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ne.s:-- . ant\~iarl" aiilQ., ~s plan woiTies )\~tJ~· ' ~ : ·. ·~
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Pomeroy-Middleport 'Ohio
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Skin. iest~qg clinic Mondtzy
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friday, A~ 22. 1S!It!
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W~GTON (I,JPI) i..: The II!!!, Yl!utter Bald the U.S.-Canadti subsidy."
Implemented In the past ·~
Ul!lted Slates Is ~- trade )alk4 tile trade.tallia 11'!1! q!eNIIInJUnr;
Yeutter noted every major JaJ)a. . years. ,Tile memo to Yl!lltel' iild ·
with Canada toalrltscolllleiilltllat ctfer the. qlilcki!St Qppoltunl1y lor · nese automaker has plans to build ' .automllkersc\li!~ back~fhtil75,
a cMidt,an program miy CJic!tate aqdresSina the ~· But, be at least one assembly plant In the cents or to.~ cetlt,~ eic1f$1~Pm,;
as an qpnrt s,UIJsktY lbr Ill auto addec!, "whre not foreclosing any United Slates, !0 the Canadhin · on Canlldtan parts ~I are lllid,lll:
parts 'Jnll!.ls!IY ud ~~ other. oj&gt;HOII," ., . &lt; •
progr!Jll does oot apJI'ar to .be original 'equipment. · V&lt;ilkJlQII!I(•
rnlgh,t burt•U.S. ~Uerj '• · '"
"However. ·! can ~SSUreyou that ~uraging Investment.
and Hond&lt;l quallfled-'lbr the larlet;
A.,-U.S.,.tr&amp;IW oftlclal sai4~Cana· we have already · raised u.s/' The long-term Impact Is unclear, remission · by ,aj!re!!lng to bUI.lo!;
da's .~MY ~n prograni Is "a coroirns
the cWdl d
be ,saJJl, and ·~Wf: are concerned the . rl)aj!lr plants In Canada,. Jfllltl',:;
.mattei:'ot .....,...,, concern" 'Iburg. iem~n.~
. · .,.· 111 "'~~ ~ duty remlis!On £;Cherne could en· Mazda, Mercedes-Benz,:' Mijiinl"
dllY. Ten "l'A$i ;i and Euli!!Jean tlatlons and';:"t;~d t0':x,";~;;t;; coorage automobile parts suppliers Peugeot, Subaru, Toy~ and BMW:'
automakers qualifY for t.be reduc- do 9l," Yeutter wrote.
to pnsslbly locate In Canada or have reen granted tile r smalle(,:
tf1r
COUnty
lions In lmpnrt dutleslnlll'Qpnrtjon
Dlngell urgedtheReganadmlnls· eQcoorpge Japanese plants In the remission.
,.
tO the IUTJI)UIIt:\'Uil!y. ·~ 'on !ration to InvOke COWllervaillng . U~lled· States li) .source their parts
' .
Meigs County', ,.~r PhiUp M. Roberts Is anoo- the
Canadlan·malle Pllfls· ,?,'(
dutl~0!1.
Canadla!! pi!rts.
• frorri Canada." U business shifts to
The memo 7~d~t~he~~~~
' ' Updating ft IJie Clll~; ~ eounty map for l'!PrllltlftgOy the
"The Cal\idla!i ,duty "i'"~n
"'IIhlllk·j!'SI,Ip&gt;el~sgovernment . caiiada, l:J.S. SUppliers ~litd be program might
,iB,oard of Meigs ~IY,~~Ioners.
,·
, . programs do not&gt;· ' P(leal': tll. be quit tUIJiit:mk-tmeed action and ·jlu~,
.
subsidies code of
. The public Is ~ to: sublillt any addltioqs, deletbns · or · ·COnslstentwtththeolijecttvestlthe do ~.to help tr.S.Industry ,}DUty remission could haver a General
. ·corrections of this map to Roberts' lt!lce at t,he Meigs County , .\uto Pact" ~ t.be , l,lnlted be~l'e.tbey' end up wa~~;hlnt us 1!1\ .• ;•~tknmcant distorting e!fect" 1 on Tarlffs as weil'as
'•· lflgbway Garage, before Sept. 1. Changes are subject 1o approval. , ·. $~tes and C&amp;11ada, .U.S. trade making McDonald's ~'llamliurgeri tnkle• the staff ·memo sald, ' by . of .the auto pact .
·
. ambassador ~ Yeutter ~ld · and 'taklng In each 'other's wash," enoou..,.ulng foreign. automakers to "cdndltlons In. which
' ·in a letter mad!! public ThundtV. sald Dlngell, w)lo released copies of b,Uy·· ~dian pilfts to tllf detri may
~S\i,~i~~!~~~
'· It\·the Aug.U~tter tochalni{an Yeutter'stettl!r.and.a-statrmemoto ment of,·U.S. worker5 anctMnS.
~be~=~t
"l(lrijlWTUJ
· Johi!~n. D·Mich., ottbe !l(xlse Yeutter. that ' &amp;aid ' tile Canadt
.
an
·'"':1!1\ll!~&gt;n·PrD
.
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·..,. •and Cohinlerce 'Comintt· program "appears to he an expnrt .
GALLIPOLIS - GaiDa Coonty sheriff's deputies seized 282
marijuana plants and burned them In two locations Thunday.
-'--(c_on_tin_ued_trom_P_age_Jl_ _
The plants were spntted by private aircraft In a field In the vicinity
of Lewis and UtUe Bullsk!n roads In Harrison Township around 2: :1)
Sbaron Paler. Debra Flnlaw, Frona
p.m. Deputies went to the Scene, where they cut and confiscated the
Secretaries: Pat Martin, JU!
IUtfle, Ula Van Meter, Cnnnle Holter, Dorothy CallOway, Kathy
plants. Some of the plants ran~ In height from six to nine feet,
Osborne, Linda Fitch. June Bearhs, Spencer, lnna Bay, Carlotta Reed,
according to a sberlff.s spnkesman. No cash value bas reen
determined, the spnkesrnan said.
VIolet Lambert.
Nola · Cllm!, Jeanette Radfoid,
Maintenance: Mlke Whitlock, Beverly CWlnlngham, Margaret
One batch of the plants was burned In the field, whUe another batch
Mlke Whitlatch, Carrol Kimes, Hawthorne, Darlene Buc~ley, Jo
was burned at the Intersection of Lewis Road, and Ohio 218, No
Kenneth Buckley, Robert Couch, Ann CaUoway, Elizabeth Ritchie,
arrests have been made In connectbn wlth the n(ld, the spnkesman
said.
r
James Cowdery.
Jo Ann Newsome, Debra Flnlaw.
Mechanics: Mike Whitlock, Car· Lila Van Meter, Unda Fitch.
rol Kimes, Kenneth Buckley.
Custodians: Patrlcfa Buchanan,
Kindergarten Aides: Pat Martin,
James Osborne, Sandra Koenig, JU! Holter, Dorothy Calloway,
Lucille Kimes, Mlke Whitlock, Darlene Buckley, Kathy Spencer,
Metgs County Emergency Medical Services reports seven calls
Mary Whit~. lima Bay, Carrol Irma Bay, Nola Cine, Carlotta
Thursday: Tuppers Plains at 5:59 a.m. to Reed!sv!Ue for Teresa
Kimes, ~bert Couch, Becky Run· Reed, Jeanette Radford, Beverly
Barber to Pleasant VaDey Hospital; Middleport at 12:38 p.. to Ohio
nln, James Cowdery, Mike Whl· Cunningham, Margaret Haw554 lor Hartle Roush to Holzer Medical Center: Middleport at 2:21
t!atch, Robert Lute, Shirley Wells, tmme, Ja Ann Calloway, Sandy
p.m. to North Fourth Avenue for Florence Reyoolds to Veterans
Connie Osborne, Sharon Pooler. Jo Bowen, Jo Ann Newsome, EUzaMemorial Hospital; Mlddlepnrt at 6:14 p.m. transported Millard
Ann Newsome, Jerry Holley, Ken- beth Ritchie, Catherine Wood,
Spaulding from an auto accident on Ohio 554 to Holzer Medical
neth Buckley, Ray Chevalier, Debra Flnlaw, Frona Riffle, Llla
Center; Pomeroy at 8:47 p.m. to East Main Street for Michael
Tracy· Myers, Kathy Sargent, Van Meter, Sharln Pooler, Connie
Imboden, who was treated but rot transported; Mlddlepor! at 8:51
Charles Sargent, and Violet Osborne, Linda Fitch, June Bearhs,
p.m. to North Front Street for Dorothy McCloud to V11terans
Lambert.
and VIolet Lambert.
Memorial Hospllal: Rutland at 10:48 p.m. to HyseltRun ROad for ·
S~'S OVER - II never IIIIIs- year
Carne Moore to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
.
.
v.watlon ends and school begins. A sure sign
when school playgrounds begin getting spruced ·
·'
Hql)' was busy Ibis week mowinK and weedeallnJ t.be
Mlddlepori Elementary. • ·
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da
E ngt.neer
Up te
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JL ··.

Sunday

Area grid 'p reviews- Page C-1

A fair-y

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pnncess

-Page B-1

map

Slaff memhel'8 111 lwo Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. newspapel'8 win reoognilion - Page A·5
Bob Hoeflich discu88es how a tittle
courtesy can so a long way - Page 8-4

EMS responds to seven calls

Area death s

Candidate unveils plan

(UP!) - Public
oouslng residents would be able
purchase their apartments or
homes under a plan being propnsed
by State Treasurer candidate Jell
Jacobs.
Jacobs sal!! Thursday the loans
would be granted at 70- percent .
below the prevailing prime lending
rate. Cum!lltly, the propnsal eould
allow low·lncome people the chance
to borrow about $12,500 at about 4
percent Interest, he said.
The legislation would expand on a
program being considered by law·
makers In Washington. Jacobs sa!d
be would present his plan In a final
CLEVELAND

'.

Belva May Nelson ·

form once he sees what Is eventu·
ally passed In Waslington.
Jacobs' propnsal received an
endorsement from feUow Republl·
can VIrgil Brown·. a Cuyahoga
County commissioner.
"llmow the history of the public
·ll!using In this area and other areas
has , not .been that 'successfUl.' :
Brown said. "I think this would be
very helpfUl."
Both Jacobs and Brown said they
hoped the proposal would ailow low
Income people purchase their Initial
home, gain equity and then be able
to.purchase another oome of their
own.

Belva May Nei!On, 78, Route 1.
Rulland, died Thursday inomlng at
her home on the New Lima Road.
A homemaker, Mrs. Nelson was
born .at Clenden4l, W.Va., on Dec. Hugh Roush
12, 1!107, a daughter of the late
Hugh Roush, Pomeroy, dted
James and Mary Hicks Lowe. She
was a member of the Harrisonville Friday morning at the Veterans
Admlnislratlon Hospital in Dayton.
Bible Holiness Church.
Arrdng»ments will be anoounced
Surviving are a son and daughter- by the Ewing Funeral Home.
ln·law, Darrell and Unda Nelson,
Dexter; three daughters and two
!Ons-tn-law, Wilma Gilmore, Ru·
Uand; June and John Yost, Ru·
Uand, and Wanda and Roy Gilbert,
South Cealnl Ohio
GaWpnlts; 17 grandchlldren, ID
Mostly cloudy tonlght, with a low
great·grandchUdren and several in the mid 60s. Partly cloudy
nieces and nephews.
Saturday, with highs In the mid ID;,
The probabll!ty ofJX'eclpltatton Is
Mrs. Nelson was the last surviv.
20
percent Through Satllrday.
!ng member ct her Immediate
family. Besides her ·parents, she
Winds will be from the mribeast
was ll't'Ceded In death by her atlO to 15 mph today and light and
husband, Roy C, Nelson wmm she easterly tonight.
Ohio Exlalded Forecast
married on Oct 25, 1933, and by five
Su•
lllrou&amp;h Tueoday
brothers and lour sisters.
Fair
Sunday
and Monday. wlth a
Services will he held at 2 p.m.
chance
ot
rain
on 'IUesday. Highs
Sunday at the Bible Metoodlst
wlll
be
between
8l and !!5 each day.
Church In Rutland with Rev. Bobby
wlth
overnight
to~
ranging from
Searles and Rev. Arms TUlJs
55 to 66.
.

(UPil - A 41year-old Berea man says now thai
he's become an overnlght miDI&lt;&gt;
nalrl&gt; by winning Wednesday's
Super Lot!D game, he wUloolonger
be selling cars for a Uvlng.
Dennis Driscoll, a divorced father of two teenagers, was the only
person to correctly pick all six
winning numbers In the $10 mU!!on
Super Lotto jackpot, lottery offt.
clals anoounced 'lbunday. He
becomes Ohio's third largest lottery

winner.

Driscoll, a car salesman In North
Obnsted. wUI receive $400,101.32,
after taxes every year for the next
ID years.
"I've been up all night long," said
DrisCOll. "I knew I had a winning
ticket, but I dldn'l·know bow many
other people had one."
Drtscoil. woo said he onlY plays
"a couple a bucks" a week on the
game, purchased the tlcket at a
convenience store In North Olms·
ted. He said he Is giving SLim to
"the Hille blonde" woo processed
his tlcket.
Ohio's 161Bt lottery millionaire
salt! be has already told his boss
that be won't be selling cars any
longer. "I'm dlvcroed, I'm single
and I'm a millionaire," said

:'

DrlscoU.

He said be has oo lmmedlate
!ians for the rmney. "I really can't
say. I'm asleep. I'm numb. I dnn't
know what to do. I kept thlnklng

something was going to go wrong. I
kept thinking this was a joke."
Driscoll, a Hie l!&gt;ng Berea
resident. said be likes the New
England area and there's a posslbil·
lty he may relocate,
He has a daughter, Rachelle, 19,
and a son, Allen, 17.
The winning numbers In Wednes·
day's jackpot were: 3,5, 9,17,35and
41.

There were 220 peo!ie who
correctly picked five ct the six
numbers to receive $:ill. There
were 10,~ four.of-slx winners woo
received $41.
Lottery officials said next Wed·
nesday's Super Lotto jackpot wU!
be $li mllllon.
DrlscoU becomes the third big
jackpot winner In the 44-number
Super Lotto game that began In
February.
On AprU 9, Walter Morgan from
CentervU!e, Ind., won $25 million
and on May 28, Donald and Kay
Swingle from Brunswlck, won $3J
mU!lon.

FRIDAY'S
UNTIL
7 P.M.

9:3.0 A.M.-Church School Foa AU AGES

10:30 A.M.-Morning Wot$_hip
"We Love Because God .Loves
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CHEVROLET
-OLDSMOBILE.(ADIUAC
'1Dallt.l 5IUIOIIS OliS.-UII..C..Y.N
COMPUT.ERIZED ENGINE ANILYSIS

$1995
+!AI IWillt COWON!

AIR coNDmONING

(fi'IOH '01 . . .

•lnspoct System 'for Luks

+ lAX

Good thru Sept. 1

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WE ftOW FILL YOUI
·. PIOPANE TANIS

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~lrley SaliSbury were named to

the ll.lbstltute teacher list It was
agreed to enter Into an agreement
wlth til! Blue Streak Cab Co. for the
transportation of a handicapped
student.
The board awarded the gasoUne
and oil contract lor the next school
year to Ashland Oil Co. It was
reported at 'IUesday night's bOard
meeting that the tid of the oompany

aolllg

·

By BOB HOEFUCII
n:w 8 tllttel 8Wf

Ohio, and through the many long
years of her training, never lost
sight of t.be fact that she wanted to
return.
And return, she bas.
Dr. Rlzer has jollied t.be staff ot
the FamUy Practlce Department of
Holzer Cl!nlc lnc.andyoo'lltlndber
practicing at the Cl!nlc's Mkldlepnrt Branch a coople of days each
week In addition 1Q other locations.
Following her graduation from
MelgJ High School, Dr. Rizer
_earned a bachl!lorltsclence dep
In nursing atOhloState,Unlverslty,
Cnlumbus, In 19?8. After complet·
lng that degree she was a medical
liJJ'I!ical staff nurse and served also
as an Instructor In medical surgical
nursing at the Holzer Medical
Center untn 19'18 when ~ began
her premedlcal Studies at Ohio
Slate. In 1983, she received her
M.D. from t.be University Of
Clnclnnall, She then ~t Into
residency throUib the Department
of Famlly Practice at North
Carolina Memorial Hospllal at

Ch..,et HW, N.C. During Uu period
she served 88 medlcal studertt
instructlr In t.be departlrlmt and
was chief resident ot the Depart.
men! · It Family Medicine: She
remained at the North caroUna ·
hospllal ..until ~cjeptlnJ her new
poaltklll, wttb !lie Hobli!r Cl!nlc. •

Dr. Rlzer cllotN: famlbl niedlctne ~
I'OltttlU&gt;Y - Wlslle mo.t )IOUIIi
people leave Mef&amp;s. 'CountY til . as a speclal!Y apln wltbtll! )lope of J
•fllrtllet tlw1l\' edUcation and never retuntlng to ·bet !IOfrul area. Her
retur11 except. ror an occasional · In le'elll cover the atrre ranJI! of
fam!IY visit - 01' perbapl, ~to tait}lly medlcllle, with particular
a h11ii IChool ~UIIIII! ~- Dr. e~ on ollltetrlc8l care. Not

· Mlliaa K. Rlil!r a 1111 eiiMJZiiDII.

Dt· Rlziel-, ~and Mr.llld
Mrs. FrMidlo Rizer of Pomao)',
loved arowtila up ·ID SOUtheutim
,_

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s.,••. llhll'll

llac •Jh tile 1a1t1 :reuw af
eduo .... Sbe bill joined
lhe Jl'amlly Pndlee Dopari.,.. af llttller Clinic.

" ' . . '"'"·''

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nJUI1LLED . - A career
ambllloa for Dr. Mlllla ftPer,
· Melp CauJtly IIUI¥e, Is befn&amp;'

0111o te pndlce !'Nie

,, . (WII!f
.'· ,COII!OIIl
....

All three firms bid from the same
specifications drawn up by the
Columbus architectural ftrm ol
Kidwell &amp; Hurdzan and had
representatives participate In an
Aug. 14 pre-bidding review of the
project, according to JoSEtte Baker.
director of the 0 .0. Mcintyre Park
District.
. Mrs, Baker said she oouldn't find
any re;;~!On I&gt; r the diversity In bids
het:weel) the two firms,
"I can't exjiain It because they
bld from t.be same specifications,"
she said.
The park dlstrtct has establlshed
an escrow account for all donations
to the ll'Oject, to be called Orchard
Lakes.
. The bids wUI oow go to the
OOMPD Board of Commissioners
for approval. The board .wUI nieet
Monday at 7 p.m. In the multlpur·

pnse room m the second floor ct the
courthnuse, but Mrs. Baker felt that
approval of the bids may be
delayed, pending revi!w by the
architect.
"It's so 9lOO alter the ~lng and
the architect wlll want to review
them to make a recommendation,"
she said,
Dr. William B. Tmmas, pres!·
dent ct the board, said Saturday the
board's decision to act will hinge oo
a repcrt on the bids from the
Galllpolls Golf Club membership,
backers of the {J'Oject.
The lmmedlate ~ ct the ll'oJecl
Is for the oonstructlonotafrontmne·
roles, or "Valley Nine," a par l&gt;,
3,235-yard layout containing sand,
water and other natural hazards,
and a bllck nlne, cr "Orchard
Nine," a par 36, 3,(11!).yard layout.
(Continued on A.J)

had not been received In Ume for
the se;ston. However. at Friday's
meeting It was rt'pOrted that the
bid, the only one submitted, had
actually been deUvered on time but
had been misplaced.
There was also a problem on bids
accepted at Tuesday nlght's meetfrom Lester Shoemaker. The
Harold ·
on two Of the

;

'only that, but ibe 1.1 certllled In
~ traulrY lie iupport and Is
a certllk!d mtrllctor In l¥fvanced

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'Image'
draws
•
cunous
to town

BQ) OPE~G - Bids for the lli'OJI()Iell $LI miDlon pU coune In
OeiUpolll wen opened Friday by Pal Compton, loll, a clerk In GaDJa
Cwaly Probate Couli, ttlld by JOielle Baker, tlrector of the 0.0.
McJDI)Ire Park Dlsirlcl, 'II!e appan~~l low bidder was Kbnberlf
llltluR1es lllc., CharietJWII, W.Va., In a joint vmture with Jack Benlh!dl
Co., Gallipolis.
'

vehicles had been misplaced also
and the Hysell bid Is higher. The
bOlird agreed to rescind 'IUesday
night's acceptance Of t.be Shoemaker bids wlth the two vehicles
In questim ~lng to Hysell. Shoemaker will he advised that the
other vehicles are available at his
bid p1ces. U he woo't accept them,
will be
Ill the next

highest bidders.
The SJI'Cial session Friday closed
wlth an executlve session to discuss
personnel and negotiations. Attend·
lng were 91perintendent Dan C.
Morris, Assistant Superintendent
James Carpenter, board members
Robert Snowden, RDhert Barton,
Larry Rupe and RJcbard Vaughan
and Treasurer J~an~e~~~...

Physician returns
•
to senre reg.on

wa.tedlo relunl te

. ~ T.U
"i

308 E. MAIN

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MIDDLEPORT- A teacher and
an aide were employed lor the new
school year when the Meigs Local
School District Board of Education
met In special session Friday
atternoon.
Hired as a new high school
teacher was Eleanor McKelvy, and
Sandy NapJI'r was hired as an aide
at the Salem Center School.
Todd King, MoWe Felsler and

fulfilled. Dr. IUier alwa,ya

SAFETY SERVICE INSPEmON

countries to remain competitive wlth the American
dynamo."
"Now," he said, "is their oppnrtunlty to join us on
the growth path, to carry this revolution ft hope and
opportunity around the world and create a strong,
sound and growing world ecooorny.
"Tax reform Is the door to a bigger fUture, a flltutil
as big and hopeful and ruu of heart as the American
dream, a fUture of expanding posslbWty and
ever-Increasing opportunity for all Americans,
Indeed for the whole world.''
Reagan made no mention of 9lme of the other
effec!B of tax reform, which could; according to a
groupo! state budgetclficlats, raise taxes bt li states
by as much as 20 percent.

Meigs Local Board hires additions to school staff

.

IEGULAit SI9:9S

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2212

P111Wiif

By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Kimberly In·
dustrles Inc.. Charleston, W.Va., In
a joint venture wlth Jack Benthail
Co., Galllpolls, was the apparent
low bidder on the proposed $1.1
million, J8.hole publlc golf course In
GaWpoUs.
Klmberly's base bid was $1m,388.
The finn estimated Its labor at
$711,479 and materials at $00,909.
A second base bid ot $1,009,446'
was otfered by Midwest GoU Inc.,
Cable, Ohio, durlng.a bl~ opening at
tb&amp;"~nl)o Coilrllxluse Friday. Mldwestestl!nated $762,482on
labor and $~, 964· for materials.
Both f1nns also offered ftemate
bids.
Salyers Golf Course Construction
Inc., StatesvUie, N.C., offered no
bid on the project.

Lubricate 1tusperislon, drain oil •nd ntpl1ce fiher using·Mr
·
Goodwrench Oil and ·AC Delco Filter.
In this sptcill"' lnsisl Cit UlitlqUI!ity Mr. Goolll!r•cfl 011 &amp; A/C fil1«1•t 1n Off brlnd or chtlp ftlltr,1nd oil. Thislun lltimt to llodnm.IPt(ill
on q111hty Gl Ptlds &amp; Gl Strytce, no ltlbstituto tor quality. liroit 5 qb. Oil

·2.6 POINt
SAF.nY· INSPECT·ION:

whole season."
Reagan, however, sounded a smau rote of caution,
quoting basebaJl. phllosopher Yogi Berra: "It Isn't
over till It's over."
Reagan scoffed ill "a chorus of pessimists" woo had
said tax reform "stood abuut as much chance as a
long·taUed cat In a room luil of rocltlng chairs."
As be spnke, about 40 demonstrators marched
oul!!kle press heal\quarters In Santa Barbara, iJ1
mlles from the plesldent's ranch, to protest U.S.
Involvement In Nicaragua.
The presiden~ woo spent Saturday with«&lt; couples

at t.be ranch celebrattiig his wlfe's 66th birthday which actually occurred July 6- took the opportunity
to nudge Western allies to take up the tax reform
cudgel.
"America won't be able to grow and ll'OSper
Indefinitely lf the rest of the world economy Is
dragging behind," he warned.
"We're already beginning to see the slowing effects
on our own economy cl sluggish world growth.'· which
hurts U.S. trade. because other countries canoot
afford to buy Arneiica 's Increasing Industrial rutput,
be said.
"Well, tax reform Is good news for them, too,"
Reagan said, quoting an unnamed British magazine
as predicting the rapid spread ct tax cutting "as our
!ndustrtallzed parlners cut tax rates In their own

Joint venture offers low bid
for new Gallia golf course

LUH,,OIL AND FILTER .

Good thru Slpt. 1 +TAX (Willi .~)

"It's t.be bottom of the ninth, tax rearm ts rounding
third anct hesdlng home," Reagan said. "We're about
to score the winning run, not just of t.be game but d. the

By IRA R. ALIEN
SANTA BARBARA, Caut. (UP!) - President
Reagan, celebrating the "winning run" of tax reform,
said Saturday If allled nations pick up the bat, they,
too, could OJI'D the door to an ecooomlc ·'revolution of
hope and opportunity around t.be world."
In his weekly radio address from his mountain
ranch, Reagan returned momentarilY to his days as a
baseball announcer to create the metapmr for the
success Of his tax reform proposal.
A House-Senate conference committee approved
the measure last week, setting the top Individual tax
rate at 28 Jl'rcent and the top CO'llOI'ale rate at 34
percent. Both houses are expected to glve
overwhelming approval to the compromise when
they return to Washington next rmnth.

COUI~Nii!

·'s•eet•l Prtee S.1995

A Mu~lmedll .lnc. NOW"''IIP"

Reagan sings praises of tax refortn moves

•

$2 595

1 1 Sectiona. 72 Pagea

Middlaport-Pomeroy-Galtipolis-Point Pleasant, August 24, 1986

GREAT DRIVING COMFORT BEGINS HEliE
REGULAR J44,50
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Includes Lobby.
Installment Loan Department.
.
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Drive-In And Walk·UP
Window

WilLE
TIIY LAST

Vot. 21 No. 28
Copyrighlld 1986

•Chock Drive Belt ConditionS. Tension
•Toot {with thermometer) Oeg•oe at Cotdn-

•'AJ.eeial Price

Moolly llllllllY .Ieday; wllh .
h1ghs near 80. The probabiUiy ol
preclplladoa to aear .zero.

tmtli-

IIIGHTU 11&amp;1111

•Poriormonc:e'Tnt Syotem
•Add Refrigerllht It Necessary

IEGULAR 126.95

CA.NNING PEACHES

101 WMf' Mlin

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FORYO·U

Discharges - Burton DeWeese,
William Young, Kimberly
Kennedy. Wade Smith.

•

Services By lew. C. Sonny Zuniga

Good thru Sept. 1

Haven.

,

SUNDAY, AUG. 24, 1986

S•eei1l Price

YELLOW FREESTONE

'

YOU ARE WELCOME TO
WORSHIP WITH US ON

+Ill

Admissions - MlcheUe King,
Middleport; Margaret Robinson,
Middleport: James White, Pomeroy; Florence Reynolds, ~ew

..

Middleport, Ohio
PH. 992-3039

Give your hilh tech auto the edge with our 1n Alltn Enliite'MIIJRr.
s.tate of theart dill,nostic center that's wn llltad ofanyof 1!Mc,.pelitton. The newnt tn the field of Generalllotors. Trouble sllootilll diacnostic equipment with computer and dlltaloc
.
. . capallililits.
.
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REGULAR J26 .00

' Veleram Memorial

S1300.US~l

HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH

Ohio weather

Berea man nets lottery prize
CLEVELAND

&lt;i'ftclatlng. Burial wUI be In Miles , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ ; __ _ _.:_;
Cemtery. Friends may call at the
Ewing Funeral Home this evening
from 7-9 and on Saturday from 2-4
South Third at Main StrHt
and 7·9 p.m.

Along the River .. .,, .. ,... IH-8
Buslness.... .... ......... ... .. . D-1
Comks-TV ............... lruiert
Classllleds ...... D-2-3+~7-8
Deallts ......................... A-4
Etii1Alt1al .. ............. .... ... A·2
Sports ..... ............ ..... .. C-1-t

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· Gallia deprities seize

Eastern board

Inside:

FOSTORIA. Ohio (UPI) - Repnrts ot a second !mage of Jesus
Christ appearing on a soybean oil
tank brought another onslaul!ht of
curious specta!Drs flocking to f'os.
torla Friday.
·
Reports of a larger-than·Ufe-slle ·
apparition of a long-haired,:
bearded man and a profile of a
young child on the tank's west tilde
)lave drawn hwtdreds ot motorlsta
to the oorthwest Olllocohununlty ct
16,(XXI.
The crowd Thursday numbered
" In the thousands," detective Gary
Mason said. Cars and trucks slowed
to a crawl as people tried to aee tbe
shadowy figures.
"It took 35 minutes to drlve a
quarter mile" Wednesday night,
Mason said. "I understand Thursday night It tonk an hour to drive
that distance, !0 I guess the number
of people Is getting bigger."
Reports of a second image on the
opposite side ctthe40-foot·hlgh lank
Friday attracted even more people
to the city, about 35 mUes !KlUth ol
Toledo.
"Traffic's bumper to bumper and
moving very slowly," said pOllee
dispatcher Tim Hatfield, adding
that Friday's crowd was compars.
ble to that of Thunday night.
Detective Gary Mason said cars
and trucks slowed to a crawl as
people trted to see the shlldnwy
figures.

Some people claim the Images
are a message from God, but
offlcla!s for the Archer Daniels
Midland Cn., which &lt;Mrts the tank,
attributed the ouUines to a oom!Ina·
lion of rust, paint and shadow..'
caused by sodlum vapnr Dghts on
the tank.
Hundreds of penple have been
gatlrrlng at the site for about two
weeks, but the throng swelled·
Thunday nlght after news stories .
about the apparatlon spread as far
away as Austraua. Witnesses say
the Images are usually vtslbte after

TO PEIIli'ORM IN AREA - 'Doe Ualled State!~
Army Pllld IIMd tllld Soldiers' a.n.. w11 appear at

L)1ae Cl!lller 011 tile Rio Oralltle

CGIIeae

camp118

SuncJQ, Oct. 1. The pelfonn1111re lo beln111P'tt1Dn!Cl

by lite Ohio Vllley PuNioltln(Co.ln ooopenttloa rih
the coiJe&amp;e, B .w ll be the bud's III!COIIII olop oo a

nallollallour.

.OVP, college co-sponsoring
perfonnance by Army band
GALLIPOLIS The
internallonally·famoua United
Slates Anny Field Band and

Sold!en' Clorua

it

Wlllhlngton,

D.C., olllclallfAI11Da D1t11ica1 representative of lbe United Slates
Anny, will pertQnn In concert at
Rio .Grlllcle Colleae'• I.Yne ·Cellles'

oo SUnday, Oct. 5, It wu llllltOUIIOOd

ioday.

The tree ~ al till
94-member ,ii'Pup, 1mown 88 the
·~

~ · lt . the

Aprry,'' is bellll C...... red by the
Oll!o Valilly Pllblllhlnl Co. in
• •tldi 'l'lth Rio GfiDtle
Cd' JE .' ,
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'ncltell tor .the 3 p.m.. P.IJI1or·
lllllllle IJ1IY be oJ!taiiMd tree 'ol .
cbarae by Jllllllat.llte r•IHpolla

The Soldiers' Chorus Is the
''voice" of the Field Band. It Is
comprised of 29 blghly-tralned and
maU, Include a self-addressed talented vocalists woo preeent t.belr
llamped envelope wlth your own special arrangeinenll of well·
known compnsltbns, ranging from
request
.
The Concert Band, an eUte the world of qll!l'8 to t.be Broadway
65-plece tnstruUIIllllal ensemble, Is stage, and tnJm aplrltuala to
the largest element Of t.be Field patriotic medleys.
The one-hour, ll).mlnute P!l'for·
. Band. In addition to conducting
mance
at Lyne Center will mark
CQIL'elt ~ tllrOUIIhOutthe nation,
the
second
slop on t.be band's
t.be band al8o appears treQUEiltly oo
upcoming
major
tour tltroug)lout
. radio and television and pelforms
the
nation.
The
first
stop Will be ID
ror varbua headl of slate and
Bluefield, W.Va., and the lfOUPwlll
dlilna~
The Cnncel1 Band maintain&amp; a go on to ~d. Ky,, after
. larlle
~Ire . !bat tnchicleg ~In Gallla County.
'ncld!ts will Ill! alva wt tnie oo a
marclleil,
(JY.SI'!ul'el, inltnlmel!tal
1
fll'llt-come,
f!rlt·lt!IW. ~. Lyne
' IOiotl 81111 poJlUlar and patriotic
Center will acconunotlate 2,!'m
IIIUJic,
Dally Tribune, The Dally Sentinel
In Pomeroy or the Point Pleasant
Register. To receive tlclreta _by

1

sunset.
The tank, capable of holding two
million gallons ot 9lybean oU, was
assembled from sections hut
month and painted , Company
officials said the outlines IJIBY have
resulted from a section restJne on
the ground and developing rust.
Dick Burket, vice lft!lident of the
Decatur, m.. company, said 111!11!
are oo plans to repaint tbe tank
bellre October.
Rick Pfeiffer of FOI!oria, who
produced mugs bearing a sketch of
t.be tank with the 11naae and the
words "I saw the lmtlllf," salcthe.
and several high school studet!ta
had M&gt;ld 500 of them at $t apiece, .
"These people who are comtq ·
can't leave wlth just a picturv ·tn
their minds," he said. "Every
human being can 1111! a 111111·" ' · ·
Petlter said he !Una to lllVe P81'l
ot his prortt to 111e 1oca1 Catm~~e
sdlool.
. ,.
''i don't want people'to think I'll\
just.ltuf!lng nzy pocketa from tiM,"
Ill said.
. '• ; .;
The Rev. James Bacik, at~ :·
for tbe 'l'oletiQ Catlrllkl

:gtan

~. played doWii •

11 ·--·111
'""'•··

l'lllltllcallce
the
said pilople haw alllldtar a ~ "'
meanlni In ordlnaly
. i'J!LP6i ....
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Jmav 'imta· Jentittel

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.A Division or

WASHINGI'ON - House and
Senate conferees .reached agreement this past weekend on a tax bUI
that might aptly he titled the Great
We Don't Know Act of 1986. It Is
highly probable that the bUI will
pass both chambers wltlllut slgnlfl·
cant change. Tlv!presldentwillslgn
II. And til! people wUI !&gt;! handed a
ptg In a poke.
Let me venture a prellmlnary,
tentative judgment, basal upon
evel)'lhlng I could read about the
bUI. The conference committee
prCilduced a pretty good plg.
In the beginning, the Idea was to
combine "tax slmpllflcatlon" with
"tax reform." A third goal was to
produce a bUI that would · be
"revenue neutral" over Ire next
five years.
In some ways the measure Is
Indeed "simpler" than the p-esent
tax code. Instead of 14 rates of
taxation on lndlvldual Income, we
are to have tiro rates. For an
estimated 6 mllllon low-Income

'l'lllrtl Ave., OalllpoUs, Ohio 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
(614)44HSU
(814) 892·2156
ROBEatT L. WINGETT
Publisher
ROBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WIIITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher-ConlroUer

A MEMBERoi'lll.e United Press lnlernaUonal, Inland Daily Press Assoclatlce and lhe American Newsp!lPer Publishers AssOCiation .
1,

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LE'M'ERS O~OP.lNION ' are welcome. Th·ey lllould be less than :.10 words
long. All letters are subject to editing and lTII st be signed with name, address and
telephone number . No \lll.s!ined letters wUl be published. Le tters should be In

good ta~te, ~res'lln&amp;IJsues, not persooalltles,.

j He's still running
~ against Washington

To Pt&lt;r:&gt;'TeGT MY ft&gt;.Hil.l(
FRoM lNrK~ .!! '

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President Reagan says re has "always felt the nine mlSI terrtlylng :
; words In the,EngiJsh language are "I'm from Ill! government and J'mrere ·
. to help."
: Tlv! president spent eight years as the governor of C;lllfornla and he Is
: nearing the end d his sixth year In the White House, and yet he speaks fl
• government with disdain.
: The Irony of his remark, made at hls last news conference In 0\Jcago, Is
• thst he uttered It after a day of campaigning In Dllnols where!&gt;! attempted
: to woo the farm vote with addltlonal government sull;ldles.
. In that respect the presldenthadltbothways. Hetoldth!farmersh!was
· gOing "to get government off your backs" and at the same time applial
: some medicine to ease their culTEIII ecooomlc pain.
; There was a time In recent history when President John F. Kennedy
• spoke In terms d pubUc service when he spcike d government. In speech!s
: to young people particularly he told trem that p\lbllc servtre rould he tre . ~~~==
: crown of their careers.
p
· Of course, he muttered about the "ooreaucrats" will were not carrying .
: out orders. All presidents In recent times have felt that they were being
: circumvented by career employees.
But In recent years government per ,se has been the whipping !Joy of
: IDlltlclans and aspiring presidential candidates. Both President Jlnuny
: Carter and Reagan ran against Waslingtoo as the Intruder. Boib extolled
• the joys of being amongst the people and both could not walt I&gt; get i:&gt;
; Washington.
: If government Is so bad, and so oftm the scapegoat, one has ID wonder
· why they chose It as their ultimate careers. However, In the case of
: Reagan, the goal admittedly was clear cut - to get rld of as much
-·gtivemment as possible. A case In point 'was his perennial attempt Ill
aboUsh, among others, the Small Business Admlnlstratlon, but he was cut
:-lift at the pass by Congress. Last week, Reagan told the Second White
· House Conference on Small Business that be would see to II that sman
: ooslness would have a voice In governmet)t councUs, and he (rOll11sed to
: select a permanent new administrator of the SBA
·'
Slnre he came
Into offlre,
has denounced
government,
:. parllcularly
in speeches.
outside·Reagan
the capital,
and !IOmetlmes
bO!ore .
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supportlnggroops thataresummoned!ora lobbying session. Hespeaksd
the ''Puzzle Palace on the Potomac" and lllw private Industry and private
charities can do a much better job.
Voluntarism In this ~Icy Is admirable and necessary, but ll cannot
take on the wholesale
of mUUons of people living below the poverty
line. Lincoln said that "the governmerit sllluld do for people what they
cannot do for tremselves."
Reagan has done nothing to lift the morale of government workers and to
: make them feel their worth. His contact with Ill! so.callal bureaucrats Is
: an annual event and those get tngethers are usually gatherlngs of his
· Jll)lltlcal appointees to he given a pep talk before the next election.
· Perhaps because he has so Uttle esteem for Ill! government he has &lt;tten
: selected men and women will have fallen by the wayside and woo have
· either been !Ired or forced to resign under allegations of misuse of their
· office.
The only government servants who may feel an esprit de oorpswlthtre
president, and will do not fall lniD the category of overgrown Intrusive
. government, are those woo serve In the m!Utary.
It Is for the Pentagon and the annal services alone that Reagan seems to
: reserve his deepest respect.
: This fall the president wUI he on the stump almost as much as re Is
· tending til! store In Washington. He wlll be trying to elect Republicans for
: all dllces, mainly the Senate to keep hls party in control of that chamber.
. And when he Isn't denouncing til! opposition party lorseeklngloobstruct
· his goals, he sure he wUI still be running against Washington.

~ Letters to the Editor
Thanks for the help
On !&gt;!baH of the Meigs High
; School Band Boosters, I wish to
• lhsnk everyone woo donated their
: Ume and effort to make the fair
; booth work this year. Thanks are
:• given to all donations and patron.: age. A special thank you to Bobby

Arnold and Fona Taylor,· for
"1thoul you It wouldn't have
worked.
Peggy Stevens
Secretary

Meigs Band Boosters

A caring community

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: On behalf of our son, Terry, and
·• tJii, recent auto accident he was
: tnvolved ln. we'd like to thank all
; tJii!,wouclerflll people woo helped us
• 1n 10 many different ways. Special
; thanJc5 flt'B to the Tuppers Plains
:.Emergency Squad Members of
J(JD!t 86 - Debble·Osbome, 0\arlie
:·weber. Barb Bennet~ Betsy Herold
: and Mary Jane Talbott, Earl and
•:Gfencla Hunt, BobandSusleBauer,
;'t.feinbel's d Veterans Memorlsl
; liolpltal, the Nottlngltam FamUy
' IJ!d ·anyme else who helped with
:·the tamny In any way, especially
' .JANET LEE RUSSELL.
:- It reslly makes your !&gt;!art feel

good wh!n you see an accident and

people care enough to jump right In
and help wt when you have tralnal
E.M.S. people will are right there
and know exactly what to do and
take care of the situation so
prompiJy. It makes you proud to he
from a community where people
really care. and are not afraid to
slllw lt. Our HATS are off to aU d
you and thanks for taking til! time
to Jearn all the requirements yoo
need to know to be a No. I E.M.S.
'JEAM and great Friends and
Neighbors.
Frank and Jo Ann Newsome
and Terry

~.~oday· in history
By Unlled I'MIIIlnternatlonal

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'rQday ~Sunday, Aug. 24, the 236th day of 1986 with 129 to follow.
~ mo01t Ia lliOV\Da toward Its last quarter.
ne mOtnJni atan are Merolry and Jupiter.
'lbe ~stars are Venus, .Mars and Saturn.
·~bon! m this date are under the sign of VIrgo. Thi1Y Include pioneer
abolltb1lat WUilam WDberforoe In 17~; Enillsh crtllc and wtt Sir
I•... In, 11/2; electrlc jDy train Inventor JOIIIJa Lionel Cowen In

M~Stllli! poet 8llcl

author Jorge Luis Bof&amp;!!l In 1.899; Roman.

• ~dloiiC CantWl filchard CUshing, archbishop of Bostoo, In 1895; and
&lt;ido state tiiotbaU running back Archie Grlflln, the &lt;lily two-time

··mer

'1iJiiium ~ wmner, 1n 19M (age 32.)

.,

Contra gam·
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WASHINGTON -Congressional
approval a President Reagan's
$100 mllllon aid program fnr tre
anti-San-dlnlsta contras will focus
attentlon on Nicaragua's north!m
neighbor, Honduras, the poorest
nation In Central America . Forlt Is
In Honduras that .much of tre
money will be spent, andwh!retre
effects of Ire rontras' rejuvenation
could !&gt;! most Immediately felt.
Honduras bas (iayed the $Up·
p:lsally reluctant rost to tiP
U.S.-backed Nicaraguan rebel!! br
the last Ove years, fea!1ul that too
nagrant support iJr til! rontras wDl
Invite a savage military response
from the Sandlnlstas. So Honduras
has made an elaborate d!arade out
of covering up the contras' operatlons rut of Honduran territory, and

COLUMBUS (UPI) -A proposal to estabUsh a Midwest regional
presldenllal primary election In 1988 wUI be the topic d dlscllsslon at
a meeting of Midwestern state legislators Tuesday.
State Sen. Stanley J. Anllw:)fr, R-Clnclnnatl, wools pushing Ill! Idea
of a regional primary, will be the chairman of the meeting . .
"Based on some recent conversatlons I have had with legislative
leaders from other Midwestern states, there Is no question our
proposal for a Midwest regional primary Is picking up ~mmentum,''
Aronoff Said.
The Ohio Senate has approved leglsllii:Jon llllving til! state's 1988
presidential primary to the th1td Tuesday In March, colncldlng with
Dllnols' primary election date. No action on the measure has been
taken In the Ohio House.

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taxpayers, there wUI IE no tax well."
obligation at all. But let us not kid
So lt Is with this bill. It has been
ourselves. Apart from these provl- olled with Ill! very best assumpslons, the bUI Is anything rut !tons, made by conscientious peo"slmple:"
·.,Jlle. but therearecrumbs In lt. What
Beyond question, the conferees Will he Ill! rate of Inflation In 1990?
have produced , tax reform What unemployment Is. to he
breathtaking, jaw-drilpplng tax re- E!!!peclal In 1991? What will be the
fol'l11- For good or ill- this Is ooe of prime r{lte of Interest in l9S27 No
the great· unknowables - an one lmo~. Whatdoest(lefutilre.rold
estimated $1l) bllll011 In taxes wDI In terms , ,of . ~nal Income,
be shifted from Individuals to · llluslng slarts, aptomoblle sales,
businesses over the nextflveyears. ' trade balances, \he harvests of
Radlcalchangeshavebeenmadeln wh!at and corn? No on~ knows.
tax credits and depreciation sche- This summer's terrible drought In
dules. These are no cosmetic the South!ast, coupled with bumper
revisions. They are substantive.
croPS In the Midwest, has skewed
Is the bUI "revenue neutral"? No estimated ' ltlcome for the current ·
one knows. We are reminded oft!&gt;! Oscal year. What about next year?
ll!Jmus scene In "Allee In Wonder·
The ~mst serious unknowables ·
land,"lnwhlchlttraltspiresthatthe. are lnh!rent In the natUre of tax
March Hare, using a bread knife, reform. Here In Washington we
has oiled the Mad Hatter's watch deal constaniJy In nice round
with butler. "It was the BEST numbers, and til! numbers take on
butter," says the March Hare. a mystic IHe of their. own. Staff
"Yes," grumbles the Hatter, "oot members provide estimates: This
some crumbs nrust have got In as change as to too deductlblllty of

crall~ard

IntereSt ·wJU ~uce X
ttllions. of . dollars; repeal of tax
shelters will produce Y bllllo~.
Reduction at rates on taxpayers
earning $.Jl,OOO :ww cost z.billionS.
Thus, l( plus Y minus Z equals what? No ooe knows.
Tills Is because th!se changes do
rot take place tD an economic
vacuum. . 0\anges affecting Individual Retirement Accounts will
not affect Individual taxpayers
ooly; til!~ changes also wDI have
some unpredictable effects upon
Investment capital. Repeal of In·
vestment tax crallts, retroactive to
Jan. 1 of this year, wUI hit certain
lnlllstt1es wh!re It hurts. Wlu .this
result" ' In slgnHlcant price Increases? In layoffs? How many
JOII; may be lost? What wUI he the
Impact on retail sales? How will
state and local revenues be af.
!ectal? Who knows? Nobody
knows.
Not unto til! bill becomes lawwlll
lll&lt;'SI of us know about the so-called
transltlon provisions. Some of the
lchanges, notable ' repeal of the
jlnves(rnent tax crallt, would apply
to 19S6. Other provisions would
apply to ball of 1987. SWI other
provisions are staggered over the
next live years. It wUI take months
- many ~mnths ·- for an army of
tax lawyers and public accountants
to rruister the Intricate provlslonsd
this blli.
The conferees labored mlghtly to
write a new tax code that would be
"m&lt;ire fair" than the presmt code.
For one example, they sought to
Impose an Inescapable m1nlmum
tax on corporations. The Idea Is
pollllcaUy appeaUng. Last month
Citizens forTaxJusllce publicized a
1r&lt;:t10rt slllwlng that ~mre tban half
Ill! nation's largest corporations
have avoided any Income tax In at
one of the past five years.
AT&amp;T, with almost $25 blllion
p-etax profits, "paid not one
l'::~:!~ln federal Income taxes
It
1982 and 1985." Very well.
us bell AT&amp;T a good one. But
will a minimum tax do to
rates, ID the mst or a
(iane, to the cost of lumber?
we wUI know. Right
nollldy knows.

Fair registration .encouraging
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Nearly 2,00J Ohioans regtsteral to vote or
updated registration Information while vlsltlng the 198&gt; Ohio State
Fair, says Secretary of Slate Sherrod Brown.
"I'm eX!remely pleased at the response to our voter Information
project at 'thls year's State Fair," Brown said P'rlday.
Brown said he was particularly pleased that more fatrgoers
registered or updated registration records than In the previous
guhernatortal-electlon year. He said thi~ year's figures represent a 3
percent Increase over 1982 and nearly equalled Ill! :1984 preslden tlalyear totals.

Coal development bonds sold
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The state has !llld $00 mllllon In Ohio Coal
Development bonds to furxl projects of resear:clllnto cleaner uses of
Ohio coal.
The bonds were sold by the Sinking Furxl Cqdunisslon .&lt;1 Ohio to a
group of Ohio underwriters, composed of McDonald &amp; Co.
Securities; Prescott, Turbin and Ball; and Seasongood &amp; Mayer,
state Auditor Thomas E. Fergu!lln said Friday.
The state wUI receive the proceeds of the 10-year bond sales nex 1
Thursday, Ferguson said.

Miami, AFSCME accept pact
OXFORD I UP! I - Miami University and the American
Federation fl State, County, and Municipal Employees union Friday
announced they bave accepted a fact·flnder's report, clearing the
way for a three-year contract.
The ul1lon represents about 690 Miami University employees,
prtmarUy custcxllal, residence hall, and food service workers.
The three-year contract will provide a 3.6 percent wage Increase
each year.

COLUMBUS (UP!) - A local Amerlcan Federation of State,
County and Municipal Employees official has hallal this week's Ohio
Supreme Court decision affirming the right of high-ranking pollee
officers to he Included in a collective bargaining unit.
The high court ruled In a case brought by tiP City of Kettering,
which attempted to exclude pollee sergeants, Lieutenants and
captains from the bal'g!IIQlng lUll!.
"Thi!l was not just a case dealing with a bandfulofKetterlng pollee
oftlcers," said AFSCME Ohio Connell 8 President Robert A.
Brlndla. "This was a fight for the survival of pubUc employee
bargaining rights."
Kettering attemped to use the Ohio constltutim's "home rule"
proVIsion to avoid compllance with Ire Public Employees CoUectlve
, Bal'g!llnlng Act, Brlndza said.
"I personally find their attempt to Invoke 'borne rule' reminiscent
.of the clvll rights days of the 1900s when segregatlonlsts tried to
justify their reprehensible actions by claimlng 'state's rights',"
Brlnzda added.
1

- - - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ _ ; _
special attention to til! oontras, has
provided the untold half. HJs
reports show that the relatlonship
b!tween the contras and the
Honduran military runs far deeper
than Is generally understood.
Put bluntly, the Nicaraguan
contras amount to a sort d "border
patrol" for Honduras, protecting It
from Infiltration by leftist Honduran guerrillas woo operate out of
Nicaragua In the same manner as
tre contras based In Honduras
'l"'rate against Nicaragua.
Twice In the past three years,
leftist guerrlllas have tried to slip
across the border Into the high,
rugged outback d Honduras. Tlv!se
units had been trained and
6Julpped by the Sandlnlstas, and
were "blooded" In Joint oombat
operations against the contras.

Deaver attorney blasts panel's
By 'DMOl'IIY BANNON
WASHINGI'ON (UPI) - A
lawyer for lobbyist Michael Detsa
says the chalnnan r1 a H01111e .-eJ
lnvestlgatlng the former W1rlte
House aide did not check his flcts
!&gt;!lore "going before tb! TV
cameras and charging'' Deaver
with perjury.
Meanwhile, special prosecutor
Whitney North Seymour has begun
calling witnesses before a l'ed&amp;ral
grand jury In his Investigation of
allegations that the Deaver, fonner
White House deputy chief d staff,
violated federal ethics laws as the
read of a private lobbying firm.
sources said Friday.
Officials from Rockwelllntematlonal Co!ll. were .called before the
grand jury, a source famlllar with
the Deaver Inquiry said, a11d a
Rockwell official told United Press
International he llelleval l!lat
account was accurate.
The appearance of Rockwell
officials before the lll:and ]liry
would be the first lndlcatlon lllat
Seymour has advanced his crtmlnal Investigation Into Deaver's
lobbying acttvltles to the levfll of
receiving sworn testimony !rom
key figures In the controversy.
Seymour Is lnvestlgatlng a~­
tions that Deaver, a close friend of

PNAieat llld Mra. R.ee,an, vlolatallldenl ethics Ia"" by bbbyln1 rerlaln Wll1ll! Hou•ofllclals too
MIOll after 'I ii May 191!l1MJcnatlon
tramthe.,..murat
' Dal cnt.l. a Rrr blll!plhaa
l'illll ID W. . . . . tald IIR ~
Mlllkl ltlllli!!'. Cllll6m nor deny
that 811)' a/. Its empoyees had
appeand llllore 1111 Rl'IJild Jury.
The Houle Elllqy and ComlTHil'CI! llltamlnltWt Ill ov~t
and lmwtlgat:Drs, heliiiEd lly Rep.
Jolll 0..11, D-Midt., bu rflerred
a report b ~ 1llat S\ liS sts
Deaver DillY
have lied
tllree
dlflerent
aulljects
whileabout
tastlfylng
bei&gt;re the panel In a closed session
In May,
Tilt ~ suggests 1111! of the
allr!ged lllitana!s of perjury occumd when DeaVt!r testified that
he told Rid well dflc1ala of his plan
to meet wltbJalllell Miller, OI!Ice of

•
baslsbrsuchad!lll'gi!,"Turksald.
"Indeal, If he had bothered to
contact Mr. Deaver, as In fairness
huhould have dolle, we would have
been happy to tell hlm the
llltlrmatlon !&gt;! had was lncorITEC~" the lawyer said.
Michael Barrett, the subcommll·
tee general counsel, said that while
tre panel did not ask Deaver for
documentation to substantiate his
testimony, It stands by the lnfonna~R In the report referral to
Seymour.
Turk said Deaver, wrose lobby-

,
lngflrmwasl'I!WIIIdbf~ell

1n August 191ri, hasnotli!trunthree
meetings that prove till! compmiY
was InformEd lil lldYanre .of
Deaver'splanton.twlthMlller:tn
February. '
•
,
Turk also said·· Qeawr has ~
record of a telepOO. eill Feb. :18 the day after hie mlletlng Wl,t~
Mlller - wtth ~dan Hello, 'a
Rockwell se!Wr .... Jflillldent. ·Jt
would be " ln~able" for the
subject of tiP DeoaWr-Mlller meetJng not to !&gt;! disciJad during lhl't
call. Turk said·. ,
·

r;:;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;.;;;-....;;;;;;;;;;,;jji;:ii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
,
1

Mlllleement and Blq-et illrGctl;r,

abullt lbe I'S-1 bomller.
ti~N1oer'a hlwyer, Randall Turk,
saill bla ciMit bu doounentatlon
that l'lflltel tb! aDegatlon about

TRY ME!
I'M DIFFERENT!

RDdtwell.
'1! Mr. Dlngell llad botllered to
clltck out Ids facts before SDbtg
~tlre tile TV cameras and chargIng Mr. Deaver with perjury, he
would have found there was oo

..

Meigs
(Continual from A·1)
cardiac llfe support. She Is a
memrer of til! American Academy
fl Family Physicians, tre American Medical Association and the
American Medical Student Association. She has publlsred a hand·
'book of prenatal care for family
practice residents.
VersatUe, to say the least, Dr.
Rizer Is an airplane pilot, a downhill
skiing enthustiast, plays tennis and
Is Into running and oth!r the more
quiet side loves doing needle point
and sewing.
She Is residing In Oles hire.

Joint

Union hails court decision

J,ack Anderson &amp; Dale TJ'an
Att.a
,. 1

tooir presence along the southern side and outside the government
lxlrder,
are nervous about the large-scale
The mllltary-domlnatm Hondu- U.S. military presmce and the
ran government has even ac- . contras' actlvltles. They're afraid
quiesced to tre presence of u.s. that these twin factors will lead lo
troops on an apparmtly permanent destabUltatlon of their country basis. The Yanqui forres serve as and trelr nervousness In this regard
an obvious deterrent to any. Sandl- was'ooly exacerbated by passage of
nlsta Ideas of a mUitary strike the SJOO m!Ulon u.s. aid II'Ogram.
against the country that haroors Its
In response, the Reagan admlnls·
enemies.
tratlon andtre Honduran military's
Recent reports from Honduras ruling eUte argue that the contras
Indicate that the Internal fighting (Nicaraguans though tooy are)
has already begun over who will get constitute the h!st avallable bulwl\0.1 sbare d the. boodle genera tal wark against Sandlnlsta-supportal
by Uncle Sam's $100 miWon subversion of Honduras Itself. And
largesse, The only thing certain this Is true, even though Ill! people
about this squabbUng IS tha~ oo woo argue this line are telling cnly
matter will wins, the vast majority balf the story.
of the Impoverished Honduran
Our associate Jon Lee Anderson,
peopJ~t wUI benefit Utile If at all.
woo has spent Ill! last four years
Tho\lght1111 Hondurans OOth In· covering Central America with

Ohio Briefs·: -....,

Lawmakers eye area·primary

AuguSt 24. 1986
,•

'

r---

Page-A-2

.!!!! !! ~!! w. Va.

iContjnued from A-1)
Site of til! p-oposed oourse Is oo 170
acres fll Mill Creek Road. The land
was purchased In June 1983 by the
goH club. With additional furxls, the
club ropes to develop a pracl!ce
area and oth!r facilities.
· The alternate bids were for Slch
Items as additional Irrigation and
· the addition or ellmlnatlon of sand
traps, Mrs. Baker said, Kimberly
bld a total of $9)2,253 on alternate
bld B; $919,1W on alternate bid C;
and $8&gt;3,138 on alternate bld D,
There was no.~idonalternate bldJ;:,
Midwest, located northeast of
Urbana, offered a total bld of
$1,031, ~ on alternate bld B;
$1,001,286 on alternate bld C;
$978,246 on alternate tid D; and
$989,446 on alternate bld E.

Ohio weather
Solllb c.-... OIIJo
Mostly sunny today, with highs
neer Ill. 'The probablllty of preclpltaUon Ia near zero today.
Oh!n Exten1W Foretlii!Jl
~ tluwgla WedllescJa.v
. Fair eacb clay, with hilhs In the

lOs. Overnight lows wllll'31111! from
55 to 65.

1. SUPPORT

0111' pWiow puff lfllttrlll lotJ II
dtsilntd 10 IUPIJD't )OU In pwl' ·
IKI bl..nct . II ni!Urllly ldiUIIJ
to )'IIU' bodr

Cor 1 ef!tion
GALLIPOLIS - Due to a
error, It was Incorrectly
rqMieiltn iWednelday's Galllpolls
Dally TriMir that Uaa-1.. Leonard
war; llllllll for DWJ 1\aday In
GlllllpoiJs Munlclpal Cwrt.
Court rtWlds allow that Rlsa L.
LMollard, 23, 4(11 Fint St., Point
Pleuant, was chalpd 111111 flllllcl,
not Llaa L. ~ 22, 200 State
St., Ce!IJmlllle.

s399

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Why not the kitchen sink?___A_rt_Buc_h_wa_ld
(Art lloldlwalcl has lalu• a lew
"That's a great Idea. What
weeks oil. He left behind leVeral. happens If a wedding jl'esent
oolumns which he laund In his arrives without consultation with
trunk.)
you?"
The summer weddings ·are upon
"We take It back to the store and
us, and ooce again evEl')Tooe ·1s exchallil! It for a bag d rement."
trying to figure out what kind of
Til! phone rang again . Phil said,
present to ooy neWlyweds. Many "Yeah, It was a lovely wedding,
frtends call up parentS and ask, wasn't It? What do they want? 1
"What do Phllllppe and Jacqueline heard Jacqueline say sre'd love a
need?"
kltd!en sink. What pattern? It
TheWhelanshavediicldedtodeal really doesn't matter as long as It
with th!lr son's wedding In a very goes with her cabinets. No, sh!
practical way.
doesn't have cablriets yet, but we're
lwas011eratthelrlllusewhlletre still roping. That's very nice of
caUs were coming ln.
yoo."
Phil, the father, said to the ftrst
Phil made a notation In tre book.
caller, "They would like a window. "We're moving right along."
Yes, that's right, a window. No, It . "Once you get all the stuff
doesn't have to have shutters. Any togeth!r woo Is going to buUd the
window w111 do."
muse?"
He told til! nell) caller, "The kidS
"PhiWppe's best man110d ushers
would love a chimney attached to a said they would work on lt. My
fireplace."
p-esmt to tre kids ts Ill pay
The third caller was told, someone to supervise the construc"They'redylng!orallnoleumfloor. tlon. It will be a rather tricky Job,
I don't have the measurernenta, but slnre imst of the presents won't
I'll let you know In a few days."
match."
Phil marked evel)'lhlng down In
"Anyone come through with
a book.
Jumh!r yet?"
I asked him what he was doing.
"People have offered, but we're
"Well,peoplewanttobuytheklds holding rut for redwood. ~think
!l!lmethlng they need. What t!Jey Jacqueline's uncle might come
need Is a llluse. So eVery time acl'OS!I becaUJe she's his favorite
!llmeone calls, Sherry or hsk Ill! niece. The Dumbartons sent us a
person for a pieced II. We've aot 12 staclt of pl;ywoocl, and Sherry' was
windows proinlaed, a relllngfor tre Ill!raged because we gave them a
Uv!ng room; two walls· i:lr the Odslnart wh!o their son got
b!droom·. 11\e ' Holbrpolres will married."
probablycometlirouab with a front
. Tile phone rang again. "Teresa,"
door, and the 'Evanses with a . said Phil, "HOw nk:e a! you tri can.
kitchen door, and th!n we can start No, tiP kids have linens and toWels.
telling people they want a roof."
Someone heat you tO .a coffee
"A roof Is an awfully·expensive maltfll'. They also have,an eleCti1c
wedding presmt," I said.
can opener. Let 111e Wliat do
"We don't expect llllt' person to they rtlally want? I'YI!'Aotltl Aga5
give them I·roof. But If we can talk trmace, Thi1Y tokF
lhat If
10 rA rur friends Into going In oo 1~ anyooe askl just til say the thing
we can get Plrllllppe's aunt I&gt; give that would maketheni 11M! happiest
them the shingles.\'
would he a lllce furnace to keep

me

tretr Jove warm.
"Thanks for calling, Teresa, and
h!st to Joe."
"! didn't think she'd go for ll,"
Phil said, writing It In his book.
"Particularly since we only gave
th!m bookends when their kids got
married. By the way, what brings
yoo over?"
"Ann asked me to drop by and
lind out what Phillippe and Jacque- .
line needed, oot I see they have

. 40 Chevy Chevettes

everything, so,we'll just get them a
nice pair of candlesticks."
"They don't want candlesticks,"
Phil said. "They want a lot."
"A tot of what?"
"A lot .ID bulid th!lr boose &lt;11. It
doesn'l'l~a,ve to he a large ooe."
"Can I think about It?"
"Sore. Talk It aver with Ann.
Women know more than men do
about what kind d lots newlyweds

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~-A-4--The ~u~y .Tmes-Sentinel

-

l

\

.

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, O~!o-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Area deaths

liup H. ROU!lh

.AHred R. White

. POP)!EROY - Hugh H. Roush,
63, Pcmeroy, dled Fnlay rnomlng
at the Veterans Admlnlstratton
Hospital in Daytoo.
I'&lt; self-employed protngrapoor
and a veteran ct World Warll,Mr.
I!Dush was born Dec. 29, 1922, In
~. a 9011 ot Harry B. and
Etta Mae Kern$ I!Dush.
· Slrvtvors Include ooe sister,
Evelyn SeeUg of Westerville; one
son, Hugh B. Roush of Rlmeroy;
and several nieceS and ~epoows.
Jle was preceded In death by his
PllfE!Its and three brotoors.
Services wUI be 10 a.m. Morw:lay
at Ewing F'ut&gt;;!ral Home, with the
Rev. James Corbitt olllclating.
Burial wtll be In Beech Grove
cemetery. Friends may call at the
fu~ral home !rom 24 and 7-9 p.m.
today.

NOR'IH CAN'ION - Allred R.
White, 70,!DIEverhardRoad,S.W.,
North Canton, died Friday at his
residence.
He was born In Pomeroy and was
a resident d. Pomeroy and Wa~·
burgrmst d. his Ute. He was a Navy
veteran d. World War llandrettred
from 'nmlren Co. In 1!111 after {!2
years SEr"lloe.
He Is suiVived by his wile,
Cather1ne, a daughter, Mrs. Ola·
rles (Shirley) Texter, North Can·
ton, and by two grandchildren, two
ststers and three brothers.
Services wUI he held at 11 a.m.
Monday at the Karlo &amp; Sons
F'ul&gt;;!ral ~- 51.2 s. Main St.'
North Canton. Burtal will be In
sunset Hills Memory Garrens.
FI'Iends may call at the fu~ral
home today from 2-4 p.m.

Singer's son

'sati~factory'

ROANOKE, Va. (UP!) - 'IIIe
7-year-oldsonofoountrymuslcstar
Ricky Skaggs Improveil to satisfactory condition Friday and appar.
ently Is not experiencing any
compllcatlonsfromaseoondoperalion to heal a gunshot wound.
Andr:ew Skaggs was In ser1oj1$
condition 'IIIursday after uJider&amp;olng surgery to repair a d81J18i(!d
artery. Serious condition Is the
irtandard description tor people
undergoing such surgery.
Doctol"S Improving the youngster's condition to satisfactory reported that he had a good evening,
slept well, and had oo apparent
~pllcatlons from the surgery, a
spokeswoman said
"He had a good night," said
Carole Mawyer, a Roanoke Mem·
orial spokes~Wman .
SurgeJY lasted about 1\!i hoUI"S,
spokeswoman Mary Anne Murray
said, and the yooth was taken to the.
.pediatric lntmsive care unlt.
Altrough the youth Is doing
better, "physicians are not able to
predict when he will heabletoroove
wf' of the lntmsive care Wilt, said
Mawyer.
'I1Ie youngster required a second
operation Thursday after an arterl·
{)jll'llm showed damage to his
:carotid artery, said MuiTay.
· The surg&lt;!OII, Dr. Howard Oark,
and the attmdlng physician, Rah·
mat Self, "are rothpleesed wtthhls
condltl:m," said Murray.
Young Skaggs ....,. rospltallzed

-..

last SUnday nlght after an Irate
trudt driver !Ired a stolen .38
caliber pistol mto the car m which
oo was riding, pollee said. The
Incident OCCUl'l'ell wbell he and his
mother, Braids Skaggs, passed a

tractor-trailer m Interstate 81 In
Botetoort County.
Doctou retmved the bullet,
which was lodged In the chlld's
neck, and had predlctal a smooth
recovery.
!ltaggs, the Coontry Music Ass&amp;
elation's Entertainer of the Year,
· has been In Roanoke since early
Monday.'
Skaggshascancelledhroappear·
anres alrEady tHs week, and
Murray !Bid an appearanre Friday
at the Allen County Fair In Uma,
Ohlo,alsohasheenscrubbedsothat
oo can he with his ,...,
Rlllce charged a Maryland truck
driver with malicious wounding,
Wegal Arearm use, sh:lotlng Into an
occupied vehicle and possession of
a st(jen gun. Edward Dean Duell·
ring Jr., 36, of Germantown, Md.,
also was charJ!dwlth (Xlssesslonof
' oocalne and methapootamlnes.

August 24,1986

August 24. 1986

said Friday his company was
withdrawing Its $1.9 billion titer for
Conrail, ending an acqulsltk&gt;nd,rlve
begun by the r,ortolk, Va., railroad
lnJune~.
· .
Dole, wiD asked Congress to
approve the sale to Norlolk South·
ern In February 1.985, ex!l'essed
regret over the ctfer's withdrawal
but said soo now woold silpport
efforts In Congress to sell Conrail
through a public stock ctfering.

Police investigate cash theft
GAU.IPOLIS- City pollee are 21, Mason, W.Va., driving with a
Investigating the theft of more than detective exhaust; Michael Wallen,
$&amp;)() from an office at Oscar's, 59 21, :Jl Evans Heights, squeaHng
Court St., Thursday afternoon.
tires; Wllllam Dell, 21, Rt. 2, Vinton,
Pollee were Informed the theft speeding; Phil E. Shaffer, 21. 1821
occurred between 3:45 and 5 p.m.
Olatham Ave., driving without an
In other (llUce news, Mark w. operator's llcense; Thomas D.
Nelson, 211, 513\!i Third Ave., was Hogan, 19, 1445 Eastern Ave..
arrestedfordrivlngwhileunderthe !allure to obey a red traffic Hght;
Influence ol alooiDI, failure to Jeffrey A. Montgomery, 23, Patriot
fasten his seat belt and weaving.
Star Route, disorderly conduct
Also cited were Nina L. Calhoun, after a warning; and John B. Foley,
22, Rt 1, Crown City, failure to 18, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, failure to fasten
yield; Joltl L. Sigman Jr., 18, Rt.l, his seat belt.
Gallipolis, failure to display a valtd
registration; Kevin w: VanMetre, I

Dole said NOrfolk• Soutoorn ofll· was not strong enough financially to
clals cited unyielding opposition In provide . good 5eiVIce and pay
the Democratlc-controUed House, dividends. She maintained· Conrail
as well as tax core changes ~ !hi! "deep pockets" and
contslned In the pending tax reform railroading expertise d NOrfolk ·
bill, as the reasoos for the Southern to survive In a shrinking
freight rail service martel.
wltlllrawal.
Norfolk Soutoorn's bid has been
"I understand their concerns
a bout the Impact of too tail !'dorm blocked for rmnths by Rep. John
legislation, concerns they have Dlngell, D-Mich., the House Energy
ralllal as we've go~ through this and Commerce Committee ·
proress," she said. "Of course, I chairman.
The Republican-controlled Seshare tll'lr lrustratkln CNer the-lack
nate approved the sale plan In
of actk&gt;n In the House."
Dole said sbe was supporting a FebruaJY 1986, but Norfolk South· .
public ctfering, which woold be the ern could not persuade Dlngell lo .
largest In U.S. history, because she bring It up for consideration In the
wanted to win approval of sale House.
legislation before the current con·
gresslonal session expires In , - - - - - - - - - October.
·
However, she added, "Any such
alternative must contain strong
measures which provide assuran·
USP 521-180
ces of vlabUlty (for Conrail).
A Multimedia Newl!lpaper
particularly now that the strength
Published each. Sunday, 825 Third
A. venue, by the Ohio Valley Publishadded by the Norfolk Southern
Ing
Company · Multlmedla , Inc. Seacqulsltk&gt;n Is no longer avatlable."
cond c lass postage paid at Gall!poll.!i,
Dole had opposed a public
Ohio 45631. Entered as serond class
mailing matter a t Pomeroy, Ohio,
offering oo grounds that Conrail

P;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,-j

Files for funding
GAU.IPOLIS - City officials
have applied for financial assistance !rom the U.S. Deparlment of
Agriculture to renovate the city's
sewage treatment plant and two Uft
stations, USDA officials confirmed.
The grant, requested under the
Farmel"S Home Administration
branch of the USDA, would equal
$2,550,000. 'I1Ie total estlmatal
JI'Oject, occupying about 14 acres,
will cost ,;,253,000.
'IIIe treatment plant Is ilea ted at
the Intersection &lt;XCruzet Street and
Olatham Avmue, with the lift
stations m VIne and Spruce streets.
According to an environmental
assessment prepared by federal
dflclals for the project, the proposal will not significantly affect the
quaUty of the environment and no
envlronmeptal preparation Imact
statement !rom til' dly will be

DO YOU WANT
FULL-TIME
SERVICE WHEN' YOU
BUY A HEARING
AID?
Diane McVey, MA. CCC·A
Audiologist·

If the 81\IWet' i1 yH. Diles H11ring Aid Center,. the 1nswer. We provide
COMPLETE hearing aid seNice such as follow· up counseling, periodic
deaning end checking of the lnltrument, baHeriea for all makes, minorre·
pairs, and retated aervices. We also provide loaner aids when yourt muat
go in for major repair . Many of these servic11 are included In the originel
purchase price ahhough we ere happy to help those not orlginalty fined by
us as well .
'I feel like I have a new lease on life.' ' That' s what one hearing aid wearer
recentty uld when lhe diaco11•ed the tull ·time service and dedicated
profe&amp;~tonal hetp availab'- at Diles Hearing Aid Center.

necessary,

Sat. Momi

9:00·12:00

E. Hendricks, Donald F.
·Hendricks 1o Donald F. Hendricks,
DOnald F. Hendricks, Jr., parcels,
Syracuse village.
Lowell D. Chevalier, Bonnie Sue
Chevalier to Darrell C. Conrad,
Helen Conrad, lots, ReedsvUe
-village.
0. C. GUpln, Nancy GUpen to
Liberty Oil and Gas Corp., tight of
way, Ollve.
A. F. Gainer, aka, Argell Fay
Gainer, dec., to Phyllis Gainer,
affidavit, Orange.
Edith L. Young, dec., Io Jolll W.
Young, atfldavlt, Olive.

SUNDAY ONLY
SUII8CBIPTION RATES

POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Medical Services
reports six calls Friday.
Pomeroy at 8:56 a.m. to Sklner Road tor Dov1e Cale w)lo was
treated but not transported; Rutland at 12: 58 p.m. to Meigs Mine No.
2 lor Bernett Breeding to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 7:12
p.m. transported Matt Hopkins from the Meigs High football game to
Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 7:29p.m. transported Olrls
Capehart from an auto accident oo Leading Creek Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:44 p.m. transported Michael
Southern from the Meigs High football game to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 10:56 p.m. to Side Hill Road tor Drexel Lanhert
to Holzer Medical Center.

The Sunda y Times-Sentinel wUl nol
be' res ponsible for adva nce pByments
made to carriers .
MAIL 8UB8CIIIPTI0"'
Sunday Only
Onr yea r ....... ..... .. ............... .. $32.24

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIO"'
ln.slde Counly
13 Weeks ....... .... ...... .............. $17.29
26 Weeks ............................... $34.1li
52 Weeks ....... ..... ..... .. ... ..... .... 166.56

Kales Outalde County
13 Weeks ........ ........ .... .... ....... $18.:1)
26 Weeks ........... ........ .. ....... ... ~-10

Hes on this day. Persons who have
not plc_ked up their cards may get
dlstrtb.lted at eight area locations them at the plck·up site shown on
on Wednesday by Gallla-Melgs their application.
Coolmunlty Action Agency.
Fond commodities may be
Dlstlibutlon will begin at 10 a.m. ptckal up by others for senklr
and end at 2 p.m. or untU the supply citizens, persons who are Ill,
Is exhaustal, whichever comes handicapped, or those who work, If
~t. Only those wbo have made an· those persons . send their food
application, and not received a commodity card and a signed oote
denial letter, will receive commodl· granting permission for another

and Sept 6 from 7:30·10 p.m. for
youth ages 13-18. Admission for teen
night Is $1 each.
On Labor Day, Sept. 1, the pool
wtll observe open bours from 11
a.m. untn 7 p.m., followed by the
scheduled family night activity.
Regular admission !l'lceS continue through to the end d the
season: $2 br adutts, $1 for children
ages ~17 , and fr9! for chUdren
underage 3.
'I1Ie final day of operation,
SUnday, Sept. 7, will be tree
admission.

FOR ALL ~OUR

AUTOMOTI~E

NEEDS ....

SALES &amp; LEASING
CALL OR SEE
EO FLORENCE
t

1
! ,

t

AT

TAYLOR NISSAN

1200 E. STllt ST.-ATHENS, OHIO

614-594-3528

ED FLORENCE

1--------.,.......====

Court issues DWI sentence

412 Pickup ·
Fuel injection Nap SX
double walled seam·
leis cargo bed. 6 speed. hologtm headlights.

' Case dismissqd in court

Jan Griesinger to Spruce Gary
AGape, 5.68 A., Columbia.
Jeannie D. Nease to Stepehen H.
Nease, 2.06 acres, Lebanon.
Harold H. Blackston, Helen E.
BlaCkston to Tony S. Milhoan,
Pamela G. Milhoan, parcel,
&lt;llester.
George H. Ingelll, Mary E. Ingels
to David York Ingels, part of lot,
Middleport viUI)Re.

APLU

77

3.33
Trash Bags

50 plastic, ~0- 30 gal.
30x36" Size

Back To
School
Bargains!

..

Candy Ban
Assorted,
1.125 • 2.28 oz.

AI'LII 53

992·2156

3 ~~:·S1

Nylon lnM·Hi's

IMulattd Cups

6 pr. pkg. Fits

Step Into Good Health In

Packlp of 50
hot or Cold cups
6.4 OL

sizes S'h-11
Misses

Wllking Shoes

$1

Our

14'

B

·6 pack variety
of quality erasers

RING

News staff
wins honors

$119

95
NOW
lEG. t 16U5
SA VI ISO
Wa will not be undersold.

THE DANCE,

-POINTPLEASANT-ThePolnt .
Pleasant Register was armng 36
WI!St Vlrglnla dally and weekly
newspapel"S ~ Friday at
!hi! Better Newspaper Contest
Awards Banquet In Martinsburg,
W.Va.
The Register won second place
Best Special Section tlr Its "Playoff
Bound" edition, edited by Judy
Morgan, that was published last fall
when the Point Ple&amp;sant Big BlaCks
went to the .state football ptayc:tts.
!)ennis Sllwnate won third place
Best Sports Photo tor his pbotogi'aph d a Rllnt Pleasant Junior
lijgh School bastetball player.
·rn addition, Jim Welmmoyer,
oow a reporter tor the Gallipolis
Dlllly Tribune, woo second place
Best S(Xlrts Writing for a storY he
did while working tor The Par·
thenon, the Mal"Shall University
student newspaper.
-~The m,
Register
competed
Dlv·
ISion
dallies
under In15,&lt;XMJ
ctrcutatlon. Both the Register and
the Trlbone are members of Ohio
~alley Publishing Co.
'

or PENDANT

COMPANY

Tawney Jewelers
422 Second, Gallipolis

Is Offering
Classes In
SYRACUSE and
MIDDLEPORT

In Ballet,
Tap &amp;.Jazz ·
BEGINNERS
thru ADVANCE
For Information Call.992-7756

1----:---:--:------======::::::::==--EVERY MON. • 'rUES. • WED. • THUR.
•'

Dissolutions granted

At Dale's We Appreciate Our Customers ...
/ So We're Bringing Back The Good Ole' Days!
. Remember Bank Night Of The 40's? ·
Will Have Four Bank Nights Each Week

: POMEROY -Granted dlssolu·
lfbns ot marrtage In Meigs County
C,(Jmmon Pleas Court were Sheila
J Baltic and Mickey BaltiC; w'
Lanibert and . James P.

ScriJttO
lraiable Pens
·Write. smoot-er,

Erasers

1w

' Pq.:of 10. SAVE

t1inbeit.

;Siilrley J . Diddle was. grlinted a ·

~from Edward L. Diddle. ;
· Filing . ro~ dlseoiutions -ct. mar-·

t.r..areJohnnyC.EbllnaDdEJlen
1C Eblin, both d. CoolvWe; Tim

9.97 ,,
'

,. '

Walking is the new sports rage.
There's no better time than rliht now to start a regular
wa.lking routine. Best of a.ll, It's ao easy.
All you have.to do is tak~ that first step.

.,

Swim classes begin Monday

52 Weeks .............................. tfi7.00

Pomeroy~e.

Downtown

CHESHIRE - Sirplus cheese,
dried milk and rice will he

GAU.IPOLIS - WUllam R. Millport, W.Va., driving left of
Lewis, 31, Eureka Star Route, was center.
sentmced to three days In Gallla
Bonds tor speeding were forlelted
CountyJall,placedonprobatlonfor by James E. Sexton, 39, Waverly,
18 months, · given a ffi'day opera- $40; Richard Fritz. 22, Rio Grana.,
tor's license suspension and fined SJ!; and Richard A. Fontslne, 34,
$.1Xl and court costs In Gallipolls Colwnbus, $47.
Municipal Court Friday for driving [i~========::;l
while under the lnfiuence of alcorol. I
Sentmced to jail for me day,
placed m prohatlon for six roonths
and fined $17 and costs for
disorderly oonducl was W\llliUl1'
GALLIPOLIS- Parent tot lot swimming classes wll he dtered at
Bums, Sr., 58, Rio Grana..
the Gallipolis Municipal Sw1mmlng Pool during too final two weeks
.
Also fined were Sean Call1 18,
of operation.
CroWl! Clty, $17, tor' carrying an
The classwes will he held at 1 p.m. lor one ~ur beginning thls
openco~ RohertW.!;!Ird.22,
MOnday through Friday, with a second class plannkl for Tuesday, •
Point- Pleasant, $12, falfure to
Sept. 2, through Friday, Sept. 5. Pre-regJstratlon-at too (X&gt;ol ct~re Is
rrialntaln re89011able control d the
necessary.
, vehicle oowas drlvmg; and Jane A.
The class tee Is $1 per day and will be collected on each dass day.
Bush, Z7, Tirurman, costs, a
: Children must be age 4 or under and be accompanied by an adult to
reduced charged speeding.
~ ·participate. For roore details, call 446-DIVE.
. Glenn E. Held, 3!, Falrbom,
torlelted ·a $50 court bond tlr a log
manual vk&gt;latlon. Forfeiting $«J
bondS were JosephS. Mrugacz, 19,
Rt. 2, CroWII City, lalluretQdlsplay
a
valid rEgistration; Eddie D.
POMEROY - A case by Earle D. Schultz, et. al., against Mary
Meeks,
19, Harts, W.Va., reckless
, Jane Talbott et. al., has been dlllmlssed In Meigs County Common
operatk&gt;n
ct a vehicle on private
Pleas Court.
property; and Walker Sharp, 67,
YOUI CHOia

Allen Dean Blackwood, Tilora I.
Blackwood to Kenneth Young,
Betty Young, GrEg Wlllebrenner,
P.alge Winebrenner, parcels,

THE DAILY SENTINEL
'

Food giveaway set for Wednesday

GALLIPOLIS - The schedule
for the remainder r:i. the 1986 season
at the Gallipolis Municipal Swim·
mlng Pool has been released.
Beginning Monday, the pool will
be open from 1·7 p.m. on weekdays,
from 11 a.m.-7 p.m. on Saturday
and from 1-7 p.m. on Sunday.
Family nights wUI oontinue on
Monday and Sept. 1 from 7-9 p.m.
Regular admission !l'lces apply,
however, children under 18 must be
accompanied by an adult 111 famlly
night.
Teen night will be held Aug. ll

Sqoods respond to 6 calls

No subscriptions by mall permllted
In areas where molor carrier service
Is ava ilable.

Moore said the year long training
program funded by the grant will
assist Appalachian Wood Products
In expan4lng and lncra~alng prolng $156,114 to Appalachian Wood duction In West Vlrtllnla. 'IIIe
Products of Ravenswood and Point company . II'Oduces wood frames
Pleasant. The contracts wtll pro· used In the construction of water·
vide training f&lt;;&gt;r lBO new employees beds and dlstlibutes them 10 both
at the plants.

Arch A. Moore Jr. announced
Saturday he has awarded two
on-the-job training contracts total·

City releases pool schedule

POMEROY - Did you by any chance lose oome money In the
lobby of the Farmers Bank&amp; Savings Co. In the past few days? If so,
contact Ted Reed, president, who can help you with the problem.

By Carrier ar Motor Route
One Week •............. .... ........ 60 Cents
One Month'........ .................. ... $3l.Zl
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Sunda y ..... .... ................. 50 Cents

Admlsslons - VlrgU Roush,
Pomeroy; Audrey Swett, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Russell Cullums,
James Weber, Murl Harris, Anne
Dllvls, Carlos Snowden, Michelle
King.

FOR MULBERRY. AYE., BEECH ST.
AND w•GHT AYE.
IF INTERESTED, PLEASE CALL

JACJ&lt;SON- Bids will he opened Tuesday lnColwnbustortheflrst
phase d. the U.S. 35 ' Jacks&gt;n bypass, Ohio Deparlment of
Transportation officials said.
Construction sbould begin within 30 to 45 days following the
awarding of the contract.
Part of Gov. Richard Celeste's "Operatk&gt;n Jobs - Highways''
program, the project's first phase has an estimated cost of $14.5
mllllon. The $13.9 mllllon second phase Is scheduled to sell Oct. 6.
The Initial phase Involves relocating U7 rnllesd. 3i from 0.45 rnlles
northwest ol Jacks&gt;n County Road 59, near the motorcycle club, 1D
Ohio 93.
Additional plans Include constructing an Interchange at the
existing 35 and 93. Grade separations will be constructed over County
Road 36andTownshlpRoad 253. The projectwlllfundedbythestate.

Money found at institution

Veterans Memorial

CARRIER NEEDED

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallls County Local Board o1 Education
hired trumerous substitute teachers at a special meeting earlier this
week.
·
Employed were Kathleen Alrerman, ·Kyle Atkinson, Frederick
Burdell, Judy Canter, Hazel Carico, VIta Carman, Uretta Jo ~m.
Bellnds Farley, Michael Halter, Brenda Hanson, Wands Holle, ·
Mary Lynne Ruff, Wands Parsons, Jane Steele, Penny S(lllds,
Spencer Suskln, Michael Shoemaker, Vlrglnls Lym Swain, Joann
Atkins, Taml Bostic, Marta Dean, Millard Cassidy, Bridget Haffelt,
Sheila Roettker and James Williams.
Hired as a substitute cook for the Hannan Trace attendance area
was Lois Thomas.
The board will meet for Its regular board meeting Moooay at 6
p.m. at 2:lJ Jacks&gt;n Pike.
·

serve as a catalyst for addltlo~
local and out-of-state retallel"S .
economic
development In t1ie
"I am very pleased to assist
. .
Appalachian Wood Products In regk)n."
Twenty of the neW ~Wrkers will.
expanding their !l'oductlon capabU·
Illes In West VIrginia," Moore said. be employed at the &lt;OO!pany's
" 'IIIe Increase In II'Oductk&gt;nwlll oot Ravenswood plant wltlle too reonly provide new jobs In Jackson maining 160 workers will lie
and Mason counties, but wUI also employed at the Point Plea511!1t..
plant.
.Funding awarded tor the ll'oJ~t:
wUI relmb.lrse the company tor~ . ·
percent of the new IWI'kers' hourlY
wages
while they undergo training
person to pick up their Items.
as
cabinet
makers.
·
In Meigs County, food will be
The
job
training
oontracts
&amp;i-f
dlstriroted at the Meigs County
Fairgrounds, Pagevllle Town Hall, funded under Title IIA of the Job
the Racine American Legjon Post Training Partnership Act. 'I1Ie .
and the Tuppers Plains !Ire station. program Is admlnlsteted In cooper·
Locations In Gallla County in· alion with the Governors Office of
elude the GaWa County Junior Community and Inlllstrlal DeVeJ..
Fairgrounds, Mount Cannel Bap- c:pment's Employment and Train:
ttst Church at Bidwell, the Guiding Ing ::llvlslon, West VIrginia Depal:t-.
Hand School and the Guyan ment of Employment Security and
Tow!!sHp Volunteer Fire Depart- the Bureau of Vocational, Tecluil-:
cal and Adult Education.
ment at Mercerville.

Gov.

POINT PLEASANT -

Jackson bypass bid opening set

Newspaper Sales, 733 Thlnl Avenue,
New York, New York 10011.

Meigs property transfers
. Mary

•·

Member: United Press International,
Inland Daily Press Association and the
Ohio Newspaper Assodation, National
Advertising ~entatlve, Branham

Daqy ..., Sunday

DILES HEARING AID CENTER
594-3571

326 W. Unioft, AthtM, 0H
Mon.·Fri. 9:00-5:00

. Board employs substitute staff

Posl Office.

Six months .... ..... .. ................. $1.6.90

SEE US AT HOLZER CLINIC
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO
ENT DEPARTMENT
EACH WEDNESDAY 1·3 P.M .

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag..,:.A,-6·

---......Local Briefs: ·'· · 'Area manufacturer ,wins~- . training pacts

Rail firm abandons Conrail -buyout bid
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Faced
with unyielding congressional opposition, Norfolk Southern Corp. has
abandoned Its two-year effort to
buy Conrail, clearing the way for
possible sale of the government·
owned freight nne througp the
biggest public stnck offering In U.S.
history.
In a letter to Transportation
Secretary EUzaheth Dole, Norfolk
Southern Olalrman Robert Claytor

Pomeroy- Middlaport-GaUipolil. Oh~-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

1/3 off
Our Rea. Price
Wallpaper

Prt-pasttll
scrubblble,

Children's
ladi
. p. .

Hn insulated
lunch box.

SAVI

~- Rutland, and

Vforkman. Pomeroy.

C¥Y

~

~ POMEROY - Pomeroy pollee
rj!port a
traff1c accident at
!i;JJO p.m. Friday at the Kerr's Run
tNmc lleht on ~t Main S!Ji1et. I
:· acoti W. ~. Polne!~, was
tillowlnla vehicle driven by AnnJ •.
Qlenn, ~· Glenn s~ ,In
tj,?tfiC It the lfKht; RlluJh I:Jiimped 1
tli8 rear or her vehicle. Lllht
to Glenn'• vehlcle; nooe to

tftl RIIUIII wblcle. Roulh was cltl!d
l'or 811Ured clear distance.
I·

RENTAL ·
,.

1111

'7" ..... "'
~

--~~----~·~
· ~
· ~--~~

.

toliee cite driver

aun.ae

'

·vas -S1·5 ••
'

•

minor

VCR

$,2

MOVIES
~O·iac~· .
ASK ABOUT RENT'
TO. OWN ·VC.R's

.

ou C(!.n Win $50.00 Cash Each Night!

.

Monday lhru Thunday .By ,Juol Enlerlng The Dollr Drawill8·

•Regillration st.-111 at 3:30 p.m. each Monday, Tue~dly, Wed1181dly and Thursdly .
oOrewlng at 8 p.m. - You need not be p!'IIMI'It to win..
·
•Winning numbeN wlft be posted In the restaur.rt.

,,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA'
...

OAIJ,II'OL8, .OHIO

I '

t

�.,.,.-;-~·6-.1ll!t Synday TIR18I-Ser!~l
,I

I

a

"
'

I

..,.

'

.
I

l'

~-Middlaport-;Gellipolil, Ohio-(:Joint Plaa11111t. W.Na.

.

stiffer penalties
CIRO..EVILLE - State senate
candidate Jan M, Lon&amp;. Democrat17th Dlltrlct, said hts plans are to
lllughen ·laws governing tile trans·
por!l,t!Qn of hazardous wastl!s and
tilxk: chemlcals, In hopes of pre• ~tilg potenttal disasters such as
1n, the recent Mlamislturg train

. derailment.

' . IAag Is proposing that Ohio
. :llnpale crtmln4l penalties upon
. \Jid(vtduals and cotpOratlons wll&gt;se
· ~ negligent conduct causes
acddellts In the tran5portatlon of
bazardous and tmdc wastes.
"I beUeve that we 011st hold
.lndlvlduals and corporations crlml·
naUy responslbleforthelrconduct If
they have faRed to make sure that
llat.a!:dous and tilde wastes are rot
\fllll!p(,rted safely wtthtn the state
of Ohio," Long said. "TIDusands d
lives d.lnnOO!nt Ohioans are at risk
dally because d. the transportation

d these materials. 1 think that we
have an Obl.lgiltlon In the the state of
Ohio 1o proteCt W!Qrent people by
crlmlnally punishing tlllse lndtvtd·
uals who are either filo lazy or filo
lnoompetmt to make sure that the
toxtc and ha1an:tous materlals are
safely transported wltltn thls
state."
lilng further proposed that Ohio
provide adequate funding for local
clsaster teams to assure proper
communication and OOII'dlnatlon
efbrts In the event of a tragedy of
thls nature.
"A disaster team that Is totally
prepared m meet tl!ese demands
and coordtnate the e!!orts of state
and beat dftctals, as Well as
communicate and roordlnate ef.
forts with the coroporate entitles
Involved, could mean the matter of
life and death for many ctttzens,"
lilng said.

GALLIPOLIS _ After • the but
Issues. He
pressessltutdownfouryearsago,a lllpeseventuallylilbeabletopaya
pllrt-tlme college tnstnlctor, 1tv1ng small amount ol rmney to each
1n lrooton, ·bas started again, thls wrtter.
.
tlme(JI)yl;ll'lllOI!thly.
He Is currently working on
James Peck, who teaches classes material for his Octobe~·November
at Marshall Untvel'slty ,-the Ironton Issue with a OOth arudversary Issue
Branch ot Ohlo University and of tiJ! gn!at Ohio Valley flood of
Shawnee Stall! University, haS · 1931, planned for ' December·
begun publlshtng a bi-monthly January.
condensed version of hts magazine
The ortglnal
magazine
The Hearthstone, a collection d was slllrt·llved,
less than
folklore, JIOS!algla and. hlstoty.
But for tillS new publication, The
Hearthstone Collections, Peck said
he needs material His newsletter
prints recollections submittal to
htm by paople anywhere about
anything. Three editions have been
printed, but he needs rrore materla!ID continue.
He said that right now he cannot
afford to pay writers with~

In Meigs CQunty, Chris A.
Capehart, 23, Middleport, was cited
by the patrol Friday for drMng
while under the tnfluenre &lt;1 alcollll
and !allure 1D control hls vehicle,
resulting In a two-car accident on
Couuty Road 3 In Salisbury
Township.
Capehart was northbound on
Ohio 7 and tumed left on 3 at 7: 25
p.m., lnm the path of an eastbound
vehicle drlve!l by Dense! L. Roush,
41, Middleport, according to
troopers;
Capehart's vehicle 'went oft the
right side of the road, striking a
guard ran, came back oo the road,
-ring lett d. the renter line,
stricktng Roush's car and overturn·
lng. Both vehicles were damaged
moderately with no Injuries.

;

,.'

r;:=====;;;:;;;:::::;j

or

In case you don't know about
Nearly Me, it's one of the most
111tural forms of b11ast prosthe·
sis on the ma!tet. It's 1 concept
of individual b11asts. shaped and
contoured according to left or
ript, proportioned to fit rilht
into most regular size b!ls. Simple, comfortable, effective. But
let's talk more in person.
If you have had 1 l!llstectomy or
know someone wl!o has, and
would like to know more about
"Nearly Me", do come in at your
convenience or phone 446-2206
for an appointment.

~

•

H&amp;RILOCit'

•419 Mal" St.
Pt. Pleasant, WV 26660

676-1632

Please send me tree information about your lax preparation

I course.
Name - - - - -- - - - -- - -

1Address
1

I
._

I
I

I

______ ___ _;J

City

,Never Mil dtnr lie
t/ $11111/ilrkfor, ..

I

Phone

State _ _ Zip

OLDSMOBILE
DELTA 88's
-01

lOGAN
MONUMENJ
COMPANY,
INC.
,...,,

•.
,._
""· 112·"··
-··

Leo~·

,

'

THE COUNTDOWN IS HERE NOW
M "72" New Chevrolet Trucks
Now In Stock
5·1 O's, S-1 Blazers C·1 O's, 1·1 O's, Custom
Deluxe, Scottsdale, Silveradoes, Vans.
'

Now is the time-Don't Miss these Great Buys
The$e must go to.make room for
the. '87 models - No reasonable
deal refused.

I

NO 81MM~CKS-WE
WILL DEAL!
.
.

.

.

.• , . _ 0 ........ ~··
.

'

r--~.

See Mike
Dwight Stevens; Jim Walker,
Sherman Green, Biii.Davis or R,oger Dillard
Chevrole~ldsmobile

.veu-.lft, Mgr.

""' -~

Inc.

I

1616 IASTJtN AVL, GAWPouS

C46·3·672·

------~~~

pvtng her some Items uselul for
schooL Here, she opens a brlghl
yellow lunch box which has a
matching thermos. Missy wiD
hegln ldndergarten at Rutland
Elementary In Sepll!mber.

.

THERAPUI1C FUN - R.tdlng a 11teyc1e do'llll llle bal pld
therapy and a lot of fun lor Milly Game&amp; A lillie lllwi.Yt foltwed
behind to guide the portable IV pole, and lor 11!11 W'V I wu Nancy
CasteeL

*rite or Clll for booklets

sllowi~ rnemorills In full
color Willi si"s and prices.

a going home party for her,

"

5. 9°/o APR (30 months)

.

Chaplaincy Services will was
conducting the ~- It was :a
ftrst for tricycles at a chapel
service, he ~d.
.
According to Nancy Casteel,
R.N ., head nurse m pediatrics,
after seven weeks of being on their
unit, every nurse. was In love wl,th
Missy. She bi!calne an Important
part cJ. their dally life and they,
hers.
MJssy knew everyone by name.
Much love and memories went
rome with her 1o Langsville.
Most lmportant ·m.l)er light now
1s starting klnderg&amp;rten at Rutland
Elementary School the first week In
September.
At her going !lime party, the
pediatric stat! gave Missy a yellow
lunch box with a tbennoslorschool,
and also tucked Inside was ·a
miniature dog tn· hls own llluse,
ribbons for her pony taU and
barrettes 10 hold her hair.
:
She was thrllled with her Pat!·
dington bear who wore a red hat,
plus a sailor dress, a Jll!lr d.
"painter's pants," and a blueSnnui:
watch to tell ttme, all for school. ·
Saturday, Aug. ~. .was both· a
bappy and a sad day for all d the
staff on Peds - happy that MJssy
was well enough togo home, but sad
because they would miss her
smlllng face and witty oonv.ersa•
lion. Working with a child 241llurs a
day for seven weeks establishes
permanent bond d love and caring.
But then, that's all a part of the Ute
cJ. pedtatrtc nurses who share both
their skills and love with their
young patients.

7

S75()
REBATE
ON All NEW

------~~~~

'

August 24,1986

on Aug. 9. The nu"'lng staff held

5. 9°/o APR &lt;3o montlhsl

.

l...._,o'

.

GOING HOME Mtso
Games left Hotz.er Medical
Center alter seven weeks of
surgery, therapy and reoovery

01

,

for life's little
emergencies
ae well as
life threatening
emergencies

fer

CHEVROLO CELEBRinES

.

II

MAKING OF AFAI&amp;-Y PRINCI!JiS-KbaiiCuuiuellll'rhll¢ •d
a diQ' away
!rom Rober Medical Center.
Richard look Mlslly Games 1o 111e Gllllla Cc11u11J Fair

ON AIL NEW

1

Section

GAlLIPOLIS - Every little glrl
August 1 was a red-letter day for
And she didn't mtss the stage
. wants to be a falry princess. Holzer Missy - first lime she walked slllw featuring Sawyer Brown.
Medical Center had a "falr·y without crutches. At first, just a few
"He twisted and twisted" Missy
princess" during the GalUa Coonty steps, but as she got stronger, Missy said of lead singer Mark Mlller, and
·Junior Fair.
walked by herself to the playroom, then she sb:lwed elf. just how he did
Melissa Dawn Garnes of Langs· but always with a nurse close It. She sat on K!m and Rlcharo's
vtlle, 5\2, was admitted to the behind her guiding the IV .jXJie on shoulders so she could get a better
hospital June 23, and discharged wheels.
vtew of the energetic entertainer.
the second week of August, after
Missy endeared herself to eveThe Tooth Fairy came by the
seven weeks of · treatment lor ryooe she came In contact with morning she lost her very first
Osteomyelltls.
throughout the hospital, and !n tooth, which happened Jo he the
. After becomtng lll tn June with a particular with the pediatric nurs- same day as the fair.
biih fever and dlfflculty walklng; lng sta!f on all three shifts. The
Missy said the Tooth Fairy left a
· her mother, Teresa Garnes, took nurses bought her special gifts to note, saying he knew she was gotng
.Missy to Holzer Cllntc tn Middle· enoourage her along !he way and lei Jo thflalr, andleftrroneyearly, but
port, whete a pediatrlctan hospital· her know just how Important she he woold he back later that night to
!Zed her lbr tests. ·
had become to them.
~ck up her tooth. "And he dld, and
First an lntecttontnMissy's
She was alwaysquicktohighltght left me more rroney," Missy said.
ankle was lbund, and after a bone her stay for anyone listening. Just
In the lllspltal, her favoclte foods
' scan, performed suii;ery on the before her discharge from Holzer, ~re "French tries, 'baslrettl'
oull!lde of the ankle. A few days shesaidthehighspots!ncludedber (spaghetti) and 7-Up." She !iayed
later, she was taken hack to trip to the Gallla County Fair, an games, and had dally checker
SIJille'1'. The lnstrle of the same unexpected visit from the Tooth sessions wtth the Foster Grand·
ankle was also Infected. She · Fairy, and her going home party.
rrother In pediatrtcs. Missy rarely
received continuous Intravenous
Kim Stout, R.N., and her husband lost Whlle·sbe was stllllearntng to
(IV) antibiotic therapy for her Richard, tookMissyonherflrsttrlp walk, she visited llJe nurses' station
lllness and had 1o learn to walk to a fair, any fair, on July 29. He nightly to stt "In the big blue chair
again after surgery.
coach wasn't a pumpkin pulled by that tums."
As her leg healed, she began white horses. but a little red wagon
Missy made up her mind that
twice-daily whirlpool therapy, US· pulled by the Stouts.
when she grows up she's not going
tng the portable whirlpool given Jo
She rode the Merry Go Round, m he just a nurse - sl!e'll he a
, the hospital by the Galllpolls Shrine and after getting up a lltle more pediatric nurse.
Club tn 1985. The IV therapy nerve, taking on the Hel!ocoptor.
You could see her rld!ng up and
arrested the Infection that had Excitement and energy was a bunt· down the halls on a tricyle, which
centralized tn her right ankle and dant In the Ove-year-old as she strengthened her leg land was a lot
leg·bone.
talked about her trip.
&lt;1 fun.) Always following dose
Her physical therapy (PT) treat·
Missy didn't miss the animals- behind was a nurse, guiding her IV
ments included learning to walk oo the big horses were her favorites. pole.
crutdles as 90011 as her leg began to Running a close second were the
In fact, she atteilded the chapel
heal. She spent lime every day tn pigs, cows In third place and 'sheep servtres and once rode her tricycle
PT, and soon - with the help &lt;1 the !n fourth. She had her first candy Into tl!e Chapel, much totbedeUght
physical therapist and aides - she apple and lots of cotton candy, and d everyone there, particularly
went everywhere on crutches.
dearly loved the elephant ears.
Rev. Art Lund, the Director d

.I

SSOO REBATE

learn
mcome taxes
from H&amp;RBlock.

~imes· ienthttl

A Jair-y ·tale' comes true in girl's recovery

·

Factory Rebates
The Choiee Is Yours!

I~ pays to

I

literary magazines, 1s located ln
Ironton. Peck said be w all
editing, layout and printing work
hlmsell.
;
He said he doe! mt edit the
submitted ropy a great deal. He
only oorrects sane grammar and
punctatlon. He said he Js atratd t6
"take away from the natural !Javor
of the writing."

Low Finance Rates

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Medical, Sales, Rentals
Former Gov. James Rhodes has fellowships worth $6,(0).
Recipients also would have to
announced a plan for keeping
565 JACKSON PIKE
work
In Ohio br !bur years cr have
graduates of Ohio colleges In the
GAWPOUS, OHIO 45631
state, and he said he would take the grant pro-rated to a loan. The
DE£ DIUON, R.N.
steps to Implement !I If elected pugram oould cost as much as $3
OWfiR/MANAGEI
mllllon.
governor for a fifth term.
In
addition,
Rhodes
satd
he
wants
The plan, which could cost as
Mon..Frl. 9 Cllll· 5 pm
much as $91 mUllon annually, to raluce the cost of higher
Sot. 9 am·l pal
Includes two grant programs to education for students.
Students
attending
public
!nstltu·
give scholarships to students will
agree to go to school tn Ohio and tlons before l98l patd approxt.
then work In the state for four years mately one·thlrd the actual cost of
their education.
after they receive their degrees.
The plan would create (he Ohio ;----------...1.---------~
Scholars Program which would
dfer grants of up to $6,(0) a year to
2,(0) graduating high school se- .
nlors. The grants could he renewed
three times. Recipients would
promise to attend an Ohio college or
university and work In the state for
four years after graduation.
If the recipient leaves earlier, the
grll!ll would be oonv~ to a
pro-rated loan.
The p-ogram oould cost as much
'
as $12 mllllon the first year and
America's
Finest
Income
Tax
Course
Increase to $48 mllllon a year at the
Leoming.income laxes now could offer you money·mol&lt;ing
end of four years.
opportunities and save you money on your return at tax time .
The Governor's Fellowship pro•11om ina. eltemaon, 1¥1nln1 cllsns
gram, a similar arrangement
•Ruson1blf course IM oClmes bealn September 4
designed 11&gt; attract graduate stu·
•Held II Hverol11• locations
dents to Ohio schools,ls also part d
Send fo.- more lnforme.tlon today Of call now!
Rhodes' plan. Students who pacel!t
the IDP 10 perrent of their college
Contactournearesloffice .
--,
classes would be eligible 1D apply

r--

er

smp nained after one of hls first

hts

for ooe &lt;1 500 yearly graduate

. '•

publicatio~:

two yean. As a quarterly publica·
lion, only sevm editions were
printed. He began the magazine In
198landwasunabletoprlnttheflrst
edltlonofthel982season.Ouetotbe
rising publications costs, Peck said
he was llrced to fold the magazine.
That magazine printed . around
5-6,!00 ooptes, he said. The new
publication already has
a
around llXI, he said.

The Medical
Rhodes poses educati~n plan Shoppe, Inc.

..••

.

· Jim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile

Elderly Scioto woman
hurt in 2-car accident
GAlLIPOLIS - An 86-year·old
Wheelersburg woman Is tn serious
condition tn Holzer Medical Hospital :with multiple fractures, sustained In a two-car accident at the
junction of Ohio 160 and 554 Friday
In Sprlngtleld Township.
Delpbta Ramey was a passenger
tn a car driven by huSband Leslie
M. ,Ramey\ 84, Wheelersburg.
Ramey was westbound on 554 at
3:13 p.m. and W&amp;s struck In the
)unction by a southboqnd vehicle
driven by 'Joyce M. Hartsook, 27,
Rt. ~. VInton, will failed to stop,
accOrdlng to the state highway
pat,rol.
Hartsook, cited by the patrol for
faUuretoyteld Ill! rlghtdway, was
treated and ·released by Pleasant
Valley Hospital, Point Pleasant, for
minor visible Injuries.

August 24. 1986

·Area ~ ~~kln~r
material.
for
new
comjJil!hen~

'.~didate . urges

'.

.

, :.

Photos courtesy
Holzer Medical Center

�24, 1986

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

We Reserve The Riaht To
. Li"!it Quantities·

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

GOOD
SUNDAY
AUGUST 24
THRU
SATURDAY
AUGUST 30

'

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

THiu SATURDAY, AUG·: ·3o, 1916

69(
Whole Fryers ••• ~~•••
4
·
9
(
Leg Quarters •••

GRADE A
•

'.•
t'

-

'.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

•I.

.

Round Steak ••••L:....
BUCKET

•

Sl 49
Chuck·Roast ••••••••
Sl 59

.U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
.'
&gt;
i ·"

....

Cube Steaks ••••L:·••••

Q

=
;

$1 99

1111•

_

·~
z

...
•·

Rump Roast •••••

1
:·•••

KEN!UCKY BORDER

'

,.-·
'~·
..
[~·

·l

"'

WI

(

W•ene~s ........~.~~:o... 69
KAHN'S SLICED
$139
Bologna •••••••••••••••

0A

POMEROY- Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Mankin, Pomeroy, BDIIOWICe the
engagementandapproachlngmarrlage r1 their daughte-, Melinda A..
to Brt8n E. Whaley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Whaley, Darwin.
The qlell Church Wedclln&amp; wUI be
held on Sept. :.1 at tre Foifet Run
United MetlDdlst Chun:h with the
Rev. Steve Nelson ~flclatlng. A

~

&gt;

"'
= ••
I!!
t"'
!:!l

("")

0

0

1111•

~

'
I
I
'

..,.
-• =
0

I

i
'I

3
ISl
.
Pork &amp; Beans ~~:~
I
Sl
Hotdog' Sauer'.~. S ·

VAN ·CAMP

CASREBERRY

.

DAlY LANE

$1
09
Ice Cream ••••••••••••

ex~~~~~~'fOW:~S:

&lt;
&gt;
t"'

pound since then.
Althaus, who was convicted of
possm••ng a wlld animal In JulY.
toldJudgeTcrnasMagdlchlhathe
has
sinceAnimal
registered his tann as the
Althaus
Refuge, Inc., and
the Judge agreed the new status

t"'
!:!l
{")

0

~

---

"l::

Popsicles ••••••• !~~~.... 79&lt;

2

•The total value of the double coupon may not exceed

~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;L

REVLON REALISTIC ON

Tha"s to enryona who halped
mokt our first JIOr 0 AICC.IS.
Wando &amp; Don lake, ownars,
ara proud to cmounca th_t addition of a Gift and Flow1r Can,.,. Stop it and look around.
Sil flowers for aH ocmsions.
Frw tlaliwery. Special gift ideas
and morw IIICh we&amp;

12 TANNING S£SSIONS

$2750
IITC..U lOAD, GAWPOU.S
446-1910

..•.

...
~

Great Feeling~~

Perm

·.:
~

$2695 ::;
Reg. $50.00

'
!

-~

IVJI.. about our great

haircut prices Just In .~.
time for back-to-school;

~·

Perm sole price includes
shampoo, cut and style.
;
:
Partlcipotlng stylists only.
Good with or without
•·
appointment. Sole price good
ltlrough September 6. 1986. ~
(No! '&gt;&lt;llld .,.,;n... onv oTher cllet l

..

MAXIM'S

SILVER BRIDGE
PLAZA
GAlliPOUS, OH.
446-3353

•

EFFECDVE

PREMIERING NOW

STAR WORLD
COLORS

PLEASANT VALLEY

1

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT

A DRAMATIC NEW
MAKEUP
PRODUCTION
FROM

'WE SPEClAUZE lN CARlNG"

•24 HOUR SERVICE .
•FREE DELIVERY

•WE
ALL INSURANCE
•PURCHASE AND RENTALS

ESTEE

COMPlETE liNE Of MEDICAL CARE EQUIPMENT

1011 Viand Street

675-6100

Point Pleasant

LAUDER

...

HERITAGE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY

$1.00
•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 61 Cwill be- redeemed at face value
only.

'The face for all projects. a new kind •
of star quality_Thei'e's a speciaJ
radiancr:, reminiscem of the gt'ellt
star faces of black-and-white film ...
rhe allure of pale lum inws skin,
bardy blushing cheeks, expressive
eyes and a smouklt't'ing mouth.
Enter Esrec Lauder's Scar world
Colors, her new makeup wllcui&gt;n
foe fall D~awec Lighcwocksj Coloc
Balancer, a new wash rhar lighrens
skin w a pale, radiant fin ish under
foundarion. Plus d1e special eiftc.ts.
of Monochromatil'S - a palletre d
blade, white, charroal and silver in Color Rhythms Pressed
Satin Eyeshadow. Cheeks and
temples are pale and silvery or
ripe with deep color 7 with
red as a new neutral.
Come 10 the Estce Lauder
cuunter today, and make
1his luminoos facr ycur
own. lc's a Sl:ar World and
Est« Lauder's new
makeup robrs are the

•

A Few REAS NS Why YOUR
Child SHOULD.Attend HCA
X

•Only one manufacturer'•
coupon per item.

College-degreed steff
X Traditional Education
X Preachool program lonly $69 per month)
X Kindergarten program
X A Belc.a curriculum
X Low- cost tuition
per month
X Total aport• program tor both boya and glrte
X Stete award winning muelc program and choirs
X · Private profe11lonal plano and voice training
X High school cui-rlculum exceed• ltate requlrementl
,g.'\
- .
. ~..
P."'~Q~&amp;:r'
Cfte,..8
P.~~~~o~''' Achievement JOO. . In the Well-Above Average range 7.-~Git
(20·30, ~bove national averege)

•The total value of the double man~Jfecturer'a CO\Jpon
cannot pcaed the purchaiB
pric~p of the item. MC1ney
will nqt be refunded .

..

•ae

•Thll offer doe a not applyto
Powell'• Super Valu Cou- ·
pon1. free.- co,upona, or anv
c!)mpatltor'a coupona.
'

•Thla off11r exclude• clgarettea, or lf!Y other ltama
prohibited by law.

Stan.

-·,.

11, liert

•Offer 11 only good lor pro:·
duct on hand. No Ralnchtckl.

HIIIIAOI

af:N1Ji,fll.fv~~ lawiRiwoiMI

HO lllw11• St.

0

114·171·9461

Plltlc-h-lew. fnll l.ewry, Jr. ·

'•Tha111 II I limit of 20 .c;ou·
, 1pon1 you may red11m.

985·3307

TANNING

------EN[{OLL NOW
f
FOI FALL TERM

0

1f2GAL

FLAYORITE TWIN

CHESTER

DON WAN

n fl •
li

under an Dllnots law th8t prohibits
the
of In
a dangerous private
animal.ownership
He has been
the dog .

&gt;

0

~

In May, the state took him away

~

GAllON

R• den 0 ur TV GAS&amp;APPLIANCES
SERVICE

LABOR DAY SPECIAL

446·3860

T

WHILE QUANTITIES LAST

University and Is employed by Ohio
Valley Electric Company at tlle
Kyger Creek Power Plant in
Cheshire.

DIXON, m. (UPI)- Walter has · quallfled as a home tor the cub.
had a bear ot a !He - he's been
Walter's reprieve may be llh&gt;It·
1
shutlled aroond at least three times lived, however.
J TC
tnhlsllxshortmonthsandspenttre
Aoslstant State's Attorney carol
•• .'1 will be closed.
last three In a 4-by-4 loot pen at the
Wallcer, woo had ar~ed Althaus'
Any ConaigniBI wilhing to
Lee County Dog Poum.
tann did DOt meet any state or check on their clothes please
But a Lee .County Circuit judge
federal requirements In lhe estabFriday gave Walter, tre downstate
llshment of a refuge, said bewW be
ca1I anytime after 4:30.
hear named after Chicago Bears arrested again, despite the judge's
runniDg back Waite- Payton, per- ..~OI~de::r·_ _ _ _ _ _ __f~~~~====~
mission to go "home" to the Robert
Althaus family in Subletle.
,__ _...,..-...._....._ _....._~---~.....~......,.....-

-.•

-Bananas •••.••••• !~ •• 4I $1
VALLEY BELL
$
20//C) M'•lk •••••••••••••• 149
KRAFT
$
Orange Juice ••~:~.. 139

S54800W.T.:

SEPT. 1 1986

2

'·,

FROST-FREE

:;::::::::::::::::::;11
II

AnENIION

S298

17 Fl. REFRIGERATOR

Gilbert·Waugh

Walter the bear goes home

"l::

0

12 OZ. PICG.

WHEELERSBURG, Ohio- Mr. Baptist Church, Wheelersburg.
and Mrs. Gary R. Pyles of
Miss Pyles is a graduateof Bloom
Wheelersoorg, Ohio, anoounce tlle Local High School and received a
engagement and approaching mar- Bachelor of Business Administra·
riage of their daughter, Terry Sue
Grande College.
She
is a from
salesRlo
representative
at Ray
Pyles, to 2nd Lt. Olris E. Moore, lion
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Moore, Hughes Olevrolet, EnteiPrise, Ala.
Moore Is a graduate of Gallia
Rio Grande. He is also the grandson
Academy
High School and received
of Mrs. Clara Capehart, Letart,
a
Bachelor
of Science degree In
W.Va., and Mrs. Marilla Gothard,
·finance tram Ria Grande College.
Bidwell.
The wedding wW take place Oct. He Is completing flight training at
18, 7:ll p.m., at Union Freewlll Ft. Rucker, Ala.

Mankin-Whaley

&lt;
&gt;
t"'

COLOR TV

Pyles-Moore

CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs.
State Route 554. A receptlon wW Milford Gilbert of Cheshire anfollow Immediately after the wed- oounce the engagement and apding In tre church reception room. proaching marriage of their daughThe brtde-elect Is a graduate of ter, Karen Elaine Gllbert to Robert
Carr Waugh Jr.. son or Mr. and
Meigs High School•
Follrod graduated from Meigs Mrs. Robert Waugh, Gallipolis.
The open-church wedding will
and is employed at Smith-Nelson.
He has enlisted In the u.s. Army take place Aug. ll, 1: ll p.m. at
and will be leaving for Fort Slll, Cheshire Bapllst Church, Rev.
William Uber officiating. A recepOkla. on Ocl 9.
tion will bllow immediately In the
fello-.whlp room.
Miss GGUbert is a graduate or
. Kyger Creek Hilth School and
Ohio University.
reception wW llllow In the church altalds
Waugh is a graduate of Ohio
lmCialroorn.
The brlde-ell!Ct Is a graduate of
Eastern High School and Is a
nursing student at Hocldna TechniThe J&gt;i1crimo ol Pl,_lll Hoek
cel~ated tlleir Tb~nkoglvlns clooer
cal College, Nelsonvllle.
Whaley graduated from Meigs to tlleir harvest time, In September or
High School add Is employed at October, tlwl to late November.
·Whaley's Auto Parts, Darwin.

RUTI.AND - Mr. and Mrs.
Elwood Howard Jr., Rutland.
anoounce the engagement and
approaching marriage of treir
dau!lllter, Melissa Lynne Howard,
to Jolll David Follrod, son of John
Ph!Up Follrod r1 Pomeroy and the
late Augustine Branham Clonch.
The q1e11 church wedding wW be
held on Aug.ll at 1:00 p.m. at the
Old ~Ill' Freewill Baptlst Church,

LB.

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

ring ceremony. A reception will
follow In the church fellowship hall.
Kerr! Beegle wW be maid of
honor and bridesmaids wW be
Theresa Bing, Teresa Powell, and
Aimee Wolfe, all of Racine. Albert
Holman of Lima wW be best man
with Terry Patt.eroon, 'J'yrone
Brlnager, and Scott Hill, all of
Racine, as usbers. Arnie Dugan and
Jason Shain wW be acolytes.

Albert H. Mackenzie officiating.
Miss France Is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School and
attended Rio Grande College. She is
employed by Ohio Vally Bank.
Fisher is a graduate of Kyger
Creek High School and Hocking
Technical College. He Is employed
by Ohio Power Company at the
Gavin Plant.

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Paul E. France, 297 Spruce St.,
Gallipolis, announce the engagement and approaching marrtage of
trelr daughter, Jo Ellen France, to
Andy L. Fisher, son of G. Gordon
Fisher and the late Evelyn Fisher.
The open-church wedding wllt
take place Sept. 6, 3: ll p.m., at St.
Peter's Eplsropal Church, Rev.

Howard-Follrod

"'g

$199

A reception wW follow In tre
American Legion Hall In Pt.
Pleasant
Ms. Diehl is a graduate of Pt.
Pleasant lDgh School and Is
employed by Fruth Pharmacy In
Pt. Pleasant.
Rollins is a graduale of Pt.
Pleasant High School and attended
Marshall UniverSity. He is employed at MuiPhy Mart.

RACINE - Plans have been
completed for the open church
wedding ot Dlxle Dugan, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Dugan,
Racine, and Jerry Wolfe, !lln of Mr.
and Mrs. Austin Wolfe.
The wedding wW take place on
Saturday, Aug. l:l, at 2:ll p.m. at
tre Racine Baptist Church. Music
by Becky Van Meter Zuspan, Rev.
Ken Smith wlll perlonn tre double

19 IN. SYLVANIA PUSH BUnON

France-Fisher

Dugan-Wolfe

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KILBUCK, Ohio - Mrs. Rita
Hanford ot Kllbuck, Ohio, announces the engagement and approach·
lng marriage of her daugllter,
Monica Rose Diehl, to Kenneth
Garland Adam Rolllns, 9011 ot Mr.
and Mrs. Randall Rollins c1 Pt.
· Pleasant, W.Va.
The~ wEddlngwW lake place
Sept. 7, 4:ll p.m., at Te-Endi-Wel
Park In Pt. Pleasant, Rev. Bryan
Blair officiating.

KarEn Elaine GObert

Melissa Lyme Howard
Jom David FoDrod

Joe Ellen France
Andy I. Fisher

Diehl-Rollins

Limit
20
Coupons

CHICKEN

Melblda A. Mallldn
11r1aD E. Whaley

Monica llo8e Diehl
Ktmleth Garlaad Adam Ro1U1111

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'Beat of the:bend ·
'nn 8 A;e!IIWf
· · Betlre I ernblij'k on a few days
vacatkll, let,
·

human rel•ttoo&amp;
In addltloa, al1'llll!ll wbo Wliiplele ,ell1IIICI credltl toWard an Woclate
, the Community
basic triiiDIDg e8i'ii credlll toward deil!i* .
CdJele
f1
the
Air
Force.'
an uoc!ate. delne tiJmilll tile
He
Is
the
lfllld8jln
f1 Mr. lftd
Qinmwilty ·Colt : r1 the Air

throulb.

Monday tbrougti Friday, and tbe
phone number, unlisted of course
due to the time r1 the year, Is
9!12-5652.

F~.

iloloagbut l think we're
1o11J1i It
I always have believed that the
one quality our business establlsll·
menta had thatcouldn'tbematcbed
any place In the world was the
p'eesent; friendly attitude ot the
: empbyees of those IJJslnesses.
. However, more and more 1 seem
: to notice that the atUtude seems to
: be making the 111p, I am detecting
· the loss of that friendliness In !Orne
: of our Big Bend business houses.
I'm !rom the okl scllool which
belleves that a polelltlal customer
In a store deselws to be acknowl·
edged even It that CU81omer Is a
· stranger. I'm sure be's more apt to .
· : spend his dollars In an estabUsh·
: inent where be Is greeted and
receives pleasant treatment that In
oiie which antogonzles him with an
"I coukl care less" attitude. And - ·
mt only that, but he's more apt to
· become a "regular" If be's treated
weD.
The bottom line, of course- and I
wonder WI\Y !Orne clerks and
business pen10nneldorrt realize this
- Is that If customers aren't
comlDg In to buy your merchandise
or pmducts, the business Isn't going
to cut It and the next thing, there's
no Job.
1 personally resent the lack of
friendliness I'm detecting and
understand, of course, that It Isn't
everyplace and It Isn't every clerk. ·
However, It seems to be getting
more prevalent. · I also resent a
clerk who bas absolutely no other
comment 10 me other than:
I'm being "ylng yanged" pretty
"'lbat'll be $lD.98" and some- consistently these days - and
tJmes even the "that'll be" are everyone has a different lnterpreta·
omitted.
lion. Many of them lEan lowards
I don't know about you, but I'm "yin yang" - but perhaps, Arnert·
lnleDd to spend my money where I canlzatlon has taken place to lum
am acknowledged as a being a the e&gt;qresslon into "y!ng yang".
pe1'9011 Instead of a paying robot.
At any rate Charles Balley of the
And please don't misunderstand F1atwoods Road, called to 1ell me
my comments. 1 don't expect deep
that "ylng yang" means the same
Imee bends from anyooe -but I do
as "ch!nga damJs" and f1 course,
(lemand to be treated better than a that's a big help.
mop handle.
Deb! Buck really got It all
: How do you feel? I'D put the together and sent by an original
soapbox away now - but you know poster. Done In vivid yellow and
what they say- a word to the wise. black, the poster L&lt;; enhan&lt;l'd with
some great drawings. 11 reads:
"yln·yangtoyou, too!" and "And do
SpEaking of business, the Sweet keep smiling". The poster also
'n Eat Shop Is again operating and gives the definition of "yin yang''
In the same location on East Main and the definition of a smUe. I'm
St., In Pomeroy under the II(IDage- posting It on the wall, lest I forget.
ment of Juanita Uttle.
WeU, enough r1 this ylng yangHours wiD be 7 a.m. to 4 p.m., bUt do keep smlllng.

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D. Bendry, lli1a ri
James D. and Heleft K. ~of
New Haven, W.VL, baa beeR
promoted In the U.S. Air I"OI'Ill to
the l'lDk d. Alnnan First a-.
lleltiey Is a COi'i'OIIIoil Olllltrol
spedallst at Pall1clt Air Faroe
Base, F1a., with the M9th Ccrlmll·
dated Aircraft Malntenace
Squadron.

mother and sll!pfalher are Mr. ud
Mrs. Gary Starr f1 Clevelucl, llu
graduated from the u.s. Air l"iirct
jet engine lll4!Chank roune at
Oianute Air Foret Base,
During the coune, studelill wtre
taught repair and lllllntelaDClt r1
Jet eng1nes with emphasis a lfWIIII

m.

I

I

Mlhlqtoexbllllt at~ 8611hoUld

COiillct Genldlm ~ at
'{al') S68l6, wt.l II wtttd!Wtllll·
tile evenL

I

••

and wind will ~ tile ........
tile pe!'ODde Dl dM iD all [Ill"
manenl tlntlnJ Ufll tile outer ~
layer of tile balr. Tbla opeaalllt' •
'shaft to IUIIburn and abrulell....,
aae. WileD 011tdooln. cover Uate~fllllr
with aiWf or bat to prev411t DOt -'J
dama&amp;e llltt unwaated color a~Ur­
atloa. U eads seem dry iD • - ·
IInce

l!lollth KOrea.

The Mtrll&lt;rlous So!rvlce Medal Is
awanled ~ for outstand·
lq nbn·combat meritorious
rocblr.Jement or llei'VIce to the
United Stalel. Morris Is com·
mander of the 51st Headquarters

uae a npt cream rlnJe after Nail

shampoo.

~ron.

.

Army Private l'talph E, FeUure,

., . '',. ,.

of Stanton J. and Sarah A.
Fellure ot Rt. 2, Bidwell, has
completed training as an Anny
mWtary polb! !lpf!CiaiiJt under the
Oilf llatlon unit lrllnlng trOefam at
Fort McClellan, Ala.
The [I'Otll'am Is a l3·week period

100

~

WITH A5-YUIUIITED

IMPERIAL WALLPAI'£1
HAS IT ALL!

.., . II

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Wollpaper in stock ot Dis·

.:~~·

lmperill

Stover anniversary to be noted

'

we, al Wallp1per Super·
carry

STOVER ANNIVERSARY, pte

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Beauty, Quality, Price
count Prices. Plus 1 large
selection of Imperii!

couple are Invited to call during the
observance of the 50th wedding open house hours of 2 to 4 p.m. The
ann)versary of Wallie and Eliza· affair Is being hosted by their
beth Stover, Route2, Racine, wlllbe chUdren and grandchildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Stover were
held on Sunday, Sept. 14, at the
home r1 their daugltter, Mrs. Drew · manied at Cottageville, W.Va. ,
Sept. 16, 1936. They have lived in
(Belva) Fisher. East Letart.
Friends and relatives of. the Racine the past 32 years.

;,t~.

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'11 ·

COME IN TODAY!
WALLPAPER
SUPER MARKET
AND BLIND SHOP

s,.,,., .

!"VJIJIIIA. w.u

-~ -

j

POMEROY - The «lth wedding
anniversary. of Don and Evelyn
~.State Route 33, Pomeroy,
was celebrated Sunday at the rome
f1 their dau@llle!', Susan Well.
11ie Lannlngs were marrted on
Aug. 171946 at Rio Grande. Abuffet
dinner followed by cake served by
the couple's daughterS, Mrs. WeD
and Cbnlile Marcum.
Attending the dinner were Jerry,

IUIIDCENTIAUVt

295-4532

.-•' , .

163 liD AVE.
DOWNTOWN HIIITINGTON
Acron from lht Clwk Cfftltr

lSI FOI IINEE 01 lOll
446·4442

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OPEN

phases of weight control.
Class size Is limited, !0
registration Is necessary,
classes wUI be In the conference
the muttl·puipOSe building,
berry Heights, Pomeroy.
For Information or ~~~~~
call the Meigs County
Department at ~ and
cate preference of TUesday
Thursday class.

1

Cora Mill Antiques
&amp;Crafts
HANDClAPTED o\CI

..

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,.

....

SN haw good your print• ·
ctnfMittbi ... AKIIW
! :
~
qu.~tty procnelng by Kodlk! I ~

TAWNEY
STUDIOS
42&lt;6 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOt.ll
''

~---·
n.....
s.t. "so-s

$750
IEIATE

Delta 88 Royale Brougham Coupe

1feat your grandparents
to a sweet

l

IE lATE

Send the ITO®
Sweet Treat'"
Bouquet. SQe£19

.ssoo

Day is Sunday,
September 7. Call
or visit us today.

IEIATE

· Celebrity 2-dr. Cla~lc

-WHAT BETTER TIME TO BUY

.

Pomeroy·Flower Shop

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bulovlllo Rood • P.O. Box 308
Galllpollo, Ohio 45631

. ~*t.a; ,':; '

CHIVIOLD•OLDSMOIIE·CADILLAC
. .

.

301 L IWI Sf,

"The Way America Send. Love"

; 10·•

PH. 992·2039 or 992-5721

·.

WOIIIrltiOoll

HOURS

MON., WED .. FRI. 8:30·8:00

P-lOY, 01.

'

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sAT. a:3o-•:oo: suN . 1:00-11:00

!

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n.ss ....

.,.,·1•·.:

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•A~Jjl\':'!ilotlr • Willi

TUES .• THURS. 8:30·11:00

161 •ltfl·"••.

'

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COBB.

'

Siladium• H.S. Class Rings.
with FREE sculpted name!
We've g&lt;&gt;l it' The best ring at the

best price. But you have to act
fast. Come in today and choose lium·.
the biR beautiful AnCarved coUection.
This ofcrexpires Sept 6.1986 and is
tn hr u~d only lOr the purchase or"
ArtCan,.ed Siladium .. H.S d~s rin~ ·

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

iiRTf"ARVEIJ
\ ( ICLASS RINGS

9'u-u~~~
STORE HOURS 9 A.M.· l 0 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.

p

ssoo

beat.
Grandparents'

:~·. 95

The first French nuclear explosion
was set off Feb. 16, 1960, in the Saha·
ra Desert.

G1ooms tux FREE with 6 or more.

A Musag• From The Bible...
SAVED THROUGH FAITH
Willi4m B. Kughn
"For by gractort)IO SIJ""d thro•gh folth and that nor of yourse/m: it u
the gift of God" (Eph. 2:8).
Foltb ADd Sol&gt;adOD
As "gr&lt;rce" describes the ~ions of&lt;;Jod .~n ~h~.divine. side of the !"in of
salvation in providing man wtth sslvauon 'f.••th ~bes the act1ons of
man on the human side of the coin 1n accepting Gods .salvatt~n. However,
man does not lite by provisions only. God hu provtded atr, food, and
water, but man hu to breathe, eot, and drink In ord"! to.benefit from the
tife·sustalnlns bl.ulnjjs. Neither~ man ssve~ by proYISI?n• (grace) only, It
is through 7ailh" man appropnates the dtvlne blesstngs by accepting
God's divine provisions in the realm ohalvttton.
·
.
Tho Nootl Of Foltb
As God's ..:ace reaches down to man, man's faith reaches up to GOO.
The "one [a~th" (Eph. 4:5) that comes "by hearing ... the worrf of God"
(Rm. 10:17), and wtthout which "i~;, impouib~! &lt;o ~!ease htm (Heb.
11 :6), is a working and obedient fatth. It Is t~ls fa~rh br whtch man is
motivated to reach up and accept all of Gods provtslons 1n the realm of
grace securing unto himself the divine blessings of salvation. When man,
throuah faith, ma~es contact with God's grace, it is God's grace that takes
him the rest of the way; therefore, he does not rely on morltorloaa worb,
but the worb Ill faldt and the..- tl G.cll
Foltlt ADd G.I, '1111 plan o1. flllqjJOD, The grace of God reveals the live simple steps of
salvation: (a) 11oar1tt1 "the w&lt;Jtd of God" (Rm. 10: 17), the gospel that con·
tains God's power to save (Rm. 1:16~ (b) btllmaa the gospel (tdk. 16:15~
(c) - * a (Lk. 13:3), being moved by ''godly som&gt;w" ~or. 7:10) to
tum from the old life of sin to the new life In Christ; (d) ·or
~·with the
mouth, Jesus u be:t:'rh• ron ofthtl!lli•l God" (Mt. 10:22; :18; ActJ
8:37)· and (e) beiDa plht&lt;l Into Chrtst (Gal. 3:27) In order to be saved
(Mk. 't6:16; 1 Pet. 3':21), and for the remlsrlon of sins (Acts2:38; 22:16).
2.'1111 ......,.., ow •lp•The rnce of God teaches us the lite elements
af wonhlp: (a) Observina the Lold'• ~ on the lint day of the week
(Acts 20:7); (b) ltearins the .......... of God's word (Acts 20:7t. (c) atmol of
your means (I Cor: 16:1,2); (d)_... with the spirit and undentandlng
(I cor.-14:15); and(e) ....... (niakln,-themelodyon the heart rather tbatt
an 1ttstru111011t of mualc, Eph. 5:19) with the spirit 111d understandlnJ (I
Cor.t4:tS).
__ ...__ . th
3. LMita t1tt Clttk1ti• ur.t The K'""" of God ,...,.,. Ul at we must
add the Chrlltilll vlrtUel (l Pet. I :5·7); deny uqodllneu and worldly lust;
live aobctly, rlaht_.t,o, and IJOdly II! this pment world (!'it. 2:12): and
mnaln falthfuT unto death (RoY. 2:10).
When "IIIith" moves you to obey GOO'I plan of s,atvation: wo~hip In
aplrlt and truth, accordiDs to the diviDe pattera: and hve the Christian lifo:
you make contact with God'a,.....thattskea you the rest of the way. This
11 the only way you may coatact the amazing,..... of GodI
.
Ft~r F,., Blbll Conapvwb.., ""'"'• W.W ...
.....

REBATES REBATES REBATES

OH1r runt Ayt. 25 lhrMth S..,t. 1f. ·

Falcons can dive-bomb their prey
at 175 miles an hour.

LOCAllY OWNED AND OPERATED BY
BIU AND JEAN BAll
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

BONElESS

FRESH SPUT

P SIRLOI
STEAK

CHICKEN
BREAST
GROUND
CHUCK

$139

$15

HOllYWOOD

SPARE
'

RIBS

$)89

II.

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LOW· SALE PIICES PLUS••••

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95 I.OWFSI' PRICES THIS FAll!·
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.... &amp;Fri.

"Tbr C""''rt GiftS..,.

...

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MOUn:

EM(Ie!JS

before Sept. 1. Changes are subject
to approval.

Let Us Help 1ou
Plan 1our Wedding

· PI'. PLEASANT - Pleasant
Valley Hospital bas granted medl·
cal staff privileges to Dr. Joseph
Gallo. He wiU be at Bend Area
Medical Center In New Haven.
Gallo graduatoo wtth a as. In
Olemtstry from Fordham Unlver·
slty In New. York and received his ·
M.D. deg1ee from Pennsylvania
State University Collyge of
Medicine. ·
He served a three year resklency
at Baltimore Franklin Square
q
Hospital doing Inpatient work,
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hospital rotations In Pediatrics and
Dr.
Joseph
Gallo
1CU. He stayed an extra ~ to
estabUsh a special geriatric assess· paper "Assessment or the Elderly
ment program Gallo traveled to Person" which deals with assessing
several p'aces In the United States mental stale, abilities to perform
that performed this type of activities, and the development of
assessment.
Instruments to asstst physicians In
He Is currently working 111 a this endeavor.

·'''

COllA. OHIO
COUNTilY ANTIQUIS a

POMERilY. - Meigs County
Engineer Philip M. Roberts is
announcing tl)e updating of. the
current Meigs County Map for
reprinting by the Meigs County
Commlsslo""rs. The public is
Invited to submit any addltllns,
deletions or corrections o! tills map
to the county engineer's office at the
Meigs County Highway Garage

PHV adds physician

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nlques, recipes, diet recall 5M!ts,l

Ru·

(Church) 5:15-5:45 p.m ; and
Uand (Civic Center), 6:J0.7:00p.m .
Tuelidlly: Portland (PostOfftce) ,
2: 10.2: 40 p.m.; Letart Falls (Effie's ·
Restaurant), .1:05-3:50 p.m.; ~­
cine (Bank), 4: 35-5: 35 p.m.; and
Syracuse (Pool), 5:50-7:2D p.m. ·
Wednesday: Baum Addltlol\,
2: 10.2:40 a.m.; Keno (No. side of
Keno Bridge), 3-3:00 p.m.; Success
Road (neaiilMlillll)l:'iiHf&gt;4!Jiop.m.;
Long Bottom (Post Office), 4:25.',
4:55 p.m.; Reedsville (Reed's
Store)5:05-6: 05 p.m.; Tupper's
Plains !Lodwick's), 7:05-7:50p.m.;
and Chester (fire Station), 8:05'
8:35p.m.
·

rr======~~~~=====;;;;;;;;;;;;~

Copley's
7:35-8.9:3().9:40; Fast
7:15.
Friday:
Banes,
Stop, 9:45-10: 15; Teens Run, 10: 00.
ll; Opal Franklin, 11: 15·11: 35;

SJ995

r--------------------4

exercise techniques and

MEIGS COUNTY
POMEROY- Bookmobile ser·
vice In Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Monday: Carpenter (Laura's
Store), 3:10.3:40 p.m.; Dexter
!Church), 4:104:40 p.m.; Danville

RACINE - An open house in

Wallpaper Books ot Groot
Savings.

· SHEAR PLEASURE
HAIRSTYLING

ATHENS - Ohio University's Applied Behavioral ~ and
College at Educatlon Is lfi!rlng a Educatlonal Leadership, 314-B
master's degree program starting McCracken Hall, Ohio University,
fall quarter with prtmary emphasis Athens, Ohio, 4m1-29'19, or calUDi
(614) 594-6953.
on two year college teaching.
All courses In the two. ~.
45-hour
program
are t~:rmftl on f
weekends,
allowing faculty from
southeast Ohio's two-year college
and technical Institutions to remain
in their full time positions.
The program runs !rom fall
quarter 1986 untO summer quarter
1~. Courseo wU1 be olfered each
quarter and wU1 be taught five .
Saturdayseachquarter!rom9a.m.
to 4 p.m. Sites Include the Athens
campus and Hocking TI\Chnlcal
College. The !lrst class Is scheduled
for Saturday, Sept. 13, at Athens.
Further lnfonilatlon ·oo the program Is avallable by writing Dr.
Richard 1. Miller, coordinator of
educations leadership, School of

Dorotlzy Young, l2:05-12:2D; My·
ers,12:00.12:45; Mercerville, 12:55·
1:15; Swain's Store, 1:25-1:50:
Crown City, 2:45-3:00; Roma My·
ers, 3:404; Ohio Townhouse, 4: 15·
4:45; Kenny's Carryoot, 5-5:25;
Eureka, 5: 00.5: 45.

Meigs County map to be updated

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market,

$600

pineapple.

•

IHi:ro; Kanauga ·5th Ave .• 6:35-7;
K&amp;K 'l'raller Ct, 7:10-7:45.
W..tmrhy: l.eGrande,1().10:00;
RaccoonTraUerCt,l0:45-11; Cora,
11:15-11:00; Deer Creek Church,
12:00.12:50; Ewlngton, 1:15-1:35;
Allee, 1:45-2:00; VInton. 2:45-3:00;
Mol'gllll Center, 3:004:20.
'11ail'llda,y: Centenary Jumbo,
11-ll:OO; Northup, 11: 35·11:50; Old
Bailey Oiurch, 12:15-1:15; Hannan
TraceRoad,DickeY&lt;llapel,1:3().2;
SR 790, 2:05-2: 45; Mudsock, 3-3: 00;
Valley Vleiv Mennonite Church,
3:404; ·Patriot, 4:104:40; Cadmus,
4:50-5:15; Gauta, 5:~ Center·
point, 6:15-jj:OO; Centervllle, 6:45-

·,

· a.lfh E. J'eDure

HAIRCUTS

Hu~ r1 r-----------------~!c======~============
!rom 10 Southern

•I

tboucb 111e ctamaaeta oaly lll&amp;bt If 1111
tlntlnJ bu been lkiWully doni: ...

1-11:. Morrlt
Air Force Capt. Jam• E. Morris,
01 f1 Carl E. and Janet E. Morris
f11!!11tland, hu been decorated with
the 'Merlkrtlul !lervlce Medal In

chocolate
cake.
rp::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:~~
Wellit!I~JIY! Fried chlcket, rice II
In cream of mushroom aoup, IJW!ft
beans, rolls, Jello with tqJplnJ.
'11aii'IICIJIY! Hot dow with sauce,
baked beans, cole slaw, bun,

LUCASVILLE -

1

All ar.tlflclally colored b4}r bu

been damaaed to IOI!Ie extelit, ~ al·

Frtllly: Macaroni and cheese,
activities, 7 to 11Yfi:,n.
buttered peas and carrots, mart·
Menus consist of:
Mmday: Beet patty with II'&amp;V)', nated cucumber sUces, wheat
mashed potatoes, mixed ~­ bread, oatmeal cookies.
bles, wheat bread, peeches.
Choice or beverage served with
'1laelclar. . Roast pori&lt;, ._. e&amp;ehmeal.
potatoes, broccoli, wheat brad,

Master's program set
through Ohio University

Expo 86 will show
:talents of seniors
SEIIIor dtlzells
Ohio counties will be gathertng at
the Scioto County Fairgrounds In
Lucasville on Sept. 5 for Senior
Expo86.
: Spon!Ored by the Area Agency on
Aging District 7lnc., for tbe past 12
¥ears this annual sposltlon Is a
!lhowcase for the talents of elderlY
resklents residing In Adams,
Brown, GaWa, Highland, Jacksoo,
ll!wren&lt;l', Pllte, Ross, Sck&gt;to and
VInton counties.
: Richard I eRa Inc, director &lt;1
AAA7, said the fairgrounds wiD
open at 8 a.m., and there Is no
lldmlsslon charge. There Is free
parking and food booths wUI be
open IJr the day.
As In pi'E'Jious years, Expo 86
piVmlses something for peope ot
all ages, he said. Entertainment
and other activities wU begin at 9:00
and rontinue to 3 p.m. 'Ibe day wiU
De ntled with live entertainment,
,ames, craft displays, cake auctiOn
and numerous demonstrattonr and
lnstntctk&gt;nal dllplays.
Everycne attending Expo 86 wU1
have the ~ty to wtn. ~
occordtna ., LeBI8i!d: "n!el:e. Ia
llltblng to buy to be EifCible. Prlzel
have been donated In the lD counl;y
ires !lei'VI!d by AM7.
: Artt 1$ I 1o1Y .ervtn8 tile elderlY

w. Acord, 'A'IIole

L. Bossard Memol1al Library
announces Its Bopkmoblle schedule
tJr the week d Aug. 25 to 00.
Monday: Pinecrest, 9:4!HO; Sun
· Valley, 10:05-10:35; Quail Crrek,
10:45-11:15; Ro.dney, 11:~11:40;
Jordan's Gas, 11:45-2; Rodney
Village, 3: JJ.4: 15; Gallla Metro
Estates, 4:00.5:15; Kerr, 5:3().5:55;
Bidwell, 6: ~: 00; Harrisburg,
6:40-7:05; Valley VIew Apts., 7:10.
7:25; Rio Grande Estates, 7:]).8:15.
TUI!illdlly: CfRP, 11:15-11:45;
Children's Home, 11:45-12:15·
Hunt's Store, 12: 5().1: 15; EnoStore',
1:00.1:55; Afrtca Road, 2·2:00;
Roush Lane, 2:45-3:15; Cheshire,
3: W-3: 50; Addison, 44: 30; Adda·
ville School, 4:4().5:05; R&amp;R Trailer
Ct., 5: 15·5:45; Georges Creek,

Protect tinted hair

Mrs. WUbllr Slack of Rt. 3,

C'.4111polls,

l'ldlllp "· Am ...

Airman Phillip

m

H~.Wry1

I

lleDJuUI D. . .ldilt

Benjamin

GALUA COUNTY
QALLIPOUS....: 'lbe Dr. Samuel

reading and

Gallia Senior Center lists activities

Weight control class
planned in Meigs Co.
POMEORY - The Meigs
Coulnty Health Department wiD
begin a serieS of six-week classes
for weight control at 6 p.m..
TUesday, Sept 2.
. There will be a choice r1 nights
for the classes - either TUesday or
Thursday - and classes are free to
Meigs residents.
Each Is two hours nightly.
Attendance Is required at only one
Session weekly. Classes Include
null1tlon education, stress management, welgh·lns, relaxation tech·

Hla wife, Nancy, II tile
· daughter· of Mr. and Mrs. Ncnn
Baum of Chester.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-8-6

Bookmobiles announce weekly area routes

which combines basic tralnlDi With
advanced lndlviWal tralnlnl. stu·
dents were trained In · civil and
mUltary law, lraftlc control, map

when watna J!Wnd
and receM!d spa:ill tl'lllllq Ill
iaupport equlpnlelft. ~ al!o

llfety

Meigs County's Samuel Ralrden ,
wU1 be marking his 9!1th tirthday (JI
Aug. 30. Cards which he wU1
apprretate can be sent to the
Arcadia Nursing Home, Coolvllle,
Ohio.
.
And speaking f1 94, you may
remember that I mentioned Mrs.
Hazel McCallum was observing her
94th birthday recently. I also
mentk&gt;ned her varied talents.
Tbrougll JWI! Sayre, comes one ·
of Mrs. McCallum's poems wrttten ;
afewyearsago.Anoteonherwork,
has the comment that she wrote It
one cold rrom!ng as she saw a little
elm sapling with Its yellow leaves
Grepry G. KiDI
!rosted knowing they would son but
Airman Gregory G. Kind, son of
but also knowing that life woold be Mr. and Mrs. Jackie L. King d.
renewed In the spring.
Pomeroy, has graduated form Air
Force basic training at Lackland
0 little trre, all covered with &amp;Old Air Force Base, Texas.
During the six weeks of training ·
For your funeral pall;
Do you think because days grow the airman studied the Air Force
cold
mission, organization and custans
Ufe wUI end with the Fall?
Old trees !mow you sleep, and
then
Wake with the Sprlng and are
new again;
GA!pPOLIS - Activities and
A beautiful though!, resurrection menu for the week d Aug. 25 to 29 at
Which we shall know In Its the Senior Citizen Center,
perlectk&gt;n.
Jackson Pike, are:
Monday: Chorus. 1 to 3 p.m.
MelgsCountYEnglneerPhlllpM.
TUI!IIday: STOP·Physical Fit·
Roberts Is announcing the updating ness, 10: 00 a.m.
of the current Meigs County map
Wedile8dJ11! VIntonBiblestudy,1
for reprinting by the Board of Meigs p.m.; card games, 1 to 3 p.m.
Coonty Commissioners.
'l'lm'ldliY: Bible stndy, 11 a.m. to
The public Is Invited to submit noon; Vinton blood pressure check,
any addltk&gt;ns, deletions or correc· 1 to3p.m.
lions of this map to the office of
Friday: Art class, 1 to 3 p.m.;
Meigs County Engineer Roberts craft mini-course, 1 to 3 p.m.; open
before Sept. 1. Chan!J!s are subject
to approval.

.

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

- - - - -.In the sei'Vite--__.;-~,
~
incticee

I'm from old school
111 BOB HOIFLICR

Augurt 24, 1986

Auguat 24, 1816

Pomerov-Middeport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Plenrnt W. Va.

B 4 The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

'

...

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'.·

SUPERIOR

·IFRANKIE
..•

.......---'WIENERS
12 OZ. PI! G.

SU&lt;ED THE WAY YOU IIIE IT

ll~259

PRE-SliCED
BOLOGNA

99&lt;
CHICKEN
SOUP
I0 II• OZ. CANS

'$1!.

FlESH
IIOIIEMADE

HAM SALAD

$159
SHURFINE

SUGAR
5 LB. BAG

HEINER'S

.UNS

COLA

2 UTUIOTTU

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IIOTIOG
&amp; IIAMIIIGEI

SAVEl .

MACARONI
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• HOT DOG
SAUCE
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POTAlO CHfS
6'1•-7 OZ. l'tiG.

�The Sunday Times-Sentinel

August

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

:"lamei"'Sandt

·, Flag orders 'flOW get price break
.
.

·Homestead·built in 1825
to later become landmark

'·

much better than tt had been and
that we sll&gt;uld make tbe distance or .
on miles by midnight. Seven hours! .
Just think of it.
"First drtvlng to tbe Fl:&gt;rtland
Neherltiah WOCIIQ.
Postof!lce (Oak Hill's first name)
who had rome
and taking on some alO pounds of
Cillo from VIrgimall matter, rur driver mountoo
nia lillie. WOOd
the front seat, snapped his loud
awned nn acn!S
cracking whip and we were off on a
In Ga1lla Coonty
brisk trot:
and brought with
"We were at once mnvlnced that
blm from VIrgithe drtver must have deceived us!
nia some fl. his family's slaves. The No such time as seven hours could
sto!yhandeddown lsthatthe !ricks be occupied In tbe trip; and we
for the "Homestead" Wl!l"e burned mrnestly sald 'You will reach
on the farm and some slave labor Gallipolis by 9 p.m.' tbe drtvB"
was used.
guessed not; we would do pretty
In 1826 the WOOd home became a well I! we reached It by 12.
tavern and hotel eighth class.
"mltEE MlLI!8 OUT from
Stagecoaches, hack lines 811d mall Portland tbe dl!!lcultles oftranspor·
wagons etten stopped at the tavl!ll. tatlon commenced. The road was
The "Homestead" lata- passed to gullied, In some places 10 teet deep,
the ownershlp d. Harrtson WOOd, and we rode oo a narrow belt with
then John WOOd to Harl)' WOod. Rio scarcely a margin of a foot oo either
Grande Coli gc owned the ll&gt;use side."
and farm from 1938 Into the 19!ils.
"As we passed, we held our
AS TO TRAVEL by horse drawn breath, and tbe driver with a rein In
veblcle near Rio Grande, we have each hand dexterously guided his
before us an Interesting letter horses. We were safely &lt;Ner and on
wrtttEII In 1974 for tbe Galllpolis again at the rate of 5 miles 811 hour
Journal by a man will had taken -but It was but fora short distance
the maU carriage from Oak Hill to - a new and more formidable
Gallipolis. Tile man was traveling obstacle awaited us: a road with
from Parkersburg, W.Va., to Galli · · thrre deep ~es and a passage
polls. He had tak€11 the train from way on either side of them scarcely
Parkersburg to Oak Hill. Tile train wide enough for the rim of the
did n o t e Gallipolis until 1811J. wheel! A sudden motion of either
Aniv1n at Oak H1ll at 5 p.m., tbe horse to the right or left must tum
traveler Inquired where he might &lt;:Ner the carnage - first the nigh
caldt a stagecoach for GaUipolis.
horse and then the off one, then both
"It was pointed out, a lll)dest are treading the deep narrow
carriage with two nne looking gullies! With wonderful dextertty
horses.lnterrogatlngtbe driver, we the carriage wheels are kept on the
were Informed that the road was ridges and at last we are safely

•

~ Peeps: A Gallipolis diary
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
GALL!POUS- About every ten
some Ellterprislng hired hand
: In the newsroom of the Gallipolis
• newspaper takes upon himself 1or
~ herself) to make a study Into how
!,and wlzy Rio Grande Is [I"Onounced
- the way It Is.

•.

...&gt;
,.

:: It Willi ID The Sunday 11mes•1!ooltlal!l, Sunday, January §, 1889,
:il.t lhlll stucly Willi made:
- Rio Grande CoDege Ill pro;.unced "Ry&amp;Gb" Gr81de College.
' We allmow that, but do :rou know
-: why! Wbydoa'twepl'OIIOWICleltthe
~ Spenloh w~ The way lll!sl

•

'

•

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~

'

.;.

• The tiag, desl,gDed bf• f4elody
Robert8 ol Long eotfml. '.will be
avallab)e UkntlliJept. 9 at$3!1; Mer

strangers dl?
Back In the 1840s a stage coach
ran from Gallipolis tn Cbilllcotbe .
The first step west of Gall1polls was
a little village by the name d
Adamsvme.
When the federal govl'l'nenl
began to estabUah poat ofllces In
small oommunltleo d. Ohio, the
residents of Adamsville were
turned down because there already
was an Ohio poat o!llce of thai
name. 11ley were rejected on a
oecond try lor lbe same nlllll&lt;lll.

wer.
"BUT OVER ONLY io meet
again and again and 100 times
again. similar and If possible worse
difficulties. As midnight ap·
[I"Oached the street lamps of
Gallipolis threw out their welcome
light; oot our dlff1cultles were not
over; tbe road grew worse Instead
of better. Onehorsesankdeepdown
In the mud and the rarnage toppled
over to one side. The driver and
oo:upants SPrang to the rescue.
"The driver encouragingly called
the rorse by name and we saw the
ll&gt;rse bt the darkness struggle
through the slough only ID precipitate the other horse into an equally
had one. and tbe carnage toppled
over In the cpposlte direction. For
more than amlle did we ride In this
fearful pertl. Scarcely a word would
he spoken except by the driver and
his words were words of kindness
and cheer to his bedra,go~led horses.

One man solved their problem. A
leader In tbe small village. he
received a newspaper from one ri
Ohio's larger cities. While reading
about the Mexican War on tbe Rlo
Grande River, be tll&gt;ught - wlzy
mt name the post office Rio
Grande?

tllatdateltwlllbe$49.~11!'1!to

be placeil wlthJ~ Wolfe-at Bank
One, Pomeroy, aild · the.,lun ·cost
must accompany the order.

At last sate within tbe city treolncts
and tbe splendid pavement wer
which we rode Is In strange contrast
with tbe thing called a road over
which we had spent seven hours
ploa:tlng,"
BY THE WAY this trtpwastaken
bt tbe month of May which one
would not mnslder to be a poor
traveling month. Apparently most
any monlh was poor In 1874 along

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

446-5287
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Monday-Friday
Weekends &amp; Holidays
5:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M .
1:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

MIDDLEPORT - Robin M.
Boring and Thomas D. Foreman
exchanged wedding vows at the
Rejoicing Life Baptist Church,
Middleport, on Aprtl19.
The bride Is lhe daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Mills, Baum Road,
Pomeroy, and the groom is the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Foreman, Mason, W.Va.
The Rev. Michael Panglo performed the double rtng ceremony
following a program of music by
Walt McWilliams, pianist and
gu ltarlst, Akron, and Karen Fore-

Grande, and as there were oo other
Rio Grandes In the state, their
application was accepted.

So today, the vlllage and lbe
oolle8e wblclt grew there and Is sill
growing today, relaiD the 1111Spanlsh pronUDclatlon which began
The background m tbe above
stol)' was obtained from Mrs. Mary
Lewis, at that time curator of the
Heritage Room ri Davis Library at
Rio Grande College. David MauE!"
Is the present curator.

Immunization
to be given
through clinic

Spiro Agnew, Eubie Blake, Biltie
Hotiday and Babe Ruth were all born
in Baltimore, Md.

Skip's out of town
onday thru
Wednesday. Come
and see what
surprises JR.&amp; Bev
have for you!

YOUR OFFER FROM ESTEE LAUDER
Take-Along Good Looks.
Yours for 15.00 wit~ any E•

!

Lauder

purchase ofl J or more.

...

•

meet 1\iesday, 5 p.m., Dr. Samuel
L. Ba;sard Memorial Library.

Revival
MIDDLEPORT - TI!ere will be
a revival at Middleport Independ·
ent Holiness Church through Aug.
31 with Rev. WWayne States.
Services at 7:30 p.m. nightly.
Spoclal singing to be featuroo.
Everyone welcome.

TBtestlng
SYRACUSE - The Meigs
County 1\Jberculosls Office will he
conducting a community skin
testing clinic at the Syracuse
VINTON - Vinton post 161 Municipal building on Monday
American Legion meets Thesday, 7 evening from 4: ll to 6:30p.m. Joan
Tewksbary, R.N., will be giving the
p.m.
skin tests which are avallable to aU
POMEROY- Fl:&gt;meroy Cl!apter. residents of the rommunity, btclud·
186 Eastern Star meets 1\Jesday. lng school children, free ri char~.
7:30 p.m.; lniatory work. Officers In addition to tbe skin tests, the fire
department will be holding a blood
wear cbapter dresses.
pressure clinic durtng the same
POMEROY - Meigs County hours.
Utter Advisory Board meets Tu.es·
day, 7: 30 p.m.. Ohio Bureau of Guthrie reunion
ATHENS- The Guthrie reunion
Employment SeiVIces building.
wUl be held Saturday, Aug. 30, at
HARRlSONVlLLE - Harrison· the Athens County fairgrounds In
ville Senk&gt;r Citizens Club meets Athens. Basket dlnuer at noon.
Bring table service, beverages and
1\Jesday, 7 p.m., IDwn house.
lawn chairs. Friends and relatives
btvlted .

CHESHIRE -Cheshire Chapter
OES meets 1\Jesday, 8 p.m.; past
matrons and past patrons to be
ll&gt;mred.

.r
/'•

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.

Whirlpool Washer
$307°0
Cost
1535
+ 5°/o
$322 35
You Pay Only

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EXAMPLE:
Mr. and Mrs. Gregory Baird
Bair, Evanston, ill., Kevin Baird,
Marietta, couslnritbe groom, Brad
Francis, Olilllcotbe. They wore
gray tuxedos with rose bowtlesand
curnherbunds.
Tapa-lighter was Gary Crusher,
and Cassandra Spradlin, musln of
the bride, attended the guest
registry .
The brtde's mother wore a pink

blouse and rose street-length skirt.
The groom's mother wore a pink
street·length dress wltl\ pink lace
&lt;:Nerlay. Both ~rore corsages ol
roses with pink forget-rne-nots and
white lace.
A receptlon was held In the
church social room following the

ceremony. Tbe bride's table fea·
tured a lou r·tlered white cake with
pink roses and a chocolate groom's
cake. Serving at !be recepton were
Debarah Spradlin, cousin of the
bride and U!nnle Kelloug_h, aunt of
the bride.
The bride Is a gradua\e ri Paint
Valley High School and attends
Ohio Wesleyan University.
The groom Is a graduateo!Gallla
Academy High School and Ohio
University. He Is a dvll engineer for
the Ohio Department of Transportation In Olilllcothe.
The couple resides at 1911
Western Ave., Chillicothe.

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955 !leoond Avenue
• Galllpolla, OH.

446-1171

Gibson·
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With ·Link SprlnaJ

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Galllpolle
'

GAUIPOUS - Gallia County

Dtstrtct Librsry Board ri Trustees

Antique fair
RIO GRANDE - Antique Fair,
Sunday, 11 a .m. If! 7 p.m., Bob
Evans Farm. China Identification
cllnicaUday, bringupto2pecesfor
Identification. Musiconrollercrgan
all day.

Your Choice

300 Seeond Ave,
Lafayelle Mall

1:)

'ft!I!E)AY
GAUIPOUS - Gallipolis Rotary meets 1\Jesday, 6 p.m .. Down
Under.

day, Aug. 31, 11 a.m.; Clay School.
Business at noon. followed by
dinner.

EXAMPLE:

DAYBEDS

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BOURNEVTI.lE, Ohio - Christine Rene Shoemaker, Chillicothe
and Gregory L. Baird, Galllpolis,
exchangedweddlngvowsJune14at ·
the Bourneville Christian Unton
Chapel. The Rev. Glenn E. Newland performed the double-ling
ceremony.
The bride Is the daughter of
Karen Shoemaker, .New Holland,
Ohio, and Donald Shoemllker,
Chillicothe. The groom Is the son ri .
Mr. and mrs. James Baird,
Galllpolls.
Music was provided by Mrs.
VIvian Arthur.
.
,
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a ~wn of
white taffeta with French lace and ·:
a double ruffle around tbe bern and ·
train, trimmed with satin bows and
a shash. The bodice featured
French lace appUque and seed
pearls. The dress also featured a
scoop neck edged In lace· and
gathered sleeves. She wore a
picture hat trtmmed with taffeta,
lace and pearls with a fingertip veil.
She also wore a pear necklace and
earrtngs, gifts of the groom.
She earned a bouquet ol dark
pink roses, lighter sweetheart roses
and daisies with Hly of the valley
and babies breath.
Kay Harris, Wooster•. was maid
of homr, and carried two IVOI)'
roses with rose and IVOJY strea·
rners. Brtclesmalds were Rebecca
Shoemaker, sister ri the bride,
Surah Shoemaker, sister d the
brtde, Tam! Bairel Shattuck, sister
of the groom, and Pam Baird, sister
d the groom. They carrted single
Ivory roses with rose and IVOJY
streamers. All wore floor·length
dresses of rose taffeta with Ivory
French lace and rtbbon.
Jessica Shoemaker, sister of the
bride, was flower girl. She wore a
floor-length rose taffeta dress with
:lvOJY lace and earned a white petal
'basket trtmmed with pink rtbbon
:and eyelet lace.
: Timmy Baird, cousin of the
:groom, was rtng bearer.
Jeff Baird, Gallipolis, brother of
:the groom. was best man. Ushers
_were Terry wonn, Columbus, Paul

WHITE 'N BRASS

Now you can take your favorite makeup anywhere. Estee' Lauder's
new lleek mirrored tlke-along compact
a wardrobe of eyeshadows end
end . you'll. get
a
and fragrance. too.
.

Gol

- GAlliPOLIS - AAUW meets
Monday, 6:30p.m. 1st Presbytertan
Church. Potluck dinner, brtng
covered dish, table service.

man, soloist, slster·in·law oJ the
groom, Charleston, W.Va.
Marylu Riley, O!arleston, W.Va.,
sister of the bride was matron of
hooor. Rick Gaul, Middleport, was
best man, and the ll!hers were Bill
Asbeck, Fl:&gt;meroy, and David Mllls.
brother of the bride. 1\1 ppers
Plains.
A reoepton was held at the Meigs
Multl·purpase Building, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy.
Rolin J. Foreman, sister of the
groom, r&lt;glstered guests, and
Brenessa Phillips and Gwen Swan

SAVINGS!

0~·

. Ph•"• ••6· f•os

MONDAY

BASH AN - Guy Mallo!)', or
Winter Garden, Fla., guest speaker
at special services 9:30 a.m. and 7
p.m. Monday through Thursday at
Red Brush Church m Bashan RQ.

'

'

c""cl Ave.

LECfA - Walnut Ridge Church
will have Rev. Pearl Casto preach·
lng, Sunday, 7:30p.m.

Guest night. Mrso Paul Curtis on
home deroratlng. Mra. Dooovan
MacCumber, regional direotor, gu.
est. Members ID take door prizes.

Christine Shoemaker weds Gregory Baird June 14

1

France and died chirlng the Crusades In 1270. A
oonfessor who cared for the spiritual weUare of his
subJects. the church at 91 Slate St., GaDipolls, 18
named for him. The feast, set for Monday, 1s being
mted
the
weekend lll888ell.

VINTON - Open house for lllth
birtlllay of Elizabeth Cloud, Sun-

L~============:;======="::!

west.
this road to Gallipolis from the
The poor mall man had to make
this trtp three times a week. One of
the men who had this man route
was Richard Blazer, who, during
the Clvll War, became a rather
famous commander of Blazer's
Scouts who took on Mosby' ,
Raiders In the Shenandoah Valley.
No dlubt negotiating this road
when he had the route before the
ClvD War toughened Blazer up so be
could try and "whop the Rebs."

day, 2 to 4 p.m., VInton Masonic·
Hall.

MASON, W.Va. - Bend Area
Gospel Sing, Sunday, 1:30to 6p.m.,
Wahama High School Stadium. In
HARTFORD, W.Va. - Grubb event d. rain, will move Into school
Family Singers will be at Fairview · gym. Featured will be Reflectlons
Bible Church, Sunday, 7:30p.m.
Trio; HOmebound Quartet; Sincere
Gospel Quartet; W.Va. Coorters;
PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. Sunrise and Dan Hayman and the
Weaver reunion, Mason Coonty Faith Trio.
Farm Museum, Sunday, basket
dinner at noon.
RIJTLAND - Hymn sing Sun·
day, 1: ll p.m., Rutland Freewill
GALLIPOLIS -Homecoming, Baptist Church. PI oceeds to needy
Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church, Sun- family.
day beginning 10 a.m. Basket
dinner at noon.
PT. PLEASANT - Weaver
reunion Sunday, Mason Coonty
CROWN CITY - Homecoming Farm Museum off Route 62, five .
Sunday, King's Chapel Church;
miles north of Point Pleasant,
dinner at noon. Services feature the W.Va. Basket dinner at 12:30 p.m.
Sbaf!er Family; Ted CoUins.
POMEROY - A pro! party for
PATRICIT- Open housefor92nd Meigs High band members will be
birthday of Emma Rose. Sunday, 2 held Sunday, 6:30 p.m .• at lnndon
to 4 p.m., at her home In Patrtot.
Pool, Syracuse.

URGENT
CARE CENTER

POMEROY - Norma Th!TE!S,
nursing supervisor fl. tbe Meigs
Coonty Health Department, has
noled a chan~ In the usual
Immunization day schedule. ·
There will be an Aug. 26, a Sept. 2
and Sept 23 free shot clinic from 9
to 11 a.m., and from 1 to 3 p.m. on a
!lrst come, first SE!'Ved basis lliJ that
chlldn!n who need lmmunlzatlon
for school purposes can be "caught
up" quickly.
There will not be an lmmunlza· ·
tlon clinic oo Sepl 9 as previously
plaJined so tllat a Bureau of
Crippled Children's Clinic be ac·
cornmodated on that day at tbe
Meigs County Health Department.

842

SOUTIISIDE, W.Va. - Annual
Morriston family reumon, Sunday,
Beech Hill United Methodist
Church. Picnic lunch at 1 p.m.

When It's Someone You Love,
You Should Never Take A Chance.

over a oenlury ago.

Slnoe there was 110 IDdlcatlon ""
to how to )II'OIIOUJICe the nlltH!, he
pi'IIIIOUIICed It the way It would be
pronouncetJ H the word had au
English had&lt;p'OUIIII, as he did:
"Ry&amp;&lt;Jh Gran ...."
The village applied for a post
omce under the name rJ. Rio
'

" CElEBRATING '11IE FFAST - Nearly Ill
: memben of the St. Loi!Js CathoBc Clrud plll'hh
~ plhen!d at the GaDipolls Shrine Ctnb Friday for the
-.cltwdl'l IIDDUal banquet celebratmg the Feast of St.
::lolull, the clm'cll's pa1ron saint, who was ldng of

SUNDAY
BIDWEll - Homecoming at
Springfield Baptist Church, Sunday, 10 a.m. Dinner·at noon.

URGENT
CARE
CENTER
'I1IE BOMESmAD A'l' Bob Ewu Fannll Willi IMd as a
stapc.oaeb !!lop from J828tmll lale In lbe lBih celdury Ill au era when
roads ;.,ere llareb' plli88hle. The hluoe waa bult ID JB211or Ne~H~mlah
Wood, who came to Ohio from VIrginia wllhsome lithe slaves from Jt.
home plantation.

The Sunday nmes-Sentinei-Page-B-7

Community calendar I area happenings

'

'

Stage given to Rio Grande

,

:years

l'

POMEROY - Pomeroy merchants aild iesldents lnteresteclli~a ·.
.·.new Pome'roy llai which v.-a5
~ recently by the ·Be!lct
.MerchimtsAssoclatloncansave$10
.'u !hey oider their !lag before Sept.
• 9'.

By IAMI!8 SANDS
SpeciU ~poadent
RIO GRANDE - The "HomestEad" on the Bob Evans Farm near
. Rio G!'ande Will erected In l92! i&gt;r

•

1986

"

'224 .
Wlih Lini Sprinp
And Llnlr Sprinl
Pop.Up Unit

YESi IT SLEEPS TWO!

.• ..
10
-

·:-.·

'~

. ·.

.

Bridge Plazq
Gallipolis

446·805-1.
•

�~;

..,"
~Paga

B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~Tofu:

August 24, 1986

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

~

~

PI'. PLEASANT - A staple of
::tile Japanese and Ollnese cuisines
"for many centuries, tofu, of soybean
;Curd, now ts becoming Increasingly
:popular In tile West. Annette L .
:Anderion, RD, dletlclan at Plea·
:;'sant Valley Hospital has recom·
~everyone take a closer look
~~ the amazing food which the
!:OIInese caD "meat withOut a
r

•••'~bone."

!· Soybeans, witch rank as tbe
: ·world's 100st Important source of
· ·protein, are the source of tofu.
: JronlcaUy, though the United States
; produces more soybeans than any
~ other nation, almost all of It Is
; exported, fed to animals, or used In
tile production of ~ble oU.
• The process of transforming

i

soybeans Into tofu ts slmUar to
converting mUk Into cheese, she
said.
Uke aU soybean products, tofu
registers high In protein contmt.
Though tile actual prolan contenl
of tofu varies somewhat with the
manufacturer, an average fouroooce serving sllluld provide 15 to
20 percent of an adult's recommended daUy allowance of protein.
As an added plus, tofu's high
protein content does not come with
the high levels of rat usually
associated with high-P"otetn foods
such as cheese andm eat. For
example, a four-ounce serving of
tofu contains only one-third tile
calories of a quarter pound of
ground heel, An!Erson said.

Because of Its plan! origin, tofu one-halftbeprlceofantljualwelght
contains no cholesterol and a low of ground heel. Wben pllrchasOO at
levelchaturatedfats.Addltlonally, an Oriental marlll!t, or tofu slllp,
lofu Is extremely low In sodium and the price sllllild be considerably
high In calcium and Iron, she added. less, she said.
Unlike most bean products, tofu
Tofu contains m preservallves
Is so easily digestible that It Is and Is, therefore, a perishable food
suitable for the elderly and lndtvld- which must he kept refrigerated.
. ua1s with digestive problems. ..
Most tofu sold In the West Is
Though almost flavorless In Its water-packed tn leakproof plastic
natural state, tofu has the dlstlnc- containers. To make sure the·tofu Is
tiveabilltyoftaklngontheflavor&lt;t fresh, always check the "use by
other foods with which It Is blen!Ed liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
or cooked. This attrtbute adds to · 11
tofu's appeal by opening up almost
unlimited taste opportunities, Anderson said.
Tofu ts also Inexpensive. Purchased In a supermarket, tre
average prtce per pound Is about

date" ~tamp .
When tofu Is not to be used
Immediately, tbe water sllluld be
drained from tile package and ·
replaced with fresh wate- which
should be changed dally. Altlllugh
tofu can be frozen,llls preferable to
b.Jy It fresh and use It within a few
days. Most supermarkets now
stock It _In the produce or dairy
sections.
Other sources of fresh tofu are

~ Job
~

from all employers In the communIty who are seeking dependable
relp. CaD the Senior Citizens
Center, 446-7tm or 446-8165 for more
Information.

"Check local tlble coquny for com·
patible requiram .. ta.

In

•

J,

•'

OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

•-

.,

~

::;

•
,

...

.•

POMEROY:
Meigs Mldicol luilding
(across !111m Veterans Hasp.)
992-5912 Monday-friday

Odd Lots &amp; Seconds
All Paper
American Made •

r

GALUPOUS ·
414 Stc:ond Ave., 2nd floor
Iabove Putting Palace)
446-0166 Mon.-Sat.
ClOSED THURSDU

Also : Jackson, Chesapeake, Athans, Chillicothe, Logan

BAYLOR PIEAIJS CASE - Boston's designated
pleads his C!IIMl wllb
second base unplre Jolm Sltulocll, claiming Cleve-

ldtter llou Baylor, on one knee,

19&amp;7ftCII

Rail

$529

SAVE S90

MOdel FMA555R
20" dll'if0081

--

Per Doubll

PLANNED PARENTHOOD

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ROll

ssso

••• •Sliding fee scale. No one refused services because
•
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,,•

ONLY

Point
Pleasant

•s.nices include:
Birth Control; V.D. Screening;
Cancer Scntning; ..,egnancy
tests; education ancl ~oun11..g
for individuals and couples.

1987ft011

19&amp;7ftCII

13" REMOTE

19" COLOR

25" COLOR CONSOLES

COLOR PORTABLE

PORTABLE

PIN£, PECAN, OAK

$3Q800

$27800

O..n: Mon. thrv Fri. I 0 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.; Sat. I 0 Ia 4
Pt. l'leaiOnl
675-6210

'

QUALITY SERVICE
AFTER THE
SALE

$488°0

••

MALL

•

.
~

}

~

I

•

My Sister's Closet Has Your

JEANS

Favorite Back·to·School
Items on Sale NOW!

s·aoo
BIG SELECDON
YOUNG MEN'S

NICE
SELECDON

Dress Pants

Shirts

1/2 PRICE

1

OFF

Now

REG. $24.00

Two
consecutive bogeys blunted Donnie
Hammond's effort on tile front nine.
b.Jt be rallied with a birdie on tile
lith hole to take a f:wo.smt lead
over playing ~r Dan Pohl
midway througb saturday's third
round of tbe $'m,OCOWorldSerles of

Shop the Shoe Cafe for
the best selection of
Back-to-School
Athletic: Shoes•

Shaker Sweaters

PAIR

1

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI SpQda Wrller
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -

SPECIAL 8RGUP

Goll.

Hammond, 29, who qualified for
this tournament with a victory In
tile '!'lOb -Hope Chrysler Classic In
January, was 1·under for the round

On Sale thru Sat., Aug. 30

$1899

,

and 7-under-par overall tl!rough 12
holes.
Hamr!Klnd began tile round at

For Children
Now

REG. '21.00

S9 90 to S1295

MOW

$1599

seven yards net rushtn:(i and 47
passing. The BobcatS coi!J!cted only
two first downs, both passing.
HTHS · soored on Its second
pos!e!•lon when sophomore quar·
terback Jay JarreD roUed left and
cormected with Junior lmd Grady
Johnlon for an 18-yard lbuchcilwn
pass. Jarrell was 3-7 for 1M! yll11:b
and led tile WUdcat 'ground attack
with :a&gt; yards on live carries.
Alter tile WUdcata' score, the
Bobcats' defense carne alive and
rellnqutshedonlyfourflrstdqwn.sln
tile remaining 16 mlnulel. pe&amp;plte
Valley,~·
field posit~ deep .ln KCliS terri·
Pnrrn Trace eJlb'ler Creek o tory twlce,onceonafllmbleandtile
Defense was tile l)8ll1e of tile other fo~ a punt, the Bobcata
pme tn tile first matchup as the forced the Vllldca~ to give tlie ball
Wildcats llmlted KYaer Creek to up on downs on fourtl\-40wn

BY 11M WEIDEMOYER
'Jbnr 9 '*Mi
CHESHIRE - Almost ftve hours
of llllh acbool scrimmage football
Friday 1111iht at Botcat Stadium
gave Southern valley Athletic
Cmference fans a sneak preview of .
each of the eight league schoOls,
tndudtng new members Oak Hll1
and Symn)eS v,_uey.
Hannan Trace ope11ed lhe even·
1ng blanking Kyger Creek, 6-0. Oak
Hill downed Eastern, :»-8; Soulhiv·
tern roUed pas,t Southe
14-&amp;.
~North Gallla past-~

Men's GTS
REG. $42.00

.
'

Check
your closet,
then check
ours for
Back ·to-School

GROUP
LONG SLEEVE AND
SHOll SLHYE

GROUP

Jeans

25°/o
OFF

Shirts

1/2 PRICE

1-------.L.------1

••

Spultl

ran

«,4

Women's

~.,

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Motivator

•.,~
;\•( ,,., ~·.,
«,\\(
c,4
~ c_o.f"

• I

~
pve MOrpn a 7~·1e.d, ·
II'
!
A1tei' the Maraudera~
~GY- ~ IIIDfed . lhel)i)Jon'!WnbleattllelroWn37
t\\'01~
- ~ . In ;: ,djOuthWird
m ~
11\111 ililr ~ ~ beld ptr Jb tight end 'l'loy Wblte &lt;M!E a
two.._._ drives to piJit a U:6 ·.. tlihtly bimcbed Met,. detenam
pre-te~~on· wtn bere Friday In tile . llne~afoortbandtwotnmtbe2B.
llfetalPrwlew.
·. · Meip,. wboplayeclwttboutblth
'lbe R.aldertt'llifttor qtlarterback co-captalna. .Huey E11011 and J. It
Mark Southward ~ a 37 yard Kltcll!ll p1uJ t11ret other ~.
liP' to a wide qll!lf ~Wood· r ~·Rider.~Mtilii!rtJ¥1.
~ CIVIl' tbe middle with ~:19 ; llllllor BW Brotben, ~led 'till! ·
nma1111111 In thl! IIICODd quarter . pme's ICXII'IIIi oa ,!hair ·I!CXllld
l!ld lbllllwll(l ~· jlolnt,ldcll • .. pouno•n Wilen Jitn10r ~

.·

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MY

SIST~~·s

t&amp;.esc.'t
..

Register to
Win
Gift Certificates

1-•sooo

1...,:.S2JH
2-*1010

Now

$3,495

,,...,. •""
1 11..,
1

Air.

BY

•

"'*

Wt AIIO

Cll!ve,., L
A. O.r,

Indians 5, 8ed Sox 4
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Andre
Thol'l!ton Uned a pinch-hit, bases·
loaded single with one out In tile
ninth Inning Saturday, helping the
Cleveland Indians snap an 11-game
lOSing streak to Boston with a 54
victory over the Red Sox.
Bob Stanley, 5-5, relieved to start
the ninth and walked Ou-ts Bando.
Pinch runner Andy Allanson advanced on Tony Bernazard's bunt
single. Julio Franco forced Allanson at third for the first out Joe
Carter lifted a fly to slllrt light that
bounced out of first baseman BUl
Buckner's glove for a single.
Thornton batted lor Otis Nlxoo and
lined the game-winner to center
field .
Ernie Camacho, 2-2, was the
winner. The Indians had rot beaten
the Red Sox in eight previous
meetings this season and 11 werall
slnoe last season.
The Red Sox tied the score 4- 4 In
the ninth. Rlch Gedman led off with
a double and took third as
pinch-hitter Mike Greenwell
grounded out Wade Boggs lilted a
long foul fly down the left -field line
lhat left fielder Otis Nixon caught.
Gedman came home with the tying

.
Alter spotting the Red Sbl!' a'1.0
lead In the third Inning when BOas
drilled a 3-2 pitch over · the
rlght-fleld fl!IKX! .for his' aeveuth
mmer of the season, the Indlaal
scored two runs In tile tltrd 'off
starter Tom Seaver.
·
Brook Jacoby led of(wlthasl!lgle
and Chris Bando wa!~- 'l'Ony
Bemazaro torced aan®atlllCOIId.
movtng Jacoby to .tlil,rd. Jacoby
scored oo Julio Franco'&amp; RBI sln!lle
to left. Carter dropped a single Into
short right to flU the lllss and
Bemazard soored· the iJ-ahead run
oo Mel HaD's groundout
Asingle by Jacoby, a sacrifice by
Brett Butler and Bando's two-rut,
run-soorlng stngle made It 3-1bl tile
fifth 11)nlng. Carter SmaCked li 1·2
pitch wer the left·fleld fence
leading off the slxlh to give
Cleveland a 4-llead.
.
Oeveland starter Tom Candlottl,
seeking his 12th complete game,
allowed four hits over the first
seven Innings. He departed tn .the
elghlh after yielding a ~t
double to Marty Barrett and a walk
to Jtm Rlce.
Camacho relieved and walked
Don Baylor to load the bases.
Barrett scored on Dwight Evans'
ln11eld single and Rice scored on
Bill Buckner's groundout to makelt
4-3.
Seaver was seeking his 3l2th
career victory. He struck out six,
walked ooe and was tagged for nine
hits before being relieved In the
sixth Inning.

on

games tile
and loses all
games,"
Bruce told his first weekly press
luncheon Thursday, " do not make
tile mistakes of'fumbles, Interceptions and penalties.
,_"You've got to empbastze that
(no mistakes)," added Bruce. "The
team that does that next Wednes·
day night wiU probably be the team
that wins tile football game. That
and don't make any big mistakes In
tile ktck1ng game."
Bruce said his defense, despite
tile loss through dismissal and
suspension of safety Terry White
and oolslde linebacker Derek !sa·
man, Is ready lor Alabama. The
!llense, however, Is a different
story.
"I'm glad we have anotber week
of practice," Bruce said. "We need
anotiler week to get our of!ense
geared up and Its' going to take
every minute of every day to get
that ready.
"That's the problem with trying
to have a complete offense," said
Bruce. "Weputbtallouroffensethe

time World Series winner Jack
Nlcklabs (15 holes), Brttlsh Open
winner Gl'l!g Nonnan of Australia
{14 IDles) and .Bobby Cole of South
Alrlca (16 holes).
Bob Tway, wbo won the PGA
Championship two weeks ago, had
two eagles m the front nine- one a
mle-ln-me on the 189-yard fifth
mle. Tway then Jiayed even-par m
the back nine to llnlsh with a
4-under 66 and a 2-over 212 Iota!.
"It's taken.me two rounds just to
get used to this course," said Tway,
a four-time winner co the PGATour
this year wiD IS aecond In winDings
to Norman with $ro6.005. "Hopefully, I'U buUd on.this tomorrow."

football at Ohio State that has bi!en
Improving, It's been our defense,"
said Bruce. "We've got more good
de!enslve players now than we had
when I came (eight years ago). Our
numberswerealwaysdownandthe
quallty behind the starters were not
t1 that vintage."
•
Bruce gave the Buckeyes a 4@y
. ott WectiJt!lilj)&gt; ildll .IIi ~ .
to iJum tt
p-actlcl! schedule ~~ lilly of ·
Bruce,
very pleased with the a lKl pads .workout under the llghts '
progress of our defensive i&gt;otba11 of Franldtn County Stadium before
team. I'm rot sattsfted with the beginning the game week
progress &lt;t our &lt;:tfenslve football countdown.
team and I'm pleased with our
Bruce said mJSt positions on his
kicking game, with the exception of offensive unit are set, altlllugh
our placekicker."
there is stt1l a lllttle goingm tlrthe
Bruce said Tom Tupa, wm led starting flankl!r spot among Jamie
the nation In net punting two years HoUand, Everett Ross and Nate
ago as a freshman. ts back kicking ~and M talliOOck be~ .
the way he was · then. Btf tile John Wooldridge and Vln'ce
placekicking Is still undecided with Woc~ .
·
freshman Pat O'Morrow and Uni"When we started out, tt k&gt;oked :
versity of Onclnnatl transfer Mike like VInce Workman had the lead," ·
Morton battling for tre job.
said Bruce. "Now, tt looks Uke John ·
White, a 3-year regular at safety Wooldridge has come back. U w.e
for tile Buckeyes, along with had to start .,morrow, tt would be
reserve running back Roman John Wooldridge, with baclaip
Bates, were kicked off the team by Vince Wortanan. And, behind him,
Bruce for "violation of team a young man, Jimmy Bryailt, ·
regulations." He refused, however, who's blg, strong and fast.
·
to disclose what tlllse violations
"He's bad the only Jreakaway
were.
run we've had, 69 yards, and has
Isaman •s penalty was a one- dolE an excptlonally fine job ·d
game suspension, meaning he wiU gaining ground ," Bruce said d
miss tile game against Alabama tn Bryant, a &amp;-!oot-1, 212-pounder wbo
the Meadowlands, but wUl be wears No. 41, worn the last four
reinstated when tile team returns. years at Ohio State by Keith Byars.
"If there's any phase ct our

first three days we're not In pads.
Then we go back and repetition,
repetition. If you put too many
plays In, you don't get enough
repetitions. Your timing Is all ofl.
"You can't have that In !lfenslve
footbaU. It's got to be 11 things and
they've all got to happen right It's a
dlf!lcult thing to run a total,

quarterback sacks.

Oak IDI Ill Euiern 8
Oak Hl11 wasted Uttle ttme
against smaller Eastern, turning
senior running back David Woods
1ooee down tile rfgbt &amp;Ide line m the
second play tnm scrimmage for a
66-yard touchdown run. Less than
two minutes later, foUowlng an
tnle!cepttoo, smJor back Mark
Boas brokll! a few tackles, racing
for a 2'1·y8f!l score.
floas, four carrtes for 91 yards,
and Woods, ~for-90, combined for
181 t1 tile Oaks 191 net yards on tile
ground.

Junior quarterback EI'E Faye
b:&gt;oked up with junior end Mike
Hale for. a 37-yard scorlDg strike
with more than three minutes

remaining In tile llrst period. Faye,
3-for-4, passed foc a total ct 51 yards.
Eastern struck back on the arm
of junloc Bryan Durst, speart.!adbig a three-play, 55-yard scortng
drtve with tm passes for 73 yards.
The second !I the l~ro went :0 yards
for tile score. Durst hit on 4-ct-9
passes for !8 yards and &lt;liE!
Interception.
Eastern rushed lor 66 yards m23
carries 1n two quarle!s of botbaJ1
!Eiayed by more than !II yards bt
penalties. EHS was pena!IZied six
t1ines for 50 yards while the Oaks
were !llliged three times for 35
yards.
SNinreltenllt Scnltllem 0
Soutwestern used a used oklo- •
fashioned IBR-conlrol ~ense to

slow down much nastier Southern.
The Tornadoes moved the baU weD
In the beginning of the first period
with Its wing-tee, multiple shOtgun
offense. Southern lined up all of Its
backs deep, attempting to disguise
Its play by snipjing tile baU to any
thrEe of Its backs, ~llowed by
muhlple counta-actlon.
~t afteu fumble kUled the first
drive, the Hlgblanden took control
r1 the lllll and marched to tile
Soutilem 20-yard line, only to
fumble tilemselves. On Southwestem's tonQWtng possession, It drove
48 yards, cubntnatlng with loa
22-yard srortng run by se1 r
tallbllck Anlb' Halslop.
The Tornadoes scored again ill
the second period on an llp ard run

by Bmlor haltback Harvey Burnett,
set up by an nta-ceptlon. Southw·

estern rushed 22 times for 131
yards, passing for only nine yards.
Halslop paced the Highlanders'
ground game with 85 yards on 12
carries.

Tornado's Junior Quarterback

Pete Roush carried tbe IBU nine
times for «l yards and sophol'nore
runlngback Danny Gbeen 4 tlr Jl.
Southern totaled Ill :Yards otrense,
all rushing.

NorlbGallla:OS~VIIIeyt
North GaWa bekl ott Symmes

=·on 0:: ~live

H
urt.

I'WIIIIng .!l

sen r
back Richard
flurt rushed 7 times for 192

yards and two touchdowns.

Cmtlnued on C-2

M;orgu. .edges ~· -Marauders, 13-6, in grid preview
.,..m.
. .,
n .., I....
tiP
a

, I

White or lklck

leg. 139,95

STOP IN AND REGISTER FOR A $150 GIFT
CERTIFICATE AND 2 ARAMIS GIFT SETS TO
BE GIVEN AWAY SAT, AUG. 30th.

. AVENUE ' GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

lh~k ·fo·S~hool

Pandora For Fall
,\.,
.,
,...
~.,

&amp;-under and moved to fl.under after
blrdles m the third and fourth IDles.
But be bogeyed after his drive
found a greenslde b.Jnker on the
par-3 fifth, and he dropped a slllt m
the following hole as weD.
Pohl, 31, wiD began the day one
shot back d Hammond at 5-under,
Jiayed the front nine In even-par
and remained at 5- under after 12
holes.
Three slllts dftbe pace was John
Mahaffey at 4-under, while Laney ·
Wadkins (through 13 hOles) was at
3-under and Corey Pavln (14 IDles)
and Massy KuramJto of Japan (13
mles) slood at 2-under.
Grouped at 1-under were five-

.

run.

:Wildcats, Highlanders, Pirates and Oaks score SVAC
grid preview wins; Hurt paces.rushers with 192 yards

SIZES 12 111 TO 5
REG. $19.95 to •24.95

Oxford Shirts

By GENECADDES
UPISporia Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Earle Bruce Wllllted to go record
early. Mistakes"· determine who
wins or loses a football game and
next Wednesday night's clash
between his Ohio State Buckeyes ·
and Alabama In the Kickoff Classic

Hammond recovers ·. after 2 bogeys

NOW!

field comer to score Dlaz and
Larkin. When shortstop Shawon
Dunston elected to. throw home to
attempt to cut down Dlaz, the baU
sailed Into the stands, allowing
Larkin to score.
Cincinnati added Its seventh run
In the fttthonEsasky'ssacrUlcefly.

Mistakes will determine outcome of
. seaso~ , opener Aug. 27, Bruce says

Connon

AT
THE
LAFAYETTE
..,

'

By MICHAEL BURNS
tile complexll&gt;n of the match.
Edberg, the No. 3 seed. "We both
MASON, Ohio (UPI) ·..- Mats
"I think tilere was a very doubtful had to give points away they were
WUander of Sweden reiched tile call when be missed the overbea!l such c~ mistakes. The umpire
final 9f the $375,000 Association of and that took tile edge ofl htn\," should haveoverl-u!ed becau!lethey
Tennis Professionals Champion- Wtlander said of Edberg. "After Wl!'e so clear~ out"
ship Saturday for the fourth that he didn't play well"
_
Edberg plaYed listlessly after
conseeuttve year with an easy
WUander, top-seeded and ranked losing his serve and never seriously
straight-sets victory over fellow No. 2 In tile mrld behind Ivan threatened WUander.
countrymau stefan Edberg.
Lend!, was referring to a polnl In
"I never got In the match.
WUander, who won the ATP In tile' seventh game of the llrst set, a Whatever I dld, the baD just took
1983 and 1984 and was runner-up to game In which WUander . broke off," said Edberg, wbQ has lost six
Boris Becker last year, use:! four Edberg's serve. Wllan!Er barely of etgbt matches against WUan!Er.
service breaks to beat Edberg &amp;4, ~J~ttoalllUbeforettbouncedlorthe
Wllan!Er attrtbuted his success
.. !J In a sk&gt;pplly,played match.
second time l!lld hit a short klb, but at 111; ATP to .playl!!g J,'l),l)dltlons
In tile otlleJ'.II!ffilflnal, No. 2-seed EdiJeri, wbo I!Pilll!'eiQv Celt - . till! .
:.~...
..
Jimmy
was il face No. 9 IBn had bouiJced ~wre, n~ ·~ ~J lllinselt. i'l1'
·
seed Mlkae1 Perntors, anotlll!r overhead.
"It's true the ball flies a lot here.
Swede, in a night match at tile Jack
Earlier, each player had gtven That's why II suits a lllsellneplayer
Nicklaus Sports Center. .I
his opponent a point to make up for because he can return reaDy well
Both Edberg and Wllander said · a call he agreed was wrong.
here. Also my serve gets reaDy fast
some questionable caDs · Changed
"The match started otl rtdlcu· here," he said.
lously with a lot of bad calls," said

992·3671

-~

attemw

Wilander gains A TP finals

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

land's Tony Bernazard 1td8fied the tag oa him
lollowlng a 11tea1
In lhe lourib Inning.
Cleveland weat OD lo win, 5-4. (UI'I)

'

WE ALSO HAVE:

PASIE, IOIDEI AND All
ACCESS OlliS

CHICAGO (UP!) -Nick Esasky
drove In three runs wtth a double
and a sacrifice fly and Eric Davis
doubled home two runs Saturda;o,~,
lifting Tom Browning and the
Cincinnati Reds to a 7-3 vlctoJY wer
the Chicago Cubs.
Browning, 1HO, dtd not walk a
man and struck out five In beating
the Cubs for tile fourtb consecutive
time since last Aug. 25. Browning
lasted 7 2-3 Innings. Ron Robinson
flntshed.
Esasky. who doubled home two
runs In the first Inning off loser Scott
Sanderson, 6-10, has driven In nine
runs In his last five games. Bo Dlaz,
with three hits, extended his hitting
streak to eight games.
Browning lost his shutout In lhe
seventh when Ron Cey hit his 12th
homer. Browning gave up two
more runs In tile eighth on a single
by Bob Demler, a double by Ryne
Sandberg, a sacrlflce fly by Gary
Mattllews and a single by Keith
Moreland.
The Reds struck for three
ftrst·lnnlng runs. Kal Daniels
walked, Buddy BeD singled and
Dave Parker walked, loading the
bases. Davis doubled Inside the
right fteld·ltne, scoring Daniels and .
Bell. When Parker held between
third and home, Davis was cut
down at third. Parker scored on
Dlaz's single.
Clnctnnatt added another threerun cluster In tile third. Dlaz singled
off Sandberg's glove and Barry
Larkin singled up the middle. Nick
Esasky tilen doubled Into the left

•Digital Command remote coo trol
•Broadcast stereo sound system
•Hi-Con'" square-comer 110•
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•Auto-Programming
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~tak

Your questions answered

...

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39 Auxiliary. AmerlCilll Legion, wtllmeel at 7:30p.m. Tuesday
at the post hOme, w. Main St.,
Pomeroy.

;, -;;;;;;:::::::;;;:;::::::;:;::;:::::;:;::;:::::;:;::;:::::;:;::;::=:;~ NOW
'• Your privacy is respected
OPEN
•

'

Auxiliary to meet -

RCA 20" diagonal
ColorTrak Stereo TV

.....

..

Esasky leads Reds by Cubs,; .
Tribe slips. past Boston, 54 :

•

COLOR TELEVISION

Bank dispels myths about agency

~ GALLIPOUS - The Senior salaries. ThatJs afalseassumptlon.
:,O Qtlzens Job Bank ts an employ- The earned wages are paid by the
: rnent agency which gives free employer.
! service to employers and appllThe Job Bank does nol set the
-cants 00 years of age or older. The wages; however, It Is assumed that
:COunselors, Grace Lemley and Kay the employer wiD pay the same rate
: vomholt attempt to get job orders · to a Job Bank appllcant as he or she
·In the community, hopefully for
would pay ID anyone else.
£each applicant
The first full week of August
: 'Many people have the mistaken brought 33 job orders and 29
· Idea tbat Job Bank applicants work placements. The Job Bank )Vel:as unpaid volunteers. Others think comes applicants with any market~that some state agency pays tile
able skiD and solicits job orders

Ortental food markets, health food
store§' and small but growing
number of tofu slllps which produce ll fresh on a nally basis.

'i'imes- ientin.el ·

1987

~

•'

orts

New ·ruisine finding more ways to rut fat in .ydur diet

~

The
. .
Shoe Cafe
,..

Sign up to
win a FlU
pair of """''

.

alii

WOIIIIR'I

........

athletic

'

.'
.,

PeHoa

• ·IDi tht¢

back Mike Bartrum bit IIJlfor

~ack PhU l_{lna With buRet

over'tbemlddli!'mfourthandgoal
ftorn tile . . ~lor Paul DaiJey's
PA1\ kiCk )l'as blOcked.
•
'!"'·TriJIIni· by with live

rnlilulelkl&amp;wlht!Manudendrove
tolhaMorpnalb.itloltlhablllm
ct.lwni a1 tba' tlvo --~only
·to ~ P: r t6otl at tbe RaJdttr 71
two · pilyl later on a ~
ftlmble. ,
, ·..
Melp l!ad first uct lo.at U.l5 '
With OYer I minute to 110. !JUt~
.

advance m further as the Raiders
plcJa!d off Bartrum's fourth down
passat1Jiell. •
Sophomore tailback Jeff MeEtroy led Metas In I'Ushing with 37
yards oiueven canies whlle junior
Scott Wtutams added 26 yardll m
five tries.. Bobby ,Andeuc•• led
Morgan wtth 29 'Yards &lt;11 five
attempta.
King led an .recelvers with six
· ~Idles tor 35 yards Wblle junior
. c:IIN Smith had tWo reoepttom tlr
tl . yardl. · ~I two 'lD
.

.

•.

' palll!ll werehismtycomplettonsln

'five jll!rials. Melga' Bartrum was
.ntnedlllt&gt;r96yards.
. Jwiloil linebacker Steve "n-acey
paced ~lgs In solo tac~ with
four whtle King, senior llnebacker
DennyWelsh,andsenrorsatetyJell
HoodaD,hadthree.
Meigs ~ both II the prellml-.
nary JIIIIJiel, tile frelhman winning
6-0aitd tile rewvs 8-0.
~ tallback Mike Harris
ran three ~. wttb lilly ,ttree
lnlnutea left ill tile 8IUI!eforthe1one
'

touchdown 1n the Melga tra~h win.
DldleCroolcs runfortheextraswas
stq&gt;pedshOrt. .
The Marauder ninth il'aden hid
earlier drtven b tbe me yard .lbie
but Wl!l'e held 011 oo- and IPin
cl'ove to the MoiJiu 18 OI!IY 10
tumble.JamesS.Uwplddedan
ll!terceptloa .lbr J'e'p
rn tile ~ m t 'ml IICOtltl .
pmelietween a P*a(qJIMitLtl

maveteama, qtpaaeWIIII*

Terry ~ldlltltlretl•
Continued 011 C-2
~

.

.,_.lla'
!,lt·, ,
.

----- . ""'•·'
.

•

Jl

�,,

w. Va.

August 24, 1986

.'

·· p~vent$ clean·· S:*e~j$&amp;· ·.

Ex-Marauder gets writeup in·
Ohio Buckeye ·-Sports Bulletin

., .M
.
.
iJercent yet; I DE~d . alltew more sou .o1 AshevWe, N.C., 7-6 (7-5),
bav~toiJiaYvetr&amp;90!i·j.typrolllerit, matches," tile top,~WU.Oder (7;2), and Pl!mtors. lf1e No.5
was tllat'he just plAyed tilo'IIOOCL '' Said altJ!r his &amp;4, 7-6 (7-l) vleti!Jy b~zed -past No. 13" Kevin
'lbetlnal,.t)leloa(aedtoCOOnors, aver ;Emilio .sanchez of · ~. · 6-1, .$-(1: "',
·
the slxth-rinlled ~r In the ''Thls match was great fo,t me. ·n
Edberg and Wllanrerwlll
. SIYedlahOpeniL
~; Connors, will! · wW ,- tace 1w1s ereat·practlce. He mime me thettll!t·semlflnal•
,Connors beat Sweden's Kent Perntilrs hi me· ilemltllla11 lroke . 11111 ,a lot and~~ a lot of balls."
E{!b!!rg rallied from a 4-3
Catllson 7-5, 4-6. 6-1 Frti8y to · CariMon's serve In · the firSt, fifth
Slnch,ez had beaten Wuander, to wtn the llrst lle- breaker 7-5,
.
a Swedish &amp;Weep Iii the !IJI() aeventh g~es orthli,set wblle 'wllq ~ 22 oo Friday, 011 day tile Willdson rontrtbuted to his
o1 til! $3'!5,Wl tooma- w1nn111g hls aer;ve eaeMiine.
last lw();tljnes theY had played.
lUidolng In the second tl~~:~~:
at tile Jack Nlcklall!l Sports
Wllander, raill!leil second. In the
"1\oty b!g fault t()j!ay was that I which· Edberg \WII 7-2, by
world and ieeklng .Ills tblrd ATP didn't mak,e volleys·well," Sanchez faulting tl1/lce.
In the ~. Mats WI- title Ill ~ years, .Said he .still Is said. "Aboun:s.;~ vdleys,were the . ·. Perntors, a finalist at the Frenc~
~ Edberg 81ld Mlkael • teellr!g the effects of a thtee-week
difference In tile
"
.. Open this year, said his ab~ty.
-aUSwedes--~· thelr
break ·~ took pmr tn the ATP.
In the tther
return.CuiTen's boomll1g serve
to adv~ to .!04aY's
''I 'don't thlDk I'm playing 100
the difference In the match.
.

I. •

By~ BUBNS
' MASON, Ohio .(UPI) ~I(~ for
.Jiriuby Connors, the A8110datlon d
'l'e!lnls Pnte&amp;lnaiS ~nablp woulll have become the
.

·--·-"
~&amp;m.

::~n·s
reserves
dfove
to the Meigs

(Vanity Game)
Morgan
0 13 - 13
Meigs
6
o_ 6
DIIPARTMI!M'

MG MN
7
Flnlt D!wro . .... .. ....... ... . . .. .. .. 10

iardl nmhlllg.. .·· · ·
~y~~::::::
Pasa attempts.. .....

promptly
11 before

... ·

...

::::::::: : :::
·... .....

92

B1

J: I~&gt;

(The following story waa originally published In the Budteye
Sports lluDelln by Columbuia Spolts
PubllcatioM of COOnnbu!l, Ohio).

BY DAVE WArt1U.8
On the morning that Mike
Chancey signed a letter o11ntent to
play football at The Ohio State
University, he got a blgsmUeanda
wink from one of his best frtends at
Meigs High School.
That might not sound so odd,
cott•ldering Chancey, a 6-5, :m
!XlUnd athlellc standout, left the
rural southeastern Ohio sc!iOOI with
a host of football and basketball
records. However, this particular
frtend also happened to be Mike's
football coach and his father,
Charles Chancey.
"It was a great leeUng," said
Mike, who became the first Ohio
State football rECruit In the brief
history of Meigs High, which was
created as a ronsolldatlon of
Pomeroy, Middleport and Rutland
high schools In 1967. "Dad wasn't
there In tile room ~whole time,
but he stuck his head In and gave

For' M'ore Inform·at•' on Call

1

before the match I had.to do as the
otllers did," tbe 18- year-old Carls-

1

61 4.6 98•61 ·89

Harry! Ule Low. Prlee S•eelal
End• Auga•. tIt
r

A
. L. CLI.NE

"They(tbeolhe~Swedes)loldme

a·.u· ILD.IRS ,.

:' .:=r down pass with n1ne seconds ~~=~=·~=':=:~: :~: ~: :~: ~: :~: : : : : : : : : : : : : :f·8lii:_:r-44:iii::::::;;;son~s~ald;;ot;tlle=lr~vJC=to
:
:r;t:es:._"I:t~w=as=a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
:; Score by quarta's:

:-

1-

(Frmlman Game)

Morgan ................... ...o

-~ ..................... ...0

:·

o- o
6-6

(ne-ve Game)
0
8

140rgan

.·

Meigs

0- 0
0-0

Wildcats ...
Continued from C·l
::Til! Pirates drove ro yan~s tor the
~reon' their qJelling)Xlssesslonas
;Jinlor AIDback David RDush buDed ·
~Wer from one-yard out Symmes .
~ matched that with a drive of
Qlelr own as senior rumlngback
,Silane Meadows scampered In
!rom tile five-yard lhre. .
: -Lessthan two minutes later, Hurt 1
broke·' up the middle and raced 00 .
Yllfds for tile' soore, alasling and
~ftlng his way throug!l tile VIking
!iMlndary.
.. •
, Neltller squad could muster a
. scoring attempt unlfi Symmes
Valley drove to the North Gallla
• 16-yard line, only i&gt; lose t1Vf ball on
; qowns with a Uttleover two minutes
- mnatnlng.
: • : On tile bllowlng play, Hurt ~t
; ~ IICI'immage out of reach,
•lll'J'ektng outside and dasilng Ill
: )'ilrds for the srore. Hurt's lndlvld: lfll:rushlng ttta~ w tgalned au a: tile
. otber teams Involved tile p-evlew.
: His teammate, Roush, rushed for 3'l
~ yards on 12 carrtes.
. Symmes Valley was led on the
: ground, 152 yards total, by junior
• Dani\Y Craft, eight C8ITies for iii,
·• junior Deland BIYII!I t, 8-for-44, and
· MeadoiW, 6-for-43. Both teams
: ~pleted their ooJy attempted
.: pas8 for four yardS.

•

'

\castror

: the Standard
: ~ performance

(

:
_
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' · : ~Frlday,justfourmenandfour
; ~ were selected Friday In
:· ~trial as attorneys spamd
• IP.I'tberaclalmakeuprJ.thepanel.
~ 1be ethniC rnakeupdthe panel1 ..wa.blacks and one Hiapanlc : provoked criticism by delmse
' lllb'lle'Y Alan Hirshman, woo
: ~ the prosecufun was seek: 1M tolaeep whites, ~Italian
· · ~~~~~~, ctr the jury.
:·''EI'I!!Y white juror Is being
~."Hirshman charged. Pep, Jeoae IDd Thomas Carbone, 51, are

: Jt.lfan.
.- •

•

Steering Wft,eel
Cover .sate 1.00

,'

Inkster takes
2-shot lead
ABSECON, N.J, (UPI) - Jllll
lnltlter, playing ID till lJ&gt;GA
lnaiiJUI'Il Atiailtlc City CluAc at
lhe,!ltavlew CowKry Club,.calftl
the Wl\'8 com~~~~.
''I've 801 tile adrenalln ADillg
apln," laid lltklter, 91JMI&amp; to
replll &amp;ale bm lllat 11tr two
LPGA ewn!J In Pw!lnsy!Y8nta
during Julie.
'1'm pretty rnucll Of a mornentllm plAyer," In!IJW IBid F'rlda)'
after flrlat a 4- UDder-par Q to take
a ~ stroke lellll after tbt nnt
round.
judy DlcklDioo, A)'alro Okamoto
rt Japan, Jaae Geddes, Deb
Richard aDCJ. Pl!any Pulz lft'l'e lied
tor setOIId at II. C.Illy Mone, Bl1tb
Daniel, Val Skinner fllld Patti Rllzo
were at ro, while LeAnn Qls1111day
and Laurie Rlnkrr Wlft at 71. four
strokes beldnd the leacWr at even

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, CllEVELAND (UP!) - The
Oeveland Browns actlvat~ tllll
,;ormer U.S. F,ootball League pfay.
ers Friday; wide receiver- punt
letumer Gerald McNeil and llnbac-

aker Mike Johnson.
The Browns also obtained defensive end Casey Merrtll from the
New York Giants for an lUidlsclosed
draft choice.

zn

te·
Season Football Tickets
You could win the crand prize of two , ..aon tieketa for the 1986 Ohio State home foctball Haaon .
Amon1the excitin11ames on thi•·year'a ala~ areccintesta with 1985 bowl game participants Colorado,
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befort eiid after the1ame, or $15 worth of y0ur fovorile aport.l publications from Buekeye Book and
News or The Neyutend, your aporll naditil headquarters.
Win or IOH, you can havea 50-yardline aeatforalltheOhio State football aetion, home end ewey1a1
well 11 enjoy coverare of the baoketball Bucktyea and all the other rreat OSU teama by tek1ng
advan111e of ont of thnupeclel trial offen. .Yo~tcan trY lix trial iuuea of BSB fo: iuot $4. Or~flioy 16
iuuet or Buekeye Sporll Bulletin for S8 (that'a 60t alllatue). For maxtmum IBVInftl, try 321UUH of
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• Personality profi!es and interview&amp;
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SUBSCRI~TION AND CONTEST ENTRY.fq~

.. pu1i1k untD cla.saes resume on ·
; . ·~. Sept. il, a rollege spQires: 1111111 saki today. A new lchedule
: W@lbe!IU~attllattlmefotthe
, . pool. 'M!IIIrt room and handball

10.oiloff

Bedilats

...

l court.

Comlco·

••

rtuclrfOol

I

liD, H: lcWo Vlllley; lost to ic1otG Valley 1-1, then
file iiRIIIe ellmlna&amp;llm even&amp; wiUt a 6-3 vtctocy
Mel'&amp;-. Valey In 11 fnalnp ~ ahove, llrst

Ticket Speetaeular.

'.

'

Gama All-Stars

Here'a 1 ehaneeto eave big money on a trialsubieription to Buekeye Sporu Bulletin, theleadinr aouree·
for Ohio Slate Univenityoporta infonnation·- and automatically be entered in BSB'a SuperSeaaon

·;,. Center
closed
.
I

'

~toW .

... ...... "

? • NEW YORK (UPI) -Despite E
.~ ~lay caused by the absence d cne
• clefendant, and amidst the crush rJ.
• riledta eager to cover fonner
;. YU!Iees star Joe Pepitone, a judge
~. Jll!llhed ahead with celebrated drug
:; IDd weapons trtal with a tongue-ln~J €!Jeek order lor "Lights, action,

team by running the 100-meter

dash, a leg of the 400 relay -which
also set a schoOl record- ltgh
jumping and throwing the soot put.
Switching back to the task at
hand - earning a soot oo the
Buckeye football roster - Chancey
ooncluded, "WW I be another Art
SchUchter, Mike Tomczak or Jim
Karsatos• I don't know. I know that
I'm definitely excited about ~-"

·1-

ALL STAR CiiAMPJoNI! - fte

_. &amp;lie JJ88 We..._ U1e I.eacue AB-&amp;ar
Tuw
ra:eally. Galla beatheMon, ~2; Rock

Browns
activate two USFL players
•'

Seiii1C,Itmlt ~

Ute model GM ippllcatlona

lltg. 5U8

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A«• mtr'l NIIIM

For moei appllclllont

ofa. school-rErord3,~yardsand29

,.

72.._

Starters
&amp; Alternators

Buckeyes) do."
Over his celebrated career,
during which Meigs posted a 22-7-1
mark, Chancey passed to the tune

.

Chancey, he admitted tllat !be 1are
of a rolleglate basketball cara!r
was also quite appealing. An
all-state selectkln following tile
1985-&amp;l cage season, O!ancey also
departed Meigs High wJlh nearly
all the school's key basll!tball
records.
'
Leading the Marauders to tla!lr ·
best mark In hlstory-23-2 and a
dlstrtct ru!Uler-up spot-Mllre averaged 17.4 points per game and Z .7
rebounds. '!'he Southeastern Dfs.
trtct Co-Player d. the Year, accurd·
lng to the Associated Press, Cllancey reigns as Meigs' tcp caner
scorer (1,078 points) and reboun&amp;!r
(~) . as well as the school's best
rebounder lor a single seasoo (346
hls senior year) .
''I got a a lot of poone calls and a
lot ci mall for msketball," wbo
listed Wittenberg and Marietta
(Division ill schools) as the two
cage oontenders for his services. "I
really considered basketball until
the end of my junior year."
Walt. That's not all. Just for tile
"tun" of!t, Mike also threw In a pair
of varsity letters In track and one In
baseball, bringing his grandtltal rJ.
prep letters to nine. · Skipping
mseball hls senior year, Chaacey
helped out the Marauder tr.ck

:and

Alter mlr'l rebate and IIOIIUI

Hll '"lll~

... ---·- -·-

threw about as much as they (the

touchdowns. In addition, he com·
pleted 168 of ll4 tosses for a school
accurscy mark ollil.5 percent.
"I €!!joyed Ita tot," said Chancey,
woo also entertalned-ix&gt;tball schcJ.
larshlp ofi!n from Marshall, Ohio
u. and West VIrginia before he
chose a;u. "It was nloe for me
because. when we (be and his
father) were at borne, he could
soow a new play 1D !Tlf!-wbere he
wouldn't be able to do that with the
other kids. He wasn't tougher on
me, wt he wasn't easter.
"Probably one d. tile best things
he had going was his relationship
with the kids," Chancey continued.
"Ju~ talking with til! other kids all
the time made It easy. He has a lot
of !belt respect-tlley'll listen to
him. If they had a problem, he
would try to help them."
Now Chancey has begun the
me a smile."
challenge of trying to help ensure
"I liked all tile otller schools that tbe future success of the football
contacted me," continued Chancey. Buckeyes. Also a tight end for one
who has been assigned UD!fonn season, Mike, woo has been clocked
·number 24 with the Buckeyes, "but at 4.7 1n tile 40-yard dash, tied a
they're not Ohio State. I've always Meigs .-ecord with 25 rreeptlons for
been an Ohio State !an, and I :m yards aJ!d t'Ml TO's.
realized at the end of JOY junior
Buckeye assistant ooach Steve
year that I had a shot at making It. Devine thinks Chanrey has a bright
It was like a dream come true."
future with the team.
Chancey made the most of his
"Hopetl!Uy, we have a great
opportunity by utilizing his many career In the ctt1ng for Mike," said
lalents to tile fullest during the Deylne, who recruited Chancey.
1.985-86 school year-both on the . ·"He's a yoling man from a winning
gridiron and the basketball C?urt. football team that we:ve observed
With hls fatller calllng the soots tor a couple rJ. 'Y!!ars. We're'll1Pre
frOm the sidelines and Mike calling ·• aware of his ablllty more aii an
the signals, the Meigs Marauders • athlete than as a football player. If a
fellonevlctoryshortd.aTri-Valley quartel'back Is a poslfun he does
Conference title and a perfect not lind satlsfactoJy, we tee! he can
seaJOn with a 9-1log.
.
help us anywhere he wants to. Our
AD Chancey did du~ his last phllosopbyatqhloStalefl!oottotell
RfeP tung was UP, m81ly of the people where.tii!Y're'going to play.
school fe~Xl~.'ds., he set the previous we,fly and reciult quality young
seasoo. Chanej!y t11rew the fl!tll 138 men to a spot tll!y would like to
~. ~ta!lilshlng · new .records start and quarterback Is a place
. with !N, .:OmpletiOns (a school- he's like to start."
reCord 68 percent accuracy rate),
Perhaps Chancey, noted ·for his
: 1,417 yards, apd 17 tpuchdowns.
overall athletic abiHtles, could wind
: In addlt!on;•·hJs two Interceptions .~ at anolhEir jJoSitkm.
~du~ t~J!! 1985season..,...a!ter whlch , "I would hope to start out as
·::he wali named on both wire servk,'e quarterback at 0hk&gt; State, but If
.=au-state .squads-were the fewest that doesn't worlt out, I could
~ever In a season by a Marauder possibly move to tlgbt end," said
• quarterback.
Chancey. "I was pretty strtct this
::. "Weworkedhardlnpractlce,but summer with lifting welgbts and
! we had tun," claims Chancey, who rurinlng."
j-eSides In the arnaU Ohio town of "It's deflnltely hlgh-quallty foot·
~se. "Dadand~h- (Earle) ball/' Chancey added, concerning''
::Bruoe are comparable when It the transition he'll have to make
!comeS to discipline. Dad was strtct, from high school to !lie wars of the
Coach Bruce seems Iii be the Big Ten. "Youlhlnkabouttllelevel
;same way. But, you have to he and you think about whether or not ,
: wheh you play at that level of you'll get to play. I just plan to work
. football.
hard and see what happens."
" "On offense," he continued,
Although the choice It Ohio State
.• "they're slightly comparable. We football was an easy one for

1.

matchbybreaklngConnors'serve

In the·lOth game of Ule aecond set.

Lm !Umble! ......................... ...

.

'

.. .. l!ll

~~iiY·:::::::::::::::::::::::::
: ;1
F\tmbles .. .. .. .. ...... .. .. .. .. ...... .. .... 2

iulmlllg out
of downsreached
and In the
jWUimg
tmments
the
·:l~Jeigs 22 before Oller lnleroepted a

·'&lt;'

Connors had never before con· .
tended with Carlsson's exaggerated toPspin shots.
.
"I s~ well then let up a bit
and ended up In a struggle,"
Connors said. ''In the end, I began
playing like I did In the beginning. I
was hitting the ball firm, getting to
the · net and playing more
aggressiVely."
Connors squandered a 5-1 lead
and two set points In the llrst ·set
before hanging
to win
It 7the
-5.
Carlsson,
the No. on
9 seed,
evened

Continued from C-1

.....,..esslon !rom two yards rut,
~pplng a flawless 14-play, 73 yard
e. Sop!Klmore quarterback
$mtt Nelgler fired Ill Sllpoomore
•!""lnts
!fld Kevin Oller for the two extra

•

Jolre. :r'D ,beat Cpnpqrs 'YOO

. ' Connors, tile No. 2 seed, SRtd he
clldn't think about the pi'ospe\."1 of
·aJI.Swedlsh semlflnals. .
"A lot of the tans were cheering
him (Carls!lln), maybe they'd
like all Swedes," COOnors said.
"But there will be asellootlnyway.
The Pf10Ple just come out to'see good

~UP YARDAGE...:. Melp' Wes Howard, liiPbomote.~lblcl&lt;,
(II) picks up10111e y8l'lll ~IOIId tioddngdudng Frllla.Y's~lew
('&gt;!' 'ed qalnlll )lforpa, Makmg laelde-ilr lhe villl4ll's IB defesislve
llll(e&amp;y BrlaaMoore (81). Ou rlghiiBMelp'DIIIIII.l' WeiBII,SIIIIDrtaclde.

•gs
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•

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0 ·*'-00.-ll 'l ln..

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•
Gallipolis, ·Oh.
~

C Sirn mtup foia1rlal .oubocription to thi Buckeye Sporta BulloUn ·and euillq&gt;AIIC'ai!Y ,
anllr ..,. In the cOIIIMllllldOit I
(0 chock h.,. IL renewal.)
•

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SPORTS M.IMS
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.. :

·Raide~s ·defeat:-,: ~,

Patriots;.Sieel.ers·.
thurrip coW.~ors .
By Unital ~..-It

By ROBERro DIAS
UPI llporfl Writer
AKRON, Ohio (UPI) -Donnie
Hammond and Dan Pohl, front·

an

•

.. . I afl.Ci;abfla,,•

runners at the World Sei1es d Golf,
have little to contribute to the
controversy generated by the $1
mWion renovation of the Firestone
Country Club's greens.
"There's no reference point for
me, since this ts tile first Ume rve
quallfted for the World Series of
. Golf," said HaiT\IIIond, J\Oltng that
many tn the 43-man field have
criticized the changes that have
resulted tn ridges and undulations
on the putting surlaces.
"I never played here before, so I
don't know what all the fuss ts

.
..

~~~.~RickWOQdfran ·

back iD ~ta ceptkltt 3JI )'lll1!l tor a
~ • . and :l$r;wv 'Hinkl.li .
~· tleki\OI)'II'y andraCed65 ' .
yirds;.f!l!" allotber ICOre ·to -~ ,
. PlttiWJ'II! ,to a X-1411alftln\e lead.
1be ll'hllilpb Wlli tlle Steelerls llrlrt
In tlln!e erdllbltiOn gami!i, wiWe.tW
Cowt»yt . ren 10 04. HersCbei ·
W.alla!r,llped by the Cowboys tWo
weeki aao•.. did not suit up for the
game. · The former Helsman
Trophy wtnner Is expeotecl to see ·
his 4rst NFL .:tloD ID-DaDas' fiDal i:
exhibition pme against Houslllll

.I

,f,.'tt~

next week.

!leabaN n, Vlldnp 17
At Seattll!, rookie Sean 8allsbucy
!Ira! a 57-Yard IICXIrlng pass to
Byron Franklin and Nann Jolmson
1\ICked a 31- yud !leld goal In the
fourth QUarter to 1IJt the Seahawks.
SaiJBbucy, a • tree qeut from
So!lthem C81, completed 6-d-9
passes for 00 yards as Seattle
Improved to 2-1. Minnesota sutrered
Its first loss In three erchlbttlon
games.
1D other training camp news:
-At MIDneapoUs, VIkings quarlerback Tommy Kramer has been
sued by creditors .and two fonner
business par1ners aDegtng he failed
10 repaydebtsandtllegallydlverted
business assets from a newspaper
he owned. A lawyl!l" for two d
Kramer's business partners said In
court Thursday that Kramer used
funds from !be VIking Report to
- buDd a swimming pool at his home
and to lease an aulolnobUe.
- Bu!!alo held out quarterback
Continued on C.S

Will televise six MAC games in fall
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Na. tlonal Sports Productions of Denver
·. lias agreed to televise a package d

· stx Mid-American Conference foot·

: baD games beginning Sept.~. MAC

·: Commissioner Jim Lessig said.
: ; The first broadcast wU1 be
: · !Jetween BoWling Green at Central
·: Michigan, Lessig announced
· 'nlursday.
Each d the nine MAC schools wU1
appear on television, he said.
The amount of money the league
will receive wU1 depend on the
amount of advertising that Is sold,
said Allen Chamberlflt,' the MAC's
director of Information.
ctne-Vtd Enterprises of New
York, NSP's production unit, wUI
: prodUce the games, which lave the

TRAilS BY ONE - Dan
Pohl, crt Carefnle, Ariz. reacts
after hltllng his lee shot on the
IBth to the · rlghl In Friday's
BeOODd I'OUDd action of the IDIIII
World Series ol GoU at Akron.

about."

_

Pohl echoed time sentiments.
"I can't make any comparisons
either," he said. "But I'll say this:
with a couple of exceptions, I think
the greens are tine. I'm sure Donnie
would agree."
Hammond roUed In a 15-foot
bt.rdte putt on the closing hole
Friday to take a one-shot lead over
Pohi after two rounds of the $'100,00J
event.
Hammond's 2-under'par 68 fol·
lowed an opening 66 and gave him a
JG.hole total of 6- under 134. Pohi
Improved to 66 after a first-round 69
and was at 5-under 135.
"Maybe Dan and I are plaYing
"'ell because we have no _pl'EConcetved notions about Ftresrone,"
Hammond said of the par-70,
7,139-yard layout. "We should be
more itmtd, but we don't know any
better."
Lanny Wadkins shot his second

straight 68 to stancf two shots back
at 136. JQeY Sindelar and John .
Mahaffey ·each shot 66 to move to
3-under 137'
Massy Kurarroto of Japan {6870) and David Ishii (67-71) we.re at
rn along with Bernhard Langer of
West Germany. Leading moneywinner and Brtttsh Open champion
Greg Nonnan of Australia {fi8.71)
and Corey Pavln {70-QI) stood at
139.
Fifteen players were at par or
better af'.er 36 holes, as Saturday's
round began. CBS televised the
third round and wUt air the fourth
round on a national basts.
Hamrrond,29,o!DaytonaBeach,
Fla., bogeyed the first hole, but
rebounded with three successive
birdies.
"I made putts when I had to,"
said Hammond, who quatuted by
wtnnfng the Bob Hope Chrysler
Classic tn Januacy ~t has played
S(XlttUy since desti.te winning
$225,1ll3 to date. "But If I'm gotn'g to
stay near the lOp, I have to keep
making those putts."
Hammond bogeyed the w ·315th
when he pulled hts tee shot, but
skied a 9-tron to 15 feet oo 18 and set
up the wtnntng putt.
Pohi, a 31-year-old native d Mt.
Pleasant, Mtch., woo CJ!altfted with
a victory In the Colonial Invitation
In mid-May, had five birdies and
ooly dropped a soot when he threeputted the 18th.
"I'm going to have to d.rtve the
hall a lot better If I'm g~&gt;tng to stay
In contmtton," said Pohi, who has
four top 10 finishes In 19 events this
year and has POCketed S314.563 for

the best ttruuictal soo~g of his

By MIKE TULLY
· Detroit catchel' Mike Heath said.
UPI N_..,allllaeball Writer
"When you call for a pitch, It's right
TheDetrott:I'Igerscanfallsmrt there, And when he' misses,: he
In tl1e American League East and mtsses Inside or away."
stW l!llll!lge with an Impressive
Mike Morgan, 9-13, took the toss.
consolation prize.
1D the fifth, Lou Whitaker walked
The 'I1gers quite possibly have and was forced by Alan Trammell,
deVI!Ioped the best rookie pitcher In woo reached second wheo second
Jhe league. Er1c King, 22, pitched a baseman Harold Reymlds threw
,four-hitter Friday night, ralsiDg his wildly to first In a double play tcy.
Tiger Stadium recol'd to 5-0 and
" It was a routine double play,"
leadlngDetrolttoa4-lvtctoryaver Wtlllams said. "Then he made a
the Seattll! Mariners.
·
poor pitch to Grubli after that."
"ID my opinion," Detroit pitching
Kirk Gibson struck out but Grubb
coach BtDy M11f!ett said, "he's the lined a 3-2 pitch to center to break a
premier young pitcher tn this H tie. Darrell Evans walked and
league, without a doubt He has an Darnell Coles singled to center to
rutstandlng arm. I enJoy watching score Grubb.
him plich."
1D other games, Boston defeated
"Against us," Seattle Manager aeveland 6-3, New York downed
pt.ck Wllll!lms said, "he's been Cy Oakland 3-2, Baltimore overtook
Young. He's iletped them a lot."
California 8-7, Kansas City trtpped
King, 9-J, walked two and struck Milwaukee 4-2, Minnesota shaded
wt !our. The only run off the Toronto 4-3 and Texas routed
right-hander came In the fourth Chicago 11-3.
·when Scott Bradley tied the score
1D the National League, It was:
1-1 with his fourth home run of the bucago 3, Cincinnati 2; Pittsburgh
season.
16, Atlanta 5; St. Louts 6, Houston 5;
"Hts location ts vecy good," Philadelphia 4, San Otego 1; Los

career.
"My Irons baUed 11)1! mt a oouple
d times."
AttEr birdies on the second and
third holes, Pohldrovepoorly(ll the
lOth and 13th IDles but recovered to
sink bfrdte jlltts of lour and 14leet.
He also birdied the 17th.
U.s. Open cliamplon Ray100nd
Fbyd, woo co-led the first round
with Hamrrond and Mark Wiebe,
-soared to a 4-over 74 to tte flve-ttme
World Sertes winner and rurrent
Masters champion Jack Nicklaus
(71.00) at even-par 140.
Wiebe faltered to a 75anda l-over
141. Defending champion Roger
Maltbie soot a 70 and Is at 4-over

144.
Bob Tway, wiD won the PGA

Championship two weeks ag~&gt;, ts at
G-over 146 after rounds of 74-72.
The :5th anntversaryoftltsevent
ts sponsored by NEC. Sunday's
winner wilt earn $126,o:xJ.

Named a!l!!istanl
SEATILE (UP! ) - Former
Kent Siate 1asststant track coach
Bob Otrando has been named
assistant women's track coach at
Washington and wW begin hts new
duties Sept. 1, Huskies athlet!c
oftictals satd Tuesday.
Otrando, 30, specializes In field
and multi-event athletes, said Mike
Lude, Washington athletic director.
Prior to his one-year sttnt at Kent
State, Otrando was an assistant
coach at Brown for a ,season.

Angeles 2, Montreal lin 10 Innings
and NeW York 5, San Francisco 3.
Rec1Sox6,ln4!••3

At Cleveland, BW Buckner
gre~~ted reliever Scott Banes wttha
two-oot, bases-loaded single that
droVe In two runs tn the seventh,
keeping Boston six games ahead of
the field•In the East. The Red Sox
have won au eight of their games
against the IDdlans· this season.
Yaollees3,A's2

At New York, WUUe Randolph
singled home Rickey Henderson
from thlrdbasewtthnoneoutln the
eighth Inning, ooattng Oakland.
Dennis Rasmussen, 134, went eight
Innings for New York. Dave
Righetti pitched the ninth for hts
30th save. Joaquin Andujar, 7-6,
took the loss.
Orioles 8, Angels 7
At Baltimore, Fred Lynn
oounced a double oft the glove of
third baseman Doug DeCinces to
srore John Shelby and cap a
five-run eighth, raUylng the Orioles
past Caltfomta. Rich Bol'dl, 5-2,
pitched 12.Jtnntngsforthevtctocy,
which snapped Baltimore's four·

rudor pitches, -bats C:a rds to.
Win over first place.Houston
"Hts ann didn't hurt him and
ByBILLWOUE
that's encouraging," Lanter said r1
UPI Sporill Writer
St. Louis Cardinals starter John Ryan. "He had a good fastball but
Thdor's only concern about his he overthrew his-breaking ball and
httttng Fni!IY night Is that It puUed g~&gt;t oohind batters that way."
out his own victory. ·
The Cal'dlnals took a 3-2 lead tn
the
!ltth on an RBI double by Curt
Tudor delivered two run· scoring
Ford.
sjngles to )lelp win his own game as
tile St. L4lUis Cardinals notched a0.5
St Louts blew the game open with
"'ctory over the Hwston Astros.
a three-run sixth. CUnt Hurdle ted
· "Both of his hits were cheaples . cit with a double and rroved up oo a
but they eounted," St. Louts groundout 10 set up Tudor's bloop
rpanager Whitey He:rmg said. "We single over a drawn-In Infield. Ryan
~~some cheap hits ln .the game but
walked VInce Coleman and gave
way to AW'Iillo l..Qpez, who walked
we needed them aD."
• 1\idor, 13-6, outlasted Nolan Oz:zte Smith. Tom Herr forced
Smith, srorlng Tudor, and short~yan, ~. for the victory. Thdor
1!1-lched Into the eighth tnntng, stop Dickie Thon overthrew first,
allowing nine hits while strtklng out
allowing Coleman to come home.
Todd Worrell notched his
1D other garlles, Pittsburgh
~ save despite atlowlng a blasted Atlanta 16-5, Chtcag~&gt; edged
~run.
ptnch-htt homer to OnciDnatt 3-2, New York beat San
Francisco 5-3, Los Angeles~
~ Walling In the ninth.
, "I'm a pitcher, not a hitter," Monti"EIIl 2-1 In 10 IDntngs, and
't'udor said. "What I did was just Philadelphia topped San otego 4-1.
ll)cky. I hit a cmpper and a blooper
lD the Amertcan League It' was:
!!!Ill managed to drive In two runs, New York 3, Oakland 2; Boston 6,
Cleveland 3; Detroit 4, Seattle 1;
that's au. It was luck.
: "I bad good stu!! for the first five Baltimore 8, C8Ufomla 7; Texas 11,
Chtcag~&gt; 3; Minnesota 4, Toropto 3,
Umlngs," Tu4or noted of his
and
Kansas City 4, Milwaukee 2.
Ditching·petforrnance. ''Then rny
Plratei 16, Braves S
TJl _~tt(fened \Ill sollll!- I reaDy
At Pittsburgh, Sid Bream Wellt
wasn't tired when l came wt."
' HO\IIIon manager -Hal wier 5-for·5 with five Rln, tnclud!Dg two
sj11d Tudor "hit them where we In an !!lght·run sixth IDnlng, to key,
the vlctocy over Atlanta. , The 16
-reren't.''
• Ryan pitched 5 1-3 lnljlngs tn runs and 19 hits repi'I!Sented season
tiylng tor his ~ career Vlctocy. . highs for the Pirates. The winner'·
He allowed seven hits and threw was Jim Wtnn, 3-5. The loser was
tllree wild pitches. He struck out stx Rick Mahler. 11-13.
but walked five.

'

standings.
Prior to the trophy presentations
by the host club, all yru ng g~&gt;lfers
were treated to a oookout
GaWa's squad was sponsored by
area supporters.
During the summer mont)ls,
Gallta 's iuntor gQif squad . won
numerous mmrs In the Tri·County
League. Saunders . won low gross
honots and Meadows loW net
honors during the MGM actio~ this
year.

ALL MOWERS

· By Udell Press lnteruatlonal
Brad Kommtnsk belted a twonin homer that highlighted a
siX-run first Inning and Charlie
P).tleo pitched a four-hiller tn the
first · game, 10 help lead the
Richmond Braves to a doubleheader sweep d the Rochester Red

and READY TO GO!
.. We Service Whal
We Sell"

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

Mets 5, Giants 3
At San Francisco, Mookte WUson
delivered a t\ro-oot, two- run single
In the fourth Inning, leading the
Mets. D.vtght Gooden, 134, went 8
2.:1 IDnlngs for the victory. He
aDowed 10 hits and struck out
seven. Roger . McDowell retired
Chris Brown for·his 15th save. VIda
Blue, 9-8, took the loss.
Dodgel'!l Z, Expos 1
At Los Angeles, Jeff Hamilton
broke an ().for-21 slump with a
single to lett with the bases baded
and none out In the bottom of the
lOth to drive IDme Enos CabeU with
the decisive run against Montreat
Ken HoweU, 5-8, was the winner.
nm Burke fell !0 8-5.
PhUlles 4, Padres 1
At San.I;&gt;jego, rookie left- bander
Bruce Rul!bj Rlfd!ed a seven''hltter
and Glenn.WUson drove In two runs
to lelid PhU!IIIelphla. The romplete
~ was the fifth In 12 starts for
Rut!ln, 6-3, woo was caDed up from
Reading, Pa., of the AA Eastern
League June 26. Ed Wht!!Dn, 1-6,
has bst tour straight.

Wings, 6-4 and 3-2, Friday night In
Richmond, Va.
1D the nightcap, ptnch·hltter Bob
Tumpane lined a two-out RBI single
In the eighth Inning to drive home
Dale Hollman with the winning run.
Nate Snell, 2-2, walked home the
tying run will} two outs tn tile
bottom d the seventh.

t

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Sl'l 0

Ro;Yalsf,Brewers2

At Mllwau~. Danny Jackson
tllfew a fou.r·hltter aver 8 z. 3
Innings, giving up only one hit after
the fourth, to lead Kansas City.
Jackson, 9-11, feUooe rut short cthts
second romplete game d the
season. Dan Quisenberry retired
ooe batter tor hts 11th save. Loser
Juan Nieves, 1().6, lasted 4 2.:1
Innings.
Twms f, Blle Jays 3
At Minneapolis, Greg Gagne hit
two rome runs and drove In tour
runs to lead the Twins' defeat of

Scioto

•

JIM BILL'S

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SINCE T933

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVI(E "
446-2362

Downs

SALES:
Industrial V- Belts
Lawn Mower V- Belts
Automotive V-Belts
Electric Motors
Fan Blades
· Fuses
Regulators

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Donora Hanover posted a lifetime
best clocking of 1: 58 2-5 for the mile
In wtnntng the featured ninth race
pace Frtd!IY night at Scioto Downs.
'l'he 3-year-old, d.rtven by Herb
Caven Jr.,ledalmost from the start
to beat out West Chester Lady by a
half·length. Mttey Miss Judy finIshed third.
Donora Hanover paid $3.00 to
wtn.
The track's Super Bet continued
to grow as no one picked the 4-7 24
l(}J-4 oombtnatlon Friday night.
The Jackpot grew to $72,669.
A crowd of 6,000 wagered
$471,121.

Beari.ngs
Pump Seals
Capacitors
Brushes
Couplings
Pulleys

·,_

ELECTRICAL REPAIRS:
Banery Chargers
Small Welders
Motor Control~

Electric Motors
Water Pumps.
Aireators

··.

AUTOMOtiVE ELEC. REPAIR:
Alternators
Generators fTractorl

Starters
Troubleshoot Wiring
.' .

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ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE FINANCING.
10

Po-"Y• OH.

·;foorrnoffy Modom Suoply"

PH. 992-21U

AS LOW A$

..

Toronto. Bert Blyleven, 13-10, scat· snapped a 2-2 tie wjth .a two:~
tered seven hits aver seven Innings double tn the fourth Inning and ~f.Ole
tor the vtctocy. Jim Clancy, 13-7, IDme 10 Ignite a stx-run ~lh;
took the loss tor -the Blue Jays, woo leading the Rangers' victorY ai(er .
fell tnto fourth place, a half- game Chicago. Jeff Russ!!ll, 5-2, gave,'Jp
behind third-place Detroit.
just one hit tn bur tnntngs of re)jef,
Ranl~Jln 11, White Sox 3
striking out two and walking~·
At Arlington, Texas, Gary Ward Floyd Bannister, 7-10, took the • ·
,..----------------------~
.".

1n the opener, the Braves had
already struck for four runs when
Komm1nsk connected. df John
Habyan, 12-7, tor his 13th mmer.
Habyan lasted one-third of an
Inning and gave up au stx Richmond runs. After retiring the first
hatter, Habyan yielded five ronsecuttve singles and then the rome run.

The Stori With "AH Kind• of Stuff'' - lor Petl, Stablao,
Lorge • SmoK AJ!jmoil • Lowno and Gerdono

CHEVY 5·1 0 PICKUPS

game bs!Dg streak. Don Aase
mtched hi$ nh save.

loss.

Richmond wins two over
Rochester
'

SET UP, SERVICED

:

Cubs 3, Reds 2
At Chicago, Jercy Mumphrey htt
a bases-loaded, tw!HJUt triple In the
fourth ' to help the Cubs snap
CtnciDnatt's four· game winning
streak. Jamie Moyer, 5-3, scattered
eight hits and· five walks In 5 2.:1
Innings to . earn the victory. Lee
Smith worked two Innings for his
24th save. Ted Power, 4-6, took the

seven.

21 II DECK-' PUSH MOWER

399 W, 11a1n

The Sunday Tunea-Sertin~_,.p,.ge ' ¢-6

v..

,·

'

Gallia's junior golfers
win SEO toumament
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis' jun·
lor g~&gt;lf team captured the 1986
Southeastern Ohto Junior Golf IItle
at Cambridge Friday.
This year's team was made up d
Tom Meadows, Kyle Saunders,
JoclY Stewart, Greg Roderick,
Steve Bradbury and Hank Davis.
low medaUst homrs went to
Meadows who soot a 76. Other
Gauta scores were: Roairtck, 82;
Stewart, 85; B.radbucy,. 86; Saund·
ers, !r1 and Davts, 101. '111€ top four
soo.res counted In the final team

Pomeroy-Middlaport-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point, Plea1111t, W.

Tiger rookie ups ·home mark to 5-0; Indians. bealen, 6!9

leads Seri~s after ·. 2 ·rounds

f I' u1 ' l'ltbbllrlb •'ile"¥ ~ '41-28.

MarcusAilensdlredillal6:yud
run and Marc Wlllc!Dpd·•:Jlm
Plunkett threW for'"'~
Friday night, allowlik tbe LQs
Angeles Raiders to defl!i!! the New
England Pab'lots 24;10 In
exhibition game at U. Angele&amp;
The Raiders, w!» !l!wked New
England quarterbaCk. T~ Eason
11 ttmes, Improved their premv
record to 2-1. New Eneland fell to
1.:1.
Allen's TI&gt; came In the second
period after Wilson bad collllected
with Todd Christensen for !11-yud
score In the first period. Phmlrett,
seeking to regain the starting job he
lost when he InJured his ~
early last year, teamed with Dolde
WUUams for a 29-yard touchdown In
the third quarter.
Chris Bahr added a 36-yanl field
g~&gt;al tor the Raiders.
The Patrols scored on a 5- yard
TI&gt; pass tram Easoo to Cedrtc
Jones and on Tony Franklin's
33-yard tleld pl.
.
Wilson played the first half and
finished r&gt;-of-15 tor 65 yards. Plun·
keit, who was sacked three times,
played the third quarter and part d
tile fourth and was H&gt;f-6 for 56
yards.
Eason played the entire game
and was 21-of-42 for 197 yards. He
: lost 90 yards In sacks.
- _Tempers flatred often between
- the contestants of last year's AFC
· sro~tttnal game. Raiders tree
: sa!etyVannMcEiroyanddefenslve
· end Sean Jones were ejected after
: being Involved In scutfles.
· · In other preseason games, Seat:tie downed Minnesota 27-17 and

:A~ 24, 1986

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Sillu!'diY qalalt tlie Kanaaa City
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b)', the U.S. FrotbaU Le81\le. the
~est-paid Pla&gt;'er In rooq,an last
\\leek by signing him to a flve-yea.r .
c:llntraCI' wort11 almost $8 rniUlon.
~ illd ~~e·n Ulcety !Me hts 11tst
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Siiutb Bend; lDd.
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See limrted warranty at dealer. CCNers eng1ne,
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through . Exci!Jf1es leases. Restrictions apply.

THE WAY WE'RE DEALING••• EVERYTHING GOES.
SO HURRY IN' NOW!

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fll'niture Upholstery
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~ SUPPORT RUN - Mator ~ llruken wl1 -.port ned mo.nth's
manthoa nm from Colwnlrwllo Qall( "" by, Ciuat~ FOI'IIet. The
h-eal !e ~ belp llfJC!Im fWidl for lbe Glllla ~ Arlrrill Ol!ipia'.
l.eft lo ...... ue Nucy C,: I ~. ll'tntler, ~"¥ Evllu of Molcir ·C~~r
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• - - - The 1'1111 !e .. Sept 11-U.

·plYMOUTH RELIANT oR .DODGE AIRIES

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�-y_.,. .

'limes- tentintt
(Cmln16-3) at Mtu!IIMR (Smith·

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

10nf.UJ .

•NM'IDN.\L UWlfJa

Kanlu Qty (Guhlcza 7-5) at Mllwaukte
~&amp;llio 0.2) •

" 't I'd. Gil

fiG- -

·a• 1;

-...
PI!Ua'

6:1 1:1 D

19

a .e

21

5911 .8~

Sl. Lculo

Oolo ...

«1

....

Ha.lston

!o! 01 411 II
19 12 .... :n~
II' 53 .586
62 8) !Gil
fiD 62 'A92
59
.4tH
58 63 .419

San Fnndlco
Onclnni.U
U. AnJtiea
Atlan1a

a

_
7
9
10

1~

'*"'...... '

s.n 01ooo&gt;

59 IIi

.m

u~

Ode., 3, C1nclnr.d·2

Pl:tt*ll'Jb til, Atlanta 5
. St. LoWa i, HoullOn 5

._....._

10-JO) at Olicaat~

ISandenoa 6-9) .

New York (qullen.
........... (llowowiJ,l) .

6-&amp;J

11 Sat!

1\tlan\1 tSmttb 7-11) at Pl.ttsbw'ab
( - ! · M I. .

nw.n

(Seott l'J.8) II St. Louis (~1

T·lO), ttl p.m.
PtdLidelplU

IMadllux

1-5) at

San

._~IT~) .

Mortretl (Setn 2-2) at Los Ange~s
/Honeya.tt ~TJ.
,

8ooooolor'•-

Houstcm at St.~
CtneUU.ttat Chlcqo

Phila:Mla;da at Sill D~
san Francllco
..wJDl£\N 1&amp;\GUE

i'W' York at

-...

WLPd.GB

Booton

13 f9.!18 S1 5~ .549 6

-YO&lt;I&lt;

Deooott

66 58 .5.T.I II
m !18 .S2R BY.!
63 S7 .52S 9

"'.......

C..otan

61 Q

Mltwau}r

w...

8)

. lOIU~

61 .812Y.!

~

51 55 .549 4
5fi 66 .ol59 11
53 07 .+12 13
~ ~ .43414
:0 99 .~H

_
53 "»

.-13114~

-York3, 0oklond2

-~C-3
Drrroll f, ~ttlp 1
Baldmcft 8, Cllltrnla 7
1's.M u. Chicaau 3
Mlnnelota ot, Toronto 3
~talus City

Ttlrolltlat Mlnrrluea
KaNuCI1y at MD.ltautft

OlicfCO II Texu,

-

Transactions

....

Onetnmu- ~ rtifd· handed pitcher
Mulo 9?W Of\ the 21-di,Y disabled U.t.
to A... I~ """'"""' ...
contract 01 rlglt·handed pitcher Bill Lan·
dnlm h'om ~ of thP Amencan

"'"""Jve

...

mucle:l 1ft rib ~act); recalltd wdle~
Herm WlMin&amp;llam frOm lnciiiDlpo&amp; ot the
AAA Amerk:an Auorlatton; purchued
ml'lll'll't t1. pltther Bm Rober.., rmm
lnclll'll.polll.

I

··Wtll
CdcliQ -Traded torwanl Sllby Grwn
to lletroft b klrward Earl Cuf'E'torl and 1
II!COftd.mJnd draft l*k tll!I!T
Detroit - Htl'fd Ron Rothstein as
lllittlal ro&amp;ch.

F-.o
&lt;ll'velantl - Obtained defmsJve end
Ca!le)' Merr1l.l rrom. New York Giant! In
eXchanat' lor ft~ draft ~: act!Wied Wlde receiver-punt lt'tumer ~raid

Green Bay - WaNed center VIna.&gt;
Ratferty: P,lrod quarterback Rol:t)le ~:Jose,:)
and guard Ke11b Uecker on InJured rearrve:
acttveted rec.lver Ph!l Ep~ tackle Greg
Feuel and running back Paul Ott Carruth.

fncl•apoJJs - Cut defms!ve baCk Tony
Slock.
New Orleans - ActJvated llnebacker Sam
MDJ.s, wtdP recetver Wllile Collier and guard
O.udt Commlst.oy: cur UnebackerWhltrt'y
Paul, *ns!ve tack.le Bill ~alles and

4, MUwaullee 2

~··a.m.
Bolton !Seaver 7-W\ at Ckovetand IC&amp;ndl·

Sl. Louis -

Signed rmP tackle Si['VE'

O'Mall'y; C\.11 runnlng back Ox! Goodman.

SDn Dleao - . cut

CaHJ::rnla !~lck 0-2) at Baltlrnore

IF\IDaf• 6-BJ.
Oaikland !Piunk3-71 at New York tNiekro

linebacker

cams

Bradk!y, nose tackle Thny tri.A&amp;ca, tacklE&gt;
Mike Pemno Md det'en&amp;IYe back MJke
?lll"dkh;

aettvatf!d

tot ileibtd

Davkl Mar-

Un, ddenalvt' lineman John Wallrl'r, and
~ Andy Hawkins and Gary

Pluntner.
Tam~ Bay -Cut r«'elverDav1d Verser,
ruaning back T~ Smith, tlghi ·epd K.D.
DuM and Unellucker DenliS Jotrlson·
plaeed ~ter Ken Kaplan on ln)Jmi

r'HefW; aetiVatM rumblg bacb Mack
Boat.rr and ~ Bmw"n. dffe.utve end
Pe-te Catan, ~ Ray Bentlf"i and
ff!t:'etYer Leonard Ranis.

.....

ctti 12·9) .

...,.,.

n.pt

defensive Ulll'ITUlll Ray Cattage.

m 59 .516

.........

SMIU&amp; at Detroit
Cl1lllmla at B.aJI1rnl:ft

McNei l and !Wbllcker Mike JohMon·
placed Unebacker Nick Mlller on tn)Jrt&gt;d
~n"t; Wlllwd ldcter Uwe von Schamann
and linebacker Vince Osby.

Atlanta at Pltbb.II'Jh
MontJul at Las Aqi:'Jes

......

Boltoaat~

....,~"""

Loo-1-~llliOo...,P
New Yen li, San rr.ctec:O 3

flrwnina

.Greyhound reviews options
in face of lower ridership

~·· o.me.

OUIMnd at New Yot1t

--~droo-A
Gallrrqa
on lW-.y dlslblrd list !pulled

~~. Son"'""'

ClnciiJIIItl

Section:

laLIIaJJa C~- Namt'd Cenp Rush·
lng men'• b&amp;U:etbaU coach.
I..JCLA. - Granted penU.sslon to l.oyda

SeatllP /Brown t.f.) a1 Detroit t'hnana

~ 10 . arran.., a tral\ller for
baskPtbaD p&amp;ayer C'.tny GalneA; named
former quarterback Rlck Neutl!lltl a

Otk'~~t~

~hlnta-r IIXtbaB

tCarlton l·ll at T£!XB.s (GuzrraQ

coadl.

World Series Golf notes ...
Update oo the press room
scoreboard. On Thursday, the
players' names had an~ aongslde
to designate the country In which
that Individual had qoallfied.
On Friday, organlzerschan~d to
Oags represmtlng the golfer's
naatlonallty. A New Zall111d !lag
wasn't avallable fil~ Gre&amp; Turner,
wllo received a blue and yellow
Swedish Oag Instead.

BUILDI·NGS
.

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COMMERCIAL
&amp; INDUSTRIAL

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Freel I
Freel I
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13'' R~UND TRAMPOLINE

unaf!ordable for many Americans,
By ).()RJ K. WEINRAUB
PHOENIX (UP!) - Belore air Greyhound profited. But as the gap
fare became affordable and even as narrowed and air travel became as
America's love affair with the car cheap a- cheaper, the bus company
was exploding, when millions r1 suffered.
Time also worked against Grey·
people traveled · they went
hound, especially on the bog-haul
Greyhound.
Those were the good old days for trips where the bus company once
the bus company, when annual was dominant. A flight from New
ridership peaked at 64 rnUllon In the York to San Frandsoo i; 9x hours
1960s. Travelers who took Grey· compared to 00 hours lJy bus.
locked Into an lnDexlble system
bound's advice to "leave the drtvlng
lJy
regulatiln, the company could
to us" made the company the
nation's largest Intercity bus not adjust fares and was forced to
maintain routes even If only one
carrier.
Two decades later, the Phoenix· (lei!!On made the trip each day.
· based company's ridership has Dunllwsld said.
Greyhound's break came In 1982
been slashed In half. Furiher
with
the deregulatbn of the rus
decline Is expected.
; Frederick Dunlkoskl, president lndustcy. The company has spent
of Greyhound Corp.'s Greyhound the last !our years modernizing,
:Lines subsldlacy,, suggests the reorganizing and redefining Its
.company may abandon long-haul philosophy.
Greyhound today can drop unpro·
'seiVIce altogether.
ductlve
service, cut !rices, add
Low-cost air fares, the lure of the ·
more profitable routes and market
automobUe and problems caused
Its service to attract riders In areas
lJy the tnflexlbutty offlve decades ct
federal and state regulation have where tiE bus stUIIs the best way to
travel.
left Greyhound struggling to
Five years ago, GreyhoUJ¥1 could
survive.
not
operate from New York to
"We are fighting evecy minute
for survival," Dunlkoskl said. "The Atlantic City, N.J. Today, more
tickets are sold for "Lucky Streak''
picture Is not rosy."
service than on any other route.
More emphasis Is placed on
Greyhound Lines lost money In
regional travel bet~&lt;een cities
1983 and 1984 and turned an
Insignificant profit In 1916, Dunl· where rus service Is less expensive
koskl said. With the memocy or a and sometimes more ronvenlent
bitter 1983 strtke stlllllngering, the than the hassles faced by an airline
company soon begins negotiations passenger on a siDrt hop.
In the last year, nearly aU of the
with union workers whose con·
lZ1 rompany-owned terminals have
tracts ex(in' In November.
been converted Into rommlsslon
As long as air travel was

agencies, some major routes have
beerr turned a.&gt;er to franchises,
smaller rus companies that can
operate at ilwer cost. Less heavily
traveled routes In New England,
the Sopth and the Southwest have
tEen dropped .
Greyhound has been divided Into
four regional companies- based In
New York, Oticago, Atlanta and
San Francisco -with the frreoom
and resources to ascertain and
meet local transportation needs,
Dunlkoskl said.
Most recently, Greyhound has
begun offering a maximum $59 fare
to anywhere In the United States.
The changes have earned the
company praise lJJt Greyhound
stlll Is In trouble .
"Greyhound Is on the right track
but the lndustcy Is having trernend·
ous problems," said Katllertne
Stults, who follows Greyhound as a
securities analyst for Dean Witter.
Greyhound's older equipment
and expensive union contracts can
hurl as ,the company moves to
compete with the bundroos of
smaller rus companies that have
sprung up since deregulation, said
Wayne Smith, spokesman tor Unl·
ted Bus Owner.i of America, a trade
association In Washington.
"The long·haul trip Is dead for all
practical purposes. Going regional
Is what Greyhound must do to
su~lve," Smith said.
"Will we survive? I don't know,"
Dunlkoskl said. "I could see us
getting out of (long-haul) Intercity
bus travel altogether."

NEW OWNERSHIP - Offering k&gt;cal and
nallonally-known gospel groups, Nora McMUiln of
Good News Tapes and &amp;cords slxnw some of the
Items available at the store at 40'7 Main St., Point

Point Pleasant store offers
latest in gospel music scene
POINT PLEASANT - It's the
same store, but with a new owner.
The store Is Good News Tapes and
Records, 407 Main St.. Point
Pleasant, across from Western
Auto.
The new owner Is Nora McMillin,
who runs the store as a family
business with her children. The
store was owned by Dennis The·
venin, who sold the business
because be was on the road too
much to keep regular hours,
McMillin said.
"I am in this business because I
am Interested In serving the p~bllc .
I've tEen In selling for ~ or 30

YOURS WHEN J9U PURCHASE ACAR TRUCK
OR VAN ·(must be 1984 model -or n~wer)
from your frlen_ds at Motor Car

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ENERGY PERFORMER

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MORTON BUILDINGS INC.

Rt. 4, Caldwell, OH. 43720.
, . 80(). 44 7. 7438
li14· 783·2331
.
•

Bryan Martin .

I have been doing it most of my

life," she said.
The store features gospel tapes,
records, sheet music, music books,
toys, T-shlrts "and all kinds d.
gQspel things, too numerous to
name Individually," she said.
Among those Items are sheet
music, music books, chlldrens'
Items, Bibles, tooks, ll?lt ruckles
and wall hangings. Plans are to
feature other Items In the future.
McMillin said the store ooes
special orders and advertising for
Its customers. It sells local groups'
music on constgrunent, as well as
the music by natlonally·known
gospel groups. Some of the k&gt;cal

groups Include the Grubb FamUy,
the Full Gospel Travelers, Saved
and.tt.&gt; Glocyland Believers.
"Then' Is some competition In
this business, but we tcy to give the
best service. After all, that Is why
people return," said McMillin, ll
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School.
.
Store hours are 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Monday through Saturday.
The store sponsors a free gospel
allJJm promotion each month, In
addition to sponsoring a free album
on the Cbarlle Adam Bible Quiz on
WPAY Radio. Portsmouth. The
store carries Gospel Music News,
the leading gospel newspaper .

Poll finds U.S. executives
concerned about insurance
was .
'

'

~

I '

•

I,.,.''"

the most trequl!ll Uy dted
farm economy has hit bottom. To
By TIM BRYANT
(rOvlslon
of the proposed tax bOI
ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Business help relieve problems In agricul·
that
would
hurt the economy.
execu tlves pinpointed the rising tun', 31 percent ct tiE ruslness
"Clearly
we were talking to
cost of liability Insurance as a more leaders said then' should be l!wer
people who benefited from the .
serious problem than the federal fanners.
Investment
tax credit," Balbach
"They
don't
think
the
problems
deftclt or the balance of trade In a
said. "That was a tig Issue for theni
are
going
to
ll?
solved
untll
some
poll of medlum·slzed companies.
steven Newberry
last year. Shoot, If they' n' all
A survey by Center Bancorpora· farmers get out of the business,"
Investing simply for the tax advan·
tion showed nearly three-fourths of Balll!ch said "The (subsidy) tage, maybe something Is wrong."
the execu tlves Identified the rising programs are keeping some margl·
Thlrty·seven percent or. those
cost of liability Insurance as a nal farmers In business when their who said tax relotm could help the
acquaints Its banking students with critical Issue facing American eflilrts oould ll? more profitably ecooomy said Increased consumer
spent somewhere else. There
all aspects at consumer credit, business.
Income would be a
Surveyed were 5ffi senior execu- doesn't seem 10 ll? much enthusl· disposable
Including direct and Indirect analy·
benefit.
Balbach
said she was
sis, consumer leasing, customer tives of firms In Illinois, Iowa, asm tJ r higher price supports."
concerned
by
that
response.
Only 18 percent of the executives
statement analysts, bank law, bank Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessee.
"I suppose I'm a little disapsaid
they expect tax reform would
management skills and mlcrocom· For the purpose of the annual
pointed
In seeing that, " she said.
puters In lending and sales survey, begun five years ago, a greatly chan~ their COlllOrate "Tax reform was oot supposed to be
medlum·slzed company was one taxes. Twenty· four percent said a redistribution of Income from me
~hnlques.
with annual sales ranging from $5 tl1ey expected oo chan~.
Loss or the Investment tax credit ~tor ID another."
mllllon to $400 million.
Rachel Balbach, vice pn'sldent
and chief economist at Centerre,
said the results came as a surprise.
"That really hit us ln the face,"
she said. "I didn't expect It because
I guess I associate the concern of
liability Insurance with doctors,
McLEAN, Va. (UPI) -Federal lawyers
and big companies.
regulators denied the request or a
"We
bear
about the problems of
financially strong AmartUo, Texas
big
companies
and the profession·
bank to drop out of the weakened
als,
but
when
(remlums
go up , they
Farm Credit System, arguing that
a law enacted last year requires gQ up for everybody.''
Askl!d to rank six economic
viable banks to aid the weak. ·
concerns
facing American lJJsl·
The two.member board of the
ness,
73
percent
of the executives
Farm Credit Administration vote:!
said
the
cost
of
llabtllty
Insurance
Friday to &lt;limY the AmarUio
Production Credit Association's bid was a "critical" problem.
Forty·four percent of the execu·
to walk away from the cooperative
Uves
said the cost of llabUity
rather than share Its wealth with
Insurance
was "significantly nega·
banks hardest hit lJy the farm
ttve"
to
business
and 66 percent said
crisis.
they would pn'fer legislation limit·
Bnwe Hann
Thnothy Coleman
The Issue will Ukely be setlled In log the size of juzy awards.
federal court, wbere the Amarillo
Also listed as "critical" problems
hank has already flied a lawsuit.
were the federal deficit, 55 percent,
.• .
The fanner-owned rooperatlve the state of the farm ecooomy, 45
lender lost $2.7 billion last year, the percent, Imports and tiE balance~
~st loss ever for an Amelcan
trade, 39 percent, tax reform, 29
flanandal Institution, and $986 percent, and the valued the doUar,
million In the first half of tits year. 22 percent.
Its loan portfolio of $61.5 bllllon
ALBANY - Two Southern Ohio Meigs Division and was promoted
Balbach said concern over the
has fallen about $16 billion since the rising federal deficit has declined Coal Co. employees, Timothy Cole· to senior mining engtneeli.
end of.l984.
man and Bruce Hann, have been ventilation the following yeat.:
since last year's poU.
Frank Nayklr, chairman or the
"It may just be tl1ey're feeling
promoted to the position of resident OrtgtnaUy from Portsmouth, Cote.·
board, said the Amartllo bank was less urgency about It now recause engineer at the company's Meigs man now lives In the Atll!ns arel! : •
Hann Is responsible for ai1:
able to accumulate flnandal re· we've been Uvtng with It so long," No. 1 and No. 2 mines.
englneertng
and survey work pel'-;
seJVes It wants to (:I'Otect because It she said. "It may just be old news
Coleman, the new resident eng!·
was part or the cooperative Farm and not hot and jazzy."
neer at Mine No. 1, Is responsible fonned In and around Mine No. 2:.
Credit System, the nation's lar~st
Only 22 percent of those polled for allmgtneertng and suJVey work He reports to AI Hillard, gener~
-. •
farm lell'der, for more than 50 said tiE Gramm-Rudman balanced pexfonned In and around the mine. superlntm&lt;Ent.
Hann
lEgan
wOrking
for
Soutii.i
He
reports
to
Keith
I.
Davis,
budget
bill
would
significantly
y~. '
em Ohb Coaltn 1976 as a c)lat~an :
The system as a wbole bonvws reduce the deficit.
· general superlnlendent.
at the Meigs No. 1 mine. In 1979 ~ •
money on Wall Street at pMerenExecutive opinion was split on
Coleman
arst
began
working
for
moved
to the Meigs Division offiCe;
tlal rates and began with a federal the outlook for thee national
the
American
Electric
Power
and
was
promoted to
lnA!aon d. fUnds . repaid several ecooomy, with 49 percent expecting
yean ago.
a decline In the next few years and System In 1975 wring summers engineering ~hnlclan the filllooJ 1
·' • '
Naylor was Joined In his v«e by 48 percent predicting no down rum. 'between semesters at West Vlrgl· lng year.
Later that year he was. nameal
board mem!Et MaMn Duncan,
Most were optimistic that the nla University. He was hired as a
wiD rejected the Amarillo bank's region's economy will Improve or student engineer at Southern Ohio Industrial engineer and In 1981 he1
argument that It II unique because remain stable over the next five Coal's Martinka Dlvlskln.
moved to Meigs No. 2 rntne'
It never signed a loSII-sllarlng · years. Slxty.one pera!nt said their
In l9'l9, Coleman received a section supervisor. Hannrecelvedt:
bachelor's degrre In mining eng!· bachelor's degree In lndustrW d ,
agreement rdiJied by au otll!r own ruslnesses will Improve.
system bankl acroa the mtton.
"It wouldn't be unusiial to run neerlni and was hired as a mining systems engineering from~ ~l
.-~
~
"
Into
a recession. bill still we have no mgtneer-vmtllatbn at Martinka. University In 198l.
· . AltiXllt&amp;JI:
signa to·
The following year be was pro·
l1t!i of the
.
t, l'tbey Wl!l't! signs of It/' Balbach said.
Hann and his wUe, Melad.;~ .· • ·
Indeed a ll!neftcwy of lOIS-sharing
In Athens with their ·daugh
In addition, B1 percent of the meted to sectkln supervisor.
In 1984, Coleman moved 10 the Jessica.
agreements," Duncan said.
\ .
.
"'" . .
executives said they llelleve the

'

Joyoelyu Barlow

Pleasant. The store stook!! records, lapM, toys and
"gospel Items too rownerous to name." The ~re
gives away a free alhum each month.

3 OVB employees conclude courses
."

''

198~ ~ORD .LTD CROW VICTORIA

4-door slllan, fimshOO 1n light RegaHa blue metallic with malt:hing cloth interior vil~ tOp I!Quipmentilcludes v.s
eng~ne, autDmatic overdrive.lrans., air ~ilitioning, am-lm stereo, tilt wheel, cru~ cootrol ,delay .;pe 15 JX)Wer seat
power door locks, power wtndows, rear defoliger, kding wire wheel covers &amp;just 23,000 miles. '

Sharp &amp; Hard To Find!

GALLIPOLIS . - Three em·
ployees from Ohio Valley Bank Joycelyn Barlow, Bcyan Martin
and Steven Newbercy - recently
·attended and graduated from
:schools sponsored by the Ohio
· Bankers Association.
.' OBA Is a trade organization
· headquarted In Columbus, provld·
· lng commercial banks and their
:branches In Ohio with legislative,
:educational and communications
· assistance.
Ms. Barklw, assistant vice presl·
dent and director for training and
customer seiVIce at OVB, was
among 31 students who graduated
from the Ohio School of Sales and
Marketing Planning held at Miami
University, Oxford, Ohio. The
marketing school cun1culum COV·

ers marketing and ptannlng, product development, sales philosophy
In banking, sales training/business
development, bank corporate lm·
age/positioning, and technology
and banking.
Martin, the bank's assistant
cashier and assistant head teller,
was one rt. 144 bankers who
graduated !rom the Ohkl School of
Banking at Ohio University. The
objective o! the Ohio School of
Banking Is to educate bankers In all
areas of bank operations and
management so each can better
serve his community.
Newbercy, a consumer loan
~fleer. was among 90 Ohio bankers
wiD graduated from the Ohio
School of Consumer Credit held at
Kent State University. The school

..-Business Briefs:-~
Federal Mogul wins award

'10,900°0

GALL!POLill - Federal Mogul Corp.'s Gallipolis plant was
awarded the company's safety award ct excellence recently at
corporate headquarters In Southfield, Mich.
Thomas F. Russell, chalrmaD d the board, made the (resmtatlon
to the plant's Union-Management Safety Committee.
The award Is presented annually 1D the pant with the best safety
score In the COlllOratlon. The icore Is determined by a formula
involving lost-time accidents, lost Wlll'kdays and doctor cases.
The GalUpoUs plant Is part of Fecleral Mogul's Preclskln Forged
Products Division and produces IDt lo~ powdered metal parts i&gt;r
the automotive lndustcy.
The plant wo!Xed all ct 1985 withlut sutrering a lost-time accident
and out of a pos&lt;;lble safety score of 100 had "·70.
Additionally, the plant completed 1 million rons«:utlve hours
without suffering a lost-time accident.

Plant U1J,it is accredited
GALL!POLJS ~ Accredltatloll hu been iiYen to the metallurgical
department at Federal Mogul Corp.'a l".aDJpolts plant !rom the '
Hydra-Matlc Division of General Motbnt Corp.
•
The accredltatiln Is conferred on a teet tacWty witch bas
completed a successlul evaluation and rontlnues to conform 1D
requltements and criteria for specific arEBi o! qlel'atbn governed
by that accreditation.
·
The .Federal Mogul metallurgical department Is the fourth out qf
500 !IIIWIIers to meet all requlreriiE!Ita for aooredltatlon. In &lt;rder 1D
receive new rustness, supPIIefll must meet certttlcatlon require- ·
ments set forth by General Moton.
.
GM supplier certification II a demand that Is placed on all
manufactl¢nl plants of components In the au(llmbtlve IndustrY.

Just

The supplier testacbi'edlta'tloals plrt Ot ill! lilppiler cerilbcatton

program and Is n~ tn.become 121 lffll!l; .

,
'

.•

: ·

Bank denies

withdrawal

from system

2 resident engineers
named at area mines

senl:lr:

u:

·"=lcilly

~

�. ; Pig a D-2-The Sunday Timas-Senti1el
'

-1 ·•

•

.N.'. ' . •.

August 24, 1986

.

Tax breaks,. policies, views .
are still questionable topics

~

·~;-.

"The m ajority of chicken farmers

By SONJA HILLGREN
VPI Fann Editor

'lblll week's ~qyi!i&amp;el)' fann,
lhe Melp Sol Md Water Olnservldlon

telepbone IUIIber wllh · JOUl' W'd 01' letter. No
telephone calls wll be accepted. AD coata.t entries
should be lurued In to the neMpllllel' olllce by 4 p.m.

MfSTERY
~elllured by

DIIUtct, Is located IICIIllewbere ,In Mep County.
IDdlvlduals wllhlnr to partlclpa&amp;e In the weekly.
. contest may do 1111 bypeulnrtbelann'sowner.Jwi
mall, or drop off yoor guess to the Dalzy Senlbtel, 111
l;ourl st., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45788, or lbe G•llpolls
Trbme, 825 'lblnl Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio, 45681, aDd
you may win a S5 cash prize lrom lbe Ohio Valley
Publishing Co. Leave your ruune, address and

each Wednellda.v. In case of a lie, the wmuer wiD be
~by loUery.

Next week, a Gallla CGunly !ann
wiD be feaaared by the Galla SoB Md Water
Cmserva&amp;loa District. 'l1le Aur. 19 Galla picture In
the Tribune beloap to Denver Wamer, Hw&amp;fllgton
Twp. (BuB ·Run). Last week's coalesi wmner was
Dorotby Crabtree, Rl. 2, VllltGD.

Elevators may help solve problems
transportation expenses for shipping cleaner wheat and by Income
from se!Ungdockage - thetennfor
chaff. dust, lllS€Ct fragments and
other foreign material In grain- as
animal feed.
Those conclusions were derived
from a study by Harvey Kiser, an
economist at Kansas State University, who has lnfiuenced Agrlcul·
ture Department economists exa·
mining effects of proposed new
rules requlr!ng speclllc dockage
reporting.
"In one case, that of the grain
elevator, you're using small·scale
equipment and deallng In far !ewer
bushels," Kiser said. "In the other,
you're deallng with much larger
quantities and heavy costs for far
more elaborate machinery."
He said some export terminals
have no land on which to build new

By SONJA HJLLGREN
UPI

August 24, 1986

PomerOy-Middleport-GaHipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va .

Fann Editor

WASHINGTON (UPI) - As a
consensus emerges that Americans
must sell cleaner grain to keep
tprelgn customers happy, ecooo. mists have determined that roun·
try elevators would be the cheapest
lQCalions for cleaning.
· Cleaning wheat at exp:lrt ports the sites where Canadians make
.certain their grain Is purer than
American grain - would cost an
estimated 10 cents to 25 cents a
bushel If costs of new buildings and
land are Included.
By contrast, eliminating chaff
and dost from wheat by lnstalllng
screeners and aspirators at country
.elevators might add a penny per
bushel to handling costs.
In some years, country elevator
costs would be offset by lower

cleaning factlltles.
A problem facing country elevators, he saki, Is that reducing
dockage can result In losses with
ellmlnatlon of shrunken and broken
kernels that are not dockage.
"The cost d. cleaning wUJ be
more than a cent a bushel If it
means lost sales because some
wheat has been removed along with
the chaff," he said. Ultimately,
wheat producers would receive
lower·prices.
Under cu~t practices, produc·
ers who deUver clean wheat to
elevatQrs often wbsldlze those who
deliver dirtier wheat. Using screen·
ers and as~Mators to remove
dockage would let country eleva·
tors pay lndlvtdual prodocers oo the
basis of extraneous material In
their gr3.in.

WASHINGTON (UPI) -In rural
Delaware, where chicken houses
dot the landscape, Sen. William
Roth, R-Del., Is a hero for preservIng a tax break for buildings that
shelter poull!y, hogs, cattle or dairy
cows.
1n Walthlll, Neb., Chuck Hassebrock, a tax policy analyst with the
Center for Rural Affairs, views that
loophole as one of the most'abused
tax breaks.
He said maintaining the tax
break was a "violation of the trust
d. family farmers," who suworted
tax reform through !lard times,
when no one else backed It, and who
'won on every vote on the Issue.
Roth, a member of the Senate
Finance Committee, also helped
preserve a loophole that lets giant
farms - like Perdue Farms of
Salisbury, Md., for whom many
Delaware farmers raise chickens
- defer taxes with an accounting
method meant to help famlly-stzed
fanns.

Those two Items are among
loopholes preserved In the HouseSenate tax reform compromise
achieved last weekend tha t still
faces final House and Senate w tes.
An aide to Roth said Delawa re
poultry farmers who like the tax
break for singlE'- purpose farm
structures do not produce a commodity In surplus•so they have a
different point of view than Hassebrock who believes current tax law
encourages prlce-ilepresslng over·
production of livestock.
"Chicken houses In Del a ware are
perhaps our most common agrlcul·
tural structure," said Roth's aide.
"Tiley (Delaware producers) were
very much relieved that this ls
something that was preserved."
Most Delaware farmers do not
begrudge a tax break that helps
giant Perdue Farms. The poultry
Industry has long been controlled
by corporations, wlth whom
farmers contract to produce birds.
"Perdue Is very popular In
Delaware," the Roth aide said.

In Delawa re do probably contract
with Perdue."
But some of Perdue's corporate

f c.l.rll'

H1:,1i

31

4

CLARIFICATION OF RE- ily end ~..,., ..tly dllplocod
QUEST FOR PROPOSALS • o ,_,k ol Conwnunity
Tho rOC*ll requlfl tor-· Develop"*'t Block Gr.,l
auk mlllo by the o..,.....,.,t tCDBGI funcMd octlvitlo1. It II
of M.,tal Rot...,lio•• •d

Devolopnwrt Dllab- 11&gt;
owmo -.onhlp d the Cocil
Moore Home It .-cl324 Gold
Rldgt Rolli. Po.....,.,, Ohio.
lllould only odd...

MaJ"*''

aloo doolgnlll 10 mltigote
advone o11ectt ar rnv dilptlco..- on low- and

mo-.
ln11&gt;1T11 porsona. AC011V oltho

II availoblo for Jllbtlc
viewing In lha offico of l1o
Pl.,

tho Iicon• tor lho rooidontiat Commiulonon loaotlll
-Ice. Mr. .,d Mrs. Coci

Moore

cumnt1v hoYe .,d wil

retH1 .,lo ownonhip of tho

ond tho -orty whore
1ho reoklontiol ......... ...
pmvided.
(8)24. ttc

hou•

Public Notice

It 1ho

County Courthou•. l.oOJII
SIJoot in tho City al Galtipolil.
FOI' f u - inlor-. plooao
contlct Joan Cavil at

1614)441·4812.
Auguot 24

Antlllll nee111 en Is

adoptad I

pollcv -

.......,nmntor·
•
I

In

monoo with Fadonl .,d S11to
POlley and ~Jjldotln•. Thie
policy it doolgnlll to minimize

.....
- · polliblo. ........,
end poovlclolorr_,..,lo
boMIItl to _ . . lnvountor·

1 Card of Thanks

• CAID OF THANKS
•• -ld like to thank 111
~ our friends , ralllives
11d ntill!bors for thl
cifts, flowers. cards end
those wbo attended our
epen house for our 50th
~nnivtrSII'Y Ctllbrllion.
· Wendell and Elizabeth
·
Hoover

young .

304·885·3972.

~ l:fVICP.S
FOUND money tn Odd Loti

vicinity. Colll14·245·6632.

3 white ldtt'"'· 2 mtle, 1

....... 304-882-2717.

I mo. oldt.mlleSc:hniUnrdog ,
long black tt.ir, good with

c:hlldrtn. 304·4118·1517.

lott: In letart orE . Letart trw . 1
mtll Bugle, 1 tnllt Wtlker
Coon hound. blind In right eye.

6 kitten• to good home, In•
trained, 7 weeb old. 304-171·

1264.

Andque pi.-.o.

L011 Auguat 18 on At 7 from
motorcycle. b111ball Clfd price
guide and • • • • buebtll eardt.

Good wnd.

7514.

7

6 Lost and Found

Lott: 2 purw•. 1 bl.::k 1nd 1
brown. Contllin1 Important pap·

' "· lost on At. 7 ~ tont of
Khl91 Anna Ttv•m. Augu1t 21 Ill
.aund noon . Pl1111 retum ID
.tdr•aln purwe.

446·0294.

a..eball Cards IM at BobEv1111
Antiqu e Show . Wed., Thurs., Fri.
Sun.

Yard Sale

·······Gallfponi···-··- 8t Vicinity

h• cllppod toil. Coli 814·M2·
eeo6 .. 614·992-31112.

SWEEPER and 18W'ing mKhine
repltir . perts. 1nd suppli•. Pldc
up end deltvery, Da'tlil Vecwm
Cl81ner. on e half mile up
G.arg• Creek Ad . Call 114-

SliVer• famMr , off Rt. 7 on
Add leon 8ulwlUe Rd . ht rd . to
l.tt. Mite houll with red blm,

behind Addovllo Sdlool. Boby

ecc•toriel, 1chool clothe1.
bolt motort. clothu. mile. Aug.

18-22. , ,30-!

3 Announcements

a.

9

0 1COfltld Clk• for any OCCI·
1jon, Weddingt a sp.c:ialty. Will
denver for 1m111 fet . 014-892-

Wt,aycaah tor lett model ct.an
'*41 Clrl.
Jim Minlt ChiiW'.-Oidalnc.
1111 Gene Johnaon

5501 .

Wanted To Buy

114· 441-3172

Plano leuon s , lu cy Jant
Bulmtr. Hartford, W. Va. 304-

682·239&amp;.
4

FrM dothlng giv-.w-v It Bid·

well Church of Chrlst. Seturdly
Auguat 23. 9 to 12 noon.

4 fr• klnens. Call 814·448-

0132 or 814·441·•80 oltor
&amp;:00.
4 lemoltpupploo. Vory plovfullo

NOAH'S ARK

cutl . Mother bl•ck lib .
wormed . CaH 114-UI·I.'SII.

5 Miles Eul

We would like

to

ex-

press our sincere ipprec iatlon to all who
helped In any way dur·
in&amp; the duth of our
loved one, Clarence B.

Hoff1111n.
A special

that*~

to

friends, neilhbors and
reiltiws wfio vlliltd,

lllouiht

food, llllt
flowen, end htlped In

.,.,.

Merit Tumlt',

448·3419.

Need blbyliUer ln m¥ home 140
pw week. Call 614-446 -0696 .
Wented : Full-time INe· ln hou. .
menger (rmm inga t nd evenings,
daytime hourt off. M-Fl for en
ln termedilte care ftcllity for
devalopmentally dlubled .. uha
in BktwtH. High school degr•.

curr•• dri'ler'allctntt l nd good
cttvtng ntCOrd ,...alfld; e•perienct in working with per10n1
with mental retardlltlon •nd
developmental dt11bllhl• prefll'ed . A on•v... commitment
to position required. Satary
, .. ge: 110.400- 14.&amp;00 year.
Excellent vtcltlon and insurance
bwurfltt. Six paid holidayt~t~d 5
pakf I*IOnll dev•· v•ar. Weekin dt off. Per10n hirtd will be
provided with a minimum of 80
tours of tormal1ratning related
to lhe job ~ldl It paid by the
-u~t~cy . Send r•ume to Robin
Etr,. BuckeyeCommunityServieet, P .O. Box 804, Jaekson , Oh
45640 . DetdlinefDf tpplicants:
9 - 1· 88 Equal Opp o rtun ity
Employtr.

Stnerfor1tt•d5thgrlderafter
tchool, .,ow day, etc . Consider

luklk-Pontillc, 1911 E.nem
Aw.. Gdll;:tl.. . Ctll 114·446·

dlatanoe of Middleport Elemen·

1·1100-433-7147.

"-1 -··

luylnt cWty fDkl. 11• DO.,t.
r1ngo. Jowalry,
dd

ANIMAL PARK
01

CARD OF THANKS

l_.y house keeper to live in
positton optn now. C•ll 614-

TOP CAIH plid for '13 model
1nd MWif UNd clrt. SnWth

Okl 0,._,.11 NCJI wlrlted . Any
abe or oondh:lon. Cel toll fr•

l~ekson,

Ohio
Train •Animals •Picn1c
•Mimature Golf •Gilts
•Groups Welcome•
Mon.·Sat. 10 am til dark
Sundays noon til dark
Phone 384-2101,
Fru 1·100-ZBZ·Z167

your ho~ If wrthin welldng

11

3000 gonmment Jo b• · lil t.
*18 .040-t&amp;9 , 230 ve er. Now
hiring. Call 806-887-6000 Ext.

R·9806.
EASY ASSEMBL Y WORK I

payment. No 111111. Dettlls-send
stamped envtlope: Elen-716 .
3418 Emerpriae. Ft Pierce, Fl.

33482.

Villag e of Pomeroy Weter Dept .
e. acceptin g writtiJil appli cation•
from Po mero y merchlWltl to
accept and ree &amp;ive w•ter bills.
Send tpplications to Village Holt
3 20 E. Mak'l St. C·O Wtter Dept .
by Aug . 25 .

AVON. 3 op1n territ o rlet. call

304·676·1429.
HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES SeNe Plrt-time i1 the Army
National Guards and ettend
coll111 full time. We pro vide up
to •11 ,000 ~ ldu catio n1l t lC ·
pen1111, PWS. provide good pay

dlotonco to Golllpollo ltlhooll 1o
lhopplng. Call 114·J45·1845.

444i·'1007 for more Information on
this fescue toxicity problem.
A special thanks 1D all those who
made the recent Beef-Forage Twl·
Light event a success. The Burdell
famUy provided an Ideal setting.
Several business persons contributed refreshmen ts, money, door
prizes and equipment for use.
These sponsors Included: Ohio
Valley Bank; Rlver City Farm
Supply; Commercial and Savings
Bank; Mid-Ohio Chemical; J ividen
Farm Equipment; J.D. North
Prodoce; C.A. Duncan Moorman
Feed; Altizer Farm Supply;
Elan co Animal Products ; P.A.G.
Seeds; Snell Fence; Swisher Implement and Farm Credit Service.
Corn price for the soon to be
harvested 1986 crop? Anew scheme
has been proposed by Extension
Economist, Dennis Henderson, to
get maximum price for your corn .
The scheme assumes the prodocer
Is ln the government ji'Ogram. Buy
CCC P.I.C. certificates now ln
sufficient quantity to cover the
current crop, then at harvest put
the crop under loan, Immediately
redeem the loan with P.I. C. certlfl·
ca tes, sell, and pocket the loan
receipts plus the sales price minu s
the cost &lt;t the P.I .C.certlflcate. The
math works something like this :
loan of abou t $1.85 plus market
trice of about $1.50 minus cost of
certificate of a bout $1. 65 (110% of
Market Price ) equals net price of
$l. JU. Add a deficiency payment of
$1.00 and the total return comes to a
respectable $2.70 or so. The scheme
probably could be labeled as "high
finan ce" but !llunds better than the
projec ted cash ha rvest prtce of
$1.50·$2.00 per bushels if you are a
cash graln grower.

V1ry tpiClll

off•. Own• mu~t

ttl thl• am..l but undwpriced

dl1f10oh , Coli 114·441·0890.

In Galllpollo. Coli 814-44821131.

112 Third Ave. 2 bdr. Stove &amp;
r.trig. furnla_h ed. t210 month .
•75 depoai\. W•t• tumi1htd.

homt loCited on Mill CrNk St.
Cloet to the n-.v awimmlng pool

ond good 1rolnlng. 304-17&amp;3960 or 1·11110·642·3819.
Orumm~r

ior Hetvy Metal Rock
Bend . 304-882 ·2741 .

ASSEMBLERS WANTED ; Earn
up to •eo per day t ue mbling
dilplty clowna, Met•ials aupplied . Send 1tamped u lt addrlllld 1nvelop e : Hawk s
Land ing, P.O Box 13493. Orlando FL 32869.
Wanted uperien ce d house keeper. PINII cell 304-6767717 lftttr e p.m.
Babytltter f) r 3 yt ar old. Experitnce. rtft,.,oes. Wetkdev•.

IOml eYitli'lgt. 304-G71- 2881
tfter 4:30 .

MAKE MORE MONEYI Eam
WMidyconvnflk)na with our
profltlble line of adverttllng
Clllndart, pent. c.pt and

jockoll. Holplul Nlto ld-

1300 Pll' Wllk. C•ll Mondi'Y or
TuM. 10em to 3pm tor per10n1l
lntorvltw, 114·oi46·7U1.

grMt Riling
AM while
being your own boll. No invlltment. No collections. Full or ptrt
time. Our 17th y. .r. Wrh e Khin
I'Mico, NEWTON MFG. COM·
PANV, Otpt. 04278. Newton.

ploym.... Hourt 1PM til 10PM.

fr•

m•t~~•

. otoH

cent• •nd other

too...

lowo 110208.

L.P.N.a n..tld for pert time

prlvlto duty In Po int PltMohl
araa. cal HCI NurtMt SMVICI,

South Cho~•ton, 304-718·
39111. 9,00 AM to 1:00 PM.
Southweltem

3 Announcements

IIIVI

speciiiiZIId Ill IIIIi fillcl for Mr 10 JMn. Call eol·
leet for a qtiOtt. Alk for 8lld SMitfl.
· ·

FIISI
SCIOTO
411 ARCADIA ·

COLUMIUI, OH. 43202
(1141211-7012

Comm.~nity

Action Council. Inc. Ia accepting
1PPIID1don1 lot 1 f'"'Uv MI'Yict
worker for tht ct.ld and ltmlly
daveiDpiMnt progr1m 1t Mt.

II II

Coli 814-446-3870.

3 bdr. home 1109 Adrlen Ave.

Hou• 2 btthl, c.,.._ w11her&amp;
dryer, references and depo1lt .
Coli ollorl. 114·448·4582.

138.000. Col 814·448·3718.
smorr 2 bedroom houoo by
owner. Rurel water. elecrtrtc.
bath, new ctrp.. lnd
NWer

n•

IYrtn . 11 mllel aouth ofGalllpoIll onKrlntrAo..t. firtthouHon

ri21h1t7 •14.000. Coli 814·441·

,

t----------+---------~

31

4 m1 11 outtlde city limital 32
IICfel., corg. ...,en room, 1atory
home. Populer Additon School

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Homee for Sala

3 bedroom houaa, alllltetric. 2

..... Flohlng pond. bom. outbul· loto, 2 cor oorport. 207 Fourth
lldlng. MeGu.e
•· R• o1tY Co ., St . Maon, W. Vt. 304--891·
1402 4th Avo., Huntington.
3453.
25701 or 304-628·8033.
Quality home, n.,..iy remodeled
choice location on Coll~ge Ad.
Syracu11. new complet•llltchen
end Leundry. •lr conditioned.
ltrgelot. 814·992·532.t.

e room houM. 1.2 acr•. Double

car ger-ue. located on Rose Hill.
Btrgtin priced UO.DOO. Call

614-878·2513.

HouHin Portlsnd . 121.000. For
ule, or rtnt. 304-235·0111.
Atedl'tllllt, by own•. Two tor

the price

of

one. 2 bedrooms.

lkling. dining room, kitchen,
beth with utra room. All fully
CtrPeted . L•rge pon:h. fenced
yard with Mtillite T.V. Also
lpartrnent whldl lndudM 1
bedroom, living room, kitch ..
.,.. whh bath, worklhop and
g8flge. forced air 1111 heat. awn
wator woll. lorgolotondmolnten•ce fr• siding. 145,000. Cal

Point PIMiant: on IMd Hill
Aold, 3 bedroome, ·2 ~ bltha.

llvingroom with flr.plaa.. a.g,
country khchen witt. brNkfaet
bar. hobby room. utllty room, 2
twag•. btHm•t. deck. air
cond, 15 IC:rtt. C•ll 304-882-

c•

2481 ovtnlngo.

6239.

3 or 4 bedroom home on 12
acrH In Pomeroy. City water,
nltural gu, FH fumace. gerden
I PICt

and loti of woodt.

110.900. 614-992·2533.

8 room houu. bath. 1\o2 acrt.

1'E for "'' or ,..., - Houee, 3 br.

North Moln, 304-882·3329.

22 7-,510 .

AutomotNe p1rta naltttnl in

GM deal ership. Must hive Blt perienee Apply in penon at Smhh
Nelson Motora.ISOO E. M1in St ..
Pome ro y, Ohio .

Situations
Wanted

Specill nursing care for eldll"ly
in P'hitte rome . Call 614 ·992 ·

3696

Will ca re tor elderly in my home .
Tra•ned, experienced . C•ll 614·

992-6683,

14 Busineu Training
HI GH SCHOOL DROPOUT
EARN WHILE YOU LEARN

It you are econorrically dilld·
v1ntaged betw-.n tha 1111• of
, 8 to 21 Y"" old and would llkt
to recetve your OED contact tht
Employm1nt Security offlct It
225 OCh Street, Point Plteunl,

Auguat 18 through Auguet 29
bltwaen 9 a.m .- IS p.m . for
eltgiblllty certlfic.tlon. lf Inter·
111ed vou mutt be 1 r•ldent of
M110n Countv and providtproof
of lddrNI, utility bill or driver'•
llcenlt, brln9 your birttl CllrtHl·

•••o-

18 Wanted to Do

'
Will do blbvoitllng In mv homo.
14.00 an hour. Btth Lynch,

Mlddl11f10rt. 814-..-2-3723.
Olivo - 1 . ..... hovo hivh Nuralng 11011...,, llok oldorly In
ochool dlplo .. 01 OED. NMCI ho. ., hoopltol. Eight-t., hour
•r wtth '*lid drNine Ncenet. porlodo, Fri thN Sundov. 304.
APIIIr 11 640 Fifth Avo, Huntlntl' 178·151117.
10ft. W. v•. no Lat• th.n 1:00
PM, Aug. 211. 1188. SCAC.Inc.
IIEEO -loyor.

33

Farme for Sale

btl••-

BeautHul home In Fl.twoodl
er11 of PotMrGy . 17 •cr• &amp;
tpring fld pond evaUable. Cell

for Sale

814·441-2359.

nice. ret. neighbor. t.rge
porch • nice yard for
weather *321 per month.

114·218·1447.

How toon can you move Into •

1- - --------

34

Pay own utilhl• . 1-814 -992 2381 days.

2 bedroom houae in Po.,...oy.
Unfumiahad . Fully in1ul1ted.
atorm doon and windows,
carpet. Nice and deen . Depolit
required. 614-992-3090.
Avtiltlble Sepl. 1. 2 bedroom.
unfurnlthed houu. Electric
hen. VIne St. Aaclne. Call
814-948-2946 for appoint"""'
H inttraated.

Cotttge, 2 rooms and btth.

Businen
Buildings

748 Third Avo. 1600

oq.

For Stlt: 10•90 fl. commerdtl
1onld building. Bride oonstnu:·
tlon. large llr.t• doo,., South
Fifth Ave. . Middleport. Phont

114·882-1188 dov~ 114·192·
5113. 114-1112·2021ovonlngo,

Pptndo, new o.-pet. 3 bdr., 2
Nlll. g11 tumeoe. woodbum•.

Fire demeg.S building. 509
Ma6n Sl .• Point Pl. . .nt, 304-

S82·3358 .

w••
•14.000. eon 814-378·2817.

duced to •12 . 700 .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION
Sap!........ 10 lUlL Sat.
Locatlort On St. II. ISO !II Mi.
110111 Hllldtn. till, ...
flullt Snl Hill Coat Co. Duo to

From Gallipolis. talil Routt 141, tum left onto
Routt
turn riaht onto P1triot Cadmus Road .
Walth for sians.
•
Looklnc for merch11dlse1 Try till Pltrlot Allction Baml
We hive ell tr~~~s of MWind used Mdlendlll-eppll·
tne»s, fllmiturt, utlquesand collectors llems. llrltst·
lectlon of merclt•dlst In the Tri·Stlte ••· sollllthln&amp;
for IVIIJOII I.

ns.

INO CO . recommends thtt you .
do buahl•• with p..,ple you
know , and NOT to tend money'
through the mail .,..til you have :
invatlgated the offering.

Need extru mon1y1 Friendly '
mme toy part i• hla immediate :
GPitl ln gl ior mtn-aerw and·.
dlmonlltratort in thil area. It ' a•
elly. fun end profitable. we·
htvl over 700 exciting toyt end;
gifts fe..,ring the ntw animated.
tolking doll "Cricht'' whld1 will·
be ld verti1ed on nltiontl TV . No
cuh lnveetrntl'lt, no coiiKting.
ru deUverlng •nd no ltrVice
chaJQe. AHyou Nediled•lreto
mae money, htvtfun andtfew
hours of IPic;;t time. No u:perlenot nec.11ry. Call 1 · 800·

h•lth IIIII 1111 to thllll·
Past bidder 30 ft. CliO!* llko
AM, 1962 0cqt Cullom 4 dr.
w txtra nlcl. nlct 1971 FOld
.... 4lllldtnl &amp;trluM tlllii111,
•"'- lull ol ""' &amp; 111111
IIHdllndiso. Wltdl Md Suoday'!
1or ru• tistinc.
tlonlt,
I Dlvtl.

C.

SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00 P.M.

p.•.

Consipments accepted froml:00-5:00
on Sllurdly.
Hm somethin&amp; you - t to Still Contact llrlln Widemeyer, Allctlonttr. Ari'IIIIIMitS far picbp hiVICIIVIIilblt.
Bant 11d Auttlonttr IVIillblt for Public AICIIons on conIncl. Contnct Includes hlullna •d tr•sportlnl all

Allctlonttr: Lon N•l

LIIP Auction Alii- 1!. 19161n
D111bar for Stall DID!. of Fl·

IIIII MMioldrotloo,
Aw. or Ouobar, W. V..

A

2 bdr. 2 baths. kitchen fur nlthed, 11 Court St. 1326 per

mo., partl1lty fur-

mo. plus utilitiM. rtferenca &amp;

•1..a

nlohod. potlo. Call 11 4·448· d-••· Co1111 4-445·4921.
7380 .. 114·446-7124.
14JII70 1-rvi.w 2 bdr., unturnilhld , \lefiiY nlce, loctted 2 mUM
from Oalllpolla. privet• lot.

~.

drill, .,OrttwMr, c::tttld......
inftnt to prl't..., matemtty,
large t ize Of combinlltkm bou"
tlque ftaturing more of th.(

hoHoot lo boot Hlllnli llrondo.
Opportunity No, 2· AopiMhy •

fun young Junior atoN fllturlng'
tht IM•t ltyt• tnd aoloft In
Jogging tutti, ewMII. T·th6rte.·
)erttyl 1nd yaur own hilt
trtnlfer dtpt. Opportunftv No,:

814-912 -2728 . Must ht\le
oppolntnwrt.

Two bedroom mobllehomanur

Roclno. Coli 814·882-5858.

Two 2-bldroom mobile home~,
2 miiM out Addlaon- lui., Ill•
Road, Oat hMI. no peu, 1200.

pluo utilhloo, oocurlty dl1f10olt
roqulrod.-11 4·445-8841.

8

Public Sele
8o Auction

ION

3· Ahlghvolu .. o!l-prlcolodl•.

Autturent tnd tavern for ....:
down town ,,.. or
C•M·
ollor 8:00PM, 304-175-71112.

le••·

____

Rd. 35. Go '"rox. 3 ntilts. Witch for 1uct1on

TRI-GREEN
ERI1'ATE -=OUPMI!Nr; INC.

1481 U.S. RouW 42 N.!.
Laroebi, OliiD 43140

'ttt~AJm.m1.m.mz
~ o.n

"uttV a...

..¢1~1~ •.0-~1111Mii11fl'll&amp;a-

•lin•.

"HOUSEHOLD"
.
18.7 cu. ft. Kalvinllor 14!rilhtdeep freezer, round table &amp;6
c:h1irs, hutcll, Sars Kenmore waller &amp; drver Oike new), hi·
dalbed, Zenith color TV con so~ 3 pc. co flee &amp; 111 d tables,
8assetl 3 pc. balroom su~e. Len~h AM.fM-casaette &amp;8
lrack sltelves, kitdlen tiiJle - chairs, metal kitcllen cabinet
w/;as doors, roclllnl chai1, rMc:. chain, 8.3 chest deep
freeze, llwn fumiture, awin&amp; misc. picturee, pots, p.,a, &amp;
dishes, eleclr~ sewn amidline, electric heaters, Christmes
Nlftts, bird blth, lw &amp;a1t1r misc.

, , ., ·"''RAAI.Ir ,

.

, 12••'-moblt holM

~r/12134

llild-on:

.·

,

·;

DA!SIIITH r- AUCDONEER'' -

"Z-;-3- .P.::ro::;fe
;:::-u= lo-:n-e,...l•.
•
Servlcee...___

•.

Wotor wlllt -lood ond dtlllod.
Fr• MtlmoiM. CoH 114-M2·
11001'... 114·742·3147.

Iagt Manor Apt . Middleport.
014-112 -7787. Equ•l Hou1int1
Opportunity.
Pomeroy 2 bdr, Naylors Run,
1175 m o .,00 deposit, yt~rd.
pt~tio. Ctll after 8pm 814-992-

1881.

1 t;ldroom apt . In Pom•ov.
co,_,lettly remodeled khchen
tumlthed. All new rugs. 814·

812·1215 or 114·982·7314.

1 beclroom tp&amp;rtment In Mlddl•
port. Unfumlthed. 1150. per
mctnth plus utlltti•. Call e1-'·

Pass
Pass

3 NT

, Pass

Pass

d2...

I NT

Opening lead: + 2

• t•inld 128.91 .
.;
14 . lA T plu1 8 prefW.IIhtd biN~
oak floor r•dom l~t~gth bunCU•

__

. ·,

~e-~1 ...~.. M,.20,~

...
'- . .... ,_ ..~r
_____
...,..,• r_1,~

Trailer apace for rant, Letan,
good location, adult s only,
*40.00 month, 304-876-2902

26 in. remote control MagntvOlC
conaoltTV exc. cond. *226 . Cell

For Lease

For 11111 lerge unfurnit hed 1at
floor 6 room apt adjacent crty
Ptrk. 1'A baths. 1326 par mo.
plus utlliti•. Atfertncn I
depoah required. Ctll 014-446·

1819.

Mercllallliise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION lo FURNITURE 62

Oliva St. , Galllpolia. New 1: uHd
wood-co.t 11ovH. 6 pc wood lH
aulte 1389, bunk beds 1199,

ltwlgroom IUitll t199-1599.
lompo, oloo buying coli lo wood

Coli 614·441·3189.
APPLIANCES

up to 1121 . Hidt·l · bedl 1390
to 1595. Rtclin~r~ 1225 ta

1375. llmpt 128 tQ 1126.
Ointnll •109 and up to M96 .
Wtod t1ble w-e c:halrt •211 to
1796. 0Hk 1100 up to 137t5.
Hutch• t400 tnd up, ~unk
beda complete w·mtrtr••s
1295 and up to 1396. Beby beds
I 110 6 1175. Mattr••• or box
aprNlgl full or twin t83, firm
173 , and 183, Queen tttl 1225.
King •uo. 4 drtwar ch•t 111.
Dr11s11'1 •89. Oun clb~ ... B.
10, a 12 gun . Qu or electric
r•gt 137&amp;. Btby mattr•"'
t31!1i &amp; 1-'1. Bed tram• 120.

2 bedroom fum lahed apartment
for rent . Adultl prtferred. 814·

882·2818.

· 2 bedrooma. unturnlahld. Utilitill p•rtlllly ptld. No pets. Ctll

514.848·22&amp;3.

APARTMENTS. mobile homM.
hou... . Pt. Pi ... ant andGallipo-

111. 614-441·S221 '
APARTMENT FOR RENT · Now

eccaptlng appllceUon1 tor rental
.,. .ments In M110n Aptl Llmhtd. Two bedroom apt• at
t181.00 ptr month. Aanttl
rtt• mrt M hlghtr d'l*'dlng
on lnoame. HousinG will be
evallablt to e.ch 1pplicant re-

G.-diMI of their raot. color.
religion. au or naturll ortgin.

,;\

•

614-441·0322.

For sale good used l oor 1n d
portebl1 color TV 't , C1ll 814-

448·1149-

lMge cheet t ype freezer almond
late model, workt good, 1140.

Coli 114·992·11891.

2 bedroom apt. Glllpolil Ferry,

Plokent UHd Fumiture. Good
qualfly ustd fumhure. Oplft 8to
I or c.U for ~ppolnt rnent.

pold. •.. _.. .. _.... No

2181 .

· In Middleport. Ohio, 2 bed room
furn lahed 1pt. 1· 304· 882 ·

2518.

tet 4 pc., 119.115 " ·
'
21 . Tempered thermal pene

gl••• %x32x78 129.115 ...
22. Oetogon ttffany lelld gl. .
wk'ldow 149.96 N . (24).
• .
23. lntulttld ltHI ckJon bl.nkl
1econds 125.00 ...
,.._:
24. 2x4x ~ tcuttlcal cellin.lh
emboaaed fire rated 12.21 • ·

28. &amp;pc. high gl-both tubklto
with shttlv11 •29.95.
25. Co.l tnd wood fireplac.
eto ve aheet steel •69 .91 or 2 tor
1100.

28. Prtflnlthed 4x8• 1AI meeonlte

12 indl Paracllp11 Dllh . Traclt•
Ill Motor DrNt. Gould O.xtl
1300 ReceNer. 11800. firm.
Call 114-992-11B1 wenlnt~ l.

firm. like

~ton .
boord 18.95 ond 19 .N to·
$4000. 080 . 83 Odyooav peg
P~n Warlhou18, Wtl!.mn,•JJh
Honda 800. Ditch Witch RQid
Punch .,d ecc1110rl11. •uoo. 814·384·31145.
Ca11114·848·2293.ovonlngs.
Full • in box IPrinu• &amp; m•nr-.

loblo. Coli 614·992·15387.
Wllek. 304·882-3225 .

newo, ontr 2 mot'ttha
old . Cost tiiOOwillaellforMOO.

Coll814·258·e251 .

'

NIIM' country dream ho!TW. IU8i:
for you. 118,9915. 4 bdr .. 2 ...lh.
See this model today. CIM

814·888·7311 .

11

Help Wanted

Used tOOO gel drinking Wltlr

8torage ..nk 1nd 1,000 g1l
plaatic 1ept ic tank. 304-576-

2349.

PART TIME

Air condrtion. twin li l t bedt.
complete, misc . Items . 304-

NO EXPERIENCE
NECESSARY

Uted Hotpoint c:h •t type freezer
20 cu. ft. 8Hi0. U1ed 30 " tlac.
rtnge, green •100. 304-675 ·

AGREAT OPPORTUNITY
EARN EXTRA MONEY ,

Cheal frHier lor sale. Exc.

Wovorly, Golllpotis, P0111110,:

675·2468.

2408.

Cond. 304·876·1848.

G un11or 1ale. de tier coat plua 10
pet. FFL holder. 304-895-30341
evening• .

Attal
•
NttioMIIy known in·lltn ""''

=':= =-llii=

ldvlrtlslna In lll,.;..rtols.
lbis pomunont part Umt po~i.
lion, nqulrinc no 111ft1lltio&amp;
Offill flEXIBlE lllllk tlayl Md
hours, Saturttoy 111111 lrldnatdty
hnlo 5pm. Cu iiiiQIIIrld. To
apply lor tli11101ltlon call (tal'
!act) (5131 563-7410 ao lortaoy, . ,

~Ill .

9 Ml-5 ....

Equal O!Jportvnity Employar.

Career Getting Stale?
Choose Fresh... Choose : ~
'

Choose a fresh approach to career devel opment
We ndy's natlona lly-tecoqmzed ma nagement

develop ment program ca n help you plan yo ur

new ca ree r Wllh a leader 1n the qulck·set'ltce
lnduslry We o t!e1
• 5-day work week

• Pens1on program

• Excellent tratmng a nd • Pa 1d vacallons
rap id advancem ent
• Savings p lan
• Stoc k o wnership

• Medical Denial pla n

So U you re interes led m a fresh app roach to
restauran t management a nd don·t have a
resu me send your letter ot quahticouons to Ntck
Bobo. WENDY'S INTERNATIONAL. INC , 390 su...,,
Bndg• PlCISa. Ga!Upolll, OH 45631 . We 01e an
equal opportunity e m ployer. m t h

114·982-2581.

rodill' . 3 curved giiU curio .
Antique wMh stand. Old rocker,

children - No Pett- 30•-t':'l -

19. 7 pc. wood prallnlohod vllyl

wr•p door trim *1 .00 11.
,
20. Solid oak Md bruttowl.blr

10 cubic ft. frH1er . Almond
color. hcellent cond ition . Ctll

Rotd . Reynold•burg, Ohio ·

Fumt.h.t 3 room tpt. 400.211t
St. 1221 .00. H11t 1nd weter

1 8 . Wood tr..dt doors MCondt
1&amp; lite &amp; 10 lite •89.95 .

1126. Coli 814-1181·4262.

tht m.in office, 1871 lrloe

43018 or coli 614·883·4514.

•

17. 17x19whhegoklvanltyand
marble top •39.91!1.

Whirlpool Wllhlf, dryer. 1126.
9,500 BTU 1lr oondH6onar.

304·773·&amp;01 1 or o:onloct Oo-

nill 8tre'b or Waltlf Juatlce 81

11 59.96 to t179 .!15.

Coli 814·251-1747.

Duncan Phyffe table with 4
chtlrt. Wtlnut dkllng table whh
I chain. Modem lovMMt and

lntartlttd •PPIICIIntl lhoukl ull

16. (11and2pc. fib•giMatubln
ahower combinetion •.con•

79 Ford 4•4 wheel drive.

•ee'

U1ed Fumiture; WQher l
dryer. tlec:trlc rlr'lge, wood
table • 2 bendl11, bedt,
drM..,, • ntr~llner . 3 mile~ CltJ r
Bulavllle Ad. Open lAM to
8PM, Mon. thru Sat.

•3411
'

y4 -448-064S.

McDtniel Cuatom Butch.,JnQ.
Open for butinea•. 5 d•v• •

mtttl cab.,MI, hMdbo•d• 130

e

trtller underpin seconds

J•

27. 91t9 Indoor or DUt door 01lle
c•rptt tlla rubber beck 4 cenu.t o
8 centt ,.,

Commodore 8A whh 115-'1 di1e
drive pk1110ftware. Price ntgot-

lfld up to

room unfumlahed apartment.
C•ll 014-992-15434 or 304-

...

...::;:=t~!!'.=!'!:::~=~--1

Tri-lttr elec. w.adar AC-Dt
230 , rods &amp; welding hit tncluded. like n•. 1200. Puro ll:
C -W 200 torch. gauge Itt, nMN
never been uHd 1100. Call

t

1 6 . 8rown 28xOO· red!:

there is something greater to be

614·379·2706

110-.

176aq.ft.

nine tricks.
It certainly goes against the grain to
give up your control in the defenders'
suit when you're playing no-trump.
But it must occasionally be done wheo

2218 .venlngJ ,

892-2749.

This is tilt pttnollll IIIOIIIIIY d tilt IIIII Aud11y An·
dlnon. From lllt:I•;OIIIo till St. Rt..l24 •stto Co.

I

South

\.

10. 6 Dr 8 panelstllllnau~
pr ehung door1 tBI.H .
1 1 . S.tMI pr.. ung lniU~
doors and jaml 1 'h hr. flr-..,n.
1 189.88.
',..
12 . Sewer and drain pipe •~10
PVC pretertted U .t9 .-. •
13 . e· picnic t1ble 2 bencll•
mede from 2•4d . rtdwDDd

1237.

49

..

ea.

d-h. Collll4-448·4159.
Fuml1hed tffl clency 1150 mo. Sat. 114·446·1689, 627 3rd.
510 short bed topper 1300.
utllhl• ptkt . 71h N1ll A.... Call A..... Galllpolit. OH.
Rkllng lawn mower 11 11 1100.
3 bedroom tloublo- 3 miiM 441·4418 oltor 8PM.
VIlli\' Furniture, ni'N &amp; Ultd . 304·882·2714.
out o1 Pomoroy oo Rt. 143.
Gorago Md l..o yard. Portlllly Unfum. 1 bdr. 1pt.. Clrp..ed, Urgt MCtlon of quality fum i1218 Eutern AYe ..
lurnlohed. 11 4-912·7401 .
utllhlee paid, no children. no ture.
Golllpol~ .
11 Help Wanted
pet1. C•ll 814-448 -1837.
2 bedroom. In Tupp•a Pllin1.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
0175 por .-th pluo utllijloo. 1 bedroom 1pt. for rtnt. B•ic
Coli 11 4·817-3487.
rent tt•rta 1218. • month lhet Sot• tnd ch.trs priced from
includ• ell utlliti... Deposh
RESTA!JRANT YANAGERS
T....... for rent tn SyrecuM. CtH required of 1200 . Conttct VH- 1385 to •915. Tlbloo no ond

SATURDAY, AUG.30, 1986
10:00 A.M.

end much

East

UMd tppllance~ tnd TV 11ts.
Open BAM to IPM. Mon thn.J

~~- porldng. FOOl ·loaatlon In
city. Muat hrW~e reftr~CII and

PUBLIC AUCTION

th., ll'ly MOre rt your city..

~ry.

North

CDUnty Apphlf1ct, Inc. Good

oft

304·675·2&amp;48 "' 178·1781.

ltOrl fllllturel. "lining, IUPPN~

West

llltnlngl .

0350.

1699.9&amp; 101. olngl• Ult,qo,

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

t300. 304·178·2580.
Nloeon• bedroom mobllehoma.

Mrs; Edward Chevalier-Owner ·
1.0. (lac) McCoy, Auct.: 985-3907

r11utw retaii...AII Programs ln·
cludt ; beghtnlng Inventory;

t K 9 52
+K Q8

FOf renl · crop ground. 304 -676-

•

8 . Double aNte llgftt dOor lib
with '1:1 gleu inallat_. ·~
9 . Double commercltl en~01
doo r 11t'1 bron1 aluml...-m

• A Q8 2

~uH · Ht 18e4 Wartd • • •
Encyclopldl-. lftill in bolllll.

and has hlr holllt for sale, so wlllull the followina: ·
ANTIQUES I COLLECTIBLES
2 iron double beds, dresser, 3 cupboards, stright chairs, 3
rockers, iton pots, hat rack, jars &amp; crocks, grist mill sacks, si·
deboard, dishes.
·
HOUSEHOLD
Dinin~ room suite !table, 6 dlairs, buHet &amp;2 china closets!, 3
pc. livmg room sune, 2 double beds, 2 ~n~e beds, 2 wooden
cabinets. 2 me!JI cabilets, record cab111et gas heaters,
square tub Maytag wrilger washer, Hoover IJ)rlable washer,
bed linens. throw rup, pots, pens, d~hes , table lamps, etc.
MISC.
Hand, lawn &amp;garden tools, 2 new inside doors. 21J)tch sw·
ings, lot windows &amp;screens, lawn chairs, wash t4bs, buckets
&amp; barrels, odd pes. of lumoor &amp; pipe. Much more misc.
Lunch bJ Lldit1 of thl Methodist Chun:h
Not rest~onslblt lor eccldentJ or loss of propllly.

TIUISDIIY, Alai' 21, W.
9:11 A.l,

•ort f••.,rlng tunclrldt of top
brtnd• 1t 20% to 80% below

SOUTH

+K 9

4 room apt. new c•rpet nica •
amron ..clinen *99. nCM &amp;
ct 11 n, clo" to shopping •
achools. Applitnctt fumilhld . uMd bedroom ault•. r.,gu,
All utHhl• paid. uctpt lleo. . wringer w.shert, a •ho• . New

Atlulto only, no pliO, 02&amp;0 mo. U15 mo. Colll14·448·7515 .
con 814·441-2300.

po•unltv No. 1· AIIIII• bottO(

prot.atld

Regency Inc. apartment 2 bdr.,
utilltlea ptrtly p•ld, nice. Cell
304 -876-6104 or 304-875-

12x50 edge of town depotH. no

tion of S.R. 611). Irs. Edward ChiVIIItr is movinc

dolly.

moro. n 4. t78 to • 11.871'
co,.,.,lete. Call Meritnn• F.:
ohio no. Inc. otl-404·411-4431
for brochure 9tm to 5pm EST
M.F.
!:

2 bdr. unfurnilhed ept. in Crown

7926.

SAT.L AUG. 30; 10:00 A.M.
At 66021 ~.R . 124 in Rttdsvlllt, 011. (near inters1c·

EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 7:30 P.l.
CLOGGING &amp;SQUARE DANCING
FEATURIIIfl LIVE 8~110

329·2362.

• J 10 7

+J 6 5

030 lo King fqmo taO. Good
992·514&amp; doyo ond 11 4·948· Hltetlon
of btdroom ., liM.

IIARliN WEDEMEYER - AUCtiONEER
614/245-5152 - 614/388-8249
APP ., ARVIN COLEGROVE

Open your own buutiful dllcoum lhoe 1tare. ltdill, children a, m~t~a. All flm quality
rnerctur,dlae. Nattonelty know
br~t~da· Lll Claiborne. Ev•n
Plcont. AndrM GtiNr, 9 W"t,
S.ndolino, Amtlfl, Nlkt and
meny more . f11 , 900 to
039.900 Including boglnning
lnv.ntory, training , fi•turee in stallld, grand op1nin1 promo·
tiona •nd round t rlp 1lr ftrt . Cell
IOday . PrHUgt Fuhiont 601 -

Spring Vtlley Plu:a. Jackton
Ettate Apertment1. 614-4463997 . Equ,pl Housing
Opportunity,

2 bdr .• fum ., new ctrpet. AC, in
Gtllipolla. ceu e14-448-1409.

Resident and Business Auction Smlct 11110 1valllble.

Diltrlbutorthlp. High volume
route for 1111 in Gtlllpollt, Oh.
Anrtgl In co me • 14,000 116,000 plut. Ont day work
w"k. Sell for t13. SOO c11h.
Ctll1 · 1100-828-9273 until ePM

'J 9 7

•econd• 13.18.

4 . 4 x8x'lt and l-11tht ~
p ~ tling woodgrain lftd ,n.ts
18.96 and 07.95-d ......
6 . 4x8111A bl.ndM watir bqercl
exterior glued T plu1 0 •• .• :-·
8 . Wood thormll poln tiOW
picture window• 5xl 124,. t'
7. Double ltHI inauletiCI • ·
tranc1 door Nt't wHh ~ Ill•

• 10 8 6 4 3
' K 10 5
t Q4
+ A 10 7

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P~tk ,
Route 33 , North of . Pomeroy.
lergelota. Call 814-992-7479.

Furn. 4 rooms &amp; bath elun . No
pets. adultt onty. Aef. &amp; dep.
required . Call 814·446-1619 .

merch~~tdist.

227·1&amp;10.

1 and 2 bdr . ap11. tor rent. Ba1ic
rent for 1 bdr. 1176. B11ic rent
for 2 bdr . e 212. Alto 1200 aec.
d..,. raq . Clo11 to Foodltnd and

City. Call 81 4·258·1&amp;20.

pell,

-'' condhlonar, •IlChte nove a
refrlgtntor, uncftrpinnlng. r..

Apartment
for Rent

3 bedroom, 2 .2 acr•J•nv•Run
Aoed, reference• and dtpatlt.

1972 F-m. Good oond., 2 Comm•rai•l or warahoult .
bdr., lla1-'. P8tlo, twn6ng.
Ptrldng on 1lde. Adj~~eent to
Woohor lo dryor. Now un'*"ln· third. Pint St. Cell 814-446- 42 Mobile Homes
nina lndutlod. Coli 114·245· 2352 lor oppolnomont.
for Rent
11885.
14x70 Kl-ood porch lo
underpinning, on renttd lol. 3
bdr. CaM 51 4-HB·Inl.
1881 O""""'ok 14x70. 12x7

44

Fum. garage apt .. 1 bdr., 12315.
utilhl• p1ld, 29 1h Neil Ave.,
Gtilipollt. Ctll 446-4416 tfter
Bpm.

v• hoot. -trol orr,

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

mont t2.99 oa. 4x4 ll .ot;t eo.
. ;1.':!;._
3. 4o8•h lltvon plywood ~..
l tcOndl.

EAST

WEST

tJ 75 2

nlct lot. Call 304-n3-6828.

fumlahod, utllijleo pold, ue.oo
week. 304· 076· 3100 or 8765108.
lt. 304·571-2838.

St.. Roclno. 2 .... llvlna
35 Lptl &amp; Acreage
room. kitchen, blth, yerd, 10xl0 M.- 2 bdr. •king
Cal 114-982·2758 or t1,100. For 1110rt Information
l •tlln.
14·M8·4231 .
coli 114-218·1148.
Aohton building loto whh public
w•ter, mobile hom~~ permitted,
304-571-2331 or 304·571·
2287.
8
PubHc Sele
8&amp; Auction
1 eert lol on ~-·· Run Rolld.
304·87S-2883.

3 Gre81 opportunilieal We I t
Mtrlenna Ftshionl (alno. ,977 ~
will help you optn 1r1d own th"
catt Of vot• 1 regiltrttlon cud, cknhlng 1tor1 oonc.pt of you•
aoeill 1ecurlty clrd. chiCk 1tubt cholc1. Ask about one or •• th,.
that lndic.teth11mount of grou · of the following oonctpta. 0 ~
ftmily incomt for paltt...........,
and the type of welftrt Mtlltan~ you 1re receiving baled ott,
the f1mlly lize. All mal• bom
lift• 1-1-80 mull have
live ler\li ce number E.E.O.
Employer.

Hannan School, 304 · 743 -

72&amp;1.

814·2&amp;8-8e13.

Help Wanted

dBmon lt retort n thil area. It's
181V, fun _..d profitable. We
hive over 100 exciting toy1 and
gifts featuring the new tnimated
talking doll Cricket which will be
edvertil ed M nat io nal T.V. No
cas h inv estment. no collee11ng.
no delivering and no tiNice
ch arge. All you need is adellreto
make money , have tun and a few
hourt of sptre time. No experience neca11ary. Cell , -800-

711\73 .

-A-vol
- lob_l_o- no_w
_ -2:-bd
- r.-h-o.,.
completely .. modeled. oxtr•

r~~;~~~h~~=~=~r~~~~:!_

Smtll ferm for ..1. 3 bdr. hou11.
3 bdr. trail•. tobtcco
C•ll

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAUTY
MOilLE HOME BALES. 4 MI.
3 large bedrooms. 1Y.. bath, Xl WElT, GAWPOUS. liT 31.
INlng room. XL kkchtn. utility PHONE 814-441-7274.

room, ger.ge. Arb•gh Addition
In TUPPM Pl1lnt. Cll1114-887-

14•70. 3 ..-m. 2 both.
Good condition,
18000. WIN
tokolf•
-..-. Coiii1•·949-2B01 .

Nice 3 bedrooms lg. yard. 314
3rd lt., KaniiUga . Cell&amp; 1 4·440·

2 . 4JI8x V• maeonlt.- ... ,........,.

• 643
t A 8 63

2
gained, like making your contract
MOBILE HOMES MOVED' In· bottar thon now home! bedfloor
leundry,
gar.
and
lovely
nesse
o
e
eart
queen
wi
l
give
ENTERPRISE ASSN.
eured, reMOnllbit f'llt•. Cal roomt, LR, DA , kh .• bamt ., 1tt
304·578-2331
yard. VIrgin ia l. Smith Real
Eototo, 514·398·B828.
12d0 Mobile homton 1· 3•cr•
42 Mobile HomBs
64 Misc. Merchandise
lot ot Apple O...o. 113.900. FUft11ohod houot 2 bolr .. 0196.
46 Space for Rent
for Rent
304·171·21153.
131 rear 4th Ave.Gelllpolla. Call
448·4418 ollor 8PM.
locust potts &amp; Beagle rabbit
For Slit tt81,000) or rent 'B3 Doubl.wldt. 24x48. •cr•
woodakf lng, tlrtplece, cell· Apartments and house• in Nice 2 bedroom trailer for rent Large lot Addison Rd . &amp; small lot dog. Coli 614-266-1902.
t•4&amp;0.00 monthl7\'o mll•lrom lend,
Rt.
7.
Call
614
-446-4265
.
Rout
h
L
ane
in
Ch•hife.
On
on
Ina fan. out building. nMr Pomeroy 1rea. Oepo1tt required .

614·378·1151.

For quick oalo. U4.000. CoR
114·112·7453.

N.. d titre monay! FRIENDLV -:c:,.---::8:-U-S-:'1.n- e- - - - 21
118
HOMETOY PARTIES h•lmmediate openingt for managers and
,Opportunity

12

Duplex for rent
Second
Ave.. Gallipoll1. 3
r. llvingroom. dinlngroom, n..v kitchen, btcky•rd, refrig. a range .
U1 0 plua utllitllll &amp; aecurlty

a.ll.81 •

• 9 13 2

When your A-K·Qof spades can take
only two tricks for you as declarer,
you will need 27 high-card points plus
a little luck to make nine tricks at notrump. You may also need to make an
unnatural play. South took the queen
of spades and led a club to the king.
When that held, he played a diamond
to the ace and led another club. If East
had again played low, all would have
been well. Declarer would have won
the queen and cleared the suit while
the spade ace was still sitting in dummy as an entry. Alas •.East grabbed the
club ace and played back a spade. Declarer could now play the high club
but had no way. to enjoy dummy 's
fourth club.
The winning play after winning the
first club trick is to get back to dummy with a second spade. Sure, that
sets up the defenders' spade tricks, but
you are relying on neither defender
starting with more than five spades.
You can now lead a second club and
establish the fourth club while you
still have the diamond ace for your
certain entry . Later, the successful fi -

41

apot, within w•lkmg

rfo R TH

S econd'•· CloMoull· luplua,
1. 4x9 and 4ilx7·1•d'l•
cota m1tontte siding or pan~Q
aecond' s 19.81-- I .Hpc. ,

+AQ

By James Jacoby

Rc nl;; ls

For 1111 by own•. 7115 Third
Ave. I or 4 bdr. 2 bltht. New
kltch•n ctblnlts. G•r•a•.

Gll"dlft

By Edward M. VoDbom
County Extension Agent
Agriculture
GALUPOLIS - A certain 1Dplc
of ronversatlon when cattle produC·
ers meet Is the Fescue Thxiclty
problem.
There ls strong evidence that the
fungus "Acremonfum Coenophlalum'' greatly reduces the perfo r·
mance an&lt;l quite possibly the
reproductive ability of grazing
animals. Recent research at the
University of Georgia has Identified
the toxin s as ergot alkaloids, known
vasoconstrictive substances. This
group of chemicals ls !mown to
cause da mage in livestock from
years of research with ergot.
Highest concentrations were In the
leaf sheath where the fungus grows
extensively, but lower levels were
also present ln leaf blades, which
are free of the fungus. The Georgia
scientist also confirmed the Undlng
that Increased nitrogen fertilization
of enllophyte - in fected fescue
Increased . the levels of ergot
alkaloids. The Georgi a group also
noted tha t plant growth and stress
might affect ergot alkaloid accum·
ulatlon In plants.
Unlike most fu ngi, this organism
grows Inside fescue plant tissue and
cannot be detected without labora·
tory procedures. A special labora·
tory has been established at
Alab ama's Auburn University. To
sample pastures, a minimum d. ll
tillers Is required for each sample.
Tillers should not have bolted
(formed seed heads) and should not
Include roots and shou ld he the
lowest 4 Inches of the plant.
Samples should be collected at
random points throughout the field.
Cost for this lab test Is $25.00. Call
the local Extension Office at

Help Wanted

•c:r•
Coiii14·448-2U1 ollor IPM.

Woodt Agency.

Fescue toxicity problem topic

No UptriMot '*=•llry. Mull
bt welltDI1 for lmmediltt em-

- ·· ,_ cu-cy. Top,.~ 1- - - - - - - -·
Ed. 1 - Shop,
2nd. A... Mlddl4tr1. Oh. 114·
112-347e.
5
Heppy Ads

WANTED:
BANK
STO.
C
KS
WI PIJ top prlciJ for yotr lllltk ltocb. II
·. ·.

11

lnvettment Opportunity. 120
1 mi. from courthoutl.

G._ sc11oo1 dlotrlct.
r•ov•.
18.000. CoM 114·441·2025 or

• o-

Doing what conies
unnaturally

Townohlp. Coli 114·B37·10B1.

2-3 bdr. hou11, ltormwlndowa.

competitors helleve they face unfair competition when a loophole
gives such a ti g firm an accounting
break.

BRIDGE

Lot for 11le: 3YJ A. I'IHh:op
hometite , cleared, Harrl1on

bllho, portly lumlllhod. Goo
hill. low utllijiM. Colle14-245·
1248.

Farm Flashes

t714 .00 per 100. Gu a ranteed

2282.
tl"'· CoU 614·M2·1ti44 olt•
1:30PM.
WAIITEO TO IUY uood wood'lo
ooll · SWAIN'S FURNI· llolp Wontocl
11J~E. 3rd. • Olivo II. Gollpo·
111. Colll4-441-318t.
Nood I good people.

Giveaway

1 Card of Thankl

Help Wanted

et4·247·3125.

kHP clfdl, r.tum borrowed
price SJUklt. Ctll 614 -992-

30•1-1176·11870.

11

Middleaged gentleman needa

amall blade Cocklf Sp~t~lel
pupplel. One wearing ooller ~ d

PU BUC NOTICE

i 111 ,luym elll

Duckling l1nt1m roottlrt.

Found on County Ao.t 19 , 2

3 Announcements

The County of o.tti.l ha

8 Lost and Found

Giveaway

35 Lofa &amp; Acreage

3 bdr. hom., cloH to town. 2

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

®by Lerry Wright

KIT 'N'

Homes for Sale

For .... or ,..,t, houM on Vine

Public Notice

Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va .

304·178-11483 .. 117&amp;·14110.

53

Antique•

OLD OAIENTAL AUG&amp;
Colltoll- 1·11110-433-7147.

WANTED. Any 1izeorcondhion.

Engineer

MANUFACTURING
ENGINEER

Wehman immadlatt op1111n1 1n ourGalllp~is , Ohio '!'I· ~
nulacturinl facility fort llnuflctutlnl E1111n•r Hlk1n1 • 1
a challenlln&amp; P!lslllon with powth potantlal. ABS Dt~~• . 1
In lbchMlctl Enlintlrinl with 3-5 1'111 trl !"'"ufactu•- ,.
in1 •lint1rln1 11ptrilllct In 1 mttllwoltin1 111vlron- · ;
1111nt ls r~ctulrllf .
,
•
Fldellll lloiUI offers 111 1mployees 1n attractive ban lilt I
packll;11nd tall!llllltlvt llilfY. Wt artiiUCctsafut For- ..,.
tunt !00 co"'IIIY wlt~ •u~l·natlonlllltlnllonsllllldl · ,
111.,ufacturl and dlsttlbuti 1 wldt varli!J of praclllon • '
pills fotllllplllllllndaslllli, IIIOIPICI, filii ~d COft· ' t~
structlon lqUiprRtftl, tlldMd IIIOIIIOIIYIIndtitllts, IS
wtll IS, twplle»MMt ltlllktls. This lltW Yort Stocll h ·
di•P ftrlll opnta 40 piMts and mort 111111 !iO dls· ~
tribulion canttrt
. ·~
To rtctlve confktMIIItl consideration for tills posltJon, . '
submit' rt~~lllllllcltl ..&amp;slllfY ~lttqty lftd '*lr••ts t
·to: P1nonnll IMJIII, FED£UI. IIOGULCOIPOIATIOII.
Pnclslon Fotpd Prodlcb DhlsloR. 21&amp;0 Eaattrn
1wtnu1, Gotllpolls, OH. 4H31.

�24, 1986
68
Concntt bk»cka alltllH verd or

,.,..,oft

Dtfto 24" Scrol f110 .;
Sondor • grlftdor delivery'. Me10n 1111d. Galllpolil
•121.: llouterTIIIIof11.; IKW 81ool&lt; Co.. 1231'1 Plno St ..
Oolllllolll. Ohio Cell 11 4-441·
_ . '"'" h11tor •::,;:. n 278$.
......., Floor droln•
•
..... : 1Z fl. Amort_, F-NI Pale lulldlng• by Quality
ltllld.... Worbhopo. corpor11•
-• 111.:
.. ~Mile.
....-.
2 Ito
IIICirlcll
.
enlrMI lhlft.,., glrtgM. Fret
304-·2·3;1 ' estlmttll. Phone 114-111·
7121 .
ij,IOVINOAWAY SALE ol"*''o
ullil rtntll unllormo 1-. . ;;
.n-1. 1om Somerville. 87 118
Pets for Sale
lu-o Adcln. 304-871·3334.

A:ti,

--old·-·

-;;;::::=;;:::;::;;::::;::;::::
0NgOnwynd Cett.ry Kennel.

..-.'".a
•. ,.,..
clothing
otool&lt;.

CFA Himoloyon, , ...,.. end
11om- kin.,., AKC Chow
pupplll. Coli 114·448· 3844
otter 7PM .

ttlt'Y . . . . . .

uood

In

a_ -

Softiii'VIIte. Eut of Rw••·

-od. Fri 811. Sun. 12:00·1:00

PM.

611

Cocktr

Span~

for

Sale

pupptw; Part

Hlrnal.y1n Peraitn ftmele kit·
1..; Minllllure SchniUIIr p.~pa.

Coli 114-982· 2107.
AKC 8 - pupo. Throoloft. 3

montht old. Prl~.

114-117·31158.

•?e.

CaH

ahota and wormed. 304-137·
3302
AKC Boxer, femMe. 304-175·

Black Doberm1n. female, 4
monthl ell ahott, • 100. Ctll
814-441·P841.

Building Suppliea

57

Musical
Instruments

Tn.nqt• and caae. tiO. Call
114-181-4418.

&amp;

81

....

Fruit
Vegetables

801 Fernwl 80 HP dull wholl. 12 mlxod hono 11.71-. 10
triCIOr, I bi&gt;n,m plowo. 12 11. '""" ...... f3.00 .... del.
hv*•la diM ¥tfth ntw cvttws. bualll'llbbfii. H-IIII, Itond·
Collt1 4-211··01.
ord - - I gotio. 4 - . 4'&lt;1
month old. 4 loogo brude -~
Coil
114·211·•08. ·
John o.,. 310 •1er. In .,od
aondMion. Coli 11'-182·7401.
3 ·alub calv•• Ch.&amp;•nlnl ·
310 John·
dozor. I woy 11-o~ Hlrelord. ·1011 llmbl_.o Wind!. Goad condition. mentll llmmtrhal-lenta
llortrudlo· Norolard. 0-~1•
814· M9·2121- 4t&gt;m.
Herolonl. Coii14·371·HOI.
1173 OMC AIIII&gt;. Rood T A.C.O. 310 OotroH. 13 oplld . You"l bull KIJ st..-1111 •
Honlord. 8Ud ily IUI-IItinoi.
Good condition, good rubbtr,
wet llne.l'llldy to work. tiiOO. · Wt hl'ftaint44andontM!bleotl.
Exceltent herd bUtle. axtMI1Miy
Coil 11 4-M8·2437.
aor-. Roldy lor Ill ..moo.
NM Hallond417hoylllno.lm•- l'llono - · 114-211·MOZ.
nlltlonll 1210 grinder mbler.
NM Halllnd 717 tor.-eherv"· 9 .ringer Hollloln hoHirl. Coli
tor. All good cond; 304-273· 114·311·1333.
4211.
Two goNod ooddlo horlll. fiOO
FARM EQUIPMENT: N- Hol- •d!. Col 114·311·8010.
lond For1110 Equip-1 Solo. 1
No. 1-thtW but• fo...ge bo• Arll&gt;lon Wold! C11&gt;11 M1r1. 3
with tendlm a1•12 ton wagen yro. IK!*Ion•. MOO.
•e.80C!: Ono No. 8 boll wNh 10 114·742-2177 - " " '·
"'" w11on fi.IOO: Ono Model
712 Clio- with motol·olort •
Grain
2 row- f14,DOO; OnoModll 84 Hay
30 lorogo blowor 1.000 RPM
42.800;; Ono uood No. 8
2
Net• whh ,0 ton runninv oeer l1rl~ 111d rye lor COVM' crop.
lt2.100: OnauMdModll707. 3 f3.00 buahlll. Long lottom,
pi hllal! d!opp•wllh both hoodo Ohio. eon 814-811-3111 .
11.100: Onouood ' - 17-17
chOPS* n, 800; Free flnll'ldng
until 3-1· 87 or e. 8 I*CWit for
I I ,JII\!illll !11 · '11
24 montno; B.l,.......lor 31 or
41 montflt or dlloauntl for cesh.
Keeler' I Service Center, St. 'At.
87 Loon. WV 304-111· 3174.
71
Autos for Sale
Ford Tn~ctor JubiiH t2,110.;
Cooe 1137 Lood• 12,100.: 101
Ford Mo- fi&amp;O.: N- Hoi- 84 Chtvltte 4 cyl ., 2 Mar, I
lend Beltr t800.; New Wegon tpd., AM -FM CMHite, ktw
1360. 304-171-2321 or 871- mll~~go. Coli 114-441·01 37
2108.
lfttr IPM.

Mal.llant PoOd .. Oroomlnq.

•e.oo whh

Groome poocU•1or

bath •e.oo. Flea dipPing
•10.00. Cocker Sptnltll
n1.oo. All l~r~~• dcgo uo.oo.
Groom til brHdt. Hourt 9 a.m.·

Cl11r11ee 011
U114 Traetort
lllfllr

9 _p.m. No Sunday worlt. Call

CaolvHio 114-117-3811. Welcome nM bulin•·

64

Misc. Merchandise

trans.

773·6721 . Open 7 dayo.

12 • l ..llor•
Mower, auto. uar-. •
S1495 .. Now SJ

Cadet

Eer Com tor 1111. 304-176·
1888 evenings.

=69

pll'

hundred, Morg111 Woodla~Nn
For Sale or
' Form, Rt. 31. 304-171-2271 or
- - -- - - - - 671-1208.

Trada

PAPERA

I 1· I I 1
2

'PINiy 16 hp
with 42" maw~tr.J
·a~'.,.

82

I,_IIIM 11 hp WisraMi~ 1
36" mower
I:JM•w blatll.

Supplres
&amp; L1v cs tur:k

Wanted to Buy

I' I

S425 ....... Now S350
Dynamarlc 11
36" mower.
S450........ Now S.010I
Horse D-160 with
inch Mower, 3 pt.
p14m, 16 hp, rear grader

61

Farm Equipment

I~

com. CellforlttMtquotes. Alvei
City firm Supt&gt;~. 114-44112886.

Livestock

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 Wat. Jackson. Ohio.

814 ·211-8481 '
Melley Ferou10n. NM HoHand,
Bush Hog Sel11 &amp; Service. Over
40 Uled tractors to cl1oOH from
&amp; OOR1tletl line of new &amp; uMd
equipnwnt. Largest lllectlon In
S.E. Ohio.

..................... S239

JIM'S FARM EOUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 31 W. Goll;pollo.

Ohio. Call 814-441·9777, ove.
814-441-31592 . Up trent biC·
tort with w."enty over 75 uMd
I' acton. 1000 tool1.

III

I

I I I I'

TENJIC

Go11 for sele. Ctll 114-992·
7176.
Pony far 11le. BliCk 1nd white. 7
.,.., old Gelding. Gentle. a76 .
Boddlo 160. 814-811·4418.

For ult 8 , .., old m•r•.
Americln seddle brild. a.tOO.
30'-876-1371.
Wentld One regllttrld young
Nubi .. Dot • 3 yaulh. 304·
8711-7717.

18710iolo. Qood-cor, good
.......
od
d-......... ..
... · - · 1100.
~: 114·113·7310 Iller 1 :00

..

' '

'

I

I

I=·=·=·==-:::·::::·
rI 1 I I I
e:z. . L.
..

lut
very
muslbook
havewaa
a good

L..

__,,::G_O;,..:A-...r-F-.!;E;.-:.:R,..-11

~

,,
·'"

.

' ~ -.

good; you
."

f t Comptefo !ho cnucklo

quoted

t,l\

by filling in

::,

~

:_;··l:i.'·
' f.J• ',

:: ' . ..:t·

r··

~

..&gt;- -~
~·

,,'1:13lii:IM3dA..I. poo6 8

tAl~ llnW noA :poo61.JaA 88M liOOQ
1111 JOOA, :.ljdiJ 1,.18~dlll!ol0\lcf
,,'IJIWI:) pooll I IAI~ llnW
nDA ·111Jf1101d II:IIN .. ~!Oild 01
lueuJ)jdWOO pej)UI~·U81 8,JO~lfl\'

lliliiiA!JdA..I.
ilfJrliO:I
ON/MNn
l::si'HI
AI¥WS
iUSilN
I:J'flddV /
. SlJ'HIIYWI

,

'14 Covolt. wogon, • cy~ I
• • · olr Mid rodlo, fron1 wholl
drl¥1. .1.100 or bMt oflor. No
•odo.· 304-8711--4140 end ' - '

r;r==j~~~~~Tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
8771.
71
luto1 for Sale
7• CemtrO 1, 200 good condi1171 Volwo ototiorowiiO•· good
tion. CIIII14-112-324Z .
BUILD YOUR NEW BUSINESS BUILD-~ .. n. 100. CoM 114·441·
ING HERE! 150' FRONTAGE ON ST. RT.
1980 Trtni·AM u . contll. MuM 4447 .
alii M,200. l•t offer • trade.
7 NEAR FEDERAL MOGUL. AVERAGE
8oolut for 11.200. Coil 814· 11 Ololo DoNo II, 2 door, V·l
441-27 ...
'""'"'· • lily -lppod, low
DEPTH APPROX. 500'. ALL UTILITIES
.......... 1 own•. uoel•t
1971 M11ibu Cl. .lc. 1173 -hloro . Coil 11 4 -381·1140.
AVAILABLE PLUS A VERY NICE
Plymouth Dutter. Ce11114·4411177
OWiftWbile
Cutl••
Su·
3324 ..... 1:30 .
1¥1 STORY HOME WITH FULL BASE- ·
. . - P.I.A.A. -d oh-.
1871 ChiVIIII Moll'"' Clooolc IUIW ..,etil rei.., whllll. t410.
MENT AND TWO GARAGES. $75,000.
t 1,800. 1942 Wlllyo Joop M II Coil 114·""1·•03.
1800. Coli 11.· 317-0341.
BLACKBURN REALTY 446-0008.
1110 ChMOiet Citetton euto,

1914 T.-llrd conv.-.lbl., u.c.
zoo. 21 OS Uncoln
Avo. 304-871·2414.
1881 Esoort Pony, uc. cond.
11.000 or boot offer. 304·171·
1700.

11M Chtvrlllol C-10V· I, oulo,
..-o. uoolont
oondhlon. Col 114-2411-8104
ofleriPM.

PRICE REDUct:D $10.000 - OIIE Of 111£
LAIGEST IIESIDOOAL lOIS 011 SECOND
AVE. - Older home diets 3-4 Ills, LR,
klchen, DR, FR, beth, unallached garage. Cal
lor more details today.

1814 Rongor XL 4 cyl .. 4 opd.,

. ,.
,.

good oond .• low mllttge. mutt
111 to apprtelete *4.500. CeH

.,

814·2111-1321.
1171 Toyoto Pldc·up ond a 11.
truol&lt; - e r. Coli 114-182••7 - 7:00p.m.

1 loc:a\8! jusl
from ta«n or the
hospitll. Three bedflllms. beth. ivmg room,
eatin kitchen with eye klvel oven, range,
brealdasl bar, family room w~h woodbuml!g
fweplace, util!y room. Ihave been gilen ~ d
TlC lrom my owner. Call and ask about me
today!!
6100 SQ. FT. BUILDING - Solid concrete
walls, 200 ft. lr!Wltage on SR 7 in Cm-n City.
Formerly l.5ed as a furnlure lactory. Ideal lor
retail sales or manufacturing business.
AFFORDABLY PRICm AT JUST $2Ul01Ciose to c!y on Rt 141 this home diets
klthen, LR, flrllily room, d~ing room 111d tun
~enl larl!ll unallached block garage. Call
lor an appointment
THIS llliE HAS All TIE TIUNGS YW
WAIIII!! - 4 BRs, equjlped kldlel, 2 tllltts
(master bath hal a whrlpool), LR. carpeting.
heat pomp, cent ai, allached garage, above
ground pool Just minutes lrom lollln al
Centenary.
24 ACRES llll. HARRISON lWP. - ClAY
UCK ROAD- Rolling l11td, well oo [Joperty,
barn and 1DIItlcm base. Call »r more
lllormalion.
TIRED Of RUIIIIIIIG 10 10WII MIY II IE
THE KIDS IIAYE ASCIIOOLICliYIIVI- This
lovely brick home is locallld \llilhil walling
distallce ollhe pie sdlootand hilfi school
and offers 3BRs. balh,LR, lilthen,dililgroom
\llilh buill~n china cabil!t. family room in
basement. gas hell, filtlllce, 1tllcMI pntge.
FRI:E REDUCED TO $49,000!

FIREPLACES INSERTS
HEAT UP TO
3000 SQ. FT.

HOUSE
•Twin Blowers •Glass Door

•Auto. Thermostat
•Large Ash Pan ·
.
•Burns Wood or Coal

SSO HOLDS YOUR STOVE
nLL FALL
YOU WIU 1101 FIND AN EQUAL
QUAliTY STOVE A1 1HISE
SAYINGS ANYWIEIE

(Guar...taedl

nE-SEASOII SAU...

WIMIGA - $19,900 - 3 BR llime IIIith
kll:h«1. Ill, balh, ps IU. Cal for an
IIP!Kiiiibnenl

WOOD &amp; COAL FUIIIACE

S795

0111E11 AIIXIOUS lo SB.l-HAS REDUCED

111£ PRICE BY $10,000 -132.9 ms mil in
'Walnut Twp. 111 !Iori home 1-.s 3 I!R, ball!, .
42x92 blm, 111111 lotllcoo blse. Call for an

·suPiil·fLU CHIIiil¥

lljlfJOillbil!llt.

MAUIIRD 10 YUIS
"2100° PIPI"

'I

.

HARRISOIIIWP. - CIIIEENS ID. - 53
ACRES Ill - 4 BR home olfets llill:hen, LR.
bath. elecfric 88 hM, carpeting. Jlx42 steel
bldg. with WIXldbuming ~ barn and 3
sheds. Call for more information.
PRIDE Of OWfiEISHIP - lovely homllofers
3 BRs, 3baltts, equipped klchen, 14x4Uarnily
room, dm:le. firepllce, 2 car altadied prace.
20x40 pool and satellite dish. Cal lor an
appoinlmenl

NEW USTIIIG - .6 mi. df Rl. 35, II Kill MIL
:16K35 roncrete block ttlg., presently IRf as
paint and body shop, motile home hoolwp on
property.

STEP 1110 ELIGAIIct: when

_

)IIU

en1!r the

Ioyer of one olthe French City's finest Formal
LR. lormlll dinin'- spacilus master bedroom
with office or sewrtgroom adjacent, den. 2BRs
211 baths. 3 fr!IJiac;es,
=~
room, solarium,I:O'o'IHI [JIIil, mantd
and much more. Call for an kppuillbtiti11l

-irs.

"rtl

ADDISOIIIWP. -l'ollorn TIVI Rd.- 93
aaes m/1, all woods. (Jd bam oo [Jl'llll!lly.
$21,900.
I•IIEDIATE POSSESSION-lois d r011111lor
the kids and a nice r.wden. Thil atlnctM
home oftets 3BRs, LR, ikhen, 2 t11tta, farrr1l
dining. !Uldeck, lui blssnent Cal for more
dellils.
OiliER HAS RmUCED 'liE PRICE TO
$1.1,!1110 - l'eri nice s1art1r homa or
invllslmenl property. 1bne diets 3 Ills, LR,
kil:hen, bllll, 2car llillllchtd Pl1ll. fenced
yard

Calllo!IIY.

ID1S OF QOOD LMH Rill SAl£ - 11.4
liorftl aflll1 3 Ills, 2 balls,
laltB IR, llitheri, lui*-'•'~ oovn1 fnlnt
perch Ind. "" pelil: Cal blay tar an
lfJIII)I1Inll II.
aa1IS m/1, roomy

'

8lWPOU5

HOUSE FOR SALE

Assume 81'1% fixed rale loan with less than
rem1ining.

'

. , . 11 GIOI - 2.5 ICIS, more or less,

:h!:'bnt2 bait!!,
ranch ltyle ho~ leatures 3
lR. kb:hen wlran!lll.
req., IIIDIIIIM, tun b

!7«1~

carpelil&amp;
Iiiii pump/cenL air, one car alllched Jlflfll
1M 11111 lachld prap. lJII d room for
,..-.. lltd enioYinc the outmors. Cal

-

• .• -II ACIES - CHESIIIE TWP.VICIIIIIand. Septic lank oo [Jl'llll!lly. Cal lor
11181'1 information.
NP. - FIOIITMI • ST. IJ. 141
- IllS ICIIII! m/1, vacant ~ Cal lor more
ilbiMtillt.

Ill THE
IN lliS NlW llliE!
- Situa\8! 00
woodlld k* lhil ~vefy
home offers 3111s, 2 tllltts, klchen,LR family
room, lull basement, deck, gafllle, gas and
cent. air. Call ICiday.

25 years

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
CAll JEAN CASTO: 675-3431 or 675-3030

SOMERVILLE REAL ESTATE

lfDUC(D TO $.,110!1 GRFAT
. . . . lilliE - Thilllillll oilers lllrfl!
lR wlti fiepltcf, dilill - · 3!IRs, bath. lui
b uiNII,l car llra&amp;e. deck,lenoed yard just
llliUta mtwm oo Rl 141. Call lor an
·~~ 'lbi6tl

YOU WON'T BE aiAII~m FOIIlOI HERE
- 2.494 acres, m/1, ranch style horre leaturea
3BRs, ooe lui and lwo II baths, elll·ll kilt:hen
LR. luH lumen!, lil'llfllace, rounly and weti
watef, storage buildio' Be sure to )lJt this m
your must see lilt.

01111 IIWCING AVAILUU - 9.5.:res
IIIII. M1rJtn Twp., lrootage on 81. 160.Can lor

CWI( CIIAPR RD. - Morpn Twp. 7.668
acres m/1. $6,000.

PIIC(

dellill.

GET IN TOUCH WITH NATURE HERE!- Thil
~ bOO! home offers a panoraml: view of
tranquil valleys and majestic woaded hils. Can
be purchased Wilh lwo acres or 19. Newer,·
home diets 4 bed1Ulr1'5, 2 baths 1R tively .
klchen, dining n with patio 'doois 111d
woodlumer, carpeOOf!. heal Pll1111. cenl ar
lui basement, 2 car garage. Wild turkey and
deer are seen oll!n oo llis serene sdlir)g. Cal
today.
CIWOIAIS HILlS -l24acres moreorltiss.
Owner finallCIIg available.

COIIFOIIAIILI,uvlMG PRICED AT$19,m·
- Tha atlnctM home diets 2 Ills, bath
·kltlien \llilh ran !Iii, dilinaroom, LR, carpet, 'i ·
car LINIIIchtll~~~~~t. silulllid oo two lob. Cal

,b!IY.

Real Estate General

....

VIrginia

c---D

71 Chevy Blutr need tome
worl!, t410. Coil 814-3811118.

SPRING YAUEV mATES - TrHMI lklme
offers 3 BRs, 2 btths, nice equippad klchen
L-shllled lR, din ill area, 24x 12 farnly 11111111
with woodburninf lrllfl~ce. gas ll!at. cenL•r.
2 car garage. Ca lcxlay.

carryoul

4 W.O.

1877CJIJoopoolttop. 3opd ..
1 cyl .. iltod1r1. wond!.
f1,800. Col 114-4411-8173

tell

WANT 10 OWN ABUSINESS OF YOOI Ollllf
- 1500 SQ. It concrete bloctt buiidilgslualed
oo .66 acre l)'t!SMIIy bein&amp; opera\8! as a

Van1.

112168

R-1-N-G!!! TIE BARGAIN BEll - 3 tedroom rome,
1ust ri~t lor the handyman. 12'x60' motile horne.
approx. 2'A acres. City school!. Owrer reeds a deaP.1
112172

Lovely 3 bedroom split level. 31'1 miles from Point
Pleasanl on Sand Hill Road. Situated on a nice
corner lot, house has family room with WBFP, 2full
baths, and double car prap.

F-210 4 w - drlvo 31G 4
• • · 11,300. H o - lUI*
o.y choln- .128. Col 114·
318·-11.

a

ho""' nr gn!at ~ace to retie.

&amp;

1111 AW.

delai~.

:. -,

STOVES

2'

NICE lllME, NICE PRICE, NICE I.OCAIIONI - Well
spit-level 3 bedrooms, II! batl-5, large
kitchen. attache;! 2 car [II rage, apJX'OX. 'A of an .:re.
Attractive landscapin~ Located at SR 160. Cal lor more

1171 C'-Y C 10 plol&lt;up, body
good. "'"' good , 304·171·
3734.

73

pnlens.Locitiid iteor

ma~lained

Pl. PI, roily
' ...
'

ti

#2133

1110 Dodoo D-80 wNh topp•
11,111. 1t71 o - t1. tes.
1871 Lw 11.311. Jahn'o Au10
8oloo, luiovllo Rd. Oolllpollo.

125.00

FAOOIY omn
ONN Nl.Y•·•se, SAl. t·S

~

..

for Sale

tlroo, brolc11, lo"':·aul,;;._--~ :::: 1
oond: Mull
ollor ortrodo.
CoH

KINDLEWOOD

-

~~~~~P~ICIU~WRSRFHEREIaround · 3 tedroom, 2111th

club ..... o~.

24.95

-OLD nil HEATING co.

Real Estate General

1171 Ooclgt 4a•

39.95

HERE IT 151 - Ateautiful !tree bedroom, lwo car
garage, fireplace, it-ground pool on aII acre loljus13\!
niles out Ill 218. Call oo.v for more inlormaoon.
112146

1871 Oodgo CoN. 1400. 304·
171·3471.

FAMOUS

••• S1195

. WHAI A BUY! - $Zl.OOO.OO. 3 bedroom ranrll
approx. 13 yrs. old, partial basement. I car unaltl:hed
garage. living room and more. Quiet seltin&amp; 2.42 acres
more or less.
112155

aond. 13.

ON
NATIONALLY

I

$35,001. Cal for more inlormaoon.

1874 Corvltl• Strlngr.-,, ...t.
310 1ut wilh e-c. 4 11M' tlr•.
41 .ooo """'· n.eoo. 304571· 2813.

•o-a
- .... 75.1111
a-• ,....,,
,....,,....._____
75.1111

Full 75.1111
Mini 65.1111
, •..,.... ......
59.1111
•Stop lu.....

DO IT YOURSELF - Wlh alittle work this could be just
the home you are looking for. There's enou~ room
here yw can do whatever you \\lint. 21.83 .:res br

Wr....od 1181 Buld! Slcylorll.
Aoldng 1100. 304-871-7212 or
871·1781.

,.

,,_.,.Colt c......._.1t.OD

Spray G'""
llooly Toallil
otlutdlilan
•Air Flit

112033

1171 Novo 301onglno. 77,000
""'•· 11300. 304-111· 3828.

73·71 ...............- ....... 1111
73-77 Grillo !hollo.--.95.1111

olio*s Copy

R£NT£RS TAKE NOTICE! Stop paying your ~ndlard
and enpy crt~ning your a«n rome. Start v.ith tlis 3
bedroom horne, partial basenlenteat-in kitchen, pus I
acre more or less. Call for [Jte and more dela~.

.;''

V·l. PB. Pll.a.ooomn•. good
condition. Coil 114-241-1078.

lOOKING FOR YOOR FIRST lilliE? - Thil
allndive llime is &gt;We! at $33,000 endofers
3 BRs. beth. kitchen, limg room, family room,
woodburn~g smve. eleclric heal ean today
and Ia 111 m
thil home.

E.; INC.

. '•

_,.

446-6610

m

SOUTHERN HIUS R.

18 Dettun truck IVftl goad
1200. 0111114· 441·4171.

AlSO

,,,

1111 Fard Esoort. Maht blu., 2
door1. 4 oyl. 4 ..... lir cond,
10.000 mM11. U ,OOO.OO. 30•·
812-3171.

01 SliMSN'f

FOlD 1lfCI PAID

lui 161.1111
Mitri 155.110

IIIME

.

73·" TailtaiM·.......... 5'-95
10·· F.................. 4'-95
10· .. Hoooh ................ 1'1.95
10· .. hort--·-······"·"·1111
11·· F..............- 49.95 116.77 Ft. lu0.,ero ...... 65.11D
II·• Tailgotor ......... 69.t5 10-16 Ft . .............65.110

olotl liH'I

1974

Situated on ¥.acre lot. County water. Slate
Route 554. $16,800
CALL 367·7172 After 8 P.M.

~

\

-

ult's a great time to buy·a home."

,...: . .

r~· ..···

BIG 2 FOR I SALE
Golden oooortunity lo own your home and have an 1ncome from the other. We are offering one ol
the nicest country sellings with lola! privacy lor both hou ses oo a 6.8 acre lot ooly Smilesoul in
Green Elementary. Bolh homes are less than 10 years old. I) An 8 year old Quality burl! 2 Ilearoom includes nice kitchen, large living room with beautiful stone fireplace, a huge deck, nice ·
bath. Was bui~ so thai future expansion could be added. Thesetltng is no nice. "You'll love it!" 2)
Very small nea~y new 2 bedroom rents for $225.00. They're yours lor $69,900.
u 35 .

Real Estate General

l

,·

73·79 F..................S4.95

Of

all carpet
balh, kilchen, dining
room, living room has lire place and caltted ral ceiling,
basemen!, nice attic can be finishedinto bedrooms,
garage and 28x32 bam. Newvinylsjdingand shutters.
Approx. 6~ acres. Country setting at edge of Vinton , in
village limits.

-1871 zza. 310 lour opood.
AM·FM olahttr..... Qood oond&gt;
lion. Allo l974 Horii\'Spo-•
Motorc:yclo. Coli 814-317'
0211 .

.

••-a
Ft• . . _ ........65.1111
IS·· Fr. . . _ .......65.1111

2 bedroom

----------------,

72,. Truck•

c•
11 ·· Hoooh----.. H .11D
11·• Dooro. -...... 75.1111

Auto Parte
Accessories

1880 Pontile Pit-lxVI ...,...
on1 4 • • · n2oo. 114·182·
3141-&amp;p.m.

IMIIIgiDftlllleeh.. l.

I

General

Gil TIIIICI PAm
, ....... ·-··-·.........1111
JS-10 ..................... 75.1111
JS·IO FoMon............ 37.95
U·IO Tlllgotol .......... SG.IID
73·10
Cornoro ...... U.SG
73·10 Ft. ............ 51.1111

&amp;

I'V'tnlngl.

i., ,.;...'

firm.
deln,Colione114-311O'M'I«,

1148 Coupe, str••• rod.
13,800. Coil 30'-871-1144.

1884 Hondo 10. Aoklng 1271.
Coll14·317·7191.

76

814-742-2121 moming1 or

-. ·

1814 Ctwytl« 11h Avenue low

10,000
miiHgl,

1881 Horll\' Oavldoor\ Clmlc.
Pllono814·818·4310.

root. QoodoondNion. 1191. CoU·

'.(

TIERS

S~'!Z'-¥1-I)''tl:!JS

Real Estate General

Real Eetete General

1874 VW lup• IHtlawlth .un

·-~._r., .,

,&gt;

tl1e missing words
L.--J.'--...1.-.L..-·'---'·--'· you develop lrom step No. 3 below.
Q.. l. ""
McMoooolo ~.....
10

hl·Gl

Boats and
Motori fOr Sale

••''
\f '

Photographer's raply: "Your

8&amp; Chrylllf Luer blue. ••·
oond .• elr cond .. ...., dtfrolt•.l
opd. 11.000. Coil 11•·3170128 .

75

'

1-....,l,:....;l...:;':...,:l~;;...;.l..::...-l~

19U Chwy Cav•U• ttltion
WIIO"· MW engine wllh only
e.ooo mil•. very goatll condl.
Coli 814-241-1401 or
11.·441-0212.

Motorcycles

1980 crul•• 21 h Oren B1teau,
280 ~P ONC. otovo. ,.f, hood
with lhow«, 111ro, trim t1b1,
lhlp to 1hore radkl , tendtm
treH•. exc eond. t11,0QO.OO.
Col Andy 304·623-1143 or
304-628·1200.

1-...,1,.:....;1~17;-;.1~~-l Author's left-handed compl~
~=====~
-menllo photographer: "Nice
....
picturea. You musl · have
0 I NNUW
a
good
camara."·

114·441-3870.

83

1~

74

,,

I

1871 Doclgo Aopon. 4 dr.. vlnol

Now buying lhell com or ••

Motorcycles

The

t'

MA T Y E S

top, good cond. 11100. Coil

f;1 r111

74

SLEENT

- - - - - - - - - ••.zoo.

16ft. ShlltelrneltreHer. 1970 Tobecco Slicb. 2.000 10c·
Ponliao Celelllne. Celll14-2tlil· Hch. 304·876-1&amp;04. Glenrldge
1&amp;41, can be ... net Eureka. _Fo_rm_._ _ _ _ _ __
Kenny' 1 Cerrvout.

1450........ Now •u • •

for Sale

simple words,, Prl~l loHtrs ol
eaeh In if1 line of squares. ·

bo•.

~:;:~:::;:=::;:::::;: Tobecco 1Uckl, •1 li.OO

Hp with

S995..•••• Ntw

Yellow Free Stone
PeediN nnw anilllble.
prlc11 end verletlee .
Merket, M~ton, W. Va.

S2595 .. Now S2095

..

Hell runntr beans, first piddn,.
Pick yOur own. Ctll 814-21 -

6839.

11 Twin Cvlillllll'
5_0 indi mowll' I

1:~: ~11

Cennlnu tomttou alretdy
picked. Ctll for your order
11•·241-1&amp;11.

Auto1

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

loorran~o lite .6 1:ramblod
O word1
below to mako 6

il

Red rublrrl•. Taylon Benv
P.tch. Ctl &amp;14--MB-1892 or
814·241-111014.

71

WOlD

Farm Equipment

o-

FOR SALE . - W.imlr8ftll
puppy, AKC Roglol-. lomolo.

2881.

IURPLUI RENTAL, denim,
_ . . . . 0 clothing. ""~

-

Pete

1986

BEAT THIS DFAU RmUCED - ONLY $15,000 1979 Redman mobile llime 14~70' , range,
refrigerator, washer and dryer ilduded in sale. lar&amp;e
l~ing room and bedrooms. All situated 111 1.5 acres
more or less.
#2105
THIS IS ONE OFTIIISE HARDTO FIND liliES - Irs
not only spacious, but quality buift also. Brick ranch
with many extras, 2\! years old, 3 bedrooms. 16'x32'
liv~g room, 21u11 tllths, 28'x28' family room. 24'x24'
two car garage. Oak cabilets. lntermm s~ .
112163
VERY SPS:IAL - 12 relleshilgacres.lnvitilg 14'xlll'
mobi~ home v.ith 24 It expando. 3 bedrooms, 2 lull
betl-5. Make us an dler.
N2118

J:. 8mith
REA C. EST A_TE

RES.IOENTIAL.. IN\'EST MENT i . CO Mt.lf.R C IALi

.

4

•.•

,,_..~~·,. ·.,

·.'.·

12 Chevy Convenlon ven.
lh..,., orlcld to 1111. tt.ese.
Coli 814·241·1131 or 114241·8111.

QUM.IlV BRICK lilliE -:- 3 bedrooms. Ill batt-5,
large living room, kitchen with formal dll~~ area, 2car
allached garage, lroot porch, landscapelllawn with
crcular enlly driveway. Decorative light ighls and
locatal in Add~ Twp.
112150

·.'
.

• ChiVY 4x4. llh fl. bed. 301
V8, 4 • •· em·fm 11.-.o. tilt
wta.l, Nnnlng bo•dl. tubt

grMI. P - ohopo. 18200. Coli
114-818-·110 - 1:00.

1111 GMC lu.ury oon-n
Plush .,,•lor. Uka new.
Loodod. Only 1000 mlloo.
ne.eoo. con t14·DII·4411.
Ylft,

':".;~·in-~TWP- FARM: Slyish raoch """"· 3tedrm. ~- iv. rm.an
..,
in pd wte. Owr 1200 lls. lob. baoo. Rt•mrllable good tob.
' Pos!ible land coo1nCl

Real Eatete Genaral

HOME NIDBIG OPPOR'IUNITY: Vety allradiveronodeled 3BR .1~balhs,
prdt!n ttb. 1Tx25' kitthen. n.. S&gt;ld oak mbnels. panlry, ound~ rm ..
scrseited pore~ NEW GM.tJ[ 28'x40'. heat watll', 200 wirin~ 12'•14'
tbr. A busmess OIJIX)rt1ln!y )&lt;II can't pass. Mid $50S. SR 160.
4 M:ftl. ~Ell. ON !II 554: IB:enlly rlltlodeled 4 l»drm, 2 ~orj
hOme. LR. M. 2 BR tbrn. 2 ICI. l1111iy kitdlen wth bar and loads d
callinetl, sun porch, ttity rm. ltalemenl QUICK POOSESSIIJI $50S..
MJ. BRICK IWICH: 11 rm. 111 SR 160. Pu1 your tMn pmonallooch to
wcrk and compete His """ tJescna1 home. 3 l!drms., i'ling and dlling
rm. 2 ful balfts. 21' miller tedl)!l,._la; k~. ~urd~ rm. 0ec1i overklokinga
pond. Bar~ lruit lrees. V«JRTH .UING. WtmH IJIINING
UIXOOII Cfll AIID IMif PRIVATI PNI~: Clay Tw~. 3 """ mil.
GrlcGus tllllrliy lYing and neat as a pin. 28'x&amp;l' ho... 3 DR, 2 btlhs,
prden lull kit ranee, M1 IJLill iland IJII.fcrmaldlling room.~ in lo.
rm. Cozy d«t with wei bar. ll'l36' bam. 3 tim and loft.
BRICK ftiiD FRMIICI.OSITO HOllO: ll!sillllehome and iocati&gt;n-SR
100. A!lt to see Inside th~ beoutilul ntndl. 3BR. ooumy kitchen, ll!mi~ rm.
!1b1P. Clrport. I ecra m/l La« $50S.
QUIIUIID US'I UYIIIIt li-level plJs 5"'"" 31!tlrmt. 1\!baths,elllra
lllthent.'!"i'f rm, I mr lllllfle-loa:ls ti treas and go!XI garden s~ce_.

OON'T WAIT TOO LONG! - on this 1978 14'x70'
BayvteW mobile horne w«h 2 bedrooms, I bath,

lirep~te

#2111

RETIREES OR STARTER HOllE - 2 bedroom ranch
with vinyl and brick sid~&amp; Carport. garag~ itorage
buildin&amp; ExceHent cond., equipped klthen, bich
cabinets. House remodeled in 1919. La.v Lliily bil~•
maillenance free. Come sa!, you will be Impressed
with $39,000
112154
AFFORDABLE! - I story frame home. 3 sp.:i&gt;us
bedroorns,lamily room, drt~g room.large ~oot porch .
let u; show you !his ooe.
112051

NEW USTING - LOOIUNG FOR A lilliE WITH
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY? - This 7 yr. okl ranch
style horne offers 3 carpeted bedrooms, 2 ill balm,
family room, 24'x32' 2 car unattached [llrage and
more jusl wailing lor !hat new f1r11i~ Very nx:e
landscaped lawn that expands m1.9 acres more or
less M at an UMIELIEVEAIILE PRICt:. $57.500.
~2176

NEED ALITTLE PFACE Nl DQUim - II s~ then take
a look at this 1972 Academy Mobile Horre. PaOO,
undelf)inning. ranee. ~- Locatal next m
Tycoon Lake. Ideal summer home.
112136
CROWN CITY ARFA - Newel ranch style ho~ with
vinyl sililg and alminum silng and allninumtnm.
Has ni:e kilchen, living room, 3 bedrooms, I bath,
sttnge buildilg and siluatal oo comer lot.
H2099

AFFORDABLE DUPLEX - Sde by side w~h 2
hedroorns oo each site. Excelenllocalion. Easy to rent
112045
JUST WHAT YOUR FAMILY ORDERED - Spacilus
III story bOCk bungalow llilh 5 bedrooms, II! balhs,
lui basemen~ lormal livin&amp; eat&lt;n lilthen. Close lo
school!.
112182
OIILY
$15,900 - Ill !tory, 2ted rooms, balh.eat-rn kitchen,
vinyl sid~g. Has been remodeled. lovely WOO!Itlork.
Musl see to appreciale.
112164
WSII GROUNOS - TREES EVERYWHERE -Nature
lovers this i!,for you. Ten acres n a nice location for
buiklilg on Ebenerer Road. Cal lor more inlormation.
$8,000.
~2138

.-=
·
as

"*'·

UKE THE SPRING VALLEY ARFA1 - You1llove thi;

tree shaded 3 bedtoomranch, 24'x24'1amily room, 2

lull beths,lovely klchen remodeild approx. 2yrs.ago.
Llit size IOO'xl33' ap[Jox. REDUCED to $67,500.0J.
#2120
MlULDN1 YOU UKE 10 LIVE IN THIS lOVELY
Ill IE?- 2 story frame home located at Upper 2nd
Avenue. Carport, 3 bedrooms. lamily room, formal
d~~g Priced at $49.!00.
#2048

HAVE AHEART YOUMl (JI Q.D!- You11 ftl illh$ !Wle
floor plan oo a quiet street. There are 3 tedrooms.
master bedroom has lull beth, spocilus »rmaiiNilg
room den wlh ltwe~ brick frllfllace. IDis ol oak
cab~ets line this WJrk easy litchen 111d sunny dil~g
area. If your search lor ahome has been hopeless, and
you don' want to spend a lot ol bme filtll'l&amp; what a
!Jlrprise we have lor you $72,500.
~2183

AWORKING IAII'S lilliE -T ATIIINKING IAN'S
PRICE - $46.!1110 - Here's your ~IXJI1un!y to (1!1
the space you need at the price yru want. 3glOd SIZe
bedrooms. ~rge coontry ktchen, 1111d a lui finished
basemllll Huge welllancllcaped let. City schools.

mt9

PRIVACY IS PRICEUSS - In lhil 3.bedroom home
with lots d extras. 2 lui tllths, dning area. breaklasl
bar. screenll1 porch. Situated oo 2. acres.. PJ1Ifllli1Y
bJrders slate [Jooert'l that has !llblic hunlilg and a
200 acre fishiltg lalte ean for more i nform~oon.
lf2156
70 ACRES WITH 211lliES - IO'x55' moble home, 2
bedrooms. 1 beth Log home has ~bedrooms, I tlllh. 8
sttrage ooildinfli. I ~rge tllrn and tobacco base.
112159
lOOKING FOR AlilliE MRIOOKING THE C»&gt;IO
RIVEIT - Cal us mthis neat brdt rand!. 3
bedrooms. bath, dinnt_and more, a1 at a
reasonab~ prK:e. $43.f00.
112047

'

lilliE MD BUSINESS- Beautiful home over'ookilg
the river and mobile lilme parlt incildes 10 spaces.
Basement apartment in rome or 1M lor [Jivale use.
Central sewage, s11ee1 ltghls 111d large 40'x00' buildng.
.
#2046
IIANDV PERSON'S SPECIAL!!! - 2 bedroo11JS, I car

garage. gas heat. Convenient to schoollltd slllppin&amp;
Call lor more delats. $26,500

JUDY DEWITT. BROKER
J. Merrill Carter

i

1.900. ...,. rtllbln!Y'IIidwel ~- Mike offll'.
IUD YIIU WAITED: SotM tlscrimi1atin&amp; ~miy will take iJide m
tMIIII!Iilp oltltls lovtly brick ilnch.l.oCalad cbst 1o ltM~ Uv. rm, 3BR. 2
bltl'l, fill!. rm. w/wlip IIIII stai10II &amp;los wlndow1 Ful-l etjuippld kldten,
-*' !RD. hell JlU"llo in-JOUi1d PODI .with iledt and side. ~Cii
~ trdiE Abeltdul home l!i trtllttoinin&amp;too.Prited1~-. $100.IXXJ
_.
~1:11--$24.&amp;00: SIJ!eelina l'llmies? Bill• nicl! ...., home llr a
!IIIII pilce.
.
3!1!11 )loth, liitllen..._frool pordt, ~~~ sillnf! Llit l!&amp;'xiOO'
10 M:ll LOT rwtlEO
CUll( tu IEJG$ IIIIlS: liSt til 91160,8eptic
Utllilies ovailllllle. ~!iOO.
·
CIIV l i Hal Ave. Go\
ond , _ Miable.
ACRES: • eo.: $15.000.
..

WllKSYILLE-WELl ESTABUSHED BUSINESS Bri:k and slucco bu~dng apJX'OX. U160 sq. ft. Seat fiJr
54 rustorners. Call for more informaoon. Possib~ d
owner lilancing avai~bi!.
.
#1025

VACANT lAND - $6.400. 9 mtles tom Gaii!Jofis.
Souttw.estern school dislricl
#2096.

SlfOCI(m AI THE lOW. LOW PRICE -

12 Dodge 4x4 cuatorNzed VIII
21 ,000 mil•. Cl 114·441·
1112-1.
·~·it

LOVElY SHAD£0 SURROUNDINGS! - A-frame. 3
bed1Ulr1'5, ooe and II baths. 'Mih an atlordab~ prx:e
$24,!nl.
#2152

SRUNG BEIDW COST- 3 bedroom oorre, k~chen ,
klchenelle, hul!:h, full basement, plus 4 ll 5 room
£1118'!11i*blent 4 miles from Gdipolis. La.ver River •
Road. Good view d r~e&lt; Sacrli:ilg 2596 due to IXlOf
heafth. $32,000.
N2128

Phyllla Loveday
BeCky LAine

Jim Cochran

Ron Pitchford
Patrick Cochran

(Cl i986 Century 21Rttl Estate Corporation u trutiH fortM N ~F. t8
,, 6Aql OFFICE

#2116

388-8166
379-2184
446-2230
446-0468
446·7881
246·9490
446•8866

lt ReaiEsttte Corporation. Printed In U.S.A . Equtl Housing Opportunity fit

·

�August 24, 1986
. 81

"~

Tony - · ~~ ft. AC.
:-.CIIII t.._~• 00 ~~" U,OOO.

1

10 It olldo In INGk ..mpor, rof.
otovo with oven, turnoco,

1 73 7

ahowtr, commode, Jack ltlftdl,
ad
d --• 0 ff 304

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

'
,,1ttoT-VM1811.olr,CNIH,
~- htorlor. 1!11. finbo, ooot
oolol. -~~~~ 18,200.

. , . - . , - - - - - - - - -· 11·114-237·0488. dov or night.

···1t7ll
~····~-~IJO
Coii14'-Z7G.
•Ill•

304-fl'll-2813.

1: 2•21';;_'

-•

' ,*· •·..,_ "' ..... loaa "" · 1117
DoComp 17
1872 -.&lt;ott

=·

~

=

•-

f4.000. Col 114-

I·

•

ft. 11200;

22 11.

'·~ Trua

08MPtr. Very clean.
, 111oopo I . M.., ooH. 71 Chevy
, ........, 171. Coli 114-811·

0

A

D •' •

neoo. w....,....,llng.

Colll14-211·1182 ..

8 - Troo llld Lown S&lt;M...

londocoplng. 304-171·2010.

'

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER

•

rooting, rtp1ir, painting In tide or

· RON ' S Ttlevillon Service .
· HouM calla on RCA , Ou111r,
. GE. 8p.cl..ing in Zlflith. Call

. romovol. CeiiJO•·e75-1331 .
:
.
·
.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE, expe·
rlenced carpenter, electrician.
muon, painter, roofing (lncluding hot ter application} 304-

. 675·2088 or 675·7366.

• 1871 - • • Cornpor. E•·
: - • - - n . c . . - ......
.·lne. o-le or v• rolrlgorotor,

B&amp;B Roofing ·• Painting. exp.

Ashby Conat. Carp~ntrv. remodeling, room addition, painting.
roofing, concrete, aiding, block .
work, free •timlte. 304-875-

· Fetty Tru Trimming, otump

DAVID WISEMAN. 44619666
B. J. HAIRSTON. 446-4240
CLYDE B. WALKER, 246-6276
LORETTA McDADE, 446-7729

oomco. 304-,

Home
Improvements

out Free Eltlmete. Local Aeferencn. 304-8715-7991.

. 304·578·2398 o• 614··46·
. 2454.

· cp- to 18 ft . • . _ ••
• • - · loo boa. oink. Phono

:• llunll
1178 ·
-otyfo,
2110
llouM
304-8t2·3110.

It-··

Good-1 E.~tcavatlng, bl~ements.
footers . drlvewaya. septic tank1.
l1ndsc1ping . C1ll anytime 614·
446-4637. James L Davi10n,
Jr. owner.

Real Estate General

STUTES REAL ESTATE
BONNIE STUTES - BROKER
JIM STUTES - REALTOR

~~- 7.

....

446-4206

117ll Jovco 20 11. cornpor with

...._ 1871 Bluer. 8oth uc.
-.1. 304-171·3341 or 875·

Uimiii -looli at al the rest 1111!
agree this is the finest home on the market fur the
· 2,700 sq. ft. f11ish00 l~ing space local9:l on a
wood!d ~ 4 tiJclcs from scholt!. The hips! standards
were usoo rn bliildilg this custom home. II inckldes
solid cherry kitchen cab~ets. cherry ceililg in family
room, 4 ~rge bedrooms, 2\li batffi, 2 woodluming
fireplaces, 2 central air condlioneB 111d na!IJral 1f1S
heabng systems and 2 car Jllrage. Full lllsement with
ooilhOO rec. room. This is not a luke. This home ~ in
excellent condition and ll!QUires very ittle
maintenance. Pr'ced at $79.000.

Reel Estate General
HOME IN GALLIPOLIS
Within walking distance of Downtown. 8 rooms, 4 bedrooms,
l1ke new gas furnace, basement, front JXlrch, and lots of Duilt-rn cabinets in ~tchen . Real nice older type home in ~~Jod
shape. Just listoo. ONLY $44.900.00.
N653

NEW LISTIIIG - ~LLtlll
bedroom home on
at1raclive iJr 1n
·and
mailtained. This home leaves little needoo to be done.
Large eat~n klchen, dililg room and l~ing room. Off
m-eet par~n~ $39,000.

PAUL SANDERS- 379-2/52

- Several excellent
sites. 1200
feet road frontage on state highway 4 · from Ril
Grande.' Gently rolling hil~ and valley.
country
surroundng;. Outstanding ~1!!'1. Ths property v.ill
really turn yoo on.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth end Pine
·
Gehipolii, Ohlo
Phone 814·446 ·3888 or 614·

4·6·4477

85

General Hauling

.B usiness
Services

Oillard' a Weter Dell\lery. Cltt·
ernt, pool, 6 wolf. Anytime but
Sunday, 614·448-7404.
Wat1trton'a Water Hauling,
reuoneble utea. immtdiltl
2.000 gallon delivery, ciaternt,
pools, well, etc. call 304-171-

2919.

CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTRUCnON

8;-;;3:---;:E==::-:--xcavating

I

.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

-;;

··-

: 114-841·2171.

82

5445 or 675·6152.

• " - ola. Colll14·812·7271.

:,.... up-· Ellcollont-

canaday Realty

SotmUIIIG HOW FOI:
•Roofing 'Siding
•continuous
Guttering
'fencing
'Remodeling
•Roplacornont
WindoWI

446-3636J\~

Call today"..
446-4514
or 446-4841

Real Estate General

HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMME~CIAL PROPERTIES
.26 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPO'.I6. OHIO 45621
AUDREY F. CANADAY. REALTOR .
ROBERT GORDON, REALTOR, 446-6216 ~
•
MARY FLOYO, REALTOR, 446-3383
25 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPDLIS. OHIO
·· ·

I&amp;J

85

#136

NEWI'itTiiili
Ri! Grande
Har&lt;Mood
• 4-5 bedrooms, baths,
a very nice
shop-garage lor
handy1111n. 9 acres of
· hilttop land
overkloking Ri! Grande Cllllege and Sob Evans Farm' The land
alone is almoot worth this !lice!

or 614 -448 -1176 or 614· 446Service.

Wells,

Upholstery

~Er'g~J-~~- INSIDE REMO[(LED, ALL IT NEEDS

IS THE
NTEO. THIS HOUSE HAS REALY BEEN
DONE RIGHT! NEW EAT-IN KITCHEN, FORMAL DR, LR.FR OR
LARGE 3RD BR, BEAUTIFUL OAK FLOORS, NEW WIRING AND
INSULATION, 3 OUTBU ILDINGS &amp; BIG LOT IN VINTON ON
RT. 160. REAP THE REWAR ~ Of All THEIR HARD WORK ONLY $28,000.

IN CHESHIRE - VERY COMFORTABLE 3 BEDROO~ 2 STORY.
HAS FORMAL DINING ROOM, HAili:INOOD FLOORS IN UVING
ROOM SW.ll DEN ,GARK;E HAS 'MJli&lt;SHJP AREA. EXCEUENT
BUY ~T $32,000.
OWNERS SAY SEll' - THEYHAVE REOUCID THE PRICE OF 1HIS
PROPERTY ffiOM $32,000 TO$25,000. PROPERTY INQ.UDES2
~MES. ONE HAS BEEN RECENTLY R£MOOELEO, HAS
BEAUTIFUL CARPETING, KITOiEN, BATH. SECONO HJME NEEDS
SOME REPAIRS. BETTER CALL AS SJON AS YOU READ THIS A01

1833.

R • M Cultom Couches •nd
Reupholatery. St. R1. 7. Crown

City. Oh. 814·266 -1470, Eve.
814-448-3438. Open daily 8 to
6. S.t. 9:30 to 1:30. Old &amp; niM'
Upholtored .

Mowrey'• Uptlolstering •erving
trl county~ree21 years. The beat
In furniture upholstering . Cell
304 - 175 - 4164 tor free
eatimlt...

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
crest

competition

'

25 Before

$7Ul0.00! - You can'
that amount of money. I.Dve~ 4 bedroom. l ·shaped
ranch. Formal entry, living room and di111g, mod kichen, lots d
cabinets, lg. lamily room oo mai11evel w/wbfp, 3 batffi, If rec.
room. City sthoo~. Th~ ~ a love~ home.

OWNER WANTS AN OfFEJI - N!OOs to sell IEfore schoo starts
- 3 or 4 BR llric~ exc. location, LR, mod. klchen wrth buitt-rn
appliances including microwave, lamrly room w/woodburnin g
firepoce 16x32 in-ground pool.

JAY
Close and convenient to shollping
attractive l ·shaped ranch
lamily room wllh lrep~ce, 2
eat·mk!chen and 2
car garage_ Great starter lxlme. Complete with gas heat
llow heating Dil~) . central air and Buyers Protecti:m
~ian . Call for more informati:m. $54,!il0.

FOURTH AVE.- Nrce 2 story. New htchen and bath. Nl:e back
yard 53x155'. Watch ball !limes from your batk yard.
CITY PRDPERTY- ONLY $32,000.00- 4 llldrooms. 2 baths,
LR. dinf1g. lg_ back yard
9 ACRES MORE &lt;WI I£SS - Rio Grande Area - 2 ~ay home.
t-i!wly painl9:l inside. New carpet. 2 ~orage burldtlg;, cel~r and.
catt~ shed. City sthoot.

#233
E.IMir•Wa

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
14207

NEW HOME FOR $38,000 - Very nice 2 bedroom
home on 1 acre of grrund. !Moor didn't skimp on
anythi1g when he construcfsd this home. Dekue
kitchen cabilets, Ander;en 1\indows,heat pump.Great
011portunity iJr begJlners

#227

COMFORTABLE 2 BEDROOM home situaloo on 1ocreo(.
land approx. 'h mile from city imrts. Shaded lot. in·
sulat~. new dou ble-pane windows. $20,000.00 .
•

flEW LISTING - RACINE

•
•
•

27 ACRES TO BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME and have •
acreage Iehto .sell someone e~e. OhioRrverview. Call for •
more rnformalion.
•

- One floor plan home w~h
2 bedrooms. dinilg room,
fuiiiJasement, and a one car
praJe. $12,000.00 ..

flEW LISTING - HYSELL
RUN - Really nice ranch
with a 'orgeous ~tchen,
huge fa moly room, big living
room with fireplace, plus a
treiler hookup. All quietand
peaceful on epprox 20
acres. $53,000.00.

flEW UmNG- A14x65ro
bile home with 2 bedroom~,
equipped ltien, end in real
aooo oonditiln. mmeditte
pon111ion. $10~.00..
Henry E. Clllllld, Jr.
992·6191
J11n Tru11ell ..... 949·2660
Dottle Turner ..... 992·5692
./ ~:

OWNER Will ACCEPT OFFER!- INCOME PROPERTYCOMMERCIAL. RENTAL. OFFICE SPACE or RESIDENTIAL Th~ iJoperly on 35 West is fl'esently being used asa residence
and rental. Rental unrt has 2 b!drooms, 1lllth, mod. ~!chen 1\ith
appliances. 1~. rm., lo~ rt cklset space. 1 car 111rage. Very nice
Residenbal has LR, 2 BR, 1\\ bath, lg. hlchen w/all appl~nces, 1
car gara~e. lg. back coveroo patio, LEed by both units. Nice level
~wn. ThG property has many possibirties. Excellent condition.

14 N:. MINI-fARM - 5 room home, btth, 3
bedrooms, rmprovoo k~hen, forced ar fueloillumace.
2car garage and storage buildn~ 8 oc.m/1, open land
wrth ,balance wooded, County water, a~o good well.
1200. m/1.road frontage. Will sell off part llith excellent
Durldrng srte. All for $37,000.

*314

•
•

•

••

HOME ON KATHY DRIVE near Hotze; Hostifal
e• 3lowBEDROOM
traffic area. large mck yard, 'MlFP. Gal!lolis City Schooi
Price $45,DOO.
•

Oistrict.

•
•
•

•
•

FOR RENT - One, 2 bedrm. apt, 2nd lloor near golf
course. $200 plus deposit. ADULTS ONLY'

•
•

••
••
••
••

BUY FARMS OR ACREAGES

ISO ACRES located within sections N34 &amp; 35,
Green Twp. $79.000.00 lor aiL Terms for qualified
purchaser. .Call for more info .

132 ACRES, near P1triot. 50 atres bottom, 7
buildinp. no 11wellina. Free p&amp;. $50,000.00 .
46 ACRES, located adtacent to Gallipolis Crty.
Your choice of the first 10 acres. $10,000.00.

••

#120

GOOD HOME SIT£ Ill QUIET IDeATION - Tree
covered hilts all around SmaUs1ream,county water. Jl
acres W1 all with 14x70 1974 :Hied room, 21Bth moble
home. All in ii)Od conditiln with partial fum!ure. 1.25
miles west of Eno on long Branch Road. All lor

$ll,OOO.

11319
WHAT CAll YOU BUY FOR $31.~7 - Before yoo
buy anythi1g, consider this one.Don' just drive by you
must see inside. Yoo11 be surpri;lllat the outslllndilg
kitchen and the excellent oonditiln d the rest d the
house. 2 bedrooms, family room, 2 lllths, rice carpet,
modem lfiS furce!j ar furnace.

Nl42
WHERE CAll YOU BEAT THIST - $34.~ - It's a
brick I1I1Ch with 1.288 sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 1\\ baths.
well to well carpet throujlout large flat lot in city
school district. Includes carport, shade trees and yoo
can have immediate J)OS$e5Sion.

NliO

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS....
CALL Afl EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY IALESPERS~N

.

'

83 ACRES ilcated 2 miles N. of Rio Grande just !If
Pleasant Valley Road. Good timblr stand of oak and
l!ila over most. Some open land near dd home sle.
t;oynty water available. Land fronts 111 two fOlds with
lppt'OI(. 2000' i1 teal. ~g $35.000.

1333

'

. \I ..

4-

7911 .

1 Dwelling
6 Challenges
11 Rabbits
16 Strip of leather
21 Homage
22 Growing oul of
23 While poplar
24 Cowboy

#lll

•

In Bidwell, Oh.

1183 Sec . Ava.. Gellipoli1.
814· 446-7833 or 614 ·446 -

- Quality buh\ excellent state d
repair of 19 yr. old home. ~ull basement (\\ finishOO
with firep~e) . Three n~ size bedrooms, I~ ballll,
convenient kitchen, dinilg end living room ar1111. Two
car garage wllh carport Two s!Drage buildilgs. All on I
acre, more or less, of land. Alking $59,!ll0.
#321

4 AC. 1/l ilctudilg convenient rrodim, energy
efficient home. Good garden area. woods, pasture.
Priced to sell at $24,900.

SYRACUSE AREA - Hiah
on 1 hill, great for CB or
hand radio operator. large
y1rd area and a newer mo·
dular with 3 bedrooms.
MAKE OfFER $25,000.00.

Located on Bidwtl·lodnoy ld.

pool• flllod . Coli e14·258·1 a1

26 Mechanical man
28 Walks in waler

30
32
33
34
35
36
37

Empty
Teutonic deity
Diphthong
Small amount
Fondle
Deli specialty
While House

38
40
42
43

Unprofitable
Pliant
Foollike pari
Desolate

initials

WATCH THE RIVEJI RUN BACKWARDS - nit ever
does, you11 see ~tnt ~om the picture window d yoor
attractive bi-levellocateli high on ahll just 5miles ~om
town. This very p-ivate home rnckldes 3 llldroornl, 2
fireplaces, ~rge farniy room , I\\ batffi, 2 car 111rage
and over 2 acres to roam around on. Home has had
excellent care and rs ready kl move rn En;:,y city
school&gt; and country atmosphere. sm.900.

FlEE ES11MA1ES
Ou1tlty Work At A
Better Price
Reliable Service

TAl STATE

#123

2 BEDROOM
Vinton. Excelent condlim! •
Good location and very economical to own and live. $ll,DOO. •

•WORKSHOPS
•ANIMAL SHELTERS
•CARPORTS
-GARAGES

$25.00-U-PICK-UP
$35.00-PICK-UP Delivered
$100.00-DUMP LOAD Delivered
$200.00-DUMP LOAD Delivered
$25.00 aton- COMM ERCIAL SALES

UPHOLSTERY SHOP

228 1st AVENUE-~~~~
redecoral9:l. Excelfent 1 · ' tiruulltout lnctJdes
large bright l~ing room,
dnilg, famiy room.
Exceptionally n~ kitcl1en, 2 ruM batffi, 3 IJls, ltility
room and basemenl2\\ car carport. Oeep ~-This is a
home that you will really enpy and be iJWd of
$114.000.

SYRACUSE -A nice ranch
type home in Rustic Hrlls. 3
bedrooms, garage, electric
8.8. heat Patio and nice lot.
In good condition. $37,000.

BUilDERS

J1m11 Boys Weter Servlca. Alto

87

35
home, rooms i1 all.
nlYI
chimney 1\ith coal/wood stove. 44x72 barn wllh 1400
· sq. ft. m/1, of coocre!e in part as shop .-ea. Excellent
for auto repairs and sfurage. 5-10 acres d crop area,
some pasture wrth ba~nce in woods. Trail rides
establ~hOO far bikes or l'orses. Tobacco base,ll)llleral
rights included w!h coal veil reportoo. All for $49,000.
#322

borhood close to schooL
2.36 acre lot - beautiful
newer split Ioyer home. 3
boorooms, 2 baths, lull ba·
sement- wood burner hoo·
kups in fem~y room, garage,
central air and heat pump.
All electric. Assume ~an .
MAKE OFFER $52,000.00.

1Y QUAUTY

filled. Call 614·367-0e23 or

iimNG- THIS
Not Your Basic
A good solid famiy designed
4 bedrooms 0~
master). 2 baths, Irving room, eat-in kitchen . Owner has nstalled
Andersen windows, full lllsernent, 100 ft. x 200 ft. lot
PROFESSIONALLY l~OSCAPED Top of p,round swimming pool
with 16xl8 deck Storage buildilg_ Kyger Creek Schoot.Th5 home
is much larger than rt appears.

POIIEIIOY - Good neigh·

MITCHELL'S FIREWOOD PROCESSING
Firewood For Sale

814·387-7741 or 304·87612•7.

PRICE REDUCED 10
- II\ stocy older
home has been remodeled.
l-4 tedrooms, gas
tired hot water heat. new
service entrance
panel, new wirit&amp; 2 car garage wrth fil~hOO room
altlched. 60x155 flat lot lmmed~te posses~on Don'
miss this J)Od buy!

Reel Estate General

Call 446·8515

General Hauling

K1n's W1ter

•

Hou smy
j-l eil dqu&lt;Jrlers

Insulation.

ciltams, pools and wlterbeda

#108

KHp Your Ioney 11
Home. Ust with Your
local R111tor. 992·3325

7

The

.
81

. Don't LtndtCipet, Don Weugh

. Prop. eu..we.ee•s.

446-3644

PIN·
Low rotM.

Aotofy or ·coblo tool drlllng.
Ma.t ..Us oompl•ld ••mtdl'f.:

Pump ond
ltlc3102

.. .

'"

·

lnt-.
rop-. . . .

EvergrMna, lhlde &amp; fruit trees ,
. tree &amp; ltU mp remo'llel, mulch.
und It grevll. 11one delivered .

. REAL ESTATE·

8 I ' o mo n t ·

EXIOrior
l
!of
• ........

~I~IV I I.I :,

•

•••••

or

'

Uncondltktnll IHetlmt au-Ill- ·
IH. Local Nflfll'lcee lumlahld.
firM _,,.,._, Coli ooHoot ·

Home
Improvements

Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.

NEW FARM LISTING -General livestock un~- 114
oc. mit, in all. 8 room farm home remodeled in 1985.
New root, all re~~ 1\irtlg, new pumbilgand bathroom
fixtures. 4 bedrooms, 1~ bath, partial basement llith
fuel oil furnace. Vinyl sidil~ Good bams used in pastas
dairy. Large loafng area, silo, machne shOO and
several other storage buildilg;. Jl-35 ac crop, 40-50
ac. pasture, balance IIOOded. 2 farm JXJOdS, creek,
wei~ and county water. Fenced lor livestock.
Productive um \lith good house and barns. Pnced to
sell at $56,800.
#328

VINYL SIDING AND BRICII
EQUIPP EDKITCHEN , NICE Dl NING MEA, 16X32 fNGiiouiNii'
POOL HEATED FOR COOL DAYS. ATIACHED GARAGE. SOLAR
HEATING UNIT. A LOT OF HOME FOR $55,000. JUST Ml·
NUTES FROM HOLlER HOSITAL
uftntK&gt; AKt MUVINij 10 FLORIDA AND Will SELL THIS
BEAUTIFU L 3 YEAR OLD RANCH HOt.£ WITH OR WIT~UT
FURNITURE. 3 BEDROOMS, LARGE EAT-IN KITCHEN FOR·
MAL DINING AREA PLUS SCREENED BACK PORCH RlR IN·
FORMAL ENTERTAINING. HOME IS BEAUTIFULLY DECORATED tHE PRICE IS $50,000 FULLY FURNISffD.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. NEW LISTING.
JUST LISTED - THE AMERICAN DREAM HOME! FIVE
ACRES, All FENCED FOR PR IVACY,WITH LOTS OF FRUIT
TR EES AND GRAPE ARBOR. 6 YR. OLO FRAME RANCH WITH
FIR SIDING, 3 BR, 2 BATit&gt;, HEAT PUMP WITH CENT. AIR,
FULLY FURNISHED KITCHEN. CITY SCHOOLS. \ALL TODAY
-TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATE! LISTED AT $56,000.
CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE- APPROX. 9'h BEAUTIFUL ACRES
WITH A 42x60 BARN. PLUS, A NEW EXCEPTIONALLY NICE
HOME WITH 3 BRS, 2 BATit&gt;, GAS FA FURNACE WITH CENT.
AIR, &amp; 2 LG. TREATED [(CKS. JUST USTED THIS WEEKBUT MAY BE GONE NEXT WEEK AT ONLY $49,000.

8.40 ACRES MORE OR I£SS- Vacant ~nd . locatoo in c!y schoo
distnct

PART TIME FARM UNIT -local9:l in sceni: settin~
amid the hi~ of Galia County. 10 acres, mit, d JKid
productive valley area. Baonce d hll, pasture and
woods. All mineral rights. Reported 1200 ID. tobacco
base and barns l:lr housing and processing. {)l:ler, well
buitt home, motile home set up wllh utilities and septic
lank in place. All approx. 4 miles west d g Rt 7 and
Crown City on St. Rt. 218. Ask~g $39,000.

DOUBLEWIDE - Owner needs to sell. 1.590 ocre more or less. 3
bedroom ranch. 2 batffi. formal I ~ . room, forrml dllrng room ,
lamrly rooiJl. 1.920 sq. ft. ivrng space. 21arge CO\Ieroo patios. City
sthoo~. Pnced at $38,000
lAND CONTRN:T - NIC£ I N:RE IDT - Close to river. 328'
frontage on Rt. 7. $5500. Call tor terms.

11327

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - 1.153 m/1 acres wrth two 1973
mobi~ homes, mostly furnished. 2 bedrooms, bath, live in one and
rent the dher. Excel~nl investment II'~- Pnced low 20s.
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING IDT - Charolais Hills lake
Estates off~ peacelul surroundilg; and sceni:
landscapes. 1.5 acre woodOO lot with smal meadow.
Very nice sJ)JI for ycur bu!dtlg ~ans . $12,000.

2 ACRES MIL OF IWODLAND. 600FT. Raccoon Crttk Fron!J&amp;t
1nd Boat Doch. TOTAL PRIVACY - t.bd. 3 BR home features
br1111thlaki1g view overiJokin~ creek from a conlllmporary glass.
Florida room. 14xl6 forrmiiiV. rm. 2 baits, den, mod kitchen,
complete wllh stove; re~. lt~ity room w/~eezer. washer, dryer.
Can also be purchasOO wihadditional2£res 1r ~ft. more creek
!rootage with 28x48 garage. Th~ ~ a very unique and sec-.ded
~~~ - If you l~e jJWacy and boating, this is a must to see.
Reasonably pricoo.

#243

Make Your Dream ARealltyll

STATELY HOME
KIT., BREAKFAST
ROOM, LR, FR. &amp;
LIBRARY. NICE BIG
NED FRONT POROi WITH GOR·
GEOUS VIEW. ALSO BARN &amp;SEVB!Al CXJTBUILOINGS. ASK·
lNG $60,000
VERY COUNTRY AND VERY NICE - 5 BEDROOM FARM
HOME. FAMILY ROOM, LAilGE OOUNIRY KITCHEN, CEllAR
HJUSE. GAR/GE, BARN. SE.VBlAL SHEDS, SIJlROUNOED BY
APPROX. 86 B£AUTIFULROLLING ICRES, FNIMPONC.SOME
WOODED NIEA. PRICED RIGHT AT $75,000.
WE JUST USTED 87 ACRES NEAR Nli!TIIJP- 3BEDROOM
t.llOERN HOr.t: HAS FULL BASEMENT, CARPORT VINYL
SIDING. 4 LAilGE ~RNS. TOBACOO BASE. GREAT HOME FOR
A FAMILY. $65,000.
.

31 ACRES MORE OR LESS - ]!tis house boasts 9 rooms, new
carpet, woodburner and vinyl sidng, 2car 111ra(B and has 3 more
outbuildllg;. Add Ioiiis astate route and Galilof~schoolsandthis
becomes a bargain iJiced in the flties.

We can help you find your dream house.
I
'
Whether it's a bi-level, tri•level, 2 story, or
ranch, whatever you like, we will work our hardest to find your dream home. Call one of our
helpful agents today and stop dreaming.

lOVElY 3'11EDROOIIWICH -i.l modern eat-in litchen 1\ilh .
appliances.livilg room features wb wilhslale ftxr. Single garage,
lg. Ylrd and prdep area. ~ schools. Pmd in low .fOs.
.
REDUCED! ,'19,900.001 - You c.tl replace this homa for that
amoont of rnoney.l.IN8fy 4 bedroom L-shaped rm. filrmal
entry, IMng room and dilin' mod.~li:hen. lois d cal*lets, 1&amp;.
famli room onmaillevel voith wblp, 3 blltts, ta. rec. toot1t City

schools. This i! aIovett home.

FliRTiNG WITH HOlt£ &lt;1NNERSHIP?-$1Jrt ri~t in·
COALMINER'S.DRFAII - Here is a super buy for
this 3 bedroom home tn Kyger ~teek School D~trd.
anyooe in the VInton area. located just north of lmton
en St Rt 160. Pretty 3 bediOOill hol11i with Ul baths,
Fealuf'!l ,l~in&amp; rQOIII!ufemly room ,with v,oodbumer
_,
very nice kithen, hil~ living room end IQ 411 acre • step.IIVin&amp; 11*:11111, I illsement and 2 car
Nice ~ ~ in 1 p!d naghborhood. Easiy afl:lrdable at
~with in-ground pool andsmal pood.$46,900 buys H
$49~:
,. I
and we cen 11!1 you fnencedl

•rltlll·
t ''

\

FAIIII- 5611 ~RIS- The OWIIBI' d tlis.laf.m has reduced the

·trEe. 3 BR lui baemlnt, furnished kithen, ~ mvered txrches.

DOOI. ~rae,:.li«J prage, toblcco bam with concrelestalls, 1500

1111. toblccO

base. -

COUNm - Wlive got a1arJ! older 1D1111In peak condition on St.
in ·c~ school d.ls!rict anx~ Wlill111 yaJr arrival. You ·
Jllp blck in time to lind I home ~'wei ketJI with 32
In the fifties.

~~E:~~~:~ckWES~~M~~M~iomt:J~,k~~ .

WITH 4 BRS, 3 BATHS, 1R DREAM OF A KITCHEN PWS
KITCHENETTE IN BSirl!. ADbiNING FR &amp;GARAGE.N{Cf PA·
TIO IN BACK &amp; !UK ON SIDE OYERUXIIIING ABOVE
ilROUND POOL YOU CAN'T REPLACE IT AT TIIS PRicEONLY $79,900.
LOVELY BRICK RANCH WITH FUll BASEMENT IN .THE
COUNTRY! IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR SOMETftNG REAUY
NICE, THIS IS IT! NICE BIG LEVEL LAWN, 3 8R, FUU IISMT.,
ALL KITCHEN APPL., FUUY CARPETED, HEAT PUW WTIH
CA &amp;ATIACHEC GARAGE PLUS 2 CAR UNATTCHED GARAGE.
.UST USTED IN KC SCHOOL lliSTRICT. WON'T lAST LOt«! AT
$56,900.
'
.

44 Church service

45 Mature
47 Cuts
49 Masculine

50 Flying mammal
5l Undisturbed
54 Clly in Nevada
55 Rage
56 Drives back
59 Ancient
60 Snake
62 Thieves
64 Singing voice
85 Negative prefix
66 Chinese measure
67 Moccasin
69 Leaks through
70 Mild
71 Nahoor sheep
72 Goddess of
lnlalualion
74 Slays
76 Diocese
77 Le1 it stand
78 Barracuda
79 Improvement
82 Thin slice
84 Inclines
85 Enemies
86 Flesh
88 Ripped
89 Bose . e.g.
90 Rugged moun1ain

92 Jumper
94 Bohavror
9a South American
rodent
99 Financial
institution
100 Metaphor: abbr.
102 The populace
103 Weight of India
104 Skill
105 Datum
· 106 Modrld Is lis
capital
108 Actor Torn
109 Gold symbol
110 Again: prolix
111 Rational
112 Russian plains
114 Decade
116 Bitter vetch
117 Three-base hil
119 Impartial
120 Gasp for breath
122 Negligent
124 Lubricate
125 Loved one
126 Places lor
worship
128 Armed conflict
129 Village
131 Prophet
132 Exist
133 Tolls
135 Recede
138 Baseball stat.
139 Venturesome
140 Wino cup
141 Sudsy brow
142 Indian mulberry
143 Keystone St.
144 Evergreen tree
145 Avoid
147 Remained erect
149 Prefix for before
150 Epic poem by
Homer
152 Claw
154 Foreign
156 End
158 Depressions
159 Improve text
160 Twts1s
161 Doorlne

DOWN
1 In front of

2 Shipworm
3 Undivided
4 Fulfill
5 Sin
6 Charges
7 One more
a Scoundrel
9 Latin conjuncti on
10 Stitch
11 Underworld
12 Encourage
13 Legal mailers
14 Spanish article
15 Slricl
16 Group of lhree
17 Brick-carrying
device
18 Hypothetical
force
19 Wants
20 Pierces wllh
horns

27 Japanese sash
29 "Planet of Ihe - "
31 Native metal
36 Blockage
37 Tropical fruit
39 Enclosure
40 River In Sibena
41 Without end
42 Investigates
thoroughly
43 Excludes
44 Charts
46 Earth goddess
48 Seth's son
49 Planet
50 Overmatch
51 Pertaining to the
sun
52 Choice part
53 Catches sight of
55 llerale
56 Float
57 While-sale llem
58 Narrow, flat
boards
61 Hand (pari)
63 Lager
64 South African
Dutchman
68 Lenient
70 More precipitous
71 Extras
73 Consequence
74 Joint
75 Move abool
fur lively

77 Fragment
78 Juncture

ao Jot
a1 Spigot
a3 Turt
a4 "- Make a Deal"
87 Assuage
89 Fit
90 Separate
91 More unusual
92 Intertwine
93 Harvest
95 Leave out
96 Approaches
97 Support
99 Poison
101 Drink liquor often
105 Season afler
summer

106 Mix
107 Tidy
111 Twirl
11 2 District in

Germany
113 Break suddenly
11 5 Tid ings
116 Country or
Europe

11 8 Des Moines Is its
capital

119 Give food lo
121 Handled
123 Goddess of truth
125 Strike oul
126 Sandarac lree
127 Drawing room s

129
130
131
132
134
136
137
139
140
144
145
146

Warm
Pope 's scarf
Offspring
Repea l
Zodiac sign
Flal· bouomed
boat
Cry or goat
Proposition s
River In England
Buller square
Porter
Account

147 Transgress

148 Spack
149 Writing
implement

151 AI homa
153 Forenoon
155 French arlicle

157 Myself

�.•

'-ge

D-8-"fhe Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

w. Va.

August 24, 1986

·Mass killer's body unclaimed; Okla. town buries its dead ·
,

By ROCKY SCOTI'
EDMOND, Okla. (UPI) - The
body of a part·tlme letter earlierwho killed 14 co-workers and
himself- remalned 1unclalmed the
weekend hls victims were being
burled, ~ medical examiner's

··
,.
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Prellmlnaiy medical examlna·
lion of ~ body of Pat Sherrill
' revealed no traces of drugs or
alcohol, a spokesman for the
medical examiner's office reported
! Friday. However, burtal arran~• ltlei!IS were on hold because oo ooe
bad claimed the body.
"T9Jdcologlc examinations of
~ - and urtne were negative for
BJCOml and all common drugs, "
said a spokesman. "The urine
tested positive for" a common
•

component of over-the-counter anlihlsta!Jllnes. "The blood was negative for this compound."
Eulogized and burted Frtday
were Patti Welch, Patricia Ann
Chambers, Janna Hamilton, Rick
Esser, the supervisor wh:J received
the first buUet by Shen1ll wiD
feared he'd lose hls $14,CID-a-year
job.

Welch was burled early Friday In
her hometown of Lawton, Okla.,
and Esser and ~milton were
burled later near Edmond. Services for Chambers were held In
Wellston, Okla.
A wake was held Frtday night for
Mike Rockne, grandson of famed
Notre Dame coach Knute Rockne,
with a mass held for him In
Edmond at 11 a.m. Saturday.

scarcely kilew ~ reclusive ex·
Martne.
Maj. Gen. Robert Morgan, commander of ~ state Air National
Guard, said Sberrtll, a member of
the guard, checked out the weapons
and 500 rounds of ammunition to
take part In a Natklnal Rifle
Association sponsored siDotlng
match.
Morgan said Sberrlll, an expert
marksman and one d five shooting
Instructors In his guard unit, had
never given any Indication of
mentallnstab!Uty and had recently
roce!ved a GOOd Conduct Medal
and a citation for hls attendance at
guard meetings.
In Edmond. postal worl&lt;ers Involved In the massacre attended

"Wby this? Why this?'· asked the
Rev. Frank Ridgley durtng a
eulogy for Esser.
"To understand why this hap.
pened and to cope with It requires
an wtusually heroic courage,".
Ridgley told about 500 mourners at
the St. Charles Borromeo CatiDUc
Church In Bethany. an Oklahoma
City suburb.
· "How Inscrutable Is (God's)
judgment," Ridgley said, quoting
scripture, "How unsearchable his
ways. Who has known the mind of
God?''
Sherrill shot his victims during a
seven-minute rampage, using two
Oklahoma Air National Guard
.45-eallber pistols. Many of the
victims were women, and most

Calif. officials reunite drug-tom.family
SANTA ANA, Calli. (UPI) -A
girl whose parents were arrested
because she told pollee they used
drugs was released from a county
shelter and reunited with her
~r and father after officials
were convinced they would not
hann her.
"They were tearfully overjoyed."
Gary Proctor, a lawyer representlng the famUy, said Friday. "She's
an only child and she desperately

wantedtobebackwlthherfamllY." ·
J?eanna Young,l3, of Tustin, was
released to her parents Thursday
from the ,Orangewood Children's
Home In Orange, a county shelter
for abused or abandoned chlldren,
where she had been for more than a
week against her wishes. ·
The girl captured national allenlion Aug. 13 when she walked Into
the Tustin Police Department with

a plastic trash bag containing
cocaine worth nearly $3,000 and a
small arrount d marijuana and
pills she sald belonged lo her
parents, Bobby Dale and Judith
Ann Young.
The parents were arrested and
Deanna was taken to the county
shelter.
Juvmile Court Referre Betty
Farrell agreed In a closed custody

Relocation decision cheers
leaders in W.Va. cottuttunity
WHEELING, W.Va. (UPI) -To
say Wheeling clty .officials are
overjoyed would definitely be an
understatement.
PoUtlclans ranging from the
mayor to city manager were
bubbling Friday with the announcement by Wheeling-Pittsburgh Steel
Corp. that It would move Its
corporate headquarters from PUtsburgh to Wheeling.
The steelmaker, struggling to
reorganize a multlrnUI!on dollar
debt and reduce costs, already
owns the building which company
dftc!als say they hope to move Into
within a year.
"I think everyone in the city of
Wheeling Is just on Cloud 9," Mayor
Stella Koerner sald. "It's Uke
having New Year's, Christmas,
Thanksgiving and ~ Fourth of
July all rolled Into one."
The anoouncement came during
an afternoon news conference In
Wheeling from Wheeling Pittsburgh Chief Exocu tlve Officer
George Ferris and West VIrginia
Gov. Arch Moore.

" It Is a signal that Wheeling, the
Upper Ohio Valley. indeed aU of
West Virginia Is a good place In
which to do business and create
jobs," Moore said.
The new Wheeling headquarters
will employ :m people, primarily In
executive and staff positions. A $2.4
rn!lUon renovation program of the
company's existing downtown office building, financed by a lowinterest package worl&lt;ed out wtth11
local and regional banks, will begin
(llce design plans are Hnallzed
officials said.
'
Wheeling-Pittsburgh, the nation's seventh- lar~st steelrnaker,
has been In Chapter 11 rrorganlzatlonal bankruptcy slnre Aprtl 1.9Ri,
trying to restructure a muH!mWlonooilar debt. The company survived
a !1!-day strike last summerbyS,:.nl
workers In three states over wage
and rene!lt Issues.
The move to Wheeling is subject
to bankruptcy court approval and Is
expected to save the sleelmaker
hu ndi'OOs of trousands of dollars,
officials said.

Mike Nau, Wheeling's city manager. said ~ economic impact of
~ move on the town wlll he
significant.
"When ~ headquarlers was
here before, the do~mtown was just
always packed," he said. Many
executives were moved from
Wheeling to Pittsburgh In 1968 with
~ merger of Wheeling Steel and
Pitts,_·
uurg h stee·1
"(The move) will help retailers,
restaurants, real estate and It will
mean lrnmedlate dollars for the
.. N
comrnu nl ty,
au added. "But the
lmporlan
I
thing
Is th8t W.Va.,
when we
now market Wheeling,
to
other oompanies, we can say we
have the seventh lar~st steel
company ."
Officials of Ohio, Pennsylvania
dw v
an
est trgtnta had been vying
for the corporate headquarters.
Each state had submitted a Ust of
ecooomic Incentives. But West
VIrginia alreaqy had most of the
• ad In
oompany
s Wheeling.
m lstrat!ve offices
In downto~m

Pennsylvania had offered
Wheeling-Pittsburgh $5 mUlion In
tree rent lf It rooved to a
Washington. Pa .. location. A spokesman t&gt;r Gov. Dick Thornburgh
sald the the company was the ,
recipient of the largest Pennsylvania Industrial Development Autblrtty klan d the Thornburg
ters work during the day, several administration- $10 mllllon tn 1979
crews weartng light-equipped hard- tJr Investment in the Monessen, :
hats attack the lire line overnight. Pa .. plant.
Press Secretary David Runkel '
After the ftre Is contained, there
will re no "mop up," which is said Wheeling-Pittsburgh Is curroutine for roost small llres.
rently In default lJ1 the loan because
"This lire is much too big to roop
ct bankruptcy and owe Pennsylvaup," Smith said. "We'll contain It , nia $II rnllllon.
and watch It, but It w(ll't be
But a spokesman tJr Plttsoorgh
completely out untO there's kits of Mayor Rlthard Callgulri said whUe
rain or even snow In Cktober."
the city obviously Is oot happy
Elsewhere In the West, a massive about losing a corporate citizen,
demobUlzatlon of fire crews was any move that might help the
underway as the majority d the company and the region survive Is 1
18,00J !lreflghters who were on the needed.
lines early this week prepared to
Former Wheeling may~r and
head home.
councilman William Muegge says
Smith said none of the rnn-Idaho the relocation d the oorporate
crews would be sent to his tire headquarters will be a pyscholog!because he had mough men &lt;Jl the calllft tor the town.
firellne.
"It's a blessing to the city," he
Including the Idaho fire, ooty said. "It's a psychological boost for
32,100 acres of uncontalned !Ires the city because (up to now) there
were reporled In the West Frtday has been a steady stream d
night, less than half of Wednesday's reversals."
total ct 87,!XXJ acres.

l

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: sUndaY·

"The good news Is there's a
chanCe ·Of a wetting rain Monday
· !llld 1\leSdlly," Boise Interagency
:- Fire Center spokesman Lee
;·: f'OI8Ue said.
_. White roost of the Idaho llref!gh-

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WH0-0-0-0

can help
you?

CLASSFIED
ADS

Betz rejoins

I

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500 mark

Daily Number
440

-Page 3

Lotto
14-13-12-38-27-30

at y

enttne
1 Section. 8 Pages

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Vot.36. No. 78

Death toll unknown from toxic ·gas disaster
YAOUNDE, Cameroon (UPI) -A deadly natural
gas seeping froiJ'l a volcanic bike In remote western
Cameroon kUled an unknown number of people, and
estimates ranged from 40 to 2,(0).
A report. broadcast once on state-run Radio
Cameroon and quoting the Information Ministry, said
2,(0) were believed dead but the radio withdrew the
report and later broadcasts used the official
government figure of 40 dead.
Western diplomats said travelers !rom~ remote
area 2iO miles from the capital reported up to 1,500
dead but said that was a speculative llgure.

"TheofflclalsarestUiwaltlng!ora final word on the
death toll from rescue teams who went to the area,"
said a Western diplomat in Yaounde.
Radto Cameroon sald a 15-member lsraeU rescue
team reached the site and would report back to the
government later today. The lake Is In a rnounlalnous
region reachable only by unpaved roads rendered
nearly Impassable by the current rainy season.
The dlsas•er occurred Friday at Nlos Lake between
the towns of Wurn and Nkambe, 250 miles northwest
of the capital city of Yaounde. Officials said the toxic
gas escaped from a volcanic fissure that opened from

the bottOm of the lake.
A correspondent for Radio Cameroon, Fidel
Tchlnda , said, "The figure of 40 deaths announced
Sunday has been largely surpassed. They are
speaking close to 1,500 dead.
"President Paul Blya bas given instructions to put
measures In place to avoid the risks of an epidemic
and Isolate, ,the population from the dangers of
Infection arid 'contamlhatlon," Tchlnda said.
"At'tlje scene the rescue t~ms are having trouble
reaching the area becau$e they lacked technical
equipment. The government has asl&lt;ed for interna·

tlonal aid," Tchllida said.
There was no volcanic eruption. The area is located
In a old volcanic chain that is still semi active. A
similar incident In the chain four years ago killed 50
peopl£'. In that case, a heavy gas formed a cloud and
killed those who walked Into It.
·
"The gas comes up out of the lake, and It it's a
heavier gas, It sit! around the surface and rolls
around. People think Its a log arid walk right Into It,"
said one diplomat.
He said he would be surprised If the toll reached
2.(0) unless the gas hit a populated village.

....---

Learning _income taxes now could offer you money -making
opportumlies and save you money on your return at tax time
•Morning. afternoon, evening classes
•Reasonable course fee •Classes begin September 4
•Held at several area locations
Send for more information today or cal l now'
Contact our neares t office .

-

-

needy.

An audit by the Department of
Agriculture alleges that ~ state
misused $710,(0) In a contract with
a Cleveland truck rental firm used
to dlstrtbute the food.
Federal offtclals say the contract
between the state and Ryder Truck
Rental Inc. is under crlmlnal
Investigation.
"We expect to re talking to the
proSECutor about It ~ry soon," said
Constant Oleval!er, USDA regional
Inspector general mr investigations
In Ol~ago .
The recommenda tlon to recover
the ~.100 was made last rronth
by Thomas Heideman, USDA's
regional Inspector general for
audits.
Heideman sald the USDA Investigation found the Ryder oontract
was signed In October 1984 Instead
of by the deadline for the fiscal yoor
which ended Sept. 30, 1984.
He said any rooney the state had
received had to be spent before then
or be returned to the federal
government.
Former Ohio Agriculture Director Dale Locher has said that he
signed the contract Sept. 28, 1984 .
but did oot know when Ryder
signed it.
George Proctor Jr.. former
director of Ryder's Cleveland
offtce, said he did not recall when he
signed the contract. Ryder had a
verbal agreement with the state
retore Sept. lJ, 1984, he said.
The audit also ftlund the state did
oot follow "applicable federal and
state procurement procedures"
because it dld oot advertise for bids.
Sylvia Cullg, who was cwerseelng
the program for Gov. Richard
Celeste's offtce, said the state had
oo time to advertise mr bids and
went lo Ryder because It could
supply 22 trucks on siDrt notice.
State ct!lclals said they were
under order from Celeste to spend
the rooney rather than return It to
the federal government.

,

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Pomeroy, OH . 45769 ................. 992- 3795
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500 E. MAIN

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Feds seek
repayment
of funds
By Untied P..- Internatloaal
The federal government ts urging
Ohio to repay more than ~.&lt;m It
spent Improperly In a program to
supply surplus federal food to ~

America's Finest Income Tax Course ·

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25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, Au ust 25, 1986

Copyrighted 1988

PartJ.r cloudy tonight, with a
low In the low 608. Bec:omlDg
cloudy Tuesday, wllh a chance
of showers and thundel"!!torrn8
and blghs In the upper 80s. Tbe
probabutly of preclpllatlon Is
near zero tonight and 30 peroent
Tuesday.
·''

•

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It pays to learn
income taxes
from H&amp;R Block.

1. 6000

clinic staff
GALLIPOLIS - J . Timothy '
Betz, C.F.N.P., M.S .. has returned
to the staff d Holzer Clinic Inc. as
director of the Spqrts, Industrial
and Rehabtlltatlve Center, located
at the clinic's Sycamore Branch.
Dr. Raymond Jennings d the
Department of Famtly Practice,
and a member of the clinic's hoard
of directors, will be ~ center
chairman, according to Robert E .
Daniel. clinic administrator.
A Gallipolis native, Betz is a 1970
graduate of Gallla Academy High
School, received Ids undergraduate
education at Ohio State UniverSity .
In 1973, rocetvJng an aasoctate
degree In nursing fran Central
Ohio Technical College in 1975.
Betz was the assistant coordinator of the Emergency Department
nursing staff at Doctor's HOdlpltal
North In Columbus from 1975 wtW
1976. He roceived a postgraduate
cerllflcate as family nurse practl- ·
tioner from OOU In 1977, and
rocelved a bachelor of science .
degree In nursing from Ohio
University In l9ln
· His prevloUI exper~ with tile
clinic was ~ a family nurse .
practitioner fran 1976 untO 19M,
when he left tl pursue a master of

•

the Qrst of what I&gt; expected to be has now entered the rew.~rd of her
several counseling sessions de- faith and lives forever."
A oontlngent of Edmond postal .
signed to help tl)em deal with the
emotional trauma of the siDotlngs. workers and about two dozen
Therapists and counselors from Lawton letter carriers In uniform
San Ysidro, Calli., where 1M! :,ears attended the services.
ago a berserk gunman killed 21 at a
Welch, who was born in Lawton
McPonald's restaurant, also ar- and attended high school and
rtved Frtday In Edmond to help college there, had been married In
dist resse d workers a nd the same church in Aprtl. She
townspeople.
worked at a post office In Duncan
At Hamllton's funeral at the First before moving to Edmond.
Baptist Church In Edmond, pastor
Hamm, pastor of Htllcrest Chris~
Alan Day called on the citizens of tlan Church in Oklahoma City
the entire city to p!ll together where Welch bad been attending
durtng Its pertod .of emotional trial. church, told mourners that life Is
"I predict Edmond, Oklahoma, fragile. "It lies on t1 thread," he
will be stronger as a result of this sald.
nightmare and catastrophe. No
After the 30-minute service, the
matter IDw dark the. night, h:lw mourners - led by a ront!ngent of
deep the water. God Is there.
Welch's co-workers- flied rut into
"Everytxxly has reen emotion- the warm morning sun and waited
ally ijhaken durtng the past several sUently as the gray and silver coffin
days. We're being called upon to was wheeled Into a waiting hearse.
use all oor resources."
Her husband, Ranqy, was helped
Welch was the first victim burled from the church and Into a
Frtday. Services were ~ld In the limousine.
southwestern Oklahoma town Or
At graveside services, the First
Lawton, where her father Is a Baptist pastor, the Rev. Ben
27-year veteran of the U.S. Postal Lortng, told about 100 people he
Service.
remembered a time when Welch
"Patti (Welch) is at home mw," and her husb3nd were talldng with
Dr. Del Hamm told about 2iO people hlrn about their marriage plans.
at First Baptist Church where the
·I roc all Patti questioning her
services were held. "Her falth In faith," Loring said. "!told her ootto
God can never be destroyed. She worry that her redeemer tives."

_
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Firefighting contingent
combats major blaze
. CROUCH, Idaho (UPI\ - Sev. .enty fire crews, taking turns
· battling an 18,Cffi.acre fire in a
round-the-clock e!for~ hope to have
the last major !Ire In the West
contained early Monday.
The commander of the 1,400
firefighters met with residents in
the Crouch area Friday night and
sald that lf the weather does not
change, the Anderson !Ire will
expand by no more than ~acres
and will be surrounded by !Ire lines
Monday.
The Inferno, In extremely rugged
terrain 40 miles north of Boise, Is
me d hundreds that started In the
Northwest durtng a fterre Aug. 10
lightning storm.
Forest and ran~ nres th1s ~ar,
nationwide but rrostly In the West,
have charred 1,153 9:1uare miles, an
area lar~r than the state of Rhode
Island.
Anderson Fire Complex Incident
C&lt;mmander Doc Smith told about
~ residents of the Garden Valley.
which Includes Crouch, his crews
are on~ ftrellnes :ll hOurs per day
trying to encircle ~ blaze In an
effort that Is costing ~ government $3117,(0) per day.
"It apJlE8rs we can herd the ooge
of the !Ire Into the burned area and
have It contained Monday," said
Smith, who Is based In Artzooa 's
Kalbab National Forest.
"The oountry Is Incredibly ~teep;
It's Incredibly rugged ," he said .
"The C!'I!Wli are worn out so we're
gMig aome d them rests.
"But we we've turned the comer
on the !Ire," he said.
_· The latest weather forecast
•· called foradrylngtrendaccompan: : led by lightning Saturday and

heartng Thursday to allow the girl
to beteunlted with her parmtsa!ter
deciding they would oot harm her In
reprisal for her actions, Proctor
said.
"By talldng to the two parents,
yoo can see that would not be the
case," Proctor said. "They all love
each other. The parents wanted her
IDme. We're going to get them Into
counseling the first part ot next
week."
The girl told pollee her parents
Ignored her ploos to stop using
drugs, and she finally decided to
tum them In after attending an
anti-drug lecture glv.en by a deputy
sheriff at a church.
Pollee arrested the couple within
several h:lurs and oonflscated a
small amount of marijuana, about
$2,(0) In cash and a [:lstol at their
home. The parents, who have no
prtor criminal records, later were
released on their promise to return
to court for a Sept. 23 arraignment
on cocaine possession charges.
Deanna had been In protective
custody slnre her visit to the pollee
station, despite her m:juest to be
reunited
wlth.her
On
ndlt parents.
fo
e co
ion
r the girl's
release was that the family not
discuss the case among themselves
untO It Is resolved in court, Proctor
ld
saProctor
·
declined to say whether
Deanna regrets her decision, but
salnld hedsheby!ebelt Ins~ . was wrongly
pu s
g locked up."
"I think she Is acting as a typical
13-year-old girl would," the lawyer
said "Sh , 11 11 d ed
·
e s a t e ~ by the
publicity, and she feels she was
punished tor what she felt was ... an
act of corisclenre."
Deanna's mother Is a bankruptcy
court clerk and the father Is a
bartender.

Ohio wttery

}teds hit

Employment
Research Associates. a Lansing,
Mich., non-profit organization that
specializes In analyzing the Impact
of military spending on the economy. also said ~ 25 major
agricultural states carried a Pentagon tax burden of $163.1 bOlton.
They received $126.8 billion In
by

EDMOND, Okla. (UPl) - Post
o!ftces nationwide set aside a
moment d silence today to hooor 14
postal workers killed In Edmond as
townspeople prepared for the final
funeral in a tragedy that has left
~m "alone In the dark and
- afraid."
Thousands of people gathered at
a football stadium Sunday to
remember the workers siDt Wed·
nesday morning at the Edmond
post office by Patrick Henry
Sherrlll. a lonely and tormented
part-time mailman whO then took
his own lt!e.
Sherrill's

his mother and father In a family

plot In his hometown of Watonga .
Services for~ last of his victims to
be burled, Betty Jarred, were
scheduled for today.
Flags·flying at ·half-stall at post
offices nationwide In horor d the .14
people kiUed will be raised to
tuB-staff at 4 p.m. cur today,
followed by a moment of silence,
Postmaster General Robert Tisch
sald.
At the service Sunday- dEClared
a day of mourning in Oklahoma by
Gov, George Nigh, - 4,:ll0 p€ople
stood trembling and tear,y-eyed for
. about an IDur at the Central State
University field, clutching Bibles

and one another.
They prayed mr the victims , lor
Sherrill and for their town.
"Night has fallen upon us," said
the Rev. David Egbert, a pastor at
St. Mary's Episcopal O!Urch. "We
are alone In the dark and afraid. We
have felt powerless .. . all feel we
have been vkllated."
Egbert urged townspeople to
pray God's presence "might flU rur
emptiness."
In his remarks, Tisch spoked the
Postal Service workers who survived ~massacre and returned to
work the i&gt;Uow!ng day.
"We can follow the lead of the
surviving workers at the Edmond

post ofllce." he said. "At 1:15a.m.
Thursday morning, as yoo know,
~ night tour Insisted (ll reporting
to work. They dared 10 walk the

sameworkroOmfioor~erethelr
colleagues had been cuI down ~

day before.
"Their return to work was an act
d defianre - defiance d evil and
the Irrational . It was an act ct
aftlrmatkln - afflrmatkm that life
will go on."
Michael Bigler. a survivor of the
massacre whO escaped by "playing
dead," broke Into tears whUe
reading Bible verses. "Believe In
Jesus Christ and love - another
as he commanded us," he said.

"It Is vlrlually Impossible to
make a persuasive argument that
the U.S. farm sector Is ra::eivlng a
net subsidy when Its l,:.nl principal
agricultural counties are exJXlrtlng
at least $12.4 bUI!on roore In ftlnds
for military and lli!IiCIIIIural purposes than is being returned to
The audit also found the state
them," the study
Among the 25 states, the study laDed to follow proper procedures
found that 17 co.ntlnued to slnw an In spending $94,!ro for a re!rt~ra ­
overall net tax loss after all tion unit for the Grooteer Cleveland
payments lo farmers had been Food bank Inc.
Included.

said.

Nation's governors give up
pos.sible tax refonn battle
HD..TON HEAD. S.C. (UPl) The nation's governors, despite
pleas for one more fight on tax
refonn legislation, are ready to
suJTellder.
"It's like•trying to catch a train
and It's already left the station,"
Oregon Gov. VIctor Atlyeh said

Sumay.
Altl:Dugh the focus of 78th annual

meeting c1. ~ ,Natlqllal Governors
A.mclallon Is ·eilucatton. ~ talk
quickly turned · to ~ tax bill
approved· by a House-Senate confereooe commllllle and awaiting
congressional passage In
September. ·

"not winnable" and warning "we
may pay a higher price for a
fruitless attempt to chan~ It"
Larnm's panel Is scheduled to
meet today to make a final decision
&lt;Jl whether to press mr a chari~ In
the bill, but the Colorado governor
Indicated that the lkely decision
will be tl forget about a blitz on
Was~ .

"J penonaUY thlnktllat·me bas to

undel'ltand that Oll.'e It's over, It's
over," he saki. •utt illl'tlncement,
~ cement Is hardentne."
Lamm strene~ tbat Ill! goverool'll backed many ofthe ji'&lt;Mslons
- Including towered tax· rates ·aU of us \rollld
The governors were stasgered· and saki
wte
yes
on
the
biD."
.
when the tax refonn negot!aton, at
North Carollna Gov. James
. )he
momen~ denied deductiOnS
for lllet IUA!I, • big soorce of Martin, wllo &amp;e!Ved on the House
Ways and 1'!feans Committee, said
rev111ue b' !be
. But Colollldo Gov' Richard the squabble was bet\101!1!11 the high
Lamm, blWII ,ia always, told hla tax and low tax !PijiS and lidded~
collequeli Ill' ~raet about a last- ~ wu a compromise. ·
Notlnl that Ill percent d the
ditch flllhl, saying the ·eflort was

J. 11uiJCII)' Bet&amp;
science deglee In exercise physiology at OU, willch he received tn

19111.

•t

"We are erauely
II
pleued to ·
have nm back and by ao doing
h~ the opportunity Ill ~
rehabUitatlve services Ill the restdents cl. the area," Daniel said.
Betz Is man1ed Ill the fonner
Janet Holtm, and lD&amp;ether with
tJielr two 10111, Adam and Andy
tbey l'l!lllde on Cedar Street .,;
GaDipnlls.
, I
. .....

·•

·-···

.~

.. ..............___·- · ...........
~

~

-· ·· ~·

·:a1m011

•tli• . .

people in North Carolina "will ~
better dl," Martin said the fight "Is
oot a big issue for me.
Most of the demands for (lle
more try at restortng the sales tax
deduction came oot from the
governors, but from rEPresenta ·
lives ol the National AssoCiatlon·o!
Counties, ~ National League of
t;:ltles and ~ Conference of
Mayors.
The first formal session d. the
conference, devoted tl the goveroors' new proposals for Improving
America's schools, drew such
disparate d.llclals u Education
Secretary William Bennett and
firebrand Al~rt Shanltl!r, pres!·
dent of the American Federatkln d

Teachers.
But the session· turned Into a
mulllal lllmlratloft ,sx:lety, with
Bennett, Shanker ·and Mary Jlartwood Futrell,. prestdent of the
NatiOnal Eldu~tion Allioclatkln,
giving the governors ~ highest
possible grades.

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