltet (ails

da ,
9
esler Y

Cerp.nter. remodeling,
addition, buMd~ rep1IF1.
roofing. pelntlng. ctment

1WO BR IIOBILE HOME - APPRO!. 2.25 ACRES

2. LOVELY HOME plus 106

REALTY.

w.-

For FREE ESllMATE,

Lanier. 304-676-1247 or 675 ·

MOSTLY CLEARED lAND. EXCELLENT INVESTMENT
OR 1i!P£R BUILDING LOT. ASKING $18,000.

. 614·385·7419

Ceii~
w~~

~mercia! &amp; Ae!lidential

~"~"";,r~oo~r;lng~.;;;;;.;;;;:-PI.~ t-;;;::::;;;::::;:;::::::::-r'jf~~;;;;;;;;~~~::j 7397.
~torExtorio•
83 Excavating
Ploo- 82
a a lntariar otucco. moo.
Plumbing

ACREAGE - 5.75 acres
with six year old bnck home.
Three bedrooms, 2 baths,
~rge living room, dining
room, equipped kitchen,
utility room, full basement
and garage, free gas. Asking
$64,900 00

MONTGOr.IRY

y

Mott well• compl.ttd tam• dey.
Pump sel• and service. 304-

TION on this 140 acre farm
locatoo in Portland, Oh io'
Approlimately)o\ of acreage
is pature, balan ce wood s' All
mineral nghts go with prop ·
ertyr Good spnng for catlle.
E1cellent huntrn gareal Only
$37.500.00 Call today!

2 BUILDING LOTS
I ACRE PLUS
S4,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES-S6r000
.
.-

SP:INPE~

J.4aKj SeM:e

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcfitlon.. Uf..krit OUIFII'Ittt. Local r.r.nnc. tumlthed.
Fr• tttlmM•- Cell cola.ct
1-114-237-0481, diV or night.
A o g 1 r 1 8 1 1 I mI n t

uJf"rlMI'·,~

1. DRASTIC PRICE REDUC.

hugo poplars, oxctlltnt
timber, scenic. Wright
St., Pomeroy.

•

"446-3636

COUNTRY AND VERY NICE - 5 BEDROOM fARM
HOME. FAMILY ROO!r\ LAAGE OOUNTRY KITCHEN. CELLAR
I()USE. GAAAGE, BARN,SEVER/ol. SHEDS, SURROUNDED BY
APPROX. 86 BEAUTIFUL ROLLING ACRES,f ARM POND,SOME
WOODED AAEA. PRICED RIGHT AT $75,0001

SMALL FARM WITH LOTS Of FRONTAGE ON R.I£(:00N
CREEK! - OlDER HOt.£ NICELY REMOOEUD
BATH, EAHN KITOiEN ANO LARGE LR WITH FP. BIG
POROi TO TNIE IN THE OORGEOUS VI~EW;:~· ~;-;:·;~
OUTBUILDING AND TOBACCO BAS£ OO~T WAIT
BARGAIN! ONLY $45,000.

I

instrument

Real

79 Branch ot

Velma R. Nicinsky, AssCH:.
Phone (614) 742·:1092
Real Estate General

Estate~

-

·

1· 16141·992·3326

~ -

AUDREY f . CANADAY. REALTOR
MARY flOYD, REALIOR. 446·3313
U LOCUST SJIEU, GALUPOUS. OHIO L-1.~.11

1 Gaiety
6 Fanatical
11 Killed
16 Blouse
21 Lasso
22 Avoid
23 Port·&amp;U·Prlnce is
its capi1al
24 Passageway
25 Timetable abbr.
26 Tall struc\ure
28 Make lnlo law
30 Twist
32 Printer's measure·
33 Tellurium symbol
34 Pale
35 Before
36 Competent
37 Marry
38 Superlative
ending
40 Kind of fabric
42 Beret
43- screen
44 Knocks
45 Sullable
47 Sandy wasle
49 Lateral
50 Sun. talk
51 Set ot games
54 Challenge
55 Abrading

fEAFORDm

ST. RT. 124 - Si1 room
home, wnh lots of remodel·
ing. Nice shady lot Re·
duced, $12,000.00.

Phone

AHONEY FOR THE IIONEY! 2 BEDROOM
BEEN REt.()DELED ONE Of If£ NICEST
ON THE MAAKET AT $20.000. fEW MINUTES
ON RT. 218.

ACROSS

56 Beasl
59 In music, high
60 Vigor: colloq .
62 Endure
·
64 Wolfhound
65 Agave plant
66 XXV + XXVI
67 Obstrucl
69 Alarm
70 Trickle
71 Actor Johnson
72 Fuss
74 Strong winds
76 Sn Is ils symbol
77 EncDYnler
78 Dominant or

216 E. 2nd" St. . -

1S acres wooded land,

EXCEPr,IOIIAL Z.IICI!S -ln~des a 6
okt nrndi perfectly placed oo a knoll,
stlpilg froot lawn and ideal garden ar111
rP.Ir-scenk: country view. Located on ahardtop
road, cfos41 to HMC, home has 31l!drooms, iv~g
room, bath, 1J kitchen, dililgroom and garage.
$45,000.

81

895·3802

uullent lake side arll
farmlarll pasture arll
woods. Aslcing $400 per
am. for quick salt. Ad·
jacent Pomeroy.

WHA'TiH!

{iOaninoS....rooo

HAC'.

pickup. Cell 114-24li·H 18 .

st~lt barn,

tCUUES I

S1:r v 1i:1:s

Roterv or clbie tool drWiing.

Huge Dutch

SOCIJI(ill$ ndudi:

.

OP:SAN

Chevy vtn or C· 30 truck. A· 1
oondi1kln . Sell or trade tor cer Of'

130 ACRES

N201

•

rca!lilday'K.e~aJ

24741 Hill Rd .. Racine, Oh.
Vir1inia D. Carroll, Broker
Tel.: 274-3644, 273·9383
THE FINEST NAME IN
REAL ESTATE
OUR 21st YEAR

with firep~ce, dinilg area. effi:i!nt Uchen
24x28 2-car 1111rage attached. 40' antenna and
rwr with very II)Od TV receplilnover wide area.
All this ..;th central ar. Boyer.~ Pr!iectiln ~n.
listed at $53,flJO.

or Too Smalf!

RON'S Television Service .
Hoo• c1ftt on RCA. Quaur,
OE . SpKiollng In Zonhh. CoU
304·&amp;7a-2388 or e14·44a·

·.;,

35 ICIES Of LAND - Along

Sal• 814-812,-7403.

Broker

1114

4 BEDROOMS AND A FAMILY ROOM - for
$44,!JKl, that doesn' sound r~hl but~ ~. This
nee ranch home a~o features, 111 bat~. full
basement and g;~rage. L1rge lot waning f!r a
pool. Oose to hospital.

1873Tf'IYIIITrelltr. 11ft. 51~
8 , r•lnk:. *1300. SandyeA.uto

321·&amp;13 • .

Real Estate General

oti9.Rl
new grale school. 6 mles '&gt;
NOSIP«&lt;I.. Nice homes in the area. Th~ 3 'If.
bur~ home ~ on a large lot with nice
trees. Home ~ 3 BR, 2 taths, living room

No Cleaning
Job Too Big

ouch

Yukon DeHe 25 ft. hou" boat

1983 Ford Conv•r~ion Van. low
miiNgl . R•uonlbly prlcttd. Cell
814·992· 21588.

NEW LISTING - 30 acres pus 14xJO 1974
home. Partial~ fum5hed 3 ll!droom, 2
baths, il II)Od conditiln. AIIProximatefy 1600'
roM frontage. Coonty water. Wooded hil lilld.
~~t area. Good house localiln. Sec1iJn 15,
Morgan Tow111hip, loog Branch Road. hikilg
$:1l,llXI lor all.
N319

srecial

a14·992·6354.

949·2226.

mobi~

__

! ... .. _ _ _ ""

1871 T1 ft . lmpalt travel trail•
14, 200. SH ecrou hom the
Kaneuga Drive-In th•tlf"-. C1ll

14 ft. •mi·v elumlnum fi1hlng
bo11 with trailer end 5 hp motor.
1878. Cell 814·992·71!3 or

1982 Dodge Conversion Van.
PS. PB. AC . loti of •-tras.
Exctlent condi1kln . C111 114·

11411

)J;

I, I K J

1989 Critchfield boet. 7&amp; HP.
Asklng 11 ,600. Evanlng• &amp;
weelltndl 114·448-8282 or

1750. Colt 814·388·9787.

NlW USTING- BEST BUilT &amp;CONDITIONED
HOME IN GALUPOUS - OltE OWNER Baseml!nt \lith 10" pouroo concrete walls.
foca!d ai' IIIIS heal Cehtral ar, I lui ~d two ~
IBths, 3bedrooms, dinilg room, living room \lith
fireplace, 12x35 fami~ room wnh bui~·in storage
space. 24x24 garage (10" pour\'d concrete
walt) \lith shop area abOIIe. Must see to
aJIPrec~te. Askilg $65,ilXI.
1314

z

L&amp;oond2Geo
' . 304·87S·
7429.

814·448·01511.

1973 Dodg1 van, nftl' paint,

,.,.IOY/CHE$TO - We are fJtllll to offet'
this outstJnding spit-level. In an aree of tile
home!, ~ is exCI!fl(ilnal ~ its qulfity, mnt
cmdiiln and settilg. Profesmnalty decoratm,
aHIIdilaled lillfitilg fidures,lhii!Jlld·level has
2500 st ft., 4 bedrooms, 3 baths. cathedral
ceiin' Property also inckldes 3 ~ndsca)llll
acres, ~gem crete drive filed with piles 11d a
32x40 3-yr. okt muli-)Jirpose buildilg (me
llllllelill as house), heetlid, concrete II»' \lith
ooilmed porch. $134,!JKl.

Services Offered

317·0415.

ZUa.

12.000. C•lll14·255·1393.

flarta

79 Motofl Homes
S. Campara
C1ll 814-3117·0447 or 114·

1979 Conveqlon vtn, 1985
Chevy truck . nice. 1978 Chevy
LUY. Cel lftlf 5, 814·4461918 Wrecker 440 Holmt
¥nnch wilh 1wlng boom•.

Auto

S. Accauorl11
Four tW. rim~, 11''• fourttr. .

1978 18 ft. Starcrlft lluminum
V·hlul, full· vinyl top, 120 HP
M•rcrui•• lnbolrd -outbo1rd,
power tltt a trim, tlh trllllf,
AM-FM 8 track 1terao, 15,600.

1980 Hondl CR 210 loti otnew
part1, mull 1tl1 1400. Csll
Suzulll 310, wlndshlekl. seddle

1879 DodgtiAIDn clubc.-b 4114
1&amp;.110, PS, PI, lir, AM·FM. tlh
whitt, low miiHQt, 380 eng.
Mw dr ... whHII. brlll11. front
gNr .. tack out hubl, ex. cond.
M:OOO. lito Mprt 4-wty tnow
blad• •aso. Treda or bett offer
moving. Cell1114-"1·2745.

76

Motors for Sale

1182 Dodge AtmPlckup . Japd,

1981

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page-D- 7

Dhio-P()int Pleasant, W.Va.

-,.

POMEROY- 2 BR rental.
Basement, garage, porch,
near the stores. Offer might
buy.
OFFER WANTED - 2 BRs,
coal furnace, full basement
with garage and nearly an
acre.
MIDDLEPORT- Riverview,
8 rms .. woodburning fire·
place, basement, dining &amp; 3
BRs. Asking $25,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice re ..
modeled 3 BR, 2 story home
near the schools.
. ..
POMEROY - 4 BRs, 2
baths, equipped krtchen,
hot water boiler, basement
&amp; walk to shop .
MINERSVILLE - 2 houses,
one needs work, offer wei·
come, $15,000.
PORTLAND AREA - 20
acres plus nice 3 BR mobile
home.
PORTLAND- 21g. lots ap·
prox. one acre, old house &amp;
bam.
POMEROY - 2 BR, 2 story
for just $6,000.
BUSINESS &amp; BLDG. - In
Pomero~ with four renta~ .
145 ACRES -All min ere~.
bam &amp; other bkiiJS. on Rt.
143, or will divide.
TUPPERS PLAINS - One
acre on Rl 7. Lot 82x531.22.
Sttlln1 l'lobltll!

catt 992·3325

Holl~lnlj

~edclqudtil't s

recessant

82
84
85
86

gO\Iernment
Deep shovels

Blanches
Great Lake
Hardwood tree

88 Nimbus

89 Heap
90 Coarse cotton
drilling
92 Crown
94 Ends
98 City in Russia
99 Skating arena
tOO Soak. as flax
102 Wading bird
103 Sit down to
dinner

t04 Bow
105 Warble
106 Scott
108 Music: as wri1ten
109 As tar as
110 Hypothetical
force

111 Dismiss
t 12 Insects
114 Airline info.
116 Uni1 of Bulgarian

currency

t 17 Lately cr8a1ed
t 19 Repast
t20 Tardy
122 Valuable fur
t24 Ugly, old woman
t25 Sword handle
126 Leave
128 Broadcast
129 Scheme
t31 Need
132 Vehicle
t33 Smallesl amount
135 Shade tree
138 Tear
139 Rabbit
140 Scottish cap
14 t Wooden vessel
142 Three·toed slolh
143 AI home
144 StaH
145 Collections of
tents
147 Heavenly being
149 Choose
150 Substance
152 Run away to be
married

154
156
158
159

Vasl throng
Get up
Expunge
Cowboy
competition
160 Bread ingredi•' nl
16t Having less coror

DOWN
1 Box
2 Leases
3 Appendage
4 Latin conjunction

5 Informer
6 Recompense
7 Exac1ed
satisfaction for

8 Disallow
9 Cyprinoid fish
10 Ruby or Sandra
11 Keen
12 lnter1wine
13 River island
14 Kind or type
15 Peck
16 Diminish
17 Succor
18 ExiSIS
19 Slumber
20 Cares tor
27 Be in debt
29 Spruce
31 Antlered animal
36 Assistant
37 Genial
39 Fruit cake
40 Walk
41 Brother of Jacob
42 TruS\worthiness
43 Storage structure
44 Check
46 Jumble
48 Sea eagles
49 Omen
50 Type 01 COOkie
51 Dinner course

52 Omit from
pronunciation

53 Staid
55 Pertain ing lo
France

56
57
58
61
63
64
68
70
71
73
74
75

Landed
Make amends
Boundaries
Tropical tree
Goddess of
discord
War god
Assembly
Expels trom
country
Strike our
Unlocked
Sinister
Move aboul

77
78
80
81
83
84

tur1ively
Bir1hmarks
Festive
Seed coating
Youngster
Grain
Ship with a
narrow stern

87 Seed of a cereal
89 Buccaneer
90 Giver ot gilt
91 Wear away
92 Force
93 Encounter
95 Speck
96 Consumed
97 Heating device
99 Disturbance
101 Bank employee
105 Melody
106 Chair
107 Harvest
111 Edible legume
112 Cumberbund
113 Antlered animal
115 Island off Ireland
116 Units ot Italian
currency

118 Fellow
t 19 Underground
excavation
121 Commissions

123 Note o1 scale
125 More difficult
126 We1
127 Goal
129 Choice
130 Seagoing vessel
131 Pale
132 Stone cutin relief
t34 Eisenhower's
nickname

136 Fall Into disuse
137 Bishop's
headdress
139 Healthy
140 Bind
144 Existed
145 Food fish
146 Timid
147 Macaw
148 Circuli
149 Lubricant
151 Tantalum symbol .
153 Behold!
155 Faeroe Islands
whirlwind

157 Suh god

�June 29. 1~86

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

Page D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Mcintyre home built for Gallipolis pharmacist

GATEWOOD IS TilE widely lmown name of tl)ls house &lt;11 State
SU'ftt In Gallipolis - larmus because ~Its association with nationally
MIOwned 0 . 0. Mcintyre. He had bour;ht K as a redrement home and
&amp;1ft to his wUe. The muse was put up In 1844 for Dr. JuUus Regnier, a
Ga._,.lls dnag;lst and doctor and son of me of the French 500. (The
Freneh 580 seUied GaBipolls In 1'190). Fred Bovle was one of the
laterestlng personages who have 11\'ed In Gatewood. ., ,

OPEC countries set
oil price arrangement
BRIONI. Yugoslavia iUPII The majortty of OPEC mrmb?rs
Saturday ag.-1 on a n~w trmpor·
ary ptice rangr for their oil and on
an overall cartel production ceiling
for this year, OPEC President
RJ!wanu Lukman said .
"The bulk of OPEC mem b?rs
have accepted the certain rang&lt;&gt; of
pnces that we think will work over
an Interim period," Lukman told a
brk'l news conference shortly after
the ministers resumed talks on the
fourth day of th~ir summer
summit.
Lukman, Nigeria's oil minister,
said the OrganlzaUon of Petroleum
Exporting Exporting Countri~s
also agreed on a production ceiling
for l!l&amp;i.
But he declined to say what the
temporary price range or the
product ton ceiling were on grounds
that pricing and production were
not the sole considerations lx&gt;ca use
OPEC Is seeking an overall stra·
tegy to restone its slumping
!1'Venues.
Lukman did not say which
memb?r nations opposed the price
arrangement. "I am giving you an
OPEC !Dint of view," he said.
He said
Subroto, the lnoone·
sian oil minister, was asked to
. recommend a set of production
quotas to !It thenewcl'illngand that
the ministers would meet again late

or.

toda)• or Sunday to consider thPm.
TIK' nev.~ con!Prl'!lce was hl'ld at
the conclusion of a 90-mlnute
session attended only by the
min rstcrs and one aide eac h. Thr
number of aides was kept to a
minimum to prevent leaks and
maintain a news blackout ordered
b)· Lukman.
Sources said the ministers dis·
cussed a proposal supported by
most oft he l:l members that called
for a production ceiling of 17.6
million barrels a day that would
graduall)' force oil prices up to
$17·$19.
A group of OPEC hardliners.
including Iran. Libya and Algeria,
demanded guarant ees the ceiling
will only b? temporary until OPEC
can ret urn prices to $:18 a barrel.
sources said.
One ministeria l source said he
was baffled by the hardliners'
attitude hecause he said it would
take a production cut to about 14
million baJT('IS a day to yield such a
high price and that such a tight
ceiling would b? all but impossible
to divide among the cartel's hungry
producers.
The source said the proposed
production ce iling and price rangr
In the compromise would apply to
the foW"th quarter oft his year. "We
are talklng about (a plan fori
severa l years. "

stm mboats and then lor about sl)c
25 cents per .day and walking fo11r passenger.
By JAMJlll SANDS
miles each way to and from work,
Concealed In the ·trees were years he operated a boat store Iii
Special Correspondent
, GALLIPOLIS - The house on When 12 years old, he was splitting hordes of Confederate bush· Galllp&lt;JIIs. About 1875 he entered
State Street known as "Gatewood" wood at il sawmill for 25 cents a whackers who opened !Ire on the Into a partnership wiTh a Pltrat In
and associated with Odd and cord and at 13 he took a position as VICtor No. 2. Captain Fred Ford the Bovle, Pltrat and Co. Grocery.
clerk In the clothing store of A.P. skiUIUlly backed·the boat away and In l885 Eovle became a partner In
Maybelle Mc!n·
Fenner. At age 14 he made a trip oo doiWI the river but not wttil the boat the Henklng grocery company
lyre was built In
a steamboat to Wheeling and back W\15 severely riddled with musket whereupon the name was changed
1844 for Julius
working as a pantryman.
ball holes. Fortunately nobody was to Henklng, Bovte and Co.
Regnier, who
t\T 'DIE t\GE of 15 he went to . hurt .
was a druggist in
Ceredo, VIrginia (now West VIrgithe Old French
1\FI'ER RUNNING a branch
nia ), to join the49th0hlo Regiment,
'DIE VICTOR No. 2 hightailed II office of the grocery store in Kansas ·
City until his
oommanded by Col. John Vance, to Point Pleasant to warn the City, Fred moved back to Gallipolis
death In 1851.
Julius was the son of 'Dr J:lhn oot was too young to be accepted as soldiers there but, according to in 1895 to take charge or the
a nrrult. He went with the band, Hardesty's· History of Putnam Gallipolis offi ce.
Baptiste Regnier, who was one d
the French 000. John Baptiste was however, to Charleston, playing the County, West VIrginia , "Captain
21 when he carne to America with cymbals untU the retreat of Light- Carter, commanding the Federal
Until his death in 1930 Fred was
his brother Modeste. Two other bum In 1B62. He then returned home troops at that place, made no
an
active Elk, Mason, and Demo·
brothers, Francis and Benjamin, and entered the government ser- preparations tor defense, and percrat.
He served as councilman and
had escaped France (during the - vice on the transport boat VIctor mitted himself to be taken com·
board
of education memb?r. The
pletely by surprtse, the next day, by
French Revolution) to Santo [)o. No.2.
Bovl£'s
were such staunch Demo·
It was while serving on the VIctor
mingo. By 1792 John Baptiste was
General Albert Jenkins."
crats
that
Fred's father was one of
urged by his young brother Mldeste No. 2 that Bovle saw action. The
only
two
men
In all Gallipolis to vote
ro nee Gallipolis for fear of the boat had on board In March of lB63
Bovle also saw action when a
for
Vallandingham
for governor In
the Federal paymaster, who was transport boat he was on was
Indians.
1863
when
suspected
Vallan·
On the boat trip up the Ohio taking pay !rom Galllpoils to attacked near Fort Donelson, Tendlngham
supporters
were
openly
Otarleston
oo
the
Kanawha
River.
River, their boat capsized. Many
nessee . Later ilovle served In the
Sl't
upon
by
gangs.
mUes !rom any seN lement they had At Halls Landing the boat was quartermaster department.
to walk several days. Their journey waved to the shore by a lone
From 18ffi to 1800 Fred Bovle ran
was impeded because of sickness . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - from eating the seeds of decayed
pawpaws.
From PittsbUrgh they went
overland to New York and then to a
Beautiful
Small Plants
French settlement in Newfound ·
Harlluafll
Reg. Up to 11.50
la nd. After three years there, Jotm
by Local
Baptiste and Modeste moved to
Now
Crofts People.
New York and In 1802 to Washing·
Come Look!
ton. Pa.. where John Baptiste
studied medicine under Dr. Antoine
Lemoyne, who had also b?en
among the "French 000".
REGISTER NOW FOR BASKET CLASSES BEGINNING SOON
In 1803 Dr Regnier settled around
Marietta, where he raised a family.
Julius Regnier studied medicine
under his father and moved to
REGISTER FOR OUR DRAWING OF '60.00 GI~T CERTIFICATE
Ga llipolis probably In the 18Ws.
DOOR PRIZE TO BE GIVEN AWAY EACH DAY
IDS DRUG store was bca ted on
We lllw just recti wed a .-. shipmint of.blautif!A solid oak furniture. We believe that this is
Second Avenue In the vicinity of the
the
finest quoity fumitun in the cna tnl wt haft tpecial prices dwing our Grand Ope11ileg.
present day Thomas Clothiers.
SALE PRICES THROUGH JULY 2
Of the prominent people who
'
have lived here b?sides the Regnier
family, Mrs. Mcintyre and the
Gatewoods, who have given their
name to the house, one should
in clude Fred Morgan and Lucy
Bovie who lived there In the early
part of this century. Bovie was a
prominent businessman In town for
several years , his name b?lng hall
of the Henking-Eovie Grocery Co.
that operated in Ga llipolis from 1885
to 1937.

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Inside:

Lady Liberty
Papt

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World Soccer Cup
Page4

Fred M. Bovie was born in Green
Township In 1847. At age U he went
to work on a farm, dropping com at

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•

:e
Vol.38, No.40
Copyrighted 1988

at y

GOLDEN VAL·UE DAYS

Untied Pns IJIIerutlonal
Setttlael Staff Reporll
May employment statistics prove Ohkl Is In the
midst ot a recovery, a S!Dkesman ilr Gov. Richard
Celeste says.
The ligures released by the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services show the state's workforce has
climbed to seven-year peak In non·fann categorles,
matching the pre-recession level.
Jobless figures released by OBES last week showed
unemployment was on the decUne In arm counties.
But only Athens County posted a job~ figure b?low
10 percent for the region.

Meigs County's unemployment was down 1.8
percent In May to 10.9 percent. In Gallla County,
joblessness also fell1.8 percent to 10.5 percent.
Brian Usher, press secretary of Gov. Richard
Celeste, said the figures are consistent with otrer
studies.
"It backs up what the governor has b?en saying all
along- Ohio Is In the midst of a recovery," he said.
Us~er said a study by the National Academy of
Science ranked Ohio fourth In "We are finally back to
where we lett off from before the recession," Dixie
Sommers, director of the bureau's labor market
division, said. "From here on out, we're looking at

S39995
WT

REGULAR $599.95

SALE
CONTINUES ONE
MORE WEEK!

•

enttne
2 Sections 14 Pogeo 26 Cent&amp;
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

further growth Instead of just getting back jobs we
lost.
"This is a slgnlilcant development for the state."
The statistics show total non-farm employment at
4.5 million, equaling an all·tlme high reached In
March 1979.
However, the mix of jobs since that year has
changed to fewer manulacturtng jobs, due In large
part to Ohio's dense concentration of industties hard
hit by the recession, lnclud'ng steel, transportation
and electrical machinery.
"Manufacturing jobs on the average do pay mane
than non-manufactuling jobs, but 1 think the average

By LORI SANTOS
WASHINGTON IUP! I - Tire 22
million American households vic·
tlmized by crime last year- ani' In
every fou r - represent a smaller
percentage than at any time in the
last decade, the ,Justice Depart·
mcnt says.
The Bureau of Justice Statistics
released its survey of 198'&gt; household cr imes Sunday, saying an
estimated 22.1 million U.S. house·
holds su ffered a robb?ry, bu rglary,
motor vehicle theft, rape, assault or
a household or personal theft.
"That is 25 percent of the
88,852,CXXJ households in the coun·
try, " said Steven Sch!f&gt;singer,
director of the Justice Department
agency. "Even rhough the numb?r
is stlll far too large ... it is espec ially

Is a little misleading," said Sommers. "They can lead
to the conclusion that non-manufacturing provides
only low·paylng jobs.
"The service sector and other non·manufacturlng
industries do have some high-pay jobs," she said,
pointing to the construction Industry as an example.
Non·manufacturlng jobs went from 3.1 million In
March 1979 to 4.5 million In May 19ffi. In contrast,
March 1979 employment figures tor the manulactur·
lng of durable and non.rturable goods was !l!G,!Wand
405,!W, respectively, compared with may 1986 figures
of 753,00) and 353,00).

gratifying that not once duting the
past 10 years did the percentage go
up."

Schlesinger said the 1985 statistic
was the lowest percentage since
1975, the first year such data was
kept, when criml' hit 32 percent of
all households. In 19S4 It was 26
percent.
The report credited most of the
decline from 1984 to a drop in the
percentage of households touched
by theft of personal property away
!rom home.
More than I mi!Uon fewer
households were victimized in 1985
than 11 years ago despite an
increase ct about 16 million house·
holds across the oountry dutingtbat
time. the report sa id .
But one of every 13 households

last year suffered a "high concern
crime" - a burglary or rape,
robbery or assau It by a stranger
against one of Its memb?rs, the
study showed. lt does not include
murder.
The households most vulnerable
to the villent attacks, II said, were
black, with a&gt; percent hit bY one or
more crimes; those with Incomes ci
S:!i,CXXJ or more, 29 percent; and
those In urban areas, 30 percent.
The report Is based on about
101,!W Interviews nationwide con·
dueled every six months with
household occupants age 12 or
older. The Incidents reported In
about 49,CXXJ homes are used to
estimate a natkmwlde total, both
those reported to pollee and those
Continued on page 6

Foreign policy issues top agenda

MEET mE LADY- Jule llwi&lt;e, 17,
of Glouceslel', Mass., holds a miniature Statue of
Uberty as ohe prepares lor a IHiay lrlp to New York
lor Uberty Weekend July 4. She wm be a pest of
l&gt;lcltal Equlpmeni Coi,Jora&amp;lon, a Uberty Weekend

sponsor. Julie, who has spina bUida, Is confined to a
wheelchair. She got permission from her doctor to
make the trip. See related Llherty stories on pa~ 9
today. (UPI)

By HELEN TIIOMAS
UPI While Hoose Reporter
SANTA BARBARA. Calif. !UP! I
- President Reagan winds up a
flve&lt;lay vacation at his mountain·
top ranch today and flies back to
Washington to tackle two major
foreign poUcy Issues- SouthA!rica
and nuclear arms .
With Congress away on its
two·week Fourth of July recess.
Reagan planned to spend a couple
ol days at the White House before
presiding Thursday at the opening
c~remonies celebrating the Statue
of Liberty's centennial In New
York.
While in New York, Reagan plans
to meet with French President
Francois Mitterrand for the ccle·

bratlon oft he statue France gave to
the United States 100 years ago.
Their talks were expected to b?
substantive and designed to mend
fences between the two countties,
at odds over the April U.S. bombing
raids on Libya.
Several weeks ago, Reagan
secretly ordered a major review of
United States policy toward South
Africa in the lace of a growing
clamor for sanctions against the
whltP. ruled African nation and a
House resolution calling for U.S.
businesses to divest their holdings
in South Alrica.
Administration of!lclais said the
review, expected to b? completed in
the next few weeks, does not mean
Reagan is backing away from his

!Diicy of "constructive engage·
ment" and no klnger resists toogher
economic sanctions.
Instead, officials said the admln·
lstratlon Is studying ways to
Improve Its contacts with black
leaders, Including the cutlawed
guertilla African Natklnal Con. ·
gress, to put the pressure on the
President Pleter Botha 's govern·
ment lor a negotiated settlement.
While adminlstrat bn officials are
confident the Senate will reject the
House resolution, sen limen! Is
buDding for stronger actkln. Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
Otalrman Richard Lugar. R·lnd.,
plans hearings starting July 22.
On another front, the president
Continued on page 6

I

Ohio becoming dumping grounds for infectious waste?

SAVE S6QO TO S700 OFF

OUR COMPLETE
INVENTORY IS ON SALE
COST OR BELOW

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPII Changes In the regulation of
medical waste dumping in
states east of Ohio have resuhed
In Increased dumping here.
where no specific state regula·
tlons gnvcrn the handling and
disposal of Infectious ,wastes.
The wastes lncluae hospital
cancer·flghtlng chemicals,
soiled bandages and body tissue.
According to a report in
Sunday's Columbus Dispatch,
the wastes soml'times are called
"red bag" wastes and include
anything that could spread
bacteria, spores or viruses. The
wastes come from hospitals,
clinics laboratorles, veterlnar·
lans ;u;d privati' doctor's offices.
The dumping has Increased,
particularly In northeastern
Ohio, since April, when Pennsyl·
vanla required landfills to lm·
IXlSI' certain condlt Ions on

lnfecllous·Waste haulers. New
York also has restricted such
dumping.
Edward Van Poolen, Columbus manager for Waste ManagP.
ment, an InfectiOus. waste
hauler, said his company would
like to see statewide regulations
on Infectious-waste disposal so
rules would be consistent at all
landfills.
"About every state that we
deal with requires pre·
treatment (of Infectious
wastes)," Van Poolen told the
Dispatch. "To my knowledge,
Ohio is the ooly exception."
JoSEph Pezze. regional air
pollutkln control rnglnf('r In
Pittsburgh, said he has heard
there is quite a bit of dumping
activity.
"A lot of hospitals are sending
portions d their wastes Into
northeast Ohio, such as the

infectious materia l or the che·
motherdpy chemicals." he said .
A sim ilar report was given by
a Pittsburgh-area hospital oUi·
cia! speaking at a hospital· waste
~mlnar last week in Reynoldsburg. Pennsylvania state officials don't track outbound ship·
men is of Infectious waste wtless
the Incinerated ash is hauled
back to Pennsylvania .
Thomas J . Halpin, acting Ohio
health director, said hi' opposed
a bill Introduced early last year
in the General Assembly b?cause it sought to assign hls
agency duties already assigned
In a general sense to the Ohio
E nvironmen ta l Protection
Agency. The bill was tabled .
Halpin said there Is no· evidence that current wastP. han·
dling practices represent a
JJJbllc healt h hazard . The Issue,
he said. pertains more to thP

Celeste fundraiser questioned
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)Opponents of Gov. Richard
Celeste are chat'Jing IIIII six
Colwn!Jul.area Republk:Ms are
planning a !Und·ralrllns dinner
for the Democrat In tetum lor
pastlluslness contracts with the
state.

The lnlluenllal group of CDIumbus bu8inesamen - six
Republicans - 11111• I has
planned the 11,-.peHlOUJIIe
lund-raiser becin• ceJeate hu
mne 80 much to revlallze tbe
clly. Bt&amp; a apokelman for

Republican gubemaiorlal CBIIcJI.
date James A. Rhodes says tbe

'
HOME OF WALDO, WHERE WE
90
DAYS
. . . . . . .s.AM•E•A•S•C•AS•H. .~. .~.....
A.RE. BE•IT•E•R•T·H~A·N·WEHAV•E•T•O•B•E•
.
. . . . . . . . . . . . . .s.a•
...
ASC~A=SH~~~==~

90 DAYS

Pqe3

Crime down in U. S. homes

PHONE 742-221l

WOW!~
ONLY

Reds top Giants

Meigs jobless down 1.8 percent during May

RUTLAND~ OHIO

. BUT OUR SALE
GOES ON DUE TO
TREMENDOUS RESPONSE ·
TO OUR SALE.

I

Pqe9

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday. June 30, 1986

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

TENT IS DOWN

Hanresting tips

By the Bend ...... Pages 7-B.t
Cla8811led8 ..... Pages 10.ll·l2
C«mb-TV ............. Page 13
Deathl! .................... Page 6
Edllorlal ................. Page 2
SIJorts ••.•..•.•...•...• Pages 3-4

ALL PLANTS 20°/o OFF

RUTLAND FURNITURE COMPANY

Model CE30M5WM

F··t==
-'--

leaders are "expeded" lo cootrillute because they do bufllneM
with the state.

The codttall reception wD1 he
heldJul,)o 9 at the Bexley home of
Leslie H. Wexner, pm~ldenl of
1be Limited. Jolnbtg blm as
ltot!la are Jom E. Fisher,
chllinnlln of Nationwide Insurance Cos.; developer Daniel M.
Galbrealh; Jom B. McCoy.
chalnnan 811d dllef aecullve
..fleer of llllnc One Corp.;
developer Jom
Kessler; and
lawyao ud developer Melvin L.

w.

Scfm«e•eln.
Fllber llid the lllnd-ralser Is
to lhow appreciation ilr the
a~ppolt Celeite has given the
Columbus community.
Celeite's chlel lund raiser
says the plherlng Is not "fte.
publlcana for Celeste," but
rather "business leaders for

•t

Celeste. In Columoos, they jll!ll
happen to be (l'edomlnanlly
Republican."
"ln oor efforts to revitalize
Columbus, we 0111e some appreciation to Go~ernor Celeste,"
Fisher said.
James A. Duerk. a Rhodes
campaign !lpOkesman, claims
the event was Inspired by a
le98-than-honorable motive.
"Most ol the people m 1M
(host) committee are doing
business with the state ol Ohio,
and 80Die or this wD1 be alred
during the campaign.'' said
Duerk. "We all know IIIII
Celeste apecls people doing
business Wlh the stale to ldck
Into 1*1 campaign and to front
for him."

protectbn of trash haulers and
landfUI employees.
Halpin and EPA officials say
they arc watching the situation.

but Ihere has been no coordina·
lion b?tween the agencies cr any
direct study .
"! don't know if anybody is

really in charge," said Nancy
Moore, section manager lor
solid waste at the EPA. "I've
asked my stalftoflnd cut what's
going on In other states...

Five remaining American
finns to .leave Libya today
By JIM t\NDERSON
was banned.
The Jan . 7 cxecutlv~ order
WASHINGTON iUPl i - Five
Amer·lcan oil companies, final completed the process of Isolating
vestiges of a once·robust U.S. Libya economically from the Unl·
commercial preSI'nce. are ex· ted States, which also warned
peeled to leave Libya today under European nations that the admlnis·
the most severe embargo the !ration would dlsaptrove of any
United States has with any country, aNempt to try to take commerlcal
advantagl' d the emba rgo .
tht' Treasury Departm~n t says.
The five American companies
By a Jan. 7 executive ordPr,
issued in reaction to the Dec. 27 Involved are Marathon, Occidental,
terrorist bombings at the Rome and W.R. Grace, Conoco and Amerada
Vienna airports, President Reagan Hess. Their comllned total of the
Imposed an almost total ban on any Libyan petroleum market Is
thought to b? less than 1 percent.
commercial contacts with Libya.
A Treasury official said, "We
Reagan said In his order that the
general embargo, the most severe expect all of them will comply."
The official said the AmeriCan
the United States has with any
country, was Imposed becauSI', companies can continue to try to
"The policies and actions of the negotiate the sale of their assets to
government or Libya constitute a the Libyan government , but the all
threat to the national security and companies' American citizens wUI
foreign policy of the United States." have to conduct such deaUngs from
As part of the order. allcomrnerl· rutslde d Libya .
The penalty for disobeying the
cal transactions between Ameli·
cans and Libya were banned, executlvl' order - which does not
Including the pumping of oil. The apply to journalists and rertaln
administration ordered the five humanitarian grou~ - is a flne &lt;1
nemalnlng American on companies $50,CXXland a jail termollOyears. In
out, after giving them an extension addition, !here Is a clvU penalty of
unlll June 30 to try to sell their SlO,(XX) lor each offense.
Nelt her the Slate nor the Treas·
assets.
In 1982, the administration ury departments has any accurate
banned the import of any Libyan Idea of how many Amertcan
crude olllnto the United States, and citizens remain In Llpya. At the
In November 198'&gt;, the import of any time of the executive order, the
Libyan neftned petroleum products State Department estimated be·

tween l,CXXJ and 1,500 Americans or
dual Llbyan ·Amerlcan nationals
were In Libya, but there is evidence
that many oft hem left after the U.S.
bombing attacks in April or because at the gpncra l oowntum 1n
Libyan oil product ion.
Reagan 's order prohibits Ameri·
cans from giving loans or credits to
Libya and from taking part in any
commerical transactions Involving
Ubya, Including lravl'l and thP
JJJrchase of any Imports.

Rejecl Bundy's appeal
MIAMI IUPII- Serial klllerTed
Bundy's pll'a for a stay of ~xecutlon
and a nl'w trial were rejected by the
trial judg~ today and his lawyer
Immediately appealed to the Flor·
Ida Supreme C'oun to halt Wednes·
day's scheduled ~xecutlon.
Dade County Circuit Court Judge
Edward Cowart sa id In his nfusal
that Bundy's lawyers failed to
prove any omissions or overt acts
that were slgnlilcant enough to
change the rutcome ot the oclglnal'
trial, presided over by Cowart. .
James Coleman , Butxly's lawyer, Immediat ely flied an appeal "
with the state Supreme Court to
block the execu tlon.
Barring Intervent ion by the high
court or the rderal courts, Bundy
wU!dle In theelectrlcchalrat 7a.m.
EDT Wednesday

•

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