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' ==bw==21=·:1:9-~
!........---Local briefs----. $SOO,OOO law suit
Area deaths
.,

·_Man pleads no contest to charge
!

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David T. llarstow, .32, Route 1, Albany, entered a voluntary
plea of no contest to '8 charge of drug abuse, possession or
cocaine, whenheappearedbeforeMelgsCountyCommonPleas
Judge Charles H. Knight Wednesday.
,,
The charge, according. to ·P aul Gerard, Investigator for the
Meigs County Prosecullng Attorney, evolved from an lllcldent ,
In February, this year, and Is a fourth degree felony carrying a
possible penalty of six, 12 or 18 months in prison and a line up to
$25,000.
, Judge Knight determined that the facts were sufficient to find
Barstow guilty and set sentencing for Wednesday, Jan. 7, at 8:30
.a.m. Barstow Is free on bond.
·
Gerard reports that Barstow faces an additional drug charge
in Athens County having allegedly sold cocaine In July last year
to an undercover agent at an Athens bar.
p
· A
F
c III represented the state
rosecutmg ttorney req W. row
at Wednesday's hearing and indicated he will recommend the
· maxtinum penalty when Barstow comes up for sentencing in
J
anuary.

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i

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Pomeroy man indicted on charge

:

l ed on agross
CariLeroyB ucktey, Sr.,43,Pomeroy,was Indct
sexual Impos it ion charge Wednesday when the Meigs County
Grand Jury met for a one day session.
·
Paul Gerar d. investigator for _ the Meigs' Prosecuting
Attorney, reports that the charge Is a third degree felony
carrying a possible penalty of one,. one and one-half or two
years In pr ison and a fine up to $5,000.
During Wedn es&lt;)ay's session, the jury also visited and
ins,..,.,ted
the Meigs County jail. In their report, filed Thursd ay ,
~-the grand jury found the )all to be operated properly, and In
accordance with applicable laws and rules of the court.

filed in Meigs court
A $500,000 law suit has been
llled In Meigs County Common
Preas Court by OkeyE, Kis er Sr.,
' Racine, against Linda Eastman
and Ronald Eastman, Coolvill e.
The action s tems from an ace! dent Jan. 25, 1985 on East Main
St. In Pomeroy, In which the
plalntlfr s vehicl e was s truck by
a vehi c1e owned bY Rona ld
Eastman and driven by his wife
Linda: l&lt;iser all eges he has
suffered permanent Injuries as a
result of the incident. .
A reciprocal a~tion (or child
support has been filed by the
County of San Bernadino, State of
California, and Jody L. Bailey,
D
H
. J
aga 1nst ana · 8. a11 ey r.
Cases dismissed Include Sabra
J . Click a nd Paul R. Click·
, Avis
.
w. Lawson against Dr. J ohn
Coo k, et at; Lela C. Carnes
agai nst Ka thy L. Rhodes.

HOSpll3
• 1 news

Sunday

,

A

vis

H I

··
·
Cecil Gaul , andtwoslsters,Do'rls

" She

art ey

Avis G, Hartley, 61· Bunker
Hill Road, Pomeroy, a former
Pomeroy business woman, died
Friday morning at Veterans
Memorial Hospital.
Mrs, Hartley was for.merly an
owner
of Hartley Shoes In
p
omeroy.

Is survived by her hu sbaQd, Kennet h! w. Hartley; a Spencer and Mary Faith GauLso n; Kenneth G. Hartley , PomeServiceS Wilt be held at 2 p.m .
roy; her mother, Lucie Smtih ' Sunday at the Rawllngs-Coa~·
Gaul, Chester: two sisters, Ma r- Blower Funeral Home, Friends
vene Caldwell, Tuppers Plains; 'may call at the funeral honje
and Maxine Hoffman, Chester, from 6 to 8 ~.m. Saturday. Burl at
a nd seve~ a! nieces and·nephews. will be In Rock· Sprln~ Cemte!'Y.
She was preceded In death by Memorial contributions In h~r
. her father, Qrls Gaul; ,aprother, memory ma y be rnad e· t 0 th,e
Meigs County Humane Society,
•

Memories
of Big Bend
Varieties
-Page B-1

Public Notice

Public Notice

.

Public Notice

Public Notice

·contl.-ot!ed fr~m Page 8

by T~omao Spitler; thence
sou-th 8~ dog. ••• 3 chains
and flllnb 10 the Pomeroy
'and Chaoter Rood; thence
North 28 dog . ant 5 cholno
86 linka olongtheoaid
and
road; thence Nonh 39 Deg.
2 choins and 7&amp; links along
tho rood to a atone; thence
North 37Yt Dov. West palsingtheNorthoicleoftherold
to a otone; thence North
37y, Dog. West passing the
North olde of tho otoble 2
cholna and '50 lin••: thence
N h7 0
E111 3 ch ·
Ill ·, tree
toortan Elm
pn oono
the
Southwest aide of the Run:
thenco North 48\l:o o..,..
West1 oloain and7511nkoto
1 stake,· thence South 1sy,
Dog. Wool 3 choino and 37
links 10 1 Gum tree; thence
by tho former tine of oaid

of beginning.
Also tho following des·
cribod parcel of lend s~uato
In tho Township of Solis·
bur/. County of Malus and
Stall of Ohio. !leginning II
thoSouthoaotcornorofa60
ocro lot formerly owned by
Thom• Spiller iri Section 3·
Town 2 and Ranu• 13;
thane• North 47 Dog. Waot
-4 doth caNorth2"dro ; on
• -··
Eoot6 rodo; thenceNorth48
Dov. east 4 rodl; thanca
North 12 dog . East 18 rodo;
thence North 59 Dog. Weot
10 rodl·, thanco North 9
P8fl. Eut 7 rodl; thance
North 78 Dog. Eest 17 rodo
to ooid $pillor'o Eaot llna:
thence South 25 .'deg .'Wost
8 rods; thance south 16
Dog. West 34 roils to tho
place of beginning.
·

Refaronce:
De~ book 288. Poga 17.

taining One Hundred and
Twenty-Five t125) acroa,
more or less.
·
1
rIo r · n st r u m· e n t
~eforenco :
p

Oood Book 253, Page
484653·.· Deed Boo~. 268 , Page
TractTwo: A cart aon
· 1ract
consisting of two parc•l•
situate in Salisbury Township, Meigs County. Ohio,
containing an oggrogeto
4 ·75 acres, more or •-•· and
baing more tuly described
as follow s:
In Section No. 3, Range
13, Town No. 2 in the Ohio
co
mpany ·• purchasa, beg'•n·
ning on the line of Section 2
at the Southeall corner of a

.

a'ppreised value.

21 No. 41
COPVrightad 1986

TERMS OF SALE: Cosh
on dallvary of Deed. Subject

•

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IEfforts to remove

!vehicle abandoned
I

l

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:Bob...

Con! lnued from page 1
; said "Bob's ass~ta n ce to the
' company In these areas has been
Invaluable. The officers, dlrec1tors and employees of Bob Eva ns
:Farms wish Bob every success In
•his future en deavors."
: Bob Evans Farms, based In
;Rio Grande, sells pork sausage In
119 states.

!

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Rates are lower than you'll find with other
Once your credit line is established, you can
ou want rock·lxlttom interest rates
kinds of loans.
when you look for a loan. And if it's a
" use it anytime over the next 10 years-simply
bywriting a check. You never have to come into .
line of credit you're after, you want it
the bank
to be hassle-free and easy to use.
'
That's what customers like these are looking
for. And they're finding it all at BANK ONE.
"Bect~use of my income, we.didn't qualifv for
Something to satisfy their very specific needs.
government student loans. I had to firlil a low·
Our Equity Money Service lets you use the
oost uoy to borrow $25,000
for
my daughters' colltge lui·
equity in your home to get cash ~ht now. With
lion over the neil few ytars.
tax-deductible interest, of course.
This way, I can just wri!!l a
But it's all the s~al features designed into
check ... anll I know the
Equity Money Service which make it your ulti·
Ed Bird
money's
lhtrt."
mate borrowing bargain. We spent long hours
working out ways to give you JUSt what you
Elizareth Hunter
"We consolidaltd a hlimt-im~vement loan. and
want ... beginning with a choice of how to
all our ollter bill payments tnto a new Equity ·
make use of your credit.
"When I saw lhllt home-equity borrowi'!(_ nuule a MontY Servia loan. lfs treat to maktj11.!1 one
monlh~ Jla]mmHntd to
lot ofsenst from atax-law stanllpoint, ljigUretl it
bo11J a1Jdty when we'll make
~mStimetosetupacrtditline,
Ute 14sl paymtnL Now we can
even though we won't neetl
plan for other things-maybe
the money until next s~.
mon projtds aro11nd
1really enjaytd working with
the house."
the people at BANK ONE.!'

'Rvo ·
Great Ways
'IOBorrow.

!weather

John and Nancy O'Flahcrty

, Bill Grorge

I

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Central Ohio
Cloudy today , with a chance of
:snow nurrfes and highs' near 40.
'
South Central Ohio
; Clearing this afternoon, with
intghs In the mid 40s. Most ly clear
•tonight, with a lo)V In the upper
\20s. Sunny Saturday, with highs
•between 50 and 55.
: The probability of preclplta·
;tton Is near zero through
:sat urday.
' Winds will be from t he west at
:10 to 15 mph today and light and
'va riable tonight.
: - - · Exlended Forecast
Sunday throu 1ft Tuesday
Fair Sunday and Tuesday, with
chance of rain or snow on,
Monday. Highs will range frqm_
Jhe upper 40s to middle 50s
Sunday, and In the 40s Monday
and Tuesday. Overnight tows will
be between 35 and 40 early
Sun(lay, between 35 and 45
Monday mor ning and between 30
· 1 ~ and 35 early Tuesday.
.!.

Orchoosea ·
lump-sum loan for
..a·one:time need.

Choose aline of
credit for long-tenn
borrowing needs.

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Our low interest rate is just 2.5% over prime.**
Of coutse, you pay interest only on the cash you
actually use.

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Some of our customers prefer amore traditional,
one-time loan with afixed interest rate.And the
same payment every month.

What customers like these are finding at
BANK ONE may be exactly_ what you're after.
So why look any further! We think you'll find
the ultimate equity loan right here. Because at
BANK ONE, we're working very hard to become
your ultimate bank.
Toapplyortoget more information aoout EQuity
Money Service, just stop by any BANK ONE office
or call us at 59UJ681 pr 1-lro-824-0054 in Ohio. '

MoNEY~ERVICE
· -=
BANKEONE..
Ten thOUSJJnd ptOp/1 who ca111.
BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA
All'ltnl, OhiO -...mbef FDtC

•consult ~our tv; advisor for specific ~dit ions and details.
''The current APft is IOIJ. This is a variable rate and may chanae monthlv
The annual fee IS $50,
.
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.......-------:.---.;..;.....;.;;....______________________~7',:-.

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tm:es-

Vol.

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: Aft er lp.tenslve effor ts to re' move a 1g78 Bronco from the
:Ohio Riv er Thursday, efforts
i have been abandoned.
Michael Smith, $yracus e,
!ow ner of the vehl rle, had stopped
!a t Dan's Service Station on E .
, Main St., In Pomeroy Thursday
:and put gasolin e Into the Bronco.
;He had gone Into the station to
i pay his bill when the vehicle
1s 1arted mov ing, crossed Main
1St., and went into the river,
'1 Pomeroy Pollee reported.
I
, A diver, John jeffers, and the
I Pomeroy Emergency Squad
:were on the scene for several
: hou rs In an effort to locate the
'vehicle so that It could be
i removed from the river. How1! ever. effort s were given up until a
later time.

•

Along the River" '""' B-1-8
Business ... ...... .. ...... ,, .. .E-1
Comics ....... ....... ...... Insert
Ctassflleds ...... ... D-3--t-iHl· 7
Deaths .. ....... ............... A-6
Editorial ... " .. " ............ A· 2
Sports .......... .. :-. ... ... . C-1-8

· occasional
esp•eci,ally In the afternoon .
mid 50s. Chance of

+

tnttnt

cannot be apld for' I•• than

two-thlrdo (2/31 of tho

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Now is the .time to get a goOd deal on white
collar crime; Art Buchwald finds. -- Page A-2

Parclt One wao opprollod ·
at $30,000.00, ond Porcat.
Two wa'a eppra~std at
$22.600.00. The raol11tote

l' Meigs County Emergency

I

Flu shots are ready and available for the
asking, Bob Hoeflich reports :- P11ge 0.3

•

Excepting I"Y previous
retervation of ~nerl;la . . .

ANOTHER MONEY SOLUTION FROM BANK ONE

: Medical ServiCes reports nine
• calls Thursday; Tuppers Plains
: at 12:02 a.m. to Reedsville for
: Sherrie Jones to Holzer Medical
1 Center: Rutland at 1:30 a.m. to
; Meigs Mine No. 2 for ·Johnny
' Man ning to Holzer Medical Cen; ter; Rutland Fire Department
:was called at 3:47a.m. to a false
:alarm at the civic center; Ru, tla nd at 6:55a. m. was called to an
: a uto accident on County Road 1
: but no transports were made;
1Racine at 8:27 a.m. transported
I Lavinia Simpson to Veterans
, Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
, a nd Chesler were called at 3:45
: p.m. to a four vehicle auto
• accident on Route 7 near Eastern
: Hlglf School; Tom Parker, Ml·
: chael Martin and Ella Price were
' taken from thescenetoVeterans
: Memorial Hospital: Rutland at
:6 :11 p.m. to New Lima road for
, Jay Stiles to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 8: 14 p.m.
, to East Main St. for Doug Seyler
• to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
: Colu mbi a Township Fire Depart·
ment was called at !0:42p.m. to a
chimney fire at the Dee Lowery
residence on State Farm Road.
• Firemen were on the scene about
:one hour and flames were con: talned to the chimney.

·Michigan . Pasade~a-bound.- Page C-

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to accrued 1986 real •tate
Veterans Memorial
taxe1.
Admls•lons ~ Lavinia Stm~
•
~
HOWARD E. FRANK.
son, Racine·, Jess ie White, PomeShorlff·of
. 'Meigs County, Ohio
roy: Ma rjor ie Gibbs, New
GERALD W. TOWNSEND,
Haven; William Colmer, PomeAttorney for Moor•• a , . ,
roy ; Douglas Seyler Jr., Mason.
A Divilon ot Ev1n1
D
. lsch'a rges - Sadie Thuener '
Products Company
Cathy Mor ris, Hele.n Crabtree,
t11) 21 . 28; (12111. 12, 19
6tc
Rebecca Hess, Howard Thomas.
~----~------~------~~::::::::::::::::::::~-L~,I~n~d~a~C=o~za~r~l~·--___________i_tr~a~ct~o~fl~a~nd~f~o~rm~ojrl~y~ow~n~:J_T~h:om~•~Sp~il:lor~to~t~h:o!p:tac:•~~R~r~io~r-l~n~s~t-r~u~c~ti_o_n_l__________________

; Squads receive
!nine calls Thursday

50 cents

1o Sooctiono, 68 Pau!!f

Mmdleport-· ~meroy--Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, November 23, 1986 .

A Multimedia Inc. NWis~per

Shutout ends
White Falcons'
historic season
By DENNIS SHUMATE
Times-Sentinel Starr
POINT PLEASANT - The
Wahama White Falcons saw the
best season in the school's
history come to an end as the
Tyler County Red Raiders scored
a pair of touchdowns la te In the
first half and then held on to
notch their seventh s hutout oft he
season 21-0 Saturday afternoon
at Point Pleasant's Sanders
Memorial Field.
Prior to the playoff clash with
Wahama, the Red Raiders had
shutouts over Cla y Battelle, 41-0;
Cameron, 43-0: Paden City, 45-0;
Valley, 26-0; Doddridge, 28-0;.
and Richie County, 48-0.
Tyler (10.21 adv ances to next
weekend's C!~ss A cham pions hip
game against number one-rated
Sistersville, a :4-0 winner over
the Red Raider:· earlier In the
season. Wahama s season com~s
to a close at 10-2.
After a defens ive dominated
first quarter, the Red Raiders

opened the scoring with 3:22 left
in the half on a 6() -yard run by
senior tailback Scott Holmes a nd
Jim Keller's ex tr_a point.
On Wahama 's ensuing offensive drive, a halfback option pass
was Intercepted by Holmes,
giving the Red Raiders possession at their own 32 with 1:44
showing on the clock. Ju st over a
minute later Holmes hit Keller
1\'lth a 59-ya rd halfback option
pass, and aft er Keller's PAT, the
Red Raiders led 14-0 with just 24
seco nds remaining In the half.
"As far as I'm concerned,
anybody that t hinks Wahama Is a
one-shot team Is wrong," stated
Tyler Coach John Stender, adding, " I look for them to be back
next year .
~'Two plays made the game for
us.11 have nothing but good things
to 'ay about Wahama. They are
a~ CCJ9.cl ~ team as w.eha v.e played ··
all year," Stender commented.
··we had a fine season, a great
seaso n, an
''

Bob -Evans
to pursue
outside
•
Interests
RIO GRANDE (UP!) - Ro·
bert L. Evans, founder of the Bob
Eva ns Restaurants and sausage
products, wil l retire at the end of
this year.
A spokes man for ' his compa ny
sa id Eva ns, 68, plans to pursue
"other In terests" bu t did not
elabora te.
In add I! ion to the sa usage and
restaurants. Eva ns developec;t
his homes tead Into a popular
tourist attraction with ent ertainment nearly every weekend. He
Is a co-fou nder of the lnt erna·
t tonal Chi cken F lying Meet a nd Is
a friend of the -4-H program ,
donating horses annu ally to
young members.
Evans buill hi s corporation
from a small restaurant In the
Ohio River town of Gallipolis
after World War II into a major
corporation that ow ns and operates 165 family-style restaurants .
In the Midwest. In the most
recen t fiscal year , the company
had sales of more t~~ n $262
mlllion .
The millionaire businessma n

Sales tax··
possibility
in Meigs ·
.mcreases
'

HARD H!TfiNG- A Wahama playe~ blocks a
play by Tyler County during early action In the
West VIrginia Class A playoff game Saturday
stated Wahama Coach Donnie
VanMeter. "It's the best season
In the school's history. No time In
the past has a Wahama team won
10 of their 12 games. You take
their two big scrolng plays away
In the first hall and were there at
the end," said VanMeter.
" Otir kids deserved to ~ here.

between-the Whit e Falcons and the Red Raiders at
Point Pleasant. Tyler County ended an historic
season for Wahama by shutting out the White
Falcons, 21-0.

We beat Ravenswood, Spencer
and Williamstown. Our kids
could have rolled over when key
players got hurt but they didn't.
Throughout the~year our kids
handled the pres ure well. The
names of these 3 kids will gd
down In hi story," added
VanMeter.

Tyler concluded the scoring
when Holm es scored from 13
yards out wit h 6:55 remai ning in
the game.
The Red Raiders defense was
the dominant aspect of the game
holding _the White Fat,ons to
minu s 14 yards rushing and 99
IContinued on C-I )

PUCO to get Gallia petitions
for toll-free phone senrice

Bob Evans
never let his money signifi cantly
cha nge his lifestyle and Is often
· seen In his res taurant s, wearing
his trademark leisure suit, string
tie and Stetson, chatting with his
customers.
The zany chicken fl ying mee!
came out of a dls&lt;'usslon Evans
had wit h a friend , Lee Durelux ,
who passed away this summer.
The two talked about a childhood
activ ity of taking c hickens up on
high hills and try ing to get them
to fly.
The chick en flying meet, that
draws thou sa nds of people to the
farm eac h May, was one of the
first activities on the sprawling
(Continued on A-3 1

By JIM WEIDJ!:MOYER
Tlmes:sentlnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - After more
than one yea r of circulation, the
petitions expressing the need for
a countywide toll-free phone
system were processed by the
Galli a Count y Prosecutor's offlee and mailed to the Public
Utilities Commission of Ohio In
Columbus Friday .
The petit ions were s igned by
thousands of residents In the
outer reaches of the county
where a toll call Is neceSsary to
reach many of the other tete·
phone exchanges .
All but one of the exc hanges
can reach Ga llipolis (446), where
practically all . major county
emergency services are located,
without a toll ca ll. The Ara bia
exchange (6431, on the southwest
cor ner bordering Lawrence
County, Is the lone exchange
necess it ating a toll call.
"Arabia defi nitely needs somethin g," Morgan Towns hip Trustee Johnnie Russell , who put
many hours Into the petilton
organization, said. "They are
lon g distance to anyw here In the
county; If they need some county
service, they're forced to ma ke a
long dista nce ca ll or do without."
'

-

Other than Arabia, Gallipolis
Russell a nd Cain said the
can contac t any exchange within changeover to a toll-free system
the county on a loca l call, but tha t ca n be made by I he phone
Is nol/!he case with 1he remaining company with lillie difficult y
five exchanges when calling one since it is the only company
another.
serv ing the county.
For the other exchanges, WalNeighboring Meigs Coun ty has
nut (379) Is forced to make toll · tried to for m a similar toll-free
calls to three of the other five system, Cain said, but were
excha nges; Vinton t388 ), Rio unable to achi eve Its goal be·
Grande (245) and Guyan (256 \ cause 'more than one phone
ma ke four and Cheshire (367)
company services the coun ty.
live.
A simil ar phone pelition, was
The pet itions were signed by circu lated within Gallia about
concer ned citizens oj those ex· two or three years ago by the
cha nges, urgin g the countywide county far m bu reau, Russell
toll-free systein be developed. said, bu t the move died before
The turnout was good In all com pletion.
exchanges, according to Russell
Cain said after the PUCO
and Prosecutor Joseph L. Cain.
receives the petitions, they will
At least 100 petlllons were be examined and Oh io Bell
needed from each exchange, · Telep hone Co. will be contacted
Cain said, a nd the number they for statis tics on the number of to ll
received far exceeded that.
calls ll')ade within_the coun ty to
The Township Clerks and Trus- es tablish a need.
tees Association was responstble
The PUCO wil l verify signa·
·ror forming the petit ion move- tures and hold public hearings In
ment , placing petitions in local Gallia County to present to
stores and meeting places, Rus- citizens !he opportunity to voice
their opinions in person·.
sell said .
"We would like to see lhe
The formatio n of the toll-free
toll-call system to anywhere system Is Important In order to
within this cou nty changed," m ainta in communication
Russell said, "and that's why we throug hou t the coun ty, Russell
started this thing."
(Continued on A-3)

RGC gives ho~orary degree
to Clarence 'Bevo' Francis
By KEVIN KELLY
Times-Sentinel Staff
RIO GRANDE -More than 30
years ago, Rio Grande College
was ready to close Its doors due to
small enrollment and loss of •
backing from the American
Baptist Association, until a
young but vigorous bas ketball
tea m put ·the college on the map.
On Saturday, the college board
.of trustees conferred an honorary, master's degree ·In public
service to the man who helped
make It possible - Cla rence
Franklin " Bevo" Francis , who
es tablished national basketball
records and whOse name has
been lent to an athletic scholar·
ship fund the college Is planning.
Francis, vis ibly touched by the
conferral of the degree, said he
wanted to thank "anyone who
had anything to do with this.
"This Is a great moment, one I
thought 1'4 never see," he said.
T~e luncheon, att ended by

staff, st ud e n ts, a lumni ,
members of the Rio Grand e
Red men team a nd ol her teams
participating In the Bevo Francis
Class ic Basketball Tournament
held this weekend at RGC-CC,
was held to kick of! the scholarship fund drive.
Francis, who left Rio Grand e In
1954 alo ng with his coach, Newt
Oliver, to play for the Boston
Whirlwinds, a professional team
thai played across the country,
congratulated the teams which
had parti ci p ate d In t he
tournam~nt.

"You' re all · champs In my
book," he said.
·
Playing for Oliver and the
Redmen In 1952-54, Francis
achieved nearly unparalleled
scoring records, Including. the
NCAA top single season scoring
average (48.3) ; best two-year
average (47.1) and points In a
s ingle game (113) . . The_, NAJA
recognized Fran~s for establish-

lng a single season scor(ng
(50.1) a nd points In a
single game (116).
Throughout his career with the
Redmen, Francis credited his
success to the team, and he Said
Saturday he still feels that way.·
"! think you'll never see a
group of boys put together like
that," he said. "I'd take them
any day . " they were just a good
group."
Francis, who last visited the
campu s three yea rs ago for a 30th
anniversary celebration or his
career with the Redmen, said he
Is Impressed wllh the growth of
the campus, which boasted an
enrollment of 92 In his student
days.
"!think ll's fantastic, unbellev·
able," he said. "I hope It
continues to grow and that
there's no end."
Francis was jofrted In his
comments by Oliver, now a
(Continued on A-3)
aver~ge

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - The possibility
of a Meigs County sales tax
undoubtedly Increased this week
with the a nnouncement that
estimated county funds tor next
year will fall s hort of amounts
needed , due to the los~. of the
federal revenue s haring
program.
The Meigs County Commissioners ann ounced in Wednesday' s meeting that the county's
estima ted general fund budget
for 1987 will be $1,722,472, accordin g to a report from the county
budget commission, which met
Monday.
Budget requests from county
officeholders a nd other county
organizations, made earlier In
the year, totaled .$1,888,000.
J ust where the difference of
$165,528 can be made up 'Is the
problem now being considered
by the commiss ioners.
The commissioners po'tntedout
thai in'divldu al office budgets,
which were su bmitted In July
" were conserva tive requests."
"This is a serious problem,"
they agreed, "and Immediate
choices will have to be made."
This year's revenue sharing
money to the county was spent in
several areas, including, $10,060
for the count y dog warden's
sa lary; $1, 635.37 for workers
com pensation and public employees ret _lrement system payments for the dog warden; $6,~
to I he historical society; $16,858
to soli and water;' $10,075 for the
soil su rvey; $3,500 to the faiT.
board; $l4,000 to senior cit izens ;
$26.386.30 for bank notes and
Interest; $36,291.27 for contract
re pairs and excess utilities;
$17.53.'i to crippled children and
$19,349 for one-half of the county's sha re of public assistance.
(The other half of public assistance Is paid out of the general
fund. l
The last two expenditures,
crippled chlldrep and public
ass ista nce, are mandated by
state law and the county's share
of· public ass istance Increases
each year by 20 percent.
Knowing that federal revenue
sharing was being phased out,
the commiss ioners have In re-"
cent months been considering the
enact ment of a sales tax to .
generate revenue. However, by
law, no type of tax can be ·
Initiated unless a fiscal emef:
gency ca n be proven. So whet her
or not a sales tax will be the
answer to the county 's financial
problem remains to be seen and '
"drastic cu ts in all areas" will
. still be necessary the commls•
stoners said .
•,
•
As for the cou nty's townshipo;
and villages, so me of them will
also suffer greatly from the loss
of revenue sha ring.
Based on population, Salis bury
Towns hip recleves more revenue
sharing than the other townships
and villages in Meigs County.

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A NEW HONOR- Clarence "Bevo" Francis, left, the buketball
great who brou1ht lame to Rio Grande College In the 1950s,
addreued a luncheon audience Saturday 'after receiving an
honorary mf!fler's degree lrom the college. Current Refmen
Coach John 11whorn Is at right.
·
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Salisbury Township Cler k
Wanda Eblin reports that Salisbury received approximately
$24,400 this year, of which nearly
$18,000 was spent on dust control
,
and road ·repair.
"There Will be no dust control
or limestone" purchased for
Salisbury Township next year,
Eblin said.
"The people will really hurt,"
she added, " but there just
qoesn' t seem to be another
source from which to make up
the money."
Financial a djustments
throughout the co~nty will defl·
nltely be necll ssary come Jan. 1.

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November 23. 1986

J:ommentary and·perspective

P~-'-A-2

Novemtler 23, 1986

•

Junb~ lim~~ Jtntittel
A Division of

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Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 446-~42
(614) 992·215G

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publishl'r

; HOBART WILSON JR.
·~xeculive Editor
•

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlshl'r.COntroller

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A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
: Jion and the American Newspaper PuhllshPrs Association.

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,LE'M'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They Mould be-less than )J() words

! long. All letters are subject to editing and mJst be signed with name address and
*~elep hone number. No unsigned letters will be published. Letters' should be In
:aooo taste. addrt:~Ssing Issues, not pt&gt;rsonalities

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·:;Backstairs at the White
House
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ifho's telling the -truth?
~;:;:.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
.
::.;:;\yASHINGTON (UP!) -Whiff' Hous!' spokesman Larty Speakes
~!Jojlsted to report!'rs recently that at a pr!'sidl'nt lal n!'Ws conference
:.:*can gui'Ss 99 out of!OOqui'Stions "that you guys pose and we can tell
~: l~aganl nin!' out of 10 tlm!'S who is going to ask the question."
;-; :,·~But you nev!'r know what hp's going to answer?" a reporter
:i·~pped.
.
..: -;~residents do have minds of lh!'lr own, despite thl'ir advisers and
~ -~~ lie they are briefed on all possibl!' answers, sometimes they don't
•:ebrne out that way.

]ames ]. Kilpatrick

Still a good ·idea
WASHINGTON -By Washing· "separation of 'powers." That
ton's standards it wasn't a big
doctrine Is not tn such hot shape
r!'port. Counting the footnotes it · either. Thl' othl'r is federalism,
ran to only 83 pag!'s,' which is which involves the division .of
nothing at all in these parts. authority between the national
Nevertheless, last Week'S report governm!'nt on on!' hand and th!'
on the status of fedl'raltsm sovereign states on the other.
merits a rueful sigh and a pat on
In Thl' F!'deralist No. 45,
· th!' back. Sic transit gloria James Madison explained how
mundi, and all that ther!'.
our system was intended to
Thl' rl'port cam!' from the work: "Th!' powers delegated by
Working Group on Federalism, the proposed Constitution to thl'
created by Prl'sident Reagan fl'd!'ral government are few and
within his Domestic Policy Coun- , defined. Those which ar!' to
cil. The authors ar!' in love with remain In thl' state gov!'rnments
the doctrine of f!'dl'ralism in the are numerous and indefinite. The
same way that others are in love former will be exercised princi-_
with heraldry, whist and croquet. pally on I'Xll'rnal objects, as war,
I too am in love with fed!'ralism ; peace, negotiation and foreign
it is thl'love affair of a lifetime. It commerce. .. . 'Ehe powers rl'·
therpfor!' grieves me to examin!' served to th!' several states will
its sta Ius and to appraise Its I'Xtend to all objectives whtch,Jn
prospects. D!'splte the chin-up th!' ordlnary course 1 of affairs,
ton!' of this report , federalism's concern the llves, libertips and
status is puny and its prospects prop!'rties of the people, and the
are poor. I wish it wer!' not so.
int ernal order, improvement and
This republic !'Stabllshed its prosperity of the stall's." .
Constitution on two foundation
It was a beautiful Idea in 1787.
stones. One stone is known as ·Time has not diminished its

perfection. Ideally the executive
and legislativ!' branches ·would
confine themselves to th!' na·
ttorial and inJ ernational fields
that are defined by thl' specifl·
catty enumprated powers.
Ideally the judicial branch would
insist that thi'SI' boundaries be
strictly kept . The stall's, for their
part. would serve as laboratoril's
of political !'xperiml'nt. They
. would look after the Wl'il·beingof
their own citizens. Governml'nt
would be kl'pt close to the people
governed.
Alas for Mr. Madison, it hasn't
worked out that way at ail. Two
C!'nturl!'S after the founding
fath!'rs stoutly affirmed thl'
reserved pow!'rs of the stall'S, the
states have become mere eu·
nuchs at the national harem. Thl'
authors of this report put it more
delical!'ly: · 'Thl' states, once thl'
hub of political tradition. hav!'
been reduced In significant part
to administrative units of the
national government."
Quite so. And how has this

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#Wh
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· en pri'Ss eel on the issue of secret dealings with Iran recently,
~~aki'S told r!'portl'rs: "I tell you what I want to tell you."
·,•: •:rhe deputy pri'Ss secretary also has not b!'en hiding his light under
,::"~ushel th!'se days as the WhiteHouse top staff dwindles down to less
•: IMn a handful.
•
'. •: • Jlelore his Wedni'Sday night news con terence. SpPak!'S was asked 11
,:.Reagan was facing "on!' of the toughi'SI news conferences" he has
·:~to face because of the Iran d!'al and the Issue of administration
.:. ~ l-'$11 bllity .
?:·:•·As a great man said y!'sterday and today, the pri'Sident t!'lls the
1 :lruth. That's all that's required." Speaki'S said.
~ ·: - : : who's the !(feat man," he was asked. "You?"
; : .; ;:YI'S," he replied .. "But it's not a tough press conference because
.' ll\e president knows all the facts. The pri'Sident tells the facts ."
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::::'A s!'n lo_r administ rati?n official showed up lat e for a pri'Ss bri!'llng

'1-"Prl· Pri'Stdent Reagan s meeting with British Prime Minister

h t-11irgaret Thatcher at Camp David.
·
.., .; 1'My apologies, first of all," sh!' said. "''ve been out here at the
!;!~ner of 17th and Pennsylvania stuck In the middl!' of the peace
·~uuarchers lor the last 30 minutes .''
. • "Were You participating or were you just obstructed from
~ ·ent- ering?" a reporter asked.
•
Although beleagu.ered in the worst crisis of his administration. the
pri'Sident still maki'S referenc!'s to four m6re years. He is limited to
serving two terms by the 22nd Amendment. Nevert hel i'Ss, the subject
crops lip from lim!' to time. -end Reagan also 'touches on it.
::
In remarks at a lOth anniversary dinner of nle Ethics and Public
: Polley Center. Reagan said: "I've bepn doing a llttt!' campaigning
;. lately. and In many placi'S there wer!'peoplewho were kind enough to
,. say I should go for four more years. Well. the constitution and Nancy
have something else to say about that. "
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Elain!'Crispen. the firs t lad)•' s press secr!'tary, acknowledged that
Nancy Reagan dol'S get ups!'t when h!'r husband is criticized. But she
said that she knew of no anger "being voiced" by Mrs. Reagan
against individuals in th!' administration. such as Secretary of State
George Shu liz, who has publicly disagr!'l'd with President R!'agan on
the secr!'t approaches to Iran.
.
The Washington Post quotedunidentifiedsourcesassayingthefirst
lady was " upset about the way the Iran crisis has bepn ·handled and
particularly irked at the questions It has provoked about the
pri'Sident' s credibility."
·
The Post said sources said "s he was upset at the way the
pr!'Sld!'nt's advisers and Secretary of Stat!' George Shultz have
responded to the Iran disclosures."
• j\lthough tradlt ion has it that former presidents should get regu lar
l~elligence briefings. the current administration has not kept up the
. tr.rblt.
.
, . Deputy pri'Ss secretary Larry Speaki'S sa id "they are briefed but
' nO!; on a regular basis."
:; Both former Presidents Gerald Ford and Jimmy Carter have
~rted company with Reagan on the Iran connection. and "pay ing
ra~som to kidnappers."
When asked to respond to cr iticism by Ford and C'art!'r, Speaki'S
simply said. "They werl' not briefed.' '
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B~rry's World

\Untch on thR H.hin!
1986

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; Today in history
i:

Today is Sunday. Nov. 23, the .'!27th day of 1986 with 38 to follow.
The moon Is approach ing Its last quarter.
~
The morning sta rs are Ml'rcury and Venus.
•
The evening stars are Mars. Jupiter and Saturn.
::
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
~ _ ioc)ude Franklin Pierce. 14th president of the•United States, in 1804;
outlaw Billy "The Kid" Bonney in 1859; Mexican artist Jose Clemente
Orozco In 1883; IValdfmar Poulsen, Danish l nvenior of tlle magnetic
wlrerrcorder, in 186!1.
·
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com!' about? It is a consequence
of "thl' national government's
aggr!'sslv!' !'Xercise and expansive interpr!'tation of its enu·m,.ratect · pawers." John Marshall
launched the downhill slid!' tn
1819 with his Interpretation of the
"nec!'ssary and proper' ; clause.
Succ!'sslv!' Supreme Courts
steadily wiped out any dlstinc·
tion betwl'l'n lnt!'rstate and In·
trastate commprce. Th!' "genpral welfare" clause took on a life
of Its own.
And the people acquiesced in
this gradual erosion of the second
foundation stone. That Is the
galling iruth. If the people
appreciated thedoctrineoflederalism - if they shared the
authors' dedication to Its wisdom ·
- the people .never would have
cons!'nl!'d to its emasculation. At
any point along the · llne the
people would have elected sena·
tors and repr!'sentatives to write
statuti'S in accoFd with the
principles of federalism; they
would hav!' elected presidents
who would have appointed Supr!'me Cou~t justices who would
hav e stuck by the doctrine of
enumerated powers. The people
did no such thing. They positively
embraced "aggressive exerc i se" and "expansive
intl'rpretation."
Until recently thl' state governments hav!' loved lt. They began
taking gra nts from· Washington
in th!' !'arly 1800s. A century later
came the federal income tax
(joyously ratified by the stall's).
and the states surrend!'rl'd alto·
get her. They had the plea~ure of
spl'ndl ng money without the pain
of raising it, and for the past 50
y!'ars the stall'S have sucked in
bllss at ihe federal teat. They
sold their sov!'relgnty lor a mess
of rev!'nue sharing. They can't
even set a speed limit now.
The authors a dvance some
recommendations· for breathing
ll fe Into thl' moribund doctrine of
federalism. Wish them luck, 11
you will, but don't bet the ranch
on th!'lr success .

Failure to communicate lack Anderson. &amp; Joseph Spear

WASHINGTON ~ In the
world 's trouble spots, U.S. I'm·
bassl!'s are the l'y!'s and ears of
thl' president. Yet many of these
vital outposts could be prevented
from keeping Washington informed in a crisis because of the
vutnerabllity of thl'ir communi·
cations systems to l!'rrorlsm.
civli strife, natural disasters or
technical breakdowns.
A State D!'partment surv y of
34 e mbassi es identified nin!'
posts with " high risk" of com·
mun·lcations inter r uption .
Twelve oth!'rs wer!' classed as
"medium risk."'
The hlgh-r lsk category In·
eludes such crucial emba ssi!'s as
Cairo. Seoul and N!'w Delhi.
Among the medium-risk embas·
sies are thosp in Mexico City,
Hong Kong, Bangkok, Buenos
Aires and Madrid.
The State Department's con·
cern Is no theoretical specula· ·
lion . One of the high -risk posts is
Manila. A high-ranking gov!'rn·
ment communications official
told our associate Donald Gold·

berg that during the tense days post." And such Interruptions
would bypass local phone com·
panles·. The most reliable satellast February, as embattled are not unheard of.
Prl'sident Ferdinand Marcos
iltes. of course. would be those
During a recent 14 -month pe·
was deciding wh!'ther to flee Into riod. The largest number- 97owned by the host countries, but
exlie or stand a nd fight. Washing· were caused by technical prob·
thi s would necessitate formal
ton could com municate with the tern s. and the outag!'s lasted for
agreements that would probably
Manila embassy only through the an av!'fage of 20-plus hours. with
be hard to get - and these
Philippine government.
at least one continuing for mo re satellit!'s are usually . not d!'·
The internal State Departml'nt than six days.
• signed for international trans·
report points out that many · Most of the remaining outages
intssions anyway.
embassies In the high-risk cate· were also technically relat!'d.
That !Paves commercial sa tel·
gory a:re in areas of poor security But in 26 cases, State De part·
li tes operated by international
b!'cause of terrorist activity or ment investigators suspected
consortiums, but their rellablllty .
·political strife. In addition, rou· thai the host countries were
has been less than satisfactory on
tine problems llke labor unrest responsible fort he in'te_rrupt,ions. .several occasions In the past.
and the lack of ev!'n rudimentary In six cases , weather was to
The int!'rnal report not ed two
security at local telephon e com· bl ame: typhoons, hurricanes and
other pro bl ems with reliance on
pani!'s contribute to.thesp em bas· minor flooding.
direct sa tellit e transmissions:
sles' vulnerability.
"Earth te rminals are suscepti·
In only one cas!' could the
The most Important em bassies blame be plac!'d definitely on a
ble to sabo tage or riatural disas·
can communicate without going military coup; In another, there
ters." and Third World ph,on!'
through toea I government or was an I dent If led sec urit y
compan ies. usually gov!'rnment·
telephone networks, but lh!' breach, and In a third there was a
owned would probably object to
report notes a problem here: problem wit~ th e codi ng
the loss of revenue from the U.S.
Interruption of service at a equ ipment.
•
,
embassies' accounts. "This
"gateway" - a satellite termi·
could result In restrictions on the
One solu tion thl' Stat!' Depart·
nal wher!' signals are received, · ment Is st udying Is an increased
post to prev!'nt direct sat!'llltl'
or the point a t which a phon!' us!' of satl'lllte transmissions
service," the report points out,
cabl!' !'nters the host country "or th!' negotiation of payml'nts
directly to thl' embassi!'s, which
"may effectively isolate the
to offset the revenue loss. "

white collar crime or are thinking of commit tlng one. now is the
time to do it. The r!'ason is the
Justice Department has run out
of gas andiswillingtoselti!'with
anyone who seems to have got ten
Into trouble.
Trinka. a lawyer for thl'
American White Collar Criminal
Defense.League. told me that this
Is the best time to make my deal
with the governmpnt attorneys.
" But I haven't done anything, "
I protested.
Trinka said. "They' ll give you
a good deal anyway. I have a
client who fill'S around . the
cou nt ry in a h!'licopter doing TV
comm!'rciais telling everyone
what a great country this is.
"He bilked his stockholders out
of a bundle and was fined, given a
censure and suspend!'d from
playing squas h for 10 days."
"What's such a good deal about
that?"
"The government agr~ not
to stop him from doing his
helicoptl'r commercials.'·
"But he manipulated stock. I
didn't do ahythlng. Why should I
try to make a d!'al with the
government ?"
·" This Is Ihi' opportunity ·o! a
iller ime. Mees e's boys wut roll
over for a white collar crlintnal.' •
"Why is the Justice Depart·
menl so easy on white collar
criminals?''
"Because thl'y'rl' pro-family .
Almost everyone who commits a
white collar crimc&lt;·has a family.
Do me a favor, let ml' go. down

and talk to them. I know they are
in a good mood. What hav~ you
got to lose?"
"I keep telling you I didn't do
anything."
· "You know Iva n Boesky? Vio·
lated ail sorts of laws on the
books. They stuck him with a $100
million fine."
"That' s a lot of money ."
"To you th at's a lot of money.
To him It's less than what he puts
in parking meters every day .
BP ~ Ides , now that he's turning
state' s evidence thorp's a rumor
the government is going to
redecorat!' his hou se In Palm
. Springs. Calif."
"That 's fine for Boesky- but I
still can 't figure out what's in it
lor me ill confess to committing
a felony."
"It won' 1 be a felony. We 'll go
S!'e the Just lei' people and if you
act contrite lhey'U knock It down
to a misd!'meanor and give you a
seven-day Caribbean cruise on

papers. "
"Did I tell you that if you
commit a white collar crime on
Wall Slref't before Christmas
they give you a Iicker tape
parade down Broadway '' "
"But if I plead guilty'to a whit e

Doonesbury

AKRON (UPII . Whli!' ·
British-french industrialist
James Goldsmith is counting th!'
$93 mtllion in profit from his
aborted raid on Goodyear Tire &amp;
· . Rubhl'r Co., Goodyear is just
beginning to count Its casualties.
As Goody!'ar chairman Robert
E. Mercer said last week, "The
ult !mate defens!' against murder
is suicide. We 're hoping to come
out o( this sompwhere short of

The company now faces much
suicid!'." .
Goodyear !'Scaped with its lifl', greater debt, staff reductions
btit.that life will be very different and. possible shareholder law·
now , officials agree: Whlle the suits b !'ca us,. of the
core tire and rubber busini'SS wtll r!'slrilcturing.
Goodyear has be!'n building a
remain r!'latively intact, . the
l!'ad
over others in the industry.
planned sale of subsidiarii'S will
but
may
not be. able to maintain
r!'duce Goody!'ar's asset ~se by
a third. It no longer can fall back the pace becaus!' of cutbacks in
on non·tlre businesses to see l.t , r!'Search and developm!'nt and
through unpredictable swings in capital expenditures. '
The w!'akened company also
the automobile industry.
may be more vulnerable to
another takeover attempt, which
(Continue~ from A·ll . Goodyear spokesman William
Newkirk said would not be
·
unusual.
ics, and you can't hope the bllls
's
not
an unfamtllar patt·
"
It
will be paid on Sunday."
ern,"
he
said,
adding that GooThe conferral of the degree
dyear
officials
are continuing
was made by RGC-CC President
their
push
for
anti-takeover
Dr. Paul C.. Hayes aild by Miles
legislation.
T. Epling, chairman of thl' board
Goodyear Aerospace Corp.,
of trustres. In opening remarks,
Motor
Wheel Corp. and Celeron,
current Rl'dmen Coach John
Lawhorn noted Francis' achievements and the coll!'g!';s gratitude
in the fame he helped bring the
(Continued fr.om A-11
school.
"Hew as askedonetimewhy he said. If a toll-frl'i! system is
gave so mucl:l.'' Lawhorn said. · adopted, the n!'xt st!'p could be to
"His r!'spons!' was, 'The public· form a direct ·dial eml'rgency
tty is good for thecollPge.' We are number, connecting any caller
extrem!'ly proud. to say hi' was a within the county directly with
part of our college and our county em!'rgency servicl's, hi'
continued.
community."

an· oil and gas suhsidiary, have
combined assets of about $2
billion, sa les of $1 . billion and
about-11,600 employ res.
"We have suitors lined up for
them," Ml'rcer ·said Thursday.
"They, of course, have to take a
look at what WI' have before they
can make a tesponsible offer. ' '
co\npanl!'S reported to be
inter!'sled in the subsidiaries
are: A!'rojet General, aG!'nCorp

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subsidiary; General Electric;
wtll mean "permanent layofts:of
Ford Motor Co.; Chrysler Corp. significant numbers of hoUrly
a nd defens!' contractor Martin and salaried employ!'l's,'' ' the
Maril'tta.
company said in a news releas!'.
Goodyear a nnounc!'d Friday it The Cumberland faclliiies emwlll closet he tire manufacturing . ploy about 1,67!ii people. AbOut
a nd headquarters complex of Its 1,557 workers are emp loyed .at
K!'liy-Sprlngfield subsidiary in N!'w Toronto.
Cumberland, Md., and th!' New
The Cumberland headquart.i~s
Toronto. tire plant in Canada.
will be relocated to an l'xistlllg,
·
It's expected to tak!' about six undisclosed facility.
months to close the plants. which

R~C gives honorary
Springfi!'ld businessman and a
Clark County commissioner, and
by Roy Moses. one of Francis'
teammates and an educator in
Oak Hlll.
Moses said playing with Fran·
cis and the Redmen was ''the
· greati'St thing and the greatest
privllege" "accorded to him,
while Oliver recounted how the
purse the Redmen brought back
from their road trips would often
~nsur!' that the college's instruc·
tors were paid.
"We weren' t out there to win
friends and influence people, we
were out there to save this
colleg!'." Oliver said. "This
world revolves at;Ound econom-

PUCO to get

Bob Evans to
farm.
Evans was born May 30, 1918,
In the tiny Wood County commun·
lty of Sugar Ridge and his family
moved to Gallipolis when he was
5.
After attending Ohio State
University's Vl'terinary school
for one year, he lefj to become a
farmer. At ~2. hi' married Jewel
Watprs, whom he met while In
high schooL They have six
children, some of who are still
active In the corporation. ·
When -world War II broke out.

pursue._---..:...(c_on_unu_ed_rro_m_A·l_
l __

Evans sold his farm and moved
into Gallipolis, so hls will' would
not b!' left alone if hi' were
Inducted Into the service.
When the Induction notice did
not come, he bought a restau·
rant, but was forced to sell It
when Uncle Sam finally did call.
When he return!'d, hi' built the
Bob Evans St!'ak Hou se in
Gallipolis. When hi' had troubl!'
getting meat. he slaughtered his
own stock and. ·even when meat
was plentiful, Evans couldn't
find a sausage he liked, so he

·Ohio weather

made his own.
In 1953. he started selling the
sausage ove~ thl' counter, pro·
duced at a plant he built outside
Galllpolfs. As his sausage busi·
ness expanded, he later bullt
plant s In Xenia, Ohio. Hillsdale.
Mich .. a nd Galva. Ill.
·
The fir st Bob Evans Farms
restaurant opened in Chillicothl'
In 1968 and the popular red
bulldlngs with white trim are
now seen throughout the
Midwest.

YOUR HEADQUARTERS FOR
"

South Central Ohio
Today, occasional showers,
especially In t;·e aftl'rnoon. High
in the mld 50s. Chance of rain 80
percent.
Ohio Extendet Forecast
Monday through Wednesday
Chane!' of rain Monday wtth
fair weather Tuesday and Wed·
ni'Sday. Highs wUI be in the 40s
Monl,iay and Tuesday and be·
tween 50 and 55.Wedn!'sday. The
low wiii be between 35 and 45
Monday and in the 30s Tuesday
and Wednesday.
·

POMEROY
GAlliPOLIS

SHONEY'S ~
BEEF TIPS&amp;
NOODLES
DINNER

NING CO.

me
Dlrectftom

FACTORY TO

.YOU!
20% off
VINYL
REPLACEMENT
WINDOWS
* Lifetime Warranty
* Suneate GlasS Available by PPG
*Tilt In For Easy Cleaning
Custom Made

collar crime which I didn't
commit. won't the othl'r . white
collar cr iminals get mad at ml'? "
"Why should they wh!'n every
American is entitled to equal
plea bat·gaining under the t_aw?."

..

We start with USDA Choice
beef tips,simmered in their
own tasty juices, heaped
over piping hot noodles,
with creamy, real mushroom gravy. Plus, all you
care to eat from our famous
Soup, Salad and Fruit
Bar. Now at Shoney 's.

The All-American
lnlaroveme t

$4.99

10% Disco·unt
on Steel or VInyl Siding

~~\,CZ&gt;

*

or

-C~\)~
Z&gt;"\l'\0\ ~a\t)

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

NOif./£T's CALL

(a

lbure invited to an oldfashioned

eo':J:o,.
0

KSGMNG DINNER

~J: $J~'e)11J,

$499

With Installation Of Vinyl
or' Steel Siding.

fT AMISSION,

GENTS.

Children
under12
just $1.99

Thanksgiving Day, beginning 11:00 a.m.

All you care to eat from our better than ever
Soup, Salad
and Fruit Bar
, .
.
~

•

I
Installation
· Offer Expires
.

~ . 675-5252 ~ .

tne QE II."

"You're just s~yl ng that be·
cause you're a lawyer."
"I'm looking after your lntl'r·
est~. I've never known whit!'
collar crime Sl'tt lement s to be so
easy to get. We ·w on't see
anything like this again . •'
· I was losing my patience. "But
I haven't committed a crime."
Trinka said, "Then go out and
commit one so you ·can take
advantage of thl'i r sale. Let me
plead you now."
"No way. Even if you cou ld
make a good deal Wlth ih!' f!'ds, I
·don't want '!lY name tn thl'

~

The Sunday Times,Sentinel

.Goodyear count~ losses .foilowing defeat of takeover try

Cop a plea_____~_____Ar--tB=-=u=ch=wa=ld
If you have ever committed a

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

5SHH!He's
~

Ml'$

Buttered Peas
•

'lender, Sliced lbrn Thrlkev'~

RESI'DENTIAL WINDOW SIDING
A;ND AWNING COMPANY

MAN.

I

405
'

1,., ••

1

M~in

Street

(Across from Western Auto &amp;
·-i•cent to Lowe Hotil Buildinl)
•'

·

Carryout service is available.

,
~y.-·ugnt Cornbread Dressing
Sl:trt your holiday ofr right with our Breakfas1

Bar. It's open tllllldO a.m. ThankSKivlng·f&gt;ay.

SHONEY~®

.

Point Pleasa

=======America's
Dinner Table r=====~=
_..,...
'

I.

�'

.,

0

Page- A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

~

"

RE ·
~IIVFn - Lana Ferrell, a
""'"'a County resident and a
t~:h er at the Gallia·Meigs
Start Program's Gall!a
~~~~~~H ead Start Center, has,
Iii
national credentials
a child development ass&lt;&gt;She is one of about 12,000
childhood educators to
~.,,; .. the credentials since
national program wa..,
't.~~l;i~~,,~ cighl years ago.

~

proficicnq was .:t.'i·

by a team co mposed of
start child's parent, a
and a national PepreThe le'am judged
competency in 13 areas
·~:~,:t~o her wor k with young
cit
The assessment In·
&lt;iJtoded on-site observation of

As bullets contin ued to fly. a
construction worker was hit in
the shin by a shot, Barnett said.
Dennis Johnson. 33, was treated
and released from · Scottsdale
Memorial Hosplj al.

Sunshine was cornered at a
shopping mall, pollee said. He·
drove the truck ont o a sidewalk,
sideswiped a·van and ~ot out, all
the while exchanging gunfir e
with pollee, Barnett said.

~
~

m

ial

news

conference

toresign Sa turday.
Lopez· Munoz said she·
nol accept the reassignimposed on her bv her
cu~rent employer, the U.S ..Jnfor·
mallion Agency, aft~r she VIO·
agency rules by ask in g

Pi~:;~~~~:~~R~:·;~ajgan
a question al
news conferencP.

h

·~ am go ing to res ign." sa id

· LoP.""·Mu~oz. who said form al
no(lfi callon was to be made to the
agO,ncy Saturday.
Radio Marti, recently estab·
lisi\'ed by the govPrnment to
brq~dcast in Span ish to Cuba and
Centra l America. prohibits its
n?P.Ortrrs from asking-.quest ions
at ~ nationally televised nrws
coriferences.
E)ut Lopez·Munoz challenged
t h'-*~

unwritten r ule and was

ali~ed by the White House
Co(j-espondrnts Association to
as~ a

qu es tion .

No subscription s by mail j){'rmitted in
area s whE'I"P motor rarriPr Sf'rvk£&gt; Is
ava ll abl£&gt;.
Th(ISu n da~· Tlmrs·S(Inllnrl wlll not b(l

rE's pon!'iblr- for

m&lt;ldr to carrl£1rs.

adva ncr pa;.' mt&gt;nt s

SOWISTS - These are among the vocal
soloists of the upcoming Big Bend·Varieties of '8fi
to be staged at 8: 10 p.m..Saturday at the Rutland
Civic Center. From the left are Bruce Wolle,

WE ACCEPT FOOD
STAMPS AND WIC
COUPONS

Coin club to meet Monday

I~

»

.MIDDLEPORT- The OH KAN Coin Club w111 meet Monday ..
at the Ed Burketl Barber Shop In Middleport. A social hour and
trading sess ion will precede t he 8 p.m. meeting. A coi n auction
and refreshments will follow the business sess ion.

Hanging lasl&lt;oh, om....
Wreaths, Cardo Arrungou•ot~
Grave lasl&lt;oh &amp; Sjrap.

ill

Middleport lodge slates class

g

MIDDLEPORT- Middleport Lodge 363, F&amp;AM, will hold a
practice class for newly-elected officers at 7 p.m. Tu esday at
the temple. Mem'bers are also welcome lo all end.

HUBBARD$ , g
GREENHOUSE
I~
SYRACUSE , OHIO

Open Dati 9 lo 5, Sunday I lo 5

~Jlii!J'$1:Ml&gt;llM~J::a~l10ii..:S,..

$J99

11.

GALLIPOLIS - It ems valued at more than $2,000 were
reported stolen Friday from a boat at Zi nn 's Landing in
Kanauga, accordi ng to the Ga llia County Sheriff's Department.
Deputies said Ihe boat, owned 1by Lar ry E . Miller, Rt . 1,
Galli polis .. was ent ered sometlm!).' Tuesday. ·Missing are an
AM·FM cassett e sterefl, a marin e radio telep hone. a stainless
steel prop, a dept h fin~ . two reels, two rods , a watch and two

PRE-SLICED,

BOLOGNA

BOSTON BUTTS
11.

$149

TRAY, CHECK WITH US

'

POMEROY - Seven ca lls were answered by local un its
Friday, the Meigs Count y Emergency Medical Services
reports.
'·
, At 9; I&gt; a.m ., Syracuse took Brian Hartman from the
Pomeroy Health Care Cent er to Veterans Memorial Hospilal;
Rutland at10: .&gt;7 a .m. took Ida Young from the New Lima Road
to the office of Dr. Wilma Mansfield; Rutland at l :57 p.m . took
Leo McM il lan from Ohio 325 to Holzer Medical Cent er;
Midd!Pport at 2:43p. m. took Da\'ld Harwick from Storys.Run
Road to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Pomeroy at5:59 p.m. took
Erma Hendrix fro m Liberty Lane to Veterans Memorial and at
II ; 58 p.m. Middleport trea ted Joyce .Blevi ns at a Middleport
cafe.

FISHER COUNTRY STORE

LONGHORN
CHEESE

SUPERIOR

BACON

USDA CHOICE

CUBED STEAK
11.

$199

USDA CHOICE

BITE SIZE

BEEF STEW
11.

$189

·170Z.$159

SUPERIORS

FRANKIES

12

PMG.

oz.

Selecting a family memorial is a di fficult

REG. S7S9.9S

task 10 accomplish LlDdcr trying cirtum·
stances ••. so why Nil tbc: risk of leaving
it for yow- laved ones to do?

ONLY

We have u http variety of monumentll

- larp .111d smaU, !lmple and ela borateand will padly wist you in selecting a fit·
tina memorial to be erected no:.O whlle timt
pennita proptr care and forethought to
your choice..

S6J99S

WHITE
WESTINGHOUSE

WASHER

Model LA400J

L~gan

Co. Inc.

•Heavy duty large capacity
•Single speed
•3 position water level.

REG.
5439.95

ONLY

$37 500

WHITE
WESTINGHOUSE
DE400J

DRY.ER

•Heavy duty dryer
•4 Temp setting
•2 Hour time dry .

REG.
$329.95

POMUOY, OHIO-MEIGS COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY -MASON BRIDGE
LEO l. VAUGHAN, MGR.
PHONE 992·2S88
VINTON, OHIO-'-GAUIA COUNTY
DISPLAY YARD
JAMES 0. lUSH, MGR.
PHONE lll-&amp;603

ONLY

$2 7900

•

BOILED HAM

SPARE .RIBS

II.

HOMEMADE

.

'

.SUPERIOR

HOLlYWOOD

$289

•

' $159
LB.

HAM SALAD

..

Perhaps it's time to
ler a CPA handle the

Flowers or plants in real
wooden country baskets
decorated with acharming
folk art floral design.
· We candeliver your
gift across town. Or wire it
anywhere inthe United
Stales and Canada.

•
•

finances while )'Oil c!)ncentrate on sales ...

K. A. KEHlER II~ CPA
611 r. Main 11.
Pomt roy, OH. H764
PH. 614·992· 7270

BANANAS

99

3LB.

Teleliora sHarvest
Basket Bouquets

•
The Country Casserole
Bouquet-oven-to-table cookware wilh acharming folk art
designand filled with a lovely
autumn arrangement.
well deliver it across
town or wire it anywhere inthe
United Slates.

Send a haiwst
ofhappin~.
The fTD®Autumn
Harvest" Bouquet.
Call or visit us today.

REO

CRISP

GRAPES

CELERY

DEL MONTE

PINEAPPLE CHUNKS

LB.

59&lt;

69(

49(

STAlX

FRESH

YAMS
LB.

CRANBERRIES

39(

12 oz.
PKG.

69(

'

CRISCO
SHORTENING

•

$199 "}
CRANBERRY
SAUCE ·
oz.

•

-Clearance Sale

·,

OCEAN SPRAY

!b

•

•

.

••

'•

'

69&lt;

99(

BOUNTY
TOWElS

79(

SURE FINE

SHURFINE

BROWN OR lOX

VEGETABLE' OIL

SUGAR

~~·

89(

38 oz.

EVAP. MILK

2f$l

: Tot. elec., eKt. imul., LR. &amp; DR. furn. Delivered &amp; set up.

,

SJ2 995

REG., DIET
CAFFEINE FREE

8-1601.$139
'lui r••

24152 3 BR
2 baths, vinyl siding, tKfro insulation. Delivered. &amp;set up.

'

.
.-. ......-"
. .' • .
...-'
~

.POMEROY
FLOWER Po1111roy,
SHOP
;106 luttemut Ave.
Ohio

.

'

...

\ "

.....

+

'

· ;&gt;,

Phone 992-2039 or 992-5721

:;:;..ant
I

.

1986 BROOKWOOD SECTIONAL

IlLS.

.

Th-e
Pomeroy Merchants
Wish to invite you to their
Open House Sunday, November 30th,
12 noon 'til5 pm.
.

14170 2 IR

•

',1

$)9~995 .

•
•
•

'·'

1986 PATRIOT REVERE

PEPSI

CAIN AnON

12oz.

$139

•

RODNEY MOBILE HOME CENTER
PRICES SLASHED-All 1986
MODELS AT INVOICE OR BELOW
NOW IS THE .TIME TO BUY

•

INTEREST RATES ARE LOWER AND YOU CAN
STI~L DEDUCT SALES TAX THIS YEAR • •

RINSO
DETERGENT

;

•17 cu. ft.
•Frost Free
•Cantilever shelves
•Full width freezer
•See thru shelf
crispers

Member of the Institute of
Commerative Arts

Emergency units answer 7 calls

446-1543

1.1 w('('k !l .. ... ..... ..... ...... ...... ... .... $17.29

REFRIGERATOR

... anc hors .

99&lt;

*FINANCING
AVAILABLE
*LAYAWAY FOR
CHRISTMAS
*WE WILL NOT
BE UNDERSOLD

WHITE WESTINGHOUSE

POMEROY -Dates for the final full cas t rehearsals of I he
Big Bend Varieties of '86 have been changed so that the sound
system can be used for both sessions.
.
The new dat es are Tuesday and Friday evenings of next week
at 7:30 p.m. at the Civic Cent er in Rutland. Meantime, any
solois t wis hin g to have an ex tra prac tice session ca ndo so from 7
to 8 p.m. Monday at the home of Bub Hoeflich In Pomeroy.

SUPERIOR
~ESH

Vlnis. 34, Stoke, N.C ., $40; Jack'• '
R. Sparks, 34, Ironton, · $39;
Roger D. Blrneli. 31, Logansport,.
Ind., $72; Aston c. Stacy; 60, ·
Ha zard, Ky .. $46; Deleda M. •
Adkins, 39, Proctorville, $39;
LyleJ,. Tairles. 23, South Charles·
ton. W.Va., $40; William L.
Leonard. 39. Wa ico, '$40; Kat·
hleen E. Stu cke!, 35, Beaver, $41;
Tamara A. Fulks, 24 , Crown City,
$42; Richard M. .Marlin, 23,
Sissonville, W.Va., $39; E&lt;!dle L.
Locket, 24, Cinci nnati, $42; and
Ronie L. Wright, 33. Romeo,
Mich., $39.

Admitted - Patty Harmon,
Rutland ; George Hoff man',
Middleport.
Discharged - Cecil Smit h,
Betty Martin, Early Scarberry,
Wllllom Colmer.

Rehearsal dates changed

69&lt;

lB.

was dismissed from a seat belt
violation after he viewed a safety
film.
Forfeiting $40 bonds were
Deborah L. Carter. 30, Pa triot
Star Route, for passing in an
intersec tion; Frazer L. Bartel,
64, Rt, 1, Bidwell, failure to
secure his vehicle after it was
stopped; and Paul D. Clay, 29,
Middleport, an insecure .load on
his pic k-up truck.
Bonds for speeding were forte·
iled by Dennis A. Moll, 21.
Waterloo, II!.. $38; Kien Van Ngo,
22 ,; \'2 Court St., $40; Curt is E.

Veterans Memorial

MIDDLEPORT- A meeting of Meigs Local Chapter 17, Ohio
Association of Public School E mployees. will be held at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday al I he Meigs Junio r High Sc hool 'in Middleport.

BEEF LIVER

ROUND STEAK

~

OAPSE chapter meets Tuesday

~

PH. 992-5776

ill

.

· GALLIPOLIS-JerrvH.Mas· Dyer, 61 .. VInton, for failure to
s!e, 38, Rt, I. Northup, was fi ned cont rol the vehic le he was
$12, plus costs, an&lt;) placed on ilrlv lng. Dedman also was fined
probation for one year Friday In S13 and costs for speeding.
Ga llipolis Munic ipal Court for
Found not guilty were Doug
driving without an operator's Clonch of Clipper Mills, on a
license.
·
menacing charge, and Melvin
. Mass ie also was fined costs for Cordell of Rt. 2, Bidwell, charged
speeding. •
wit h dis orderly conduct.
In other court news, Georgetta
A cha rge of menaci ng aga inst
L. Wallace, 23, Henderson, Bob Wright of Ga llipolis, was
W.Va .. was fi ned $12 and cos ts dism issed at the request of the
and placed on probation for 18 com plaining witness, as was a
months for driving wi thout a case try ing Linda Jones of
license. Bill y R. Brooks of Rt 1, Gallipolis for ass.a ult. Mark D.
Gallipolis, was fi ned $50 an~ . Marl!n, .24, Pt . Pleasa nt, W.Va .,
costs for • passjng a school bus
while it was sto pped..
Fined S12 and costs were
William P. Close J r., 20. 81 Pine
St,, and Steph,en C. Dedman. 27.
Oa'k Hill ; for fail ure to display
valid registra tions, and Walter J.

'·

'd

PRICES GOOD THRU WEDNESDAY, NOV. 26

IONEIESS

Dall)' and Sunday
MAIL Sl,IBSCRIPTIONS .
lnskle County

~ Flowers -in-a- gift
~for Thanksgiving.

RUTLAND - The Rutland Friendly Gardeners will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at the hom e of Suzy Ca rpenter.

Deputies checking theft report

On£1 Yrar ......................... . .. .. $32.2-1
Sl." rn omh~ ........................ ..... ..~ 1 11.90

~

Rutland group will meet Monday .

I

Su nda)' Onl)'

26 W('ek!' ................................ $.1 5.10

CHESHIRE -:- The 1987 Communi ty Service Block Gran t
applica tion prep~£_ed by Ga ll! a-Meigs Communily . Action
Age ncy that will oo sent to the state is available tor review
·starling Mond ay and endin g Dec. 5.
,
A copy of the applicat ion can be rev iewed at the
commissioners' offices in Gallia a nd Meigs cou nties and al th&lt;:&gt;
CAA office in Cheshire. Any co mm ents on the applicat ion
should be received by CAA no later than Dec. 5.
, All co mments received by CAA will be forwarded to the Ohio
Office of Communily Services.
CAA administers the block gr ant for Gallia and Mei~:s
counties. The grant provides fundin g for a number of services to
low-income res ident s. For · more information. cont act Sidn ev
Edwards, CAA executiv e director, dt 367· 7341 or 992-6629.
..

WE WILL BE CLOSED THANKSGIVING
DAY SO OUR EMPLOYEES MAY SPEND
THE HOLIDAY WITH THEIR FAMILIES.

MONDAY • SATURDAY
8 AM- 9 PM
SUNDAY
10 AM· 7 PM

52 W('f'kS ................................. 567.60

3Thleflom·

Brickles
the back.
by J e•mlfo!f
Sheets, the show is I he first staged by the Big Bend
Minstrel Association since !981.

MA.Il SUBSCRIPTIONS

~6 Wr £1ks ..................... ......... : ... $.3Hl6
52 WP('k.!i ................................ S66.56
Rai @S Oul!lld f' Cou nl y
13 Wr(lkS ................................. SHt2D

~

~

Mrmber : UnltM Prr&gt;s!&lt;i In ter nat lonal.
In land Dally Pr£&gt;S~ AS!&lt;iOC ia tlon and 1hl'
Ohio New spaper Association. Nationa l
Advrrtls lng Reprt'~£1n tat l\1'. Bran h~m
Newspap£1r Sa lrs. 7.tl Third Avf'mH'.
Nrw York. N£1w York 10017.
SUNDA.\' ONLY
SUBSCRIP'MO N RATES
By Carrier tlr Mol or Route
On£1 WePk .................. .......... 611 Crn l s
One Yrar ................ .... ....... $31. 20
SINGLE COPV
PRICE
Sunda~· .................. ............. ;;o Cents

~

ill

IUSP 525-MOO)

cond class postapr paid at Gallipolis.
Ohio 456.11 . Enter!'d as SPCOOO C'las~
mailing mallf'r at Pomeroy. Ohio. Pos t
Off!('('.

Poinlfttia~ Holy Tr"" ~ .. &amp; WI ~
!hrist1111s ''"" Failago Pbm, n

.

Grant application open to review

NOW OPEN FOR TNE ~
CHRISTMAS SEASON g

~
n
ill

together by Fe rrell, that
with her work in the 13

tUPII -The
Marti reporter removed
the While House heat
b~E~i~~~:she as ked a question at a

police chase

Sunshine then jumped into a bruises.
.
parked car and shoved 79-year·
The chase contmued In to
old Agnes Millea ou t of the Tem pe; where Sunshine com·
,v&lt;Jhi cle and onto the pavement, ·mandeered a statlon wagon.
authorities said. The Scottsdale
According to Crooks, Sunshine.
woman suffered facial cuts and then abducted. Robert Hughes
from ou tside hts elementary
school. As hedrovethe8·year-old
away fr om the school. he crashed
the station wagon and began
running wit h the boy. .
.
They ran one block into the
house, po llee said. A woman who
was in the home at the time •
managed to escape.
Crooks said Sun shine emerged
from the front of the house about
thr ee hou rs later and began
firing, killing a pollee dog.
tlfficer Les Gray \)'as grazed by a
bullet and Tranter was shot in the
face during the shootout , police
said.

NEW HOURS

f\lbli shed each Sunday. 825 Third Ave ..
G&lt;ll llpolls. Ohio, by !he Oh io V~ll~ Pu bllshinJZ Compan,\'IM u11imOOi a. InC'. Sf..

,_.....,..._.Locai'"'Briefs :-----, Traffic cases ended in municipal court :. .
.

~&gt;:&gt;'!~~llll!llll!l'IBMJIBM~\

teaching and a portfolio,

AS!ii~IG1'0N'

follo~ing

said.

Scottsdale police opokesman
tl!,ark Barnett · said Sunshine
began shoot ing and sped off when
offi cers approached his stolen
vehicle. Shots were exchanged
during the chase and Officer
Kevin Volte, 27, was hit in the
right shou lder, Barnett sa id .
"II was a horrible scene,"
Barnett said. adding offi cers
chased Sunsh ine all over the city .

The Sunday Times-Senti nei- Page~A-6 ,- .

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

'

'

Ariz. armed robber slain
TEMPE. Ariz. tUP!i - An
armed robbery suspect was shot
to deat)J Friday after shooting
three police officers, cominan·
deering a car from 'a 79-year-oid
woman and holding an 8-year-oid
bov hos tage fo r three hours
auihorilles said.
'
The suspect ident ified as Bruce
Su nshine, 47. wounded ·three
polie&lt;&gt; offi cers, injured two bys·
landers, cras hed int o several
cars during a chas e and killed a
polie&lt;&gt; dog, police said.
Tempe police spokesman Stephen Crooks and Ll. Stephen
Gra.hling said the suspect was
shot as he emerged fr om the
house with the boy In a chokehold. He then excha nged gunfire
wit h police, went back into the
hous e and collapsed in a back
room.
: Sgt. Ralph Tranter ran into the
house and grabbed the boy, who
was unharmed. Tranter was shot
In the face and underwent
surgery Friday night , police

November 23, 1986

· November .23, 1986

Pomeroy- "Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio....:Point
Pieasant, W. Va.
.

•

'
-..-••
•
•
•
•

•

.

All of the stores are sto.cked with quality gifts for
· "this~ Christmas Season.

•

RODNEY MOBILE
HOME CENTER

Special prices will be offered during this
Open House.
POMEROY MERCHANTS ASSO(]ATION

-

Located jutrt off Rt. 36 in Rodney, Ohio
245·5301 ·
Daily 9 A.M.-5 P.M.

Open

\,

J

j

••

�&gt;

r

.

~

Paga-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

GALLIPOLIS - Elmer Monroe (Shorty) Gothard', 86. Rt. 1.
Gallipolis, died a:t 11:45 a.m.
Friday In Holzer Medi~al Center.
He had been in falling health the
past three years.
A farmer and a retired EOD
employee In PorrCI!nton, Ohio.
Mr. Gothard was born Nov . 9,
1900, In Gallla County to the late
Monroe and Mary White GoI har d. He married Florence
Fulton on Aug. 16, 1942.
Sh e survives. along with fou r
h
c ildren : Mary North of Texas ,
Betty Jo Taylor of Crown City.
Gene Gothard of Texas, and
R
II G
, usse othard of Gallipolis; 13
grandchildren: one brother and
one sister, Herman Gothard Rt·
' ~.Gallipolis, and Hazel Scott: Rt:
..
: 1, Gallipolis.
· Mr. 'Gothard was preeeded In
: death by one daughter. one
; grandson, two brothers and two
. sisters.
Services wUI be 2 p.m. Monday
in Prospect Ch urch, with the
Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
• Burial wUI be In Prospect Ceme: tery. Friends may call from 6-9
· p.m. today at Waugh -Halley· Wood Funeral Home.
Pallbearers will be Joe Voreh.
Don Rumley, Bob Watson, Don
Winkle, Denny Winkle and Bobby
Racer.
·
.

Erma Jean Hendrix
MIDDLEPO RT -Erma Jea n
Hendrix, 63, 11 Liberty Lane,
Pomeroy, died Friday evening at
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
. Mrs. Hendrix was born April
: 17. 1923, at New Lexington, Ohio,
a daughter ol the late Floyd and
Vern a Allen Pratt. She was a n
active member of the ladles
auxU!ary of Feeney-Bennelt Post
128, American Legion, a nd 1he
Big Bend CB Club.
· Surviving are four daughters
'and sons-In-law, Sonja and Gary
·wayland. Middleport; Carolyn
and Jim Schuler. Langsville;
Linda and Bob Darst, Cheshire:
Trudy and .(erry Swartz, Middleport: two sons and qaughters-ln·
:Jaw, Roy E. a nd Sue Hendrix,
·Mount Clemons, Mi ch.; David
:and Connie Hendrix, Langsville;
a son. Roger Hendrix, at home: a
sister. Garnet Spires. New LexIngton: brot hers-In-law an d
sisters-In· law, Thomas and Fran·
ces Hendrix, Langsville, and
Winifred and Howard Baker,
' Pasadena, Calif. Also surviving
are 16 grandchildren. one great·
grandchild and several nieces
and nephews.
Besides her parents. Mrs.
Hendrix was preceded In death
by her husband, Roy L. Hendrix
In 1980, and an Infant son, Robert
Hendrix.
: Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Monday at the Rawlings-Coats·
Blower Funeral Home. with Mr.
John E vans officiating. Burial
will be In Meigs Memory Garden.
'Friends may ca ll at the funeral
;home from 4-9 p.m. today.

:Lee

Bertha Patterson

POMEROY- A Racine youth failure to yield In a two-vehicle Huntington, W.Va., and Rad·
Robert
Sims
of
Lincoln,
Ala.,
and
was treated and ·released from collision at the intersection of cliffe's car struck a vehicle
Ernest E. Shafer
John and Amos Sims of Colum- Veterans Memorial Hospital Frl· U.S. 35 and Ohio 7 Friday.
ahead of his driven by Kirk P.
IRONTON- ErnestE ..Shafer, bus: four · sisters, Mrs. Conr11e day for multiple contusions and
The
·patrol
said
Jones
report·
Flck, 17, Long Bottom.
74 • 2803 S. E ighth St .. Ironton, Jones of Springfield. Mrs. Mag·
The Collins, RadcliffeandFick
abrasions following a two-car edly attempted to turn north
died Thursday following ai] ex· gle Em~ry of Talladeg~. Ala. , collision on Meigs County Road from 35 onto 7 at 6:57p.m. into the cars were ·stopped for a school
tended illness.
Mrs. Tommy Mae Str,oder of 25.
.
path Of a . southbound vehicle bus ahead of · them that was
Born March 28 • 1912, ar Lecta, Columbus, and Mrs. Veou Smith
The Gallia·Meigs post of the driven by J9yce L. King, 31, dischargiqg. students, the Patrol
son of the late CreedW. and Lot!e of Lincoln, Ala.
Ohio Highway Patrol said Mi· Letart, W.Va. , and collided. said. Injured were Michael. J .
Sheets Shafer· he was a 1931
Services will be Tuesday at l
Cbael A. Holter, 17, was west- Damage was slight to both Martin, 15, Reedsvllle, a pasgraduate of Masop·Aid High p.m. In Mount Carmel Baptist bound in Sutton To~nship~ one- · vehicles, the patrol said.
senger In Collins' car, .and Ella L.
School and a retired · mechanic Church, with the Rev. Vance tenth of a mile east of Ohio 124, at
Two persons were Injured in a Price, 45, Ashland, Ky., a pas·
fOr Jack Wolfe Chevrolet Co., Watson, the Rev. Grover Turner 4:25 p.m. when he sw·e rved to four-vehicle accident on Ohio 7 senger In the Radcliffe vehicle.
Ironton. where he worked for 30 and the Rev . Calvin Minnis miss a deer and struck a near Chester 'an Thursday , the They were both taken to VMH by
years. He was also employed b;t • officiating. Burial will be In westbound car driven by Glenn pAtrol said. ·
. ·
the Meigs EMS for treatment of
Higgins Chevrolet Co. at Willow Morgan Bethel Cemetery. The F. Young, 21, Racine.
Troopers reported that a vehl· their Injuries.
Wood. He was a member of the body will be taken to the church
Damage was severe to the
Both vehicles were severely cledriven by ThomasM.Parker,
M th dl t f lth
es o 1 s1 a . h
orte hour prior to services.
damaged. Young was also In· ·17, Rt. 3, Pomeroy, was unable to Parker, Collins and Radcliffe
urv v ng are is wife, Verna
Friends may call at McCoy
Mass 1e Sh a fer, w hom hemarried Moore Funeral Home in VInton, . jured, but was not treated, the stop at 3:35 p~ m . and struck the vehicles, and sllght to the Fick
patrol said. Holter was taken to rear of a stopped vehicle driven car. Parkerwascltedforassured
on Dec. 28 ' 1938 : a son, Danny L. Monday, 7-9 p.m..
VMH
by private vehicle. He was by Edward J . Coilins, 17, clear &lt;!!stance and no seatbelt,
Shafer of Ironton: a daughter,
the patrol said.
cited
for
failure to yield and no • Reedsville.
Billy L Whittington
Mrs. Roland (Joyce) Samons Jr.
of South Point: a grandson,
· ,
The collision forced Collins'
seatbeit.
The patrol cited Dawene S. c.ar Into a vehicle ahead of his
Jimmy Samons of Sout.h Point:
BUFFALO, W.Va. -Billy L.
Jones, 18, 'Rt. 4, Gallipolis, fo r driven . by Jack S. Radcliffe, 56,
and a brother, Stanley Shafer of Whittington. 60, Buf!alo, died
Sunday, Nov. 23rd at 1:00..
Ironton.
Thursday In Reynolds Memorial
PAt American Llgion &amp; •:
He was preceded In death by Hospital · Jn Glendale, · W.Va.,
American Legion AUL lin ·
two brothers, Clarence and Alva after an apparent heart attack.
Shafer, and by a sister, Geneva
Surviving are three daughters,
Having Their Thanksgiving
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Frl·
PICK-4
Shafer.
Madona Jean Warner of Calllpo. 8782
day's . winning Ohio Lottery
Dinner at the Hal.
Services will be2 p.m. Monday lis F erry , Rosetta Kay Long of
numbers:
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
Ladits art asu.l to bring a
in Phillips Funeral Home, Iron· Apple Grove, and De loris Ann
$189,001. with a payoff due of
Dally Number
Thtrt will be ltiOCiol gu•ts
ton, with Minister Charles Nolan . Dell of Akron: six sons, Bill and
$85,620.
505
and lanilios
1
officiating. Burial will be In Joe,' both of Gallipolis Ferry,
Woodland . Cemetery, Ironton. Gary and Alvin, bolh of Apple
Friends may ca ll at the .funeral Grove, Jim of Harker Heights,
Texas, a nd Daniel of Akron; his
home from 6.9 p.m. today.
mother, Agatha Patchell of Buf·
Rev. Jeremiah Sims ·
falo: four sisters, B~ulah Bald·
win of Plantation, Fla.. Lorraine
VINTON- The Rev. Jeremiah Hart of Buffalo, Rowena Tucker
Sims, 63, Bidwell, died Frida y at of Scott Depot, W.Va., and Bonita
Holzer Medical Center.
Goodall of Nitro, W.Va.: two
He was a retired self-em ployed brothers , Dick Ash of Tornado,
ma intenance man, a U.S. Army W.Va., and Larry Ash of St.
World Wa r II veteran, and a Albans , W.Va.; and eight
00
member of Mount Carmel Bap- grandchildren.
tist Church In Bidwell, where he
He was preceded In death by
was an associate pastor.
his wife, Elsie Jane Whittington;
He was born Feb. 14, 1923, In and one daughter, Lou
Talladega, Ala ., to the late Whittington.
Thomas and Rosa Sims.
Services will be today at 2 p.m.
Surviving are his wife, Cleo at the Raynes Funeral Home,
446-0697
GALUPOLIS, OH.
CORNER THIRD &amp; COUU
Miller Sims: one son, Terry Sims Buffalo, with the Rev. Johnny
of Dayton : one daughter, Leola Hart officiating. Burial wlil fol·
Peterson of Dayton; seven · low In Buffalo Memorial Park In
grandchildren: three brolhers, Buffalo.

r.:========:::l;;

Friday's winning Ohio Lottery numbers

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Comic actor
dead at 82

v

E
R

LOS ANGELES (UPII-J~rry
Colonna, who turned his googly
;eyes and bushy mu stache Into a
·successful comedi c career and
entertained American lroops all
over the world with Bob Hope,
died Friday or kidney failur~ . He
was 82.
Colonna, born In Boston on
·Sept. 17, 1904, died at lhe Motion
'Picture and Television Hospllal
In W()jldland Hills afler a long
Illness. said Ken Kant or, a
spoke!Oman for Hope.
" He was a dear friend. A greal
entertainer whom I traveled all
overt he world wit h for ~years,"
~ope said.
•. Hope said Colonna traveled a
daZen times with him to ent ertain
American troops In three differ~nt wars.
:· " He provided millions of
•laughs for millions of people and
delighted the entire world with
)lis unique style of comedy, "
· t~opesjlld. "lt'sagreatlosstothe
entertainment Industry ... I'll
miss him."
Kantor said Hope Will preside
over the funeral , which was
being arranged by the Lorencen
Mortuary In RI!Seda. Colonna Is
s urvived by his wife, Florence,
who lives In Woodland Hills. an~
their son, Robert, who operates a
theater In Provide nce, R.I .

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Denim Day

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Nov. 26 · Wednesday

Nov. 28 · Friday

Nov. 29 · Saturday

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Dec.

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Dec. 8 · Monday

Dec. 9 · Tuesday

. By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Science Writer ·
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla . .
(UP]) - Mounted atop a huge
craw ler- transporter , the shuttle
Atlantis was hauled from Its
oceanside Iaurich pad Saturday
In the final chapter of a six-week
stay highlighted by key lests to
·improve safety:
.
The 4\!,·mUe, six-hour . trip
.from t he pad to the cavernous
Vehicle Assembly Building be·
gan at 12 midnight EST.
The next time a s huttle stands
on a Kennedy Space Cen ter
launcl) pad the National Aero-

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Dec. 19 . Friday

~:joins firm
'

GALLiPOLIS - Jim Morrison '
•. has joined Integrated. Resources
: •Equity Corp. as an account
:'executive, according to Nell M .
· · Moss, managing executive.
· Morrison will be responsible
' for several client accounts. H~
;;;oJI!aS formerly associated with
""f),!"erslfied Inv~s tors' securities
t!Peratlons as a registered
~presentative.

"':e~~~Prcv lous ly,_he- was a co-owner ·
~ The

Bastille Inc., in downtown
..;;;;~ n ipolls.
~: ~Morrison receiveQ a bachelor' S
~ol':)!tlgree In business administra·
::r.:;)lQn with a major in economics
.!,~m Ohio University. He has
'"&gt;B o taught business courses at
~jo Grande College and Com·
:::iibunlty College. He is licensed by
'Hie National Association of Se~ritles Dealers.
,
a ntegrated Resources Equity
• ,l\rp. Is Ihe broker/ dealer subs!·
:_::;utl'ry of Integrated Resources
~:t~ n..c., one or the nation's largest
:;&lt;~!~a nclal services firms. Jnte_,~ated Resources is listed on the
• 'New York Stock Exchange under
the symbol IRE.

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (UP])Nineteen act ivists opposed lo
Ha,rva rd University's lnvesl·
ment s in South Africa were
arrested as they tried to blockade
a dinner for about 100 prominent
alumni, campus police said.
University officials said they
believed the Friday night protest
marked the first time Harvard
has made arrests at an anti·
aparlheld protest and said it was
the largest number of arrests In
con necllon wit h a campus dem. onstratlon since th e 1969 occupallon of University Hall by antiwar activists.
The protesters, some carrying
signs thai said, "If you want to
digest you have lo divest," were
urging Harvard to sell ils approx·
lmalely $300 million worth of
stock In companies that do
bu sln e~s In Soulh Africa.
·

.:

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other tesls conducted with the
shuttle Itself were equally Importa nt to the Nallonal Aeronautics
and Space Adminls lration.
A new weather protection
syslem was successfully checked
out that shou ld reduce the
amount of rai n the shuttle's
fragiie heat-shield 1iles are ek·
posed to on the launch pad .
In addition, engineers ran tests
on shu ttle booster rocket fu el·
segment joints thai appear lo
show the strains experienced ~y
the joints duri ng I he trip to the
pad were minim al and of no
'
concer n.

., OYYOWINt

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Dec. 13 · Saturday

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fli ghts got a boos ! from Atlantis; s
stay on pad 39· B - the same pad
used by Challenger Jan. 28- and
engineers say anextensive series
of tests will help Improve safety.
Atlan'tls was taken to the
oceanside fir in g stand Oct. 9 for
six weeks of lests thai culm!·
nated this week with a practice
countdown Tuesday aqd an
emergency shuttle escape exer·
cise Thursday to test launch pad
evacuatio n procedures.
Two crews of astronauts participated In lhe generally sur·
cessfu l tests, which generated
widespread media attent ion, but

"'f l~ems

Open TUB

'

fund-raising effor t conducted by
the memorial foundation. The
organization hopes to build a ·
memorial al the Kennedy Space
Center along with an educational
center.
Sc heduled to be on ha nd were
Rep . Bill Nelson, D,FJa., Apollo 7
astronaut Don Eisele, Bruce
Jarvis, father of Challenger
astronaut Gregory Jarvis. and
Sheryl Purvenas, daughter of
astronaut Roger Chaffee, who
was killed In a launch pad fire
aboard an Apollo capsule Jan. 27,
1967.
The road to resum ing shut.tle

All

Open Til 8

Missy &amp;.Junior

nautics and Space Administration will be gearing up for the
first · post-Challenger blastoff
with the shuttle Discovery . on
Feb. 18 .. 1988.
A few mil es from the Vehicle
Assembl y Building the Astronaut s Memorial Fourtdatlon
hosted a 4.3-mile run at the space
. center to raise money' for a
planned memorl,a l to honor theH
.astrona uts who lost their lives in
the line of duty , in cluding the
.seven who died Jan. 28' aboard
Challenger.
,
The stalewlde event, scheduled In 51 counties, was I he first

Dec. 5 · Friday

'

.
Dec. 1.2 . Friday

Times-Sentinel-Page-A·7

Jim Morrison

YOUI CMOICII
110. $1.99 lA.

Dec. 10 · Wednesday

The

Atlantis tests completed; shuttle returns to hangar

loast Turt&lt;1y
Breast w/dar~

Dec. 17 · Wednesday

&amp;

Playtex
Bras

Jackets &amp; Jeans
By Levi &amp; Cliic

Leather, Woo l
Nylon &amp; Poplin

D

Nov. 25 · Tuesday

Nov. 24 · Monday

W.Va.

Ohio- Point

Activists arrested

. VINTON- Bertha Patterson,•
88. a former resldenl of Gallla
·County, died Saturday in the
:Barberton Citizen's Hospllal,
'Barberton, Ohio.
· Funeral arrangements will be
announced later by McCoy•Moore Funeral Home in VInton.

.I

November 23, 1986

Accideni injures Racine you~h

Area deaths
Flmer M. Gothard

'

•...

Pomeroy Middl8port Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pl&amp;asant. W.Va. ·

Acetate tricot

in sizes 5 to 10.

110.

U.H

I

444

Clauic Chri1tmas
gift for herl

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

•II'S IIICIYS' RIICII SWUn

•••. 344
$S.H

Closed toe style.
Buy new and •~avtl

1 •••·nun olfms . IIIIlS' 111111' OII'MIS
99 SAYI
99
1 SAYI
$3.00
. $2.00
•I Men's S,M,l,XL.Boys' S,M,l (8 to t6) .
I !AVI $4.10, Mlli1110001D PUllOVER . . . . ·.. I ..V.

5

4

!AYI $3 .00, lOIS' N®DfD PUllOVER . . .... 6..V.

· Pt. Plunrit

UUTOUII
VISAOI
M&amp;SUIICAIO

JOMINGSUin

L!)W 599
I .lOW,
PIICII

I

I

COM PAll AT $4.99
AND$8.99 .

12-24 mos., 2-41

G.C. MURPHY CO. • YOUR FRIENDLY CHRISTMAS STORE!
AVAILA~LE AT MURPHY'S DOWNTOWN STORE 348 2ND AVE.
HRS.: Mon, 9-8 Tues.; 9-5:30; Will 9-5:30;
Fri. 9-1; Sat. 9-5:30; Sun. 1-5

II

CLOSED :
THANKSGIVING DAY

')

�'

•

'

;1 .. ....

••

•

• •

&lt;.

r1

,:P;;~a~ge=A~-8~The~~S=u~n~da~y~Ti~•me~s~-S~e~n:;;ti~ne~I=====P~o;;;m;;e;;ro;;;v~M~id~d~le~po~rt~G=a;:;ll~ipo~lis~·;;O~h~io;-:;:P~o~in~t~P~Iea~sa~n~t:;;,;;Y'J;:·:V:;a::.===========:;·N:;:o:;:v=:em=be:;:r:;:2:;:3:;:':;:1:::S::;:¥:

:Collins declines recount; wi)J .press ·Lo~g race-·complaint ·
~. COLUMBUS

-

State Sen.

.O~ kl ey C. Coll ins has sa.id he will

nbt req uest a recount of the Nov .
4;_ election ret urns. however.
CQII ins pledged to ''vigorous ly"
J:lllrsue an offi cial elections complaint fil ed agains t his opponent,
,}fin Mic hael Long of Circleville.
• ' "After meeting wit h my
friends ad suppor ters. I have
,ectded agai nst see king a r&lt;"rtjunt . now that the election
r es ult s have been declared offlelal." Coll ins. R-l ronton. sai d.
:,t'·on the other hand," Co ll ins
Ti!\ded. "my supporters will vi~rously pursue a complaint
~ed again s t tho Lon g ca mpa ign
~lth th e Ohi o E lections

tu1;c. a nd the mat ter was further
upheld by the couns ." sa id
Colli ns.
Coll ins also point Pd to a Long
camp a ign clai m that Collin s
" makes over $84.001" per year
from hi s sa laries as legis lator
and superintendent .
"Aga in . the Long campaign
was dead wrong," Collins said .
" f have nev er been paid as a
sup ~ r int end en t on· the days I wa s
in the legis lature, and the sa lar)
total purveyed by the Long
ca mpaign was, to be kind, a gros s
exaggeration ."

· " Fu rt herni.om I have been
in valved in publi c .Pduc at ion In
southeast Ohio nea r ly my whole
life. As an educator. and as
chairm an of ihe Senate Eduea·
lion Comm itt ee, l have fought
hard ·for bett er schools and more
state ai d for education in our
area. As l reflect on things, It is
my record of accomplis hmen ts
in education of which I am most
proud," Col li ns added.
Coll ins emphasized he will be
leaving the Senate with pos it.lve
feel in gs.
"I ha,·e always loved southeas t

Ohio and the peop le of the 17th

r

· COLUMBUS iU P il - The
·pi·ice of ga,;ollne for co nsum ers
has reached a seven-year low.
,dropping Jo re nt s a ga llon in the
last 12 months. accord ing to the
Ain erica n Automobil e Assoc iai ion' s fuel r e port f o r
Thanksgiv ing.
'The avera ge price for a gallon
of leaded a nd unl eaded gaso line
·in Ohio is R8. 2 cents. the assoc iation sa id. The nat ional ave•·age is
90.4 cents , the lowes t since June
1979 and lhe lowes t avPragr for a
than ksgiv ing s ince 1978.
. La st Thank sgiving. Oh io mo(or is ts paid a n average ot $1.2.1 a
g&lt;)llon. and in 1 ~8~ the avera gl'
$1.21.

my

,

worked hard to do my very best

---+-

.You're Invited to ·our · ~7th Annual Christmas

*DOOR PR'IZES *FREE GIFTS *REF~ESHMENTS
.,

L

'

$UNDAY, NOVEMBER 30th·
11:00 AM~ TO 5:00 P.M.

_:.i:oM_PLETE NEw Sfl FCJION df·atRISlMAS MERQIANDISE

. . . . _ I.......

*Yards ~d Yards of New Garland
*Christmas ~gemenls ILive, .t'ermanent &amp; SUk).
· *Door Wreaths
*Swags
Candles &amp; Candle Rings

Jill

Prices reach low

ioward

*

* Poinsettias

NOTICE

Starting Friday, Nov. 28, Rail's Ben Franklin will be
OPEN evenings 'til Dec. 24th. Closed Sundays.
We invite you to use our easy lay·away plan with a small deposit down and a pick-up by Dec. 20th. There is a big selection
of low priced toys for girls and boys. Buy your winter gloves
now whi.le stocks are complete. Stock up on hosiery for all the
family and school supplies year round.
Now featuring all Christmas merchandise - Cards, Tags,
Seals, Christmas Wraps of all kinds, Tree and Home Decaro·
lions, Gift Boxed Hankies, and Timex Watches.

Sho~

* Potted Plants

GIRLS, GIRLS, GIRlS- Teen Interest ran high In the annual product~on of the Big Bend group as reD~ted In lhe numerous
..
young gtrls taking part In a single routine about 1970.

*Terrariu~s

~Let's

Christmas Gifts For That .
Hard To Buy For Person
We've tiled our shop with the spii\ of Christmas and we know you'l
en101 seeing everythng thai ~ · new and beallliful for the holiday
season. Circle the date now ...

TRIO ·oF SINGERS - This girls trio !rom the Eastern Local
School Dlstricl was one of the vocal groups In Big Bend shows.

.
.
Plan to be wrth us lor our "Open1ng" of the Christmas Season.

thlt Stote for All our Christmas Needs!

POMEROY.
FLOWER SHOP

RALL'S
BENMIDDLEPORT,
FRANKLIN®
OHIO

Ph. 992-2039
99Z·5721

.

108 Bunemut Ave .
Pomeroy, Oh .

WI 1ccep1 •II major cr•dit catdl &amp; wire flowers evervwhere.

:

EARLY START- Dancers started at an early age with the Bllli
Bend shows and generally hung In I here untU they graduated from
high school. These youngsters appeared annual.ly beginning In the
early 1960's.

•
•

'

OCTOBER 1984

NOVEMBER 1986
CLASSY ACT- These three dancers, who are now mothers with
families, gave the Big Bend Show a touch of class In their tophats
and tajls.

WE INTRODUCED CAPITAL-LINE, OUR
POPULAR LINE OF CREDIT SERVICE, OVER
TWO YEARS AGO. OVER 1,100 CUSTOMERS
HAVE ACCLAIMED ITS MERITS AND
ADVANTAGES. IT'S NICE TO SEE OUR PEERS
AGREE, EVEN IF ON A DELAYED BASIS.
WELCOME TO GALLIA COUNTY, CENTRALINE!

'

·S ection ·- ·

~d~is~t~ri.::,:ct~._:a::,n:::d~l:_::ha~v:_:e~no~t~o::,ln~g:_b~u~t-..:;co:::;n:,::s::_t::_llu:::e;::n::,ts::;-___:l~~ha:!:v:.:e;_~~::.__:fo:r_::m:;:y_:co:::n:s:::tl:::tu:e:::n:.::ts::..

~mmis s io n .· ·

:t:''The fac ts will show ihe Long
~ mpaig n r~peatedll' , recklessly
~d willfully lied to the vot ers
~ u t my record . and thus won
+be electio n in a di sho nes t
ptanner. Mr. Long·s m iscondu ct
ring the ca mpai gn cannot and
i!J).ould not be excused for forgot ~~n." Col lins said .
:.: collins re ferred speci fi cia ll y to
l:,"onlt ca mpaign televison ads
lll!clarlng it " Illegal" for Coll ins
tir serve .as state senat or and a
count y school superint endent at
the sam e 1imr.
"Ohio law express ly permits
educators to serve in the l e~ i s l a-

positive feelings

eornneli'" tentWI

have a show': minstrel group revived:

' BOB HOEFLICH
By
Times-Sentinel Staff
There's no business like show
business a nd hundreds of Mei gs
Countlans who have been picked
up by the Big Bend Minstrel
Association's spotlight over the
past 30 years as they performed
in association musica ls can
vouch for it.
As time goes by, more and
more of the young people, many.
of· whom bega n taki ng part in
as sociat ion shows at theageoflO
or s o, are begin ning to realize
that act ually, "memories are
made of this ... .
Tech ni cally speaking. the Big
Bend Min strel Associatio n which Is rev iv in g this year aft er a
five year " dry ~ pe ll " -became
reality quit e by accident.
It was back in 1954 that money
wa s need ed to help build a room
onto the Le tart Falls Grade
Sc hoo l and somebody quip.ped:
" Let's have a show ."
• Residents from the Sutt on and
Letart Townships were joined by
talent from Pomeroy a nd Middle.POrt and the mu s ica l was off and
ru nnin g. Nq one ~eemed to mind
traveling several Iimes a week to
the Letart E lement ary School for
practice sess ions.
Although the audi ence probably didn't rea lize it on show
nlgh,ts. practically all of th e
props were gathered up at th e
dump whi ch flourished at th e
t !me ·on the fl ood road between
Pomer oy and Middleport.
The first costumes were made
from feed sacks a nd performers
"did thei r thing'.' in front of an
Improv ised spot light consisting
of an automobile headlight wired
to a batt ery agai n proving that
necessity is the mother of
/ invent ion.
'rhat fir s t s how played to full
houses in Pomeroy, Middleport
and Racin e and the money
poured in to make the kitche n at
Let art Falls a reality.
Meantime. the participants
had so much run puttin g the
production toget her, th~ t It was
only natural that an association
be form·ed a nd the mu sical
should become an a nnual even t.
The fir st spo nsor in g organization, of course, was the Letart
Falls PTA which was involved in
the lunch room program. When
show t !me rolled around the
following year. the Pomeroy'
Elementary School PTA also
needed fund s for projects so that
group joined the Letart Falls
PTA as co-sponsor,
The a nnu al product Ion was
well off th e grou nd and every fall .
nearly 100 residents - sometimes over lOQ - m et severa l
times weekly to whip a new
mu sical into s hape.

Through the years sponsors
cha nged with many groups in the
county benefiting from the s how
proceeds as t ime marched on.
The productions went through
evo lution sw it ching from the
tra ditional minstrel s how into a
variety forma t.
,
Cast members began performin g additional comm·unlty service as act s from the productions
were pulled to put toge ther short
programs suitable for entertai nment at various meetings across
the cou nt y. There were a couple
of s tint s on ihe Majes tic Showbo at a \ Point Pleasa nt and then
came the Meigs County Fair.
The mus icals becam e a grandsta nd attraction at the fair- at
fir st two s how s bei ng performed

on one evening.
Th e venture ·was success ful
and local people turned out to see
their homegrown talent , so the
shoW became the granqstand
feature for two even ings of the
fair for a number or years.
The assoclation also took over
the stagin g and entertainment
lor the annual Miss Southern
Ohio Pageant.
However, per haps, the demands became too'great because
the productions In lat er years
beg an to become more difficult ..
Rehearsal locations were hard to
come by and people were hesitant to co mmit to the long hours of
practice and discipline required
to insure a good show.
Still, the s hows continu ed.

.'

VARIETY OF COSTUMES - There per·
formers reflect some of the variety that was
.

'.

worked out In cos tuming lhe Big Bend muslcats
over the years. The photo dates back to the early
1960's.
. ~-

.

OOOOH, BABY - · Big Bend Minstrel Association rnu s lca.ls have always been lor a Uage groups.

These women ol the community clowned their
way through "You Must Havt• Been a Beautiful
Baby" nearly 20 years ago.

This 1956 photo marked the third year of the Big Be1ui Mimtrel A.rJOciation ~r traditio1zal .rhow.

•

25th year in 1978 - and its 28th
year in 1981 when the final show
hit the Meigs High School stage.
Five years passed without.. ll•
show from the group. However,:
those who had been a part or
those good years seemed to fe~l
the loss not only personally, but
for the community - and so,- Jjl
1986- on Nov. 29 to be exact the Big Bend Minstrel Assodatlon will be revived at least lor
one more time when "Varietl€'1&gt;,
of86" hits the stags. at Hie
•• •·
Rutland Civic Ce nt er.
There are many young peopie
taking part . Hopefully, they, t~,
will find through their partlcl~a­
tion that "memories are made of
this ".
:•

\

Four
Convenient
Locations

The associ at ion marked Its•

•

�'

I

~-

Th!l Sunday limes-Sentinel

·• ·

..,...

Pomeroy-Middlaport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.
·.

.

''

PRICES EFFFECTIVE THRU
29, 1986
. -SATURDAY, · NOV.
.

§

EAST MEIGS- Menus for all

••
-~

~~ WIC pickup
:.: is announced
'

'

~'

POMEROY - The December

t~

coupons at the Meigs County

:,! schedule for the pick up of WIC

r-•Department' of Health has been
,.! announced.

Regular pickup days will be
1, Dec. 4 and Dec. 5, from 9
~ to 11 a.m. and 1to3 p.m., all three
..-days. Makeup days are Dec. 8,
p:Dec. 15 and Dec. 22, also from 9 to
11 a.m. and 1 lo 3 p.m. Those
,J-Picklng up coupons must take
;~their ID !older.
.

s
..
9
1·

Chuck Roast .~·~.....
FRESH PORK BUTT
Steak/Roast .~·~-..... $119:·
HOMEMADE .PORK
$ .19·
Sausage ............... ·1 .
.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE ·
.. $
99
1
Round Steak.~·~.....
·
LB.

~ : schools in the Eastern Local

.-.

$

. U.S.D.A.CHOICE BONELESS

~·

",;.'·School District for next week
-~ : have been announced by Grace
"' Stout, cafeteria supervisor.
: :. On Monday the menu will be
~;~ot dog with sauce. bvaked
::',beans, ice juicee and milk;
J'!Tuesday, turkey and dressing
~~ homemade roll and butter'
~ mashed potatoes. gravy, appl~
r sauce, yummy cake, and milk ;
; ;and Wednesday. corn dog, potato
·:-chips, carrot and celery slicks,
:.•pineapple and milk.
•'
.r.'

.

and Jean •Matsoll Blair of Chilli·
cot he and a granddaughter of the
late William and Royal Matson
who .at one time were Pomeroy
· residents.
· Th~ Bl~irs also have ·a daugh. ter, L~. who Is a Phd candidate In
· marketing ~t the University of
South Carolina, and a son, John
Jr., a graduate engineer at Ohio
State University who Is now
·· ~~Erres,R.N,,oftheM:elgsHealth ·· taking pre,med at Ohio State.
·' · partl1lent advises· that the
Addle imd ller brother, Jack
department has 17 flu immuniza- Matson, were unable to attend
. ~~tlons that no one has come in for the ceremonies when their niece,
' £ and they ;.Ill be given to the first LlnM, was sworlt In because
17 people requesting tbeni·at the Addle has been ·having some
, health department Monday health problems and Jack, a
,_ mornlng;The price is 50 cents for . re~ident of German · Village,
: •t ;anyone over 65 or disabled and $1 Columbus, has been here with
,:..tor others.
.
· her for the past couple of weeks.
•.:: The .department will start
:::;gtviQg the shots at 8 a.m. . · A Thanksgiving candlelight
praise and worship service has
:-: Monday .
·
;
been set for 7 this evening at lhe
Still no word-:-.n ~hether the Carleton "Church, Rev. David
:l:terry service will be worked out Curfman, pa~tor, announces:
And speaking of churches. it
· l::.betweer\ Mason and Pomeroywill
be Dan Hayman and The
: ::Middleport when the bridge
Faith
Trio who will be appearing
•..... closes. However , be nol
: ::;dtseouraged-·11 Isn't a forgotten at the Pometoy Church of the
Nazarene at 9: 30 this morning.
: ;.,issue.

MIXED

Fryer Parts ... ~·~ ...... 49(

GRADE A

Whole Chickens ~!·..

~.....

--- j

1J: The Meigs High School Band

Meigs resident, Mrs . lola Wil·
son Is a patient at University
Hospital in Columbus and cards
may be sent to her at Room 766,
· 7th Floor, University Hospital,
Columbus, 43200.

Sliced Bacon ••••••••••

$ 29
Lunch Meats ........ . 1
LB.

:-c.-

:[county Health Department ~as
-issued a warning, along with the
-....;tate Dj!partment of Health,
::Concerning "Fresh Scenl''
~lorox. Acordlng to the state, I his
S,roducl has an herbal scent
""'dded to the bleach.
:: The new product, If usefl as a
::Sanitizer or for disinfecting prl·
·"':Vate water supplle,;, wUlleave a
in the water or on
and utensils.

.

Onions •••••••••••••••••• 69(
3 LB. BAG

SIIIIDAY
. CIPIII IIOY. 30

11:00..5:00

$ .59.
0
2. Vo Mtlk .............. 1

PARKAY

LUCKY .

f

Cherry Pi·e .F._ •••• 89( TV

GOLD MEDAL

Flour ••••••••••••••••••••• 89(
'

'

...,.,

"I·HI4 .

. ..

. .....

.

•..·····coop(fi·······•
DOMINO SUGAR •••
••
SLB.
••
BAG
••
limit I Por CiiJtomor
, Gaotl Only At PowJII'• Suptrmarllot

$.149

bpir11 No•.,bor 29, 1986

SIS ·

614·446-0676

Salem Baptist Church. A reception wUI follow.
Miss Lakin is a graduateo!Rio
Grande College. She is employed
by Gallipolis archit ect Mark
Epling.
.
Sw isher Is a gradu ate of Rio
Grande College and is ass istant
manager of Bob Evans restau·
rani in Barboursville, W.Va.

New

Bou~ique

TWINS

Topptng.............. 2/
-

INSTANT COFFEE

TOILET TISSUE

oz.$399

12
JAR

.
IIIII I P• Cuot-r
Goool Otlly At Powiii'J S,..r..itaot
llpi'" "".,...'· n, 1916 m

6 ROLL
PKG.

$1 .39

Umit I Per Cuotomer
GH41 Otlly At Ptwoll's Sop•mar~ot
hpir• Now.,lttr 29, 1916 SIS

:
•

•,

BOX

design and filled with alovely
autumn arrangement

3Thiefiom·

town or wire it anywhere in
United States.

We'll deliver it across

J!IIMhO*
'
FLORIST
LOC.-..LL Y OWNE D 6'1 JOtiNN'I' H006 &amp;

The JTD®Autumn

l

•u&gt;L£AL.LEN,I

446-9721

Harv&lt;'.\1 '" Bnuqurl.

28 Cl'dar Str...-t
(;allipoli •• OH.

WE
DELIVER

,.

:.

•

S98 88

SET

'"full
Ill W. tod St.

1fPrt1irP

salon"

Get 13 months for the pric~ of 12 and
you can give your 13th month as a

p.,.,..,, OH.

9t2-6720

!Sholto Poweii-Tonnlngl

GifT OF HEALTH

TO A FRIEND

HOLIDAY
CARPET CLEANING
SPECIAL

$ .

1

CHEER DETERGENT
'147 oz. $'499

ware wilh acharminglolk art

.PVH Wellness Center·MemberS.hips·

SWEEPERS, BAGS
&amp; BELTS

VACUUM CLEANERS

.

COUPON

•Compa&lt;t
•lainbow
•EloctroluK •Hoover
•Kirby
. •~unko
, •
·
FINANCING AVAll ABLE
M·F 10-6: Sat. l D · Z L . . - - - - -........1

PH ' 446 '7441

:' - - - - - - - . . 1 7 5 0 First Awe.
Offer not good with othor coupons.

Between November I and
December I 5. 1986, all yearly
memberships will include a
thirteenth month - FR[E. You
can keep and enjoy your I 3th
month yourself or give it as a
gift to someone you care about

N!W &amp; USED

All VACUUM
CHARMfN

Flowers or plants in real
wooden country baskels
decoraled wilh acharming
folk art floral design.

of happiness.

, ..........................ll:l&lt;...............

SAVE 10% OFF

MAXWELL HOUSE

The Country Casserole
Bouquet-oven-to-table cook·

Send a harvest

Trudy M•n,...ll. M•rv Powell. Uz lucas

&amp;OZ.

TelefiOta sHarvest
Basket Bouquets

Christmas
Open House
Sunday
November 30

HOURS: MON .-SAT. 9 :00 TO 9;00 ·
CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT

·· . _

ORDER
EARLY

~
~

IN SIZES PETITE,
JUNIOR AND MISSY

CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE
NOVEMBER 30TH

Siuu JH66 " ·.

••• delicious
ThanksQhting
centerpu!ces.

.

•BLOUSES
•SLACKS
•DESIGNER
JEANS

1·
I

lflro~r

. Eva's Beauty Salon

MAnRESS SET

10·11

FLAVORIT~ WHIPPED

HASKINS-TANNER

Give a Gift of Health

·

•
oz.
D1nners ..........
..

Grooms tux FREE with 6 or more.

Ak1!'r

BANQUET

21 OZ. CAN - LIMIT 3 PLEASE

$2995

332 Second. Gollipotls, OH •

·

Margarine ..... ~~ ••• 2

S LB., BAG

liS ... Socf041

~

GALLON

Univers ity . Both are serv ing on
active du ty as lieutenants In the
U.S. Air Force.
An open church wedding is
being planned for Ja n. 10 at J::lO
p.m. al the Middleport First
Bapt 1st Chureh.

I
I
I
l----~-~Q~!t~!~--~~

YELLOW ·

MT. VERNON •

GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Lakin announce the engagement and approaching marriage
of their daught er. Sandra Lynn
Lakin, to John Swisher, son of
Don Swisher, Galli polis, and
Barbara Simmons, Columbus.
The open church wedding will
take place Dec. 6, 3:30 p. m., at

I

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

Lakin-Swisher

'

r GALLIPOLJS - The Gallia

...

Gift Certificates
Sewing Machines
Cabinets
Quilting Frames
Quilting Supplies
Sewing Chest
Craft Panels
Scissors
Sewing Books
&amp; Magazines
Glue Guns
Steamstress
Steam Iron

Univrrs il y. __
Barfi eld Is a graduate uf Ohio

COMING SOON

:!;Ciorox warning
:;issued from
,.':Health Dept.

""

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and
Mrs. Richard 0 . . Thomas of
Cheshire are announcing the
engagement . of their daught er,
Barbara Jean Thomas. to Ken net h Lamar Barfield. son of Dr.
and Mrs. Amos J. Barfield.
Cornelia, Ga .
Thr bride- elect is a graduate of
Meigs High School and Ohio

~Meuns

Let Us Help Yoa
Plan Your Wddlng

Thomas Barfield

RathburnCanaday

Blai;::--;;-;,lece of Mrs.
.'rG:ajl . •(Addlel. Buck, Pomeroy,
: ~Ws received her oath as an
·:::=.!tto.rney·at·law and will be asso·:;:cfated with the Columbus law
r'flrm of Vorys, Sater, Seymour
.fand Pease.
'
::: Linda is the daughter of John

18.

Barbara .Jean Thomas
Kenn eth Lamar Barfield

Sandra Lynn Lakin
John Swisher

: _r:Boosters are Inviting all parents
:c ot seventh and eighth grade band
•r students to attend their Dec. 1
;,: meeting- the session starting at
:::1 p.m. They are encouraging
·--· !:these parents to join the boosters
: ~.., membership Is $1 _since the
Sorry '.bout that, but the nights
: ;::Jllnior high band people will be for full cast rehearsals for the
·-:=moving_in the band very soon.
Big Bend Varieties of '86 have
. _:: Incidentally. the boosters ex- been changed so that sound
/,;; tend a big thanks for your equipment will be on hand for the
,
final two rehearsals.
~ suppor.t during the recent tag day
The two nights are now Tuesthat goes to both individuals
446-1209
. ~ a"d business~s. Mr. and Mrs. day and Friday al 7: 30 p.m. both
GALLIPOLIS - Arra nge·
New a.ld latest hair fashions
~ George Korn get.a special vote of evenings at the Rutland Civic ments have been completed for
for fall-• and winter from the
::thanks for transporting band Center with Friday nlgbt' s ses· the marriage of Kim Rathburn
Sluff:
: equlP.ment to the home games slon being the dress rehearsa l. and Randy Canaday.
Adrah Neal, Pat O'Dell, Chris
..during the football season.
The show Is at 8' 10 p.m. on
The open church wedding will
::
·
Saturday.
take place Wednesday, Nov. 26,
Martin and Lori Somerville
: •Like it or not , ll's time to start
6:30 p.m., at Grace United
WALK-INS WELCOME
' : thinking. Christmas and this
Times do change. Remel1lber Methodist Church, I he Rev. Jo·
, -.s aturday, Nov. 29; a Christmas when you used to get very tired seph Hefner officiating. A recep;::~ra!t sale will be held al the period. Now you get burned out.
lion wU,I follow Immediately in
·~Cheshire Kyger Elementary ..~~eep~o:!!m!a~tt~er~ho:..w~yo_u_s_u_ce_lt_..._.d_o_~th=e~c:hu~r~c:h:so:c:la~l~ro:o:m~.-~___j
· ~ hoot from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
,.Santa will be on hand from noon
Cto 3 p.m.
. ....

:~ ~Linda

SAVORY

SUPERIOR

lt

are:
Monday: Swiss steak, cooked
cabbage, wheat bread, peaches.
Tuesday: Sliced turkey w lth
gravy, mashed ' potatoes, green
be:ins, cranberry sauce, rol1s,
pumpkin pie.with topping.
Wednesday: Johnny Marzet t~
sa lad, Italian bread, !ruit
cocktaiL
Thursday: center closed for
Thar\ksglvlng Day.
Friday: center closed.
Choice of beverage with each·
meaL

· GALLIPOLIS - Activilies and
menus for the week of Nov . 24-28
at Ihe Senior Citizen Center, 220
Jackson Pike, are:
Monday: chorus, J.J p.m.
Tuesday: STOP I physica l
fitness, 10:30 a.m.; Thanksgiving dinner. 11:30 p.m.
Wednesday: Vinton Bible
study, 1 p.m.: card games. 1-3
p.m .
Thursday: cent er closed for
Thanksgiving Day.
Friday: center closed.

:t 6e..

298 SECOND ST.
·. POMEROY; OH,

.

.

'

The Sund.ay Times-Sentifllli- Page-· B-3

Seniors slate activities
for Thanksgiving week

for the asking

; :;, ·~ ,. : .By BOB HOEFLICH
• ...
&gt;Times·SentiDel Staff
:-:: Got you nu shot yet?
::::: If n0 t, per&lt;;::haps, you· '
:';Put on ·your run: ~nJ.ng , shoes and
one. of th~
, . ' ' 1u c k y · 17 ,.,
;·":Monday.
·
'
F Nqrma A.
·.

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

-Eastern menu set

;;nee.

'

[~ours

We Reserve . Rilltt To '
Umit Q111ntilies

·~

;,

••

]Flu shots ready,

~

~~ ·

-

:2Beat of the bend

......"'""

..

••

;;November 23, 1986
"-"
...' ...,.

, GALLIPOLIS - On Friday,
Nov. 28, Kmart at 185 Upper
River Road, Gallipolis, wtll display a special Christmas Tree,
not just a tree, but an angel tree ·
to help the needy children In the
area.
The tree is decorated with '
Angel Tags, bearing the first
name, age and size of a child In
the area. Customers are asked to
pick out a tag, buy a clothing gl(t
for the child at any store; and
·return the present wrapped with
- the tag to Kmarl by Dec. 18. It
. wut be picked up by the child's
.."'parent ror Christmas.
, : According to Roger Buck,'.
• · store manager, response from
~ this area is ·'tremendous.''
: clubs, organization and
• : churches are getting Involved
· . with the project, he said, adding
: · there are hundred of these needv
·
· children in Gallia County.
, : The program's goatts to make ·
• : the public aware of the needs of
,.:these children, not Just here, but
:;_a11 around. In this public aware- ness, he said, thousands of
~--c hildren could be assisted next
• 'year, too. not Just . In the Tri: County, but possibly the entire
country, Buck said.
" "I truly believe lhdl everyone
:;-·wants to held needy children." he
.•. said. This is a simple program
::;- through Kmart, he added. The
: name and size of the child has
~ been provided, and all the giver
~~ has to do Is select the Item of
• clothing.

~··

- · --

:; ·'".

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

_. Angel ·tree
will assist
·area needy

l';•

:!'

----------------------·
COUPON
, 1

I

Single
Couple
Family

II PliES DEC. 31, 1916

-

I

'

';

EXPIIis'DfC. 31, 1916

WELLNESS CENTER
;t

I

lt,Pt

11'f

t

l.outtct ~t Mt•unl VAIIt)' Hosptt111l. VAlier Dr.. rt. rleo~~w.nt, Ml

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

.

'

Baker's Dozen Special
$255
Save$ 70
$360
Save$ 95
$410
Save $110

I

1

$2 49-5 . UVING
ROOM
!$12995 WHOLE HOUSE!
. &amp; HALL

Umit I Por Cuotomor
o Goad Only At PowJII's Sop•marlcot
Explr• No•..lttr 29, 1986 m

13 regular months
$325
$455
$520

.

•
•
•

�•

Page-8-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

8y J.\MES SANDS

Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - The building
featured today is the aid Bladen
store located a long State Route 7.
At one tlm e . -•
Bladen. or Bladensburg, was a
busy rural river
town with coal
and produce beIng shipped by
fl at bo at and
later steamboa t from this point.
In 1911. Bladen had two s tor&amp;sOne run by Id a Neal who
advertised: " Dealer in General
Mercha ndi se with phone

. .-.=

'connections.''
~

The other store \\'aS operated
'by A.S. Wa lters who had- '" Dry
-goods, noti ons. men's work
clothes and boy's su its. shoes,
rubber goods ; hats, carpe ts,
matting s. wall paper , pate nt
medi ci nes. groce ri es. provis ions, flour, feed. wholesale
buyer and shipper of country
, produce. 'Star Brand' shoes and
: ' Ball' brand rubber goods. "
- We believe the building pic·
: lured was the former store where
: Ida Neal also served as pustmas-

te r for several dec ades. There
was a post office named Bladen
from 1890 to 1957 but the town had
a post office earlier _in hi story
that wa s known as Soul h
Newcast le.
It seems th at there was
another town in Ohio named
Bladensburg and so the town sfolk chose a different name for
the post office. George House.
Joseph Wilkinson, and George
Parmley were a mong th e ea rly
postmaslers at South Newcastle.
The name Bladensbuq; was
given the town by its founder
Willi am Bladen who laid out the
town sometime between 1835 and
1840.
William Bladen was the son of
Thomas Bladen who had brou ght
his family from the Potomac
River Valley to Mason County.
Virginia (now West Virginia ! in
the early 1800's. Thomas had
'followed the Hereford brothers
and settled near them just across
the Ohio River fro m where
Bladen is today.
It ts interesting to note th at
Thomas Bladen, his wife Priscilla, the ir dau ght er E liza beth
and Elizabeth's husband Noa h

Eth ridge and the ir child ren left
Ma son Count y about 1860, even
though Thomas and P r iscilla
were at an advanced age.
As it happens Priscilla died on
the flatboa t that held -a ll their
belongings near New Richmond,
Oh io. She w~ s buried there while
the res t of the fam ily continued
down riv er an d eve ntuall y
founded the town, of Ethridge,
Ky.
Willi a m Bladen married Elizabeth, Hereford about 1835 with
William dying around 1840. Fol·
lowing William' s death Bladensburg saw an influx of a number of
families that would ·become
infl uen ti al in the history of
Bladensburg; Porters, Smalls,
Edwards. Thompsons, Wilkinsons, Urwins. Clarks, Parmleys
and others.
·
According to a piece by W.A.I"
Lanier in the Gall ia Times in
1962; "Thes~ newcomers bei ng of
good fa milies and skill e(l in
various trades, added much to
the business, social anp religious
li fe of. the co mmunity that had
already reached a fa ir state of
advancement. Churches, schools
and other civic cent ers were

established a nd the spirit of the
com munity was much enlivened. ·
Bladensburg became a busy
shipping point by river, lri the
pal.my days of stea mbo.at
trans porta tion ."
Of the many interesting 'characters to have lived in and
a~o und Bladen throvgh time,
probably the most fascinating
was Col. James Henry Marion
Montgomery . Montgomery was
a lawyer by trade but he also was
into agriculture.
During the Civil War. the
Colonel di stinguis hed him self as
a hero a nd participated in · a
number of s ignifi cant battles
during the War Between the
States.
He was a frequ ent speaker at
reunions sponsored by soldier s
and never disappointed his audiences, charming them with
countless tales of courage and
valor.
Ii was said that Montgomery
never traveled without his gti n
s trapped to his side and at leas t
twice killed prominent citizens of
Bladensburg (J ames Franklin
a nd John Jeffers). Courts rul ed
self defense in both insta nces

STORE REMAINS - The old Blade ns b~rg store on Route 7.near
Eureka was on ce a husy place In a busy river town. Baldensburl!or
Bladen, )"as named for William Bladen, who hiid out the town in
the 1830's. It was also known as South Newcastle before the Civil
War.'
·
though the fam ily of Jeffers
In regards to the Jeffersclaimed otherwise for many Mont gomery confrontation we
generations . .
note that a feu d had brewed for
Accordin g toon e hi storian : "It years between the pair (both
is sa id th at the "Old War Horse. Civ il War heros) and shots had
Hero of Ma ny Battles" had bee n exchanged between .the tw~~·
others marked for ex tinct ion , by prior to the instance of Jeffers' •·
the way of the bu llet rout e. bu t · dea th . In fac t this pa rticular feud ~dea th (Montgomery's deat h 1 was probably the most bitter ifi_
intervened."
the county's history.
__

By WlLLI.\M C. TROTT
United Press International
BRANCHING OUT: Don Johnson says no one rea lly wanted
him to make a r ecord. "They
said. 'Why fool around with a
very healthy ca reer? '" John son
says of hi s hit album , " Heartbeat," . in a two-part int erview
with the sy ndi ca ted "Rock 'n'

Roil Eveni ng News. "
scored with "Heartbeat" and
"And they were all ver&gt;'
J ohnson plays the role of a
ner vous .... But it' s some I hi ng docu ment ary filmm aker in Latin
that 1 had to do. It 's something in
America.
me and I hac! to let il show." r;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::==~­
Johnso n bra nches out sorne more
Jan . 17 wllcn HBO broadcas ts
" Don Johnso n's Mus ic Video
Feature 'Hear lbeat. '"

Review
Compl eti ng the performance
was an impressive movemf'nt
piece, " Windswept. ... Showing
exactly how flexible the body can
be. it wa s pure fl ow ing motion no story to follow, no hidden
meaning to interpret . simply
movemen t.
Footpa th was an 'excellent
add ition to the Valley Artist
series schedu le. The group is
imaginative, creative and was a
most engrossin g, easy to enjoy
Unfortunately, Gali ia Count y
performance.
may not be ready for modern
interpretive dance. as was ev i·
denced by a disappointingly
small crowd.
IN A CHAIR' - Man In a Chair was one
"Photoplay," presented by Footpath
at the Fine and Perlorming Arts Center
night at Rio Grande College and

;- trayal of art pieces in a museum,
; and exhibited amazing muscle
• control. It was a more ballet i based work than otl)ers in the
,• Footpath presenta tion.
This piece. as a11 those don e
Friday, was choreographed by
• Alice Rubinstein, and set to the
~ strains of Vivaldi. Rubinst ein is a
: past recipient of the Ohio Arts
• ·council C h oreography
: Fellowship.
•
The poignant "A nn a," was

done to Keith Jarrett 's "Brass
Echoes," a nd showed the aging
process of a woma n. F rom youn g
girlhood to elder hood. the women
performers s howed the four
periods in life - the ideals and
imagination of a gir l. young
womanhood. the aging woma n
and the elderly lady.

•
•

.•
••'
!

;•

''

Finis hing the first half of the
program was " Streams of
Hooved Wings," an imagi native
look at the life In a park - the
trees, the grass. bi rds. butter!·
lies and insects, along with thei r
Interaction . Each dancer took on
the characters- flowing wings.
quick moving bugs, growing
grass, humming bees - with
style a nd great creativ ity.
"Streams of Hooved Wings ,"
was set to original music by
David Kechley,_ es pecially for
this ptece, which is an award·
.
· wmner
..
Givingsomecomicreliefto the
even ing program was "Photo·
play." This piece s howed every
photographers nightmare _ the
high strung, moody, "art iste." It
was · enjoyable. with six small
scenes of a photo studio session.
Among the portraits were a

Your privacy is respected
.Your q'!estion! answered
lirth Control; V,D. Scrttning;
Cancer Scrttning; ll''lnancy
tests; education and counseling
for indivlduah and couples.

•Sliding fee scale. No one nfus ad services because
of inability to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

.... Mlllical luilding
(a&lt;r~ !111m YettraN Hasp.)

"2-5912 Monday-friday

November

The

Circular,

!he 7 pc. Cookware Seton page
4 advertised at 9.99 should
have had a &amp;mit of 4 seh per
store, sorry, no rain&lt;he&lt;ks. We
are sorry for any inionveni-

Shoe Cafe
::1111 Sl'l'ond Ave.
l.~f~ .vette

,\I all

t;~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~~~;;;;;;~~~••

bridal session, beach modeling, a
man in a ch~ir, and a day in the
park- y;it h a tw ist.

'•

•

GALUPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd floor

446-0166 Mon.-Sat. •
CLOSED THIM$DA Y

Al10:•JackttOn, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe, logan

Order developing and printing
by Kodak of your color negative tilm. See us fo r details.

WIIH AHEAl LIIIIT£0 WUUIITY

IMPERIAL WALLPAPER

Hurry! Offer runs
Nov. 24 thru Dec. 1'4

HAS IT ALL!
Beauty, Quality, Price
We, at Wallpaper Super·
market,

carry

Imperi al
Wallpaper in stock al Ois·

count Prices. Plus a large
setecllon of Hnperial
Wallpaper Books al Great

COME IN TODAY!

See how good your prints
can really be .. . Ask for
' quality pro~?essing by Kodak.

TAWNEY STUDIO
422 Se,ond
Ave., Gallipolis
.

WALLPAPER
SUPER MARKET
AND BLIND SHOP
704WNDCENTIALAVE.

VJENNA, W.YA

295·4532

763 liD Avt.
DOWNTOWN HI.NnNGTON
Acron from tht Civic Ctnttt

Midk\11, treasurer of the Heart Association,
rooeiving a donation from Gerald Freem;tn, post
communder, and Ullian Moore, executive director of the local cancer unit, rece iving the
contribution from Albert Roush, Feeney-Bennett
Post treasurer.

Elderly ·abuse ·may affect a million
Ul'l Science Writer
CHI.CAGO &lt;UP!) - Th e nation's elderly are upder attack by
members of their own famil y,
with as many as million people
over 65 being chronically abused
or neglected in their own homes,
a major stu'ay indicates.
" Some people wUI be shocked
by these numbers , but it's our
feeling that we've probably underestimated the problem," said
Karl Pillemer, of the Family
Research Labora tory of the
University of New Hampshire at
Durham.
Surpris ingly, ·the report presented at a national meeting of the
Gerontological Society of America Friday also found that
abusers of the elderly are primarily spouses, not children, and
are typically dependent on the
abused senior citizen rather than
vice versa.
· "This pretty mu ch explodes
the my th that elder abuse is
perpetrated by children or care- ·
takers ·who are overburdened by
their dependent e lder and are
. otherwise well· meaning but tak- ing out their frustrations," Pille: mer said Friday.
_ Pillemer and colleague Dav id
· Finklehorn supervised the s tudy,
: which involved 1, 911 telephone
· and personal interviews with
people over th,e. age of 6q in the
Boston area. An additional 109
primary caregivers were also
interviewed.
Phys ical abuse was defined as
· at least one act of violence,
· verbal abuse as at least 10
threats in the previous year, and
n~lect as multiple instances in
• which the person was deprived of
• assistance needed for important
activit ie~ of daily living. Economic exploitation, a form of
abuse recognized by many social
· service groups. was not in.cluded
in the study.
The survey ldent ified 63 cases
of elder abuse, or 32 per '1,000,
with physical violence being
cited more frequently than verbal aggression or neglect. Extrapolating to the entire U.S.
population; the researchers estimated there are between 101,000
- and 1,093,560 senior citizens who
a re abused by family members.
Pillemer said the estimate is
probably low because the Bos ton
·• a rea has .a lower level of
domestic violence than the na·
ttonal average, and "there were

certainly s ome cases we
Violence or neg lec t was perpemissed."
trated by sons and daught ers 24
In 58 percent of the cases. the percent of the tim e. the most
abuser was the person's spouse, serious case being a 74-year-old
mostly a wife abusing her hus- woman who had her rib cage
band, though the husband - to- broken by her middle-aged son.
wife abuse was more severe. Grandchildren. in-laws and dis·
Spousal abuse typically dated ta nt relatives wer e respons ible
back at least 10 year s and often ,for the rest of the abuse.
Finklehorn sa id that while
early into the marriage.
Finklehorn said the pa ttern of every state but Pennsylva nia
more frequent fem ale- to-ma le and North Dakota have laws
spouse abuse is ,common to a ll s pecificall y cover ing el der
age groups. but that hu sband-to- abuse, many "cause more harm
wife abuse is far more likely to than good" by requiring report·
result in serious phys ica l or ing abuse rases without offering
serv ices to correct the problem.
emotional damage.

Come to
Our
Open
House!
•
eatunng
Christ
Crafts
Saturday, .November 29th
Sunday, November 30th
The
The
Gingerbread -Cou..-try Loft
Shop
· · Crafts
Sat., 9:30 to. 8:00
Sun., 1:00 to 8:00
MASON, WEST VIRGNIA

Sat., 1:00 to 8:00
Sun. 1:00 to 8:00
POMEROY I OHIO

Turn left at tht bridge, third

End of Rt. 7, turn left Twp. 79

house on tht right.
(Main St.)

•Refreshments

(behind Meigs Co. Foirgroundsl.
Wotch lonigns.
Also enjoy Sorah's Christmas
decoroted home, aho opens.

•Door Pri-zes

Welcome Everyone/

PRECIOUS MEMORIES STUDIO
529 5th Street

ART &amp; .PHOTOGRAPHY

Racine. Ohio

Mon. thru Friday 10 AM . ti14 P.M .
Sat . 10 Til Noon-. Ciosed Wednesdav Evening

TUES . &amp; THURS.
7 p .. m. to 9 p.m.

2 Week ChristMas Special
FREE Photos fo be Given Awoy
1-8x10
PlusPen.S.tnk

$5 .50 per night

1-11x14·

ART CLASSES

Oraw1ng

D rew lngOec. 3

-PH.

OPEN EVENINGS BY

C0 t\11: 0 \J 0 VI: 1\ T 0 T II E F L N SI D E 0 F T H E S I' HF I :

•

Street.

8PM '

'

,.

.~ ...,,,

-"·

........... . ··:...,

'-

r
i No one ever tells

'i

a mofher tltat
•he's got togo
' through puberf)l

Will the kids.
get in the way of

Gus ' new romance?

agoi&gt;L And again!

. "

IT'S NOT JUST A SCHOOL,
IT'S A RIOT!

WHO Point, lt Ain't.
'&gt;I I "'" ~'

'

JAMIE FARR . DICK VAN PArTEN

SHERMAN HEMSLEY ROOERT ( ULP. BERNIE I&lt; OPELL
DANA HILL JOHN RATZENBERGER. RlCI-iARD MOLL
MARCPRICE . GEORGE CLOONEY. WALLY WARD
I&lt;EITH GORDON ~rm TINA CASPARY

WSAZ television 3

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$}49.00

SAVE 'oNt Com.plate Bedroom Suite Acce~aories.

,-WITH COUPON-,
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RENT 'TAPES WEDNESDAY, NOV•
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NOV. 28 FOR 1 DAY PRICE OF

CHECK FOR OUR NEW TITLES:
SPACE CAMP, COBRA, LEGEND, RAW
D'EAL, JUST BETWEEN FRIENDS,
MANY, MANY MORE.

GRAND QPENING

The causes of acne are only partly
understood, and its treatment has to
be individualized for each case. Fats,
nuts, chocolate and shellfish were
Once , widely_ banned because they
seemed to trigger acne flare-ups, but
most doctors now feel such a ,ban is
unjustified. However, a low-fat diet is
a lwa~s healthier, and chocolate is a
high-fat item. Some teenagers with
highly sensitive skins might react to
the iodine in shellfish. Decisions to
ban any diet item must be based on
medical a'dvice alter observation of
the individual.

C RISTMAS GIFT

COLONY VIDEO -Gallipolis
COLONY VIDEO II -Vinton

$2°0

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"Diet and acae

. THE GREATEST
WATERBED SALE EVER!

THANKS81~1N8

SPECIAL
2
1 ~AY

on behalf ol ·
RE:SE:N1cA1c!ON M.\DE - Mrs. Francis W.
Moriah
Council
32
In
Gallia
Co11nty
were Gary
Shane presented the jewel and apron of her late
'
B
ane,
past
Illustrious
Master
of
Moriah
Council
husband, Dr. Francis W. Shane, )YhO was
Cross.
The
Items
wUI ·
and
Illustrious
Master
Virgil
D/ustrious Grand Master ol the Grand Council of '
be
displayed
at
the
lodge
hall.
Ohio,' Royal and Select Masons, to the local

!itay tuned t=or NEW!iCENTER 3 TONIGHT!

525-7090

DAYS .FOR PRICE OF

•s."ic" include:

POMEIOY:

girl

•

Savings.

t

&lt;

little

Community Coll ege. The group performed as part
.ti-the Valley Artist Series 1986-87 season. (T-S
photo by Lee Ann Welch)

Modern dance attracts small
&lt;::rowd for Valley Artist Series
By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-Sentinel Stall
RIO GRANDE - Play ing to a
sparse but enthu siastic crowd.
the Footpath dance com pany
perforn\ed here Friday night as
part of the Valley Artist Series.
The group, comprised of six
dancers. Is cons idered one of
Ohto' s leading modern dance
compa~ias. founded in 1976. and
the m~jority of ticket holders
missed out on a wonder ful
performance by this group.
Footpath eased from one piece
to another', showing story and
concept set to mulsic and fluid
bOdy movemenr.
Beginning with "Canto Di
Scultura," or Song of Sculpture.
each dancer took on the par·

Dress-up
your

Due to~a~~~~

CONTRWUTIONS - Two Meigs County
the Meigs Chapter ofthe American
·Heart .\ssociation and the Meigs County Cancer
Society, received sizeable contributions from
Feeney-Bennett Post · 128,' American Legion .
Shown at the presentation are, from left , Millie
organ~alions,

By LARRY DOYLE

.....
ea

c'

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- B-5

I
''

People in !he news------~~-:s_a_n-ho-ur-,o-ng-m-us-ic_v_id

.

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Bladen was a center·of activity.

]ames Sand~r.·

'MAN
part of
dancers
Friday

.November 23. 1986

November 23, 1986

I'I SALES
LOTS TO OPEN IN Pl. PLEASANT AND AT
THE FARM ON RT-. 17 DEC. 5. SPECIAL ORDERS
I

ACCEnED ANYTIME.

SAVE ''MORE ONt Scratch a: Dent Items, Discontinued Styles.
. USE OUR EASY CREDIT ·oR 90 DAYS SAME:AS-CASH TO MAKrYOUR PURCHASE.
.
LAYAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS! .

NO STAlE, NO STORE,· NO WAREH()_USE ~-~MATCH OUR VALUE YOU'll _COM ETO APPALACHIAN FOR
QUALITY .. YOU'll BUY FOR THE PRICE.'

·RIPLEY

·256 S. Churci!Jt.
372-5937

POINT PLEASANT
2416 Jackson Ave. 675-.500

KANAWHA CITY
4910 MacCorkle Ave.
..
925·2523

•'

�,.

November 23, 1986

.
'
Noveml)er 23, 1986

Ohio-'-Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Community calendar I area hJppenings

.. .

Harrison anniversary to -be noted
GALL IPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Hollis E. Harrison,· 293 Lower
River Road, Gallipolis. wjll celebrate melr 50th wedding anniver·
sary Dec. 5.
.
The couple m11rrled Dec. 5,
1936, at Cattletsburg, Ky., and
have been lifelong residents of
Gallipolis.
Mrs. Harrison is the former
VIrginia Juanit a Egg leton ,
daughter of the late John w. and
Fammle Fletcher Eggleton. She
, worked as 4 nursin g assis tant for
· Dr. J . Gordon Gilbert. Mr. Harrison Is the son of the
late Rudy Mac~ and Stella Tipton
Harrison of Ga llipolis. He was
employed by the City of Gallipo-

'·
·,.,...

anniversary to be noted
RODNEY -

Mr. and Mrs.

Carolyn of Gallipolis.

g:,~~:a~~ ~~~~~· o;5~od~~d~~~

The couple married Dec. 1,
1951 in Hebron. Oh io.
He was the owner and operator
of James Merry Stone Company
for 25 yea rs ,a nd currently.ow ns
Rodney Su pply Company.
The cou ple request gifts be
omitted.

;,anniversary Su nday, Nov. 30
~lth an open house at their
:1esidence from 1 to 5 p.m.
... The event is being hosted by
children, Jeffy, Eddie and
lim1my,, all of Rodnev. Dave of
:fc•lurnb\ts, Jen ny of North up and

R. 011ir ur.

Quivey anniversary celebrated
SHADE-Mr. andMrs . .Jamcs
R. (Connie Slu sher) Quivey.
Route 1. Shade. celebrated their
silver wedding annivers ary on
Saturday night at a s~rprise
din ner pari)• held at Sebas l ians
in Parkersburg ..
The couple was married Nov.
26. 1961 by the Rev. Guy Webb.

They ha,·e two daughtet·s. Kathi e
Hannin g. Alban)' . and ChrL,t ina
Estep, Shade. and one grandson.
C.J . Es tep.
Quivc,· is emplo,·ed by the
Athens Mold and Marhin0 Co.
and Mrs. Quivey is cmployc•d at
Bradbury Element ary Schoo l.

MISHAWAKA , Ind . tU f ll - A
Mishawaka night club has fil ed
suit agai nst 20 underaged
drinkers who were arrlested in
the bar last year, causing the
popular tav er n to be fined by
state alcohol officials.
In the suit s filed Thursday in
St. Joseph County Superio r
Court, the Backsta ge f\lgh tclub Is
seeking $4,000 in dam ages plus

attorneys' fees from each of the
indiv iduals arrested at the cl ub
Oct. 18, 1985.
As a result of the arres ts, the
Indiana Alcoholic Beverage
Commission fined the bar $1,500
and suspended Its liquor license
for five days.
The ABC orde r is bei ng ap·
pea led, said Kennel h Fedder. an
attorney for the tavern.

r··
w

Diamond
Y,OUI
CHOICE

1/.4 CARAT

S16.9
· 1/2 CARA.t

Tawney Jewlers
422 Second, Gallipolis

NEUT.RAL

PINK

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BLUE

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WOMEN'S
LEATHER
WARM
SLIPPEIS

w
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RUTLAND - Rutland Church
ef God wlll be In revival through
_·l)unday, 7 p.m. nightly: with
!'vangellst Marvin Hocker, Gal' llpolis. Public lnvltiod.

TAN
GRAY
BLUE

$1800

.~~--

STORE HOURS:
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30-8:00
Tues., Wed., Thurs., Sat.
9:30-S:OO

EAGLE . RIDGE - Eagl!'
Ridge Community Church wlll
have Its annual Thanksgiving
dinner Sunday, 1 p.m. Everyone
welcome.

..·--·
...........- . ..-·---·
... --.-..
-·-·-·
....
-. .......·-·. . "'·-·-·
·-uoo·
• _.. AO'IIIUtll.a

~~-

...-_.....-,_,_.,._
·--·
..·-. .....
--·
..
...·--··
-.........
- ......-. ..

, SYRACUSE - The Sisson
. \Family wlll present sacred
: .music during the Sunday morn:tng, .10:30 a. m. worship hour
· •Syracuse Nazarene C)mrch. Everyone welcome.

...-.

~.

anniversary
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Os•car Baird. Rt. 1. Box, o27,
Galllip&lt;&gt;lis,, will celebrate their
weddin g anniversary Nov.
with an open recept ion. 1 to
:30 p.m .. at the Senior Citizen
220 Jackson Pike.

to

be noted

The couple married Dec. 2.
1936 in Kanauga.
They are the parent s of two
sons, Robert Baird, Marietta,
and .James Baird, Gallipolis.
The couple requests gifts be
omitted.

A Mwage From The Bible ...
JOY ACCOMPANIES GROWTH
William B. Kughn
.
Knowing all spiritual blessings come from God through Christ brings
joy: thus. choosing to grow in grace or favor with God produces joy. But,
what a thrill it is to know that we have chosen to become our very best,
growing in the likeness of Christ.
There is a thrill in growing. No greater compliment may be paid a child
nor one that he would better appreciate, than that he or she is growing.
The child looks forward to reaching school age, the teenage years, when he
or she can drive, date, finish school, get a job, marry, etc. As we become an
adult , our worthwhile endeavors and accomplishments are signs of growth.
We plant a vegetable garde n, watch and care for it, hanest it, and enjoy
the produce. We pick the best vegetable and the most beautiful bloom that
comes from the small seed we planted. In each of these a!eas, we seek the
best, and the best thrills our hearts.
The amazing power of growth accounts for the greatness of Christ.
Things do not happen just overnight. Christ did not become God's
supreme revelation to man in a matter of a few hours. It was,necessag that
He be conceived bl the Holy Spirit in th ~ womb of the virgin, and dehvered
at birth into Mary s hands as an infant. He attained His greatness by growing. ''Jesus incretl.std in wisdom and in stature, and in favour with God
and man " (lk. 2:52).
Peter understood the thrill of ~rowing. Before meeting the Lord and
being called by Him, he was nothmg more than a ru~ged fisherman. He
had his good and bad qualities, yet he had possibilittes. He suffered and
endured the pains that attend growth. He failed and was defeated, but
through much remorse and bitter weeping, he sprang back, continuing his
, growth in the right direction. It is this man, Peter, who is encouraging us to
· keep oa pvwlaa in spite of its painful afflictions.
The tremendous power of $fOW!h accounts for the greatness of the early
ch urch. The church began wtth about 3000 oonvens on the day it was established (Acts 2:41). From that day, daily addltions contributed to the
growth ofthe church, increasinR the number to about 5000 (Acts 4:4). The
word of God continued to increa.e and the number of disciples was multiplied (Acts 6:7). The power of persecution could not destroy the church nor
stay her power of growth. The hand of persecution drove the disciples into
other areas to further her:.arowth (Acts 8:4). Th&lt; church grew throughout
the world during the lifetime of Paul, preaching the gospel to every
creature, "If ye continue in rhe faith grounded and settled, ond be not
moved awoy }'rom the hope of the go•pel, which yt have heard and which
wos preached to e"'l)' creature which is under heaven; whereof 1 Paul am
made a miniJter" (Coi.1:23).-Continued
For Ftw Bible Cornspondence Counre, Write ...

Our 1.96 Roll. 30"
gift wrap; SO sq. ft.

APLU 81

Save35%

•

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Our 1.37 Skein. siytllt• yarn; 4 -plyO~on® ocryl­
lc. 4-oz.-n!lt-wt. solids.

57¢

MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - The OH
KAN Coin Club. will hold a
· . :; .re~ar m.eetlng Monday even:;~~t~ at ~d"Burkett' s Barber Shop
Mlildleport. A social hour and
session will precede the 8

Sale Price Plcg. Paper producll.

2 ply towels, lh9",
72
ft.

·

~&lt;'. ~II' .

_
':·J[ ]

-. ;~i_L~

Christmas lights; set at
SO, indoor/outdoor use.
While QUOnlttle$ 10sr

8.97E] a 7.88
22" wreath* ciiOI&lt;:e; of
hotly or pine. Feslivei'

Eo. .,,
7' musical figures at
potcelaln. Tune choice.

"WNle quantities K:lst

YttliiD QUantities lOst

___

Save23~

W1tch "1bt 85blc An•wen" WOWK·TV 1J • 11:Jeua. Sadat

Gray or Taupe

-----

---- --·--· ··-

.
..
_ ,.
Rock of Age• offers you a choice of 6 different colored
1(1'1111111!11. Whatever your requirements may be, complete
sallsfaellon Is assured with Rock of Ages.

MOI\I .•Tl iES.·THURS.-FRI. 9 Ul.-4 P.M.

,Other t\'oura by 'rippt. by calling 593 -1455

'a

The
Shoe Cafe

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

:1011 Second .\ \oe.

Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, 0.

PH. 448·2327

a.. •sh·V'acT".
• W

Vacuum

•

.The Agl•tor

lsthedlr~
• ful Wktth a-Nna • Grwt: fof a.IJS
Et ~·C... YIN&amp;MODHom.

·~--..

Give him a.La-Z-Boy®recliner arid
we'll give you sensational savings1

EXCEUENT CHRISTMAS GIFT
- S49.95 - SA\t s201 Tht #1
· HlNDCIUNER IN THE U.s.A.

What's the next best thing loa worm
hug this holiday season? A cozy,
la-Z-Boy• recliner! Your fovorile
someone will love one of our exciting
slyles, sole priced just in lhe nick of
time for holiday gift-giving!

RetittBf FD'
Ch,lttmt~

'

EMPIRE FURNITURE
Gallipolis
142 2nd be.
446·1405

Qlreswsgl

Pomeroy

108 w. Mlin
992-3307

WE'RE THE STORE

:·

.....

\,

I]I[j
Sale Price. Peanuts;
honey roost8d, 12-oz.•.
"Net WI .

Sale Price. Cookie
varlely; box of 5 doz.

Pkg.
Sale Price. llenhey's
baking chips; novors. ·
n.S· or12-oz netwt

''
Sale Price Pkg. 2
f·120 VHS tapes.

Paul D.lvies Jewelers has been
Christmas Diamond Headquarters
for over 40 years. Quality - Selection·
Value. Make your Christmas \)iamond purchase a wise one this year
- Shop Paul D.lvies Jewelers.

Sale Price. COlor print
111m; 135' 01 110...
2• up. •150 100 .. ISO 200

SALE I·

SALE I

Recllno-Rocker' Recliner
A handsome style that relaxes
on demand. Button tufted, with
pillow -soft arms and seat.

This eontemporwy ttelinw features a
roll and piNtid arm that's stylish
•d comfortable.

-

.

$369

"Suburban"

"The Woodstock"
Reclina-Resttt Recliner

~""" ~-·~,

SALE!
"Dolly"

Reclina-Rocker®Recliner

luury supreme in this rich velvet
rock•-ltcliner w~h m•shmlllow
soft cushions and heldrest.

.

$469

"Avenger"
Recllna-Rocker·.Recliner
Relax on alluring contemporary curves. With o tucked
back and soft cush ioning.

....eo..o •...,. .......

'

·-'

7dl0 p.m.

111551 ...

Sebi se1s the 1one ror Jn

exceptional FaiL Classically
tailored slq:)e with an Inspired
use of tewe rrde it l'q:lpen
fOr\ ' U

OUr 12.97 Ea. ''Vartlly'' heovyweiQht sweat :
po'nts 01 shirts. Men's.
;.
. women's sizes.

Btb~SIH,

'J'h..aell
Do111 • W/EH

.,

--'"1""'4'

Wednelda1' ·

uA Me.ae Fmm

Step into the
holidays with ...

9' Matching Gc~and' . 6.97 . , .• .:;..,&amp;.·•~· ;.,.

Bul ..·ill• Road • P.O. Ro&lt; 308
Ga lll;toli•, Ohio 4563 1
Sundly £nnln1r
Wonhlp 6100

POMEROY - Drew Webster.
Post 39 Auxiliary Unlt of American Legion I;&gt;Ot!uckThanksglvlng

POMEROY Carleton
Church Thanksgiving candlelight praise and worship services
Sunday, 7 p.m.

Chapel Hill Church of Christ
SWI•1 Momlna1
Blbk Study 9,30
w.r.ttlp 10:30

TUPPERS PLAINS - OliveOrange VFW Post 9053 meets

• POMEROY Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eaastern Star, will have a practice for
the officers at 3 p.m on Sunday,
Nov. 23,J~ nd at 4 p.m. on Sund~y,
Nov. 30.

.

1.48~:

- ...... -

POMEROY ~ Chlldrer\s Trust
Fund Advisory Board meets
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. , offices of
Meigs County Juvenile Court.

r,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

-AC~DIIli'OliC'

and Mr.r. OJca1· &amp;ird

POMEROY - The Meigs
Children's Trust F.und Advisory
Board will meet at '7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Meigs Juvenile
Court facility lri the courthouse.

.....

Meigs boosters
. :::;
POMEROY - Parents of sey·
enth and eighth grade Mel~
Hlg.h band stu. dents are Invited Ill'
attend the Dec. 1 meeting &lt;&gt;f'llli
Meigs High School band boo$!;
ters. The meeting, In the
Hlglt band room, will begin
p.m. Membership for one vearJIO.
$1.

YOU'll SAVE MONEY
IN TltE CUSSIFIEOS
AND THAT'S NO RULLI

POMEROY - Dan Hayman .
.and tbe , Country Hymntlmers
··will be featured at Sunday
llnornlng9: 30 a.m. services at the II
. ~P,omeroy Church of the Naza_rene. Everyone welcome.

Daily 10 to 9
Sunday 12 to 6 ;

M1~

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

-

Tuesday, 7:30p.m., at Tuppe¢
Plains Elementary School.
,_

- PORTLAND - Hazel Com:munlty Church, Rt. 12~ between
Portland and Long Bottom, wlll
be In revival Sunday with services at 7:30 each evening. Speaker
Homer Stevens. Special singing.
Public Invited.

Open

'SUN.
MON.
TUES.
ONLY!

through Nov. 30; Ted Robinson
evangelist. Services at 7 p.m.
week evenings, 10:30 a.m. and 6
p.m. Sunday.

Grubb Family Singers at J"leasa.nt V all ~y Comrpunlty Church,
Tuesday. 7 p.m.

.•

Nightclub su.es offending patrons I
i

p.m. meeting. Col'n auction and
refreshments follow meeting.

POMEROY - New officers of
Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of
the Eastern Star, will be lnstalied
Monday night at 7:30 at the
CENTENARY - Centenary ·Pomeroy Masonic T~ mpole .
Unjted · Christian Church wm J;:ach member Is to take two
feature Harmony Airs, Sunday, 7 dozen cookies for the social hour.
p.m . Sharon Slqers speaker.
RUTLAND ~ Rutland
VINTON -Fellowship Chapel Friendly Gardeners wlll meet ·
wUI show a tum on marriage, Monday night at the home of Suzl
•Strike the Original Match, Sun- Carpenter.
.'day, 7 p.m.
·•
' LECTA- Rev. Earl Hinkle at MIDDLEPORT, - Jnternatlonal Order of Job's Daughters
~Walnut Rlgde Church Sunday.
meet Monday night, . 7:30 p.m.,
Middleport Masonic Tel:'lple.
CROWN GITY - Songfest at
Big Fou~ Church, Sunday, 7:30
RUTLAND - The Rutland
p.m. with the Grubb F:amlly Garden Club will ri'teet at 7:30
•Singer, The Sincere Gospel p.m . Monday at the home of Mrs.
:Quartet and others. Special James Nicholson.
·
,,,J
:preaching.
TUESDAY
: BIDWELL - Rev. Eugene
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chap:Bare wUI be at Springfield ter OES meets Tuesday, 7: 30
•Baptist Church, Sunday, 7 p.m. p.m. El~tlon of officers,
; Harbor Lights wUI sing.
VINTON - Vinton Fellowship
'
, GALLIPOLIS - Community Chapel Thanksgiving service,
•Thanksgiving Service sponsored Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
:by the Gallia County Ministerial
'
:Association, wlll be Sunday, 7: 30
RIO GRANDE - SUCCESS
p.m., Grace United Methodist class begins for displace homec·hurcli. Speaker Rev. Rick Vl - ·makers at Buckeye F!llls, Tues•lardo, Christ United Methodist day . Call .245 -5336 for
~burch; slnglit by the Chancel
In forma lion.
'Choir of (;race Church. Offering
'
will be place In the Ministerial
RAWLINSTOWN, W.Va.
·Association's general fund .

r;::==='=======;.

Mature hair
Like mimy hair salons, the lmo Salon in New York's Regency Hotel bas
many matu"" clients seeking advice.
The salon "'advises frequent mild
shampooing, daily brushing and use of
hair dryers on warm or cool settings
only. They use a light body perm to
give fine or thinning hair more bulk.
lmo advises shorter styles to give the
mature face a lift - longer hair accents facial lines. Color is used subtly;
a little too much makes the mature
face look harder and older.

-

Mr. and Mr.l'. }arne.r R. Merr;1

SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Turn Your
Heart Toward Home continues at
First Baptist Church, Sunday, 6
p.m., with Overcoming a Painful
Childhood.

i1s; and later by Appalachla.n
Power . Company In Huntington
W.Va., as a draftsman until. his
retirement 'In 1980.
'The couple has three children, ·
Ralph Eldon Harrrlson, Portsmouth, ·Larry Harrison, ~orth
Ri&lt;jgeville, Ohio, and Sandra
Harrison Mlslc~a . Columbus~
They also have · seven
grandchildren.

The Sunday Tmes-Sentinei- Page- 8-'Z .

P~t~merey-Mklldlepon-Galipolis, Qhio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

_
3 33

APLU77

Sale Price Plcg. 50
trash bags; 20-30 gal.
Mfr f"'I\\ YOI'V

ft•• Save
43~.

1.97~

our 6.97. Coloilut'

· Our 3.44. 1hanltlgl¥-

mums in 6' pots.

. fng cactus in 4' pot.

•

•FREE PARKING
•FREE DEUVERY

•

87 &amp;a.,. :

24
3.77:::
a·

OPEN DAILY
9-5
MON . &amp; FRI .
9-8

21% :

446,3045

'

Our 6.97 Ia. boaller Our 14.97. 6-amp boicables of copper.
lary c:hafVIr, 6112-\1.•:

Styte ma '"". lri0'1' ~

..

\

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·-

'

•

(

'

�'

Ohio-Point Pleasant, 'W.Va.

Bookmobile .routes are announced
GALLIA COUNTY
GALLIPOLIS - Th e Dr. Sa mu el L. Bossard Memorial Li. br ary a nnounces it s bookmo bi le
schedule for the week of Sl'pt. 14
to 20.
Monday: Lewis Or.. 9:45-

Pa mela

Ka~·

10:15; SunVal leyN ursery,10: 2510:55: Pin ecrest, 11 -11:25; 35
West Apts.. 11:20-11: 35; Scenic
Hills 11 : 40;- C&amp;S Bank. 12: 15·
12: 30; Ga lli a Metro, 4-5; Ker r,
5: 15-5:35: Bidw ell, 5:50-6: 10;
Ha r r is bu rg, 6:20-6: 45: Deer
Creek. 6: o5-7: 15; Vall ey Vi ew ,
7: 25-7: !iO; Rio Gra-n de Es tates,
7:55-8: :ro.
Tuesday: Eno Store, l :30-1:55:
Africa Road , 2-2: 15; Roush lane ,
3-3: 15: Rous h Lane , 3: 15- 3: 30;
·· Ches hire, 3: 35-4:05; Addison
4: 15-4: 30; Add av llll&gt; Sc hool, 4: 40:
5: 05: R&amp;R T rail er Ct. , 5: 15· 5:45;
Georges Creek, 5: 45-6: 15;
Geor ges Cr ee k, 6: 20·6: 40; Ka na uga 5th Ave .. 6:50. 7:10; Foster s Tra il er Ct .. 7:15-7: 40: K&amp;l&lt;
Trail er Ct .. 7:45-8:05.
Wednesday: No rout e, maintenance day.
Thursday ! No route, Thank sgiv ing Day .
Friday: F ast Stop, 1·1: 15:
B a n~s . 1:20-1:30: Young' s, 1:351:45: Franklin's, 1:55-2:10; Myer s, 2: 25-2: 40 ; Mercerville. 3:253:40; 790 Small. 3:50-4 ; 790

November 23, 198&amp;:

An exciting holiday offer

Hall ey . 4-4: 10; 790 Lincoln Pike
Jet. , 4:20-4: 40; ·Swain's Store.
5- 5:15: Crown City. 5: 30-6: 05;
Grace Shafer, 6:20-6: 35; Ohio
TownhOuse, 6:45-7: 10; Kenny' s
Carry out, 7: 25=7: 50; Teens Run,
8-8: 25.
·Saturday: Legrande, 9: 30-10;
Raccoon Trail er Ct. ,' 10: 15-10:30:
Cora. 10:35-10: 50; Qua il Creek ,
11:05-11:35; Rodney Village .
12: 20-12:50; Children's Home.
1-1:20: CRTP, 1: 25-1:50; Ali ce.
2:15-2: 45; Vinton, 3-3: 30; MoPgan Center , 3:45- 4:15.

Spar
Section ·
Michigan rally defeats OSl), .26-24

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By IRA KAUFMAN
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ~ Jamie Morris
fueled Michigan's comeback from a 14-3deficlt b~
rushing for a career-high 210 yards and two.
touchdowns Saturday and the sixth-ranked
Wolverines earned a Rose Bowl berth with a 26·24
triumph against No. 7 Ohio State.
Michigan, 10-1, rebounded from ·last week's
stunning 20·17 loss against Minnesota to tie Ohio .
State at[1 for the Big Ten C.onference title. In
returnln to the Rose Bowl following a 3·year
absence, the Wolverines wUl face No. 4 Arizona
State, the Pac-10 champion. The Buckeyes, who
have finished 9·3 for six c6nsecutlve seasons, fell
to 9-3 and will play the Southwest Conference
·champion In the Cotton B.owl. The Buckeyes had
won nine -s traight following an 1}2 getaway- their
worst start since 1894.
Matt Frantz missed a 45-ya'rd fleid goal attempt
for Ohio State with 61 seeonds remaining to lift the
Wolverines into their first meeting ever with
Arizona State.
With Michigan ahe.ad 26-17, Andre MCintyre's
Interception at the Ohio State 34 appeare&lt;1 to seal
the decision for the Wolverines, but Darryl Lee
blocked Mike Gillette's field goal attempt and the
·Buckeyes quickly drove 56 yards . Crls Carter' s
second TO catch of the game, a 17-yarder with
9:42 left, reduced Ohio State's deficit to 26-24.

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MEIGS COUNTY
Bookmobil e service in Meigs
County is prov ided by the· Meigs
Publi c Libraray under contract
with Ohio Vall ey Area Librar ies.
Monday:. Burlingham, county
mobil e hom e park, 3: 35-4: 05;
Harrisonvllle, church, 4:35-5: 05;
New Lima Road , 1 mile south of
Ft. Meigs, 5:15-6: Rutland. Depot
Street, 6:40-7:10.
Wednesday: Tuppers Plains,
Lodwic k's, 7: 25-8: 10; Riggscrest
Addition, 8: 25-8: 55.

nails . You 'll find ele~anr eye color:

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Neece

HAPPY THANKS81~1NC

State title
winner named

Send the FTD

MIDDLEPORT
Pa mela
Ka y Nceoc. 6-ycar-old daughter
of Roy a nd Donnal Neece.
Middl eport. recen t! ~· captured
the 1itles ot Begi nner StateQ ueen
a nd Queen Fanc.v Best Appea rin g in the 0-6 age group of the
Ohio Sta te Na ti ona l Bato n
Tw irl ers Associatio n Champio nshi ps. held in Columbus.
She also w.on seco nd place in
basic strut ing and th ird place in
th e Mi ss Pho t oge ni c
co mpetition .
Pamela also ha s begun modeling in Ripley, W.Va .. a nd has won
severa l fi rs t place 1itles. Her
most recent win was on_Nov. 8

when s he wo n the tit lt· of
Beginner Queen at the N.B.T.A.
open fes tival in Sou th Charleston. W.Va. She tied for seco nd
place · i' n the fa ncv bes t
a ppeari ng.
She per forms with the Ruffles
a nd Flour is hes Bato n Corps a nd
Pon-Pom teams. She is a firs t
grader at the Middl eport E lement ary School.

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Thomas Wllcher's fumble atthe Oh-io' State 37
with 3:17 left gave the Buckeyes a flnal chance,
but Frantz was wide left as Bo Schembechler won
his 166th ·game at Michigan to become the
winnlngest coa~h ln Wolverine history.
,
Morris. who carried 29tlmes, gave Michigan Its
first lead, 19· 17, with a twisting 8-yard touchdown
run late In the third quarter and Wilcher's 7-yard
run padded the margin to 26-17 at 2:14 of the final
period.
Living up to their reputatlon .as a thlrd·quarter
terror, the Wolverines rolled up 188 yards and
outscored Ohlo State 13· 3 In the third period to
forge a 19·17 advantage. In the last 32 games,
Michigan boasts a whopping 250·34 scoring
advantage tn· the third period.
Carter also caught a 4-yard scoring pass from
Jim Karsatos Vince Workman ran 46 yards for a
touchdown a~d Frantz kicked a 27-yard field goal ·
for the Buckeyes. Gillette kicked-field goals of 32
and 34 yards for the Wolverines and Morris scored
on runs of 4 and 8 yards.
·Michigan's Jim Harbaugh completed 19 of 29
passes for 261 yards while Workman gained 126
yards In 21 carries. Karsatos hit on 15 of27 for 188
yards.
·
After Frantz's 27-yarder put Ohio State aheail
17·13 with 5:26 left in the third quarter, Morris
answered Immediately wlth a 52-yard run off
right guard to the 24. Ha r baugh found Bob
Perryman for 15 yards before Morris power ed his

·

way into the end zone . wlth 3: 53 remaining_
Harbaugh's 2-point conversion pass fell In com plete, leaving the Wolverines ahead 19-17.
Harbaugh hit Ken Higgins and P erryman lor 23
yards each an~ Morris ripped oil a 20-ya rd gain to
set up Wilcher s 7-yard scoring run of! left gu ard .
Playing before a record Ohlo Stadium crowd of
90,674, the Wolverines closed to within 14- 13 by
taking the -second-half kickoff and drivin g 83
yards in 14 plays. Morris took Harbaugh's option
pitchout and cut Inside rover Sonny Gordon for the
4-yard score at 6:07 of the third period.
Jamie Holland's 47·yard return to the Michigan
45 on the game's opening kickoff set the early
tempo for Ohio State, which led 14-3 after two
possessions. On third and goal from the 4-yard
line, C~rter got behind Erik Campbell in the right
corner and caught a fade pass for a 7· 0 lead at4: 13 .
It was the seventH consecutive game with a !least
one TO . catch for Carter, Ohio State' s car ~er .
reception leader.
Morris returned the subsequent kickoff 33 yards
and fullback Gerald White caught passes of 9 and
10 yards , leading to Gillette' s 32-yarder.

· ·

-

· November 23, 1986
•,

..
'

Two sophomores then took over for t!le
Buckeyes as Everett Ross turned a short pass
over the middle into a 32- ya rd gain by spinning off
three tacklers to the Michigan 46. On the next
play, Workm an took a pltchout on the rights ide,
cut across the lield at the 37 and ran untouched
down the left s idelin es for a touchdown with 3:03
remainin g in the first quarter. It' was the longest
gain from scrimmage allowed by the Michigan
defense this season.
After Da vid Brown - intercepted Harbaugh's
de fl ected pass to give-the Bucl\eyes possession at
their 42, Workman broke off left tackle for 29
yards. Th at run gave Workman 90 yards In the
qua r ter; Ohio State rushed for 90 yards in the
entire gam e during last year's 27-17 loss to the
Wolveri nes. Frantz was s hort on a 43-yard field
goal att empt and Michigan pulled within 14· 6
midway through the second qu arter on Glliette'Jl
34- y arder.
ins ide linebacker Chris Spielman was sensation a I in defea t for the Buckeyes, recording 29
total tackl es to tie the school single-game record
set by Tom Cou sineau against Penn State In 1978.

Saturday's roundup:
Penn State 34 Pitt 14
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa .
(UP!) - Blair Thomas scored
two touchdow'ns, Including a
school-record 91-yard kickoff return, to lead No.2 Penn State to a
34-14 victory Saturday over Pittsburgh and send the Nlttany Lions
to the Fiesta Bowl .and a possible
nation al championship game
against No. I Mi ami.
If Miami, 10-0, defeat s E ast
Carolina Thursda y night. the
Fiesta Bowl Jan : 2 In Tempe,
Ariz., will feature two undefeated teams. Penn State closed
it s regular season 11·0.
MSU 23 Wisconsin 13
EAST LANSING, Mlch. (UP!)
- Senior Bobby Morse ran for a
_career-high 170 yards an(\. two
touchdowns Saturday to enable
. Michigan State to keep its bowl
chances alive with a 23-13 Big
Ten victory over Wisconsin.
The Spartans finish ed their
with a 6-5 reeord overall and 4- 4
i~ conference play with a scout
from the Bluebonnet Bowl present The trfumph enabled Michi gan State to 'register Its third
straight winning season - the
first time the school ha s accomplished that feat since the Spar·
tans had winn ing seasons from
1961-63.
Boston 56 Holy Cross 26
WORCESTER, Mass. (UP!)Shawn Halloran threw fou r
touchdown passes, three to Kelvin Martin, and Hail·of· F ameBowl bound Boston · College
scored on five consecutive possessions Saturday en route to a

56-26 . thrashing of previously
undefeated Holy Cross.
Tens A&amp;M 74, TCU 10
COLLEGE STATION, Texas
(UP! ) -Roger Vlck scored four
touchdowns and had his fourth
straight 100-yard -plus rushing
game Saturday to allow No. 11
Texas A&amp;M to clinch at least a tie
for the Southwest Conference
title wlth a 74-10 rout of Texas
Christian.
Oklahoma 20 Nebraska 17
LINCOLN. Neb. (UPT)

Number three Oklahoma edged
number five Nebraska, 20-17, on
a field goal In the final six
seconds of play Saturday to
capturl&gt; the 1986 Big Eight
League crown.

(
1

Purdue 17 Indiana 15
WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind.
(UP!) Punjue fFeshman
tackle Scott Schult blocked an
Indiana field goal attempi wlth67
seconds to play Saturday, giving
· the Boilermakers a 17-15 Big 10
Conference victory .

JJ7llltlllllll~L------(C_on_tm_u_ed__fr_om__A_-1_l______
yards through the ai r. Tyler also
Intercepted four Wah am a aerials
and recovered one Wahama
fumble. Meanwhile, offensively,
Tyler r11shed (or 226 yards and
passed for 129 more.
Individually, Sean Gibbs led
Wahama's air attack, going 9·21
for 81 yards and three lntercep·
t,lons. Robbie Grimm was 1-3for
18 yards and one Interception.
Grimm led Wahama Is rushing
with 22 yar.ds on ·n carries.
Brad Bumgarner was Wahama 's leading receiver with four
catches for 59 yards.
Tyler County was paced'hy the
146-yard rushing performance by
Holmes. Through the air quarter·
back Jeff McKinney was 4-6 for
70yards and one Interception and
Holmes wa s 1-lfor 59 ya rds and a
touchdown.
Defens ively , the White Falcons
were led In tackles by Jay Roush

with 11, followed by Terry
Hawkins and Chris Noble with 10
each, Troy Tucker and Rodney
Dayo wlth six apiece, and Todd
Pethtel with five .
Eddie Starcher, Dale Smith
and Tucker each recovered Tyler
County fumbles . while Grimm
intercepted a Red Raider pass.
Grimm' s interception came
with 7: lllelt In the first half. with
Tyler County on the Wahama
13-yard line and the score locked
at zero. McKinney dropped back
on the third down play, !Ired the
pass Into the endzone where
Grimm thwarted the dr ive with
the Interception.
Wahama•s-best scoring oppor·
tunlty came with 2: 02 -left ln the
third quarter with· Tyler on top
14·0. Inside the 20 yard line Gibbs
rifled a pass Into the endzone
where It was picked off by the
Tyler County secondary.

WORKMAN GETS 12 YARDS - Ohlo State
running back Vince Workman ( 42) attemps to get
around Michigan linebacker Andre Mcintyre (54)
clurln~ a 12-yard run In first quarter action In

Columbus Saturday. The visiting Wo1verlnea
erased a 14-3 deficit to wm , 26·24 and wUI
represent the Big 10 in the &amp;se Bowl. (UPI) '

Cleveland eyes first sweep over Pittsburgh since 1969

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'

By ROBERTO DIAS UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND &lt;UP!) - Forget the standings .
Thr ow away the offens iv e and defens ive
ran kings.
In fact , Ignore a ll individual and team statistics
Sunday when the Pittsburgh Steelers visit the
Cleveland Browns. Even the rulebook may be
powerless.
"You want to beat everybody," says Pit tsbu rgh
quarterback Mark Malone, " but we alw ays seem
to get that extra desire against Cleveland. It's
almost a no-holds· barred situation.
' ~ They beat us earlll'r (winning 27·24 on Oct. 5,
snapping an 0-16 streak at Three Rivers Stadium)
and we want to return the fawur. a's been a whil e
slnce they won both gam es In a season 119691, and
we want to keep It tha t way."
Despit e the fact the two teams have mirror
records- Cleveland Is 7·4 whil e Pittsburgh Is 4· 7
-both have won three of their last four.
"There's no question that thl' Steel ers' offense
Is more effi cient that It was when we first m et, "
said Clevel and co ac h Marty Schott enhelmer.

" Malone has upped his completion ration and
(running backs) Walter Aber crombie and E arn·
est Jackson have helped balance the offense.
" They've got proven qualltyy In their wide
receiver corps. Weegie Thompson. Louis Lipps
and John Stallworth could start for anybody. we
expect a tough ga!Jle."
Malone (130 of 266 passes for 1,321 yards , 11
touchdowns and lllnterceptlons ) has upped his
completion percentage from 40 percent In theflrst
four games to 68.5 percent In his rast five.
" It's no secret," sald the quartl'rback. "We' ve
got some people healthy, we' ve been abl e to run
the ball more efllclently and we' re playing with
more Intensity."
Pittsburgh, however, remain s last In thl' NFL
with an average of 261.9 yards per game. But the
ground game, eighth overall with a 126.9-yard
clip, has been Improved by Jackson (119 carries
for 478 yards and four touchdowns) while
Aber crombie leads in rushing (141 for 563 and two
tou chdow ns) and rece iv in g (26 for 199 and on e
touchdow n).
,
.

Malone, whose offens ive line has per mitt ed an
NFL·Iow 14 s acks, can choose targets between
Thompson (16 for 176. 5touchdowns t , Lipps (16 fo r
216, one touchdown! and Stallworth (17 fo r 193).
"Our offens e has much potentIa!,·' said Steelers
coach Chuck NolL " Wit hall the weapons to choose
from , you· expect production ."
Pittsburgh Is expected to key on Cleveland
rookie cornerback Mark Ha r per. who is lik ely to
start In place of Frank Minnifield. Minnifi eld Is
doubtful wlth a pulled calf mu scle.
"All r can be Is very alert a nd very willin g to
mat ch them stride for stride," says Ha rper. " I
don' t expect to shut them down all by myself. I
know my teammates will help me out. "
Cleveland quarterback Bernie Kosa r (214-of354 for 10 tou ch~owns and s ix Int ercept Ions)
remains fourth -ranked In theA FC despit eerralic
pass protection .
Wldeouts Reggie La ng horne (31 for 529, one
touchdown ) and Bria n Brenn an (29 for 400, th ree
touchdowns ) are balanced with t ight end Ozzle
Newsome (28 for 295, two touchdowns) and
running back Herman Fon tenot 128 for 346,. one

touchdow n) ava il able.
"We'r e fortuna te to have s uc h hard workers out
there on offense:· sa ys Kosar. "And that Includes
the offens ive line, the ba ckfi eld and the
recelvl'rs."
Th e ground attack remain s second-worst In the
wit h just 88.1 yards per g ame. Running backs
Curt is Dickey (85 for 376, three touchdowns ) and
Kev in Mack (74 fo r 244 . four touchdowns) have
been unabl e lhu s far to overcome the loss of
Earn est Byner.
Kosar may face a lour-ma n line, since he has
had probl ems with protection against that
for ma tion.
" The'o ne sure thing we ex pert is a very tough
ga me," he sa id. ' 'We need to win thi s game. and so
do they. When opposin g goals clas h, y ou 've got
somet hin g."
Inju r ies- Pittsbu rgh reports none while lig ht
end Harry H olt (ca lf) is proba bly and Mlnnifil'ld
doubtfu L
.
Cleveland leads t he series b.1· a 42·31 m ar gin . AU
80, 098 seats a t Cleveland Stadium have been sold .

Vikings ·need victory today to ·keep playoff hopes alive
CINCINNA'TI (UP ]) - Both the Clnclnnatl
Bengals and Minn esot a Vikings have plenty of
Incentive for Sunday 's matchup because the
outcome should 'play a big part In determining
both teams' playoff chan~s.
Minnesota probably needs to win the game
more than Cincinnati becaus e the VIkings have
the mis fortune to be In the same division as the
Chicago ' Bears. With the Bears enjoymg a
three- game lead over the VIkings with only fiv e
games to go, Minn esota figures to make the
playoffs only by the wildcard route.
.
That means matching recorda with a lot ofNFC
team s and that 's why Minnesota coach Jerry
Burns figur es his club must go undefeated the rest
of the way to be In solid shape for a wildcard. His
VIkings ar e now 6·5.
Cincinnati, 7·4, ls ·tted with Cleveland for the
AFC Central Division lead and the Browns are .
favored to · beat Pittsburgh Sunday. Should
Cincinnati stumble against Minnesota, the
Bengals would be a gam e back with four games
lefl,

Although a loss would s et Cin cinnati's playoff
hopes ba ck a.blt, It wouldn' t lint !rely cripple them .
Cincinnati, which beat Cleveland earlier In lhe
year, could make up ground when It hosts the
Browns In the next-to-last game of the season.
Cincinnati Is favored over Minnesota, mainly
because sensational VIkings' quarterback
Tommy Kramer Is doubtful because of an Injured
thumb. Kramer Is thetopratedpasser In the NFC.
" We'd like to be able to go with our top gun, but
I've got confidence in Wade Wilson, and If he has
to play, he will do an excellent job," said Burns.
"But, when you take your top gun out, It hurts,
no question about it. If Cincinnati took James
Brooks or Boomer Eslason out of t~elr offense,
they just wouldn't be ab15to replace tetn wtth
people of equal ability."
After Kramer Injured his thumb last Sunday·
against the New York Giants, Whson came In and
directed an 80-yard touchdown drive that gave the
Vikings the lead midway through the final
quarter. However, the Giants won the game on a
field geal with 12 seronds left.
·

there aren't a tot of people using it . so It' s mor e
" I think Wad e can do the jo b, " said VIki ngs'
troubl esome for the othet· tea m."
receiv er Anthony Ca r ter. " We feel comfortable
Says Cincinnati coach Sa m \Vyche, ··" We' re
w.hen he's ln ther e. Hi s bail even has·morez lp on It ,
playing
the NFL 's No. 6 team on offense and No . 10
than Tommy' s.' '
on de fen~. T h al:,s~d,lfl!m In the upper
A month ago, the VIkin gs whipped the Bears
· ec helo n of the leagu e. They ha ve revamped their
23-7 and had a 5·2 reeord. But they' ve lost three of
Club from the USFL and good drafts the last
their last four and are feeling the playoff pinch.
couple of years."
·
"In order for us to ma ke the playoffs, we
The VIkings have seven for mer USFL players
definitely hav e to win ou r fin a l five gam es," sa id
and probably the best is Carter.
Carter.
" He's one of the most.excltlng players In the
Added Bu r ns, "Our chances for a dlv jslon title
game,"
said Wyche. " He can go downtown
aren' t veri strong when the Bears are ln our
anyt ime and make circus catches."
division. So, I feel we ' ve got to win all the rest of
Although bot h teams have offenses capable of
our games to Insure awildcard. We 'd be 11- 5 and I
scoring a lot of points, nett her coach would rule
· think that would merit a wildcard. I Ju st don't
out of the possibility of a defens ive stalemate.
know If 10·6 would do the job."
" It could go anyywhere from a high-scoring
The VIkings wUI throw a four- ma n defensive
offens ive ga m e to a tight d~ fenstve battle," said
line, Instead oftheconvenllonal three-man, at the
Wych e.
Bengals Sunday.
"I would think It could be ·a high· scoring gam e,
· "We wanted to Improve our pass rush, "
explained Burns, "You can put more pressure on
but I thou ght the Monday night game between the
49ers and Reds klns·was going to be high-scor ing
the quarterback from the four- man line. Th at' s
the biggest advantage. A secondary advanta ge In,
and It turned out to be 14-6,'1 add ed aurns. ·

�-,

November 23, 1986
:... .:PJ~g8-C-2-The
Sunday Times-Sentinel
;

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

November 23, 1986

Rio and Muskingum post opening· rouf!d
triu~Qphs in Bevo Francis Cage Classi~!

""'· Meigs, .Spartans, Lancers,
·_Bulldogs post preview win~
ATHENS - Junior forward
Bill Brothers came off the bench
· · t'o. spark Meigs with a team-high
nine points In leading the Ma·
'rauders to a 27-24 two-period
pre-season win over Vinton
County here Friday In the 1986
Al hen s · Shrine Ba sketball
Preview :
·. 'In the three following games,
'Alexander whipped NelsonvilleYork, 48-40; Federal-Hocking
• surprised Logan, 30-24 and
Athens nipped Trirrible,-35-34.
Marauders 2'l Vikings 24
•
•
Coach Mick Childs' Marauders
• sa nk 13 of 14 free throws to seal
~ the come-from-behind win over
.• the Vikings, who dropped only
~ eight of 15 from the foul line.
Meigs jumped off to a 9-0 lead,
holding the Vikings scoreless for
the first five minutes before
, Coach Buddy Bell's crew could
• get untracked. Once on course,
, the Vikings raliled to take a 14-12
' lead and led for the las t time at
·• 18=17 with 4:13 left.
: : Two free throws by _Chris
Smith at the 3:28 mark gave the
Marauders the lead for good at
19-18.
Brothers popped In two field
goals from the perimeter and
senior guard Phil King made four
of lour foul shots down the stretch
to help preseve the Meigs win .
Other than Brothers' nine.,
Brent Bissell added live markers
and King four. Danny McManis
led Vinton with 10. Scott Gilliland
and Nick Gill had four each.
· Spartans 48. Buckeyes 411
. Alexander shot out to a 24-14
'ljist period lead , hut had to hold

..·

off a scrappy NYHS five as the
Buckeyes rallied to tie with four
minutes to go. · They never
mangaged to gain the upper
hand.
After tying the score at the4 : 48
mark (28-ail) Alexander regrouped and held on for the win.
; The Bucks cut the gap to 43-40 in
the finallllinute of play:
Talented junior guard Mike
C hapma~ led the Spartans with
17 points-. Jay Martin added
seven. Michael Russell led the
Buckeyes with 14.
Lancers 30 Chiefs 24
Defending Southeastern Ohio
League champion Logan lost its
preview tilt In the final minute of
play. The Lancers held a slim
lead througi!Qut the evening.
It was 20-20 with three minutes
left . The Lancers were up 24·21
with two left on the clock.
Eric Householder led the
Lancers with 10. Jose Medina led
Logan with seven.
BuUdogs 35 Tomcats 34
Athens' Jerry Jones made but
one field goal, but It was the
game winner with 18 seconds left
as the junior put In a missed
Bulldog shot. ·
·
Trimble, which had rallied
from a 31-24 deficit in the final
three 'minutes, had two ·shots
bounce of[ the rim in the final10
seconds.
The Tomcats had taken a 34·33
lead with 38 seconds left on a
two-pointer by Dave Kovach.
Tim Adams led the Bulldogs
with 10. points. Tom Shifflet led
Trimble with nine.
Box scores:

RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande BevoFrancisCage Ciass lcSatur·
' College battled Musklngum lor day night following opening night
the fifth championship of the triumphs over Wilmington and

Meigs 27, ·
Vlrito• County U ·
Mel~s .......... .. ........... ............. .. IO 17-27

VInton Counry .... .... ................... 8 16-2~

MEIGS Om -J .R. Klt chen. l-0-2; Chris
Smith, 0-2-2: Don &amp;&gt;rker. 0-2-2; M!ke
Barr rum. 0-0-0; Jesse Howard. 0-0-0; Scott
Willi ams. 0-0.0: Huey Eason, 1·1"3: Phil
Ki ng, 0-4-4; Brent Bissell, 1-3-5; BUI
Brothers , 4+9: ~o,tt Powell. .0-0-0: Steve
Musser, 0-0-0. TOTALS 7-13·27.
VINTON COUNTY ( :U) - Scott Cllii·
land, 2-0-4; Mark Saunders, 1-0-2; Nick

Gill, 2-Q..t Roger Herrold , 1-0-2; James
F('{', 0-2-2; Danny McManis, 2-6-10. TOTALS 8-8-14.
Aleunder 48,
NelsonvUie-l'ork ,.,
NY . ... ................................... 14 2i -40
Alexander ... ... ....................... 24 2~-48
_NELSONVILLE-YORK (40) - Dennis
Howe, 1·4-6; Michael Russell. 6-2-14; Jeff
Russell, 2-2-6: Ulysses, . 1-0-2; Brad
Spencer. 1·0-2; Chad Savage, 3-0-6; Mike
F:ck•is. 2-0-4. TOTALS I!&gt;8-441 .
ALEXANDER tli)- Jay Martin, 2-3-7;
Joe McLain, 4·4·12; Denton Gu1hrle, 1-2·4'
Richard Ca rroll , Hl-2; Mike Chapman'.
6·5·17: DOUJa' Keiter. 1-2-4; Scott S!alder,
1-0-2. TOTALS IIHIH8.

LOGA.N (U)- St&gt;an Spalar, 1-0-2: Jose
11·8-311.
Medina . 3·1·7: Sa m E~gleston, 0..2·2: Chris
VanVorhls, 2-0-4; Jerry Ga briPI. 1· 0.2:
John Tomkins. 1·0-2; Randy Kuhn. 2·1·5.
TOTALS t0-1-14.
"

SOUTH POINT - Chesapeake's second five outscored
Gallipolis 16-9 during the final
5:01 of play in Friday -night's
Ohio Valley Conference preview
opener at South Point to post a
41·34 two-quarter victory over
the Blue Devils.
-· · Rock Hill battled Coal Grove in
,. . ·tiw nightcap.
;: :: : coach Jim Osborne's starting
~ : tlve or Tom Cassady, David
• Todd, Chris Howard, Gary Harrl·
: son and Todd Miller outscored
~ .tal!: Panthers 19·17 during the
· ~~ Mt eight minutes.
,~: • ' The second GAHS group of Joel '
)..1 ~pencer, Jason Thomas, Mark
_ ~kich , Tim Neville, Bill
! :Evans, Tom Cornett and Kev
: ·;Stowers were outscored 24-15
• -over the next eight minutes.
, ', Tom Hauldren did not dress,
~ ;due to a back injury. Miller
i , played with live stitches In his
~ ;rorehead alter suffering an In' •Jury In Thursday's drills.
: : GAHS was up 6-2 early before
~ ~Niirm Persin's Lawrence Coun-

..

MCMANIS DRIVES - Vinton's Darry McMa·
nls (50) drives toward bucket in Friday's Shrine

RAYMORE SHOOTS -Rio Grande's 5-11 sophomore guard
from Columbus, Anthony Raymore (15) pops in a short jumper
from the side during Friday's first round action In the Fifth Annual
Bev.o Francis Classic at Lyne Center againsl Wilmingt~n, The
Redmen won, 102·89, a~ played Musklngum Saturday night for
the 1986 championship, '"

l

Into
the Fedd,
waitingwho
armscradl~~
of tight end
Elliott
• h~
pass at the Akron 25.
After a first half that saw ootn
teams score almos\ at will,
Akron apparently had a comfortable 39-27 lead when Bob Dombroski hit his third field goal of
the contest with a little over 10
minutes left in the game.
But Youngstown came right

•

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c/1 time for l,ivinA thanks

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ANNIUAL CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE

- Mly you .. llljoy. -llld ' - " Hotlelaf.

HromeOfficft. ~ CnlogtOii, . , _

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SAT. &amp; SUN., NOV. 29 &amp; 30
12 NOON TIL 5 P.M.
Free refteshments - Free Gilts for
everyone. Also Fret 4" Spider Plant with
· ony purchase. legister for door prim.
Need not be present to win - 16 years
&amp; older. Large stlection of Poinstllias,
Holly Trees, live &amp; cut Christmas Trees,
'r• F'olio&lt;at Plants, Hanging Baskets &amp; Candie
Arrangements.

'STATE FARM I&lt;ISUIWICE COMPAMES

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Reg.

OPEN DAILY 9 TO 5

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GREENHOUSE
SYRACUSE, OH .

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The Shoe Cafe
300 Second

Galipolis

And we·re proud to saywe·re still locally owned and operated .Which means we have a genuine interest tor Ihe prosperityot our community

1984 8u·ick .Park Avenue · ·

1986 Lincoln Town Car

By being locally owned we know what's going on - and we're able lo react more quickly to
your needs.
'
Our business is here.And we're doing everything we can to support !he local business economy.And with your support we can work logether to build an even stronger community.

.,

...... IVIC

back on its next possession to cut
the margin to 39-34 when Lykes
capped a 68-yard drive with a
nine-yard touchdown run, sett ing
up the dramatic ending.
Lykes was easily the key to the
Youngstown victory.

SAVllN&lt;G§
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4 Door. "LOADED". "New Codillac Trade-In';::

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

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1987 CELEBRITY

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EMERGENCY
CARE CENTER
IAMIIIIIIIIIUM

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Corner ol Third Ave.
. &amp; State St.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Phone 446·4290
Home 446·4518

Ciyic Savings Bank is proud to support the local Gallia County business community.

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USED
CAR

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The business of goo~ business.

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~ 1r;:;:;:;:;;~;::;;:::~;:~~;:~~~~~77;-l

~

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP1)
Trader Oz, driven by C.J. Osborn, won Friday night's fea ·
tured trot at Toledo Park Raceway, a length and a hall over
Dream of Troy.
Trader Oz was second at the
top of the stretch, down by a half
length, but charged down the ·
stretch and passed Dream of
Troy to win in 2:06 3-5 over a
sloppy track. · Speedy Chester ·
was third.
Cactus Needle won the first
race and Trader Oz the second to
return $16.80 on the daily double
combination of 2 and 6.
Th~ crowd of 1,562 wagered
$169,084.

.

tlans reeled off nine straight
points for a 11·6 advantage.
GAHS rallied from a 13-8
deficit to win the first period
melee, 19-17. Gary Harr ison
tallied four points In the final 19
seconds, hitting the go-ahead
goal with nine seconds left .

Jim Tressel readily admitted
was not In the team's playbook.
With a little over a minute -left
In the game, Lykes, from his own
. 44 yard line, threw long over the
middle.
Two Akron defenders collided
In pursuit of the overthrown pass
and the ball bounced off them

HOME MEDICAL EQUIPMENT _'

COM PLETE LINE Of MEDICAL CARE EOUII PME.NT

~ul frioncllllld ......,. •... Fcr..vlng yair·=~

Toledo results

!1Y
oungstown State upsets Akron
'
'
; : YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio tUPil
• :- Youngstown State used an
~ ~ " imm acu late reception" play
' .and a last-minute. 17-ya rd touch~ :down pass from Trenton Lykes to
, ·Lorenzo Davis to post an emo; :tiona! 40-39 victory over arch: ; rival Akron Friday nighi.
• • The loss ended the NCAA
: :Divis ion 1-AA playoff hopes of
~ ;AJu:on, which finished 7-4 In
•Coach Gerry Faust's first
.1 :season.
• '· With the win, Youngstown
; -State. 2·9 for the season, over: ,came a year's worth of fru stra·
• ·tion that saw the team lose six
~ :games by less than a touchdown.
~ .: The wlnninl( score was set up
by a play that Youngstown Coach

Preview at Athens. The VIkings lost to Meigs,
21·24. Marauder defenders are Steve Musser (45)
and Bill Brothers (35).

rr=========::::::::===::===::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;-

'

Harrison led Gallia's ·attack
with 16. Jason Thomas, Mark
Berklch and Bill Evans all had
four eac11. Neville, Harrison,
Todd, Hauldren and Spencer all
had two rebounds ap.iec~ .
Gallipolis hit 12 of 25 field goal
attempts (48 percent) and 10of17
free throws (58 percent) . GAHS
The second units battled It out had 13 rebounds and committed
on even terms until Jon Gipson 10 tu rnover.s.
stole the ball following a Blue
Box score:
Devil rebound, turned around
GALLIPOLIS (34) -Cassady,
and put It in for a 27-25 CHS lead. 0-2-2; T~dd , 0-0-0; Howard, 0·1-1:
The Pimthers never relinquished Harrison, 7-2-16; Miller, 0-0-0;
the lead.
Spencer, 1-0-2; Thoma,, 1-2-4;
Chesapeake's biggest spread Berklch, 1-2·4; Neville, 0-1-1;
was 41·29, 'with 1:tl9 le!t.
Stowers, 0-0-0; Evans. 2-0-4;
· Joe Me Masters, up from 1st Cornett, 0-0-0. TOTALS 12-10-34.
year's Panther reserve team, led
CHESAPEAKE (41) -Lafon,
CHS with 10 points and four 0-1-1; Wells, 1-2-4; M: Curry,
rebounds. Mark Curry added six 2-2- 6; Hensley, 1-0-2; J. Curry,
points and collected fou r 2·0-4; Thacker, 0-2-2; Martin,
rebounds.
2·0-4; Gibson, 1-0- 2; McMasters,
Chesapeake hit 13 of 21 field 3-4-10; Estep, 0-0-0; Nida, 1-2·4;
goal attempts (6lpercentl and15 Webb, 0-2·2. TOTALS 15-13·41.
of 22 free throws (68 percent).
By quarters: .
CHS had 15 rebounds and six Gallipolis .. .. ............ .. 19 15-34
turnovers.
Chesapeake ....... .. ...... 17 24-41

-

PLEASANT VALLEY .

• 24 HOUR SERVICE
• FREE DELIVERY

,..,..,,. Ru.sselll, Gallipolis,
U:DA Hammond, GallipoIs
a
member of the 1986-87 Rio
lis, has been named captain of
J
Grande
College cheerleadlng
the 1986-87 Rio Grande College
squad. The daughter of Paul
cheerleading squad. Daughand
Mary Russell, Galllpolis,
ter of Robert and Cassandra
she
Is
a sophomqre. This is her
Byer, Leda Is a senior com·
second
year as a member of
munlcatlons major. This Is
the
Rio
cheerieadlng squad.
her fourth year on the cheer· ,
She
is
an
elementary educaleading squl\d.
tion major.

Alhens 35, Trimble 34
Athens ..... .. ............................ . 18 17-35
Trlmble ... .. ... ...................... .... . n 23-34
ATHENS &lt;(3.1) - Ji m Slrickll n 2-0-4;
Cory CorriJ{an. t-0.2: Rod Bryant, 3· (.1-6;
Jamt&gt;S Conra1h. 1·0..2; P.J. Lyons. 2-0-4:
Thaden Brlent , 1-0-2; Tony Coles, 0-1-1:
Tim Adams, 3-4·10: Trevor Costello. 1-0-2;
Jer'1' Jon•s. 1·0-2. TOTALS IH-35.
TRIMBLE (!4) - Chris Karns , 3-1-7;
Chris Spain, 1-0.2; Bill Sayre, 1-2·4: Dav('
Kovach, 1-0.2; Phil Runyon, 0-4-4: Tom
Sh lffiE't, 3·3-9: Jl"ff Koons . 2-0-4: Aaron
McCrown, 1·0-2. TOTALS 12-11-:W.

Panthers top Devils in OVC
cage preview at South Point

~
'D rlrl

Muskingum College edged•..Urban~. 59-56.
_::
Wilmington a nd Urbana
played for consolation honors
Saturday night.
__
. In the women's contest, '.ftio .
beat Pikeville, 86-83, in overl.iJne.
Robin Luck scored 31 for Ihe
winners.
~ _
In the second game, Misso'uri
Wes tern walloped GeorgJan
Court, 88-47.
·
' ·
Pikeville and Georgian C~urt
met for consolation honprs
Saturday.
·

"WE SPECIAliZE IN CARING"

FH ...................... ..-............ .. .. .. 12 18-:ll

Kincade. 1·0.2: Phil Gillian. 1-2·4: Eric
HousE'holder. 3-4·10: Inlnlgo Urquiza.
· 0.2·2: Brian Tabler. 1-0-2; Steve PE- nsW!ck.
2-0-4 : Scott Way , l-Q-.2: Joh n Burde!!e.
l-().2; Shane Burchwell, 1-0-2. TOTALS

Urbana.
In the women's division, the
Rio Grande Redwomen bat tled
Missouri Wes tern State College
for the championship.
Rio downed Wilmington, 10289, for its fourth straight court
victory.
It was the third time this
season the Redmen have hit the
century mark.
Six Redmen finished In double
figUres, led by Joe Verhoff' s 31
. markers.
·
In the first men's game,

li1

Federai•Hocklng 311,
Lol(an 24

LoiE~iiiiM:-iiociiiiiiii "iaii1 1~ ~~-;:;:

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

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

'•

1978 FORD FAIRMONT.......................................................................... 1195.00
1984 CHEVY CHEVETTE .•......................................•................................$2995.00
1979 V.W. SCIRROC0............................................................................$1995.00
1978 BUICK LeSABRE ....... ;...................................................................~1495,00
1978 CHEVY CHEVETTE .......................................................................... $795.00
1977 BUICK REGAL .... ~ ............................................................................. $450.00
1978 FORD PINT0 •.........•....•...•......................................... , ......................•,350.00

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T~X. 11TLE &amp; DESnNATION CH~ROES

COBB

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SPECIALS- ONE WEEK ONLY$·
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MAIN STIER

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Pige- C-4- The _Sunday Times-Sentinel

fouthwestem, Oak Hi~l boys, Belpre interested

~outhem, Oak Hill girls win
-first round preview contests·
i&gt;CHESHIRE - Fans and fo l-

ester n built a 34-24 'advant age

~h!Ntc Con ference h1gh schools
~ rc g t v~n an opportunity to get
&lt;~&gt;:, r' ~.sl · hand glance. at_ the!r
ffm11 0. schools Fnday mght m
t!i~ flfst hal f of Ihe co nference
4.l'Is and boys basket ball pre~w at Kyger Creek Hig h
.,.,hooJ.
:Three of the four games w7re
~hm a co upl e of pom ts of gomg
c!l;hcr way With th ~ only blowout
cOming at th e hands o f defe nding
S~AC boys champton Sou thern,
3 ~. the TOI,nadoes fell to Sout hw cStet n 42-29. In Ihe ot her boys
g•.m e, Oa k Htll used an extra
tJ!r;ee·mmute overt 1m e followin g
ti!P two etght· mmute qu arters to
c~c host . Kyger Creek 34·31. In
g~,J:ls acno n, Southern edg~d
Squ thw es tern 25·24 and 011k H1ll
sA;lded Ky1:er Creek 15-14.
.
'.n the . Sou t~western pr es~son out mg , the Htghland~rs
took adva nt ~ge of theH supenor
htht _to buii~ a 6-2 lead ear ly,
!
P tt to 16· 1 and ho ld on to a
1 ,11 adva nta ge alter the first
Prtod. The Htghla nder. altack
"~s _Jed by &amp;-foot-5 semor Dan
P~nck
who bucketPd 20 points,
1~ lh t 1
-,.In e II'S quar ter.
~n the second quarter , Southw "'

seconds remaining. The Torna·
does, led by junior Dave Am bur·
gey's eighl points, shot a dism al
22 percent from the flopr in the
first quarter and on ly 44 percent
.in the second.
The Highlander effor t may
have been the mos t surprising
but the Kyger Creek-Oak Hill
scrimmage was the most con·
tested. The Bobcats Jed the
majority of the 16 minutes 01
r.egulatlon play, but allowed the
tenacious Oa ks back Into the
game and win it in overtime.
Fifteen of the Oaks' points
came via the free throw as they
attempted only 24 shots from the
floor. OHHS junior Brian Howell
Jed the Oa ks with 11 points, nine
in the first quar ter.
Kyger Cref:k led alter the fir st
period 15-14 and built a 27,24 1ead
with three minutes remai ning in
regu lation, only to see the Oaks
rally for a 29-27 llead with Jess
than one minut e left . With three
seconds to go, KCHS junior Bill
Loveday followed in a missed
shot to sent the contes t int o
overtime.
In the overtime. Oak Hill ran
off the first four points and hung

l~ ers ,or fou r Southern Va lley- a nd raised It to 42· 25 wit h 44

.

W
Kentucky
'
.
.'·· estern
i•

: By GERRY MONIGAN
UP I S t W 't
'"·
por s r• er
IQieW Western Kent~cky coac h
~rray
Arnold mhent ed a tea m
t~l returned 11 of the 13 player s
a 'l~· \j'Cnt to the second round of
I~ NCAA tournament las t sea·
s&lt;tii . . Dtgge_l Ph elps , Notre
Df;e s coach for 16 years.
p ifted five fres hmen.
.• he _two teams played Friday
n@lt 1n the f1r st round of the
N~ional In vit a tion Tournament
C~sstc and pl ay ing ex perience
~t ro achmg ex pen en cc.
p tt w&lt;.lS gre~t lor ~e to hav~
s~h a b1gw m m my fir st game,
A~ol d sa id aft er his team's 80-63
trf!mph. "Our kids we n! out a nd
w~ II , thou gh. 1 had VC'ry lillie to
dlrtvith it."
~!lis F ra nk powered the Hil·
lt~pers wilh 17 points. followed
bJif!ret t McNea l with 13. Donald
R9!ai lcd the Irish wit h 17 points
a!jil Mark Stevenson add ed 13.
I have to play freshmen . I
wv:l," Phelps s aid. " But I gua·
ra tee you th ey'll improve. "
· otre Dame 's leader. jun ior
g rd David Rivers. was in v ed in a n Aug. 24 auto
a 'dent that le ft a 15·inch gas h
a ss his stomach. He is recov~d enough to play, but scored
8 poin ts in 34 minutes.
~ take full r espons ibllit.v be·
c ~e I'm the point guard and it' s
m$C job to direct !he offeQse,"
sa~ Rivers. who received a

we

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••

~E N

PR AIR !E .. Minn. iUPJI
-l!fhe Min nesota Vikings said
Fr[~a v qu arterback To mmy
J&lt;r!O"ncr was listed as qu es liOna·
bl~lfor Sunday 's game wit h th e
Citli;inn ali Bengals.
amN jammed hi s thumb in
th New York Gia nt s ga me a
w
ago. Coach Jerry Burns
wtjmake no announcement on .
w her to start quarter back
W c Wilson or ·Kram er unt il
Sui¢la y, a club spokes m an sa id.
'Ute Vikings announced sever~ ot her lineup changes. Right
ta.,le Mik e Stensrud will stan in

PITTSBURGH ! UPI) - The
Pittsburgh Steelers reported Fri·
day. that starting defensive end
Edmund Nelson, who suffered a
calf injury last Sunday, lias been
upgraded from questionable to
probable and Is expected to sta rt
this week when the Steel'ers play
the Cleveland Browns.

.
.
MARIETTA - Officials of the Southeastern Ohio Athletic
League heard an informal request by Belpre Hlsh School to
agree to a ~erger of the Trl·Valley Conference with the SEOAL
during the latter's fall meeting eatlier tills month In Martella.
Officials from Belpre indicated their desire to Join theSEOAL
at some future date, but did not make a formal applican to join
.
· .
'
the larger school conference.
Belpre, a long-time member of ihe Tri-Valley Conference,
suggested a merger of the two leagues, with the smaller schools
to be placed In one division rutd the larger schools In a different
,
division.
Warren Local, a Belpre rival rutd former TVC member,
joined the SEOAL this year. Nelghhoring Marietta Joined last
year.
. League officials took no action on the suggestion for the
merger, but left tile door open lor Belpre to return at a future
meeting and petition formally to join the SEOAL.
One of the main r.easons for Belpre wanting to partiCipate in
the SEOAL Is the. playoff posslbllites now probable ·under the
current state setup (five dlvl!!lons), , '
League princlpals, and athletic directors also created a new
form ol SEOAL compelllion, school spirit.
·
The compellllon will be In the form of ratings which are
conducted of the opposing school. Heading the list of spirit items
to be rated Is sportsmanship.
.
.
·
Other areas which wUI be rated Include cheerleaders, pep
bands, and clean s pirit e•hlblted by fans at the basketball
games thl• winter.
,
In addition to the regular season ratings, there will be some
sped a! competition among the cheerleaders at the SEOAL-Tri·
Valley Conference AU-Star game In March.

POOR BILL. ··
HE'S TOO

SENSITIVE TO
ADMIT HIS
HEARING
LOSS.

Sometimes _. Ignore· •
problem and ·hOJMI It will
~:.~~,:Vg•r~ •• ~~tha;;!~~
when It uaually .;".;, ·

Browns involvement in
BeniJ'U[S 0 if.rpense_;ncreas;ng
0
"
"

nothing to llo dwith ....
LDon't give up olng t ...
thlngl you love to tlo. A

CINCI NNATI !UP)) - Com- start any· controversy or any ing off his AFC Rookie of the thing like that. "

•
h
.
~::;ds~;~~· ~!~~rl:~~~wr~
tops ' IriS

ceiver Eddie Brown on the field
the first nine weeks of the 1986

In the last two games, Brown
has ca ught 15 passes for 229
d
·
yar s, compared to just 22
ca tches the preceding nine
games. Last year, he ca ught 53
and scored eight touchdowns.
"We have made a conscious
effort to get him the ba ll the last
two weeks,:· Coach Sam Wyche
said. "He had not ca ugh t the
number of balls we had targeted
for him. He wa s not on pace for
where we had him in th e team
goals."
Brown said he was n' t awa re of
plans to increase his involvement
in the offense.
"That's something 1 didn't
really catch up on in practice
those weeks," he said. "Everyb·
ody wants the ball. but 1 guess
I'm not one to speak out !hal
h bo

~~~~

ne;~~~i~~:l~g:."ts~~~t~i~he~f~~;

few~nutl•h

Stadium Sunday.
Wyc he sat'd t here were some
extenu ating circumstances be·
hind Brown's relatively . low
output early in the season.
" In the first couple of games,
Kansas City and Buffalo put
some heavy coverage on him, .
even more than Crls (Collins -

talce• only •
and we're equip,.... .. t
the I a tall
equipment.
Call t~lng
f

.

Q rr
Udi.OIO

ay

standing ova tion !rom the home· ana State 83· 74.
d
.
&amp; hearing alds.J
1
own rrow · " It was a lack of
At Charlottsvllle, Va .. Nate
co.ncen tratlon. We didn't do any- Blackwell scored a career-h igh
riwioritih)igioiti,"~W~yc~h~e~s~aiid~.i!ii!i#.~A&gt;Od~•~lo~rn~:~~cc~-A~~iiiiiiillil·~lllijl
fhmg well tonight."
24 points to lea d Temple. which
In a matchup of ranked teams won Its season opener for the 34th
at Las Vegas, Nev., Freddie consecutive year. Richard Mor'
Banks and-Gerald Pad~io eac h gan led VIrginia with 15 points.
hit 3-pomt shots In the !mal two
AtAnnArbor', Mich ., G!enRice
minutes to carry No.3 Nevada· and Garde ·Thompson scored 6
Las Vegas to a 92-87 victory over points ap iece in a 14·0 surge
No. 18 Arizona In another NIT opening the SE'COnd ha lf to spark
.
openin g-round game.
Michigan. Hersey Ha wkins Jed
Banks' 3-pointer with 2:09 Bradley wit h a career-best and
remaining gave the Rebels the game-hlgtr 37 points .
·
lead. 83-82, for the first time In
At Baton Rouge, La ., Ca rven
the second half .. After Arizona' s Holcome scored 20 points and
Cratg McMill an s free throw tied Texas Chr istian ran off a 19·0
the sco re 14 seconds later. Banks first-ha lf spurt after spotting
put the Rebels ahead for good, LSU a 15·4 lead. Anthony Wilso n
85-83, on a drive with 1:43 led LSU with 21 points but shol9
remain ing.
of 24 from the field. '
$228
Banks led all scorers with 27 ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;===m;u;c~a~~ut~t~
· r.~l~\~l'a~s~n~·t~g:o:ln~g~t~o~
12 ga. &amp; 16 Ga. S pk
point s, including 4 3- point
20 ga. &amp; 410 ga. · 5 PK. $214
baskets, followed by Armon
Gilliam with 24.
At Norman , Okla., Tim McCal·
Isler scored 44 point s to power
.
SINCE 1133
No. 7 Oklahoma to a 119· 110
victory over Brigham Young in
the NIT.
12 gauge $238
20 gauge and 410 gauge $224
McCalister s hot 16 of 32 from
446-!362
.
the field, including 5 of 6 from
SAUS:
3- point range, and contributed a
lnduatrial V-Belta
game-high 9 assists and 4 steals.
Bearings
Lawn Mower V·Btltl
.12
$3 19
20 gauge $319
Jeff Chatman led BYU with 26
Pump Seals
points.
Automotive V-Belts
Capacitors
SLUG SALES ENDS Nov: 26TH
In ot her NIT action, Temple
Elec1ric Motors
Bru,has
edged Virgi nia 79-75, Michiga n
OPEN TILL 8:00 P.M. FOR SPORTING GOODS
Fen Bladet
"
Couplings
topped Bradley 115·107 and
SALE STARTING NOY.24·DEC. 6
Fuset .
. Pulleys
Texas Chris tian dumped Louisi·

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SP 0 RTS ( 0 RNER
REMINGTON
Rl FLE ·SLUGS

HESTER AND
FEDEUL RIFLE SLUGS
BRENNEKE SLUGS

gau~e

place of Keith Milla rd who is
suffer in g fro m a knee inj ury .
Li nebac ker David How a rd will
start in place of Jesse Solomon.
Howa rd missed two games with
hyper-extended elbow.
Offensive left guard Da vid
Huffman will start In place
J im Hough . Hou gh has a pincheu
nerve In his neck and played
sparingly in the past two weeks.
AI left cor nerback, Dav id
Eva ns will start in place of Jsslac
Holt. who coaches said has been
playing inconsist ently.

Regulators

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RlmiCAL IEPAIIS:
Battery Chargers
Small Welders
Motor Control~;

Complete Line of Ammo-Guns
Hunting Clothing and Accessories

AIJO.OIIYE RIC. IIPA•:
Altematora
Starten
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101w. ·.

SH AD E ( 0 UNTRV

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE

Electric Motora
Water Pumps.
Aireatora

P"'"""Kon-.M
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STOP AT BAUM LUMBER
·AND VISIT

JIM BILL'S ·

.
'
*amer questionable starter today
~l

Nelson may star\
today for Steelers ·

in joining SEOAL

on to win. as the Bobcats
man aged only one shot from the
floor. J unior Chris Vogel led the
KCHS scoring attac"k with eight
points, followed by senior Rick
Hudson. junior Mike Bradbury
a nd Loveday with six each..
A free throw by J a nelle Jen·
kins with less than 30 seeonds
remaining. pushed the OHHS
girls squ ad to a 15·14 win over
Kyger Creek. The game was nip
and tuck , as the fir st period
ended in a 10- all tie. The second
period see-sawed throughou t
with Jenkin s' charity s hot mak·
ing the difference.
All of the Lady Bobcat scoring
was furnished by juniors Jill
Drummond, 10 points, and Ren-e e
Ward, four.
In the opening scr immage,
Southern' s girls team held on to
defeat Southwes tern's 25-24 .
Southern built a 12-7 advantage
in the first period and hung on to
edge the Lady· Highlanders who
were led by junior Vicky Ham mend 's 12 poi nts.
To close out the SVAC preview,
North Ga ll ia a nd Jjannan Trace
weretosquareoff Saturday night
in the KCHSgymnasium,as wer e .
Eas tern and Sy mmes Vall ey.

Baum Lumber985-3301 .

Troubleshoot Wiring

November23, 1986

November 23, 19aa··

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

CHESTER

S00 Down Will Buy ..... Your Choice

· PQmeroy-Middleport-GaHipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va.

·Jordan nets last 18 in Bulls '101-99 win
.

By IAN LOVE .
UPI Sports Writer
Michael J ordan, the centerpiece of Chicago ' s onedimensional\ offense, domin ated
the New Yorl\ Knlcks for the
second time this season. ·
Jordan. who had collec ted 50
point ~ against 'New ·York In
Chicago' s season opener, scored
his team's flnall8 points Friday
night to lead the Bulls to a 101-99
victory. Jordan 's 18· point streak
- an NBA record- Included the
game-winning_ basket wit h one
second left and Capped a 40-polnt
performance .
On his final basket, Jordan
dcove the length of the court and
fired a 20-foot jumper ·from thP
le(t corner over two ,New York
defenders to snap a 99-99 tie.
"You can't put three men on
him because. he'll pass to the
open man," Knlcks Coach Huble
Brown said. "He jumps over,
in!o, and splits the double team.
He's a superstar."
Said Knicks center Patrick
· Ewing: "There was nothing we
: coJJid do , especially on the last
shot. · We had two men on him.
\Vhat ·can I say?"
Jordan broke the recor d of 16
consecutive points set by Leon
Wood last January for the
Washington B~p ets . . Jordan
scored his first point s of the
fourt h quarter on a pair of free
throws with 6: 29 left to play to
pull Chicago even at 85-85.
With 13 seconds lett, Jordan
sank a four-footer to give the
Bulls a 99-97 lead. After New
York called a timeou t, Gerald
Wil klns drove Into the lane and
sank an 8-foot hook shot to tie the
score 99·99 with eight seconds
remai ning.
Jordan, following Coach Doug
Collins' advice, Immediately
took the In bounds pass and drove
to the left corner for h.is game·
winning shot .
" I was surprised we didn ' t call
timeout, but tha i's Doug's style,"
said Jordan, who added he
played with a painful right foot.
. "He sa id, 'Go to the hole.' Their
defense forced me to the left. I
felt open. I felt good."
Collins' strat egy on the final
play was to disorient the Kni cks
and get the ball to Jordan.
" I did not want them to get
organized defensively," Collins
' sa id. ") think they relaxed and
expected that we'd call timeout.
Bu t I went with the flow .
" It 's sort or nice to have a
nuclear weapon on the team ."
John Paxson contributed a
season-high 20 points lor the 6-3
Bulls. The Knlcks were led by
guard Rory Sparrow, who had 22
point s. Wilkins added 21 and
rookie Kenny Walker had 20.
: New York, 3-9, has won just one
of nine games on the road.
E lsew here, Washington topped
Houston 115·99, Boston beat
Golden State 135·120, Detroit
defeated Philadelphia 120-110,
Dall as dropped Phoenix 130-122
in overtime, the Los Angeles
Lakers dumped New J ersey
111·95 and Portland beat San

'

.

•

•

•

Weekend Specis/1
From

~im

Mink Chev.-Oids
'

1986 Chevrolet Celebrity Eurosport
Classic Black with Burgundy 60-40 CL interior.
Tilt, rallye wheels. AM-FM stereo and only 9,741
low miles.

Compare and Save

1985 Olds 98 Regency Brougham

It's ·a beauty! Light Burgundy finish with custom
Carmine clo.th interior. All the options you would
expect in the top of the line Olds.

SPECIALL1 PRICED AT

$1 0-,·900

1984 Chevrolet Caprice
'MCCORMICK DRIVES .:.. Philadelphia's Tim
McCormick drives past Detroit's Adrian Dantley

to score during Friday's NBA game In Philadel·
phia. The Pistons won, 120·110. (UPI)

This is a Classic sedan. Dark blue exterior with
contrasting 50-50 custom interior. Power seat,
power windows, power door locks, AM-FM, stereo
with cassette, wire wheel covers and full vinyl
roof. Locally owned.

We Sold It New! ·
Antonio 127· 114.
Bullets 115, Rockets 99
At Landover, Md., Moses Ma ·
lone scored 34 points and converted a team -record 20 free
throws. and Jeff Maione added 37
points. The Bullets outscored
Hou ston 33-19 In the third period.
Akeem Olajuwon had 17 points
a nd 7 rebounds lor the Rockets.
Celtlcs 135, Warriors 120
At Boston, Larry Bird scored a
game-hig h 32 points, Including 4
3-pointers, to hel'p K.C. Jones
post his 200th victory as Celtics
head coach.with
E ric 30
Floyd
pacedThe
the
Warriors
points.
Celtics wo n their 43rd consecutive game at Boston Garden.
Pistons 120, Sixers 110
At Philadelphia, lslah Thomas
and Adrian Dantley eac h scored
27 points for Detroit. Vinnie
Johnson scored 8 of his 25 points
in the third quar ter for the
Pistons. Tim McCormick led the
Sl•ers with 27 points.
Mavericks I38, Suns 122
At Phoenix, Rolando Black·
man scored 6 of his 31 points in
overtime for Da llas. Alva n
Adams sank a layup off a steal
With four seconds left to send the
game Into overtime. Mark Aguirre finished with 28 polqts and
Derek Harper 25 for the Mavei'j
leks. Walter Davis paced Pho·
e nix with 32 points.
Lakers Ill, Nets 95
At Inglewood, Cali!., James
Worthy scored 26 points to lift the
Lakers to their eighth straight
victory. The Lakers, 8- 1, are off

Warm Italy temperatures pose problem
SESTRIERE , Ital y !UPI\ Workers packed the one usable
slope and organizers sca nned the
skies for snow to rescue the ski
World Series which were sche·
duled to begin Saturday with a
women's slalom.
Warmer· than· normal No ·
vember temperatures have rendered nearly useles s the 450
snowmaklng cannons at thi s
resort near the French border,
a nd unless a cold snap comes,
giant slalom warmup events fQr
both men and women will have to ;
be canceled, officials said.
Enough coverin g for the
Alpette slalom run has been

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-Cir .

assured , but more snow is needed ·
to build the giant slalom run.
"We're hoping for a nice big
storm," Plero Abrate, member
of the organizing committ ee,
said Friday. " The forecast says
the weather could turn bad on
Sunday. "
Women's teams from up to
nine nations - including the
powerful Swiss a nd Austriansare scheduled for a s lalom
Saturday.
But lack of a giant slalom
means defending world cham·
pion Marla Walllser and Olympic
gold medalist teammate Michela
Flginl of Switzerland have not
come to Ses\flere.

to their best-ever s tart . Th e Nets,
playing without injured center
Darryl Dawkins lor the fifth .
straight game, lost their fifth in a
row to fall to a league-worst 2-9.
Blazers 127, Spurs 1U
At Portland, Ore., Clyde
Drexler a nd Klkl Vandeweghe
each scored 26 points for Portland. Drexler had 18 points in the
second hall. The Blazers hit 61 ·
percent of their field -goal at·
tempts, 48 of 80. Mychal Thomp·
son finished with 17 pOints and 9
rebounds for the Spurs .

BANKRUPTCY
614-221-0888
L. W. CENNAMO
ATTORNEY ·Al·LAW
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Only 18.302 miles on this coupe. Russet exterior
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Light Beige with Dark Brown cloth interior. Equip·
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Super· Stock wheels With raised letter tires.

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Roth dominates field in Friday event
GLENDALE HEIGHTS, Ill.
fUPJ) -Mark Roth continued to
dominate the field In the $200,000
Bru nswick Memorial World
Open Friday night, finishing 110
pins ahead of rookie Ryan Shafer
aft er the seventh round.

Roth. of Spring Lake Heights.
N.J ., finished with a 56- game
pin fall total of 12,832. He had to
win just one game In Satureday's
nationa lly televised finals to end
a 23- month victory drought and
win his 33rd career Professional
Bowlers Association title.

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�Page-c.&amp;-The Sunday Tmes-Sentinal

November Z3. 1986

Pomeroy-Middieport-Gallipolis. Ohio-POint Pleasant, W.Va. ·

SMU p~ident announce~ retirement Friday because of ill health
DALLAS tUPI) .- Southern
.Methodist University President
·· Donald Shields, who said he was
following his physician's advice,
announced his .retirement
Friday.

Shields, 50, who suffers frotn .
what a spokesman called adultonset diabetes, said he Is resign·
lng, effective Immediately. A
university spokesman said
Shields and his family plahf!ed to

'·

.-

return to their home In Southern probation, paid one pla~er
$25,000 to sign with the team In
California.
Shields recentiy returned from 19R3 and a fan provided anol~er
a month's medical leave to face · pla yer with a re nt -fr ee
fresh allegations the SMU foot- apartment.
.ball program, already on NCAA

New York Rangers ,win, 8-5

r~~~~~-~M~~--·~--~~-~---·····~·-··•···~··•··--~~1

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Pre-Christmas Hon~a Sale

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at:

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1
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WAS

-~
1987 'MODELS.
1
NOW NOW I

5750
I .TRX125 .· 51450
I TRX200SX S1750
TRX250 5~250,
I TRX350 53000

S898
Sl-598
S2098
S2658
S3398

TRX70 .
S949 S998 I
TRX200SX .S2069 S2198
TRX250 S2498/ S2698
TRX350 53298 5349. I
TRX350 53500 S3898 R

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SALE PRICES IN EFFECT THRU NOV. 29, 1986

1986 MODELS

J
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Cargo Nets
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Gun Racks
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Gunscabbords
Was 574.95/Now S54.95

•

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446-2468

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~---~-~---~MEMMM~--~~~---~----~-~----~~----~~--·J

CHESAPEAKE'S Gary Hensley (32) r&amp;C!es down court alter
teammate Mark Curry picked oil a rebound In Friday's Ohio
Valley Conlerence cage preview al South Polnt.ln background are
GAHS delenders Todd Miller (center) and Gary Harrison (rear) .
ens won, 41·34.

Padres for sale if buyer
will keep team in San Diego
SAN DIEGO (UPII - San
Diego Padres owner Joan Kroc
and her son-In-law. team President Ballard Smith. Friday announced in full-page newspaper
ads that the team was for sale to
someone who would keep the club
in San Dle~o .
An open let ter addressed to
"Padre Fans" was printed in the
San Diego Union and Tribune and
the Los Angeles Times San Diego
- County Edition. It stressed that
, . Kroc would take "every step
·: legally available to us to ass ure
• that the team will not be moved."
• • The announcement that a po• tenlial buyer would have to keep
: : the team in Southern California
: : .followed reports earlier this
••• week that negotiations were
: • • underway between Kroc and
-: Mafvln Davis. Dav'ts, a blllio·
nalre who has earned much of his
wealth in the oil and entertainment industries, recently shifted
: his opera tions to Los Angeles
:. fromOenver,aci ty thathasbeen
.· seeking a major league
franchise.
However, Kroc and Smith said
at a news conference Friday that
• there were no discussions under• way with anyone for the sale of
•
the .team and Dav is was not a
·factor.
"Marvin Davis has .never been
ln. contention," said Kroc, who
inherited the club · when her
husband, r.,cDonald's founder
Ray Kroc, died in 1984.
•
Davis reportedly was ready to
~ • buy the Padres for $50 million.
: • Smith and Kroc declined to say if
$50 million was the current
asking price.
Kroc and Smith stressed t~ey
were in no hurry to sell the
franchis e, which finis hed fourth
In the National League West.
ThJs ·is not a distress sale,··
Kroc said.
The club has suffered several
•

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SELLING OUT RECAPS
AT DEALER COST!
WE ACCEPT AU STATE Alii NAniiiAL M:COUNTS

OHIO VALLEY TIRE OUTLET
Rt. 2 South Gllllpolls, WV.

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·.·.u.-

·~

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-.

E-:3
.

.,,~.

HOUIS
Mon. thru Fri. a to I
Satwday a to II
Sunday 9 to S

"200" Club for the 1986-87 year. If
you are Interested in finding out
more about the Club or wish to
join, please contact myself, Bill
Todd, vice president. or Janie
Lane, secretary. The cut-off date

for membership this year Is Jan.
1 1987. :'
i Indivjduals Interested In be·
coming a GAHS Athletic Booster
may do so by contacting any of ·
the above people.

College scores
FrldQ' II ColleJl' Ba.o;ktttJ.\1.11
Bohcllol fi-le Tournamt"nl
Froslhur1 St. 71. Fre don!~ 6.1
( 'r.dl\ntUit• lnv ii.U knu&amp;l

Vlt'!ltern Ontlli'kll\0, f ln Blhll' 64
fe dunUit• 10,., Concordia (Mil'h . 11t

MCCA.C

fourth goal just past the game's
lflldpoint, and the tactic proved
effe,ctlve.
·
"Wow, he was hot," Esposito
said of Skriko. "I told Jan Erixon
to follow him around - I put up
with It for 16 years- and see how
he (Skrlko) likes it. He (Skriko)
stopped. "
And McKegney started.
McKegney made it 4-1at 2:32 of
the second, and Walt Poddubny·
followed with a power-play goal
at 8:04. On the play, Vancouver
goalie Richard Brodeur suffered
ligament damage in his knee
after a collision near the goal,
and Wendell Young too k over.
After Skrlko scored his fourth
goal of the game, on the power
play at 10:10, McKegney replied
with a pair of goals.,... a112: 56 and
16:21 - to bring the Rangers
within 5·4. New York-scored four
. more goals in the thir d period.
Mike Ridley tied the score 5-5 at
2:01, then McKegney made it 6-5
at 11:41.
"The guys were nervous early,
but we never gave up," said
McKegney, who has nine goals
this season. "ft was good to get a
win tonight and may.be this can
be a starling point."
Esposito, who had a shor t stint
as a Rangers' assis tant coach
under Fred Shero ID 1981, said he
will annouce a new head coach as
soon as possible.

In other action, . Hartford
blanked St. Louis 4'0, . Quebec
. ripped Buffalo 6-1, Detroit lied
Washington 3-3, and Los Angeles
downed Winnipeg 4-1.
Whalers 4, Blues 0
At Hartford, Conn.. Stewart
Gavin and Kevi n Dineen scored
power-play goals and Mike Liut
stopped 22 shots to record his 14th
career shutout, snapping St.
Louis ' · five -game unbea te n·
streak.
Nordiques 6, Sabres I
AI Buffalo, N.Y., MicHel
Goulet scored a hat trick and
Dale Hunter added two goals to
lead the · Nordlques . Gou let
scored on the power play atl9: 03
of ·the second period to give
Quebec a 3-1 lead and struck
again In the first minute ·of the
third period.
Capitals 3, Red Wings 3
At Detroit , John Ogrodnick and
Gerard Gallant scored third·
period goals to rally the Red
Wings. Bobby Carpenter had
scored twice in the first period
for the Capitals. The tie ended a
three-ga me losing streak for the
Capitals, who are winless in their
last six games.
Kin gs 4, J ets 1
At Wi nn ipeg, Manitoba, Morris
Lukowich scored two goals t{)
ignite Los Angeles' four-goal
third period and help snap the
Jets' four -game win ning sfreak.

'

Tournam~t

FIL'Ihlon fn_ll(. 101, Nl' Teda. Col. 101
MI. St. M ~ary'!'i Lltllli fluh Toornev
F lr.d Round

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W. Va . Trch 77. Gtct)'sllurJ ;\II
MI. St . ,, bl')''li II. f." '· PoM K3
s.-w Jrn.ey Tt&gt;r h 'npoff

Fl1'!41 Round
Rohert~ "'e~~leyun

'7!il, N,J . T('th 7M

FDU-Mudl:oon 71. ffN\'

~I

f"r(!!o!l'a'IOn NIT
•
FirM Round
Mkhl~~;.-. 11 5. Br aullt·y ur.
" 'I'Sif'l'rto K.t.•lad,V M. Nottt' Dumt•6:1

Vlll111ova 71, Ha.o·ltfd UAh· ('n.it~· Rl

,TI'mplr 7'9,

Vlr~nla

1$

TI'AWI f hrllillllf!ll3. Lou'-l1111 a. St 71
Oklllholtl ll. 118, Brtkfi~Yn Voun• 110
Nrvada-W \'co~~;.- 12. ,\ri!ontt K7

Ohio " 'eN iti'an
Tt urllmu•nl

Klw~M~I"

J\drl1111 (Mh;h) lit MarltUU f~
Rorll' &lt;'lty r l.,,.k
W•lllll'1'111, Rho&amp;• lsl1111d 1:t.
Dn'"' 14, SI!"Vt&gt;nll Tech 31
\\'I'Sl et n Muryi~W~d
11porl Tournunl'nl
Fln~t Round
\\'I'Sttrn M11ryi1U1I *1. S"·art hmort&gt; 16
1'1111. l"h ' miM.,. 7'1, St. M11ry 's fol. 60
Othrr Sco rf'll
,\!fred M-1 , H untl!l' llt

,\nn ll Mar\11 d, &amp;ffolk U. 83
fllll' k,IH . Nlchclbi 7-1
Gt•tU'!&gt;fO 102. H11 rt..- kil &amp;6 12 OT\
H~M~Khf.on 71, l 'on('!ttOA:II 511
llhuclltK. Blurflf'ld 11
IA&gt;hmu.n 11, S to~ Brook I I
Mt"!40U rl '71'. 1\lrkl.~h Nut'l Tt&gt;um &amp;a

CRADLES PUCK - Hartford Whaler goalie Mille Llut cradl es
puck between his knees on a Rick Meagher shof in Friday's 4-0
victory over the St. Louis Blues. Lurking for rebound is (18) Pat
Hughes-and Meagher (22). (UP1)

r;:::::;:====================:;l

SEARS
'

NOW GET

3• 9

~

OA .
AP~INANCING

...

SAVE

35%-40%

~~t~~;!~~~:.

RoadHandler 45

Club was formed
belted
years ago by 1he GAHS
Athletic Boosters.
,
radial tire
~ It consists of two hundred (200)
people paying $50 per year for
memberships. The memberships
PISS/
entitles a person has to particiI 80RI3
pate in' events at fi ve (51 home
FA72903
~ot ball gaines, ten oql home
Limited wearout warranly
'tlasketball games, and five ( 5)
for 45,000 miles. Aggres·
track meets. They do not need to
sive, all season traction!
be present to claim awards.
.:' At the end of the "200" Club
'Year, a member Is invited to
attend a free steak dinner. The
AOAO~ANDLEA 41
CATALOG REO. IALE
member Is also eligible to win
SIZE
NUMIEA PAICf PRICE
'·
awards throughout the
P15580At3 72903
67.99 . 39.99
eyenlng. Prize winners from this
P195 75A14 72909
97.99 11.99
LIMITED nRE WEAROUT WARRANTY
P205 75At4 79210 104.99 66.99
- •.rca • 's dinner were:
FOR MtLEI SPECIFIED.
P225 75At5 72916 I17 99 73.99
SH store lo r details.
Four - $50 Gilt Certificates
P235 75Rt5 72917 I19.99 74 .9!
. from Dean Barry's Advanced
Cle.anh1g Service,. (Judy Clar k,
~tty
Lin Young, &amp; Bi\1
Tbdd).
.
.
Five- $100 Savings Bond from
the Ohio Valley Bank, (C ha rlotte
Seamon, Becky &amp; Ron Atklnson,
David Tawney, &amp; John Hood!.
.one - $250 Gift Certificate
from Bob Saunders Quaker State
Service Center, (P a nzo
BastlaiiH .
One - $250 Gift Certificate
fr.o m Bernad'Jne' s, (La nce
Clifford).
One - $250 Gift Certificate
from Paul Davies Jewelers, (Bob
auto bltttry
Donnally).
One - $500 Cl!t Certificate
wt,9 FA4301 SR43003
from Tope's Furniture Gallery, n.-~::::;;;;..
(Larry Lee 1.
,.
$123.50 ~ Jack Payton, oneWE SERVICE WHAT W~: SELL
""" half door prlze-lype award.
P•icn aro
prlcoa now ovaltabloln our "FA", "NV' ond "WN" caraJooo

steel

99
39

IIOUIID 110111

'NIIl XP CIIINid

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•

GALLIPOLIS - The GAHS
Athleiic Boosters, during their
regular weekly meeting last
week, approved • a. motion to
share · hail the cost with the
athletic department for the pu rchaso:&gt; of a new ice machine for
Gallia Academy athletes.
: In other matters, according to
Newt .Jones, pres ident, the club
voted to sell donations for a
fund-raiser this yea r at the home
basketball g11mes Instead of what
t!ley have done In previous years.
Jones asked for volunteers to
work junior varsity and the
va rsity games. Anyone wishing
o volunteer their services should
oontact Jones.
~Jones told members the "200"
~lub dinner was well attended
tills year. Anyone wishing to join
the "200" Club for the calendar
year 1986-1987 may do so by
contacting Jones, Bill Todd or
~~ nle Lane.
·
~ The club voted to have Its
Meetings during the winter
months on the second and fourth
Tuesdays, beginning Janua ry 13
It was also pointed out membershit&gt;s are available for the

Pll:slll'

sasoo

I
.
West Virginia has a thriving and counties con tai nin g nationa l
expanding deer herd which no forest land OF public hunting
doubt lures a lot of hunters In her areas are: Randolph, Greenb·
dir ection. High powered rifles rier , Pocahontas, Preston,
are permitted which adds a little · Hardy and Hampshire.
License . cost fo r the· nonmore app~al to a West VIrginia
hunt. The mountain scenery and resident ih West Virginia are $50.
atmosphere are also calling This ll~en se entitles the holder to
two deer, one with gun and one
cards to the non-resident. ·
There are thousands of acres of with bow or muzzleloader , two
National Forest land within the wlld turkeys and small ga me
Wesr Virginia borders. Most of hunting. An additional deer tag
this public land lies along the can be purchased for $25. This
mountainous eastern border and may be the year to hunt W.Va. as
runs on up into the northern next year the non-resident 11section of the state. Most of this ~en se will cost $80.
I look forward to the few
land has fairly easy access and is
managed for wildife. There Is a precious days each year I can
$1 National Fores t stamp r,e· spend hunting In the West Virgiqulred to hunt on the forest nia mountains. Some years my
property in addition to the luck has' been good, some years
not so good. But regardless,
regular license.
Some of the more popular 'them thar hills' appeal to me .

'

FREEl

"""'

By Tom B.!ivllle
Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - The West
Virginia 1986 deer gun season
begins Monday, Nov. 24 and
continues for two weeks. With
proper . weather conditions a
recor d harvest s·hould be
recorded.
The two week gun harvest of
••u,•&gt;o in 1985 was 11,618less than
previous year. Bad weather
in the mountain state, steady
r~lns for, the first three days of
the season and severe flooding a
couple of weeks prior to the
season was responsible for the
low harvest . Also one popular
~ .c:oUinty was closed completely.
· Many non-residents, Including
a fa ir share of Ohioans take to the
West Virginia mountains each
.. ~e~r to pursue whitetail deer.

AFTER

tco..,totoly IMtallodl FIOM S11 0

goals. Keenan also had 3 hat-tricks. Also
contributing In! scoring were Eric Thornton 9,
Scott Blevins 3, Shannon GUllam 8, Mike Wright 2,
Tony Jamora 4, Dax Hllll, Jamey Black 1, Barry
Call 1; and Brady Johnson 1.
·
' •

West Virginia deer season
scheduled to begin Monday

RElATE

PICKUP TRUCK
BED COVERS

675•5332

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OUR WIMCI .......... , . , . . . , ......... 1.H
lliAIIAtt "'MTI ............... . . ..... , . . .. 1.10

1637 EASTEIN AYE.
GAILIPOUS, 01110 45631
IINSTAiliDJ

~

Wildlife notes

AUTO TRIM
CENTER
BOAT COVERS

'

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPl Sports Writer
With a four-goal outburst In the
. final two periods Friday night,
Tony McKegney vindicated Phil
Esposito on two accounts.
Esposito, the New York
Rangers' general manager , fired
Coach Ted Sat or Friday morning
and, by 1:.59 of the second period
at Vancouver that n[ght, was
trailing the Canucks 4-0 In his
interim- coaching debut.
McKegney, recently obtained
by Esposito from the Minnesota
Nort,h Stars for Bob Brooke, a
fa vorite of Sa tor and one of the .
team's highest scorers last year,
incited New York to an 8- 5
victory.
" It ·wasn't pretty," said Esposito, who expressed distress over
Sa tor's firing. " Ted told me these
guys never stopped working.
They just were no t executing ln
spots. We wouldn't let them
quit."
McKegney's five-point output
overshadowed a four-goal performance by Vancouver's Petri
Skrlko. Esposito changed his
strategy, ass igning Jan Erixon to
shadow Skrlko, who scored his

Boosters ·to help buy ice machine;
200 · Club memberships . available

IUY 3 TIRES
GO THE 4th ONE

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• SUPER FLUSH
•SUPER SEALER

aU·weather lractioa.
steel belted radial.

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Pleslll·

off-the-field dis tractions, including pitcher LaMarr Hoyt's arrest
for smuggling pills across the
Mexica n border, the sudden
resignation of Manager Dick
Williams on the eve of spring
training, and the suspension of
reliever Goose Gossage for publicly criticizing Kroc and Smith.
"We both love the game of
baseball, but we think Ills ti me to ·
let someone else take over the
stewardship of this fr anchise,"
said Smith.
Smith said that the plan to sell
the club would not affect the
current operations of the team.
He said the Padres would continue to make personnel decisions, including determining' the
fate of Hoyt, who faces a jail term
of at least 60 days on the
mis.demcanor drug charges.

[ OVCS SOC¢ER TEAM - The Ohio Valley
Christian Schoo) soccer team llnlshed Its regular
-season wltb~an 8-6 record. The team complied an
'average ot;·zs shots and 3 goals per game while
;allowlng the opposition only 2 goals· per game.
Team scorlnK was led by John Keenan with 18

I
II

Gloves
Wallets
New Shipment of Long &amp; I
Short Sleeve Shirts.
"'

I .

,.,

I
I

(foreman)

FouaTRAX 0 250

The Sunday Times- Sentjnei - Pa~-C- 7 .

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-PointPieasant, W.Va .

49

40 OIFFIRINT IIUIH!I TO H£LP
YOU 00-lf.I'OUIISELF AND SAVE!

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PH. 446-9335 ·
DAVE MICHAEL
MANAGEI

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ON SELECTED MODELS ••• NOW'S THE TIME
TO BUY - WHY WAIT

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A WINNING TEAM···

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MIKE
NORTHUP

CARROLL
NORRIS

TOMMY
SPRAGUE

LARRY
PIERCE

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BUSINESS.
. OUR QUALITY WAY OF DOING
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CARROLL NORRIS

Installation txtl'l • Ask aboU1 Sears credit plans.

; : ~~~er:OOcl~~ub~g;~:t a~~~~~
~;::;;::-:::;;;::;;:;---:1
::=- maker. Sixty percent of the
SilVER BRIDGE
::;.members hip money Is donated to
PlAIA
~ athletess at GAHS (both boys
446-27.70
arid girls programs) .
At present time, there are a - -, _ , .,,..,.., '""'"- Celebrating Our New Century
limllect number or openings In the L:"':.:,..::
·'"':_:":":-·:.•:'"~..,::::;":..:"':!':""::',:m:-~•:!ooc::==,•_...:;tSNro~~-!"•~·~b,~oc·~-~~co:··,!;'"'~...J

.I
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YOUR pODGE DEALER
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.t46-0142

300 THIRD AVE.

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The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio~ Point

November

Pleasant, W. Va.

.

Hartley advances; St. Clairsville · ousted ~~
.

.
M""'hh1~un

NFL Standings

f hh ·u~•

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lin,·n Ru_\' at ( ' hie-a~• . 1 p. m.
lndhll'lapHIJ,. tU Hou~tun. 1 p.m.
Rulfalu lC :'lrli ·~ t:nglill'llf. I p.m.
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S\' Riln~·n. It, \ 'wH,ItiH'r 3
SWur~'s Gamt"'
Hurtfrwd at Sl' 1-larukors, ~:t~ p.m .
St . Louis iU I(Mon, 7: II~ r.m .
Tnrnnlo at Phllltdt'lphlll. 7::J$ p.m.
r.u~t..rlh Ill \\'a-;hln~on. i::l.' p.m .
Hulfalolll Qu!'hr(-. 7:35 p.m.
\T H:l•.ll'l'l'i 1U f:tl,~;w,• . lt:Oli p. m .
Df'tntll !II Mo!Mrt'al, li:B.l p. m.
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l'&gt;Ot•w ,Jt•rst') ul ,\llnni'S(l( !l, lt : ~l p.m .

Rla s k!&gt;thall
Gnldl'n Sl:llolt' - r\t·11\' alt•d fnn.·ilrd ltjrn
1\Jd),.nald; pl•·•od forward Pun·ko,: Shnrt

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Rf'~ fill{.,.; n.&amp;rnl'd Pbll E~pu..Ml•lnh•rlm

t'!l;k•h.

Prep scores
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Quarter back Mike Denallo
scored on a one-yard keeper with
25 seconds left to give Kens ton a ·
22-21 win over St. Clairsville in a
Division III semifinal · Friday
night. Kenston will go into ·the
final s next week against the
Cincinn ati Academy of Physical
Education, a 21-8 victor over
Fostoria .
Semifinals in the other three
divisions will be played tonightLakewood St. Edward against
Austintown-Fitch and Fairfield
agai nst Worthington in Division
I; Willoughby South against
North Ca nton Hoover and Woos-

with a minute left fell short.
· Denallo's winning touchdown
capped an 82-yarq dr ive that
-began · alter St. Clairsville had
been stopped on downs lor the
s~cpnd time in the fourth period.
The other time, St. Clairsville's
drive stalled on the Kens ton 1The winning d~lve started with
a 69-yard pass from Denallo to
flanker Anthony Reha.
Kenston · had soored three

touchdowns in the second quar-'
ter to take a 21-10 halftime lead.
But Kenston opened the second
half with a 78-yard march,
cappt!d by fullback Ken McCllntack's one-yard touchdown. He
scored another one- yard
touchdown. ·
· St. Clairsville's halfback John
Sp'encer was the game's leading
rusher with 108 yards in 19
carries.
·

.
MIAMI !UPil -Authorities pian to send Billy
Milligan, a man with 24 diagnosed personalities ,
back to Ol]io where heesca ped from a psy~hiatric
hospital July 4.
Acting on information from unidentified tlps' ters, .FBI agents arrested Milligan, ~1, at a hotel
bar on Key Biscayne Thursday night as he met
ll(ith' a ·Iawyer from an Ohio public defender's.
. .
.
o(fice. ·
Milligan. who was acquitted of rape, robbery
· and. kidnap charges because of Insanity at ·
Columbus, Ohio, in 1978, was arraigned before a
federal magistrate Friday on a charge of unlawful
flight to avoid confinement.
U.S. Magistrate Patricia Kyle appointed a
public defender for him and ordered him he ld
without bond at the Metro-Dade Cou nty Correc·

LYNE CENTER SCHEDULE
D~TE~YMNASIUM

Week of November 28, 1988

POOL
Nov. 23-12·2 .p.m. Open Rl'c ........ .. ................ .. ......... ..... ....... 12·2 p.rri. Opf'n Swim

&amp;8 p.m. Colleae fu&gt;c ................................ .... .. ....... S.S p.m. Collcgfo Swim
Nov. 24-6:00 p.m. RedwomPn \'.~.W . Va . Stall' ..................................... ........ Ciosed
Nov. 25-7:30 p.m. Redmf'n vs. Cincinn ati Blbl£' ....... ;.................................. ClosE'()

~g: i~~~~l~ . : : .:::: : : :·.
Nov .

30-6·~

,\kron
:n..'it.'' 'fhllrJO''
illl' 21
AI Da)'lon

fin r ,\PE '!1. FO!Olnrlalt
Dlvl~lo•l\'

i\1 Rrrt•ll
Gall'll Hill~ Hak'l''t'fl ~
,\a ('ohlnlllll ...

:\laq{ur•~la 10,

C'ol H11rtlt')' ~. \-'t•no:tllll"' ~

CLEVELAND (UPI) -Brian
Doyle will resign as head soccer
coach at Cleveland State University at the· end of the school year,
school officia ls announced
Friday.
Doyle has coqched the team for
five seaspns, compiling a 52- 32·10
re.cord. This year's team finished
12-6-1 and won the championship
of the Association of MidContinent Universities .
Doyle, who was named the
AMCU's coach of the year, cited
personal reasons for leaving.
"This is a move I have been
contemplating lor some time."
he said . " I made up my mind at
the beginning of the season that
this would be my last year here.
It was a difficult choice. I'm
leav ing a very promis ing young
team, which is losing only two
seniors. but I feel it's time for me
to move on to so mething else."
Ath i eti~ Direct.or Robert Busbey said he accepted the resignation wlth regret .
"We're sorry to lose Brian,"
Bus bey said. "He's a fine young
coach and we wish him well hi
whatever he decides to do."

: : . :· .:. .:...:.Ji~l3i

•NOTE: Pool Is closed for malnl enance and will not bf' opf'n u~lll January 5. 1~7 . ..

'

NEW
LOCATION
1818 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS

446-1113
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Dayton Blue-Ribbon IV
These added features:
•40,000 Mile Warranty
•SOOfo Workmanship Material
Warrcmty !Ask For Details)

1'986

Hazard •Top of the Line
•Safety Valves
•Lifetime of Tire Rotation
•Bonus Discount Certificate '
•Whitewall •Computer Balan\e

'Rivieras
•

The All Season Tread Design for
Added Tractionin Summer and Winter:

.

tiona! Center until Dec. I when he will be removed
to Ohio to face charges.
Following hfs escape July 4 from the Central
Ohio Psychi~tric Hospital in Columbus. Milligan
left a message on the telephone answering
mac~lne of Daniel Keyes, aut hor of " The Minds of
Billy Milli[lan," saying he would ne ver return to
Ohio.
"He said he left because he fea red lor his
safety." 'said Keyes, an English professor at Ohio
University In Athens.
·During Milligan's 1978 .trial, a psyc ho analyst
testified that he suffered from a rare disorder in
which he assumed up to 24 different personalities.
Those personalities included a 3-year-old
dyslexic girl, an escape artlsi who speaks
Serbo-Croauan and an Englishman who reads

By HELEN THOMAS ·
UPI White House Reporter
. WASHINGTON (UP!) -Presidenl Reagan, pushed by con. gressional leaders to admit he
, "goofed' ' by selling arms to Iran,
escaped to Iils Camp David
presidential retreat for the weekend showin g no inclin atio n he
would accept such advice.
His top aides, meanwhile, are
fighting among themselv es
about whose idea the secret
operation was, who among the
tight circle of officials was in the
know, and who was locked out
because of opposition , to. the
program.
· "I hear a lot of statements '
coming from people who are
apparently involved .· sort of
polnling the finger of bl ame a t
one another. I don't believe that
to be helpful," Senate Republi·
can leader Robert Dole of Kansas
said Friday after meeting wlth.
Reagan and Senate Democratic ·
leader Robert Byrd of West
Virginia .
" I think It's about time to stop
the lntraparty bickering here,"
Dole told reporters. "I think the
president has (to end It)."
'Byrd- agreeir, saying, "This
situation is really creating a
o~eeplng paralysis that is going
tp continue to sap the ·energies
and time of the administration ,
and the credibility of the nation is :

'I

•Driven only by Buick officials.
•Built in June Clnd July
•Loaded with options
•3,000 to 5,000 miles
•Factory Warranty

HE'S IN CHARGE- Sen. Robert Dole, R-Kan.,
enjoyed himself Friday as h'e laughingly pointed
to Sen. Robert Byrd, D·W.Va., to tell reporters to
at stake .
" I think the sooner the president acts quickly and decisively
to put this th ing behind us, tthe
better)," he said. "Say we made
a mistake, we goofed, we want to
clean it up, let's get on with the
business of the nation."
Reagan gave no signal, however, of willingness to back down
· from his stance ·in li nationally
televised speech and sub~eq u en t
news conference th at he firmly
believes In the "correctness" of
his 'decisions in the matter.
Reagan has defended the 18

CINCINNATI (UPI)- Ohio law prohibits the
removal of jurors due to processing errors dur.lng
thei r selection. prosecutors in the trial of three
former Home State Savings Bank officials
contend.
Defense lawyers had llled a motion askin g
Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Richard
Niehaus to throw out a group of 400 potential
jurors and restart the jury selection process from
scratch. They argued that state laws and court
rules were violated lhe potential jurors were
processed for the trial.
: "The defendants are clutching at straws when

S17 ,900 to S18,500
ACCORDING TO MILEAGE

4 to Choose From.

$19,900
WITH SUN ROOFS &amp; LEATHER INTERIOR
•

'

3 to Choose From

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HEAVY DUTY
GAS CHARGED

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FREEZE

$.)99

talk to Byrd because Byrd wlll be the new Senate
majority leader. The pair had just completed
their meeting with President Reagan in the Oval
Office at the While House. (UP!)

months of clandestine overtures
and arms deal s as an attempt to
improve relal ions with moderate
elements in Iran while seeking
the release of Americans held
hostage by pro-Iranian captors in
Lebanon.
But th~ appearance of an
arms-lor-hostages deal has be·
come a majo r foreign policy and
credibility ctlsis for Reagan and with congressional intelligence committees unsatisfied
Friday after a briefing by CIA
Director William Casey, it could
continue unreso lved. New hear,.

they attack the procedure used by the deputy jury
commissioner," Special Prosecutor Lawrence
Kane responded in hi s brief fli ed Friday.
Kane said Ohio law states that no pool of jurors
can be set aside beca use of relatively "unimportant" selection procedures.
Niehaus scheduled a hearing on the mat ter for
Tuesday.
Marvin Warn er , former owner of Home Sta le.
and ex-bank president s David Schiebel a nd
Burton Bongard are s tanding trial on charges of
Illegally funnelin g millions of Home State dollars
to ESM Government Securities of Fort Lau der-

POLAND (UPI) -A woman who initially told authorities s he
found an abandoned baby in her car was identified Friday as the
newborn's mother.
Liza Eisenbraun , 20, of the Youngstown suburb of Poland, told
pollee officers Wednesday that she found the baby girl on the
front seat of her car when she went to get a pack of cigarettes .
Authorities originally indicated that another woman came to
a Youngstown hospital later in the day to claim the child, but
they said Friday it was Eisenbraun who admitted giving birth to
the live-pound, 10-ounce infant .
Poland Township pollee officer Tom Johnson said Eisenbraun
apparently gave birth to the child Wednesday morning and
placed the baby in her car while her stepmother and falher were
at work.

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his room shortly alter he checked in to ask for a
meeting.
Dana said they agreed to meet in the hotel bar,
but agents arrested Milligan just after the two sat .
down.
"
"I haven't known where Billy was," Dana said.
"I did not know he was down here."
Dana said he spoke wfth Milligan "two or thr~
times in the last six or eight we.e ks" and was
trying to make arrangements for Milligan's
·
surrender.
Milligan's various personalities were diagnosed by Dr. Cornelia Wilbur of Lexington, Ky ..
the psychoanalyst who fused the 16 personallti~
of a patient known as Sybil , later the subject of a&gt;
hook and television play.
:

lngs are scheduled to begin
Monday.
White Hou se spokesman Larry
Speakes refused comment Friday on the int ernal adminlstra·
tive divisions. but the White
Hou se was beset with leaks from
the president's bickering team
players.
·
White House chief of s taff
Donald Regan has criticized
Robert . McFarlane, the former
national security adviser who
was the operat ion's key U.S.
middleman, for giving the president " lousy advice."

By United Press International
The 24 personalities of Billy
Milligan, according to Daniel
Keyes, author of the 1981 book
"The Minds of Billy Milligan ":
-William "Billy" Stanley Mil ligan: The core personality. Billy
was unaware of the others inside
him and therefore cou Id. not
account lor their actions.
-Arthur, 22: Upper-cla ss
Briton, leader in non-physical
situations; rational, unemo tional, reads and writes fluent
Arabic.
-Ragen Vadascovinich. 23:
"The Keeper of Rage"; Yugosla vian martial arts expert , the only
personality allowed to handle
guns; dominates in dangerous
situations; robs when money is
needed but denied sex crimes .
-Tommy , 16: Anti-s ocial , sarcastic, an escape ar.tlst.
-Allen, 18: The oon man; often
called on to deal with outsiders.
The only personality who smokes
and the only one who is righthanded; IQ of120.
-David, 8: Frightened, "t he
keeper of pain"; IQ of 69.
~Danny, 14 : ·shy, fine artist,
bu t does · only still Illes; especially afraid of men.
-C hristen e, 3: Bright Englis h
girl but dy slexic; a favorite of
Ragen .
-Christopher. 13: Chrlstene's
brother; good kid but upset .
-Adalana, 19: Lesbian, admit ted to rapes, saying she was
desperate to be loved; only
personality that can "wish"
herself Into control of a situation.
overriding the others.
The fo llowing personalities are

A jlthorities move sickly suspect
TOLEDO (UP I) - The prospect that the "Super Gl'ue Bandit "
will never go to trial because of an Incapacitating stroke has
prompted authorities to move him a federal medical center in
.
Missouri.
Federal marshals accompanied Wendall Hall from the
Medical College of Ohio in Toledo to Springfield, Mo .. Friday
where he will serve a 20oyear prison sentence.
Hall has been In a coma since Nov. 8. He suffered a \!Ouble
stroke In the Ottawa County jail while awaiting trial lor
aggravated robbery.
The stroke Incapacitated hoth sides of his body .
He was to be tried lor the May 3, 1985, robbery of the American
Automobile Association office. The nickname "Super Glue
• · Bandit" was given to the suspect alter he ,ordered clerks to
spread glue on thl!lr hands and p\ace them on the floor while he
' escaped.
·
'
Hall, 31, was convicted on federal charges this year for the
May 7, 1985, robbery of the Port Clinton Sal)lngs and Loan. ·
Ottawa County authorities filed a motion to dismiss robbery
charges because his medical oondltlon prevents him from
standing trial.'
Deput,les found Hall unconscious on the tloor of his cell around
6 a.m. Nov. 8. Officials said Hall's brain did not receiweenough
oxygen after his blood pressure dropped. An amount of codeine
greater than that prescrlbtld lor him was found In hls blood, but
officials denied a drug overdose caused the strq_ke.
•

.·

•

..

called the "undesirables" and· ·
were silenced by Arthur because: ,
they were considered dangerous, :
disobendient or because their
talen ts no longer were needed.:
However, they sometimes sur-· ·
laced during periods of great: :
confusion.
-Kevin, 20: Small-time '·
criminal.
-Philip, 20: Thug, drug addict ;
and liar with a heavy Brooklyn ·
accent.
:
-Mark. 16: the workhorse:
handles manual labor.
:
-Steve, 21: Daring race-car
driver. "The hell-raiser, the· ·
perpetual Imposter ." Banished . ·
because his unflattering imper- •
sonations were making too many· .
enemies in jail.
;
-Samuel, 18: Jewish, like his ·
natural. father, eats only kosher :
food: the only one who bel !eves in : ;
God.
::
-Walter. 22: Australia n; ban-. ·
ished for taking one of Ragen's :
guns and shooting a crow fQr ·
sport.
'
-Lee, 20: Banished because of · ·
his practical jokes and lack o( ;
useful characteristics.·
::
-April, 19: "The Bitch": Bos- · :
ton accent. is obsessed by •
thoughts of killing Milli gan's ;
father with a blowtorch ; the
others say she Is insane.
-Jason, 13: "The Pressure · :
Valve"; Throws temper tan- ·
trums to release stress.
-Shawn, 4: Peaf, short atten- ...
tion span.
-Timothy. 15: Loves flowers,
worked in a flower shop where he
was accosted by a homosexuaL

Warner attorneys seek renewal of tri~f' s jury selection

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and writes flu ent Arabic.
·,
Miami FBI spokesman Paul Miller said FBI
agents acted on a tip to determine that Milligan
had come to southern Florida in the las't few days
from the state of Washington.
He said Mllligan. described by doctors as a
victim of an abusive father who molested him
sexually as a child and buried him alive, had been
tile subject of an "extensive search" coordinated
by. the FBI in Columbus.
With Milligan a t the time of his arrest was Ohio
public defender Randall Dana, Miller said. He
said the U.S. at torney's office h1 Columbu s would
determine if charges were warranted again st
Dana.
Dana arrived in Miami Thursday to attend a
law conference. He told ag('nts Milligan phoned

The many faces
of Billy Milligan

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November 23; 19&amp;6-

.

Reagan
hears
:leaders'
.advice

p.m. ColleJ;!:f' Rf'c . .............. ... .:.. .................. ...................... ,...... Ciosro ~ ·

TOM'S

·,

Florida aUthorities to retum Milligan to Ohio

~

'

ter al'airist Cincinnati Purcell
Marian in Division II and MOga·
dare against Ayersville and
·Newark Catholic against St.
Henry in Division V.
Davls, a 6-1, 217-pound senior,
scored on runs of 4, 1. 25 and 20
ya rds . His one-yarder, set up by
his 67-yard run, came with 1: 13
left tq give. Hartley all-2record.
· Aaron Moran rushed for 33
yards and caught six passes for
144 yards and one touchdown for
Versailles which ended the sea·
son at 12·1.
Ambon had scored Margaret ta's touchdown on a 27-yard pass
from Mike Coukart. Otis McDuffie scored Hawken's touchdown
on a two-yard run and Hawken
went up on a two- point
oonyersion.
McDuffie attempted to win the
game, but his 33-yard field goal

Cleveland
State soccer
coach quits

Transarlions

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l 'ampht•ll ('onfl'ft'nw

\\' L T

Eric Davis has established
himself as a marked man going
into the finals of the Ohio High
School football playoffs .
The Columbus Hartley running
back has scored ail liis team's
tou chdowns in the playoffs. includ ing four Friday night In the
· 25-20 win over previously unde:
featrd Versailles in a Division IV
semifinal. That puts Hartley,
ll -2, in the finals ne~t week
agai nst castalia Margaretta, a
10·8 winner over Gates Mills
Hawken.

PW.rkk 01\t..lon

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ltll .

J,,\ l.:t lit•N Ill . \t•~t ·lt•l'lor,\' :t:i
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"'"''

By United PreS. International

Ualllf! tNI, l'hut'llb. It!

\RH'f lt•afl ( ' nnfo,. t"ftW

~

.

~imu·itntinttSection D

State/ ational

1986'

..

dale. Fl a .. which went bankrupt and triggered
Ohio savings and loaQ crisis in 1985.
Hom e Stat e lost at least $144 million when ESM
co llapsed. It also led to lhe tem porary closure of
iO stat e-chartered savings and loans In the spring
of 1985.
Jury selection fo r the trial entered its lith day
F riday. but th e pool of potential jurors remained
stu ck at 11. Two were tentatively passed Friday,
bul bot.h the defens e and prosecutors used one
preemptory c hallenge to exc use jurors pr ev iously
acc~pt ed .

Kan~

sa id he thinks it is possible a jury co uld be

assignment lakes effect.
" I welcomp the opportunity to oversee the intelligence
activ,ities of our government, particul arly a t this lim e when
there is so much public concern about the private conduct of our
foreign policy, " Metzenbaum said Friday .
Aides said Democratic Leader ·Robert Byrd of West VIrginia
had selected Metzenbaum to take over the seat now held by Sen.
Patrick Lea hy, D- Vt .. whose term ends in six months . They said
Metzenbaum ha s been Invited to attend committee proceedings
In the interim.
In the new sess ion of Congress, Metzenbuam wlll continue to
serve on the Judiciary, Energy and Labor committees. His
term on the Senate Budget CommitteE' has expired.

Ray Hoylman. supervising depu ty o! the U.S. marshal' s
office. said Hall was sent to a U.S. medi cal cent er for federa l
prisoners in Springfield, Mo.
Douglas Meyer, Ottawa County Prosecutor. sa id Hall could
face local charges again should ~e recover.
"It doesn't preclude us from re-Indict lng him sho uld-there be
a miraculous recovery, but ther e Is very little likeli hoo d he will
ever regain a status where he even knows what' s happening to
him ," Meyer sai d.

Jury clears ex-NAACP leader
XENIA (UP! ) -Former Greene Co unt y NAA CP President
Snyder Garland ha s .been cleared of all rape cha rges by a
Greene Counl y jury.
Jurors in the four-day trial delibera ted about eight hours
before finding Garla nd nol guilty on six counts of raping a girl
under ·13. Conviction on any one of the count s ca rried a
mandatory life sentence.
·
The former president of the Greene Count y NAACP, who
resigned his post unlll the co nclus ion of the trial. said " it 's over
and it's been a long week.''
Garland's former wife, Gloria Lewis, expressed disappoint ment with th~ verdict. saying it would have "a terrible impact
on our lives."
The defense maintained the charges arose from a custody
dispute between Garland and Lewis. Th e couple divorced In
1981.
.
Garland was accused of repea tly raping his daughter between
1982 and 1984, when the girl was between 3Y, ~nd 5'h years ord.
Several doctors testified during the trial that they found no
evidence of physical' or ·sexual abuse of the girl. Qefense .
attorney Louis Hoffman said the state's case was built on
unsuppor ted testimony by the girl, now 7 years old.
" I knew that justice would preva il." .Garland said after the
verdict was read. " The Lord looked out for me so I think I'm
Indebted to him. "
·
II was not known whether Garland would seek his-iormer post
as Greene County NAACP .president.

M

etzenbaum Wins COmmittee seat

WASHINGTON (U P I) -Sen. Howard Metzenbaum , D-Ohio,
is getting a seat on the Senate Intelligence Committee, as well
as. an Invitation Ia sit In on committee meetings until the

.

G!JOdyear to· ClOSe lWO p lants

AKRON !UP II - The Goodyear Tire a nd Rubb&lt;'r Co. said
Friday it has plans 10 close two tire plants in a r(•s truclur in g
move that would affect a "~ignificant" number of workNs.
The firm said it would close the tire manufa ct uring and
headquarters oomplex of It s Kelly -Springfield subsidiary in
Cumberland, Md., and the Goodyear Canada Nrw Toronto tire
plant as part of a restructuring program.
The plant closures will result in the permanent layoffs of a
significant number 6! hourly ·and salaried employees at hoth
facilities. the company said In a statement. The Cumberland
complex employs 1,675 people and ' the New Toronto lacilit1·
1,557.
·
The company said It would take about six month s to close the
two facilities, but that the Cumberland operations wou ld ~
re located al another lQcation, which Goodyear officials hav en't
yet chosen.
Goodyear ChalrmancHobert Mercer attributed the Cumberland closing to steadily decreasing demanding ih e market for
bias-ply tires while the New Toronto plant is not competitive in
the glo~l marketplace despite the best efforts ollts employees .
Goodyear's Gadsden, Ala., plant continues to produce
bias-ply tires and other Canadian plants will produce tires
formerly made In New Toronto.
Kelly-Springfield, a Goodyear subsidiary since 1935, produced bias· ply auto, light truck and medium truck tires at
Cumberland since 1921.
The New Toronto plant is 69 years old and the oldest existing
Goodyear tire facility currently in operation.
By closing Its least competitive facllty, Goodyear is
streamlining its operation and reducing cos ts, Mercer said.
'
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•

•.
·~

·1'

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•

•

•
•

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•

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•

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:•:

,.,_ .:
L.------------------------------------------------------~----------------------------------~------------------------~----------------------------------~
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~age D-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Snow, rain swamp ·Northeast
By Ualted Press International
Residents of the Northeast
were cleaning up Saturday from
a second major storm that
dumped heavy rain and up to 16
Inches of new snow on New
England and New York, closing
schools and flooding streets.
Much of the Northeast - still
recovering from ·a storm last
Wednesday that left as much as
20 Inches of snow In New
Hampshire and knocked out
power to nearly 300,000 residents
- was hit with more snow, rain
and sleet and winds of up to 44
mph.
The messy conditions made
roads treacherous, and more
fhan 200 trucks fanned out across
: )lermont Friday to clear snow; ~vered roads.
• • "There are a lot of people out
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE

there with'their summer !Ires on
who are on the sides of the road."
Sally Coffey, a dispatcher for the
state pollee In Middlesex, Vt ..
said late Frtday night.
Ralnshowers with snow In the
mountains occurred from north·
ern California, Oregon and Wa·
s hlngton. across Idaho, northern
Nevada and Into western Mon·
lana. Ttavelers advisories for
strong, gusty winds were pos ted '
overnight for the Antelope Valley
and Mojave Desert in southern
California.
Record highs were broken or
tied In six cities in Wyoming,
Colorado, Nebraska, Arizona
and Florida. Frost and freeze
warnings were posted overnight
in North Carolina.
An a v~ l a n c h e in the Devil's
Castle area of the Albion Basin
FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 11 -23-86

ski area In Utah killed a hiker
l~entjfiea as a Czechoslovakian
refugee, officials said Friday.
Members of the Alta Ski Patrol
found the body of Paul Janda, 27,
burled under more than 6 feet of
snow.
Wintry storms this month
alone have been blamed for at
least 46 deaths, 18 since Monday,
many from traffic accidents on
snowy and Icy roads.
. Up to 16 Inches of snow fell.
early Friday In the Northern
Kingdom In northern Vermont,
while 10 inches was recorded in
Montpelier, Vt., and Caribou,
Maine, 6 Inches in Burlington,
Vt.. and 4 inches at Augusta,
Maine, and Lebanon,. N.H. The
snow forced schools to close in
Vermont, southern New Hampshire and the .\dirondack Moun·
tains of New York, where about
t~about 6 inches of snow was on the
'ground in Saranac Lake.
In Newark, N.Y., a 15-ton
snowplow plunged through a
107-year·old bridge and fell 12
~c....--7"'r'flr40 .feet into Ganargua Creek: The
driver was not injured.
The wintry conditions, how·
ever, made for great skilng In
northern New England, where
several resorts opened last
weeke~d.

[ill) SNOW
FRONTS: . . Wa·rn

"

RAIN
Cold

November 23, 198'-

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

~SHOWERS
- s tatic · . . Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Ralnshowers, with snow In the higher
elevations, wUI extend from the northern Pacific Coast to western
Montana. Showers and thunderstorms will be scattered from east
Tens across the lower Mississippi Valley Into western Alabama.
Snowshowers wUI be scattered over Colorado and parts of the
Dakotas and Minnesota. Winds will be strong and gusty along the
New England coast.

"Psychologically, it's incredl·
ble what real snow wUI do," said
Chip Carey, spokesman for
Sugarloaf-USA in Kingfield,
Maine. "This Is already the
fastest start we've had in years."
Rai n and rapid snow melt
flooded some streets and low·
lying areas across southern New
England. The storm dumped
heavy rainfall from the central
New En~land coast to New York
and New Jersey Friday.
Portsmouth, N.H., received
2.45 Inches of-rain, while Provl·
dence, R.I., got 1.59 Inches and
Boston 1.44 Inches.
Gale warnings were Issued for
the Atlantic coast from New
Jersey to northern New-England
with wind gusts up to 44 mph
reported.

.General assemb.ly ·adopts
several b'ills, then adjourns

•

UPJ Business Writer
NEW YORK !UPI) - Tbe stock · mar ket
· advanced in tumultuous trading last week.
rebounding from an early sell- off spurred by the
" biggest insider-trading scandal in Wall Street 's
· history.
·
. After losing 56 points on the firs t two days of the
·· week , the Dow Jones industrial average cllmbed
': 76on the final three days, finishing with a net gain
of 19.97 points at 1893.56.
Wall Street opened for business Monday to news
- released after the market closed-F-riday- that
. one of It~ richest and best-known arbitrageurs,
, Ivan Boesky, had agreed to pay a penalty of $100
million to settle insider-trading charges brought
against him by the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
. The Boesky-scandal prompted selling Monday,.
especially among Issues at the center of rumored
~r announced takeover developments.
Selling accelerated Tuesday, with the Dow
plunging 43.31 points. Panicked dumping of
potential takeover issues led to talk that arbitrage
·desks at major brokerage houses had suffered
:substantial losses.
On Wednesday, Investors sought sale haven in
the heavily capitalized blue chip stocks that
.comprise the Dow Jones Industrial average.
·Buying spread from those issues to the broader
market Thursday; the Dow. jumped 34.03 points.
A stronger bond market and futures-related
buying spurred the market to even higher ground
· trtday.

.• •
'.
..
'.

.

Perelman of "tipping off" traders to his takeover
plans,
.
Beverly Enterprises fell 4')), to 17. It said
previously announced leveraged buyout discus·
slons with an investor grou p have been .
terminated.
Blue chips adva nced as investors sought out
relatively safe havens after fleeing takeover
issues. IBM rose 1]', to 1 23 ~ , General Motors rose
3 ~ to73 %. and American Expressrose1% to 57%.
The Dow utility Index rose 1. 32 to 211.48. The
Dow transportation average edged up 0.63 to
838.88.
Standard &amp; Poor' s 50(). stock Index rose 1.36 to
245.86; the New York Stock Exchange composite
index rose 0.22 to 140.94.
Big Board volume tot aled 860,596,200 shares,
compared with 737,009,100 a week earller and
623.756,420 during the same week a year ago.
Composite volume tot aled 1.001,914,723 shares,
compared with 883,875;880 a week earller.
Prices fell In act lve trading on the American
Stock Exchange.
.
The American Stock Exchange index fell 3.68 to
262.95. Declines outpaced adva nces 496-257 among
the 914 issues traded . Volume was 56.029,!Wl5
shares, compared with 54,315,020 last week and
51,231,410 during the same week a year ago.
Wickes led the Amex actives , off % to 4%.
AirCal followed , rising 3% to 14'!.- American
Airlines said It would buy ACI Holdings for $15,a
share. Lorimar-Telepictu res was third, !alllng2~
to 18',1 .

\

' ·i--------------------------------------------------------------------..,

Dow Jones Average
November 21 1986
30 _
Industrials
_
_ _ _ _.. High: 1901.86
Low: 1853.07
1930 . . , - - - - - - - 1 Close: 1893.56 ...,__,
I

t:=::==:::::!:u:::·=~3=2.::9o:t::j

Dow Jones Average
30 Industrials

.

High ....... ... 1901.86
Low .. ......... 1853.07
Close ........ t 893.56 ·
Up............. 32.90

N.Y.S.E.
Volume Profile

Up

Down Unch.

l1o93l ~ 13871.
Issues Traded: 2025
---------1 ndex -------140.94 ·up 1.92
Composite Volume
231,6821980 .

1850

1830
1810

1790
1770
1750

S.&amp;P. Composites

November
DOW JONES Avera1e lor 30 Industrials closed November 21 at 1893.56, up 32.90. (UPI)
1

.

"'

D•ssolutfon,granted
•
POMEROY - A dissolution of marriage has been granted in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court to Carolyn J . Reeve and
Ronald G. Reeve.
Filing lor dissolutions are VIncent E. Mossman, Middl~port ,
and Lois M. Mossman, Pomeroy; Cathy A. Daniels, Middleport,
and Larry L. Daniels, Gallipolis.

'
•••

••

•

. ; ~------------------------------------J
•

.

~

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
• The Ohio Valley Bank

t • Company offers fo; ule
, tho tollowlng PfOporty:

. • 19B3 Clayton Double·
.S,ide Mobile Homo, 3 bod·
roomt, 2 batha.

Arnngemen~s

:

to aee the

property may be made by
~ conllcting The Ohio Valley
· llonk Company. Bids will be

No hunting or lrMPIIIIng,
Myne1 F1rm loCited Chestnut

RldtoAood.

Senti for hire, Evenings, S1t lftd
Sundays, 304-773-1892.
Beceuee my 2 very vtlu1b..
German Shepherd dOQI, w«e
shat, Hunting ie no longtl"
permitted on my l•m on Redmond ~kfit. Edith Rugen

f

·.

245.86 Up 3.81

Steel states union·
officials rejec.t offer
PmSBURGH tUPi i - The
United Steelworkers chief nego·
tiator says he has "run Into a
steel wall" In contract talks with
the USX Corp. and predicts the
union wUI break a 27-year-old
recor,d for Its longest work
stoppage.
Talks between the two sides
recessed Friday after 50 USW
local presidents from arou nd the
country unanimously rejected a
three-year com pany proposal.
If the work stoppage at USX
plants in nine states extends past
Monday, it will surpass a 116-day
strike In 1959.
"This Is not a day we w\11
celebrate. It Is a record that
should not have become a real·
ity," James McGeehan said
Friday.
,
"We have not been able to get
the company In a position where
we can address our competitive
needs. We've run into a steel
wall ," McGeehan said. ·
About 22,000 employees of the
No. 1 steelmaker have been off
the job since Aug. 1. State labor
officials have declared the work
stoppage a lockout, entitling
union members to unemploy·
ment compensation .
"We have gone as far as we felt
we could go," USX chief negotla·
tor Bruce Johnston said. "We are
astonished they have not found It
attractive."
The company's final offer
before the walkout included an

"

hourly reduction of $3.27 in
employment costs and a $1.00an·hour drop In the $12.2S hourly
wage.
The two sides are more than $2
apart , USW Ass istan t President
Jim Smith said. but he refused to
release speci fi cs until the rank·
and-fil e are briefed on Frtday·s
meeting in Pitts burgh.
McGeehan said the main stumbling blocks are economic issues
contracting out and manning
proposals.
The ·company-'s offer would
reduce the company's work force
by about 1. 500 Pmployees, "to get
our prod uct out the door comfortably and effici ently," Johns ton'
said. ' ·
Johnston said affected em.: :
ployees would receive retrain-: :
ing, pay differentials if their ' ;
duties were changed and "gener· .-·
ous pension opportunit les."
Johnston said for the 1,500 jobs :
lost, 3,000 pensions would be ' (
made available. McGeehan said
that was a union demand.
On the issue of contraciing out,
Johnston said the company "met
the union 85 percent of the way."
He said part of the proposal
included a clause binding the •
company to consider _fXpenses
other than labor costs when .It
contemplated contracting out. '
':They maybe changed. the
words but they haven't changed
the substance.

11 Help Wanted

Wanted To Buy

9

Old Fumhure - c:upbo•ds, Ubl11
• chllrt, chnt1. bookeas11, ice
box•. iron bed1, c"h patd Ph.
114-~1- 3751 .

Buying d1ity gold. allv• coin• .
rings, jewelry, tt•llng Wire, old
coin1, 111g1 currency. Top pri·
cee. Ed. Burktn B1rblr Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. $14·

192-3471.

VETERANS · Your priOr military
aervice is worlh MONEY An E-4
in the Army Netlonll Gu•d c1n
eern up to t 131 .91 for one
wMk·end per month, an E-6, up
to $1&amp;3 .80. Othlr benefit•
include: t&amp;O,OOO llfllln•urence.
tduCIIIon funding 111istance,
retirement. and much more. C1ll

304·676·3950 or 1·800·642·
3119.

WtntM to buy. Stll'lding timber.

' •ccephld et the main office,

23

.

htion, Bernard V. FtAtl,

Moth• dog, 1nd 2 9wk. old

1986. tor the Kibble Foun·

381·8449.

Good uHd sn•• drum. C1tl

puppin to gNI IWIV Ph. 81 • .
Trust•. to available forpub· 3e7-0541
.
tic inspection It Bernard V.
FUltz Law office, t11 'h W . frM to good home, 8 month okl
Second Str•t. Pomeroy, CoH!o. GOOd wotch dog. good
Ohio 46769. during rogular w~h kids. C.Utl-915-3931 or
butineu hours for a period e14·985·313S. •
of 180 days oubleq uent to
• puppies, 3 melt and 1 femlle .
publication of tli1 notice.
Ml•od Boqlo. Coli 614·742·
t11)1B, 19, 20, 21 ,
3143.
23. 24, 26, 7tc

e Adorlbte come puppift. mil•
tnd femelt

Anr1t1u 111.1:111 r: nt s

eny~ima .

3 ,t,nnouncamenta

304 · 178· 2487

1 m• dog. 1 'h y... a old. No
phone c.lll •fttt 4 p.m. 304·

e75·5721.

•'
GOVERNMENT
HOMES from

11" cokw TV on pedlltal stand,
netd1 foiPtir. 304-871-217!
ettlf' 15 p.m.

pfoperty. Aepa....tons. Cel

~---

11 IU replir). Dtlil'lqu.m tu

105·187·1000 hi.GH-4562
tor current repo lilt.

8 Loat and Found

, DECIDE NOW TOGETHER .
Ohio Yellay Memory Qardent
GtllipoMs, Metgs Co. Memory
• r;Jardtnt Pomrov. Ph. 114-112·

e1&amp;1 or114·44e-3615.

0111' Hunt.,.
FDr ule 1 email trliler, c•pet.t

lor 1400.00 Ph. e14·251·
1575
ATTENTION AEROBIC
ENTHUSIASTS:

Specilt training ttmin• by
I.O.E.A. CertHitcl lnttructorl,
December 13 Lecturet, ldtls,
Rcy..nlnet, &amp; Mort! Cell 1814)
374·2117 for regiatr•ion or
more intormetton . Space li·
. mited, IPKIII krtroductory offer

Lott 'II lrit~ Setter, Y2 Cocker
Sptniel, 2'/t ft . .tell. brown,
entwen to lridgllt. In aree of
Raccoon rd . • Sho•trlng Ridg1
R'd.. REWARD Ph 114·446·
3710 or 114-441·30n ask for
Elaine Mumpow•.

LOft k1 Eno vlcinlty I long hllrtd
Chi Hue Hut,' mile bl.ck wtth 1
white chltt. lftiiWifl to. Chico,
welghta 1ppr. llb1., mlulna

since 11 -18·86. IIEWARD
•1oo.oo. Ph. 114·388·1132

CALL TODAY.

Lolt in Raccoon T.W.P. mlxtd
bflld lheplwd·bo••. Fawn
cotored. - • • to be• RE WARD Ph. e14·241·1212. -

' Recln1 Gun Shoot tpaniDred by
}leclne Gun Club. EvlfV Sundey.
beQ.nnlng at 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke, 12 guege shotguns.

FOUND- Smell femMe bt.. le
with coli• . Slack 6 White l
brown, Vicinity of Feirlleld
Vtnco · Rodney Cora Ad. Call

~80 . 00.

114·2415·9209.

•eo. r...-ct tor Information
INdino to wherubout1 of withe
m.te dog lolt in •r• of Condor
St. end Spring An. All whh1,
.medium lilt and curly till.
Anantlan Aerobic Emhuaiaata: ' Answ.,. to Br1ndy. Call 114·
Special trtlnlng s~ntin• by 992-2018.
I.D.E.A. Certified ln~tructor1.
December 13 Lecturn, ldtll. Lost: &amp; month old mile mi111td
Routintt 1nd Morel Cat I t8 14) brlld dog. lltck and brown. C. II
374-2117 for r.,tatr•lon or 614-742-3143.
more information . Spece II·
mittd, apecllllntroductory offer .,,--..,.,,-.,.-.,.-:,-:--•80 Celllodeyt

9

C11l1 Decormlng Cl•••• 1t1rt·
lng D~te~mbttr 1. 1111. Taught
bY Iunny Kuhl. For dettlls, ceH

We PlY cellh for late model clun

114-992·7537.

Piano Tuninl 1nd Replir. CUp
thia ld for 2 percent discount.
Ltne D•nilll 114· 742·22951 .

2

Wanted To Buy

uHd &lt;*1.

Jim Mink Chev.-Oidllnc.
IHI O.n• JohnH~t

114-44e·3172
TOP CASH pold for ' 83

model
1M MWII' uud cen. Smhh
luick-Pontiec, 1911 E11t•n

Avo .. Gallipolis. Cell 111·44e·
2282.

In Memoriam

WANTED TO BUY Uled WDOd.

In Loving Memory
of Asa L. Rucker
Asa's family would lib to
·thank MfYODI for their
IXJI'ISSions of love, •ind·
ness 111d Jifts durin1 this
•difficult trme. Asa w• t•
' ken !10111 US, IMrt hiS memory will remain in our

heal1s forevar.

George Buckley 814-H4-471 1.

cool he•-· SWAIN'&amp; FURNI·
TURE. 3Jd. I Olive St. Oottlpollo. C.ll14·446·3159.
Uud MobUt Homea Ph. 814·

446·0175.

Happy Ada
6
- ------

614-712·21180.

.

f II. t:i,ly I'll' ill
St:r Vlr.r:'
11

614-949-3014.

Help Wanted

304·675-e947 or 676·1296.

SeiMPeOPI•full or plrt ttmt to
1eH cemM.-y &amp; mlfch. Ctll

614-441-3115 or 614-592·
1111.

,
Sldly missed by
· ·dau1hters Ethel, Geneva,
IItty and Familln.
I'

'

Need help wrth your holidt y
cle•ing? CaM Gln1burn Cle1n·
lng Service Ph. 614-446-9027

Will do house cleaning. 304·

,..inttntnce p•eon to ltvt in
apwtmlftt eompl•. Cell 304-

671·&amp;728.

178-1104.

Progr"'"''

Hlttthc.-e F•cllltv
, ....,.. fuN·tknt &amp; pert·timt
AN '1. hCIII•-.t slltrY &amp; benet·
it1. If lnt•llt• eppty et Sc:tnlc
Hill• N~nlng Cent•. At. 2 Box
282 aldwol. OH 45114"' coli
Mo.., o·ar~on .. 114·441·7t 50.
WANTED : Part· time Community SefYia Work• for 1n irh•-

medlate coro foclllty for

cfw...,.

mentel,ly ditlbiH tdultl in
GtUipoHt, Ohio. Houn : 12

mldnlgllt-1:30 e.m.. FRI·SAT·

SUN. High school degr11, valid

Ohio driv•'• liC811H 1nd good
drWing recont rsquil'ed; experilnct working w;th perton•
wtth mente! rttardllion 1nd
dweAopmentll dl11billti11 prer...ed; good hau•lkeeplno 1kills
nlldtd. III•Y· t4.25 pw hour.
Vac:ltion and Sick 111'1• benet·
Itt Send riiUffte to RoiMn Eby,
Buckeye Community Strvictt,
P.O. lox 104. Jechon, OH
41140. Deadline for appllctntl ~
11 -21·81. Equel opportunity
employer.

Frnancial
21

Real Eslale

14li70Fieetwood3bdr 2baths .
Must sale. for more info. cllll
614·388-8633 after 4 p.m

3 bud room 1411170trailor for ule
or rent Ch .. hire ~rea . Call
House• toraal eon Evens He 1ghta evenings 814-388· 9776 .
&amp; a tot in Fairfield Gleda 1n Tenn.
3 bedroom 14x70 trallor for sale
Call 614-446-8699.
Of rent c~ hlre Jlree. Call
3 Bedroom hou se. tire plece 1, evening• 1114-388·9776.
air. pool. ute or trad e. A·ONE
Raal E1tate Ph 304-675 -5104 1973 Vindela12x65 with 7ll14
axpando. Total etectric set up for
1969 12x80 Holly Park, 2 woodburner. Good Conditio n.
bedroom, new c1rpet, v8fY mce Ph 614· 246 · 5308 between96
mutt tee t6950.00 Ph 614· 5

5:00p.m.
Mon
e14·HI·4116.

thru

Fri

1985 mobile home for ule.
6 rocm hou1e. 1.2 acres. Double 14x70, excellent condition. 2
cer gerage. l ocated on Rose Hill . bedroom, 2 full batha. Call
Barga •n priee d 820.000 Celt 614-992-7163
614-678-2613.
' 79 Victorian mobile hom e. 1
For tala: 8 room house 41ots. E. acre, 1211118 room 1ddition, front
M1in St . Pom e~o y . Call 614- deck. t25.000.00. Glenwood.
W VI. 304· 676·2018
985·44 27 after 6 :00 pm
House partly furni•l'iad . 5 acres
on R1 in bow Ridge. Good f'tu nt·
mg S15,000. 614-863-6440.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

House for sate 380 Grant St..
Middleport . 6 roo m, bath. ger·
age. work shop. t23. 700. Make
offar. Call 614·992 -2602 .

lNG CO . recommend• thtt you
do bUtinllt with people you
know, 1nd NOT to nnd money
througl1 the m t il until you h•v•
Investigated the offering.

ATIENTION INVESTORS
Ttlce advantage now betore the
new t111 IIWI. 8 unit IP• tment
c:ompllll, loclted In Wellston,
Oh. tully rented. rentefl pay all
utllhia. II\CCme over •1 .•00
per mo. Sell price
call
Days 814-592-1189 or even-

ue.ooo

Dune Buggy, pipe frame, street
legal Needs engine work. 8750.
or trede for good 1mall dirt bike
or riding lawn mower. Call

614-949-2877

2 br kitchen . ballnoDm, with
laundrv room, living room &amp;
dining room. all elec. Appro111 . 7
mll11 from Pt. Pt on Rt 62. 2
traets 1pprox 1 acremoreorl ell
overlooking Ken1wha River

ing• 514·594·2874.

140.000 Call 304-675·5440

Gold Key Motel in Jlck•on Ohio
11 unlta plua 3 Bedroom Home,
good income priced at
•111.000 with
down
ml"( trede. Out of 1ttte owner
mut1sell Ph. 1·286-3258

AN XIOUS to 1811, 3 bedroom
house, new roof and wlr~ng ,
t3 6,000 00 neg otiable Point
Pleasant 304-675-6939

••o.ooo

Op•Mino ABC Club In Point
Ptenant JJet. 3200 tQ foot
l:!ullding on 2 l&lt;lrn of land .
304-875-3609 evening•.

114·313·1135.

Irick Maton 8ub·Contract0fs
needed. Guaranttld fuN-time
work. C.ll Stave 8:00a.m to

446-0176.

between 8 30 end 4 :30.

l.b11e to purchase tvlillble on
three bedroom houu, 1 acre lot,
Jim Hill Road or will accept
trade -in on immediate purcha1e.

304·676·3073.

$8,000.00. Coil 304-675·
6349.

1970 Atlantic 12x60, 2 br,
equipped for woodburner. re·
trigerttorand stove. bedroom1ir
cond $3,800. 304· 676-6947
197212x60 mobile home, 3 br,
11h bath:. front deck. 81C27
concrete covered back porch.
central air , 8 10.12 s t or~ge bldtJ. 'h
acre tot. 'h mile btlhind Muon.

.. 4.000 304-773-6361

34

Business
Buildings

Office spece · Store IPI!tCe in Pt.
Pleaunt, A·One Real Estate Ph

304-676·5104

35 lots &amp; Acreage
1.92 ecr11. with three bedroom
mobile home, 911 heet. CA.
storage bldg S16,000 Call
Hob1tetter Real ty, 61 4 -742·

'------------------11-----------------+-----------------l

Ph. I"

Airlln• now hking. Flight At·
tlr'ldlr'lll, Agent•. Mech•nica,
CultOm.,. hrvloe. llt1rin to
850K. Entry t..lll poaltiont. C1ll

BRIDGE

41

Houses for Rent·,;
••
bedroom house w1th gerege '

3
for rent or uta. Call614-742·

614-446-8699

2427.

Totaltlectnc lot• 1va•lable 1M the
K &amp; K Mob1le home park on
2145 Eutern Ave Move in now
PlY no ren1 until Jan. 1987. Pf't

Cute 2 room conege with bath,
furnished , utllltl.. plid, 1&amp;5 00
week, deposit required, 304-

Rental s

Four rooms and gtrlge 2323
Jefferson Btvd . •110.00 14x70
mobile home Camp Conl.y
U26 00. 304-675-1371 .

675·3100 or 676·6509.

304·876·3000.

41

Houses lor Rent

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 bedrDDm houae for rent. Ph

614·448·0722

6 room house. 928 firtt ave Ph
614-446-3945 after 4p m

2 bdr . all utilitl.. paid except
etec , furn . or unfurn., He.
deposit requ~r~d. Convll'litnt
location. Clll 614·441•8511 or

3 Bedroom. Bath &amp; 'h. FR ,
located 3 'h miiH out Rt. 688
614-446·4778
$326 OOmo plus Dep011t. Ph.
614 · 256-6789 or 814· 266· ·2bdr futlyfurnithedadutttonly,
6205.
util peid. Call 614·448-4110
3 Bedoom house Close to c1ty
schDols. inqu1re at 63 Garfield
Ava to,tadtsmp
2 Bedroom house 53 Gerf•eld
Ave rei. Adults preferred.

In Eureka· nice and cl ..n,ldulta:
only. No pell, deposit required,
180 00 mo . Clll814-258-1638
Mtore 10e m.
2 bedroom mobiltl honM for rent

Beautiful 3 Mdroom houte m
Syracuse Deposit and referen·
cas req u~red . Cell 814-9926298, 9-5, Mond•v through
Saturday
2 bedroom house for r&amp;nt 1n
Middleport. Completely remo·
dtiled. New Clfpeting through out New cab.ne'~• S276 P8f
month plus deposit. Call 614·

Ph. 614-446·0722.

Mobile Home 2 bedroom, turnl•h e d in gallipolis , rent
$200.00 mo . UOO 00 depolil. ,
tf internted Ph . 614-448-7899
dtya ·or 614 · 448 - 9539
evening•

992·6858.
- - - -- - --lc-

K &amp; K Mobile HomH, 2 lnd 3
IMdroom mobile hom•. 3041

675-3000.

Smatl 2-bedroom home in Mid·
dlepon 81th with t ub and
•~ower. attachad garage, yard .
Carpeted. new atoveend refrig·
e retor Ju11 nght for single or
working couple. Sorry, no pett
or children accepted . S176
month plus security depos•t .
Phone 614- 992 -6292 . eher
5 p m or weekends.

2. bedroom•, 111 fumilhttd , mobile home, GetllpollaFerry;. HUD
approved. •·c, gaa furnac:e, city
water. Call 304-&amp;76-2132 or"'

2 bedroom house In country
pertly finished . 850 deposit
t1 50 month plus utili ties. 61 4·

614·418·1292.

843-5440.

Recently remodeled, 3 bed·
room. 1 1h bath home with welt
to Will carpeting. U76 par
month or sell lend contract
Located neer Addison. Call
614·992-6843 after 5:00p.m
Clean 2 bedroom home m
Lang1ville area Storage building
end cellar on 1 •ere lot.
614-742·2541 .
Hou•e in Rutland , na.e r Elemen·
tary School. t125. par month,
$ 125. depottt . See in penon
only et car lot acrou trom Civic
Center Absolutely no eaHs

11

Two bedroom trlliler. eouP'tl,
one • mtU child. refereno. lftd
deposit. Everett Schw1rt1, At. 1'
Locun lane. PDint ftM11nt ~­

oiKIK.

2 bedroom m centen1ry Ph.·

6

Happy Ada

Happy 40th
Birthday
Jimmie Dale
...._

.....,.... __

·--

' .

3 Bedroom rench. Rodney Vit -1
lagell. U85 .00 per month. plu•
deposit, rtftrtnCM '"u if~ 4
Bt~kburn Realty Ph . 814· 4460008
oJ
2 bdr mobile home in Ev.gr"n. Call614· 44e-7032 . 1 ' 1
2 bedroom tr111er for rent Cto• '
to school• and nor• CaH afttll"

5:00p.m. 614·992·5914.

12x65, 3 bedroom tumilhtd
W-0 . awning 1nd undttptnntnQ '
$200 plu1 deposit 1nd utllitiet
814-11.92-7479.
.~

Hetp Wanted

NEEDED IMMEDIATELY
PART-TIME REGISTERED NURSE
11 PM 'TIL 7:30 AM SHIFT
For 35 Bed SNF-ICF Unit
Contact Rhonda Dailey, RN or

Apply at Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 1/z East Memorial Dr.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

CALL 614·992-2104

"An Equal Opportunity Employer"

..

.: .
'.
''

MOM AND DAD · looklno for

FREE INFORMATION PACKET.
coli 1·800·1142·3819.

•

678·2083.

'

•

coli... fundt fOf' your aon or

daughter? The Army N1tlonll
Gull'd can provide more then
t11,000 lnlduCMk&gt;nHtlttiiiCI
to qutiHIId lndlvtduelt. S.nlor•
cen enllet now tnd begin 11rn·
ings •ee.oo tor one wetk-end
P• month and dlley Bulc
Tratnint until Jun1 1987. For 1

..

---------- " ·~

James Jacoby

1-106·117·6000 E". A·l805.

HAPPY
BIRTHDAY

' 71 two IMdroom mobil e home,
helf ecre land, Leon, price

3092.

.
'' '
'.
'.
I •

'

Pressure
all 'around

.74

By Jamet JaCoby

+ AQ8 7

NORTH
+A 6 6 4

11·22·16

• Q64

WEST

EAST

Mike Edwards had an 10terestin@
• Q J 10 9
+ 73
deal to show me at the St. Louis re· .KQ J986
•s 32
tK H2
giopal in August. Mike, sitting South, . • J 10
+64
arrived in three no-trump. Prospects +•o3 2 •
weren't great after the opening lead,
SOUTH
but there are always chances whelf
+ K 52
you have eight tricks off the top. Cash·
• A 10
·ing a lot of tricks can put the defend·
t A983
+K J 9 5
ers under some pressure, and that was
Mike's plan.
Vulnerable: Neither
He grabbed lhe first trick and ran
Dealer: West
lour rounds of clubs, West throwing a
spade. Declarer next played king and
Nort~ East
Soutb
Weal
2 NT
Pass Pass
ace of spade~, West shedding a bearl.
Pass
3 NT
3•
Pass
Now Mike played the heart 10. His
Pass Pass
Pass
plan wu to force West to lead away
from the king of diamonds he presum·
Opening lead: ' K
ably held. Althouch East had the kipg
all alone. look what happened. West
blithely took all lour of hla heart win·
Although declarer played well, West
nen. On the lut heart East had to recould
still have won the day had he
duce to two cards, and be telegraphed
taken
only
three high he~rts and then
hila,ony. EventUIIIy, to keep a blgh
played
the
jack of diamonds. Then
spade, Elst blanked hia diamond king.
East
would
have
been able to both preBy lhll time Mike had the right read·
serve
a
high
spade
and keep his dialnJ, and 10 when Wnt led tbe,jack of
diamondl, declarer played low from mond kingiUirded, and the contract
the Q-1 In dummy and made his con- would have failed.
~ liM, N1111PAPD E111'1:1U'ftlllt .t1SN
tract when tbe king came up.

2•

69th

Must ·•ell. 12X65 Yindela. 14X7
upando , woodburner, dith
wuher, under pinning, CA. 2
deokl with awning, priced to
sell Ph . 614-256-1608

446· 6345 day•.

Business
Opportunity

Ltadlng Ph•macv nlldt top
notch Ph•mecilt. Large AX
votume. nunlng ho.mn. div•tifild, modern oomputeriud fecil·
tty. No aundav• or hoUdays, top
llla'y a btntfhl. COI'ltiC1 Jim
Still.•, Portsmouth, Oh Ph.

Verlena, Alln, Melania
&amp; Kimberly Rucker

· In Iovine memory of
Muie L. Roush
who passed away
November 22. 1985.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35.
PHONE 814·448·7274

..

Chrlnm• money. ooll 18 Wanted to Do
Avon Mae 45 p•cem Clll '~-------e14-441-331a.
,-

,Moh

·

IN MEMORY
One year hu passed since
you went away;
Words could never ex., prtSS the loss we fHI
today.
.

Starks Tree and Lawn Serv•ce
Hedges , s hrub s , bushes
trimmed. landscaping, stump
1nd leaf remov... 304-576·
2842 Of 578· 2010.

614-246-5823 ••••• 6:30 614·

Will do l&amp;ght houte cle1ning .
W1gn by dey • 6 daya a week .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
7 acres, 2 barna, 1 sepbc tank
end ru'ral water for 7.000

Rio Grande FA Ga s. Lg. Kitchen .
loti of cabinets, weU inauleted ,
40 gallon HW tank, 4 bedrooms ,
ctoae to sckool, bank, college
Rental Potenllal. extra lots, call

.

Y•d Mit ltf1 ov•• Ph . 814-

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Veeanci11 tor elderly people In
my homa. Short or long tMm .
Hot mHis 1nd w1rm 11ome.
Rettonllble retea. References
end loti of TLC Call tnvtlme.

aw..,

• • The 1111nual report Form
~OPF for ~amber 31,

Professional
Services

Naed 1omeone to cut a big tree
down • f'tauleway from Gallipo·
lit Ph. 814-446-2639,

Call 114-742·2328 . .
v••,
f20 Third Avenu.. Gattipo· 4
1·518·469·3636 oxl A·t980
Iii. Ohio untH t 2:00 noon,
Headtf penel, grill end front tor information 2• hour~ .
November 29. 1988. The
bumper, lor 1981 Gran Ply·
Ohio Valley Bank Company 9 wk. Did puppiea hetf beagle, 2 mouth Fury. C.r u11 from IHutldan• needed. Studio One.
, Peltrvea the right to reject femeln left call 814-387-0185 1171-1982 . Chrysler N•w 304·876·4510 oftor &amp;
oOO 675·
Yorker. New Port or Ply . Fury. 2473 Ilk for Ternt or Lena
' ••v and all bids.
after 4p m.
Coli 114·192·7075.
; NOV. ·19, 23, 26,
Mtgulnu tD give
Ph
' •
BUYING RAW FURSt Ginseng, 12 Situations
114·441-8321.
P,ubllc Notice
Yeltow Root, beef 1nd dar·
Wanted
2 Btoct. &amp; Wllht T.Y.'I Ph. hide1. Alto aelllng triPPing
IUPPiiH, WhNt Ut•, Nite Ut ...
614-446-4347
•· •
PUBLIC NOTICE
Hourt 1 :00-1 :00. Cloted Wed.
;

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

Great Buy- 12~~: 60 2 bdr mobile
horne 24x28 metal pole build·
31 Homes for Sale
in!f, appro• 11 ' cleer•nce. extrt
hook up for mobile hom•. gerden
all this on large corner lot.
3 bdr . air. poot, garage N•ee
172 No hilla to mow , ln
Commercial property corner
loti a. highway frontage Liat Patriot. IBIIing b1ceu11 of
w1th us. We have buyers, A·One health . C811614-379-2282.
Reel Estate-Broker Call 304 ·
1984 Schult 3 BR, 14X70, with
674-6104 or 304-674-5388
7tt.X20 expands on LA &amp; DR ,
Beautiful home In Fletwood• f't11 1pac1 IIIV8f micrOWIYII in
area of Pomeroy anilable. New kitchen. Total electric, 2 full
kitchen , bath , &amp; ca rpeting. Celt baths Ownerwillhtlpfinlnce. lf
lnteretted ca ll 614-446-8725
614-445-2359.
Must Sell.
1985 1 4X60 for tale or rent . 1
mite south of galtipoli t Dam Ph 1973 Arlington mobile home tor
sale Ph. 614-446-8000.
614-266-6089

Alrllnajobst17. 747to t83.4&amp;9
now hningl CALL job line

the quality of Its aerial spray.
programs, agriculture depart·'
ment spokes man said.
The department also reports:
that a Mahonlng County bakery ·
ow ner has been found guilty of
charges of operating an unregts-:
tered meat establishment and'
selling uninspected meats.
John F. LaPresta, owner of'
Godfather Bakery In Canfield, •
was found gu ilty Oct. 29andflned
$200 plus court costs. One- ·
hundred dollars of the fine was ,
suspended.

itned the company $:;0D plus court
costs.
The department received a
complaint that Columbia Gas
had contracted with Helicopter
Systme-s-rnc. to apply herbicides
to a gas pipline right-of- way In
Meigs County, and that the
companies had exceded the de·
fined boundaries which resuIted
in the loss of valuable timber in a
reforestation program.
As a result of the case,
Columbia Gas has met with
department o!flcials to improve

\

3 Announcements

~
~

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The companies were charged
Two out-of-state companies were with violating the Ohio Pesticide
found gu~ty of charges lnvol',\lng Law. Charges were filed by the
negllgnece in the application of Ohio 'Department of Agricul·
I herbicides that in one case
lure's Division of Criminal
resulted in desiruction of poten- Investigations.
tial timber In Meigs County.
Columbia Gas Transmission
In a separate court. Helicopter
Corp. In Charleston, W.Va, and Systems was also fou nd guilty of
Helicopter Systems Inc., of using a pilot who was an
Scottsdale, Pa., were each fauna unlicensed pesticide applicator
guilty and fined $750 plus court to apply herbicides to a gas
costs last month by Meigs Count,)' pipeline right·of·way In GuernCommon Pleas Court Judge sey County. Cambridge Municl·
Patrick O'Brian
pal Court Judge Don Revelle

Junbav- 'mimts.- ienthtel

J

No hunting day or night on
following lend: R.H. Bo•riQht,
' Keith Ridenour. Junior Hunt.
Gary Dill, John Ginther. Steve
Dill.

'

191 0

organizational meeting Tuesday at 7 p.m. In the air CentervUie
Elementary School.
T)le meeting will be held for all Interested in forming a
Neighborhood Crime Watch group In the area. Ai film will be
shown.

..•

LEE LEONARD
The final settlement revolved around several
concessions to the trial lawyers and passeq
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) - The.Ohlo General· despite complaints from the business community,
Assembly •has adjourned for the year after which strongly objected to a last· minute
adopting three tax relief bills and a major proviSion for punitive damages to be assessed in
overhaul of the state's civil justice system and wrongful death actions.
insur ance regulatory law.
The tax reduction bill cuts the top corJ?Orate
The Senate adjourned at midnight Friday alter income tax bracket and adjusts the lowest rate to
stumbling throughout the day on the thorny Issue apply to corporations earning up to $50,000 a yea~
ot insurance and tort law reform, which It finally Instead of just $25,000.
adopted 20·10 on thesecondconferencecommittee
"This bill IS to provide Ohioans with a '
report. The House rati!ied It earlier 68· 17, sent It neutralized tax Impact," said Rep. Dean Conley,
to Gov. Richard F. Celeste for signature and D-Columbus, as the House passed it , 87·5.
adjourned.
The bill Is supposed to cut $303 million !tom tbe
Also sent to the governor was a btll reducing the state coffers in fiscal 1987 and $411 million t~e ;
personal income tax rate by 7 percent across the following year to ll!ake up for higher taxes paid by
board in 1987 and another 1 percent In 1968. It also Ohioans because of the elimination of certam
cuts ·corporate taxes to ensure that. the state will deductions, credits and exemptions. In the federal ·
not receive a $714 million windfall over two years tax. reform bill. Ohio's taxes are based on federal '
from the effects of the federal tax reform bill.
taxable income.
· •
The civil justice and Insurance reform package
Also sent to the governor were bills offering tax
is designed to provide affordable commercial relief to qualifying families using day care ·
liability Insurance for businesses and local services {or children or dependent adults, and to '
; governments.
elderly or disabled low-income homeowners .
One part of the package• strengthen$ •• the
Those !&gt;ills reccelved unanimous House ratlflca- •
authority of the Ohio Department of Insurance In ·tion ·of Senate changes.
.;
regulating the insurance industry, and requires
Celeste said he would sign all three bills. "I al)l ·
det ailed reporting of financial Information pleased with the legislation, and proud that Ohio.js '
including claims, payouts and reserves.
leading the way for the nation In providing a fa(r
The other part Is aimed at encouraging state laJi: system," the governor· said in a press
out-of-court settlements of dam age clal.ms, stateement.
limiting awards and 11ttorney contingency fees,
The tax cut bill also reduces the top person_al
and r~vlsing the system of awarding damages.
Income tax bracket from 8 percent to 6. 9 percent
The bill also Includes a section limiting lawsuits on Income over $100,000 a year. Sponsors said that
against ~ru~nufacturers for defective products. . would Induce highly-paid corporate executlves to
"This Is the best piece of legislation of its type move their firms to Ohio because thei r own taxes
passed anywhere In the nation,' ' proclaimed sen . woulq be lower.
H. Cooper Snyder, R·Hillsboro, who chaired a
The House Ignored warnings of conservative
slx·member conference committee assigned to Republicans in voting down, 53·40, an amendment ·
wrestle with the package.
, jl'hich would have eliminated language requiring
"This is the most comprehensive, most
the state tax commissioner to raise the tax rates if·.
complete package of tort reforms, appropriate· revenu es fall short by 15 percent on June 30, 1988.
insurance regulation and a very ·Solid product
The day care tax credit applies to families with
liability bill."
annual income of$30, 000 or less. The credit will be
" It Is strongly pro-consumer. fair and worka· · 25 percent of the fed eral credit, which averages ,
ble," agreed Rep. Michael P. Stinziano, D- $300 a year.
Columbus. "Insurance reform doesn't get any
The "homes tead exemption," a ceduction In the ·
better than this."
•
value of' real es tate for tax purposes. now Is
The conference committee, pressured by . offered to homeowners who are disabled or over
business groups, trial attorneys and labor 65, and earning $15,000 or less. That figure will go
representatives, had to go back to the draw ing
to $16,500 under the bill. and mobile home owners
board after the fltst agreement failed In the
will be eligible.
Senate on a 15·15 vote.
.
.' .

•

~nd the Gallla County Sheriffs Department will have an

~y

volume of more thall17 million shares, In an initial
public offering. The company Is the bottling
system of Coca-Cola. Coca-Cola rose~ to 36%.
Goodyear was third, dropping 5~ to 42~ .
Goodyear, which was threatened with a takeover
by Investor James GOidsmlt h, said h will buy the
British financier's stock and undertake a
restructuring program that will include the sale of
several subsidiaries, expense reductions and an
early retirement program.
AT&amp;T gained 1 ~ to 26~ . AT&amp;T proposed $1.2
billion reduction In long-distance prices as part of
an effort to keep Its long distance business
competitive.
Among stocks that erased large speculative
gains, Federated Department Stores fell13 % to
86%, Johnson Controls fell 5 to 62%, J .C. Penney
lost 5% to 80%, Lockheed slipped 4 to 51%. Stop &amp;
·shop fell 5% to 53jS, Holiday Corp. class A
dropped 5',1 to 105, Southland fell 4 to 55,
Archer-Daniels· Midland was off 1iS to 21 % and
E.F. Hutton Group fell4 ~ to 40 Y, .
Lear Siegler fell10 to 82on news that Wickes has
backed off from Its commitment to purchase it.
The worst losses were tr immed after Lear said it
would proceed with a restructuring if Wickes falls
to purchase it. AFG Partners said It may renew its
bid lor Lear.
Gillette fell 11% to 56%. It sued to prevent
Revlon from buying more of its stock. Revlon has
offered $65 a share for Gillette and said this week
Drexel Burnham Lambert remained co nfident
th at it could get financing for the Revlon bid .
Gillette has accused Revlon Chairman Ronald

Two out-of-state companies are convicted .of •
violating pesticide law; one case in Meigs area·

THURMAN ~The Gallia County Crime Prevention Program

••

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-3

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

Organizational meeting scheduled

••

:Stocks advance in heavy trading _d uring past few days
_Gai ners outnumbered lowers l,Q83.555 among a
total of 2.025 issues traded on the New York Stock
Exchange:
"We've had a few Incredible w~ this year,
but last week was the most Incredible," said
Ricky Harrington analyst at Ihterstate Securities
In Charlotte, N.C.
Harrington said th~ Boesky news was ,hfrnlng
out to have little impact on stock prices.
" The market was extremely resilient:" Har· ·
rington said. He said investors' preference for
high-quality issues Is a good sign that the Dow will
agai n move above 1900 and make a "powerful
advance" subsequent to ·that.
"Another mild pullback and thestagewlll be set
lor a blowout above 1900 next week," Harrington
said.
Jon Groveman, head of equity trading at
Laden burg, Thalmann &amp; Co. was also impressed
by the market's performance last week and by
buyers' Interest In quality stocks . But he said the
market's course remained uncertain.
"The market's very whippy. Inves tors' heads
are spinning and they don't know what to think."
On the trading floor, winners Included most blue
chips, w,hile the bigges t losers were stocks that
had climbed as they came under the spotlight of
takeover speculation.
USX was the most active NYSE·IIsted Issue,
falling 1% to 21 ',1 . The company has been
defending itself against a threatened takeover by
Carl Icahn.
Coca-Cola Enterprises followed, up ',1 to 16',1 on

1986

•

'

By ELLEN FREILICH

: '~f.lovember 23,

I

.

I '

Account

COST ACCOUNTANT
We have an immediate openinf in qur Gallipolis. Ohio manufactulinglaci ity for a Cost
Accountant seeking a challenainc pos~ion
with growth potential. A BS De1111 in Ac·
countincw~h a minimum of I year manuflc·
turing cost experience IS requ ired. ·
Federal Moprl offers its employees an attrac·
live benefit packace and compet~ive salifY.
We are a succ:esfut Fortune 500 comptr~y w~h
muij~nalional operalions which mltluiiCiure
and distribute a wide variety of precision
parts for the cenerli industrial. ae~ospiCe.
term and const1uction equipment. t1uct 111d
automotive indusllies, as well as. ret~IICe­
ment merkets. This New York Stoclt hch111p
firm operales 40 plants and motet han SO dis·
l1ibut1on "nt•s.
To receive confidential conside11!ion for
this position. submit resume including sa·
la'Y history and requirements to: Personnel
Manecer. FEDERAL MOGUL CORPORATION.
P11cision Forged Products Oivlsion. 2160
Eastern Avenue. G111ipolis, OH . 45631.
.,.. [qual Opportun~y /Afflrmlliwt Atlion Employ•

f) FEDERAL

MOGUL
An EQull
Afflrmal•ve ActiOn EmplOyer
Opporlu My l

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· Page- 0 -4-

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

42 Mobile Homes

44

for Rent

November 23, 1986

Pomeroy~ Midd leport- Gallipoli s, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W . Va. ·

Apa rtment
for Rent

r~~~;~;~v S© lt~lA-~t.~s~

44

WORD
GAM I

-···

.. ·--

51 Household Goods

•bedroom. toul electric $275.
P« month, mcludea water and

' pbag•. • so. depolit, referen' c" No fighting or drinking. C1 ll
:&amp;14-317-7267 .
2 bedroom mobile home. Mrd dteport. 0 . Reference with se' CUrity depo ait 304 -88 2- 3267

"' 304-n 3-5024.
: Mobile homes. S200 OO to
, U71S .OO month, water and
.aew.r included. 6 1 4-446 -0497 .
-446-2430 or 446- 0508

0

Regency Inc 2 bdr .. kitchen,

nice. good location. fu rnished,

Rea rran ge the 6 scrambled
words below to make 6

1 bedroom apt. for rent . Bas•c
re nt starts fl216 a month that

County Apphance, Inc. Good
used appliences and TV sets.
Open BAM to 6PM . Men thru
S.et 614-446-1699, 627 3rd
Ave Gallipolis. OH.

~imple

re11onable. Call 30 4 -675-610 4
or 304 -1 76-7437 .

words.

includes all utilitie!l Depos 1t
requited of 020 0 . Under New
FmH A regulations. Takmg a"pp li·
cations for rental uslst.!Jnce f or
low income senior citizens.
Contact Vill age Manor Apt
Middle port ... 61 4 -992- 7787 .
Equal Hou1lng Opportunity.

Pnnt letter5 of /":"o....,JII:

each in it s lrne of squares.

N icely furnished mobile home

CA. &amp; heat. excel. location,
adults only. Ce ll614- 446· 033 8.

51 31h Jrd Ave. 1 bdr. private
bath, S1-tO per mo Oepostt

required . Call 81 4 -446-42 22
betw een 9 &amp; 5 .

45

Furnished apt. 8225. Utililies
pa1d. 1 BR , 920 4t h Gallipoll1
448-441 aft er 7pm.

For rent Sleeping Rooms end
light ho use keepi ng rDGms Park
Central Hotel . Cell 614-446·
0766

e

44

Furnished apt 1 bdr S226
utitj ti• • paid. 701 4t h Gallipolis.
Call"'4 46- 441 6 after 8 pm

Apartment
fo.r Rent

Nicely furnished 2 bd r. apt
Adutta only . Inquire at corner
First &amp; Olive St. at Sheppards
'Salu &amp; Sen~ lee
.fum1ahed apwtmant, upstairs
Ad utta only, all util•t •e• pa1d. Call

614-446-9523.

2 bdr. new tv redecorated. all
,_u tilities paid. nur McDonelds.

Rooms f or rent, day week
month. Galli a Hot el. Ca ll 614446·95 80 . Rer1tas low as S1 20
month.

Furnished efficiency $150 utili·
ties pa1d . share bath, 701 4th.
Gallipolis. Cull 446 - 4416 after 6

NAXPED

pm .

1 17
I
I
I
~=·=·==·=·==·

6 14-446-1519.

ME L I S I

rl--i being ~=~';!a~ ..death
~::::::::::==:

9 -:;1,::-T
h11,--,'l;;I=--.1-

2 bedroom. partly furnished
:Nice large 2 bedroom s. Main st . apartme n t off Sprin g Ave.
..ChHtHn. clean, tumished , wa· • Pomeroy, Ohio Larg e pat10 an d .
yard . Call 614 -992-6B86 aftor
'ter paid 1200 00 mo Ph
6:00pm .
"1114-246-681 B.

WA MO E D

I I l II

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46 Space fo r Rent

and
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33. North of Pomeroy
"Large lots. Ca11814 -9 92-7479 .

A
V

Complete the chu ckle quoted
b~ fil ling in the m1ssmg words
L.--1 you de... eloo from step No 3 below
11 -(.3
...~•.,...... ""'

l0

L-....L.-L.-L.-L.-

.

::: cowhand,
afraid oftrying
horses.
The
to console
him, explained, "Courage is

.-

Furn ished apt., 3 room s &amp; balh.
all utilhiu Pd S2 10 OOmo 260
fourth ave. Call 614 -4 46-0544.

Furnished roo m 9 19 2nd. Galli·
polia. $11 6 . Utilities pd. Share
bath. Singl e male Call 446441 6 after, 7pm

"My younger brothe r. was

G

Furnished 3 room• and bath.
clean. adults only, no pets. Ca ll

Coll8 14 ·446-7026.

8

Mobil hom o lots, small ch1ldren
acc epted, Rt. 1, Locust Ro.Jd.
Mobil ' home lot s, Oh10 R1ver
Aoad and Potters Creek Aouto 1.

P~blic

Sale
&amp; Auction

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
.:~a!Mua

Locawd at Rutland Township Fire Dept .
in Rutland, Ohio.
All kinds of toys, tools, clocks, lamps, wallets, mu si c
boxes. items too numerous to mention. Great Christmas
cifts. Come one, come all. Do your shopping with 'Us and
help the fire department.
Eats
Grab Bags
Door Prizes

NtOO'(;Y'I

dO

iTIIIVIS

E)N/100\IS pue ~IB9p 01 J)eJBOS 6U!
-!'4 S! e6BJnO:)., 'PBU!eidxe 'W!4 BIOS
·UO~ OlllU!~l 'pUB4MOO 9 LU 'S9SJ04

ON'tdX3
HSni:INO

Winter special S400.00, 1 year
lease m mi far m. 14 acres. 2
miles from to wn. bric~ hou so
central heat and air cond , new
deck. gard en s'mall barn, pond.

:noonr

10 P!BJIB S8M J8410Jq Je6uno~ ~~

i11J.Sild
sm·N't'H:&gt;S

304-1176-6276.

OJ. · SHiiMSN't

Merchandise
44

Apart ment
f or Rent

44

44

Apa rtment
for Rent

Apartment
f or Rent
51 Household Good s

-·

AUCTION
Tri-Green
Interstate Equipment, Inc .
7 m1le s north of london. Oh10 at Intersect• on of 1-70 {ex•1#791
and U.S Route 42 12 m1les wes t of Columbus 19 m1les eas1of
Spnngf1eld and 40 miles east of Dayton

.. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1986
· r-----~9~:~
3~
0~a~
.m
~·~----~

Furmshed Apt tor rent . 1 or 2
11dults only Wat er and trash
pick -up included .
Vou pay
electric. S200 00 per month
plu s security deposit . Call 5g.

446-6 296 alter 5 30.
- - - - - - - - -\
Modern 1 bdr. apartment . Smgla
per son pref erred No pets Ref erence Ca ll 614 -446 20 65 af·
tor 6 p m
Effiency apt completely fur·
nished, utilities patd. near A10
Grande College Ph 614-44 61323 or 614- 245-9170

2 and 3 bedroo m apartmenta
and houses tn Pom eroy or
Middleport Furnished or unfurnished. Pav own util ities. Ca ll
days 61 4 - 992 -2381
New one be dr oom apt. 1n
Middleport Ca ll 614-992 -53 04,
or 614 446- 1552 ahur 6.00
pm
--------1 and 1 'h bedroo m apt avatlable
at Ri11erside fo r rent Bas•c ren t

starts at S179 plus u t ilities.
S200 security deposit required.
Inquire at 6 1 4-99 2·77 8 7

Real Estate General

6 room un furnished apt for r ent .
Call 6 14-992 -5434 or 304·
SWAIN
•
AU CTI ON &amp; FU RNITU RE 62
Olive St ... Galllpolis New &amp; used
wood-coa l stoves, 6 pc wood LA
suite $399. bunk Deds $199.
antron recliners $99, new &amp;
used b edroom suites, ra nges.
wring Of was hers. 6o shoos New
livingroom suit es 5199 -$599
lamps, also buying coal &amp; wood
stov es. Call 61 4-446-3 169

882 -25116

2 bedroom. newly remodeled
upst airs apt w ith riverv iew.
Equipped kitchen. access to
was her and dryer free trach
pickup, no pets, reference and
deposi t require d. 61 4· 9 9 2 ·
663 9 anytimeor 6 14-992-3489
alter 6:00 p,m
A PA RTM ENTS . m ob1le homes.
houses. Pt. Pleasant and Gallipo·
lis 614-446 -822 1

037"'

llul\pl $28 &lt;o $125.

Used FUrniture: Washer &amp;

drver. gas range , wood tabl e &amp;
2 benches. beds. dresser. wood
wardrobe . 3 mil es out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9AM to
5PM . Mon thru Sat

GOOD

For Lease

Creftmati c chair. light t an . e11c.
cond. 3 04 -676-4616 .

Real Estate General

Coal delivered Run of Mine
t42. a ton: Lump, 86&amp;. • tDn;
Call Don Hoyd, Foreat Acres
Park, Rutland , 614-742-2100

USED APPLIA NCES
Washers, dryers , refr igerators.
ra nges . Slulggs App li ances.
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446-7398.

1 Large sized Sears Fuel Oil
Stove. excellent condition Ph .
614-256 -6210 .
Electrtc counter top stove &amp;
ovon, copper co lored S1 50
Autom atiC Washe r 5125.00.
smAll elec dryer S 1 00 00 2
recliners S30 00 occh
Flower couch &amp; love seat. good
condtt1on 246 -6 126.$
Elec Range 36in 695 00, Elec
Range 40in $75 .00, Elec: .
Ronge JOin. avocado $126 00,
2 elc. ronges 30 in whit e
$125 .00 each . Elec . dryer cop·
pcrtone. gas dryer $95 00.
Kenm ore automatic wosher
S95 00 Skaggs Applian ces,
Upper Rivflf' Rd Ph 614 -4467398 . So,fadtemp
For !ale good used color TV's ca ll

6 14-446-11 49.

Electric cook stove and complete metal bed Ca ll 6 1 4 -992·

2598

Living room furniture (couches. ·
chtira, tablet, lamps, mirror!.
r,ew Weatern Hits (8 "%}, guitar.

•

A 76ct diamond will tr ade for ..
D!JtO or wUI sale, alt o for t ale a ~
baby bed
•

mlac. Call8!4-992 , 3267

Tony' a Gun Repairs. hot rebluelng. Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM .
Call 304-675-4831 .

Zenith turntable. cassette tape •
deck, turner ampiHier, t3DO.OO ,
lighted t ter io ca binet 8100.00. ,

Surplus regular Bmy camou·
flaga. Carhartt, Denim, Aantal
ckJthing. camouflage coveralls
t30.00, ·H. 0 . ''S.m" Somerville. (Sgt U.S A F Ret. ) Eaat
of Ravenswood. Fn 1 Sat, Sun,
12·00·8 ·oo PM, other dayaafter

614-3117-0394
Uve Xma1 trae1, 1tone. mulch, •
firewood, 83 6 coal. delivered .
Heap vouchers accepted. Don' a
Land scape s Call 614 - 448· ,.
9046.
.

4:00 PM 304-273-6656.
Fall ie for plant1ng tr-tt &amp;
bushes, also fill dirt &amp;. top aoll•.
Davlsona Land scaping Ph 614·

~

Shop

Chrittntlll trill. 5 to 14 foot,
$20 00 each. Three mllea out
Sand Hill Road on lett

SAV E your loved"bnn some of
the sorrow &amp; expense. Purchesing memorial propeny before
need 11 JUi t good common sense.
Call now tor brodmre. Ohio
Valley Memory Gardena. Call
6 14-446-36 16 . Me1g1 Coun!'(
Memory Gardena C.ll61•· 592-

24 pc. new china . $25.00; 43
Old Albums •20.00, 1913
Brownie camera 120.00; box
left over y.,d sata itema 115.00
tor all .. 304-875-6118.

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Chrittm11 Trees S.lect your
tree . Cut It anytime before
Christmea. 112.00 any t ite
· Newt U's Christmu Tree Farm.
Hanging Rod! Rd ., Mason. WV

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6 151
1.,---------a

304-n3-5371 o• BB2-2BB6.

For aala Ki mball Fun Swinger :
Organ and a 1978 Honda Mini ...
Trai l 70 00, Call § 14-446· 3993. ;

Br owning Swee t 16 gauge
S550.00, Ruger Model 77 L.W .
270 naw $325.00, Savage 99
with ICOpe 30:30 S250.00,Savage An schuu 22 Cal. new

FOf sale. pool table, exc cond. lA
ln. slate top. t 500. 304-57&amp; 2142 after 4

:
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30.08 Reminuton pump wrtt,
scope. •2&amp;0 304·196-3630.
Dog house, medium 1iza dog,

e1tc. cond $26.; box 1prings.
e11c. cond . t21S .. mMching mattrill frM with boa aprlngt,
wood gr~ln , dr•erv rod1 810.

Cub Cl!ldet . Riding Mower. 3p c "'
Bedroom Suit . 20in. boy• bike :Ph 614-446· 4426.
•

-

oach. 304-875-6678

Firewoo d for sale. U5 pick -up
toad Delivered Heap Vou chers
accop1ed Cell614-742- 2466 ••

65 Building Supplies
Buttding Matartal1
Blodt, br~ c k , l twet plpn, wm ·
dawt. Untela, etc. Claude Win·
ters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614 ·
246· 5 121
~

FirftWood. Seuoned hardwood. -split and delivered t40. Ex-lqe
P.U load 614-992 · 3,0.

Real Es tale General

•

1499 U.S. Route 42 N.E.
London. Ohio 43140

- (614) 879-7731 - 879-7732 - 879-7649 ,,.,..,

Dick Green Judy Green Connie G. Ballah
. M adr son Co Ai rport &amp; Motels nearby

•

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L•censed &amp; Bonded 10 t"'or ot the state ol Oh•o
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
TERMS : Cash or check w/ proper I.D.

ANTIOUE AUCTION
R1PLEY, W. VA.

MONDAY EVE., DEC. 1, 1986

5:30 P.M.

,

Located 5 miles south of Ripley, WVoff 1-77 at Fairplain exit. Follow signs to Jackson County livestock
Market. Auction will be held inside new comfortable
heated building. Due to space everything has been
moved and will sell with minimum or reserve. Doors
will be open at 3:00 P.M. to view up to sale ti me.

ANTIQUES COLLECTIBLES PRIMITIVES

Oak side board w/ beveled glass m1rror: 2 tainting couches
w/oak frames; 2 slepback cupboards w•lh llour b~n s. 1 w1th
bread baskel: waf nul dropleat Iable: square oak dm1ng table;
pressed back chans, pressed back rockers; p1e safe; large
k1lchen cupboard , Counlry K1tchen wood cook slave: walnut
covered treadle sewmg machme; 1ron ketlle, Cu ca early
1800's; round wood buller mold, swan design, Ingraham column mantel clock: Waltham com Sliver key wma pocket
walch: Ham ilion M1nt 24 kt gold E.P. Easter lale, certified
and numbered, large press; arrow heads; .colleclor paper
dolls; slat back chairs; library tables: old baskets, kraul cutter: old colleclor botlles: glass wash board: small and large
brass keltles, slone 1ars and 1ugs. gold r"'gs and teeth; Roosevelt lapel pin: Free Silver pin; cam paign buttons, Garl•eld
clear pressed cui memonal plate: C1rc11 IBB1 ; large collection ot old books, magazmes and newspapers, some daling
back to ea rly 1900's, several of Gall! aCounty, also mcluded
for serious collectors only, a repnnt on unusual paper ot lhe
Ulster County Gazette newspaper · featunng George WashIngton's obituary known to be over 100yearsold; marble top
wash stand. needs repairs: cereal grinder: carb1de light: oil
lamps; okl P•ctures and frames; gramte ware; 2 glass butter
' churns; dasher ~ro ck churn: metal egg baskets, large collection of advertising items including old boltS, fans, etc; battery operated radro wrth lealher lront, large collection of
ant1que lools plus many olher ant1ques and prinill1ves loo
numerous to ment1on.
.
.
· • GLASSWARE: Germany, depression, pressed cut, Blue
On•on, amethyst, coin-spol opalescent and other m•scell aneous Rlassware. GUNS: LC. Sm~h 12 ga. double barr~ shotgun;
sman model 22 ga pump; J.C. H1ggins model-583-11 0I 20
ga. shotgun; ant1que shotgun reloading k•t
•
FOOD AVAILABLE
TERMS: CASH OR CHECK WITH POSIT IVE I.D.
SALE CONDUCTED BY
•
WINTER AUCTION SERVICE
AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER- MILLWOOD. WV
PHONE: (304-) Z73-3447
LICENSE #334·87

·NEW ELECTRIC 24X4S
3 BR 2 BATHS;
DELUXE SECTIONAL

$17,500

· luner

: •1!9 9! to • 199.95

'

.' 7.,Prtrfinl•hed oak flooring JA .. T
. Jt 2W 'W random length T.G .
Gunattlll and nMurll finish

CHARMING HOM E ON SECOND AVENU E
- Wilhm easy reach oft he down/own area
th1s attraCIIVe home features LR w/ fneplace. lar ge lor mal d1nmg room. roomy
k1tchen. 3 or 4 bedrooms, l'h bal hs, gas
heat gar age, Call for an appo•n(menL
COMFORTABLEHOM E4 SAL E- $19.000
- LR. k1tchen. balh, 3 BRs. gas heal, one
car unattached gara ge Call lor an
appomlmenl
STEP INTO ElEGAN CE when you enl er the
Ioyer of one of lhe Fren ch C1ly's finest
FormallR , lormal drnln&amp; spac1ous master
bedroom wilh olf1 ce or sewm g ruom
ad1acent den, 2 BR s, upstans, 2'• baths. 3
fireplaces, lar ge lam•ly room, solar1um.
covered pat1o. screened por ch and much
more Call for an appl
ADDISONTWP.- PossomTrot Rd -93
acr es m/ 1, al l woods. Old barn on property
$21.900.
COMM ER CIAL BUILDIN G- PERRY TVIP.
- NEAR CORA - 600 sq M sleel bld g,
Ideal for anyon e 1n lrucktn &amp; drrllln g or
m1mng bu smess Owner may cons•der
leas1n g or hnancmg Call for more
mformatlon.

COUNTRY CHARM - . N•ce older home
oilers 3 BRs, bath, LR. d1nm g room and
kitchen Srlual ed on 2 lots on Rl 160 1n
Vtnlon. Call for an appomlmenl
VACANT F.ARMLANO- Mor gan Twp. 84
acres more or less level and rolling land
Approx 33 acres tillable. rema1nder
woods

47 MADISON -One slory home With LR .
k•lchen, balh. BR, gas heat, pr1ced at
$15,000.
OWNER ANXIOU S TO SELL - HAS
REDUCED THE PRICEBY $10,000 - 143
acres m/ 1m Walnul Twp. 1'1 story home
has 3BR, balh 42x92 bar n, large lobacco
base. Call for an appo1nlmenl.
NICE STARTER HOME AT CENTENARY Th1s home offers 3 BRS, LR. k1lchen. balh .
ln eplace and full basement Pr~ced a/
$32,900 Calll oday
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION - Lois ol room
for the krds and a n1 ce garden. This
attractive home offers 3 BRs, LR, k1lchen. 2
baths, formal dm•n &amp; sundeck. lull
basem ent Call lor more del ailS
COMFORTABLE LIVING PR ICED AT
$19,900! - This a1tract1ve home offers 2
BRs. bath, k1l chen w~h r an g~ dm•n groom
LR, car pel, I car unattached garage:
s•tualed on two loi s. Call loday

rnform at1on.

EVERGREEN - 128,900- Th1s home has
been remodeled ~nd •ncludes LR. k1t chen
w~h stov e, refr~ g. and disposal dmm g
room, bath, carpel. woodburnmg slave.
unaltached garage and a 16&lt;30 olf1ce and
shop. Call about lh1s on e loday

DUPLEX 4 SALE- Great mveslmenl for
the buyer, located on Graham School Rd.
Ea ' h un11 offers 2 BRs, llvmg room, bath,
k1tchen and stove. relr1g , OW and d1spl., ,
laundr y. large carport. central air an d
storage well

$39,900- 1.7 acres m/ 1. Very n1ceran ch
slyle home leatu res 2 baths, &lt;3 BRs. LR.
family rm. and formal d•n•nr. c arpet in ~
woodbu rnmg slave. Call for more

COMM ERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL - RES IDENTIAL - 50 acres more or less, vacan t
land Road lronlage on U S 35 and
M1l chell Road

KAN AUGA- $L8. 900 - 3 BR home w ~ h
krlchen LR, bath, gas heat Call for an
appo1nlmen1

LOOKING FOR YOU R FIRST HOME? Th•s attr aCIIV e hom e IS pr~ced at $33, 000
and oilers 3 BR s, bath, k1tchen. liV Ing
roo m, fam1ly room. ,woodburnrng sl ove,
elec heal Ca/1/oday and let us show you
this home.
·

OWNER ANXIOU S TO SELL. PRICED AT
$39,900!1 _:_ lovely ranch sl yle hom e on
St Rt 141 offers 3 BRs, 1 lull and two ~
baths, eal·tn k1tchen LR. fireplace, full
basement, one car attached gar age, ulll1ty
barn. county water and well All th1s
s1tual ed on 2.494 acres m/1. Ca ll for an
appomtmenl

WANT TO OWN A BUSINESS OF YOUR
OWN? - 1500 sq h. co ncrete block
building s•lualed on .66 acre presently
bemg operated as a carry out
·

CHAROLAIS HI LLS- 3.24 acres more or
less Owner hn anc1n g ava1lable

SPRING VALLEY ESTATES - Tn-level
home offers 3 BR s. 2 baths, n• ce equipped
kitchen, L·shaped LR . dm1ng area 24x 12
fam1ly room w1lh woodbur"'ng fneplace.
gas heat cent a1r. 2 car garage Callloday.

GUYAN TOW NSHI P - 108 acres m/1
located south ot Mer cervrlle 20 A. tillable,
balance woods toba cco base Owner w1ll
help finan ce

AFFOROABLY PRI CEDAT JUST $29,900'
-Close to c1ty on Rl 1411hiShomeoffers
k1lchen. LR fam1ly room. drnm g roomand
lull ba sement large unattached block
garage. Call for an appo1ntmenl

103 ACRES MI L. SPRINGFIELD TWP. Approx. 96 A. l•llable, older home has 5
BRs, balh LR, kitchen counly wal er
40x60 pole bldg 40x60 tobaco barn
variou s olher outbUildings.

GREENTWP. - 2.5 AC RES m/1. very mce
homeoffers5 BRs, 2 baths, k1lchen, drnmg
rm. LR . carpel and har dwood, wood·
burner. new lurnace Call lor an
app01nlment

GREEN TWP. - FRONTAGE ON ST. RT.
141 - 116 5 acres-m/1 vacanlland. Call
lor more mlormal!on.

OW NER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 9 5 EWINGTON - WOODRUFF RD _ 1 55
acres m/1, Mor gan Twp. Fronlage on Rl ·.acr es m/ 1, 3 BR home. LR, kil chen. balh
160. Call ,tor deiBIIS.
North Gallla scho ol d~&lt;lncl
·

6100 SQ. FT. BUILDING - Sohd·concrele
walks, 200 K Iron/aRe on SR 7 m Crown
C1ly. For merly used as a lurmture laclory
Ideal for reta•l sales 01 manulaclu rmg
bu smess

ATTENTION INVESTOR OR FIRST TIME
HOME OWNER! - N1ce hom e 1n city offers
3 BRs, LR. bath, k1tchen, gas heat and a2
car unattached garage. Priced al $19,500
Ca_lltoday

BUY A LITTLE OR BUY A LOT! - .This home
can be f)IJrchased with 5 acres or 5B'llnd
oilers 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR, kil.chen,
woodbusnmg slave, carp et, lobacco base,
• 40x60 barn, cellar hou se and several
sheds Call for mor e rnformation.

RUTLAND, OHIO

Real

JUDY DEWITT
J. Merrill Carter
Phyllis Loveday
Jim Cochran
Becky Lane
Patrick Cochran
Ron Pitchford

$6995
KANAUGA MOBILE
HOME SALES

SOUTHU. HIUS R.

E.; INC.

446•6610

388-81 ss
379-2184
446 -2230
446-7881
446 -0458
446 -86SS
245 -9490

BROKER

I

m

'I

REALTOR•

446-9662

Real Estate General

canaday ~- Reaity

:446~3636cA~

m
.
.,.. ,oort
.

_.r..;:-.
ULI

NICE
HOME WITH
ON ALMOST AN
ACREOF BEAUTIFULLANO 3 BR. 2 BATHS, I WITH GARDEN
TUB &amp; SEPARATE SHOWER, UR, RANG E, REFRIG., C/A,
VINYL SIDING WITH EXTRA INSULATION, LG. STORAGE
BLDG All OF THI S FOR ONLY $29.900.
ANOTHER FARM IN THE KYGER CREEK AREA - APPROX.
78 ACRES NICE MODE~N FARM HOME HAS 1 ~ BATHS,
EQUIPPED EAT -IN KITCHEN, All ROOMS AR E SPACIOUS.
FENCED PASTURE. POND BETTER HURRY, THE LAST FARM
WE HAD IN THI S AREA SOLD FAST! $75.000.

• · ~6 . 69 Secondo 04.99

~

15.Kayed or Bed (R ) Lock s

U .99Nch.
18 5pc. Hight Glos1 t ub w11\ kit1
.. with shetves t2 9 96
• , PENN' S WA~ E HOUSE
~" .
Well1ton , Ohio

•. "

614-384-31145
Daya B lo 6

,. :&amp;

GREAT EXPOSE TO YOUR WARES! - 5 rooms and
bath, full basement Largest01age building 160 ~
of road frontage on SR 7 tusl above /he S•lv er
Bridge! A low pncel $36,000.00
#2 243

oon~ente n ces

#2 125

2

3
~:~~~· UNATTA
HEAT C
PUMP,
1 CAR
HED GARAGE
ATT~I~Hl!~~~~·R~~UELLP~~~E24X32
.75 OF AN ACRE.
JUST LISTED! IN TOWN, 3 BR RANCH, NICE LR &amp; EAT -IN
KITCHEN, LG. UR. AND GREAT BACK YARD. HAROTOBEAT
AT $29,900
REDUCED! OWN ERS WANT THIS ONE SOLD ' CONVENIENT
TO HOSPITAL, 3 BR. HUGE LR. FULLY FURNISHED
KITCHEN-0/NING COMBO, CARPORT WITHSTORAGE ROOM
&amp; PARTIAL BSMT. JUST REDUCED TO $30,000.

·:Pole a·ulldingl by Quality
• .Builders . Workshopa, carports,
' 1nimal shelters. garages Free
ut imate s. Phon e 614 -384 ·

STARTING OUT! -Then lh1s is the homelor you.
3 bedrooms, hv.ng room, I car g~rage Corner lol
$28,000
#22t2

FARM WITH 60 ACR ES - l ovely 3 bedroom. 2
balh home, 2 ~ car garage wrt h el e clr~c opener,
barn. tobacco base. pond. Approx. 15 acres are
l•ll able. resl•n paslure and some woods Bea ul 1ful
view surrounds home
#2209
'"

SPACIOUSAN 0 BEAUTIFUl Englrsh des1gn stone
and fr arne ex tenor, 2slory, 3 bedrooms. 2'" balhs
formal d•n•nr. formal entry w1th much more. Call
IO see 1hiS lovely home located wrthm City
#2 1&amp;4

Pets for Sale

1'h year old Rabb it Beagle. good
n,arkings Pt}.. 6,4·4•&amp; -8170
AKC Registllfed Siberian Hu1ky
. both p1rents on premises Cell
114-949-2940 11ter 5p.m .
AKC miniature Da sh Hound
puppies, AKC reg istered Pekin·
ge11 pupp1et • 200.00 each
P.uppy Ph 6t4-446·7920 .
AKC Registet'ed Ba11ett Hound
pupa 8 wHits old. Tri-color ed
Mother and Father can be uen.
• 125 Call614 · 667- 6758
2 Registered Pi t Bull puppies tor
11le or trade Ca ll 614 -843-

51&amp;4.

BRICK &amp; FRAME ON NICE LOT WITH SUPER NICE HEATED
POOL WITH STORAGE BLDG. 3 BR. 2 BATHS. GARAGE, BIT
EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH RANGE , REFRIG , OISP &amp; OW ELEC
HEAT PLUS SOLAR HEATING UNIT WITH BLOWER. AS KING·
155.000.
WHAT MORE CAN YOU ASK FOR? GR EAT LOCATION IN
TOWN, 3 BR, GAS FURNACE. 2 CAR GARAGE, RAN GE.
REFRIG, WASHER&amp; DRYER, NICE FENCED BACKYARD, AND
BEST OF All ONLY ASKING $25,000
REOUCEO! CITYSC HOOLS 3 BR RANCH , 1~ BAT H , GARAGE.
LARGE LEVEL LAWN, VERY NI CE. REDUCED TO$39,000.

Germ an Short Hai r Po1n1 er .
e11cellent bird dog. t76 .00 .

PICTURE PERFECT! 2 BRRANCH WITH VINYL SIDING, NICE
LEVEL LOT, RANGE, REFRIG.. FU LLY CARPETED. CARPORT ,
STORAG EBLDG ASKING$32;000.
FARM WITH 60 ACRES. AP~ROX. 20 ACRES TILLAB LE &amp;2
STORY HOU SE WLTH 4 BRS, BIG EAT-IN KITCHEN WITH
RANGE REFRIG.. NICE FORMAL OR, FRONT &amp; SIDE
PORCHES. BLOWN-IN INSULATION IN WALLS &amp; CEILING.
ONLY A~ lNG $44,000.
GREAT LOCAITON! MINUTES FROM TOWN, 3 BR RANCH
WITH ALMOST ~ AC~E LEVEL LAWN 1~ BATH, LR &amp; FR
WITH FP PRICED TO SELL AT $42, 000 •
IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR A FARM OR ACREAGE, GIVE US A
CALL. WE HAVE LAND IN VINTON COUNTY, CITY SCHOOL
DIST .. NG. HT. SW &amp; KC SCHOOL DISTRICTS.

NEW LI STING- $12,000.00- 1 story frame
home wrth 2-3 bedrooms Would make an
e&lt;eell enl renlal pr operty Srlualed on I acre mor e
or less lot
• #2262
SO MUCH FOR SO LITTL£1 lloor plan home w1lh large lev el lot 3 carpeted
bedrooms, livmg room and balh. d1mng area.
eat-m kitchen. $36,000.00 .
#2260,

MINI FARM -Th e hou s e~ empt•onal. 1 slory
wfth upstalfs unflmshed. Full dr 1 v~•n basemen! 3
bedrooms, livmg room. lor mal dm•n&amp; calhedral
c e~lin g 1n livm g room, foyer. modern k1l chen
large garage and barn like new A showy 6 plus
acres Hunl •n gton Twp Call/or an apporntment
Th•s ISreally n1ce $51.000.
#22 18

EFF ICI ENT! - Should explam lh1s house
Impressive- large enough. 5 rooms and balh.
Fully insulated low ma1nlenan ce bmk and
alummum s•d •n g Showy garage and carport.
Eff1C1ency apartm ent w1th a lillie work. List1ng
pnce $39.900.00. Mak e us an oiler
#2 24 5
HOM E CLOSE TO MANY CONVENIENCES &amp;
SCHOO U - Alummum Sided neal three bedroom
ranch Hardwood floors, storage buildin&amp; lol
appro• . 120'x40'. W1th1n c1ty lim1ts. $36,500 00
Make an appo1 ntmenllo see l h•s one today
#2238
OLD ER BUT WELL MAINTAIN ED AND REMODELED HOME w1lh 3 bedrooms. l1vrng room, bath,
/am1 ly room, k1lchen and large formal d1nmg
room A 12'x12' poul •ng and 12'Kl2' attached
shed $42 900 Call lor more •n formal1on
#2205

A SPECIAL HOUSE FOR SPECIAL PEOPLE Charmrn g 3 bedroom ranch and 2 lots Full
lm rs hed basement 1 car garage. llvmg room
family room. ~oodburne~ . wal k 1n clos ~ oil
masler bedroom. Pnced 1n /he 40s Call loday
Th1s could be Ihe on e for you
#2227
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY - Br1ck and lrame
bu1ld1n g. presently used as a ceram•c and flo ral
shop 3 mob1l e hom es used as rental property. 2 ·
lots located al Upper RIVer Road Good ~nco me, all
pr es enlly renIed
#21 61

SMALL FARM , ~ p PROX . 25 ACRES- I '? slory
home. barn and several oulburldm gs Gas well on
property. Home ~as 3 bedrooms. I balh, dmmg
room. k1tchen. I1V1n g room, screened 1n back
porch and basement. Addison Tow nship
#2250

COMMERCIAL BUILDING, stale approved. lo·
caled wrthln c•ly ·lim•l s Bu1id1n g has concret e
lloor. heal water, small olflce area and bathr oom
Pr esently used as a garage and wr ecker serv1ce
l ol s•ze 55 'xll0'.

MISTY LANE - 3 bedrooms, new ranch, I !&amp;
balh s Home 1n excellent cond1!10n
'#2204

•
WOW!! $6,600.00 w1ll buy li11s 3 8 acr es more 01
less l and lays very well Excell ent bulldm g lot
Has' been survey ed Several leet ol road fr ont age
#2207

$$SAVE$$ - THREE FOR THE PRI CE OF ONE!!
- 2 sl ory doubl e and 14'x70 mobile home Greal
mvestment pr operty Income $750 00 per mont h.
located 641 Th•rd Ave Askin g on ly $60.000.00.
GIVe us a call for more mformat1on. Cert amly one
to act on loday.
#2230

COMMERCIAL BUILPING WITH MANY POSSIBIL ITIES - Appr ox. 4,000 sq. ft. Has been used for
hardware and grocery slore. Equ1pped lor a 2
bedroom apart ment. Ru ral wal er, paved parking
area, qver 1 acre lot. P r~ced 1n lhe 20s.
#2239

OWN ER TRANS FE RR ED - MUST SEE lh1s
allract1ve 3 bedroom briCk and vmyl hom e at
Northup. Includes fam ily room, ollice. equ•pped
kitchen. satell•le d•sh and fenced yard $46,900.
#2 185

LOTS FOR SALE - 1 acre lots for building or
mobile homes. N•ce wooded area, needs some
cleanng. rural water available. l ocated in Addison
Township.
#2249
1
20 ACRES - $8,000 00. Wooded acreage Good
buildin g srt es Ru ral water available.
#2242

GREAT STARTER HOM E - Located .m Planlz
Subd1v1sion. 2 large fl al lots. back deck.
oulbUIIdtn~ trrepl ace, eal·•n krt chen. $42,000.
#2 124
SEVERAL BUILDING SITES - $25,000 - 19
acres mor e or less. Within 'A mile of c1ty 11m1ls
Must see lo appreciate.
#2 194

~ 19&amp;6 Century "2 1Real Es;a te Corporation as trustee fort he NAF. ® and '"·

PRICE REDUCE0... $2,400.00
A DREAM
COME TRUE! - Yours·w•ll when you see th•s
lovely bnck and cedar ranch sett1ng am1d 2 8
acres ol naiiV e lrees 4 bedrooms, fireplace,
dmm g and family roo ms 2 car gar age, 3baths, fu ll
basement Oon'/lel th•s one gel away Call for an
appomlmenttodayl
#2264
REDU CED ... Owner 1s makin g two house
payments and needsl osel l•mmedlale~IDbl w1de
located on 70 acre Askmg $17,00000 MAKE
OFFER You can'l go wron g
#2L80

DOWN ON THE FARM - 145 acres al•ls besl
lovely reslored older home. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths
Some farm equ1pmenl included wrth sale
S11ualed on slate h1 ghway Must seelo apprec•ale
#2203

WE' RE GIVING IT AWAY or almostl - 3 bedroom •
brick ranch conven•ent to shoppm g Home
fe~ures larrnly room. 22'x30' livrn groom, 2 balhs
lormal dining. 2 car garage. eat-in kitChen wrth a
complete set of appliances Exira lot •ncluded
Maintenance fr~. $72.500
#2 183

E-U-l-A-V spelled backwards means VALUE and
thai's what lh1s 3 bedroom ran ch oilers. Oouble
closll in masl er bedroom l ot JOO'x133' loan
assumable IO f1rsl lime hom$ buyers
#2216
NEW LISTING - 133 ACRESMORE OR LESS- 2
story older home w~h 3 bedrooms and more 2
barns, pond tobac co base. 2 slorage bu rldrn gs
Only appro• 7 m1les from town
#2 263

3g ACRES PLUS BARN - 2 ponds, lobacco base
storage bUildin g I arm machinery and equ1pmem
.ncluded. I % story 4 bedroom home. full
basement, 2 car vnattached garage
#2 187

_6762.

: 56

NEW LISTING - BEAUTIFUL CONTEM PORAR~
nestled in the trees. 3.200 sq h. of living space.
llVmg room, dinm g room, lam1l y room. rec room.
lar ge master bedroom leadmgtoyour own p11v al e
deck. Office. 2 fireplaces. beaul 1lul 30'x40' pool.
So many exlras must see to apprec•~a 17 acres.
#226t

GREAT INVEStMENT PROPERTY!- Mobrle home
park w~h 10 mob1le homes. A very n1ce 3
bedroom, '2 bath homew1th basemen! apartmenl
large 40'x60' bu1ldrng Park has central lighted
slreets and 11 spaces. localed al River Streel
#2259
OWNER WILLING TO FINANCE - 11\ slory, 3
bedrooms plu s, liVIng roo m. drn•n g room. parlial
basemen!, blown-10 .nsulal10n. cha10 l.nk fence
local ed on 43'!173' c1ly lot · Close to many

110 00 10 25.00.

; ·14.

NEW LISTING THIS AD ISNT FOR
YOU .... Unless you're looking for a super deall
Wrndsor 14'x70' mob1ie homewrth 3 bedrooms, I
bal h, bpill-lrr stereo system and m1crowave. N1ce
bay wmdow 1n krtchen Over 7 acr es of n•ce level
land
#2258
NEW LISTING - RELAX WITH ME' - A warm
hou seoffsets the aulumnal chill 3 bedrooms, 1'-\
baths, liVing room. fam•ly room and a molher' s
irlchen. One slory, lev~ yard' LeGrande Blvd
Come and seel
#2 252

B 50% off Vinyl siding trim
O .S.Corners • 4 . 00 , ln s1 de
Comers U 00. 12-J . Chane!
1160 00 16) co lor~ .
9. Wood Roof Truu 20 ' 10 20 '
10 Tempered tn1ulated Gla11
., Panel a. ~ .. T x 32 " W. x 78'' H.
' t29 95 each
1
11 Serubbable prepated vinyle
: wall covering double roll $6 .99.
. 12. 1nsulated whitestOI'm door' s
. 1'/•T x 38 " W•80 " H. Reg
• .1129.96 Now $89.96.
... 13 4 "x8" x'h " R. Guard Foem
• .8o1rd Foil Face. • 3 99pc
Decorator Wood Paneling

21 NEIL AVENUE - $29,900 - N1ce remodeled
vmyl s1ded home. Includes 2 bedrooms, l'h bath,
screened p01 ch, full basemenl(could be 3d BR)
Nalural gas and fenced yard. An excellent bu yI
#2202

I

ROOM TOGROW - 2 5acres, moreor less,
very attracl.veranchsty le homeleatures 3
bedrooms. 2 b.alhs. LR, k1l chen w/range,
ref n&amp;. m1crowave full basement carpetmg. heal pump/cenl a~r, one car a«ached
garage plus an unal/ach ed garage, lots of
room for gardenmg ~nd en1oymg lhe
ouldoors. Calll oday

614-742-2455
ANYTIME

Put Nplnber 1 to work for you:

5'4 Misc. Merchandise

MAKE THIS
- l ovely home
srtualed on 34 acres I near Rodney. fh ~ .
home offers 3 BRs. bath, LR w/ fireplace.
large attraclive eal·m k1l chen. breezeway
Spring well and county water, tenced and
cross fenced, barn, tobacco base Call for
an appo1nlment

'

ZETOR
TRACTORS

SEE US TODAY FOR
A SPECI_AL PRICE

Real Estate General .

1979 TITAN 14XS6

AUDREY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
ROBERT GORDON, REALTOR, 4-46-6216
MARY FlDYD. REALTOR. 446-3383
25 lDCUST STREET, GAUIPOUS. OHIO

t

These
Are
in I et or 52 S.rits Tractors: Differential Lock, Built·
iR Air Coq~rntor, 3 Pt. Hitdl , Wet Sleeve Diesel Engine, Heavy Duty Front Arle. Coft11art a
ltter 2 or 4 Wheel Drive tractor to Any Other Tractor Brand. You Will Sttlt's Tht Best
Trador Buy il Amarica.

Unn••• River Rd., Gallipolis, 446-047 5

$9995

304-1176-2 159.

~~oll.illll....-..

•

STARTING AT 52 HP
TO 161 HP

SWISHER IMPLEMENT

WITH 7X24 EXPANDO

11.75 oq. h .

PRICE REDUCED TO $39 9001 GREAT
BEGINNER HOM E - Th1s home offers a
lar ge LR w1lh fireplace, k•lchen, dinm g
area, 3 BRs. bath. full basemen! I car
garage, deck fenced yard 1u st minut es In
lown on Rt 141 Ca ll for an appotnlm ent

~

Stop in and see this oil new AlV Work
Horse/Rmeotionol Vehide ot

1981 WINDSOR 14X70

ENT

IS PROUD TO ANNOUNCE SALES &amp;
SERVICE OF ZETOR TRACTORS

Commuter' s 4 x S Ka first in
4 wheel dri ve off -rood vehidts. Detigned to haul more
cargo than any other _ATV.
Commuter's 4x5 works so
well thet the competition IS
surt to " copy ' ' us . Don 'twa1f
for the "followers" - buy a
4 x S from the leader,

.

2783.

• LUNCH SERVED •

•

SPECIAL
.

Concrete blocks all 1iz81 yard or
dellverv Mu on sand Gallipolis
llodt Co . 123 'ih Pine St.,
Gallipoli1, Ohio Call 614-448 ·
Buildmg SupphQ
Surplus-Cioaeouts-Buyouts
: 1. Wood buming sheet metal
• sto v. . tlmllar t o Franklin
... tfi9.91S eech or 2 for 8100 00.
- 2. S ~eel insulated prehung
.. door 's. no brick mold 89 96.
"' 3.- lnt•ior prehung door' s all
: •sizes and fini1h11 121.96 eKh .
4. 42 " Vanity with (8) m•bletop
t149.91 each
IS. 6" by 20' White commeroiel
8 1.00 per ft .
• . 1•nd2pcFiberglustub'und
.. showers white and colors

PRIOE OF OWN ERSHIP - lov~y home
oilers 3 BRs, 3 balhs, equ1pped kitchen,
14x44 family room, d1nerte, fireplace, 2 car
an ached gar age 20x40 pool and satell~e
dish. Call for an appo~nlm e nl

MORRIS EQUI

THANKS81~1N8

.

------------==~~===-------~~~~~---------~~~~~----------- ,

Several Makes &amp; Models of Com P1c~er s &amp; Grav11y Wa gons
lndu stnal EQuipment and salvage trac tors
·
l 1Uag e Equ1pment. Plows 1· 7 bottoms. d•scs
F11!ld Cultivators. Packers. Etc.• Grmder-M1xers
Round &amp; Square Balers. Rates &amp; Mowers of au k1nd s
Tools • Equipment to suit Everyone• need1.

54 Misc . M ~ rc ha nd ise

54 Misc. Merchand ise

54 Misc . Merchandise

HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTIES
. 25 LOCUST ST,REET, G!'LLIPOliS, OHI? 45621

M ilted hardwood slabt. S 1 2. per ~
bundle. Conuining approx. 1Y1 ,..
to ns. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pom eroy, Oh1o Ca ll 614-992· .,.

"Assorted Makes &amp; Models to choose from 25 to 150 H P

Pets fo r Sale

Dregonwynd Catt ery Kennel
CFA Himalayan, Persi an and
Silmt~se ki tten1. AKC Chow
puppies. Ca ll 614-.. 46-3 844
eher7PM.

614-446-0231 .

Heavy duty k)g splitter! 6" cyl ..
41 " ltroke. 16 gal pel min. 2
stage pump. 18 H.P. motor,
e1ttra powerful.

"

Schwinn 10-speed blcide , ..Cannon sure shot 35mm. ca· ..
m ere. Weatherby 22 callbur rifle
Ph . 814-245 -9109 for pricea. ...

TRACTORS: J D.. I.H.. Case. M.F.. Ford. Etc.

The Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei- Page- D-5

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W . Va.

•

$350.00 Ph. 814-448-7019 ,

Cons1gnments from several Local Farms and Dealers
Many ttems at Ab solute Auction
PLAN TO ATTEND THIS AUCTIO N
AS A BUYER-SELLER-VI SITOR

56

Groom 6 SYpply Shop
Profe11ionel Service, all 1tyles .
all br..ds. state At. 141 Gallipa 111, Ohio 46631 . Julie Webb. Ph

with,

Sawmill 3 Block standard size, ·
new wood . good condition
S1.600.00 wit h out blade Of :
power umt Ph 61 4·446· 8038: •

New &amp;. Used Farm &amp; Indust rial Equipment Of All Kinds

Tri-Green
Interstate Equipment. Inc.

Chri1tm11

266-1427

6481
P1ckens Used Furniture bood
quality used furnrture Open 9 to
6 01 call fo r appointment
304-675 -648 3 or 675· 14 50

for

· Pets for Sale

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS,
Call 304-675-1090

~---,------ Jc-

Oetuxe Kmg s•ze water bed,
e~~:cel lent condition $270 00 Ph.
614-446- 4043.

Firewood for aaJe. $36. per loed
or fi load1 1160. delivered and
uacked. Call 614 -949· 2501
after 5 :00
,

FirewoOd deliwered Oak &amp;. hick - :
ory, t pl lt,.HEAP voucher, pickup ~
lo6"d •36~an8"1•448- 2 2 23or '
614-4411 -3028.
~

SALES HELD LASTTHURSDAY OF EACH MONTH

-••

Coal delivered . Au).! of Min.e,
142. a ton: lump, 855. a ton;
Call Don Hoyd. Fore~t A cr"
Park, Autt1nd . 614-742-2600

388-8417.

NEXT SALES: Thursday. January 1. 1987
Thursday,Janua ry29. 1987
...,

0300 Call 614-985-4149.

Coll1114-268-8251 .

Firewood for 11le •30 .00 PU •
load Call Aogar Meade, 6 14- •

Dinettes 5 109 and up to $496
Wood table w-6 chairs S286 to
S795. Des~ 6100 uP to $376
Hutchea 6400 and up Bunk
be ds comp lete w -mattresses
S29 5 and up to $395 Baby beds
91 10&amp;$ 175 Mattr essesor box
springs full or twi n•. S63. firm
873 and S83. Queen sets $226.
King $360. 4 drawer chest $66.
Dressers SB9. Gun cabinets 8,
10. &amp; 12 gun Gas or elect riC
range $376 . Baby mattres1es
S35 &amp; S4f Bed trames S20 .
$30 &amp; KinJ frame $50. Good
sel ection of bedroom 1uites,
m&amp;tal cabmets, headboards $30
and up t o S65

8u smess or Office Space for
rent New Haven 304 -173·
5024 or 304-88 2 -3267

49

1.000 tirtl, slze1 12. 13. 14, 16,
16, 16 6. 8 miles aut Rt. 218 , ,

-----:::-::-::-= .

Sof as and chatrs priced from
S396 to $99£i. Tab les $60 and
up to S125 H•de·e·beds $39 0
to S59S R&amp;cllne rs 8226 t o

614-446-03_22 .

dn DNI'JGCWS

LP Gls Stove. Warm Motning.
85.000 BTU , Complete whtt
blower Coat t 799.96. sell for

Callahin'l Used Tire S~O'p . Over

Plu tic cistern 111te approved,
Valley Furniture. new &amp; used.,.. plastic septic tlnkt, JJt•tic
Large uction ot quality f urni· culverts, metal cutveru . RON
ture 1216 Eastern Ave. , EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jackson, Oh 6 14·2B6-6930.
Gal hpolis.

304-675-1076 .

Professional office space fo r
rent. Bend Area Mcd1ca l Center.
138 M ain St.. New Haven.
304 -882-3 135

FRI. EVE.• NOV. 28. 1986
7:00 P.M.

jiM HARKLESS - AUCTIONEER
R&amp;S Sales will furnish sale items.
742 -2882

Furnished Rooms

Pomeroy- Middleport-

54 Misc. Merchandise 56

54 Misc. Merchandise

LAYNE 'S FUR NITURE

.·

~--·

~

- - - - - - l dl!od by CLAY R POLLAN - - - - - •For t• t or • • • - 1 4r. 70, 3

.... -

November 23. 1986

..

Apartment
for Rent

·--~

SECLUDED &amp; ONLY APPROX 2 MILES FROM
TOWN - J.4 bedrooms. 2 balhs, bi·l evel newly
remodeled Co mplet~y redecor ated ms• de and
au / Over 2 acres Bel1 ev e th1s pr~ce low $40s
' #2236
VERY SPECIAL - 12 rehesh•n g acres Invited
14'•70' mob&lt;le home wrth 24 h expando. 3
bedrooms, 2 lull baths. Make us an oiler
#2 118
1137 SECON DAV ENU E -lol approx 52'i 170'
One slory frame home ? bedrooms I car garage
Encl osed porch. gas lurnace. part1al basement
Upper $20s
#2116
$8.500.00 WILL BUY TH IS 2 bedroomhomP and
Ph ac res more or less LoniPd nPal Thurmrin
~2215

OWN A LI TTLE BI T OF COUN TRY - 92 acr ~
partially wooded bar n rural wal er av311abl e 2
dnlled wells. Mineral IIRhlo mcluded ~ s k1n g
$27.900. Open tor oilers
'#2 14.4
EXCELLENT HOM E SITES WITH FINANCIN.G
AVAILAIILE AT AN UNBELIEVEABLE APR AND
LOW DOWN PAYM ENT - 5 acre lracls.
Surveyed Road fr ont age Mall\ h•ghway rural
water ava•lable Resl11cled lo• your proleCIIon A
deal you can 't be al Call today
#22J.7
TAKEYOUR PICK! - 97acres I obe diV •ded •nlo 5
acr e lo 25 acr e lracls W1t h1n 3'; m1les at City
Parhally wooded Pnvate Publ•c water ava1lab1e
Re sln cled .
#2221
PRICE REDUCED $3,900.00 - THISPROP ERTY
HAS POTE NTIAL - 5 room house and bulldmg
formerly used as a bu s•ness. 160 ft. road fr ont
on SR 7 jusl abov eIheS•lver Bfldge. Mak e aw1s e
purch ase loday. $36.000
#2243

trademark s of Centur y 21 RN I Estatl' Corpnratiun .

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED

P~ttd 1n U S.A Equ.1l l tnu,_IM~ OPpurtunily ~
..

·

�.

'

Page-0-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

fe

59 For Sale or Trade

Pets for Sale

' beaglesforuie,
?year, 4ye8r.
months . 8300. for all 304-

i

76·3796.

For sale or trade. AQHA marB
and colt. Mare is bred to AQHA
Palomino s~allion . Call 614949-2455 8\lenings or 614-

61

:;!•1304-675-2511 '"" 4,oo

;

•

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

t

Apples. all large sil'e. 7 11arieties,
by bag or bushel. all fruits and
~etablas, we accept food

stamps,
7 days, Jacks
Mkt, Rt open
35 , Henderson,
W Fruit
. Va

Registered Quarter Horses 2

Siders Equipment Co . ' 304675 -7421 .
'

weanlings , 1 brood mare in foul ,
call evenings Ph . 614-446-

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 36 West. Jackson.
614· 286·6451 .

Ohio

.

Masse; Ferguson , New Holland
62 Wanted to Buy
8ush Hog Sates &amp; Service. Ove; 1-::--:------___:.__
40 used ''actors to choose from I
~ complete line of new &amp; used Now buy ing shell corn or ear
equipment Largest selection in
Ct?rn . Call for latest quotes. River
S.E. Ohia .
~~~ - Farm Supply, 614·446-

sale. Call614-742-2014.
6 year old Quaner Horse.
gelding. has been shown 4 -H. ·
$650 .00 tirm, 304-675-6799
after 5 :30

xX

Sharp loaded will trade
1-614-886 -7311 .
'

1973 Sedan DeVIlle 67,000
miles. new radials. many new
p81'ts. Very good condit!on.
01.800.00 Ph. 614·448·0677

1983 Oldsmobile Royale, excel ·
lent condition, PS, PB, cruise
control, rear defroeter. crushed
velvet seats, 4 dr ., Sll\l&amp;r. Priced
to sf11 at 04500. Call448-0840

or 448·1429 after 6pm.
1974 Dodge excell8nt runn ing-

II , AC,PS,P B,AT ,

$600.00 Ph . 614-448-3093.

1976 Cabra par1ially restqred
kas AM FM Cassett, PB , PS .
rebuilt 4 -spood. good condition
Ph . 614-246· 91 52 or 614-4467270.
~M. low' mileage ,
auto, PS, PB, air stereo, CB,
aeking &amp;4,600.000. Not e hot
rod. if not sold will be traded in .
Ca11614-446-2745.

1980 Trilne

Datsun

310.

AM -FM

canette. good ,mileage, front

64

-======~::;:~~~~~==;=====
·
Real Estate

Mercedem 1978 450SEL 4-door

1979

5

Autos for Sale

2 Hereford caws with calves .

3 Hereford Heifer Calves for

330a.

71

19·7 9 LTO

near Pomeroy . Call 6-14-9922164 .

Toba__pco stripper, electric po wered, almasi: new, 304- 675~

Autos for Sale

2075

160 twentywpek old ready to lay
Hand N legtlorn Pullets located

15,000 bushel grain bin for rent
Morgen's Woodlawn Farm, 304:
675-1288 or 676· 2275.

71

Hay

&amp; Grain

ral
Large round bales of ha..,, $10
each, Square bales. s 1.25 each.
Call 614- 446· 1052 after 5.

Electric guitars, tulle t._,pe amp,
16 ln. speaker in case, Will trade
tor camcorder. or VCR Reeorder
Camera. Ph . 614-388-8706.

wheel drive. 81495. OBO . Call
614 -992-7039 or 614 -992 ·

7606.

1977 To..,ota . New tires. new
battery. E~tcellent gas mileage,
good condition 81600. Call

614·992·5465.

23. 1986

November 23, 1

Va.

1979 LTO 11. AC.I'S,I'e.AT. condition. jul1 wlntBf'lzed, eleC1S800.00 Ph . 814 -446·'3093.
rjc seats, body in · good shape,

Coll614·992-8a54.

4215 .

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

.

Ll'vestock

Oli\lers, M -M , Deutz tract ors:

M1ur . exc cond , 304 -273 -

&amp;iblll piano. arttst con·so~e.'

'

63

International 1250 Grinder

!;

!j'll

304·882 -3110.

New and used parts for Wkites

992·7a63.

W
Musical
•
Instruments

Wjintto.buypickuploadofcorn,

Ohio. Call 614-446-97?7, ,e-.re.
6 14- ~~6 - 359~ . Up front tree tors with warranfy over 40 used
trae1ors, 1000 tools.

3526.

Ohio- Point
62 Wanted to Buy

Farm E;quipment

JIM 'S fARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER SA 35 w. G«~illipolis.

Slayer barrel . Call 614 -992-

lrice Reduced. Cuddly Teddy

...

61

Savage 22 Hornet high powered
rifle. $325. or trade for 870 Deer
Slayer with regular and Deer

.

IMin, AKC registUI"ed 'Chow
i!hoW puppies. Read'Y to go
tlome Nov. 19. Red &amp; black, axe.
blood line, payment plan a\laila bt· The perfect Chri1tmas .Gift .
3p4-875-1799 aftf!f 5 ~ 30

Pomeroy-

new tires, new battery, and AM
FM in dash cauat~ 1400.00 will
take anything in on trade 636
Jack1on Pike, Apt 88- 8, Gallipo·
lis, Ohio across from Donnel_l'a.
1972 Duster. good shape 6)

autO &amp;596.00 call 614-446 -

2459.

1973 \M, one own.- 31,000
actual mil8s, factory AC,
I
rear defaulter, 4 new radial tires

Ph . 367-08aO

81 Plymouth-Champ, good con dition $1.700.00 Ptl. 814· 258 -

- - - - - - - ·IC-

19/ .: l10 Ford. 400 engine.
needs some work. As is S200.

Trucks for Sale . '

1979 Chevv 4x4 3150 eng: LoC:k
out

'2877.

Hubl. Dual

exhaus~ ..

$3,&amp;00.00 call814·246·92•t .

pid!-up. Short bOd·
whh 'Sliding VII•• window, tun1

roof. AM-FM c•..ett•:

oney ·

·

1972 Chevelt 55 360 . 4 b•rel. 4
tpe&amp;d. Good condition , 81800.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .' .

'70 GMC 350. .A~. P8. good
plint.. c1mp" 1Dp. m•e offer,
~···70, ~107.
.

1982 Subaru 4 WD wagon , VG
·cond . .t3.360. Call 814-448 ·

1150 Ford pickup Flllheld ·six,
good cond. t 1.200.00. 30•·

1978 Dodge Power Wt~gon for
••• call between 8'-sp.n:-. eu-

1729.

1978 Chevy luv pickup. Auto~
matic. 1696. C.ll 114-742·

73 . Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

1974 Ford F160, 361 engine,
e~tc. wMil vehicle with like niBW ·
aluminum topper. needs some
body work. At it 19915. Cell
614--742 ~ ~746 .
:.,

S600 00. call 304-773-5303.

1980 Plymouth Horizon TC3,

S1,600.00. 304·468·1 569.

1974 Ford ~160. 361 engine.
EKcellent work vehlde with like
new alun:tiftum top pet , HMis

1974 Volkeswagen, cheap, motpr good, 8160 .00. 304-675-

74 Motorcycles

1976 GMC \Ill'!. rebul!t engine,
new tlr81 . 11600.

1981 Honda . CX 600 for ule;
lxc.. cond . 8660 . 30•-su.

transmission.

.

30~· 6'18-2581.4

2436.

\

Ptlone 114-742·2745. '

-----~~--·\
1973 lntern81ionel flat bed . 6 ;

Trucks for Sale

e

1975 Chevy Silverado 4- door 1
ton duel wheels 13,000.00 or
ben offer Ph . 6~4 - 246 - 6800 .

6376.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Cl!mpera

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories·

62.000

1ctull

304-875·1a62.

Trudt - 1981 Chevy S-10 M.xi. •
cyl.. automatic. 304-876- •

8600.00. Ca ll 614-25&amp;- 1288.

76

t100.00. 304-682-2787.

350 engine and transmiuion,

speed trantml.-on, 2 speed ,
axel. Call 814-.186-4107.

72 Ford pickUp rune good

Ford 4 · wheel drive, front end &amp;
transfer case 8360.00 Ph. 814·

Budget trtntmiuions, used S.
rebuilt. Tool con\l'erten &amp;
tranlfar Cas... Will deliver Ca1h
&amp; ,Carry or ln.tall call 814-44$4870 or 614-379· 2220. ·

Real Estate General

10me bady work. At it 1996.

3308

.

1979 Jaep J -10"piekup 4 wd.
exc. cond. 304-175-3141.

,.
12 foot Flbet'glas Jon Boat

,,

miln

8200.

245-9894.

.

OeerhUnters Special! Truck
camper . Sleeps aix. Stove. ice
box. furnace . porta-potty. Call

SWEEPER and sawing machine
replir, pll'ts, and suppliH. Pick
up .and dalh.oery, Davis V1cuurri
Cleaner. one hllf mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 114-

44&amp;·0294.'

87

Upholstery
'

Watter~on 't W1ter

Hauling,

reasonable ral•. immediate
2.000 'gallon dtllvlfV, cisterns.
poolt, weU, etc. call 304·571-

·2919.

.

Coal, limettone, grl'lel, etc.
Delivered 1 ton and up. Jim
Llnier, 304 -&amp;76- 1247 Of 176·

7397.

87 . Upholstery

2454.

10ft. .tide -in camper, fully tell
contained for 1ala. 8800. Call

614·949·2013.

Real Estate General

Tr" and Uwn Service,
shruba, bushes
I
landscaping and
. stump r~ovat Le1f removal.

304·676·2010 •• 676-2842. .
cable t'ool drilling.
completed same dey.
and seryice. 304-

WISEMAN

tEAFORD[H

~~~~~·~~~~

REAL ESTATE

Real Estate· R!llloR

Get On The-

Ashby Construction , cerpentery. remodtling,.room addition.
cement block work. roofing.
interior and eltttrior peinting,

'

BEST

SE[L~RS

446•3644

LIST WITH US.

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER
bAVID WISEMAN, 446-9555
B. J. HAIRSTON. 446 ·4240
LORETTA McDADE, 446-7729

siding. Roofing. Free utim1181.
304 -176· 6445 or 675· 61&amp;2.

BEJTER HOMtS AIID GARDENS
I&gt;' '"'"'''" "'"'""~the inlerior of thiS one.Owner hascompletely
l~· rerr1od1~11i~d and redecorated this very well located home in
Grande When you see il: you' ll love il. Everything is so
nir••lv dnno Includes lormal dining. niee kitchen and break·
area. 3 bedrooms. 1~11 basement, large double lot and
,garage .building with room lor shop or lots of good storage.
$54,500.
.
.
#102

LIST!

'

216 E. 2nd St. ·.
Phone
1-(6141 -992 -3325
POMEROY- E•cellent bnck
about 30 yrs. old. Good qual·
ity construct1on, 1500 SQ. ft.,
3 BRs. masler 39• 14 dh
private bath. central air &amp;
heat, 2 woodburmng fireplaces, equ1pped kitchen,
dbl. garage. near the oospital. Asking $130.000
83 ACRES - Near Racine
with minerals. 3 BR home.
limber &amp; traclor land. Want

82 ·

Plumbing

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth end Pine

Gallipolis, Ohio

· Phone 814·446~ 3888 or 814441-4477

WISEMAN lEAL EStATE AGENCY

.'

SUNDAY PUZZLER

Real Estate General

7 Im.

-

brick on I&amp; level lot near I he
schools &amp; stores. Gas lur·
ance, 4 BRs, full basemen!,
dbl. gar.age &amp; dbl carport.
$35,000. MIDDLEPORT - Nicely remodeled 3 BR home on
corner lol near the schools.
Central heat, equipped kitchen, 2 bat11:;, J fl •:::c
porches &amp;aluminu ms1din g.
$34,900.
RT. 7 BYPASS- Near Middleport, small easy to heal 3
BR, one lloor home wrth car·
pet1ng. automatic heat. n1ce
bath &amp; 2 porches. Asking
iusl $18,000.
POIIEIIOY BUS, BLDG. from Seoond to Main, exrelerlt bnck wth .older ~dg. on
CIXlrt 2 ~cries, good inoome
&amp; well located nearly the
courtlllusa Was $130.00.
Will take $100.000.00 lo settle

Real Estate General

ARE YOU READY FOR WINTER7 - You'll
i
the warm hea a Buck stove insm can
trom ·
the lami~ room of th~ clean 3 BR bi · le~~EIIndures l
lull and 2 h~f baths. nice lfl1ng room and spacious
eat-10 krtchen. A~o I ~ car gaage and Iage Cllvered
patll. Super nice fla yard Rt 160, excellent for Clla
mine-s. $49.900.
#207

HERE'S A GOLDEN OPPORTUNITY- To ii; ein tow~
h:~&gt; e plenty ol pri;acy and still havea la'ge lot l:ir the
children to pay and h:~&gt; e room left over lor agarden ·
and pool This ~der manttl'\ance tree 2 ~01'1 offers a
modern k!chen and bat~ 3 be&lt;iooms and a
family room . II has had good ca re and is pnced at
$48,000.
#126

'

HISTORIC MIDDLEPORT HOME - OeCllralfle
woo&lt;!&lt;ltrk Stone and brick in 1;00d cond~lm 2~
baths. 4·5 bedrooms. 9 rooms plus aHic and partia
basemmt Gas forced air furnace 13 yrs. old)_Large
llitchen, wei plillnaf. Step sav~ng tamd~ , Pirltry,
walk:in dos(js, garage A sk~ng $ 5~900

Real Estate General

#308

BfST BUY - For $37,500, tlis will be had lo beat
Very .wei cared klr rome wlh outstanding'"" v~e~~.
Eas-y to heal 3 bedroom home ~ndu des eat·IO kichen
l~ing room wrth fireplace. l,..ge side pmch. Mani ansJ
lawn and 2 car ga-aga Kyger Creel! sctxl o~.

'

#206

601

E. M•in,. .la
POMEROY,O.

992-2259
N'ICE LISTING ..:. Really
nice! Splil foyer home wilh
4·5 bedrooms all in excel·
lent condilion. Garage. nice
lol. W.B. hookup. blinds and
sh uners included. Want
$54,900.00.

2 StOIY bnck double. Downstairs apil1menl has I'
room kijchen, bath fami~ or dining 100m and
bedrooms. Upstairs has 4 rooms and a bath Month~
1noome pllenl1a of $375-$400. OON T MISS THIS
OPPORTUNITY' $37.500.
#Ill
FIRST AVENUE - You w1ll be insp~raf by the
poss1bll1es t)l~ home offers' Convenient todowntow~
fine woo!lllork throughout wrth frtl'\ch doors. 1600
plus SQ. ~ IOdUdes 3 bedrOOm&gt; 2 baths. mrge.din ing
and l•~n g rooms. breaklast area, sm al den and carport'
Professonal landscap~n g front and back wrt h
mu~flel/li deck. $5G500.

..
,
, AVE ., 2 bedroom cottage , large rooms on
53 xl74 lot. Awn1ngs. ~n s u l al lon . Can have rooms upstai
$27500 00

BUSINESS' OPPORTUNITYH
- Bar room &amp; liquor license
available and or commercial
building. Call for deta1ls.
IN POMEROY - N1ce htlle
house ready to mov e~nto. 3
Dedroom~ gas furnace, front
Sitting porch. $14,000 DO
bul will except offer.

PRICE REDUCED
lANGSVILLE One floor plan
with 2 bedrooms. aluminum
sidin, new roof. large bath
with ut1l1ty room. 1'4 acre
lot. Screened s1de porch.
$17,000.00.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
.
992-6191
Jun Trussell ..... 9t9·2660
Dottit TurMr ..... 992·5692
Office ................ 992·22 59

(H~

#409
4 BEDROOMS/2.62 ACRfS - Ide~ oome lor a
growilg !am i~ . Th~ 2 StOIY bnck/trame has a !5x37
Cllmbned li;ingldining room 4 bedrooms. 2 baths,
lami~ r00f1\ gaage irld ptr ch Situataf on ale~~e lot
wn h a woodsy back~()JOO and dose to the school
Buyers Protectlln Pla1. $59,900.

ROUT£ '!60 - 4 bedroom brick. lull basement,.
l f~replla'ce &amp; l~n1 shed lam1ly rooms. 2 car garage fin~shed . No
al l he pnce of $45 .000.00. Needs 011me TLC.

1

'.

I

• APPROXIMATELY 9.8~ ACRES of level ground adjacent t~
Pleasant Valley Estates. 608 ~ ot road lrontage . w1lh Cllyt
• water. sewage and gas on prem•ses. $400.00 per lrontloot. t

#407
CITY LOT JUST OFF PORTSMOUTH ROAD ON
BURKHART lANE - Good ~cal1o n tobu~dnew home
All atv utillies availaile Walkingdlstanceloschooland
business ~catiOns. Pnced to set at $~800.
#34C

·.LOCATED ALONG 3RD AVENUE - 3.4 bedroom. 2 slor.
home. New furnace, hardwood floors, recently ren ovated.
N1ce lot $50. 000.00.

·1
I
1
I

NEAT 3 BEDROOM HOME located alon g Roush Rd . •
Chesn11 e l wp Kyger Creek Schools. Approx •, acre . •
wbiP oool Buy now lor $49 . ~0 . 00 •
•

•

COMFORT~BL£ 2 BEDROOM ho~re SitU ita! on

I acre of •
land approx _ 'h mile from cily imits. Shaded lot 10 . •
sulated , new dou ble·pane windows. $20.000.00 . '

I

•
•

I
1
I
1

3 BEDROOM HOME ON KATHY DRIVE near Holzer Hospital. •
!Jlw traff~ area, large tack yard,.WBFP. Gallipol~ City School
·
DiSir~t. Price $45,000.

e

.
•

I
•

1

I

•I

MAINTENANCE FREE OLDER HOME - Very well
mantainaf oome on the edge ol townm1g~ end yoor
house hurt1ng wtrnes. 2 or 3 bedroom~ ti;~n g room
d1ning room. eat·IO k!chen wlh breakfast room Good
siled backyard Exc~lmt ~calli~ close to town Good
neighoortod Gas he:t, centro air. $4~900.
#202

BUY FARMS OR ACREAGES

•

150 ACRES localed within secllons #34 &amp; 35 ,Green lwp. $79,000.00 loraii.Termsforqualified
purchase r. Call for more in fo.
·

•

YOU DfSERVE IT - This 1mmarul:te 3 bed&lt;oom
ranch offers morethan theaveragerouse Living room,
dining area plus eat·in klchen 11.11~ ~u~poo).
screened In porch. Full basemen! indures lamiti rOOIT\
st~age and garage. Swimm•ng pool proilege; Tara

e

$64.900.

•

'

132 ACRES . near Palriot. ~0 acres botlom 7
buildines. no dwelling. Free fis. $50.000.00.
46 ACRES , located ad tacenl to Gallipolis CIIY".
You1 ch01ce ollhe first 10 ac res. $1 0,000.00.

•

e
I

•

,,f rd

(Jo~ll, 1 11

DEl AILED ·ELEGANCE - ProfesS~n~ deCllnting
througt10Ut th~ kllll'i 3 bedroom bnd&lt; d be had to
walk away kom Owners ha'le extensi;e.'i remodeled
this home wrt h lop of the line materifls_Beatiliful oak
parqu!llloor accents the h~ l and dining are~ plush
new carp!l will please your lett as well asI he eyes. 2
s par~1n g baths wrth very attractfle Koehler ~lures.
Custom lig~s tlrougjloul atr~m doors lead to sunktl'\
patli. ~rge 2 car garage wtlf~orage New gas ln noc~
c mtr~ air. Many more amer1iies I hat. y()J must selto
apprec1:te Kyger C11:ek sctxlols. $60s.

#226

NEW ON MARKET - Modern J bedroom home in
good m ndit~ n Gas heat. Ctl'\tr~ &gt;r. W~ l ilJi~ gaage
wrth24x~ room aoove s uta~ e ilr apartment partia
utlll1es 1n placa L1slaf al $42800.

#309
COUNTRY LIVING' - 9 acres and nmdern home 3
bedroom ranCh wrt h attract~e klchen, li;mg room
smal den and lage bath Quill counlry ocati:ln in
AddiSOn Tow ~hip. $44,900.
#246
JA.Y DRIVE - A SupiJ Place To Raise A family _
Close and Cllnven1enllo si1Jpp 1ng City sctxlo5 Very
att1&lt;d1Ve L·shaped ran ch wrth 3 BR&gt; toing rOOIT\
lam1~ roomwrth fireploce, 2baths. eat-in kichen and 2
car garaga Great ~ iller rome. Compl!le wrth gas he~ ·
(low he~1n g b1l~). centr~ a~r and Buyers Protectlln
Plan. Call lor more 1ntlrmatlln $54,500.

#233
BEAUTY WHERE IT SHOWS - QUAliTY WHERE IT
COUNTS - all sp~loo ()JI iltlis 2000 p~SSij ftbrick
ranch. feaures 3 BR• a sunken tronl rOOIT\ 2 baths
and .large. LR. 2 c;r garage pkJs a 24xll gaage
bu1l!lng Srtuated on 2acres. off Rt l'i. Was $1 2 ~ 000
Now $89,900.
·

11405
OLDER HOME WITH MODERN FEATURfS _ HI
ball'6, lue oil, lorred air furnace, newer klchen ·
ca ~nru. Exrelenl garden area 45x45 barn 22124
garage Exira Ill br Sealnd lllme All for $36,500.
#329
84 ACRES OF VACANT LAND iusl2 miles north of
Rio Grand e just oil Pleasant Valley Rd. Mostly lree
covered. Good road fronlage. County water availa ble_Asking $35,000.

#3J3

SELLING ¥OUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS .... :
CALL AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON
'.)I'"

#234

42 ACRfS OF BARE lAND - Most~ wooded wl h
some saw lim!». 4 acres. m/1of ooHom la1d Good
place lo build Water tap p~d lor. Located'" Vinton tr
Glenn Summl Ror.J, \1 mile S()Jih ol 'v1nlon Asking
$23,000
I
'
#337

( t•l V\.'r1t1ol H1•,d1y Jr

IUUOI .

446·4206
NEW LISTING - RENTAt PROP.ERTY - DUPLEX
U~sta i rs apartment 3 bedroom, LR, kitchen. bath. Oownslairs
apartment. lg. kilchen , dining, Ig. living room, bath, laundry
room, also garage. Total monlh ly renlal $385.00. Asking
price $34 ,500.00.

'·
-

Headquarters

PRicE REDUCED - MIDDLEPORT - HANDYMAN'S
SPECIAL - I \; story older
home lhat needs work. Nice
level lot, 3·4 bedrooms, two
car garage. $9,900.00.

JIM STUTES - REALTOR

INVEST fliNT PltOPERTY, S HOM£ 5
.Lin in one, Rent 4 or rent all 5
All. close together

Housing

PRICE REDUCED - POMEROY - Older 11h story
frame home on a large lot.
House needs repa~red . 3
bedrooms, bath, k1tchen.
$9.900.00.

Stutes
Real
Estate
80MMIE STUTES ...., BROKER

THE BUY Of A LIFETIME -Look it atl·lte rest illd
yw'l agree I his !; the finest lllme on ll'j) m¥k!l iJrthe
price. 2,700 Sf+ ft. lin~hed INing SJiiO! located on a
wooded ~ 4 IJod\s trom scOOot The highest
standards were user! in IJJ~!ing th!; aJstom home II
indu005 solidcherry klchen catinBs, cherry relingin
fami~ room 4 la-ge beltooms, 2\1 baths, 2
woodilJrning firllJI~ 2 centrii air oondi~n!IS and
naturii gas heaing systems and 2 ca- garage Ful
basernect w!h fi~5hed rec. room This is rd a fluke
This home is in exrelent conclit~n and r~ures very
IItie monlmance. Priced at $79,000.

·.,

SELLING PROBLEM .
CALL 992-3325

PRICE REDUCED- POMEROY - Good look~ng stucco,
large lol, garage, basement,
fire place, 3 bedroo ms .
neeQ_s repairs, but has
potential to be really 01 ce.
$24.900.00.
.

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614·9a6·3a39.

Real

Real Estate 'G eneral .

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RON'S · Television Service .·
Houu c1111 on RCA, Quuar,'
GE. Speclallng in Zenith .' Cal
304-570-2398 or 61 4· 446-

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est~e.

The Sunday

W.Va.

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINP
Unconditional lifetime guerantee . Local raiMinCit furnistled .
Frae ettlmttes. Call· collect
1-814- 237· 0488, day or night,
Rog 'ers Batema~ nt
Walerprooting.
·

1978 Dodge Power Wagon 4

3092.

1975 Plymouth. 4 doo.-, air,
cruiee, PS, PB . good cond,

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r;'hHI drive Pt-. . 814 ·388-9688.
'85 Chevy S10 ttuck. 4 wheel
drtve. ,4 speed. 17,460.00,
304-875·6643 after 5:00.

Sr:r VILe s

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

4141 .

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Call 614-843·6388.

76

74 Motorcycles

3BB·96aa.

take o\ltr P8¥'rnentt . C.ll 614·

949-22B21ft• e,oo p.m.

73

Two 1973 White freigtlt tin.- 1 ,
both good c:o!"d. 304- 468-

~ 9,000 mltn. Aaldng 18500. ot;

1974 LTD Fard. 400 engine.
Needs some work. At is 1200.
Phone 614-742-2746 .

Tf!Jcks for Sale

,87&amp;-6123.

19a&amp; SIO

1984 gray Chevy Cavalier. Auto
trana .. PS. clean, low t'nlleage,
new tires. Call 614· 992 -3703 .

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1976 lincoln Mark 4 Only
64,000 miles. Good condition .
First $H6D take• it. Call 614·
742-2753.

72

1979 PlYmouth Volara . 8 cyl.,
auto , 'air . $760. Call 814-949 -

1385.

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Aut~s for Sale

.71

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio- Point

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446 11J66

WISEMAN IS A' HOUS

WHAT CAIIYOII BUY fOR u~:::;,;-~::!"~
buy anylhng ronsidertlisone
,yw
must see inside You'll be
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Mslandng
knclltl'\ and the excellerrt Cllnclit~n of the rest of the
house 2 bedrooms, fami~ room 2 baths, nice carpd,
modern gas lorOJd or IJrnace.
#142
MAINTENANCE FREE OLDER HOllE- Best ofl!il:h
Worlds- hosts charm illd characte-of an older tome
lxlt very easy lo care for. Very Cllmlortable lw111~e
rome well deoor ited and cared ~r. Features weil
arranged INing area wlh MSian!ing ea-in klchtl'l
breaklasl . nook and Iami~ room ove-kloking ~
1n-gr()Jnd 1nvlng poola'ldaso llrma !iningroomilld
l w ~g room wlh fir~lace and oak woodwtrk Ret
room wjh woodilJrne- in basement New winlilw~ ·
vi\yl s1ding and much more Best of ~l rs in town

11232
JUST A MIN UTE - Before you read any more r.Js, call
us about lh1soutstand~ng buy for $29, !00. 3 bedroom
A:frame wrth open staircase, living room .and large
krtchen on approx. 3 acres, Deck off bedroom. Garden
space. Also included is 10x55 motile home. Possilje
owner financing. Callloday.
11212

Top left-S rooms, t bedrooms. I bath , fronl &amp; back
porches
Top lighl-8 rooms. duplex . 4 bedrooms, 2 bathS. na t. gas
heal.
Center-6 rooms , lull basement, 2 tr 3 bedrooms, I bath,
large fron t porch , gas FA furnace.
, Bottom Lefl-6 rooms, 2 bedrooms I bath. d1010g room,
nat. gas heal.
Bottom Right-Garage apartment 2 bedrooms. I bath,
renling now ~r $150 .00 per mo .
656-660
. IUY AU FOil ONlY $72,600: liT THE RENT PAY FOR IT
PIIONE NOW

lllDINGHIIIIEAL ESTATE-446-7699
Real

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REALESTJ\TE

RESID[Nft41. . IN I.'ES TMEN fS. COM"'f.R CtAI.

388-8126

FOR RENT - OPTION TO BUY - OR FOR SALE- Owners
have moved out of slate and .need to sell lhis home nghl
away. REDUCEO THE PRCE TO $30,000 00 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, LR, kitchen , dining.
HAVE TO SELL!! - OWNERS LEAVING· STATE - 1983
12x60 mobile home and L3 acres more or less. Will sell
mobile home or land separately . $10,000 for mobile home
and $21.800 tor land. This has to go in December.

#339
SLIGHT COSMETIC SURGERY would do wonders for
this home and increase the' smart lellow's equrty woo·
buys lhis 3 bedrooni home on Getrges Creek. $29,000.

#404

WORD

1 Dull
6 Once more
I 1 Cubic meter
16 Part alarm
2 1 Part of slep
22 Squander
23 Choir voice
24 Deathlike
25 Tavern slock
26 New- Day
28 Mountain lakes
30 Foretell
32 Tanlalum symbol
33 Calcium symbol
34 Cover
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35 Young boy
36 BoUle stbpp6r
37 Possesses
, 38 Old ~ranch coin
40 Surfeits
42 Declare
43 Sins
44 Unadulterated
45 Decay
47 Moves aboul
furllvely
49 Those In favor ol
50 In behalf ol
51 Rue
.
' 54 Hindu garment
55 Fasloner
56 Expert
59 Hall!
60 Small lump
62 Earnesl
64 Spar
65 Therefore
66 Prefix: down
67 Chart
_69 Packs away
70 Rage
71 Parenl-leacher
grp.
.
72 ThOse holding
office .
74 Mephistopheles
76 Music: 8S wrllten
77 Withered
78 South African
Outch
79 ·swings back arid
iorth
82 Come on the
scene
84 Couples
85 Medicinal plant

86 Hyson and oolong
88 Lavish londness
on
89 Presses for
paymenl
90 Valley on the
moon
92 Interfere
94 Shari-barreled
pistol
98 Poems
99 Diversify
100 Actress Arder1
102 Scorches
103 Speck
104 Footllke pari
105 Gtve.prlor nollce
t06 Pays att8nllon
108 Excavate
109 Coroner: abbr.
110 Babylonian detly
t 11 Perches
I 12 Spice
114 Blrd's beak
116 That woman
117 Inclines
119 Sailors: colloq.
t 20 Car feature
t22 Tavern
124 Genus ol catllo
t 25 Fragment
126 Not boastlul
128 Tear
129 Again
131 Fall short
t32 Weight ollndia
133 Japanese or
Chinese
t 35 Series ol games
138 Suilable
139 To set on fire
140 Diocese
141 Swiss river
142 Mile: abbr.
143 Tellurium symbol
t44 Lease
t45 Warms
147 Country ol Asia
149 Actor Vigoda
150 Acclaim
t 52 Occurrence
t54 Ringworm
t 56 One defeated
158 Pap6r measure
159 Shares
160 Highways
161 Chicago
footballers

1 Supporl
2 Flowering tree
3 Employ
4 Neon symbol
5 Atlempt
6 Expecls
7 Flower beds
8 Beast of burden
9 That thing
tO Seines
t 1 Wander
12 Care for
13 Abstract being
14 Artificial language
15 Mistakes
t6 Feeble
17 Crimson
18 Negative prefix
19 Hindu gullar
20 Plague
27 Guido's high note
29 Word of sorrow
3 1 Biller vetch
36 Cut
37 Oamage
39 Force onward
40 Cook slowly
41 caspian and

Bailie
42 Women's
garments

.43 Goddess of
discord
44 Station
46 Etlher
48 War god
49 Nol negalive
50 Swift
51 Wireless set
52 Smooths .
53 Mexlcarrdish
55 Noel 56 Horse's neck h3ir

57 Chemical
compound

58 Bellows
61 Facts
63 Jot
64 Female horse
68 Model
70 Held in high
regard
71 Batahced
73 Weighing
ma&lt;;hines
74 Wild plum
75 Poverty-stricken
77 Locations

relr ig., wa sher, dryer~

age ar1d outbuildm g.

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executive

105 HumoriSis
106 Musical
Instruments

107 Slide
111 Wlnler
precipilalion
112 Bucket
113 Region
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115 Farm building ....
I 16 Jumps
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118 Encourage
119 Slender
121 Tried
_
123 CHinese dislance '
measure
125 Calling
t 26 Encounler
t27 Crowns
,
t29 Laler
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130 Female relative
t31 Animal's eoat
132 Chairs
134 Onassls's
nickname
t 36 Glowing fragment ·
o1 coal
137 Rows
139 Small amounts
140 Olspatched
144 Cui of meat
145 Chicken
146 Steamer: abbr.
147 Nahoor sheep
148 Priest's vestment ,
149 King of Judah
151 Nole of scale
153 Brother or Odin
155 Maiden loved by -.

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157 Faeroe Islands
whirlwind

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ONLY $1200 DOWN PAYMENT - 9'h%Int. Fixed $320.00
Monlhly Payment P&amp;l. 30 yrs. Reduced $40.000.00.
careful cons1defation. 2

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-96 Juliel's tover
97 Slrtcl
99 Large tubs
101 Newspaper

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' Evans Farms- $42,000
RIO GRANDE- Just up from Bob
- $1,260 Do.wn Payment $342.24 monthly payment P&amp;l
only 30 yl. 9\\% fixed . I acre ground, 4-5 bedrooms, 2
balhs. lg. workshop, garage.
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OWNER W.ILL ACCEPT OFFER! - INCOME PROPERTY CDIIIIERCIAL, RENTAL, OFFICE SPAC£ or RESIDENTIAL
- 35 Wtsl-l s presently being' used ,as a residence and
rental. Rental unit-2 bedrooms, I bath, mod. kitchen wi h
appliances, ·liv. rm . lots of closet space, 1 car garage.
Residential-has LR, 2 BR, I ll balh, lg. kitchen with all
appliances. 1 cat garage, lg. back covered patio .. Nice level
lawn. Excellent condition.

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BUILDING LOT- Pa~ially wooded , good view only 2 miles
from cily. Been surveyed and waler tap paid for. Excellent to
build log cabin on.

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8.40 ACRES IIORE OR LESS - Vacanlland. Located in city
scl!ool district.

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. WE NEED LISTINGSIII
There Is still good qualified buyers.

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(c) 1986 United Fealuro Syndicale '

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WITHIN CITY LIMITS - Good buildin g lot overlooks city .
.978 acre more or.less with 2 barns on property . Also .816
acre more or less with 2 bedroom home used for rental
prope~y. Lel the rent help make your paymenls or live in the
home. Won 't sell separate.

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2S ACRES . Of lAND, BARN - 8 room rome,
~e-sav1n~ klchen Wdh lo~ of Quality cabinets. dining
room, fiv10g room wrth fireplace. 12x 20 f&lt;rnily room 3
bedrooms, large balhroom. 2 m1les to grade school. 4·
m1.les to h1gh school. Quiet locatKm, usea~e land
Pnced a1 '$77,600.
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#323

ACROSS

78 Loud noise
80 Evils
81 Mourntul
83 Fishing pole
84 Play on words
87 Slumbers
89 Funeral songs
90 Lassoes
9t Standard of
perfection
92 Oamages
93 Withoul end
95 "SOldier In lhe

CITY PROPERTY - Very nice 2 story w/ vinyl siding large
back yard. L.P. w/ woodburn ing, spacious counlry kitchen
with lois ol hand buill cabinets. family room, nice carpel and
wallpaper. Priced low 40s. POSSIBLE LAND CONTRACT.
$2,000.00 down payment. 9% fixed rate. $350.00 per
month. No. points to pay or large closing cosls.

so

HOME WITH SMAlL ACREAGE- Near Vintoo- 17
acr.es wih I'". story home. Remodeled home has v1nyl
sidm&amp; new w1nn~ Includes 3 bedrooms, 1 bath and
lots of slorage room. 10.12 acres flat ground. Ought to
look at il' $40,000.

WILL TAKE A MOBILE HOllE IN TRADE- Or only $1575
down and 30 yrs. 9'h%, monthly payment $430.00 P&amp;L
Owner could help finance. 4 bedroom s, 2 baths. Price
$52,500.
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PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

NEW LISTING - 141 AC. FARII - Quafily ~der
remodeled home wih newer addilln. Oulstanding
krtcher1, bath, utrlity area, glassed in j)OI'ch area and
stone !~replace. 2car garage, l.lrge f,..m soop will! klng
work bench and binsand fin1shed insile, 21argebarns
lor feed storage and livestock. 2 machine shed~ ~lo all
mgood condition .. ac. m/ 1ol good rolling cropland: ·
70 ac. pasture wlh bal.lnce 1n woods and buildmg·
area. large pond for water and excellent soft water
• from w~l. Also creek frontage. Th1s ~ a fine farm unrt
pr~ed to sell at $89,900.

lARGE RANCH WITH ROM~IN ' ROOII - $pac1ous
home on 3.3 acres. wh1ch includes large flat lawnoffe1s
1920sq. ft. large living roomwrth d~nin g room Cllmoo
wjh fireplace, roomy klchen w1lh family rdom on from
n, 3 bedrooms and 2 baths. full unfi n~hed basement
with outside er11rance. Plenty of roomlor kids lo play
City schools. $69,000.
"
#213

40 ACRES - With a lg. home w1lh over 5.000 sq. ft .
_enlry. LR. and dining room w/ wooden floors. 4 bedrooms.
baths, 35 ft . cabinet space in kitchen-bar plus a barbeque
pit. Home has wooded Malia windows. Home is qualily
throughout. Cedar closets. expensive light fixtures,
slereo·lntercom system. Lg. garage and workshop 32x36
feet . 16x32 in -ground pool, wood and coal furnace hooked
into heating system. This home has it all. Give us a ca ll lor
more details.
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�Page- 0-8- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 23~ 198§

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pie.11sant, W. Va.

Talks, presentations highlight Eastern drug awareness day ..: .
Ry SCOTT WOLFE

Tim~•-Sentincl

Stall
E AST MEIGS _ An ~" Ico ho!
and drug awareness da y was
held at Eastern High School
·Frida)· during reglar class hours
to enlighten the student .bod)·.
grades 7-12. on the eff['('IS a nd ·
consu mption of dru gs or alcohol
Th(' program was arra nged by
Eastern Pr incipal Dan Aplin g.
trac hers Sue Arnold and Dennis
Eichinger and ihc· school staff.
On&lt;' ta rgr group sess ion and
three mi n i - sc~sions en hanced the
st udent s' awareness of phys ical.
ment al. emo tiona l and legal
aspects of dr ug and alco hol
abuse.
Bob Murph_,._ represen ting th!'
Ohi o Drpartmenl of Heal th 's
Gallipo lis office. madr thr init ia l
group presentat ion.
Murph)• downpla)·ed th&lt;' promot io n o! alcoho l and dru gre lated items. say in g. " It' s com ing from .everywhere
the
promotio n of alroh9l and dt ugs
through the media. adwrtis in g.
und our frie nd s or peer groups.
Thev'rc mani pulat ing us: t·ncou ragi ng us to spend our money on
1heir products."
Murphy lec tured on lhr cause-

effect aspects of alco ho l on you ng
p('Opic and the io ng-tenn di s,·
h
f
ordrrs I at may o11ow.
"These thinrrs
.( drugs and
~
alcoho l) do not hin ~ for ,-ou: rhev
can on ly work against )'Ou." were
Murphy' s words of advic'r to the
young people in afl e ndancc. .
What is alcoholism was one ·
topic of a movie presen ted by
Murphy. Alcohol is a chronic.
progressive. incurabl&lt;' di sease
by medical defin ition, according
to t~ c movie present ation.
Also participat ing in the progra m were Carl Hy_sell, Mei gs
Count y juvenil e officer. assisted
b)' Ter-ry Ga rd,ner and Berne
Va ughan.
H)•seii talked about the lega l
risks of a juvenil e and demonst rated the use o! a brea thalizer
sobriety t ~st.
Hyse ll pleaded with the stu de nt s. "Sta nd on you r. own two
feet . Make your own decisions
a nd people will respect you!"
Represent ing the Jl:leigs
Count)• Sheriff' s Department,
Offi cers Kenny Klein and Brent
Sisson made presentation on
the law enfo rcem ent views on
drugs and alcohol.
The two officers arranged a

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well-defined slide presentation
on the ris in g· use of ·:crack,"
cocaine in its purest form , and it s
effects on tecnag·ers.
Klein comment ed that ther e
has been a widespread crackdown on drugs in Meigs County
and informed the student s on how
to react if confronted by someone
dealing in drugs. .
Common Plea s Judge Charles
Knig ht .t nformed the . students
about criminal offenses dealing
. with drug use and possession.
'Knight spoke on wh at constitutes
a misdemeanor or felony charge
and convict ion.
Knigh t also r&lt;'flected on the
degrees of va rious offenses and
urged-st.ude nts "'to te ll the proper
authorities" if they know someone who is using drugs that could
incriminat e the student .
Allan Wh eeler of the Ohio State
Patrol was also on hand to inform
the s't udent s on drivi ng under the
influence of alcohol and the
penal! ies incurred once one is
ca'ughl.
Eas tern students were polled
on var io us dr,ug- rel~ted subjects
and if alcohol or drugs were ever
consumed by the students.
ln the morning hour s student s

rewonded td 80 question~ on a
('. 1 • d
pr --test
eveloped by the program organizers, then alter
rev 1ewing th_e entire program,

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OPEN HOUSE
SUNDAY,
NOVEMBER
,30th,
11
to
5,
P.M.
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ET us LIGHT UP YOUR LIFE AT OUR

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We're 111ow with.wonderful &amp;ills. ·decor1tions 1nd the
~oliday spirit. Stop by,to see the special new thin1s
we've created lor you this yur ... ideas colorful and
unique .. , ideas twinkinc 1nd traditional ...111 desicned
to put the cheer of Christ1111s into our life.

co• To SEE us1 WE'll lAVE 1001
PIIZES, IEFIES.ENTS AND SANTI WIU
IE HEIE WITH TIEATS FOI THE liDS.

Shertlf s Departm ent took a stand again•t drugs

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ltglsttr for Drawi11g 011 Dtc. Uth for S100 Worth of F~wen.

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By DAVID VESEY
UPI Business Wrtter
WASHINGTON IUPli - To
hear the way some ~eagan
administration officials tell It ,
. U.S. business leaders should be
. ashamed of themselves for pursuing policies and goals that are
harmful- even dangerous - to
America's economic heait h.
As might be expected, busin es~
leaders resent these accusations
by Deputy Treasury Secretary
Richard Darman and Commerce
Secretary Malcolm Baldrige.
Business, said Pfizer 1nr.
Chairman Edmund Pratt.
"doesn't need someone like Dick
Darman rmaktng speeches ! to
try to get us to work harder. "
Darman recently told the J apan Society that corporat e~xecu ­
tives have allowed their companies to become " bloated,
rlsk·averse, Inefficient and
unimaginative."
Executives are most Int erested in dotng whatever Is
necessary to keep their high- ·
paying jobs, Darman said, and
. too often would rather play golf

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than do the hard work needed to
ensure their compa nies' prospe rIty- in the face of tenacious,
sklll ful foreign compel it ion.
Commerce Secretary Ma lco lm
Baldrige, in a Nov. 5 speech, said
U.S. indu stry has " lost ground to
foreign compet itors because of
short sighted mana g~ment , " and
that has been the major cause of
record trade deficit s ln rrcent
years. .
·Baldrige sa id American business has lost its most preciou s
ingredient - quality. "There is
no excuse lor Ihal and there ls no
one to blame but A!l)ertcan
managem~nt- not labo r, not the
government but managemen t. "
Da rman says his crit leal comments were intended, in pa rt. to
deflect the pu sh for trade protectionism in Congress whil e so me
an~iysts sugges t he was really
df'fendin g tax reform, whi ch will
boost the tax bill for many large
corporal ions.
Critics said it was e motional. ·
Irrational poppycock.
"American manufacturing is
not fat , dumb and happy," said

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All entries registered in our store will go into the
Pomeroy Merchants Association Give-Away.

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Friday as th ey ' informed Eastern High School
students on the risks and dangers of dealing with
drugs.

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HAPPY HOLIDAYS
OPEN.HOUSE '

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~nne•· teutirael Section 2

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POMERO~. OHIO •&amp;57111

ea -4 illll2 · a 4 4

"7co..te£4.,J

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F L 0 R IS T
Meigs Counfy 's Oldest Florist
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&amp;~~~~~•••~m•~~•••~m~~••••M•••~m~~-~-~ :

APPLIANCE EXPLAINED
Dr. ,John Sheets is shown
explaining a functiOnal appliance lo an orthodonlc patient.

Area dentist ·briefed ·
on dental appliances
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. John R.
Sheets, Spring Valley Plaza,
Gallipolis. recently completed an
adv'anced course in fun ctional
orthodonic appliances , taught by
Dr. John Wit zig o! Minneapolis,
Minn.
Witzig in the leadi ng clinician
In the U . S . and a n
internationally· recogn !zed aut hortty in Ihis relatively new and
expanding fteld of orthodontc
treatment.

TII.KES TEST - Eastern High School freshman Klm Mcintyre
tak~s a hreathaliz cr sobriety te&gt;;t as part of a demonstralion
olfered hy Carl Hy,rll, Berne Vaughan and Terry Gardner a.~ part
of a drug and al cohol awareness day at Eastern High School.
Mcinlyrt• gar~ird with Li stcrine, high ln alcohol content, then

This met hod, often combi ned
with conventional braces, offers
the advantages of decrea sed
necessity of extractions. a full
pleasing smile and more stable
res ult s aft er treatment.
Addil·lonally, the need for surgical interventIon is elimin ated
In many cases. Many of the
functional appliances can be
inserted at an _e arlier age, which
helps a child's appea rance durIng years when their self· esteem
Is developin g.

,..---Business· Briefs:-....,

r egi!"ll en •d a ..JX on the scal e.

Alexandc·r Trowbridg-e, pres!·
dent of lhC' Nation al Association
of Manufacture rs. "Instead of
pointing lingers and damn ing
with clever ph r as~s . American
publ ic and pr iva te leaders shou id
... pull together 'to regain Ameri·
can Industrial compet it iveness."
Pratt· said Darman's comme nt s were "silly" and that
"most American companies and
businessmen are beating themselv es to deat h trying. to do
better ' '
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It would be unrealistic. Prall
said, to ex pect fh at Am erican
business would be able to domi·
nat e the world the wav It did
following World War ii whrn
"the rest of the wo rld was flat on
its back ."
The United Stales. h~ said.
faces tough compel it ion - but
still has thew ill to compete. "We
don't have a monopoly on brains
and talent . bu t tha t doesn't mea n
we' re rolling over and playing
dead." Pratt said.
.
Andrew Sigler. -chairman of
the Champion In1 er natio nai
Corp.. said he was " sho cked at
the kind of ,angr)- outburst bv so
high a govern men t official. "
Sigler told the New Yoi·kTimcs
he does not know any of thr
shortsighted and ineffici ent managers described by Darman and
"I don't believe he does either."
However, Darman and Baldrige are not wllhout support ers.
Howard Wachtel. professor of
economics at American Univ ersity, said they "are on the
mar k.' '
La rge, old-line bu s inesses
"have really given' up on produc·
lion in the United States and ha \'r
decided to make money on
money rather than the old
fashioned way or produ('ing a
product and testing it in th!'
compel it ton of I he mar k!'! ·
place." he said.
"You have major corporal Ions
dealing with the sy mbols of an
economy: mon ey. financial inst rum e nts . shar e priers .
m ergers and acqu isitloQs."
Wa r ht el said. "There' s nobod)' In
big · busin ess rol ling up lh0i r
sleeves a nd tackllng the big
product ion a nd rngin eerin g
dec is tons.'·
Wacht el said thr administration - through its policies - is
largely responsible for the problem . F. xcrss i\'e deregu la tion.
empha sis on the ftw mark r t.
negl['('l of a nt it rust laws and
fallur&lt;' to live up to it s wat chdog
res ponsibllit ies havr srnt a
strong message to bus inrss. he
sa id.
''I'm glad to see it he administration) is finally getting inlc rrsted in the real economy ...
because it has bf'ent oo intrrcsted
in celebrating thr gl ilt ~r and
glamor of Wall Street."
'

New G~llipolis clothing store
responds to fashion needs
GALLIPOLIS - After liste nin g to what stude nt s in hPr
modeling studio hil d to say about
clot hrs and prices . Ka y Hard way
and her husband Marc decided to
open a women' s clothin g s10rr
thai would respond to the fashion
needs of a r!'a wome n.
.
That decision ha s result ed in
the opening of Br iltany's a_t 366
Seco nd Ave. 1cor ner of Sero nd

Grooming
and supply
business
to open
GALI.IPOLIS - 1\'ow op~ n in
thr log ca.bin on Ohi o 141 ncar
Ga llipolis. the Groom and Supply
Shqp offers a complelr li ne of pet
groomi ng supp lies in add it ion to
1.1 yrars of pet gr oomin g ex prril'nce for ali breeds of dogs an d
cats .
The Groom and Supp-ly Sho-p
will feat ure steer and dai ry r ail tc
groom in g su pplies and s how
equ ipmcnt.
Future plans includ~ dog and
rat grooming r l ass~s. offered
free of c harge to 4-H youngsters
invol\'ed in these project s. Also
ava il able will be stEW and da iry
cat! le groom ing demons! rat tons
to 4-H and FFA me mbers.
F'or those pet ow n&lt;·rs wishing
to \'islt the facility, a grand
open in g will be held Monday.
Der . l. from 10 a.m. un til 4 p.m.
There will br gifts for all pets
a !lending
The Groom and Supply Shop.
ow ned and operated bv Juiir
Webb. is the onI\' oneofils kind in
the at·ea and lias been built to
serve the n!!eds of pets.

Area personnel file

Plant officials attributed' the new record to the part)clpation
and Involvement of all employees ln the plant's safety program.
Th e Unlon!Managenient Safety Committ ee at the plant ha s
set a new goal of2 mllllon co nsec ut tve hours wtthout a lost·time
accident. The plant had set a goal of 1 million hours and
achieved it on May 23. 1986, after an 18-mpnth period.

HOMEMADE

PUMPKIN
PIES
9" $400

Area AAA official wins position

'

Bavleaves, 4 oz ..

.. .... , .. ,. BC " Fer merBrown", 4oz ... ...... S1 :19
Celery Seeds, 4 oz . . .......... .. 66 C Sesnme Seed . 4 oz . ..... .... ....... 32C
Celery Salt . 4 oz .. ... ..... .. ........ 53C C1uawav Seed. 4 oz . .... . .... ..... 33C
Ground Mu stard, 4 oz ....... . .. .. 34C
Mustard Seeds. 4 oz. ..
..59e
Whole Black Pepper . 4 oz .. .. .. . 93¢
Gmd , Bla ck Pepper. 4 oz .. .... S1 .33
On ion Powder, 4 01 . .... ... ........ 90&lt;::
Cream of Tarter. 4 oz .. ... ....... .57C
Chili Power , 4 oz . .. .. ..... , . .. ... . 79C

Thym&amp;lell\181, 4 oz ...... .. ........ 29C
lmit. Bncon Bits. 4 oz ... .... .... .. 42C

Garli c Salt, 4

oz . .......... .......... 96C

GArlic Powder , 4 0:1 ...... ...... . $1.02
Marjo ram Leaves, 4 oz . ..... ...... 20C
Dill Seeds, 4 oz: . ........ .. ... ...... 32(
FlnMI Seeds, 4 oz . .. ........ ,. ... .. 38C

Nutmeg . 4 Ot . .................. . $ 1.23 Cuny Powder , 4 z ....' ....... .. ........ l52
Mace . 4 oz .............. .. ......... , $ 1.64 Brown Sugar. 2Jt ....... ..... ..... $1 .36
Onion Sets , 4 oz ..

.. ... ... . 63C Powderd SUgar. •2 # ........... ... 11 .08
Gi nger , 4 01 ..... ... .... .... ......... SOC Pie Crust Mix ................. ... .. t1 .69

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
514 EAST MAIN ~
POMEROY

.

'

.

992-6910
We Accept

Food Stamps

Lt~:;:::OP~EN~TH~R:U:CH:R;l~:M:A:S:lll;5::3:0;P~.M;.:;:;~~ ·
Drop by and check out the rest of our Baking Staple• for
your Holiday Needs .
·

i

Avrnu e and State Strecn. which
offe rs bra nd nam C. clothes and
HCCC'S!-iOI' if's

for

mi sses

and

juniors.
Somr of Ihe names offerl'd a rr
Firenza and Coca-Cola. in ad di·
lion to product s fro m The Li·
mitrd. Zena jeans and Manor
House for missl'S. In th e spr ing.
Brillanv's will offer Nadine
forma ls. !eat ur&lt;'d in Seventeen
and other young wome n's fashion
magazin Ps.
Thr starr is open Mondays
1hrough Saturd ays from 10 a .m.

until Rp.m.. and on s und ays from
noon until !; p.m. "Our concept is
to compete with the malls, "
Marr Ha rdw ay said. "We offer
the plaza's hours at the mall 's
prices ...
It's the starr's goa l to keep its
offerin gs fas hion forward, Marc
Hardway said.
Kay Hardway has operated
Profiles Mod eling Studio in Gall ipolis for the past two yea rs. and
will he operating thE' clothi ng
store wit h het· hus band and three
salespeople.

READY FOR OI'ENING - The Groom· nnd Supply Shop onOhl~
141 near Gallipolis, designed to meet lht• need' of area pets, wlll
hav e a grand opening on Monday , Dt'c. I. The shop Is owned and
DP&lt;'ratcd hy .Julit• Wehh.

Expert's school gives
salesmen ·confidence
By ,J,\J'&gt; I('E KAI.MAR
cl icnt mi ght ask and can rasill'
CHI CAGO 1UP II
J im changr his sail'S pit ch if hesrnses
Sch neider is at his hest "hrn it's not l'ffrrtive.
bu~ inr~sPS art• al lhcir worst. In
"Ninef)'·fi vr prrcent of sales
fac t. his companv thri1 rs on poor people I alk 1oo mu ch." Sc hn ridr r
sa les prr for man ce.
sa id. " Most propl c talk as a wa\'
Schn(lidrr is e:1 salrs m&lt;.~nage­ of c·owring up thei r anxiety." ..
ment rxpprf w ho~0 su bu rba n
He ad\' ises so lrs mr n to take up
Oa k 13rook -llased consu It ing fir m on ly abou t 20 prrcrnt of the
has trans ro rmrd ~co rrs of lnsf'-- talki ng and leave the n •st of the
cu rp and push_
v sa lr:-;man acTo~s I imr for the client to ask
Anwr lea and Ca nada into fint' que~tions.
tu ned sr ll ing machines.
He also tra ins propir to aP:
Mosll)'. howe\' ('I'. hr is a proach the right rljrnts. make
bus in essman who rl'aiizrd 11 ;h,•ir produ ct slan(jout abo,·e thr
yl'a rs ago he· cou ld get r ic·h !'rom I'&lt;'SI and cnm P awa\· wit h a
the bad imagr sait•smrn hal'('. in frrl in"g of surer" wh~l her 1hr•1·
m a ny wavs. rreatr•d for make th&lt;' sa l(' Ol ' not.
·
thr msrh cs.
Schnt•i ciN Pm phasizes that
"Si'lllng is onr or lh(' lar gest "lillie thin g, .. c-a n mak l' thr •
profess ions in I ht• countrv. but it dlffcr rncr i n .1 :-.;_II&lt;'.
is nC'vrr laugh! in high srhooi or
"Man~' ~~ ~ Jr-... mcm ag('r~ &lt;lrr n ' t
in coll ege or in ot·irnt atio n when rcaiizr how impor tant the- litllo·
somronr comes into a com· things ar~. tiko• '-' smi l•· "''
pan:v ." sa id Sr hn ridrr. who has showing lnlt •l't''-.1 in pcop lr •. " h! ·
s~cn his compan.v's sales doubi(• said. " Tht • li '" ' :~1 SN'on rl~ &lt;11'1'
in each of 1he last th r0&lt;' ~-~ars.
thr most imp n11a n1. If th~ ·\ go
" Here' s a ba sic ' kill oi lifr and poorl _v. ~· ou 1 .1n '!l tuail_,. ki"' t lH'
it' s nevrr taught in a st ru ctu red
sa IP goo diJ." ..
1

Cru shed Red Pepper , 4 oz . ...... 44¢
Ground Cumi n Sfted, 4 oz .. .. $1 .20
78C P11prika. 4 oz ........ ... 1. ...... ...... 68 ¢
.... 36¢ Oregano , 4 oz ...... ,.. ., .. ... .. .... ... 23¢
Pickling Spice . 4 oz . .. ......... .... 61C:
Pump~ i n Pie Spice . 4ot ....... .. . S8C
Poultry SeasoninQ . 4 oz . .. ....... 46¢
Grou nd Sage. 4 oz .. .......... .. .... 40C
Sea soning Salt, 4 01 ... . . . .. . . . .... 66¢

Cindy Nelson arid Susan Milam, who work in the
store, ~lr. and Mrs . Hardway, and ' Tammy
Smelb.cr, who also works in the store.

OWNERS AND STAFF - Marc and Kay
Hardway are the owners and operators or
Brittany' s, Gallipolis' new est clothing store,
which npe ned earlier till• week. From left al'!·

GALLIPOLIS - Employees of Federal Mogul Corp.'s
Gallipolis plant completed two consecutive years of no lost-time
acci dent s on Nov. 2, In recognition of the achievement, all
~~ployees were served hot lunches by the plant on Nov. 13 and

PoppeySeeds, 4oz . .. .... ....... .. 42C:

November

'

Plant logs no lost-time accident8

Cinnamon Sticks , 4 oz
Cinnamon, 4 oz.....
C l ove~ 4oz .. .......... ·. . . . 5 1.44
Wh ole Clo\les , 4 01 .
. . .. 51 . 27
Ground AU Sp ice ..
.. : .. 64C
Whole All Spice . 4 oz . ....... 36¢
8as11. 4 oz . .. ...
24 C
Chopp ed Onion s ...... .. ..... .. 60C

·

Laziness accusations
irk business leaders_·

TO OUR ANNUAL

I!

DEPUTrES TAKE A STAND -

lear ned throughout the gay 'and:
f
to urther enlig hten the s tuden ts~
on the use and abuse of alcohol or •
drugs.

YOU'RE INVITED

I·
I
1
1

~cn~y ,Kl ei n and Brent Si"on oftheMeigsCount~­

were asked to re-evaluate them selves on the material
.
A dlscu_ssion period was conduc ted t.o stress &amp;ert ain· point s

LADIES' BUXTON CLUTCHES
BO YS' SHIRTS

CHILDREN'S JOGGING WEAR
PRINCESS ROLL-TOP DESK

MAPLE BAR STOOLS

AS LOW AS

775

REDUCED 25°/o
ONLY $19900
'

PORTSMOUTH- Robert L. Morton, pt·es ident of Automobil e
Club of Southeastern Ohio, was elected vice chairman of the
Ohio Confer ence of AAA Clubs at the conference annual
m eet1ng.
·
Morton will assist in directing the activities oft he statewide
AAA organizallon. . w~ich provides state legis lati ve and
governmental rep resent ation for 20 Ohio AAA Clubs.
Others elected to conference leadership positions were
Jacques R. Everhart, Toledo Autolltobll e Club, chairman;
Peter C. Ohlheiser. Ohio Motorists Association Cleveland
treasurer: and Dennis E. Loy, Crawford Count y' Automobil~
Club, Bucyrus, secreta ry.
·

Martin Marietta operating plant
PIKETON- Martin Martelta Energy Systems Inc. became
responsible for operating the U.S. Department' of E nergy's
uranium enrichment facilit y in Pike County on Nov. 16.
The contract to operate I he plant was transferred to Mart tn
Marietta from Goodyear Tire &amp; Rubber Co.
The two companies announced on Sept. 23 the signing of a
letter of int eR) preliminary to an agreement under which
Marttn Mariett a would assume the management contract held
by Goodyear Atomi c Corp. Final agreement was s igned by the
two corporations and approved the DOE.
Marlin Marietta ha s been the operallngcontraclor the DOE 's
gaseous diffusion plants at Oak Rid ge, Tenn., and Paducah,
Ky ., since 1984.

Lett le Stew art

Cindy Lou Lutton

GALLIPOLIS - Letl ie St &lt;:war I is employed at Athens
Medical Laboratory as a mPdi cal
technologist.
She received her cert ttl cat ion
from the American Society of
Clinical Pathologist s in Octo'ber.
She is a graduate of Rlo Grande
Coll ege a nd Community Coitege.
Ms. Stewart is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Norman L. Stewart , and the granddaught er of
Mr. and Mrs. Lowell M. Gothard
an d Mr. and Mrs. O.M . Stewart.
GALLIPOLIS - Two Gallia
Cou nty res idents_havecomplet ed
training in travel and tourism at
Southeastern Academy, Klss trn·
mee, Fla .
Named by the Institution as
graduates were -Cindy Lou Lutton and Ronda S. Halley, both of
Gallipolis.
To complete 1he program of
study, both met the requirement s
for specialized occupational

\-\'l.J~'. "

Ronda S. Halley

~

training in addition to work In
business profess ionalism and
career development.

Srhn rlder, 41. is attempting to
changr 1hat. In ad di l ion to
helping com panies drvelop sa les
stra tegies and train ing their
staff. hr ha s developed a 20qu estion quiz that allow s saiPS
people to meas ur e th ei r
effect iveness.
H e a.lso has writt en a book.
'The Feel of Success in Sellin g.'
due ou t in J anuary, and plans to
open a sa lrs training school in t hP
Chicago area.
"We used to teac h the tech nique or selling. but I found out
that's not really importa nt ," he
sa id. "Thr rra l Issue in trai nin g
sal es peo pl e is helpi ng them to
get past the barrie r of 1hinkin g
that 1hey're forcing people to ta lk
Iathem."
~
He said a good sales man is
mor e concerned wil h the cus tomer than his presentation, ant leipates the net~ative questions a

Sc hn ricJPr .~clmi'" it ' ... not r·; l .. \
to learn hm\ ' 1 1 hf' :.m l'llt·&lt;ll'l l •

salesmun

; lll d

lrll' ~onu · pt~·~IP

it 's impo.&lt;&gt;i iJio ·
"Fortho' ' ' I"'"Jlll•. l simp!\ •..tl
fh&lt;"m lhf'ir pol &lt;·nti;l l wnu ld hP

llctter rca lit&lt; •rl in anoth&lt;'r lirlcl."
hr sai d.
But for 1hl' ot hPrs, hr sai d. it is
noth ing mor r· than Pl'l'suadi ng
someonr ht) nr -..hr i~ ff0rin c. a
valua bl r !iif'r\' ir-f• .

Sc hn ei der s; lid it "a n takt• a.s .
long as four )'Pars to imp lrmen l a
sales stratcgv fPr a rompan_,._
T~ e process begins with dt•termlnin~

th r

co mp tm:v: s

:o;a i0S

goats and thl' 1\'fJC's of customers
it is int cn•&gt;trcl _l n Hll t·ac tln g.
.He also ini rnirws the com- ·
pany's best sHies prople to s~ .·
what they arr doing r ight and
uses the information th0)' . give
him to !rain 1hr top manH gct·~,
and supervisor)· staff.

�I

Pomeroy- Middleport - Gal~polis,

Page- .E-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

November 23; 1$1!6

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Chicken.will · replace beef at top of American ·menu in '87 -.
By SONJA HILLGREN
changes a nd Americans' desires
· , • UP I Farm Editor
to reduce cho lesterol levels have
1V"ASH INGTON (UP ! I
had more to do with beef and
St!'aks, roasts and hamburgers poultry sales than economic
apparently will have to relin- studies indicate.
quis h their No. 1 ranking at the · "I think the diet and health
top of the American men u next factor has contributed greatly tq
year to fried chicken, chicken the ln~l" in chicken dem!ggets a nd tu rkey .rolls.
mand,' \,Haas sajd. S he said'
~conomls ts predict . that an
pou·ltry is increasingly sold
a\'C'rage American will eat mor·e ready .to serve and in a large
poultry than beef for the first variety of ways In response to
time in 1987.
coD$umer preferences.
A great deal of academic,
People buy chicken because it
bi{Siness and consumer attent ion is a bargain, she said, but if diet
has been devoted to determining and health are not factors , "why
wfiether beef ca n reclaim its No. has so much money been spent in
I rank and to fi nding out why"the marketing nutrition for poultry,
shift is occurring. Finding and why is beeftrylngtocompete
a n~wers is difficult.
in that way?"
There Is general agreement
Government experts say the
that one reason Americans eat short-term, beef-poultry . shift
more poultry is tha t prices. when fro m 1986 Lo I9a7 is largeiy the
adj usted for inflation, have de· result of changes in beef
ci liled dramaticallY over the past production.
del:ades . Poultry , produ ced t1y
Allen Baker, a key livestock
companies that co ntrol the entire an d poultry expert al the Agriculproduct ion chain and hold down ture Department, said a procosts, is si mply cheaper than
gram to slaughter dairy cows to
beef.
cut mil k product ion provided
Beef production and cons ump- extra hamburger this yea r . Next
ti ~ are dow n from a decade ago,
year there wlli not be as much.
b&lt;H they have held steady in the
An~ cattle producers hurt by
1980s. Poult ry has con tinued to drought or tough economic times
climb,
raised supplies this year by
Some government economi sts
seli!ng off cattle, als o leaving
argue that neit·her price nor
fewe r animals nex t year.
lifestyle changes account for
In 1987. Baker said, the number
most of the dec line in per- capit a of s teaks and roasts will stay
be!'! consumpt ion.
about the sam,e, but fewer
'fhey believe that unique cir· animals will yield less hamcuinstances of ca ttle product ion burger and sausage beef. ·
ar~ the m aj or r easo n Americans
One reaso n peultry will move
are ea tin g less beef. There
sim ply Is less beef ava ilable.
Agriculture Department economist Richard 'Hai da cher said a
belief that beef is a victim of a
niajor cha nge in consumer tastes

e ness or ca tt le produ ction influ ·

encej beef supply apart fr om
consumer dem and.

.

· But

she believes

lifest yle

'

Ca ttlemen are paying actor
James Garner and actress Cybill
Shepherd to tell American consu·
mers they ought to demand more
beef.
.

cattlecattle
Industry
pr~lcts'
theThe
nation's
herd will
drop ~;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;
to 100 million head by the·end of
· · ,. ·
this year, the lowest level since
1962. With fewer cattle In· the ·
pipeline. the National Cattlemen' s Association predicts' per
capita beef consumption could
•••
fall to 65.or 66 pounds in the next
for
students who need help
two or three year s.
·
to pay for their college
But Baker said, " In the long
run. you' re going to have more
tuition.
beef." However, he said he
The state of Ohio has
cannot predict If beef will win
back Its title from poultry.
extended the deadline for
The Issue is soo complex that a
applying for grants for
score of academic papers on the
topic were present~ at a sympo· ·
winter and spring quartets.
slum last month In Charleston,
So, if you need help and
S.C.
Haidacher said experts agr~
missed the Aug. 22
that declining beef productlort by
deadline, don't miss the
• an industry that has endur~
dramatic changes over the past
next one. Call us today!
several years has had much
more Influence on per-capita
beef consumption than has con·
sumer demand.
Haldacher said beef prices,
529 JACKSON PIKE, GALLIPOLIS, 0 HIO
costs of living and consumer
REG. #10578
446-4367
Income account for 95 percent or
more of !he less significant
consumer demand. A wide range
of population factors that reflect
consumer taste changes were
found t o be relatively
Insignifi cant.

Good news

HEASTERN BUSINESS COLLEGE

COMPLETE HEARING AID SERVICES

and prefere nces is "terribly off
base. ' '
:America ns will consume an

ayerage of 73.8 pounds of beef
next year and 78.6 pounds or
chicken an d turkey, the Agriculture. Depa rtment predicted this
rnon)h .
.'This year. per-capita consump·
t ion of beef was 79 pounds. It was
73.4. pounds for poultry. Beef
s(ayed in first place, but the gap
hilS narrowed dramatically.
·In 1976, a year of record beef
production. Americans ate an
average of 94.36 pounds of beef
a)ld 51.8 peunds of peultry.
: A consumer activ ist, Ellen
Haas, executive director of PubliC : Voice for Food and Health
P.olicy, acknowledges uniqu-

Beginning In · January", the
industry will finance a television,
radio and magazine campaign
titled "Beef. Real Food for Real
People."

above beef next year, he said, Is
But the beef industry is takin g
that hot dog makers lacking beef no chances. It is developing meat
will put add poultry to their hot that Is low in cholesterol and is
dogs. They can add 20 percent assessing Itself to pay for napoultry and sti.ll call them hot tional advertising.
dogs.

•REPAIRS
•BATTERIES
•HEARING AID CLEANING &amp; CHECK-UP

Please Note Our Expanded Service

TOLL FREE PHONE NUMBER
1-800-237-7716
SEE US AT HOLZER CLINIC
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
ENT DEPARTMENT
EACH WEDNESDAY 1-3 P.M .

)

;'

) ..-

/·--,..,-

I
I
I
I
I

~

-

(l~l)

'

L

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

326 W. UniQO, Avenue, OH.

594-3571

Mon.-Fri. 9,oo-s,oo

!at. Morning 9,00 1 ' "0

---

CurrentA.P R.

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GUARANTEED
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$25,000 ' $49.999
$ 5.000 ' $24,999

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Prim£ + lo/o
Prime + 1 11:!%
PrimR + 2%

-

~.~·

I

-·· __. ,
~

time for holiday gift-giving!
·· ~ ,."I

LA·Z·BOY

SLEEPER-SOFAS
SALE PRICED

..,.

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Mil

l6u can tlCa!SS )'!Ur iine ofcrr!dit by
writing a sjJ«&lt;II Centreline check.

A Gold MasliJrCard i&lt;included for ea~l'
access kJ yourC.ntmLilll'a/Credit. U'if
itfor major pwrlmsc:-:. or to J..lfl ca!ih at

'iJu pay '"'cwng rosts or opp/icollmfee
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Th find out more about CentraLine of Credit, visit any one of our cmwenient
branch offices. Or give us a call. But do it today. If you get your application in riow..
you may soon be enjoying the best W'izy to borrow money around. More or less. '

SALE!

$299

" Suburban"
.
Reclina· Rocker' Recliner

A&gt;ooml, lavishly ' "'hlon..d
style w l t1 a tlGOdrest bock , ,
podded orms ond deep .eot.

A korw::l~eme 11yle rho1 rel(lll.et

on dtmond . Bul!on lufted, with
plllow -toh OI'Ms ond sear.

THE CENTRAL TRUSf COMPANY
• SALE!

The Bank That Makes Things Happen.

SALE I

" Danbu~"

352 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.
Phone 446-0902

Rectlno·Aocker · Aec:llner
~ tron&amp;ltlonol lh&lt;tt't Slylith ond
comfortoble. Tufted wilh neat
tolforing ond soh cuthlonll'l;.

\IN-.....,,, .. ,_,

;va.. or Meet-c..-d.

675-1371

5 '101..1'11 FR0\1 SILVER IIRIDOE 0:\1 RT. 2

11/UJ.IPOUS FERRV, W.\'.\ .

~10 1" lf1111 ~: \40ft. 1111\1 Thul"!l.• ~ a. m. Ill)~ p ,'11.; F'rl. II a.'11. 111 ~ p."'l .: ~1 . , !I a ...,.. 11 !I

,'1.'11 .

97 North Second
Middleport, OH.
Phone 992-6661

.,.

By SONJA HILLGREN
· UPI Farm.Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - New
International trade talks could
ultimately benefit ailing U.S.
agriculture, but negotiations
could become unpopular In the
short term when the United
States b,eglns horse ·trading with
other nations .
A warning against inflated
expectations .comes from Dale.
Hathaway, a consultant who was
the top agricultural trade official
of the Carter . administration
when the most recent trade talks
were completed.
Most of the. U.S. agricultural
sector cheered when Agriculture
Secretary Richard Lyng battled
successfully at initial trade ta lks
in Uruguay in September to put
a ll farm subsidies on the table.
There Is broad belief that trade
ta lks will help reform_ subsidyridden European Community
agricultural poilcy.
. But Hathaway warns that
special breaks now enjoyed by
American agriculture must a lso
be put on the negotiating table,
and the United States will have to
m ake concessions to win any.

In fact, Hathaway reminds
trade talk watchers that most of
the loose agricultural trade rules
that aggravate Americans and
that Europeans use to their
benefit were Initiated . by the
Un ited States after World War Il
as protec tion for a u.s. farm
sector tha t produced at prices
above world levels.
New multi-year talks, soon to
begin in earnest in Geneva will
be "an interesting test." H~tha ­
way said, of whether the U.S.
agricultural sector believes It
can be fully competitive in world
markets without import protec·
lion , export subsidies and other
domestic programs.

A/filialt: Tht CttltnJI &amp;rtrorponJhtm, Cirsc·buwti, Ollio

~

Q

MrmbN FDIC

22 , ailows the United States Ia
apply quotas on price-supported
products If Imports thr eaten to
undercut domesti c price support
IJ'Ograms. It js used.fordairy a nd
sugar Imports.
The United States initlaily
insisted on loose trade rules that
make agricultural subsidies acceptable as long as they a re nor
used to give a subsidizing countr y an unf air share of the world
market .
E uropea ns us ed that U.S.·
designed ioc·phole to become tbe
wor ld 's No. I ex porter of dairy
products. beef and sugar and a
major seiler of grain a nd poultry
1
products.
There will be little progress In
putting agricultural trade under
tough rules unless the United
States and other countries put
domestic and export subsidy
programs on the negotiating
table.
. Here the going gets even
tougher, Hathaway said. In past
negotiations, U.S. agric ulture
has been helped by promising
cou ntries they can ex port more
manufactured products to· the
United States if they will bu y
more . U.S. fa rm products in
foreign marke ts. Wl!h a mass ive
u.s tr ade dellclt, now there wiil
be no opportu nity to trade off
promises of U.S. Imports of
tex tile and manufactured goods .
lor farm goods.
This tlme, the ·United States is
demanding access for Us services, so those sectors cannot be
used as tradeoffs for help
agricult ure.
Thus, agricultura l talks will be
self-con tained and agriculture
must provide Us own bargainin g
chips, Hathaway sat d.
If the United States and other

•ltJurCenlroLine must be approved by january 31, 1987 /oqua/ify for the 90·day rotegum.nntee.
• •The an nual percentage rate may vary due to fluctuations in Prime. Prime rate refers ro the thcn·rurrrnl PrimeroJtl o(
The Centroi'Ih&lt;sl Con1pony. Tlu!-m/tsforan unseCUfl!d CentreLineofCredit are:$5,000-$24,9!1.&lt;1. Primeplus JIJi,·
$25,000-$49,999, Prime plus 21/z%; $50,000and up, Prime p/us2%.
·

olt~:in 1 Flair Furniture &amp; Design

the U.S.

II

na tions take the long view. a il
countries could agree to phas~
out subsidies. produ cing rea l
betfeflts to Americans in 10 to 15
yea rs, Hathaway said.
But talks will not solve key
problems of slow growth in
developing countries that holds
down demand for farm products
or of unstable exchange rates .

"'

·The Sunday Times-Senti'nei- Pa{J!t-E-3: .

surpl~s at lowest level in 14 years

U.S. farm

....
.-·

MAKE IT ARULL
USE WANTADt
ARANDY TOOL

'

WASHINGTON t UP II
But America ns exported less summary, the department noted smaller shipment s of feed grains ·
America ns exported less co rn corn - at lower prices, and that J apan Imported only $5.1 and cotton.
.
at lower prices, and Imported Imported more co ffee than usual, · billion worth of U.S. goods, the "jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
more coffee in fiscai 19R6 to pull heading the lis t offact.orsblamed lowes t leve l since 1979. Japan is 1
the u.s. fa r m trade surplus down for the lowes t surplus since a $2 traditionally the largest indlvid·
to $5.1 billion, the govern ment billion figur e in 1972 just before ual Importer of U.S. farm goods.
reports- the lowest mark in 14 the farm export boom ofth el970s
The department attri buted the
yea rs.
bega n.
weak Japanese figure to lower
Last year 's su rplus was less
In a world' agriculture outloo~ prices for grains andolls~s and
than half .the size of , the $11.5 rl__________;_.,;.__
billion figure in fiscal 1985, and
AI ·
even overall exports In fis call986 .
.· , j I IHI
amounted to less than the 1981
.•oOIO·VIDEO
.
farm trade surplus of $26.6
billion, the Agriculture Department said.
In a repo rt issued Thursday,
;.
the department said U.S. farm
19 IN.
exports were $26.3 billion in the
year ended Sept. 30. That was 16
percent less than 1985 experts of ·
$31.2 biilion and 10 percent less
REMOTE CONTROL
than a 1981 record of $43.8 billion.

••

We purchase 1st
&amp; 2nd mortgages ·
and land contracts

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

Sllill#ll w1A

SPECIAL

SUPERSET

$38800

Coupled with declining ex· ·
ports, the depar tment noted.
imports of agricultural products
roseto$20.9biilion last year, up 6
percent from $19.7 billion in 1985.
The result was a- narrowed
surplus of $5. 4 billion.
Indeed, for three months th is
year - May, J une and July imports surpassed expo rt s for
the first time since 1959, but the
farm trade surplus was restored
II\ the final months of the fiscal
year. ,
Maj or U.S. expert crops were
led py corn, other feed grai ns,
soybeans, wheat, cotton, fruit
and lives tock. Major imports
were coffee, beef, sugar, cocoa,
vegetables. fruit. wine and
bananas. ·

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The new tax ltmlallows forrleduction of some or all of the inlen!st
on illans secured try ajJerSOna/ residena!.

--

What's the next best thing too worm
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someone will love one of our exciting
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Trade talks
may benefit

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-.Point Pi8asant, W.Va.

was given a special waiver .

And. )!JU canpay back as little ffll'h month as
tlu! interest d1w an your Oil/standing baloncc.
For wmp/ete fina ncial f kxibility.

Give him a La-Z-Boy" recliner and
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armfront ....----...

To be more specific. he asked if
Americans "are willing to ex·
change the protection of the U.S.
da iry Industry and tbe U.S.
sweetener industry from foreign
competition to gain either. im·
proved access lo foreign markets
or an end to export ,subsldies. "
Hathaway lssued his warnings
in Choices, a quart erly magazine
published by The American
Agric ultural Economics
Assoc iation .
America ns complain abOut
trade rules, but the U.S. dairy
industry is protected by an
exe mption de manded ,by the
United Sta tes yea rs ago, Hatha·
way sa id.
When trade rules made Ame rican dairy quot as illegal un~er the
General Agree ment on Tariffs
a nd Trade, which oversees global trade, the United States
threatened to withdraw unless It

'i

"

November 23, 1986

tl ::::::

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tSWitCHABLE TOUCH·TONEIPULS£ phones WOik on both tone and pulSe Mnes. Therefore, In arm 1\aving onty
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LOCALLY AND INDEPENDEt)ITLY OWNED .

ORDER YOUR FRESH LOUIS RICH TURKEY TODAY!!!

DA~

..

THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 27th

, 'ith $10 or more additional purchase.
See the store for detal,ls.

9 A.M.· 7 P.M.
!

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· COOK'S 'FANCY TRIM' WHOLE

•REGULAR •DRIP •ELEC. PERK •AOC

Semi-Boneless
Hams

Maxwell House
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''

14 · 17 LB. ~·,..:.:;::,-.:.

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AVG.

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CAN

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49

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•We Rmr¥1 The Right To limit Ouontities • Prim Efftllin Sunday, Nov. 23 through Wednesday, Nov. 2b,
1986 • USDI\ Foad Siamps Ampted • Not Responsible
for. Typographical or Pktorial Errors.

ODLAND.

LOCALLY AND INDEPENDENTLY OWNED

�•·
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. w. Va.-

Page-E-6- The Sunday Time!I·Sentinel .

. ·~~·

OFAMR representing .26 -Ohio. coal
·~:egions

November 23. 1986

November 23, 1986·

By Meigs SWCD
PtiMEROY - Recently 50
people supporting the ''Ohio For
Abandoned Mineland Reclama·
tton·" (OFAMR) elected officers
and task force leaders at
meeting In Cambridge.
tl,eii , Shen~leld, acting chair·
m. nofOFAMRandaSupervlsor
of ~ the1 Meigs Soil and Water
Conservatlon District (SWCD) ,
. 'ch~lred t he meeting. Dean
, K&amp;f!ler, Athens Count y Co mml sstoner and Chairman of the
OFAMR Officer Nominal io n
Committee, presented a slate of
·offfcers who were approved
un!lnlmously.
'!;he officers are: President _
Dick DeMu th, dairy farmer,
reclamation contractor and Tu~caiaw11~ Soli and Water Conser;a\ion' p islrlcl (SWCD ) Supervisor. Ville President- Bob Olexo
e ofmont 'county Commissioner;'
~ecretary - Dean Kahler; an d
Tr!lasurer - Lawrence Winkler,
Noble SWCD Supervisor. They
will hold office for a two year
tertn. Task Force Leaders are:
Legislative - Vivian Fiddl er,
Tuscarawas Co unty Com mlsslol).er; Information - Dean
·Kahler: Technical - Robert
Baker, Ohio Division of Hecla·
matlon, Marshall Edens and
Boyd Ruth , SCS.
Mars hall Edens and Robert
Baker gave an update on current ,
reclamation jobs and said more
could be underway If money from
the 'Abandoned Mine Land Trust
Fund In Was.hlngton were spent
as allowed by law. More reclamation jobs would Increase employment, improve the area's
economy and most importantly,
reduce public haza rds ca used by
abandoped mine land.
OFAMR, representing the 26county coal region, is seeking the
release· of 343 million dollars In
existing fund s and· the full
allotment of reclamation dollars
for future years. The funds for
coal mine rec lamation work are
generated by a tax on the coal
producer and not from the
federal Income tax. The SCS

a

Farm flashes

Forty from
ar~a attend
cattle exhibit
By Edward M. Vollborn
. County Extension Agent
Agriculture
GALLIPOLIS - A special
thanks to all who helped make
the bus' trip to IM Nort h America n Livestock Show in Louisville.
a success, The one day t$20-20
hour ) economy tri p allowed
some 40 local people to see beef
ca ttle f Xhlblts from all over
North America . Several show
strings on display were from
Texas, Califor nia , Oregon and
other western slates.
Preventive maint enance for
farm equipment will be the topic
for two ed ucational classes on
Dec. 4 and Dec. 10. The classes
will be taught by Dwight Jenkins
and Wendell McCoy, Ag MechanIcs Instructors at Buckeye Hills
Career :Center. The classes will
be helq In the Ag Mechanics
classroom In the back wing at Ihe
center. 'Class lime will be 7:30
p.m. Both Mr. Jenkins and Mr.
McCoy : have extensive experience with tractor mechani cs.
They have taken pari In several
classes in which equipment rna·
nu!a ct urers put on for their
people.
Some of the topics to be
covered will be diesel tune-up;
replacing seals; Nebraska tractor test results; and electrical
system troubleshooting. With the
amount of equipment necessary
for a farm operation, preventive
mainte nance can be the difference between gett ing the job
done or losing a crop. We hope the
classes will prov id e a financial
reward from a hint orllpyou pick
up. There Is no enrollment fee or
advance registration. Let's fill
the room!!
.A reminder for · the Dairy
Winter Feeding session,. which
will be held In the evening of Dec.
2, at 7:30 p.m. at the Gallla
Academy Vo-Ag room. Mr. Tim
Massie, Vo-Ag , Instructor, and
the Extension Service are cooperating on this class. Mr. Ben
White, Extension Agent from
Adams Cou nt y. will lead I he
dis cu ssion. Mr. Whi te has
worked during the past couple
years with 20 key dairymen In
Adams and ·surrounding counties
to Improve their rolling herd
averages by 10%. Emphasis has
been Improved feeding programs. You may not agree with
everything he says, but I am sure
he will stimulate you to think.
Tobacco market opening on
·Monday, November 24, 1986, will
answe~ a lot of questions on
price. Information from market·
·log people Indicate a strong
interest from the export market
tor
quality burley. TJme will tell.
1

Rural Abandoned Mine Program ser va tlon a nd Develo pment
(RAMP ) has only received five (RC&amp;Dl .Coordlnallor Robe rt
percent of the funds collected , First reported on a recent
instead of the20 percen t allowed meeting In Char leston, W.Va.,
by law. The Ohio Divisio n of which res ult ed In the fo rmation
Reclamation has only received of an eight -state "Appalachian
half of what they are entitled to , Coalilion for Abandoned Mln ebased -on a national study of , landReclamalion. " The OFAMR
hazards caused by abandoned voted to join the mulli·state
mine land. Wllh full release of group and submit $50 for memfu~ds from the Congress, _,recla- bershlp dues . The Buckeye Rills
mation efforts could be greatly RC&amp;D has helped In the forma accelerated in Ohio. Coal mining . tlon of OFAMR.
companies, which could economWithin the next two months,
ically benefll from increased each SWCD will select a person to
abandoned mine rec lamation represent their county on the
work, ar e encouraged to join OFAMR Steering Committee:
OFAMR.
The Steering Commlllee, which
Paul Hoskins, Administrator, also includes the officers, will
Soil and Water Districts, noted meet qu ar terly to pursue
thai OFAMR ha s received $200 In OFAMR's objectives . The next
support from the Ohio Feder a- OFAMR meeting is set for 6:30
tlqn of Soli and Water Districts p.m., March 4, ) 987 at the Deer
and $10 for an individual mem- Creek Steakhouse In Cambridge.
bership. Annual business or
For further Information. COR ·
organl atlon membership dues tact Dick MuMuth at (216)
are $25. Hoskins als.o reviewed 339·2531 or write Route 4, Box
the·OFAMR bylaws.
4238, New Philadelphia, Ohio
Buckeye Hills Resource Con- 44663.

By STEVE GERSTEL

the three-day program, a suite: and Sen. Joseph Blden of · them control oflhe Senate for the
WASHINGTON (UPli - Jubi- number of the party's potential Delaware plans some one-on-one first time since President Realant Democrats, wllh some po- presidential candidates will be meetings with DNC members.
gan took office and the "sldetential candidates looking ·on, working the national chairmen
s h.o w" . of cal)dldate
opened a thrE'lc'-day .session Fri- and committee members who
In contrast to some of the campaigning.
day to begin laying down the are always• key political figures tubulenl meetings which have
But the meeting also will be
rules for the election ·of the In their states.
marked pre-convention gather- highlighted by DNC Chairman
pa rly' s 1988 presid ential
Sen. Gary Hart of Colorado is ings of the Democrats in . pas t Paul Kirk' s charge to the party
candidatE&gt;.
..
scheduled for two coffees, hosted years. •the weekend se~sion is for the next 'two years and a
The Democ ratic National by Colorado state chairman Bute expeeted to be fr ee of intra-party tribute to retiring House Speaker
Campaign Committee, at Its fall Seawell- one for members from str-Ife.
Thomas O'Neill.
meeting, will issue the so· called the north and east and one for ·
"Tpere Is not a si 0 gle flghllhat
The delegate allocations,
preliminary call for the 1988 members . from the south and I know of," DNC spokesman based on a complicated formu ,la
convention, which Incorporates west.
·
Terry Mlc)1ael said. "It Is pretty that includes · past Democratic ,
the apportionment of delegates
voting records as well as poptila·
Jesse Jackson plans to tour the much devoid of a~y conflict."
to ,the states and puts lnio,actioil four regional meetings Sa lurMichael said It was '' basically lion, Is expected to be adopted,
the committee that is supposed to day; Rep. Richard Gephardt of a victory celebration" ·tq mark without trouble, as part of the
ride herd on the process .for the , Missouri wUI 'be honored at a Democratic gains In the , No- preliminary call to the 1988
next two years.
reception; Arizona Gov. Bruce vember elections, including the convention .
Although they are not part of Babbitt plans to host a hospitality landslide victory which gave
The delegate selection process
adopted bY the DNC Is alrea&lt;jy

Unions, Eastern
trade barbs

prlzC&gt; from the Ohio. Valley Puhllllhlnr Co. :&gt;
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or letter. No telephone calls will be ,
accepted. All contest entries s~ould he turned In to •;
tbe newspaper office by 4 p.m. each Wednesday.
In ca,e ' o( a tie, t)le winner wUI be chosen by
lottery. Ne•t week, a Mcig&gt;; County farm wUI be
featured by the Meigs Soil and Water Conserva·
tlon District.
·

MYST~RY

FARM - This week's mys~ery
farm, featured by the Gallla Soli and Water
Conservation District, is locaiL'II somewher" In
Galli a County. I ndlv !duals w lshln g to purtlclpult•
in the weekly contest !llUY do so by guessing the
farm's owner. ,J usl mail, or drop off your guess to
thll the Gallipolis Tr.lbune, ' li25 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, ~5631, or tht• Oaily Sentinel, II) Court
St., Pom'eroy, Ohio, •15769, and you may win a $5

Physic ian and Surgeon

ahnounc,es the opening of

WESTMORELAND
FAMILY CARE CENTER

AITENTION!

IN

• Each package insulates behind one 4t xBt sheet
of wallboard
$
279
• Insulate as you. remodel
Pkg.

M~SON,

WE$T VIRGINIA

what was going to happen. "
ByLESKJOS
The unions claim they hav·e
MIAMI (UP!) -Attorneys for
Eastern Airlines attacked as offered Eastern's board of direcGIVE THE GIFT THAT GIVES
"fantasy" Friday a union plan to tors a $1.15 billion package for an
ALL YEAR LONG
buy the carrier and said the • employee takeover of the finan9:00A.M.
5:00
unions' federal court sull has cially alllng carrier, but were not
scared off lenders and thwarted given an adequate opportunity to
0
efforts to Improve Eastern's , present their plan . Eastern attorONLY
neys claim the package lacks
ability lo compete.
\
The suit by a coalition of adequate fin ancing.
"We want to allow the Eastern
Eastern's employee unions seeks
to cancel a shareholders' meet- board of directors to consider the
Gallipolis, Oh .
ing scheduled for Tuesday In offer In good faith," Lowey told
360 SECOND AVE.
Ph. 446· 0699
New York. l! the meeting pro· King. "This Is something they •
(Located next to Wahama High School in the formtr
cl?eds on schedule, the $676 have not done since the possibilmillion sale of Eastern to Texas Ity of an employee-owned airline
office of Dr. Thomas McGowan.)
·
Air Corp. Chairman Frank Lo- was raised."
r:enzo Is assured because Lorenzo
aJready owns 51 percent of
Eastern's stock.
: David Ross, an attorney for
Eastern's board of directors, told
U.S. District Judge Lawrence
~lng the unions were stalling for
time with their suit to block the
s'a le, He said the deal to rescue
l~e alling airline could fall
through If Lorenzo does not take
oontrol by Dec. 31.
Ross said the Eastern-Texas
Air deal struck In February
allows Lorenzo to withdraw his
merger offer on Dec. 31. He said
the coalition had nine months to
come up with a solid offer to buy
Eastern, but failed to do so.
"Where were the unions In
February?" Ross asked during a
hearing on the union su 11. "They
want us to believe lhey wanted to
buy the airline In February. That
IS fanta sy. Not once did any
leader come to the table and say
'here is an offer."'
·Ross said a prosective lender
withdrew an offer of a $100
million loan to buy three Boeing
757s because of the suit .
" The lenders said they would
not go through with It," Ross
said. "This attack has scared Ihe
.
•
day lights out of them."
I
But union attorney Stephen
PHYSICIAN SERVICES
ADVACARE COVERAGE
EMERGENCY CARE
ADVACARE COVERAGE
'
I Routine oNice visits
Lowey accused Eastern and
'
W~hin service area, care at AdvaCatelacilily
Covered in lull
Texas Atr of forging a secret deal
I
provided
for
life-threaten
ing
emergencies
or
other
I
Specialists' office visits
Covered in full
emergency requiring Immediate medical attention
Covered In lull
for the takeover last December
'
:
Consultations
Coveted in full
without competitive bidding.
Out ot set'Vfce area, care at any available medical
Covered in lull
I
Annual physical exam
-facility, ptOVided lor life-threatening emetgeneles
Covered
in
full
AdvaCare
must be .
"We seek
level playing
'
i
or Olhet : ' c y requiting Immediate
notified within 72 hcuts
field, " Lowey said. "There was
Inpatient physici an services
Covered in lull
---, medical alt8n on
no level playing field In DeSurger~ and related services
Covered in lull
i Ambulance service in cases of life·threatening
cember when Mr. Lorenzo wa s
~ Anesthesia
Coveted in lull
Coveted in full
I I or- .,_gencies
given the Inside track He had a
I
I.
Well-baby
cate
I
Covered
in
lull
big head start in all of I his.''
' URGENT CARE
r
Lowey sal&lt;\ Eastern stock·
INPAnENT SERVICES
Coveted in run
' Within seMce Bf8B, care at AdvoCate facility
holders were not · advised of the
1 Days of care
Unlimited
Qu( ot set'Vfce atea. care at My available medical taciity
Coveted In full
I
Lorenzo deal until a Feb. 23
AdvaCare muat be
Semi· private room: intensive care or private room
'
I
notiied within 72 haulS
board meeting.
when medically necessary
Covered in lull
I
"By that time, II was a done
MATERNITY SERVICEs
Surgery and related services
I
Coveted In full
deal," Lowey said. "This was
I
I
Prenalal
and postnatal cate
Coveted in full
Coveted In lull
II
. Anesthesia
like Pearl Harbor. They (shareOelivay in hospital, normal and ca~tean
Dtugs, medicines, and related supplies
Coveted
Coveted In lull
holders) had no advance word on
. In full
1
Physician setvices
Coveted In full
Covered in lull
~pllcations
Consu ltations
Coveted in full
Covered in full
Related ~~~cas
Coveted
In full
Laboratory exams and ultrasound
. Covered In full
I Labotatory lasts, E~G . EEG, e(c.
I
'
Consultations
Diagnostic and therapeutic x-ray services
Covered in full
Covered in lull
I
Newborn nutsery care
General nursin g services
Covered in full
Covered in lull
_,_ _
Covered in full
I Special duty nutsing services
PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
I
FERNALD, Ohio iUPI) - The
I
Short-term
Intervention
physical
therapy
and
I
K
aistt
Prescnlltiot1 drugs
Fernald uranium process ing
in halation therapy
in
lull
Covered
prescription
'
I
plant Is not the source of eleyated
Shon-tetm Intervention physical and occupational
drug PIOQf!l~
levels of radloact ive radon gas
lmmuniz.ations, alletlly ond chemotheraphy
therapy tahabllitatlon services
Covered
in
lull
measured In homes near the
innoculations
Covered ,in lull
' I
·-·---j OUTPATIENTSERVICES
- ----,·
plant. the facility's citizen advi••
(This is only • p.rti•l list ot 11111 1nd procedure• ll'llllbii .J
EXTENOED CARE
sory committee reported Friday.
I ·x-tay, EKG, EEG, and other diagnostic studies
Covered in full
Physician care
Covered In lui ---·----.
Committee m ember Dr. Nor·
I
Laboratory tests
ma n Cohen said a radon survey
Coveted In tull
100 days per calendar yeat sl&lt;illed nutsing facility
Covered In full
.
- -·
..
-I Cardiovasc;:ular studies
··-·
.
by the Ohio Department of
Coveted In full
HOME HEALTH CARE
Health gives prel!mlnary "al·
· -Pulmonary
function
studies
Covered In lull
1
Physician and nutsing setv1ces
Covered in full
though 'definit e evidence exoner·
---.
-j Short· term intervention physical and occupational
Social set'Vfces as authofized
Covered
in full
a ling Ihe Fernald plant. "
1 therapy rehabilitation services
,
Covered in full
.
..
Radiation screening of area
AOOmONAL IIENEFITS
['1! ENTAL HEALTH-HOSPITALIZATION
residents found some had detec·
(Aiatimum combined total of 30 dtyt.J
Annual hea~ng and eye exams
Covered in full
ta ble levels of radon particles
"
Family
planning
and
counltling
services
Covered in lull
that can cause cell damage and
1 Inpatient drug detoxification program
Covered in lu ll
'~
Health and education claaOes
Covered in full
trigger caneer.
-···
h;,patient
alcohol
detoxification
p~am
Covered in fu ll
The committee, however, exNu1rition counseling and education
Covered In full
Nervous and mental conditions.
Covered in lu ll
pressed concern about a backlog
I
To assure understandinQ of the arrangements and focations in which seNices are covered by
of 37,ml barrels of low- level
MENTAL HEALTH- OUTPAnENT
AdvaCoro,
applicanfa 'lfiH be olloted a Statement o/ Unt:JafSianding to sign that ra-ompHasizas
ura nium waste stored at the
I' IMuimUm comblnttd total at 30 aeulont.J
'
the programS requirements.
..._
plant -and urged the Department
• Individual therapy
$20 co-payment per visit
of E nergy , the plant's owner, to
1-lnerease funding for removal of
I Gt~up lherap!
$5 co-paymant per visit
lh_e material.
,
.
.
-'-

OPEN

Monday • Friday
to
P.M.

MEMBERSHIPS
$24°
GALLIPOLIS @

Your Choice

Democrats wll] stick with their ·
three-month " window"- March '
to June - for the selection of
delegates In primaries or cau·
cuses with exemptions given to
early-bird contests In Iowa, N~
Hampshire, Maine and Wyom·
Ing, as In 1984.

o·anny . Westmoreland, ·o.o.

@

Paneling-Wide Selection

For Appointments Phone
773-5333
Walk-ins Accepted

THIS IS

~ACARE~MM

._sa.

. . . . ·a·.a,

part of the preliminary call. It
prov ides for a slight. increase in
the number of unpledged del egat~ from Congress, assures a
spot on the delegation for governors, and opens the way for more
party and elected officials to seek
unpledged slots .

EARLY BIRD SHOPPERS

INVENTORY·
CLEARANCE

Midwest Ute Birch
••••• $6.99
Front Street Oak
Rustic White ................................. $7.19
Provincial Elm ..............................
19
Your Choice
Spyglass Birch
Heirloom Cherry
Almond Elm
Your Choice
•••••••
Savanah Hickory
$8.99
Ant. Burl Cherry
Library Oak .................................... s9 .59·
--.
$9
89
Inlaid Sav. H1ckory........................ . •
B-5 Birch ....... ~ ............................~ 1 0.99
Nature Wood ..............................s11 ~69
Your Choice
Colonial White Melamine
White Romano Melamine
Gaslight Brick ..................... ~ .......'20.69

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-E-7_.

Demo.c rats jubilant in majority.role, ..calls to ·candidates .

''

_seek for release of funds

'

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

.

.

BATHTUB WALL KIT

.

By- Benson

1 -n
~w

0
Only

I
~u
·$34. 95
~

0

!

' ',

IQ

WHITE
OR
ALMO"D

l

I

I

~

I

Q

I

-------- ~

'•

-:-=-...

BY.COMPLETE
HEALTH CARE&gt;COVERAGE

a

&lt;(

~

.

.:o;c.;;~,;;_·- --- ""TT? - p--ans;;~--

Fernald
not source

~

I

~-

~

~

--

I

'

·I

I

·-·______j

I

'

-------

--

--·

INSULATE YOUR.ATTIC
FOR ONLY $197.60
AND SAVE MONEY*
YEAR 'ROUND ON- YOUR
HEATING AND COOLING BILLS

I

·--- ~

Attic Size .Insulation Needed 6~" Unfaced/R·19
20t X 40t =
800 Sq. Ft.
24.7 Sq. Ft.
X
20tx60t .= 1200Sq.Ft.. X 24.7 Sq. Ft.

Total
Project Cost

'197.60
'296.40

•Savings vary. Find out why in the Seiter's Fact Sheet on R·va lues. Higher R-values mean greater insulating power.

40 GALLON

GAS

50 GALLON

ELEORIC

5 rear warranty on tanks - 1 rear thermostats &amp; elements

Your

Choi·c e'142.oo

,,

ALL SALES SUBJECT TO STOCK ON HAND

see for yourself what a new and better
kind of health care benefit can do for you.
For. more information contact us at:
Advacare

AROLINA LUMBER AND SUPPLY COMPANY
312, 6th Street

· e~

675-1160

Point Pleasant, WV.

P.O. Box 680, 385 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, OH 45631
614/446-5283

Bt ACoot Cm Ana Cho&lt;&lt; 0"' rltt
So.-mp 1n the Clouiflt!d S«uon

,,,

�'

'

~-Middleport GaDipglis. Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

hga E-8-The Sunday :rmu-.Santinel

.

November 23, 1986

.

Government may ·extend · autom~bile airbag .requirements
•

By FRANK T. CSONGOS
WASHINGTON I UP!) - The
government proposed giving autornakers a four·yE:ar extension
to install automatlccrashproteclion devices such as alr bags In
passenger cars sold In I be United
States, officials said Friday.
The proposal was made by the
National Highway Traffic Safety
Admlnlstr;~tlon, a division of the
Transportation Department. In
response to a petition flied In
June.by the Ford Motor Co:
Under the current rule drawn
up July 11, 1984. by Transportalion Secretary Elizabeth Dole,
automobiles sold In the United
States must phase In full front

protection devices - air bags.
sell-buckling seat belts or a
combination of the . two - by
Sept. I, 1989. Ten percent of1987
lnodel·year cars also must have
such devices.
This rule would be scrapped If
states comprising two-thirds of
the population pass mandatory
seat-belt use laws by Aprll1989.
In Its petition, Ford said if the
extension to 1993 Is granted, It
would Install alr bags for the
driver's seat - not merely selfbuckling seat belts -In most of
ItS automobiles regardless of
state action.

extension) by NHTSA ts sound
publtc policy," said Robert Munson, director of Ford's Auto
SafetY Office ar th e No. 2
·¢'a rmaker's headquarters In
Dearborn, \11lch.
.
"It gives the manufacturers
the flexibility to Install driverside · suppleme~tal alr bags In
large volume, Munson said.
"This Is a major breakthrough
for advancing the development
of supplemental air bag restraint
technology .
But Clarence Ditlow, director
of the Center for Auto Safety,

POMEROY -

called the move "an unwise
tradeoff.'.'
"Passengers deserve a supertor protwtion like air bags just as
drivers do," he said.
·A Tra'\Sportaiion Department
spokesman said the proposed
extension beyond, Sept. 1. !989,
would entourage the orderly
development and production of
passenger cars with alr bags
systems for both the driver and
front -seat passeng~r .
"We would continue to allow
the automaker to put tn a manual
system ior the passenger In the

elted by the Gallla-Melgs post of
the Ohio Highway Patrol
Thursday.
Stewart was ticketed for drivIng while under the Influence of
alcohol, left of the center line and
under suspension; all resulting
!rom a two-vehicle accident on

front seat as long as it put s In an
air bag for the driver's side;" thr
spokesman said. "But any rnanufacturer could stIll ,say that it
would rather install a·n auto·
m ~tic (self- burkllngl safety belt
for both slctes instead of the air
bags."
Granting the Ford req~ es t ''Is

we are here ... for YOU I

URGENT
CARE CENTER
.446-5287
NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY
Monday-Friday
Weekend• &amp; Holidays
5:00P.M. to 9:00P.M.
1:00 P.M. to 9:00P.M.

SHARON, MARY, LAS, STEVE, DON, BRAD
AND FRANK

:_.:,..,

I

FROM

THR
t

Possible Tax A dvantages F or You On A 198 7 Ch~ roDt=!·
I

1. ,..., lq .............. llelhryw- 2. ",.. .. ,..,a.,... hr, tl ••• tltll_, .. ,.., 3.w. t11tt"..., *• ......... -a.,,.,, 1111
Nrt .W... -1 With our competitive pricing , imOns•• .... Jll atll•. All local sales laxes paid
tlttttlt"• tiitlty 11 .. _, ...... •• ..;11••· The
mediale availabiHty, and upcoming 1987 Federal Tax
new Federal Tax law will change aiiJYpes of corporate
tax rates. For example, if you buy In 1986, you may
be able to depreciate your Chevrolet in three years instead of live.
·

in 1986 are fully deductible on your 1986 Federal Tax
Return .

fl CHEVY SPRINT
IIIW.O. 2 do.-, nd 111111...,. clalb
I I ler, S qllader, i lpeed
-11511,1 ndiiJ linl.

:

..........-........... •6212
• CHEVY

CIIEVETl'E cs
am. 2 dlar, lllltl bbat ..... blue
IIUrla', I 1P1"'1 muual, I
eyl!

h ' . . . . . l'ldlll tinL

Ult ...................................GO
1.- OrMie lllle..........-"P!..

:

.......................•4711
rl CHEVY' --

CAVAI,JER ZZ4

. .. ldo.-, nd 111111 bl.t eiGtll

lalerlor, I apnd maaaal,

••WP"'' fuel ill.(eoled, V-1,
cniM, 1111, AII·FII llerto
' Nit del ...t r.c.wy

*·

ehe 4 Fill

wbeela, railed

............ ndiiJ liN.
Ult..............................~.
.... GIMie . . ." ......... .

=. -.. . . . .

•10,927

1JI7CHEVY

J,t TON
nm. Plctup, gray with red
Interior, power ateerlnc,
power brakes, v-a·,
ltllomallc, gauges.
Lllt ...................... $11,••110
r.. Qrlllllle Dllc....f1,!7L.
YOUR
.

PRICE ............. ~ ..... '9111

8'1 CHEVY

. . . Sil'nrldo ~. blllclt and
graJ llilh bwtllild)- eiGIII
! - *, l'8dlll tlno, . _
..... Ill, enlle, raliJ . . .
JIO"'r ahar(UJI. JIO"'r bnltel,

v...

=

automatic, hta'f duty

llioD, ...., dulr power
alllllllar7 fuel link, AM·
P'llllllno
"e
Lilt..............................$11.M.•
... Guttllle Dlle.........

!IIIIi. b4 pletup, galaxy blue
witb blue lntertar, V-1, 4 speed
IIIIIUIII,i ~ llleertng, poftf
bnbll, radial 011 rood off road
tlno.
Lial .............................. $10,1'12.00

lilA. Red with red laterlor,
power a-tnc. power .........
V_., 4 tpetd IIIIDIIII, radio,
pup~, radl.al tine, pUlled .....
llltp, ..., duiJI'IIJI'SIIIIIl,
u.t ............................... ll,ti2UO
1.- Grllllle otoe............J,I7LII

:

.n.m.•

YOOR \
PRICE ........................

8'1 CHEVY CAMARO LT•

v...

........
:

:

'12,453

.................... 15,524

rl ltiONTE CARLO 88

..U.IIIodl111111- eiGtllln-

tert«,bod:a-. ...........
loeb, ,..... wiDdon, ""'"'

lrwlk, Waaalllod wlpen, .....
dlfllepr, lldor)' air, crulle, WI,
AJI.nl sleno Cl Its. hiP . .

&amp;:.J_.• automatic, T-topo,

IJI&amp;,''' ......... "' ....... ''' .... $17,JII.II

... GrMie Dlle..........tl,IN.It

:

......-...........•10,933

Llal ..............................fll,lli.oo
1.- Gra.leiMie.......... ~.·

:

................... '14,996

8'1 CHEVY NOVA
liM. 4 ...... blue with blue ln-

Lela Grllble Dlle...........tt.

711..

......................... 11941

:

8'1 CHEVY SPECTRUM

9734

13311. Sport ~. blue with

erulae, V-&amp;, automatic, laelory

....... 011 ...... . . ......

black cUllom cloth Interior,

air, AM·l"M oleroo caaaelle,
gaug01 with tach, WI, lnlermlt-

lao Grlbblelllo&lt; ............l,JII••

n~ee~tnwn~tn- ~~.................... •11 ,976
lerlllr, 4fpeodllllllllli, 4cylindJIIr,

88 CHEVY "r'• TON

t.. Gdlllllo IIIIo............. - . •

aulmlalic, 350 V.,, power steer-

:

: : : e r brakes, heavy duty

C.~-~·. ~~~:. ........ to.-.oo :::r~~·.M~~~ '::di~
.:................:,....., 4916
8'7 CJJEVY CAVALlER

Llal ..............................$13,01100

1$1JO. RS 2 do.-, gray with gray

Leu Grlbb1o Dlle ...........tz.ML•

dolouer, llet«y air, eruiae, WI,
AM-1M ateno cuoelto, rally.

!IIlli. 4 door light blue with blue

::..~-fuela!~~ ~~ . . . . . . . . . . '1 0,997
8'7 CHEVY CHEVEIIE

..........."'''''''''''' "7947

:

1111p1111i0n,

to•

radl.al
t1no, manual, 1oet oull, radio,
V_., I lpeed IIIIIIUII, pupa.
Lllt ..............................$12,7M.OI
Lell GrlbWe Dlle...........tt,&amp;ll

:

..................... 11,302
8'1 CHEVY ASTRO

mit. c-avan, red IIIII 1111nr with

ilurguDib' dGih IDierior, pup~,
v.......tic. lldor)' air, AIIFM sleno et'P'I'a, tilt, crulle,
""'"' ..... loeb, deep llalod
gila, 1 c.pllla'o cbaln, rear

seat, roof caole, illlermllleDt

lripers, heavy ...ay .......... :n
gallon fuel tank:
Lilt .......... ,................... $11,41J.OO
Ltll GrtMie Dlle..........n,7. . .

:

.................. •14,667

t..
YOURGrtbllle Dlle................•
PIICE .........................

•
- · n~•
~un-o

Ull ..............................$10,tz3.IIO

'9558

.:.rt~~~~
cloth laleutor,

~ ~.

u...., • .....

v.a.

Ull .............................. $7,516.111
~..
-·
.................
.....,,

: . . . . . . . . . . . . .'6986
. 87 CHEVY 8-11

automatic, rallr. wheels, 192311. Eltended cab U:f, black
lerlor, 4cylindJIIr, 5 tpetd manUII,
manUII, 1 cyllader, opllt foldlntl whltenll radllla, AM-FM lllno 1fith red lnlerlor, IIIIi""• pointed
bumper, power Jletrll!C, power
rear•L
· ceeeCfe, factory air, crulle.
radllllinl.
Ull ......................................110
Lilt ............................... "·'102.00 Ull... '.' .... ' ......... '''' ...... $13,41111.110 bnbo, V-&amp;, i apeed manUII,
lao Grlbtolt Dlle .............$Ml.M lao Grtbllle Dlle. ......... .n,711M jiiiiiP IIIII, llldlni rear 'llindoft,
Ltll Guttllle Dlle.............t~~L•
1,100 lb payload, m road ott road
, radlallinl.
Ull ....................... :•.•..•$12,01.110
lao
Grlbblelltle. ..........fi..L•
1'1 CHEVY CELEBRITY
8'1 CHEVY CAVALlER
YOVR '
, _, I do.-, &amp;raJ.:tbgray cloth 111101'1. 41(oor, wbllewltb blue clalb
PRICE .................... S
inlerlor, tlnl.t I , , 1Joor IDIII, lnlerior, 4 cylindlr, fuellnjei:led,
fac:torJ air, aportmlrrlln, erulle, . • . . .tie, .... clef1laer, fac:torJ
fuel Injected, 4 CJIIDder, · air, erulae, lilt, poww lletrlnl,
.....,.....,, wbltewiD radial, AM~ power bnbl, All.f'M 1tereo
I'll sleno - ·
C l - whttnall radllll. '
Lllt............................... 12. 110 Ull •
• $10,1111.80
1.- Grlollle Dtoe.............;..... ~-~·~:::.:~:•...;.rr..

..................... 15,950 :

heavy duly

81 CHEVY J,t TON
clolb interior, outomatic; 4
cylinder, factory air, rear deloi· 1111'1. Silftndo,""' ._ lnnre
.,.,.. mlmn wbltewall Jllllllln 111111-....... aiiJ' eiiiiGm
clolb lnlerlor, V-1, alllomde,
gradlaler' " - trim .. "~'
..._,
•• ..,...

wheela, willie lettered radial
tine.

HIOI. 2do.-,III'Oim with lin dotll power brabe, tuo1 lnjecled,

lnlertor, radio!

8'1 CHEVY J,t TON
Hl.Uf; blllclt wllb r e d - .

toni wlpera, rally w;heela, rear
Dtl
t
................
'
spoiler.
·
I
Ull .............................. $13,276.00

11011'1. While w1t1t blue interior, • . . . Gny with black CUllom
gaapo, ,.... lletrlnl. power cloth inlertor, V_., • ...m.uc,
tnba, V-1, aulllmatlc, ndlo, llllllllmiii wbeell, AM-FM ateno
riCHEVYS.U
rodill lire,, htiVY I duly crerHe, fadary lir, tilt, erulle,
IIIM4. . . . Tllbo, ""' .....
rear tpoller, Intermittent wipers,
~ and 1llllte wii1I ........ Llll. ............................... 12,311.00
...
defoaer.
ciGIIa IIMrlar,
..amatle, 1.- Grllllle Olae...........$1,411.. Llal .............................. $13,831.110
AJI.nl ateno e.elle, ~
Ltll Glillllle Dlle.......... .$Uil.
. . . . . ,.... bnltel, ,....
YIIUK
·
•ludHsa. pooNrloeb, 1111, enlle,
PRICE
...................
AII·FM atereo Ca.Pattte,
1'1 CiiEVY CAMARO
. . . . . . . . . . I'liled 1llllte • ....
81 CHEVY '&gt;2 TON
z.a red 111111 billc:II clolb In....... ndlllllrM, toode4
terior, fuel Injected V·l, 1$110. Plctup, red with red ln• Llal ..............................$17,312.110
tertor, gaugas, power -mg,
cntllt, tilt, ""'"'
1.- GrMie Dlle.................. 11Iklmlllc,
door loeb, power wbadowa, ~ brabe, v.a. auiGmatle,
hoa'f duly I''"P""'iOII, linted
,..... bltdl, nit ....... fie.
IGrJ llr, AJI.II'IIIIIenJo euoetls, gtua, radio, radlll tine.
Llal ....... ''.' ..... ' ''' ...,, '"' .$10,1114.110
T-tGpl.

: :.................... •12,114

8'7 CHEVY CAMARO

._ Grtbtlle

..........................9950
8'1 CHEVY VAN

changes, now is the time. See your tax accountant ,
and theo see us lor a new Chevrolet today.

nCHEVY 8-10

81 CiiEVY l!l.t TON

.........................7161 :

....................11,756

crulle, tilt, n11J wbeela, AM-FM
cuoelto, llldlnc 1111' win....... heavy dliJ ........
LOADED.
Lilt.'....... '...... ''.',,' ... '' ..$13,5S2.00
Ltll Grlllllle lllo&lt; ...........$Z,1H.II
YOUR
fl

PRICE.................... 1,318
8'1 CHEVY 8-10

14102. Pickup, IJ'I1 with gray lnlertor, rally wbeell, 4 ..-I
IDIIIUII, fuelln)eeled 1 cylindJIIr,
Ull ............................... $1,11ltl0
~Gribble lillie............. . .

11 ,319 ~~........................ 56727

GMQUALITY

:

................... '10,797

=. . . . . . . .

SERVa rPARTS

5

9801

Lotto ·

-Page 3

11-20-26-1 -33-4

•

Vol.36. No. 142
Copyrighted t 986

WE DO APPRECIATE YOU and your
· continued patronage.
We would also like to invite. you to
stop in our newly opened Frarik' s
Pawn Shop in Chillicothe.

Located at Holzer Clinic
on Rt. 35 In Gallipolis

CLRSSiriED RDS

Daily Number
676

at y

Frank's Pawn Shop wishes to
take this ·opportunity to say
THANK YOU Gallia, Mason and
surrounding counties for your
support in making Franks a
successful business venture.

We want you to know that,

Readthe

teams ready
for action .

.

-OUR FOUR-YEAR
·ANNIVERSARY-

URGENT
CARE
CENTER

R~ad th2 Best Scila

warranted by the various technl·
cat. engineering· and supplier
resource problems .. that currentiy hinder the. widespread
Installation of full· front alr bag
systems," th e government
agency said in Its proposed rule '
to be publtsh~d In the Federal
Register next week.
·

Ohio Lottery

THANKS!"!! ·.

.

'

County Road 1 in Salem
Township.
Stewart was southbound
around 6:47 a.m.. rounding a
curve, when he collided with a
northbound vehicle being driven
by Jeffrey L. Folmer, 36, Pomeroy, according to the patrol.
No one was Injured but Stewart's vehicle was damaged
heavily; Folmer's moderately,

Charles Ste-

wan, 23, Rt. 1, Langsville, was

Area SVAC

j

"The decision (to propose the

Patrol -;ites Langsville man

•

M'oslly cloudy tonight , with
a · low ncar 40. Rain likely

'l'u•sday, with highs between
55 and 60. The probability
precipitation .1&gt; ncar
today tonight and 60 percent
Tuesday.

en tine
3 Seclions. 36 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Monday. November 24, 1986

A Multimedia Inc.

25 Cents

New spaper

·Reagan faces pressure
to discharge key aides
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Reagan, hls sense of
personal loyalty put to a severe
test, is under mounting pressure
from friends and supporters to
fire top aides at the center of the
polttlcal maelstrom over secret
arms sales to Iran.
"Cut yqur losses," Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole
·of Kansas advised Reagan In a
television InterviewSunday. " Rl·
chard Nixon never did that "
"We need a visible sign that
things will go differently In the
future," said Sen.pavld Durenberger, R-Minn. :such a signal
could be provided by "some
personnel changes," he added.
Amid speculation that heads
still rn ay roll, White House
spokesman Roman Popadluk
said there bad been "no talk of
resignations.''
,
But The Washington Post reported Sunday some of Reagan's
longtime Calltornla friends, Including Attorney General Edwin
Meese and former Interior Secretary William Clark. are pressing
Reagan to remove White House
chief of staff Donald Regan,
national security adviser John
Poindexter and Secretary of
State George Shultz.
Dole said on CBS's "Face the
Nation" that Regan told him the
slocy was : ·new~ to him." · - ..
'The Post reported today
another White House Insiders '
argument arose over advice

communications director Patrick Buchanan gave Reagan to
admit at his news conference
Wednesday night that the entire
Iran operation was a mistake.
The advisers ·considered an
alternative for Reagan In which
he would · have said It was a
mistake to sell arms to Iran while
he publicly called for an arms
embargo. Reagan rejected both
sets of advice and ·told the nation
he believed what . he did was
right .
The California ,group- was r\'"
ported to have the encouragement offlrst lady Nancy Reagan,
who Is known to be upset by the
damaging revelations on Iran .
Reagan said last week be had no
plans " to fire anybody.".
Some presidential aides con·
tend that while Poindexter, who
ran the clandestine contacts with
Ira n,. Is the. clearest target for
criticism, tht&gt; operation also
exposed Regan as Insensitive to
political and diplomatic risks
and Inept at dealing with the
resulting fallout.
Privately, these ai des portray
the Iran operation - which
preceded the. release of three
American hostages held by proIranian terrorists In Lebanon as the latest In a succession of
foreign policy snafus attrlbuta·
ble, In part, to Regan's lack of
expertiR In polltlca.and.fore'(!Jl
affairs.
The outlook fo r Shultz, despite
a vote of confidence from Rea-

gan, Is even more uncertain.
Sen. Sam Nunn, D-Ga., Inter·
viewed with Durenberger Sunday on the NBC's "Meet the
Press," said Shultz has lost
' \some cre,dlblllty." particularly
among U.S. allies. At the same
time, he said ."II would be a .
supreme paradox" to dismiss a
man who opposed the arms deal.
Nunn said the fundamental
problem Is that Reagan "still is
not clear on what his administration has don e."
Former Secretary of St ate
Henry Kissinger indicated Shultz
undercuHrls position by exposing
his opposition to the arms deal
with Iran.
"In the end," Kissinger said,
"It Is the duty of the secretary of
state to get along with the
president, not the president to get
along with the secretary of
state."
The Post said the Californians
want former Transportation Secretary Drew Lewis to replace
Regan and Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger· to replace
Shultz. Former U.N. Ambassador J ea ne Kirkpatrick was menlloned as a successor to
Poindexter.
To succeed, the Califor nians
would have to overcome the.
Intense loyalty Reagan. has displ ayed to his staff In Urnes of
cr!!_ia.

New business ·
The old egg plant at MlnersvUie has been extensively
remodeled to. house Sloane
Carpeting. Partners In lhe
business are Charles Sloane,
pictured, and Betty Thomas.
The store Is open from 9 a.m.
to 6 p.m., Mon.day through
Saturday, and carries a fuU i
line of Armstrong carpeting
as well as other name brands.
Area rugs, instllllallon supplies and vinyl floor coverings
are sold and an Armstrong
credit program is available
tpo. Installation and rneasurlllg is provided, and new
shipments of carpeting are
arriving regularly. The
number to call Is 992-7059.

. . - . ...._'" .. ...

Incinerator idea bums Vinton Countians

Philippine ·leader
fires minister;
coup plot foi"led
Senators suspect CIA link
in secret Iran anns .bargain

By PAUL ANDERSON
MANILA, Phtllpplnes
1UPI) - Preslaent Corazon
Aquino, seeking a " fr esh
start" for her beleaguered
government, fired rebellious
Defense Minister Juan Ponce
Enrlle In a sudden show of
political muscle and demanded that her entire Cabinet resign.
Armed Forces chief Gen.
Fidel Ramos said a coup plot
by politicians from the ousted
regime of Ferdinand Marcos
and supported by some military elements had been
"aborted without loss of life"
but said the military remained on alert.
• In Washington, &amp;tate DeJuan Ponce EnrUe
partment spokeswoman Anita
Stockman said. "We are durin g the weekend. was In
pleased that this reported "full · control," Ramos said,
coup attempt failed. We reiter- but added that II remained on
ate our strong and une&lt;julvo- red alert.
, cal sa pport for President
Aquino demanded resignaAq uino and h er tions from all 25 mern bers of
administration."
her Cabinet but accepted only
Enrll e, 62, a major force
Enrlle's Immediately. Some
behind the "people power" other Cabinet members were
revolution that swept Aquino expected to depart sodn as
to power In February, told part of Aquino's shakeup of
armed forces officers In a h er eig ht -m onth - old
tearful address Sunday that
administration :
he would go quietly.
"Of late, my circums pecAquino named Gen . Rafae l· tion has been v lewed as
lleto as her new defense chief weakness, and my sincere
and warned the nailon's powattempts · at reconciliation
erful communists that he&gt; as Indecision," Aquino said In
patience was running out and a nationwide tel evlslo~ and
they had only a week to reach radio address Sunday. "This
a peace agreement with the cannot continue."
government.
She said she ordered h,er
;·we need a fres h start ," negotiators to produce a
' ' nation In
Aquino told the
cease-tire In the four-month·
announcing' her first Cabinet old peace talks wlth commuchange since she ·came to . nlst rebels by the end of the
power Feb. 25 In lhe largely month or the .dlscusslons will
peaceful revolution that sent be terminated.
Marcos, ruler of the PhilipAquIno's surprise announce. pines for 20 years, Into exile In ment came after Ramos
Hawaii.
pledged full support for her
The nation, surprised on a government and ·ordered
quiet Sunday by the firing of troops "not to take orderS
Enrlle, was reported quiet and from the Defense Ministry."
cairn following weeks of unAquino Sunday swore In
·certalnty over repeated rum- Deto, 66, a West Pofut-tralned
ors of an Impending coup three-star general and former
attempt.
•
. diplomat, who · Immediately
The mllltary, placed on the called for discipline tn the
highest state of readiness armed forces.

ORLAND , Ohio (UPI) - The
organizers of a group opposed to
construction of a proposed ha·
zardous waste Incinerator say
they fear the lnclnertor would
spoil Vinton Count y's rural.
. wooded sett ing and disrupt
tour ism.

Patti Martin and her hu sband,
Jim, also say the winding roads
are too hazardous for tractortrailers and area fir e department s are ill -equipped to handle
'accident s.
Six weeks ago, Larry' Evans of
Col umbus announced he plans to

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Top
senators are stU! In the dark
abou) key elements o(Presldent
Reagan's secret arms deal with
Iran, and they suspect the CIA
had ·more to do with It than has
been told so far.
In the opin ion of Senate Republican leader Robert Dole of
Kansas, the lh\gerlng mysteries
- lncl!';dlng whether the weaponry was worth $12 million or
$100 million - persist either
becau se of "Intentional wlthiulld-

lng" . of Information by top
Reagan aides or because
members of Congress " haven't
asked the right questions."
But law makers are divided
over whether legal changes are
needed to rein back the National
Securit y CounciL the White
House agency that masterminded the Iran operation; lo
specify , how long the president
has to tell Congr ess of secret
operations; and to change the
Arms Export Act notification
requ lrements.
While official Washington was
buzzing .Sunday over specula! ion
Reagan might' dismiss some top
aides, Including Secretary of
State George Shultz or Adm.
John Poindexter, national securIty adviser, CIA Director Wll·

Holiday gas
prices ·down

•

build an Incinerator to handle
hospital. solid household and
some indu strial toxic wastes In
the northern part of their cou nty.
Vi nton County Commiss ioner
J ack Herrold said he spoke to
Eva ns. who Identified himself as

Ham Casey and his agency were
pulled closer to the center of the
controversy.
Appearing on NBC's "Meel the
Press," Sen . Sam Nun n, D· Ga.,
said lawmakers looking into
Reagan's co ntroversial IS· month
effort to Improve relations with
Iran and win freedom for Amerl·
can hostages In Lebanon st ill
have "some rea l problems" with
the official ex planations.
"We have not heard ... all we're
goi ng to have to hea r from th~
CIA on this one," Nunn said.
·"They wer~ more involved than
we thought they were."
Sen. David Durenberger, R·
Minn., outgoing Intelligence
committee chairman, said con·
trolling the NSC Is not the crucial
1
Issue.

.' COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
price of a gallon of gasoline has
dropped 35 cents In the last 12
months, according to a survey or
service stations by the American
Automobile Association.
The average price for a gallon
of leaded and unleaded gasoline
In Ohto. Is 88.2 cents, the association said. The national average Is
90.4 cents, the lowest stnce June ·
1979 and the lowest average for
Thanksgiving since 1978.
Last Thanksgiving, Ohio mo·
tortsts paid an average of $1.23 a
-gallon, and ln,1984 the average ·
was $1.21.
The association reports that
the average price for a g;~Uon of
self-serve regular gas Is 71.2 .
cents. Self-serve unleaded Is 74.8
cents.
The price Is about 30 cents
more for full-serve. Th~ average
for a gallon of regular ls$1.01 and
the average for a gallon of
unleaded Is $1.05.
Diesel fuel prices averaged
94.9 cents a ·gallon, while pre- '
CHORUS LINE - D11nce Instructor Shirley
mlum unleaded averaged $1.06.
Quickel, center, baok row, wUI be the featured
Premium unleaded and .diesel
daucer on "A Chorus Line" In Saturday night's
fuel prices are not reflected In the
Big Bend Varieties of '86, to he presented at the
state and national aveuges, due
Rutland
Civic Center. Pictured with Quickel are
to their small market share.
members of her Dance Company whO will back
On Thanksgiving, 63 percent of
the number. The group Includes: front,l.to r, Abby
service stations wUI be open
Blake, Kristen Slawter, Lisa Poulin, Teresa
normal hours and 27 percent will
Deem; second row, I to r, Julie Buck, Chrl!ltl
be open 24 hours.

co-owner of Resource Energy
Recovery Systems Co. of Columbus . He said Evans did not reveal
his qualificat ions to run such an
operation.
Herrold said Evans told him he
expected tht&gt; project wou ld cost
$20 million to $25 million and
employ 3o to 50 people.
He said phone calls he has
received indicate some Vinton
Counly residents vehemently oppose th e incinerator.
·
Judith Carr. Vinton County
healt h com miss ioner , said
Evans told her he has not been
Involved with a hazardous-waste
incinerator before.
She said he identified himself
as a business cons ulta nt and that
he is "self-schooled " in the ·
hazardous-was te management .
field.
Carr said Evans to ld her he
chose Vi nt on County beca use of
the land is cheap and safe from '
flooding.
Pat Madigan of the Ohio :
Environmenta l Protec t ion
Agency said Eva ns has yet to
apply for a license, which wou ld ,
determine what wastes the inci nerator could handle. She said she '
will nol know Evans' qualltica- i
t Ions until he submits an applica· ;
lion and she added that the ,
application process takes at least :
two years.

Maidens; back, I to r, Jessica Mitchell, Susan:
. Houchins, Shirley Quickel, Amy Rouse and Mlsay:
Nelson. Advance tickets for the s how are on sate·
at Dan' s and the Middleport Department Store; ·
Rullaud Furniture and lhe ~niland Department
Store, and at Top of the Stairs, Farmers Bank &amp;
Savlnp Co., Swisher and Lohse Drug Store, Bank
One, Chapman Shoes .aud The Dally Sentinel In
Pomeroy.

'

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