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Page 12-The

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oop

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DaiW Sentinel

.....----Local Briefs:-.....
Open house wtll be held at Sy1'8C11Se Elementacy Tuesday at 6:30
p.m., followed by a Pl'O meeting at 7:30 p.m.
·
The entire lnter1or It the buDding has been Jilinted and cleaned.
Jim Lawrence, prtnc!pal, Invites the public to attend and see the
buDding and-meet the teachers.

Sheriff Howard Frank reports that at 12: ~ a.m. today, Deputies

The plckup_ran a I'OIIIIblock and autlxlrltes chased the veblcle for
35 minutes. The truck finally went off the Meigs Coonty roadway It
was traveling, and three juvenUes In the truck were apprehended
and transported to the Meigs County JaU. The driver d. the truck was
cited for fleeing an d.flcer.
After talldng With Carl Hysell, county juvmUe d.flcer, the three
youths were returned to West Vlrglnla where other charges were to
be flied.

Racine man hurt in areident
An Athens 'County man died and a Racine man was seriously
Injured Wednesday afternoon In a head oo coWsion oo U.S. 33 at the
Intersection ol Athens Coonty Road !ll (Angel Ridge).
David Carmichael, 79, of Athens Route 5, woo died In the Incident,
was driving his truck wben It moved abruptly Into the opposite lane
of traffic, collldlng with a car drlvm by David Huddleston, 29,
Racine.
Carmichael was pronounced dead on arrival at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital.
Huddleston was trapped In his vehicle for nearly 30 minutes. He
was taken to O'Bieness after rescue persoMel freed him by using the
Jaws of Life. From O'Bieness he was transferred by Ufefllght to
Grant Hospital, Columbus, for treatment of severe factallnjuties, a
possible concussion and leg Injuries.
Grant Hospital personnel reported Huddleston In poor condition In
tbe hospital's trauma-Intensive care unit this morning (Friday) .
Huddleston's seat belt helped reduce his Injuries 11 was reported.
Carmichael was not wearing a seat belt.

Sutton trustees meet Tuesday
Sutton Township Trustees will meet Tuesday, Sept. 2, at the
Syracuse Municipal BuDding.

Air Force to recover
cost overrun losses

mUUon
because
addltbnal
by
between
$400ofmUllon
andlabor
$500

costs and other factors Lockheed
had concealed.
"Lockheed faDed (In 1982) to tell
the Air Fora! negotiators their
coUeetlvebargalnlng objectives fur
union negotiations scheduled for
October 1983," an Air Force
spokesman said Thursday.
The wage structure was "far
diftermt" from what lockheed told
the Air Foro', he said, and this and
other "defective pricing Issues
Involving materiel and subcontractor costs" Inflated the potential,
overall cost.
Lockheed Issued a statement
from Calabasas, Calif., that said lt
had not received the Air Force's
audit report.
L.O. Kitchen, the company's
chairman, said, "In the course of
negotiations br the C-5B, Lockheed
provided the government with
complete current and accurate
costs and pricing data.
"That being the case, Lockheed
considers the allegatilns of defective pricing to be toaUy lacking In
merit. Lockheed Intends i:&gt; dispute
any claim the Air Force may assert
and Is confldent,tbat tt wllliJ'evall."
Aslted If Lockheed had asreed'to
a price adjustment, tl)e Air Force
spokesman said, "They have rot."
The Truth In Negotlatbn Act, he
said, "allows us to make a
l(nllateral price adju!llment If the
contractor does not agree. This Is

GRAVELY TRACTOR
, SALES, 8t SERVICE
·

C1areut:e A. Andrews

Clarence A. Andrews .
Former Pomeroy Mayor Clarence A. Andrews, 71, 111 Ebenezer
. St, Pomeroy, died Thursday at
· Medical Center.
Mr. Andrews, a prominent
Pomeroy resident, seiVed two
terms as Mayor of Pomeroy. He
was a retlred emplaye of the New
York Central Railroad, having
seiVed 35 years as corxluctor.
Mr. Andrews was born March 9,
1915, at Pomeroy, the son d. the late
Clyde and Cora Scott Andrews. He
was also preceded In death by one
daugl!ter, Mary Wayland, one
brother, Paul Andrews and ooe
sister, Marcella Moore. He attended Mount Herman United
Brethren Church.
He Is survived by his wife,
Margaret Andrews; three sons and
two daughters-In-law, Jim An·
drews, Athens; Bill and Norma
Andrews, Falnnont, W.Va.; Ray
and Megan Andrews, Long Bot·
tom; one daughter and son-In-law,
Susie and Roger Karr, long
Bottom; son-In-law, Jennings Wayland, Pomeroy; three gran!klaugl!ters, two grandsons ans several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services wUI be held
Sunday at 2 p.m. at Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Robert Sanders ri.flclatlng. Burial wUI be In
Riverview Cemetery, Middleport.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Saturday from 7-9 p.m.

Dovie

B. Cale

A swvlvoi' of Dovle B. Cale, who
died Morxlay, Is a daughter, Mrs.
Lloyd (Audrey) McLaughlin of
Homestead, Fla., not a stepdaughter, as was reported. Services for
Mrs. Cale were held Thursday.

~,::::::;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;:;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;;;;:;;;::::;:;·:~

Fred Cales Jr.

'HIGH SGIOOL SENIORS

,,

•

You'll also like our reasonable prices.

'•
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COME AND WORSHIP WITH
US AS WE CELEBRATE

LAB OR S UNDA y
AUGUST 31, 1986
HEATH UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
Corner Main &amp; So. Third Ave.

PH. 992-3039

9:30 A.M.-Sunday School !All Agesl
10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship
"We Love Because God Loves Us.1"

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PACKAGE INCLUDES:
XL Tr.lm, Carpeting, Swing-awty

mi'nors, Power

alttr~ng, AM·FM 11treo radio, Tinted glass and

more.

$872~

ASAVINGS OF

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PACKAGE INCLUDES:
4 cylinder 1.9 litre engine . Ele c1ronie dig1ttl clock

Overhead conaole, Tinted glass. lnttrwat
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Bumptr rub strWps. Instrumentation group, Du•l ·

FRIDAY'S
UNTIL

on

Headaches faced by Agriculture Set'relary
Richani Lyng are examined - Page A-2

01'111 11011.-fll.
9 tO S, SAt. tfO 1

Vol. 21 No. 29
~olgtiled ~!186

'

14 Sectiono, 130 Pogn
A Mu~imedia Inc. N-opapor

Middleport-Pomeroy-GaUipolis-Point Pleasant. August 31, 1986

House to vote on tort reform hills this week
By LEE LEONARD
1JPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The Ohio House of
Representatives will reconvene this week to deal With
a pair of bWs aimed at sUenclng complaints thaI
businesses canmt obtain affordable llabillty
Insurance.
House members are to assemble Thursday to vote
on a major Insurance reform biD giving rrore powers
to the Ohio Department of !nsurana!, and a civil
justice reform blll designed to burst ballooning
lawsuit costs.
Practically no one except the lawmakers who voted
the bWsoutofcommlttee believes theywDI havettl'lr
desired effect - lowerln~ commercial Insurance
rates.
But OhloHou5e SpeakerVernaiG. RlfteJr., D-New
BoSton, Irritated at the continuing anguiih In the
business COJ1ll)lUnlty over insurance, directed two

months ago that a solution he ready by Labor Day.
It is ready, and probably will be sent to the Senate
this week Without further changes.
Attorneys are wary of the sanctions in the civil
justice btu which try to encourage pre-trial
settlements, discourage "frivolous" lawsuits and cut
down damage awards and lawyer fees.
Grumbling lnsurana! Industry repre;entattves
believe the state Is unjustifiably attacking their
profession by encouraging the department to "get
tough" and requiring tl~m to dlsclpse llnanclal
secrets of claims, payouts and reserveS to see If ihey
are at the root of the problem.
"There Is nothing In there (the but) that wUI really
benefit the public and Increase tbe availability of
Insurance," said Herbert Knox of NationWide
Insurance Co. shortly after the House Insurance
Committee had approved the Insurance btu last
Friday.

"The requirement for reporting (financial data I is
going to discourage companies from beCOming
involved in lines of tnsuranre they otherWise might
write," said Knox.

But Peter MacDowell of the Ohio Public Interest
Campaign, a consumer group, called tbe !nsurancr&gt;
bill "a major milestone in pro-consumer legislation in
Ohio."
Attorneys won a victory Friday when the lnsuranre
Committee voted 7-6to remove language whlch·would
have forced them to reveal their legal charges for
pressing lawsuits.
Rep. Michael P . Stinziano, D-Columbus, chairman
of the Insurance Committee and a member of the
special committee which drafted the tort raorm bill,
pronounced both fair. "I'm hopeful that a final
product wUl pass both houses of the General
Assembly sometime this fall," he said.
The tort reform bill places no limit oo damages that

BODO, Norway tUPII- A U.S.
Marine helicopter with at least 21
people aboard slammed into a
parked helicopter while taking oft
from an assault ship and plunged
into the sea, NATO officials said
Saturday. Two men were kUied and
six others presumed dead.
The CH 46 twin· rotor transport
helicopter crashed IIJto the frigid
waters of the Atlantic north of the
Arctic Circle Friday evening durIJii Jl¥'"~1 NATO amphl~lous
exl!ri!l$e5 In , eight Yllilrs, the
d.flclals said.
·
·
"We have reports of two dead at
the scene with bodies recovered,"
Lt. Cmdr. · Paul Lohnes said 24
hours "at!er the eras h· "Six men
were missing but they are now
presumed dead by the U.S. Navl"
Two survivors were seriously
Injured and 10 were in good
condltiln, Lohnes said from Northwood, England, NATO's naval
center in Britain for operations in
the eastern Atlantic.
The dead and injured were all
U.S. servicemen. the officials said.
The helicopter was taking off

from tbe assault vessel USS Salpan
when It smastl'd Into an empty
chopper parked on the deck. Lt.
Cmdr. Torbjorn Sakselde, spokes·
man for North Norway Ilefero;e
Command. !!aid In Bodo .
Sakselde said that "after flying
Into the other helicopter, the
aircraft plunged Into the sea" about
60 mUes west d Bodo, 75 miles
north ol the Arctic Circle.
. The transport helicopter was one
¢ about 30 based 111 the ll,OOO.IQn
Saipan and was assigned toMartne
MediUIII ijellcOpter Squadron 162, ·
based In New River. N.C.• said Lt.
Crndr. BUl Sontag, spokesman for
tJie Atlantic ,Fleet In Norfolk, Va .
The Salpan was &lt;JOe £f t~:fleet d. 25
NATO ships, Including the aircraft
carrier USS Nimitz, taking part In
maneuvers off northern Norway In
exercises code-named "Northern
Wedding '!16."
The three-week maneuvers are
the biggest NATO amphibious
exercises In eight years and are to
test the allies' abUlty to reinforce
key nonhero defenses In time of
war ..

may be collected in a civillawsuil, nor does it restrict
attorney fees. But it does provide Incentives for
out-at-court settlements, penalizes frivolous lawsuits,
restricts certain elements that go Into damages
awards and requ!rl's attorneys to furnish clients with
a breakdoWn of fees and costs.
The !nsurana! bill gives the Ohio Department of
Insurance the power to review certain rate lncl'l'Qses
before they take effect.
It also requires Insurance companies to hetp find
alternative coverage for applicants and allows the
Legislature, If that marketing assistance fails, to set
up a joint underwrttlng association In which
insurance companies would be breed to share the
costs and risks ol covering compan Jes unable to
obtain Insurance. ·
The Republican-controlled Senate already has
adopted some ton reforms but has shown little
interest In getting after the insuranre side of the
problem.

Exchange student

kills 2 servicemen

el1ctrlc remote ~;ontrol m1rrars. Tr1m rings/center
hubl •nd mare

ASAVINGS OF

By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHINGTON tUPH - Analysts studying new poverty ligures
released last week by the Census
Bureau fear that despite almost
four years of economic recovery ,
poverty may be ·leveling off at an
unusually. high rate and the Income
gap between rich and poor Is
growing.
The figures showed a sUght drop
In the poverty rate, from 14.4
percent to 14 percent, putting 33.1
mUllori Americans below the government's oftlclal poverty line ol
S10.~ In Income.
But Robert Greenstein of the
Center on Budget and Polley
Prlortt les said the new flgu res show
tbe economic recovery has oot done
much to help the poor and has failed
to reduce poverty to pre-~esslon

levels In part because "the gains of
the recovery have been unevenly
distributed and have benefited the
rich much more than the poor."
The center's analysis of the new
figures, for example, found that
poverty rates In 1985 are "slgnlfl·
cantly higher" !han In 1911 (11.6
percent) and 1911) (13 percent)
wben the unemplayment rate was
about the same as it is now.
"A major reason lor the failure of
poverty to follow unemplayment
rates back down to 1911 and 191ll
levels Is due to growing Inequality
of Income and widening gaps
between the rich and tbe poor,"
Greenstein said.
The bureau's data. !rom 198J to
1985, shows that the typical - or
median - !annOy In the poorest 40
pertent of the population saw Its

$620~

•
•
SOJOUrnS In

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By KEVIN KELLY
'J'Imes.Sentlnel Staff

•

VINTON - For Kirsten Meyer,
it' s an opportunity to learn the
English language firsthand.
And for pupUs and staff at North
Gallia High School. where the West
German exchange student Is at tending claSSi'S, It will offer another
chance to learn about life and
attitudes In another country.
Kirsten said that In the nearly
t~ sbe's t.m -in the U.S.,
everyone - her host family, NGHS
faculty and students - have been
more than WIUJng to help ber adjust
to the surrourxllngs.
'
"I'm very glad everyonewantsto
help, because withOut their help, I
would be nothing," she said.
Kirsten 's sojourn In Gallla
County was arranged by the
Educational Foundation for For·
elgn Study alter she had applled to
many similar organizations oo she
u.s.:Manne he•llcot~~ter. with at 1eus1 could
study in the U.S. Her local
21 people
slamnled into a parted helloopter
taking off
contacts
werP Jim and Carol
from the assanM vll!ISel USS Salpan at Norway, NATO offtclal&lt;l said
Svoboda
of
Galllpolls, who have
Satunlay. Two men were ldDed and six others are presumed dead. The
placed exchange students In three
Saipan Is shown In this IMIIIIe photo. (UP!~
area hlgh schools, and her host
family are JOP and Carolyn Burris
of Vinton. who hosted Maria
Svensson, a student from Sweden
who a !tended NG If&gt; last year.
Kirsten , 17, who has heen
income decline by SZl6 after
Greenstein also said the in·
adjusting for Inflation.
crease&gt;; In the pro port ion of woman . schooled in English for several
During the same !lve-year peheaded families - a subject of years, said the trtp is her last
rbd, tbe typical tamUy In the top 4l groWing concern among policy. chancr&gt; at Improving her already
percent of the population saw its makers - have relatively little to skilled command of the language.
Income rise $2,915 while the typical do with the increase In poverty in In West Germany, students ~elve
seven years of !nst ruction In
family In the richest 10 percent saw recent years.
Its Income Increase by $7,1ll, the
"The census data soow that English and live years of another
persons In female- headed families language, Kirsten added .
center said.
After being accepted into the
"In 1985, the gap between the constitute a smnaller proportion of
program,
Kirsten spEnt two weeks
richest 40percentof alllamillesahd the total poverty population today
in
an
English
orlentatbn program
the poorest 40 percent tied with 1984 than In 1977, and about the same
In
Brighton,
England, and then
for the widest ever recorded since proportion as in 1911l," he said.
traveled
by
air
kl Pittsburgh, Pa.,
the Census Bureau began ooUectlng
"Only 29 percent of the Increase
tbese data In 1947, '' Greenstein said. In the poverty population since 1971 on Aug. 13. Following a layover
The data show that the poorest aJ came among persons In female- there, she (I'OCE'eded on to Huntingpercent d all families received only headed families ," Greenstein said. ton, w.va·., wbere she was met by
4.6 percent of national Income In
"Other factors, such as growing the Svoboda s and the Bu rrlses.
Her Immediate impressions of
1985 whlle the top aJ percent economic Inequality and budget
school
have heen favorable, she
received 43.5 percent of aU Income cuts at federal and state levels,
said
.
In
her hometown of Meckcl- the highest percentages re- appear ,to be more important In
feld,
near
Hamburg, more than~
corded since 1947.
explaining the Increase in poverty."

By JIM WEmEMOYER.
Tlmet&amp;ntlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - For a college
student to come home during the
summer to see his parents Is not
that unusual. But for Glenn Evans,
a sophOmore at a California
community college, the way In
which he did It was.
. Evans attends College d. tbe Red
Woods In Eureka, Call!. When he
decided to head back to Gallipolis to
see his parents for the summer. he
did not tly. He did not drive. Nordld
he take the bus.
lie licy¢1ed, more than 3,!XXJ

."'

,'"'...

--'

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

10 .....".

1&gt;00

I

area

Kirsten Meyer

students attend her gymnasium,
the German name for high school.
The comparatively smaller NGHS
studenl population is more to ~er
liking, she said.
She has been set up In classPS
dealing with U.S. history, British
literature and nu Ditlonal and survival skills. She would like to study
sociology after completing hlgh
school - German students attend
school for a total of 13 years.
compared to the 12 Americans
urxtergo - but said there Is not
much in the w.ay of jobs for
50Cloiogy majors In West Germany
at this time.
Ufe In America is more conservative than the average w~st
German imagines, Kirsten explained. In America patriotism is
more evident than it is in West
Germany, she said, partly because
the country's past history makes
the average West German reluctant to display overt nationalism.
Some d. West Germany's impressions of the U.S. do come from the
media, where teievos10n soows such
as "Dallas," "Dynasty" and "Ma~ ·
iContinul'd on A-.11

Biker sees America on trek back home

1300

mDes.
.
He lEft June 16 and 41 days later
an1ved In city park, greeted .by his

pareua,

- Altlloullh never a blcycl!ngenthuslut as a child, Evans said II was
lometblng he has wanted to do br

MEMBER F.D.I.C.
2212 Joodooon A ~- . oLW.Va. •'
1171-1121

/\long the River ........... B-I-8
Busin-....................... 0-t
CombTV ............... Wert
Classilleds ...... D-2-3+5+1·8
lleatlti ......................... A-5
Editorial ...................... A-2
Sports ........................ C·I-8

tmts-

'fThe letter lanlc"
Suatid.,_.
Moeon. w. v•.
773-11114

Page C-1

•

7P.M.

Peoples Bank

Katie Crow discusses lhe effect of Noll'h
Years upon Social Set!urity - Page B-8

-

U.S. poverty gap widening, analysts say

C. SONNY ZUNIGA, Pastor

Includes Lobby,
Installment Loan Department,
Drive-In And Walk·UP
Window

'

~

'

U.S. Open tennis results

Have a safe,
happy holiday
Labor Day

•

50 cents

Helicopter crash

Each preview set includes 10-12 different
poses before traditional oil backdrops and in at- ,
tractive outdoor senings.
,,

W) High So., Pomeroy

WE'RE
OPEN
II*OR YOU

•

•

You'll like the individualized attention you
receive ·when you have your senior porrrait made
at THE PHOTO PLACE...

1HE PHOTO PLACE

Pomeroy. OH.
Phone 992-2875
SPIIJIG AJit SU-I •ouiS

'•

Jolll and Helen CaWdlne Brauer. ion Long, Ashton, Ill.; seven
He was a school,teacbe,r and coach · step-grandchlldrm, five step-great
at Meigs Hlgb from l974to 19'19. He grandchildren.
SeiVlce will be held today at 2
was aftlllated with the Methodist
p.m.
at the Tyree Funeral !{orne
Oturch and was a veteran r1 World
~olay ID'Ougb Tuesd!Q'
&gt;
Chapel,
Oak Hill, W. Va ., With
War II; a member of the Masonic
Fair Sunday and Monday, wlth'a-_);.
Lcqe, Urbana; the Veterans d. Pastor John S. Evans officiating. chanre r1 smwers In the northef111~
Foreign Wars; the American Le- Burtal wUI be In High Lawn part r1 the state Tuesday. Highs wlll.•
gion, AllenEEn, S.D.; the Elks Club Memortal Park.
range from the upper 70s to IJie.~ .
and National Bridge Club, Aber·
middle !llseachday, with overnight ~ .:
deen, S.D.; and was a life member Cecil Frazier
lows ranging !rom themidEOstothe.• :
ofO.E.A.
,
mid Ills.
SuiVIvlng are his wile, Allee,
Cecil Frazier, Middleport, who
Bankruptcy filed
Aberdeen, S.D.; three 9JilS, John died Wednesday was preceded In
.;·
Brauer, In the Marine Corps In death by his mother, Rhett Mantey
"
DENVER (UP!) - People Ex· ,'
Calltoi'IJla, WOllam Brauer, a stu- Frazier, two brothers, Roy Frazler, press Inc., unable to attract a buyer.., •J.~·
dent ~I Kent State University, and Columbus and Clyde Frazier, for Its grounded subsidiary, Front·J:
Ro&amp;er Brauer Jr. ot Middleport;
Middleport. Services lor Mr. Fraz- ler Airlines, sought' bankruptcy, i
two dailgllters, VIcki Mullner d. Ier will be held Saturday at 1p.m. at protection for the 39-year-old air::.
Aberdeen, S.D., and Pam Undder· Rock Springs United Metoodlst carrier to stave off losses mountlni";::
wood of Willie River, S.D.; two Church.
at $1 mUllon a day.
·, ·
brothers, Gerald Brauer and Edwin
Brauer, both of the You~town
area; one sister, Charlotte GUWand
of the Youngstown area; seven
grandchUdren; and several nieces
and nephews.
A memorial servia!, With Rev.
James Corbitt, will be held 4 p.m.
Saturday at the F\:lmeroy United
Methodist Church. Burlal will be In
the BJ.ook Hills Nati&gt;nal Cemetery,
Sturgis, S.D. 'There will be no
calling hours at Ewing Funeral
Home.

Bob &amp; Charlene Hoeflich

204 Condor St.

THE
GRAVELY
SV TEM

.

Saudi Caatral Ohio
Clear tmllght, With a low near 5I:
Mostly sunny Saturday, With hlg~
In the mJd 70s
-~
The probability of proclpltatbn ~
near zero throulllt Saturday.
:
ton~~ wmre lllllt~ and vartabiet

For Appointment or More Information Call
Afrer 5 p.m. or Weekends

tn 1989.

Sunday

s.

Brian Bissell and Mark Boyd were on patrol In the Portland area
when they received a call from Ravenswood, W.Va. pollee thatthey
and the Jackson Coonty Sheriff's J;lepartment were In persult of a
stolen pickup cornlDg across the Ravenswood brklge.

lor the first 29 aircraft actually
oought, the Air Force said, It
concluded that the cost ot a11 EO
would exceed the negotiated prtce

··:

$

Juveniles held following chllse

Au~i ~~~~~e-,:~!t~;o;~~

Ohio weather

Area deaths

School schedules open lwwe

WASHINGTON (UP! ) -The Air
Force says it will begin action to
recover between $400 mlUion and
$500 miUion In potential cost
overruns from Lockheed Corp., but
the company says the claim is
"totally lacking In merit."
The alleged cost overruns Involve
the defense contractor's production
ot the giant C-5B Galaxy jet
transport.
"TheAIEForceblnttlattngactton
With Lockheed-Georgia to obtain an
approprtateprlceadjustment ... the
Air Force said Thursday In announcing what 5 believed to be the
largest defective price case yet
encountered.
An$8billkmcontractl&gt;rffiofthe
C·5B's, an improved version d.
247-loot-long. four-jet c-s. was
negotiated In December 1982. The
Dna! aircraft 5 due to be delivered

Friday, August 29, 19St&gt;.:

Pomeroy-Middlepon, Ohio

.~·

sewrat

tlthSirltl
- - - ; W. Va.

,.,.\Ybln~In the (U.S.) Nl!vy, I
read about a lot &lt;t people tloilg 11

882-2131

(I:JIItlq aerou the rountr\1) and

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decided that It was what I wanted to
do," he said. "The more I thought
about It the more I wanted to do it. I
used to daydream about it."
After leaving the Navy in the
summer 111984, Evans purchased a
Rawlf!4lh Touring 14-speed bike for
arourxl USO. He later added seven
gears but only three are functional,
he said.
The trip began when Evans left
his apartment In Eureka at 8 a.m .
the first day With his modlfled
17-speed combination bike and
approxlll\ately $!i00,
By the time he arrived .In
Gall1polls on July 'li, he had
chanied eight Oat tires, several
spokes,, booght a new silicon
padded seat and spent atmo&amp;t $11JJ.
He w,as not Ured. be sajd, but his
toes were SOI'f! from the pedal cl,lps
and welcomed a break from sltlln,g
for so maily days.
He estimated spendln&amp;, m .the
average, '$10 a day. He packed a
sleeping baa and one-inan \!!Ill with

him to camp every night.

It was a great way to see tbe
rountry, he said, but making the
trek alone had its advantages and
disadvantages.
"It got a little lonely at times," he
said. "U there was another person
With me, food would have 'been a
little cheaper to buy.
"But the good part about being
alone was I could alter my route
any time 1 wan ted and yru really
have to depend oo yourself for
everything," he added.
When his bike would falter were
the toughest times, he said. There
were a few times he had to
hitchhike to the nearest repair shOp,
especlaJIY for his damaged spokes.
The route he took was based oo
one mapped out by a national bike
club. But he altered It considerably
to travel through YeUowstone
National Park, Rocky Mountain
NallolliiJo Park and Kansas City,
MO., to lll!le 10me relativeS for two
days. I

He also altered his route after
asking residents oft he area he was
located for dlr~tions. He basically
asked them ~ there werP any
shOwers or gnx.-ery stores along
specific roads.
Sevm of tlx&gt; homeowners he
approached offered him to ~ay in
their hoUSI' or ~arage for thteven!ng, he said.
"! got to spend Sl?';en night s in
hOuses along tht- way," he said. "I
would tell them what I was doing,
they could tell I was biker, and let
me stay In their garag&lt; tir
somet]jng,"
Evans, the oon of Verna Evans
and J. Robert Evans,' did have
some gear ~d fooil paeked on his
bike, about EO tDlmds, he estimated,
accumulating more every dliy. His
diet basically consisted r1 granola
barS, cream of wheat and hOt
chocolate..
·
He bepn each mo11!1!1a~rourxt8
or 9 &amp;,fll; and C!&gt;JT~Ple!Ed the dty
!Continued on A-3)
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August 31, 1986

.

-\ve., GalllpoUs, Ohio lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(814) 446-ZI42
(614) 992-2156
ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

.HOBART WilSON JR.
Executive Edllor

I.

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of The Unite:! Pr('Ss International. Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper PubliShers Association .
~-

·

LEITERS OF-OPINION art&gt; wei('Ome. They !ilo.tld tl' less than Dl words

1ong. AU letters aresubJ ec:t to I'd ltlng and rl'List bfo signed with name. address and
1
telephone number. No Wl signed IPttE&gt;rs wUI be published. LE&gt;tters should be tn
&amp;ood taste, addressing Issues. not persmaUrM&gt;s.

feculiar quality
:of Reagan n~ws
,l

This Satunlay, President Reagan will make another In a series of
, ~ several huoored five-minu te radio addresses from his rrountalntop ranch
% near Santa Barbara.
~,
It wUI probably rehash some topic he has been speaking abcut, or
~! pevhaps he will have a Labor Day weekend message about the ooblllty of
1' the working man and woman.
But whatever he says, it Is guaranteed to make news. He could start
! 1World War III or he could read the Beverly Hills phore book. WhateVer he
'. } says wUl be featured on Saturday evening's newscasts and on most Sunday
• ·morning front ,pages.
! 1• Why? Because he is the president - and by every definition of news,
.
1 .1: wllilt he says Is deemed important.
I : · But thanks to fonner White House press secretary Ron Nessen, now vice
: : president of the Mutual Broadcastlng System, that shibboleth Is under
" question.
: 1 Nessen recently onlered his radio network to stop carrying the ~h
: l Hve, on grounds that "It surrendered to the pJlitlctans what t the basic
: ; responsibility of the media - deciding what t and what is not news."
, ' Nessen went on to complain that the Saturday speech, and a Democratic

t

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! : ' 'responSe ,'' are rarely newsworthy .

; ' But when Reagan produced what Nessen deemed "real news" two
; · Satunlays ago - denouncing the Democratic House for trashing the
~. administration' s defense budget, Nessen retaliated.
, ; The speech was taped on the )l"evlous Friday because Reagan was to be
; : en route to California at the scheduled broadcast time. Each network and
:; prtnt medium received either a tape recording or a transcript Jl hours In
: ~ advance on the $landard condition that It not be p.Jt on the air or In prtnt
, · until 12;06 p.m. EUf Saturday.
: ; Nessen, seeing the "real news" value of this speech, put It oothe Mutual
1: nstwork Immediately, breaking the ground rules and Incurring the wrath
1l of Reaga'n spokesman Larry Speakes, who ooce worked for Nessen In the
i~ Ford White House.
t1 Speakes threatened to put Mutual's White House correspJndent "out of
~ 1J$iness" because "he'll have to figure out how to get his news some other
•. &gt;Wily because he's not getting It from me as bng as I'm here, and I'll be here
- ~- marl! years."
i"'• 'Nessen broke every journalistic convention by not treating the
j presidential address as news In the first place, and then by breaking an
f ~mbargo - a clvlllzed tradition that makes Wlitlng stories easier lor his
f colleagues.
~
But, In his defense, why should reporters have it easy? And he Is on firm
: ·logical grouooln dectartng, "News is news when 'It's made, not when the
. : White House says It may be released to the p.~blic."
• Speakes seems to have come out on top in this spitting match, merely by
; pointing out that breaking an emoorgo is tantamount to theft from other
• report~rs.
Meanwhile, this less-than- titanic face-off between Nessen and Speakes
: Is reminiscent of one of Jody PoweU's favorite respJnses to an Insult: "This
• is like being calied ugly by a frog."

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i Letters to the Editor
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Taking her business elsewhere
I was pleased to read Bob

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1 Qoefl!ch's views on the unfriendly
attitude of Pomeroy's business
, people and clerks. It has come to
.. . ~ tht point where we'll drive 20-l!
~. mUes to other towns to shop. The
:owners and clerks are the rudest,
. ' most unfriendly people I have had
. ~tile misfortune to meet. They act as
If they aredoingyoua favor waiting
pn you. If you are bold enough to ask
:a· que:;tlon or for help, you get a
and a short, snippy reply.
' •Many people have expressed their
•ldlsmaY and said they have quit
ing In Pomeroy. To me they
·.
t as,lf they work In a country club
.,and you are an uninvited guest.

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before, smlllrig and eager to wait oo
you, helping any way they can and
actually talking with you. They'll
get my thanks and trade. Hats of! to
them!
Pomeroy has many beautiful old
buUdlngs that could be restored,
many places for new tllslnesses.
Why would anyone want to move a
rosiness and their families to such
an obnoxious toM!?
I thought the oostnesses were
responsible for the sidewalks
around their ooUdlngs. Weeds now
grow up thru the walks and against
the buUdlogs.
I am stU! hopeful for a better
tomorrow.
Mrs. Zelma GUmore
23715 Hiland Road
Pomeroy, Ohio

Haiti desenres help.______..::__iac_k_And~e..:..:...rso::.:..:.n
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti-The treasury hsa been deplete:!.
half live In tiny COJTUgated tin drawn by bullocks. The poverty, If
·reaHty ofeconomlcshasdescended
'f'r~al!y, these grim statistics shacks. Under the tropical sun,
Jess oppressive, is just as severe.
like an enShrouding miasma rn 'luive'faces - gaunt, peaked faces, these shanties become Insufferable Nestled In the parched mountains
Haiti. This wretched country, poor- wil,hoUt hope. For life In Haiti Is hot boxes.
are obscure villages wherechlldren
est In the Americas, will get p10rer. harsl!, and catastrophe Is commonOn the edge of the slums, a water are too weak from hunger 1D play,
Its people, hungriest In the hemls- place. Only one of five Haitians has main sprung a leak. A crowd their hair discolored and their
phere, will get . hungrier .. The :learned to read. For most, ll!e is quickly "-gathered. Some splashed · bellies bloated from malnutrition
ravaged tand, which now hare!)' . • labor, lind death comes early. The and bathed happily mthe oobbUng
Destitute familles have cho~
supports the (Xlpulace, willl!ld up a . average Haitian woman expects to water; others smoped up wat€1' m daM~ trees to make charcoal, which
parched, barren desert In Jl years. lose halt of her babies to Infant tin cans and carried the pvecklus Is sold .In bushel bags along the
Unless Haiti receives massive ald. diseases. In their · native croole Duld to their sbanties.
roadside. They have stripped wide
Wilen this cr,-cade began, Haiti language, a child o121s called yoon
A small boy, walling pitifully, patches at land, which were once
wa.q already at the bottom~ ev~ry ti chope- "a little escapee" from wancrred through a fo~t &lt;t adult forested but now are barren. The
economic chart In .the Western hall death.
~ . But the people are so inured to
pelting, rains wash the rich topsoU
of the world. Yel the statistics
I visited a slum section where suffering that they tgnorect the little Into the dvers and out to sea. In
continued to plunge and st~l are rn authortites estimate, 4)(),000 peopl~ boy's cries. They show~ no S!lalher two decades·, rrost of Haiti
a downhUI slide:
arecrammedlntoagbeltolOblocks lDstWty, by the way, toward an / wUl be a crsert unless It Is
Real wages are Jl perrent below square. I found muself engulfed In alfluent, oveJWelght Amertcan Jn rdorested.
. the l9lKl leveLinfiatlon Is more than an ant bed of humanity, with people their midst. Some were a bit
~ Haitian people are by no
double what it was six years ago. pushing, swarming, sweating, aggressive, eager to 5ell trinkets or means a lazy lot. They are eager to
Drought ·has reduced rice, com and hawking solled goods,,struggling to services. For a.s&amp;~e, after air, might work; they expect oothlng to be
soybean ·pl'Qductlon by ll perCEnt. survive.
·
determine whether they would eat hanO!d to them. Neither are they
Thousands who held jobs ln 198lare • Hall of the people live In the that day.
victims of an "act d Gcd," like the
now out of work. The AIIli crisis streets. They batbe In the gutters In
The roads out of Port-au-Prtnce drought-Induced farninellln 'Africa.
and pJUtical upheavalshavescared lUthy, ruMing sewer water. Their lead back through the renturles to a They have been aliused and
away touriSts. Fuel supplies are naked children dig for rrorsels In world of, donkeys loaded with bedevUed by tlleir rulers.
dangerously bw. And the national decaying'garooge Jiles. The other IJ'!)duce and wooden·wheeled carts

Avengers of the word.______;_:A..:....::...rt

.=.::Buc:.::..:..h::.::.:wa==-ld

·r··.. . ..
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:py

Mr:

tfiJday in history .

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must be a wmder!ul job."
"There's no fun In reading It, It's
banning it that gives our followers a
purpose in llfe. Every 'Avenger'
wants to ban Jane Austen."
"I dldo't lmow Jane was on the
Revermd's hit Ust."
"No me has 11lled children's
minds with ·Jmre sinful garooge.
Tbanks to the Reverend Ick, aU the
acttools In the country have been
lllUfled."
"Buddy, I can see where your
people would want to kfep their own
bookshelves clean, but why us? We
don't even belong to your sect."
"Because If- you read banned
boolcll, yru'U bum In hell. Tllele are
ootmy wordsbutthoseo!Reverend
Ick wiD Is within an arm's throw at
the Lord."
"Granted," I said, ••t:tut let's
assume that the Ust d. other
distinguished book-burners does
not match yours. This means I can't
read anytliaa."
"The Awngen' list Is the only
one , 1D follow because It has been
liessed Ill television by the ReveI'E!Id lck."
''Back to the question. If I'm not
an _lck follower, w(ly are yuu,
ln!llctlng your phiioeopby 011 Jlle?"
"Beca111e the Reverl!lld' believes
U.t II yw don't tllroW oot your
·bJokl, you will be conc!emned to a
llery b'ltmlo in ihe atteriUie."
"DaM the Reverend really want
to control oor h?"
"AD he'a IJylng to do Is lrA!ep the
secu!IU' hulnanlsts from ca~
your flu!."
.
"How can the secular hllll!allMts
.capture 11\Y SOUl?" I've never met
evm c:ne d. them."
"The IM!CIIlarlats get Into your_

lDme through the prtnted won!. Go
ln1D any bookstore and see· how
much mischief the devil Is
makblg."
"You people really have a lot of
work td do."
"Book.biJmlng can be exhllarat- •

lng If you know what you're looking
for."

NATO cltief urges action against Liby~~

Competition fierce
for phone business

Page-A-2
August ;n. 19~8

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Support benefits band

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WASHINGTON - Ifs rot ec- resolved. Long-estabUshed farm 8.3 billion ooshiels of com. You can go ver omen t would pay dairy
actly a trtvlal questk&gt;n. but try It lor services go on as usual. It's !he multiply those figures on yoor farmers to go rut d bu~ess and to
size: What area of federal Spellclng price support system .decreed by handy pocket calculator. The wheat stay out ol business lor at leaSt live
years. Roughly lt,IXXI tanners
has lncreesed most rapidly &lt;Werthe ~ ' last year that has ~Ill pvgram works the •same way.
.,,
p~st live years? petense? Wrong.
shaking his head.
Lyna acknowlEdges that a g~:eat responde~! .. . ~ W!lllt out ,(If
Social programs? Wrong. For the
DUring the five fiscal years from chunk of the subsidy goes to a ·. business and the government paid
answer, consider the multiple 1981 through 1985,de!ensespending relatively few super-farmers. them $1.8 billion lor the favor,,
One consequence was that the
headaches of Richard ~11:.
Increased by :fi percent In this Under !he law, no grower Is
Six months have passed slnre the same period wtlays llr trice suwosed . to ~elve more thai! .cattle market was flooded with the
66-year-old Call!ornlan took &lt;Wer supports Increased by 340 percent. $!1l,&lt;XXl a year, butthe big producers aban'doned }¥!l'ds. To keep beef
from Jobn Block a.s Secretary d !'II the fiscal yearthatendsSept.ll, easUyhaveavoldedthatrestrtctlon. · prices !tom !a'nlng, the gov~mrnent
Agriculture. He gave up a lu.cratlve farmers will reeelve "deficiency Any~w. ·says Lyrg, given the agrred '·to buy up to 400 m\lliOJ)
private practice a.s a marleting payments" of nearly $211 wtlon. oomper crops of 1!185 and 1986, pJUOOS of beef, half alit to.be \lsed
consultant to return to the depart· This Is an qlell-end mllttement m1111y middle-sized growers sur- for subsidized expJrts. Lyng pald$1
ment he served as assistant program. Except for Social Secur- pass the celllng. Until export a p:mnd for OO,&lt;XXl tons at beef thai
Slrretary and later as depuly lty, It's the largl!st entitlement markets recover, there's no alter- were sold to Brazil ti&gt;r ~ cents a
SECretary. He's happy to be back, program of them all.
native to the Price support system. !X&gt;Und. The government lost $1;4XI
oot down at 14th and Independence · -This Is how the system 'Mlrks. It trOVideS more than half ofthe net on every 1Dn. Try that one on yow:
Avenue it ain't no bed of roseS.
The law estabUahes a ''target cash Income fal'!llers wUl receive pJcket calculator too.
Meanwhile, back at the lm,ID)
Some of the programs I,yng prtce" on com of$3.00 a IRjsheL The this year.
administers rock along wit!Dut law also provides ilr a "!dan level"
Then there's the da(Iy program. !Urvlvlng da(Iy farms, eftlclency
much trouble. Food stamps wDJ of $1.!11 a bushel. Wilen tl!e marltet l,yl¥!' p.Jts the matter simply: "The levels are Improving, feed costs ani
cost the taxpayers upwards of Sl2 hits the loan level, wblch It does, the country has 11 million' cows, and 10 dropping, and mUk production 14
billion this year, oot problems of federal treasury pays the com mUJion Is all we need." In an effort expanding. The government now
Ineligibility that once plagued the grower the dlffe:ence d $1.17. This to ease the situation, Congress owns rm million pounds of surplus
program have been pretty well year the deficiency will be paid on came with a novel plan: The cheese, 242 million pJunds ~ bulterj
and 828 million pounds ol dried
~tiM,..V•IomUtU·'I'iiEil""
ETn' milk . LyJll gives away a million
P·t. J.IUI.ME pJunds of cheese a day, ool ill:
NfA giveaways displace a big part r1 the
private market and they're not
much help.
The fuooamental problem hen!
at home, Lyng says, is rooted iJ1
elementary economics: too IlliCit
suwly, too Uttle demand. The bl!i
problem abroad Is what he bluntll(
terms tbe " monkey business" of
nations thatsubsldlzefarmex~rts :
"They're killing us." Lyng 14
cautiously , optimistic about the
future. This Is a time of transltlori
!Or price supports. Over the next
five years costs sllould go down;
1be wave of Midwestern foreclo1
sures eventually wUI subside:
Meanwhile, as Lyng ruefully IIC;
Jmowiedges, thousands of farmer!(
In the Midwest and In the droughtstricken South continue to find
things tough.
What's good on the farm front?
I,yrg brightens. Hogs are griod;
vegetables are good, and you know
what? The tromotlon of wine
coolers has qlelled a nice new
market for grapes. In the midst of
many problems, he'll drink to that.

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The thing I like about the citizen
censors we now have In this country
(and there are moreofthemall tbe
time) Is that they oot only worry
about wbat their own families are
reading, but yours a.s Well.
Buddy Bloooose, a.block warden
lor the Reverend Abner Ick, Is a
frequent visitor to ~ house. lie
Ulllally comes In through the
!· "
•: It's nice togo In rut cl town stores.
kftdJa window while I'm eating
'
~pie who have never seen you
cornflakes. Theotherday~saldto
me, "Mind If I check your library to
i'
see If you !lave any secular
humanist literature stashed
away?"
"Be my guest," I told him. "But
•,
:· We would like to extend thanks r1 family, to the area . The students you're wasting' ·your time. I
are mthuslastlc, and with Mr. wouldo't know a secular humanist
· 'iped with the success r1 East- Hall'sdlrection, we areanticlpa!ing book If It jumped up and bit me."
's band concession at the Meigs a fine Instrumental year. Maybe
"I can't takeyourwordfor lt. My
•.
pty Fair. Not only did most of you wUI catch a glimpse d. the ba.nd
organization, The Avengers of the
~ band members and their perfonnlng at a football game or a
Printed Wan!, asked' me to see tlr
:pli'rents work han! durlng the week, parade. Our county's youth need myself. We won't stand for 11th In
i1heY aiBO had a wonderful oppJrtun- wr support, thanks again ror your house."
·
to get acquainted. We thank helping ~s support ours.
"No problem there," I assured
)veeyqne for thetr patronage and
Rosemary Keeler, president
him. "We burned everything the
Debbie Flnlaw, vice !l'esldent Avmgers PJI on their black Uat. H
:fw.~elcome our new band
Pat Wolf, secretacy
)VU find anything that v¥lla11!8 the
thr,
Wllliam Hall and his
Roberta Ridenour, treasurer
teachlnga of the Revermd Jck, yw
'
can take It with yOu."
"We're dolni thla. lor your. own
good," Buddy Bald.
"I knoW that, or I WWldn't Jei )011
ln1D riJy house." '
t! ~ IS',Sunday, Aug. 31, the 2!13nl day of 1986 with 122 to follow.
"Our Job Ia to clean a., America,
and the iinly way to do that Ia il
' 'l'lleJI!Oilll'ls f110VInijtoward lis new pllase.
, 111e h'iiJtn!llg stars are Mercury and Jupter.
alert the people to dangerous
eYeillni stars are Venus, Mars and Sa111rn.
. reading."
.
· ,bOrn on this date are under the sign d VIrgo. They Include Italian
"Let me ask you a 'quliltton.
, Marla· Montessort in · 1870; actor Fredric March in llll7;
Where does the Revi:I'Eild .kk let
Arthllr Godftey In 1903; ·author William Saroyan 1n 1908;
the time to read all the P,rtnled .
Sir Bernard LoVell In l9l3 (age 73); lyricist Alan JayJMner In material he altllcki on tell!vlllmi?"
• comer!lan 'J:!Udt!Y Hackett lh 1924 (age 62); actor James CobUrn In
"He doein't ~d 1(~. He
(lilt W); vtolblllt Itzhak I'erlman and rock singer Van MOIIP bl
has AVI!IIII!R readiDg lt'tlr )lim,"
(lif.G)',,IIId.ctor ~bard Gere in l9tl (age37).
'
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Revl!rEIIII

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By SYDNEY SHAW
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
court-onlered process that has
allowed moSt Americans to
choose a long-distance company
ends Monday but the fierce
competition It triggered In the
nation's S45 bllllon long-distance
marketplace wW linger.
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph, which won 75 percent at
the customers in two years of
balloting at the local Bell phone
companies, pia.ns an aggressive
effort to take business away
from MCI and U.S. Sprtnt, its
closest competitors.
MCI has 15 percent of the
market and U.S. Sprint has 4.5
percent.
In all, 475 companies nation·
wide now are battling for part of
a business that once belonged
exclusively to AT&amp;T. While the
main target ls the high-volume
business phone customer, the
competition and a · series of
Federal Communications Commission decisions already have
driven all long-distance ratf'S
down dramatically.
Since the selection process
began, AT&amp;T has dropped Its
rates rrore than 21 percent. MCI
has adjusted its prices to stand o
percent to Jl percent below
AT&amp;T's. U.S. Sprint says its
average rates are 5 percent to 10
percent uooer AT&amp;T and 2
percent to 3 percent bwer than
MCI .
The Justice Department.
meanwhile. will begin an investigation to determine if the seven
regional Bell operating companIes have properly complied with
the federal court order mandatIng "equal access" -one r1 tlr
most tangible results of the Jan.
1. 1984. Bell System breakup.
"But we don't foresee any
significant deviations from tho
schedule at this pJint," said
Nancy Garrison, assistant chief
of the commerce and finance
section in thr Justice Department's antitrust division.
Under the decree, the local
Bell phone companies were

required to offer all longdistance companies the same
quality ol cormectlon to tile local
phone network as AT&amp;T's.
The changeover has bwered
AT&amp;T's overhead and Increased
costs slightly for the other
companies.
For consumers. ·hoM"Ver, it
has !T\l'l!nt freedom to use the
long-distance carrier of their
choice the same )l'ay they used
to use AT&amp;T, by picking up the
phone and dialing 1. Before,
customers had to punch In
lengtby access codes to use any
AT&amp;T competitor.
By the Sept. 1 deadllne for
providing equal access at rrost
central Bell offices, ahout 70
percent of the nation's telep!Dne
customers had been switched
over.
Due to the expense of altering
equipment in some areas, some
phone customers will rot get
equal access for many years,
oot the Bell companies expect to
switch &lt;Ner 3 mUllan rrore lines
by the end of 1986. In 1987. 6
mllllon rrore Unes wUI be
converted.
Independent local phone companies also plan to )l"Ovlde €1]Ual
access but are rot urxler a
court-ordered timetable.
The balloting process has been
fraught with foulups since It
began In July 1984111 Charleston.
W.Va. Local companies hooked
up about 1 percent of the
customers to the wrong longdistance companies; in several
area s AT&amp;T accidentally
mailed out "thank you" notices
to MCI customers; federal
decisions changed the ground
rules for voting midway through
the process.
Consumer groups say Americans who make lew longdistance calls gain llttle fromtbe
changes. pointing out that bcal
phone rates have risen more
than :fi percent nati:mwide since
the divestiture of AT&amp;T.
The biggest price breaks are
for business customers, they
say.

Biker sees

(Continued from A-ll

about 6 p.m., breaking for lunch
half.way In hetween.
Yellowstone was the highlight of
the trip, he said, even though the
road was probably the worst r1 any
he traveled.
On thethetopdRockyMountaln.
it began to ball, he said. Going down
the other sl(le he coasted arouod
ll-:fi miles per hour. according to a
passing motorist, gauging him.
The road up Rocky Mountain Is
the highest paved continuous road
In the country, he said. He
estim ated il was about n mi)&lt;'s to
the top, taking him half a day's
time.
While al the top. hr said he met a
:M-year-old girl bikjng from Philadelphia to Oregon .
"That did not really surprise me
that much though.'' he said. "You
hear about people going across the
country all the tlme. It's not that
unusual."
The girl was by herself but began
tier jourTIPy wil h a friend who has
an aunt living in Gallipolis. Thr
friend had to turn baC'k and go home
because the trip becamr too
expensive.
Evans said he would like to bike
across the nation again. but not
until he is finished with school. The

leaveforhimhiswith
much
trip
timedidto not
relax
summer
' d.
Vacation' he sat

"What can I do to make sure I
ti&gt;n't buy a booil I shouldo't?"
"Send $lOO Ill Reverend Ick and
he'D ten you how to become a
born-again reader."

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

Emphasizing repeatedly that he
was speaking "for Bernie Rogers"
and not the administration, the
NATO chief said, "I think that
Gadhafl has to understand that ... ~
he Is Involved In terrorist acts
against U.S. personnel again and
his fingerprints are found on it. that
he must understand that he Is liable
to suffer slmUar type punishment
as he did on the 15th of ApriL"
"We need to strike again" if
Gadhafl moves, Rogers said.
"He needs to urxlerstand tha t he
Is not Immure to being struck by
any of the resources wl!ich the
United States possesses ... the kind
of assets we have which can reach
targets within Libya," he said,
adding, "We have the B-52 In the
United States."
The eight-engine jet bombers of
the Strategic Air Command, which
can carry hath conventional and
nuclear bombs, have an almost
unlimited range with air tanker
refueling.

•Night Stalker' trial
set for late this year
LOS ANGELES iUPI) - "Night
Stalker" suspect Richard Ramirez,
a self-proctalmed devll worshipper
with a penchant for heavy·metai
music, was captured a year ago
Sunday but he prohably will not
face trial on 14 murder charges
until next year. officials say.
The arrest calmed nerves that
were frayed by reports of a serial
killer who Invaded darkent&gt;d homes
through open windows and a t·
tacked his victims·as they slept.
Ramirez, 26, is charged In Los
Angeles County with the murders of
14 people plu s a series of non·fatal
attacks durtng a yearlong crime
spree.
Ramirez. a devil worshipper who
once shouted 0111 "Hail Satan" at a n
early court appearance. also is
chargt'd with a 15th murder in San

Ohio weather

Francisco and a ron-fatal attack ln
Orange County.
Daniel Hernandez. one of Ramirez's two defense attorneys, said he
did not even realize a year had
passed since his client's arrest.
"Has it been a year already •" he
said. "I don't think a year. per se.
means anything. The important
thing is that we're progressing
along with the defense and look
forward to a fair trial."

Ohio Lottery
CLEVELAND I UPI 1- Friday's
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Daily Numher
698
PICK-I
5ll2

_ South CenlrJJ Ohio
Partly cloudy today, with highs in
the upper 70s. The probabiiitv ot
precipitation Is 20 perccn 1. ·
Ohio Extended Forecao;t
Monday th
h '"edn--•
rougthr" period
'"""Y
Fair through
. with
highs in the80seachday . Oveml~ht
'iO
lows WI' II ra~ from th
to the liOs ·

GALLIPOLIS - Offices in the
Gallipolis City Building wit! be
closed Monday In ohservan('(&gt; of the
Labor Day hollday. The pollee and
fire departments will be staffed .
Also, the Gallia' County Courthouse will be closed Monday for thr
holiday. The Gallia County Sheriff's
Department will be staffed.

Office·
"My new office
means I can serve
you r lam1ly msurance needs Call or
drop 1n anytime: ..

CAROLL
SNOWDEN

Cornet Third Ave .
&amp; State St.
Gallipolis, Oh .
Phone 446-4290
Home 446-4518

Dear Senior

L1ke a good neighbor.
State Farm IS there
StAll fARM

A

INSUlANU

'

State Farm I ~Surance Compan1es
HofT'e011•ces Btoom•ngtofl lll•oos

-.

Four ch aracteristics · that determine the ·
quality of a diamond . Consu It me.

I am Sue Ann Bostic, Senior Citizens Coordinator for Ohio Valley
Bank and I have great news for youl At OVB, we are constantly
striving to find ways to meet the needs of our community. In an
effort to provide the ' best service possible, we have found that
many of our senior citizen customers want individualized banking
assistance. With ·this in mind, we are developing a new program
especially for you, our Senior Citizens,
We are excited about this new service which will include a
special area in the bank where I will be available to help you
with your banking at the first of the month. I want you to feel
free to call me any time or, if you prefer, I will be glad to
assist you personally on an appointment basis.
Perhaps, the
highlight of this new prog.ram is - 'WE MAKE HOU,SE CALLS', For
those of you who are unable to . come to the bank, I .w ill meet with
you in your home at your convenience.

You are important to OVB and a valuable customer. Our goal is to
make your banking as pleasant an4 easy as possible. we want this
program to be a very special part of your banking relationship
with us.

,. Children' a eveUebft 111 w~ite.

.

4@
0

&lt;104 SIECONO A - • - 11(. .£~ - - QIIIIOCltTY

~itizen:

•'
•••

.,

......

,.,.

'

•

',

A rt.Ii "buy" is a quality diamond at a reaso nab le
price. Such as you' ll fin d at Paul Dnies J ewele rs .
You can count on finding a gmd quality diamond at
just the price you want ro pay. And because our reput ~Hi o n
is so import am m us. yuu c.1 n be su re of gert~ng a quality
gem that will s1and up as a lrferime in ves tment
When )' OU ltx&gt;k for a diamond see Paul Davies
J ewe lers. You 'll find we're· a good deal better.

I will also be working very closely with the Gallia County Senior
Citizens Center on this new project.
This will give me an
opportunity to visit with you and to discuss your ideas regarding
the other services you would like for us to provide.

'·

.t

Those ld s offerin_g dia mond s at ridiculously low pricei
so und good. And the di amond may even look good. Bur be
cHefu l.
The diamond tha t looks gmd to you may look terribl e :
to an expert. Which cou ld make it a very poor invesrmem:

.., ,

•

.

or Yellow

:. ,~,,.

Diamond
It's Not A Good Deal

\

•

•

If It'~ Not A Good

:'!;!::!

(;uni Pllllr

'

one.

t:;AL.L.IPOL.IS, OHIO 4!5631

Ex·O·Fit®

•

The Air Forces F-ills, which
dropped bombs on Libya In April.
also "could do It again" In a repeat
raid on Libya, Rogers said . "but I
don't think we would ask 1Brit ish
Prime Minister Marg are t 1
Thatcher again."
Thatcher came under heavy
In ternational and domestic criticism for permitting F"llls to take

THE OHIO VALLEY SAN

Women's

''

on.''

off from British bases for the
Libvan raids. The American panes
had to fly a 14-hour circuitous route
over the Atlantic because Fra:ut&gt;
and Spain refused to allow rugh~
over their territory.
.
Rogers said he thinks Gadhafl '
learned some lessons from the
April raid .
" He learned that he could ~
struck. He was surprised. He went
through his usual regime:
withdrawal; secondly, starting \tl
come aut of it, and now starting·to
pian ibr other activities; and thiN!.
trying to reach the position where
he can be so boastful of having
st ruck AmeriCan targets wit~
impunity.''

ov

BeCause life not spectator sport.~

.(

"Sure, that's rot a unanimous
opinion," Rogers said of the B-52
suggestion. "I'm talking for Bernie
Rogers and there have been
oocastons. I might say. when what I
say and what the administration
wants to do have rot coincided. But
from where I sit. that' s how I rom0

Offices closed

"New

Exchange

in lulllllt

terrorist acts.

r-.iiiiiiiiiiiii

l;laabok
is a
.'

By DANIEL F. GD...MORE
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Citing
"credible evidence" that Moammar Gadhafl Is plotting new
terroriSt attacks against A:merl·
cans, the supreme allled commander In Europe has suggested
resporxllng by hitting Libya with
B-52 bombers.
"II you want to showGadhafi that
he is not Immune to any of the
resources of the United States, Jet's
put the B-52s over some I Libyan)
targets out of North Dakota or
. Maine," Gen. Bernard Rogers told
Pentagon reporters al a Friday
·
breakfast meeting.
White House officials have said
they believe the Libyan leader Is
planning a new wave of worldwide
terroriSt attacks and warned the
United States is ready to retaliate
mUltarUy. On Aprlll5, the United
States bombed targets In two
Libyan cities ln response to suspected Libyan-backed attacks
against Americans.
Rogers said "there is credible
evidence" Gadhaflls planning new

Bu.t~re-~est~t.he~dhe~~~~;·;-;;;e~u;p;pe;r;·;·~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

has his sights set on cross country
hiking. He said the thought d hiking
about 2,1XXl mUes on thr Pacific.
Crest Trail , extending from Canada
to Mexico In trlgues him.

!Continued from A-ll
num P.l." are shown.
"German peopir think you cando
whatC'ver you w~nt in America. "
she said.
"I rmlly thought l was funny,"
Kirsten added. "I saw 'Simon and
Simon' the otlrr day . In Germany,
It's just starting on televisiOn. and
&lt;Ner here. It's so old."

·

The Sunday Timf!s-Sentinei-Pag,-A-3

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

.

·Lyng's headaches---,.-. ___ _,.!J~(Jrne: .:.: ;~: . .: J. :. . :.

A Division of

'lblr~

"' '

perspeaive

ommentary
,unblli ·time•· Jmtintt

.

'
'

,;-

•

I

· If

The
Shoe ·Cafe

.

'

aoo Second Ave:

'

Sincerely,

•

.~ '-'. . rh~')l.'' '4tSJdU,)
'Sue Ann Bostic
Senior Citiz~n coordinator

•

S.AB/pws

"

LafayeUe Mall

Gallipolis, 0 .
'•

,·I'l-l,

·-

-

•.

- -

--·

-..!..,._ -

�lj. l

:

' P'gal A·4-The Sunday nmes-Sentinel
11'1.

.,

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

31,

August 31, 1986

,,

Pomeroy-Middleport GaHipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va.
'

~uthorities hold adult, 4·juvertiles in Toledo ra~ial incideltt~~
·rou:oo..Ohlo (UPI) -An adult

Iii'.!

~

'

.

Taberner and three juvenlies,
Kirk Tabener, '!1, charged with
!elonlous assault and crlmblal wlvl were not ldentl!led, were
damages stemming from sooJgun aiTeSted Thursday, while a ~urth
attacks on the home ot Roosevelt yooth was aiTeSted Friday.
1be tour boys, char!J!d with
Rudolph, was ordered held on
$ll,IXXI bond after an appearance deliquency by reason of felonious
Friday In Toledo Municipal Court. assault. were In custody at a

.,anli roUr

:juveniles charg!!d with
clll\lOIIng aDd rock-throwing attacks
~~ the propeJ ty .,o1 black
.faihllles on the city's south side
ln cu~ Friday, autooritles

%

:~Meigs

said.
Tabener and the juveniles are
white and live In the same
neighborhood as Rudolph, authdrt·
ties said. Three ot the youths are 16
and the fourth Is 15.
The arrests were made through
lnl:Jrmatlon obtained through the
Crime . Stopper Program, Police
Chief John Mason said.
A s,lvltgun believed to have been
used In the attacks was recovered,
JDllce said.
At least nine incidents of racially
motivated attacks have ~ re·
JDrted In Toledo's south end in the
past week, authorities said.
Four shotgun blasts were fired at
Rudolph's homeandat his oon'scar
late Tuesday.
.
Wlnoows In the homes of other
black familles have l)een shattered

juvenile detention facillty .
The Lucas County prosocutor' s
Ottlce has asked the juveniles be
certitled tor tr1a1 as adults, said
Lawrence Murpcy, juvenile court
administrator. A decision on that
request will be made next week, he

County Court hands out 32 fines

:; POMEROY - Thirty-two de·
·:fendants were fined and six others
,:forfeited bonds In Meigs County
.•Court earlier this week.
Fined by Judge Patrick O'Brien
"were John Barrett, Crestline, Ohio,
~~ky J. Farnsworth, Martella,
, jllld Abdulkarlm Bamar, Colum·
~bls, $24 and costs each, speed;
.•Jetrrey L. Rathburn, Gallipolis, and
. ;,Gregory E. Tucker, Huntington,
Sal and costs each, speed;
Randle G. Lawson, West Hamlin,
W.Va., and Dwlgbt Sturgeon, Ra·
.;clile, S2l and costs each, speed.
·· , Donna Clay, Syracuse, assured
Atee.r distance, SID and costs; Chris
~art. Middleport, OWl, S:OO
.~il costs, three days confinement •.
.;,license sw;pended 00 days, failure to
.(l)ntrol, rosts only; Guy Scbuler,
.Rutland, no operators Hoense, $75
jnd rosts, six rmnths jail sentE!Ice,
all !IISpended but seven days, one
·.o/ear probation.
. ; Lawrence McGrew, Coolville,
, iltsorderly conduct wlile liltoxi·
,j:ated, Ul and rosts; Thomas R.
QuOlen, Middiepo11, speed, $28 and
,:£osts; Terry L. Brooks, South
: 2:imesvUle, speed, $22 and costs;
: ~ames D. Hlll, Raceland, .lett of
: ~ter, $10 and costs; Anna Cozart,
• fortiand, assured clear dlstanre,
$1.0 and rosts; Faith E. Thacker,
, ;Ewlngton, failure to control, $'!land
'JDSts; Paullmholf, ReyroldsbJrg,
: ~. $22 and costs.
. James B. Sayre, Point Pleasant,
,peed, fl1 and rosts; Ralph K.
pner, Langsvllle, no lights on
trailer, $5 and costs; Ertan K.
Arms, Minersville, Improper regis·
tratk&gt;n, $lO and costs; David Riggs,
Pomeroy, Invalid !llltorcycle per·
rNt; $25 and costs; Debbie Moody,
~lcersburg, W.Va., no operators.

:w.va.,

license, $75 and costs, three days
conflnernmt suspended, six llllnths
probatk&gt;n.
Greg Kuhl, Vienna, W.Va., speed,
$24 and costs; Gregory Taylor,
Pomeroy, lKl motorcycle license,
$75 and costs, three days confine·
ment, confinement suspended If
license obtained within 90 days,
detective exhaust,$10 and costs;
Robert 'Riffle, Racine, no operators
license. $100 and costs, four days
confinement and six roonths !J'Oba·
tlon, oo seat belt, driver, $~ and
costs, no seat belt, driver, second
offense, $:Jl and costs.
James McDonald, Rutland.
speed, $46 and costs; Michael
Brockway, Dexter, no drivers
license, $75 and costs, thra? days
confinement, six months proba·

tlon; Ronald R: Eakins, Racine,
DWI, six months confinement, all
but 45 days suspended, $250 and .
costs, license suspended six
roonths, two years probation, no
operators license, $&amp;) arid costs, 45
days confinement, tairlure to dis·
play valid registratkm, costs.
Carol L. Cross, Raclne,DWI, $250
and costs, thre!! days confinement,
license suspended 00 days, failure to
control, costs; Richard D. Blessing,
Shade, placed items ot trash near
watershed, $25 and costs, flve days
confinement will be suspended If
trash cleaned up.
Chris Capehart, Middleport, ln·
jurtng animals, costs. criminal
mischief, costs, on year prolja,t!on,
menacing, costs; Howard Runym,
Athens, overload, $175 and costs.

Forieltlng bonds were Jeffrey D.
Calloway, . Forest, Va., Linda
Hayes, Point Pleasant, arid Stephanie R. Hemphill, Gallipolis, $50
each, speed; Kaley D. Fry, Syracuse, speed, $35; Terry E. Albright,
West Columbia, W.Va., speed, $43;
Rotert E. Sam;, Parlu!rsburg, left
Of center, $45.

POMEROV - Five emergency
runs were m8de Friday by local
units and tour on Thursday the
Meigs Coullty Emergency Medical
Sf,&gt;rvice repbfled.
The following runs were made
Thursday: .at 12:33 p.m. Rutland to
Rutland Elementary School for
Amanda Jewell, taken to Veterans
Memorial Hospital and later trans·
Ierred to Holzer Medical Center.
At 12:43 p.m. Pomeroy to Ebe·
nezer Street for Clarence Andrews,
taken to Veterans Memorial then to
Holzer Medical; at 1:54 p.m.
Pomeroy to VIllage Green Apart·
ments tor Homer Smith, treated not
transported.
At 3:56 p.m. Rutland to Hysell
Run tor Gary Moore, taken to
Veterans Memorial; at 10:56 p.m.
MlddleJDrt to Beech Stra?t for

the lawn ot another black f&lt;lfl\lly
Sunday night.
No arrests have been made inlhe
cross-burning inCident and the . -; '
Investigation of all Incidents Is
continuing, pollee said.
Neighborhood groups offered
· apologies to the victims Thursday.
Ned Howard, president of the South
Side Coalition, said neighbors took
fruit to the homes of the victims.
At a news conference Thursday;
more than 35 civic leaders con'
demned the attacks as "terrorist
acts" against Toledo's minorities . .
Patrols iii the sooth end wer~ .
Increased because of the lncidents.Mason said.
'

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Publlshed each Su nday, 825 Third
Avenue, by th e Ohio Vallf'y Publish·

lng Compi\fly . Multtmedla , Inc. Se· •
cond class postage paid at Gallipolis,
Ohio 45631. Entered as second class
mallln p: matter at Pome-roy, Ohio,
Post OUJce.
Member: United Press International,

Inland Dally Press Association and t~

-

ot'llo NE.-Nspaper Association. Nat)Onal
Advertising RepreseruatlvP, Branham
Nf'Wspa~ Sales, 733 Thlrd Avenue.

FREE HEARING EVALUATION FOR THE
HEARING IMPAIRED
TUESDAY, SEPT. 2 AND
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Featuring
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Salon meets Monday
MIDDLEPORT- Meigs County
8 et 40 Salon no will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the home of Rhoda
Hackett.
Officers will be Installed by past
chapeau Mary Martin. Members
are asked to wear white dresses.

instruments.
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Onp Wl'€k . ............. ...... ...... 60 Cents
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In areas wh('re motor carrlPr sPrv lce

1
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AT THE

Ear"
canal
aid
.

Clarence A. Mooney

A Multimedia N.Wspop..-

.~;Miracle·Ear
-

Jerry Uribe, taken to Veterans
Memorial.
Frida} runs: at 7:19a.m. Middleport to Plum Street for Ellen
Stewart, taken to Veterans Memor·
tal; at 8 a.m. Middleport to East
Main !Dr Glenna Frocker, taken to
Veterans Memorial.
At 1:55 p.m. Racine to Letart A:Jr
Addie Cummins, taken to Veterans
Memorial; at 9:47p.m. Pomeroy to
li6 E. Main for Jack Delph, taken to
Veterans Memorial.

•...

USP !211-1100

ng

Squads respond to nine calls

No subscrip tion s b:y mail permitted

Is avallabl£'.

565 JACKSON PIKE
GALUPOLIS, OH.

Th£' Sunday Times-Sentinel will not
bE&gt; res ponsible tor advanCE' paymmts

inade to carriers.

- - -· -

446-2206

Suaday Only

OnP year ..
·- .......
. ... $32 .24
Six months ........ ... ......... ... .... $16 .00 ·

111
ar llop
Iring this ad in lor lattory
Spt&lt;lal, buy - gtt Ollt flEE.
Fru Hoaring lid S.r•ici.,, l..,ing
&amp; [loaning

Hoaring Aid Spe&lt;ioli•t ·

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MAIL SUBSCRU'TIONS

Miracle·Earby.
Call now for appoinlmonl

aockr s1acy

Dally and Sunday

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Cou nty

13 Weeks ................. ...... ........ $17 .29
26 Weeks ........ .. ...... ..... .. ..... $34.06 ·
52 Weeks ...... ..... .................... ,;6.56

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Heanng Aod Spe&lt;tahst

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13 Wl'&lt;'ks .......... .......... ...... SIR.:ll
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white or clear

POINT PLEASANT - Charles
70, Leon. died
Friday at his residence following an
extended illneSs.
'
'Born Feb. 19, 1916, at Leon, son of
late Abraham and Ellzaheth
Tllomas Herdman, he retired after
42years with West Virginia Malleable Iron at Point Pleasant, and was
a memter d. Pine Grove Commun·
lty Church at Leon.
Surviving are his wt!e, Helen
Boles Herdman; nine daughters,
oithe rtne Baker, Sue Bleitlns and
Jean Henl)ebe~; aU of llliumbJs,
Brenda Herdman at Gahanna,
Marcella ~. D&lt;irls Smith,
Jul!y Keeter and Sharon ,Deweese,
all' of Leon, and Edna Jetters of
Southside, W.Va.; five sdns, Dale
Herdman, Mark Herdman and
Mike Herdman, all dLeon, Charles
Herdman ot Ripley , W.Va., and
Woodrow Herdman d. Gahanna;
tour sisters, MallE!! McDade and
POOrl Deweese, .bot!) ot Leon, and
Elila McC)\Ire and Beulah-fdcl}aile, .
A. (SUck) ~erdman,

190-827 8()6 Clf'OI

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18

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e.,,
" '"'""
Whrll' or bon f'

wood ' "'"'

~~

MASKING TAPE.._._......

59(;

Sug . . &gt;. 99 &lt;

6 PfECE

SKIL 7114 INCH

3 14 inch wide by 00 yatd\ long .

066-605

All Prices In Effect As,, Long As Supplies Last.

B 1nc h fou ( f'f wdh bro H \pout Fl o· rf'duc t' r
and O(o)'lil hondlll"\ Chrome
hov"''9

SCREWDRIVER

CIRCULAR SAW

' MK40 1

4389

SET

Cast aluminum upp.r and
lowet guardt. 4600 RPM

VINYL
ELECTRIC TAPE

.'

inch wide x 60 feet long.

CLAMP LIGHT
8 h inch h! Civy aluminwm shade . 6 foot cord .

423 -996/ 1219-60

sse

RECEPTACLES

799-270/ 04170

242 . 347 270 Brown

Sug Rei 4 .25

6S'

679 -655 1301 lvofy

142-453 170 Ivory

Poc~el. elethicion , stubby ' lotte d. mechon :n .

Phillips ' and ofh•t ttrtwdriven

...
''•

-•
•~'

AROLINA LUMBER. &amp; SUPPLY COMPA Y
675'·1 160

. • ;3U1 6th Street
••

'J

·'

••,.I
•:

•

•

./

''

'Point· Pleasant, WV.

9:00 A.M.·6:00 P.M .

FOR AN

Store Hours: Monday-Friday 8:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., Saturday 8:00a.m. to. 12 noon, Closed .Sunday
•'~-

,,

I

''

I

&lt;

.

CALL:

•

·.
•'

•

,.

FIRST
SCIOTO
411 ARCADIA
COLUMBUS., OH . 43202
(614)261-7092

...
.

-.

:'
'

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

URGENT
CARE c ·ENTER
Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis
446~5287
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Weekends &amp; Holidays
Monday-Friday
1:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.
5:00 P.M. to 9:00 P.M.

-

L

TO LIMIT QU"'

LEG

QUARTERS

I LB. ROU
BilE ,!IZE

BEEF

$18 9

lB.

lfOUTMIOD

$199

STEW

SPARE
RIBS

ll.49

WIENERS

SJ69
PRI-SLICED
I

USDA CHOICE

12 OZ. PICG.

ROAST
LOIN END

SUPERIOR

OP SIRLOI
STEAK

ANKlE

PORK

SJ89

BONELESS

SUPERIOR

BOLOGNA

LB.89

GROUND
CHUCK

FRiiSII
HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD

$139

$159
., MAXWEU HOUU

COCA

INSTANT

R£G.·Dli'T -FREE

COFFEE

12 OZ. JAR

. IU.IOSI

o·•

MOUNTAIN DIW
8-16 oz. ans.
Gl

FLOUR

PEACHES

Sll,

89(

t9 OZ. CAN

SElF -RISING

79t

.

2°/o
MILK

· EGG.S

BEANS

'\

GRADE A

$)3
""' ,.
'MOUNT V£RNON

-

-~
· ' , SHURFRESH.

PORK &amp;
14 OZ. CANS

.

'

specialized in this field for over 10 years. Call col·
lect for a quote. Ask for Brad Smith.

SAUSAGE

. Harritb,.., ow.

. ~OIEIOY,
OHIO
.
OFFitE HOURS:
MON .. nfES., 'WI:D., FRI.

WANTED:
BANK
STOCKS
We pay top prices fot your bank stocks. We have

BOB EVANS

Routt 554

.ANNOUNCES THE .
OPENING OF HIS. HICTIC.E
· MEIGS :HEALTH SEIVICES,·'INC.
. '
. • ...~....GillS

'• ·•

CHICKEN

Ntw Hope Baptist Church

,INRRNAL·

·,

I

WE RESERVE THE Rl

YOtr talent and participation in
our Strvlcil art welcomt ...

D.

..----:;::===============::--'1::··:

LOCAUY OWNED AND OPERATED BY
BILL AND JEAN BAll
WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WICC_o,. ,;U:,;.P.OiCNS

Musical, Vocal, SptiKh, or tic ....
Ylllf talent is a Gift af ln.irotion
ptrfortllld in lht field of your
choice "for prtllrvanco of lift"
make 'New' Hope loptist Chtrch
your choice·.

.•

~"!;

STORE HOURS 9 A.M.-1 0 P.M. MON. THRU SAT

ATTENTION ·

.' '

ELLENTON , Fla. - Raymond
Wiener, 70, of Ellenton, Fla.,
formerly of Meigs County died
Saturday morning at L.W. Blake

-

prteiated.

MICHAEL..J. .
'

SWtiCHES
It~

Born July 10, 1931. in Gallia
County, son of the late John W. and
Goldie J . Swa in Waugh, heallended
Rio Grande College and wa s
assistant pharmacist at Holzer

HANOV£R

.,

load sp..d. Has eoty ad·
justing angle cutting and
motor burnout protection.

67$·S48 1301 81own

c~n1er.

-YOtr attendance and tllptrliM
will bt highly acceptable and ap-

.

1

Raymond Wiener

Calvin Layne, Sohio dealer on
2nd &amp; Court Street, Gallipolis, has amounced his retirement after many years of
excellent customer service.
Station will close August
31, 1986. Calvin Layne
and Standard Oil
appreciate your patronage.
For your future motoring
needs please select our sta·
tion at 309 Upper River
Road (Jim Whittington, Managed or 470 Jackson Pike
IEa~l Winters, Dealer).

GALLIPOLIS - Ca rroll Waugh,
!&gt;'i, :i74 Sun Valley Drive, Ga llijlllis.
died Friday in Holzer Medica l

To be presented in the Social
Room of the New Hope
Baptist Chtrch, Harrisburg.
Ohio, Route 554, Tuesday,
September 16 at 7:30 p.m.

·

te

URGENT
CARE
CENTER

Carroll Wau1,rh

"ARMS OF AMERICA"

. ·

Memorial Hospital
Mr. Wiener was retired II'QtJI Jc.
Wright Patterson A. F. R, Fairborn.
as a romputer !.)'stems analy!St. ~
was a civil service emploYewlthtij:.
u.s. Air Force for 34 years. , : ,~
He was born July 21. 1916, §:,.
Jacksonville, Fla. He issurvtvedll(,_;
his wUe, Marilyn Pooler Wiener. ,
Arrangements wiD be anoo~,
by Ewing Funeral Home.
·

..
•

OSTRANDER, Ohio - Ted
Roberts , Ostrander, died Wednes·
day at Delaware.
He Is survived by his wife,
Elizabeth Williams Roberts, for·
merly 61 Pomeroy; two nephews,
Blll WUJiams, Minersvllle, and
Larry Ebersbach, Syracuse; and
me niece, Ruth Ann Allen,
Minersville.
Services were held today al
Delaware with bJrial in Grants·
ville, W.Va.

COMMUNITY
PARTICIPATION

ARAB
ROACH and ANT SPRAY

Oturch.
He was twice ' married, first to
Marilyn Beers . and the socond tinw
ID Lana Hale on Dec. 24, 19€.'1 . She
proceded him In death on Sept. 29.
1985
Surviving are a daughter, Chris
E. Waugh; two nephews, James D.
Sacconi and Brian Crump, reared
In his home: several nieces and
nephews: three brothers, Ivan L.
Waugh of Frankfort Ohio, John F'.
Waugh of Otillicothe, and Oifford
R Waugh of Greenwich, Ohio; a
sister, Mrs. Mary E. Crump&lt;t West
Monroe, La .
Services will be 2 o.m. Monday in

Willis Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Den ny Coburn officiating. Burial
will
in Mound Hill Cemetery.
Friends may call al the funeral
lvlme from 24 and 7-9 p.m . today.

Ted Roberts

ATTENTION

Sug . Ael . 1 49

cooans and poHshes m;"'w•••
ovens in,ide and aut . Kills germs. Spray on - wipe off.
640-284/ M027

SPECIAL - CLOSEOUT - SPECIAL

' .
GALLIPOL.IS - Cla~ce Alva
Mooney, 65, Rt. 2, Galli}iolis, died
early Saturday In the Veterans
Administration Hospital in
Chillicothe.
,;:'"
· Lllimlllll! Soisson
' .
Born Dec. 7, i9:a:J, In GaiUa
", ~wrence SOisson
County, .son of the' late George A.
., '
. ,I
Mooney and Sylvia Mooney otRt.l.
• : GALLIPOt'rs - Lawrence Northup, who SurviVe:;, he was a
jJlud) .sOtssl:&gt;n; 1\5, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, World War II Army veteran and a
died Friday In Pomeroy.
member of Dickey ChaPel Church,
:Born June 14, 1921, at Connells· Arneflcan Leg!on'Lafayette Post '!I
, v~le,1 Pa., son of the late Harold and and VFW Post 4464. ·
• · ·· Agnes WUhelm Soisson, he · was
Also su.rvivlng are his wife,
retired from Ohio Valley Electric Transylvania Frye Mooney, wmm
Q,:lrp.'s Kyger Creek plant, where he married on Aug. 7, 1945, In
he was a malnten.ance plant Gallipolis; four daughters. Mrs.
7 sUpervisor. He served In the U.S . Rotert (Janice) Manion of Rl. I,
"" .N,avy for three vears.
Nortlllp, Mrs. Donald (Pat) Woo• •He was a member of St. U&gt;uls · die of Rt. 1, Northup, Mrs. Roger
Catholic Church · and Elks Lodge
(Carol) Boer!gter of Ennis, Texas,
. No. 107 of Gallipolis .
and Annette Mooney, at home; two
. Surviving are his wife, Leona brothers, Garland Mooney of Co14ae Soisson, wlvlm he married on lumbJs, and Leroy Moooey of
Dec. 6, 1941, at Steubenville; two Wellston; thrre sisters, Eileane
daughters, Mrs. Brmda . Dunna- Johnson of Crown Qty, Helen
vant of Anderson, Ind., and Bonita Kemper of Gallipolis, and Eva
Hilton of Gallipolis; a sister, U&gt;uis Queen
of Rt. 1, Nortlrup; and 10
Sklterollc d. Steubenville; and foor grandchildren.
grandchildren, Lance, . Tara and
He was preceded in death by two
Erin Dunnavant; and Todd Hilton. brothers and a sister.
·Services will be 10 a.m. Tuesday
Services wlll he 2p.m. Tuesday In
·· In Willis Funeral Home, with
Dickey Chapel Church , wit h the
- Father Wllliam Myers officiating. Rev. Wllliam Birchfield Jr. official·
·• Burial will be In Gravel Hlll Ing. Burial will be In Ohio Valley
Cemetery, Cheshire. Friends may Memory Gardens. Friends m ay
call at the funeral home from 6-9 call at Willis Funeral Home from
p.m. Monday.
6-9 p.m. Monday.
Military graveside rites will be
Oddie [.Bush
conducted by American Legion
Lafayette Post 27 and VFW Post
. GALL!POLL&lt;; - Oddie E. Bush . 4464. The body will lie in state In the
73, Lower River Road. Gallipolis. church' one hour prior to th~
died at 1:15 p.m. Saturday in H'olzer service .
Medical Center, following a fivePallbearers wlll be Tony Hoerig·
yea r Illness.
ter, Bobby Manion, Don Woodie,
Born Feb. 20, 1913. at Mason. Robert Manbn, Alva Manion,
· W.Va. , son of the lato; Harry Bernie Queen and Ike Hively .
Timothy and Anna Margaret Eads
Bush, he was last employed by Fr~erick Reed
Marietta Mamifactur.ing Co., Point
Pleasant. He was a member of
FREEPORT. Ill. - Frederick
Ce ntenary United Me thodist Reed, 86, died Wednesday at a
.. C)lurch and VFW Post 4164.
Freeport, Ill., hospital.
He was born In Syracu!l!!, Kan.,
;Surviving are his wife, Lillian
son
ot the late W.F. Reed, founder
Moss Bush, whom he married · on
of
the
Farmers Bank In Pomeroy,
" J\fov. 29, 1947, at Pomeroy; a
and
Llllian
Thompso11 Reed.
daughter, Mrs. Harold Gene tOne·
He
was
also
preceded In death by
dla 1 Wray of Gallipolis; a son,
his
wife,
Murtel,
two brothers,
Donald George B~sh, at lvlme;
Reed
of
Pomeroy,
and D.
· three grancrhlidren; two brothers,
Curtis
RL-ed,
ColUmbus;
a
sister,
Orville Bush of Gallipolis. and
Eimice
Reed
Loehr,
Fort
LauderCarroll Bush of Lancaster; and two
sisters, Mrs. Donald !Genevieve! r - - - - - . - - - - - - - - 1
Nutter and Mrs. Howard !Reba I
Reed , both of Lancaster.
~~ He was prl\'eded in death .by a
. '
·- son, Homer Dal!ey Bush.
·
·~· Services wlll be 1 p.m. Tuesday in
.W:aug.h-Halley- Wood Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Rick A.
1
Vilardo dflclatlng. Burial will be in
Safegwrding theli ... tnl princi- ·
Ohio Valley Memory Gardens.
pits of our youth artlht duti11 of
Friends may· call at the funeral
every
patriotic citil•n of America.
hdme from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m.
Utili1ing and tharing IGgtlhtr,
Monday.
making our Commtllity a safer
Military graveside rites will be
ploct to live and in raising our
conducted by VFW Post 4464 .
children.
Charles A. Herdman
Plan to attend the presentation:

Hospital from 1951 to 1957. From
1957 to 1961. he was manager of
Butler Drug Store in Gallipolis, and
until his retirement, he was man ager of Gllllngham'sDrugs. He was
also a farmer and produce stand
operator.
He was a board member of thP
Gallia Cou nty Historical Society
and a lvlard memter and tru stee of
the Ohio Association of Historical
Societies and Museums. He was a
member of Gallipolis Christian

Theo(Dre

179

MICROWAVE OVEN MAGIC -

54 m&lt;h wood flame tough e ned handl e
Sl'l-079 18· 8\S

'1

roller cgver , roll er frame and

ROLLER COVERS

COUNTI!!RlOP MAGIC -

RAKE

4 7 rnch handle 8 •·, a I t

plastic tray

(

• Remove1 sc:rahhe\, uutfs and dain1 from fine wood
paneling and f~o~rnihue . Spray on - wipe oH .
'214·221 / PMlO

both of
. a brother,
Ephrum Herdman of Leon; and 23
grancrhlldren and seven great·
grancrhlldren.
He was proceded In death by a
daughter, Charlene.Lynn Herdman
Castle, and by two granddaughters,
four sisters and two brothers.
Services will be 1:30 p.m. Mon·
day In Wilcoxen Funeral Home,
with the Rev. Dencil Matheny and
the Rev. Sampy Hart officiating.
Burial wlll be In Pine Grove
Cemetery, Leon. Friends may call
at the funeral horne all day lnday.

by rocks, and a cross was burned on

dale, Fla.; and two nieces and a
nephew.
In addition to his daughter, Ann
Kaser, he Is SUIVived by three
grandchl!Cirep and two nephews,
Wllliam Curtis Reed, Saratoga,
Call!., and Ted Reed Jr., Pomeroy.
Mr. Reed graduated from Pomeroy High School and received his
bachelor's degree In education
from Ohio State University and his
master's degree In chemistry from
Purdue University.
He was an educator all his
professional Ute, having taught at
Eli Minnesota High School and
Junior College. He served as
supervisor and later ;:rlncipal cl the
Winnetka, Ill., Public Schools.
When he retired from that
JDSltion he went to Brooklyn
QIUege, Brooklyn, N.Y ., assuperv.l·
sor fo student teaching and locturer
In elementary education.
After leaving Brooklyn, he re·
tired to Okemus, Mich., and served
as teacher of an df.campus course
for Michigan State University.
He lived In Okemus until re·
cently, when he moved to Fra?port
to be near his daughter.
A memorial service will be held
In Okemus at a later date.

.:o.

AIGO

IUfl

PEAS
II oz. UIIS

ORANGE
JUICE

12 Ol. Ull

$169

49&lt;

' 3/S1

u oz.m.

WIISOII

.ll

�•
Paae-A~6-The Sunday TimeS-Sentinel

~
· _,_;·. Local

Pome~oy-Middlaport-~lis,

J.v .....
• •n

GALLIPOLJS _ The Dally Sentinel, tile GaDlpolls Dally Tribune
and the Point Pleasant Register wW not tie published Monday 50
their employees may observe the Labor nay hoUday. . .
Regular publication and business hours resume Tuesday.

Meigs couples file for marriage
POMEROY - Marrtage licenses have been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court 1D Russell Paul See!, 46, Canaanv1lle, and
Carolyn L. Chase, 35, Pomeroy; Joll! Vanley Stew~rt, 25,
Middleport, and Jane Ann Amberger, 20, Syracuse; Carl VIncent
Gheen Sr., 47, Racine, and Pamela Sue F1ernlng, 28, Racine.

()MU..........

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

DENVER (UP!) - Some d the
4,700 employees of Frontier Air·
lines, which ft1ed for bankruptcy
this wrek, say they aie the
undeserving v1ctlms of a lingering
diSpute between United Alrllnes
and Its pilots union.
"We became tile tennis ball in a
match that we had nocontrolover,"
Frontier pilot ..Qoug Bader said
Friday. "As It boiled down It
became obvious the Issue was the
gaping wound left over from the

United strike a year ago."
Bader Is vice chalnnan of tile
Frontier pUnts branch of the Air
Line PUots Association.
Since People Express Inc. flied
for bankruptcy protection Thursday for Its debt-ridden subsidiary,
Frontier employEes have been
exchanging theories about tile
chain d events that took their jobs.
Thebankruptcyflllngcameatter
o!flclals of United Airllnes, which
had dfered $146 million ilr Frontler, said a dlsputeoverplotsaiartes
thwarta1 the acquisition.

The bankruptcy of Frontier
Airllnes leaves parent rompany
People Express cash poor as the
POMEROY - Salisbury Town· tradltbnally slow fall travel season
ship Trustees will meet Thursday, begins, analysts said Frklay.
Some Frontier employees blame
Sept. 4, at7p.m.at the township hall
United
pilots ror ll!fustng that
at Rock Springs.

Trustees to meet

Court grants four dissolutions
POMEROY - Deidre Jo Reed and David Franklln Reed have
filed for a dissolution of marriage In Meigs County Common Pleas
Cou rt
Granted dissolutions were Judith Manley and Cutford Manley;
Nora Elaine Hughes and Kerry Allen Hughes; Cynthia A. Cascl and
Ronald P. Case!; Dale Wallace Hill and Amy Ellzabeth Hill. Cynthia
· Case! was restored to her former name Cynthia Bing. Amy Hill was
restored to her malden name Roush.
.
Granted divorces In Meigs County Common Pleas Court were
.Jack Richard Wells, Reedsville. from Reannle Kae Wells, Alporo,
W.Va.; and Bonnie S. Willford, from Theod:lre Willford.

temporary restraining order has been Issued against William
Levacy durin g pendency of an action by John Leonard Bass against
Stella M. Bass; and orders have been filed confirming sale of
property and distribution of proceeds In a case by Marte E. Blslop,
et.al. , against Bob C. Bishop.
. Dismissed were the cases of William Gregory Camp against
Truman R. Hall Jr;; Donna Morgan against Kevin Morgan.

Carryout firms assets seized
GALLIPOLIS- Gallla County sheriff's deputies seized all assets
Individually owned by Stan P\:lwell of Rllnt Pleasant earlier this
week. acting on a precipe d. execut1on Issued to the department by
Doul!las Cowles, a ttorney lor the plaintiff, Burllle OU Co. Inc .
COwles Issued the precipe Aug. 14, 17 days after the petroleum
company, located on 1136 Second Aw .. received a judgment from
Callla County Common Pleas Court Judge Richard C. Roderick Jr.
for money owed by Point Pleasant Utopian Enterprises. Pl:lwellls
th~ president of the finn and owns thrEe J's Mlni-Marts,located In
Rio Grande, Cheshire and Rodney, according to court ra:ords.
Pl:lwell owed Burllle more than $27,0001n petroleum fees, Including
Interest, according to records.
An appeal oond was, requested In court but the plaintiff was unable
to post the necessary $35,00J.

ln"es"tment broker wiD has been
•·
trying to arranlll! a $l!iO million sale
10 an unldentUied trust, said
trust seems b be hedging.
·

e

'

• r

'

S.. lhis Week:• Mailer

na~~e B~~r:!m~~anbanD;.

For More

· FlNTAST(C

]
ruptcy on the Air Une
Association and United. He
·
United dllclals rejected a "dras-.tJ::
reduction In price" olfered IIY
PeopleEj!e5so!tlclalsjustbeflire
Hllng ban ptcy papers ..
Bankruptcy documents showed
Frontier with $89 minion In assets
and $151.45 million In llabWtlesaf

Wise a11d lasting investment
from LOGAN MONUMENT
ized monument of Select Barre Granite. It is
a worthy expression of love and respect for a
person's life. See our display of permanently
guaranteed B3rre Guild Monuments.

SEE US AT HOLZER CLINIC

GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
ENT DEPARTMENT
EACH WEDNESDAY 1- 3 P.M.

r

No other tribute is as lasting as a personal -

reconttv aoid when lho dlaoovorod tho ful·tlme Mrvlco ond dlldicotlld
proftlllonol help ovolloble II Dilea H'eorlng Aid Center.

BARRE
GUILD

Monuments

LOGAN MONIMENT COMPANY,
POMEIOY, OH.

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

594-3571
9:00· 12:00

Sol. Monti

•BIG BEND FOODLAND
•GALLIPOLI.S FOODLAND
•OHIO Y.LLEY FOODLAND

ICK-OFF SEPT:·EMBER

OS
~
'

R C Cola

duning Mtd checking of dw inltrument, betterllt for all makes, minor repair., end releted servicea. We lito provide loaner aid• when youra.muat
go In for motor repotr. Mony ofthoa. .orvlcoa orelncludod in tho originol
purchell price ekliough we oro happy to help thott not originally littlld by
utal well.
'I feel like I have anew leaaeon life." That's whet one hearing aid wearer

326 W. Union, lthtM, ON
MOII.·Fri. 9:00-5:00

PRICES EFFECTIVE AT:

SUNKIST ORANGE
.CHERRY RC
DIET RITE, DIET RC

If the lt'IIWer it yes, Oilet Htering Aid Center ia the Mlwer. We provide
·COMPLETE hearing aid aorvlco """" u lolow·up coun10iing, periodic

$3,240.31
In oth!'r court matters, Tom Kirby was release! from probation; a

'

.• -

r~E~Ills~H~a~ui!IJ;;ton;:,a~New~~O~rle~an=s;;;;;.J;uly~31~.; ;.;;;;;;;;;~

Audiologist

POMEROY - An order has been llled In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court to transfer Jimmie Jude, 29, from the Meigs County Jail
to the Athens Mental Health Center lor Incarceration and treatment.
Jude, charged with rape, Is being rmved for his own welltelng
after threatlng bodily harm to himself.
Diamond Savings &amp; Loan Co. has been granted a judgement of
$16,050.44 from Marcia M. Spaulding, also known as Marcia M.
Terry, et. al.
Bank One of Athens has been granted judgment of $8,572.1)j rrom
Wllllam H. Nelson.
Farmers Bank &amp; Savings Co. has been filed an action against
Jerome K Howard, in care of Oscar Maynard, Racine, etal.. for

•

' .

company's five-year plan il bring
Frontier pilots' salaries up to the
level d United's p!ots. Others
blame United management for not
compromising. Still others blame
both United management and
United pilots. _
•
"I tlllnk that United didn't want
us to survive," said Capt. Ardlle
Van Beek Sr., a Frontier pilot with
14 years experience. "I think they
wanted People Express and Front·
ler out of business.''
Another polfinttal buyer d Front·
ter apparently has evaporated.

DO YOU WANT
FULL-nME
SERVICE WHEN YOU
BUY A HEARING
Diane McVey, MA, CCC-A
AID?

Jude moved to Athens facility

.,,

of.lahor dispute

Briefs:--- Airline staff 'victims'

No' newspapers on Monday

P.omeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

August 31, 19M

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

VINTON, -OH.

leo l, Vaughan, Mgr.
Ph. 992-2688

•..•

...

6 PACK
· 2 OI. CANS

..'.

-SAVE

•'
••

•

VIVA

, ;.

2°/o MILK
$159 GAL.~

INC~1

James 0 . Bush, Mgr.
Ph. 388-8603

$1 40

.•

Open Daily 10-9; Sun. 12·6
SALE STARTS SUN., AUG. 31;
ENDS TUES., SEPT. 2
Regula: Prices May Vary AI Some
Slores Due To local Competition

SUPERIOR

LARD

•

'I

25 lb. Pail

-· ·1

••

'·
''·

.

I

,,

~

•

$999,

'

•

Accident injures two people
GALLIPOLIS - Two Ga!Upolls residents were treated and
relrased from Holzer Medical Center early Saturday for Injuries
suffered In a two-car accident on Ohio 7 near Addison.
Samuel L. Bennett, 45, was treats! ilr bruises and a cut 1o tile
forehead . and Patty L. Bennett , ~. was treatedforbrulsestothearm
and lip. according to a hospital spukesperson.
The state highway patrol said Samuel Bennett was northbound at
11: 38 p.m. Friday when he was unable to stop In Urne for a disabled
vehicle In the northbound lane driven by Thomas J. Moore, 23,
Langsvllle. Bennett's vehicle collided with the rear d Moore's car,
the patrol said, causing severe damage to Bennett's vehicle and
moderate to Moore's car.
Samuel Bennett and Patty Bennett, a passenger In his vehicle,
wore taken to HMC by the Gallla EMS.Samue!Bennettwascitedlor
DWI and assured clear distance.

Salt Prlct Ea. Pltdgt pol·
Ish in regular, lemon. 14 oz. •
"Net wl. oer0501 01 fi.·Ol. lriggef sprayer_ -...

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~*

Save 23%·28%

4.94

Candidate withdraws from race
POMEROY - The only contested race In Meigs County's
upcoming election Is no longer a contest.
The contested race was the bid fo~ county commissioner. The
candidate running against Manning Roush, Republican Incumbent
was Melinda Jane Thompson, Democrat.
'
Thompson withdrew her candidacy Frklay according Ill Jane
Frylnyer. director of Meigs County Board of Elections.

*
2.99 77C

Q

I!.CI;i.ll:ll•t\:&gt;1

treat your grandparents
to a sweet
trmt.

SOit Pllct Pkg. Plastic
bag Cholet. 100 kHchen
bags wllh 13-gal. capacity; or 35 durable lawn
bags In 33-gol. size.

Send the ITO®
Sweet Treat"'

$1

3

For

79¢ :.

Sale Prlcela.

llnglt-lubJ•ct

Sale ~rice. Pidcl••
32 oz. jar. Kosher
dill pickles.

ltltme book with

70,

10~8"shEH9~

of paper.

Mlf_ITOY VOi'V

Mfr. mCiyYaV

Salt Price Pkg. 24 Dura

1

juml»stze scour PCids. !

Soap-filled steel wool tor ~
cleaning pots, pans, ~

3 2~ 't.$129
..

PURE CANE

~ *
~3 For $1

September 7. Call
or visit us today.

COLONIAL
~-

~FLORIST
Meig• County's Olde•l Flora~l.
•

oz.-net.-wt. size.
.

'

.

99•,

1.57

· Sale Price. Air llllen ior
many U.S., lortign CQ!S,
'

,

• #

· 352 EAST MAIN
POMIIPY,·457.9
.
614/992·t64C. ·• . · , . ·. . . .

. Lh'llf ID b01t1

GIFT CllmFICATIS ·
· WHEN'YOU TRAVEL
'. Delatls ovailable In atore.

J

I ...

•'

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Save '
31%
I

ammo*. High' vii&lt;X:lty.

EAitN I( mart.

•

•

2SLI.$899

•

lAG

·

SUPERIOR

VELVET

SURF

PAPER TOWELS

DETERGENT

43(

99

4

Single
Roll

••

TAVERN HAMS

147 Oz .

WHOLE

Box

$1 .89

LB.

.

•

2/S3~

••

••

~

..

KERR REGULAR

· -Oiir 1.97 Fr.. zer
c.t:"l••n. 1 pt, 1~pt. , 1qt.

CANNING JARS

. ~. 499

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•''

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SUGAR

·~

Sale Price. C01111t ·

clean..,, Household
scoullng powder 101
Cleaf'llng bathrooms,
ltlt~s and mare. 14-

~s 89 Gallon

'

Bouquet.

Grandparents'
Day is Sunday,

CIDER VINEGAR -., •.

.G SIZE BREAD

.

.'

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QUARTS

•

ZESTA .

ASST. YARIEnES
·•

PILLSBURY

.

· ·cAKE MIX

,
(
.
69

1i.s oz.

~

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lOX

2

.~ R...- Tile Right To Umlt Qulnlilloo-'
'

:9 ,9
~
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Prices Etfec;tl~ tht;t~ ~at.. Sept;; 6; ~ ~ 8~
·~

•

SALTINES
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16 Oi.
Box . ·

..Cll

-~

•

•POTATO
•MACARONI •SLAW
•
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SALADS

"' '$1 59

2 Lb.

Pkg.

•USDA Food Stampa Glodv Accepteo •Not Reoponsib le For Typographical Errois

l"'

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31. 1986

•ntt-act· flaps cloud .
school year's opening
~ ByUaW Pl'ellll ~

·'

Nuke plant
hearing
delayed'' ,,.•..

IIIEIIt with the board of education

ll Labor Day tradltK&gt;DBily marks FridaY·
~ beginning of scbool, but In at . AFSCME Local U43 rq&gt;resents

e

t1ve Oll1o public school
ts, teachers unions and
I negotiators !\ave been at the
inlng table.
~ Teachers In Youngstown have
~ted !O Strike. Teat~)n Warren
",lame to· a tentative agreement
)'rlday, but wW strlkl! H the
mentis not approved by union
bers. Educators In Newtoo
have agreed tO ronllnue talks
lifter their contract expires.
• Teachers at Dayton's Jefferson
~ownslap District have turned
l!own a board offer and tmchers In
ton near Toledo Voted on a

..

ard

cifer.

. Youngstown city teachers, re~tlng seve:al dfers, voted Thurs·
)lay night·576 1D 82 to walk off their
jObs Tuesday unless they got a
~ntract by IDday, when their
liuiTEIIt pact eK~res. More talks
be held today.
Meanwhile, non-teaching em·
yees In the Youngstown district
reached a tenative contract agree-

550 .emploY,ees, Including custodl·
ans bus drivers, cafeteria workers,
clerical employees and others.
They are to meet 111 6 tonight to wte
on the pact.
A tentative agreemm t was
reached Friday between ttl&gt;
Warren Board of Education and
city teachers. But teactl&gt;rs have
authorized a strike ilr Monday In
case the dfer is rejected.
Newton Falls teacHers have
agr&amp;!d to continue talks beyood the
eK~ratlon
of their contr.act
Morxlay.
Teachers In Swanton have authorized a strike ilr Wednesday,
although they wted ,on an offer
from the board Friday. Classes ilr
the 1,!00 students began this week,
but the contract expires tlday.
In Jefferson Towns lip, outside ci
Dayton, teachers rejected a base
minimum salary lifer of $15,00!.
They want a minimum salary of
$16,00! this year and $17 ,IXXJ next
year.

Area physician

Dr. Amold J. Salt.,r
Hands·on experience was also
offered in the emergency room
setting with a radioactively con·
laminated dummy patient, 140
pounds worth, atfectlonately called

Herman.
Sattler said he hopes he may
ni'Yer have to use this newly·
acquired knowledge and skill, but
should 11\e unexpected happm, he
said t1&gt; will be ready to help,
whoever his patients may be.

Gallia deputies probing thefl, vandalism
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
sherlft's deputies are Investigating
the theft of eight quarts of &lt;tl and a
grease gun from a barn of!' Ohio 7,
two miles south of CUppers MID.
1 The theft was reponed by David
L. Raynor, Lower River Road , and
ocrurred Wednesday, deputies
learned.
Deputies are also Investigating a
vandalism to a garage at Tommy's
Enterprises, Ohio 218, In which
windows and tbe cbor to the garage
were darn.iged. Reported missing
were a set dkeysand a headlight to
~

FERNALD. Ohio ilJ Pl1 - The:
Department of Energy. bowing t()'
public ·pressure, ' has agreed io
either postpone next week's be~r·
ing on its Feed .Materials Process:
lng plant or to schedule a second ·
hearing.
'
Department officials announc;ecl .
Aug. 20 they would flol&lt;t; a publ~ :
hearing on probl~ms al the plitnf:
this ~mlng Wednesday.
, ~;
Thursday, Rep. Thomas Luken-;:
!}Ohio, criliclzed ~- agency f~f,;
g1vlng residents only two weeks W·
prepare for the heanng and calli\~!:
for a postponement. The ~~:
ment acquiesced several
hours •
'

a 1978 Ford. An Implement trailer
was also reported missing. The
InCident was reported Friday. ·
Cltlll by city pollee were Charles
A. Javlns, 24, Gallipolis, assault;
Marvin R Wamsley, 29, Gallipolis,
domestic violence: Arthur Rupe
Jr .• 51, m Bastian! Drive, failure to
yield; O!arles L. Booth, 19, Rt. 1.
Vinton, and Samantha K. Gardner,
18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis, each for m
seatbelt; Perry J. Ayoob, 25,413 Le
Grande Blvd., speeding; Garnett
E. Strait, 33, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, m
operator's license.

~

:~ ~

later.

DONATION MWE - Jeffrey Smith. lt!Jhl,
executive vice preSident ~ Ohio VaDey llaDk,
presents a donation lrom OVB to Pam Banis,

presldeat ol the board of tnJ8Iees of the GaJIIpollll

ACIIIilemk Bolisllen Clut Inc. to hdp 1tm orP,.Ization.
The club pl8li8 to recc~ptze acllllemlc excelence In
the GaiUpolls City School Dls&amp;rict. 'Die bank'6
donallon Is the aeconll one made•to cklb. The ftrst
came from the GaDipolilllotary Cub.

Auto theft charge dropped in court
forfeiture c1 $47 by Call.
In other court news, Phil E.
Sha!ler, 21,1821 O!alhamAve., was
placed on probation for 18 months
and fined $2i and cour1 costs for
driving without an operator's
license.
Tamara Griffith, 23, Eureka Star
Route, was fined $17 and costs In
two cases convicting her of diSor·
derly conduct and carrying an cpen
flask containing alcohoL Fined $12
County gets payments
and costs was Damien W. Brewer,
19, Patriot Star Route. for !allure to ;
POMEROY- The August State control the vehicle he was driving.
School Foundation subsidy pay·
Cases trying Mark W. Hatfell, 25.
ments were reported by State Rt. 3, Bidwell; Mark W. Long, 24,
Auditor Thomas E. FerguS&gt;n.
Leon, W.Va·.: and John E. Baldwin
Schools and amouut received Jr., 24,ll7 Upper Rlver.RDad; for
respectively were Eastern Local, tanuretofastenttl&gt;lrseatbeltswere
$119,431.75; Meigs Local , , dismissed after each otfender
$358,049.14; Southern Local, 1· viewed a seat belt salety rum.
$137,436.24. Direct alkltment to
Michael L. Mayes, 20, Point
county board was $30,737.75.

GALLIPOLIS - A case trying
Huston E. Call, 18, Eureka Star
Route. for grand theft auto Friday
was dismissed in Gallipolis Munici·
pal Court later that day at the
request of the state.
A possession of marijuana
charge was not dismissed, how·
ever, resulting In a court bond

receives training
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Arnold J .
Sattler, a member of the Holzer
Medical Center hospital staff and
practicing at the Medical Plaza, :m
Jackson Pike, Is the first physldan
from the Gallipolis area to attend
an lntE!IIslve training course called
"Medical Planning and Care In
RadiatiOn Accidents."
· The course· was held at the
Radiation Emergency Assistance
Center/Training Site at Oak Ridge.
Tenn., where research and produc·
lion facilities for nuclear reactors
lind weapons are located on 37 ,!lXJ
acres . owned by the federal
government.
Specialists, mt only from Oak
Rl~e. but from a number of &lt;Xher
states, gave lectur'!S on radiation,
physics, biologic effects of radla·
lion, cytogenics, acute total body
and local radiation Injuries, treat·
men! of Internal radionuclide contaminatkln and other related
subjects.
In the laboratory, participants
were trained In the calibration of
dosimeters, the use of Geiger
counters and in ttl&gt; detection of
varklus kinds of radioactive rays.

'

Pleasant, foifeited two bonds ci $45
fordisorderlyconductandcarrylng
an open container of alcohoL
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
were Wllllam J . Jordan, 21, Troy,
$48; Nancy L. Vlgh, 44, West
Carrollton, $42; Bobby Brock, 21,
Combs, Ky., $43; Pamela D.
Jetfrey. :11, Logan, W.Va., $38;
Wllllam Dell, 21, Rt. 2, Vinton, $29;
Gary L. Brown, 35, Washington,
W.Va., $42; Mark K. Lockhart, 30,
Columbus, $44; Raymond C. Liev·
lng, 39, Rt. 3, Bidwell. S.ll; Michael
A. Welsand, jl.'i, ProdorvUie, $42;
Maudlne Minnis, 41, Bidwell, $44;
O!arles T. Young Jr., 28, Hunting·
ton, W.Va., $39; Gaylln W. Bow·
man. 42, Mlllwood, W.Va., $42;
Thelma L. Looney, 51, Big Rock ,
Va., $41; PhyllisO!ristlan,48,0ak
Hill, $ll; and Richard F. Allen, 58,
Convoy,

Jtm Alexander, a spokesman a~
the department's regional ~~
quarters In Oak Ridge, Tenn., ~
no new dates have been set . Hesa,l~
it's possible the Sept. 3 hearing wi,il:
still be held, with another held Se{if.;
22. or that only one meeting will lie;
held, on the later dale.
.:~
He also said ttl&gt; deadUne fol'
submission rt written commenf.t
would llkely he p.~shed bac~ from:
Sept. 22 to Oct. 10.
..
"Basically, DOE is trying W.
address the concerns cit be !llbllc!':
Alexander said.
·
Luken said the hearing was "yery
important. It could determine !he:
!uture operatkln ot this plant and W!!;
don't want just a gestilre, a sham:".
"We want this to he a meaningfilt
exchange and that's why moretirdi:;
Is necessary; the problems tbetl}
are very complex."
,o
The tl&gt;aring to he held is calledft.
"scoplng hearing," a forum to a~
residents or agencies suc;ll as the,
Ohio Envlrorunental Prot~rtlim
Agency to define the scope: ;Ofproblems at the site and sugl!~t.
solutions. II will be the first tlrnetli'
Energy Department has allo~
outsiders to have a role In till!
cperation of the li·Ye!II'-old plantt .

n

r1

By l\IANCY YOACHAM
Tilnes Sentinel Stall
CHESTER- Robbery, bribery,
frjtud, murder- words that lndte
thoughts of ruthless cr1mlnals and
big' cities - New York, Chicago,
I.o~ Angeles, Miami.
·Add horse stealing to the word list
1111d the mind conjures up notions of
the old west- Dodge City; Tusron,
Tombstooe, Larado.
Iiut tl you're familiar with Meigs
&lt;;otinty history, then all these words
ju'st might bring to mind the
eommunity of Chester- headquar·
ters for years of the Infamous Keg
Company, also known as the
Newsome Gang.
Remembered for being Meigs'
first county seat, O!ester has
alWays been home to many well·
known famllles. But In the early
days or Chester, a highly organized
counterfeiting ring prospered
under the guise of a small town inn,
owned and operated by Nathan
Newsome, ring leader.
The group of thieves became
known as the Keg Company
beca use- so the story goes-: they
claimed to keep their money in a
keg.

It was never known exactly how
many Individuals were In cahoots
with Newsome, nor were aU details
of the gang's escapades ever
uncovered. But older folks living In
Chester, who grew up hearing
parents and grandparents talk
about the heyday of· the Keg
Company, still describe the group
as "cutthn&gt;ats."
According to a story in "Meigs
County History Vol. 1," New9:lme
came to the Chester area In 1825.
The house he built still stands.
Located oo Ohln 7 just south of the
Ohio 248 lntersectkln, it Is mw
owned by LucWe Smlth of O!ester,
and her sister, Elma Reuter rt
Akron.
NewS&gt;me kept tavern In the
house and both he and tavern were
popolar. He soon bullt another
house nearby which was used as a
tannery.
Said to be from a good lamily,
Newsome was described as attrac·
live, Intelligent, well-off flnandally
- and shrewd. At one time he was
was even a candidate for state
legislature from Meigs County and
It's said he had a brother who
served In the
legislature from

Ga~ .

·
It's hard to imagine a smooth·
talldng, high-llvlng hustler llvlng in
O!ester, even In the old days, but
perhaps the reaS&gt;n for Newsome's
choosing that bcamn for an Inn Is
best explained by Lucille Smith.
"There was nothing much in the
Pomeroy-Middleport areas In those
days," stl&gt; comments. "but O!ester
wasathoroughfaretolargerplaces
like Parkersburg, Gallipolis and
Cindnnati."
The history lxlok says the Keg
Company used aU metho&lt;E to cheat
acquaintances out of good money
for bad money, . for example,
trading two counti'!'Fit sliver dol·
Iars for one genuine. Many a
gullible, honest-natured man were
said to have fallen ilr the ttwo-for.
ooe trick.
It was especially profitable for
the gangtoooncentrateon men who
enjoyed "partaking of the spirits."
The unsuspecting target would be
offered "just one more drink,"
which was easily done since
Newsome also owned a dlstlliery.
Then with ttl&gt; victim In the right
frame of mind- or out of 11'1&gt; right
frame of mind (depmdi ng on your

License fees released
POMEROY - State Auditor
Thomas E. Fergullln's office reponed the July 1985 dlstr1bu1K&gt;Il: of
state motor vehicle registartlon
fees totaling $18,850,510.81 to Ohlo
counties, cities, townships and
villages.
Meigs County received $16,671.14.

Veterans Memorial
·, EMPI'Y NOW - ll's hard to IJna«~e that 111111

Thu~ay

admissions - Opal
Barr, Middleport; Mary Keller,
Pomeroy; Carrie Moore, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - Bessie
Landaker, Gladys RQb&amp;on.
Friday admissiol$ - Albert
Shoemaker, Shade; Ellen Stewart,
Middleport; Gle1111 Frecker, Ra·
cine; Mark Profl'itt, Albany.
Friday discharges - Roger
Smith, Frank Wolford, Nellie
Perry, Darlene Hicks.

vacant hou8e was ever a "den ~ lnlqully" but
ilccordlngto LUcille Smllh, co-owuer, and many other

RECOGNli'ION
Epling
of the Gallla Count)' Reaith Department presmled ·
certlftcates to three jlrea residents Salurday lor
t'Ompletlng aD Dve weeks . ~ a waJ!Ung· progn1m

sponsored by lbe
department. Receh'iflt
cerUIIcales are, lrom left, Kay Haftelt, WUinelt
Rodgers and l'llyDis Taylor. 'Die program ~ heW·
on live Saturd~s •J'Ing Au$Ust,-whld1 was declw;ell:
National WaM,I&amp; M!X'III·
, :;

Nobody

beats
JUST COMPARE ...

AND YOU'LL MAKE YOUR DEAL HERE!

MA~NAGER, . · sA~Ys •••

SALES

MIKE FOX

I

CO E IN AND KE YOU·II:BEST DEAl .AND
THEN CHOOSE BETWEE··N LOW ~·NtEREST RATES
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STARTING. AT

INTEREST

OR

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~
n •OLDMOBILE-CADilLAC
.

CH

301E.UII

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POMEIOY,
OHIOr.
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1rimts-,ientintl

Section

D

D·

August 31, 198~

Big-time crime not limited to just big cities

.

I •

our

•

I

Featpering
the nest
in U.S.

How Americans Feather the Nest

The survey conducted by Knapp Communications shows an
increasing number of consumers are taking personal
responsibility for making decorating and buying dec1sions.
The lop answers to the survey include:
Whe,. do you buy furniture?
1. Furniture Store
2. Department Store
3. Discount Furnilure Store
4. Designer Showroom
5. Antique Store

What style do you prefer?
I. Traditional
2. Contemporary
3. Country
4. Early Amencan/Colon1nl
5. Anlique

polntofvlew) gangmemberswlnould
eittl&gt;r engage their prey
a
crooked gamed cards or just steal
him blind outrtght.
If the gang faDed to secure their
Wgotten gains by these met!Dds,
ttl&gt;n one of them would lrnperson·
ate an officer of the law. The bogus
lawman would burst upon ttl&gt; scene
and everyone would run for fear of
arrest. The gang !Jll the money,
and the victim's Ups were sealed,
again for fear of. the law, the real
law, and perhaps out of fear of a
wife oc parmi.
The Keg Company Is believed to
have been responsible for at least
one murder, and maybe more.
The murder definitely attributed
to the Keg Company Involved a
peddler who came tci O!ester In
February 1829. The peddler's horse
was ~tabled at Newsome's tannery
and he took io~ing at the Inn. He
.was never, heard from again and it
was said that Newsome sold the
horse a while later.
A mald at the Inn told authorities,
much after ttl&gt; fact, that on the
night In quesllin, she heard awfUl
groans In the IDuse and next
morning, found blood stains on a
floor. She said she kept silent
because she had been threatened
with retaliation if she revealed what
stl&gt; knew.
The few Meigs Coonty men
linked for certain with NewS&gt;me's
Keg Company were Jack Nolan,
Cornelius Lake and Moses Green.
Nolan and Lake were said to have
been the ones wbo took care of
unpleasant tasks, such as roping
the victims, robbing and perhaps
even killing, H necessary.
In Apr11 1829, NewS&gt;me, Nolan,
Lake and. Green were Indicted In
Meigs Coonty for obtaining a mte
fraudulently. All posted ball and of
the three, only Nolan was found
guilty and sent to prison. He was
released after nine years and
moved south. While in the southern
states, he told someone that il the
peddler in Meigs County had been
murdered, his body would have
been concealf!d in the grave of ttl&gt;
wife of. Judge John Bestow.
Bestow's wife had been bu ned In
O!ester Cemetery. less than a half
mUe from the Inn, at about the same
lime the alleged murder of ttl&gt;
peddler occurred.
When word reached Meigs
County, the grave was opened but
the ~r's body wasn't found.
Some thOught the body rllay have
been under the coffin, but author1·

tieschQsenottoremovethecoffinto
look.
Years later, Ludlle Smith's
parents, Benjamin and Daisy
Smith, purchased the Inn from a
Mr. Decker.
Lucille recalls that her mother
was ex!)2Cially pleased with the
house's cellar, which eYen had a
fresh water spring. The cellar was
made d. huge stones about two feet
thick, however, dlrlanddustwould
leak mto the room from behind a
boarded-up ploce In the side d ooe
waD.
Mrs. Smith persuaded her hus·
band to clean up ttl&gt; troublesome
spot and he, assisted by Lucille's
cousin. a yru ng man of 16 or 17.
unboarded the hole to dig out the
dirt .

Human oones were found in the
possibly the
peddler who had mysteriously
disappeared so many years before.
And when all the dirt was
removed, a vault-type structure,
four feet high with lhrre brick
walls, rould be sren. In the walls
were several decaying wooden
drawers with !mom. Remembering
the tales of the Keg Company, the
two anxklusly opeoed the drawers,
half eK;li!Ctlng to find them fUll of
money- but no money was found.
Lucille Smith says the house's

dirt they shoveled -

reputation oothered her as a chUd
growing up there.
"I was often scared," she says.
"When we Qrsl troved in I t!Dught
there was a blood stain on the floor
of ·my room built rurned out to be
red paint. As forrrother and father,
stories of the house didn't seem to
bother them at all."
The house was also said to have
had a trap door with a tunnel
leading from it to ttl&gt; woods but
according to LucUie, this Isn't quite
true. "The a&gt; llar with the vault was
under the backofthehouse. Acrawl
space ran from the vault under the
house to one of ttl&gt; big foundation
stooes In the front. The stone was m
pivots so 11 would rurn. This was
probably a way of escape," she
says, "or maybe a way to get Inside
without being sam."
But mw the house with ttl&gt; past
stands empty -of people that Isbut not of fl\YSiery.
Just recently , Lucille's eight-year·
old grandniece, Mary Frletag, was '
visiting her from North Canton. :
Questklned Mary one day, "Aunt
IJ.tcUie, yoor old house Isn't ·
haunted , Is It?"
Lucille told her, no, it wasn't, and
with eyes big and round, Mary
reptied, "Well, my friend said It
was. "
. Her tittle friend lives in Olester. :

The Pink Flamingo: popular agaiq
donery, swlzzlesticks, shower cur·
tains, bathroom acressortes from
UPI Feature Wrler
BOSTON (UP!) - The pink to~ls 1o toothbrush holders, neon
flamingo, for three decades the flamingos, jewelry, a spoonrest,
most loved, hated and joked· about calendars, butter dishes, ashtrays,
lawn ornament. is flying high cream and sugar sets, salt and
pepper sets, night lights. mirrors
again.
and
decorative wall Items."
This cheap, plastic symbol of
The Cat's Pyjamas alSo offers a
1950s Americana has found new
friends as a nostalgia Item for the polo shirt with a flamingo over the
heart, Instead of an alligator or
Big O!IU generalion.
"For a while, the pink Oamlngo other ·status symbol.
"When we started 2~ years ago,
was an endangered plastic spe
cies," said Its creator, Don Feather· II was kind d run and tacky,"
stone. " It no longer is. Now it Is the Kwaloff said . "Now, it's starting to
status symbobof a new generation, dominate the catalog. Everybody
and they're coming back Into the has tun with It."
Why are the birds suddenly so
front yard again. "
The pink birds are also coming hot? "It's the pastels, the pinks and
into the house and spawning an. greens," said Kwalofl. "They 're
array of Interior offspring that graceful, they have a certain
range from wall clocks to night beauty about them also. They're
oot just p.~rely tacky. The lawn
lights.
The original flamingo craze ornaments were the tacky part of
started In the 1940s when Florida, the wbole thing .
"1! it is done right, the flamin go is
the home of the real thing, became
a popular vacation spot for lour1sts. what's 'In' now." he added . "I have
The Florida theme Inspired shower a feeling It will become just a
curtains, decals and one- dimen· mainstay and not fade away."
At Joly's Lawn Ornaments In
sionallawn ornaments.
In 195'7, Featherstone, then a Smithfield, R.I ., proprietor Lucien
21-year·old art student, put the A. Joly Jr., has seen steady sales ci
flamingo on the cutHng edge of Oamingos over the past 14 years.
"They even put them In ba·
outdoor decor when he designed a
three-dimensional lawn ornament
for Union Products Inc .. of nearby
Fitchburg, Mass.
Union, a major manufacturer of
plastic lawn ornaments, sold !ll,&lt;XXJ
of the bot pink birds In 1976. It 9:lld
190,00l In 1985 and has sold about
250,00l so fa r this year. Feather·
stone and Union have been laughing
all the way to the bank.
"! still say that eight percent are
bought by people who are playing
jokes and having tun, but 92 percent
are bought by the little old lady with
11\e garden," Featherstone said.
"They are tun. .. . College kids
grab them In scavenger hunts.
Some are sold for Christmas
presents. Some people use them for
holiday decorating, with wreaths,
holly and sloeking caps."
~e undisputed king of the
Oamlngo :accessory market Is The
Cal's Pyjamas, a Montclair, N.J.,
mall order firm.
lis catalog otters at least 25
Oamlngo items, and owner Michael
Kwalotf says the next edi!K&gt;n will
have 10 or 15 more.
By KEN FRANCKLING

..
By KATE CALLEN
· · United Press Intemallonal
: : Americans love to fantasize
about redecorating their homes but
What do you look for?
Whe,. do you get Ideas?·
lhey hale to part with their
1 Durability
1. Newspapers
ti1ed-and -true furniture, according
2. High Quality
2.
Decor
Magazines
:ro a consumer survey on trends In
3. Value
3. Furniture Catalogs
~me decor.
4.
Style
4 . Friends/Family
.· "Feathering the Nest: AContrast
5. Versalility
5. Home Improvement
Q! Furniture Attitudes and !mag·
Magazines
}iry," conducted last fall by Knapp
UPI GraphiC
Communications, also revealed
:t,!!at when people do buy furniture,
Inspiration seems to be magazines what Intimida ting.
they are wUUng to pay extra for
rather than experts In Interior
"E urop ea ns are design ·
ilttrabllity and they prefer tradi·
design
.
conscious."
be says; "Americans
Uonai and cont emporary styles to
Roughly
one-half
of
all
respoml·
are taste-mnscious."
high -tech or deco trends.
en ts said tbey usually consult
Once style has been chosed, the
·• The survey of 2,!lXJ households
newspapers, decorating magazines majority of respondents said their
selecte:l at random shows that
and furniture catalogs when select· !lrst consideration In buying furni·
'; there's an attachment to the
lng furniture. A second tier d likely ture is "how weilll's made." The
home, a long. strong emotional tie
sources
Included friends and lam. most prized characteristics were
to what's in it, " says Robert Brown,
ily,
home
improvement magazines "durabilily," "qual ity " a nd
·a vice president of Knapp , the Los
and
store
salespeople. Interior "value"; the least prized were
Angeles-based publisher of "Arch!·
designers
ranked
last.
"band· crafted." "prestigious" and
tecturai Digest" and "Bon
The most popular styles among "trendy ."
:Appetit."
When they're ready lo make the
respondents were:
: "We trade cars every three or
purchase,
the vast majority of
-Traditional,
which
Brown
des·
·tour years and don't even blinkrespondents
visit a furniture store.
cr1hes as "largely European and
·IU'd cars are more expensive,"
Discount
furniture
srores came in a
somewhat detailed In style,"
Brown observes. "But we expect
distant
second,
largely
because
-Contemporary, "anything that
our chairs to last a generation."
"they
don't
have
much
ci
an
image
: Questionnaires were malled to a is simple, functtqnal, designed for
for quality or selection," says
. national sample of households. comfor1,"
:Participants in the survey were
-Cwntry , which Brown reports Brown.
Department stores placed third,
:asked to rate their degree d. Is rrost popular in certain regions,
followed
by antique stores and
· kilerest In various aspects of home and.
designer
showrooms
i which, ac-Early American or colonial,
:llec'O r, with responses rang1ngfrom
cording
to
Brown,
will
turn away
;complete Interest lo complete which the report found "Is not as
customers
who
are
not
accompan·
well Hked by the afDuent as by the
·iusinterest. ·
led by a professional designer) .
:: Nol surprisingly, affluent consu- non-affluent."
"More and more department
; mers and those who had recently
Brown predicts that two styles
· Pl'rchased fu miture expressed a that mnked In the middle wlll soon stores don't want to be in the
: lli'eater overall interest In decorat· catch on big: Orlen\81, because of furniture business," Brown reports,
"because furniture doesn't rrove as
: lffg their homes. But all groups "an Increasing awareness d. Japan
fast
as (Jl.shlons" and has come to
s)lowed a high degree of ongoing and Ollna as a culture," and
rq&gt;resent
'a waste of valuable retail
Interest In decor, and even mn· Scandinavian, because "new
floor
space.
nifluent buyers reported that their Norttl&gt;m European outlets are
"Bloomingdale's In New York is
coming into this countcy and
•Interest was growing.
a
huge exception to that rule,"
:.: Further, the survey report states, making an impact."
Brown
points out The stunning
The last-place finishers were
"consumers do not consider tuml·
room layouts that are a signature of
: nire as a 'temporary' thing.... They styles that are featured prom!·
Bloomingdale's thriving furniture
' are not eager to buy new furniture nently in lrendy furnishing rnaga·
When they get tired of what they zlnes: "eclectic" and "deco." , departments "have the bok of a
seKY furniture store, a very sUck ·
. ~ave .. . perhaps they never get Brown believes that American
cperatkln.
''We have flamingo watches, four
consumers "don'tknowwhateclec·
: tired' of lt."
"But
then,
Bloomingdale's
Is
the
mugs,
three vases, pilsner glasses,
· Howevel', ''consumers are con· tic means" (It's a creative mix of
eKceptkln
to
!!Very
rule,"
he
leather-covered outlet and switch·
:· lhually looking for . 'decorating dlf!eren( s!yles) and, unlike Euro!JIIppEd.
plateS, address books, clocks, sta·
. t,as. "' and their primary source ct. peans, fl,nd hlgli·lech deco some•

HOUSE OWNER- Ludlle Smllh grew up living In the millie wiiJcb
was ll!led as headqlllll'ters for the lnlamous Keg Company. As she was
growing up, she heard tales ol escapades which wmt on behind closed
doo.s. Miss Smith, of Chester, and her sister, Ebna Reuter ol Akron,
stiU own the house which now stands empty.

throoms now. They must take lhr&gt;
legs off them and hang them on a ·
wall," Joly said. "It's hard to tell •
what they're doing with ttl&gt;m. I ·
don't ask. It 's none rt my business, ·
after they pay for it."
·•
As wind geese become the new
lawn fad and flamingos perch in the :
house. other animals are rrov!ng
IndOOrs. Joly says his 'plaster and;
concrete frogs, squirrels, owls,:,
kittens. ducks and puppies are also_.
finding new life as dOOrstops and~:
kinky objets d'art.
);
His penguins show up arou~ :
swlrnmlng pools, sometimes whole"'
'·
Docks of them coming up the steps•,
and out of the water.
~
"And you s!Duld see what they dO:
with the squirrels," Joly said.•:
"They put them on the walls. on the;·
roof, even in the house.
.&gt;:
"Lawn ornaments have always:;
been pretty popular, " he addedC·
"We keep selling more hecausettl&gt;y keep bulldlng more houSES." :
But the father of ttl&gt; PlnlC: .
flamingo believes people buy the- .
birds to recapture the past. "I think: :
it Is nostalgia." F'ealherstone sald. 1:
"Everybody remembered what ~
their mother had hanging in the~
bathroom, or in the garden. Ail of a"'
sudden you find you've been left:,
out. ''

POPUlAR AGAIN - Don Featherstone Is suiTOunded ~ his
creations. 'Die Pink Flalnin,o lawJI ornammtl8 enjoying a Muraence
almoll ~years alter Feathen&amp;one Invented II. (UP!)

•"'

�•
August 31, 1986

-•
.

... Calendar
;;;

~- VINToN - Pendelton-Marcum
i~XnecomJng, Sunday, 10 a.m. with
tl!acetul Valley singers and the
~anlel 'nio.
•
:=CENTENARY - McCall rsmi;!li, SUnday, Centenary Unital
~t Olurch. Basket dinner

~- ;.:coRA -

..

~y

..

By .JAMa SANDS
8peclal Cwiillpolldent

We Reserve The Ri1ht To
Quantities

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

John D.Jones reunion,

--

298 SECOND ST. ·
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SATURDAY, SEPltMBER 6, 1986

GALllPOLIS - John T. and
reunion,
sunday, Raccoon Creek County
Park.

Sarah Norman Ward

·POPLAR RIDGE - Poplar
Ridge FWB Church homecoming,
Sunday. Rev. Jlnnl..usherafternoon
speaker. Special singing.
• GALLIPOLIS - Rev. Samuel
l,.ewis reunion. Sunday, Clay
School, ll a.m. Business meeting at
joon, followed by lunch.

••

~ PATRIOT Patriot Unltald
f1ethodlst Church spec Ia I services
With Pearl Casto, Sunday, 7 p.m.
~tal singing.
•
• GALLIPOLIS- God's Echoes at
talth Temple Independent Churth, '
t&gt;ebby Dr., Sunday, 7 p.m.

9"
9
&lt;
$ 99
Beef Barbeque • ·L:~. 5

Pork

; CROWN CITY - Saunders Trio
qt Uberty Chapel, Swan Creek Rd .,
Sunday, 7 p.m.

-

o.m.

. ; POMEROY- The Meigs Crunty
senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
fil!lghts, Pomeroy, has the followlng actMtles scheduled !or the
week ot Sept.1-5: ·
Monday - Closed for holiday.
: 'I\Jesday - Chorus 1-2.
;•Wednesday - Social Securtty
~resentatlve 10-noon, bingo U .·
a,m., Health Mallttenance I'J'o. ·
~m at 1 p.m.;: sponsored by
flolzer Medical Center-and Holzer
be, Ltd. Speaker wm· be Dr,
Carol Sholtis Cll the subject cl
qancer progress and new aspects.

MOUNTAINEER

:

LECTA - Rev. Earl Hinkle at
PJalnut Ridge Chu rch, Sunday, 7:30

juSt evecyooe could afford a radio,

Invocation by Rev. Mr. Davison

the church radio was probably
Clle , at the tew sets In the
community.
WE CAN lmaglne that Poplar
~e's altitude made an Ideal
place to receive radio.
While the c!Jurch ·soon foullil a
pastor, the Influence ~ the radio
was l!lt IJr many.yeal'!l as we note
the church sponsored concerts
regiJinl/lg In the l92ls per!onned by
many radio celebrttles from Ash·
land, ·Kentucky, · Charleston, and
Huntington, who appeared In
person.
In 1925 Lewis Harding organized
a homecoming for Poplar Rl~
Church and It became one of the
most popular homecomings In the
county. One d the lavortte personagesaltheearlyhomecomingswas
ClvU War veteran Perry Ralph,
wiD was a master storyteller.
WE HAVE 11efore us the copy
from theTrlbulll! ofthe program for

there were songs by: Evelyn and

90

furls Shaver; Luther and Junior
Lemley; the Skidmore Brothers

(radio singers), Laing Spires; tile
Hood Brotll'rs, and talent from
Kanauga and Rutland.
Recitations were given by: Rorert Carson, Homer Taylor , Betty
Wallace, Doris Shaver, Evelyn
Shaver, Luther Lemley, Dorothy
Rose, Louise Cremeens, and by tile
chairman, Lemley. There were
about l&lt;ro people In attendance
throughout the day - most of the
octlv!tles taking place outside
where a refreshment stand had
~n b catal. Other officers of the
homecoming were: C.E. Fife, Mrs.
Henry Hood, Mrs. Mary Hlx; and
Way!E Shaver.
IN O'I1IER years we note
different radio talent at the Poplar
Ridge homecoming. In the late
l9lls came Captain Andy Flip who
was a regular per!ormer on WCMI

SausageLB~:~L~·•••

JTM .PORK, TACO or

LB
9
(
Fryer Parts •.•••• ~ •••• S
BUCKET
$
99
Cube Steak .~~...
1
HILLSHIRE FARMS
$1 99
Smoked Sausagel~ •.
SUPE~IOR FRANKIE
.
s· 09
oz.
1
WI.eners ••••••••••••••••

MIXE~

12

POPLAR RIDGE Free WID Bapllllt Church datell back to lhe
with Ill! lftSI!III 8811ctuary oonslructed In J8B2. Poplar •tqlp
became noled for 118 popular homecominp n Ill! 1900s ancl- Ia .,
19%1 the church oongregallon memoors made hlslory wileD !bey · •
replaced their preacher with a radio set.
~

radio out of Ashland, Kentucky.
In 19.ll Poplar Ridge Church
closed and remained dosed for a
siDrt time before reopening. The
strtp mining that was done around

:rrusteeS tO meet

.

Circus 0 a ues

Palhtlng class 11t 1p.m., instructed llli!IIU for the weellis:
cost Is $1Q per
Thesday - Johnny Mal"lettl,
session, materials lllmlshed.
~ll. lDssed salad, pllteapple.
Tlwrsday - Cl!ramlcs 10-2,
Wednesday ·- Baked porkette,
'I\Jwerwu,re Party at 10, with Janet cabbage, ovm browned potatoes,'
Thells, Gallipolis, as demonstrator. mixed fruit
Friday - !3owllng 1: II.
'rhu..Sday - Baked steak,
· 1'11e Center Is p~lng a rum-. m115bed potatoes and gravy, peas ·
magesaleforearlyOctober. Hyou and carrots, orange sauced
haveltemsyouWOuldllketodonate ~hes.
thlslsa-goodopportunltytodosome
Fl1day - Creamed chicken on
deanlngrut.Doootbringltemsfor biscuit, mashed · potatoes, green
the aale fD the Center before the reans, vanWa pudding on graham
week o! Sept. 29 due to storage · cractrer crust.
limitation.
Choice o! milk, coffee, tea, or
~- Senior Nutrition J!rogram · juice avaUable wl,lh meals, ·
by Lois Pauley,

: ORANGE TWP - Orange Town·
$hlp Trustees meet Tuesday, 8
p.m., home of clerk, Dorot!IY
Callaway.

3

Blood pressure day
pressure

E~~~o•zsooN.n

•rth Centrol; V.D. Scte11ing;
Cancer. Scra_.t; pr..-..y

ar C11ll 992·7321

,

IIIIS. SHIRIN .tiiGGUD

'

•

REG. $44.00

We , at Wallpaper Super·
mar~et , carry
Imperial
Wallpaper in stock at Dis·
count Pr ices. Plu s a large
selection of Imper i al
Wallpaper Books at. Gre at
Sav ings.

Y)(MtiU.YA

lndhl••

Now

REG. 139.00

$32°0

Now

Tk~s~~
REG. $3UO

295-4532

'763 SID AVE.
DbWNTOWii ' HlllnNGTON
Acroa fre~~ '"' Ciwk Contor ·

PLAN.ED
,
l
·
f
t
'
I
ENI,
H
OOD
·
.
·
'
q
•
·
s
·
o
ur•
·
·
.
..
.
.
.,
.
·
·
·
·
·
, r
·
v
.. ·. ··

I

'

"

•'

POMEROY:

. ,a1'
.

'-~

'

~'

'

.

GAWPOUS
414 Second Ave., 2nd floor
llhw Putting Palace)
446·0166 Molt.-Sat.

· Mligs MHicalluildiltg

MASTEIS DIGIIE II

Al10: Jackson, Cheaapeaka, Athena, Chillicothe, Logan

Fabric Potpourri

Help

¢

POWELL'S SUPER VALUE
And

EVEN WITH YOII HECDC BACi TO SCHOOL
SCHEDULE THERE'S STILL TIME TO FIT
TACO GRANDE® INTO YOUR DAY.

Maxwell House®
Raise $500,000 fOr the MDA
·, '

......
W1
-...
....

Jlb.$769
only

·..

Maxweu House.
DeCaffeinated

Ground COffee

!~t, Hr. $629
Maxwell Houseoo

Maxwell House.,
Instant Coffee

Instant

Decaffeinated

COffee

·.$4 99

17
only

a..$389
only

$

Peaches ••••••••• ~~ •••••• 39&lt;
BROUGHTON'S
2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $149 ~
PARKAY
$ •..
Margarine .....~ ... 2/ 1

y. Trash pickup within the
e will lJ' held Thesday and
esday.
·

~
...""'

"' YRACUSE - Sutton Township
tees meet Tuesday, Syracuse
nlctpal &amp;IUdlng.
~·'

•••

;oo..

WEDNESDAY
::ti:;ALUPOUS - Gallipolis Kiwaj meet Walnesday, 6 p.m., Down
Vl)der.

.HARRISONVILLE - The
dly Neighbor Senior Citizens
b Is sponsoring a liood pressure
· ·y Wednesday, 10 a.m. to noon,
!!Jth Rutland EMS memrers on
Jl!!ty.
'

...••
•

11

Reg. $4.99 yd.

~-------~-:-------~!!~---;~-~-;~::~---~
~ Taco Salqd Supreme l
GET Ttl SECOND ONE
r

DOMINO SUGAR

I

3/S2

SLB.

BAG

Unlit 3 Por (.,,_,
Go&lt;MI Only At Powell's s.&lt;ma,.et

Offer Erplrts Sept. 6, 1916

m

BATH TISSUE

$149

Customer
o Go1!C1 Only AI r...u·s s,.,nna ..ot
Offer bplm Sept. 6, 1916
m

'
4 ROLL
PKG

limit 1 Per

0

0 ;

2/Sl

Limit 2 Por Customer
Go&lt;MI Only AI Powell's s,....ma ..tl
Offor Erplrts Sept. 6, 1..6
STI

ARMOUR TREET
WNCH MEAT

12

oz.

CAN

99(

!~

If
I•

.

AND GET AFREE

Dessert or Mtd. Drink
.

l

Limit' one per coupon. Good only 1t
regul1r price. Expii'H 9-30-88.

;:

r

Lmh ona per coupon. Good only at

,.gular price. Expires 9-30-86

*

S.IS•

2s (

Limit 1 per coupon. Good only It
,.gul1r price. Explrea1·30··

SAVE 40C

.

.

'

,,,

• Pin caddy, reg. $3 25 $1.62

• Shoulder pads
reg. price group

so··

Off

SILVER BRID~E SHOPPING CENTER
STATE ROUTE 7
GALLIPOLIS

, Umlt one r* aoupon. Expire• 9·~·88

....,..

•
5
• Fiskars • 8" ICissors, reg. $12.99
6.47
5
• Craft glue gun, reg. $22.99
11.49
• All sewing lamps,
reg . $19.95 &amp; $39.99 $9.97 • $19.99

WHERE FASHION AND QUALITY MAKE THE DIFFERENCE

~-·--·~---~·-·--·--·----------~·~-·-·~-·----·--·-··--~--·--·-·_,
SPIIIG
PHONE AHEAD
,.
oran ·AIL·••
•...

446·1

so::F

Every Day - No

~~
Buy One Chili Dogliff' i~OTATO GRANDE®
I
GET THE SECO.ND FOR
ON~Y Sl,79
OilY

'

1/3 OFF:~. AII Fabrics!
1/2 OFF:t.AII Patterns!

HALF PRICE

~

YD .

Notions Riot

Plus ... Through Saturday, Sept. 61h

•

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

.,

limit 1 Per (uslomor
Good Only At Powell's s,.orma ..llt

o
e , Offor bpirts Stpt. 6.J1916

.

~

•

•BOUNTY TOWElS

Exceptional savings
on versatile prjnted
coHon s and I-shirt
knils lhol ore lops
for lops! 60" wide.

CLIP AND SAVE

f'

YOU STILL HAVE TIME TO REGISTER YOUR GROUP FOR OUR I % CHARITY REBATE PROGRAM!

--

;t,

98

~

•

:,RAONE - Rac ine Village Coun-

Special
Fabric
Purchase

GAL

PAII16

eU meets Tuesday, 7 p.m. Instead of

Now's lhe time Ia slack up on solids and fancies lor
a variety of sewing projecls Poly/cotton 45" wide.

•

DAIRY LANE

YD.

Reg. $2.99 yd.

FREESTONE

.....
:::;
...
$109
Ice
Cream.
oz. ans.
149
Pepsi • Cola •a•••••••••••
•
BANQUET
79
s
oz.
(
.
R. C. Cola ••.•• !~'~E: •••• 89&lt; Tv. D1nner ••••••••••••

MT. DEW, •PEPSI-FREE, Reg. or Diet

•.

$2700

Now

ClOsED TH..SDA Y

fAa Y atUHooD EDIKA110H

Maxwell H'Ouse®
Ground Coffee

$29°0

•SIIdilla fit scale. No ene refustd Mnicts because
of lnaltiHty to. pay.

Iacross from Vtti;.,. Hosp.J
992-5912 Monday-Friday

"~ OWtt:R/ADMINimATOR

PKG.

. Beauty, Quality, Price

I~ GIAIIDCiliTIAUYL

tim; lllucatlen IIIII Mnlli..l
t.r
and .........
. ,. '

rru:RESCHOb~·

:; For Regiitrailon Stop in
: 9~ to 4~ Men. thru Fri.

· ,IMPERIAL WALLPAPER
HAS IT ALL!

COMEINTODAY!
WALLPAPER
SUPER MlRKET
AND BLIND SHOP

Your. privacy is repcted
Your questions answered
•Strvlcts inclu•:

: HARRISONVILLE - The
Friendly Neighbor Senior Citizens
~lub Is sponso11ng a blood
~Y Wednesday, 10 a.m. to noon,
with Rutland EMS members on
duty ..
•

:..

the church beginning In the ~
&lt;ld much to change the oommullll)i '
surrounding the church, although•;
the church building Is well caredlcm:
,
today.

~--=~;;;;;;;;;;J~r;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;p;;;p;~;;--•~

Meigs County se_nior activities planned

$ 59
Rump Roast ••• !~ .... 1
U.S.. D.A. CHOICE .
LB. $ 99
Round Steak........ ·1

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

~ RIO GRANDE - John and Ann
IUchard family reunion, Sunday,
)!asket dinner at noon, Tyn Rhos
~u rch .

':

since

27, which had John Lemley as
chairman. The welcome was given
~ the Lemley twins followed by the
singing of Amertca. After the

the 1933 Homecoming held August

,,

':' BIDWELL - Laymen day serJice, Mt. Carmel Church. Sunday,
~: 45 a.m. with Rev. Calvin Minnis
ind Corinth Choir. Afternoon ser~ce, 2 p.m . Rev. Larry McNeil ,
yolces Unital. Dinner serval fol~wlng morning services.

rome 1o the church In the early
evenlnp and listen fD the many
ooncerta and lectures that KDKA
broailcast. Of course, In 1922 not

Townslllp (near MtZionCemetey)
that Is at:the !1531eet mark.
CHESHIRE - The Poplar ~e
'I1Iere 1111.- been a cburdl on
Freewill Baptist Cbul'Cb sits. ~
Poplar Ridge
1825 wllm the
"ghest ridge in mrtll!m Gallla "Fourth Brandl of The Fra!
County. This
. Oturcll In The Relllloul Order"
l'll!ge; located In
wu orpnlzed. ,!bmetlme later a
Qleshlre Towncburcll wu built In the ~
!\h!P. Is about 912
and known as Poplar Grove Fra!
feet above sea
WW Baptist Church. nilscol!lll'fla·
~el. The highest
t1on 1w IIIIo beelllilloWD atvarlo~
~,Dint In Gallla
times 88 the Seconcl 'Kyger Free
C~ty can be
WW Baptist Olurdt. Tli! First
~ at Pt Wagner In Greeljllel&lt;l
Kyger Church becattie known as
'fownshlp. This hiD Is 1015 teet Old Kyger and d murse stnl exists
above sea level. Poplar Knob wtlch today.
fs partly In Green Township and
SOME 01r tb! families 8590·
partly in Perry Township Is 1011 elated with Po~ Ridge lit Its early
~t jibove sea level. .
hl.story are: ~. Swlsll!r,
. Other points In the county fNer Wilcox, and Rupe. ·
1000 teet above sea leVel are:
Poplar Ridge Olurcll. made
F,atrvlew Ridge In Harrtson Town- hl.story in 1922, when It repliced Its
ship at troJ tJet; Mt Mortab pastorwltharadkl. 'Ibechurdl had
E:ernetecy at 1002; and Siloam at been Wllll!le to, find a p-eacher l:lr
1~. The latter three spots are
sometime and .wJ they cleckled that
bcated near where Hamson and !hey would hOok up a radb n the
Guy an come together.
sanctuary wll!re ,they oould llstm
There are three points on fD the cburcit serVices lroadeaet
friendly Ridge that are fNer 930 fNI!I' KDKA In Plltlbul'!lh, me of
ll!et and \Ill' point In Walnut the nation's 11rst radio !tatlons.
The rongregallon' also could

!!r

noon, at the cabin at old

!D}YlEStelld. Bring covered dish.
·...~
:·;CROWN CITY - Homecoming
at' Btg Fool' Church, Sunday, ·
~g 10: ao a.m. Services
feature Charles Lambert, Hercll
Taylor and Rev. Jimmy Chapman.
Dinner 1 p.m., bring coveral dish.

Chur:ch tops highest ridge in 'county

James Sands

SUNDAY

The Sunday Times-Sentinei - Page-B-;1-

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

... '

'

'

�The

Times-Sentinel

· August 31, 1986

Ohio-Point Ple81811t, W. Va.

Boosters meeting

Juniors to meet

POMEROY- Meigs Band Boos·
ters meeting has been cban&amp;"ell
from Sept. 1, to Sept. 8, at 7 p.m. in
the band room.

Cremeans reunion
Rl!I'LAND - The descendants

io~~~~br!~=~~:

Services announced

board

to

CLR·s·S·l·F.lED' :f\.DS

rl-;::::::;;;;;;:===~=~~===:::::::::::::::::.

GYM FACTORY ,

Dance set

of James and Bertha Cremeans will

have their annual reunion on
Saturday, Sept. 13, at Forest Acres
Park on New Llnna Rd., (]U! ct
Rutland. A basket lunch will IF
seJVed about noon. All relatives and
friends are invited.

"·

7 p.m., St. Peter's EpisCopal

Church. Executive
hostess.

RlJI'LAND -

·

spon·

A dance,

PTO to meet
CHESTER - Chester PTO
. meets Wednesday,
CaliF·
' r!ne. Jonnson,
Child ·c an!

AMD

· Huntingto'n

Barboursville, WV.

Point Pleasant
Proudly Announces
. GYMNASTICS CHEERLEADING TUMBLING-

RACINE - Missionary Brady
Duren of Guatemala ,will be In a
speclalseJVlce Friday, 7:30p.m., at
Pine Grove Holiness Church. Pas·
tor Ben Watts invites the publlc.

POMEROY - Xi Gamma EpsUon Sorority will meet at the Down
Under Restaurant Thursday at 7
p.m.

Anniversary
celebrated
by Sheets

Martin
•
annrversary

Mr, and Mrs. George L Sheets

Anniversary
·reception
scheduled

Pt. Pleatll'lt
LIMITED ENROLLMENT

Cost: $22 mo.; $20 registration ' - ·
CLASSES BEGIN SEn. 8

"Home 0( The WV Cia.&lt;.&lt;I
In Point Pleasant at

·Wallis anniversary to be noted
G~ry at the oomer ctThlrd Ave.
and Vine St., !rom l9.ll unt U1955.
The couple has a daughter, Mrs.
Jack (Elleen I Mink, two grandchildren, and two great
grandchlldren.
Cards may be sent to the couple
at 623 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis.

They owned and operated Wallis'

Gallia County seniors
plan Expo '86 trip
Activities and
menus llr the week of Sept. 1 to 5 at
the Senior Citizens Center, 220
Jackson Plke, are as follows:
: Monday - Labor Day, closed.
Thesday - S.T.O.P.!Physlcal
Illness, 10: 3l a.m.
Wednesday - Crown city blood
pressure check, 1 p.m.; Vinton
Blblestuey, 1 p.m.; card games, 1-3
p.m.
Thursday - Birthday party;
Bible stuey, 11-noon; banking
services, 11:30 a.m.
Friday -EXPO '86; art class, 1-3
p.m.; craft mlnl-rourse, 1-3 p.m.;
~activities. 7-10 p.m.
' Menus COII!jist ol:
Monday - Labor day, closed.
Tuesday - Johnny Marzettl,
tossed salad, cheest' sticks, French/Italian bread, pear.
Wednesday - Baked chlcken,
mashed potatoes, broccoli, wheat
bread, peach crisp. •
Thursday - Birthday party,
GALUPOLIS -

GALLIA COUNTY
· · GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Samuel
L. Bossard Memorial Ubrary
announces Its Bookmoblle schedule
lor the week of Sept 1-6.
.Monday: No route, holiday.
'nlt'llday: Eno Store, 1:30-1:55;
AfriCa Road, 2-2: 15; Roush Lane,
3-3:15; Roush Lane, ~:~: 30;
Cheshire, 3:35-4:05; Addison, 4:1:&gt;4:'3!; Addavllle School, 4:40-5:05;
'R&amp;R Trailer Ct., 5:15-5: 45;
Georges Creek, 5: 45-6: 15; Georges
Creek, 6120-6: 40; Kana~ga 5th

r-;=======:::::;1
11

LABOR DAY SPECIAL

DON WAN
TANNING

SH:ARP ···.
CAMCORDER

SHARP

VCR
WITH WIIIIISS IEMOTE

Sill flowers for aH occasions.
Fret cltlivery. Special gift'ideas

Ave., 6:50-7:10; Footers
7:15-7: 40; K&amp;K Traller Ct., 7: 45·
8:05.
Wednesday: No route, maintenance day.
'Diunday: Imogene Church's
Store, 1:30-3: 30; Mudsock, 3: 45-4;
Patriot, 4: 15-4: 40; Cadmus, 4: 505:15; Gallla, 5:30-6; Centerpoint,
6:1~:30;
Centerville, ~ : 4:&gt;-7:15;
Meadowbrook, 7: 3!Hl.
·Friday: Fast Stop, 1-1: 15; Banes,
1:"20·1: 3!; Young's, l: 35-1: 45;
Franklin's, 1:55-2:10; Myers, 2:252:4o; Mercerville, 3: 2:&gt;-3: 40; 790

. SHARP

SHARP

19" COLOR TV

13' COLOR TV

and mort each wttk.

12 TANNING SESSIONS
The U.S. Capitol contains a non-denominational room for meditation
and prayer. It is located off the
rotunda.

S2750
IITCHIU lOAD, GAUIPOUS

4U·1910

A Meuage From The Bible...
THE EPHESIANS SAVED BY -GRACE THROUGH FAITH
William B. Kughn
"For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not ojyourselves: it is
the gift of God: Not of works. lest any man should boast" (Eph. 2:8,9).
Thet!p._luu' Spiritual Conclltlon
I. They wen dead oplrltuiJJ: "Who were dead in trespa~ses and sins"
(v.l). "Dead" denotes separation; "trespasse&amp;' means a deviation from
what is right or true; and "sin" expresses disobedience to the law of God.
Their turning from the righteousness of God ,nd being disobedient to His
holy will. separated them from God.
2. They walked In tho path olo•U: "Ye walked according to the course of
this world" (d). "Walked" is used figuratively in referring to the octivities
of their life; while "courst" expresses that which pertains to the evil and
worldly nature of the "world." They had chosen to conduct their lives ofter
the lusts of the nesh.
J . Sallon wu their muter: "Ye wa/ked ... according to the prince of the
power of thf arr" (v .2). The "prince " is Satan, and "the power of the air "
describes the power or authority Satan exercised in the atmosphere of the
world which is mon's abode.
4. They oamnde....t to tho
of SalaD: "Thespirit tluzt now ""'rketh
in the children of disobedience" (v.2). The "spirit'' is the power of Satan
which tills the life of the disobedient to God with evil.
5. They weno dloobtdltah ' Among whom abo wt all luzd our conversation in time past" (v.4). "We " includes Paul and the Jewish brethren,
along with the Gentiles. "Conversation" indicates one's behavior or man·
ner of life. Paul and the Jewish brethren had been children of disobedience
at one time, and lived "in the fum of the flesh" (the lower nature of man1
fulfilling the desire&gt; of the flesh (fteshly appetites of nature) and of the
mind (evil thoughts, purposes, and intents of the intellect); and were by
nature (in sin) the children of wrath (objects of God's anserl even as
orhm (the Gentiles)."
The Ep...h• Made Ah
The Ephesians could not rely on the works of the law nor their own works
to deliver them from their sins (v.S). They were "q•icktned tog&lt;ther with
Christ, .. that is. made alive (saved by grace)by the God of v.ace, who being
"rich in mercy " acted out of "his flrt!Ot love " (v.6), provtding them with
"the exceeding riches of his grtJCf! " (salvation), and which He ertended
unto them "in his kindness toward Ch..Ut" (v,7),
, The Ephesians were made alive (saved by grace) when they responded to
God's gra« throogA IIIith. Having "llftnl the word of truth, " the gospel of
their salvation (Eph. 1:13); they~ (Eph. 1:13); and were redeemed
through the blood of Christ, having their s:ns forgiven (Eph. 1:7), beina
"btlJit/zed in the name of the Lord Jesus" (Acu 19:5). When, by fllith, they
obeyed the grtw of God, they were raised from their spiritual death by the
,_melovimr oower that raised Jesus from tho dead (v:S), and are made to
sit with Him "in the heavenly plactl (the church) in Ch..Ut Jaus" (v.6), to
reign with Him on earth in the "ou body, " the church (Eph . 4:4; 1:22,23),
We must obey the fP'I'" of God with the same f.Jth in order to be nlled
from our sinful state and reign,'rlth Christl
For FrH B/b/1 CorrwJ1011Mftcr
Wrl~...

REG.

11299

Small. 3:504; 7ro Halley, 4-4: 10; 790
Lincoln Pike Jet., 4: 20-4:40;
Swain's Store, 5-5: 15; Crown City,
5:.ll-6:05; Grace Shafer, 6:20-6:35;
Ohio Townhouse. 6: 4:&gt;-7: 10; Kenny's Carry(]U~ 7:25-7:50; Teens
Run, 8-8:25.
Saturday: Legrande, 9:30-~J:
Raccoon Trailer Ct. IO:JS-10:30;
Cora, 10:35-10:50; Quall Crrek,
11:0!).11:35; Rodney Village, 12:al12:50; Chlldrm's Home, ·1-1:20;
CRTP, ·1:25-1:50; Alice, 2:15-2:45;

VInton, 3-3: 30; Morgan Center,
3:45-4:15.
POMEROY
- Bookmobile scheMEIGSCOUNTY
dule In Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs County Public U brary
urxler . oontract with Ohio Valley
Area Ubrarles.
Moft\lay: No route, hoUday.
Wednesda)': Tupper's Plains,
I.Ddwlck's, 7:25-8:10; Riggscrest
Addition, 8:25-8:55.

$1098

S.29·8

REG.
S349

RCA
2 5" (Gill
COLOR
TV
6401

RCA
19" COLOR TV

S228

REG.

1299

REG.
1229

RCA

-- - - . __
__

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
Bulavillt Rood • P.O. Box l08
Gallipollo, Ohio 451&gt;31

s....,~.

w-., •.oo

·

•.

w-,.
...,SINr

,...,

NOW
OPEN

Send the ITO'''
Swccl Treat'"
Bouquet.

In
Point
Pleasant

Gra ndparcnls'
Day

1s Sunday,

SepicmiJcr 7 Ca ll
or ·visilus loday.

ssso

Per Double
Roll

Odd Lots &amp; Seconds
All Paper
American Made.
WE ALSO HAVE:
PASTE, BORDER AND AU
ACCESSORIES

Pomeroy Flower Shop
"The Wav A m e ri ca Sends Love"

PH. 992-2039 or 992-5721

Open: MOll. lhru Fri. 10 a.m. to
4:30 p.m.; Sal. 10 to 4
Pt. Pleasant
675-6280

• Heog•S11)11){1 1rfldemar1&lt; 01 Fl OA

r
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;~~~~~::::::::::::::::;:~
•1\

How to save $10: ·

S188

Fall Quarter . classes at Sou·
theastern Business College wUl
start Sept. 29, not Sept. ~- Classes
will run from 9 a.m. to 12: ll p.m., I
p.m. to 4: 3l p.m., and 6 p.m. to 9: 30
p.m.

MICROWAVE

__... ...
,

~

Bring in this coupon.
We'll take $10 off any
JCPenney Catalog
order of $75 or more
placed between
Aug. 31st. and Sept. 13th. :·

--

Rock of 1\ge• oilers you a choice of 6 dilfffenl colored
p-anties. Whale~er your requirements may IM&gt;, complet•
•atlsfacllon Is assured with Rock ol Ages.
MON ••TllES.·THt:RS ••fRI. 9 UtA P. ~ .
Other hours by appl. by calling 593· 1455

Correction

LITTON

12" B&amp;W TV

.~-.-

•

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS
·
MONUMENTS
352 Third Ave.
·
Gallipolis. OH
PH . 446· 2327

S1 mply clip th1s coupon and redeem II on any catalog ord er ol $75 0 1 more placed
between August 31st and September 13!h . Coupon os good on merchandr sc
ordered lrom any ol our current catalogs . And you ca n redeem you r coupon when
you pock up your order al your JCPenney Calalog Sales Center

'f" · ·- .

., utton

~

..,'
.,

'.

r----------------------~ .
1 ~~
JCPenney
~~ 1
I ~
·~ I '
Catalog Bonus Coupon
·~ 1
1 rG

-•r

eo.,..,

treat

~ailerCi., IIriiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiliiii;;;;;~::=:-::~~:::::--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii9n
~--------------------------------~
LARGE

twlrjonl

Wanda &amp; Don llilke, OWMFI,
art proud to IIIIOIIIIft the acldi·
tion of a Gift and Flower CMI·
ter. Stop in and look arouncl.

Treat your grandparents
to a sweet

Bookmobile schedules announced

sllced ham, glazed sweet potatoes,
!russel sprouts, hot rolls, cake and
ice cream
Friday - Fish with tartar sauce,
hash brown potatoe cake, sliced
!Fets, wheat bread, chocolate
pudding.
Choice or beverage served with
each meal.

to
who helpetl
ITha'*•
malre our first year a sucftll.

Gerald E. (Dick) Roach

•

Street,

GALLIPOLIS- Mr. -and Mrs.
Gerald E. (Dick) Roach, Fal.rfleldVanco Rd., · Gallipolis, will cele·
brate their 25th wedding anniver·
sary, Thursday, Sept. 4.
Mrs. Roach Is the fonner Hoberta Costen. She is the daughter of
H.E. Costen and the late Margaret
W. Costen, of Galllpolls. Mr. Roach
Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred
Arnold, Gallipolis.
The couple was rnarrted Sept. 4,
1961 at St. Louis CatrollcChurch, by
the Rev. A.J. Golubiewsld.
They are the parents ctGeraldE .
(Gary) Roach Jr .. of Gallipolis, and
Jeffrey A. Roach, at home.
An open reception to mark the
anniversary will he held Sunday,
Sept. 7, at the home ol Gary and
Anne Roach, 2 Willow Dr., Gallipolis, !rom 2 to&lt;5 o.rr..

Carrit and Earl Wallis
: GALLIPOLIS- Carrie and Earl
:Wallis will obseJVe their roth
wedding anniversary Sept. 5. They
were married at the Grace Metrodis! Church parsonage In Gallipolis,
by the Rev. J.R. Fields.

PT. PLEASANT, W.Va. - Mr.
and Mrs. Carl Martin observed
their 40th anniversary Aug. ~. at
Krodel Park.
The couple was presented an
anniversary cake given hy Larry
and Mary Spencer, attendants at
the park.
The couple were married In 1946
lJy the Rev. J. Edward Hakes of
Gallipolis.
They have one son, Larry Martin,
Rand, W.Va., one grandson, Troyct
Charleston, three step ·
grandchildren and three step-great
grandchildren .
Others attending were Mr. and
Mrs. Nutter and sister and brother·
In-law, Mr. and Mrs. James Haley.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Martin
Mr. Martin retired six years ago , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -__.'
!rom General Electric of Cl!arles·
•
•
ton.
resides at 7400llver

..

Registration: Fri. Sept. 5, 4-7 p.m.;:
Sqt., Sept. 6, 9 a.m.-2 p.m. :: ·
At White's School lllf Karate ::

CALL
TODAY!

Sorority to meet

Ohio-Point

GALLIPOLIS - Mr ..and Mrs.
George L. Sheets, George's Creek
· Rd., Gallipolis, celebr~ted their
50th wedding anniversary July 2'7,
. with a dinner and reception at the
. rome of their son, Geo~ Ronald
· Sheets, MercervU!e.
The couple married July 25, 1936
at Pl. Pleasant, W.Va., 'by the Rev.
Mark Shlfflett.
Attmdlng the t'I'Ception were Mr . .
and Mrs. Wylie White, Gallipolis;
:Mr. and Mrs. Allen Yeauger, Fl.
; White, Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Easter, Ironton; . Mr. and
. Mrs. Ronald Sheets II, MercervUJe
:and Donald Sheets,
Ky . .

DANCE CENTERS

sored ~ the Sons or the American
Legion, wUI be held Sunday, 8 p.m.
to rnldnight, at the Rutland Arneri·
can Legion Hall. Donation of $2 per
person at the door. Everyone
welcome.

Special service

HYSELL RUN - Hysell Run
Holiness Church, off Ohio 124 on
Coonty Rd. 15, will be in revival
Wednesday, Sept. 3, through ,~t.
7. SeJVices will begin nightly at 7: ll
p.m. with Rev. George Wlillam
from Point Rock as speaker.
Special singers will be featured.

31, 1986

,•

REG.
$499

S398

$248

REG.
S299

GIBSON

$6.8

REG.
S99

Golden

lEG. SJC9

S298

_,.
'"""''

Gdden

~

.

,'

'

•• '•

!$3·-48

'

'
-'

.,.

•

ASSOI?ED F'-' ¥015

SLUSH PUPPY

DRINKS
20

OJ.

Cups

ECKRICH DELl MEA' SALE

GOLDEN RIP£

Roast
Beef

Bananas

$

MT. VERNON

Oippecl

·Chopped
Ham

LB.

lffectlvttllru Sot..

. I

'

Sept. 8, 1918

I

I

39

S.

3691-----

LB.

AU MEAT

.,

R C eOLA
8 _IllIlls.01.

~

LB.

.
;
.
s
II
'

DELI·BOILED

. 10 Lb. lag

16 cu. n.
REG, $429

$2.48

'I

SUPERIOR

$288

WASHER

• ••

DIET RC

8 CU FT.
REG. $3~9

Wammty*

.~1

$128

FREEZERS

LIMITED

DIYEI lEG. SJ99

T

GIBSON

Gilson·

LAUNDRY PAIR

REG.
1179

169
S1 99

2% Milk

$_

reapollllilll for

GRAOE A
.NIDIUM

Eggs

Sl s9
GAL

AUTHORIZED BY

.;d.,U. n~~

$

,r-r-

((.. 2/m

I
CSC3/5
((;!)~
I
L1m11 one per customer towards any catalog order ol $75 or more placed belw . ·co
I
Augusl31 st and September 13th, 1986 ThiScoupon ga&lt;XI on me rchand1se
1 i'Jj ordered from any of our current act1ve catalogs Redee m 11 at your JCPennoy
-.~
{U Catalog Sales Center when piCk&lt;ng up your order
-~
I G#J~
-~~

I

1·
I
I
I
1

I

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

The JCPenney Catalog
Sales Center
1·800·222-6161 TO PLACE DRDEii BY PHONE
446·3525
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
HOUIS: MON.•FII. 10·6
SAT. 10·'3
••

�Pomeroy~ Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va .

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-7

Pleasant. W.Va.

ami L. Mayse
the&lt;om~es bride
f&gt;f Phillip Taylor·
I'"'

Hutchi.ron,
HumphrP'fls
J·
v

exchange VOW.f
R'lJTI.AND -

and PbUUp Taylor.

.):t. Calvary Baptist O!urch, Rio
'iSirande.
.
::,. Music was provided by Timothy
,Vatts, and soloists Kayth Mayle,
-tlster d the lll'lde and Terry Mayse,
:~rother of the bride, and Nelson
:~. uncle of the bride. Terry
Mayse was also guitarist. ,
': The altar was decorated by a
..fJreside Br1'811&amp;1!mel!t r1 blue carna·

The bride • employed by
~

vaughan. at the_Humphreys· home

on SR 143, Pomeroy.
!' +

f

'

•

' .j_

..

Dorm
;

double carnation corsage. The
groom's mother wore a two-piece
street-length dress of blue. She also
wore a double carnation corsage.
Best man was Terry Mayse,
Pittsburgh, brother of the bride,
woo wore a lilack tuxedo with
blue-tipped white carnation oouIDnnler. Groomsman was Nelson
Sharp, Jackson, uncle ot the bride.
He also wore a black OJxedo with
blue-tipped white carnallon
boutonnler.
Usher was Jay Hunt, Gallipolis,
who wore a black tuxedo with
blue-tipped white carnation ooutonnier. Ring bearer was Jeffrey
Mayse, Pittsburgh, nephew of the
bride. He also wore a black tuxedo
with blue-tipped white carnation
boutonnler. He carrted a white

a Sffiior In high SChOOl you can cope
with that a little better, but this was
very emotk;nal for this little girl and
I'm glad we did what we did
because It was worth seeing her
hap)tness."

At the auction WErlnesday night,
Hoth paid almost double the
previous record price of $13,m

: A short time tater, she learned
11er 6-year-old son had been hit by a
car whlle riding a bicycle.
· While en mute from the hospital
Ill the wedding rehearsal, she
IIOtlced her fiance's brand new, red
sports car traveling toward her.
'the driver, however, was not the
groom, but tJM! thief who had stolen
the 198 Iroc Z-28 Camaro.
:·ro make matters worse, the keys
~the ..non haD where the wedding
niceptlon was to be held plus the
ci:Juple's round- trip pane tickets tor
tli!lr honeymoon had been left
lllllde the car.
: The. couple did m111age to gain
access to the union hall Just four
liiurs before the wedding was to
~.and the bride's rmther raced
tDjetdet'oratlomln pace, arrtv!Ag
at"the dlurcbwlthlust lO minutes to

apare.

..

PRESSURE
.

.

SC~EENING .

·"

•

ON ~ TU'ISDAY, SEPT. 2 YOUR RITE
AID PHARMACY WILL BE GIVING A
FREE BL·o· OD PRESSURE CLINIC
FROM 10 A.M. TO 2 P~M. AT 208
EAST MAIN._ ST., P'MEROY
NO ·AP·POINTMENT
IS NECESSARY
.
SIGN UP TO WIN A FREE
BLOOD PRISSURE' KIT

satin, lace edged, ring pillow. made
by Jayckle Wyatt. Jackson, aunt r1
the bride.
Boutonnlers and rorsages were
also presented to Erman Sharp Sr.,
Jackson. grandfather of l,l1e bride
and to sisters of the groom. 1
Assisting at the rrceptlon were
Beverly Sharp apd MeUssa Crabtree, bOth of Jackson, cousins of the
blrde. They wore street-length
dresses with blue-tipped white
carnatiln corsages.
·
The private reception was held at
Rhodes Hall on the Rio Grande
College campus. The bride's table
featured
three·tlerThe
caked
Jackiea Wyatt.
cakebaked
was
topped by a hand blown glass heart
with hells and swans.
The couple resides In Gage.

by

.

FRESH .

Wt invite you to visit Dll" prtl!niatpt:i:an~i~r,~~=-:~.:
Presentthis coupon with yoor nut,;.,
~dour
pharmacist will give yoo $3.00 (Yhrot dollanl off theretail price of the prescription. There is no time limit oo
this coupon, but it m ooly be usiMI with yoor next prescription and not more than ooe ooupon will~ honored
per orescription.
• ·

.l•lii:t
Tha.. you for shopping lite Aid ~-

OVEITWENTY-FIVE MillON PRESCRIPTIONS
ARE FILLED IN RITE AID PHARMACIES

I

'

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''•
•

'

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208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY. OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

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ONLY AT RUTLAND

spent for last year' schamplon steer
at the fair. The grand champion at
this year's Natbnal WE'Stern S!Dck
Show n Denver brought $9,000.
In addltbn to returning the steer,
J;!oth Jet Dawn keep the $25,f00 he
paid for the animal. The girl said
she !lans to save the rmney lor her
college education.

·~

...,.

10 I••· or
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LINKS $10.99
PATTIES $9,49

Sausage
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Ir::~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~

· GALLIPOLIS - Plans have been
&lt;!ompleted for the open church
~eddtng of Oleryl Mink Kingery,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James L.
Mink, to Kenneth CaudUI, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Louie Caudill.
: The wedding will take place
Saturday, Sept. 6, 5 p.m .. at Grace
United Metlxldlst Olurch. Rev.
Joseph Hefner, officiating. A reception will follow Jrrunedlately at the
Elks' Club.

was

BLQOD

.

Mr. and Mrs. Phillip Nelron Taylor

~ngery-Caudill

..,: Love, the song proclaims, Is a
many-splendored thing, but John
3nd Jimmie Sue Owen were singing
the blues by the tbne their wedding
~lis rang last weekend.
·First It was the wedding gown
tllat had to he rushed back to the
tiillor on Friday because the hem
longer !bah the lace, the bride

.

..

'

.-

Wedding
bell blues

S~

-

'.

Girl couldn't stand 'no bull;' keeps steer

: GALLIPOLIS - The Job Bank,
IDeated In the Senior Citizen Center,
:!'ll Jackson Pike. would like to find
jObs for the older woliler - people
t)lo are 50 years of age and older.
- There Is an abundance of
Strength and knowledge to be found
1p someone of this age group.
--11 you need someone to do Interior
6t exteriOr painting, yard work,
roofing, carpentry and such, call
4l6-700l and talk to the job
&lt;tlunselors.

by

=dam~%~at:Ssan~st~u~

.,

""

]!Jb Bank helps
ieniors find work

~

CENTER

Grange will meet Saturday at ~ •
grange ~IL Ahayride will preced~
the meeting at 7 p.m. The meeth!lt.
will begtil at 8 p.m. and a weiner.
roast wlll follow. AU members 111\d:
Interested persons Invited toatteJI!f. :

~REE!

aa,nk

~ag~r~~~
Pl~~ranch
The groom employed Local
8lt.A~':~n:~~:~rlrtlmedlate

lions and candleabras. ·

: PUEBLO, Colo. (UP!) - A
)3-year-old girl will get tD keep both
iter champion steer and the record
l:zi,500 price bid for It at the
:Colorado State Fair.
- Harry Hoth, president of a
t:olorado television station, gave
the steer back tD a tearful Dawn
~earous, Fort Morgan, Colo., woo
.l:onsidered the prize wbming
!!Pima! more pet than project.
-~ "We were probably going to have
it butchered," said Hoth. "If you 're

HEMLOCK GROVE - Metgs
County Pomona Grange 'w!ll meet
Friday, 7:30p.m., at the Hemlock
Gr~ Hall. Inspec,tlon, election of
officers and JudP!g ot au contests
Will be held. All ni,eml!ers urged to
attend. Hemlock Gtange wW host.

n:~::~·::=: Norrnan

::the cblble-rlng cel'l!lliOIIY was held

: Given In marriage by her father,
·the bride wore a VIctorian dress
·M!ith a chapel length veU. The dress
featured a lace bodice and train,
.4&gt;utt satin sleeves and pearls and
'Jace. The dress had a sheer overlay
~th appliques of Sequins and
·pearls. She wore a Victortan hat
;trtmmed with sequins, pearls and
·whit~ satin roses.
~ She carried a colonial bouquet of
"Plue roses, baby carnations and
.IJaby's breath. She also wore a
)00-year-ol.d bracelet given her by
'an aunt; Minnie Perkins.
: Maid d oonor was Kathy Mayse,
JUo Grande, sister of the bride. She
~ore a floor-length gown of royal
'blue satin with lace overlay with
plue bows. She wore a hairpiece r1
p!ue daisies and baby's breath.
; Bridesmaid was Debbie Mayse,
Pittsburgh, Penn., sister-In-law of
:'the bride. She wore a Door-length
'kOwn d royal blue satin with chiffon
overlay. Her hairpiece was ldentl·
hi tD the rnald ol honor's.
·: Flower g1ris were Tonya Mayse,
~WeUstoo, and Kati\Y Lym Mayse,
:)&gt;ittsburgh, neices ct. the bride.
:Ibey wore blue Door-length satin
~wns. trimmed with lace. The
-a.rr!ed white wicker baskets r1
:blue carnatilns and sweetheart
;iose;. They wore hairpieces r1 blue
')!aisles and baby's breath.
• The rmther of the bride wore a
'blue street-length dress and a

.

SALEM

Rutland, 8IUill1llce the Aug. 15
marriage d their daughter, Leora fiiiiiiiiio--lllliiiiiiiiiiiil--llliiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~IJ
Jayne, to Claude Jackson Humph- I ,

·t:.RIO GRANDE- Wedding wws
~re exc:llaqed Aug. 2 by Taml
~ May~e

Mr. and Mrs. MOo

B. Hutchison, , New Uma Rd.,

.

~

Grange meetings

~8

24/2

Pkt•·

*4
,~

,,,

.,

'"

.,

'·

•

'

'

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�•
August 31. 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

assault prevention, recognition pianned ·for Sept. 13
chlldren, ste said.
Ms. Mays said tJxo workshop's
obfectlves are for chUd care
worllers to learn the outward
recognition of abuse and neglect.
Also covered will be prevention,
InterVention and treatment strategies. She. said that cross-cultural
.factors m'abuse determination will
also be covered.
'
Workshop topics wDl be an
overview c1 Parents Anonymous
and League against child abuse,

which wUI

PresE!ItEd by a memberd PA from
Columbus; failure tD . thrlve/ne·
glee!, by Janet McCleery, RN,
Oilldrm's Hospital In Columbus;
"The Final Chapter," t7.f Sgt. Ed
Duvall Jr., Akron Pollee Depart·
ment; and abuse vs. cultural
dlf!ermces, by Ms. Mays .
The workshop mrets recent state
requirements for lil·iim'lce train·
lng ol day care providers In the area
d chlld abuse and neglect recognl·
tlon, Ms. Mays said.

Ms. Mays Is a social worker with
a bachelor of social work degree.
She crmted C;$A In 1984 In an
attempt to telghten professional
awarl!le5s In the arms of missing

chUdrEn, chUd abuse and neglect,
chUd sexual assault and chlld
pornography. CASA Is supported by
tJxo Governor's Oltlce of Crlmlilal
Justice Services In Cl&gt;lumbus.

RegiStration should be senttoMs
Mays by Friday, Sept. 5, at CASA,
PO Box 1022, Gallipolis. Ohio, 456.n,
or by calling (614)446-3931 lor
Information.

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

POI!tS
Red Sox, .:dl~e Jays capture
.

.

-

.Red Sox needed something to slow

~.,.ct Include 11

a.m. to noon, adult ballet; noon to 12: 30

·Katie's korner
•

·'

About Social Security

...'

By KATIE CROW
T-s ron-espondent
: .. I am sure you are aware of the
Situation within
~ Social Secur·
:~ system that f,
·iJlvolves Amerl~ born in what
they call the
Notch Years.
Now Notch Ye- A ' ~H~
ars Involve people who were born
~tween the years 1917 through
1921. Now this Is what It means If
you were horn during the above
named period.
. Your social security benefits will
be an average of up to 24 percent
l.j;:SS than if you were born in years
~her than the Notch Years accord·
ltig to a letter that was directed to
members of the National Commit·
~to Preserve Social Security and
l\7edicare.
• The letter was written by James
R'oosevelt. United States Congress·
~ (retired ) Washington. chair·
tfian of the National Committee to
~IVe Social Security and Medi·
care. Roosevelt Is the son ol the late
ltranklln D. Roosevelt.
.::Roosevelt is urging prople to
wJte to their Representative in
Congress and urge him or her to
suppon Congressman Edward R
Roybal's bill, HR 1917. which would
t1!store thousands of dollars In
benefits to milUons of Social
security beneficiaries. Suppon of
Oils btU could restore lost bpnefit s to
Jl!!rsons born durtng the Notch
X:ears. 1917-21 according to
fiOOsevelt.
. Just thought I would pass this bit
d! Information on in case you would
\t3DI to wrlt e to Rep. ClarenCl'
MU!er.

l"

Clemens provided 11.
"1 like pressure moments be·
cause I like to see that I can come
through and show people what l
l)ave," Clemens said Saturday
after becoming the majors' first
' 20-game winner this season, pitch~g the Red Sox to a 7.J victory over
.the Cleveland Indians.
The victory kept the Red Sox 3%
games ahead of second- place
Toronto In the American League
East
"Ifelt Uke I was throwing the ball
well and moving it around today,"
said Clemens. "It was nice that I
could wtn It In Fenway In front tt all
the home fans . But my next start Is
against Minnesota and I'll have to
go out running In the streets to get
ready for It"
Clemens, 20-4, fired a four- hitter
over seven Innings. He fanned 11
and walked ooly one before leaving
due to a bUster on his pitching
thumb. He became Boston's first
~game winner since Dennis Eckersley In 19'78 and ralsetl his leagueleadingstrlkeouttotalto:1Jl7. TheCy
Young Award candidate also became the Red Sox' first pitcher tn
go over the 200 mark in strikeouts
since Luis Ttant In 1973.
"I'm pleased that this milestone
is over for him," said Boston Man a
·g· e r John McNamara. "We had
(lmely h!ttlilg today, that's some.!hlng that we haven't done In a

plus); 21o3 p.m., jazz; 3to4 p.m.,liltennedlate baBel.
Fee Is $24, except pre-ballet, which Is $1.8. Advance
resis(ratlon Is needed lor class size llmllallolll.
Contact (614)«ff.3834 ilr lnfonnatlon.

:pre
ballet (age 4-6); lto2p.m., heglnningbaDel (age'l
•..••

teachers of the school are very
proud of their school and to show
their appreciation they are holding
open house Tuesday from 6:30 to
7:30p.m.
Following a tour or the school
there will be a meeting of the PTO.
All parents and interested per·
sons are cordially invited to attend
both events.

./'i"-

Since New York Clothing House
closed, Pomeroy residents have
lost a location to pay their water
bills.
Torn Reed, a member of the
Pomeroy Board of Public Affairs,
announced that beginning Tuesday
residents of Pomeroy may pay
their water b!Us at EIIErteld 's
Department Store office. The &lt;illce
Is bcated on the second floor.
Since the cpeningof school. 9:lme
ct tiE yrunger set have come up
with some jewels.
Gayton Crow, seven year old son
of Danny and Carol Crow, Pomeroy, began his first year at
Pomeroy Elementary.
Following his return llJme the
fi rst day Clayton was asked, "how
did you like school?"
" l had a good time but I'm not
going bac k. it's too bng."
Bill and Mary Porte-'s grand~
daughter. Kara , a first year
kinderganen student at Racine, got
on the wrong bus the first day of
school.
It se&lt;'s as tllJugh there are two
busses tha t transport the kindergarten students with a kinderganen
teacher on each bus.
u.ihilc theywere loadlngtlE buses
the phone ran g and MiSs Jean. one
of the kinderganen teachers went
to answer the phone . Miss Susie, the
other kindergarten teacher, think·
ing everything was ok, got on the
bu s that Kara was on and off tlEy
went.
When the drtver had delivered all

.......,

-·.understand Syracuse Elemen·
tary School Is really shining. (Inside
t!f!t Is) as a result of ex tensive
Painting and cleaning.
':Jim Lawrence. prtncipal and the

'

the students trere was Kara and
Miss Susie. He asked Kara where
she was to get off and Kara told him
she was togo to Helen Holter's. The
driver stated that she (Holter) was
oot on hiS rou te.
,
Miss Susie called Bob Beegle,
supervising principal, and asked
what Ill do and he told her to bring
the yru ngster back to the school
and he would take of the situation.
Beegle (llt her in hl' car and drove
rer to her destinatiJn.
When she was talking to her
grandmother (Mary Porter) by
phone that evening, Mary asked her
about her day. Kara ex pained what
happened and Mary asked tt she
was frightened and Kara said "oh
no. Mr. Beegle was nlce and I
entertained him." "What did you
do" Mary asked. "I sang to him"
Kara answered.
"What did you sing?"
"I'm Glad I Got Stuck With You ."
Kids are something- but oh how
sweet.

. ""'

'

Toey Armas provided the dfenslve support lor Clemens with a
three-run horner In the fifth.
"He's the !J!!st In the league that's
why he's :.»4,", saftl , Cleveland
outfielder Mel HalL "He struck me
out a lew times. He had good control
d his fastball. I cOOldn't have hit if!
knew It was coming."
Calvin Schiraldi relieved at the
start or ttl! eighth and pitched the
final two Innings.
Holding a 4-2 advantage In the
fifth, ttl! Red Sox added three runs
off loser PhU Nlekro, 10.10. Jim
Rlce and Don Baylor drew on~t
walks before Armas smashed a 1-0
pitch for his 11th homer of tJxo
season.
Boston jumped to a 4-0 lead In the
second. Baylor led cit with a single
to right and rnwed to third on
Armas' double down the left-lleld
line before Dave Henderson walked
to load the bases. .After Rlch
Gedman Uned to short, Spike Owen
grounded rut to score Baylor.
Wade Boggs tJxon sllced a single
to left tl score Armas. Henderson
also scored on the play, rollldlng
with catcher Chris Banoo. Indians
Manager Pat Corrales argued the
call · along with his catcher, but
umpire DUI'WQ9d Merrill Ill led that
Henderson reached ttl! (iate lrlore
!lando brought his glove oown lor
.tJxo tag.
After ,Marty Barrett walked, Bill
BuCkner grounded a double down
the right-field Une to score Boggs
and make It 4-0.

00

$75

PARISIENNE
leSABRES
PARI AVENUES

00·

RIVIERA
/

Fly-in breakfast
set in Pt. Pleasant

tll!lr first hit and cut the saoreto4-2
In ttl! !ltth. With one out, Pat Tabler
bit a routlile groullder to second
baseman Barret~ but first baseman Budmer was too .far off tJxo
bag and Clemens dldn t cover In
time, allowtng Tabler to reach with
a gift single. After Clemens tanned
Brook Jacoby, Carmm Castillo
smacked the first pitch into the
center·field seats lor his sixth
horner of lhe season.
Tabler's RBI single In tJxo
seventh SCI)red Hall to cut the score
tn 7-3.
.
Blue Jays 8, Twins I
TORONTO (UP!) -Joe Johnson
scattered five singles rNer 5 1-3
innings and Manny Lee went J.lor-4
and drove In three runs Saturday to
lead Ire Toronto Blue Jays to tJxoir
season·hlgh seventh ·ronsecutlve
victory, an 8-1 rout dtlE Mlnnesota
Twins. ·
By notching tJxolr 13th victory In
tll!lr last 16 games, the Blue Jays
remained 31h games behind the
first-place Boston Red Sox In the
American League East
Johnoon raised his record to 4·1
since being acquired from Atlanta
on July 6. He aUowect one run,
struck rut three and did not walk a
batter. Overall on the season the
rtght-hand!r Is 10-8.
Dennis Lamp, the third Toronto
!Xtcher, pitched three siJJtout Innlngs to pick up his !I€COnd save.
The 21·year·old Lee, called up
from Syracuse Aug. 11, has drtven
In a run In lour consecutive games.

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•Dark-Lite black matrix picture tube
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•Random access digital tun ina
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•Stereo/SAP adaptable - 111quires
optional stereo decoder and home
s1ereo system
•Infrared remote control with Quick
View and Mute
•Room light monitor
•Automatic tine tuning
•VHF/ UHF antennas

idenour

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KING SET lEG. •mt.oo Ill Stt~lll

qualifying to earn the 21st position .
"Starting In too middle of the
pack will ke!IP me pretty bu sy when
ttl! racE&gt; starts Sunday," said
Earnhardt. who led 335 of li7laps to
win theTranSouth:mat Darlington
In Aprtl.
"This old racetrack can bite ynu .
Once the race settles down and we
hit a caution flag or two I think we'll
he right up therewith the willners."
Earnhardt said his Chevy was
repaired "just tike new" from the
qualltylng crash.
Darrell Waltrip. who drove his
Cheilrolet to victory In last week's
Busch :m In Bristol, Tenn .. said he
hopes the momentum pays ct1 on
Darllngton 's treacherous 1.lJ6.mUe
ovaL

usual, defeated Katby HoiVath, 64.
6-2, although she saw her seiVe
broken twice In the opening set.
Third seed Stall Graf, mean·
~. rontlnued to play well as she
claimed a 6-1, 1-1! victory over
Beverly Bowes, who was forced to
retire because or a vtrallnfectlon.
Graf ~s yielded a single game In
each ot·her three matches. and has
been m court a mere 1 hour and 00
minutes, causing her tD complain,..
"I want tn have a tougher mateh.
In sharp nontrast, fourth seed
Stefan Edberg strusgled for 3 hours
and 24 mliluteis before subduing

By MAB'DN lADER
UP1 Spor18 Writer
NEW YORK (UP!)- Top seeds
lvau Lend! and Martina Navratil·
rNa enjoyed pleasant worllouts In
warm sunshine Saturday, progress·
lng comfortably to tJxo fourth round
of ttl! u .s. Open.
Lend!, ttl! · defending men's
champion, admitted to an attack d
ner.ves playing against a man he
JII!Yer bli!l seen before, and he had
1D tight from behind In the third set
, betlre beating Jonas Svensson of
SWeden, ~. 6-3, 64.
Nilvratllova, not quite as sharp as
E.c:lusl.,. mllltr

ot

''Anytime you'v«&gt; woo a race, Iat)
the next event you go to people
watch yoo a little closer," Waltrip
said. "It makes the crew feel good .
II makes ttl! driver feel good.
"Anytime you feel good tren you
run lEtter. I guess that's all got
psychological advantages."
Defending Winston Cup and
Southern 500 champion BUI Elllon
quamled his Ford at 14th lor this
year's event. Elliott took the
Champion Spark Plug 400 at
Michigan International Speedway
earlier thlis month.
Elliott's Southern !iOO victory a
year ago also earned him ttl! $1
mUUon W!ri'ston bonus. paid to any
driver who wins three of tre sport's
"big four" races.

This year no driver has won mort&gt;
than Oil{' or the "big four. " But
Winston tlll offers $100,100 to a
driver wllJ wins two of the four
events.
Daytona !iOO winner Geoff IJo.
dine, Winston !iOO winner Bobby
Allison or Coca-Cola 600 winner
Earnhardt could take the $100,001
bonus with a victory Sunday.
"There are three dlffe!'Eilt drlv·
ers with three different driving
styles eligible lor this ($l00,100). but
there are 15 guys capable of
winning too race. It's notgolngtobe
just a three-car race," said Bod!ne.
whose Chevy will set In the no. 2
p:lSitlon across from Richmond in
Sunday's race.

Ramesh Krishnan, 7-6 c7-5), 3-6, &amp;4,
4-6, &amp;4.
After the two men exchanged
treaks In tre fourth and fifth games
of the ftnal set, Edberg ended tJxo
marathon with a break ln. ttl! lOth
game with a crusling rNerhand
that bounced 10 rows deep Into the
stands.
Edberg went In ttl! net 154 times
tn only 20 lor his Indian owonent:
Edberg won !Xllnts m 85 of his
approaches to 14 l:lr Krishnan.
Eighth seed Henrt Leconte, a
seml!lnallst at both the French
Open and Wimbledon, won his tiJird

round match from 1\mos Mansdort.
4-6. 6-3. 7-5. 6-2.
AD of the S('('()cd women to play
tJxolr third round contests durtng
ttl! alterman session were succrsstul. with only No.8 Bonnie Gadusck
forced tn go three ~s. She
rNercame Helen Kelesl of Canada.
6-7 (4-7), 6-2,6-2.
Also reaching the fourth round
were No. 11 Gabriela Sabatini, No.
13 Stephanie ~hi' aild No. 15 Kathy
Jordan. Sabatini beat Katerlna
Maleeva, 7-5. 6·2. Rehe el!ntinate,1
Annabel Croft. 6-2. &amp;-3. and Jordan
defeated Elizabeth Minter, 6-l. 6-3.

the

''

Chlllemi, Dickinson lead' Rail ·Charity Classic
. .
SPRJ~,o~Gm:w. Ill. (UPlf -

.ChU!eml birdied live hOles on ttl! · starting timeS and they said
wlndler, drlercondltbns tater In too
dtly wooltl make !COring more
diltt'ult. •AbOUt I1W-Iblnls d tile
• !be U)O.OOl Rall Chartty ·Classic birdies on her front nine.
field was !IIIII on the course.
Saturday.
.
"! played very consistently,"
"The greens, when I played, were
Chris Jobnlon and KatbY Young DickinsOn laid. "I missed mly two very true," said DickinSOn. "H you
· were two llblta back with ll9s In the gri!eD5 and flO! up and oown (for could read .the .}Jreak, )QI rould
56-hole LPGA tournament at ttl! pari on one d those."
make tte · p~tts ."
pat·72 RaD Golf Club.
Both ~ leaders had mol'nlng
Chllieml, who has wm onlY

.

S49.95° sn
S59950 sn
$79950·sn
$999 50 liT

~ ¢hlneml and Judy Dlckln· frOnt Jlln!: and one hole on tJxo back
'ilon lhot a palrd5-·ilnder·par67s ID . and had .just O!le bogey. Dickinson
!lbare tJxo early finl·round lead In also g111 of! to a fast start with four

'

\-

,,

myself."
Infante agrees,
"In a sense. you tend tollveout your own desires bl
ttl! plays you formulate," he said. "You can watch
ttem untold and feel good about it. It' s as If you threw
ttl! touchOOwn pass or ran l:lr ttl! !lrst'down."
·
Stallings, like the otters, rmUzes he Is under
pressure to succeed. In addition, ttl! restdthe NFL Is
watching to see If these speclaUsts can Improve their
teams' fortunes.
"I expect aU ttl! responsibility will be mine," ll!
saki. "I also expect tobeunfera mlcroscopethewrole
year. I think It will be worse for Buddy, since
everybody knows ttl! success ttl! Bears have had .
Hank's In a situation where the tans want a better
season. and that's ttl! case In' St. I.ouls as well.
"Uncly's not a.bead coach, but be !1141ht as well be.
He's got to get the most out of (quatterback) Bernie
Kosar and ttl! rest of- ttl! Browns' offense."
Are the days ol. ttl! an,iuwnd coach gone?
. "! think so," said Btlllough. "Nowadays, their
aren't any Vince Lombardls arourr:l who can
completely dominate a team and mold It to their.
personalltles.Coaches llke myself take what UteY't'e •
best at and try to gUide ttl! team that way. We just
hope It worlls."

:IKk ~upporl11 · m1llrtn

CARESS BACK SUPPORTER

TV &amp; APPLIANCES
GAS SERVICE

specialist trend

Lendl, Martina advance in U.S. Open

SLEEP EXPERTS

LUXORA 676
TWIN SET
FULL SET
'
QUEEN SET
KING SET

Chicago Cubs.
Winner Doyle Alexander. 4-:i,
pitched seven Innings, allowing
three runs. Gene Garber pitched
two Innings for his 21st save. Cubs
pitcher Rick Sutcllffe, 4-12, gave up
lour runs In 6 2.J Innings.

••

DARLINGTON, S.C. (UPil
Tim Richmond , who will be on tJxo
pole In Sunday's Southern~. says
Dale Earnhardt may still pose the
biggest challenge despite Earnhardt 's starting position 20 oars
back.
"I really don't think Earnhardt
can hav~ pressure put on him,'' said
Richmond, who clocked 158.489
mph In his Chevrolet to set a record
lor SoutJxorn 500 quautylilg. "He
does just Uke I do. We go and do wr
absolute best"
Earnhardt, points leader lor this
year's Winston Cup NASCAR
championship, missed the top 20
when he slammed Into the third; tum wall In first- day qualifying
Thursday. But ll! led second-day

This is the one t~at will make you take notice.
Specltl $199°0 sn
Spnltl $299°0 m
Special $399°0 lEt
Spulal $4 99 00 1n

Braves 4, Cubs 3
ATlANTA (UP!l - A bases·
loaded walk to Ken .Oberkfell and a
checked swing Infield hit by Dale
Murphy drOve home the tying and
go-ahead runs In the seventh Inning
Saturday, rallying tJxo Atlanta
Braves to a 4-3 victory over the

Richmond in pole slot for Southern 500

Preferred Sleeping
II G. '500.00 m

August 31, 1986

FIRST TO WIN 20 GAMES -lblon's JloK'!r Clemens whips
to
home plate during lint Inning acllon Ill Fenway Park Saturd"
afternoon. Clemens is lhe lint maJor league ba8eball pitcher to win ID
games this seasoo. DespKe leaving lbe game In the seventh lnmnc,
Clemens was credited with a 7-3 vlctoryoverthevlsltlnglncl.llls. (UPI)

areas as well.
the four men - dlsclpUne.
"I'm a defense-oriented fellow. and that's how my
"I won't put up with any slacking ott," says the
team Is going to be. Fa~ Instance, we host
52·year· old Ryan. "For rur plan to work, everybody
Phlladelphla on Nov. 2, and rm really looking
must be worlllng hard at all times.
forward to seeing what Buddy's oone. It should be
"I dl;ln't see any l'ell$0n why ttl! Eagles' defense
Interesting to compare our defenses."
can't be as good as ttl! Bears. AD It takes as
But the quartet at coaches readily admits concern
dedication. If a player's ni&gt;t wUllng tn give all or
for
areas other than his specialty. Though Infante's
himself to this, I don't IOOdlfy lhe system. I get rtd or
responsibilities are limited to the dlense, the
ttl! player."
52-year-old Bullough says ttl! signing of U.S. Foot baD
Infante expressed sbnllar tbougllts.
League Jim Kelly "makes things easier."
"Frolli wbat I kmw of Buddy's system, II does have
"Since Buddy, Gene and myself are head roaches.
!IOIIIelhlng In conunon )'lltb ttl! way I see tJxo cifense
ol. worl!lng .,.. It's compllc:a.ted," saki ~te. 46. ,. ' . we have to have an overall .vlew of tootbaD,': said
~ ·~t 1'1!8llY rneells you ltave 'IIi ~de run . BulloiJgh. "Just because we're del&gt;nsive-orlented
doesn't mean IJuiOw1ng the football Is GtEek to us."
coni~ntratlon of eveeyone Involved:' You can't have
Curtollsly, the four coaches have ooly two years of
1111YboclY around with shQrt atiEIIUin spans. But Uke
Buddy, I think ttl! Browns can have as IY'IIch ·success
NFL playing experlence among tJxom. Bullough was
a Uneman for two seasons lor Green Bay. R;yan and
as ttl! Benpls did with this offense. You just noid ttl!
Stalllngs never played In ttl! pros willie Infante spent
right l&gt;leces to the puzzle ...
a couple of seasons with Hamilton of ttl! Canadian '
The coaches also agreed that bringing tll!lr
Football League.
distinctive specialties tn their teams will lead to more
"I don't see myself as a frustrated athlete/' says
lnteresUng competition.
Ryan. "There are times when any guy who didn't p.ay
"I don't see anythlngwrongwithanyonevlewlngSt.
professionally wishes he had. Now there are times I
Louis as bavlng a strong defensive h!!Gkfleld," says
wish
I was ll years younger, II mly ID try out things
StaUJngs, :il. "That's because I believe that having a
strength In one area can lead tn buDding up otter

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Spolis Writer
CLEVElAND (UP!) -The CO~K:hlng trend In ttl!
NFL Is akin to that In medicine. The general
practitioner, that "old famUy doctor,'' has been
replaced IIese days by speclallsts.
And just as the phone book lslllled witheye,earand
throat experts, so too are NFL coaching staffs
boasting defensive experts and offensive wizards.
Buddy Ryan probably is· ttl! best example d this
new phllosophy. As Phlladelphla's new head coach.
he now faces the chall!!ngl! ol. Installing ttl! vaunted
" defenae he devised for the Super Bowl champion
Chicago Bears. ·
'
·
·
Lindy Infante, who revitalized Cincinnati's aertal
and ground attack, lsex~ted to help Cleveland as Its
new oUenslve coordinator.
Hank Bullough, who replaced Kay Stepll!nson as
Buffalo's head coach a year ago, came to ttl! Bills as
tJxolr defensive coordinator.
l
GeneStalUngs spent 14 years as a Dallas coach, and
Is g!vm the credit by Tom Landry for making the
!;:owboys' defensive backfield one of ttl! NFt'sbest.
Stalling hopes ID do the same In his first year as St.
Louis' head coach.
' There Is a common thread In tJxo conversations of

PT. PLEASANT - the 12th
annu7al Fly-In Breakfast and opne
houseolthePt. Pleasant Composite
Squadron Civil Air Patrol, wUI.be
Monday at the CAP headquarters
and hangar at the Mason County
Airport .
The public Is invited to the event,
which begins at 8 a.m .. concluding
at 1 ~m_ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___l_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __;__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___;_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
,--;__

TWIN SET
FULL SET
QUEEN SET
KING SET

V.O
13-10, lor a 3-0 lead in the second
With one out, Buck Martinez and
Ron Shepll!rd singled and advanced on Willie Upshaw's groundnut Lee skipped an artificial turt
triple over the head of charging
·center fielder Kirby Puckett. and
Tony Fernandez followed with a
single to give Toronto a J.O lead.
Minnesota scored In the ftfth on
Greg Gagne's lnfleld single .
Toronto sent 10 batters to the
plate and took a 7-1lead in the fifth.
A single by CUff Johnson followed
by walks tn George Bell and Jesse
Barfield loaded the bases with one
out Martinez ripped a two-run
single down the tine in lat field ,
making the score 5-1.
Roy Lee Jackson relieved and
walked pinch-hitter Uoyd Moseby
to re-load too bases. Upshaw
walked to force in a run and Lee's
Infield single scored another, giving
Toronto a 7-llead.
The Blue Jays added a run in the
seventh on Fernandez's RBI single.
Mel.~ 6 Dodgers 3
NEW YORK (UP!) _ Rick
AguJJera pitched a seven-hitter and
delivered a tie-breaking, two-run
single Saturday to lead tre New
York Mets to a 6-3 victory over the
Los Angeles Dodgers.
Agullera, 7-6, allowed all three
Dodger runs over the first eight
lnnliJgs before being removed for a
pinCh-hitter. /He struck, out seven
and did not Issue a walk. Roger
McDowell pitched the nlnth for his
18th save.

Buddy Ryan leads new

And so it goes.

~

Section

~N ~~~~~...'.fin_~; 1\!~!~!!!~T!!ll~,
t)le momentum of the charging
Toronto Blue Jays and Ro~r

~t::'DA!~CE CLASSES SET- The FrEnch Art Colony
BIIIIOUJICed dance classes to begin Sept. 20 with
.~r Nancy Seckinger. They run lor six weeks

·- ·

times- ientintt

f

•

. ·- ·- .... .

~

•O.

£I •&gt;

' '

•I •

. .
'

S16,981lll far this year, said she bas
been swinging her clubs better and
relaxing rmre on the cour:;e.
Pat Bradley, the tnur's leading :
money winner and runaway leader
In most statistics. had nines d U
·
for74,
Nancy Lopez. making ber lhlr9 '
appearance after givln!l' birth to a :
chU4, was at 71.
. .'·;

�.,
.

.

.~;-

August 31, 1'86

. At.JgUJt 31, 1986

Ohio- Point Plea1811t, W. Va .

~~~. en~ hex, defeats Pt. Pleasant Big
'ijlackS, 33-18·, · ;
run~
~11'1
:'· ' By •

.WISECUP

and another 13 Y!lnl scoring
.
Reduce
, Meigs coach Charley Chanrey.
· 'l'lnieiii?O"'N'Siall
Eason, capping a seven-play, 43'
"Our~lmP{O"ed, trernend·
"We lmew Bordman and Kin- ,
. PI'. PL'E~- ::'TheY owEd short punt for anotiE' six-pointer.
yard drive following a 16 yard Big wsiY. bycuttlngdo"'!! miStakes and nalrd (Charlle) wou_id be. an .
:liS.one." sald Pt. Pl~t coach and stopped three Pt. Pleasant
Black punt gave M!!i!IS Its' early _ elliDinatbll pen~. We felt we atmload tJr us to · stop:. PI!!Dt
~Steve satford alter watching Meigs drives with two Interceptions and a
lead. Qulll1erback Mike' Bartrwn . muld li'KlYe the ball and our long mnsumed a lot of valuable lime
!Ired a t\ro-pblnt ronverslt&gt;n pass to range scoring took tiE Jl'essureoff. (with Its' running game~ when they
lwlllp his Big Blacks, 33-18, behind lrllllant third quarter goal Une
the!our·toucb~ Pe!'fonnance d stand. .
·
mdJ. R. Kitchen on theserondro. Point is dll!lcuh to run the ball did score,' added tiE vetern Meigs
.senior tallbacl\ ~lieS' EaS!xl. snap~ Have Beelllley
Cornerback Phil King biter- agalhst because thl!y blltz so much, coach.
M·plng a Maral!dl!f ~losing
The goal Une-staA\1 C(lU)d have
ceptEd a Roger Roush pass at the- so we knew we ha[l' to JlaS!i," said
~linued on C-6
r-~lmlk tothelrcn..rtver~ In the · blien the key to the bail glime. With
Mejgs 33 to s~ Point's first ,..=....:...:..=::.::...;.:..:...::.::;...::,:
. ::.::·~._,....-__.....;:_ _ _ ____
1 ~season open« here Friday.
Meigs up 21-12, the Big Blacks
sustained driVe. Meigs piomptly
~~~~.,
't : ~igs used the-horne run ball for
marchEd 64 yards to the )'4elgs
drove to the PP 23 be!o~ losing tiE
IIIII MIDDLI!I'OBT RECBf;ATION COMMISSION FALL CLASSIC
~. twbqulck scores, ca_pllallzed on two three when Ryan Bordman, who
ball on dcl)ws.
DATE: ·we&lt;~neodlly, S&lt;!Ptember 31hrUII!Il
7.
· · Sunday, Septe!nber 7, at ·Middl&lt;!(&gt;ort, Ph to
Point Pleasant temporarlly got
Entry Dtaodllne: Tuesday, S&lt;!Ptl!niber 1 5:111 P.M.
back In lhe game when Bordman
Entry Fee: Sln&amp;les: $6.111
1 can &lt;t bills
j
galltomakeoped !Qit1yar
In
cano!
ot
balls. Tho
4 dsbuthrt
uwu
w nerst _s
unu.. . . ., mnand thelostrs taketheus~can
..,., s.
• '
p1~v after tiE ldCk-olf, Bartrum
Mak~ ehec:ti pa bleto: MIDDLJiPORT REX:RE ATION COMMISSION
·•• ~CINE- Two first half scores,
-., the speedy Kitchen deep over
Mall dlecks to: ·
Brtan
Coo'de,Ohio
M6 Sycamore
The !ley to a p anlher~tmymay ""ys
"" rea Uy gave 100 ..........,.t
.-~.. · we found
Mlddl&lt;!(&gt;ort,
t5760
·Street
'1, Including an in-yard fumble recov- have mme In tiE third frame, when had a lot of mommtum alter the the middle for a 78 yard scoring
Parllcillants 'ohould report to the Mlddl&lt;!(&gt;ort Coorts 15 mlnures before the
""'runba.ck In the second quarter Its st'""'' defense withstood a first smre, but that !I) yard run took "'~v. Paul Dailey's kick made 11
srart otthl-lr nrst II!Bieh .
"'&amp;.J
"''6J'
team W
1--.,
For reelstrationa arid Stantn£ tlmt: Call 992·nl4 or 992·5523 .
. pa,aed the Ross-Southeastern grueling drive by tiE Tornadoes. abawleaytosomhangesin the-re~~ughere anstDdl 21-6.
AAU12evmlntot~·~·•kmlntwtrro.u'1:c ,awed. 6all AU I wtll~ll It«! I tO
Panthers to a 13-6 non-league Marching tiE distance ri. the !leld,
uu
Big llac ... Score 4 ~..,
po t •· rea or
~pay . 11 . payers
~ m
oa
...:..!:_
that
1
t
•
the
kids u
JUio
· ~minutewarm·up
beforeea~h m~tch .
~ tnUmPh over the Southern Torna- Southern fell s!Drt on a fourth and
says a 0 •Or
·
The pp bruising grouild game
All decisions ottlle tw 111 aml'!lt director wm be nnoL
Z d0!15 Ihere Friday eYt!lllng In tiE Inches situation that COuld have
"We marched tJE baJi downfleld came allveln IJE !lnaJ1burmlnutes
Please return bottom portlon wtth you r E!l lry fee or call lo enter.
• season opener !or both cl~Jbs.
rem a Orst down at the me }ard when we had to,but coulm't Sot&gt;re. of the arst half as the lJg Blacks
......................................... .. ..... · .. .......... .. ···· ······· ···
·· ........ ..
~ Few statistics~ Including names Une. The Pant!Er goal-One stand That was one key In the game. We Wt!llt li7 yanls In 10 plays, Bord·
Please ent er me In Ihe following events:
~ for the SoutlEastem squad, were was sucdessfulandSHSneverfully also played a much ImprovEd man'sl0yardrunmaklnglt21·12at
NANE .. .. ..... ..... ......... .... .
.
recoverEd.
tE!enslve game."
lhe hall.
., ava,llable.
~ · SoUtllf1rn was Or! and running In
Tornadoes' Junior running ace
Southern travels to Fort Frye this
A 23 yard scoring toss !rom
ADDR~S ...... ... ...... ....... .
,, ~ .op,enlng minutes of tbe game Pete Roush was InjurEd late In the week.
srATIITIO!
Roush to end Mike Barton nar· .
~ wiiJ! a: ~t:x-play scoring drive. Scott garrie, but is expectEd to see action Deparlment
s SE rowed It to27-l8witha minute togo
TELEPHONE NUMBER ........ ... .. .... ...... .
: liliTts ram~ 34 yards for lhe again week.Roush lEd all rusrers First downs .... .. .. ... ....... .... ... 12 9 1n tiE third period. Eason's three
CHECK EVENTS:
·• stiasOn's toucbdown.
with 103 yanls on'al carries, while Ya rds ru shing ... .... .. .. .......... 235 :JJO yard 9Camper over left end wound
M('fl 'J Singles ........... .
Men's li Singles
;~ Butrls' run culminatEd a ttl-yard sppiDmoJ! Danny Gheen ramliEd ~~~!!f:~IS
~ up the game's scoring.
Men 's Ooubll'S ........... ...
Partner ... ........ ... .
:~ drive that lelt Southern with a EH&gt; 13-62. BluTis added 61br42 and Rick Intercepted by... ................ . o
o
Senior defensive end Jesse How- ·
Ml'n
's
!i
Doubles
...
7
25 ard played standout a tEfenslve
Partner ............ ... .. ... .. ..
1, lead as the snap lor 'the PAT kick Sellers 4-29.
Yards passing .....
.. ... · · ·
24
22
Wmen
's
Singles
..........
..
i_ was bobblEd at the 9:46 mark.
Sout!Ern had 12 llrst downs and ~~~i:.'~~
~ game, leadlngMelgswithnlnesolo
Pa rtnPr .. .......... .. .. .. .. .
· Moments I a t e r Ross · 2,l; yards ru shing to win rut In loose Lost tumbles ........ .... ............ 1
2 tackles while teammate Jason
Women' s Doubles .... .. .. .
!i!kll!tbeast:ern took a 7-6 lead .
departments. Unofficially Ross- Pen allies. .. ...... .... ......... , .. . 6-!'6 s.O-~ Bush had eight with Dalley and
Partner ........ .......... ..
lntermedlau.• Men .........
quarter's endbothclubs'shad Sout!Eastern netted :lJO yards and P unts ...... ·· ........... . · .. ....... 1' 35
Eason adding sevt!ll each. King
Intermedla t(' Women . ...
those pre-game jitters, and had 9 arst downs.
mntrtlli!Ed with five and Bartrum
llegtnners ................... ..
to play much better football.
Mlklre ArmCshris
caught IIE~one EHS Sous.;o~~IUt...-." . ...... ... 7 6 0 11-!3 and Olris Smith had four apiece.
developed a sound pass om
.81out r seven Southern ..... ........ ....... ..... 6 o o 11- 6
game, stea~
another
score as moving
Burrts ~rds.
Soutll?rn tacklers were headed r-------------------------------------------l-----~----------------------------~------rambled to the Panther 20 by Tim Smith, Tony Connolly, and
Une where the ball was Scott Burris with 9 each, while Tim
lose on a hard hit from an Wlllls, Dan Gheen, and Crage
Panther. The Pantrer Brown each had 7 apiece.
controlled the ball on one
Scott Burris and Chris Stout had
and won a fool race to liE fumble recoveries for the
iDIIIICOIIMf'MJTO AIR1'S ii
Une for tiE game's final score. Tornadoes.
The PAT was void, but Ross COach Bill Hensler slatEd , "The
~!!!!!!:!!!!! a J3-6
tiE

Pt. Pleasant fumbles for two rrore
touchdowns, took advantage o! a

t
h
t
tran e.rs 0 n

: D

'

·-

.

.r

gainEd l82 yards In 21 carries, was
drUietUoratwo-yard!OSSI)D!ourth
and goal. Two plays later, Eason,
woo led Meigs with 141 yanls on17
carrtes, scored the third of hiS four
\:r,n·s on a 92 jaunt Up the middle to
giVe Meigs a 2'7·12lead.
The Marauders never trailed as
the Chanreymen rolled to a 14-0
first periOd IEad,.Aflveyardrun by
Eason, capping art eight-play, 41
yard drive after PPHS had fumblEd
on their first play trom scrimmage,

Uons score twice ·in final
13 seconds to beat Bengals

.--------..1.';·.-----.. . .

d
1
0 rna oes' 3-6

r'f1

.,.~ OneeMpeigsa,y~ !~

f

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Eaehaks"1.~11~.:::~~~nd~~;',~':! !n'/l~~~~~~~e ~f!WI

~

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lI

:: :

::::::

BOARDMAN SCORES - Pomt Pleasant's Ryan
Boardman (42) races Into endzone lor a first half
touchdown against visiting Meigs Friday night.

i

::::::: i

$3.00

..

REBATE
MTH
P'Uf~CtiAIE

..•

Marauders shown above In this Dennh Shumate
·· photo are Terry Fields (40): Jesse Howard (83) and
Huey Eason (&lt;14) .

,.

lloyd advances; traffic ousts pair
NEW YORK (UPI) ..:.. Chris · Marslkova.
tiE No. 81.-ranked Motta In tiE
Evert Uoyd needed only 35 minutes
The Czechoslovakian woo Jl!st 14 second-round meetingg because he
on the fourth day of the U.S. Open to points and made :18 unforced errors, had watchEd Lendl'sserond· roulll
Win a singles match, whlle John versus only three by lhe women's victory over Robert Seguso.
McEnroe was dismissed from the No. 2 seed In Evert Uoyd' s EH&gt;. 6-0
'"Ibnlght I really tried playing
men's dOubles tournament even victory.
my bes\ because I saw Lend! the
quicker.
"Nothing was going rtght for ot!Er night. He was just pla,ylng
- W!En McEnroe and partner her," said Evert Lloyd, winner of winners all over liE place against
Peter Fleming failed to appear six Open titles. "I think s!E was Seguso. I said: 'Well, If IE's playing
Frtday within 15 -allottEd inlnutes, IntimidatEd."
that way, I also have to put the gear
they were defaulted from their
Saturday's featurEd matches In· higher.'
··
! · scheduled first-round doubles eluded No. 1 Ivan Lend! playing
''I abnost played perfect, even
: · match.
Jonas Svensson and women's top trough ·.Motta is not the best
:
Heavy traffic from Long Island seed Martina Navratllova playing opponent," said lhe 17· year-old
; . and tiE rapid conclusion of two Kathleen Hmvath.
West German.
) · earller Grandstand Court matches
In lhe second of Friday's featurEd
During t~ second set, the Center
"': combinEd to thwart the IItle hopes evening singles matches, men'sNo. Court crowd began a stadium-style
!: of the three-time Open champions. 3 Boris Becker eliminatEd Casslo "wave" which Becker applauded
: . "Whaldoyousay? I suppose It's a Motta ri. Brazil 6-3, EH&gt;. 6-2. Becker after Its end.
: : stupid thing," lamented Fleming, said he was mentally preparEd for
•t who turned down a place in tiE
: • singles draw to concentrate on
;-: doubles. "Obviously we cut It too
t: close."
• . Each player was fined $1.(00 for
: ' failing c(O appear for tiE matcjt.
: · They arrived at 2: 21 p.m., six
: . minutes after the time limit ended,
' to McEnroe' s dismay.
"He couldn't understand wl\)t we
, • couldn't have waited longer,"
; : relatEd supeiVlsor Ken Farrar.
: • "He never rwlly questioned us to
~Teconslder. He J1111t kept . saying,
!•' How ~d you do tiU? Why
: rcouliln 't you walt longer?' T)tlngs a
~: that nature.
'
·~But when •you bend the rules to
':favor a player, you 're cheating the
; :other players," he said.
CORNER BEU and EASTERN AVE.
;- Only tiE spectators might have
O:!elt cheated during Evert Uoyd's
(Next Door To
Cor Wash)
: night match wtth Regina
OHIO
••

ByRlCKVANSANT
CINCINNATI (UPl) - The
DetroltLlonsplckedupmomentum
lor the regular season with a frantic
!lnlsh In a .Jl-20 win over tiE
Cincinnati Bengals In a preseason
!1nale Friday night.
Trailing :ID-9 going Into the last
quarter, the Lions scorEd two
touchdowns In the tlna113 seconds
to pull out the victory.
Fullback Scott WUllams ran one
yard for a touchdown with 13
seconds remaining and nose tackle
Eric WUJlarns returned a fumble 29
yards for a m on the !Ina! play of
lhe game to tum what looJted like a
sure Detroit defeat Into ·a Lions'
win.
"We were lucky to do liE things
we got done;" admitted Detroit
read roach Darryl Rogers. "But, to
finish the last preseason game like
this means our players will he a lot
happier and wW work a lot harder
next week to get ready for oor
regular season opener. "
Detroit, which starts the regular
season at Minnesota on Sept. 7,
finished exhibition play with a 2-2
record. Cincinnati, which opens
regularplayatKansasC!tyooSept.
7, was 1-3 trr preseason play.
The Lions, woo fallEd to score a
touchdown tiE llrst three quarters

andhadooly!leldgoalsa34,46and InterceptEd twice. In ttl!! second
34 ~rds from Eddie Murray, half, Eric Hipple hit 10 of 18 ~se;
eruptEd for three IDs In the final for 81 yards and provided solid
5: 13.
leadership for tiE Lions' comeback.
Scott Wllllams ran !lve yards tJr
a m with 5: 13 left to cut tiE r;:;::;;~:;:~;:;:;:;;;;:,
Bengals' lead to. ~-16. His ooe-yard I
m burst with 13 seconds left gave
the Lions a 23-20 lead and liEn Eric
WUJlams provided the capper on
the tlnal play of the night, picking
up Cincinnati quarterback Ken
Anderson'sfumbleafterasackand
16 3 7 EASTEIII AVE. •
rumbling 29 yards for a m .
GAWPOUS, 011.
"I told our team after tiE game
that we got a good lesson on how to
Custom Truck Seat
play a football game,'' said ClnclnCovers
.
nail lEad coach Sam Wyche.
"We're good enough to beat
Pickup Bed Covers ::
anyoott- and good enough to lEal
Stripe Kits/Moldings·
ourselves."
Cincinnati quarterback Boomer
Corpet /Headliners ··
Esiason was extremely sharp In tiE
Trans Am Decals : ·
three quarters he played, hitting 15
of 19 passes for 196 ~rds . Including
Vinyl Roofs -touchdowns of 00 yards to Rodney
Convertibles
Holman and ~ ~rds to Mike
Martin. Larry Kinnebrew ran one
Boat Tops &amp; Covers_-'
~rd .for a m tD complete liE
Furniture Upholstery:
Bengals' scoring.
"Boomer is ready fo r tiE regular
Much More...
season," declarEd Wyche.
Joe Ferguson quarterbackEd the
FOR APPOINTMENT
Uons 11EflrsthalfandcompletEdl4
CAU 446·1968
d. at passes for 122 yards, but was .

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CHRYSLER'S 5150
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See limited warranty at dealer. Covers engine.

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THE WAY WE'RE DEALING••• EVERYIHING GOES.
SO HURRY IN NOW!
• Annual Percentage Aale Financing lor qualtfied. retail buyers through. Chrysler Credit Corpor at1on on dealer siOCk
Dealer contribution may affect final price. Offer tncludes other fmancmg terms. See dealer for detatl s

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'

•f;AST MEIGS ' - The 1986
Ji!jldltton it IN! Eastern Eagles'

!oOtball team made a
debit as !our dlfferent
hit · paydlrt In a ?8-6
..
ague victory over Waterlord
~Y night it Eagle Stadium.
• . ll;laStem· quickly went to work
~ IN! ~. kJCk«f, scoring

~ at !be 10: 41 mark, just four

plaYs from scrtnunlllle. That score

·Four Seo
«:earns cop
~urnphs

•
.~IN!astern Ohio Athletic tea rm
~ed the 1986 football season
n!day night winning four of six
· ;~;ontests against non-league

:~~ments.
:: Pre-season favorite Logan
Smashed New Lexington 39-0,
·~lpolls rolled over Rock Hill fl-O,
,VIlrren Local edged Belpre 13-12,
~d tiE Athens Bulldogs used three
overtlmes to sUp past Nelsonvillel'ork 12-G.
: On IN! bslng end .......- ...
tfafletta fell to powerful Parl&lt;ersburg South 35-7 while jackson
~JJ!Ighborlng Wellston
,''Sbice~ 19'18, by a Z7-al score .
llij'ie
1
.. ' ' ' Lopn 311 New Lex 0
~AN.- At Logan Larry
. three !Qudldowns,
·
.~; extra poln\S. and ran br
~as the Chleltalns whipped tiE
~ Lexington Panthers :11-0.
.
.. ~ mid offensive guard con.
~to fullback, raced46yards~
Ill!' Sl!concl perlo(!, scored from tiE
In IN! third quarter, and dashed
I.e.ter In the third.
' .
Wolfe, and AU..SEOAL
.llhjltCe In 191ri, added two toudi~Wils 0!1 runs rt three and 11 yards
II) "~~ for 126 yards. Logan's
~~'I'D ~me on an Ill yard run by
Pa'hl~
;;Oaiii wit 16 seconds left in the
::J '
OOn

came on a 29 yard play action pass
from QIUII'terback BryBJt Purst.
woo rolled rut ot the pocket to hit
junior end Mark Griffin with !be TD
reception. 11te PAT kick failed,
hoWf'Ver, Eastern led 6-0 as a result
of the 52-yard drive.
On Its first possession, Waterford
moved the ball well before the
attack bOgged down. Eastern took
aver on downs deep in its own
territory. The Eagles ground out
several big yards, but were forCed
to punt, setting the stage for a
successful Kyle Davis punt that
rolled all the way to the EHS one
·
yard line.
On the. second play from scrim·
mage Waterford coughed up the
ball on a fumble recovered by
sophomol't' Mike Weber.
That ·play set the stage for
fullback Brian Beeler's one-yard ·
plunge up the middle for the score
at tiE 7:30 mark in the second
frame. Senior Doug Beaver capped
the rally with a two-point conversion run for a 14-0 EHS lead.
The third quarter brought about a
defensive struggle !hal saw Waterford produce several lenghthy

'

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.

'

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I

GAHS blanks Rock Hill 40~ in o
PEDRO VIsiting Gallla
Academy High School rolled up 402
total yards and Umlted host Rock
HUI to 16 here Friday night as the
Blue Devils opened their 19!li grid
campaign with a ~ noncon!el't'nce victory.
GAHS coach Brent Saunders said
. . afietWard, "We got to play around
· 41 or 42 kid tonight. I'm thrllled .
Four years ago , Rock HiU beat us
4t).(l,"

MASSIVE PILEUP - "astern's junior QB, Brian Durst (10) ~in ttw&gt;
middle of this massive pUeup of Eagle and Waterford grid player;;.
Eagle on right Is EllS center Roger Carpenter. Defender standing up m
rear is Waterford's Bobbie Crawford (42). Eastern won, 28-G.

- ~..

0 28

Duplicolor 6 oz. Touch-up
. Spralf Paint

.

Scratch·fi• Brush on Paint,

after mlr'a 5.00 rebllte

after mlr's 5.00 rebate

when you buy t 2 qls.

Troc• .... ...... ...... ... 0 0 0 0

. Njjjotb ·Galllo .. ....... ... .........

o 0 0 0
I 16 28
o I 0 :1)

111'!mtl Valley ......... ..... ... o
1!!1o'illwestern ...... ...... ..... ....

li!IIIM'rn .. .~ .. .. .. .. ........ ..... ... 0 I 6 13
(

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Valley 16

Koddog&amp;
0

6

Reg.9.95

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Reg. 2.69

when you buy 12qts.

Marl(el Mvsterv Oil 1 pint;

10W30&amp;30HD
Motor Oils

Valvofine fourGard
SW30 Motor Oil

Sale 65tt, limit t 2

~utomatic

reg. 2.39. #012

Armorall Cleaner, l&amp;~z.,
reg. 2.49, #30160

Transmission fluid
TY,pe fA or B·C2·D
Valvollne Racing Oils
30, 4,0, 50; or 20W50 ,

Gumout Jet Sprav Carburetor
&amp; Choke Cleaner 1:i oz.,
reg. 2.,9. #7450

Tightseal Undercoating,

reg . 1.99. #T16-16

Sale IICie, UmH 12 ,

alter mlr's 5.00 rebate

Disc Brake Paas
Reg.9.95

New Brake Shoes
Reg. 12.49

11.88
g·.aa
7.88

"

when you buy 12 qts.

/~ ·
I

75C rebate

Tradco
Windshield
Washer Solvent ·

DLHand
Cleaner

14oa.,reg. 1.29

·~

10W40 &amp; HP020.W
Motor Oils

..
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Sf ATISTICS

·
Department

G
18
379
8
371
6
2

First down s... .. ........
......
Yards ru shlnJ! ..
Lost rush in~ .
Net rushin g . ..
Pass allt&gt;mp1 s ... .... .. .......... .
Complt&gt;tlons
.. ....... .. ..
lnt Prr&lt;'pt Pd b.v
.... ..... ... ..
Yardspussing ..
... . .......
Total Yards .. ..... .. ......... ....
Plays ..
.. ............ .
Reru m yards... .. . .... ... .. ...
Fum bles ..
Lost fumb les..

*
'1(·l
71

&lt;'j. '

1

I

31
402

,-lJ

~2

169

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

PPnalrles..
Punt s ..

BR.

2
l

.. 9· 105
2-72
"

Scort' by
Visitors ...

Q\Hifi Prs

......... 12 14 7

0 0

0

•

7~ :

(1.6.0

•

..

" '

Wellslon %'1 JacUMI !I

Sale 70e, limilt2

7 \

-=--

49.88

9.88

Reg. 99c

LlmH I, #CJt014

Eaale Headers

California Turbo
Mufflers, reg. 1u5

alter mlr'o1 .00 rebate

Purolator
. Oil Filters

Reg.'S9.88

For moot clomeatlc eppllcat~a
Sale 2.49, Reg. 2.99

Giarit Sure Start BaHeries
AncoWipet
Blades each
Anco Refills a pair
reg. 4.29

25.88

1.54

40 month w•IT•n~y, reg. 31 .88

Air Filters

. .
For moat domeetlc applications· ,

Zerex

' :,'

Sale 3.49, Reg, 3.99

Anti-freeze
Coolant

32•88

....!i.
I.

alter mlr 's 1.75 rebate

60 month w•rr'

y, reg. 45.88

Sale 3.29, reg. 4.19. limit 2

109.95
Holley High
Performance
Car~uretors
from 129.95

20.00 off

Radiators
Reg. from 99.85
1.00 off

Cuddley Lamb
Seat Covers

From

95¢
1

Radiator
Caps

Reg. from 1.95

1.00 off

From

Radiator
Hoses

Reg. from 2.95

J.Oo off
Reg. from 3.95

1·5~95

wHh exchange
reg. 16.50
'

3.49
Fan
149
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.Reg. 95c, #C1·5

1'

From

49¢
.lltar mlr'a1.50 rlbate ·

Preston• Super
,fflsh, #.ISID7

-

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lectronic

.feg.from 13.48 •

'

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A pinging or rattling .
•
nou's'e underthe hcX)d 2.00Dif
:lncllic!l1 ~e• a need for a
. 7-MM
WI,.Sets ·
nm&lt;.. up 'or higher :·
reg. !tom 6.95
.octane fuel.
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Permatelr
Gasket
ComDound
.

reg. 1.9~. #IBR

From

4.g·s'·:
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9.9 14~95

Aeg. lrom24.95

;.

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19.95

WELLS1UN - Sophomore Scott ·
Bragg ran lor a pair rt touchdown&amp; ·
and passed for two more in leadlnt
the Wellston Golden Rockets Ill a . ·.
27-~ victory aver tiE Jackson· ·
Ironmen, marking the first Rocket ·
triumph since a 28-14 deciSion ,Jn. '.
1978.
..
Bragg returned the o~
kickoff 91 yards for a touchdawll. · .
and Dale Wheatley kicked the first ·
of hiS three conversions.
.. . • •
The Ironmen came back in till!
first periodonDaleSexton's43yard .'ID pass reception from Chrts Erv-In-' ,
and Otad Ward's kick knotted tiE, ..
soore at 7·7.
Bragg found Ernie Parseau with · ..
a 25 yard TD strike, · but a ~
conversion kick was blocked.
In the second periOd Bragg lljt
Parseau with a 59 yard strtke ap~ ,.
Wheatley's kick made it :!l-7.
, ..
Olad Gallagher scored aJackso;n
TD on a seven yard run, but BrBgg;• 1
scampered 15 yards moments lQ!Qij , :
tD lXII Wellston on top Z1·13 ,at..,.
intermlssiln.
; 1,
Jackson's Chad Ward scon¥1 ; .
from the ~ve yard line In the tiDaL,:;
period and kicked the EP to c~
out the scoring.
, ,•
Wellston roiled up 15 tlfSt d~, . ,
had 227 yards rushing, and Cll!ll: , :
pletel three of seven passes for .g;t, ,
yards. Parseau led the Rocket ball
carriers with 78 yards on 10carri~; , ;
The lronmen finished with 10~t . ,
downs, 155 rushing, and completed
two of seven aerials tlr 63 yards.
Score by quarters;
'
Jackson ...... .. .. .. 7 6 0 7.:..fil, ' 1
Wellston ... ......... . 13 14 0 0-.::27. ,;
' 'I ~ . , ..

SEOAL standiftg8 ' "
GRDl SI'ANIIING8
SIDAL EI'"'Nl!Hn!
(AI G - )

Fr~m

Tum

.Gallipolis............. ..... .........
Wa rren Local ...... .............
Athens .............. .... ...... ......
Portsmouth West ........... ....
Coal Grov £&gt; . . ........ ........ ....
Wellston .... .... :.............. .....
Jackson ..... ... ,.......... ..........
Pt. PINsanl ............. .. ......

1
1
1
1
I
o
0
0
0

"""""'

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.....

-:

Rock Rill .... .................... ...

8MM
W.ireSets

W

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

Logan .........

Marlett1 ................ ............

GlllipOI!I «!Rock HUI 0
n -.v~~~e &amp; c3 011

'Foo'aurtf starts,

Metes :llll'lllnl PIH51.nt 18
COli GnMIB Butlolo 0

Reg. from 9.95

w-

-~~~ ........ South Point 7
~ Soulh :li Morlella 7

Belts

Reg.•.••

5

5.00 off

I '

4.DOOFF.

1

&amp;.ovee &amp;.ami) .
Seat Covers

Wells
. wi;e.Sets
. .

1

•

Super Velour
Seat Covers

Standard

np
. .
Remanufactured
Water Pumps

9 95

5.00011
Reg.14.95

Multi·
Purpose
Radiator
Sealant

!

6

carries.
!iltton completed three ot eigl)t
passes for aJ yards (one in terce~ ..
by Jell Finley).
·
· _;;.
Andy Howard and Scott Mlllet..
recovered Rock HW fumbles. ~It,
Anson recovered a GAHS ~mill~ :
ea rly in the game.
·; :
Keith McCormick punted &amp;eVen
times lor Zl1 yards, with qri~
blocked by Bo Smith in the f~t :
·'
Peri.ld.'
Hornets next
· '
GAHS will play at Coal Groy~
Sepl. 5. The Redmen travel · ~
Wayl'l". W.Va.
·'•

Continued from C4
• '·
visiting Nelsonvllle - Yo~li , :
Bud&lt;eyes.
. ,
On Athens ' first possession rt IQI!.
third extra pertod, Earlch had rwi ·
18 yanls to the Buckeye one Y1!1'4
llne, where he fumbled, and the '11\U .
appeared to have been~ -,
by the Buckeyes. But, the offfc~ , .
,ruled Ihat Earlch was out rt bounc)s , ·
IJe!ore he fumbled, and AIN!D$
retained possession of the ball.
the next play Eartch scored tlle.. .
winning TD.
,
Following a scoreless first halC
Brtan Jolley put NelsonvWe on lt;&gt;P
with a tMJ yard run with 5: aJ left in
the third quarter. A conversion n)~ _
faDed.
The clock showed 4! 44 left in thf:
game wiEn Kris Kostlval capped,a .,
63 yard drive in 11 plays with a Olle . ;
yard scoring run to knot the sco~:·
A faDed conversion ldck llY,
Athens set the stage for avert~·, ;.
and the Bulldogs missed a chance-'!),:.
win It In the first (YI' period wheq a
33 yardfleldgoalattemptbyEarlcl\ ·.
was short.
· '
This was the only sertous threal
by either team until Earlch's
winner in the third OT.
..
Kostivalled Athens with Ill yai'ds ,
on 24 carries whlle Jolley flnlshl!d:
with 63 yards on 19 carries A:lr ~- :
Buckeyes.
·.
Score by quarters:
.: : ·
Nels-York .. .. .. ... 0 o 6 0 0 0 ~ 6
Athens .... .... .. ... 0 0 0 6 0 0 6-i!!

EZRide
HeavvDutv
Shock Absorbers

.

L POP
0 13 6
0 28 7

Saunders added, "However, I
thought we made several dumb
mistakes out there tonight, but our
kids were aggressive. They (Rock
Hill) were minus a couple of key
players because of grade problems.
That hurt them. As a direct result ,
they were not a very good team oul
thel't' tonight. "
The GAHS coach added, "We' ll
face a complete turnaround at Coal
Grove this weekend. They have a
fine football program. Their teams
are always strong on fund amentals."
Jackson, Harrison Sharp
Sa und er s used eight differenl
backs in the season opener. GAHS
scored in every quarter.

6.88··

Continued on C.S

"
8V!tC; ALL GAMJill
T.plin
W
Kl9or croek ...................... I
Oo*liiU .... .. .. ...... .... .. ... .. I
E.1111f111 .,.. ... .. ......... .... .... I

JACKSON HAS BIG NIGHT- GAHS senilr (JIUback Kirk Jackson
(46) picked up 145 yanls ( 15 trips) lor the Blue DevOs at Rock lllU
Friday night. He scored two touchdowns. Otrls Howard (13) 1ralls play
on right. Making tacllle l• Redman ace Jim Sutton (H). The GaUians
won, 40-0.

Thn Neville played trust of the
second half at the signal caller's
position.
Fullback Kirk Jackson led all
rushers with 145 in 15 carries.
Jackson had touchdown runs of
three and one yards in the second
period with 8:?.7 lei! in tl"e !Jurth
canto with B: 48 remaining.
Shawn Grant taiUed the other
GAHS touchdown, a 25-yard run
with 5:56 left in the third period.
Randy Amsbary kicked four
points from placement after miss·
ing the first. GAHS attempted to
run fo r two aft er its secona score.
Chris Tawney added ~ yards in
11 trips for the Galllans.
Howard, Smith Tough
Andy Howard, wbo along with Bo
Smith and others sacked IUIHS QB
Jim Sutton at least 11 times for a,
minus 53 yards rushing. added 33
yards in six trips; Grant 35 in four
and Chris Howard 22 in three
attempts. The latter had a &gt;4-yard
touchdown run nullified by penalty
early in the fourth period.
Keith McCormick led the Red·
men with 32 yards in five carries.
Rick J3a iley added 18 oo nine

The Blue DevOs picked up 18 first
downs, permitted five (two were by
Devll penalties 1 and ran 52 plays
from scrimmage whlle RHHS
managed only 38. GAHS was
peqallzed nine times .for 105 yards .
RHHS was penalized once for five
yar(ls.
The ReQmen we.re Umited to
minus four yards rushing by the
Blue DevOs defense , speartraded
by Andy Howard, Bo Smith, Mark
Berkich, and company.
GAHS QB Gary Harrison scored
three times, first on a 57-yard punt
return with 11: 10 lett in the first
period; a six yard scamper with Jl
seconds iefi in the first stanza and 25
yards on a keeper with 1:30 left in
the half.
'
Harrison connected on two of five
pass attempts for 31 yards. He had
one 27-yard touchdown strtke to
Scott Mlller nullified by a PE!lalty
with 4:46 left in the second period,
and rushed for 39 yards in three
I rips.
The shifty Harrison also punted
twice for 72 yards and returned
three punts for 107 yards and one
TD.

011, .

'

~

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Four ...

Reg.2.B§

~._SVAC standings
.... •,.

31. 1988

.,

on.

i".

-'"'--··-

Home team . .
Scpl. 5--AI Coal Grove.

'IJje' ~eltains rolled up 479 total

ya~ on 417 rushing and complet·
inll: ~\)Ur of 14 passes br another 62
yardS.
.
Score by quarters:
New· Lex ..... ... .. 0 0 0 {)- 0
lfglln ....... ..... .. o 13 13 13--:ll
"
" ' South 35 MarleUa 7
: PARKERSBURG -Steve Mastorr;ft,ad kkkOif returns of 83 yards
and~ 92 yards in leading the
Ilatkl!rsburg South Pirates to a
IQpslded 35-7 victory over the
~arletta Tigers Friday night.
· · ~ston raced the qJening kickoff
baclt 83yardsandShad Vandergrift
kicked the first of tlve extra points
to gtve the oost ream a 7-0 lead just
S!!COnds into the game.
-GrEg Carpenter's 25 yard run
gave South a 14-0 lead before Chrts
()ller's 38 yard scarq&gt;er put
Marietta on the board. Matt
lleldorn's kick reduced the lead to
11-7.
; Maston ~?turned the ensuing
~~~!*off 92 yards, Carpenter added a
1B '~ard TD run, and Charlie
~fner closed rut the scortng.
::&lt;JSrpenter led South with 96 yards
,15 tries while Coler led the
Marietta attack v.ith 47 yards on
elklt&lt; c:arries.
:i'icore by quarters:
t.Jjlttetta .. '" '"" .. " 7 0 0 {)- 7
~rl&lt;ersburg .. ... ., 21 7 0 7-35
::: ..
WL 13 Belpre 12
•BEVERLY- WarrenLocaitook
8':1'3-ll halftime lead and then held on
fii defeat Belpre 13-12.
: ~8th Eddlebiuteran 22 yards for
t)Jr lrst Warrior score with Doug
Blildlnger's extra point kick providtift11E wjnning point.
;:Ada~ West, woo finished with 82
)11'1'11 tlrtlle Warriors, tallied from
~ ' cne yard stripe for a 13-0 lead.
• Mike t&amp;:Vey scored from the one
tA: tiE third period and added a four
yarti·"ID run in the fourth period,
~t"flolb extra point kicks by the
dOiiien Eagles were blocked,
Sbore by quarters:
Belpte.. ......... ...... 0 0 6 6-12
Wljiten ........ .. .... .. 7 6 0 {)-13
•
Alhens 12 NY 6 (3 ot)
ATHENS - Quarterback J .D.
Ea"'-'h scored from the one yard
Hoe· In the tbJr!1 overtime Friday
nf8hl ~ gtve the Athens'Bulldogs a
11ar4 (ouiht 12-G victory over the

'

. ''

Jollisdn 1e,d EHsJ~shers with an
drlve!i. ~h tline,however, the
8-!!4
nlght. while Brian ~ler was
Eastern defense rose to the orea10-46..
.
. .
slon, coming up witb .the big play
Waterford's
McFII(lden
was
19-68,
that proved to be the needed
whlle Crawford had 11-51.
,
'slqlper'.
Eastern's
passing
g8llle
':Dan·
Eastern started the final round on
a·high note as junior halfback Jeff aged 103 yards and netted sev11ral _;.
close caDs as well, res4)t!ng in two
John9ln rtpped around the lei! end
ID'
s and ro interceptions from
for a three-yard touchdown bid at,
quarterbac!t Bryan DurSt.
the 11: 23mark. The five yard drive
Homer had two recE!ptlo1'5 ilr 45 .
yard, covering 53 yards, was set up
yards and Davis and Grtflln one for ..
by a 29-yard
Durst-to-Davis
2S
... ·
passing play.
Eastern
tacklers
were led by .
Johnson completed the scortng
Durst,
wlti
did
the
jOb
defeiiSlveiy ··
with a two-point COIIVerslon catch \
as well, with 16 9llo !lickles .and one
and Eastern led 22-0.
turnble recovery: .lohn9ln had 7.,
On the Wlldcat's next drive Bob
whlle Davl$,. Beelj!r, an,d Homer
Crawford squirted into the e11dzone
each
had six.
..
ilrthe lone WHS score that covered
Eastern·
travels
to
Parlersbu
rg ·
65 yanls on 10 plays. A threatening
Catblll~
next
Friday
at
8p.m.
for
a •
aertal attack kept the EHS tans on
bOut
with
tiE
Crusaders.
edge, but Eastern's defense pulled
TEAM SI'ATM'ICS
a thread of magic out ~ their
Department
E
\\' chinstraps to take away several big
First downs... ...... .... ........... .. 10
13
Plays from scrimmage .... ..... 43
57
plays.
Rushing (plays-yards \...
122
153
Before substitutlng freely, East·
Yardspasslng ... ... ...... ...
103
53
ern again hit paydlrt as Durst hit Total net yards.. ..... .. ........
225
:ll6
Passes Att. -Comp ... .. .. ..
11-4 15-4
junior e11d Steve Horner in the
Passes had Intercepted .. .
0
0
e11dzme for a 19-yard touchdown
Fumbles-lost... ... .. ......
1-0
3-2
score. The PAT kick falled, but
Penalties (No. yards) .. .. ..
S.fll 4-25
Punts (No. avg .) .. .... ..
.... . 3-393 0-000
Eastern led 28-6.

•

.

,

,_

,.

·. 49

Lopn 19 New

•

Wiomn Locall,'l Bcltft"l2'

·.:,.2Q9 U~aper Rivtir:~ td~ ;~· .:··
-·· Gallipoljs, .Oh~ . ·
1

1

J

~·

I

'

"'"•

't•

Luinlflm 0
71 Jackloo zr l

G~ ~~I c.,..

Rock HUI al Wayne
•llarbollriVIIIe at Paint PIHsant

I

Welblm at Trtmblf

,.·,' '"'· .,

J,

.
'

•

l'lli1Jmoulh We.t al West Jell......,
Unlfllo al Albena
' '
JacDIII It Wlleeleni!Wl!
' ~ •• Nellonvtllo-YOiik I
RIWr Local at
Lcial
Marietta 11 Camll'ldJ!O ,

w.,.,.

�-' . ..
Page .

·.

c.a...::The Sunday Tmas·Santi1el

returned the bllll '83 Y~ for a
touchdown.
BobcatllnemanTheronHoq,e,a
6-foot·l junior, blocked the extra
p~lnt attempt to keep the Lanrers

:~~~?~~: 3~!:oo;:~&amp;el:

klckol! 8t yardS to gtve the Bolicats
t11e1r seven-point advantage. The
p~Jnt lifler kick failed.
The rest was up to the Bolleat
&lt;Ei!nse as Federal Hocking could
only manage five~ downs, four
oo KOlS penalties. The Lanrers
gained 33 yards on 2.'1 attempts.
ButJor the rnajortty of the GnaJ
perbd, Federal Hocklllg bad the
baD deep b! Bobcat terrttory,
Including a flrst-and.goal 111 the
Kyger Creek nJne.yard nne mid·
way througlt .
Gordon led all rushers with 57
yardson16carrtes,complemented

campaign on the right foot.
As a ~ult ~ some · rugged
defensive play, neither team generated muchllffense, Kyger Creek 116
total and FHHS 69, as two of the
three touchdowns were scored on
kickoff returns.
The Bobcats opened the scoring
on their second possesion of the
contest as sophomore tallback
,Bobby Gordon scored from three
yards out and kicked the extra
.point.
But on the ensuing kickoff,
Fe&lt;Eral Hocking's Brian Jarvis

- · ·-· -.l- -··

P.omaroy-Middlepdrt-Gallipolil, Ohio-Point Plaaunt. W. Va.

:Kyg~r Creek. Bo~ts
STEWAR.T - Kyger Creek High
School bettered Ill! entire l9lll
recordFrldaynfebtastheilobcats
held on to down Federal Hocking
mlnbothsquads'seasoncpeners.

- --- --·-···· ·· -

······- ---- -- --- "·- --

August 31, 19p6

L

open cainpaip with:: 13,-6.\81?~- win
'r:,;i::,;;i;.. · ........ . . ·
i .1'
-b&gt;..
=-.. . . . . . . . . . . . : :·=
.

~ Wauglt's 21. on eight. JarviS

Sept. 5 at BObcat Stadium. Game
Umelslll!l!orUlp.m.

peed the!Jinoersgroundattack
wlth.2t&lt;ml5.
"
•
010
Kyger Ciel)k next plays mst to , 111 _ , ........ .. ........ . .. ""10 6
Wahama (W.Va.) High School v.... .....""...................... 37·111

,..
,

p.;.i~ ......... ::.:.....~ .. .. .:. '
:;~liY ···· ................
v..$~ ::

....,

3

"

:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::u , • ·

~!lOt ..... ::: :

:::::;::: ..

c:r*~:::::::::::::::::

..... ...... ......... ,..............: ..... ....

-

::: . ,1

W:~

;

&gt;-ll

0 6 o-13
o o o-,

••

Hi•hlanders·
. bl.anked ·20~· by.. Tartans ;.:
-e·
By JIM WEIDEMOYEB

ftne.S diDeJ 8ta1f
PA'l'IUOT - Portsmouth East
High School toomatl coach Darryl
Davis madesurethathlssquad was
ootgolngtomakethesamemlstake
It did last season when 11 played
Southwt!!IIJ!rn
"Last year·we played this team
(Southwestern) andgotbeatbad,"
Davis said after his tartans beat
the Hlghlanders ~ Friday nfellt
"Jack (James, Souhtwestern
coach) said last year that we took
fhetn Ughtly; and 1 think he
right.
"But this time we made sure not
to underestimate them. We came
ready to play..
Preparatlo~ was the key to the
wtrome and alter the loss, James
saidhehasplannedabusyweekftlr
himself and his assistant coaches.
"We just were not ready and we
weren't prepared;" James said.
"We're just going to have work on
our fundamentals this week. Take a
good look at what we're doing and
examine our perSOimel. ••
Portsmouth East dominated tbe
.first half of Friday's contest The
~could onJy generate Z1
yards ,total offense and one first
/!DWD• on a 15-yard pass lnterfer-

was

I!IICI! penalty.

'

nlngs scor'ed Ill his fourt)l _carry of• · ~al situatiOn, SoutJnvestern stlfthe ftve-play drive, bolting INer felled, forcing the 'I'artaqs, to lite
from tbe O,ve-yard line..
tlur lllays betlr · S&lt;:Qrlng on Jen·

The second smre came Ill a
one-yard run ~ Jennings, who
flnlshedthenlghtwlth:llcaniestor
53 Yards. with only M seconds
remaining In the first half.
Following a punt, the Hlghtan&lt;Er
defense trapped Jennings ft:lr a
two-yard loss, placing him back oo
the SouthiWBIB'n 39-yard line, and
a 5-~f ':proce&lt;Nrepl penalty,
on
o
g ay, threw the
Tartans back even farther.
But a double-reverse, halfback
pass struck fDr Z! :yards, placlngthe
Tartans only 2t yards from goal
line. Two plays later, PEHS signal ,.
caBer Jim Oakley raced around
right end to the two with two
minutes remaining.
Faced with defending a first-and·

nlngs' run.

·
third period, a soort punt

In lbe
leftPE!f&amp;ootheH~and!r!iand,
bllo)Ning a, penalty, Oakley hooked

· Southwes•n crosse~! rnidfleJd
lilly twice In the ell tire rontest, bgth
In the ftnal quarter. The Hlghlal¥!·
ers liest offensive posesston CIIJI:le
midway throogh ~ burth Jlel'~.
· Starilngonthelrawn32-yardllrw,
Soutllwestern marched 34 yards }II
more than six minutes but a
ftlurth-down pass attempt with five
minutes remaining W~$
IntErCepted.
..., ,..,.
""'"""
;:;;;:.;;;;:
..
. ·~ 1 -•~

upwlthtlgbtend D.J.Horselyfora
31-yanhcorlng strike.
ThepasalngofOakJeY,fourctslx
br 38 yards, surprised James.
"I didn't tblnli they would pass as
weU as they did," be said. '"!bey
threw alot better than .we Y-....., . . .. .... .. ....... .. ....,,. J6.ll8
exp!Cted."
. :·
, ~.:.:
:::::::::::::::::::::l , :
For Davis,- II was the. lclnl! on a Jai-by ................ . ................. .. . · 0
weu.payed !11!119011 opener.
:n
"I think Oakley bad good game ::::'.'~ : : :: ::::: ·
: ': . ~
and a lot ct It Is due to the .............. ....... .
...........o
,
experlenre he got last year," he ::W':b~
J,
said. "But tonight ~e bad our night
q6 8 ' 0.:1"
We nee&lt;Ed this gsme and It all =.=..:~~
came \qlether."
............. ·· 0 0 0 o- 0

v--.. . . . . ·. . . . .,
a.....,

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

;::,

.

ml8 cantee.

~ Jll8ty

OONFERS Wll'll COACH - Soulhwtlliem
Tartans.~.

·Friday's high school scores
lly U n~ Pft'M

, . _ ,., -

~

=:.

.
Metgs...

Slolen.W. 1WVa1 Jl, ....,. . . "
Sokln IS. Nanta.l.a 0

Continued fromC.2
Point's roach Safford was all
praise br Meigs' offensive attack.
"Bartrum Is a great passer, Eason
a fine runner, and we didn't have
anybody who, could cover Kitchen.
We' re pretty green and we sure got
aneducatxm tonlght.'saldSafftlrd.
About his . own club, Safford
added, "We can't expect to play
defense Uke we did and win many
· ball games. We let thell) make the
• big play . We had a chaiu:e to get
· · back tn the game. but turned the

: :~ ~-~~::~~f::·~~~~

l1llln

Tol Wake 19, Tol WOGOwanl &amp;

Yards passing .. ...... ·-· ·

- ... "'"'"""' u. ...,._ Mad o

~z.:..=;~•

4

64
3~

2
3-2

o-o

1·16

Score by qu arters:

Melas .......... ...... ......... .14 7 6 6-33
Pt. l'leasant .............. .. ..... 0 12 6 IH8

'pltcblng Hdqston to a J.2 victory

'bver tbe Pltt,Sburgh Pirates.

,; l)ybeat!ngthePii'ates, theAstros
'l'ilaln1;alned their seven- game lead
:river the Reds In tlle,NL West.
At · ~- lliils, Gulllckson, 12-8,
.l,amjl(l his second shutout and·fifth
completegamelttlleseason. lnhls
·Ialit ffi Innings, Gullickson has
· allOwed six earned runs for a 0.83
ERA In that span.
~ At Houston, 'Scott Is making a
.~ngbldfortheCyYoungAward.

''

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.;~(

For

The Yankees beat' the Seattle ·
POINT PLEASANT- Pr~ara­ Valu buDding on Second Street, and
Mariners wlthDor)'Matl!ngly play· tions for the ftlurth Rllnt Pleasant will follow a winding coun;e
lng third base and Juan Espino Distance Run, slated for Saturday, through city streets, finishing
Oct. 4, are underway .
oollverlng the game- winning hit.
straight down Main Street to the
The event, which wUI be held In DoodwaU at TU-Endle·Wel Park.
The Angels overtook the Detroit
Tigers with an eight-run ninth conjunction with the aty's Battle
Starling times are 9:30 a.m. for
Inning, capped by shortstop Dick Day~ celebration Oct. 3-4, consists the $-K race and 10:00 A.M. for the
of a ·one-.mlle fun run, liJ.K and 5-K one-mOe fun run and liJ.K race.
Schofield's grand slam.
Mattingly switched from llrst 1D races.
Persons may · pre-register for $5
Members of the Dlstanre Run until Sept ~- Late registration of $7
third In the fifth Inning when a
serlesctplnchhittersforcedWayne Commlttre consist of City Recrea· will be accepted untO 9 a.m. on the
Tolleson to vacate third andr~IAce tlon Director Brian BUllngs, Race day of the race.
Mike flschlln at short. Mattingly. Director Gary Cottrlll, Mayor J. J.
Entry forms may be obtained at
who says he can throw with either Wedge, City Clerk John Thabet, · the city building In Point Pleasant,
arm. played left-hand!d and Terri Shamblin of Citizens National Western Auto, Rardin's Shoe Cen·
handled six chanres quite nicely and Georglanna Tillis of Pleasant ter, Les W!Uiamson Credit Jewel ·
Valley Hospital.
Without an error.
·
ers, Tiffin Credit Jewelers, Hock en·
Mayor Wedge announced plans berry Pharmacy North, all three
With . California trailing )2-5,
Schofield opened the ninth with a are underway for a possible kick-off locations of Citizens National Bank,
single. Jack Howell later deliver¢ run scheduled for Sept. ?:1, consist- all In Point Pleasant, and at
a two-run &lt;illlble. Reliever Wlllle lng of a one-mile walk and the WJEH-WYPC radio station In
·Heman&lt;Ez gave up back-to-hack, proceeds to go to charity; more wtll . Gallipolis, Ohio, and WMPO Radio
run-srorlng singles to George Hen· he announced later on this. .
Station In Middleport.
Area residents of all ages are
drlck and Boltly Grlch to make It
T-shlrts decorated with a logo wil l
· be given to the first JJOrunners who
12-9. Pinch hitter Ruppert Jones ur~ to participate.
The City and Qtlzens National, a
wall!ed on a full count 1D toad the
register. Awards (trophies and
bases. Hernandez, 7-6, threw two division of First Huntington Na- medallions) will be presented .
strikes be6Jre Schofield drove hls tional Bank, are co-sponsoring the Each entrant In the fun run will
12th lnmer to make a winner of · race again this year: The races receive a participant rlbbon .
behind the Heck's and Super
· Dou!! Corbett, 3·2.

.

56 73 -~ llilh
5.5 72 .4.13 JG~

...

a.~

'

II

til~~:l!~ (HenhJser J2-9J at New York

•
•

think

as.

"1256!163 68 61 517 ~!,)
_,. fll11J .CIJ
·· :~~ 70 .61 14

Teoou

t ..

.•

underway for annual
night and, If you
that sounds B
}e Days .R. un in Oc~r
•~ L_...
unusual, you should hear how It .
att
happened.

The decis ion moo ted Milwaukee
one game over .000, but the team
remai ned tled with Cleveland' for
last place in the American League -.
East. A's 4-4, Orioles 3-0
At Oakland. Ca lif., Mike Davis
smashed 1wo home runs and sroreil
thr&lt;F runs to lead the A's In f,he
opener. Dave Stewart pitched a
six-hitter to complete Oakland's _.
second sweep of Baltimore In
many days. Tlre sweep gave tile A's
seven victOries in the ir last eight
games. The Orioles have lost seve!)

W L Pet. Gl
74 5t .578 Tl58.5C!O 3~

Toronro
New Vorl&lt;
Dl!trolt •
O..lnd

446-2362

Alternators
Generators (Tra~torl

-...

.....,.

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE

Electric Motors
Water Pumpt.
Aireators

a

Kaagers .5, White Sox 2
At Chicago, Geno· Petralll collected the oolyhlt In a four-run fifth,
a two-run slpgle, leading the
Rangers. Texas starter Charlie
Hough, 12-8,' allowed fo_ur hits and
two runs In 7 1-3 Innings. The
knuckleballer struck out six and
walked four. Mitch Williams went!
2-3 Innings for his seventh save.
Brewers 3, Royals I
At Kansas City, Jim Gantner and
Ben Ogilvie lifted sacrifice flies and
Ted Higuera, 17-8, set a Brewers
record
. for strtkeouts In a season.

Scoreboard
· Majors

'

lndu1trial V· Belu
Lawn Mower V·Belu
Automotive V·Belts
Electric Motors
Fen BladH
Fu1e1 ·
Regulators

Indians 7, Red Sox 3
At BOston, Joe Carter belted
three home runs In
5-for·5
pertormanre and drOVe lnftlur runs
In support of Tom C;mdlottl' s
slx-llltter, l~dlng C)eyeland. Roo·
Ide Cory Snyder added a solo homer
to help the Indians snap a three·
game klslng streak. The Red Sox
have lost live d their last six.

.WEIUC.\N LEAGUE
II) Utllled p.._~ae .....,,

-- . J. .- . . BILL'S
SINCE 1933

Bue Jays 6, Twlad
At 'Thronto, 'Thny Fernandez
scored on Jesse Barfleld 'sgrOOnder
.with one out In the bottom of ~
ninth, p.illlng the Blue Jays wlthlri
3~ games of thl;! AL East. 'Thronto
has won Its last six gan\es. Mark
Eichhorn, 12-4, pitched two lnnlnss
fort he victory. Keith Atherton, 5-10,
took the loss.

'The rlght-han&lt;Er, who was a total
;,JIISappolntment for the New York
Mets In the early '80s, notched his
.:~th victory In hls last 11
.decisions.
• . ~1 .
PbiDies 6, GIIUIUI4
'fo-t Phlladelphla, Von Hayes
~wly missed hitting for the
.,.YcJe, dellverlng three hits and two
~ against San Francisco to help
:at Ph1lltes notch their third
;:-l!J'Ilght victory. Hayes singled,
...'mubled, tripled and walked before
~g out to the warning track.
·:)ljlte Msddux, 2-5, was the winner
~·~!!Dd Mike Kruko'w feU to 13-8.
r:'" ·
Meta 2, Dodgers 1
'f:, •At New York, Bob Ojeda pitched
; • · !lve-hitter and Keith Hernandez
...Ud Mookle Wilson singled home a
~ {iin apiece against Los Angeles to .--~-~----_,;.-':
~-· lead the Melli to their fourth
.;l~t triumph. Ojeda, 15-5,
..;rpnened his sixth complete game.
~ ·l;llve Anderson's RBI groundout In
ninth spolfed·the shutout. Rick
_;.~cult feU to 9-9.
" ·•
Cubs 7, Braves 3·
·+: AtAUapta,BobDernllirstrokeda
" 'three-run homer to highlight a
":fl1&lt;e-nm fifth Inning that propelled
;;,~~c!:;,~Scott Sanderson, 7-10, was
4.:
and 1Ane Smith fell to

Was
sor "Now Just
. '10_1!.-

r---------------~ it

PP
17
:111

140

so.rt 0

American League

' By MIKE TUlLY
Both the New York Yankees and
the Cautornla Angels scored 13-12

it 2~ . shutout against Cardinal nine··.~',.

t:·· =~~~~en:U~In~; ~~~:~-s~ r~:c:~g ~~ · P~ans

GALUPOLIS- Four teams win
finished as chami&gt;lons of the
Gallipolis summer' recreatiOns
baseball and scltbsD leagues wtll be

Cclllmbloo 21. , . , _ """"

\"'- . . . . ,.

"' ll&lt;9n "'· -~~"

!IUTIITICS

Total yards .. ...
JG!J
Passes comp. ..
0
Fumbles lost
0·0
Penalties ...... ... ... .............. 2-15
Punts ... ........ ... ... ............. .... 2- 39 ~

.

powerslet!ring &amp;brakes, air IXII1di1Dling, am-rn\
one-&lt;Jt~ner van!

banquet
be held Tuesday

Theannualawardsdlnnerwtllbe
held at tbe Grace United Methodist
at 6::11 p.m. '1\iesday and will
conclude at 7:45p.m.
TheLittleleaguel'lblteSox, Pony
,- .o.a.nor.t
B
a1o
....Me
raves,
ng with the
Slul!gers and Racers, co-champs~
the Girls' Senior League, will be
guests~
the Lions.
A buffet •en,Je
d1nner will be
..,
served to the players, team man ag ·
ers, and representatives ct tbe
recreation board.

At Montreal, the schedlll(!d game
between the Padres and the Expos
was postponed due !o an explosion
and fire In the Olympic Stadium
tower. The game was rescheduled
as part of a double-header
Saturday.

.

The Sunday, Times-Sentinel. Pagij+ £ -'7 ,""

t Ale

S~er

Llo~~~~: ~~~lpolls

:=:;.~~w.,..u

MEIGS-PT. PL&amp;\&amp;\NT

Dep•rtment
M
First downs . .. ........... ......... . 15
Yards rushing .. ...... ..
225

The dlffmllce was field position.
Portsmouth's thrEe smrtng drives
covered U, 39' and ill yards as the
maJol'ltY of the game was payed m
the Hllblmders' .end of the fteld.
A!Umble by Hlghlander quarterback Justy Burleson m hii own
24-yard une, eight minutes Into tbe
rontest, set up the first Tartan
smre.
Two and one-half minutes later,
Tartan SEIIlor tallll&amp;ck Chris Jen-

~"

ro1 Wllltn¥• 21. Tot

:, · Ul'l ·~rta \frlli!r
· atll;'cuillctison .has helped the
Cl!ldnnal! "fleds creep Into the
National l.eague West, race. HoustonjUtrO;)IWui ~tt Is lliaklngsure
they don't C!i'eep too close.
Gulllc~rl; !Ired a three-hitter
~f'l1ctlaY -~1 to lead the Reds to
"!llelr sliltll straight· victory, a 2-0
··l!eclsloll .dver the St. Louis Cardl-

00

· ~::.=oSE'
Sl ""'"' • Mllml Eul o
: =-~_ _ ,._ v....., _ ,
..,_, 11·...,.. 6
Sw.ntm 21. HoilaDcl lillrial o
,.._ N._ll. ...,.._,

· • yards on three catches whlle King
: had 26 yards oo two receptions.
Barton led Poln I In receiving with
- threefor4lyards andChetHorton
added two for aJ yards. DaUey had
. :Jl yards In nine carries for the
. Marauders while Wes Howard
• , added Ji In ooly four tries. Kinnaird
• had 42 yards on 12 attempts for the
. Big Blacks.
Belpre Nexl Foe
• Melgshosts BelprenextFrldayln
· a crucial TVC match-upwhlte Point
Pleasant hosts Barboursvllle.

.l

u- ""'" "

~~;~:,::.,

Sak&gt;m 28. li{' East 0
Sandusky 14. Tot S! .John B

JOE ILLtal

v Jy

. : ·.

::#.i

Offeaslvely, boiJI squads were
' matdled. Southwestern outru!!hed
the ~·s IJ8.106 but was
' aulllalned. In total yards 1B6-155.
Hlflhlander senior tal!hack Andy
Halalosrled all rushers with 92yards

Burleson. lett, conferred with Coacb Jack JIIIIH8 eart, In the
Wgldanders' ope11er against Portsmoulb East F'rldl.v. SW loll 10 the

qv~Jickshn .· fires ·. ~me•

'

.

. Po~.,- Middieport~GaU.,olis,~Ohio~Point Pleasant, W. Va.

¢10W30 :-'
Motor Oil ,

['1"~:..::::-_----..
10W40
Motor Oil •

THEIIIOTOA OIL WlTMl-7

A

· PENJl~IL

&gt;8&lt;
' MVI.TI-VIS

11\'W-30

.-..

-.......

• ......,.._ ..... s.....

.....""_.._...c.., ..
.............. ......
~-

lj!I, , I'J/ , • 'I' Ql

'1.!~ \II R(

I
.
j

i .

�-.
·Friday's·high school scores
........

-----

.

Clmmnl NE lt. llaldllalft" D
C... Crvve •• adllb Wl)'nP (M'&amp;I 0
Col 1:Wfley 31, Col E. . 0

.
Air a v~ z, Alu Nri 6
Aller\ E &amp; W~flfft! 0

Col'!brtllll, Qi Und!n :Y
Col MIDfn 3. Cal st CharTs 0
Col E&amp;llm:M.I' 3', Newark 8
21, 0 - 0
Col Wlltdt 11, Cd Ham Twp o
C!ll
Rklp o. HiUill'll ll
Col Andemy li, Medlalllclbu'l 9
Col lid:
' :u 6. BilomCarTOI :12:
Collin.ta' 7, O!l1na '
llillnl Wf!l Rea II, Cdumbla 9
c.donel C!'IWIJnl 7, Mt Gilead 6
Caul!r IKYJ II, C. Mariemont 1
O::rtllrld l...akt!vtew 21, ~ SE 31

naa a
~13,-·
Alht
E • ..._ to. Jtenon 0
ArdiiXild lQ.

Atilt ~ ~ 111, ~ C.rftrid 1t
Alhenli :12, NIIIIDrr.1Ur York 6 fbi
Auron. 10. Street*-'o 6
Alllllmow&amp;Fttd:l 2'7, Ml&gt;nttr 12

-~-, .
Bw bei ..... u. ~ Aqu.llu 7

Croolllvt1i@

~ fl(yj ... Madetra 7
Belle"lue ~ IIW'on 13

BeUbroolc 2'7, Gn!II!DI'!'Ifil! 21 17111: \
8eUe 2 tne .. lndiM lake 12
Benilmln Lopn 27, Jol'lldWI Alll!f 8
Bl!ml ~. Shalrer Hu 7
~ Unloil lt, tlemkldl; M1JJer 6

.....,. w ll. -

FalrJo1

Carrolltoll •• 1\IISiw 6
CfodarvUie :1, c. I..oct1and ll
Ct!DW!rbuf'l :1, ~p:ll't 7
~ :a, 0. Pl'tnl::elm 21
Ck t ' ::1, Syrnres Valli
OdDicoth!o •• Oll Blookhsven 12
aa PureeD s, Norwood o

Fa~ld

HHJiby 0

R£&gt;*

GahMIN 32. Col Be«bc• on 12
Gallon 16, AJtiland 6

Miamllburt %1, W Chelter Lakota
Mld'town Fenwick :n. Val vrw lJ

Galii)DII. 4D. Roell Hill 0
Galllway Wel(]and 18, Col West 18

·"'" \

iJ

Middlrtown n. s~ s 7

Girard 71, YDUJWJ Llbf!rty 0

Mineral~

Glol.llltK ~R*' ll, Scklto Gtft'n 0

3&amp;, MIIIIJNts 0

Mlnbrd ai, Huntington II
Mlngp Z!, StaniiJn Loc :iD

Grandview li. Cot Centellllial 6

Nortlruta'n 9, Mlnl 'n'ace 8

._,.,

Maysville 36, Heath 7
McDooi kill, South!~ 0
Medina :II, ~ 3
MeigS 31, PI Pieaant !WV11 lB

CHEVETTES

2.9°/o ,APR or S300 Cash Rebate

:Bengals sign number one pick Joe Kelly
· CINCINNATI (UP!)- Just nlne
days before the start of the J'fgUlar
seasm, the Cincinnati Bengals
lrrlday signed their No. I draft pick
"- llllebacker Joe Kelly from the
t1n!Verstty of Washington.
1
Kelly, a 6-toot-2, 22'1-pounder,
~· a tour-year contract worth a
total !I $1.5 rnlllion.
i' The signing ended weeks of
·'

~tem volleyball
~ drops match
Seniors Thnya Savoy and I.esa
Ruti:ereach ronbirutEdflvepolnts
each, rut It was not enough as
Eastern dropped a oon-league
volleyball match to Federal Hock·
lng, 15-9 and J5.li.
HoOey Cremeans pacEd FEderal
Hocking with 13 markers, Denise
&amp;rchweU had 6, Joy Coolson 4 and
tor! •,WUJtams, Jill Ethridge, and
lle.bble Kidwell IIW each.
:. For EHS Arlene Ritchie and Bev
Wigal each had 2 and Krtstl Hawk

haggling between Bengals' officials
and Kelly's agent over tenns of the
contract and Bengals' assistant
general inanager Mike Brown
lamented that Kelly had missed all
II tralning camp and all pregeason
games.

"The coaches and Kelly have
their worl&lt; cut out tor them 1o get
him ready to play," said Brown.
''We wished the slgnlngwouJd.have
happened earUer, rut lie's here now
and ready to go and that's the
Important thing,"
Said Bengals' head coach Sam
Wyche, ''We're glad It's llnallzed
and we'll get to IWii! right away
and get him ready IIi play against
Kansas City (In the Sept. 7 J'fgUiar
season opener). AI this time, he'll

CELEBRITIES

be partlclpatlng prlmarUy on special teams."

2.9°/o APR or SSOO Cash Rebate

Toledo results

-MONTE CARLOS

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Jnt
Time .won the feature race at
Raceway Park Friday night, lead·
ing the $2,1m pace wire-to- wire In a
time &lt;12:00 1·5.
Hlt Time, which won by ooe
length, paid $11.40, $7.40 and $4Jll.
Second was Kulnn, which p&amp;id SUJ
lind $3.40, while Dobers Thunder
was third and paid $3.lrl.
The dally double c1 Superb Andy
8l]d Port Bobba paid $85.00.
A crowd of 19,008 wagered

. ~· EHS Coach Pam Douthitt stated,
!'We did not hustle very well and
made a lot of ~ntal mistakes. I
·l !el as tmugll we wtll do much
.better ooce we get some conll·
de nee. We have seven seniors and a
•lot of expertenoe and potenUaJ."
·· ln the reserve match Eastern
won the qlener but lost the battle In
.tbra! sets, 15-2, 6-15, and 9-15.
, Eastern's Amy Berkhlmer net·
ted 13, Melanie Mankin 9, Amy
&lt;1onnolly 3, Usa Driggs 3, and
Trlsha Spenoer 2.
For Federal Hocking Kathy Hobo
had 9, Mindy Hodge 6 and Angle
Taybr and Duana Young 5.

CAPRICE
2.9°/o APR or S750 Cash Rebate

AND

BLAZERS

Send the flU®
Sweet Treat'"
Bouquet.
Grandpaqmts'
Day is Sunday, .
Septembef 7. Call

2.9°/o

APR

OR

ssoo

or visit us today.

Cash Rebate

•· . GRADUATES FROM
After extensive
- · training in travellourtsm, Gina
• : L. ,Jont'S of GaiUpoUs Is a recent
·.' graduate of Southeastern
Academy, Kissimmee. Fla. To
oomplt'le the program, she met

&lt;{\CADEMY -

,. l"f'Quirements in areas of career

OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS CIERAS

·Rutland tourney slated

~Ci/j.· FLOIISI,

2.

LOCALLY OW- IY ..,... , IIOOD I M1 AW11

PIIONI 446·9721

CHECK WITH US BEFORE·YOU BUY
FOR THE BEST DEALS AROUND

.

ATC"350X

WE ALSO HAV.E A GOOD
SELEcnON Of USED
MOTORCYCLES &amp; ATV'S.

Follow- the Lead.ar
to_Weekend fui
liver Front, Honda

ssoo Cash Rebate

See
. Mike Sickels, Dwight
Staters, Jim Wctlker,
Sherman Green~ Bill
Davis or.Roger
Dillard, NOW for .the
Best Deal in Modern
History!

Discount days are here
on All 1986· Model All's
3 &amp; 4 WHEElERS

APR or

DELTA 88's
2.9°/o APR or S750 Cash Rebate
98 REGENCY$
2.9°/o PAR or S750 Cash Rebate
TORONADOS
2.9°/o APR or S1500 Cash Rebate

GAWPOUS

R1ver Front ·Hon

,

.

lirst

Stlea 446-2240

,
:
•
• ;
: ··
· ·

I!

.

...

" :.

/

'·

4·46•3672

st:'ries

the:
of,

consti.mt I'Hm.1 to adapt ," sait!:
Rudr. v.:ho now works as manage"-

of corporJt(· prrsonnC'I administra~
tion lor HPWirll Packard Co. ~
Pa lo Alt o, C..J iif
.,.
"You art' constantly translating.;:

You havr to concentratf' a lo1. It's.
kmd ol a ' hock ." said Rude, wh(T,
c"mr 10 thr• Lnit r'&lt;i States 19 years:
a~o .

To h{'lp o1hrr foreign business{

passes the product over a price scanner and the prlt'e

NEW SYSTEM - Robin Moulder, left, a Kroger
employee In Atlanta, Ga., recen~ demonstrated to
young cuslomer Joseph Berry, right, Ito. new
checkout sy!tem In lite Kroger store. The sbopp,..

Is lhen posted on a 1:1-lnch color monitor. A
computerized voice recites tile (ll1re and tre Item is

curried down a conveyor belt, where k Is bagged .

geographer on. his business card.
My ti tle .. IS drrE&gt;?tor of market
research. sa1d Ric&lt;'. who holds a
maslcr's degree in geogra phy and
.
has eompleled graduale studies m
urba
.. n, and economrc geograp.hy.
\'.hen I leU ,P""Pi&lt;' 1 ~ a

Geography was a subjcc~ no one
stud red . after elementa ry sch 1.
They lhmk geography rs Ihe ~.prtal
of . dKansas or rocks or maps. she
sa1 .
Rol:x'rt Aangf'f'nbrug , din'Cio! o,,
the Washing1on·based Associalion

we' ('(' cornlng out of the dosrt."

grograptlf'r is. No om' h;l" urhan

geogra phcl .

thPy re

of American \rograpt'crs. es timates thf&gt;rr a.n• morf' than 700

fasrmated .

Hardware stores catch up
with revolution in retailing
Many o! the warehouse stores
grew out of lumber yards tbat were
trying to make up for the Impact ci
winter that discouraged do-it·
yourself activity, said Harry
Franta, editor of Home Center
Magazine.
"In the West, a sizable number c1
hardware stores saw the value of
selling wbole product Unes In the
1950s, rut in the Midwest most c1 the
rome centers grew out of lumber·
yards," he said.
Altmugh hardware warehouses
have expanded sixfold in just the
past three years. they haven 't
captured the market they sought,
said Kelleher, whose organization
sponsors the annual National HardwareS how in Chicago. The nation's
285wtlets, llVlSI run by tr.&gt; national
chains, Mr. How, Home Depot,
Builders Square and Home Club,
accounted lbr just 5 percent of the
$00.1 billion In 1985 hardware sales.
"For a while tr.&gt;y were very
successful , but in the past six to
eight montm there's been a ronsoll-

dation and shakeout In that part of
the market," Kelleher said. "Now
we're moving toward a more
mature market. The race Isn't on
lbr new stores as It Is lor market
share."
To capture some of that market
sbare many r:l. the warehouse stores
are ronvertlng to super borne
center storel that "•ture the same
wide-ranging product mix but c:tfer
customer service as well.
Nonetheless, til&gt; Introduction of·
the warehouse stores forced hard·
ware rooperatives, wch as A£e
Hareware and True Value, to
change their IJ'oduCt line and lake a
look al what they're selling.
"The day of the klcal hardware
dealer rontent with selling In a
dusty sm~&lt;Toom and taking lnven,
tory only once a year Is over,"
Kelleher said.
"Our Industry has caught up with
retailing," ll&gt; said. "You think of
hardware and it sounds kind of
oortng, but there have been a lot of
fashion and upscale products that
have come Into the market."

00

urban grographPrs on eoilrgr
rampu~l'S around thr country and
anott'er JOO or morr wor~ng at
govPrnmPnl or privatr indu stry

jobs. Hundrrd s morr have training
in urban geograp hy .
Thr incrraSC' in thrir numlx'rs
dates back to II&lt;' "real ex plosion"
of lho s)X"ially oo rollege cam
puses of tho 19Ws, I&lt;' said.
Urban problrm·so lving becamr
the vogue. leading lo such special·
Hes as urban sodolo~ and urban

history . he sa id .
"Before the ffis. therew&lt;'rr urban
geograplx'rs bulthry wPrr a ralher
small group," Aangrenbrug sa1d.
Maps Uno II&lt;' walls of Rico' s
office and she 'll"aks in terms of
"spatial perspectives." oot shPalso
sprinkles her conversation with
"occupancy rates" and othl'r tradi·
lional real estate Jerms.
AI Embrey Investment s Inc ..
which has offia•s in four states to
oversee some 50 projects worth
about $:ffl million, RiC\' ilont~ii"S
and analyzes new markets, or
cities. for IXJiential development.
She also studies exisling mari4:'ts to
project O&lt;rupancy cr rxplorr (Xlten
tial areas for ex pansion.
Always applying thr theories of
urban g&lt;"Ography, RiC&lt;' looks al
demographics, transporta tion systems, subcrbanization patterns.
rronomics. environment and a OOst

mPn ad&lt;:~p1 to 1hc' ways and O'l('an9of AmPrica n business, Rucr l'E'-:

cc•nt ly participatE'd in a training:
film produc&lt;'d by Copeland Grigg&amp;
Produclions Inc.
'
Thr San Franciseo-basro com·
pany is trying to case thr onm
difficu lt transition many forf'ign

businessmen make when lh&lt;&gt;y
leave Iheir countries for jobs in Ihe
United Stai&lt;'S.
_
"Thr foreign people coming to
thr statrs run into the same
problems our people run intQ
overseas," said Lennir Copeland.
onr of the production company'~
partners.
"For0i gn r mployf'f'~ have a hard
tim&lt;' i&lt;'arning IIlw to play th~
corp;JralP gamf' thr A.rru?ricaJ!
way ," 'I&lt;' said. "Many things
I'"JUirE'd for success in II&lt;' Unit~
Slate&lt;&gt; arr differmt than in olll&gt;r

•

rountrirs

"You nr&lt;·d to cxud&lt;' confi()&gt;nC\' in
lhr· UniiE'd Slates. In Japan thi$
would romr across as rg{)('{'ntrtC
individualism. " six' ;;aid. "In Euro'·
pran count ri0S it woold ~11)
uwity.' '
Co(X'Iand fonnrd thr production
compan~· rou r yrars ago wJth
partll(lr

LeY/~

Brown

Cri&amp;gS

sixlr1ly aflrr bolh gradualed from
lhe Stanford Graduate School of
Business.
Onr of Copeland 's $700 half·hour
training films, in a strirs called
"Going in lernational," introduces
foreign executives to American
IJJsiness languagr, customs and
!Jlirks. Another offers insights into
living in the United States.
"Most people don't understand
Ihat where you tive Is whore your
kids go 1o ,.,hool or thai you can't
cas h a cneck wittuul a driver:s
license," said Copeland, who grc.W
up in the Middle Easl and Europe
along with i'er brother, Stewart ,
now II&lt;' drummer fo r thr rock band
"'11'&lt;' PoliCl' "

of othPr fact or s.

She (Xlints to a map of t hP
NorthPasl , where llx'rr has been a
resu rgrnCI' in jobs and populat io n.
''I'm analyzing growth in thosr
cit iPs, hying to figurr oo I wherr in
those cit iPs gro\.\.1h is taking place."

she explained .
While ancient geograp hers
served as the patrons of explorers,
tl» urban geographer is Ihe student
o! cities.
"What an urban geograplx'r can
rb is understand citiPS. Why are
cities wherethcy are" How do cities
relate to earh other? Wllhin a city,
where is a city growing'! A
g&lt;&gt;ograpr.&gt;r can offer a broader

GALLIPOLIS - Lon Neal of Bidwell placed among the top 10
auctioneers In June at the West VIrginia Auctioneer Convention.
The top 10 auctioneers competed at the West VIrginia State Fair at
Lewisburg Aug. 23, and Neal placed third. Judges were two
professional cattle buyers and Miss West Vlrglnla.19116.
The contest was s(Xlnsored by the West VIrginia Auctbneer
Association. Neal woli!s as a lull-time auctioneer and 1D kls a
contract with West Virginia for surplus property, In addition to
working automobile, !ann, household and other auctions.

RIO GRANDE - A coun;e In medical clerk training will begin
' Sept. 8, sponsored by the Aduh Education Department r:l. the
Callla-Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational School Dlsbict.
The course will train Its students for IIUCh jobs as medical
receptionist, wrad clerk and medical records clerk. Ins!ruction
: Includes basic medical skllls and management and medical
~ · tenntnoiogy·tn addition such cli!rlcal sldlls as tYJjng, accounting,
• !Uing and office machines, lncluc!jng computers. The !tofp:am wn1
include classroom, laboratocy and llekl experle~. Typng skiDs
are recommended.
~tratlonls now underway, and starting Tuesday, nvlstratlon
will be held Monday through Thu!'lday from 2-9 p,m. and on Friday
~ from 8 a .m. untll. 4 p.m. For more lnfonnatlo~;~, contact the ~ult
• Education DEpartment at 245-5.1'16.
· :,

as a

"You work at a frac tion of youl'

says Jeanette Rice, an urban
geograp her who is using her
expertise to charllhr course of real
"SI"I"
lor a lhriving San
..- &lt;&gt; ..- prnJ'PCis
v
Anlonio company.
"In thr. businrs&lt; world . mosl
people don I know wl1at an urban

HUrnON, Ohio -Allstate Insuranoe Croup has Invested more
than $240 mllllon in bonds throughout Ohio, according to Ru!llell P.
Peterson, the companies' regional vice presldentt for Ohio.
The Investments Include the Scioto Coonty Ecooomlc Develop.
ment Medical Aart Project, the Ohio Higher Educational Facility
Commission Project and the Ohio Housing Ftnanoe Agency Single
Famlly Mortgage 1983 series A.
Allstate Investments are spread through 51 Ohio counties,
Peterson said, Including Meigs County.

as a businessman in

l'a pacit~ cmd you arE" physically:
tirrd bPra uSf' vou arC' making this;

By RENEE HAINES
SAN ANTONIO !UP! I _ A
d
· eographv is becoming a
egree
m gsuccess :m 11, u::',. ~.
.
ticket to
uustness
world, especially in lhP land olfPal
"Stat"
d"V"Iopm"nl.
"
.._
.. ~
&lt;="We sometimes faceliously say

. Medical clerk training scheduled

1616 Ealf•J'I •n~' · . '

-

:
:

'

rruslr.:Jting and tiring r ncountrrs. ;

··'; A rea auctioneer wins honors
·
:

dll\'S

L:nilr'd · Staf f'S

-Business Briefs:-.....,
·

J

. '
Budt.'. a Swiss ll£lli , ·r, rC'CaUs hIS1

Geographers find success in real estate

: Firm invests in Ohio bonds

Chevrol~t-Oldsm.Obile, Inc.

· a•llp1ls, OIL 45631

• and personal development, in
addlllon to to spedallzed occupa·
tiona! training. She is oow
&lt;iuali!ied for an entry-level
position In all areas of tre
. llirllnr, travel or tourism
Industry.

.,,

By BOB WEBSTER
'
UPI Business Writer
:
LOS AI\GELES 1UPI t - Andr&lt;'

(UH)

By .JANICE KALMAR
CIDCAGO iUPI) - The hard·
ware lnduslly - once content with
selling nuts, bolts and tools from
neighborhood slorefronts - has
grown up.
"When someone sars hardWill'l'
store there's stlll a connotation of a
Ma and Pa store down the street
where you can flnd every nut and
bolt," said Jack Kelleher of the
American Hardware Manufactur·
ers' Association In Schaumburg, Ill.
"But they've become sharper
retailers because of competition.
They've learned about everything
from advertising to
merchandising."
Most of the competition over the
last 15 years has come from
warehouse stDres - large !ll,OOHo
!OO,OOJ.squar.,.foot facUlties that
feature everything from the tradlllonal screws and nuts to kitchen
faucets and lumber at rock-bottom
prices.
"Their strategy was to come Into
very large major metropolitan
areas of the country with lnvento·
rles two, three, four times as large
of the traditional home lrr:provl.'ment center with low prices, high
volume and high turnover ," Kelle·
her said.

·'

to U.S.

perspective,'' she sa id .

'

Ullt

/

4SS ,., St.

•

•

5·10
PICKUPS

:;

.1

, · The Supreme Court agreed a
;bostiJe work environment is a form
!Of sex discrimination that falls
iunder the jurisdiction of Title VII,
"I'd the case was sent back lor
:(urt her action.
· "It Is a major decision because it
,itJakes it unequivocaloow In saying

this does constitute sexual harass·
ment," Benedict said.
"A sidebar remark thai Ls made
In passing Is not going to create a
mstile working environment. The
conduct must be severe and
pervasive," she said.
However, there Is dismay over
another part of the ruling saying a
victim's background can be intra·
duced as evidence.
"Because an element of the
hostlle working environment Is that
the advance must have been
unwelcome, testimony Is going to
he allowed to smw tbose advances
were oot un""'lcome. From an
alleged viculn's stan~oint, admissibility of evidence Is going to be
viewed as a drawback," Benedict
said.
"Women's groups a revery upset
by that part of. the ruling. They feel
that the conduct of the allegEd
victim smuld not he admissible,"
she. said.
1'he protest L• based oo the
long-standing objection to a worn·
an's background becoming fodder
for the defense in rape cases.
"My personai belle! Is I makes
sense." she said.

$195,~.

,·

RUTLAND - . The Rutland!
P.T.O. Is sponsoring an ln"'strtal l
Softball Tournament the weekend
of Sept. 13-14. Entry fee Is $75.
1
Anyooe Interested should contact ·
Max Whitlatch at 742-2435 cr Wayne
Adams at 742-2675.
All entries must be In before Sept

ment was created .

2.9°/o APR or S50'0 Cash Rebate

.toa·sweet
treat.

me.

.

o APR

FINANCING
NOW AVAILABLE

Hf'll!hb l), G&amp;IUP!d Htl 0
Marpn&gt;«a 18, Upper ~11\&amp;Sky 7
Mulli;)n Wasb 7, AJa Budltel 0
M. . Perry :fi, ~ Linroln W 0
Mala J.clulon ~ . ('If&gt; CdlJnv.rood 12
Maurrre 31, Elda 2l
Ma,y1\eld 16, Outcrtn Kenslon 7

By RENEE IIAINES
ANTONIO (UPI) - A
Stl'preme Court rullng making It
~.sler for an employee to sue lor
Sf'xual harassment may be sending
shpck waves through business
quarters bul labor law experts saw
lt coming.
Cynthia Benedict has been advls·lng her linn' s clients lor years not
to view sexual harassment In the
narrow light of traditional grounds
for legal action.
"I I hjnk the general public Is
more sull'rised by the opinion .
,Employers not receiving counsel,lng are more taken aback," said
.Benedict, who works for the taw
~Inn of Fulbright &amp; Jaworski.
; Before the June 19 Supreme
(.:ourt ruling, sexual harassment
'lawsuit s traditionally were based
on the quid pro quo theory - the
culprit demanding sexual favors In
:exchange lor, say, a promotion or
continued employment.
::But the high court said creating a
'"Hostile work environment" also is
·rEason to sue.
.
· The case involved a hank em·ployee and hPr supervisor, the
~mpioyee claiming she was subject
. t&lt;l continued sexual harassment by
·her supervisor in violation of Title
:vll of tr.&gt; Civil Rights Act of 1964.
: _A district cour1 said the case had
·nothing to do with her continued
.employment at the bank, as she had
;coni inned receiving promotions.
Bul an appeals rourt said the
.district court had failed to consider
whelher a oostile working environ-

:: SAN

•

0

Map~

Fral\klln. 27, GIMICII 7
FranJtl1n Hts Q , Col
o'
F'rl.ndK1 Ad!na 14, Greenlleld 7
~ktewn :n. Clear Fori 0

~· Moelltr ,_ lnclanlpoUJ Caltledral l
(]arlr:

Keyskllt! 14
14, Ml Healthy 0

~Idly :zt, 01! Jobn N:lams w
fbm:lrill Sl Wm 17, w~ 14 1011

P"ft ll, Golh:!n 0
a...us.. rr. em au HIU5 o
Ql Norti!M!it 21, Gr!ien Hllll7
an !I x.rt!r 11, Ckl ~atncft o
Cln Mcf\lcmlll l ClD Alldenon 0
01 aury Dl)' lll, Twin Val South 7

0

r.z

12 , ~ld 8
l.ovNnd H, Mllbrd lJ
I.Gwe!MDe ll, Let&gt;tonla 12
lucasville Val :11, ~Derrmtt NW T
ftladlsm H. Perry 0
Mansfteld Millibar Jl, WUlard 1'1
Mansfteld Madllon 'l1. s~~ 3

"""12.r-l

Fore~t

~

Lorain

Falrblnb 18, W UI&gt;Salem 7

C.. "'""'
II. Holnt
ll 1'
Ql
CAPE 31,
4KY!
'Cin Huafa D. n.y B!lrm• 1

Believe it!

L..onlbll 71, Mldilan Pl£lni 0
lLir Clear.1ew :1, Lor Soulhvlew l3

:A.

FalrftHd 14. Mt

Ben1011 ll.

J..oeM Elm 7, W!ltlall 0
LoeM !1, New Lednp:m

Eastwood 21. MllbJ,ry Lake 0
Elyria 36, ~Ken- 0
Erlt&gt; 1PaJ Tft'h 1ft. Connl!aut.o
Erie (Pal Vinrent M, Ashtatula 0

C&amp;nlnrton ll. Ridgedlle o

z. varwe o

Lima Bath II, D!lph:l1 St Joba 6
Lima 9\awll!t' Jl, Llma Calli :Y !Oil
Lodl CloverHf 13, Wa:tsworth 6

East L1Wrpoo116, MarUnglon 0
Eastern Melp 21. Watertnt 6

~ .0, Newrom!l'RM'n 0
Cam~7.~6
CUll W\nct&amp;(Eor 13, Bl!xEy 9
CaniOn 'l'l1rl)len l!i, Ravenna 7

ca

U~r1y

•
aSSISt
• •
VISitors

'

.

Ut...rty O!tlf'r I&gt;, Holp~ 6 ·
Lk:tting Val !, Drtlden Trt-Val 7

East Knax :11, Hllllldai! 3

...... 16
Soutbside 'l'!ch 6

'

KentDD :t1 Hll7
Kent 3), Lou»~ 14
Kmton RI&lt;W&lt;! 13. MaryJ\'IBe 0
Ke4 t Alfl'r 16, KL"lt Falnnarn lJ
Kyaer aa WI. ~ Hocklq '
l..alu!Mlcd J}, 0e Wnt Tf'l'h 19
Lancute- 21, Col Mar.Fra!lk Y
lebMon :1, l..IUe Miami l'
Lemon ~ 7, C1n Wa!Dut Hils 2

a. Ubel1y u..,a o

DfGnft Rlvenlde 1!, Trlad M
Deer Part ll. &amp;1:~1 Tall' !I
Delawart H&amp;)'el!!ll2, liK:i!.eye Vlllley 0
I:Riptn JC!U II, Wayll' 'JTace 0
0mer 29, ae Eaa~ Tech o
Datiea:lwn :11, Akr Covernry 6

0

:::ae~

KaDIII Lakota

0

tl, T«o!IO Y

~: ~

tY.'
7
lronloa 15. Colll:lcton 6
Jacklon MIIIUI 7, P)'mabanlnl Val 6
.Jefleraln UMio 7. IJIIcbyf so
Jewett.scto 14, New Albin)' 12 leU
Jdtmti:Jwn 8, IIi: Wabi.Lt 7
JotulabNII N'rldile 14, l..icldnl HIS 12

cay Pattmoa 18. o.y Stebtllns o
Oily N'1'1181! 1!1, T1pp Oty ~ 0
Day ~ 21, Trtllwaod Madi5on

Back Rivt!r 12, W Salmi NW 0
Bl.llfltort 19, Cory·RaMJJn 0
9oarctnan t&amp;, Newcastle (Pa) 6

C&amp;cll It, ~ (PI I

:

OJ)'Illop Hb 11, Kln11111d 0
Dl.llm a, New t.o.t~a lf
Dlnvll! Il, Cl! l..anan•k !I
Day '!'~ ll, a.a,ymn Nortt.m" Zi
DIY OakwGDd :fi, MUDI-UrOOn ll
Dlilr Ollm.JuJ 8. Dly CarroU TT

~' ~ ConoJnt 0
BN-mcretlt • • Gree!rvBit 3)
Bel!bd QaMI!I :w. Lor lholctlde 0

Ri!v~

Ku'*"l 28, Dnlodeld 13

w•

Movies

Jlarassment ruling
:Worries
bosses
.

ll&lt;&gt;iritnd J&amp;. eam,...i o

Col..,..

""""' 14. •Air II
Amladl asaua 22, UDlotG2l
AnlrllllS. G1e1 E1tt 7
An::anum M. &amp;ookvtle 6

~ N

Grovl' City 18, Clldrvtl~ u
Ha:•nlbal RMr d.' Sl Nlrys IWVIIl r.
Hardin N«tt''lmt C9, Up Sdoto Vtl12
Kartvllr ,l...akf 12. Quill J\lhon NW 6
lllcUvWt 27. Lima ·Reeny 0
tlopf!weU·Loudon tz. Arcdl 11

0! ~ :16, Hudaoo Jl
.
~ Ualv ~ 21., l..yD:Ihural Brush 0

·u..ltiJ;r K8l.mrft •
....
z. a.,. &gt;)Ill.
AU ~I stu 12. Gft.eD.Itwt G1'8!11

Brec:kMDe 11 RkhBelcl

"""""""'·"""""""''

a.rt NW 12. Sping Calh Cent '

7

Allr lloblil

0

• ...

1 .

'

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

r: II:Mif!CII ..... '• • •

LaiTy A. Bean

George L. WUBamson

Two Win promOtlOUS
at firm s Meigs rmnes
•

'

ALBANY - Larry A. Bean and
George L. "Buddy" Williamson
have been promoted at Southern
Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs Division
offtce.
Bean, named associate environ·
mental engineer, Is responsible for
overseeing the division's environ·
mental program within areas that
hav.e been granted pennlts by t!le
Ohio Depar1ment of Natural Resources. He reports to David V.
Wright, supervlsor·envlronment
artd land.
Orlglnally trom the Athens area,

Bean began working for Southem

Ohio Coal m1982 as a laboratory
technician. In March 1984. he was
proJIIoled to envltonmental
technlcliln.
Bean J'll(:elved his bachelor's

•

.

"You've hPard lhe old saymg:
'The three most im(Xlrtant things In
rea l estate are location. location.
local ion.' In urban geography, It's
localion." she said. "Good real
estale developers. even trough they
don'tknowit,canhaveagoodsense
of gcog.-aphy."
In her sparl' lime, RiCI' speaks to

~~:. ~ts":lln~sg t~~~~h 7:

·
. , all geographers teac h" and encou·
degree In field biology !rom Ohio raging tll&gt;m to consider the various
University in 198l. He and his wife, applications of their craft .
Laura, now Uve In the Albany area.
Geography can he a lucrative
Wllllamson, named real estate business undertaking.
".There are some millionaire
coordinator, wW be res(Xlnslble tor
the company'ssubsldence (l'ogram geographers," she said.
as It relates D the gen,..al public.
In tbe private sector. urban
He also reports Ill Wrlgbt.
geographers can be bund in real
Wllllamson joinEd Southern Ohio estate, retail and investment firms.
Coal In 1978 as a .generaJ· lnslde In the public sector, they can be
laborer at Meigs No.2 mine. In 1981 found in planning and environmen·
he became a taceman at the mine. ta 1departments.
Prior to working at the Meigs
"Dayton·Hudson oul of MlnneaDivlslon, WllilamSDII was general polls bas a willie team of g&lt;&gt;ornanager and CO!l§lntelion esllrna· graphers." she said about the
tor for WWJamson ~hale and Slope major retailing firm.
In Athens from 19'10 to 19Tl. He
"A lot of urban planners have
became a licensEd realt.., ml981.
degrees 1n geography. Washington
OrlginaUy from the Athens area, D.C. Is full c1 grographers working
WWlamson and his wife, ~sann, !or the government," she said. "We
have IIW daught...s, Summer and apply our geography ."
Gretchen.

Richard L McAlli&lt;iter

Oil company :
adds to staff ~·
MARIEITA - Richard L. MeA~
lister has joined Par Mar Oil tO
evaluate and execute new busine5f
opportunities for the company;
according to Par Mar Preside'~'!
William C. Hollister.
McAllister, woo !bonded Mti·
rleUa Computer but closEd it dowp
when Apple Computercanrelled Ill
smaller dealerships, has held
variety of (Xlsltions In lndustly. Ht
was a division president with Botj
Warner and Is listed In Marqul(
"WOO's Who in Flnanoe anp
In"'stry.''
•
"We are particularly pleased lb.
have someone with McAlllster)
rosiness credentials to guide our
move into ll)Me exciting
ventures," Hollister said. "In
new IXJSitlon, McAUister wW c
upon his background In compu '
an&lt;trustness management toesta~
!Ish new rosiness oenters In Par
Mar."
:
McAllister and his wife, Pe!ID',
wW continue to Uve In MarleUa.

a

a

�The

Times-Sentinel

Annuunt:ellll' nl o

'lard Seles

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

Antiques, Gravely equipment.
trolling moto r, btby ctothlng,
rnuch more. Rt . 2 Eckard ChiPel

304-676-66 2 4.

....... Gii11Tpolis..........

MawW'Ig and Ylrd sale Sept
2.3.4, 6, 6 . Twp. Rd. 79, ~mile
~ beck of Maiga Fair Grounds.
Few' tools and antklu•.
A~ult 28th and 30th, Stpt.
~~~ end 3rd. Ja.n Craig 483

SIXth St , Middleport. 9 :00-1
Someth~ng for everyone!
Tu•dey. Sept. 2nd. Nice school
cloth• 4 to ax. Baby clothn.
women winter doth.. g, Moped,
~ 342 Sixth. Middleport
Sep1ember 3 9 .00-5:00 2
111M. Riggs Crest, above Eest·
ern H1gh Wicker furniture,
stove, childrtn's clothes,
wrought iron potl.
Two family . September 3
Ro.ckspnngs Fairgrounds at Fred
&amp;oeglems 9 .00 am Rain
c1notls

8t Vicinity

reptir, part1. and suppN•. Pk*
up end dllfvtry, Devil v._,m
Cl11nar, one half mila up
G10rg11 CrMk Rd. CaM 014-

4. . ·0294.

RacinaOun Shoot apon~ared by

Racine Gun Club. Every Sunday,
beginning It 1 :00 p.m. Factory
Choke. 12 111.11191 thotgunt.

NEWCRED1TCARD81 NOONE

2nd. 3rd. 8.30 to 1 On Fourth
Ave across from Foodland.
'ferd Sale Wed. 8a Thurs. Sept 3
&amp; 4 Old Rt 180 at Evergreen .
:ox residence

Porch Sale. Sept 1·2, P1anta

5 ldorlble ktntnl, I w..U Did,
J, Mo.ton..,, 304-875·1131.

6 Lost end Found
Cit

Uttla white on nedl. Lo.t in Bob
McCormick Rd trM. Cal 814-

448·2158.

SINGLES

LOST in O.J. Whhe Rd arM.
Male black Lat. CMh NWard.

your

aru

Meet othert from
and ehlewhere

AM

11981 Don't be lonlly H H C

Bo• 81 . leNuy, WV 21871

Coli 814·441·0370.

'

Jim Mink ChiY.-Oida Inc
BIILGII'It John10n

114·448·3172

11

TOP CAISH plkl tor '83 model
and n • • uud cars. Smith
luldt-Pontlac. 1811 Ea1tem
Ave.. Oaillpolls . Call 814·448-

22a2.

u_.

WANTED TO BUY
wood &amp;
coal hHterl . SWAIN'S FURNI TURE. 3od. &amp; Olivo St. Golllpa·
!Ia. C1ll 111.C.-448-3159 .

Old Orientlll n.tp wanted . Any

1-800·433·1847.

Wanted !lito 10 ~er•ltnd. Mutt
be in VInton Elt. Scftool Dinrict.
Call 814-388-8342
'
Good ltok-o-matic stove Ctll

4

814·358·11038.

Aug. 30th &amp; 31st 8.30 till 6.30

2 long haired grav kitten, 7
wnQ old . call 814-448-9682

Giveaway

St.IVIt.l~o

We PlY ollh for late model ciMn
Ul.t cera. •

lizt or condition. Cal toll free

469-3648 ext C-1880 24 hrs.

1----- -- - - -

Eleetronlcs Baby cloth• to size
48, glauware, old books, dolls,
jBWelry, miSC

5 ktttent to good home, 8 wllkl
old, UH• trlln«&lt; 304-171S12U.

tiurr or ·11re¥ed smiR dl,.

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.
I

Help Wanted
--

Make Chrl1tmaa money, 1111
Avon Make 46 percent Call
814-448 -33&amp;8
Position Aviilabla Sub bus
d'iver- must hold bus driver
licente 1nd have physical exam
Salary 15 06 per OOur Contact
Mr. David Ratliff, Prinical. Guiding Hand School. P.O. Box 14,
Cheshire. Oh 45820 or call
814-367-0102.
FIJI time &amp; part time in nur11ng
ust. whh 111.1tp1~1ence and for
trelning. Apply adPinecresl Care
Center.

Immediate man-eement posted
for local restaurant business
Some experten ce nec:euary
Please send resume to T-70 in
cara of the Galhpolia Deily
Tribune, 825 Th~rd Ave., Galli·
polia. Ohio 46631

Wanted security couple to live in
apartment cof11)1811: tor free rent
Mutt be bondable Ill have
reference Call 304-675 -SBOB
or 614-446-9280.

3000 govemment JObS It&amp;t.
$16.040-$69,230 year. Now
hirin{l Call 806-687·6000 EKt
R-9806.

to tuch par~thood classu and
to davllop other health education cours•. Pan-time. Sand
r•u me to Box T50 In care of the
Gallipolis Da1ly Tribune, 825
Third Ave , GallipOlis , Oh

810 S . Second. Middleport
September 1 through 6. Bed·
dll\Q, linens, spreads, drap",
curtains, d11h•, pots, PMI.
AW)n, clothing . small applian
en. Ttppan 911 range , bedroom
a~i1e, ltrge chair. stereo l)'ttem,
JIIWelfy, school drum. Iampi,
lots mise

Marrl Mac's guaranteed line of
tovs. gifts. hbme decor item·
•.ate. NO delivering, collecting
or nva.tment Your hourt call
304· 67&amp; -5768 or 1-800· 992·

Women to care for elderty lady 1n
het mme. by the week or as hva
in . Call 614-992-3223

Health EducatiOn Coordinator-

Wanted 10 buy, Belt vibrator
muuger. 304-1575-8678

OPEN1NGS
" AVAILABLE. oolllng

1072

R.N. with obstetrical eaperiaoce

Hen 811d 14 blddl•to glv.ew-v.
Call 814-985-4288

11

11 Help Wanted

lnqtltt'/ll lt'lll

REFUSED! Vlaa-Maltt.,Cird
Into Clll ~refundlblal 1· 1118-

Sub. Orv off Bulavilla rd
Several p1ece1 of Vll'fllnla Rose
dishes 10-5 o 'clock Brown '•
residenoe

on Upptf Rt . 7 next to Bob

Giveaway

Wood., p•ll..,. &amp;top bv Oalllpo111 Daity Tribune Office, 825
Third Ave., Galllpollt, Oh.

SWEEPER and ltwing ma:hlnt

Road. Tun. Wtd, Thurs, Sept
2, 3,4 9 00 tilt dark. Phone

·-···· ··········· ··· · ··· --------- -

4

Announcement~

3

·· ..... P.onierov······ ·····

31, 1966

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Easy Assembly Work! 1714 00
per 100. Guaranteed payment
No ael11 . Oetalla-·Sendatamped
envelope· Elan-716 3418 Enter·
pr•e. Ft Pierce, Fl 33402

46531.

X-n1y Technician. AART cert1fl·
cation preferred At leatt one
year experelnc:a desired . Part time 6 everungs a week and
II'VW'f Olher weekend Pay IS
co mmtnsurate Wllh exper1ence
Send r•u me to 8001 T60 In care
of the Gallipolis Dally Trilxlne,
82&amp; Third Ave . Gallipolis, Oh

HIGH SCHOOl GRADUATES Serve part-t1me n the Army
National Guards and attend
college full time. We prov1de up
to 818,000 ~ educational expenses, PWS, provide good pay
and good training 304·11763960 or 1-B00-842-3619

46831

H.alp Wanted

Will Care for alderty In my..,,.,
TrMIId. IXPirilnold . C.n 114·

112·•13.

We hlwe vacancy for .adtrty
gent...._., Room and bo.-d.
allo llaeping room. Cal 114-

982·1022.

Ptlermac-. needed lor Fruth
Pharmacr Stores, Gallipolis,
M1ddlapon . Wellston. Call Don
Pt.~llin

Bilby lining in my home. Full
time .,.. 1*1 time on New Lima
Road In

2778.

614-448 ·0474.

MAJC.E MORE MONEY! Esm
weakty comrniuions with our
Profitable Line of advet1aing
c alendars, pens , caps, tnd
J&amp;ceta, helpful sale&amp; ideas, 1
toll ~ free m111saga center and
other great selling tools AU
while being your boll. No
invettment No ooUecdons Full
or part time Our 77th yelf'.
Wri1e Kevin P111ka, NEWTON
MFO COMPANY . Dept.
04922, Newton, Iowa 60208.

Rutland. 114·742·

814·211·1114.

Will do weUpepwlng. Frw lflimata. Low .-.. Phon• blfore
3:00 p.m. or afttr 7:00 p.m.

114-1182·3121.

In my lloMonlloY 1hN Frkloy
ontr. 304-871-Mil.
Will cD

boby~ttlog

doy ohllt,

HI TECH LPN 1 needed for p8rt "

21

-.. . . 0-

Three bedroom home on 11
- · ,,...,._ lul1y ...........
nwt khdl111 wllh appllftlnaludod. Largo """' ... ~onl

NEW AND UIED MOilLE
HOMEI KESSEL'S QUAUTY
C1oM101hon..,_...,._
MOilLE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
In OolllpoKo. Coli 814·441·
Zllt.
'
ploy WEST, OAWPOU8, AT 38
c.tt•. MUll 1111. Mlkl offet. PHONE 114-44t·7274.
3 bdr. holM UOI A*llft Awe. 114-Mt·ZIOS.
10.10 M.n.tt 2 bdr. •king
111,000. Coll14-44t-1711.
Land CantriCL 2 t.droont IMUM •1.100. For more information
all814·211·1148.
4 miiM aullldo olty ·llrnllsl 32 tn•---~-ln
llo.,.lo.-..1

ecre~ .. 00111·

-1ft-

..,...room. 1 ttory

yonl, h10 ....-.. otumlrKom
oldlnt. tul1y ~. - l y
remodeftd. "' block from
n~artel. pool. JN!rll. tenni•

llad1e /haek

NMd extr• money? Friendly
homa 1ov .-rtlel 1'111 lmmedl...
openings for manlglfl and
dlmonstrlltOrt M ttlil .,.., lt'l
e..,., fun Wid pcofttlbta. We
hive ower 100 exclttng toys and
glfl1 teeturing thl
anlmltld
tiHdnl dol "Crlclltt" whlc:tl wMI
be advart•ed on natioftii1V. No
cash in"""*''· no caaecdng.
·no dtllv!fring end no MfYics
m•ue· All you nHCil11detlreto
make money , hmfun andelew
houra of IPICe time. No txp•
rlenCI necenary. Cell 1-100-

n•

227·1810

23

Wireless Remote

Save

1181 Rtdman 21•44 home. 3
bdr.. 2 bath on 1 left! lot. whh 2
cer gar.... SA 110 neerNGHS

-o. po11o, """ - · CloH
.. KC - · 117,100. Col

Colll14·318·97el.

nlllllod. tnqulnl.

1171 Aotemont 3 bc:lr. 1 bath,

114·317·7170. Wll Hit

Ill'

3 bclr. houHiqey•d. , . - .
t mi. flom town Witt. ,.,.,.Oil,

1111 1* - · Colll14·~1111711.

Quality hOMt, ntw,Y rema~allll
ah- loootlon 011 Collop Rd.
lyrMUU. fiiW compllte~
....
loundly,
•• - - · ·
hovotot.
114·M2·1U4._

N. Perk Driwa,two bedroom. tul
.................d.
1orcocl ok g• -..JIIIoahod
garege. Hnm sklhlg, JOOd
loalltkM'i.

c-.

to holpitll, btnk.

dNI ""d g10e0ty .......

171·1881.

5~ . 1tt and 2nd . 383 Park St ,

step No J below

Middleport . Auto shotgun .
aufc:l rtfla !single shot ), pistc l,
bed clothing. dishes. camper
lop.

Reg. 89.95

·· ..."Pf'Pieiisii'rif ··· ·
&amp; Vicinity
Porc h Sale. leon Baden Road.
Sept 1, 9 ·00 till 6 ·00 2 m11es
off Rt B7

304- 33

IIYa A. f~rm In VInton, 8 room. 1

Kriner Road
c~

Sepl
v~

3 &amp;

a•,

4

Adutt

4l!M dn

fiStniU.

AIU.N3f)
l¥.JNV7
A7IJIIOH

doe~

1. uptnoo 1eq 01 peon
II .. "&amp;&lt;IIOU1! 011Ml)ll08X8 .(Qnq 8U()

end children clo thing D1shea,
pans, pictures, m1rrora, toy s
small applian ces Item s to nu merou s to mentiOn Rain
cancels

32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

Cut 37%

IIJ3 I'IA II:IS

JACK ROUSH MOTOR CAR SPECIAL$111

1888

Banery Backup
HAC Falls
No better value' #12·1557
Backup battery extra

Opt1mus«' T-120 by Reai!SII C

9995
EaCh

Reg.
199.95

Low AI $20 Per Month
On Cltillne •

Save $2~0 on a patr!
35'12" high #4().2047

4 door hardtop, front wheel drive 6 cyl. eng., fuct. atr cond, auto. trans., p-steering, p-lJakes. p-wildows. p·seat

Reg. 49.95
Twin 3'h" speakers. 1112·706
Batter ~es

Stereo Car Cassette
By ReahstiC

Save Save

140

23995

Reg.
379.95

linaer on.
Sldly missed by mothtr
tnd dad. sisttl11ftd broth·
· en, tnd their dlildrM, and
his chlldrM.

e.:tra

SCR-3010 by Reahshc

1

Avx1nt chtir rnnot btlilltd
Thoup 5 yeon 11m potsod
IOd pno,
Fond mtmories will 1tw1ys

'40

Digitaltuntng! #31·1998

1

'14,880

scA-18 by Rea!IS1lc

40

Stereo-Wide for
Reg. 99.95 Lifelike Sound
Record tapes off-the-air or "hve"
wtlh bullt·tn mtkes. AC/battery.

5

675·5045

,

Point Ple111nt, WV.

•

'

. . ..
'

'

. . ...... '

' . •'

..

a82·3311.

1110 Ftifmont 14x70 O.klxe. Z
bedrooms. ucelllnt conllfUon.
Cl..,. Cell 014 -112-30131fter

36 Loti &amp; Acreage

12•60 all ellotrlc 2 bedroom
mobil• ho rna. A 1 ·furniture and
appliance~ wtth With• tnd
dryer, ...w
ell the wey, 3

c.,..

c•

prqe, 70x178 lewel lot.
Reduced from 111.100. to
112.800 flrmtor quldlule. East
Vine, A.clne. Ohio. See Linll¥

fruit end shadt ....... 10011.171
lenl lot . Reduud from
129.1500. 1110 127,100. firm for
quick tale. Muotl more. SH
Untey H ... Eeat Vlna, Raclne.

Ohio or coli 114·949·3071 or
I14·MI·2158.
le,b2,fcl•32

R..irement

in Moore
Lake Ok...
choble. Extrtlot 'lllthHP11cend
drain. But baa tt.hlng. Vary
nice with frulttrles,IOfMn roOm
tnd
ciHI)Ofl. Good buy 11
132,000. 8H Unl.., Hert Of call
1514-9,9-3071 or 11,·941·

H.even..

home

on

F~rk11,

AIIIMIL PARK
5 Milts El!l

01 Jackson, Ohio
'train •Animals •P1cntc
•M1mature Coif •C11ts
•G1oups Welcome•
Mon.-Sal 10 am mda1k
SundayS noon til dark

304·1711-2331

3 bedroom treiler, 304-1712111.
1178 HollY Pwk wtth etpendo,
hHI pulf1', exc cond. 304-1575-

1810.

8

thane 314.2101
Toll Fret 1•100.282·2167

Lot for sale. 3'h A. hilltop
homesite, cleered. Herrlson
Townthlp. Cllll1'·837-1081

Acrt rtltrlcWd building lots.
Rodney-Hm1sburg Rd Electrtc,
rurll water. Calll514-248-5467.
Ashton building Iota with public

41

Houses for Rent

Duptax tor rent 841 Second
A.vt . Gatllpolls 3 bch llvin·
groom. dlnlngroorn. n...- kitchen, backyard, rwfrig &amp; rena•
1310 plus utllitl• • security
deposit. C.lll14-4415-01590

::~=~~Yno;:,!d!:.t.'~~';:

niCII, retldenoe Mighbor, large
front
• niCII yard for fall
133&amp; per month Ctll

19P~29.95

Save

•aoo

3195
21.!

Reg. 39.95
It really talks! 24-hour alarm,

It mer. if63.903 Satterlee extra

EC-4014 by Radio Sheck

33% Off

1595

Reg.

. 23.95
Powered by Light
Has 67 functions, 9
parentheses levels,
acllve' memory.
#65-979

....==_,
• 'lo.

ESTATE OF ROY MOONEY

ADIIIINISTRAlOR, .LVIII lOONEY
·

CAS£tli41i

2 bedroom turn11hed apanment
lor rent Adults preferred 614
992-2749

1 bedroom apt 1n Middleport
Unfurnilhed. 1160. per month
plu1 utilities Call 614-992 ·
564&amp; deya and 614 -949 ·2216
evenings.
Claan, roomy 2 bedroom apt m
New Haven , W Va Also commercial apace Call 614 -992-

2 bdr. unfurnished 1pt. in Crown
C1ty Call 814-2158 -6520

~~P....-. =Cu-2Ttln,eOwv PkS-UP-~

2 bedroom. furnished or untur·
nlshed Remodeled Large pat10
On Spring Ave, Pomeroy Call
•fter e.oo p m 814-992-6886
Unfurn11hed 2 bedroom. Newly
painted, fully carpeted, uttlitles
partially furntshed . No peu Cell
814· 9·9-22&amp;3
Apartments forrant 1n Pomeroy
One and two bedrooms Call
814-992 -8216

Fum. 4 rooma li beth cl1111n No
pets. adults ooly. Aet &amp; dep.
requ.red . Clll814 -446-1&amp;19.

1 bedroom apertment upltalu
Newly carpated throughout
Partly fur1111hed Call 814-992 5908.

Regency Inc apartment 2 bdr ,
utdlti11 partly paid, nice Cell
304-1576-6104 or 304-875
7928

APARTMENTS. mobile homes .
house• Pt Pleanntand Gatllpc ·
hi 814-446 -8221

2 bdr 2 baths. kitchen fur nished, 11 Coun St $325 per
mo plus utilities , refMance &amp;
depo11t Ca11614 -448 -4926
2 bdr unfum Wrlh appl. It 881
Ave G1lhpohs 8260
month plus utltitiea Call 614·
246- 9691

Th~rd

Furnishllllll efficiency t160 ma
utHitiM paid. 7Y:t Nell Ave. Call
448·4416 stter 8PM.
Unturn 1 bdr •Pt , carptrtad,
utilities peid, no children, no
pat1. Call814-448 -1637

8

2 bedroom apt Gallipolis Ferry,
304-876 -2648 or 676-5783
In Middleport Ohio, 2 bed room
furn11hed apt . 1 304 882
2568
Ona bedroom apt Convement
location . 304-676-2441
Unfurnished , 2 bedroom apt for
rCII'lt. 206 Poplar St. S50 00
dapo11t , 304-876 -7641
One bedroom apt Point Plea·
unt, extra nice and clean,
304-675-13B6

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ESTATE AUCTION

SATURDAY, SEPT. 6, 1986
10:00 A.M.

lhis is tha personal property of tha late Harry C.
Watson. Located at 310 Wetzpll St. Walch for signs
on Buttemut Ave. in Pomeroy, Ohio.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Admtral no-frost refngeoator. 30" !l&gt;s•c Sears nat gas range
w/dovble ovms, recliner, portable B&amp;WIV &amp;sland. end lables,
stereo. beds. van tty dresser. m•~ !abies, lamps, Cl!btn el base
Hoover uprtghl sweeper. dresses. auto washer &amp; dryer. mtsc
pots. pans &amp;dtshes,1&gt;1al rug; , movie projector &amp;screen. eleclnc
heaters, elect•~ lans, miSt inens &amp; small ap~tances
"ANTIQUE OR COUECTABLES"
Chtkl's rocker dtntng room lable &amp; 4 chatrs, hutch , sc hool
desks, chatrs, rock tng chatr, p~e shelf. cab~et. chtl!erobe
w/ desk, wash stand w/lowel rack. tr unks, chtld 's diSh cup
boaod, handmade Qutlls, star &amp; miSe handmade Qutlts no!
complete, QUilt p~eces . school, 91ng, ch1ldrm's &amp; Ltllle Wo·
men books, collectiOn ol stlver spoons &amp; racks copper wash
bot!er, old Maytag wnnger washer. Qutlltng lrames. wood
chest. oak small chesl and more
"MISC"
Lawn mower, ladder. wash tubs. 'miSe tools. brass cui " "
frutt 1ars, dressmaker form. Clmstmas decoratiOns. loot
locker &amp; other miSC.
Administratrix. Kathy Ann Hysell
Case #251l7
Cash
Pos111ve I D.
Eats
DAN SMITH : AUCnONEER
949·2033 OR 992·7301
"Not responsible for accidents or loss of

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Steep1ng Rooms and
light house keepmg room• Park
Central Hotel Call 614-4.t.6·
0756
Rooms for rent , day weH
month Gall•• Hotel c.n 814446 -9580 Rent ulowaaf120
month.

46 Space lor Rent

61 Household Good•
Chadt us

c:&amp;~t

w.._ •

on our lvMg room

... n... U41 a up

Bushllne. New GibiDn IIIPMM·
ces MoUohan Furniture fh. 7 ·
north , Kaneuga. CMI 114-441·
7444.
GE 1~ 3 almond Nfrlg•IIDr
only 8 vn. old wtttl niW
coft1)rlltor t110 . Wh"-oal
copp . .one 22 ft ,.,...,Morr
side by aide t210 Ceft 114·
448· 8839.
•

For rent traiiCif space on Teena
Run Road 1 m1 ofl Rt 7.
Gallipolis School Dlst Garden ,
rural weter, •30 month Call
814 446 -0427

Moving S•le 0 E. weaMf ., ,.
dryer, white
Queur
color TV UOO. 8..,. floof

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Routa 33. Nonh of Pom•oy
Largalots Call 814-992 -7479

814·358·8e20.

Merc handi se

51 Household Goode
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE B2
Olive 81 • Gelhpolia NtMt &amp; used
wood coal stovea, fl pc wood lR
tulle 1399, btmk beds 1199 ,
an1ron reclmers 199 . naw It
used bedroom suit11. ranges.
wr~nger washers, &amp; sho• New
hvingroom 1u1tes 1199· 8699,
lamps. also buymg calli&amp; wood
stoves Call 614 -448 · 3169
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers . refrigerator•.
ranges Ska11g 1 Apphancu .
Upper R1ver Rd Dos ida Stone
CrBit Motel. 814-448 -7398
County Appliance. Inc Good
used appllan~s and TV l ett
Open BAM to 6PM Moo thru
Sat. 614-446 1699, 627 3rd
Ave Gall1potis, OH
Valley Fum1ture. new &amp; used
large 1C!1Ct1on ot ~ahty tum1 ·
ture 1216 Eutern Ave,
Gallipohs
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofu and eha1r1 priced from
8395 to a995 Tabl• 160 end
up to $126 Hide -a-beds 1390
to S596 Recliners 1225 to
S376 L1mpa 128 to a 1~5
D1n11tn •109 end up to f496 .
Wood teble w-8 chein t286 to
8796 Desk 8100 up to U7ts .
Hutch• $400 and up Bunk
beds COI11)1ete w· m•ttress•
1296 and up to 1396 , Blbybeda
$110 &amp; $176. Manr81111Drbox
springs full or twin 183, tnm
$73, and 183. Queen 111111228.
King &amp;360 4 drawer dt•t 166
Dressers &amp;89 0 un cabl\811 B.
10. &amp; 12 gun. Gas or eleclrlc
range 8375 Baby manres•
&amp;35 It &amp;46 Bed ffam• 120.
830 &amp; King frame t60 Good
selection of bedroom RJit81,
metal cab•nels headboards 130
and up to 166
Used Fumit\lre We1h1r &amp;
dryer, electric range , wood
t1ble &amp; 2 benches, bad•.
dresser . &amp; rec:lln• 3 mi1al rut
Bulav11!1 Rd Optn 9AM to
5PM. Mon. thN Sst

614·446·0322

8

z•:

uoo.

modeiOflln with bencfl l200l·l
ft trudl topp.- 171 . 2 mft cloth• closeta 121 Met~ . Cal ·

-

Horizontal Ex.-cteor wtth .-..cr;
176. Thr1111 electric r~r~. .. TWO
upnght frHzen. O.E.(.uto.'l
wesher Two sld•by-llderlfril• ·
et'IIOrt. Thr• 2 door ftOit 'frill,
Fir•tone Store in 'MkkUtport.

'"' *

Broyhill bedroom wite,
dr•aer wfth tutch mirror, nlaM
nand. bed. 1271. Cell11'-742·
2163 .

Pickens Used furntture. Oood ·
qu1lity used fumtture.
till .
8 or call for sppoknmll'lt.
304· 876-&amp;ot83 or 171·1410. · '

o,.,

New Whirlpool w.-.dDw eir conil,
10.000 btu . VCR Zenith. Whir·
pool mlcmweve. Coudl F.... '
1teei Phone 304-17&amp;-MII. · · :

53

Antiques

5 PieCe Oek dinnet HI. Ca•

614·446·9150

OlD ORIENTAL RUO.
WANTED Anysazeoroondltlon
Call toll tree HID0-433-7147.

.

CallahM' sUiad Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tir• . lliz81 12, 13, 14, 11,
16. 16 6 8 mil.. ou1 At. 218 .
Call 814-2515-8251 .
Pluflc clatem ltate approv~.
plutic septk tanks, pl . .&amp;c
culverts, metel culvllll. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, JIICk·
son. Oh. 114-280·15930.
Childers S.w Suppty, Vinton,
Ohio. Call 114-318· •14. Altgull Speclell . 20" off Echo
uws. 20% off Ect.o trtrnmer..
Hu~qwemasews. c:ltlinuws 11' '
t11.-&amp;0. B•r oil gel. MOO
Chain llh.rpen .. g, ntpslr worll
Opan 8-15 Mon -Sat. CloaaC:I
Wed . &amp; Sun.
New eountry drMm hon . Bulb
foryou. $18,99&amp; 4tdr.2 .. th.
See lhi1 model todey Call ..
814-888-7311 .

ML.:ed hardwood slabs, t12 . par
bundle. Containing approx 11Ja
ton1 FOB Ohio Pellet Co..
Pomeroy, ()tuo Call 614-9821· ..
6481 .
Wood-coal stowe. Sears frei
11andlng with glan doon. kl·
ctudn br1ck firtplacepad . l410.
Cell614-742-2113

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AUCTION- ..
SEPTEMBER 6, 1986
SATURDAY 10:00 A.M.
location : From Holzer Hospilll, take Route 160pnt
Wilkesville cross double lane highway; stly on 160
to Sand Hill Coal Company. Sale ~eross from Coel
Company, 3 miles from Hamden, Ohio on Route 160
on right.
Due to health problems, owner will sail the followmg to Highest Bidder:
AUTOMOBILES &amp; TRAILERS
1978 Ford Van, real ntce; ltke new 30ft 1980 Champ1on
ca mper lratler wtth atr; collecttble 1962 custom 4 dooo
Dodge. exira nt ce. J mach tnery trailers, lmdems. I car
hauleo 19 73 Dodge pte kup wtlh ultltly bed
GUNS
Brown 1 n ~ shotQ
un · twn-410 numn ~ mnr1P.\74 automatiCnIle. 30 cali be r re volver Guns are extra c ean
MISCELLANEOUS &amp; OTHER
Snappe~ 8 hp nder mower. Ia!he, old drtll press. lire chan·
ger. new hand lools ol all ktnds, dtS hes, Avon l:xltlles rod 11011
table wtlh 4 chatrs; butldm g lu l ol new and used tlems too
numerous lo me111ton. ThiS IS a parttal listtng
THIS IS AN ALL DAY AUCTION
-LUNCH SUVEONole: This is a cl,.n Silo .
Not responsible far accidents or loss of property .
TERMS: Cash or Approved Check. 1.0. required.
Commg in October. Consignment Auction at Ewina·
ton , Oh. Callllike little 388-8244.

OWNER: MARCUS DAVIS
AUCTIONEER-LON NEAl-614·367-7101

,

...... ,., 5I» \

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, SEPT 6 AT 10 A.M.
Location: From Gallipolis take Rt. 141 west
to Cadmus, tum Tight on Crossroads 60, 2
mi.

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 160, turn rightoniD Bulaville Porter Road. Approx. 6 mtles from Gallipolis.
Wale h for s1gns.
HOUSEHOLD
Good Hot Point chest freezer, refrigerator, bedroom
sutle, metal bed, book shelf, end table, dresser, rolla·
way bed,recliners, glider, ]licnic table, dishes &amp;more .
ANTIQUES &amp;COI.LEClOR tlEIS
Wood cabinet, kitchen cabinet with flower bin, 1ron
skillets, buffet, metal trunk, ptcnic basile!, stone jug,
m1lk can &amp; much more .
MISC. :
2 shelf propelled lawn mowe11, wheelbarrow, 3.5 hp
tiller, steel traps, utension ladder, $lap ladder, log
chains, lumber, grass seeder, hand tobacco setter,
many hand tools, &amp;much, much more.
Horse drawn: sled, drag, la'yoff plow, harrow, turn
plow, doub~ shovel plow, hlmess, collars, bridles,
check lines &amp; more.
·
.
38 ACIII, Houll &amp;lim with mintl11 rleiJI$.

Scientific Calculator

1 and 2 bdr. apls forr11111 B111c
rtnt tor 1 bdr. e178. Basic rent
for 2 bdr. 1212 AIIO 1200 HC
dep. req Close to Foodland and
Spring Vllllev pteze Jadlton
E...te Apsrtmenta, B14-4463997
Equal Hou11ng
Opportunrty

0254.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Claalnl &amp;$Quill Dancinl
Liw Bands
Auction Every Slturdly Nicht 7:00 P.l .

Set ol3
No wiring- jus! plug into AC, and
talkl 3 channels. #43-218
Vo.:Ciock®-2 by M1cronta

-

Apartment
for Rent

fot Mia Of ""t 3 bdr 1 blth.
kltch .. - ' · Including .... 0 .
Locatld 18 Portsmouth Ad .,
O.rtlpolls. Sec. dip. &amp; ret.
riQUifed Rent whh option to
buv pouible Call «114-448-

We- WW 1'UI- A ,.,. CollllipiNIII To Help Wltft The COft Of 'nUl Aut'tbn. U
Yau H1W !kMI M'l« Ta !1111. Pll• CaU 8Uil'tl 5ldm t:1 Edril ~

MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER
614-245-5152
App. Arvin Colarove
Every Fnday Nilht at 7:30 P.M.

982-5868

fwnithtcf houN 2 bdr , t185,
131,.., 4th Ave Oelllpolil. Call
~-,...11 aft• &amp;PM

A
SATtiiiDAY, SEPT. t. IIIII

11CIIIY

N1ce2 bedroommobllehomefor
rent. Near Racine Call 614 ·

114·2a6·5110.

w:•ur.

FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED

Reg. 99.95

Talking Alarm Clock

Reg. 4.29

NOAH'S ARK

SATURDAY, SEPT~MBER 6, lf86
AT lO:Ou A.M.

Banenes e•tra

Reg. 3.50
90 Minute•

MOilLE HOMES MOVED In·
turtd , r~~Hneble riii:M, Ca•

LARGE GROCERY SALE

Closed Mondcry • In Observcrnce Of &amp;.obor Dayl

JACK ROUSH MOTOR CAR, INC.

814-742·2777.

15:30 p.m.

1 bedroom apt for rent Ba11c
rent ltarts 1215 a month that
Includes aU ut1ht1111 Deposit
required of 1200 Con11et Village Mtnor Apt Middleport
614· 992·7787 Equal Housing
Opponunltv

One bedroom unturn11hed Total
electric apt Wiler and garbage
collect1on tree. located in Pomeroy 614-992-2094. ·

fQ damllltad buHdlng, 1509
Malrt St., Point Pl....nt, 304·

Hon "' Coli 114·948·3071 or wet•, mobile homes permitted.
304·171·2338 or 304-6713 ·4 bedroom houH n. . school 814·M8·2855.
and hosphel. Priced to Htl.
2217.
123,000. Col 114·1112·1010. 12•10 ell electric 2 bedroom
mobile home A 1 houM fum I·
ture lf'td sppllan- with w111tlar
Henl ols
3 Announcement~
end dryer, 14•24 family room.
wort ahap, ... ,.. ., 2 gorog•.

ESTATE SALE

Projects music or
voice up to 300
feet! #32·2030

'

Coli 114·

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1986at 7:00P.M.

Reg. 39.95

For A Big
Announcement

only.

11 13. 11 •·HZ-2021 enning•

m.

2995

We've Got The Cars,
The Finaneing And The
Prices For You!
STOP BY AND
CHECK THEM OUT!

closed Pttio, centn~l•. Private
Mttlng. Call eft• 1:00 p.m.

From Gallipolis, tallt Rt. 141, ~urn \aft onto Rt.
Tum rieht onto Cldmus P1tr1ot Co.· Rd. Witch for
SilnS.

250fo Off

2 door, front wheel drive, 4cyl.
eng., p-steering &amp; p.brakes,
am·tm, sterro tape, radials,
wh-walls, rallye wheels, delay
wipers. Only 24,txXJ miles!. Best
of oolh worlds! Pickup truck
convenience and front wheel
drive handllng!
WAS
NOW

IVa ICNI on C.R. 28,juatout of
Aldne. 3 bldfoom~. tun b. .
m ..t. flraplaoe. wood-bum•.

Hom.. 3 bldroom. n• carpet.
11100. Cal 114-742-2788 or

Very ntce tpiCIOUI 2 bdr , rafr .
r1nge, covered pat1o. m town,
quiet ..reat. no pets, 1176 and
dep 6 ref Call Earl Tope.
614-448·0332 dl'(l 446-0181
eva.

2 bedroom furnished apt for
rent m Middleport Cell 614992 -5084

Auto-reverse, EO, tn-dashl 1112-1914

#'14-788 Battenesextra

K·CAR OR
CELEBRITY
BUYERSIIII

114,000. Coll14-4411-2817

1873 Uxll Oreywood Mobile

Wllflled Hcurlty couple to live m
apartment comple• for frH renJ
Must be bOndable &amp; have
reference Call 304 -876-6806
or 614-441 ·9280.

44

0" C/11Uno•

33°/o

Nice, cleen, 2 bdr. furnished on
Rt. 7, 2 bdr dupi8:1 house 1n
Chethire. C.lt 614· 246-&amp;818

3 r. &amp; bath nice &amp; clean. app
fuml1h1d. cion to shopp1ng &amp;
school. f216 pet' month. all
ut1litles paid but electric Call
614 -446 -7616.

114·1112·1188 doyo. 114-892·

Low AI $20 Par Month

Cut

14.:70 BtyWiew 2 bdr .. unfur·
niahed. very nice. loclted 2 mil•
from Gallipolis. private lot
Aduhs only, no pets, 1260 mo.
Call 814-446-2300

dep required. Call 614 ·446·
0444

7481 .

9995

AealtSIIC/Shure

Gellipolls. Call814-441·1409

Unfurn~thed 1pt , 4 rooms &amp;
bath Centr~lly located One or
two aduh.1, reference~ &amp; sec.

Two bedroom fumiahed trailer
on Creb Creek Road, 1160.00
per month, 3U-876-1206

10•80 ft. comrnerdtl
building. Irick conltf\lc·
tlon. LBrP genge doofl. South
Fifth A-.. Mkldl.n. Phona

RMr II HftftCINtan. W.Yt.

R47XT by

2 bdr , fum , new carpet, AC, m

Apartment
for Rent

•••=
zon•

LOrATmN: !lt:lrr's Equlpm!l'll' Co. . U S.lflallwav ~- I ~llt-!kluth ofthf0116o

Reg. 139.95

42 Mobile Homes
for Rant

44

FDf

Low As 520 Per Month on CttiLine •

Save

NOW

1984 DODGE
PAGE PICKUP

now-·· mil•-

13000. Colll14·112·7387.

'·

AM/FM Stereo Cassette Light-Tracking Cartridge

p·dOOf locks, ltll sl·wheel, cr-control. am·fm. stereo tape, radial bres, wh-walls, rear wtndow del, dark .Jaie w/light
.Jale 1nt.. Brooiham pkg! Only 6,000 mtlest Compare Anywhere'

WATCH
SATURDAY'S
REGISTER
AND
SUNDAY'S
TIMES-SENTINEL

own•. we1•.

By
anwH 2 bedroom
houN, rul'll
bl1h. elactrlc
ond
5
of
O.INpola. Fram Rt. 211 tlkt
Kriner Rd to flr" hoUM on right

A Iovin&amp; voitl t. bllft

llilltd.

AM/FM Stereo Cassette

PRICE

$15,900

tid" .

Reg. Separate
Items 29.90
Wtlh headphones! #12-119,

HALF

WAS

qr

#33-1000 Ba tte nes e •tra

Tower Speaker System

1986 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY

1172 Dtrwln. 2 bedroom.

-lo1moot
H2·1018.

IN MEIOR'f
In Iovine 11tii101Y of
Ao~:~r Eua... Lt•btrt,
who dtparltd this lilt 5
years aca Sept. 4, 1981.

2 bedroom hou .. ln MlddltDon.
Call ev.,.ngs 114-992·3415:7.

waodo. Clllll14·388·1852.

2818 ..

~i/(/fi(}M

3 ~room. 2 bath. •• elactric
horne In N.w Haven, W.Va No
children end no pete Cell
814-948·2470 efter 6 :00 p m.
Shown bv eppolnlment.

bath, W •W Olrplt:, Will &amp; Nrll
water, app. 71 A. otpMturewlth

14lll:70, 3 b«&lt;room, 2 bath.
Good condtdon. 11000. Wil
tak• trade. CtH 11 4-9'1·2801.

Middleport. Complltety remo· Pricod 10 N11. Shown by

Card of Thenk1

2311 doyo.

Farm• for Sale

4-•••-

CARD OF THANK$
Joe and hill M.
Thompson would tiki'
to thlri ewryone wlto
sent their Pl1)'111,
cards, flowa11 and
visits frotn 111 their
friends wh ill they both
we11 suraical Pltients
at Holztr Hospitlll.

Battenes for remote e.:lra

!/fiHIOIIOOJIJ
Slfi1Nr:1

•."SDNI01!00311 8118Sft0 08PJA
~w 411" dn doe~ 01 ew~ &amp;Ill •••4
I.UOP .I JI\ON 'tiUtll\8.1ueJJnO DutPHJ

~

Low As S20 Per Month on Chlllna•
Reg. 399.95
• 11-Functlon Infrared Remote Control
• Front-Loading Operation • Cable Ready
Our lowest price ever for this feature-packed
VCR I EnJOY all the latest vtdeos and TV shows
you've been missmg. 1116-505

One-Touch Automatic
Dialing of Up to
32 Numbers

Profeuionel
s•ivlcee

Apertm1nts •nd houses 1n
Pomerov area. Deposit required.
Pey own utlllll11. 1· 814-892·

371·21185 '"l1f·37&amp;-250B.

748 Third Awe. 1800 IQ. ft
Co,nmerclel or we,.hou1e
P.n"'o on skit. Adlactnl to
thlrd • Pine St. Call 11
2312 for appoln..,.,.t.

3 bedroom. 1 Ya story houH ln

1001'" 114·742-3147

31995

the chvckle quoted
in the mts.slng WOf'ds

n.w carpMfng. underpinning.

WI hookup, t7.800. Cell 814·

Houeee for Rent

3 bedroom mobill home for rent
in Cheshire. Call 614-3157 7,.8

814·Mt·2111.

Wat• wells III'Yictd end driHtd.
frw •timetM. Cal 114-882-

sao

M3vlng yard sale. Sept 2nd and
3rd. On Rt 124 , end ot Salem
St. going toward langsv•lle

'*''"'

Bu1lnaa
Opportunity

PM

NEW! FREE '81 Catalog! Come Get Yours!

12•M 117S Cameron n11lr.
niW ctrpll, new Nghtl•

ho ...Flohlnt
,_..,
~~.....
pood.
11om. · fen, porch. und•rplnnlng .
· ••
MaOCo .. ..."" ueo. -~~~~~If. eo• blockt. ...-de: ..... t4.100.
1401
Aw., HUIItlngton.
-Into oft• 4:00 p.m. 114- Coli 814·211·1303.
21701 .. 304-121·1033.
112·3133 or 114·812·2011.
1172 Atl.entio 12xl0 .. ldng
R-tlnl Priaod to Hll Nlt:o 2
U,IOO. Col 114·388·9102.

I II 1.1 II .I II

time prrvate duty m Point
Plea11ntarea, call HCS Nurting ,
SerwiC41, Sooth Charleston, 304768 -3996, 9 00 AM to 6·00

41

HOINI for Sale

wtttt CA. an 3.11 _.._ Wide
tt.l tn,nfllt. Doullll drfviWay,

Lessons on Ill woodwind inltN·
m.. u. oboe, buloon. flute,
clerin1t,. Ull. Call Lort Snow

Reliable baby liner needed
stan1ng Sept 30 Hours 2 ·304 00 PM. References Phone
304-676 -1336

oo Mll1 c..... lt.

31

bdrm. molalla homt, 10til el-.

18 Wanted to Do

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

Ca_rport aala. Wed.·Thurs Sept
3· 4. 9:00·4 :00 918 South
T~d. Mkldlepon.

J

~~u

lNG CO reconwnendl thlt you
do
wlttl P•Pie you
know, end NOT to .-d money
throu_. the meil until you hiVe
~wt1tlg111d the offering.

1643linooln HeJghts. Pomeroy,
Ohio. 9 ·00·5 00. Ylmaha200K
3 wh ... er, Chnstmas trM with
Iota of tnm, electric m1nr, hah
aqfiarium. exerciser, old dishes,
bottles. books. lamps, trur1 Jars,
ruq (brakted) and much more
September 4th and 5th

...

... Col1 114·992·

ASSEMBLERS WANTED E.am
up to .,0 P"' dey 1111mbling
diaplay clowns MatllfieiiiUpplied Send stamped self·
eddr .. ud envelope H1wkl
Landing, PO Box 13493, Orlando FL32869.

3181.

Sept 2nd, 3rd, 4th, 6th. Tires.
hlllters, mower, weed eater
bi4ycles. toya, cklothes, dishea'
Bufttmut Ave .. Pomerov

'·

VlfV IPIOIII ott.: Owtl• mull
MM thM lmll but lllncllePiload

il P'lwllo

569 Broadway St. m MiddlePiift Sept. 1st, 2nd , 3rd
9 .00· 4 00. Numerou1 ·1tems

1111 Yia~d Street

,..,.Ina 011"11 fOr ttdtrf¥

Homn for Sale

bu'*'••

A""- M1ud1 Smith residenc:a.
Brick St . Rutland . September
lTd and 4111 . 9 :00·4 :00. Rain
c•ncels

mans clothe&amp; Toya, bik e
1ck knacka . 178 Mtdway
nve. New Ha~~ten. Sept. 3. 4,6
&amp;:00 to 2 ·30

$pedll

port 1nd Wellston Ohio. Call Don
Pullin, 814· 448 -0474 .

First house on right, Wotf Pen

~

31

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAUEV PUaLIIH·

Rd . September 1at and 2nd.

~r... f fiDJiy_Y...ard .S o.I,JI.fuUune
' year Children. men and

Situation•
Wanted

Ph•rmtcittt nttdldl FNth Pharmacy hit p~uitlon• for rw
pharmacist ~n'Gallipolil , Middle-

Ri'cine. acroas from Crones
Sept1mber 2 10 ? 9 .00 til dartr:
lots of mite 614· 949-2879 .

•

12

The

·

,

AUCTIONEER: MARLIN WEDEMEYER
614-245·5152

Polltlw I.D.
,
Cash
Not r11ponst•lt for •ldtnts ·or ton d property.

PUBLIC
AUCTION
·8AT1.JIIDAY,
SEP'JEMBER 8, IJ88
11:1111 A.M.

Turn left

on Wismond Rd.

5 ft. bush hog ~ fertilizer spreader, \\ hp compressor on
wheels, farm tta1ler, 15 fl Lone Star boat &amp;tratler wtlh
35 hp, Sea Kmg motor, GE freezer, 8 ton floor Jack. 10
rolls barbed wtre, manual tile changer. 275 gallon fuel
011 tank, large ptle of scrap11on . 18 II swtmmmg pool,
pool filters, 3 hp a1r compressor. 8 It drag disc, Wag·
onerfront end loader for tractor wtth 2 buckets, 2 bot·
tom turnmg plows. 3 bottom turnmg plows · John
Deere, concrete mixer. 12ft. drag, Huffyfldtng mower.
12 hp John Deere tractor wtth 4ft. mower, Honda 90
trail bike, Sears weed eater, 1970 Model4451ong trac·
tor 1187 hours, atr ttre changer, 16 channel Robm
scanner, Craftsman welder, Bear Kooiac hunting bow.
Homelile cham saw, Remmglon eleclrtc cham saw, 2
black &amp;wh1te TVs, home stereo
VEHIClfS
1 ton GMC wrecker 63 ,000 m1., 1978 Jeep Wagon "-er
6l,OOP mtles. new paint tn excellent con dillon : 1966
Ford Mustang, 289 high performance engme '" mint
condition .
GUNS
Marlin Mooel 336 in. 30-30 cal. wtth Bushnell 3x9
scope 410 Speco,' 58 cal. musket, 22 G~nfield with
scope: Stephens 410·22 over &amp; under, 12 gauge riot
gun, 1861 Cavalry sword, BereHa 22 Minx, H&amp;R model
929 9 shot 22, Model 36 Smtih &amp;Wesson 38 spec tal,
plus 5 or 6 more guns.

. OWNER
IIIR. &amp; MRS. CA~t

JacksonJACKSON,
)\uction
House
OHIO
SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1986
11:00 A.M.
NEXT TO DANIELS TRUCKING CO., ST. RT. 788
Oak curved &amp;lass ch1na cupbo.ud, 01~ alas doorfllt Will cup·
board (n ice): oak low boy b1chelor dl est w/ btveled m~rror (nice).
w1lnut f1in1Jn1 couch; mapl1 buff1t: cal flat top 2 pedntll dtsk:
walnut chest driWars, mahopny 2 &lt;bor china CIJilbolrd (nice).
walnut muble top drawer; child' s one dn1wer sl1nt front lllsk . p11
safe pierced tin Sidts wl one drawer at top ; pie s~t 2 door tin m

duor. mce: sq. 5 leued oak table; 1 4111 oak t1blt: 2 round oak
pedest1l tablas: coal111d wood cook stove; mtllopn~ boote~se .
secretarial slant front. It 01k 4 shelf squarechinJCupbolrdw/ 6
beveled t~ass ; cherry 6 drawer eltest of drawers : Nhopny 6
drn•r Hi·bor chest: mehopny 7cklor chmlclbinll:; 2~n~ho~n~
3 stack bookcase; french dresser nmtr; oak sl•t front chtld 's
desk : oak dresser w/ btv1IICI .n~rror (nice); ollt kitchtn e~bmet :
oat 1 dr1..r clothes chesl. oak ftat top depressin dtsk: Sfttral
rockinJ chairs : retl old l•ll fltl •II cupbo1rd w/2 *•••rs : l

full size bod.! full slzo iron bod; I d1t11y rapa bad: ladles sptnet
desk. m~pleslant front child's dut ; modern 6 ptKI dinina room

su111 wolnut: mople atess door dl ino; ~n,.pple half bad, Mvml
nice beveled mirrors; l Sill d 4 oak ttllirs . mlhopny I dr1wer

dask: Ia. walnut porto• cheio: 11. oound wolnu1 ttblo: 1111111 moho·

aany dinln!roombbl•: •1tens1on ltavts at .,d; n• 9112 carp•t:

2 htah ch11s: !i011s Iliad ch111, 111 or """'llltckOik dllirs: 2
oat paolor oocklnc chlln: 7 ~d trunks; walnrt IIIIIIY lor side·
ba~rd; tr•dleuwlnc mochino: child's Pltnlc toblo; • .,,.,hind
pain1td &amp;loss windows: llldtd &amp;ion w11dows: brm b11d case
w/stond; Mmll old quilts: 2MIS bllby set los:COfiPII t• kottlt:
oo111111illctlts; rolloood lock: 3 ~~~~ hill 1,..s; 2 roo lltnh; I
cost 1,.. duck: '""'' 111d tablos: nl&amp;ht llllds ; Dullc.sR Phylo,'
lozy suun tablo; beby cenloat: ZAP Oonno&amp;lril jlos, IIOittrotks &amp; iucs: "'"'I .,,.,.,, IM!ps: 25 ~'"' loselood &amp;Wl!lar: •
s111111 ptdestal: StYortl ~"" ltodtd cut atm; """'' pltus •
coyslol FoRton iJm; Shirl., Tt111plo bowl: cobtlt tllldltholrltn;, •-·
smrol floor lomps; Zcomlvtlaltss
IIIia -~~~cast •
ir011 toys; 2 old blow torc~IS ; 1110111 Will: cli1kl lltcli dodt; I '
tom·IOII!tltom clodt: 2 old sdlool dtsh w/suts; c~fld's rodtlq 1 '

"'"'"II;

chlit; llaun; nvsral thlnp too l'll•fou• to . .uon.

'

TERMS: cash Of Check with 1.0.
lURCII Strved
-

Owner: Coleman' Bellamy-(614) 286-3065 . '
Auctioneer: Preston Mustard
614 286-5868 or 614 286-5061

'

"C

�Ohio-Point
74 Motorcyclea
BRDnd'• CloiiOUtl• Suplua.

t. 4d Olld 4xlx7·tllhl •••·
00111 m11011tte tldlnli'r pantling

Building Mtttritil
Blodl, brick, tewer pip•. Win·

-d··········

dowt. linttlt. etc. CIIIUdl Win ten. R~ Grandt, 0 . Ctlll14-

3. 4•1xl&lt;o- . . . , _ lli .ll

.wtv..,. Muon aMd. Gtlllpolil

-··

2. 4xlx1A! maeontle undM•v·
mem U .88 ... 4x4 pc.
•1 .00 ••·

241·111 21 .

Concrete blodl• til all• y~rd or

-13.11.
Co., 123~ Pint St.,
4...~
..d l -111ho - d BIDe*
........
datlln lnd prln'tl GtllttDiit, Ohio CeU 11.t-441·
.... ., t7.tli-M.II . 2783.
5 .••••.,. ~bllndtx wtt• bo•d

..-gluodTI)No"l.lloo.
I . - d , _ , polo bow
plclore
- - · kl 1241.
7-. Double ltltl ln.. a.t.d • ·

lrlftot door Ml't wlttl 'n: gla~

*310.

P~Jit

Building• by Quality

lulldwt. Work•hopa. etrporta.
~nlrnel lhtlten, DII'ID"· F....

tttlmetea . Phone 114· 189-

7121 .

-;;;:::=::;;::;;:::::;;::;:;:
Pets for Sale

a. Double oldo light doo• 1111 66
· with Yo gl.. lnoulotod UIO.
Ill. Double oorrMnerct.l •menoe
door Ht' • brona ~u minu m

...

NH.II old, olngloo *398.00

10. I IW 8 J*'el ltMI iniUiet.:l

........ doort t99.11.
1111 . Steel prehung iniUieted
l!octoort and jeml 1~ hr. fire rt.

tte8.11.

12.

sew., •d dratn ptpe 4x10

Pur..,rlld Grtlt Dane pupa, 4

14. llfl T plua I prilfmilhed bruce

Reg. 8Nglt pupa 2-4 months
okl. 1 lemon flmtlt, 15 mtlll,
175 Melt For moreinform~tion .

171 ...11.

11. lrvwn 28180 rodl feet

...

lriiHw underpin tecondt •3. •

II. (I l•d 2 pc. I l l - tubon

thower oomblnltlon tiConda

Ul9.11 .. t179.11.

17. 17x19 whtte gold van tty end
mM'bll top 131. • ·

11. Wood frtnd'l doorsHConda

tlllto • tO

l~o

tB8.11.

18. 7 pc. wood p.t'W.ilhed vk'lyl
WfiP door trim •1.00 ...

20. Solid o'* ~nd br-towl biJ

... 4 pc .. tt9.11oo.
21 . Tomp- -...,, pono
"""32•71 128.11 ...
22. 0 - tiff.,. lood ltlooo
wlol- 148.11 ... 1241.
23. lneulatld atHI door~ bl.,b
MCOnda •za.oo ...
24. 2x4Jt~ tcuetical wHmg tile
embollld fife r8tld t2.29 ...
21. lpc . hlgh-bolhtubk~o

ah••

with
•28.81.
21. C011l and wood ftrepllce
ltOvtthMI at~ tiS&amp;.• or 2 for

Now buying ~etl

oom

2911.

63

Coli 614·246·9678.

Sitmete kitten• for aaia. Cell

114·948·2111 .

3 month old mtle AKC Regia·
t•ed Toy Poodfe. White. Had
ohct . t126. Coll&amp;t4·949·2042
afler 3:30 p.m.
I yur old Treeing Walker Coon
Hound end coon llghta. tl500.
Ctll 814·247-2484 after 4 :00
p.m.

AKC Regiltered male apricot
colored Miniature Poodle pup.
Hu flrat aholt and been
wormed. t125. or will trlda for
female Poodle pup. Call OU·

949·2919.

57

Livestock

3 club c1lvu Chl1nlnt ·
Slmmental- Hereford, tul Slm·

Young bula KBJ Simmentai •
Henion!.
by ICJI-IIgnol.

Sw_,

We ~e one~ and one Y.t btood.
Exceli.,t htrd bull, extremety
correct. ANdy for fait Hrvlce.
Phone eve. 814-251-1402.

Bundy trambone utld 5 or 8
tlmn t200. Cell 014·446-

114·384-3841.

8136 .

Full till boJc IPrina• 6 mattr..
flrm. Litte n.w, ..tty 2 monttta
old. eo.t IBOOwHiullfor l350.
C.. l814-218-1251 .

King Mer~Mut elto au., practiCllty n...,, Ctil 014-2&amp;8-1814 .
PtiYY Bua Guhar with amp,

301-671·3041.

Warm momlng ttove tor 11ie.
Colllt4~ 441 · 1107 .

68

Fruit

Flower for tale. Prict reduced
Set. Sun .. &amp; Mon. 843 Second
Ave.

&amp; Vegetables

Uke ...._,, Mod. 12· 12 gauge
30' tuM •eoo. on &amp;tl.t m•IIW Nke MW f300. Cal 114-

Red raberritl. Taylol"l Berry
Patch . Cel 614-448 -M92 or

441·3341.

Firewood foraale. Cali 814-448·
9218 of 814-441-1437 or 814-

t4.00

pel'

... .., ...

614·247·

21&amp;·1112.

2&amp;42 .

'Wonder Coal' thermostat controlled co .. or wood bumWltJ
circulator heat., with blower.
ex. cond. t276. Cali 814-4411640or ... at111 KineonDr ..
Gelllpolil.

Yellow FrH Stone Canning
PeiCh• now l"ttllllble. Cell for
pricet end varietl11 . Bob'•
Market, M11on, W. Va. 304773·5721 . Open 7 dtys.

dutv

".tlt6 u
comprenor. 1100 . Ctll 814-

HMVOI

11M mUon.

21&amp;·1393.

B • S Produoe closed for
vacetion . wll! re-op.-. llbor

==--:----

_o='•=
: ·

Wiru:t•••• pufl1&gt; model 1200
lhotgun 2 btrrella. never been
uHd, t236. Call 114 -446-

r;mn Supplie S
&amp;

L IVC S IU~k

Genertl Electric micro-wave.
excellent condition. Stainie11
11•1 twin tinka COfl1)telt wrth
fbttur•. Twin w11h
CO"'C)Iete with fixtures. Gertlen
beth tub, COJI1llletewith shower.
Cutoft HW. ball bearing man drel, complete with bllde. Call

-•ins.

., 4·742·2860.

He-Men toys with til acceaso riM. Myen thallow well water

..,...,. 304·876·1784.

M.tel office dealq 3'~~;6' with
l(ljul111blt twivel
.,d
llng cabineu . •126 . 00 1150.00 . 304· 372-2801 or

m..-.

i

61

Fa;m Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 315 W•t. Jtcklon , Ohio.

&amp;14·281-8411 .

Meuey fMgueon. New HoMand,
8uah Hoo Sal• &amp;: Stn~i~.' Ov•
40 uted tractors to chooae from
&amp; C:OfY1)1ete ine of new 6 used
IQuipn.nt. Llrgnt Mlection in
S.E. Ohio .

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 36 W. Gallipolis,

Ohio. Cell 814 -441-9777. eve.
814· 446- 3692 . Up front treelora with wtrranty Dlll!lr 76 used
Tecto,., 1000 toola.
Toblcoo atidts for
114-21il-1111 .

1111.

Call

12·8822 .

FARM EQUIPMENT : New Holland For~~ge Equipment Stle. 1
MUNTERSII Complete stock No. 8-three better for~ge box
hunting 11nd dog care suppliet. with tandem pie 12 ton w~~gen
Nittlhe dul•. 407 Sb{th Street. tl, 900: One No. 8 box witt\ 10
Point Pluunt, W.Va.
ton weg., t6,500; One Modtt
782 Chopp.- with metel·tl.-t Ill
El«trlc ETS room unit fumace. 2row heMI114.900; One Model
brand ntw never uted 8276.00 . 30 forege blowlf 1.000 RPM
J04· n3·6004 .
82,800;; Oneuaed No . 8 box. 2
beater with 10 ton running g11r
Two mlll'l plutic bell boat, 2 t2,Ei00; One uud Model707, 3
il.ts, otra. lilt jiCketa. Morae pi t"itch chopper with both heads
Itereo 8 track record player . t1 .BOO; OneuHd Super 17-17
:104·896·3382.
chopper t1,.,0; Free fin.,eing
until 3- 1-87 or ! .9 percent for
Seara heevy duty Wllhtr for 24 montha; 8.9 percent for 36 or
tala, good cond. f100 . 304· 48 months or dsoountt for cuh.
175-4163 .
Keefer'• S~ce Center. St. Rt.
B7leon , WV 304-896-3874.
14 ahHta ptnellng, 6 boxn
Ceiling tile, parch glider. 304 · Toblcco ttlckl, t16 .00 per
078-11!59 -"• 11 e.m.
tanldred , Morgen Woodltwn
flrrn, Rt. 36 , 304-676-2276 or
Sears hori1ontal air cond , 1576- 1206.

1121.00. 304·17&amp;·6861.

MO\IIng .way ule, rnM ' s ulld
iJI'ttl unlforme.. Somerville's.
57 Burdette Addn. Trtiler for
..,t . 304-07&amp;-3334

Trtctora. JO 420 crtwler with
end tolder 14.200 .00 . IH Cub
with culitvet or and mower
t1,800 .00 . Glenridge Farm.

304-176·6604.

BUSINESS SERVICES
CHRISTIAN'S
CONSTIUCnON
SCHEDULING NOW FOR,

•Roofing "Siding

Cal 446-8515

•continuo,,. . .
Guttering
•Fencing

c;fil\

e

II fill

"Remodeling
•R eplacement
Windows
Call today....

446-4514
or 446-4841

MITCHEU'S fiREWOOD PRO&lt;ESSING
Firewood For Salt
$26.00-U·PICK-UP
$36.00-PICK-UP Delivered
$1 00.00- DUMP LOAD Delivered
$200.00-DUMP LOAD D.livered
'·$26.00oton-COMMERCIAL SALES
l«atwd ............., Ill.

........ Olt.

IIIUmt

304·17S.2233.

Pigs torttlt . 304-895-3883 .

64 Hay 8t Grain

""'*·condh\on
'14
.

~878 Fo;:,r.ldl·up
12.000
. Geed

IDn.

Col 114· 742· 2771.

piclc-up
tNcll. lidt wtndowt ....... lfklll'.
todd• - .. Llko now. 1110.

con 814-941·2918.

1113 Chw 8· 10 DurJ11go. V-1
engine. Auto tr.namliak)n. low

mlloogo. Phone 304-1'11·1816

oflw S:OO PM.

64 Misc. MerchandiH

247·4282.

1974 Chevy Mellbu. 80.000
mil11. 8326. or bell offer. CaH

814·992·7103.

doo•.

r•

Shelled com for ule. Cell ' 82 Pontlec BonniiVillt. 4 door,
614·986 · 3831 or 114-98&amp; · Vlnyltop, V-1. Air. Auto, PS, Pl.
3947 lfter 8;00 p.m.
AM ·FM lltereo, tih, ,. . window
defogger. valour klterlor, body
ua oond, tAgh miiM(It, 304-

Autos for Sale

1981 Ford Etcon smionwegon,
AC, 36 MPO. new Michlen
rldi1l1, juft tuntd up, ex. eond.
bookl t)r 82, 800 tale t2,300.

Coll614·446-0362.

69 Ctdill.c Celall. Runt good.
r-.w tir•. new bettary, good
intMior. NIHtdasoma body work.

Mtkeotfer. Call 814-448·0094.
1979 Olda Deha 88 Royele cpi.
46.000 ectutl mltee, excellent
cond. ,._M &amp; FM eutomatlc, wire
wheela. ctuil'e control. air ,
83.860. Call 614 ·446-9968 .

882·2198.

671·1108 .. 1715·1789.

1882 Chevy Cavalier. front
wheel drive. auto. 4 cyl, n.w
tirll, t4 , 860.00 . 304 -8715 -

4181 .

1980 Plymouth Horilon, make
offer. Ctll614·441-7042 .

body good. runa good, engine

Attractive three bedroom frame house with two .
baths situated in serene country setting on
thre~AI:re. Has full basement and one
car rap. Mid 20's. Fin~ncing available to
quah ied buyer. 446-4113 or 446·9607.

gold wing intenttte, tome Bk·
:;:- gocd mnd. Coli 814·268·
7

Belore you read
oolslanding
buy lor $29,!KIO.
open staircase,liv·
tng room and large ·
111 approximately 3 acres. Deck
oH bedroom. Garden space. Also included is 10x55 mobile
home. Possible owner financing. Call today.
H
212

Saturday, Sept. 6
9:30 a.m. to
3:30 pm.

197e Dodge 0 · 100 pickup,

1978 Honda CB 360 T,
e110.00. Sllrt Franklin firepiece with grill and potholder

0100.00. Call 304·882-2810.

1179 Honda CBX 1.000. 6 eyl,
ft .000.00. 304·896·3838

76

Boats and
Motors for Sale

198• Btrjon blnbolt-trail.,,
Trolling motor. LCD flthfinder.
lifliackeu. bltt.-y and bO)I . 2
·gM tenkl. 82.760. After 6PM.

lNG THE OHIO RIVER
Si1 rooms and balh, paneled and carpeted .Jusl above Pom·
eroy, Ohto on Stale Highway. Gas fumace, blown '" insula ·
bon in walls and ceiling. Large living room. Nice fronl potch
covered w1th 1ndoor·ouldoor carpelin g overlooking Ihe Ohio
River. Alllhis for only $19.!ll0. "
#
652

HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
26 LOCUST STREET. GALLI,POI.IS, OHIO 46621

AUDREY F. CANADAY, REALTOR .
ROBERT GORDON. REALTOR, 446-6216
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR. 446-3383
25
STREET. GAlliPOUS. OHIO

PEISONAL SHOWING
SUNDAY, AUGUST 31, 1986

I 'til 4 P.M. - No Appt. Necessary!
lOCAnON: Wtst on State Rt. #3S
Tum left beside Foodland on Buhi-Morton Rd.
Fonow road to 1op of hill; turn left
follow lane
all tho
back. Otod to be tha

Se rvices

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

1980TrenaAMekc. cond., mull 1977 Chevy pidl:up, no rult. 1
aeil, •4.000. 881t off• or trtde. cyl, IUIO , AM-FM ceuett.
Book price t6.300. Cell 614· 11.!1&amp;0.00. 304·671·4181 .

.,:-::--"7:H,...o_m_e_ _ __

81

Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

HOUSE FOR SALE
lovely 3 bedroom split level, J'h miles from Point
Pleasant on Sand Hill Road. Situated on a nice
corner lot. house has family room with WBFP. 2full
baths. and double car garage.
Assume 8'h%lixed rate loan with less than 25 years
remaining .

hterlor a. interior stucco. Pill·
tlf 6 pllltlf reptirs. Low Jttll.
Cell 814 -266-1182 .
Evergreenl. shade &amp; fruit trill,
tree S. du ~ remo11al, mulch,
11nd &amp; gravel. rtone delivered.
Oon'a Landac1p11, Don Waugh
Prop. 614-.U$·9846.

SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
CAll JEAN CASrO: 675 -3431 or 675 ·3030

SOMERVILLE REAL ESTATE

Evergreen und &amp;: gravel, 1op
toil. mulch. firewood 6 coel
delivered. Tree I stump ramo·
val. ditching. Oon'e Landscapes,

448-274fi.

11 Help Wanted

-

FARM FOR SALE
Beautiful home in Flatwoodsarea of Pomeroy. New kitchen, bath,
etc ... 17
acres &amp;spring fed pond avaitlabJe.
Call 614-446-

VICE PRESIDENT FOR
BUSINESS AND FINANCE

Requirements include an accounting delree,
administrative skills in a major area of busi·
ness and/or finance, ability to manqe funds
and oth~r ~sources, leadership a!lility, and
commumcat1on and personal skills appropriate to relate to the CQIIege's constituencies. A
CPA is desirable. A minimum of a master's
degree and progressively responsible experience ill ahiper i!d ucation setting is &amp;liPected.
Interested persons should send a resume,
transcripts,letter of interest, including names
of-references, before the deadline of September 20,1986 to:
Personnel Officer
Rio Grande Colle&amp;e/Community Colle&amp;e
P.O. Box 969
.
Attn: Vice President, Business/Finance
Rio Grande,' OH 45674
Rio Grtndl Collt&amp;t!Comniunity Coii.P is an Equtl
Opportunl!y/AfflrmaliYt Action Employer
'
P.O. •o. !1007

and Pop to entov the go lden ¥ea1s

Auto Parts

MOUNTAINEER AUTO BODY
H even, Wilt Vlrglnie. Phone
304· 882-3729 . Fulllineottruck
end cer par1 1 available. More
prices tre cut tD dellert coat
through September 8th. Deliv.-y evailtble.

Perfect fOr overntght hunting &amp;

fiehing. 8 ft . truck topp., with
removeble bedt , e)lcellent condition , beat offer. Catl614-266-

6682.

1978 Concord camper 19 fl ..
eelf contained, aieepa I . AC.
t3 ,660 . Caill14-388-8651 .

14 ft . ctmper tleepa 4 , new.
earpet, g.. fur ., gtt &amp; tlectrl~
lightt, well equipped, 8:.10 edd 1 ·
.oom. great tor de., litton. Cell

llUUO~

'le--D

1~[.-\L

LSTATE

388 ·8826

PPOFESSIONAL SERVICE MAK ES THE DIFFERENCE

SINGLE FAMILY ACQUIRED PROPERTI~S
•111 II'ICEIVED UNTl ~ ll PM 9/" 16
1111 OPINED 10.00 1M 9/10/16

lOG NMih

High SlrHI , 7th Floor

Propwly OispOJilion- 1641 459·6906

' _reli&amp;ton. sn marital
"HUO properties are available tor sate to all persons regardless of race. colot.
status or National Ori&amp;in. HUO reserves the right to reject any (I aU ~ids ._ to WI_Nt any 1nformalrty or
in"eguiarity in any bids. Bids will be accepted from all interested parties. 1ncludmg owrer occupancy.
1ndiv1duals and investor{,;· HIGH BIDS llt1LLII( IIETERMINED IIASEO ON THE HIGHEST NET 810 TO
HUD. PROPERTIES ARE SUBJECT01 PRIOR SALE. BUYER MUST OBTAIN OWN ANANCING

'

CASE~

122805·203

ATHENS CO.-UNINSURED '
ADDRESS
Box 92, RO&lt;k 51.

ARIA
ICool•illt)

8RI
2

MEIGS CO.-UNINSURED
CASE #
ADDRESS
127151 -203 212 Rock St.

AREA
IPomerayl

BRS

3

liSTING
PRI&lt;!
15900

OIPOSIT
$500

'

OSTING
PRICE
ST 1,500

"01' _,,liS CNIU TO lfSUIID 'II:IHRU

FOR SALE OR RENT - OELIGHTFU l !'J ~~l~~

winng. stonn "Mnlilws, ~nsulaOOn. gas
d1mng rm . k1t . tlrst floor launc1ry.1ul1 basenl. mr Jlrage See the ())10

R.ver !rom "" lovely back yard Yocant. Dial 1!8·8826 mw .
HOME ANO BIG OPPORTUNITY: Ve~ an1 act.ver011odeled 3BR. I 'o ballls
garden tub I 7"x25" k1tchen n~ 'ilhd oak rn bml'l3. pantry, laundry rm .,
.-.m&gt;ened rocch NEW GMI'-C E· 28 "~4il ·. heat. water. 200 wmng, 1 2xl~'
door o. buSiness opportunity J()U can't pass Mrd $50s SR 160

4 ACRES. PORTER. ON SR 514: Recently 1onodeled 4 IEdom. 2 1o~
home. lR OR. ? BR OOwn 2 un. t,:mty k1tcl1en wrth fill and load ~ tJ •

cab•llet. sun po&lt;ch 1rt•h1V rm. basemffii QUICKPOSSESSION $50s ..•
All8~1CK RANCH: II 1m 01 SR 160 P~ your ow n"'"""' touch to··

DEPOSIT
$100

lOT£ · CHAI GE lfl EAIIfiUliiOnT DC POSIT PRESOI1lY IN UfECT THE Ea~NESI MONEY OE PO!SiliS SSOO 00 REGa~O ­
llSS Of THE l!SYIJIIG PtiCE. UO lUST B£ SUBIITI£0 WITH UCH BID.
TO SO ANDJOR 110 ON liiSI PIMmiS CONJAU A lEAL ISTATI .OIIEI C)a aGlNT DF YOUI CHDK:I.
11110-0WtiD NOPIIfllS ON WHICH lAm COHIIIl.n Alf fiKUim IV tiiO l£f0.f iN I JO , 1916, CONS1ft'UTE A
COMMrrJIM IIllO MAY CONTINUE 1"0 II PIOUUID i .. CIOSBUli UUSCONJUCIS FOitttl Sill OF SE&lt;UTAIY ·
.-LD PIOPftTIS IX£CUTID IY Ifill AUTHOIIZIO lrPttiiNJAnYI, OJ HUD OH 01 And iPil30 MIJST COHTAIH Til
fOUOWitG NOYISION UJGU !liM HOF nt CONTI..C:I: " f Tlf5 5Mf IS TOll fiN.IJfCEDIY .lH fHI -INstJUD MORT ·
GAGI, I'll .IC(fnlHCf Of TIIS CONIIA(T If tiJD IS tONfiHGfNJ UPON Ill aUTHOim Of" HUD TO IHUME THf
MOITGAGf .U Tllf.l Til s.tU 15 CLOUD ."

wr.~

and complete lh1s WPII c1P"ilr,n00 ho!T'e 3 IJ;clrms. l~1ng and dt11ng
rm . 2 !IJII baths. 21' master tledrm lg k1t laundry nn Deck averlook1ng a ·

IJlrO Barn hurt i"" WORTH SEEING.WCIHH (JIINING
.:·
RACCOON CRK. AND (INN PRIVATE PARK Clay Twp 3 .:r" mil •
Grac(lus count~¥ 1-.ilflg and neal a ~ a pm 28'~ 60· harTE 3 BR 'l i:BthS. •
garden tub. k1t ranb~t. awen hu1~ 1n and DN Format d11'11ng room. wblp mlrv .• r
rm Co!Y den With wet bar .JJ'~36. barn 3 d:lm ~ anc11oH

BRICK AND fRAME ClOSETOHOllER: i:rs.oabte homeand locaton-SR·
160 AsM to s~ 1ns1de th1s beaut11ul 1anch 3BR. count~ k1tchen. tamrtv rm .
wbtp Carp:u1 I ~rf' m/ t LiM' $50s

QUI£1 ANDEASY UVING: S·ievei plusI"''" J l:edrms I' oaths.extra ;

1g l!ltcll en. !amity rm I car til rage Loads ol I HJ' ~ ancl goo1 g?orl'lf!n ~ ll\te ..

$11.900. lust ot Rodne)·B&gt;dwell Rd Make oil"

BE GOO YOO WAITED : Some d1scnm10al1ng lam1ly 1';111til~e pnde 10
of !Ius lovPiy bn c ~. r;mch loca tPd c(Jse toILNfn L1v 1m 3BR. 2 ~

ow re~h1p

baths. tam rm w/ wbrp and stamed glass wndows Fu!lvPQ uipped ~ liChen . "
screened paiiO, heat pump. m·~l o und pool Wllh deck ifld side. MJQ--1 ·

MUOi MJRE. AOOauhlui home lor entertam1ng too Pnced ower SlOO,CKXJ ·
MRGREEN-$24.600: SQueezmgPennos' Buy aniCe lrtlle horre lor a .
small pnce. 3 BR, bath. k1lchen. Iron!

73 Terry camper 26 ft . atum. AC .
good condition, *3.000. Call

614·14&amp;.·7371 .

rD

•

FOR ADDITONAL INFO .
CONTACT: MR . JIM MISSOURI

614 / 469 -2232

614·266·1919.

~rch .

011nyl s d m ~ l o1

~ · ~ 1 00' .

10 ACRE lOT lOCATED ClOSETO MEIGSMINES: Just ott :lll60 Sepbc .

system

m~l~d.

Ub'lleS available S9'&lt;1()

em LOT: Ne1l Ave. Gas. water. anc1 sewer a~a1lable

33 WOOD£0 ACRES: Me&gt;gs Co.: $11.000
BEAUTIFUL OHIO RIVER LOCATION
REDUCEO TOSEll 7 rms .. ovely lv rm . 9ttlllgom. lorrrol ~n1n~ 3BR.
II.$ batt1 s. lull basement 2 rutburld1ngs, 2 rn1 JiHage rru11 ln~s and
excel..,l !lJrden SIJlt

Real Estate General

Radio Shack is an E.O.E. M/ F

Rio Grande College/Community College, a
unique blend of private and community college located in the rolling hills of Southeastern. ~hio, a~nounce~ an opening for the
pos111on of V1ce Pres1det for Business and
Finance. As a key member of the President's Cabinet, this position is responsible
for the college's financial operation includ!ng budget pr.eparation, control and reportmg. accountmg, physical plant. property,
personnel and other auxiliary enterprises.

and watk-rn closets, master bed room mcludes asrtting room and
bat h wrth tub &amp;shower Basement under most of the hou se and
rn cludp,s (I lar ge rec room I rH prn r. pon r,. pJ ol. model rarlro ads or
many l.lther actrvrtres. It' s a per fe ct !)ace to rarse krds or Mom

LIVING

EARN EXTRA MONEY
PART TIME SALESPERSON
Work parttime in your off hours as asalesperson at your local Radio Shack store.
Current opening for honest. energetic individuals who are eager to earn extra money
while gaining valuable business experience. Challenging commission plan. Apply
now.
CONTACT: TIM HOCKWORTH
614-446-2142 on Tues., Sept. 2
From 10 A.M. TO 3 P.M.

20x~O rn-gr ou nd oool . lor mal dmu1~ room and hu~ fam1lv room

Wilh woodburner. ~ · · oalhs. 4 ~ r ge bedrooms .;th lois of wall

AFFORDABLE

676-3089.

&amp; Campers

ONE OF THE NICEST! BRICK &amp;FRAME RANCH WIT~ FUll
BASEMENT ON 6 ACRES. BEAUTIFUllY DECORATED INSIDE
WITH 4 BRS, 3 BATHS . lR, DREAM Of A KITC~EN, PLUS
KITCHENETTE INBSMT. AtlJOINING FR &amp;GARAGE.NICE PA·
TID IN BACK &amp; D£CK ON SIDE OVERLOOKING ABOVE
GROUND POOL YOU CAN'T REPLACE IT AT THIS PRICE ONLY $79,900.

lent nergtt borhood. A large natural red wood 2 story ho me offer·
rng lar ge livin groom .den w1th bu d! mca bmets an dboo ~sh elves,
a larg_eeat·m~ri ch en wtth a vrew jj the woods surrou ndin gthe

c~1"[)1 11{()

U.S. DEPT. HUD
PROPERTY DISPOSITION-II
200 N. HIGH STREET
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43215

198&amp; Checkmate akl boat
18'3", 160hpJohnton 08 with
acceetories . he. Cond. 304-

PARTS GRAND OPENING
SALE! 1318 Filth St. , New

One of the very best views i
counly.You can seeto Rod·
ney Hill to Holzer Hospttal and more. LOCATIONIIII LOCA·
liON!!!! LOCATION!!!! will sell lhis slately home. If you are
looking lor a good quality home, peace and quiel yet alllhe
convenience, this is for you . This home has been TOT ALL~
RENOVATEOI!!! Features a spac1ou s formal foyer w/llalian
lile, sunken livmg 1oom 20x21! Wilh loisof bookshelves. large
wooden windows and a slone wb firep lace for cold winter
days. Huge formal dining room 20xl5, mellenllor enler·
laintng. Roomy 16x 15 counlry kilchen w/ lols ol hand·butll
cabinets, new wallpaper and ceiling lan. Lg. deck area across
side of home and off lrom kitchen ideal lor cookouts. 2 lull
baths with new ceramic lile and wallpaper. Roomy fa mily·
rec. room 27x28 n w/ wb llfeplace. 2 car garage ApproK.
3•.000 SQ .. H. olltvtng space; also acrea ge. lotsol amenit1es.
This home ha s lots ol potenlial.

shoppm g, schools, Holzer Med1cal Cente1 an d ch urc~es . Eml·

I Estate General

304·&amp;29·9200.

&amp; Accessories

a secluded. picturesque seltmg. 3

Real Estate General

1980 cruiser 26 h Oren Bateau,
280 hp ONC, ttove, ref, head
with shower, rcero, trim t1b1,
ship to shOrt rtdio, tandem
trailer, I)IC cond. &amp;16,000.00.
Call Andy 304-623· 6843 or

76

a l mosphe~e ,

614·446·9146

1978 eighteen foot Renkea Boat
for tale. Open bow with cover,
140 HP, 1.0 .. new seata , ali new
lower unit, trailer included.
84800. Phone 614-992-6217 .

614 ·379·2220.

LOVELY BRICK RANCH WITH FUll BASEMENT IN THE
COUNTRY' If YOU'RE LOOKING FOR SOMETHING R~llY
NICE, THIS IS IT' NICE BIG LEVEL LAWN. 3 BR, FULL BSMT .
All KITCHEN APPL, fULlY CARPETED, HEAT PUMP WTIH
CA &amp; ATTACHED GARAGE PLUS2 CAR UNATTCHEDGARAGE. JUST LISTEDIN KC SCHOOL DISTRICT. WON'T LAST LONG AT
$56,!Xl0.

· counlry

acres of wooded playground lor the child ren. very con venient to

16ft. Giutron with 86 Me rcury,
buih ftH apeed, good cond.
t2,400. Call614· 2•6·6818 .

Transmi11ions, all types, over,
front, rear. 4 wheel drive, prices
start &amp;100. will deliver . Call

at MGM

TWP.

448·2146.

814-246·1216.

79 Motors Homes

61 .. ·9U-2111
P~-roy, Cllllo
Salt on pet suppli11 such as eolian,
chains, wormen, dips, etc.

GREEN

Unccnditional lifetime guarlfltee. local referenc81 furnlahed.
Fr&amp;e ntimatea. Cell collect
1-814-237-0488, dey or night.
Rogers 9a tement
Waterproofing.

876·6816.

446-3636cA~

Real Estate General

u-u. good cond. 19811 Honda

1983 Honda VR 100. good
cond., run• good. f400 . 304-

Canaday.· Realt~

D-5

1980 Trant vtn 19 h ., eir.
cruisa, new Interior . tires.
brake a, roof air , ex. con d. Mutt
tell. t8.1500 beat offer or tr•de.
look price •12.000 . Call 614-

•1.100. coil 814·441·7018.

MsM

in Happy Jack
Kennel Dip
!for fleas, ticks,
Habits &amp; lice I

Trucks for Sale

318 to btrt'tl. autom~tic trena ..
85 Plymouth Turismo 2.2 PS , f1 ,860. C1tl 814-441-4422 or
P8, air cond .. AM-FM c. .ette. 814·44&amp;·!1&amp;00.
am roof. IPOilera. ,." window
louvera , 8,000 mllea t&amp; ,OOO· 81 Oateun King ceb. 4~~;4 ,
firm. Ctll 114 -379· 23411 .
IIIUget, tack, a~nroof. 6 spd.,
low mil•. 11klng 13.300. Cell
1979 Dodge Aspen 4 dr., very 614·388·9920.
good cond. Call 814- 446-3870.
72 Ford plclcup good body, runa
n Olda Dalta, 1877 Honda good. Cell 814·268· 1268.
Civic both run• good. Ctli
&amp;14·246·6126 oft• 6PM.
78 GMC 'h ton, good cond.
Monte Ctrlo good cond. Cell
81 Muda RX -7. 6 ll)d .. tow 014 - 268-1228 or &amp;14-266mileag,. Ceil 014-440-3231 .
1417.

1982 Chev. 4x4 pickup ee.&amp;oo
trtd•in. tl5.000 cah. 80 Toy-•
ott Coroll1 11at1on wegon

FREE

1980 Ford flirrnlnt station
wegon. PS, PB, auto, 41,000
mile~ . good cond. ceii304-77367B6 .. n3 -5430 .

1980 Dodge D· 60 with topptt
*1 , 999 . 1979 Oataun t1.199.
1918 Luv *1.399. John'aAuto
Stilt. Bulavilit Ad, Gallipolis.

2-Dynamork 11 hp
36" Mower ••• 400.00
1-0160 Wh11horse
16 . hp twin, 3 pt.
hlkh, rtl.r bladtt, 41"
' Mower .......... 2395,00
1-Mamy Fergwtn
7 hp, 36" Mawer
495.00
1-JC Pemy 16 hp
twin 42" Mower
895.00
1-12 hp Whatlhorse
auto, Kohler engine,
36" Mower
1649.00
1-1983 Roper· 18 hp
auto., twin, Onan engine, 50" Mower
2095.00
1-Sears II hp 36"
Mower ............ 375.00

DIP YOUR DOG

876·40n.

1977 Trena AM 1.800 AM -AM
cus . \1 -8. 466 enQine whh
heldlt'l. Call 61 4-44e-2739 .

1884 CA 80R e•. con d. Call

114-14&amp;-2881.

,-·--·-·-·-·--·--·--·:... -----r:-::-=:==:=:;1

1979 Plymouth Arrow Jet
noo.oo. 304-876-3376 or

72

E•4 of S111111ttr
Clouout

985-3301

'74 Ford Torino. t300.00, 304-

871·1148.

78 modal Dodga M~gnum tir
cond .. power brak• II steering,
9'0d cond. Call61 4-388 -8862 .

74 Motorcycles

19815 I&lt;IWIIIkl 454 eome 8~·

BAUM
·LUMBER
CHESTEI

1980 Pontile Grand Prh,
•1.100.00 or bnt oftlf. 304·

'78 Mercury Bobcat, runs good.
Good wortc cer. good tir11,
elfin. 304- 675·6217.

21 ,000 miles. Cl 814 ·446·
1882 atter e.

64 Misc. Merchandfse

Cop tu -doni ollod

4278.

t1400. NNd trenamlnion
pelr. Call 304· 07&amp;· 1293.

1978 Hondl CB 310T, Iota of
extr•. Cali 11•·448-22151 .

82 Dodge 4k4 cu1tomlztd vtn

017'---:---- - - -

1171 Chtvetta with 81 an gin e.
Naw bllttery. new exMun.
Good oondhlon. Runs good.
1800. or belt offer. 014-1815·

1980 Buick Skvl""' 4

188&amp; ChiVY aonvenfon van.
dual llr. tuto . ...,.., TV. low
mUug._ uc. oond. C11t 814-

Real Estate General

&amp; Campara

loon. Call 114·211· 441·(141 .

---------

n

7071.

Wann Morning wood burner.
H11 ftn and thermorcat. Good
lhape. t200. Call 614·949 2151.

1177 Plymouth Valeri. 318
engine. AC. Mike good work
car. tiOO. or belt off•. C1ll
014-742· 2471.

4 year old mare work horte
t300.00. 4 year old Palomino
riding horte Gilding 8300 .00.

614·448-9644.

"Late canning tomato• . John
HiH. St . At. 338, Letart Ftlll.

4

1.-86FordRengeriniOOdcond.

1980 ChiiVItte. 4 .,_., 4 door,

76 Monte Cerlo, t.top. Ctll

614·246·61064.

tl.700. C.l 814·441-2745.

4·982·2110.,

tilt. rur dafroll.er. lookl and
rune good. 11195. Ctil 814·

2174.

71

Steinw!ly &amp; Son eonaole piano
B11t offar. Calll14-448-(l!q
aft• 4 p.m .

1177 Lincoln Marit V Cflllm
DOtor wtth matching vinyl roof.
All pcwe&lt;, 21.000 mlloo, looko
niMI' il'laida end out, good oond.
Cell81•·241-8413.
---------lcCutiMtSuprtme. 80.000
1,:::::~~ Good oondttton. Locel
· 001 Noutzllng. UIOO.

1973 Buick Riviera. OoodCOIMII·
tlon. 1800. Cell &amp;14-843·D281.

1100.

XI. lallndoor or cut door ode
a..p .. tilt rubb11 back 4 C*lts to
I e.ntt te.
28. Preflnilhld 4x8x 1.1. m110ntte
,.. boon! ••. ll .. d 19.11 ...
Penn WlrthouN, Wellston. Oh

82 Monte Ctrla PS, Pl. llr,
t-top, t5.300 or ._. riiiOnlble
offer. CaM 114· 317-0832 .

Holstein buill, ttrVIce tge AI
lirM. dllmt with pipare. Hemm
Vallev Fern. Cell 814-949·

Tr all spur l atiUII

Musical
Instruments

1890 Choucrlot C~llllon. - ·
V·l, P8, PI, 41.100mllto100d
oond~lon, U.710. Coli 114·
241·1078.

Dr • •

com. Callforl.a•tquot•. Rlv•
City Farm Suppty, 814-441-

Baby catv• Holstein • Angut
CIOn. No Sunday calla. 814388-•24.

ch•t 1100 t.ch . Oepoait will
held. Call &amp;14·14&amp;·1364.

Olk tloorr•doml•ath bundlel

62 Wanted to Buy

puppi81 . Ctll I14 -441-38U
after 7PM.
bl-.;k mel• wfth whitt bluee an

IXInd., Muot Mil t4,200 .._., 114·892·3194.

offer or trtde. look price " " " - : - - - ; - - - - --

K•nltl.

Dr~gonwynd Cettery

PVC pretll'eted t2.91 .. .
13. I ' plcni&lt; lillie 2 ..... . , .
· rNdt frvm 2Jc4xl r.dwDDd

-od t21.11.

1031 .

mentti Simmentei-Stnta
Oertruda· Hertford. Gertrudl•
H•olc•d. Coli 114·378-2105.

CFA Himetav•. P.r~l111 ~nd
llam•• llttt.la. AK C Chow

1171 D~e 4•4 plclwp, J,4 ton 1871 .Chevy 12 peaatnger win·
club cab, a • auto, PI, PI, new dqwv1n. AC. CNile•.UH, captain
tW... braht. IDck· out hubt. ••· attllrt. duel heat. t3500. Call

Ma..., Ferguaon, 1 row flllld
chopper. Exc. cond. t3100 or
trade for Uvtetock. 30•· 418·

The Sunday

W.Va .

:TOAI':THI~COLONIAL HOME WITH60 ACRES- LARGE
HOME WITH OPEN STAIRWAY TO' SECOND FLOOR,
KIT., BREAKFAST ROOM, FORMAL DIN IN~ ROOM, LR, FR &amp;
LIBRARY. NICE BIG SCREENED FRONT 'PORCH WITH GOR·
GEOUS VIEW. ALSO BARN &amp; SEVERAL OUTBUILDINGS. ASK·
lNG $60.110e.
JUST LISTED - THE AMERICAN DREAM HOME' fiVE
ACRES, All FENCED FOR PRIVACY,WITH LOTS Of FRUIT
TREES AND GRAPE ARBOR. 6YR. OLD FRAME RANCH WITH
FIR SIDING. 3 BR. 2 BATHS. HEAT PUMP WITH CENT. AIR ,
FULLY FURNISHED KITCHEN, CITY SCHOOLS . CAll TODAY
- TOMORROW MAY BE TOO LATEILISTEO AT $56,000.
CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE - APPROX ~h BEAUTIFUl ACRES
WITH A 42•60 BARN. PLU S. ANEW EXCEPTIONALLY NICE
HOME WITH 3 BRS, 2 BATHS, GAS FA FURNACE WITH CENT.
AIR , &amp; 2lG. TRWED !lCKS. JUST LI STED THI SWEEKBUT MAY BE GONE NEXT WEEK AT ONLY $49,000
~

.

.
:
·

LOOKING FOR A BUILDING SIT£1 CAll US, WE HAVE
SEVERAL!
SPRING VAll£\' ESTATES - Tri·level l'crre
3 BRs, 2 llllhs, nice equipped kichen.
L·shaped LR, din~g area, 24112 family room
wrth woodburn~g fireplace. gas lEal, cent. ar.
2 ca r garage. CaiiiOOay.
ROOM TO GROW - 2.5 acres, more or le ss,
very attractive ranch style holll! features 3
bedrooms. 2 balhs, IR, kitchen w/range,
THE FIRS! FAMILY IN THIS N!W HOME I retrig., m ~r1111ave, lull basement carpeltng,
Situall!d 111 two wooded I~ th5 bvety heat pump/cent. air, ooe car allached garage
offers 3 BRs, 2111ths, kKchen,LR, family plus an unattched garage. lois of room for
room, ful basement deck, gar,e,gasll!atand gardenllg and enj:)ying lhe ouldoors. Cal
air. ean tooay.
today.
~

Great location in town. 2
wilh li~ing room ,
large dtnmg room and krtchen. ~ouse has been well cared
for and ts nicely decorated inside . Partial basement Ga s
heat. Would make agood starter home or inveslmenl prop·
erty also. $39,000.
H
204

Real Estate Genaral

'

,l;,j .

BUIAVILLE ROAD - BEAUTIFUL FARM - LE SS THAN 5
MILES FROM GALLI POtJS API'ROX. 86 ACRES ,FENCED PAS
TURE, POND, BARN, OTHER OUTBUILDINGS. FARM HAS 4
BEDROOMS, EATIN COUNTRY KITCHEN FAMILY ' ROOM
$75,1100
.
.
HEATED POOLI YOU CAN SWIM UNTil lATE FAll. BEAUTI·
FULI6X32 POOL COMPLETE WITH AL l EQUIPMENT 3BED·
ROOM, 2 BAT~ RANCH ~OME HAS An ACHED rARAGE SO·
LAR HEATING UNIT, EQUIPPED KITCHEN, NICE DINING
AAEA. NEAR HOLZER HOSPITAL $55, 000.
NEWLY REMODELED - tiSIOE REMOIHED ALL IT NEEDS
IS THE EXTERIOR PAINTED. THI SHaUSEHASREALY BEEN
OONE RIGHT! NEW EAT-IN KITCHEN FORMAL DR LR FR OR
LARGE 3RO B.R. &amp;AUTIFUL OAK FLOoRS. NEW WiRING AND
INSULATION, .3 OUTBUILDINGS &amp; BIG LOT IN VINTON 'ON
Rl160. REAP THE REWAROO [)'All THE IRHARD WORK ONL Y$28,000.
IN CHESHIRE ~ VERY C(lt.fORTABLE 3 BEDROOt.\ 2 STORY.
HAS FORMAL DINING lllOM, HNl()VOOD f\.OIJIS t1 UVINCl
ROOM SMALL DEN, GARME HAS WIJIKStDII AAEA. EXCEllENf

BUY ~Ti$32.00Q.

~1

•'

·,

· . .

VIEW\ KC. SCHOOL DISTRICT. BRICK' &amp;·
3 BR II! BATHS, fR WHH·WOOD·
! HDCIK·UP,, CIA. CARPORT &amp; LOTS OF STORAllE
•
. SALE
. Al$4S,ooo
'
KI·LI,V&lt;L,

s.

PRID£ OF OWNERSHIP -love~ l'ome offetS
BRs, 3 baths, equipped kichen, 14x44 family
, dnelle, frep~ce. 2 car allached garage,
pool and satelile disiL Call for an
a!IIIIMtment

PRICE RmUC£0 TO $3U~R GREAT
BEGINNER HOII - This l'crre offers alar[l!
lR with fireplace, ktichen,' dililg area, 3 BRs,
bath. full lllsemenl, I car guqe, deck,lenced
yard iusl minutes to 11111n on Rl. l4L Canf6ran
BP!IOillrMnl

COUNTRY CHARM- Nice older l'orre offetS 3
BRs, bath, LR, d01~g 1'00(11 and knchen.
Situall!d on 2lols 111 Rt. 160 tn linton.Call for
an apptintrrent.

LOOKING FOR Y'OIJR FIRST 11011£1 - This
attractive home is prl:ed at $33,000irldoffers
3 BRs. bath. kitchen, living room,lamiy room,
woodburnng stii'J~ electric heal ean loday
and let us show )'OU this home.
DUPLD 4 SALE - Great lweslrrent ilr the
bu).'ef. localed oo Grah;wn SchOol Rd. eAch ·
uril dlers 2 BRs, living room, batlt, kilchen,
end skwe, re~. DW and d&amp;pl, llundry, laflll!
carport, central ait and sD"age wei. •

THIS HOME HAS All Til THINGS YOO TIRED Of RUNNING TO TOWN EVERY TIME
WANT!!! - 4 BRs. eqUipped klchen, 2 llllhs THE KIDS HAVE ASCHOOUCTIVITY1- This
!master balh has 1 whirlpool. lR, carpenng lovely brick home ~ bcall!d with~ wa~• g
heat pump, cent 01r. attached garage, above distance ol til! ~ade school and high school
groond pool. Jus1 m1nu1es from liNin al an doffe~ 3BRs, balh.lR.kilchen . d•~groom
Centenary.
wrth bum·in chna cabnet. famiy room •n
THIS COULO BE THE ONE FOR YOU! _ Priced basement, gasheat, f~repoce, attached garage
for the fitSI time horre 1111ner rJ a place lo fllCE REDUfl:D TO $49WQI
retire. Localed aboul halfway between klwn
and lhe OOspilal, this home offetS 3BRs. balh, ADDISON TWP. - Pussom Trot Rd. - 93
living room, eat·m l&lt;i1chen, fam1ly mom w~h acres m/1, all woods. Oij barn oo JJopert)
woodburning firep~ce. Lllilrty room. Call lot an . $21,900.
appoiltment.
ElUlY THE RIUITS OF NATURE -16 acres LOTS OF GOOD LIVING FOR SitE - II 4
m/1 app~ trees. cherry trees, plum trres. acres m/1,roomy horre offers 3 BRs. 2 llllhs.
slrawberry palch. N1ce home offers 3BIS. balh, ~rge LR. kitchen, full basemen!, covered ltont
LR, kill:hen, carport. n~e wool pach ilt pach and tear palil. Call IDday for an
enjoying the cool summer even~g. Call for an appoinlment
appointment
COMMERCIAL BUILDING- PERRY lWP.NEARCORA-61XX1 sq . ft. steelb~g,.idealfor IMNER HAS REDUCED THE PRICE TO
anyooe in trucking, drilling or mllng busmess. $18,500 - Very ntce starter l'crre or
~Mner may consider leasing or mancing. Call nvestment property Horre offetS 3 ffis, lR.
lor more inlormalion.
kilchen, balh, 2 car unallached garage.lenced
103 ACRES MIL. SPRINGFIELD TWP. ~ yard. Callloday.
Approx. 96 A. til~b~. o~er horre l'es 5 BRs.
balh, LR, kKchen. oounly waler. 40x00 pole WAIIT TO CMN A llJSINESS Of YOOR OWN?
bkl, •. 40x60 tobacco lllrn, vamus other _ 1500 sq. ft.concretebkicl&lt; build~gdualed
outbuild~gs.
oo .66 acre presenlty be~g operatlll as a
rOUR NEW llJSINISS llJillliNG carrYwt.
150' !rootage on St. Rt. 7 near federal
Average deplh approx .!i)() ft. All
availabll plus a very•nice 1~ siDry VACANT FARM LAND - Morgan Twp 84
•"15;000:·'" tun basement and 1wo gal!ges. Awox.
acres more IJ lesi· ~el and rpllilg ~nd.
.,
33 BCn5 tillable. remamlir woods.

BEAUTIFUL HOME, COUNTRY ATWJSPHERE Gn IN TOUCH WITH NATURE HERE' - Th5
CLOSE TO TOWN - Whal more coukl vw ask love~ br~k home o~ers a panoramc '""' a
lor. This beautiful bnck horre ~ localed IU~ l•e lranqUII val~y and ma~Siic wooded hilt. Can
minutes kom ll711n tn Grren lwp . and offe~ 3 be purchased Mlh lwo ac res or 79. Newer
BRs. 2 balhs. lormal d•n&amp; krtchen. lR '"'h home offetS 4 bedrooms. 2 balhs. LR. ~ve~
k~chen, d1n1ng area wrth pal~ door s and
lttep~ce. fR w~h l"epoce. carpel, e~ctnc
heat cent a". 2 car garage wrth opene~ . l't'OOrlburner. c a r pe l rn ~. heat pump, cent. air.
salellrte d~h . fenced yard andgarren arot .Call · lull basement. 2 car g a~agc Wild lur key and
deet are seen often 1n th• serene setttng. Ca ll
today for an appo1nlment.
today
KANAUGA - Sl9.!llll - 3 BR lllrre Mlh
krtchen. lR. baih. gas beat. Call for an
appointment

OWNER ANANCING AVAilABlE -9.5 a: res
m/ 1. Morgan Twp lrontage on Rt 160. Call for
tlelaio

6100 SQ. A. BUILDING - Solid ooncrele
walks, 200 al. fr111lage on SR 7 in Cr1111nCrty CHAROIAIS HILLS - 3 24..:res Mmeo•less
formerly LMl asa furnrture factory Ideal lor Otmer ltnan crng avarlable
retail sales or manufactunng OOstness
CLOSE TO TOWN - N1ce one slory holll!
lealuring krtchen, LR. famiy room.dnng room.
lull basement,carpetin&amp; gas IEat,c rty waler.2
car unattachoo bock 111 rage.

24 ACRES M/l. HARRISON TWP. - ClAV
LICK ROAD - Rollingland. weH oo JJopert).
lllrn and IDbacco base Ca ll lor more
tnlormalton.

PRICf REDUCED $10,000 - ONE OF THE
lARGEST RESIOENTIAL LOTS ON SECOND
AVE. - Cider home cllers J.4 Ills, lR.
k!chen, ~. FR, bath. unallached garage. Call
lor lllOI'e de~ io loday.

HARRISON TWP. - CREMEENS RD. - 53
ACRES M/l - ~ BR home oftm l&lt;i1chen.lR.
balh, electric BB heat. catpeltng, 30x42 ~eel
bldg. with woodburnng stove. barn and 2
sheds. Call lor more mlormallln.

GREEN TWP. - FRONTAGE ON Sl. RT. 141
- 116.5 acres m/1, vacanllot. Call lor more
nlormalion.

GUYAN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres m/1,localed
soolh of Mercervi l~ 20 A. til~b~. balance
woods, tobacco base. Owner \lilliE~ f~ance.

�31, 1986
Times-Sentinel
81

86

Home
Improvements

RON'S Televi1i0n Service.
HoM,. cede on RCA. Ouuar.
QE. &amp;poclolina ., Zonhll. eau

304· 171-231l
2414.
.

Of

F.tty Tree Trlmmlnt.

87
87

General Hauling

_/rj;·r;;;!J!I!I(!f.}ln~r?J !l!li(fj.. fljJJ'J1/JS

Upholstery

Rtuphollttry. St. At. 7, Crown
814-448-MlB . Opan dalty 8 10
&amp;,'Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp; new
Uphoatered.

WISEMAN

Real Estate General

Rotafy or clbh tool drilling.

446-3644

MOitWIIIoo..,......qmeday.
P\lmp • • ..., MI'Vice. 3CM-

IH·3102

earp.....,• ....,..

IIIP-

: HOUSE FOR
SALE
Priced below market.
family moving. 3 BR
bi-level, large family
room with fireplace.
1y, baths, large deck,
attached garage. Ex·
cellent neighborhood.
city schools. Assumable mortgage .

HISTORIC MIDDLEPORT HOME - Decorat~e
v.oodwak Stone and brl:k n good oond~on 1~
baths. 4·5 bed1ooms. 9 moms p~ l att1c and partial
basemoot. Gas IQrced ai furnace (.l ~· o~l. Larfll!
kdchen, well planned. Step saving iaundty. panlty,
wa~-1n closeli, garage. l.lktng $55,!ll0
#308

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER
.
DAVID WISEMAN, 446-9665
8. J. HAIRSTON. 446-4240
CLYDE B. WALKER. 246·6276
LORETTA McDADE. 446-7729

dlltng, 100m Mldttion. pelntfng..
....,.... - - · oldlng .......
work. 1r• lltlmlt&amp; 304-171·
1441 or 111·1112.
rooflng. rep~if, ,_.ntlng lntKieor
out. Fr• Estlmatl. LOCIII Reflr·

Call 446-0646.

....... 3().1-171·7111 .
'i1 Plymouth Horizon. 4 door. •

aptMI. Nnl good. 11,400.00.
304·881-3838 .

CARTER'S PWMIING

WISEMAN UAL ESU1E AGENCY

216 E. 2nd

Phone

Gellipolla. Ohio
Phona 814-.,.G-3888 or 814-

a lot chroeyl
$44,!JJO, you can have 4

~41-114n

$3

bed100ms,

Excavating

, eat-in ldchen vith ap~~nces.

hou~ns

1-16141·992·3325

NI.W
- 17 acll!S with l'H oty home
home has
Vtnyl sidtn&amp; new wlfln&amp; includes 3 1Edroo1111. 1 bath
and lots ol storage room. 10·12 acres fat groond .
Ouf!ht to look at 1U $40,000
#2$0

full basement 1\11h famdy mom, garage. G~e us acall.
we'll solve al your

needs.

&lt;Jood-1 Excevating, ba-.n ... tt,
toot-., drtvewavt. teptlc hnltt,

'-tdacaplng. Call anytlma 114+11-4137. Jam11 l. Oavi&amp;on,

Jr. own• .

86

General Hauling

Jtmat loya Wat• Sanrice. Alto
pooll tHied- Call814· 215&amp;-1 141

or eu..we-1111 or.,,_,.._
Jl1 1:

Olllard'l WMar Delivery. Cltt·
ema. pool, 6 well. Anyttma but

GOOD BARGAIN AT $50.000 - That buys a bl~k
home ;nd approKimate~ 6 acres of groooo. 3
bed1001111 1~ baths home ~ beautiful IV!chert
wh~h wiil please any w~e. Partlai basement wilh
\Wildburner. large garden spot. Kyger Creek schools.
$50,000.

SundiY, I 14-441·7404.

Real Estate General

OOTSTANDING STARTER HOME- Nothing to do IJJI
troVe in. Newly carpeted Md decorated 3 bed100m
home '" Green Townshtp. EKceHent oo~borhood for
children. 1~ baths , liVIng room, eat-in kitchen, garag~
llat lawn. Owner movtng out rJ. ""'· $47.!ll0.
H231

DEWXE 3 BEOCROOM BI·LEVEL IN TltE COUNTRY
- Very nl:e home tnciuoossuper krtchen vilh an the
enras. Uv~g room. d1nilg area and larfl' famt~ 100m.
Master bedroom has dressmg area and bath with
skyl1ght. 1 car garage, I acre ol groond Owner .viii
trade for il'j)bi~ home or ooub~ wtoo and Will cons~er
tinancin&amp; Cali tor more tnforrrotion.

#220

.24.741 Hill Rd .. Racine. Oh.
·Vir«inie D. Carron Broker
Tel.: 247·3644, 213·9383
THE FINEST NAIIE IN
REAL ESTATE
OUR 21st YEAR

1. DRASTIC PRICE REDUC.
TION on this 140 acre f8Jm
~cated in Portland. Ohio'
Approximately ~ of acreage
~ pature, balance woods' Ail
minml r'll!l'l 10 witt!·!I"'P·
erty! Good spring lor cattle.
Emllent hunting area! Only
$37.500.00 Call today'

KYGER CREEK SCHOOlS- Terr~l: sii'OKer "'""' wdh
oulstalld~i 1~er view. 3bed100mhome includes iilflg
room 1\11h attractive ll'ep~ce with insert. eal·tn iNfl!
and large covered sde porch Md 2 llH Ill rage. Well
man~ured 0.9 acre lawn. $37,500. EKceiienl starter cr
vacation home.

HER£$ AOOLDEN
.
have plenty ~ pr~acy and still !)ave aiar!lf 1m the
ch!dren to
and 100m left Cllel ilr a prden Md
IX!Oi. Th~ oiler ma~tenance hee 2 ~ay offe,; a
modern IV!chert and bath, 3 bedroo1111 and a lam1~
room It has had gOOd care and is rr~ed at $48,000.
.
Hl26

"'Y

2. LOVELY HOME plus 106
ICRES located at long Bot·
tom, Ohio- 45 acres of bot·
tom land. land bordets
forked Run State Patk at
rear ol property'

NEW! NEW! - New~ loted 1 ,510~ . ft. ranch .1111hluil ·
basemoot may be :12 yea,; dd, bullool&lt;s like oow
in sd~ Completely redecorated v.ith .excel~nt coklr
schem~ ~ush carpet• &amp; k~chen i~Jpl~nces . lm tile
and on and on. Home Ills 4 bedroo1111, 2 oolhs. rec. ·.
room. central air and gatage on a llat ~t . $49.~·

..,

Real Estate General

NEW USTING - 10 YEAR 01.0 BRICK/FRAME
RANCH JUSt off l.owet Rt. 7 neo1 Clay School. Laflll!
IMIIg room with fi1eplace (has .oodbumer). 3
bedroo!Th jail have chandelietSI, 1 lllths, large
klchen/din•s area, 2 lllll!lrase. flat klt .;th satell~e
doh. Anx:e lllme! $51,000..

E. Maitnloola

POMEROY,O.
992-2259
NEW USTING- Yesteryeat
has been restmed to this
beaut~ut coilll\lai home ~
M~dleport 1 This 4 bedroom,
1 room home with a level lot
and 2 car prage. has omate
trim leaded ~ass windows
and ' door. ~ttic studio with
sky light. Well '"suiated
means low heating bills.
Must see 10 apptec~ate 1
$65,000
NEW USTING- Approx. IO
acres of groo nd w1th many
uses. Hou~ng, apartments,
special purpose. etc. plus.,
o~er 2 stmy home in good
condition. $43.000.
RACINE - large oide1
home on I ~ we lol. 3 bed·
1ooms Needs some work.
$16.900
PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DLEPORT - 3 bedroom
home in mellen! condit~n
1~ baths, new lurnace, well
insulated. full basement.
two car garage. Nice lot.
NOW ONLY $42 ,000.
NEW LISTING - farm tn
Bedf01d Township . Approx
143 acres with 3 bedroom
o~er home. Bam . fencing.
sheds. Pastureiand, timbe1
acreage. Plus minerals.
$47,500.
NEW USTING- N111 Porn·
110, - 1~ acres. nice 1
floor plan home with car·
port. sheds and celiat. Gar·
den space and other lea·
tu 1es. Priced to sell at
$26,900
POMEROY - OWNER WILL
fiNAIIct! - Recently re·
modeled 4 bedroom home
on 14 acre lot. Secluded but
close to- town.
$24.~0.
..
- .
Henry E. Cltllnd, Jr.
992·6191
Jon Tru&amp;HU'..... 949-2660
Dottit Turner ..... 992·!169.2

Affi
J:,;l

BONNIE STUTES - BROKER
JIM STUTES- REALTOR
PAUL SANDERS - 379 -2152

"Wher1 elae on Debby Drive can you buy a home
lor 849,9001" Wu 869,600

AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth lind Pine

STUTES REAL ESTATE
446-4206

tired one car garage .

11402

co•oRT

COUNTIIY
AT ITS FINEST- 4 BR bll:k
ranch ~rge enough fer any size famiy. Over 2500 ~ .
ft. ot IMIIg space.inckldes formal d~~~ wrth harlloood
~~Jots, ~rge eat~n kitchen v.ith d•ette, 2 ~n baths.
liVIng room with fireplace. P,.s over 1500 !l1 fl.
partiallt' tllsiled lllsement v.ith another tullllth and
amily room. Ove,;ized 2 car garage, wrap-atoond
porch, in-ground iXIOI7 ac. of ~aygrouoo aiOUnd
tiouse w~h 33 acres of woods. $96,!ll0 fol an. or
$86,500 1m house and I ac1e

l

TltE
DRfAM COal TRUE- Just i
the prettiest home in the ICIIeiiest setting I lilt '
ever seen and this home will till iL Perfect sett~s .
ltrees. small pond, huge bouldersI lura very handsome
bric~ 1~ ~ay overklokngthe rNer. 4BRs.large lamily
room. 1 fireplaces, lormai d~ n&amp; 2 baths. in-sroond
pool. Owoor i'os moved out ct state. must sell. $95,000.
Hl34

#113

'

'NEW LISTING - Attracltve
3 bedroom home wtlh coun·
try setting. Has fu ll base·
·men! and over 4 acres. 3 car
garage and outbids Tall
trees. lenced pastute. Just
.$35,000.
NEW LISTING -lg. 2 story
:nice 81m. ~det lllme in Po·
·me roy. 3 baths, ntce kitchen
w1th cook and bake units,•
·dishwasher, disposal, den
with woodburn ins unrt, ceti·
ills fan , lormal dining, gar·
age in full basement and Ig.
klt.
NEW LISTING - 100 acres,
2 gas· oil wells. 2 water taps.
1 barn s. etc.
·RACINE - Good 6 rm .• 1\1
story frame with bath, 3
BRs, full ba sement with coal
lurnace and dbi. garage on
corne1 lot near the bank.
2 HOUSES - Fo1 the Price
of On a- Has natutal fillS FA
furnace. 2 BRs. lull base·
ment in one. Asking only
$15,000.
141111 KIRKWOOD - fwe
yea1 old, 3 bedrooms. gas lur·
nace, range, refrigerator, sundeclo and 20 acres "
Southern. Real nice. $27.:ll0.
OLD HOUSE - Barn and
others bldgs. in need of re·
pair oo about one level acre
for just $11 .000.
CHESTER- Good 3 BR one
.Story frame. New 9ding and
.s.hin~e root. Nice kitchen .
basement, front porch and
small lot.
·JIJST FOR YOU - 4 or 5BR.
2 story lrame in need ol re·
pair. One acre, hot water
boiler, 4 por ches and car·
Port Asking an oiler.
liT. 7 BY-PASS- Wonder·
ful quiet location. 3 BRs,
l!ath, l.C . water and carpel·
10g. Now just $18.000.
12K65 FAIR Ill NT- 2 BR,
j'as furnace, range, ref1iger·
alor, c8Jpetin gand dbi. sink.
.Wsl $9.800
BUSINESS BLDG. - Like
new bri ck from Front to 2nd .
2 sloties-lst has good in·
come-and 3 stones oo'
Coort to let. Only $100.000.
That's less than construe-

lion cost
lOT 531 x 82 -In Tuppers
Plains on Rt. 7. Good loca ·
lion lor garage, flea matket
or what ~ave you .

Wt W~~t Tt $til Yt•nl
Call 992-3325
Housing
fieadq uarl e1s

tho 2 Y'· dd ranch on acll!S .w,.jboliing
Rivet. Home is in impeccable rollftxtn
off!!~' 3
BRs, la1ge attractive otchen with oak cabnln. lull
basemoot. Nice deck on kont of house. easy care Vflyi
sidin~ Give us a call - we a1n !Ill you financed.
H223
LARGE F~MILIES Wlll lOVE TltiS ROOM Y, BR
HOME 1\11h approK. 1800 !Xf. ft. d iiling arm. featu1es
~elude large foyilr, LR, DR. Den. k~choo .;th pBrty d
cab•et;. 1 f&lt;eplaces and utilty morn. Huge storage
room, krts of ct&gt;sets and 2cor t~~ rage. Srtuated on !tee
shaded 1.5 ac. kJt v.ith rwer ~ew . Priced at $84,!00.

2 BEDROOM HOME located with~ Vinton.EKceiient coootxtn!
QlOd location aoo very economical to CYOn Md i ~e. Sll.OOO.
COMFORTABLE 1 BEDROOM home 11tuated on I o: re ol
land approx. ~ m1ie from city l mits. Shad ed lot. '"·
sulated , new doubie ·pane wmdows. $20,000.00 .

•too

&lt;WINER FINANCING TO QUALIFIED llfYER!I- Can
SM!OO thousands of S$1- O)arn~ngstuter Ioili!
with 3 bedroom:;, 3 baths, i~ns room with I replace.
informal dinin&amp; den and prase. Walk to ICYOn and
school. $39,900.
#234

11 ACRES TO BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME and have

acreage left tosell someone els e. Ohto RIVer vtew. Call for
more inlormation .

·

3 BEDROOM HOME 011 KATHY DRIVE n"'r Holzer Hosj)lai.
Low traff~ area, large lllck yatd. WflfP. Gail~ol5 City Sdlool
District. Price $45,000.
FOR RENT - One. 2 bedrm. apt., 2nd floor near ROil
course. $200 pius depoSit. ADULTSONLY 1
NEW LtSTING- 1.85 acres, with 4 mom house. Abar·
gain 101 $5,000.1!!

BUY FARMS OR ACREAGES

ISO ACRES located withm sect tons #34 &amp;. 35.
Gteen Twp. $79.000.00 lo1 all .Te1ms fpr qualified
purchaser. Call tor more mfo. .
132 ACRES. nell Pat1i6t. $0 acres bottom. 7
bulldints. no dwellin1. Frae ps. $50.000.00.
46 ACRES. located ad jacent to Gallipolis City.
YOIH chotce of the first 10 acres. $10 .000.00.

m/1 and offer; nice sized bediOOITh, ample ck&gt;let
space and an attach&lt;Kf fill rag~ with workshop PJi for
$37 .fill,
#430

••
••
••
••
••
•

115 ACRE M/l well located fu1m unrt wdh 00·70
acres of good la~ng crnp land. Has wade "A" daily set
up with bulk cooler and ~pehne milker's. Well bu~
otler larrn home, large barn, corn crib, mach~e
storage Coonty water. ApproK. 1mi~ of Raccoon Creek
trontlge with flOOd access br irrigaliln, water suw~
and rocreation. All located 1 mi~ swth of U.S. Rt. ~
at Adamsville-Cora Road. Partlai f•anc•s poss&lt;bl! to
quailild buyer. Usted at $100.000.

11332

IMPRESSIVE 2 STORY- ff yoo are not ready In buy,
BEWARE of this unusual~ nx:e 3 bedroom home .~
very tiomey tamiy room 1\11h tieplace. ~11111
entrance,.formal dil•&amp; vite apprMd klchert withal
appl~nces plus snack lllr stnoll, l.arlll 1111ster
bedroom 111th tuilf!lth aoo hU(II wa&amp;-il c~P. All the
carpet~ new a in lllod condtxln. 21\baths, 2ktmace
.,d air conditioningsyst!ms.Yoo1 chidrell .;I love the
~bal11ood whdl inclldes a pool and te111111. etc.
·Mom and Dad willovelhequiel poaceluls~eet,andtte
12autiful settil1g ove1klokng atiny ~ke. Dad can folget
aliout eKieriof pa~lin&amp; n's ma~tenanre free. Offered
Ill $87,500.
#133

PRODUCTIVE FARM UNIT - 147 acres klratoo in
ROOd farming community on Gage Patr~t ltlad.
flooem 11 yr. old 4 Br 2blth ho~ . 4,000 !l1 ft.barn '
area for tobacco. hay and iNeslock. Pond, sprngs,
small creek. QlOd deepwell for mill! andcoonty water
avaiiab~. 50 acres ~ys well for c1ops, 40 ac.1mproved
pasture. 50 ac. woods, good cross fence amund
pasture and mostlinelence new atoondpasture 1625
lb. tobacco base. ~I lor $11 8,000.
H342
NfAR ELEMENTARY - llu~ ren llln skip ac ross the
lawn to Clay E~mentaty School from th ~ 1350 ~u s sq.
fl. bi·levet w~h 14' above-g1oooo jlllli and decks.
Home has. 3 bed1ooms ~ th lli tr,lb~ but not qurte
fi15hed). krtchen with S!!llt-dNtdOO d ~~g room.loins
room , I bath plus added space '" the livided la.et
level, 2'h car sarase. l.lk lli about the financ~s .
available. $46,900.
11406
0000 CONDITIONED and modern features • ader
home located in Cad ml.li. 1-3 oodrooms, l 'h baths.
IN~g 100m w~h lilepiace. ~ basement EKcelient
garden area. Good ~orage bw~ n~ 45x45 barn.
11x24 prage 1 acre m/1. Sll.~O.

GREEN ACRES aquals 141 total of forast and
lll8ldow lind. Good timber stands espec~ly wmut'of
hif!h potential return value. Sevetal home sies wilh
excellent view. So:enl: Raccoon Creek kiJIIaRe. aH
mineral•~ts. county water available. Possible access
to 3000'long ai str~ 111 ad~cent farm. R"'sonable
IJice of $55,000.
#334

1ACRE VACANT IANO with rwe&lt; !rootage located JUst
beklw Eureka. ExceH011 spot ~r lta1or. $10.000.
#224
20 ACRES BARE lAND - EKCe!Ont bUIId~g srte neat
R~ Grande and Southwest\llll H~h Sdlool lnckJdes
$if~~ and woods vith P~!lty d good road trontage
#140

SCHULT MOBILE HOME 1983 l4K10, 2 ktl baths,
special desiwl qoaliy kitchen, all etectr~. well
insulatl!d, central ar. On nice 12~110 lot vith uti~
in place includ~g rural water. On St. Rt. 325 near
Southwestern Hiih School a~d grade school. Priced at

$26,101.

NI.W LISTING - &lt;WINER TRANSFERRED -MUST
SELL this attractwe 3 bedroom brd a~dv~yl home at
Northup. includes fami~ room, office, ll!Uipped
krtchen. ~atellrte d5h and fooced yard. $46.~0.00.
#2185

NI.W USTING -This klve~ holll! is klcated on~ ahaff mi•.trom
R~ Grande Coi•ge aoo yet I has ail the leatures d coonlty hvin~
Harclflood tkoo, 4-5 bedl0011'5, 1 baths, and a very nice
shopi3rage for the handyrron. 9 acres of JJime hilttop bnd
overklokilg R~ Gtande Colege and Bob Evans farm' The land
alone is almost worth this rr~··
NEW LISTING -THIS HOME HAS CHARICT£R!!!'!
Not Your Basic Ranch Floor Plan
A good solid famiy designed home. features 4 bedfO!llll!i ~g
master!. 1 baths, living room. eal·tn lotchen. Ownet has' installed
Andersen wtndows. lull blsement. 100 ft. ' 200 ft. iol
PROfESSION~llY LANOOCAPED. Top of lii'OUOO swimmtng pool
wrth 16x18 deck. Storagebui~ in~ Kyger Creek Schooo. Tho home
is much larger than ~ appea,;.
REDUCED! t«lW DilLY .$79.!KJO.OO! - You canl 1eptace th•
home for lllat amount of money. Love~ 4 bedroom, L·shaped
ranch. formal ertlry, living 100m and dinil~ mod. kdchen. ~" d
cabilet;, I&amp; fami~ room on main level w/ v.tJip, 3 baths, lg. 1ec.
room. City schools. This • a lovely ho~ .
,
OWNER WANTS AN OfFER - Needsto sell bllure sc hool star1s
- 3 or 4 BR bl~k. eKe. ~cation, LR. il'j)d. klchen with IXJ•II·tl
appliances including micrrMave, family room

388-8155
379-2184
446·2230
446-0458
446-7881
245-9490
446 -8655

IB

REA1T0 W

lOOKING FOR A
OCCUPANCY? - qh6 7 yr. old ranch style holll!
rJ.Ie,; 3 carpeled bedrooms. 2 lull baths, fam tiy room,
24'x31' 1 car unattached saraseand il'j)re just wantng
for that new lamt~' Vety n&lt;e landscaped ii!Wn that
expands in 1.9 acres rrore or less. All at an
UNBELIEVABLE PRICE. $57,!lJO..

NEW LISTING - ONLY $15,000- 2 bedroom
mobtie home, palto. completely underpinned . ln·
eludes range and rel11geralor. Large lawn .Closeto
Tycoon lake.
#2136

SPACIOUS AND BEAUTIFUL En~~h design, gone
illd lrame eder~r. 2 stay, 3 bed100ms, 1~ baths,
forma Idinin&amp;formal entry vith JJlJ Ch rrore. Ca li to see
tho klveiy home located wilhi'l ci)
#2184

HELP US PRICE THIS ONE! - Crown City area, 1
bedroom tanch with vtn~ and bl~k ~d~&amp;
matnlertance tree, equipped kitchen. brd1 cab•ets.
sarage. carport and utiity build~~ Property has 11\d
OKceiient cate. Cali for shownfl
#1154

HOllE WITH A HEARn - Well constructed famt~
home wrth !replace, eat-in krtchen. attached 2 car
garage. Covered deck. heat ~rro . central ar. flatlawn.
convetrenl l ocat~n . Wrth~ 2 mties of hosi)lai.
$54,!Xl0.
#2031

GIANT REDUCTION ($20,000.001 - Th5 l'h story
home offe~ 3-5 bed rooms. ltvm g room, diltng room
and more. Oon 'l let IheouMe fool yoo, lh5 louse has
lots ol grow1n groom_Lot s12e approx. 43' x 173'.0wrer

wants a dea I. $39.!llO

CANl BEAT TltE PRICE ON THIS ONE!AT$3J,Ill03 bedroom ranch home sentng on 2.41 acres more or
less. includes family room. iwtng room. 1 lll r
unattached garage and more Qu •t iocalon.apj)'OK. 9
mdes from ta.vn. Owner wants an ciier

#2155

w/lM'JOdburn~ng

fireplace. 16K32 tn-ground pool.
FOURTH AVL - Ntce 1sloty. New Nlchen and bath. Nice back
yard 531155'. Watch bail 111mes from your back yard.
CITY PROPERTY - ONLY $32.000.00 - 4 bedrooms, 2 baths,
IR dtnin&amp; lg. back yard.
9 ACRES.MORE OR LESS - Rio Gtande Area - 1 ~cry ho~ .
New~ patnted insde. New carpet. 1 ~or age buildtnss. c ei~r and
catt~ shed. City schooo.
OWNER WILL ACCEPT OFFER! - INCOME PROPERlY COMMERCIAL RENTAL. OFFICE SPACE or RESIDENTIAL This IJoperly on 3S West is JJesentty betng used as ares~ence
and rental. Rental unrt has 211!drooms.llllth. mod. otchen vith
appl~nces, io. rm., lots ~ cbsel space. 1 car 111rase. Very nK:e.
Residential has LR. 2 BR, 1~ bath, I&amp; klchen w/aii ap~iances, 1
car p~e. I~ back 00'/ered patio, 15ed. by both units. Ntce level
lawn. Th~ property hasmany posstbi~•s Excellent condrtm

8.40 ACRES MORE OR LESS- Vacant iand .located incity school
diStrict

LAND OONTRACT- NICE 1 ACRE lOT- Close lo 11ver. 328'
• frontage oo Rt. 7. $5500. Cali lor lerllll.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOlS - 1153 m/1acres w~h two 1973
il'j)b i ~ homes, mosHy furnished. 2 bedrooms, bath, live tn oneand
rent the other. EKceiienl Investment floperty P11ced ICYO 201
1 ACRES M/L OF 'r\OOOIAND. 600FT. Raccoon Creek Frontage
and Boat Docks. TOTAl PRIVACY- Mod. 3 BR Ill~ leatures
breathtaking vtew overklok~g creek from a oontemporary glass·
florida room. 14K16 formal lo . rm. 2 baths, den. mod. krtchen.
complete wrth stove. re~i~ , utility room w/ keezer. washer, dryer.
Can also Ill purchased wlh addlionai 1..:res cr alOft.morecreek
!rootage 1111h 28x48 garage This ~a very unque illd s oc~derl
IJopeJty. if you itke JJNacy and boatin ~ th is • a must tosee.
Reasonab~ priced.
10'/ELY 3 BEDROOM RANCH - Lg modern eat-'" IV!chen 111lh
Uv11g room features v.tJw~h s ~te f~or . Sinf!ie garage,
I&amp; yard and garden area. City schoo~. Pr~ ed 'n low 40s
appl~nces .

FARM- 56~ M:RES -The owner d this ~rm hasreduced the
p-i:e. 3 BR, lull basement, lumo hed klchen. 1rovered po&lt;ches,
pool. large 31lx40 garage, tobacco barn 111th concrete stal~ . 1500
lbs. tobacco base.
COUNTRY - We've got aiatl!lOider Ill~ •n peak condl~n on St.
Rt. 218 ~ city school diStrict anx~us~ wa~ng yoor arrival. You
may have to 1tep back in time to l~d aholll! so well kept with 31
acll!S iJiced 1n the fifties.

"Gstewood"
Home of 0. 0. Mcintyre

Imp lement storage underneat h and all this m afarm of

ff2167

SAVE GAS! LET
DRI~INO

BUSIN£SS.MINOED1 ~ This cou~ be yoor
opportunity. Establi&gt;herlteslaurant v.rth inventory and
equiprrenl Coo~ be the bt5~ess foryoo . lli4 SQ . ft., 2
reslrOOITlS, .92 acre more or less wrth plenty d parkilg
and room to build. Cali for an appoiltment today.
$55,000.
#10611
70 ACRES WITH 2 HOMES - Several butidilg;, lariiJ
barn, approx. 35 acres pasture, 10 bloble, and 20
limber. tobacco base tncklderl
#2159

YOUR "GET STARTED" HOME - ijeal ICYO cost two
bedroom home at lower River Road has aklm. odtn~
gas heat. eat-'" krtchen and on~ $16.9JO
#2050
$10.!'00 - 14'xlll' MOBILE HOME - Sduated on
rented lot 2 bedrooms. 2 full baths, butld~g. Owner
nredsqud sale. Spnng Vai~y area.Qwckoccupancy.
#2169

lOT FOR SALE - Ntce liat ixl t ld~ g lot n Northu p.
rural water avalia b~ . 353 acre $4.000
#2185A
118 ACRES OF NATIJRE - ~ yoo ~ve tl'e outdoors.
wa lk the lratls on th• ond,lrees. 5 jlloos. perfect lur
hunt1ng. camping or buill a love~ horre. Priced at
$25.000
#1186

NI.W USTING - JUST WI'AT YDtJR FAMILY
ORDERED .... Spac~ us 1~ ~ay bnck ixl f€ak1w v.ith 5
bedrooms. 1~ balhs, lull basement formal dnin&amp;
eat·'" krtchen. cllse lo schoot.
#2181

GREAT STARTER HOME - Located • Plantt
Subd N~ion 2 large flat krts. back deck. outbu tid•&amp;
fireplace. eat-•n krtchert $42.1ll0.
#2124

SPACIOUS QUALITY BUILT HOME - 3 bedtOOITh.
lormal dtnmg room , lg master bedroom, 2 fi1ep~ces.
ful basement. 2 ~ baths. 1 ca1flll " i"·Ail th• illd more
101 a vety flOOd Jl~e .
#2142

SERENITY- Nestled among the trees 3 ~vel btl:k
chateau v.rth 3 bediOOITh,21uii baths,opoo !O tng room
and di111ng area. kitchen,lul basement. 2 fireplaces ail
situated on 6 wooded acres.
#2165
COUNTRY UVING- 25 acres more or less. Tobacco
base. barn. Plus 3 bedroom home 111th large IN ~g
room. dimng room .

SOMETHING SPECIAL- $36,000 - Th6 6 JDI 1ust
an ordinary home. LOTS Of SPICE. There's room for
grCIIIin! in the lovely 3 bedroom ho~. &amp;tra nice
shaded lawn. Cali. We have aU lhe ootails
#2039
$50.000- 2 stay ho~. 1cor 111rase. 3 bed1001111.
den, formal dinn&amp; utility room. paved d1ile. Srtuated
111 10 acres more or less.

112016
TWO FOR TltE PRICE OF ONE - Two rro~le homes
each 1\11h bu i~ oo addlilns. lllree bedrooms, ivtng
room, formal d~ini and il'j)re on 17 acres d lushfarm
land
#2149
TltE UlTIMATE IN ELmANCE - Resmg on
l!!!autifu!~ landscaped groollfs that stretch to an
1mposng 2 acll!S, three carpeted bedroo1111, 2 llllhs
rorma1 entry, a~•g and lo~groom, exqu~ al'K401
~-groullf pool cnmpote~ ertCOII'!liiSSOO 111 a li(,nted
brick pmacy fence. These are just a kw of the
iKidi~nai far too nulll!rous 1:1 mention elaborate
leatures ll!ntained wrth this Inme. Let us show you th5
home t!Kia~
N'.!l29
BEAUnFUl 3 BEDROOM RANCH with iNilg space
arnund 11. ttl restn:OOns and .over 2 O:ll!S to en~y.
Green Twp., 3-&lt;1 miles m ely, 1•.00 !Xf. ft. ivitg
space apprnx. Modem and m~ Catdtxln. Proed in
the Jls. Please call for more •nlormation.
.
112162
30 ACRES - VACANT LAIID - PrNate set!in&amp;
several feet ot rllld fronllt!e. rural water miab~ Call
br directions aoo more di!taill.
·
#2175

ntiS IS NO H~NDYMAN'S SPECIAL - 3 bedroom,
one fklor plan home tnexcellent oo ool~n . Larllf eal·tn
kdchen. ions room. bath. pamai basement. carpeted
lhrou ~oul. ApproK. 1 acre law n. Pr•ale country
settm g
#2033
WANT A REAL HOME INSTEAD OF JUST ANY OLD
HOUSE?- II so. takenotice of thi; 2stay 4bld100m.
2 bath. formal iNtng room. me. mom. pkJ1a lot more.
#2158
IJ)OKING FOR A lOW PRICE RI!HAll - tt "'
$11 .000 will buy lh• one 2 bldroo1111.bath,'" the city
limrts.

THE

FOR YOU •

WHAT Aa!EATCHANCE TO OWNYOOR &lt;MN HOME
- Wrthn 8 mi~ of cl)'. apJJox. l* acrel. 3bldroom;.
bath, eat-in kdchen. lull basemertl. 2 ca1 garage
recent~ remodekld. Mobt~ Ill~ 1pace Orl~
$41,!XXl (lve us a call t!XIay.
#2173

#2058

I

- 1.684 sq. ft.lwngarea Twosloty, 111~ 6 yea,; old.
4 iledrooms. 2 baths, kdchert. Great 40 ft. cab•et
space forma l dtntng and i3Jge iNtng area, large deck
lactng 1outhwest. Pouroo basement wa i~. lu i~
tnsuiated an d low energy eHcent Canbnation 3 car
garage and seakld bu1tness buiid~ g ~ 'diO '.
61 piCturesque acres

DOUBLEWIDE - Owner ooeds to sell. L:tlO acre rrore or less. 3
bedroom ranch, 2 baths •. formai liv. room, forii'Oi diling room.
fam1~ room, 1.920 SQ. ft. iv~s SJ&gt;tce. 2 larfll! covered patios. City
schoo~. Priced at $38,000

PRIME LOCATION - PIESTIGE ADDRESS
~~tm LIVING II en lllordlble prlctl This 3 bedroom ranch on Graham Sdlooi Rd. may be
just what you are lookilg for. lt is situatoo on I~ ac.

BROKER

Real Estate General

hweaher. Forced eir 'klmace with central air. Dining
• • with patio door~ to aundeck. Lower level include~
large recreation room. half blth, uUity room andover-

446-6610

Outstartding Loan Assuii'4Jtion
Can save you thousands of dollars in financmg charges.
Owne1 moved to Columbus and needs to sell last. WILLING
TO SACRIFICE! Gteal famtly home in Spring Valley. 3 bed ·
rooms.1 ~ baths, full oosement. Matnlenance free. conven t·
ent. Call for more information on loan .
#237

B~ck Mid !rome bl-levol. 3 nice olzed bedrooms, 1 full
and 2 half betht. Pretty built-in kitchen wtth dia-

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

82

SOUTHERN HILLS R. E., INC.

Real Estate General

REAL ESTATE

lwkl T,.. ll'ld Lt!Wn IIII'VIct,
lwHI•;•plne- 304-171-2010.

. . . ·Roofing _, '•lntktg.

JUDY DEWITT
J. Merrill Carter
Phyllis Loveday
Becky Lane
Jim Cochran
Ron Pitchford
Patrick Cochran

City. Oh. 814·261·1470. Eve.

111·2081 .. 1711-7318.

A - Conlt.

Put Number 1 to work for you:

R • M Cullom Couch• and

I

...,,.,p

RINQLES ' S SERVICE. up•
rllnoed CtrPenltr. eiiCtriden.
l!'lliiOn. 1)lllnW, roofiftg (lnducJ..
Ina hot tor opolloatlonl 304·

Real Esta)e General

Reel Estate General

Upholatery

UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1113 Sec. Ava., Gallipoll•.
&amp;U-441 -7833 or 814-446 1833.

'

The

W.Va.

TAl STATE

.

tri countyerea21 years. The but
in fumitute upholltlring. Cell
304·6715 · 4164 for free
estimlt81 .

2118 .

removtl. Ca.ll 304-111-1331.

v

Mowrey's Upholetering MtVing

W1tt"son ' 1 W1ter Heuling,
;,..oneble r11es, immediate
2.000 gallon dellve,.., , cl•terna,
poole, well, etc. cell 304·678·

814-448·

Ohio-Point

Ohio-Point ·Pieasant, W. Va.

#1179

HISTORY ADORNS THIS OLDER HOME - Srtuated at
alocation wh ~ h was on ce tl'e stagestop.1 ~ay kame
house w~ h 3 bedrooiTh, !lull balh,lami 1room, lorrroi
dinflg 100m. parttal basement, l'h car garage and \\
acrek&gt;t more or less.Pr~ed tnlow 20s.Not ~ r komciy
limits
#1181
PRICE REDUCED TO $19.!00- O.rer must selllh6
3 bedroom ranch 111 Geor!IOS Creek roaf df Rt. 7.
lnc~des garage and ovet ~ acte
#2140
112.500 - OLDER ONE STORY HOME - love ~
settin&amp; lllod garden ""'· 2welo.situated on2.9 acres
more a less.
#1104

REDUCED!! WINDSOR HOMIIILE t«lME AND 1.4
ACRES M/ L - 3 bedrooms. I 'h baths. equtpped
krtchen and more. ail 1luat!!l on Sl. Rt 160. $18.000
ff2121
FRAME 1 BEDROOM HOME IN CHESHIRE - Has
kdchen, dtntng room. I balh. basemen I. wrap jllrch,
separate g31age and deep lot ...,t hgarden area andlrwt
trees

#1178

COMMERCIAL BUILDING - l oi 55'xl l0' klcaied tn
city limits. But~n g hal been state approved Sept&lt;
tank and cl) water. Presootly used as garage Md
wrecker servrce.

#2130

TIP TOP SHAPE - Ws whal you call llffe r81~ Just a
iltto pretl~r than so many' lholiJarkim gcoan ranch
has 2 baths. lull basemoo t. la rge iMng roomattached
ga rage, pius carport Talk about a blrgan1$49.:il0.
#1174
FOR RENT - 3 red room doubleWidelocated In North
G:lll• School Dtstnct.

#2180

IJ)OKING FOR ASMALL FARM?- Take nottceto th5
111e lor oo~ $55.000. 38 acres more or less. tolllcco
base. 1 poods. farm machoery and eq Utp ~nt
Included I ~ story hamehou se wl h4tfd roorns.2lllr
garage '"d full basem81t
#1187
308 LeGRANDE BLVD. - E.. cepl" nai~ nice 2
bedroombnck home tnGreen School D•tr1ct l n c ~des
lu ll fnished basement. gas heat. c~ntral arr and miSc.
lumrture Cali 101 more rnlorma bo11 $54 .!ll0.
#1148
PICTURE YOURSELF HERE' - Narure's tfauty
mandesls 1~etl 3Jound tho 3 bldroom. 2 balh br&lt;k
OOme wrth basement. 10 ac r ~ d lu s ~r country seU1ng
I'Mh a rushmg stream . bier! gar ~n ~ and pond. Near
R~ Grande
#1133
YICANT IANO - 40 acres more or less. Marke ~b ~
Omber, tobacco base. n..nal watff

a~a1la b le .

$8.000.

#1110
ROAD FRONTfilE - TAKEYDtJR PICI&lt; - ().oe, 1000
ft. of road lrontage to be d &gt;V~ed 1nlo res~enMI loi;
Water available.
#2082

oort FOR ~ COUPLE - Here IS a neal 3 bedroom
ranch thai wuotd be m~h~ "cozy" io1 the cou ple
ookilg for conven• nce. Located mIhe city Youli be
OJrprised at the fl' &lt;e. Oi1 1y $28 . ~0. Cali ~ r more
•fmmaoon .
#2151

lOTS - 1ac1e~~ klcated at AddiSOO lwp.Sduated in
a wooded area with restrictions
#2059

CO•ERCIAL PROPERTY - Br&lt;k and lrame
bui~il~tly used asa ceram&lt;and lktral 1hop 3
mobile
used asrental property 1klts klcated a1
Uwer River Road. Good inrnlll!. aHJJesen t~ tented
#1161

SPECIAU - 54 acres more or less. Has markelab~
timber. Call for more' infolmation today.
#2131

5 ACRES moreor less vacant lan d wtl h lois d woods
near Eureka. Aerobl: septrc and •ural water nciuood
Clxxl view &lt;i river. 011~ $7.!lJO

FRAME 2 8EDROOIIIQ. IN CHISIIRE - Has
kilchen. dining room, 1 balh. basemen~ wrap IXI&lt;ch .
separate garage and deep lot with garden area and fru~
trees.
#2178

147 ACRES SECW OED FAR.M- L o~ d pastu1eand
v.ooded acreage. 1story countryhome.co...,O!es ~ol
build~g;, tolllcco base, good waler system. $58,000.
#2143

i211J

Cl 1986 Century 21 Rtal Estate Corpor11ion 11 truJttt far th~ NA F. ® and'"- trldtmarkl of Centur y 21 Re.J! Est.1tr Corporation. Pri ntt'd 1n U S.A Equ&lt;~l Huus lnROpJX!rt umtv G&gt;

#317

.

.IU1111

'

EACH OFFICE IS

OPERAT ED.

.·,.

•, '

�-

fage D-B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

pil, technology issues brighten
1$)' EU..EN' FREILICH

:;

j

~

VPI &amp;•±1!1111 Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - 'l'he stock

: market advanced last week, led by
...on, technology, and other stocks
: that invesrors relieve wW benefit
; !rom a pickup in economic actiVIty.
.~ The Dow Jones industrial aver·
-age cllnnbed 10.5&gt;1 points Ill ~.34,
4.,Its fourth consecutive weekly gain.
!The Dow frEquently flirted with Its
;:~rdh1gho!1909.03-establlshed

:Juzy 2 -

but was wtable to

;surmount It.
~ The market's biggest rally OC·
~-curred Tuesday, when the Dow rose
~.Ql points as major banks cut
:.their prime lending rates to 7.5
:J!ertent !rom 8 percent. The
ooreducttons followed the Federal
~e Board's decision a week
~arUer to lower its discount rate-

:-&lt;t~~eratettchargesonloanstohanks

:;- to 5.5 percent from 6 percent.
. Except for a bout of profit-taking
:!i'hursday, oU stocks attracted
;PJyers throughout tbe week. Some
"'l.echnology Issues also did well.
goods stocks, which had
lt good run during the first half d
· '-9116. garnered less attention. ·
,; Though many investors are
~png for the economy to revive In
~third and fourth quarter, the
jJ&gt;II8'Mll!llt oontlnued to release
:JillIa reflecting a weak economy.
.•
·
';:

t:onsurner

J ed

:'D

.;;;,uUyOU( COMp e(

""
; TROY, Mich. (UP!)- Ex-GeiW
::Corp. Friday said it has completed
' ts acquisition of TRW Inc.'s
:Pmpresoor Components Division,
~tIt declined to disclose the terms
;ot the transaction.
\t' E. Paul Casey said acquisition of
"!CCmpresoor Components, which
fpnxtuces jet engine components, Is
~ Important step In the continuing
~wth of Ex-Cell-O's aerospace·
:llefense segment.

-

The Comrneree Department said
Ire U.S. trade deficit stood at a

and to concentrate on commerdaJ
electronics,
Owens·Corning Flrerglas ~ll2%
to '19\1. The rompa11y said late
Thursday that Its directors had
approved a recapitalization plan to
block a rostlle takeover bid trom
Wickes. Wickes said Friday It
would terminate Its $74-a-share
offer for Owens-Coming.
ICN Pharmaceuticals fell4 to 24.
Its prospects were questioned in a
weekend article In Barron's and In
a Wall Street Journal rolumn
Monday.
Among other blue cll1ps, General
Motors dropped l4 to 72, Eastman
Kodak slipped ~ to 56lA and Sears
lost ~ to 72.
·
Overall, 1,:156 Issues posted gains
while 8.ll slx&gt;wed l:lsses armng a
total d. 2,:ll5 Issues traded.
The Interest-rate sensitive Dow
utlltty index added 1. 76 to end the
week at 2!9.15. The Dowtransportatlon average jumped 10.22 to 772.00.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock
index rose 2. 74 to 252.93; the New
York Stock Exchange composite
lndex added 1.44 to 145.32.
Big Board volume totaled
ffi4,614,759 shares, oompared with
632,131,180 a week earller and
408,1M,li5durlngthesameweeka
year ago.
Composite volume for the week
was 773,925,179 shares, compared '
with 755.~.!SJ a week earlier.
~s advanced In moderate
trading on the American Stock
Exchange.
The American Stock Exchange
index rose 2.93 to 273.85. Advances
outpaced declines :JSS.353 among
the 9l9 Issues traded. Volume was
46,814,000 shares, oompared with
44,63l,:li5 last week and 31,:al4,745
during the same week a year ago.
Wickes led the Amex actives,
rising ~ to 5V.. B.A.T. Inrustries
lollowed, unchanged at 6 3-16.
Amdahl was third , advancing 3 to

record $18.4 !Illlon in July. The
government also said that mJuly,
single-family rome sales fell 5.6
pel'(~nt.

Edward Nlcoskt &lt;t Piper, Jaftray
&amp; Hopwood In Minneapolis said the

stock markellsatthereglnn!ngofa
major change In leadership. Since
mid-July, the best performers have
been energy, utWty and manufac·
turing Issues, he no)ed. Consumer
goods compaDieshave moved to the
b:&gt;ttom at the llst.
James Andrews, head &lt;t instltu·
tiona! trading at Janney Montgo·
mery Scott In Philadelphia said the
market soould rletain a nrm tone
this week.
"PorttbUo managers will be
ready to comm!t a llttle bit more
money to the market," Andrews
said. He said with the Fed trying to
spur economic activity, an upturn
In third-and fourth·(Jlarter corporate earnings stvuld SE!Id til' Dow
up to m before yearend.
On the trading ftoor, Ohio Edison
was the Jmst active NYSE-llsted
Issue, rising \!, to 22'!i. Duquesne
Power &amp; Light followed, easing \!,
to 14
AT&amp;T was third, jumping1% to.
24:;(,.
Oil and cil service Issues rose
after Norway said It planned fD
dlstuss production curbs 011 Its
North Sea cil ootp.~t. Mobil rose ~
ID 35%, Exxon jumped 3~ to 68%,
Texaco spurted 1% to33o/,,Chevron
advanced 1'~ fD 44~, Occidental
Petroleum jumped 1% to :!!Y4 ,
Phillips Petroleum added% tolO~.
Atlantic Richfield added 1\!, to S7 \!,
and Schlumbergt'r cllmred 1% to
34.
IBM rose l4 to 138~ . Merrill
Lyoch raised its Investment rating
on the stock.
Gould added 2 fD 21. The company
said Its b:&gt;ard approved a plan to
divest its defense systems business 21.

*·

ALL GAUGES
Box of 25

~SLIDE-ACTION

'6''

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1

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FOXFIRE CROSSBOW

r==

·~-iijqij;liiii::a'"'iiiiii"'i...

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Pl;un O~rrcl

199

SALE PRICE
•12 Goug•

R•&lt;oil Pad.

•Saf•l y At Top Of llecelv•r

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99

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.$ 499

ga. and
20 ga.

12

? ', " Of 3 " Magnvm

•H•avyOuty Rubb0&lt;$13999

WINCHESTER
RABBIT-SQUIRREL
FIELD LOADS

SHOTGUN

I
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22

W /M ~Oflulll

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12 GAUGE ~.

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$211

Price

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WINCHESTER""

BUCKSHOT LOAD
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SALE PRICE

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• WJttOMIW CA$1 - Cil'llAJ ~llOIOH !
• fOUit txnA. SU.li'IOTM MIHGl$!
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SHAAP FIHGEA · J 'lo ·- Sll""ong bt!de
G¥&gt;vone ~111\er &amp;/'learn 111\Ciuded

S f•~ O ~

PRECISION
VALUE PAC

~.t OLD-TIMER
.:. ., ,~ ·, ._.. . .- '"'" '11 99

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B·K ARCHERY PRODUCTS

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Store Hours:
Mon thru Fri 9: 30-6: 00
Sat 9:30-5: 00,S un .
Closed

.. .

~

Jack Rogers (Youkoubls Uzsku·
rlatlsl, 76, of 120 Pleasant St., Point
Pleasant, longtime Mason Coonty
educator, sportsman and writer.
died Monday in Pleasant Valley
Hospital following an- extended
illness.
Born June 29, 1910, In Chicago,
Ill.. a son of Jonas and Ona
Salclunas Uzskuriat!s, newly ar·
Jived tmmlgrants from Lithuania
via Scotland. Mr. Rogers ~mved
with his famlly fD Minden where his
father worked In the coal fields. He
graduated from Qak HUI High
School and continued his education
at Morrls Harvey College, Bar·
boursvtlle, W.Va., where he was a
summa cum laude graduate In l933 .
A baseball and football player In
both high school and college, Mr.
Rogers worked his way through
Morris Harvey lecturing ln.botany
and conducting forest IY field trips .

yearsandthatonly4.4mlllionofthe
company's 22 million tons of coal
last year came from underground
mines.
"You cannot characterize a
company's record by looking at
only a piece of It," said Murray.
"You oo that and you get a very
distorted viewpoint."
Davitt McAteer, director of the
law center, said the survey did not
reflect one reality of the coal
Industry - that small coal opera·
tors. In general, have worse safety
records than large companies.
partly because they do mt have the
same resources or expertise.
However. he expressed confl·

25 Cenll

dence the · survey accurately
ranked safety records among the
big producers. He said the survey's
ratings were based on statistics
gatil'red by the U.S. Mine Safety
and Health Administration over a
five-year period - enough time to
ensure that a single disaster would
not unduly skew the overall safety
record compiled by a company.
McAteer acknowledged that the
magnitude d the Wilberg disaster
was such that It probably contrlb·
uted substantially 10 Savage Neal's
poor rating. Still, he said, Savage
Neal had one of the worst overall
disabling Injury rates among the
large companies.

said an autopsy srowed the plot of
the small plane died of "multiple
Injuries" and from a heart attack.
Gold said the heart attack hap·
pened before the pilot was decapl·
tated In the collision that sheared off
his plane and much of the jet's
control stabilizers, sending both
craft plunging Into the suborb of
Los Angeles.
The 18 dead on the ground died In
ex{ioslons, fire and from the falling
debris. The 15 found In one home
were apparently attending a party,
It was reported.
Autmritles said Aeromextco
Capt. Juan Prom had been in
contact with tre l.Ds Angeles
control rower just refore Impact
and was IDld to watch lor another
small plane.;... not the Piper- iii ~s
vtcln1ty.
National Transportation Safety
Board blvestlgators said the controller handling Fllght 498 was
"distracted" by the otil'r small
plane, which "popped up" unexpectedly in the airspace, but It was
unknown U the distraction was
relevant. The controller was to be
given a drug test today, officials
said.
The Piper was equipped with a
transponder, which magnifies a
plane's presence oo radar screens.
The device's switch was In til' "on "

Mr. Rogers moved to Point
Pleasant following college graduation In 1933 where he edited the
former Mason County Citizen. a
weekly newspaper, for two years.
At the time he was the youngest
editor In West Virginia.
In 1935 he married Ire former
Thelma G. Coon, an elementary
school teacher from Comfort, and
began teaching bjl!k&gt;gy at Point
Pleasant High School. The Rogers'
combined for well over 60 years of
teaching In the Point Pleasant
school system.
During World War II. Mr. Rogers
took a leave of absence from
teaching to expedite for til' Marietta Manufacturing Co.. which
constructed ocean-going tugs for
Russia.
Combining his interest In sports
and teaching, Mr. Rogers coached
til' high school baseball team for 24

By CIIARUS MffCHELL
Mc&amp;OW (UP!)- U.S. News&amp;
World Report correspondent Nicholas Danlloff, jailed since Saturday
for alleged espionage, wUI eltil'r be
r:Jharged or released within 10 days;
Ills wife says.
Mortimer Zuckerman, owner
and editor In chief ol !be magazine.
planned meetings In Mbscow today
with Soviet officials to press for the
release of Danllof!, 52, an·Amerlcan
Citizen. '
Zuckerman arrived · in Moscow
Monday and charged that Danllotl
was the vtctlm of "a phony arrest
based on contrived
The $ovlet government has said
Danllotf was caught "red·lu)nded"
In an act of espionage Saturday
when he was gtven a ~(!age by a
11011roe ,t)Jat was later loup! to
'cOIItaln maps marlled secret.
\ ln
Barbara, Calif., where
President Reaaan was vacationing,

santa

White House spokesman Larry
Speakes said the admlnlstraUon Is
"angry" about Danllof!'sdetentlon,
but a senior administration oltlclal
said no decision had been made on
what action Reagan would take.
Speakes said that while the
United States relleves a summit
between Reagan and Soviet leader
MtkhaU Gorbachev Is "a potentially
Important event" and that JX'eparatol)( meetings are stW oo sdiEdule.
"Incidents llke this ... cannot help
U.S.-Sovtet relations.''
Ruth Dalllloft, who visited her
huSband Monday- her second visit
In two days at, the KGB lnterroga·
lion center at Lellrtovo prison said DanUotr was "atralned and lull
of 'hnxtety allput the sttuat~n," but
lhat SoVIet au!Jilritle$ luid treated
h1m 1n a "rorrect and buslnesllllke

manner."

'

"What I learned from my
meeting with ,Nick was lha~ In 10
days he woukl either be charilld or

w~~~~,.

' .GRIM TASK

lnvestlgators examined the

fuselage ~ an Aeromedco jel Monday as the search
for hodles continued in the Cerrllo!l, Calif.,

neighborhood devalllated by the crash Sunday of a
passenger alrttner and a private craft. (UPI)

passengers and the six crew
memrers were listed as Mexican
citizens, many of whom lived In the
United States.
It was the worstatrdlsaster In the
history of the Los Angeles airport.
spokesman Thomas Winfrey said.

position, but It was not known If It
was working before the collision.
An Aeromexlco passenger ltst
smwed that 36 of the ~ travelers
aboard the plane were American
citizens. There was one Colomlian
and one Salvadoran. The rest oft he

eight ·and nine-year-old group oft he
Point Pleasant Little Men's League
Is named for him. He alsc managed
the Kiwanis Club swimming pool
for a season, and found time to play
semi-pro baseball lbr a numrer of
years.
Mr. Rogers was a historian for
the famous 13 Club througmut Its
existence. He was also a member of
the Independent Order at Odd
Fello~W and had served as an
asslstabt scoutmaster. A memrer
of til' Presbyterian Church in Point
Pleasant for about 50 years. Mr.
Rogers was an ordained elder and
held membership on numerous
church committees and taught
Sunday School tbr many years.
Oct. :n, 1975. was proclaimed
Jack Rogers Day in Point Pleasant
by Mayor John Musgrave. On May
5, 1985, Mr. Rogers was the
recipient of the prestigous Gene

years with his teams. compiling an
overall 182·121 record. He also
served as an assistant coach In
football and basketball for seven
years. In 1942. he coached all the
high school sports.
Mr. Rogers was a sportswriter
and columnist for the Plllnt Plea·
sant Register for over 50 years,
turning out over IO,OOJ articles
during his wiiling carrer. An avid
reader, hunter and fisherman, his
columns · dten Incorporated book
reviews and his wildltfe experien·
ces. Jack wrote and sold fiction
articles to national magazines,
concentrating on sports, short
stories and novelets. He also
created "Offsldes Oscar," the
well -known " plxllated plgsldn
picker."
For eight years, Mr. Rogers
directed the Little League baseball
program In Point Pleasant. The

prison. Mrs. Danlloff and the
embassy o:iflctal were allowed a
one-hour meeting with him Sunday,
but Caleb Danlloff was not allowed
to see his father.
~ckerman said on his arrlval at
Sheremetyevo airport that he came
to provide help and suwort to
DanUoff and his family "over the
fact that he has been thrown lnfD
prison unjustly.''
He Indicated he reUeves Danllott
was set up as a bargaining chip to
obtain the release of Gennadl
Zakharov, 39, a Soviet citizen and
U.N. ernp~yee who was being held
without bond In New York after the
FBI arrested h1m Aug. 23 .while
h""dlng wer $1,00l to an Informant
tor classified documents.
Speakes said he had no lmowl·
edge ct any plans for a swap.
Danllof! served 5\!, years In the
Soviet capital lor the IIUIJazlne and
three years lor United Press
International In the ear)¥ 1960s.

released," she said. "If he's
charged, presumably there wUI be
a trial."
Mrs. Danllolf said she did not
know whether the 10-day period
began Monday or Saturday, wben
her husband was detained.
During the W;lt Monday Soviet
autlx&gt;ritles allowed Dan Doll's wife,
his 16-year-old son, Caleb, and a
U.S. consular officer to enter the

Speakes said that whle the
Unlled States believes a sunwnll
between : heac• and Soviet
leader Mlkball Gorbachev Ill "a
potaJtiiiiJy lmpontaat event"
and thlil preparatoey meetlllp
. . . 011 IICbedule, "lllcldenla
like this ... Cl8IIID lw!lp U.S.·
Soviet rela&amp;lo118."

'

It also was til' worst domestic
accident since 137 people were
killed Aug. 2, 1985, when a Delta
Airlines L-lOU Trtstar bound from
Fort Lauderdale, Fla.. ID Los
Angeles crashed on landing at
Dallas-Fort Worth Internalbnal.

'

Labor Day celebration In Racine
was filled with the sounds a·
happlness: children laughing,coun-'
try music and feet skipping to the
reat.
But the underlying tones were
grim. Speech after speech by
political and union figures at tbe
celebration, put on by the United.
Mine Workers, bemoaned tbe·
shrinking union membership.
·
Howard Green, a member of the
UMW's International Executive
Board, told the 2,(01 people ga- ·
lhered In Racine that his organlza·
tlon Is at a crossroads, facing a
crisis from non-union mines open,
lng up In Kentucky and West:
VIrginia.
He said non-union operators are
· draining the ltfe blood of the union
and therefore the miners.
"In Logan County," Green said,
"I talked fD a man working tn a
non-uniOn mine woo was getting
$3.55 an hour. That's ridiculous."
UMW District 17 President Bob
Phalm said the dwindling member·
ship In his soutrern West VIrginia
district "Is sickening.'' In 1978 his
district had 29,00l members. Today, he said, It has less than lO,IXXI
memrers.
Sen. Robert Byrd and Rep. Nick
Rahal!, both West VIrginia Democrats, attended the annual celebration and blamed President Reagan
for the union's woes.
Byrd, woo played til' ftddle and
sang "There's More Pretty Gtris
Than One," said the nation 's $170 ·
billion national trad!' deficit Is' to ·
blame formuchofthe problem . The
nation 's workers are not competing
with tbrelgn workers, but with
foreign governments who subsidize
their Industries, he said.
"All we want is a level playing
field.' ' Byrd said. "But this admln·
lstrallon does nothing about the
problem."
Gov. Arch Moore alsc attended .
the event. He said the state ·
economy Is Improving, Including :
moving from the No. 3 coal :
producer ID the No. 2 producer 1n ·
the country. But. he added, "We're
not rmvlng as fast In UMW ·
terrltory as I'd like us ID be."
Mlorevowed "nevertowritecoal :
off."

Jack Rogers

Morehouse Award for dlstln·
gulshed service to sports writing In
West Virginia by the West Virginia
(Cootlnued on Page 5)

Robert Massey, a field represen-:
tatlve for District 17's subdistrict 2. ·
said his rome of Whitesville has ·
changed radically since 1982, when ·
massive mine layoffs began.

Recent woes overshadow
Labor Day celebration
By United Press International
On a Labor Day marked by the cancellation of the traditional
parade In New York- where the tvllday was born 104years agolabor leaders admitted "the past few years have been tough" but
asked Americans 10 "see how far they get witrout labor."
Many of the nation's beaches and parks were filled Monday with
the usual Labor Day throngs Indulging In one last. summer.endlng
round of sunbathing. picnics, and music festivals.
But the celebration of the blue-collar worker In many cities was
tempered by reminders of the labor rmvemenl's recent woes.
Several hundred unHarmed employees of Denver-based Frontier
Airlines, which Died for bankruptcy last week after ceasing
operations, marched in the annual Labor Day parade in Denver.
·;1think this Is the final goodbye with us," Sllldonefllght attendant.
"We're all stW Frontier faml!y, and we're trying to give each other
suwort as much as we can."
About 2iO strikers gathered outside The Chicago Tribune buDding ·
to demonstrate their resolve In a 14-month walkout against the dally
newspaper by 1,!XXI pressmen, matlers and typowaphers.
·
Monday marked the one-month anniversary of a labor dispute,
ruled a lockout in several states. between the United Steelworkers
union and USXSteelCQrp. The dispute;which USXIscal!lng astrtke .
Involves 44,000 workers nationwide, Including about 23,IXXI already
laid off. .
.
.

'

•,

\

McAleer said North American's
safety problems ranged back
beyond ~he 1981-1985 survey • m ·
compassmg tbe last decade.
In the survey, North American
had the worst rate of overall
disabling injuries, averaging 22
Injuries per aiO,!XXIemployee tvurs.
That compared to an average rate
of 8.7 lor the ID largest companies.
North American trailed only
Savage Neal .in I he category of
Intermediate mjury rate, which
Includes aU fatal and disabling
lnjurtes. Savage Neal had a rate or
8.2 such Injuries per IDO,!XXI employee hours, and North American
had a rate
7.1. The ID-compa11y
average
wasof3.5.

~wer ranks

Editor presses for reporter's release

clrCuJnStinces.''

Store Hours:
\1on thru Frl 9:30- '7:00
Sil t 9: 30-5: OO,Sun 12: ()().
5:00

Bethlehem Steel Corp. of Bethlehem, Pa.
Robert Murray, president of
North American Coal Co., said the
survey's conclusion that his com·
pany had the worst safety record
was "unfair" because It did not
consider recent changes at North
American.
He said the statistics used to
compile the ratings were " probably
correct" oot that the survey was
"misleading" and outdated be·
cause It mly looked at underground
mines - not surface mines.
Murray said North American
had sold or closed 10 d. Its 12
underground mines In the last three

~

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BROADHEAD

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WIOF 1

MAGAZINE

fiE'" ~AlE' $1

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WITH 1D-SHOTOETACHABLE ROTARY

'2"

22LR Hollow Point

llmtlii

Prlc•

HUNTING
. ' . COATS
All Sizes Except
XXL and XXXL

- - - ...

lllJ(IEJC.• 10r22• AUTOMATIC .22 CARBINE

22 LONG RIFLE

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~~

Utah,where27mlnersandsupervl·
sors died 1n a fire Dec. 19, 1984.
Other companies ranking among
the worst were Fluor Corp.-Royal
Dutch Shell, of Los Angeles, which
operated the Grundy mine in
Chattanooga, Tenn., where 13
miners died in a December 1981
explosion; R.ocnester &amp; Plttsoorgh
Coal Co. of Indiana, Pa .• and
Peabody Holding Co. Inc. of st.
!JJuls, the nation's biggest coal
producer.
The survey rated Consolldated
Coal Co. of Pittsburgh as the safest
of the big coal compaDies, followed
by Occidental Petroleum-Island
Creek of Lexington. Ky., and the

Noted area educator, writer dies at 76

;;·,';,'7999
1

;

The OC-9 was struck trom below
as It made an auttvrtzed descent
from 7,00l to6,00l feet. All 64 people
aboard were kWed alter a terrlfY·
lng ll-t~second upside-down fall
trom more than a mile up.
Coroner's spokesman Bill Gold

Scop(J

.....
1

Har&gt;O

99

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'159

By STEVEN DE SALVO
CERRITO&gt;, Calif. (UPI) - The
pilot &lt;t the small plane that co Hided
with an Aeromextco jetliner In a
disaster that killed at least 85 people
suffered a heart attack before the
two planes crashed and fell like
bombs Into a quiet neighborhood,
autmritles said.
The death toll Included 64 on the
jetliner, three In the small plane
and 18 on the ground. The Los
Angeles Times reported that 15 of
the dead were found in one home.
The pilot, tentatively Identified as
WOllam Kramer, 53. was one of
three people in the single-engine
Piper Cherokee Archer that clipped
the rear of Fllght 498 Sunday as the
DC-9, .apprtlaehed Los Angeles
· J'nvestlgatotS said the Piper was
In restricted airspace between 6,000
and 7,IXXI feet and was requli'ed to
contact ground controllers. But
offtclals said the Piper did not
contact the tower and appllrently
never appeared on radar.

PRO HUNTER '229~9

MINI-MAG
AMMUNITION

Prlc•
16 GAUGE Salo

GAMEGETTER

~- ·ARCHERY

,~ •. l~~;o '79'' '

1 2 Pages

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Small craft's pilot
had heart attack

Iilte.rfiilliiiW'~'

RAM HUNTER '12 9 99

I..I..J:

-

C yi,Mel

Hott/~USA

BEAR
WHITETAILIIB""AR

6"-REVOLVER
I ·n~: c

~'~··15

HOURS
MON., WED.,FRI. 8:30-8:00
lUES. &amp; THURS. 8:30-5:00
SAT. 8:30-4:00; SUN. 1:00·5:00

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE (614) 992-6614

"""

~

~

308 ,E. MAIN 5I,

High Powered
Shotgun Shells

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, September 2, 1986

ByGEORGELOBSENZ
WASHrnGTON (UPI) - A
survey by an occupational safety
advocacy group shows North
American Coal Co. of Cleveland
posted the worst mine safety record
of the nation's 20 largest undergrou~ coal companies between
1981 and 1985.
The report by the Occupational
Safety and Health Law Center said
the second worst safety record
belongs to a firm 1t Identified as
Savage Neal, described as a
subsidiary of the Utah Power &amp;
Light Co. at the time of the worst
mine disaster In recent history at
the Wilberg mine in Orangevllle,

JIM
COBB
CHEVROLET -OLDSMOBILE·CADILLA C

tilt 8tAIOft ltAI'tl ftOW

•

•

Cleveland finn rates "worst' in mine safety

ALL
CHEVY
CHEVEn"ES
IN STOCK···

WINCHESTER LONG RANGE

.

6134

at y

PLUS FREE SUNROOF

cloudy Wednesday, with widely

scattered showen~ and Nab&amp;
near 80. The probability of
precipitation is 28 percent tonight and 30 percent wecmes-

PICK-4

•

Vol.36, No.83
Copyrighted 1986

Mostly cloudy tonight, wllh a
low between 00 and 61. MOI!tb'

Daily Number
712

REBATE ••••

9:30a.m.·
5:00p.m.

Nw.;Ji'l1'

Victory keeps

- Page4

Thru

........,ttOs·

Ohio Lottery

Reds alive

Open Monday
Labor Day

llwse wlw wnul · T·Star 11
the l•incsl
Camo Finish

..ot11111

ket ·scene

.eek's stock

Sal.e Prices
Effective
Sept. 13, 1986.
l-or

August 31. 1986

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

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