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••

'1 .

Fridliy December 26, :1986 ~

P~~~;1~2~~
~!D~a~Uy~Se~~~-~~·~--------~~--~~----~P~~~me~~~~M~~~~e~~
· ~·~O~hi~o--~--------~=-~--~----~~~·~~~~-----~

r-----Ohio Briefs:-___, N.J. minister receives 20-year .sentence
N.~.

Boxer bound over on rape charge

AKRON ( UPH _:Akron boxer Todd Hickman has been bOund
.
over to a Summit County grand jury on a ra pe charge.
Hickma n, who delayed his Tuesday tnornlng appearance In
f~lony court for abOut 20 minutes by refusi ng to enter the
courtroom, Is accused of raping a woman in Dec. 3.
A bond of $25.000 was continued for the 20-year-old former
Golden Cloves cha mpion·.

Grand jury probes alleged theft

CINCINNATI iUPll - . A grand jury is invesiigat lng
allegations tha i money has been skimmed from proceeds of a
charity bingo g'am0 for the Cyst ic Fibrosis F:oundation.
Marshall Hun t, president of the Cincinnati chapter of the
foundat ion, said he has learned that the HamHton County grand
jury has fou nd thai one ot· two people who helped operate the
bin go games have been ta king mon.ey.
,
The Friday night a nd Sa turday night bingo games are
intended to raise money to aid the effort to find a cure for cyst ic
fibrosis. The amoun t of money allegedly skimmed has not been
disclosed.

SIDNEY 1UP I) - A Sidney man is being held in connection
with a series of early-morning house burglaries he alleged ly
comm itted while dellvet·ing newspapers.
Kevin Burd is, 23, was arrested as a suspect in 10 burgla ries
dating from mid-October to last week, but is being held in the
Shelby County J a il on a probation violation. according to Sidney
Po lice Detective Greg Berquis t.
Authorities began to suspect Burdis in the string of
burglaries. all of which occurred between 2 a.m. and 8 a. m.,
aft er learning Burdis had a Sidney newspaper route delivering
the Dayton Daily News and Journal Hera ld, Berquist sa id
Wedn esda y.

FInancIng
•

•

(Fixed Payment Variable)

NOW THRU DECEMBER 31 sf

ON THE SPOT

Big Diseounts

LISBON 1UP It - Co lumbiana County officials have
approved temporary appropria tions for the firs t three month s
of 1987. but a financial crisis looms on the horizon.
County Treasurer Ardel Strabala said Tuesday the county is
In poor fin anc ia l condition because of a revenue shortfall of $1.4
million for the coming yea r.
The count y co mmission approved a three-month appropr ia·
lions pl an Tuesday, but offi cials will eventually have to face the
money problems. The state requires that permanent approprla·
lions be approved by April!.

•

BANK FINANCIN

UP TO 60 MONTHS FINANCING AVAILABLE

1986 LINCOLN

TOWN CAR
LOAD.ED (White)

IRONTON 1 UP II - A port ion of U.S. 52 eas t of Ironton was
blocked by a boulder that fell onto a car Wednesday evening,
kill ing the driver.
The Sta te Highway Patro l said the highway would remain
closed unti l the Oh io Department of Transportion could get
equipment in to break up the boulder and clear the debris.

15,000 MILES

FORD FACTOR~ S~LE CAR

1986 MERCURY 4.DR.

1986 PONTAIC 4 DR.

TOPAZ
AIR, AUTO, TRANS., PS, PB.

PARISIENNE BROUGHAM
LOADED (Charcoal)
23,000 Miles

(Black)

FORD FACTOR~ SALE CAR

I)

the new machine.
"We can make up thP bolts
ahead of time, so that th&lt;" only
time we wouldn't be under (the
protective canopy I Is when we're
hanging a cable," he said.
Reich was quick lo point ou t
severa l other features of the roof
bOlter, particularly a "safe drill
tram convers ion." That mea ns
when drilling Is taking place, It's
impossible for the machine to
start tramming unexpectedly. he
explained.
Machine meets tes l
And, each operator has separate controls for one compartment only. That means the one
opera tor can' t accidentally atfeet the compartment of the
other, he said.
"Ou r goa l was to make the
machine as safe as we possibly
could a nd still keep up the
production," Reich 5Uid.
McCraw pointed out a noth er
aspect £he company examined
verv closely during the trial
per iod.
"Theoolterhad to prove thatit
will be adequate from a maint!'nance sta ndpoint and that the
machin e component s will r!'main reli able under Mine No.2's
mining conditions." he sai d.
There's a portion of the agreement that allowed the com pany
to tear the mac hine apart to
measure the wear on its parts
after the four-month period, he
added.

1986 LTD BROUGHAM

1986 TEMPO 2 DR.

(2) 1986 COUGARS

4 DR- LOADED

V-6, AIR, TILT, CRUISE, REAR DEFROST

White

AIR, AUTO TRANS., AM/FM
Red.

For• Faetarr Sale Car

For• Factory Sale Car

For• Faetorf Sale Can

Black • Red

LOW MILEAGE

1986 FORD TEMP 4 DR.

(2) 1985 FORD TEMPOS

For4 Ftotorr Sale Car

4 DR.'s- lOW MILEAGE
AIR, COND., AUTO. TRANS.
PS, PB, AM/FM
White • Grey

1985 MUSTANG 2 DR.

1985 DODGE LANCER 4 DR.

AUTO. TRANS., AIR, AM/FM, TILT WHEEl
(White)

AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND.
AM/FM STEREO
(White)

1985 MERCURY COUGAR
V-6, AIR COND., AM/FM
White

AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND., CRUISE
TILT, AM/FM/USSEm
(Silver)

1985 E-1 SO CARGO VAN
POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS,
TILT WHEEL, CRUISE CONTROL
AM/FM CASSETTE
(SAver)

"1985 RANGER PICKUP

1986 FORD

4 CYL., 4 SPEED, RADIO
SHARP
llt. Blue)

CONVERSION VAN- LOADED
· Pat's Demo
Red/Silver

WAGON
AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND., RADIO
lUGGAGE RACK, REAR DEFROST

1984 CELEBRITY 4 DR.

1983 FORD
COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON

1983 F-150 FORD 4X4

. EURO·SPORT PACKAGE
LOADED
(Silver)

l983 MAZDA PICKUP
4 CYl.; 4 SPD. TRANS.
RADIO

'Tis the season for special events and
. d
8-S
memories, Ch arIene Hoe fl ic h f tn s -

9 PASSENGER - lOADED
(White)

1981 CHEV. LUV
PICKUP

Vot 21 No. 46
Copyrighted 1986

4 CYL., 4 SPD.,
38,000 Miles

WAGON - LOADED

Save Hundreds

High court strikes down two state regulations
)'

COLUMBUS 1UP! I - The Ohio Supreme Court
has struck down as unconstitutional two state
laws, includingonMhat gives the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles the right to appeal a trial court"sdeclslon
to · suspenq , driving rights due to the lack .of
financial responsibility.
Also held unconstitutiona l Friday was a state
la w that favors the Importation of ethanol from
those states that allow a tax credit simila r Jo
Ohio' s. Ethanol is blended with gasoline to create
gasohol.
The high court, In a 6-1 decision, ruled that state
law Improperly allows the Bureau of Motor
Ve hicles to override a court decision when a
. motorist's license Is suspended for not being abl e

I

Middleport, OH.

992·2196

to prove financial responsibility.
Motorists are required to prove they have
adequate liability insurance or financi al ba cking
to ·pay damages they cause while driving. ·
The case Involved a South E~dld motorist who
was convicted of speeding. His drlver'·s license .
was suspended and reglstrallon and,license plates
Impounded because he did not have proof of
financial responslblllty.
The 1984 law, which was r!'-wrilten aft er parts
of It were found . unconstilutional, sets up the
appeal process through the Bureau of Motor
Vehicles.
For various reasons, the hi gh"court said the

procedure violates the separatio n of powers of the
various branches of government. The burea u
could find thai a driver was fin ancially
responsiblle and , In effect, overrule a tr ial court ,
the justices said.
The Supreme Court a lso .found improper · a
procedure In which a court clerk accepts
suspended or Impounded licenses, which it said, in
effect, makes I he clerk an agent of the bureau.
The ethanol case was fil ed by the New Energy
Co. of South Bend, Ind. The co mpany produces
et hanol, a 199-proof alcohol, and sells about 12
mllllon gallons a month In Ohio for use In gasoline.
State laws gives a tax credit on gasohol, but a

1985 change tn the law says gasohol dealers cannot
receive a tax credit unless the ethanol in it Js
produced in Ohio or comes from a state that
grants a similar credit. tax exemption or refund,
Indiana does not have a tax credit program. ,
New Energy said the provision makes Its
ethanol unmarketable In Ohio because without the
tax credit its product Is more costly. Thecompaey ·
said (he restriction violates Interstate commer ~e
provis ions of the U.S. Constitu tion.
r'·
Lower courts said the state law provides
incentives on an equal basis to both In-and
out-of-state producers and does not preclude New
Energy from selling in .Ohio. ·

Officials ·
approve
•
Issuance .
of bonds

State bonds to aid
•
carr~er
fimls' development ·bids route
The

~~~t ~~~ar~~~~t $~~.8D~~:f~~
worth of tax-free bonds to aid
companies in financing building
proje c t s and eq uipment
acquisition.
Friday's Issua nce was,the first
for the Ohio Pooled Bond Program, which wa s established as
pa rt of the Ohio Lender Commit ment Program to make available
lower-lntl'rrst flnaneing to companies for new construction,
expansion or renovation a nd the
purchase of new equipment.
Such coml!lerclal projects will
be Ineligible for that type · of
financing after Dec. 31. due to the
Tax Reform Act of 1986.
The program combines an
established method of raising
funds- tax-exempt IDBs- with
a unique concept, pooling of these
bOnds.
The bond proceeds will aid 12
companies and create more than
800 jobs, said State Development
Director Clarence D. Pawlicki.
The projects:
-E.F. Realty Limited Part·
ners hlp , Elyria, $900.000 to assist
In the acquisition, construction
and equipping of a manufactur·
lng plant for lease to Nash
Engineering, a vacuum pump
manufacturer.
-Cary W. J ames, Reynoldsburg. $1 million to assist In the
acquisition and renovation of a
building to be used as a comput er
hardware m an uf ac lu r in l(

warehouse.
-Huds9n PeopleCare Health
Center, Hudson, $800,000 to assist
In acquiring and constructing an
outpatient medi cal office
complex.
-SinterMet Corp., Brookpark,
$4 mlllion to assist In acq uir ing,
relocating and equipping an auto
parts factory.
-Westlake·Ranney Proper·
ties. Ltd., Westlake, $2.8 million
to assist in constructing an office
and warehouse building.
-S&amp;W Realty, Middleburg
Heights. $1. 76. million to assist In
constructing a multi· tenant
warehouse and dlst•ribution
faclllty .
-Pollack Inn Restoration Associates. Youngstown. $3 million
to assist in purchas ing and
renovating an inn adjacent to the
Youngstown State University
campus.
:..Regent Ma nufacturing, Inc.,
Bowling Green, $400,000 to assist
In acquiring new equipment for
R&lt;&gt;gen t's ex isting plant.
· -Carnation Towers Limited
Partnership, Alliance, $5.2 mil·
lion to assist In constructing a
110-room Holiday Inn a djacent to
Carnation Mali.
-Southwest Financial Services In c .. Cincinnati, $450,000 to
assist In acquiring and renovat·
lng a his toric, building.
t
-Norwalk Furniture Corp. ,
Norwalk, $3.35 million to assist in
expa nding the firm's furnitu re
factory .

farewell
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
· Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - After 23 years
on a motor route for The Dally
Sentinel, George Korn turned off
the motor of his Bronco four·
wheel drive and settled ba c ~ for
some quieter times.
Friday was his last day op his
85-mlle route servicing 625 Sen·
tine! customers. He was the
oldest In years bf service o( the
Sentinel's tube route drivers.
• Korn started on a motor route
in 1963 wlth 225 customers a nd
has gradually e xpanded the
route and solicited new cus to·
mers until his final draw was 625.
Sometimes snow and ice on the
roads and high water made him
la le. but Korn prides himself on
always having gotten the papers
out "every day one way or
another."
His route went from from
Pomeroy down West Ma in Street
to Monkey Run, then Into lower
Middleport, Bradbury, Mulberry
Height s, Laurel Cliff, Ohio 124 to
Rutland. New Lim a Road , out to
Harr isonville, a nd down Ohio 143
before comi~g back into Pom"
roy . To get his Sund ay papers out
before his cus tomers left fo r
church, Korn alw ays s tarted out.
at 4 a.m.
While he's handled the . morl'

LAST DAY - George Korn stands beside stacks of Dally
Sentinels walling to hP delivered to customers on his
K5-mlle-plus delivery route. Korn, who carried the Sentinel lor
23 years, put in his last day on the route on Friday.
tha n four- hour route himself a
few times, he usually took
someo ne with him. At one time It
was his wife. Jan et, who rode
along, folding papers and stuffing them Into the green boxes
along the road. After her death
severa l years ago, he had one
helper then a nother for a time
until Wayne Leifheit came along.
Wayne has worked with Korn for
the ' past (our years.
Kern lives in the same house on
Breezy Heights, in which he was
born near ly 74 yea r ~ ago. He

spent 20 years away from Meigs
Cou nty and in that time ma rried
his wife, a native of Massachu.'
setts, a nd worked as a hot el cook
in Las Vegas and Reno, Nev. The
couple returned lo Me igs Cqunty
in 19 5~.
A year ago when Korn bought
his new Bronro, he had hoped to
be. on the route long enough to
wear It out. But now , he says, he's
just not physically abl e to
continue.
To be su re Korn will be missed
by his Sentinel cu~tomrrs .

Counselor brings experience
to job as Reagan's point man

THE MAN FOR THE JOB - David Abshire, 60, posing for
photographers with his wile Caroline, has been named by
President Reagan as a special counselor to Investigate the Iran
arms-Contra aid affair. t UPI)

By United Press International
NATO Ambassador David Abshire, na med by President Rea·
gan to coordinate White House
strategy on the Iran arms-Cont ra
aid scandal , brings a mllltar.v
a nd diplomatic background to his
new job.
Abshire Is a foreign policy
expert who helped fo und lhe
Center for Strategic and Internationa l Studies, a n Influenti al
politica l analysis organization
associated with Georgetown
Univers ity.
Abshire, 60. was appointed
March 30, 1983, to the post a t
North American Trea ty Organ!·
zation headqu arters In Brussels,
Belgium. He previously was a
member of the president's Foreign Intelligence Adv isory Board

and the Long Range Planning
Advisory Board for the Chief of
Naval Operations . .
Abs hire has won high praise
from Secretary of State George
Shultz for his work at NATO ·
through a difficult period, win nin g a llied support for U.S .
sanctions against Libya and
keeping the na tions commi tt ed to
the continuing dep loy ment of
Pershing 2 and cr uise miss iles in
Wes tern Europe.
.
He had been considered fort he
job of na ti ona l security adviser
after Vice Adm. John Poindexter
resigned when the sca nda l broke
Nov. 25, but was passed over for
Frank Carlucci, who ha s more
clout with the Pe nt agon and the
CIA.

"David Abshire has what it
takes -bot h the respect and the
experience - to be the pres l·
dent' s pqint man on the Iran
affair," Se n a te Republican
leader Robert Dole of Kansas
sa id in a sta tement issued when
Abs hire was named Friday.
A graduate of the U.S. Milit ary
Academy at West Point. Abshire
has maintained contac ts with the
mllltarv es tablishment In Wa·
shin gton and retains Influenti al
friends 'on Capitol Hill fr om his
days as the State Depart ment' s
head lobbyIst.
Abshire Is a former special
projects director at anot her
political analys is organization,
the American En terprise
Inst itu te.

By NANC.Y YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel stall
POMEROY - Meigs County
. Commissioners passed a t esoiu·
tion Friday a pproving issuance
of $2,600,000 of Indu strial revenue
bonds to build a 100-bed skilled
nursing and intermedi ate care
faclllty in Middleport.
The resolution was passed
foll9wlng ~ public hearing on the
matter.
Bob Jennings, Ci ncinnat i. representing the bond counseling
firm of Peck. Shaffer &amp; Williams,
explained tha t Meigs County will
not be liable for paymE'nt of the
· bonds.
The bonds will be Insured by
the Farmer's Home Administration (FmHA 1 and collateral will
be provided by the Government
National Mortgage Association
(Ginnie Mae Securities). Buck·
eye Federal Savings &amp; Loan Co.
is the lender in the transaction
and Bank One, Columbus, will
act as trustee, J ennings said. The
bonds. will be pu rchased !row
Ba nk One at a 7 ~ percent fixed
rate by The Ohio Company and
then resold to the public al the
current market rate, Jennin gs
explained.
Under new federa l law, this Is
the last year for th is type of bond
transaction. Deadline to finalize
proceedings to sell th e bonds is
Dec. 31.
According to Jennings. conflr·
matlon from the Ohio Depart ·
ment of Development for the$2.6
m lllion has already been received. FmHA approval of the
pro ject Is expected sometime in
late.winter and the money is to be
held in escrow until that t ime.
Bonds wlll not be sold to th e
public until a ll transact ions
through FmHA a nd Ginnie Mae
have been completed.
Je nnings sa id it is antic ipated
tha t ground will be broken In
March 19R7, wi th the fac ilit y to be
opened by Mareh 1988.
Ownet· of the facilit y to be
constru cted In the Page StrPct
arE'a of Middleport will be Meigs
Center Ltd .. of w hich Dr. Harold
Brown Is pres ide nt.
It was no ted at the publ ic
heari ng that this is probabi)' the
largest Investment ,that has been
proposed In Meigs County in I he
past 50 years .

Reagan heads west .to distance self from political crisis

SEE: RICK TOLLIVER, J. R. PIERCE or PAT HILL

461 S. 3rd

highs In the
The •
probability of precipitation .15
near zero
today.

10 Sect lana, 62 Pegea
A Multimedia Inc. NIWII)Ipe'r

Middleport- Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant December 28. 1986

6 CYl., 4 SPD., RADIO
Red

' · NEW 1986 TAURUS

Deaths ........ ........ ........ A-5
Editorial ..................... A-2
Sports ...... ....... ......... C+&amp;

::;et:

•
tmts-

1985 CHEV. CAVALIER

Pat Hill Ford Inc.

675-4340

Gallia County: 1------,------,~~~-.-...,..~~~~
The,year in
' Whilliam A. RucsJJer sumds up the fllACts2in
Along tbe River ..~ ..... B+H
t e )ran anus- ontra ai affair - . •
Buslness, .....................D-1
Comlcs .................... lnsert
R.e.VI·ew, 19'86
1
Classlfleds ........... D-H-6- 7
Partly

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -

Motorist killed by boulder

C-1

Wild card playoffs

.

!

, County to face financial crisis

Don't Take A Chance.

said.
He likened the disciplinary ,.
measures Imposed In his church ,
1
hi h h
.to frat ernity haz ngs, w c
e ~,
said are "an American way of :
life."
::;
Members of the church from "
Miami and Akron told the court
that the beatings serve as disci- .:
pllnary measures used only as a 1.
last resort. The paf)shloners said •.
they do not live In fear 'of their "
leader, testimony that conflicted ":
with statement s made by other. ~
church members at the trial last •
year .
•
-:

PAT HILL FORD
ear End learance ale
•
•
•

Suspect held in house burglaries

If There Is A Question • • •

~

50 cents

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

MASSILLON iUPli - AbOut 300 la id off Superior's Brand
Meats emp loyees are co ns idering a boycott of the company if
the)' are not reh ired.
The workers, who were laid offwith one day 's notice on Dec. 9,
staged a rally in Mass illon Tuesday. Ofli cialsof the United Food
and Commercia l Workers Local 17-A have flied an in junction in
federal court to seek rei nstatement of the employees.

work most closely with the roof
bolter, McCraw ha s condu c ted
· week i,\ ' and bi-week i.v meetings
with the miners, safety officials,
managemen t a nd Schroeder
Bro ther' representatives.
The operators' feedba ck has
been es pec ially helpful In det erm in ing the comfort provid ed by
the seated compart me nt and
control-i&lt;'ver locations, McCraw
sa id. In addi tion, a phys ical
therapist will be contacted to
rev iew the comp art ment design
for operator comfor t.
Lan ning likes the fact that the
levers for ope rat ion arc eas.' · to.
reach and maneuver, and fee ls
the seated co mpart ment a nd
ca nopy is a great safety featu re
as well.
" It was ras ~ to learn, too,"
Lanning said.
Training conducted
Mi ke DelCotto. section supervisor and WISE coordinator
(Work Instructio ns for Safety
and Efflc icncyt a t Meigs No. 2,
was primarily responsible for
setting up tra ining on the new
machine for six roof bolter
. operators . 10 mechanics and fi ve
maint ena nce s uperv isors from
thc three shi ft s at the mine. Th e
operators. in turn. helped tra in
ot her roof ba ll et· operators and
helpers.
Wilson. a for&lt;?man who was
filling in a s a bolter helper, said it
on ly took him a few s hifts to
become reall.v comfortable with

silver- haired religious leader Church slowly developed Into a
had called for a new tr.)al, saying ·cult. Fqrmer members .testified
the beatings of members of his abOut beatings with belts and
ed
1
congregation were a · form of tree branches, a nd fore sexua
"discipline" a nd that be was not forays.
properly repr~~ented In his ,July · The church once had burgeon1985 tr 1·al.
lng congregations ' In Trenton,
1
But Schroth disagreed, and Miami, Dallas and Akron , Oh o.
· sentenced the church leader to But since a Mercer County grand
two 10-year prison ·terms for jury handed up a 22-count Indictbeating a 15-year-old girl a nd ment In 1983, membership has
forcing an 11!-year·old woman · llecllned drastically.
into performing or.al sex on him.
In court testimony Tuesday
1 ,
Founded In 1967 as a well· Thomas denied that his group sa
meaning pentecos tal group, the cult.
Chris tia n Alliance Holiness
"I find that very ins ulting
because I'm a Chr istian, '' he

Sunday

,

Furloughed staff eyes boycott

Coal company tests (Continued from Page

~ The

TRENTON,
tUPil
founder and sell-ordained bishop
k Tr
NJ
of a cult·ll e
enton,
· .,
chu rch has been sentenced to 20
years In prison for comml.tting a
series of sexual and physical
·
assualts on parishioners.
Superior Court Judge David
Schroth ruled that Wilbert ·Thomas, described dur ing a trial last
year as a dynamic cult leader,
will be lnellglbl efor parole fora t
leas t eight years.
·
Before Wednesday··s sentenc·
, lng, ;lchroth rejected Thomas '
.a ppeal to re-try his ca se. Th e

t

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON 1UP!) - President Reagan
hea ded west , Saturday for a weeklong yea r-end
vacation, having na med a special In-house
counselor for the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal In
an effort to mute criticis m of how the crisis has
been handled.
,
Facing congress ional Inquiries and prostate
surgery a t the s tart or the new year , Reagan
planned a mid-mor ning departure for Ca lifornia,
where he will try to keep some distance from the
press, ~he public and his political problems.
The effort to recover from a plunge In his public
a pproval rating took a new turn Friday with the
appointment of NATO Ambassador .David Ab·
·~·

shire, a foreign policy specialist, as a temporary
In -house counselor to coordinate White Hou se
strategy on the lr an-Contr~ controversy.
The act ion had been urged for some time by key
Rep~bllcans on Capitol Hill out of concern that
Reagan, tn· relying •on outside Inves tigations to
bring out the truth. was perceived as unbothered
by the worst crisis of his presidency.
A statement Issued by the White Hou se press
office said Abshire will assume his new duties
Jan. 5 as " the White House coordinator for the
Iran Inquiry.''
Alton Keel, acting national security adviser
since . the departure of VIce. Adm. John

Poindexter amid the furor, had been na med
previously to succeed Abshire at the North
Atlantic Treaty Orga nization in Brussels,
Belgium.
In Abshire's new role, the White House
statement said, he wlii have "Cabinet rank"' an d
"wlii coordina te White House responses to
congressional and ot her reques ts for Information
In a timely manner, working with senior members
of the White House staff, ass isted by re presenta·
llves from key Whi te House staff offices"
The job descr iption left vague, however , the
breadth of Abshire's mandate and his specifi c
duties.
Reagan has resisted calls ,hat he underlake a n

'

..•

inquiry of his own to uncover and make pulllic
details of his secret U.S. arms sales to 1ran and th&lt;'
subsequent diversion of profit~ fr om the sa l ~.&lt; to
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
,
Whil e House legal couns ~l Peter Walllson ha s
been conducting a search for document s regard·
lng the matter, and other White Hou se officials
have referred to a c hronology dra wn up by Lt. Col.
Oliver North , the fired National Securit y Coun cil
aide implicated in the cris is. in response to
questions from Congress.
There was no Indica tion that Abshlr&lt;'. whose
selection for the new ass lgnm &lt;'nl had not be~n
expected , would be asked to conduct a fo rmal
In-house probe.

�.,....

__ _

"

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'

J:ommentary and perspective
'-.

A Division &lt;lf
''

823 'Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
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Publisher
HOBART Wlll!ON JR.
Ex~utlve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of The Uni ted Press In ternational. Inland Dally Press Associ A·
t.lon and the Amerlran Newspaper P ubllshers Association.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoold be less than 300 words
long . All let1 ers are subject to edltlng a nd OJJ.st b~;&gt; signed with name, address and
) £&gt;1e-phone number. No WlSigna:l IE.'tters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, add1esslng Issues, not personalltl~s.
.

.
••
...
.•'-..
..
'

'

. The basic outlines of the
Iran-conlras Imbroglio are now
~lear, and If you want to clip this
co lumn and tuck it in your wallet
or purse it ma y jave you trouble
ln ·the days a head.
The facts
The or igins of the aflair go
back to reports, reaching the
White House well over a year
ago, to the effect that the Soviet
Union was on the verge of pulling
off a coup in Ira n with the help of
agents it has infi ltrated into the
entourage of the Ayatollah Montazeri. To his everlasting credit,
Presiden t Reagan - acting
through Robert McFarlane,
Oliver North , and others moved swiftly to make contact
with Mont azerl's deadly rival,
t he Ayatollah Rafsanjani,
speaker of the Ir ania n parlia-

m ent. As part of the mutual
confidence-building process, Mr.
Reaga n authorized the sale of
limited quantities of arms to
Ira n, and Rafsanjani In turn used
his Influ ence to win release of
three U.S. citizens held hostage
by terrorists In Lebanon.
The sa le of the arms throu g h
Intermediaries result ed in
hefty profit to the latter, caused
by the high markup typical of
such transactions. At Colonel
North 's recommendation. th is
was deposited in a CIA account In
Switzerland . It also seems possl·
ble. In addition or In the alternative, th at Saudi money destined
from the start for the Nicaraguan
contra s found Its way into the
arms deal and thence Into the
Swi ss account. From there, In

a

any case. the money went. under
the direct ion of reti red Maj. Gen.
Rlcha rd Secord to bu y tra nsport
planes and other military necessities for the con tras- and quite
possibly to fi nance other good
ca uses as well, such as a id to the
Afghan rebel s.
None of thes e tra nsa ctions
lnv'olved a ny serious violations of
American law - though it is, of
course. alway s possible that
some statute was arguably transgressed, and 1-he Democrats (see
below ) wil l certainly try hard to
find one. Unfortuna tely. clandestine opera tions always look bad
when exposed, even If no laws arc
broken. There are secret bank
account$, dumm y corporations,
shadowy middlemen, etc. All thi s
Is raw meat f9r the media.

Jf:.a.shington
Window
..

-....-

Bush, Dole jockey
for leadership role

•

By IRA R. ALLEN
· WASHINGTON (U P! I -One of the amusing sides how s in the Iran
a"rms-Conlra aid affair is the political minuet between Vice President
Grorge Bus h and Senate Republican lea der Bob Dole.
Since President Reagan's lands lide re-election two years ago , Bush
carne under greater scrutiny as the prohibitive favorite for the 1988
Republican nomination. and the co nventional wisdom was that the
prize is his to lose. For the moment, he seems to be trying to do just
tha t.
Dole, who has been arou nd the national political track before, has
_benefi ted most from Reagan's credibility problems In the sclndal,
be(· a use of his cal! early in the go ing for full disclosure and hi s dally
appearances on television offering "friendly" advice.
l1 was a tactic Bush could not ma tch because of his loyalty not only
to the president but to his self· Imposed principle or never discussing
wha t advice he gives in the Oval Office.
Bush's problem is sirnpll'. His month-long ~ lien ee caused him to be
perceived as having either been shut out of the decision-making
process- giving lie to his claim of being a 1\ey player in the hall s of
power - or knowing what was going on and remaining silent in
deference to his boss.
, ff Bush gave any advice at ali , it is hard to imagine that this form er
me mber of Congress, worldly wise ambassador and one-time head of
the CIA cou ld have assented to the plan to sell arms to Iran. He was, of'
COUrSE'. the author of a ballyhooed report that condemned paying
ran soms or trading with count ries sponsoring terrorism.
, For now. the 1988 GOP race is between Bush and Dole, with the
witty Kan sa n moving ahead last week in a poll of Republicans in
ne ighboring Iowa, site of the first party caucus in less than l4'rnonths.
·, While Bush is warning of the folly ofRepublica ns who "cut and run"
from the pres ident in his hou r of need- a clea r reference to Dolet6c vice pres ident and his aides are careful not to name names. and
they eve n say for the record that Dole is acting property .
: Dolc and his aides, similarly, have nothing but kind words for Bus h,
although the senator did say recently In a subtle jab, "There's not
l'l)uch differcnce between our stands on this thing. It's just that what
fie"s saying npw, I was say ing three weeks ago."
O: The twist s of fate that link these two able Republican presidential
Qo ht cnders go back to the last big sca ndal- Wa terga te.
Rush succeeded Dolc as chairma n of the Republican National
Commit tee during the 1972· 1974 national nightmare. Dole was
chairman when Nixon re-election cam pai gn workers broke into
:Democratic headquarters. He subsequrntly joked the burglary
:occurred "on my nigh t off."
· Dole, at thP time a li llie-known GOP backbencher with a pench a nt
:for defending Presiden t Nixon on the Sena te floor. was invited one
:day to the president 's mountain retreat, and as he tells it, "'1 was
·called to the mountain , givl'n a Cam p David jacket a nd pushed off."
:: Hr was repl aced as RN C chairman by Bush. who had to hold hands
:with drvastatrd party members during the Watergate climax and the
·i·esignatlon of a Republican president. Bus h de fended Nixon' s
:Conduct when hr could and hoped to become Gerald Ford's appointed
:vic!' president- a job he was prominrntly mentioned for In 1968 and
·1!172, as wrll as 1976 when Dole got it.
:- Whrn Bush lra rned of the ··smoking gun " that was to bring Nixon
:iJown. according to an account of a fellow Republican in the book "The
·f"inal Days." he reacted In ·a manner described in an unprintable
:(Yletaphor that made it eviden t he did not handle the news with
:equanlmil,\' .
.
·: In the afterma th of Wat ergate. Bush prospered and Dole
·
:ranguis hed .
·: Bush became am bassador to China and headuf the CIA under ford
:~nd ran a crrdlble cam pai gn agai nst Reagan for the 1980 nomination.
:- Dole becamc Ford's running mate in 1976, was accused of being a
";'hatchctman "' a nd was blamed for the GOP defeat becausr of
, ~la s hin g attacks on the Democrats.
', In 1980. Dole tried to resurrect his Ima ge with a decent but doomed
'presidential bid .
: Now. after two years as Senat.e majorlt)' lea dcr and a n
tndisprnsable rnembN of lhP Reagan team. Dole is profiling from a
RPpubllcan scandal and Bush Is on the s idelin es wall i n ~ for a break.

Page~A-2

December 28,

.
·'·...

:[Today in history
.: Today is Sunday, Dec. 28. the 362nd day ofl986wlth th ree to follow .
The moon Is moving toward It s new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Sa turn.
The evening stars are Mars a nd Jupiter.
: T hose born on this dat e are under the sign of Capricorn. They
1nclude Woodrow Wilson. 28th president of the United States, In 1856;
]az7. pianist Earl "Fatha " Hines In 1905; and actors Lew Ayres In 1908
• age 781 . Martin Milner In 1931 rage 55\, and Maggie Smith In 1934
(a~ 521.
• en this date in history :
In 1832, John Calhoun, at o9ds with President Andrew Jackson,
breame the first U.S. vice president to resign .
: hi 1836, Spai n recognized the Independence of Mexico.
• Jir 1945, Congress officially recognized the "Pledge of Allegiance"
~o :~he flag of the United States .
: In 1950, advancing Chinese troops crossed the 38th Parallel,
~lvldlng line between North and South Korea, to he lp the communist
North Koreans fight American -led United Nations forces.
In 1985, warring Lebanese Moslem and Christ ian leaders signed a
peace agreement backed by Syria.
A thought for the day: Pres ident Woodrow Wllson said of World
)Var !, "The war we have just been through, though It was shot
through with terror, Is not to be compared with thewarwe would have
~o face next time."
•

.-.

•

imagine what their fat e migh t be
in this holiday season.
" The younger kids are proba·
bly alive, because they 're usu ally unable to Identify their
abductors," Carla Branch, the
center's comrnunicatioqs direc ·
tor, explai ned to reporter MI chael Satchell . "The older ones
.. . well. you always hope and
hope, btit as time goes by ... "
There are similar ' photographic display s throughout the
center, poignant reminders of it s
primary mi ssion - to help
protect America's children from
abduct ion, sexual abuse and
violence. These are the pictures
you see on milk cartons. shopping bags , utility bills, TV spots
and elsewhere.
The center has raised public
awareness of child kidnapping
dramatically. and 107 youngsters
have been recovered as a direct
result of these photos- victims
of abdu ctio n by either a stranger
or a paren t In a custody disput e.

Yet some people resent being
confronted by the images of
missing children, a nd a great
deal Of public mi sund ersta nding
cloud s the Issue.
· Branch re ca ll s one Irate
woman calling to complain:
"You're evading my privacy and
my peace of mind by making m e
look at tragedies of missing kid s
at my breakfast tabl e."
There Is confusion over just
how serious a threat abduction
by strangers really is. In the
past. the media tended to include
kidnapped children wit h the
nation's estimated 1 milli on oc
more runawa ys, creating an
exaggerated picture and skept!rlsrn that resulted In the kidn ap
probl em be in g underest imated.
Exact nation a l sta tistics a re
hard to come by, but the cent er 's
analysis of poli ce reports In
Houston, Texas, and J acksonville. Fla·.. reveal s that the
incidence or abdu ctio n and sexual abuse Is dismayingly high.

•

LOS ANGELES (UP)) -Elsa
Lanchester, the red-haired pixie
who specialized In playing eccentric spinsters and w'ltty dowagers during a 60-year career
that Included the film classic
''The Bride of Frankenstein, "· Is
dead at 84.
Lanchester, the widow of
Academy Award-winning actor
Charles Laughton, died of bronchopneumonia Friday at · the
Motion Picture and Television
Hospital. where she was admitted Dec. 17, spokeswoman Jean
Ferris sai d.
The London-born actress had
been comatose for several years
following several· strokes. She
left no family or relatives and
requested that there be no
memorial services.
Lanchester twice was noml·
nated for Oscars, for "Come to
the Stable"1n 1949 and "Witness
for the Prosecution" In 1958.
During her prolific career, the
o actress delighted audiences with

The Democrats
Don't kid yourself that the
· D~rnoci-ats share Mr. Reagan's
eagern ess (o "put th is behind
us." On the contrar)'. they want
ld put it in fron t &lt;Jf us and keep it
ther e just as long as possible.
Th eir two-ring investigatory circus won't eve n get under

way

until after the holidays, a nd
hear ings will contin ue unt II the
Democrat s' private polls indica te that the public is tiring of the
spectacle. Then the ten ts will be
folded, "report s" will be issued
denouncing the president , and
prosecut ion will be demande(l for
any un fortunate sou l (the higher
ranking the better) who ca n
plausi bly be accused of violating
some law.
Th e political cpnsc'l)uences
A sol,id gain for the Democrats.
Thcv ca n blow it. of course, if .
the y insist on nominating a ·
stahdard liberal (e,g. Mario ·
Cuomo or E dwa rd Kennedy ) ln .
1988. But Sen. Sam Nunn of ;
Georgia. former Gov. Cha rles ·
Robb of VIrginia or some similar :
" modera te" Democrat could ·
well win the presidency. Among ;
Republicans, George Bush is .
hurt worst (beca use closest to the ·
Iran operation! . Jack Kemp less, :
and ' Robert Dote least. The ;
conservative movement as such ·
Is scarcely affected at all, though
aid to the Nicaraguan contras is
probably doomed.
The long-range Implications .
Twice in recent years a Repub- '
II can professing conservative :
views has been elected president, ,
then re-elected by the stunning •
margin of 49 states to l. Twice a .
Democra t-co ntrolled Congress, ·
with the crucial aid of our liberal
media. has moved to nullify that :
victory by exposing real or ;
alleged misdeeds In the exec u- •
live branch. The resu lting pollti -,.
cal gridlock is bad enough, but ;
behind It looms a far graver (
problem : Can the popul ar will on ;
basic Issues be thwarted lndefl- ·
nitely by such techniques?
•

In 1984, there were 211 cases or :
abductions by stm ngers in those :
two cities alon e, and 58 a ttempts :
In which the you ngsters success- •
fu lly res!s t(ld, Some were freed :
within minutes. some were held ·
for 'hours or days, and others ate :
still mi ssi ng. The average age of ;
the victims was 10, and 90 ·
per cent of the children had been
sexua lly molested.
Nationwide. the center est imates. as many as 20,000 child· .
ren may be abducted annually by
people other than their parents ,
while th e number of children
sna tched by a parent in custody
di sputes also run s Into the tens of
thousands. Thes e parental kid - ·
nap cases. explai ned Jay Howell,
executive director of the ce nt er,
tend to be dismissed as inconse- .
quential. when In fact studies
show that more than half of these ·
youn gsters suffer sex ua l or phys- :
ical abu se. neglect or other
harms.

WASHINGTON (UPil - CIA Director William Casey,
reportedly In a semi-coma earlier this week, Is conscious and
able to sit up as he recovers from surgery to remove a cancerous
·
br ain tumor, Georgetown University Hospital says.
In a brief statement issued Friday, the hospital said Casey, 73,
"remains In stable condition ... as he continues to recover from
'surgery. He Is fully conscious and able to sit up In a bedside
I
Chair. 0
II was the most detailed statement from the hospital since
Casey underwent surgery Dec. 18. Previously, officials would
not provide any details about his recovery, maintaining only
that he was in stable condition.
Th e upbeat statement followed by two days a report from CBS
News that Casey "Is In a semi-coma and Is responding to only
painful stimuli." CBS did not disclose the source of the
Information or provide details about his condition.
Asked about the report' at the time, hospital spokeswoman
Robin Payes said the network "got that-l~m unconfirmed
sources" and refused io confirm or deny it. ·' ·
Th(' Washington Post reported Wednesday that Casey had
failed to recover all normal brain functions since his 5Whour
operation. The new spaper .cited White House officials and
knowledgeable sources as providing the Information, but said ·
the sources did not indicate which brain functions had not
returned.
Hospita l officials refused to say Friday whether Casey could
speak.
Surgeons removed the cancerous brain tumor three days
after Casey s uffered two cerebral seizures Dec. 15, one at CIA
headquarters In Langley , Va., and a second at the hospitaL
Hospita l officials have said they plan to schedule cancer
treatment for Casey when he recovers from the brain surgery.
· Cancer ex perts differ on the prognosis for brain tumor
patients. The American Cancer Society reports 40 percent of
such patients ca n resume -a useful life, but other specialists,
con tend the chanel' for long-term survival Is slim.
Case~. a central figure In the Iran arms-Contr1,1 aid scandal,
was stricken one day before his scheduled testimony to the
Senate Intelligence Committee. He had testified twice
previously In private congressional sessions.

'

Rewrite offered
(USP ~~~810)
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llshlng Compa n,v/Muttlmf'dla, Inc. ~ ·
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MC'mhPr: Unit('(! Prrss InU'!rnattonal.
In land Dally Pr(ISs Associ at ton and ThC'

Ohio Nl'wspapN Associ at ion. Na t ional
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Nrwspapl'r Sa iNi. na Third AvPnuc.
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SUNDAY ONLY
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By Carrier or Mol or Roule

Death of a hero ________Ge_o~rge_R_._P~lag.:._en_z:
I•asked to speak to Mr . Abbolt.
" ! am sorry to tell you , Mr .•
Abbott died in Oc tobe r," she
sa id . I cou ld sense a lump
building up in her thro at. Th ere
was a pause as I swa llowed a
lump In my own throat.
I wonder If any thing leaves one
fee ling suddenl y so desolate as
being told th a l lhe person one has
ca ll~d. expecting to talk with , has
died .
When 1he person has been one
of your heroes a nd models in life,
the shock can be even greater.
Walter Abbott was onv of my
first heroes. l used to do coll ections for him on a weekly
newspaper he published. I wa s
only 17, but he a lways talked to
me as if we were the sa me age.
For Walter Abbott, that news paper wa s just so met hing to
make ends m eet. He was a writ er
-a good one. He wrote detecti ve
stori es and he taught me the
rudiment s of creative writing. so
that 1 wa s able to he lp work my
way through college by writing
detective stori es myself.
Walter wrote a novel ca tted
"Choir Boy" and a play based on
Mraquand' s be~t seller "The
Late George Apley." Then when
he was 40 he went to Hollywood
where he got a job writing for
P ara mount at $2,200 a week.
He was now a lull -fledged
success In the writing world, but
he never forgot hi s protege In
Cleveland. We corresponded
through the years and he would
always give !JlY ego a boost by
saying things (rid iculous things )
like , "If I were you, I would think
In terms of a J ames CaIn-Ish
novel a Ia 'Postman.' "
After I became a minist er I

No ,&lt;;, ubsrrlj:)tlons by mall (X'rmllled In
a rC'aS whC'r£1 mot or carrl('l' sE&gt;rvice Is

For most of us. thinking or
ourselves as so mebod y else' s
hero mi ght SC&lt;'rn like the hei g ht
of presumption. Yet a t any
mom ent each of us may be
playing the role of hero to
another person unawa res.
The kind of life we lead
depends to a large degree on
what we see in others. We are
often as patien t and kind. We are
as tru st worthy as the people we
know who ~re trus tworthy.

In 1he same way, somebody
may be taking no!IC'r of us -of
the way we react to trouble and
adversity. of the way we make ·
use or our gifts of nature. And '
from what they see in ~s and In
other people. they put toget her a ·
life or thei r own .
It Is an awesome thi ng to
realize 1hat eac h of us may be
somebody 's hero. sornebody's
Walle r Abbott. hel ping to shape
someon e Plse"s life.

avallal:ll ('.

Thf' Sunday Tlm4.'S·S['nfln('l wnl not b('
r f's pon ~l bl{' for a dv a n~ paymE:'nl s
mad(' t o carrl!'rs.
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only

Onf' Yf'ar .. ......r·· ................ ..... 132 .2 ~
Six months ........ ......... ....... ....... $16.90
Dally and Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS

Inside County
1:1 W£' f'ks .. .. .... ..... .... ... ............. 117.29
26 WPl'k5 .................. ... ' ............ 134 .06

52 Wrcks .. ......... .. ... .~ ....... .. ... ... S6ti .~

Berry's World

bawdy cabaret songs and horrl·
fled moviegoers In thetltleroleof
the 1935 film "The Bride of
Franken's teln."
· t.:anchester made her first
Hollywood film appearance In
"David Copperfield'' earlier that
year, andl her co-starring role
with ,Laughton In "Tile Beach·
comber" In 1938 won her recognition as a majo (actress .
Born Elizabeth Sullivan In Oct.
28, 1902, Lanchester hoped to
become a · dancer, put began
playing music halls and small
night clubs, and helped organize
the Children's Theater In London
at age 16.
.
She belonged to a group called .
Cave of Harmony Productions
that ·· staged, after midnight,
one-act plays by Anton Chekhov,
Luigi Plrandello and A.E .
Houseman.
.
Lanchester claimed that while
at the cabaret she originated the
costume of top hat, ballet tlgh.ts
and high heels, later used · bv·

CIA chief is listed
·,as ~table, conscious

On£' W('£'k ...... .. ... .... ......... .. .. 60 Ce-nt~
On£' Y&lt;'ar ................... ..... .... ..... $31.20
' SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Sunday ..
.. .:..... ..... ... .. MC£'nlll

noti ced hl' was ed iting some of
hi s choicer expressions out of his
letters to me. "I am busier than
-THAT place," he would say in
deference to my clergy s tatus.
But he co ntinued to urge me on
to greater height s with admoni tions like, 'Work for a magnum
opus- 'Peace of Mind, ' 'Peace
of Soul' proportions ." Those
were bes t-selling religious books
back In the 1950s.
Gradually even he ca!)le to see
that he had vast ly overrated my
talent s, but we stili kept In touch
at Christmas time- until some
years ago when we both changed
a ddresses at about thesarnetime
and lost track of each other.
Then one day, while I was
looking up a number in the Los
Angeles phone book, I ran across
th e name Walter Abbott. Could it
be the Walter Abbott I knew·~ I
dia led. It was th e right number
but .. .
"I' m sorry to tel! you .... " she
sa id.
Many yo ung people today don't
have heroes. J practicall y collected them. They en ri ched my
life more than I ca n say. I hung on
their every word and I saved all
their letters to me. I still have
them.
I ca n counlll bona fide heroes
In my life. All are gone now.
Waller Abbott was the last.
It Is too bad we are no longer
heroworshlpper s. Heroes ca n do
m any things for us . They provide
us with a model - somet hing to
aspire Jo. We all do better when
we have someth ing to live up to.
Heroes are also a constant
Inspirat ion to us not to give up,
for we feel that to fall ourselves Is
to fall them.

Rat~

Out'lide CoUIIt)'

t3 Wrok• .... ...... ... :...... .. ...... .. ... $18.20

26 Wroks .... .. ............... ............ $15.10
52 Work• ................................. 167.60

COLUMBUS (UPII - The
sponsor of a bill vetoed by Gov.
Richard F. Celeste has offered to
meet with Celeste's staff to
rewrite the part oft he bill Celeste
didn't llkr.
Sen . H. Cooper Snyder , R·
Hillsboro. Friday S('nt an open
letter to the governor saying he
believes there Is a need for a new
product liabilit y law .
•:we all recognize that eventually, in order to have an effective
product-liability law, we need to
be uniform nationally," Snyder
wrote.

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy tonight. with a
low near 30. Partly cloudy
Saturday. with highs near 40.
The probability of precipita tion · Is near zero through
Saturday.
Winds wlll he light and variable tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Sunday lhroul!'h Tuesday
A chance of rain or snow
Sunday. with fair weather Monday and Tuesday. Highs will
,range from the upper 30s to the
lower 40s each day, with overnight lows between 25 and 30.

BLOOD GLUCOSE

MONITORS
GLUCOMETER II WITH MEMORY
ONLY

'

"I want to exchange this G.I. Joe doll for a
COL. NORTH doll."
.

The

Bowman's HomeCare
Medical Supply
63 PINE ST.

CAWPOLIS

446·7283 - .CAU COUECl

'"
'•

Lanchester 'played Laughton's up her face for 1he female
monster.
daughter.
"My hair stiffened Into a
The couple returned to London
In 1933 to make their first ta lking Topsy-like mop and was to sUck
movie, " Henry VIII," In which out backward on a little cage,"
she played one of the monarch's she wrote In her autobiography,
wives, Ann of Cleves. The movie "C harles Laughton and 1." "I
was a success and they repeated was then bound In yards and
it as a stage show at the Old VIc. yards or bandage, all most
That performance led to sev· carefully done by a ·nurse."
Lanchester's more than 50
era! companion roles for the
Laughtons, Including Ariel and credits also included "The Ghost
Prospera In "The Tempest" by Goes West," 1936; "RemShakespeare; and "Peter Pan" brandt." 1937; "The Spiral Stairwith she In the title role and he case," 1946; "The Inspector
General," 1949; "Androcles and
playing Captain ijook.
Laughton began building a the Lion," 1953: "'Bell, Book and
reputation as an actor, and Candle," 1958; "Mary Poppins,"
Hollywood lured him In 1934 for 1964; "Willard," 1971; "Murder
such films as "The Hunchback of by Death," 1976.
.She also appeared on television
Notre Dame." ·
The Laughtons shuttled back In "Omnibu s," 1953-57; "The
and forth from London to New ,John Forsythe Show," 1965-67;
York for a btl , then settled In Los and "Nanny and the Professor,"
1971.
Angeles.
After Laughton's death in 1962
After the filming of' 'The Bride
of Frankenstein" wtlh Borl~ In Los Angeles, Lanchester re·
Karloff, Lanchester complained malned In Hollywood and perof the three hours it took to make formed for several years at the
Turnabout Theater.

NOTED ACTREsS DIES Actress Elsa Lanchester, who
specialized in playing eccentric s pinsters and witty dowag·
ers during a 50-year care!'!"
that Included the 19311 film
classic "Bride of Franken·
stein, " died Friday at the age
of R4. Lanchester was married
to actor Charles Laul!'hlon,
who died In
'

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·Asian, western nations urge
withdrawal from Afghanistan
Afghan governments accuse of
By CAROL ROSENBE~G
arms to the rebels .
supplying
United Press lnlernatlonal
Earlier this year. In a move
China. Britain ' and West Germany marked the seventh ann!- . balled as "goodwill gesture" by
versary of the Sovlet ·tnvaslon of the Kremlin, the Soviets with·
Afghanistan Saturday with calls drew an estimated 5,000 troops.
for the Kremlin to withdraw all The United States called It a
lis troops from the Moslem propaganda ploy.
"The tragedy of Afghanistan
nation .
In Moscow, Soviet dissident · continues," Sakharov said Frl·
Andrei Sakharov. who was re- day on the NBC Nightly News.
cently released from seven years "The suffering of the people
of Internal exile for condemning continues. The number of refuMoscow's Invasion of Afghanis- gees, which I think are primarily
tan, also called for a Soylet the result of the presence of the
Soviet forces, increases.
pullout.
.,
.
"I think that what we need Is a
The Soviets Invaded the moun·
fast
withdrawal of the Soviet
talnous nation on Dec. 27, 1979 to
forces
from Afghanistan," he
back the Kabul government In Its
said.
fight · against anti-communist
rebels. Western officials say
The 65-year-old dissident phys·
there are more than 110.000 iclst returned to Moscow Tues·
Soviet troops now in the country. day after seven years of banishAbout 2 million Afghan res!· ment to the closed c ity of Gorky ,
dents have fled to neighboring 250 miles to the east.
Pakistan, which· the Soviet and
In Peking, the Chinese Foreign

Jordan blasts bloody
Iraqi airliner hijack
AMMAN, Jordan (UP!) Jordan condemned the bloody
hijack attempt on an Iraq i
passenger plane which crashlanded and exploded In Saudi
Arabia following a fierce mid-air
gun battle between four hijackers arid security guards . '
As many as 62 people were
killed Thursday In the mid-air
shootoul, crash and explosion In
, the desert near a small Saudi
Arabian airport In Arar, about
250 miles southwest of Baghdad
on the Iraqi border, av iation
officials sa id.
Jordanian Foreign Minister
Taber AI Masri , re turning from ~
fou r-day visit to Egy pt. said
.Jordan " Is against terrorism ~ ad
strongly condemns this act."
Th e sta te-owned Iraqi News
Agency said of 91 passengers a nd
15 crew !)lernbers aboard the jet,
32 people were injured. Other
Middle East reports said 62
people were killed, Including
three hijack ers, a steward, two
stewardesses and a guard.
Survivor Sulelman Arrar, a
former Jordanian Interior Minis·
ter, said the first he knew of the
hijack attempt was when, while
sitting In first class, he saw a
commando throw a live hand
grenade Into the cockpit. The
commando was chased by securIty guards . who shot him , he said.
'"The whole drama was . 22

minutes long from the minute I
saw one of the hljack~rs storm
the plane's cockpit and when the
plane crash-landed, overturned,
spil t almost In half and blew up In
a ball of fire," Arrar said Friday .
Officials In Baghdad said the
hijackers, who were not masked,
were "Iranian agents of Leba·
nese origin." Iran, which has
been at war with Iraq for six
years, denied "a n y
involvem ent. "
'In Beirut, Lebanon, four phone
callers took responslbll'lty for the
hi jack.
They included people identifyIng themselves with the pro·
Iranian Islamic Jihad Organl7.a·
lion. the unknown Revolutlonar)·
Action Organization and the
" Rt&gt;volutlonary Islamic Forces
- Iraqi wing - Forces of
Mohammad Prophet of God. "
Al so. a man claimed responslbil·
lty for "a Shiite revolutionary
organization" which he did not
name.

Ohio Lottery ·
CLEVELAND (UPII
Fr!·
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Ministry ca lled the Soviet Invasion of Its southern Moslem
neighbor a "flagrant violation of
the 'norms governing lnterna·
tiona! relations.
" If the Soviet Union is sincere
In a political settlement of the
question of Afghanistan," the
Chinese sta temen t said. " it
should set forth a reasonable
timetable for a troop withdrawal
and pull oU:t all Its troops from
Afghanistan as soon as
possible."
In London. Foreign Secretary
Sir Geoffrev Howe charged,
"The Russians are trying to keep
the realities of this war a secret.
They tal k ofwithdra~al. Inst ead,
they and their client regime have
6nly intensified the war.
"There can be no military
solution. We, the E uropean Com·
munlty, and the rest of the world ,
took to the Sov iet Union to agree
to a rapid and complete withdra wal of its forces. Only this , not
cosmetic gest ures, can bring the
agony of the Afghan nation to an
end,'' Howe said.
Howe said a Unit ed Nations
mediator had estimateed 49.000
&lt;'ivlllans •were killed In the las t
two years alone, five million
Afghans had fled Iheir count ry as
war refugees and " large·scale
violations of human rights" are
· Infl icted by the Sov irt troops and
the pro-Moscow government
they back.
In Sydney, Australia, aboutl20
mernb~rs Afghan
refugees
burned a Soviet flag Friday

·Let ~our ex.penence guide you in tne
selection of a famtly monument.
of Select Barr e1

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send mt details Dllaut

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Co. In(.'

POMEIIOY, OHIO-MEIGS COUNTY"
DISPLAY YAIID NEAR
'
POMEROY -MASON IIDGE
LEO L. VAUGHAN, MGt.
PHONE 992-2518

'

VINTON, OHIO_:GAiltA COUNTY, ~
DISPlAY YAll
JAMES 0. IUSM, MGR.
PHONE 318-1603

'

You Asked
For It!

Because. so many of
our customers
requested it1 Dale's
Smorgasbord will be
open Thursday1
Jan. 11 1987
from 11 a.m.-to 7 p.m •

Corne Join Usl:

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For One Low Price! '

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In-Kind Exchanges Only

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thru Sot,
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STOREWIDE

SAVIN.GS

"CoMplete Medleal Stppllu For HoMe Ute"

~~.

Marlene Dietrich.
She met Laughton In her first
big London stage hit, "Riverside
Nights." When the play closed,
they were married. Friends said
she had no Idea her husband had
homosexual predilections.
Later, Lanchester was asked
why she allowed author Charles
Hfgham to write about her
husband's secret homosexual life
In "Charles Laughton: An Inti·
male Biography." ·
·
• "Because times have changed,
and such things can he discussed
more openly than they were
before," she said. "And because
it might help people who are
faced with the same kind of
problem and must deal wlih the
terrible gullt that Charles felt
most of his life."
Lanchester played. her first
screen role in the silent version of
"The Constant Nymph" in 1927.
The Laughtons came to the
Untied Stales to pt!rform "Payment Ileferred, " one ofI their hit
shows .In London , on Broadway.

$12400

After Mfgs. ltbatt

ID1iMby NEA, Inc.

w. va.

Ohio-Point

tharacter actress Elsa Lanehester dead at 84

198~

Facing a grim fate. ____Ja_ck_A~n~d_er_so_n_&amp;_J_o_se.:.,_ph_S....:..p_ea_r:
WASHINGTON - At this
happy lime or the year, when
children's laughter fills the air
a nd grandparents treasure the
snapshots that come . in the
holiday mall, It's a harrowing
experience to vis it the conference room of a particular office
suit e In downtown Washington,
D.C.
On one wa ll there . are 48
photographs of kids - toddlers to
teenager s, boys and girls, bl ack,
white and Hispanic. Almost all of
them are smiling, as children
usually are in famil y or school
snapshots. But the one thing
these youngsters have in common Is that eac h has a case lile in
the Nationa l Center (or Mi ss in g
and Exploited Child ren.
Writt en across four of the
photos in la rge red letlers is a
single word : DE CEASE D. On 18
is the happier word : RECO·
VERED . The remaining photos
have nothing written on them,
and the visi tor Is almost afra id to

~

~bet 28, 1986

Summing it u P'---___,______;_·__W:. :~'. . : : il : .: : iQ:.·:m. :. ~i=L-=-.R=u;;:,:.;~h==er

iunba~ ~imts· lmtitttl .

.

Silvtr lri~g• "'. '
Pla1a
'
Gallipolis, Ohi.. :
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Page-A-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-__;._·Local Briefs·---..... . . Residents··
Two marriage license$ issr.ted
' POMEROY - A marriage license has been Issued tn Meigs '
County Probate Court to Jon Rupert Dillard, 31, Pomeroy, and
Regina Annette Butcher, 31, Pomer 0y; Albert Eugene Holman ..
23. Spencerville. and Beckie Lynn Amos, 18. Racine.

Dissolution filed in court
POMEROY - Michael Jeffrey Meldau and Helen Marie
Meldau, both of Racine, have filed for a dissolution of marriage
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.

WIC coupon schedule announced
POMEROY -January WIC coupons may be picked up at the
Meigs County Health Department on Friday, Jan. 2, and on
Monday and Tuesday, Jan. 5 and 6.
Make-up days lor those Who cannot get to the department ·on
the regular distribution days have been set for Jan.12 and Jan.
20. Hours are from 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m. on all of the
scheduled days.

.Gallia gets sales tax payments
: GALLIPOLIS --- GaiHa County received $5l, 790.!16 out of a
total $29,389,2511n permissive sales tax payments, representing
October collections, whlcn were distributed to 79 counties·,
according to State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
The money was distributed to County Treasurer Myron
"Bud" McGhee. Ferguson said.
The distribution Is made monthly but there Is a two-month
payment lag because of the time Involved In collection and
certification of the amounts to the auditor's office by the payees.
State law permits counties and regional transit authorities to
levy the .5 percent tax. Franklin recelved the largest tax
payment of the 79 counties - $3,215,029.63.

Area schools receive subsidies
GALLIPOLIS - Schools In Gallia County received a total of
$446,862.47 of state subsidy payments In December, according
to State Auditor Thomas E. Ferguson.
·
More than $165,249,000 'was distributed throughout 614 city,
exempted vlllage and local school districts and 87 county boards
.of education throughout the state, Ferguson said.
. Gallipolis City School District received a net payment of
$315,944.75, according to Ferguson's statistics. Gallla County
Local Schools netted $130,917.72.
Each district wossed more mQney but was deducted for State
Teacher's Retirement System and School Employees Retire·
ment System payments, as part of the ·employers share of the
pension pro;:ram for December,. Ferguson said.
: More than $146,000 from the two districts combined for the two
:rettrment programs.

Harless selected bureau rep

•
•

•. COLUMBUS - Richard Harless has been named field
¥epresentatlve 'tor the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation In
;Jackson, VInton. Athens, Pike Scioto, Lawrence and Gallla
-countieS. The announcement came from Glenn Pirtle, vice
president Qf field services.
Harless, 26, Jaakson, succeeds Dan Fulks, who has accepted a
sales position with a West VIrginia financial institution.
· As a bureau representative. Harless will serve as liaison
between the county bureaus In his area and the state bureaus
office in Columbus. He will served as an adviser and consultant
l o the county farm bureaus, assisting them with development
:)lnd execution of programs which will strengthen and benefit
the members and their organization.
•

Beer, wine permit in process
CHESHIRE- A beer and wine permit Is being processed for
Mason County Exxon Inc., doing business as Food Shop on Ohio
'fin Cheshire. according to Wl.lllam J. Flaherty, state liquor
control director .
The permit application was flied Dec. 15, Flaherty said. The
department will not Issue any new permits until Jan. 16, 1987.

VFW member wins panel post
GALLIPOLIS ~ Dovel T. Myers·, Gallla County veterans
service o!flcer and a member of Gallipolis Veterans of Foreign
Wars Post 4464, has been appointed to serve as a member of the
VFW's National Legislative Committee.
The appointment was made by VFW Commander In Chief
Norman G. Staab of Russell, Kan.
• Myers' service record and national and VFW achievements
were considered in the appointment, Staab said. The committee
Is responsible lor establishing goals and objectives for the VFW
for the 1986-87 administrative year.

,Police investigate decoration theft
GALLIPOLIS - City pollee are Investigating the theft of
outdoor Christmas lights, decorating the porch on 1041 Second
Ave.
.
Shirley Graham. a resident of the vandalized home, reported
to pollee that 1511ghts were taken and the wires were cut on the
remaining lights.
~

honored ·
for using
seatbelts

.

GALLIPOLiS
T'wo local
residents have joined Ohio's
"Saved ·by the Belt Club" after
they escaped serious injury in an
accident on Nov, 26 on Ohio 588 in
Gallia County.
Lt. Dan Henderson, com·
mander of the Gallia-Meigs Post
of the Ohio Highway Patrol, said
that according to rep(&gt;rts, Angela
· M. Holley artd Tammy M. Elliott
of Gallipolis were . eastllound
when Holley lost control of her
vehicle ·on the wet pavement.
center, and Tammy M.,Eillott, both of whom were
. S!l.VED BY THE BELT --- Lt.,Dan Henderson,
Alter sliding off the left side of
.
spared
lrom serious Injury In a traffic accident
left, commander ol the Galllil·~elgs Post ol the
the road, the pickup truck struck
last
month
because they wore their se.albelts.
,Ohio Highway Patrol, presented "Saved by the
a ditch and rolled over. While the
Belt Club" certlfl.cates to Angela M. Holley,
truck was heavily damaged, botll
occupants escaped w,tth little or Department of Highway Safety injurieS on our highways," the accidents on our highways. Four
no Injuries because they were and more than 400 pollee agen· commander said. "If everyone hundred .fatal acciden.ts victims
wearing safety belts, Henderson cies to recognize people who wore their safety belt, 400 fewer ' could literally be Savect by the
benefited from wearing their people would die in traffic Belt."
said.
Holley and Elliott were each seat belts.
r~;;;;:;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;
presented with a "Saved by the
A "seat Belt Survivor" Is a
Belt Club" certificate signed by li\&lt;lng testimonial to the elfec·
Gov. Richard Celeste, Highway tiveness of safety bells. Hender·
Safety Director William M. Dent- son said.
han and Col. Jack Walsb, · the
"We hope this example of how.
patrol superintendent. They safety belts can save lives will
were each presented with a · influence others to voluntarily
"Saved by the Belt" lapel pin.
comply with Ohio's mandatory ·
The "Saved by the Belt Club" belt Jaw and help ·us reduce the
Corner 'of Second &amp; Grape
Is a joint . effort by the Ohio number of deaths and serious

YEA-R

After 40 yeru;s, Santa
fulfills Ohioan's wish
CLEVELAND (UPIJ ---Ralph
Conley doesn't know who put the
new, shiny, red bicycle under his
Christmas tree this year, but
says no one should give up on
Santa Claus because dreams do
come true, although sometimes
It means waiting as long as 40
years.
Conley, 51, and his wife,
Wanda, found a new 10-speed
bicycle under their ChrJstmas
tree after returning from church
services late Christmas Eve.
A note attached to the tree
said: "Sorry It took me so long to
get here. But I didn't forget that
Christmas you wanted this. Hope
I'm not too late. Love, Santa."
"It took me 40 years to get
this," said Conley , who grew up
In a West VIrginia coal mining
town near the Kentucky border.
When Conley was 3, his lather,
a miner, died of a lung Infection .
His mother. Ruth. struggled to

raise Conley, ·his two sisters and
brother on welfare benefits and
her husband's pensioo.
On Christmas, toys were
scarce in the Conley home. More
than' anything, he said, hew anted
a shiny, red Roadmas ter bicycle
that he saw In a Montgomery
Ward catalog, but each Christ·
mas the bike never came.
"Every Christmas , I feltSanny
passed me by ," he said.
Wheq he was 12, Conley hoed
corn ail summer with his uncle
who promised he wou id help the
boy buy the bike when the crop
came in.
· fiut Conley's qream was shah
tered again when ~ mine shaft
caved In and his uncle was killed
in the mishap.
The years passed and Conley's
dream of a new bicycle faded. He
married. had children and
moved to Cleveland. Six years
ago his mother died . .

' POMEROY --- ·Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services
reports eight calls Friday.
Middleport at 7: 11 a.m. to
South Second for Katherine
Werner who was treated but not
transported; Rutland EMS at
9:43 a.m. transported Barry
Redman from an auto accident
on Ohio 124 West to Holzer
Medical Center; Salem Town·
ship Fire Department was also
called to the scene.
Rutland at 10:48 a.m. to Depot
Street for June Cremeans to
Veterans ·Memorial Hospital:
Pomeroy at 11:19 a.m. to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for .
Bertha Robinson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Rutland at
12:18 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. lfor
Raymond Llevlng to Holzer
Medical Center: Racine at 12: 59
p.m. to Wells Run for Pearl
HawthOrne to Veterans Memor·
lal Hospital: Middleport at 5:10
p.m. to Story's Run Road for
Cecil Hall who was treated but
not transported; Rutland at 11:28
p.m. to Pagetown for Sue Deog
and Jerry ' Haning who were
transported to Veterans Memor·
Ia! Hospital.
The service report 12 calls over
the ,Christmas holiday; five calls
on Wednesday and seven on
Thursday.
Wednesday, Middleport at 2:·19
a.m. to Stonewoods Apartments
for Esther Kessell to Veterans

M~morlal Hospital: R~tiand at
2:49 a.m. to B!ckels Road for
Helen Ebersbach to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at
7:58 a.m. to Wells·Run Road for
Pearl Hawthorne to Veterans
Memorial Hospital: Racine at
5:09 p.m. to Letart Falls for
Eimer Pickens to Veterans Mem·
orial Hospital.
Thursday, Pomeroy at 12:51
a.m. to Ohio 7 for Emerson Wells
to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7:30 a.m. to the
Maples Apartments for Ray·
mond Justice to Veterans Mem·
orial Hospital; Rutland at 12:30
p.m. to New Lima Road for Dave
Follrod to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 12:57
p.m. to Pearl Street for Helen
Miller to Veterans Memorial
Hospital : Tuppers Plains at 2:15
p.m. was called to Ohio 681 East·
for Don Yater who was dead on
arrival; Racine at 3:03 p.m. to
Ohio 124 for Wesley Clark to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 7: 47 p.m. to
Greenup Lane for Henry Bahr to
Holzer Medical Center.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Christopher
Diddle, Racine; Ralph Swan,
Pomeroy; Marie Du&lt;!ding, Mid·
dleport; Hazel Creamer, Athens.
Discharges - Robert Dickens,
George Nichols, Lovle Watson .

URGENT
CARE
CENTER
I

"Firm, VA W aid less fortunate ·
•

; GALLIPOLIS- United Auto Workers Local1685 and F2deral
:l'&gt;logul Corp. of Galilpolis joined together this holiday season to
' -1\elp ease the financial burden of families of employees who
,have been laid off or on medical leaves of absence. •
' Each out-of-work employee received two$25 gift certllicates,
.One from the local union and one from the company, redeemable
..at the Kroger store of their choice.
: The gifts were donated after the membership of Loca11685
&lt;Voted to give each out-of-work member a certificate. Local
l&gt;resldent Harold Hanson then challenged Federal Mogul plant
'll!anager Jim Davis, to match the local's gifts.
Nina Butcher, financial secretary of the local, reports that
both the company and the union are working together for the
good of their people.

••

We want you to know that
we are here ... for YOU!

URGENT
'
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A Message From The Bi~le...

..

MUSIC IN WORSHIP
William B. Kughn
It is affirmed that the word "p~al/o ...is the key to unlocking the

'

~real

mystery and authorizing instrumental music in worship. The affirmation is
supported by the claim that "p&amp;allo" means to sing with the accompani·
ment ofan instrument, so when Paul said, "singing and making melody in
your heart to the Lord" (Eph. 5:19), he advocated sin!Pn~ with an instrument. If this be so, then thiS settles the question. But, IS It true? We shall
see.
The MeuaJaa Of "P..UO"
The word "p!aUo" has undergone many chanll"•· It originally meant to
touch, twitch, or pluck, having no reference ,to music. It was used in de·
scribing the drawmg of the bowstring in the shooting of arrows, and the
twitchin¥ oh carpenter's line for marking ruled lines. It was later applied
to touching the strins of an harp so as to make music and sing with the accompaniment of a harp. Lastly, it signified singing without any instrument
other than the organ of speech.
"l'llllo" And The lllllnlment
"P141/Io" no more describes the instrument any more thari "baptize"
describes the water. "hallo" means to touch, twitch, or pluck, and we
det~ine what is to ~ touche.d, twitched, or plucked by the use of the
word m the context, he ttthe hair, harp, or heart. In the context of Ephesians 5:19, the instrument that is being "p&amp;al/oed," (touched, twitched, or
plucked) is the heart. ''Bapti:o" means to dip or immerse&gt;You can be bap·
tlr.ecl with lire, sufferina. and water. That into which we are immersed is
determined by the element that has been chosen by God and revealed in
the word, 'wtor," "Can ""Y man forbid wat.,, that these should not be
baptlud... !"(Acts 10:47).
·

' '

,.

...rw-

.

The ~paotloo And Eui.J
The apostles and early Christians used.''psallo" in its limited sense of

singinJ or making vocal music. They realized that "maki~f melody" was
essential. but they had to look beyond·theword "psallontes' to find the in·
strument. They undmtood the instrument to be the heart to be touched,
twitched, or plucked so as to make the melody on it. Since the word
"p&amp;al/o" in the New TestamenttimeJDeant "to sing without the accompaniment of the harp," this passage eliminates all mechanical instruments of
music designed and devised by man:
.
For FrN Blbk CAmspofttk•ce CAurse, Write . . .

Chltpel Hill G_l~:urch of Christ ,
Bulavllle

P.O. Do. 308
Galltpolto, Ohio 45631
Sandlyl,entna,
'.-'• Wol'lhiJ 6t00 .

446-5287

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Bib~StudJ

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PARKING

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40°/o OFF
OPEN DAILY TO 5 P.M.
MON. I Fit. TO I P.M.

446-3045
WHERE CUSTOMER SATISFACTION
IS OUR MAIN CONCERN

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1

1986 LINCOLN

TOWN CAR
LOADED (White)
15,000 MILES

FORO FACTORY SALE CAR

1986 PONTAIC 4 DR.
PARISIENNE BROUGHAM
LOADED (Chartaall
23,000 Miles

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1986 MERCURY 4 DR.

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TOPAZ
AIR, AUTO, TRANS., PS, PB.
(Biatk)

,.,

FORD FACTORY SALE CAR f

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1986 lTD BROUGHAM
White

AIR, AUTO TRANS., AM/FM
Red

·V-6, AIR, TILT, CRUISE, REAR DEFROST
Black • Red

ford faetory Sale Car

ford fletory Sale Car

Ford factory Sale Cars

4 DR -LOADED

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(2) 1986 COUGARS

1986 TEMPO 2 DR.

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LOW MILEAGE

1986 FORD TEMP 4 DR •
AUTO. TRANS., AIR, AM/FM. TILT WHEEL
(White)

Ford Factory Sale Car

(2) 1985 FORD TEMPOS
4 DR.'s- LOW MILEAGE
AIR, COND., AUTO. TRANS.
PS, PB, AM/FM
White • Grey

I

1985 MUSTANG 2 DR.
AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND.
AM/FM STEREO

EURO-SPORT PACKAGE
LOADED
(Silveri

1983 MAZDA PICKUP
4 CYL., 4 SPD. TRANS.
RADIO

1985 DODGE LANCER 4 DR.
AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND;, CRUISE
TILT, AM/FM/CASSEITE
ISilveri

1986 FORD

1985 MERCURY COUGAR

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1985 E-1 SO CARGO VAN
POWER WINDOWS, POWER LOCKS,
TILT WHEEL, CRUISE CONTROL
AM/FM CASSETTE 1
(Silver)

1985 CHEY. CAVALIER

CONVERSION VAN- LOADED
Pat's Demo
Red/Silver

WAGON
AUTO. TRANS., AIR COND,. RADIO
L~GGAGE RACK, REAR DEFROST

1983 FORD
COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON

1983 F-1 SO FORD 4X4

9 PASSENGER - LOADED
(White)

6 CYL., 4 SPD., RADIO
Red

1981 CHEY. LUV
PICKUP

NEW 1986 TAURUS
WAGON - LOADED

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Save Hundreds

4 CYL., 4 SPD.,
38,000 Miles

.SEE: RICK TOLLIVER,

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V-6, AIR COND., AM/FM
White

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J. R. PIERCE or .PAT' HILL

Pat Hill Ford·InC:.

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Middleport, OH. ·

461 S. 3rd

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992-2196
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ON THE SPOT
BANK FINANCIN

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UP TO 60 MONTHS FINANCING AVAILABLE

1984 CELEBRITY 4 DR.

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· o A.P.R.
Financing

Big ·Discounts

SALE ENDS DECEMBER 31st

DRASTICALLV
REDUCED!

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NOW THRU DECEMBER 31st

SHARP
· (Lt. Blue)

EVERYTHING IN OUR
. STORE HAS BEEN

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(Fixed Payment Variable)

4 CYL., 4 SPEED, RADIO

COINEI THIID I OUYE-GAWPOLIS

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PAT HILL FORD
ear End learance ale

1985 RANGER. PICKUP

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· WASHINGTON tliPI 1 ~ rience, 1 think it's worth a mlllio~;~ · ~Is closure statements required profits and loans !rom 1979 until
Former Rep. George Hansen, bucks," he said:
· under the 1978 Ethics In Govern· 1982 .
back in public 'Ute after six
Just before being released ·ment Act,l!'ansen feels anything
Hansen mststs he was told he
months . In prison, .. says his eatller this month from the but disgraced or repentent. ' . did not .have to report income in
experience bel)lnd bars was 'Federal Correctional Institute at
Hansen sees . himself as ·. a · his wife's name, but .he couldn' t
"worth a million bucks ;·.· and he . Petersburg, va., Hansen de' . victim, unfairly cut out of a herp · producE' evidence to prove he
hopes to cash in on it'.
na 11 ur laid reporters at a news of similar violators .and .pun· ·acted in ;:ood faith.
·
The Idaho Republican •. un·. con 1erence,
he plans to Write a. !shed, perhaps bec.aUsE' ne . He never
· misses han opportun·
At
daunted by the Jail from his book attacking the . prison ruffled feathers 'In the Justice ity to poirit . out t at t orney
cong~essional seat Into .a prison · system.
Department and Internal Re' General Edwin Mf.'ese, foriner
cell, explains his· approach. to
At first he llked the ,1111e, venuE' Service with his frequent ·.Rep. Geraldine Ferraro of New,
·,
"Coverup," but now he's think· criticism.
,
York. the Democrats' J984 vicP
adverslty.sitl'lply.
:· Row am ·I going to make ing of calling it, "Petersburg
He dismisses his 'crime as "an presidential c~ndidatfe,Cand nu·
lemonade out of this lemon?'' he Camp: An Amerjcan Gulag," he argument about how to fiJI out a merous members Q. ongrcss
quipped In an interview last said.
form."
had c:liscrepancies on theirdisclo-:
But
a
J'ury.
iound
him
guilty
in
sure
fo rms. but were allowed
to ·
Week.
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· Although he Is the first official
"Now that I've .had the expe· jailed for falsifying financial April i984 of (!ling false state· correct them instead of being
ments that omitted $334,000 in prosecuted.

(White)

"l'llllo" And SID&amp;

Sophocles, a native of Greece and professor of the Greek langua¥•· de·
clares "that there Is not a single eumple of psallo thrQughout thts long
period" (the Roman and Byzantine period from B.C. 1~6 to A.D. 1100,
during which time the New Testament was written) "involving or implying
the use of an instrument," but says "that it means always and everywhere .
'to elwlt, .....
~.·..
Dr. Joseph11enry Thayer in Thayer's Greek Lexicon states," .. .but when
the prince Of the New Testament lexiCO(Ifaphers comes to the New Testament period, he omits all of these meanlnp, and limits it to touching the
chords of the human heart, say!Dg that it means 'lil·tlle'New Tettament to ·
llqah.rmn, ehbnt«&lt;tlle.,....alGedluolq.'"
Ae&lt;:orcltns to these Greelt scholan, two hundred years before Christ,
"p&amp;allo" was,taking on the meaning "to sinr." and by the time the New
Testament was given, the word came to simp=~~o sing. ''
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Located at Holzer Clinic
qn Rt. 35 In Gallipolis
NO APPOINTMENT
-Mondav·Frlday
5:00P.M. to 9:00P.M.

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SALE ENDS DECEMBER 31st

EMS units. resprind to calls

GVFD answers false-alarm call
• GALLIPOLIS - Fourteen men and one volunteer fire
·department truck responded to a false alarm at Gallipolis
'Developmental Center Friday. The 11:51 p.m. alarm was
Jrlggered by a malfunctioning smoke alarm, according to
c)epartment records.

END

FURNITURE
GALLERIES

Lyle, Oscar B. Jr., and Law·
renee, all of Mount Alto; two
brothers. James Riffle, Mount
Alto, and Edgar· Riffle. Leon:
· and 37 granc:lchildren at\d 23
great-grandchildren.
SE!tvlces will be 1 p.m. Tuesday
in the ·Crow-Russell F.uneral
Home, with the 'Rev. ·Herman
Jorda11 and the. Rev . Winfield
Mayle officiating. Burial will be
in Blain Memorial Oenietery,
Cottageville, W.Va. Friendsinay
call at the funeral home after 2
p.m. MOnday.

RUTLAND ~ PaullrieR. Ben'
!ley, 64. a resident of Rutl~nd for
44 years, died·Friday morning at
Mark Rest Center · in
McConnel.sv Uie.
.1 · · ·.
A member of the Hysell .Run
Holiness Church near RtHland,
she was born Feb. 3, '1922, In
Zanesville, ·a daughter of the late
Ralph and Lillie Goins.
· She Is survived by a step
son-in-law; Jack
of Gallipolis: several step-grandchildren;
Bertha H. Marlow
four brothers, · Ernest·, Dale,
Henry and James Goins, all of
POMEROY - Bertha Helen
ZaneSville; and one sis·ier, Mary
Baker
Marlow, 80, 114 Brick St.,
Johnson, of Zanesville.
Pomeroy,
died . Friday at Vete·
aesides her par~nts, she was
ran's IV(emorial Hospital. '.'
preceded in death bv her husThe daughter of the late Ellis
band,'George Dewey Bentl~y. in ·
1982.
. . .and Ollie Brannan Baker, she
Services will . be Monday, 1 . was born Aug. 14, 1906, In
Ravenswood,W~.Va. ·
.
p.m., at the Hunter Funeral
She
was
married
to
Walter
W
..
Home In · flutland with Rev.
Marlow~
who
preceded
her
in
Theron Durham officiating: Bur- .
ial wili be in Miles Cemetery. death In 1969. She was · also ·
Friends may cal) at the. funeral . preceded :tri death by one son,
Charles W. Marlow.
. .
hoinefrom 2·4 and 7-9p.m. today.
SurviVing are a daughter, Lee
Roxey D. Goodrich · Hendrix, with whom she made
her home, Pome~oy; two sons,
BELPRE,- Roxpy D. Doolittle ' Forrest. Marlow, Calumet City,
Goodrich, 96, of Coolville, for· Ill., and Delmar Marlow, Crown
merly·of DovPr-Foxeroft, Maine, Point, Ind.; one brother, Thomas
died WednesdaY evening at ,the Baker, East Liverpool; one sis·
Malone-Henderson farmhouse in ter, Ethel Hlte, McConnelsville;
Coolville.
11 grandchildren and 10 great
Born in Carbondale to the late grandchildren: and several nie·
Elmer T. and Susan Belle Cox ces and nephe\\ls.
Doolittle, she was a member of
Services will be Monday, 1
the Order \ of Eastern Star at p.m., in the Ewing Funeral
Island Falls, Maine.
Home, with the Rev. Lamar
She is survived by one sister, O'Bryant officiating. B~rlai will
Jessie A. Doolittle, of Cooivlile:
be in Carmel Cemetery, Racine.
three grandsons, Maison, Ste· Friends may call at the funeral ,
Pheri and Richard Goodrich, of home 2·4 and 7-9·p.m ..' today.
Brewer. Maine: one grand·
'
daughter, Mrs. Edward tBonniel Grace Myel'!!
Hutton, of Derry, N.H.; several
RUTLAND - Former Meigs
nieces and nephews Including,
County
reside~t Grace Myers, 77,
Jl1arjorie Malone, Frances M.
died
Friday
morning at Terrace
and Ralph C. Henderson, :rti of
View
Nursing
Home in
Coolville, and D. Bradley and
Millersburg.
·
Helen Peck. of Marco Islan.d,
She
was
born
Jan.
9,
1909,
to
Fla.
In addition to her parents, she Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Misner.
Private graveside serVIces will
was preceded in death by her
be
announced later by Hunter
husband, Edgar Maurice Good:
Funeral
Home, Rutland.
rich, and one son, Maison K.
Goodrich ,
Mortie H, Rol.lsh
Services will be today at 2:30
p.m. at the Coolvliie United
MIDDLEPORT --- R.onnie
Methodist Church with Rev. Jeff Roush, Joel Sanford. Mike
Burdsall officiating. Burial will Shuler, Barton Stump, Bob Price
be In Coolville Cemetery. Arranand Delbert Clay will be pal·
gements ard under the direction !bearers for Hartle H. Roush at
of th~ Whlte-Ethrldg&lt;' Funeral services to be held at 2 p.m. today
Home. Belpre. and the family at the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
r(&gt;(Juests that flowers be·omitted, Funeral Home.
There will be no caiiing hours at
Honorary pallbearers are John
the funeral home.
Berger, Bud Fife and Harold
Mack , Burial will be In Gravel
Mary Jan'e Jordan
Hill Cemetery, Cheshire.
POINT PLEASANT --- Mary Lois Ann Thompson
Jane .Jordan, ~. Mount Alto,
W.Va., died Saturday morning at
GALLIPOLIS - Services will
·her holl)e.
be held at 2 p.m. today in the
She was born June o, '190:1. In Rollins Funeral Home, Kenova,
MasoJl&gt;Countv, W.Va .. to the late W.Va., for Lois Ann Thompson.
Norman and· Cora Belle Roush 36, Rt. 2. Gaillpolis, who died
Riffle.
Thursday In Holzer Medical
She w,as preceded In 'death by Center.
one foster son. three sist!'rs and
Burial will be in Ross Cemesix brothers.
,
tery, Ceredo, W.Va. Ffiends may
She was a member of the call at the funeral home after 10
Gospel Lighthouse Tabernacle of a.m. today.
Chestnut Rid'ge.
Surviving are her husband,
Surviving is h·er ·husband, • Thomas A. Thompson; her
Oscar B. Jordan Sr.; two daugh· mother, Willie Mae Ward Sexton
ters, Beatrice Rollins of Leon, of Ce_redo; two daughters, Shfrry
W. va:. and Reca Rollins of Point Lynn Thompson and Pamela
Pleasant: six sons. Wallace Dawn Thompson, both at home;
Jordan of Point Pleasant, Sher· and a son, Thomas A. Thompson
man and Kenn ~th. both of Leon, Jr., at home.

carr,

The Sunday Times- Sentinei-Page~A-5 .•:
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Ex-lawwaker values prison experience

Area deaths
Pauline R. Bentley

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·Pomeroy..:..Mid(lleport-GaUipolis, C)hio~Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Dec8mber 28.• 1986

December 26. 1986

W.Va.

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December

Pomerov-:-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va ,

1988'

By PEG BYRON
· bat·wieldlnR white gang chasPd with the white g·ang had been
NEW YORK iUPil - The
hlin. lnto traffk in the predoml· ruled out.
·
mo.ther of a 23-year-old black
nantly white .Howard Beach
Queens District Attorney .John
man who died ln an attack by a community In the neighboring Santuc·cl denied any coverup and
white gang walled her grief in a borough of Quet'ns last weekend. said the three white teenager&gt;
small Brooklyn church as she
A spate of l'aclal violenrf' In who were arrested and are beln~ ,.
and hundreds of mourners filed
Queens ~ lndudlhg an incldf'nt held on second-degree charges of
past her son's blue and silver
In which two Hispanic youths murder, manslaughter and as-.
steel casket.
were beaten Dec. 20 just two sault will have to be released
At the tiny Our Lady of Charity
hours before the attack on without ball Monday if Sandlford
church, still decorated with a Griffith and two companions and does not come forward.
Christmas tree and an African an apparent reprisal assault on a
The funeral mass · for the
nativity . creche, Jean Griffith white youth by a· gang of blacks
victim was tense and emotional
cried out at Mlcha~l Griffith's · Tuesday -have prompted extra
although many 0( I hose attending
funeral Friday night as his police patrols.
said they had n01 known Grlff.lth,
"It makes no sense trying tn
casket was closed .
Ushers restricted entry by
Many men and women cried hate," Seay said In hls eulogy at
rpporters . who were told not tb
softly or sobbed uncontrollably. the late night funeral service In
One young woman buried her the Bedford-Stuyvesant section
head In her arms and leaned of Brooklyn.
Seay urged more than ~00
against a friend . A few fainted in
the stifling air of the crowded mourners, who jammed the
aisles and spilled out Into the
service.
FORT PLAIN, NY. !]JPI 1 ~
The priest who led the emotion· street, to turn their anger and
ally charged funeral mass II· grief toward "changing the sys- An elderly woman whb lived
alone with her cats died in a
kened the racial attack· to the tem" that encourages violence
Christmas
fire that may have
and
prejudice.
violence that has convulsed
Earlier Friday, a civil rights
resulted from spontaneous com·
South Africa and told mourners
bustion In the animals' litter, fire
that such injustices teach impor· lawyer charged that authorllles
olflcials said.
tant lessons.
·
are hiding evidence surrounding
Margaret Blrk. 74. was pro·
"It is a message of freedom," Griffith's death.
nounced dead at the seen~ of the
the Rev . Robert Seay said In the
Alton Maddox said his client,
Christmas night blaze Friday
packed · sanc\uary alter Betty Cedric Sandlford, 36, one of two
after firefighter s found her body
Shabazz , widow of slain civil black men who survived ·the
Inside her smoke-filled house,
rights leader Malcolm X, city attack, would not cooperate with
David Bowman: chief of the Fort
Human Rights Commissioner Investigators until police arrest
Plain Volunteer Flr£' Depart Marcella Maxwell, state assem· Dominick Blum, a pollee offlc·
ment, said.
blyman AI Vann and hundreds of er's son who admitted driving the
other mourners had flied past the car that struck Griffith.
Some 60 firefighters brought
Pollee Commissioner Ben· · the !Ire under control within
casket.
Griffith was struck and killed jam in Ward said on the day of the about an hour of receiving the
by a car wh!'n a baseball attack that complicity by Blum alarm at 8:03 p.m., Bowman

take notes or talk to mourners.
Some rrportt'rs were /risked for
tape recorders or camPras as
they pntered.
Dressed in a brilliantly colored
vestment In orange, green,
black, red and yellow, Se~S'
described Griffith, a construe·
lion workei·, as a generous man•
who loaned money to friends and&gt;,
helped others get jobs.
, -~·.
"It's quite a tribute to say that
of a young man of 23 , especially, !l'
young man today. that he ma~e;
life more IIVeabiP for somebodY·
else." the priest said.
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Grant will help OU
establish radio station
ATHENS - A $150,000 federal
grant for a new FM radio station
in Iront on has been received by
l h ~ Ohio Uni versity Telecommuni ca tions Ce nt er.
The grant, from the Public
Teleco mmunications Facilities
Program of the U.S. Department
of Commerce , supplements
$86.000 in state money for const ruct ion ol the station. Expected
to be on the air next fall, the
sta tion will be located n eao· the
.univers ity's Ironton Regiona l
Campu s . .
" Adding thi s s tation will fulfill
the university's long-s tanding
_goal of prov iding fu II public radio
·service to a 30-county, 16,()()().
:square mile ar e a of southeastern
:Ohi o, from Ste ubenville to Ports·
mouth," said Joseph Welling,
Tel eco mmuni c ation s Center
director.
' Last year, the center rec~lved
·a $5:!4,000 gra nt from the samP
a gency lor a new FM ratilo
:o;;tation for the universit)r's Bel;mont Regio nal Campus . That
.stat ion is expected to beon the alr

in May 1987.
Both stations will be associate
members of National Public
Radio and will combine local
programming with national and
regional broadcast services orlg·
lnating at WOUB-FM ln~thens,
Welling said. Both stations will
broadcast in stereo.
The Athens station will orlgl·
nate about 85 percent of programming for thP new stations,
which will be linked to the
Telecommunications Center by a
two-way microwave system.
"The microwave system and
the new stations will allow us to
provide new educational and
public service programs," Welling said.
Both new stations will serve
tri-state areas, Welling added.
The Belmont station will provide
services In Ohio, Pennsylvania
and West Virginia, while the
Ironton station will provide servl·
ces in Ohio, West Virginia and
Kentucky.
The cent&lt;&gt;r's application for the
grant was supported by U.S, Rep.
Clarence E. Miller, R-Ohlo.

SWIMMING ALONG -The
Gallipolis Municipal S'l'lm·
mlng Pool opened this
summer · amid 00 derree
weather and a sunny day .July
26. The pool, which was funded
b)' a special tax levy approved
by the city voters, was the
bralnchUd ·of the Gallipolis
Junior . Woman's Club, who
gathered support from area
civic groups and local busl·
nesses. The women's group
was headed by Robin Lane
and Debbie Tipple during the
two year project, which won
regional and stale compell·
· tlon for the club. It earned the
right to enter the national
Clvk: Improvement Project
( CIP) competition lor . the
Women's Clubs, but was . not
named ln the top three
nationwide.

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Man;· of the local firemen kne~ '
Blrk personally and found he£
after going Into the house at the ·
door where she usually enteredj •
Bowman said.
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"We're speculating spontane. .
ous com bus tlon,'' Bowman said
of the possible cause of the blaze.:
Birk had storC'd a large number·
of ncwspaP&lt;'rS and magazines ln .
the hous&lt;' and kitty littH for the:
numerous cats she owned wa s'
scattered about, Bowman said. ;j
"We were kind of speculatln_!f ·
that something got Into the kitty.·
litter and set ofl t he combus.,·:
tlon," Bowman said, noting that:
stored turpentine might have·
soaked the Utter.
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People speak ..

. DELAYS FOR MILES- The third major accident In two years
closed the Gallipolis Lucks and Dam In April. t\llhe time, there
' were 17 t~wboals with almost UUI'barges walling to pass through,
rl~er traffic was backed up for miles. Later, in August, lhe
·t..t~CIIS .had problems again, and among those walling for passage
;through were the Mississippi Queen and her sister ship, the Delta

ELECTION RESULTS -"
Gallla County Auditor's em·
ployee LOis Clark, left, jots
down election results as read
to her by Deputy Auditor Joan
Folden ln the May primary.
Three county ollices - com·
missioner, audltor and com·
mon pleas judge- were on the
November ballot. Auditor Ro·
nald K. Canaday was re·
elected to a second term,
while Dr. Dan C. Nolter will sit
on the county commission and
Donald Andrew Cox will be the
new judge. Notter and Cox are
to be sworn In this week.

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In city-hall...

NAME BRANDS
BASSETT
ENGlA.ND

FLEXSTEEl
RIVERSIDE
KEMP
KINCAID
STONEYIUE
SPRING AIR
BENCH CRAFT CHATHAM COUNTRY

to Identify the victims pending
notification of relatives.
Latu said two boys and ah adu It
were taken to Lautoka Hospital
and were in critical condition ..
Unofficial sources said the
dead Included the pilot, identllled
as a New zealander: the Austral·
ian co-pilot: and the manager of
the Savu Westpac Bank in~ Corp.
It was not Immediately appar·
ent why the plane missed the
runway. but the weather was
"very cloudy," Latu.sald.
Pollee dismissed reports of an
explosion on board as the plane
crashed. Tht&gt; aircraft was belltoved to have disintegrated on
impa ct , flinging passengers
around the wreckage, pollee
said.
An aircraft Investigator from
New zealand was expected to
arrive Monday In Nadl.
Sunflower Airlines runs short
flights between the Islands In the
South Pacific archipelago about
1,100 miles north of New zealand .
Opposition leader Harlsh
Sharma . noting the air disaster
lollowtod a September cra sh that
killed one of three people aboard
another Sunflower flight, said
" there seems to be a defltilte
need for an Investigation."
" Something must be very
wrong with ou r local airlines,'' he
said.
Flj lis comprised of 840 islands
with a total land area the size of
New Jersey. but only 106 are
Inhabit ed.

In the swim...

1986.. .in ·revif:w

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WE NEED TO REDUCE OUR
INVENTORY BY ONE-THIRD BY
DECEMBER 31ST. NEW TAX
LAWS MAlE CHANGES
NECESSARY. SAVE UP TO 700fo.
NOTHING IN STOCK HELD BACK.
COME IN AND MAlE A DEAL
WITH BEVERLY, CASBY JR.
OR SliP.
FINANCING AVAILABLE.

idead in plane crash
NADI. Fi ji t UP! ) - A four·
en gin e a irplan e ca rrying 14 peop le crashed In " poor visibility"
$a tut day 200 ya rds short of the
runway at Na dl Int ernational
Airport. killing 11 people, at least
four oft hem Americans. officials
sa id.
It wa s the wor st air disas ter In
the history of the Island nation In
the wes te rn South Pacific .
An airport spokeswoman said
the governm e nt -owned Sunflower Airlines flight cras hed at
1:52 p.m. on a pproach to the
aiport in Fiji' s s econd largest
city a fter a 3D-minute flight from
the ca pital of Suva, about 150
miles to the nor th.
: Spokeswoman Uta Latu said
the four -engine. 18-seat Heron
aircraft missed t he runwav in
:·poor visibilit y ... It cras hed
abou t200 yards from the ta rmac
on a i(ra ssy , sug ar -ca ne
pla na tion.
"The aircraft is sca llered. the
pieces of th P plane were sca t·
lere&lt;l all a bout ." s he said.
: fn Suva, a U.S. Embassy
spo~eswo m a n said two crew
'!'ember s and 12 passengPrs
were aboard the plane. F our of
.Tiie dea d were Americans and
tw o· other Americ an s were In·
'j ured. she said. Their conditions
:vern nor immC'dla tely known.
• However, unoffi cial sources
ia iil six Americans and at least
o'ne &lt;.wed is h touris t wrre killed In
the cfas h.
; Gevrrnment official s re fused

.•.

All locked up ...

;4 Americans reported

· WOOD &amp; MOlL

HECTIC YEAR - For memhf&gt;rs of the Gallipolis City
Commission, 19116 was a hel'llc year as It was confronted by
budgetary problems, l11yolfs, a change In city managers and an
ordinance shielding ju~eniles from pornograhlc materials. The
t-omml~slonel'8 seen here are, from left. G. Richard Brown, Lloyd

DINETTES

E. Danner, Hugh H. Graham Jr., Richard A. Moore and Dow W.
Saunde1'8. The year began with Albert R. Pierce, seen here, as city
. manager, whose contract was terminated by the commission In
March. Pierce had held the Job lor a little more Ihan two months. .
' as Interim city manager until July, when
Paul J. Knotts
Dale E. !man look
reins of office.

. .)
;Fundmg
....

OYEI
50

IN STOCK

GlASS TOP Dlll WOOD TRIM, 4 Qtllllo., ~~

~411

RIG. 1199.95 .

WOOD TAilE, 6 WOOD

I

FUNDING SOUGHT- The
Gallla County Emergency
Medlcitl Service has had its
:~ · sh:ore of headlines since the
ellmlnallon of federal revenue
.t: '!!harlng, which funds the ser·
•kc.
EMS must lind
another source of funding for
; t ;·~he lull and pari tbnc person·
-nel pay and vehicle and
equipment maintenance.
/\long with the Gallla County
Commission, they are explor·
lng options lor funding the
ser~lce. Amhulancf'!l will con·
tlnuc to operate and the
• commission will be funding
the service until such time as a
• levy cun be passed.

C~~

~;s8811

RIG. 1699.95

AlMOND TOP PASS MAUVE &amp; IR~ 4 ,SM!!~

~344 4

RIG. 1699.95

GlASS TOP, LT. OAK TIIM,

41~1,l

~;s4444
DARK TOP TAilE, 6 SWIVEl CH~ §.CJll

RIG. 1599.95

~4111111

RIG. 1799.95

SMOKED Gl.AWS TOP w/4 RUS! SliAJPS

~;s4444

RIG. 16"-95

CM
S:z4444

ClEAR GlASS TOP, 4 POWN
HG. 1599.95

GlASS TOP liGHT OAK TIIM, l CJl~

RIG.I1199.9l
~)~~~~~
SOliD MAPlE TAill w/4 CAPUt CH,!IIl
Rlp, 1999.95
4 .4 444
DAIK PINE TAIU ' 6 CHW
RIG.I699.9S
~.;s8811
llACKSMITH SHOP TAll£ &amp; 4 S,El ~~~
RIG. 11099.95
611 II

'I

PRIO~ SALE
FINANCING AYAII.AIU - MASTER CARD, VISA
90 DAYS SAMI AS CASH

OP lltd111r ao
Swlvtlllocbr bclitw

In courts ...
WHITE FRENCH PROVINCIAL

CLOSEOUTS
·

REG. •349.91

$19811

TRIALS IN NEWS - Two
murder trials dominated
headltnl!ll In the summer and
fall of 1986. Charles Lee II, 20,
Point Pleasant, at left, con·
vlcted In 1983 lor the shooting
death of a Gallla County
teenarer, was cleared by a
Jury In a lengthy retrial In
common pleas court In Oc·
Iober. Grace Gilman, 71, Rl. 4,
Oak Hil~ was lound guilty of
voluntary manllaughler In
July for the January shooting
death of her husband.

ONLY,. PIECES
AVAUILE
,.
'

•

"'.

~~

.r

:Area man treated for injuries

416 TIIIIIIID

•

back onto the road and turned
ove~. troopers said. Thto truck
was damaged heavily. Redman
was cited by the patrol for !allure
to control.
The patrol cited Larry W.
Phelps Friday afternoon fo r
driving while under the Influence
of alcohol and failure to control
on Ohio 141, just outside the
corporation limits.
Phelps was eastbound around
12:45 p.m. and lost control In a
left curve, sliding off the road
and Into a ditch. The 1986 Ford he
was driving was damaged
lightly .

'

'

All ITEMS SUBJECT TO

•

' GALLIPOLfS - Ba r r y A.
;Redm an, 30, Poi nt Pleasant. was
1reated and rele ased by Holzer
'Medica l Cent er Friday for multi·
jJle contusions and abrasions,
susta ined when the vehic le he
was driving turned over on Ohio
124 In Salem Township ln Meigs
-County.
: Re dm an wa s eas tbound
:around 9: 20 a.m . lost control of
ihe 1985 Ford Ranger he was
~rivi ng, a ccording to the Gal!la·
Meigs Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol.
The pickup truck veered off the
right side of the road, thton came

~28,1986

..

Fatal fire may have started in litter

TAG ME .- Galli a County Auditor Ronald Canaday, left,
prepares to gove Sam the Dog his license for 19&amp;7. At right is Sam's
mas.ter, Peg Ollv~r. Dog licenses may be purchased In Canaday's
office In_the Galha County Courthouse until Jan. 20, at a M fee.
Kennel hcenses also can be purchased until then for $20. Aller the
s_et dat e, a S4 penally will be lacked on for each license and kennel
license purchased, Canaday said.

Section~g

r1

Hundreds mourn racial violence victinl:

•... •u•.u ....S111••
416 110

·•·'"'·
"····'101"
!/3110
WING RECliiUI

RED VINYL

lUST PRINT

IIGUIAR11tf.95 ,
!All

CORDUIOY

WAU HUGGER

SAil
SAil
SAlE
SAlE

sa a•(

S1281.1
S1481f
S148~~': ·

....""·"··-·'""

IIGUIAII"US

S38811

II1GI 01 IIOWN

3 Drawer Chests t,. 't7t.95
4 Drawer Chests .... . 17• .9!
S Drawer Chests I ... •!Ot.!l
3 Drawer Chests .... . ,19.9!
/Hutch Top

44
IIG MEN'S WALl
HUGGER .

IIIGI C-Ol OIIDGI

lEG. '799.95

VllYIT 01 GIIIN

SAU$388 88

!All S444·i4

Tough players, on both sides ...

SAII$34444
ROCK~R

RECUNER

iiiif OIIIOWN
COIDUIOI

STILL WINNING YEAR - Gallla Academy
High Sehoul senior quarterback Gary Harrison
scrambll!l!l on this play as Mifflin's David Madlso'l
(28) closes in for the Iackie during the Blue De~il's
1088 &amp;o
, 21·0 re~tlonalseml·flnal

·

IIG. '"'-''

lEG. '199.95

SAil

$34444
•

trip to the playolfsln 19116, dl!l!lplte bein~rmoved
a class lo Dl~lslon 11. They were 10.0 in r~~~~~~~
· season play In the Southeastern Ohio A
Le&amp;KIJe (SEOAL).

DOwn on
the
farm.~ .
LANDMARKS. GOING
All was not well at Bob Evans
Farms In 19&amp;6. In September,
II was announced the original
restaurant, considered a Gal·
llpolls landmark, will be vacated for a larrer faclllty, to
be built .acrOtl!l from the Silver
Bridge Plaza on Route 7. In
December, Bob E~ans,
founder of the ·restaurant
chain and sausare company,
stepped down to punme un·
specified "other Interests."
According to a story In a
Huntington, W.Va., news·
paper, E~ans was not happy
being dropped a~ spokesman,
and not plea•ed with the way
thin !!!I had been run within the
company.

�-·. .. .... . -..•..... -- ..,.
The

Times-Sentinel

December 28, 1986

OhiO-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

We Reserve The Right To
. Umit Quantities ·

:i• 'December 28, 1986

!

,(ash
JackpQt

.

IN!!
IN!!

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 3, 1987

,.

C

~

..
:;:

S
&gt;'·
..

~

':::;
""·

AT

~

Powell's
Supervalu

·Pork Loin ....L:·••• Sl 59.

CHICKEN

:i:
::;:
""'

~

E; .

);..
:;
..
:':
:;:
;;:
;:::
::;:

EACH
WEEK

a
....."'
...
"'=
I"'

Now thru February 21th

Leg Quarters ••••••••
LB.

(4)

$25··

Drumsticks ••••L:·•••••••
CHICKEN

Chuck Roast ••••L:~ •• $119
Chuck .Roast ••••L:~ •• $] 59

,$·100·

Bacon ...............L!.••••

CASH PRIZE
JACKPOT

BONELESS
SAVORY

Cabbage....... .':~ .••••. l S&lt;
BROUGHTON

2°/o Milk .........·.~!·•• $1 59
BLUE BONNET
$
Margarine •••3.l:~r:: ••••

8
9
(
Jeno's·
Pl
,
$1.
39
•••••••••
Sugar •••••••••••••••
DINNER TRE.AT .
.
$
STTOKELy
•
3
I
$2
51
1
Pot
Pies
omato Ju1ce .....
•••••••••••••
SHURFINE

oz.

'

•

10.1 -10.8 oz.

.

79&lt;

.linoit I Por Cust• GeM Oftly At Powell's Supormorkot
: ,.
Erpiros Jon. 3, 1917
STS ·

MA.XWRL HOUSE

6 Roll
Pkg •

0

12
JAR

oz. $399

U11il I P.- Cntomor .
Good O.ly AI Powell's luptrmorktl
,Expim Jan. 3, 1917
STS

PAPER TOWELS
JUMB03
ROLL

1$2

·~··· ·················

1

WINNING
NUMBERS
POSTED IN
THE STORE
SUNDAY 10
A.M.
(MUST COME 1N
AND CLAIM
PRIZE BY ' ·
FOLLOWING
SATURDAy ,,o
P.M. NO
WINNING
NUMBER
GIVEN OVER
PHONE)
1

INSTANT C'OFFEE .

I

IF ANY PRIZE
IS NOT
CLAIMED IN THE

ALOnED TIME,

THE PRIZE WILL
BE INCLUDED IN
TME NEXT
WEEK'S 5100
CASH PRIZE
JACKPOT.

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

'

the way the J ournal "gourmet churches. We read of the actlvlly
columnist" also ·noted. that Mr. on Christmas Eve at Grace
. Muzio (an Italian immigrant) Church:
was suffering !rom 111 health and
"The Sunday SChool of the
because be ·also had a large M.E . Church propose a season of
family was one Gall!politari much enjoyment tor Friday
• • w 0 r t h y 0 f c h ar 1tab 1e evening. The entertainment will
patronage". ·
· . · consist of musical and literary
Looking over the Journal Jor exercises, toge(her with the
Decembe.r 1886 we find: "Ernst· amusing distribution of presents
lng, ih~ jeweler, displays an· for the children ·from a Christ·
interesting piece of mechanism mas tree: The mission is free to
In his show window. It is a clock everybody. AIJ. are expected to
of rich design,' Ute pendulum of bring a charity offering tor the
which Is an engine with fly wheel, poor o( the city-either coffee, tea,
· governors, etc. A thermometer sugar, potatoes, etc. Doors open
and bllrometer are also attached. at 7 p.m." ,
The clock Is valued at $1lOO."
Out In the county we read
"The Ice !nen are filling their where the Swan Creek correshouses with clear Ice, six and one . pondent was hoping for tqe snow
half Inches thick. The purchaser · to continue to' tal! so that
ot lake Ice Sfnds .considerable sleighing could be possible. Since
money out of the county which Is the road s were muddy and then
ed b th
1
1 frozen into large ruts and the
· ~~;_e tatior." e emp oyment .. 0 .river filled with Ice. they needed
. ''Mr. Frank Ulsamer wishes it . the snow because the sleigh
stated that .he qas a large music ' would be the o~ly way .to travel.
box which will be given to the
· The Old Kyger Baptist Church
lucky holder bf the number In the had a large Christmas tree In the
drawing which w'm be held at the sanctuary, one of the few county
conclus!im of the sale of a lot of churches to do so In 1886. The tree
cigars every buyer of a cigar in the church as well as the
being presented with a number." introduction of the organ Into
There were a number of country . churches ws still a
activities at the Mammoth Roll er controversial subject. One )Meth·
Rink . Including a masquerade od!st minister refused to step
party. The Gallipolis Gymna· back In the sanctuary until the
slum Society had several events organ was removed as he said it
and of course so did the various was too fancy for C?mmon

ann~un cem ent

of ~ qod sensatlon . that was
lntr.o duced . in
the county for
the first tll)le In
·December of
1886 by Lo. u!~ .
.
Muzio at his business at 47 Court
Street In Gallipolis.
' The Journal scooped the Bul·
letln and the T~!bune by printing
the recipe first: "Boil macaroni
In just sufficient water to cover.
The fOOked article should be
turned out well cooked; but firm
In d~onslstency. Lay this In a
pu lng pan wtth alterna te lay·
ers of old grated cheese, using
not too much of the latter. Place
several bits of onion through the
mass and paur over the whole a
sa uce made ofm~lted butter, salt
and pepper. !'ut In the oven and
bake a light brown. Serve from
the pan."
,
And so was born, at least In the
Old French City, a dish that has
seen countless ones through thick
and thin-macaroni and cheese.
The picture Included with the
article this week Is of what In 1886
was Muzio's store. The building
probably dates .to the 1830's. By

people.
The Addison correspondent
remarked bow Addison was
becoming a great turkey ship·
.ping port and he explained what
was Involved: "Mr. Turkey Is .
starved 30 to 40 hours previous to
his demise, then suspended by
his legs, ·a brick bat tied behind
·hts ears, a cleaver kn!!e severs
the blood vessels of the neck and
· ·in the course of 10 minutes his·
soul flop~ up the golden stairs,
· then only the feathers are removed. the head. feet and lntes·
tines serving for soup, hash and
mince pie In the markets of
Philadelphia. Penn."
December 1886. also saw the
. organization In· Gallipolis of 3
. new · drum corps. The group
organized In the first and second
wards of Galllpo!ls had 8 tenor
drums, 8 Illes, 1 bass drum, 1 pair
of cymbals, 1 bugle, and 1
banner .. The teachers were Ma·
jor St!veson of Pome~oy and
Peter Zelas of Middleport. All the
boys in this group ranged In age
from 9 to 14.
An "old fashioned social public
dance" was held Christmas Eve
at the Fireman's HalL The ad did
not .specify what rnade their
dance old fashioned. A number of
weddings were held Ip December
(In fact more weddings were held
In December In Gallla County
than any other month ).

1830's BUILDING - The building lhat has h~~;~~:u:~~;~
Lounge w.as erected In the 1830's and has served In a
capac!lles, Including an IAA61tallan food stand operated by
Mw:!o, who introduced Gallipolis to a new dish that mllide1
sensal!on at a number of area Christmas dinner tables.
It Is Interesting the gifts given
fo r a wedding In 1886: ·silver
knifes. spoons , ' rorks, silver
pitchers. Bibles. to!let case. wool
blankets. vases, fan cy glass·
ware, diner · napkins. sugar sit.·
ters, potatoe masher. s!lk pin

r---------+-

•

Community calendarj area happenings
SUNDAY ·
NORTHUP - Missionary Ted
Ball will speak Sunday, 7:30
p.m .. at Northup Baptist Church.

y~ar

revival will be held Sunday 7 p.m .. at the town haiL
CHESTER - Chester Townthr ovgh We dnesday, 7: 30
sh ip Trustees will meet Tuesday,
.,.
night!¥. at Calvary Pilgrim
RUTLAND - Rutland Town· 7 p.m.; at the town hall. for the
Chapel. Ohio 143, near Pomeroy . ship Trustees will meet Tuesday. final buisness meeting of the
j:
Victor Roush will be spea ker. On 6:30 p.m .. at the Rutland fire year. An organizational meeting
POMEROY - Calvary Pll· the fi nal evening. a Watch Night house.
for 1987 will be held Friday, 7
grim Chapel will be in revival · service will be conducted with
p.m., at the town haiL
7:30
Sunday
through
Dec.
31
at
l!
Roush and ot hers to spea k.
ORANGE TWP - Orange
tp:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~
nightly. Dec. 31 services will be
Township .Trustees will hold a
COLUMBIA TWP- Columbia
watch night services. Rev. Victor
RODNEY - Faith Baptist special meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m.. Township Trustees will meet
Rou sh will be speaker. Rev. Church will conduct a New to discuss. end·of·the,year busi· Wednesday, 7 p.m., for the final
Dewey King, pastor, welcomes Year's Eve Watch Night service ness. The meeting will be held a t business meeting of the year. An
•
the public.
••
from 9 p.m. unt!l midnight . A the home of Dorothy Calaway , organizational meeting will be
..'
tum on the lifeofD.L. Moody will clerk.
held Thursday at the fire station.
::I
No Rotary Tuesday
'
TheAgltalur
be show n. and Tim Chevalier will ,.,--..:....----------------~----!
"
:;r
GALLI!'OLIS- The Gallipolis · swak. There will be special 1·
Is the drfwence :1
·
Rotary Club will nat meet next music.
;:i
Tuesday. Dec. 30, according to a
• Ful WMtttl a.Nng • Grwt far ..... ~
it Upholiltllry • tet., v.,. ft Motor . . .
g~oup spokesman.
Trustees meetings
Abctvt Aoor CMining
M"
PAGEV!LLE - Scipio Town·
'•
New year's eve
ship Trustees will meet Wednes·
•
Crystal Rainey ·
~·
EXCEllENT OIRISTMAS Gl
PORT~R - There will be a
day: 7 p.m.. at the towns hip
- 149.95 -SAVE 1201 .....'"' I
New Year's watch service at butld ln ~ in Pagevllle to finalize
Clark Chapel Church 9 p.m: end·of·the-year business. An or·
HANDCLEANER IN Til U.:i.l'-!
Wednesday with the Rev. B!ll ganlzatlonal meeting will be held
Price and the Rev. John Saxon Thursday, 10 a.m .. at the same
preaching. The Heavenly,Bound locatio n.
.
· Four w!U sing.
~
PT. PLEASANT - Mr. and
BEDFORD - Bedford Town·
:
Mrs. Jerry Rainey, Pt. Pleasant,
POMEROY - An end of the ship Trustees will meet Monday,
: , W.Va . .' announce the engage- men! and approaching marriage
:
of thelc daughter. Crystal Ra!·
POMEROY - Winners in the t he·grand prize winner receiving
"' ney, to Chuck Sanders. son of Mr.
:::l and Mrs. Cha rlrs Sanders, Pomeroy !vlerchants Assocatlon a $900 gift certificate and a $500
• Ga!llpolis.
Christmas shoppptng spree were savings bond . The week ly
announced today.
winners of $175 gift certificate
•
The open church wedqlng will
Phyllis Clark, Pomeroy. was and a $100 savings bond were
All Outstanding Credits
:: ta ke place Jan. 3. 1987. at Jordan
Crystal Richmond, Rutland;
or Exchanges
: Baptist Church. Ga llipolis Ferry,
Twtla Buckley, Sandi Mitch, and
job
Bank
needr.
11 in-ker.r
:;: W.Va .. Rev. William iBudi Hal·
·Must be Complete by January 8
~
GALLIPOLIS- The Job Bank, May Mayle, all of Pomeroy, and
Gallipolis
"' field of!lclatlng. A reception will
POI!Wroy;:
Chr
istl
Roush,
Letart,
W.Va.
located in the Senior Citizens
::) follow tn t he chu rch Fellowship
842 2nd Ave. 101 .W. ~
Center,
220 Jackson Pike Is a free
::' Hall:
446-1405
992-330l
:::
Miss Rainey Is a grad uate of employment service to assist
both applicant and employer.
: Pt. !Pleasant High School and
The Job· Counselors interview
• • attends Marshall University,
persons,
50 years of age or older.
446· 1209
~ majoring in accounting. She Is
who
are
seeking employment
', employed by Cltzens National
Ntw and latest hair fashions
and refer applicants to prosper·
r, Bank .
for fall and winter from tht
tlve employers. .
staff:
!·.: Sanders Is a graduate of Gall!a
The Job Counselors work .
Adrali
N~al,
Pat O'Dell, Chris
.. Academy High School and Buck· within the county area to develop
Martin and Lori So1111n lilt
· eye Hills Career Center. He Is Jobs for part·tlme or full-time
"' employed by G&amp;J Au!o Parts of employment by telephone, cor·
WAUl -INS WELCOME
:::! Gallipolis:
respondence or personal contact.

....

lftlsh·Vac.

E

MINIMUM OF 0 100
MAY BE MOREl

.

. The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-;B-3

....

'CASH PRIZES
.(1)

• •..• ''(j()(J~'
••••••
'
..... •
••
•• CLOROX BLEACH ••
••
•••
•
••
•• GAL
•
••

w: Va,

.

sso

oz. CAN

.. ·- ...·..

····-.

:1
, ,.,.

Ground Chuck ••••• $119

46

•..

::;

(2)

LB.

5 LB. BAG

.

"'
:l
..,.

CASH PRIZ·ES

Thighs ..............L:·••••

. zzao.1-10.8

~- - - -

i: ·

CHICKEN

:•

Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS- One of the big
stories in Gall!a County 100 years
ag.o at Christmas time was the

~

WIN!!

1/4

a::
~

-

·Christmas of years past in Gallia

JamesSaQds

' By JAMES SANDS

::::
::

··-- .............

Pomeroy-Middll)port- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plea$ant

""

·:
·•
,..

'

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

..

···- -····· - ~ --· -~ · ·· ~-:- ···---~·- -·"·-··~· ··· -···-·

Vacuum

,.,.

•

§
......
,..

..- Rainey; Sanders
g...
;

'

to ~eq Jan. . 3

Cloeing Business
Sale Continues

I

.STOREWIDE

20 to 75°/o

Winners named .in promotion

SAVINGS

..-

EMPIRE

---etc. c

Eva's Beauty Salon

5

....
..i=
-.
..,..
........
....."'.
••
••

Shrtmp Dinner

~

••

"

~

~

•

~

"
N

DEU

CHIPPED ·
CHOPPED

5

HAM

-.......
••
u

....

HANGING lOCK MEDIUM
G,RAD( 'A'EGGS

~

DOZ.

69(

MT. VERNON

20fo MILK
GAL

s

159

'

SPRITE, TAB

NEW

DIET OR REG.

COCACOLA

YEAR'S

EVE.

$16.9
E
..

OPEN

&amp;

DAY

ORDER Y
PARTY TRAYS
TODAY!!
AU SIZES AID PIICE
IAIGES AVAILAIU

uoz.$159
WINDSHIELD WASHER
FLUID
GAL.

99(

MT. DEW, PEPSI FRrE

Thn delicious, hand-breaded
fried shrimp, served with our
natural-cut french fries, fresh
cole slaw, Southern-style
hush puppies and cocktail
sauce.

$3.59
MONDAY &amp; TUESDAY
Two Bite-Size Shrimp Dinners
Each dinner includes a large
seMnQ of bite-size fried
shrimp with cocktai sauce,
french fries, cole slaw and two
hush puppies.
•

$4 99

DIET OR REG .

•

PEPSI COLA

M~·

99c

BAKED FISH DINNER
1'ltree tender bakfd fish fillels on a
bed c1 nee. Sened with ween beMtS,

~~~anda

$3.59

SUNDAY SPECIAL

All-You-Can-Eat
Country-Style Fish Dinner
Country-style fish fillets, french fries, cole slaw,
hush puppies and la!tlr sauce. Offer Good For
Dining Room Service Only.

�''

.. ·. -

.
'

December 28. 1986"

·Pomeroy-Middleport--Gallipolis, Ohio:-Point Pleasant W.

Times-Sentinel

.

'• '

jf;n;;;;;/l/;;r/ i;;u ._·p';,;:r;

1{/;17}]/)J

'

oec•uber 28, 1988

Ponwoy-Midcleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant W.Va.

Community comer:
By CHARLENE BOEFI.ICH

I

~=~~~~·aft

OUr belated
t"uatlons to
Clyde Carol
Riggs of 385
~outh Hague
AV!!,., Columbus, ·
)vhO was born on
.pee, 25, 1896 In
Me)as County,
lhe'son of Charles
Rlrgs
Jlnd Barbara Ellen (Ella) Hart.
' Mr. Riggs moved to Delaware
· r:ounty In the early 1900's and In
i9~ he married Hattie Andrews
and had ~ve sons, Roy, Waller,
DoriS, Harry and Donald, who
lives near , his father In
Columbus.

·
've
Sa\e 'fou
1be ,a~ 0•tin9 f ~r

Been ~ '

Jackets &amp; Coats •••••••••• Up to 1/2 Oft
PLEDGE COMPLETED - Ohio Vally Bank
,has completed its $30,000 pledge to the construe·
lion of Orchard Lakes Golf Course In Gallipolis.
The first payment was In spring 1986, with annual
payments of $10,000 yearly. This week, comple·

Sweaters
Slacks
Skirts
Suits

lion of the pledge was completed, with Josette
Baker, 00 Mcintyre Park District Director and
Ron Saunders, golf course committee memeber
accepting the final $20,000 from C. Leon Saunders,
~enior vice president, cashier and trust officer of
OVB.

FAC receives leadership
pledge from area bank
GALLIPOLIS - The Ohio
Valley Bank has completed its
$7,500 leadership pledge to the
French Art Colony.
According to OVB President
James L. Dailey, the pledge was
made in consideration of a
Challenge Grant the French Art
Colony was awarded by the Ohio
Arts Council.
The first $,1,000 was received in
December, 1985.
In presenting the $2,500 check,
Morris Haskins, , OVB's board
chairman, reinforced the ba nk's
firm leadership commitment to
supporting and en hancing cultu·
ral activities a nd opportunities in
the area.
Allee Lukac, executive direc·
tor a nd Tom Wiseman, challenge
campa lgn chairman a nd board
member, accepted the gift on
behalf of the FAC's board of
tru stees.

O OFF

,Jeans &amp; Skirts •••• Up to 50°/o Off
Robes &amp; Sleepwear •••••• 2 5°/o Off
Dresses •••••••••••••••••·••••••••• 2 5°/o Off

•
•
•
•
1
ed
Se
: fllOr aatvltles p ann

, POMEROY - The Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center,

MAnRESS SET ·
TWINS

$988~ ~ET

300 Second Avenue
Gallipolis,..,Ohio

!-==========:.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
!ON SALE SUN., DEC. 28
THRU TUES., DEC. 30

ADVfJITISEO

MERCHANDISE POLICY

•

0.&lt; lu "' l"lt"i'O" +I I~ "1•1 ..., , llllrt!• •

~lllll '' ' "' '" 11(1(:~ on our ' " ' " ' ' ~ I"
O&lt;l&lt;.. I•HG '""' ' ' "01 "IOIIbll lc• ~··
&lt;111111 ~ UI Ill 11\l u•'oo iiH" ''""'""" • I
.. u llOIJI I ~1on C""'=• 0~ 1...1&gt;111101 llle
.... ' i : - I H lOIII '' "" 01 ! H '-""'' Oul nl I} I 10 ~ .,...,,....., 01 ,,..

·

·

Wll P"" " - " ' ' ' " ' I•I•IDit 0t ""' Mil
TOil I ~Otll~ lt8bll ~UIIoly •II"' II I COII1 •

H&lt;ln+t•ed uchoo '"~"&lt;I

PRESENTS CHEVK - Morris Haskins, left, chairman of the
hoard, Ohio Valley Bank, presents $2,500 check to Alice Lukac,
executive director of the French Art Colony. Looking on at right Is
Tom Wiseman, a member of the FAC's hoard and chairman of the
challenge cumpaig.i. The · check completed OVB's 57,500
leadership pledge to the FAC,

Angie and Jay Jenkins Ports."

Don't be concerned, it will all
wash away, was Joe Zwilling's
comment about that big "Merry
Christmas" written ·on the road
in front of his house, 106 State St. ,
Monkey Run, Pomeroy.
Some of Zwilling's relatives,
here for a family wedding used
paint in a spray can to make the
sign, But It's paint that washes
right away with water .&lt;In fact
some of it had been used to
decorate the wedding couple's
car which was clean as a whistle
once it had been hosf;'d .off.
Have a nice week and a Happy
New Year'

r-....:....--------------------

Let Us Help You
Plan Your Wedding
'We offer complete tuxedo rental
service to help you look your best
on tha special day. Priced from

S2995
Grooms tux FREE with 6 or more.

HASKINS-TANNER

WI ACCEPT FOOD .
STAIIIIS AIID WIC
COUPOIIS

NEW HOURS
MONDAY· SAlURDAY
8 AM· 9 PM

NOW OPEN SUNDAY
10 A.M. ti.l 7 P.M.
FOR YOUR SHOPPING
CONVENIENCE

HAPPY NEW YEAR

OPEN 10 A.M. Til 7 P.M. NEW YEAR'S DAY

TENDER

HOMEMADE

HAM SALAD

STEAK
II.

$J99

II.

SUPfiiOR

PORK BUTT

BOILED HAM

u. $129

i'

SUPEIIOI

FISH£1'S

FRANKIE$

STEW

CHEESE

,, oz. Sl 09

$189

PIG.

ll.
KAHN'S

SUP£1101 PIE·SUCID

HOMEMADE

SAUSAGE

li.B~l~9

99&lt;

$249

Plf-SUCID

"NO SUGAI ADOID'

BOLOGNA
IJ.

CHOPPED HAM

$289

USDA UAN

II.

_$J59

IJ.

SUPERIOR

WHOL! IOSTON

SJ29

Our NEW BATTERY CLUB PIAN It dttignod to help:
1. lower the price of hMring aid batteries
2. Protect ~~tolnst price lncroooe
3. Provide convenience
4. G""rontM the hlghat quolity, lrethMt botteriet
5. Provide • free hNring old chedc·up, etc.
Here II how it WO.. I You pureho• • - of coupons good for ton pockog.. o( your size~­
tery at a - i l l dilc:ount price. In odlltion, you witt recoive • coupon
good for ciNning, computerlud onolysit, lldiustment, ond tubing replo·
-mont - o 14.00 borpin - ot no cllarge. When you nHd btttoriet
, ; limply lUI In your oddrwa ond moll u t pom:ord. You wHI rocoive your
· • boottoriet _..ge poid by moil in • fow doya.

68

contract with Ohio Valley Area
Li braries.
Monday: Carpenter, Laura's
Store, 3:10-3: 40; .Dexter church,
4:10-4: 40; Danvute church, 5: 155: 45; Rutland Civic Center, 6: JO.
7:30.
Tuesday: Portand post office,
2:02·2:35; Letart Fails, Effie's
Restaurapt, 3:05-3: 50; Racine
bank, 4:35-5:35; syracuse pool,
5: 50· 7:20. ·
Wednesday: Baum Addition,
2:10-2: 40; Keno, north side of
bridge, 3-3: 30; Success Road
near 39060, 3:45-4:15; Long Bot·
torn post office, 4:25-4: 55; Reeds·
ville, Reed's Store; 5:05-6:05;

•

vice In Meigs County Is by corner across fro'nt, 8:05-8:35.
r-___
__::...,._ __::...,._....:.____________J...._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.,- - - - - - - - -

PIOIUMS nNDING TilE lEST HEAliNG AID IAnEIIES???
NEW IAnERY CLUB PLAN ANNOU~CED

9 To20

IJ.

$149

; ; 4AYINGI EKAMPLE:

· • · • Repler cost for 10 Plds. e $4.20 and $4.00 dlect·up
46.00
, ' BaittiY Club Plan coupon boot for 10 Pls.
35.00
SAYINGS TO YOU
11 .00
AS ASNQAl •11011C11011 TO 1111CP WI All Offllllll YOI A

.

0 0 OFF

• YOI- . . !WI 1M . .CIMSIAIOOI OF COif Oil$ ••011 JAII. ·t,
1917. 1111 . . . A lOYAL SA. . . Of $11.1110 YOI.
UU TOU FlEE 1·100·237-7716 .. Olie IOot.W. tllit, col cotlodl
-,:::SI:r; ioo el - .. -11 II II fe ftllle .......... tJo1s I~

a-. OIL

326 W. Unitn
llon ..fri.9:00·5:00

.68¢ .

410

Price Pkg. Posh Pulls
faclalltiiUI. 100, 2·piy son
sheets in decorative pkg.
limit .. Pltgl

•

99C

Salt price lufflts
Potato Chips.

6'/t ounce package.

\

.. )

Pepper .......~····.. ·•• S2.40

32o/o

Our 5.97 Ea. Pocket T-1111111 of COfekee polyester/cotton. Wecir them
alone, under swea1oo, over blouses,
more. In choice of fashion COlors to
spice up any wardrobe, Sizes S·M·l.

2.97 23%-28% 9
Our 3.11-4.11 Pkg. Tralh baga.
30* or 40** Trash, 60'' kitchen.

88

longhorn ............. 12.75
Sharp Chedtlw ....... $3,1 0
Smobd (hlddcw .... S3.00
Amish Iutter ....... sus
Traillologna....... suo

.

• •,
Sale Pllce. 2-pack VHS tapes. :~
2·, 4·, 6-hr. recording on each. : •

Wttll11orage coaa

707·23120

(

NEW STORE HOURS
OPEN 9 A.M.-5 P.M.
MONDAY ·SATURDAY

NUT LOVERS
llandtecl PICIIIUtS'""" SUS
Club Mix ..................... sus
Caftws ...................... 55.50
Spanish···---....... _.... ' 1.70
Sliwll'lll Almencls-.... S6.2 S

Ohio Valley

Foods

lrnil Ntlfl--..--.

biXJie lrnl!ed to mtr: t lllp\Ja1t0n

Heavy·duly balterlet, 8 "AA"
cell, 6 "C" cell, or 6 "0" cell.

..., "-Goods Cool

..... 'okgl,

I)

'

:or99'

Sale flllcl. b-flne GnflfrMZI
helP! Pllhe!rt icing. 12ft, oz.

---......

Motarwalar a bafllnr 1n 11zes
lOr many U.S., Import COli,

......

.

, II, IIUclcl

5.67

' , late Pllce Ia. 11c1e laundly
dellrglnt, 14 7-oz. net wl,

''''"
.I

\

"••

Whelt Almonds .......... SUS
•lack Walnuts ............ ss.so

Pecan Pes. ................... S4.2S
Wahwh ...................... S3.50
Nut Siftings ••,..._,,,, s1.60
.
s 0
law
Peanuts
·-·--·····
1.6
WI S1l1 UR I.OYS Of CAleY

Sunflewer Seeds.-..... suo

suo

MOZZARELLA BALL

$"1 59

$119

I OZ.

69(

•
ll.

St4-357f

H£UMANS

PEPSI

MAYONNAISE

COLA

BOUNTY TOWELS

COCA
COLA

3~ oz.$169

laby Swiss .......... S2.95

Save

SPREAD
MARGARINE

Sat, ... • 9:00.12:00

Formers ............... S3.00 ,
Hawarti ................. S3.2 S

0 0 OFF

GAL

ltlflliiJ

l!' .•

'

2°/o MILK

SHEDD'S COUNTltY CROCK

COUNTY UNE

VALlEY BELl

FBI COIPLI. .Ifi'AIY PACUGI OF IAmiiES

DILES HEARING AID CENTER

•All Wools
•All Christmas Fabrics

'I

Choice of beverage available
with meals.

Be5t Wishes for the Holiday Season

CLOTHES
44

~b~~~e~~~~~r::~~~;u~:;~

mouth; Steve. Donna and Ga·
briel Jenkins , Rutland; Betll,
D.J . and Aimee of Alamagordo,
N.M., ,and Harold and Billie
Abbott, Dick Doris, David and
Bobbie, Coollvllle.

POM~:J~8_c~~~biieser· i~~~~~ %~=~~:; n;~d~~;~~~:

GALLIPOLIS - ACtivities and
menus for the week of Dec. 29,
2, 1987:
through Jan. 2, 1987, at the Senior
; Monday - Round and square Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
dance 1·3 p.m.
Pike, are as follows :
: Tuesday - Chorus to Pomeroy
Monday- Chorus, 1·3 p.m.
Jtealth Care Center at 1:30 p.m.,
Tuesday - S.T.O.P./Physlcal
Bloodmobile visit from 1 to 5: 30 Fitness, 10: 30 a.m. .. J
p.m.
Wednesday - VltnQ&amp;' Bible
· Wednesday - Bingo 1·2 p.m .; Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games, 1·3
Bowling 1: 30; New Year's Evl.' p.m.
Party from 8 p.m. to midnight, ·
Thursday - New Year, Center
&lt;nlmisslon $1.50 per person, Closed.
round and square dancing with
Friday - Art Class, 1·3 p.m.:
music by the Stringdusters, Crall Mini-Course, 1·3 p.m.
bring snacks for the refreshment
Menus consist of:
table.
Monday - Fish, noodles with
ThursdaY - Closed for New mushroom sauce, carrots, wheat
Year's Day.
·
bread, chocolate pudding.
Friday - Quilting, cards,
Tuesday - Beef patties,
games.
muhed potatoes, green beans,
The Senior Nutrition Program wheat bread, peaches.
menu for the week Is:
Wed sday - New England
• !'rfonday - Hamburger steak boDed dinner (potatoes, cabi!!lth gravy, spinach, mashed bage, and ham}, rolls, ice cream.
Thursday- New Year, Center
potatoes, cookie.
Tuesday - Boiled New Eng· Closed.
land Dinner, applesauce,
. Friday - Liver and onions, au
mashed potatoes, cookie.
gratin potatoes, cole slaw with
Wednesday - Liver, mashed carrots, . wheat bread, fruit
cocktail.
,
potatoes, green beans, fruit .
· Friday - Tuna Noodle casseChoice of beverage served with
, rolf!, peas, Harvard beets, pears. each meal.

WORK

1

STS 51·J 3-7 October. ~985"
Christmas.
The badge- and It lsoneof the
The group gathered at the
19 which ·went into space - Is Chase home in Middleport tor a
mounted on the plaque. Jeff ·Is holiday buffet Christmas night.
stationed at the astraunaut train· Steve and Barbara· Anthony
ing base In L.os Angeles and was White of Fort Lauderdale, Fla.
.here earlier tlils fall for the flew in lor the holiday and will
golden wedding anniversary of return to Florida today.
They were ·at the family
Quite the surprise Christmas his grandparent~. He Is the son of
gift for Dale and Lucille Jacobs Chief Master Steve and, Wanda gathering along with Barbara's
was a plaque from .their grand· Roush Jacobs.
pareilts, Gerald and Dorothy
Steve, incidentally, wUI be . Anthony, and her brother, Joe,
son, First Lt. Jllffrey Jacobs, an
astraunaut In training to work in retiring soon from the Air Force and Willis and Katy Anthony, ail
a space station.
where he's served for the past 30 of Middleport.
Jeff sent his grandparents the years.
Others at the family gathering
were Harold and Frances Young,
plaque inscribed "Presented to
Dale and Lucille Jacobs. This · For the first time in more years Clifton; Ralph , Sheila , Jason,
U.S. Air Force Space, Badge is than anyone can remember, the Stacie and Craig Roush, Mike,
certified N!l. 1 of 19 which flew entire family of Mr. and Mrs. Holly, Merrily and Wesley Liev·
aboard the Maiden Voyage of the Harold Chase were home for lng and Jane and Dustin Zirkle,
Space Shuttle Atlantis (OV-1040
·an of New Haven; Judy Lievlng

and Guy V. Riggs, and a sister,
Madge ' H. Riggs, all deceased,
and another sister, Helen May
Riggs who was born in 1899 here
in Bedford Township and mar·
ried Warner Welling Fell, who
now lives In Pikeville, ~y.

Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, has
the following activities schejluled lor the week of Dec. 29-Jan.

a...,.

SALE ENDS DECEMBER 31ST

In the early 1900's Riggs moved
to Delaware County. He taught
school lor a time and later was a
,street car ' conductor In the
Columbus area. Since the death
of his second wife, he has lived
alone. . .
.
.
He piays a banjo, harmonica
and Jews harp and can tell
stories and jokes and entertain
like a veteran of vaudevllle days,
according to a letter from Eileen
Skivington who lives In Gran·
. vOle, and Is a first cousin once
removed, of the centenarl~n. ',
· She says he likes to talk about
the good old days in Meigs
County when he was growing up
and attending school here.
He had brothers, Hart C. Riggs

·,
GALLIACOUNTY
7:55-8:30.
·
!man's 1:25-1:40; Kingery 's,
:, GALLIPOLIS- The, Dr. Sa·
Tuesday: EnoStore, l:J0.1:55; 1:45-2; Myers,2:25-2:40; Mercer·
muel L. Bossard Memorial Ll· Africa /'Wad. 2·2:15; Roushtane, vUie,3:25·3:40; 790Small,3:50-4;
brary announces Its bookmobile 3·3: 15; Roush Lane, 3:15-3: 30;
790 Halley, 4-4: 10; 790 Lincoln
~chedule for the week of Dec.
Cheshire, 3: 35-4:05; Addison,
Pike Jet., 4: 20-4: 40; Burd's,
29-Jan.3, 1987: ·
4:15-4: 30; Addavme School, 4:40- 5-5: 15; Crown City, 5: 30-6: 05;
' Monday: Geiger, 10-10: 20; , 5:05; R&amp;R Trailer Ct., 5:15-5: 45;
Roma Myers, 6:15-6: 30; Ohio
Ewington, 10:25-10: 45; VInton Georges Creek, 5: 45·6: 15;
Townhouse, 6:45-7: 10; Kenny's
(Dyer), 10:55-1'1:05; Kyger I, Georges Creek, 6: 20-6: 40; Ka· Carryout, 7:25-7:50; Teens Run,
11:35-11: 45; ~yger II, lUi(). nauga 5th Ave., 6: 5I). 7: 10; Fos·
8-8:25.
Salurduy: . Legrande, 9:30-10;
,noon; Gallla Christian School, ters Trailer Ct., 7:15-7:40; K&amp;K
l2: 45·1:45; Cheshire (Thomas), Trailer Ct., 7: 45·8: 05.
Raccoon Trailer Ct., 10: 15·10: 30;
2:05-2:35. · Gallia Metro, 4·5:
Wednesday: No route, malnte- • Cora, 10:35-10:50; Quail Creek,
Kerr, 5: 15-5: 35; Bidwell, $: 5I). nance day.
11:05-11: 35; Rodney Village,
6: 10; Cochrans, 6: 20-6:'45; Deer
Tbursday: No route. New
12:20-12: 50; , Children's Home,
Creek, 6:55-7:15; Valley VIew, Year's Day. ·
1-1:20; CRTP, 1:25-1:50; Alice,
Friday: Eureka, H: 15; Huf·
2: 15-2: 45; Vinton, 3-3: 30; Mor·
7:25-7: 50; Rio Grande Estates,
gan Center 3·45-4·15

'**t May Yary AI lOme
11om; 0. To Loc•l Colf,p;IIIIOII

•All Other Fabrics
•All Sewing Machines

Christmas means special days, events, memones
•

Bookmobile routes named for Meigs, Gallia areas

ONE GROUP

The grant was just one of 14
a pproved statewide according to
Mrs. Lukac. It was awarded to
the FAC primarily to sta blize
finances and provides means for
growth.
The combin ation of$7,500 from
OVB and $15,000 in matching
funds is being used to expand
programming, strengthen staff
a nd establish a per manent en·
dowment fund . Gifts and pledges
of more than $75,000 have been
received toward a $150,000 goal.
Ohio Valley Bank and the
Down Under Restaurant are the .
current sponsors of th e De·
cember gallery exhibit of toys as
well as the Chr istmas Open
House which was held Saturday.
The FAC maintains
an open,
non-discriminatory
policy.
and
offers a single members hip of$15
and family membership of S25 a
year .

0

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page 8-5

•YtaSIPfUIS

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

::0 . 79·c

WHITNEY

PINK
SALMON

u.soz.$199

CAN

2
UTER

ITl

1- 1601.
ITLS.

'$149

7-UP &amp;
PEPSI

$149

1-16 OZ. ITLS.

Plus Deposit

STorm SQUEEZE

CATSUP

noz. 99(
U.S.,NO. 1

.

IDAHO

POTATOES

I 0 lll.

'

$179 :•
~

~

YWIC

POTATO

SAUERKRAUT
3201. .

$1 79

89&lt;

CABBAGE
SAVE
50•

STOIElY

HEINO'S HAMIUIGII 011

TOMATO JUICE

HOTDOG BUNS

79&lt;

69&lt;

\

'·

II.

19&lt;
RIPE

BANANAS
3Les.

99(

...
•
•

�. .;··.

···~

··-

. -- · .... ..

-·

. .. .. ·.·.-.

~ - -···· ~

.

... -., ·-

''•
"

Times-Sentinel

'

Ohio-;-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

.

•

..'

..

•'

.,

,.

) ..

.••

-.'

•

..•

Mr. And Mrs. Bradley Varney ·

Betts exchanges vows
vert :r1/nn
·
,;th
Br.·J 'e11J T J rne ,;n ce""'nmon!11
W ,,
{I..U,/-1 J
v a ry "
, cJ
r

·L

Geri Ly nn Betts exchanged
vows with Bradley Varney is a
June 28 ceremony at the Gallipolis
Christian Church.
The bride is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Carroll. Gennv. Yost,
Bidwell, and Mr. and Mrs. Donald
R. Betts, Conneaut Lake, Pa. ·The
groom is the .son of Patricia
·· Varney and the late William
Varney, Point Pleasant.
Rev, Denny Coburn officiated
the double ring ceremony. Music
.. was provided by soloist Betty Jo
Clark and organist June Grose.
The church was decorated with
fireside baskets of pink and white
rooes accented with bu~"RUndy. a
brass archway, kneeling bench
and a spiral candelabra.
Given In marriage by her
grandfather. Bernard Wllllarns' or
Gallipolis. the bride wore a white
gown with a Queen Anne neckline.
The close fitted hodlce featured
lace and pearls with a basque
waistline.
The shirred leg-of·
mutton sleeves were trtmmed with
lace. The dress also featured a fUll
skirt extending into a chapel length
train, edged In lace. She wore a
single strand pearl necklas:e and
earrines, and carried a cascade of
pink, white a nd burgundy rooes,
with stephanotis.
Bridal attendants were Sue
Jones. Bidwell. and Ton.va Price.
Vinton, both cousins of the bride.
Attnedants wore Belle Bouffant
dresses or pink taffeta featurin~&lt; a
scoop neckline and fitted bodice
with back bows. They carried
nosegays of pink. white and
burgundy roses.
Flower girl was Shanna Gall()way, cousin of the bride. She wore
a dress or pink rantanya with a
brush train and aheadpleceofplnk

and white Dowers.
,
Best man was Dana. Varney,
brother of the groom, Michigan.
Ushers were John Varney, brother
or the groom, Myrtle Beach, S.C..
David Darst. Point Pleasant, and
Leroy Adkins, uncle ol the bride,
Gallipolis.
The groom andushersworeplnk
and white "Miami Vice" style
tuxedos with burgundy rose bou·
tonnieres. The ring bearer, Jamie
Yost, brother of the bride wore a
white tuxedo with pink rose
boutonniere.
The bride's mother wore a lilac
nylon over talleta Door-length
gown with matehing lilly wrist
corsage. The groom's mother
wore a mauve Door-length gown of
chiffon over satin and a wrist
corsage ollillies.
A reception was held immediately following the ceremony in
the church fellowship room.
The bride's table featured a
three-tiered cake with irrdescent
doves and grapes, baked bY the
brlde's grandmother, -Glena
Williams.
Assisting at the reception were .
Wanda Neal, Ernaline Mosbaeher,
and Brenda Varney. Attending the
guest register was Carrie Willi·
ams. aunt of tile bride.
The bride Is a graduate or Rio
Grande College with a degree in
social work, and is employed as a
casemanager lor the Gallla Board
of Mental Retardation and Devel·
opmental Disabilities.
The groom is a graduate ol Rio
Grande College with a degree In
Business Administration. He l&lt;
employed ey the James Gavin
Power Plant, American Electric
Power in Chesire.

POMEROY - , Rebecca Lou
Ambrose and Carlos Robert
Geyer, exchanged wedding vows
in a double-ringceremomy at the
Middleport First Baptist Church
at 6:30 In the .evenlngon Oct. 4.
The bride is the daughter of
John and Corrine Ambrose,
Baum A:ddi,tlon, Pomeroy., and
the groom Is the son of Bob and
Margaret Bisqop, Rutland.
, The Rev. Earl Eden and the
' Rev. Green Kegley, grandfather
of the groom, performed the
ceremony following a program of
organ and vocill music by Sharon
Hawley, Middleport. Ligh.tlng of
a unity candle was a part or the
ceremony.
Escorted to the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown ol
white chillon with an English net
bodice trimmed with lace medal·
!Ions, pearl and sequins, The
mandarin lace collar was also
trimmed with pearls and sequins
as was the Elzabethiait sleeves oi
chiffon and chant!lly lace. The
skirt had medallion and Venetian
lace Inserts trimmed with chlllon
ruffles, and !lowed into a cathed·
ral train ol Venetian lace edged
w{th chiffon ruffles.
The ' bride's triple tiered silk
illus ion veil with pearls ren from
a headpiece which featured silk
sweetheart rose, organdy ruf.
fl es, clusters or pearls and
stephanotis. It was made by the
aunt of the groom, Eloise Knipp.
She carried a cascade bouquet
or red roses with white roses,
white carnations, lily ·or the
valley, and greenery created by
the bride's cousin, Herman Gaf·
fney, who also made all or the
church floral arrangements. The
bride wore diamond earrings,

gilt or her grandmother, the late
Bertha Manley.
Becky Smith, Belpre, was
matron ol honor, and the bridesmaids were Anne Bear.hs, Pome- ·
roy, • Darlene Sherer, Xenia,
Terre Wood, Long Bottom, with
Ann Bishop, sister ot the grQOm, ·
Rutland, a junior bridesmaids.
The matron honor was in a
red taffeta gown.While the Other
attendants wore royal blue tal·
leta gowns, all evening length. .
The gowns were fashioned with
fitted bodices with spaghetti
straps and Dared skirts featuring '
a draped overskirt with rosettes.
They wore circle headpieces
made by the groom's aunt, and
carried cascades of flowers In
red, white and blue.
Shauna Elliott, Taylord, Mich., .
cousin or the bride, was flower
girl. and John Ambrose. Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., nephew of the
bride, was ring bearer.
Best man was Chad Williams.
Fort Myers, Va. and the grooms·
men were John Longstreth,
Athens, Nlc~ Riggs, . Gambler,
and Scott Geyer, brother ol the
groom, R~tland. David Young,
State College, Pa., was junior
Mr. and Mrs. Carlo.r Robert Geyer
groomsmen. The groom and his
'
best man were in their U.S. Army . pie was held following the wed· guests.
The
groom
is
statlon.,O.
in
ding
at
the
Pomeroy
American
uniforms, while the groomsmen
Bamberg,
Germany
and
will•
be
Legion hall. The bride's table
wore black tuxedos.
The bride's mother wore a tea featured a tiered fountain cake joined ther e by his wife: (fhe
length dress of royal blue lace with stairways leading to side bride graduated !rom Eastern
over taffeta, fashioned with long cakes on pedistals. all decorated High School and attended ' Rio
sleeves and a high neckline, with with red and whit e carnations · Grande College and Ohio Unlver·
matching , accessories . The and cupids, and topped with sily. The groom, a graduate of
groom's mother was In a two crystal double wedding rings. Meigs, attended Ohio University
piece red linen suit with black Jim Schaekel registered the before going lnt9 the Army.
and red accessories, and both
mothers wore double orchid
·
corsages.
A reception honoring \ he COU·
was apparent l.1· lhrown against a
OKANOGAN. Wash. (UPII If you hear this weird voice door when he courageously .peshrieking, "Hi. Honey," "Here fended himself by biting· the
kitty, ,kitty" or "Praise the burglar. Twlddler's wing was
broken.
Lord," call I he cops.
Gra ves. an unemployed· fish
It's Noah the parrot. stolen
!rom Suzy Graves two day s biologist. set the wing herself,
Although Noah ca~ say "I iove
before Christmas.
Graves has been beside herself you " and even the ' all·pUFQQSe
with worry since Noah was taken "What's up Doc? " , the word
' last Tuesday by a burglar turned "Help!" unfort unat ely Isn't in
his repertoire.
. .
parrot-napper.
Worse, says Grav Ps: " Si)rtlE'Graves said she obt alned tlmes he gets his words mixed up
"Twiddler , " a blue-front and he'll say. "What 's up:· ,fhe
Amazon pa rrot. when the bird Lord ?"
·
i •

ot

Beaked victim still missing . ·.

Jane Ann Amberger trades vo~s
with John Vanley Stewart Sept.. 6
•

1..

I

SYRACUSE - Jane Ann Am· bouquet of ivory and maU'Ve
berger and John Vanley Stewart colored rosebuds and baby's
exchanl(ed wedding vows on brea th with a matching head·
Sept. 61n a double-ring ceremony piece. Meg Amberger was ·rpald
performed by the Rev. William or honor and Becky Johnson
Mlddleswarth at the home or th e Rou sh was brides mai d, They
bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. wore pink georgette crepe
Paul Amberger, Syracuse.
· dresses. Each wore a single
For the ceremony the room rosebud corsage decorat ed 'Yfth
was decorated with candles and baby's breath and ribiJOn . · :
pink mums. Given in marriage
George St ewa rt Jr. was'. ~s t
by her father. the bride wore ,a man and Bob Spaun, the groo.~ s ·
formal gown or ivory lace and man. They wore s Ingle ro s~bud
salln fashioned with a fitted
boutonnieres.
·, ,
bodice and high neckline.
Ass istin g at the reception bt'ld
She wore a cameo broach that following the ceremony w ~r e
belong ed to her g re a·i · Carol yn Rous h a nd ,Ap•
grandmother, and a diamond Chapman .
'. :.
necklace, a girt or the groom.
They reside at Hemlock Gt:ave .
The bride carried a colonial

··k,~: ·

. .Mr. and Mn:. Joh11 Vanley Stewart

Adkins, Roberts Jo wed Jap. 3
VIRGIE. Ky. -Mr. andMrs. Ronald Lee Adkins of Indian Creek. "
VIrgie. Ky .. announce the engaf(ement and forthcoming marriage or
lhelr daughter. Kellye Oawne Ad·
kins. lo tarry J ay 'Roberts, son or
Mr. and Mrs. Richard B. Robert s of
Gallipolis.
The bride is a graduate of Vir·
gle. Ky. High School and att ends
Morehead State University.
The groom Is a gradua te of
Ga llla Ac ademy High School and
Morehead ,St at e Unive rsity with

a Bachelor of Arts degree. Ro·
berts Is a member or the Theta
Chi Fraternity and Is a Second
Lieu tenant In the Unit ed States
Army.
The open church wedding will
be held al 4:30 p.m. Saturday,
Jan. 3 In the Ald ersga te United
Methodist Church at Robinson
Cr~ek , Ky. There wlll be a rece p.
tion foll owing in the church lei·
lowship hall .
The couple will be residing at
Fort Bliss, Texas.

All

Sportswear
....

Furs

I'

',.

REG. $6oo

Breakfast Bar is open
11:00 p.m.-3:00a.m., New Year's Eve
•
r

Make Shoney's the last place you go New Year's
Eve. Stop in and enjoy golden pancakes, sausage,
~. whatever you want. As much as you want.
It's a perfect way to top off your night!
Free cabbage with any meal on New Year's Day.
'

Up to

SHONEYS.
America's Dinner Table.

1/2

, Lorle J . Clifford
Loric J . Clifford. daughter of
retired Marine Corps Master
Sf(t . William J. and Peggy A.
Rohner of VInton, has been
· promoted In the U.S. Air Force to
the rank or airman first class .
, ·Clifford Is a law enforcement
specialist with the 7100th Secur·
lty PUce Squadron in West Ger-

. ,many.

I Charles M. Tackett
Master Sgt. CharJes M. Tackett.
son of Melburn C. and Juanita
Tackett ol Gallipolis. has been de. corated with the Air Force Com·
mendatlon Medal In Spain.
The Air Force Commendation
Medal Is awarded to those individuals who demonstrate out·
standing achievement or meritO·
rtous service in the performance
of their duti~s on behalf ol the Air
Force .
Tackett Is a security supervl·
sor wtth·thH06th Security Pollee
Squadron .
James A. Gheen
Pvt . James A. Gheen, son or
Franklin D. and Donna L. Gheen
of 332 Grant St.. Middleport , has
completed an aircraft electrl·
clan course at the U.S. Army .
Trnsportatlon Sehool. Fort Eus·
ti s. Va.
Students were trained to main!·
.aln. test and repair aircraft elec·
trlcal components and systems.
. They also received Instruction In
the proper use and maintenance of
shop test E'Qulpment.
· His wife. Elizabeth. Is the
daughter of Lewis L. and Leota
.Milstead or Gallipolis .

Off

MEMORIAL GIFf- Memorial gifts were made from the Roger
L. Cromlisb Jr. Memorial Fund at Ohio Valley Bank. Recipients of
the equal distribution were Pinecrest and Scenic Hills Care
Centers, Holzer Medical C~nter Pediatric Unit, Gallla County
Senior Citizens ;...d Gallla County Children's Home. Pictured are
Jennifer Osborne, Jell, and Cindy Johnston, right, of OVB, and
Pediatric Unit head nurse Nancy Casteel.
Medical Center was used to
purchase electronic and computer type toys that could be used
by chlldren of all ages to enjoy in
th~lr ' Individual rooms when
confined. The Foster Grandparents are also very much Involved
In , this program· at Holzer,
working with the children as they

S375

. ~

His wile, Vanessa, Is the
daughter ol Van E. and Janice
O'Lynn ol 3221 Mossman Ave.,
David B. Knight , son of Robert Point Pleasant.
C. Knight of Hartford. W. Va .. . - - - - - - - - - - - and Barbara L. Chapman of
Rural Route 2. Racine, has been
promoted In the U.S. Air Force to
the rank of senior airman.
Knight Is a law enforc~ment
specialist at Hill Air Force Base.
Utah. with the 2849th Security
Pollee Squadron.
Gregory A. Bowles
Army Reserve Pvt. Gregory A.
Bowles, son of Wllllam E. and
Elise J. Bowles of 304 Fifth St ..
Point Pleasant, W.Va .. has com·
pleted basic training at Fort Dlx,
N.J.
During the tnilnlng, students
received Instruction In drill and
ceremonies, weapons, map read·
tng, tactics. military courtesy,
military justice. lirst aid, and
Army history and traditions.
He Is a 1981 graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.

David W. stamper
Air Force Airman lst Class
David W. Stamper, son of Patrl·
eta A. Whitlock of Rural Route 2,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. , and
Clearance D. Stamper of 3211
Maylock Lane, Fairfax, Va., has
arrived for duty with the 7276th
Security Pollee Squadron,
Greece .
Stamper Is a security
specialist .

I
i

•

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

PROGRAMMABLE COMPACT DISC PLAYER
16-selection programmable ,with scan function
Horizontal loading system with motorized drawer
Forward and reverse skip function
A!Vomyoff repeat function
·
Digital display for track and index numbers
Index search function
Optical Laser Pickup
440mm width

$J

KEY FEATURES
*COMPACT DISC PLAYER
*AUTO REVERSE CASSffiE DECK
*SYNCHRONIZED DUBBING
(CD TO CASSETTE)

$399
FVH-906
VHS/HQ VIDEO
CASSETTE RECORDER

$349
FVH-919
VHS STEREO/MTS/HQ
VlDioO CASSETTE

' .t

HI-FI TO GO STEREO
HIGH FIDELITY SYSTEM·AC/DC
KEY FEATURES
REVERSE CASSETIE DECK
NOISE REDUCTION
..1-llmi-SPEED DUBBING SYSTEM

$1 '99

OF SOUT..AST OHIO

POMUOY:

GALUPOUS

Mtlgs Mtdkal luililing
lncro11 from Vttwrans Ho~p.)
992-5912 Monday-friday

414 S.Cond An., 2nd floor

$9995
'

446-0166 Mon.·Sat.
ClOSED THLIISDAY

Alao: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe. Logan

'

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)

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$4995

·

VAtUUM CLEAN~RS
*Compact

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(INCLUDES EVERYTHING LI STED BELOW )

*Kirby

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M-F 10·6: Sot. 10·211--------1

----------~----~------,
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COUPON
.•
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COUPON
I
II
L!VING ROOM I~
WHOLE HOUSEl
&amp; HALL
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12995

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EXPIRES DEC. 31, 1916

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• Synchronized one- touch h1 g r.- s pee~
dubbing
• Sequential play function
• ,Dolby' Noise Reduction Syste m
• Metal tape capability fo r boll1 systems
• Soft 1ouch controls
• 440mm width

VIDEOTECH MK-20

Olfer not good with oth11 coupono.

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD

$2495,

CAR STEREOS
HOME STEREOS

HI-FI TO GO STEREO WITH
HIGH FIDELITY SYSTEM

•Sliding he scale. No one refused services because
of inability to pay.

PH. 446-7441

TV's, VCR's

PH-W464

•s."lcts include:
Birth Control; Y.D. Sc..-ng;
c-er ScrM!Iing; ....oncy
teml ediKCitlon •d counseling
for Individuals and couples.

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.Your questions answered

'----..;...----' 750 First An.

LAFAYmE
300 Second Avenue
GalllpoNs, Ohio

play with and learn from th~se
special electronic and computer·
!zed games .
Ms. Casteel said she will look
at the latest types ol toys and
games that will have a more
permanent life and will be both
enjoyable and educational for the
•
pediatric patients.

Transportation Squadron.
David B. Knighl

All VACUUM
SWEEPERS, BAGS
&amp;BELTS

•••

•

UPPER RT. 7 • P.O. BOX 342
GALUPOLIS, 0!"110 45631
Phone 446-4517

CHRISTMAS .....
Left Over Sale!

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•

GALLIPOLIS - The Holzer
Medical Center Pediatric Unit
• was one ot five local and equal
recipients of the second annual
distribution of the Roger L.
Cromlish Jr., Memorial Christmas Fund, with the check presen, tation made to : Nancy Casteel ,
R.N .. pediatric head nurse, by
Ohio Valley Bank sta(f members
: ~.,Jenn,ifer Osborne, assistant cashier .and loan o!flcer, and Cindy
'Johnston; staff assistant .
• Other recipients are Galila
·County Chlldrens Home, Gallia
County Senior Citizens, Plnec)-esl Care . Center, and Scenic
!IIlls Care Center.
• The employees of the Ohio
Bank established this
Fund in 1985 to honor
L. Cromlish Jr., a Gallla
Academy High School student
· ·and Ohio Valley Bank employee
'who was electrocuted Oct. 26,
1985. They created this fund with
their volunteer contributions and
chose five local recipients.
"This Fund makes It possible
lor the hospital pediatric unit to
purchase items for use by child·
ren who will be hospitalized now
and In the future. All recipients of
the fund are Involved In pro·
grams to benefit either children
or the elderly, as Indicated by the
work or their organizations,"
said Jeffrey E. Smith, Executive
Vice President at OVB.
Last year's gilt to the Holzer

Including skirts, slacks, separates &amp; co-ordinates.

..•

•

Memorial Fund dis.tributed
.to nursing homes, HMC, senior center

•
Seott A. Adkins
Airman Scott A. Adkins, son of
Jean Adkins of 151 Berger Ave ..
Gallipolis, ha ~ graduated from
the U.S. Air Force aerospace
ground equipment mechanic
course at Chanute Air Force
Base. Ill.
During the course. students
were taught to repair f(enerators.
gas turbines and hydraulic pumplnf! equipment. They also earned
' credits toward an associate degree through the Community Col·
lege of the Air Force.
James V. Gibson
. James v. Gibson. son or James
D, and Julia B. Gibson or Rural
Route 2. Chesapeake. has been
promoted in the U.S. Air Force to
the rank or senior airman.
Gibson Is a vehicle operator
and dispatcher at Little Rock Air
Force Base, Ark., with the 314th

•Dresses
•Jackets
•Coats
•Robes
•Lingerie
•Sweaters

·.'

Pomeroy-Middleport-.Gallipolis, Ohio;,.,;Poi~·n,;;t;,;Piea,;;;;;;;sa;;;n,;;t;_,W~.:;;;V;;a·~====;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;; iii~~~~~~~

December 28, 1986

Rebecca wu Ambrose
becomes
.
'bride of Carlos Robert'Geyer

•

•·

December 28, 1986

MONITOR/TV SECTION · PC-420
AUDIO SECTION
"
•Amplifier
•Equalizer
VCR SECTION • FVH-990
•Tuner FM-8908 •CD Player
•Cassette
•Spnkers
•Turntable
COMPUTER CONTROL CENTER-CB·420B/RAV·420
•120 Button remote for ell audio component funtions, TV functions. VCR functions,
me11age centllr, phone directory, .calendar. audio spectrum' di spla y: on-.screen
· dlaplay for all functions, programmong of system and status of operat1on displays
UNIFIED CABINET- RC-690-•Pre-assambled cabinet holds au equipment
and haa hidden
compartment•

.,

�I

Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

-~-In

pomeroy-Middleport- · Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant,

&lt;

w. Va.

December 28. 1986'

.'·

the service ____,.;.__:.I- -.........-----~~....;,....---~~-~-----.-~
.~
ot

. . . Thomu A. Copley
-···- Island, SC.
lock, son Wll~rt D. Spurlock Rlv~slde Drive, Chesapeake.••
Army National Guard Private
During the ll·week training of 5443 Guyan River Road,
•
.Thomas A. Copley, son of Marion cycle, van Hoi!ten was taught t!J.e Huntington, W.Va. and Marjorie
WIUiam C. MIUer
•
.·r. and William T. Copley ot Rural hastes of battlefield survival. He E. Spurlock of Rural Route ~.
Navy Seaman Recruit William·
Route 2, Chesapeake, Ohio, has was Introduced to the typical Proctorvllle, Ohio. has been C. Mlller. son of Donald L. and'
completed basic training at Fort --dally routine that ' he will expe· awarqed an associate degree tn Carolyn J. Mtller of Mason, WV ~
Dlx, 'N.J . '
.
rlence during hls ,enllstment and applied science by t~e Commun· has completed recruit training atDuring the training, students studied the personal and profes· tty College of the Air Force.
Recruit Training Command;'
received Instruction tn drtll and slonal standards . traditionally
The worldwide college. head· Great Lakes. IL.
· :
ceremonies, weapons, map read· exhibited by Marines.
qu"artered at Maxwell Air Force
During Miller's . eight -week·
lng, tactics, military courtesy,
He 'participated in an actlv'e · Ba~e · Ala .. awards associate training .cycle, he studied g~n,';:
military justice, · first aid, and physical conditioning program degrees to' enlisted airmen for · -cra t military_ subjects designed·
Army history and traditions.
and gained proficiency In a
programs combining technlc.al _to prepare him -tor furthefl..
He . Is a 1984 graduate of variety of l)lllltary skllls, lnclud· education received In the Air acadern]c and on-the·job training,_
Symmes . Valley High School, lng !lrst aid, rifle marksmanship Force with general education
In one of the Navy's 85 basic-.
Wlllowood, Ohio.
, and close order drill. Tea mwork provided by .clvl!lan Institutions. fields .
' ~
Richard L. Van.Houten
and self·dlsclpllne were emphas- .
Spurlock Is a main tenance
Miller's studies Included sea-7:
Marin e Pte. Richard L. Van ized throughout the training· scheduling technician at .Kir· rnanshlp, closeorderdrlll, Naval:·
Houten, son of Bob and Mary cycle.
!land Air Force Base, N.M.. with hi story· and first a.!d. · Personne~.
Hathburn of Rutland, has corn·
the 1550th Avionics Maintenance who complete this course otr .
pleted recruit training at Marine
Jonathan s. Spb~Jock
Squadron.
; ..
' instruction are eligible for thre(
Corps Recruit Depot Parris
Staff Sgt. Jonathan S. SpurHis wile: Virginia, ts the hours o! college credit in Physt-~
daughter of Russell Crump of 619 cal Education and Hygtene ..-

·
1
Rorer StumbO
'3923 Ileej;h Grove Road, Bucy·
. Roller Stumbo, son of Roy and rus, and brother of Russell M.
Karla Stumbo of PSR BoK 31 In Lupls of Gallipolis , has gradu·
Gallipolis, has enlisted into the a ted as an armor crewman at the
Navy's Delayed Entry P rogram. U.S. Army Armor School, Fc.Orl
. The Navy's Delayed Entry Knox , Ky.
,
Program allows youn!( men a nd
Th e training was conducted .
women to enlist on Inactive dut y · under the one sta tion unit train·
up to a year before they rece ive . ing (OSUT) program . which
· their initial training.
combines basic comba t training
Stumbo, a 1985 graduate of and advanced individual training
Symmes Valley Hi gh Sc hool , is Into one l3·week period.
scheduli&gt;d to · rece ive recruit
During the course, students
training at the U.S. Nava l Train- received training In the duties of
lng Center in Great Lakes, Ill .. in a ta nk crewman, including firing
December.
the tank's armament and sinal!
He will be part of an eighty· weapons. Instruct ion was also
. rna~ recruit company called the given In field radio operations,
" W~y Hayes Buckeye Com- map reading, and tank rnainte·
g~ny. namod in honor of form er
na nce andrepair.
io tate football coach Woody
Chad H. Wooten
.
Hayes, a ndChap(er
sponsored
the
Columbus
of th ebyNavy
Chad H. Wooten, fo rmerly of rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;~;;;;:;~~
League.
Ht. 4, Gallipolis.. has completed
Recruit Training at Naval Train ·
Following rec ruit training.
Stumbo will recei ve further
ing Center, San Diego. Calif.
While undergoing recruit train·
schooling In th e Navy's Boller
ing he was pa rt of the Naval
Technici an ratin g.
Recruit Center band and per·
Trevor L. Peaytt
formed in several functio ns. He
Pvt. Trevor L. Peaytt, son of
has been reassigned to Nuclear
Power School. Orlando. Fla., for
Buddy L. and Brenda. K. Peay lt
advanced training as part of the
of Rural Route 1, Point Pleasan t.
W.Va .. has completed one station
Navy Nuclear Power Program . ·
•mit training tO SUTl at the u.s.
Th e Nuclear Power Program
Army It\fantry School. Fort
is a course of in struction in
Benning, Ga .
lea rning to operate a nuclear
OSUT is a 12-week pPriod
reactor. All graduat es of the
which combines basic combat
Nuclear Power School undergo
training an d adva nced individua l comprehens ive co urse in mat hetrai ning.
mattes, physics, chemistry and
Th e training in cl uded wea pons calculus prior to assignmen t as a
qualifications. squ ad ta ctics. pa·
reac tor operator.
trolling, landrnine warfare. fi eld
He is a 1986 gradu ate of Kyger
Stock No.
communications and combat op· Creek High School.
U8
eratlons. Completion of thi s
Todd M. Hill
cours·e qualifies the soldier as a
Seaman App renti ce Todd M .
light -weapons infantryman and Hill. son of Mr. and Mrs . J .R. Hill
as an indirect-fire crew man.
of Syracuse , ha s completed re·
Soldiers were ta ught to per· erult training at Naval Tr aining
form any of the duties in a rifle or Cent er . San Diego , Ca lif.
mortar squad.
He is a ttending Radioman
Class "A " school also a t Naval
Training Cent er, San Diego.
Paul H. Sheets
Paul H. Sheets. s on of Mr. a nd Radiomen are the Navys rom ·
Cutlass Ciera Sedan
Mrs. Iva n Sheet s of Gallipolis. munications specialists whose
ha s enlisted In to the Unit ed job ent a ils handling all types of
States Navy as part of !he co rr espond ence a nd re pair·
Stock No.
De layed Entry Program. He will /m ain tenance of communication
·
recei ve recruit trai nin g at Naval eq uipment.
640
He is a l981i graduate of
Training Center. Sa n Diego,
Dr~
Calif., In Jul y 1987 to be followed Soul bern High School and en·
by training as an electroni cs listed in the, Navy In November
technician as part of the Navv's .19R5.
advanced electron ics field .
Wllllarn A. Mathias
The advanced elec tronics fi eld
Arm y Privat e William A. Ma allows qualified applicants to thi as, son of Raymond A. Ma·
earn up to 2 yea rs of electroni cs th las of 1705 Chestnut St .. Galli training and e nli stmen t a t a poli s, ha s co mp·lete d bas ic
Sedan
• higher pay grade. ·
t ra ining at Fort McClellan, Ala.
He will graduat e from Ga llia
During the training, students
Academy High sc hool and Buck· received Instru ction In drill and
eye Hills Career Center In June
ceremonies, weapons, map read1987.
.
Ing, tactics, military courtesy.
mf!ltary justice, first ald. and
.'
Chris M. Lupls
Army history and traditions.
Pvt. lsi Class Chris M. Lupis,
· He Is a 1986 graduate of
son of Emma C. Nledermier of
Worthington High SchOol, Ohio.

8

G. M. snnounee1.......

No-charge air conditiQning
on all new Olds ·Firenzas and Cieras
till Dec. 31, 1986.

Examples:

1987 Olds Ciera 4 Dr: Sedan
Factory Retail
Sale Price
Less Free Air

513;609
12,600
775

Net Sale Price

_$11,825

1987 Olds Firenza 4
Factory Retail
Sale Price
Less Free Air

$11,458
10,760
675

Net Sale Price

$10,085

BIG SELECTION OF CIERAS &amp; FIRENZAS
NOW IN STOCK

Final Countdown to 1987 on all '86 models in stock. ·
Low rate financing! Cash Rebates!
Big Discounts!

Check These .Superior .Buys ... ."
. .

1986 Olds Delta 88, 2 Dr.
STOCK NO. 502

3 BIG. DAYS

' '

Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday
O

FULL FIGURE

Devon and Donkennt •• 40 Yo OFF
Regular Devon ..... 3 S Yo-40°/o OFF
Robes &amp; Gowns .................. 30°/o OFF

;~~e~:.............................. Now $2QOO
si!~k~F.....................;........... Now $8 OO
Coats ...................................
40°/o OFF
'

Dresses ................................ 40°/o OFF
Blouses by Judy Bond ............. 30°/o OFF
Panties, Bras; Slips ............. 10°/o oFF
Odds and Ends .................... 40°/o oFF

1986 Chev. Caprice Classic
STOCK NO. 173

5~6,581

Factory Retail
Discount

2,381

$14,200
1986 Chev. Monte Carlo

Sale Price

$11,560
1986 Chev. S-1 0 Pickup

Sale Price

STOCK NO. 193

STOCK NO. 698

513,978
1,978

Factory Retail
Discount

$12,000
1986 Chev. Custom Deluxe
Sale Price

$9,300
1986 Chev. Beauville Van

Sale Price

STOCK NO. 192

511,067 2,567

s8,soo

Sale Price

1986 Chev. Astro Conversion .Van

Factory Retail
Discount

Sale Price

518,565
2,565

S16,000

517,927
2,527

$1 S~400
1986 Chev. Cavalier 4 Dr. Sedan
Sale Price

STOC.K NO. 592

STOCK NO. 262

Factory Retail
·Discount

511,654
2,354

Factory Retail
Discount

STOCK NO. 522

Factory Retail
Discount

513,471
1,911

Factory Retail
Discount

Factory Retail
,Discount

Sale Price

$9,292
892 '

S8,400

Many other bargains in the store.

,
.I,.
336 Second, Gallipolis, 446-9332
Jo Rice, Owner

&gt;

Chevrolet-Oldsmobile Inc.
1616 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis
Cars 446-3672
Trucks 446-20000

'

port
.

Jt~skins .· Manley
By WILL DUNHAM
upset with the $600,000 he will
UPI Sports Writer
e11rn this season, arrived at the
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Dex- tralnlag facility shortly . after
ter· Manley, the Washington practice ended. He missed TuesRedsklns' Pro Bowl-bound defen· day's practice because of a
slve end, missed practtcewlthout . sprained foot, but returned for
permission Fvl&lt;!ay and may have practice on Christmas Day.
to pay the price.
"I don't even want to comment
Manley never showed up for a on it,'" said Manley, whose
noon practice at Redskin Park club-record 18% . sacks were
.a nd refused to explain his ab·
second most In the NFL this
sence to reporters later In lhe season.
day. Coach Joe Gibbs, after
Gibbs has several options,
meeting twice with Manley, also ranging from no punishment to a
. declined to discuss the player's
fine or suspension from today 's
behavior. Gibbs was expected to NFC Wild-Card game against the
announce late Saturday what Los Angeles Rams.
form . of puniShment will be
Meanwhile, the Hedsklns, 12-4,
leveled against the team's all- are hoping to revive their dor·
time sack leader.
mant rushing game against the
Manley, who Is reportediy

.

facing possible

Rams, 10·6, Sunday at RFK
Stadium.
"In order for us to win tlits
game, we' re going to have to
have some sort of running
game," said run-ning back
George Rogers, who led -the
reague with 18 touchdowns and
was siKth in the NFC In rushing
with 1,203 yards, "But you can' t
really tell what our.rushing game
Is going to do."
.The Redskins' rotating running backs, Rogers and Kelvin
Bryant, have forged a rushing
game ranked 17th In the NFL.
with neither back r~shlng for 100
yards over the final five games of
the season.
!actors have caused

the decline of the Redsklns'
rushing game. The Redsklns
passed more this season because
they had to rally In eight of t heir
12 victories . Also, quarterback
Jay Schroeder. the NFC's most
productive passer i4,109 yards,
seco nd In the NFL to Miami's
Dan Marino), has developed Into
one of the league's top passers ln .
his first year as ·a starter.
Last season, Rogers teamed .
with John Riggins to produce the
NFL 's second· best rushing game
057.7 yards per game). Despite
the addition of Bryant, a talented
all- purpose back, Washington Is
gaining just 108.3yards per game
on the ground-.
The Redsklns have won 30

on~."

During the Tigers' 20-polnt

surge In the second period,
JUST SHORT - Clemson fuUback Tracy
Johnson (42) dives to the 1-yard line In the second
quarter oi the Gator Bowl Saturday at Jackson·

ville, Fla. The dive set up Clemson's second
touchdown. The Tigers hung to defeat Stanford
27·21. (UPI)

'

son, whose defense Is ranked ll.fth
overall in the NFL and elgbth
against the rush i105.1 yards ,per
game). said his te,am Is con.
cerned with the Washington
ground attack.
" You would like to keep them
from establishing a running
game," Hoblnson said.
· •
The Rams went though a brief
morning workout Friday. before
flying east In theaftern9Qn, while
the Redsklns went through lull
drills. Washington wide receiver
Gary Clark, a Pro Bowl starter,
practiced for the first lime this
week after missing the regular·
season finale against Phlladel·
phla while nursing a sprai ned left
ankle.

Rodney Williams scored on a
1·yard keeper with the quarter
only two seconds old; Ray
Williams scorPd on
l4-yard
reverse on the second play after

a

the Tigers recovered a fumble at ·
the Cardinal 16; and David
Treadwell kicked !leld goals o!21
and 46 yards.
Clemson, 7-2·2 during the regu·
Jar season, appeared to be
mainly going through the mo·
tions after i.ntermlsslon, and
Stanford took advantage of that
to close the gap.
On It' s second possession of t he
second half, Stanford, 8-3 this
past season. scored on a 1-yard
plunge by Muster with 6: 44 left In
the third period.
Then, In the fourth quarter,
Muster caught touchdown passes
of 13 and 36 yards from sophomore Greg Ennis. who became
Stanford's starting quarterback
this . week when It was learni.&gt;d
regular John Paye needed a
shoulder operation.
Ellis, who threw on ly eight
regular -season passes, completed 6 ol 13 passes for only 18
yards In the first half, but was far
more effective In the second. ·
Clemson' s offense, which out·
!?ialned the Cardinals by better
than 4-to-1 (291·57) In the first
half, bogged down after lntermls·
slon with the Tigers lallingto get
Inside the Stanford 45 until the
closing minute.
Stanford lost a scoring chance
after the !irs! Ennls· te&gt;-Muster
TD pass. Tom Cook returned an
Intercepted Rodney Williams
pass to the Clemson 21, but
Clemson's Delton Hall countered
by Intercepting an Ennis pass at
the 11 three plays later .

AFC wild-card contest poses intriguing matchups
By JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports Writer
HEMPSTEAD, N.Y. !UP!) On the field. today's AFC wild·
card game between the New
York Jets and Kansas City Chiefs
poses severa l intriguing
rnatchups.
Among the most Inte resting
are Jets wide receivers AI Toon
and Wesley Walker vs, corner·
backs Albert Lewis and .Kevin
Hoss .
Off the !leld, one battle
emerges above all others : Jets

defensive coordinator Bud Car·
son vs. Chiefs head coach John
. Mackovlc.
Carson was defens ive coordl·
nator for the Chi efs In 1983,
Mackovlc ' s first season as coach.
There was no second year !or thi s
stormy marriage.
Carson Inherited a defense that
hardly blitzed, and Initiated his
attack style In 1983. During the
following offseason, Carson and
Mackovlc disagreed about philo·
sophy and personnel. Shortly
after the start of training camp.
they decided the best thing was to

split up.
Carson was a volunteer ass ist·
ant for one season at Kansas
University before joining the
J ets In 19&amp;1. Ma ckovlc went
without a defensive coordinator
for two seasons before na mlng
Watt Corey to lhe position this
year.
"They're all big at this point of
the year," Carson said in down·
playing the Issue. " It 's not
between Mackovlc a nd I. The
players will play the game and
that's how It will be decided."
" Bud Is one of the outstanding

ance In a bowl game with
national title aspirations, and
Paterno said his players still
have last year's Orange Bowl
loss to Oklahoma, the eventual
champions, on their minds.
"When we walked off the field
against Oklahoma, we knew we
were as good as them, but we
didn't execute well," Paterno
said. "The team worked hard to
get back ~~re. They wanted
another shot at lt."
Asked how Penn State was
going to stop the high-powered
Hurricanes, Paterno said, "l
don ' t know how to stop them, to
be honest with you."
Paterno's players shared that
view.
"Their whole offense Is a
worry." said linebacker Shane
Conlan.
Their first concern lies · In
Reisman Trophy winner· VInny
Testa verde, the nation's leading
passer.
"There's no question he Is In
the same boat as (Dan) Marino
and (Doug) Flutle. I don' t think
any body's better than them."
Paterno said. "I don't think
anybody has had a better year
than Testaverde has. He's at the
top of his game."
Conlan said It's "nof likely tot
us to shut him down. We're just
going to slow him down."

I

coaches In the teague," Mack·
ovlc said In equal unwillingness
to add bulle tin-board fodder . "He
a lways applies a lot of pressure
to offenses ."
The link to Kansas City Is sil ll
strong for Carson. Many of the
players he coached are still with
the Chiefs. His wife, Linda,
works as an on-air personality
for the NBC affiliate In Kansas
City.
"Bud Carson, to me, Is a great
coach," said De ron Cherry, the
Chiefs' Pro Bowl free safety. "He
Is very knowledgeable about the

game. He had a big Influence on
me. The biggest Influence was In
developing my talent and ability.
He's a very aggressive coach.
When he sees talent and ability
· he gets the best out of it. He
makes you use tt. I think he is the
greatest coach I've had the
opportunity to play for ."
Cherry said In Carson's first
year In Kansas City, some people
thought the outspoken coach was
a "pyscho or a -madman." He
added, bowever. "To this day I
think a lot of players s till wished
Bl!d was around."

Australians take 2-l
lead in Davis final

Nittany Lions get right
to work for Fiesta

The Fiesta Bowl will be Penn
State's second straight, appear-

consecutive games In which a
running back has gained 100
yards.
Bryant, wtto plays primarily In
thlrd·down and. pass ing-down
sit uations, was released from
Arlington Hospital Wednesday
morning after treatment for a
bruised kidney, and Is listed as
probable. Rogers has looked
strong In practice despite a weak
finish during the season.
"I feel good about George,"
Gibbs said. "I think he's been
running hard and working hard.
We would like to be balanced, to
be able to do both running and
passing. I feel like you're going to
have to do that In this game."
Los Angeles Coach John Robin·

By DAVID MOFFIT
UP! Sports Writer
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI)
-Quarterback Rodney Williams
. scored on a 1-yard plunge, and
Ray Wlliiams ran 14 yards for
anot her score to highlight a
20-point second quarter Saturday, enabling Clemson to hold off
a second-half rally and record a
27-21 victory over Stanford in the
Gator Bowl.
Clemson used a dominating
defense featuring "Refi'igera·
tor" Perry's younger brother,
Michael, to build a 27·0 first -half
lead . But Clemson then had to
struggle to salvage the triumph.
The Tigers appeared to have
victory In hand after their
20-polnt second period, but the
Cardinals - held to 57 net yards
In the first half- capitalized on
the running and receiving of
tailback Brad Muster to make It
clo se In thf' second.
Clemson, which Improved to
6· 4 In Gator Bowl play, opened
the scoring by marching SO yards
on Its second possession. Sophe&gt;more fullback Chris Lancaster
ran the final 5 yards, two plays
after Rodney Wllll~ms hit sopho·
more flanker Hicardo Hooper on
a 34-yard pass.

. By JANET PLUME
NEW OHLEANS iUPli
Nebr·aska Coach Torn Osborne
blamed the Christmas Eve ar·
rests of nine Corn huskers foot ·
ball players In the French
Quarter on a pollee mlsunder - .
standing and said no dlsclpllnary
action Is planned.
"The olflcers may have run
Into something earlier and mls·
took them for those other peo·
pie;" Osborne said Friday. " ...
This Is the ~8th consecutive bowl
we've been to and we've never, to
my knowledge, had any Incidents
and I don't really look at this like

By JEFFREY T. SHAIN
PHOENIX iUPil - Penn
State arrived amidst ti\e strains
of mariachi music Friday to
begin preparations for their
Fiesta Bowl showdown against
Miami, then weni directly to the
practice field for a workout.
As soon as the No. 2 Nlttany
Lions stepped oft their jet. Coach
Joe Paterno had them escorted to
buses and on their way to a
workout at Arizona State.
1
"We haven 't practiced for
three days," 'Paterno said. "I
want them to break a sweat and
work off some of that Christmas
turkey."
The top-ranked Hurricanes
were not expected to arrive In
Phoenix until late Saturday af·
ternoon, and not hold their !irst
workouts In Arizona until
Sunday.
· Paterno told a news conference
Friday he broke his usual practice of not working his team
before the Christmas holidays,
but did so this year because of all
the hoopla surrounding the
game.
·
"We got a lot of things done at
home," he said. "I don't usually
do that. I don't want them to start
too early, because they might get
bored."

suspensto~

Tigers hold off
Stanford charge;
•
WID Gator 27-21

Husker
arrests
mistake

The Cornhuskers had been In
New Orleans fewer than 12 hours
In preparation lor the New
Year 's Day Sugar Bowl game
against Louisiana State when thl'
inciden t occurred early
Wednesday .
,
Among those arrested was
All-America linebacker Danny
Noonan , 25. His teammates also
detained were Matthew Stras·
burger, 22; safety Mark Blazrk,
21; s trong safeties Gary
Schneider and Jeff Tomjak, ·both
23; punter James Ton,e r, 21;
.linebacker Marc Munford, 25;
1-back Jeff Wheeler, 26; and
graduate assistant coach Scott
Fischer, 29.
Pollee Capt. Richard Hunter
' said the team me mbers had been
shouting and s lapping parked
cars when they were told to calm
down by a V.leux Carre District
policeman. but they continued to
shout obscenltl€'s and climb Iron
columns on the s idewalk.
"We rf'gret that It happened,"
Hunte r said. "They were just a
bunch of kids who ' wNe overreactlng .a nd overzea lous In their
celebrating. They should have
llstenf'd to the policeman's
warning."
The pl~yers were taken to jail ,
where they were released immediately by a traffic judge.,
Sugar Bowl Director Mickey
Holmes, who picked up the
players aftrr onP of their wives
called him , said the lncldrnt had
bee n pxaggerated a nd no
charges were flied against thl'
players.

•

AUSIES · TAKE DOUBLES ..:. Australia's Pat Cash hlst a
winning overhead smash during the doubles match SSaturday
a11al111t Swedes Anlen Jarryd and ~efiUI Edberg. Cash and
teammate -John Fllz11erald (crouching to avoid the shot) won 6-3,
1-f, 4·6 and &amp;.1 to rtve Australia a Z.l lead In the Davis Cup llnal.
(UPI)

By BRIAN DEWHURST
MELBOURNE , Australia,
(UP!) - Pat Cash and John
Fitzgerald thrashed Sweden's
world champions Stefan Edberg
and Anders Jarryd In four sets
Saturday to win the vttal doubles
match and give Australia a 2·1
lead In the Davis Cup llnal.
Cash and Fitzgerald's 6-3, 6-4,
' 4·6, 6-1 upset gave the Austral·
tans a decided advantage In the
final with the reverse singles
matches between Cash and Mlkael Pernfors and Edberg and
Paul McNamee to be played
,
today.
The capacity crowd 11,200 led
by Prime Minister Bob Hawke
gave· the Australian pair a
standing ovation after they
subdued the strongly favored
Swedes In four gripping sets.
The Swedes had been expected
to easily handle the Australians
after they won the world Masters
Cha mptons hlp at London three
weeks ago. However, Cash and
Fitzgerald combined brilliantly
and upset the Swedes. Edberg,
the world ' s tourth·ranked
player, played poorly and failed
to counter the Australians'
onslaught.
The Davis Cup was tied 1·1
before Saturday's doubles. Frl·
day, Cash romped past world No.
' 4 Edberg 13-11, lJ.ll, 6-4 and
Perntors beat McNamee In

r

straight sets.
Australia, which has won the
Davis Cup 2o times , entered the
final a 5·4 und0rdog . The Aussil's
appear primed to knock off
Sweden, the two-tim e defending
Davis Cup champion.
Australia took the first set 6·3
In 24 minutes with Cas h losing
only one point in the set. Sweden
had break points on Cash 's
opening servict• in the second set
but Jarryd los t the third point
whe!l he dunked his foreh and Int o
the net. Jarryd lost service In the
seventh game. helping Au strali a
to a 4·3 lead. Cash c linched the
second set with an ace.
After takln~ a 1·0 lead in the
fourth set. the Swedes were
unable to hold serv ice and we nt
down 6-1.
The mat ch was the last Da vis
Cup doubles to be played on the
Kooyong center court. A new $50
million complex Is being bulft In
downtown Melbourne and It Is
expected to be ready by 1988. All
national a nd Davis Cup matches
will be played In that arena.
Australia has played In six
Davis Cup fin als at Kooyong and
has won five in a row since los ing
to the United States In 1965.
Australia's last Davis Cup vic·
tory at Kooyo ng was In 1983when
it .!lefeated Sweden 3-2. The
Aussles won thelrflrst Davis Cup
In 1908.

�"'

·~

December 28, 1986

'

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

.....
.

•

.Highlanders, Pirates mat~hed in county f"
Persistent SW comes back ·
to down Kyger·Creek 5449
By JIM WEIDEMOYER

HURRY! HURRY! HURRY!
FIRST COME FIRST SERVED BASIS!
•NO DEALERS PLEA.SE•

SALE IN EFFECT NOW THRU DEC. 31st, 2:.00 P.M.
(OPEN SUNDAY DEC. 27th FROM 1:00 P.M. TO 5:00 P.M.)

: 19116 FORD RANGER . S1ock ! 74031. 2 doon auto. tran•. llldial ti~ .. W1s $1495..... Now 17(95
1911IWISWAGEM OOlF. Stock !700~· 411oor. rroot - dm~ 4 cyl, air llllld.. 5 speed tt""-, PB, ll&gt;lffl.._
tirtol ~ass. !Iorio~"" odio tres, re~ winiloo¥ delugger. rol in oolor ..................Wos 110.46~.: .11'"' $9119

1986 LIIICOLII TOWN CAR,Stock HIOS41)4 &lt;klors, V-8, ~r cond., auto trans.. PS.PB. jx,wEJwndow•
IXIW" seat. til wheel, cruse control, M1/FM rad ~. ~E&lt;e? tapa llldial tie;, whle wall• rea- win&lt;llw
defo!IR!' .......................... .......................... . ............................... WIS $19,995..... Now $18,995

1985 'IOIKSWAGEN GOlf, ~ocll5031, 211oor. rroot wheel drive 4 cyl. 5 speoltTans., Pa tlnlol ~""AM liM
radio. r!diil tres. rear ""llow dellgge-. t.;ge " oolor .............. ............ Wos
50...... Mow $7136.34

sma.

'

1987 'IOI.IIS\!IAG£N SCI ROCCO. Stock 11010. 2 '*""· rroot wi&lt;O drive 4e~t .. air oond . 16.vaoes, 5sp..t tra"'.

1986 CHEVY IIONT£ CARLO. Stock H10630. 2&lt;klors, hard top. oodan. 6cyl,. ai cond, auto. tr01s., PS,
Pa cruse control, M1/FM rad~. radi~ Ires, whle walls .......................Wos ll0.995 ..... Now 19995

Ps, P8, ""'" w;,.m, fiTor mm. d1~0 c!Td&lt;. tilllol gial\ st«Ol tape. radiO tires. l!riiO!e mrrors, rear w•l!r.v

1986 CHEVY EUIIOSPORT,Stock! 10620, 4 dOO'S, front wheel dr~e. 4 cyl.. a&lt; oond, auto. trafl!., PS.
Pll bl wheel, cruse oontroiiM/FM radio, llldial !Jes, whle wal~ ....Was ll0,395..... Nowl9195

glass, ste!Ol tap!\ radiO twes, il'clic ~ue

defollll'l'. red" color....................

.................................................... Was SI5.225.50. .... Now 113,505.50

1916\'!II.IIS\tiAGfN SCI ROCCO. Stock 10028. 2 '*""· rroot •"'" drive 4 cyl . air llllld .. 5speed trans., PB, tirtol
ocotT&lt; ....................................... Was St2.305..... Maw 110,910.50
1916 YDUilWAOEN JmAGI.. ~ocl 1 609~ 4 door, frol11 wheO dnvo ~ cyl..'air amd .. WolfslxJrg Edili&gt;" autn ·

1986 OlliS 98 REGENCY, Stock H73671. 4&lt;klors. hard top. v.aa&lt; cond.. aut~ trans .. PS. Pa pow~&lt;
w;,~ pow eo seat. pow eo door klcks. tilt wheel. cru6e control, M1/FM radio, ~"111 tapa llldi~ tie;,
wMe wal~ . rea- window debgger ................................................ Wos $14,99L.Now 113.595

trans., PS, PB, di~S 'cktcl tiltOO ~zs. cruise contrcM, stere:~ tape, radi.j tues. rear wi"lOOw de*~~. ~ue '"

m . . . .......... ................................................................................. Was SIJ.230.....M,., $11,117

·

1915 YIIIJCSWIIGEN Gil. !locll5121, 2 '*!«. front whee liivo 4 cyl, ~8., 111&lt;1&gt;.. 5speed ..... PB, floor mats.
digit&gt;! ckJ:k. tinloo ~'"' umoo~~~ radi~ tres. ol~ wheels. buck~ smts. rear WTn&lt;llw delogger, ~ock •
color ....................
.. ................... ...................................................................w. $9740. ....Now 182!0

1985 CHEVY SPORT VAN . Stock H73211. V-8. air oond.. auto trans .. PS. Pa llldi~tres, wtitewai~
air ............................................ ... . ............. ........ ................... .. ......WIS 19995..... $8995

~orl/rea-

1985 VOlJCiWAG£N GTI, Stock! 73~1. 2door!. 4 cyl.. a&lt; rond.. PB, AMIFMradio,!IE&lt;e? tape, rad1al
tire;, re~r window defogger. gauges .
.. ....................was $9295..... Now 18295

1917 FOROCROWNYICIORIA IX COUNIIIY SQUIRESIAIIONWAGOft, Stocl H132&amp; V·.air IXIIld. iTt &amp;ext deoJ
group OJto. trans.. PS, PB, pc!Wilf wmiloo¥~ iXJW8 seal""'"'*"" bcks, ID~ ode _ moo~in~. tintol ~ass.
ul'ldel'cnlting, t\11: wheel, cruise control, AMIFM radQ !term t3pe, ra:tii tirt5. wh~e walls, w~re.wheel ID'o'efS, bump11
li'l~~ 1.,. wi100. defoggeT .......................................................... Wos SIB.005.95.... Mow 116,255.95

1985 FORD ESIXIRT, Stock H3t423. 2 door!. coupe. ~ont wheel drive, 4 cyl., air rond, PB. M1/FM
radio, !IEJeo tape, radial t r~ ................ ............................................. Was $7495.....Now 16495

1916 MERQJRY MMQ(JIS I!ROUGHAM , ~ock H6357, 4&lt;lx&gt;r. 6cyl.. a&lt; oond.. vinYl roof, aulD. nan•. PS, PB, ""'"
!0!1. IJdol t11e; whie walb, wheel ""~ "'""' mimn rnar wioTI!w d~ogger . Wos 113,116.....N.. 111.130
1916 FORO E-150 124 CII!ID VIII 6100 llYW. ~ock·H 6975, 6cyl, a~• tr"", PS, PB.ch10"" lxl·" !J!Ugi!S.
fixed rear and side carl) OOor ~ air mr1d.• tinto:l glzs. sport wheel COYB'S. radial tires

1985 CHEVY CAMARO Z-28, Stock H10000. 2&lt;klors, hard top, coupe, V-8, air con d. auto. tran.. PS,
Pll POWE&lt; wlloow• tilt wheel cruise rontrol. M1 /FM radio, stere? tap~ llldial tres, rear window
. deio!IR!' ................................................................................................ ..VIII ll0.995.....Now $9995

.........................................................................................................................Was 114.644.l3 ..... Mow 111.106.46

1987 RIRD BRONOOII, Slocll 730&lt; 41111"" drive 6 cyl 5 - traro .. ct«h irlter'or, prilacy ~"" chlUire
txJ""""'Iuggage rad&lt;. tlnlol ~E~ AM!l'M r.to. radiO ties ..................Was $13.196.65 ..... Noo $12.221.75

,

Times-Sentinel StBtl
· MERCERVILLE - Kyger
Creek High School's boys basket·,
,ball team held on as long as lt
:could Friday night but finally
,gave way to persistent Southw-es tern· and loss 54-49 In an
opening round contest of the
Gallla County Holiday
·Tournament.
• The victory advanced Southwestern , Into the championship
gao;ne which was to be played 9
p.m. Saturday against North
Gallia, a 63-55 winner over
Hannan Trace. Kyger Creek was
slated to play Hannan Trace at 7
.!J.m. In the consolation ganie.
The Bobcats, 3-5, Jumped out to
an 8-2 lead in the first four
minutes. Friday night and actually upped their advantage to
23-14 midway through the second
quarter.
But the Highlanders refused to
quit, slicing the deficit to 25-22 at
the half.
"We had some problems getting our rythm in the first half,"
Highlander Coach Michael L.
Klnnared said after his squad
improved to 1&gt;-3. "We were
geUing beat Inside and were not
applying a lot of pressure
defensively."
In the second half, however,
Klnnared made an adjustment to
hls defensive press, which
seemed to give Kyger Creek
problems.
"That press gave us some
problems but we didn't have a lot
ollurnovers," second-year Bobcat Coach Scott Stemple said.
The ad justed press did not
ca use the Bobcats to turn the ball
?Ver . It merely destroyed their
rythm.
"My philosophy is, if yoou can
throw them off their tempo and
they lake. a bad shot," ·Kinnared

I

said, "well, that's just as good as
a turnover."
Kyger Creek kepi Us advantage until the 4: 55 mark in the
third quarter after Southwestern
senior Sean Colley, who finished
, with a game'hlgh 19 points. hit a
driving layup to knot the score at
21!.
Four minutes later, Highlander senior Justy Burleson,
who tallied 11 on the night,
converted a thr~polnt ·play,
glvln·g Southwestern Its first lead
· of the contest. Burleson's were
the last polnls of the quarter and
-Southweslern led 36-33 entering
the final period.
Kyger Creek closed th~ gap to
one polnl Immediately and
forged ahead 39'38 with 5: 25
remaining.
But t~e Highlanders scored
eight unanswered points lo burst
· ahead 46-39 with three minutes
remaining. The final basket of
the run came on a layup by senior
Danny Patrick, who flnised with
10 points and a game-high 11
rebounds.
Less than two mlntues later,
however, Kyger Creek's Mike
Bradbury, who led the Bobcat
scoring attack with 17 points,
(ouled out of the game, sending
Patrick to line with the Highlanders leading '46-41. The 6-foot'7
Patrick connected on both charity shots.
Kyger Creek sophomore Mike
Reece stripped the ball from
Danny Patrick
Highlander Dave Merson and end."
raced down floor for an unconKYGER CREER (t91- Hudoon H s-3
tested layup, closing the gap to 7; Loveday &amp;-IG tH tO; Reece 1·9 0.8 2:
411-45 with 1:03 remaining. That Leado 3-11 t-O I; llrnbury 11-ti 1-1 tl;
S.4 0.0 I; YoKel 0.0 1·21. TOTALS
was as close as the Bobcats were Gordon
12-!1 5-749.
to get.
. 80UTHWE8T1'=ftN (541 - Palrk~. 4-7
"We gave the game away in the t-410: R.HaJI•opt-tll-10; A.HaJslop3-M2-2
S. Colley 8-ti:t-319; Burl .. on 4-RJ.t II;
last couple of minutes," Stemple, II;MerUoa
1-3 0.0 j; Z. Colley 0.1 0.0 I!;
said. "We took some poor shots llryanl l-It-O&amp;. TOTAlS :IH~ 10-13 M. ,
&amp;ore by quarten:
and just could not seem to get the
Kner
Creel&lt;................ 12 13· .A 1&amp;-411
break we needed close to the Southwetltern
........
H 1-1 14 lA- ~
1 ...

(0\'erllll )

" ' L PF PA

Tewm

E~a,"itern ......... .................,.. fi,

3 168 141
North Galllu .............. ........ 5 ~ 11M m
SouthweNhorn ..•••... .....•.. : ..•• l 3 517 497
H"nnan Trace ..... .............. 5 3 19! 4110
Oak Hlll .... .... ... .. .............. 5 3 m 4illl
.Southern ....... .................... 3 4 -448 117
Kygtr Cre~k......... ........ ..... 3 5 :1113 m
Symmei Viilley ..... :....... .... ) ' :114 m

'Tt-am
W
Hannllll 1'rllcr ...... ............. 5
Norch Gallla .. ...... ,............. -1
O•k Hill ............................ ~
SnutbWflollern....... ,.. ,, . .,,,.,,.;t
Ea~l&lt;'rn ... .......................... 3

I.
I
2
2

a

PF PA
:11M 343
:l,IS 817

IIYJer Creek ...................... 2 ~ 2113 :li3
Southern ........................... 3 3 31\M 31&amp;
Symmftl Volley ................. 0 6 211 359
Friday'" retlulbt
Gallla County Touraament
Norlh Galli&amp; IS. Hannan Tnu 55
!!outhwoot.,.. 54, Kner ('reek It
Symm~ Valle)! Holldt)l Toumwneat
Symm.. Volley 17, Ohio Vol ChrT&lt;In 52
WMama llotldA,!' Toom11111en1
Eulern II, Walt11111a M

!Uu....,'ll aama
Kner Cl'ftk VJI. ltuau Tra~r
North Gollla ••· 8oul.wftl4&lt;!ra
Euaem va. Wlrt

3!1 316
319 353

· 1984 FORD RMGEll, Stock H12281. 4cyl, Pa llldialtil~. s1nt whe!l bale, rea- !tell rump"
WIS 15495..... N011 14495 .

...

:.

~

' ••• .. ...... .. ... • .. ... ..... ... • •

T

Now

'11 ,26810

1987 V.W. JETTA

1987 FORD ESCOIII, Stock I 7349. 4 '*""· di!sel. 5speed. 4 cyL, a11 IXIOd.. PS. body side moo~in~. tintoo ~"'

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

AMilM ralh:J, r.Jial tif15. rurule mirors, Dumper gu;rcii. budlt! seals, rear win!bw defogjr
............. ... ...... ........ .. .... ............ ................
.. ........... Was $9215.95.....Now $8730.61

:: )914 FORD FlSO XLI. Stock #69743,V·S, aw oond. auto trans.. PS, PB. pownlldows. pow!&lt; door •
;-: ~II wheel, cruse oontrol, Ntt/FM radicl ~1&lt;0&gt; tapa llldial tie;, ~ too pidw~ klogwkte bed, rear
: i•il!tl
rumPEJ, auxiiary fuel tao~ gauges, sliding rear ~aSS .....................Was $9995..... Now IS995
'

. ..

' 'I "+

1986 MIRQJRY MARQUIS BROUGHAM. Stock H6305, ~door. 6.cyl.. a&lt; mnd.. vOyl roof. autn trn. PS. PB. 1XM8
smt. txxty side moo kilnS\ mtOO glass, oodlrol~int tih wll!el, cruise rontrol, /IMIFM radio. wire wtea -CDV!J5
............................................................... .......................Wu ll3,232 ..... M&lt;M $11,928

I

~ ~: 1913 TOYOTA SUPRA. Stock # 14141, 2 door• coupe, 6 cyl, air ron d., PS. PB, pow.,. wnlilw&gt;tik

1916 RIRD TEMPO. ~ock 16165, 4'*""· diesel, 5spool, front wi&lt;O drwo 4cyl, ai1mnd., PS, P~ tinlol ~z;s,
IM!l'M 1i&lt;!io, ~8., l'f!&lt; IJdial lies, whle wal~ Mone pont... ................ Wos I!O.n5.!10..... Now $9139.114

·.;' 11111eei. cruoe ronlf~. llot/FM radio, stere? tap~

radial ti~. rear wodow wiper, gauges, sun roof
.; •; ;:.............................................................................................was S9295..... Now $8295

.
' · l913 VOLKSWAGEN GTI, Stock! 73751. 2doon
4cyt.. ar rond.PB,Ntt/FM
.;... •.
radill
!1ere?
tape,
llldial
tr~. gauges ........................................................ Wos 15695.....Now 14695
,. .
,•

1917 LIN (IIIII COIIIINOOil. Giv11~ Sorits, SW 11304. n ar 1Ii11d, Ill"• """ roof, au\1. lm, PS,Pa
IXMO' wiodrTws, IXM• slli, IXM« '*"" kx&gt;s. body side moo~inll'. bnlol mass. underoo~ O!&amp; tit wr.o, cruO.
control AA'IFM radio, !tereo tape, ~ial ti'~ whtte.walls. remote mJrm. rear w~!b¥ detlgger
................................................................................................................................ Was SJI.~22 . 95.....NTM $27,2114

cou~ ~ontwhe!l 00.~

~

I.,_' ..

' ;1913 PONTIAC HOOD. Stock# ll871, 2 doors, coupe, 4 cyt., PB, radial tr~
·: •. .......................................... ............. . . .. ............................. was 13295..... Now $2295

;: ; • 1912 FORD IXP. Stock# 10611.2 dOO'• coupe, ~ont wheel rhe, 4cyl.,PS. PB, AM/FM radiclllldial

..

·,'

. ~e;,

••

' .It

•

•: '
:
••
·•
.,

·..
.,'

gauges ....................................... c......................................................... Was 13295.....Now 12295

Stock H 1014. 4 door. 4cyl, a~r cond., heater. 5
speed trans.. PB. d1git~ dock. !lilted ~ass. buck~
seat• re~r win&lt;llw defogger. sterOl prep., titianred.

Now

S9999'

1987 FORD BRONCO II 4X4

1982\'0LICSWfiGEN J£TTA. Stocl&lt; # 60031, 2 doors, hO"d top, front wl'eel dr~e. 4 cyl., PB ...
..............................................................................:................Was $5795..... Now 14795

1987 RIRO llttoSlM I LWIGON. Stock 17303, 7 passengtr, 6 cyl, a~o """· PS. P~ ""'~ winrllw. ""'"
klcks. Clll!ill's ciTOil. 100f rl&lt;l\
delo;t•/wiPo'/wilSho. ail mnd.. lintl!l ~'"' Cluise mntrol. Nttll'M radiJ
"""'· llfleel """'- .............................................................................Was 115,6~. 95..... NTM 114.340

r.,.

1917 RIRO BRONOO !liLT, Stock" I'JJI. 6cyL, a~• trans.. PS.Pa l!lli'lle 11&lt;1\ chmme lxll!llOS. wlsN!e sp•e
tire~«. rear wiD« &amp;wash!J. runoing l:llarlt,INriFM r~il. cruiSerontr~, ~nted ~!I;S, air mnd., ral~ wheels,~~
wheel.......................................
.. ......................................................... Was 117,334..... Now 115.196
1916 FORO F·l50, Srock 13034. '; too pickup 6 cyl , a~• bi&lt;TS .. PS, PB, bngw!le lui, Pi'U»", bckmg dflerenti,j,
""' sletT lxlmpe-, delu10 Mooe pairt, SjXIIi whO!! ow ............................. Was I13,033.20..... Now 110,416.!6

1982 PONTIAC FIR£BIRD. Stock H31431. 2door!, 6 cyl., air rond., auto trans., PS.PB.cruise control
1111/FM rod~. radial tie;, wtite wa~ rocket seats .................................. Was HI95.....Now 15895

I

1911RIRD F·ll0414xtl l'lctiiO. Stock H1411, ~ "" picku~ 6cyl. a~o ln. PS.PB,chrn"" lxlmp•.kl&lt;mg
di"l!fential, rea- sl«l ~nw. audi;ty N~ tank. delure fut[lrle, air oond.. tinfed ~&lt;'M, AMIFM radb, radial tfes
............................................................ .........
................................... Was lli,516.14..... Now 114.919.13

1981 FORD FlSO. Stoct&lt; # 74021. v-a autn hr-. , PS,PB.Illdial tit5, wh~e wah, ~ ton ~cku~ ~ng
wKie bed. rear !1ep rumPEJ, 51iding rear ~ass ...........................................Was I5995.....Now $4995

1917 RIRO RINGEl! 4•t Stock !7~ do.j, 5 • . 4cyl, PS.PB. iTioniWTIJ&lt;!l. 10.- stetT txJ-. han~ing
po:kage, briifrt k&gt;ll 11'00111 miron, AM liM r.to. ~• .,lace............................Was 112.691.!10. ....111.663.21

• 1911 FORD FlSO. Stock # 31291. 6 cyl, auto tr111s.. PS, PB, llldial trt5, ~ 1Dn picku~ klog wiK1e
bed ............................................................................................................Was $&amp;29~ ....Now 15295

"'"'rs.

1917 FORD RINGIULI. ~ocl i 1313. 6cyl 5speed, PS, PB. brigl!t 0. rrou~
chtome lxll!ll•. 1,.. sf'I&gt;
chrome
dek10 M.._ '' rond. AMIIM r.to stow .....Uo rad!~ l•es .... Wu 110,217.....19107.!5

w-.

Stock H1412. 4wl'oel dri'l~ 6 cyl. en~ . 5 speed.
trans.. PS, PB. c~th &amp; ,;,yllxlck~ seats. rut.de
spare l1re cau1er, AM radiO.

Now

SEOAL. OPPONENTS
(Ovt&gt;raJI)
TE.\M
W I.
GaJilpor;. .......................... 7 o
" 'hl'ei('Oibur,; ....................i e
Gr...,fleld .........................&amp; t
Port~o~mouth ....................... 6 %
South hint .. .....................4 2
w.-rlft Local ..... :................ 3
&lt;'lu'l'lapeuke ....................... t t
Wll'Vt'rly .... ........................ 3 -4
l'louth"rn ........................... 3 4
Athtlflll ............... ... .... ........ 3 5
I..O.IUI .............. I' "'"'""'""2 :5
M•rlal ..... ........................ l 5
rulnt PleaMunl. ....... ...........o :1
w... 1 ................................. u 7
,Jilckllun.... ... .... .......... ........O 7

Tewn

WL
I
North Gatllu ...................... 4 2
EILHter~~ ............................. -4 2
Hannan Trace ...... 1..... .... .. .4 2
Oalo Hill ............. ............... 3 3
~•tltwHtem ..................... l 4
lyJcr Crttk ................ ...... l 5
Symmeo Valley ............ .....! 5

Soul•ern ...........................!

Mike Kemper

tta

must." ·

Sophomore center Rusty Denney paced the Pirate rebounding
effort with a game-high nlne. The
6-foot-5 post player also chipped
in with 15 points.
North Gallla, 6-2, wasted no
lime In setting the tempo. The
Pirates scored the game's first
eight points, enroute to a 9-for -10

The Wildcats cut the lead, tq
eight at 51-43, fo llowing a pal l-of'
free throws by Rick Swain, whO
finished with 12 points. Hannan
Trace held steady, trailing by
eight, but could get no closer. ·
NORTH GALUA. 163) -Holstein !J.9lt·O
10; Kemper '7· 1tt~7 20; D£onnt&gt;y 6-10 3-t U:
Glasshur n :1·-t 0·0 6; Burnette 4-!_3,:11'~0~
May' I· I 11-0 !; Olddl• 0.1 0.0 D. Ttrl'l\Q
26-41 11-15 63.
.
......
IIANN~N1'11~CE n3)- SinaliO·Oil'eir
Rankin 6-1-t 9·11 !I; Swain !· M4·6 12: Pt!tro
2- 10 0.0 .t; Slltl .f.l3 ().J K; .Jont~ IH 2-2 2;

Brumfield 3·5 2·2 K. TOTALS 19-M 17-22 55.
Score by quiU'terN :

North Gallla ................ 20 12 16 15-8:~
Hun nan Tra c(' .... ......... ll 21 lfl 1!1-55

E RIOJlGRA.NDE

92

!28 10

·~

'*

til
19M ll{

""'_,,.,o~.· To

212 231!

REDMEN

vs.

MALONE COLLEGE
JAN. 6TH, 7:30 P.M.

m 111
M 4218
3111 1311
515 451
38t 33S
431 414

2U 2t7
:M8 -IlK
441 :191
53!t W

Super2 ·

-118 -12f
:ttl
1-414 217
1112 m
•7 -112

m

. j

Home lite cuts throudt the prict blr- 'A~oltlltic Ch1in Oilint oil wiMtn
rin on chlin - •· Sne now on our jOU netd it
,
ru.td. relialiltiiiOdels. llllllc:tdfor 'Salt·T-Tipe Anti-kickbock DeviceIIIJ, uftr cuttin&amp; action. thtf'TI slier optrltion 111. · ~oin protec·
built to won lon&amp;llldhlrd. futur• lion
lndudl :
. • Rlltr II'" LCIII·Kickback Saw Ch1in'Ho•lite• 2-cyde llllint- ruiPd. reduces kickback intensilf
dep•dlble powtr
'Front hllldluerd for atro sift optr'Solid-Stlte lpillon- quicker, tuitr Ilion

Satur~ay'!&lt;i "'llRl~

G11lllpoll" at GrHnfleld Mt•C'Ialn
" 'ainu I IUd~te at W,;un

11111s

Ned Tu('Mday' s gumtos
,Ja ck.Mon ILl. Wll\'t•rly

ft,o,.Joi.Snulht•Juttern • Joloutht•rn
PurkerMhur,; ui Murlctta
Nt•xt Friday'~&gt;~ ~amt'!&lt;i
Point Ph•woMt at RurhouM~&gt;vUie
Athens at Clrclt'\llllr
Wht&gt;t.~tonohur• at F11iriMd
PorlMmoulh \\'t!'il U G111llpolis
FulrnMd Union at Wurren Wt·al
Next &amp;lurday·~ «atn~
C'hP.&gt;tapcMc at South Point
Gr«&gt;enfietd at Adflla
,Jo hn !llcnn at Marietta
Lo~ran at BrookhaYen

1987 RIO GRANDE IEDMEN

FOODLAND NITE

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
CHISia, OliO ·

TUESDAY, JAN. 6TH, 7:30 P.M.
LYNE CENTER, RIO GRANDE COLLEGE

THE 198 7 DOG LICENSE

GO ON SALE
DEC. 1st ·
'

,••... ..••.••••••.•.•.•..........................................•..
,••........•.....•........•.......
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; Yr. llo.; M. F.; Bk.

COLOR
Grsy
lin

Whit

.:
Hair
: If :
Ytllow : Lon&amp;
SHORT! Known ;Paid

Brown

:
;

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Township ................................................................................................................................................. ..

'6595

'*WIN A FREE 90 SECOND.
SHOPPING SPREE!
*WIN A FREE ICROWAVE!
*PLUS
MORE!!
.
COME JOIN THE FUN ... HELP US
HELP SUPPORT THE REDMEN
.

Address ...... :...................................................................................................................... ·.... ·.......... ···•· .. .

'

.

.

~

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IOMid K. Clllldly, 011111 County Auditor

' .

•

'

'

I

·.

I will be ending my practice in Pt.
Pleasant on January 9. Your Health
Care n11ds can continue to be met
at Point Clinic and Pleasant Valley
Hospital, or if you wish, you may
request a copy of your record to be ·
sent to another physician. I have
appreciated being able to care for
you and your family.
Most Sincerely,
V. A. POLITANI, D.O.

SUPEI2 UGD-DUTY SAW

Prlday'11 t~UUPi
Portsmouth 71, VInton ('ounty .W
Ripley II, Polnl Ple..ulll

'12.300

Only

··

The victory pla'ced North Gallla in the championship game 9
p.m. Saturday against Southwestern, a 54-49 winner over Kyger
Creek in the other opening game.
Hannan Trace, host of the
lournament , was scheduled to
play Kyger Creek at7 p.m. In the
consolation game.
Pirate Coach Bruce Wilson
admitted after Friday's victory,
!hat several adjustments which
he made during the seven-day
layoff were keys to recording his
first victory here In his six years
of coaching.
"We decided coming in here,
that we were going to press them
more than last week and run a lot
more on offense," he said. " We
set an up-tempo game, which
.was to our advantage, and we
controlled the boards, which Is a

PF Po\
%10 ISO
2112 1211

Owner's Name ........................................................................................... ........................... .... .... ............ ..

bench seal· mirron, llldia•

us ~ "

shooting performance and a 20-6
lead after one quarter.
Three minutes later, the PI·
rales upped their advantage to
28-10, following a layup by
Denney.
No~th Gallla's torrid shooting
pace came to a temporary stop,
however, as Hannan Tr.ace, 5-3,
reeled off 13 straight points to ·
close the gap to 28-23 with 1:35
remaining in the hall. Seven of
!hose points during that run were
scored by junior Scott Rankin,
who finished with a game-high
21.
The five-point difference was
kept until halftime and the
Wildcats nipped it down to 36·33
midway through the third period,
which was as close as they were
to get. ·
Three baskets by Mike
Kemper, who tallied 20 points,
one by Todd Holstein, who
finished with 10, and another by
Kelth Burnelte, who also tota led
10, in a four-minute spa n raised
the lead to 46-35· with one minut e
remaining in the third period.
The Pirates ' shooting from the
field never cooled off completely .
They finished 26-o!-41 for 63
percent on the night.

Rt&gt;tienre adlon
(ConfHenCC)

DEADLINE FOR PURCHASE Of 1987 DOG LICENSE IS JANUARY 20TH. FOUR DOLLARS {$4.00) PENALTY If LICENSE
IS PURCHASED AFTER THAT DATE. FOR YOUR COIIYENIENCE USE THE HANDY APPLICATION BLANK AND MAIL TO
TH£ COUIITY AUDITOR AT THE COURTHOUSE IIOW. FEES ARE FOUR DOLLARS ($4.00) FOR EACH DOG. MALE OR fEMALE. (KENNEL LICENSE PENALTY $20.00).
.
Male $4.00
Spayed Female $4.00
female $4.00
Kennel License $20.00

~nyl

MERCERVILLE - After losIng to Hannan Trace ]11st seven
days prior, North Gailla High
School's boys . basketball team,
with the .setback fresh In mind,
made a few adjust.ments Friday
night . ,
The Pirates, 10-polnt losers on
Dec. 19 here,,came to play with a
vengence and left with a 63-55
victory in the opening round of ·
the , Gallia · County Holiday
·
Tournament.
"They just seemed !))ore ready
to play than us," Hannan Trace
Coach Mike Jenkins said after
.his squad's four-game winning
streak was snapped. "I've got to
hand it to them, tonight (Friday)
they just wanted it more than us
and were prepared to take it to

P OP

.

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Times-Sentinel Staff

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North Gallia avenges earlier
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*·

IJig Blacks lose
;RIPLEY , W.Va. - Th~ Ripley
VIkings downed Point Pleasant
Hi~h School In an opening round
g4me of the Simmons Memorial
Tourna m ~nt 62-51 Friday night.
The Bl~ Blacks, 0-3, jumped
ou1 to an early lead but found
themselves down 27-22 at halftime. Led by John Pelfrey, who
scorrd 15 points and pulled down
12 • rebounds, Point Pleasant
regained the lead 32-31 with 2:41
remaining In the third period.
A 15-0 run by the hosting
Vikln~s In the latter stages of the
th!i'd period and carrying into the
foujth. howev er, proved to be too
much for the Big Blacks.

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B · BILL WOLLE
UPYIQ 1 w 11
,.por s r er
Steve Alford took ·advantageof
·
the thr~-pomt rul~ and Rick
Calloway s presence In the Indiana lineup Friday mght.
Alford, a sharpshooter ·whose
Yalue increased wlth the NCAA's
revival of the three-point shot,
drilled 8 of 11 attempts from that
range and scored 26 points to lead
No. 6 Indiana to an 83-54 triumph
over Princeton In the opener of
the Hoosier Classic.
Calloway, a 6-!oot-6sophomore
who 11veraged 13.2 points last
year and was the Big Ten
Freshman of I he Year. suffered a
.leg Injury early this season. His
return has helped take pressure
off Alford. Calloway scored 13
points against Princeton.
"Steve made up his mind he
was going to hit the basket
tonight and he had some time to
shoot," Indiana Coach Bob
Knight said. "With Calloway
back In the lineup it opens up
some things for Steve."
Alford hit four3-pointersovera
6:30 stretch In the second half to
help Ihe Hoosiers increase their
38-25 halftime lead to 68-45. As a
team , Indiana made ·10 of 16

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s. h d 17 lnts
arry
omas a
po
for Indiana 8-1 while Alan
willi~ms led 'Princeton,
'
1h
4-4• w t
20 pomts.
The game marked the first
time a Bob Knight -coached team
has beaten Princeton. Knight lost
several Urnes to the Tigers while
he was head coach at Army.
Indiana will meet Illinois
State, 60-44 winners over Fresno
State, In the tournament's championship game Saturday night.
Elsewhere In the Top 20, No.8
Oklahoma b~at Creighton 106- 89
in the All College Tournament.
At Oklahoma City, forwards
Harvey Grant and Darryl
Kennedy scored 29 and 25 points,
respectively, to power Oklahoma
Into the finals of the All College
Tournament • for ' the fourth
straight year. In o!le 7\1,- minute
stretch, Grant and Kennedy
combined for all 13 of Oklahorna 's points. The Sooners, 7-1,
will meet'Texas Christian, a 92-61
winner over Oklahoma State,
Saturday night for the
championship.
In · other first-round tournament games, Bradley defeated
Northeastern 110-105 and St.

°"0~-ranlgeThs

Joseph's. (Pa ) topped LaSalle
77-70!nthePhiiadelphlaCiasslc;
S
1 da eo;lged p epperd1ne
· outh For!
· 69-6.1 and Marquette cUpped
Columbia 79- 68 In double overtime In the· Milwaukee Classic;
0 ra ke bl as ted Mlamt. 0 r· Ohl 0

The Big Blacks, defending
champions of the tournament,
were scheduled to play St.
Mary's 7 p.m:·· Saturday In the
consolation game.

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OHIO VALLEY BANK

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------.,
PRINIS
J
2

Louisiana 78- 73 and San Jose
.
State pounded Mtsslsslppl State
t
82-57 In the Far West Classic.
424 SECOND AVE., GALLIPOLIS
In the Hawaii Loa Classic at
'
Honolulu, No. 7 Syracuse played
Wichita State
------~
4 4!....:a!:!n~d!...,;N~e~w~~M:!.!e~x~lc;!:0!_11&gt;~e!a!.t_.::.::::::::::..:::_:::_·_ _ _ _ _ _,..L_ _ _ _ _ _:_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
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'100 OH

Miami""" Pt'nn Slalt•.

THE FOLLOWING
'·• GALLIPOLIS FINANCIAL
.·. INSTITUTIONS WILL BE
;(LOSING NEW YEAR'S EVE

Mike Martin

w.·,.

Shalt• \'ll. Nf'hUIIkil.

Local Consultation
In Gallipolis

""" ,..

.

Bryl!n Durst

Wken nwnbm if" ~ problem~ - In loin
1ppkaaons, hMneill •I•IMI\tt, bu!'lng and
•lling, tu planningond prtp~tldon, uU u1.
the numbm ptep&amp;l ... a.t Ul put 10m1 numben to
work for you.

Host' Bowl tP1111JMhon1L fall f. I -Pill'· II
&lt;'hiWp \IIi. RI.TH l'hllmp : Arlnn11St!U1'
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.4.l-lltr..-lt'Aml'!: ,\uhurn "-'~· i'lhl hrrn( 'lll.

Su••

senior sharpshooter canning nine Falcons' big men. Jew~ li scored
field goals and adding 6-of-8 from 10 . points in ·the period (or
the· charity stripe. Mike Martin Wahama while Bumgarner
scored 12 markers on the evening added six as the local cagers
while Ed Collins totaled 10 for the fought back to knot the score at
winners.
46-46.
Wahama was paced by junior
The White Falcons began to
center Brad Bumgarner who pull away In the final quarter and
came off the bench to scoFe 15 opened up a five-point bulge wllh
points while senior forward •Matt 3:48 left In the game but turnovJewell chipped In with 14. Junior ers and the shooting of Durst and
guard Robbie Grimm added Mark Griffin carried the Eagles
seven points and a number of back Into contention. A basket by
assists In the contest
Griffin at the 47-second mark
Eastern jumped out to an early gave Eastern a 59-58 lead before
8·2 lead only ·to have· the White Billy Marsl)all scored to make It
Falcons score 10 unanswered 60-59 with 37 seconds remaining.
points for a 12-8 advantage. The
Following an Eagle tt lmeout,
Eagles, behind Durst, regrouped the Meigs Countlans.worked the
by the end of the first period to ball around until Durst attempregain the lead 18-16.
ted a shot .wlth five seconds to ~o.
Second-quarter action was a Martin rebounded the missed try
tight battle throughout the eight· . and ~ank the game winner.
WAHAMA tl411 - Jlumlt81'ner 6 :t 1!:
minute stanza with no more than
Jewelll ~ If; Ma'"halt 4 II; Lloyd !,t 7:
·four points s·eparatlng the two. Grlnun 3 I 7; Glbbol 2 2 6; .!ewell I 0 2;
Eastern scored the final bucket Redmon 0 0 I. TOTALS 2'161().
EASTERN till -Dorst962f; Martini
of the half to Increase Its lead to
0 II: Collins f 2 Ul; Grlllln f I 9; HPndrlx 20 .
31-28 at the Intermission break.
t: Caldwell 1 0 2: Tripp 0 0 0; Norton 0 0
Matt Jewell and Brad Bum- O.TOTALS 28 9 61.
Sc~re by quart erl!i:
garner- began to find the range In '
EIL'Itcrn ........................... IK 13 15 1~-61
the third quarter with ·Grimm · Wulnunu ........... ..... ...... , .. tG 12 IR tt-60
feeding the ball Inside to the

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ment crown In its first two years
while claiming third place In last
year's tourney.
Eastern will be making their
fourth straight appearance In the
finals of the WHS Classic but has
yet to claim the title. The Eagles
lost to host Wahama In 1983 by a .
68-40 margin and again In 1984 by
a 74-58 score. Last year the Meigs
County team fell to Gilbert In the
championship game:
Wirt County will be making
their Initial appearance In the
tourney finals after finishing
third In 1983 and fourth In each of
the past two seasons and was the
odds-on favorite with Its unbeaten 4-0 record. Eastern will
take a 5-4 slate into the tourney
finals.
The host\Vhlte Falcons turned
in their best out]ng o( the young
campaign only to drop their third
consecutive game. The Bend
Area team enjoyed a five-point
55-50 advantage late In the game
only to have the Eagles outscore
the hosts 11-5 down the stretch for
the victory,
Bryan Durst led all scorers on
the night with 24 points wjth the

Alford taking advantage of.3-pOint rule

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. season.
.
Mark Price scored 18 point s,
"We're not playing with the · Including 10 in the fourth quarter,
sallJe enthusiasm as last year,"
to power Clevel and. Mi~e
Reid said. "More Importantly,
Gmlnskl paced New Jersey with
we not playing smart In regards
24 points and a game-high 16
to pass and shot selection. You
rebounds.
can't do that against the Lakers
Pistons 121, Warriors l06
and expect to,have any SIJCCess."
At Pontiac, Mich., Adrian
In other games, Cleveland Dan.tley scored 26 points and
downed New Jersey 12H12,
three teammates each scored 20
Detroit dumped Golden State to lead Detroit to Its sixth victory
121-106, Dallas shaded Denver In seven games, Eric Floyd artc.i
123-l21, Boston defeated Phoenix Joe Barry Carroll scot·ed 18
.122-112 and· Seattle qoused the points apiece ion Golden St~t e,
Los Angeles Clippers 113- 107.
which played without flu-plagued
.
Cavaliers 121, Nets 112
Ben McDona ld and Chr is
At Richfield, Ohio, rOokie Ron washburn.

St . •r.._,h'tt n. ~san• 71

By Unlh•d Prl"~ lnternLM kNILLI
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Johnson hl!lhllghted his performance with a spectacular assist
midway through the fourth
quarter.
Lying on his back after wrestlngt!)eballfromRalphSampson,
Johnson . two-handed ·. a · high
bounce .pass between the legs of
Robert Reid right to Kurt Rambls for an easy layup. That gave
the Lakers a 104-90 lead with 7:50
\eft
Akeem Olajuwon and Rpdney
McCray led the Rockets with 22
points apiece. The · Rockets .'
dropped their fifth game in the
last six and fell to 10-16 for the

f'll'lll Rouad

NFL Standings

'

JIM LU'ITRELL
UPI Sports Writer
The Houston Rockets returned
to the scene of the crime Friday
night and this lime the. magic
man was ready·for them.
Magic Johnson scored 30
points, sparking the Lal\ers to a
134-111trlumph over Houston In
the Rocllets' first visit ~ to the
Forum since eliminating the
Lakers In the conference final
last season.
Los Angeles Improved the
· NBA's best record to 21-6 with Its
third straight victory and fifth In
the last six games.

BndiPf Itt. Ncu'lheiiHtern 115

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By Gary Cll\rk
. OVP Staff Wriler
Mike Martin grabbed an offensive rebound and sank a short
jumper with just two seconds
remaining Friday night to give
the Eastern Eagles a 61-60
triumph over the W'\hama White
Falcons In o~nlng round action
of the Fourth Annual Wahama
New Years' Classic basketball
tournament.
The final -second victory gave
coach Dennis Eichinger's Eagles, 6-3, spot In Saturday's 8: 30
p.m. championship ~ame
against tlie W!rt County Tigers.
Witt County also received some
la~t - sec&lt;ind heroics in their semifinal roundmatch-upwlth Sissonville when Kevin Roberts connected on a 15-foot jumper with
two seconds remaining in overlime for a 54-52 win over the
Indians.
, The opening round set back was
the second In a row for coach
Lewis Hall's White Falcons, 0-3,
and pits the Bend Area team
agalns.t Sissonville In Saturday's
6:30 p.m. consolation game.
Wahama won the holiday tburna-

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�Page- C-6- The Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

December 28, 19BS ;

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. V11.

·Bosworth .lashes· out at NCAA drug testing rUle
ByBOBKEIM .
UPI Sports Writer
•
.' MIAMI BEACli. Fla. (UP!) Okla homa linebacker Brian Bosworth las hed out at the NCAA.
ca lllng the organization dictatoria l and criticizing a rule t hat
allows athletes who test positive
for ma rij uana to play In bowl
games.
Bos worth has been suspended
from playing in Thursday:S
Orange Bowl because he tested
pos itive for steroid use in a NCAA
tes t g iven to a thle tes on bowl·
bound tea ms . .Two other Okla·
hom a players - offens ive guard
Gary Bennett and defensive
tackle David Shoemaker - also
were s us pended for slerold use,
a long with Arkansas line backer

i'imes- ltntinoel

A twO' time winner of the Dick
attitude. They put themselves Those testing poslilve for m.ariButkus Award as· the nation's
juana are warned but permitted
above the athletes.
premier college linebacker, Bos"The NCAA has Its priorities so to participate.
"If I was detected with pot in worth said he had taken the
screwed up . They worry about
steroids between January and
what I have writte n on my shoes my system, they'd say; 'Don't
March after a doctor prescribed
eac h Week Instead of pertlnen·t worry about 1t Brian. You can
.
them for Injuries to his shoulders
play Thursday."' Bosworth said.
problems."
and
a deep thigh br uise. IroniBosworth, who said this wquld "If you have a steroid In your
cally,
the Injuries were suffered
be his only statement to the system , It' s 'Adios amigo. Wei·
In the 1986 Orange Bowl game
media , did not specify what come to Russia."'
The colorful and controversial against Penn State, which Okl a" pertinent problems" the NCAA
linebacker, who finished fourth hOma won for the national
has failed to address.
Under a new NCAA dru g- · In this year's He lsman Trophy championship.
Boswor th said he wa s not told
tes ting pr ogram, players on the
balloting, paid for hiS ticket to
until
April that there was a
teams competing in the Fiesta,
j'dlaml and Is paying for his room
possibility
players would be
Cotton, Rose, Sugar and Orange at the swank . Fountalnbleau
bowls were tested fo r more than
Hilton. Bosworth appeared at the tested by the NCAA In the
banned substa nces . A player news conference wearing dark postseason. Bosworth said he
testing pos itive for any subsunglasses, red and black stripes used an oil-based steroid, whl.ch
stance except marijuana Is In- in 'his hair. and three earrings in he said takes up to 12 months to
leave the body.
eligible to play in a bowl game. his left ear.
I

David Dudley.
The No. 3 Sooners , lQ-1, play
No. 10 Arkansas. 9-2, in the
Orange Bowl New Year's night.
Bosworth, a two-time AllAmerica who is one of college
foot ball's .biggest stars, held a
news confere·n ce Friday a t the
team hotel to discuss the Issue.
Because he is a fourth-year·
junior, Bosworth must decide
whether he wants to enter this
spring's NFL draft or use his
final year of eligibility at
Oklahoma .
" I would miss the excitem ent
ol college football." Bosworth
sai d when asked a bout the NFL .
"But I'm s t.arting to get to the
point where I'm a lmost fed up
with the NCAA's dictatorial

·
·

Specialty sales
growing fast

,

•., .... •,,

Brian Bosworth
.

.

When ·he was tested last '
· Thursday , Bosworth said he wa~ i
In the hospital with a 103 degree ·
temperature. and suffering from·~
dehydration.
·

Smith's Famous

YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE
This Could Be Your LAST CHANCE To "Write Off" the
State Sales Tax· from your 1040 Federal Income Tax· Form!

1986 Pontia Fiero GT
less

$1!~~28

LOADED!

COUPE

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1986 Buick Park Avenues 1986 Chev.
CHOOSE FROM 6
Save 15500

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12,990

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'

.

PLUS get two FREE round-trip tickets to
anywhere in the world TWA flies, from Buick!

1986 Buick LeSabre

'

. '1~:~13 ~~~:

an

these

factory

$1315 00

ASLOW AS

$14,900

10,200
CroliM.

milt~

P.

S9900

~inclows,

Tilt.

1986 Buick Skylark
4 Dr.
Tilt, cruiM, AM·fM. etc. Sil.. r.

SAY! s4500
OFF NEW

$8900

WAS SI0,900

ONLY 2 LEFT

1985 Olds Calais
. 2 Dr.
Now Park bt. trade-in, Nght chest·
nut metallic.
CO..AR! AT

$7 900

1984 Pontiac Fiero
Rfd. local iaoly OWMr.

1980 MG
"Collector's Item"
2·Mot &lt;onvtrtiWt 1ports ••· Low
milts. Local lady ownw. "A-1". You'll
wish you hall this next IPfinql

WAS 13995

•

ONLY

$8990

WAS 110,900

1982 Chev.
Cavalier 4 Dr.

$2700

WAS 13495

1910 Buick LeSabre
Limited 2 Dr.
Abselutely show1oorn condition.
low milts. This car should half
sold by nowl

$3480

1980 Citation X-11
A little tdgy, bul runs good. lod
and grty.
WAS 11995

looclod inchodi"11 power ,..ts &amp; win·
flows. 18,000 m~os. two tone.

llut, air cond, standa1d shift.

$6690

WAS S7495

198S Buick Regal
Limited

$990

770

1985 Pontiac Sunbird
Wagon
Automatic, air, lt. chostnut

WAS SI0,900

$6500

1915 Iuick Century
limited 4 Dr.
Charcoal, 28,000 milu lurgundy
velour lntericll'.
WAS 18995

$8200

1983 Pontiac 2000
Hatchback

Automatic, oir cond. local latly

•i••·

WAS 14995

$

1979 Pontiac Catalina
4 door. loigo. lun1 good.
WAS 11495

$880

1978 Chev. Pickup

2 Door, lod. A'utomatic

GoOII Wead Hau'f.r

$1800

$780

1979 Olds
Cutlass 4 Dr.

1979 Chev.
luv Pickup

II. blut. Automatic • . _ 1"41·

Witts C11111per Topper

$990

1982 Buick Riviera 1983 Chev. Blazer 510
local Owner. l•tloor Noh.
Charcoal metolic.
WAS s7995

$7220

1984 Chev. Celebrity
4 Dr.

THt, crulst, power door locks, V-6,
frMI whttl drlwo.
WAS t749S

$6475

llut. local Owner. 2 WD.

$4950

WAS I599S

1984 Mercury Marquis
4 Dr.
local Owner - bpect

o..ality

$5800

WAS IU95

1982 Cougar XR7

1980 Ford
Fairmont 4 Dr.

lod. 42,000 milu. l0&lt;1l DWMI.

local lady owner. Auto. A/C. lasic
oconanoy car.

WAS 15995

$4900

1979 Plymouth
Horizon TC3
4 spotd

WAS 12795

$2200

1979 Pontiac
leMans Waqon
Runs goad, but n..di paint.

:- ~: Sat,ings bond purchases increase
'

• GALLIPOLIS - Thi s yea r's U.S. Sav ings Bond campaign
• e nded in Sep tember wit h a 131 prrcent Increase in the sa les of
:· . sav ings bonds , comp~rl'd to 1980,.
. , ' • C Leon Sau nders, v ic&lt;' presid~n t of Ohio Valley Bank a nd
'· • · Ga llia County sav in gs bend ca mpa ign chair ma n. said $415.683
'
wor th of bonds wer!' s old during the campai gn year . Between
Octolx'r 1984 a nd Sept ember 1985, $180,278 worth of bonds were
·, sold in the count y, Saunders sai d.
The campaig n encou rages people to buy bonds through the
: :
i· :' payroll savings plans offered by emplo.v ers or in over· the·
1' , , c o unt~ r sales at fin a ncial Institutions. Saunders, who wa s
:· '· volunte&lt;'r chai rm an for the effort, at tribu ted the sa les ln cr~ase
• · in part to the " highly favora ble rates sav in gs bonds have
offered thi s yea r .
."The cur rent marke t rate- 6.06 percent through Apr i11987compa res favorably ro ot her rates ava ilable today," he
co ntinued. " ,\nd, unde r the m a rket -bas ed system , savings
bends will co ntinue to be a compNitive ins trument no matter
wha t rat~s do in the futur~."

1982 Chev. C10 Pickup
local IWner. Automatic
lEST IUY IN TOWN!

$4830

WAS 15695

Beauville Van

.' ' OfficiaL~ outline ..~ervice change

Mr. Smith's por-I
van. frelll &amp; r- air. lHCiod.
24,000 milts.

llut &amp; Silver.

WAS 117,000

,&gt;

:
•••
. ,
'
'

$

1980 Buick Skylark
Limited

.'

.•
;
~·

I :'

Auto, Clir, two tono lltigo, V-6.
Was $2695

,

: ·:

c:

$1990

, ·:
• '

' t&lt;

, •'
. ·'
: •
· ~·

1979 Olds '
Delta 88 2 Dr.
llut. 62,000 mHts.

&lt; •'

WAS 12495

$1680

1910 Plymouth
Horizon TC3

!hale Value

1980 Buick
Centur
r.

lurgoondy
WAS 11995

A/(,

$1180

1979 Chev.
Malibu 2 Dr.
llue. Auto, AI C ·

$1700

WAS S2695

$

11925

$2500

~·

.'&lt;

luns good, Automatic. Woodgrain.

Grftn.

Whitt

WAS 11995

•'

$1180

WAS Sl995

1976 Jeep 4 W.D.

$1288

;•
,;
-~
'·
:;
,.

1979 Mercury
Zephyr Wagon

1978 Ford Mustang
WASI1695

is ts in 1978. has grow n into a
65-store nationa l chain.
The store, whic h offers a line ol
travel and safa ri clothin g - a n
eclect ic collect ion of ar my
s urplus-type it ems from around
the g lobe - bega n oper a tin g as
bot h a ret a il and m ail-order
bu siness.
"We a ren't fas hion-conscious.
but we are conscious about
putting clothing on peop le that is
dura ble." said Joa nn Snyder. a
spokeswoma n for the c hai n.
The bulk of Banana Re public's
bus in ess now comes from its
retail ou tlets, Snyder sai d. "Peo·
pie prefer to comr in , to try on
a nd to feel. " she sa id.
Banana Re public, which was
purchased by The Gap Inc. lour
y~ars ago, recently has dev iated
from It s line of clof hin!( to offer a
selec tion of trav el books In some
s tores.

Policy hold ers can rap a ll or
part of t he interest accrued on
the premium. a nd the re is no
nE'&lt;'d to repay these lo ans out of
pocke t.
However, II should be remem·
bered that the deat h benefit or
surrend('r va lue of the policy

r

Kyger Creek plant honors 6 employees :
CHES HIR E - Six em ployees
of Ohio Valley Electric Co rp.'s
Kyger Creek plant recent ty received their ann iversa ry awards
for 30 years of serv ice to t he
co mpa ny, acco rdin g to P lant
Ma nage r Ray mond H. Blowers
Jr.
Receivi ng awards were Danny
B. Brown. unit supe rvisor; Ro·

New offirial named
MANSF IELD (U PI ) - Thl'
UnIted Telephone Co. has named
a new general manager of thP
company's centra l region.
Assis tant Vice Pres ident Nick
Jebbla a nnounced F riday that
Edward Freeman will beg in the
job Ja n. 1, replaci Qg T. Geo rge
Hess. who will become staff
di r ec tor ol custom er serv ice a t
UTO.
Freeman. a 25-year vetera n in
the telephone indus try'. will be
responsible for Unit ed 's service
to Ma nsfiel d, Bucyr us, She lby,
Mount Ver non. and Pataskala .

nald N. Burde tte, unit supervi·
sor; F reder ick L. Williamson.
senior plant clerk; P ur l H.
Va nMeter. co nveyor operator;
Charles K. B;•er. assi~ta nt shllt
operatin g e ng ineer; and Thomas
E . Smith. unit s upervisor.
Brown joi ned OVEC on Nov.14,
1956. as a la borer in t he labor/ janit or depa rtment . In 1959 he
beca m e a util ity worker in the
opera !Ions departme nt, where he
was promoted to auxillar;• equ ip·
ment operator t hat sam e year. to
equipment opera tor in 1973 and to
un it supNv isor in 1981. Brown
a nd his wife, Cordelia, reside in
Pomeroy .
Burdette we nt to work a t
Kyger Creek on Nol'.l4, 1956 1 as a
laborN In the labor/ janitor de·
partme nt. a nd four mont hs later
beca m e a coal ha ndle r in th e
yard de partment. In 19n2 he
became a utilitv worker in t he
operatio ns depai·tme nt. whe re he
was promoted to auxiliary equip·
ment operator in 1963, to equip·
ment operator in 1973 a nd to unit
supervisor In 1979. Burdette a nd

his wife. J essie, live at Leon.
W.Va .
Williamson joi ned OV EC on
Nov. 19, 1956, as a laborer in the
labor/ janitor departmen t. In
1957 he became a rt'sult s clerk In
the result s de partment. a nd in
1964 was promoted to senior plant
clerk. He a nd hi s wife. Donna .
reside at Rutland .
VanMe ter joined the plant staff
on Nov . 27. 1956, as a labor!'r in
the la bor/ ja nitor department.
The following yea r he became a
coal handler in the ya rd de part ment , where he progressed
through variou s classifications
to the position o f co nveyer
opera tor in 1982. :VanMeter a nd
his wif(' , Barbara. live at
Rutland.
Byer joined OVEC on Dec. 20,
1956, as a labQrer in the labor/ janitor depa rtment. In 1959 he
beca m e a uti lit y worker In the
operations departme nt. He wa s
promoted to a uxil iary equipment
operator in 1961. to equipment
operator in 1973, to unit s uperv i·
sor in 1979 a nd to assistant s hift

operating e ngineer in 198.'5. Byer
an d his wife. Helen. ~esld e at 36!\
Sixth Ave.. Middleport.
Sm ith went to work a t the plant
on Dec. 26. 1956. as a laborpr in
the labor / janitor department. ln
1959 he became a utility worker
in thr operations departmen\.
whf're he was promoted to
a uxiliary eq uipme nt operator ·lh
1963, to eq uipment opera tor in
1973 and to ' unit supervisor in
1979. Smith a nd his wife . Aprli.
reside a t 1691 Lincoln Height ~.
Pomeroy.
'

Ohioan!'! join pant&gt;l

.,

HUNTINGTON , W.Va . - Piedmont Alr lln ~s will start a thi r d
:,
d ally nons top, round -trip fli ght to its air serv ice ~ ub at
• .. Cha rlotte , N.C .. from Huntington on Fe b. 1, 1987 .
Stephe n King, PlPdmon t city sa les mana ger. said the new
I
fli!(h t will give Huntin gton area travelers the opport unit y to
' connect with 19 oth er Piedmont and P iedmo nt commutet
destina tions once in Charlot te. '
The nPw flight will depart Huntington at 4 p.m. a nd arrive in
' , Char lotte at 4: W p.m . A return flight will depart Char lotte at
• : 2:21p.m. and arrive In Huntington a t .l : 14 p.m. Both flights will
be operated with 118· pa ssenger Boei ng 737-200 jets, King said .
All fat·es will b co mpetitive, he added . Piedmont has four
dally departures from Tri -State Ah'port on Its Feb. 1 schedule .

$1588

•

..

REALTORS DONATE FUNDS -The Southeastern Ohio Board
of Realtors , comprised of member real estate agencies In Gallla,
Me igs and Jackson counlles, voted to contribute to various
Chris tmas giving programs In each county In lieu of having a
Chris tmas party. In Gallla County, this money and Individual
donation.• were given to the city and county school districts and the
Senior Citizens Ce nter. School nursew will use the funds to provide

•I .

LOU ISVILLE, Ky. iUPI! "'"
farm Credit Banks ol Louisv il(P
a nnouncl'd Friday that two Ohl'o
fa rmer s have bee n elected to a le
Fourth Farm Credit Dis trict
Board of Directors.
·
Donald Ben s~ hn eidcr o f Payric•
and Dale Ha rr ison of Ea ton beg in
three-yea r terms Jan . I.
:.
Benschne ider was et ~cted bv
fourt h dis trict &lt;'Ooperativrs and
s ucceeds Rob&lt;' I'! Heswr.
'

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by offering a flas hy assort men t
of elect ronics, exerc ise a nd
s porting equ ipment, accessories
and even a $129 s urviva l knife
"proven In the Am azon jungle."
The merchandi sing mix has
paid oiL The Sharper Im age
report ed I 985 sa irs of $100 million
a~d ex pec ts sa les ol $130 mil lio n
for 1986. The company is conlef11·
plating a publlc offer ing and
ex panding into ,J apa n.
Williams-Sonoma, a San Fran ·
cisco s pecialty c hain , offers a
co mpl~tc lin e of cooking a nd
kitche n accessor ies r a ngi ng
from $1 wooden s poon s to $400 icc
crea m makers .
" I ha te to say it's upsca le. We
a ppeal to a broad range of
customers," sa id Ann Kupper, a
spo keswoman for the 40-store
c hain .
Banana Republic. found~d in
Mill Valley, Calif .. by two former
Sa n Francisco Ch ronicle journal ·

would be reduced by outsta nding·
loa ns. And there are some
caveats.
The best plans do not charge .
a ny fee to policyholders who'
borrow against the interest In •
their account, a nd offer a com· '
petltive net ra te to policyholders
who wish to borrow against their'·
premium.
The best plans also offer
guarantE'&lt;'d minimum inte rest
ra tes for the Investor , and ar&amp;
" no front -end load, " meaning;
that insurance companies do not•
c harge any application or com~
mission lees.
Policyholders can ·. wlthdral!'
the policy at a ny time, but would
be subj ect to a penalty and would,
have to pay taxes on the income
generated by th&lt;' policy .
.:
Si ngle premium life is ai(
es pecia lly good buy for people in
their 50s a nd older who are,
looking for tax advantages, said
Ro bert Hunte r of the Nationa[
In surance Consume~
Organization.
'
One reason : while some invest; ·
ment Income may cause Social
.Security benefits to be taxed:. ·
tha t Is not the case with single
premium life i ns ur~ n ce.
.
Hunt er advises single prQ·
mlum life s hoppers to loo~
carefull y a t the solvency of ·
compan.les offeri ng policies. a ni!
to compar(' policy features .
Finkle agrees. "This is pr imar·
ilv a n Investmen t ga me ... so
siick with compa nies with ~
track record in an nuities." Fin·
kle suggests that consumers deal
only with rompa nics tha t h av~
received a n A or A-plus r at ing
from A.M. Best Co., the insu,
ranee company a nalyst.
:;
Finkle a lso says cons ume~s
should ask agents the right
ques tions, suc h as what guaran•
tees exist on Int erest ra t&lt;:'S after
the first year?
•
Is the policy a net-int e rest -or
gross -int e r est -rat e prod uct.?
Gross-rate pla ns are less at trattive, he sa Jd.
F inkle also would want to know
how long co mpa nies guannte('
no char!(es for loans agai ns•
accrued Int erest, a nd what guara nteeli 'there ar!' for loa n ra te~
against the origin al pren\lum.

·'
. A'tr l'.uw adds flight to region

..• .
•
•

NEWARK- Telc•phone c ustomers In Ohio w ill be trea t ed as
ow ner s of ins ide te lep hone wiring and jacks loca ted in their
homes a nd bu~i m•ss es. commencing .Jan. 1, 1987, Western
Reserve TNeph6ne Co . officia ls have adv ised their customers.
fhis change was Initiated by the Federal Communica tions
Com m ission a nd thr Publi c Ut ili! ies Com miss ion o!O hio as part
ot' ongoing telep hone d eregula tion e tforts. ofllcia ls sai d.
Wc•5trrn Re,('n·t· is" part of thP Alltcl systr m , which serves
the eas t••rn part of ~1 c igs County.
Custom~r' shqulLl not lJc· concern d allOu t the cha nge.
Wes tern Res ~rve offir·lals sa id .
" Many of our customers may not wa nt the n-sponslbllity or
thr po&lt;sible hassle of maint a ining tho•tr Ins ide wire." sa id Hugh
Hl!l(l man , vice preside nt of opPratlon' " F'or those people, we
will!H ke rrsp.Jnsiblllt for th P ma lmena nce of their ins ide wlrt'
an d jacks on a non "re!(uiatl'&lt;l basis. It ~lmpllfles thin gs lor our
c ustomt•rs and a" u rL·S them of a high qua lit y of ser vice."
In t hr pa st. main te n a nce of lns!dewi r·e was a regul ated part ol
thf lo-cal teleph one com pa ny ' s sNvlre a nd was covered in the
mont hly s&lt;"rv ice ra te. With lhl' cha ng&lt;&gt;, c ustom ers may c hoose
to receiv!' a cred it on th eir mon th l,v bill. assumin g th ey wan t to
' r pai r 01' ins tallt heir ow n lnsldP w ire. or contact a n electrician
to do thP wo1·k. Thl' PUCO estima tes th e credit to between 20 and
30cents.
•
Wcst&lt;•n t Reserve will Issue more det allPd inform ation abou t
i h~ c•hn npc a nd illl' c us tomer 's opti ons In January .

SPECIALTIES TAKE O,FF ~ Richard Thalheimer, preside nt of
The Sharper Image , displays' a miniature ping-pong table sold in
hL~ chain of 26 s pecialty retail stores. c ustomers are s pending
increas ing amount. of money in specialty retail stores as opposed
to department stores. Analy sts say s pecialty stores are the
fastest-growing retail segment. (UPI )

By DAVID VESEY
UPI Business Write~
WASHINGTON ({JP!i - The
Tax Reform Act of 1986 was
devastating to tax s helters a nd
loopholes. but some breaks did
survive and one in particular is
·getting a Jot of attention: single
premium life insurance.
" You are buying life insur a nce
but you're a lso getting a tax
s helter,'.' sa id Joel Weingarten, a
Bethesda, Md ., tax attorney a nd
certified public accountant.
It serves as a n investment as
well as life insurance. It offers
cash flow and tax-free financial
growth.
" I' m ex tremely high on single
premium life," Steven Finkle, a
financial services executive in
Rockville , Md .. sa id. "It rep resents the best purc hase of any
fixed - return t y p e of
investm e nt."
Here is how it works: A
policyholder pays 1he entire
premium, generally ra nging
from $5,000 to $500,000. up fro nt in
a lump su m.
The Income generated by the
investment Is tax free .
Ma ny companies selling si ngle
pre mium life policies offer
hi!(her initial int eres t rates tha n
those found in traditional Ins urance pla ns , with m a ny such
policies now pegged around 8
percent. Savings grow rapidly
beca use Interest is compounded
w ithout bein!( taxed.
Because it Is whole life Insu r a nce. single premium life provides s urvivo rs of a policyholder
with su bs ta nt ia l death benefits
that, de pending on individua l
state laws. generally are not
subj ect to Income tax a nd pro·
bate proceed ings .
In oth!'r words , death benefit s
a rc tax free.
A " key selling point," said
We ingarten. is tha t you can
borrow again st the policy.

f '.I,

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lhtse are the actu1 rn.,.resf'ratH. No Hidden Buy Down Charges. You
get the Sale Price for the car plut the special finance rate!

PEl MONTH

tha t does r eta il and m anagement
con.s ult ing.
1986 specia lt y sales are ex-.
peeled to rise 11:6 percent to
$232.7 billion, · compa red with. a
6.4 percent increase In general
m erc ha ndise sa les to $152.8 billio'n. Management Horizons said.
Tt pr edic ted overall retail sa les
will app1·oach $1.4 billion.
Cynthia Ga le, a spokeswo.m a n
lor t he Na tional Retail Mer·
c ha nt s Association, a New Yorkbas ed retail trade group; said
productivity of selling space for
specialty stores reached a~ alltim e hi gh in 1985.
Dul-ing that year, specialt y
store sa les averaged $178.03 per
squa re foot, compared wit h
$175.AA the year - before. During
the same period, department
stores posted a ~I ecllne in sa les
per squa re foot to $151.48 from
$155.08, 'Gale said.
P re-tax earnings for department and specialty stores improved substa ntially in 198.'\, but
the greatest advances were
posted by specialty stores.
Specialty stor~ earnin gs in creased by 27.8 percent las t year,
while earnings ol de partment
stores in creased 17 percent , Gale
said .
"The basic reason for the ris e
of the spec ia lt y stores is the
change in our Amer ic an psyc ho·
graphics, " s he said. "We're no
longer lhhe mas s society we were
in the 1950s. "
As society has segm ent ed. so
have the desir es and demands of
ht' nation's consumers.
"Specialty retailNS arc hot
beca use ,consumers got tired o l
old de pa rtment stores. Society
has evolved a nd matured, and
d~par tm ent s tores have lost a lot
of their impact of being s pecial. '·
sa id Ri chard Thalh~imer, presi·
dent of The Sharper Im age .
His San F rancisco s pecialty
retail ope ration has g rown in four
yea rs from a m ail order house to
a chai n of 26 s tores nationwide. '
The compa ny m ailed 33 milli'/n
ca talogs in 1985.
The ~h arper Image caters to a
mostly youthful male customer

:~
! : · -Business Briefs:~--

STARTING AT

· A . ~ Ofp USED CAR RATE

1980 Mercury Capri
WAS 12495

'

7. 9°/0 NEW CAR FINANCING
DEC. 22·31
OJ

"HOLIDAY LEASE SPECIAL"
1986 Buick Regal

Automatic, air, AM·FM. etc.
100% Warranty.

Low miiH

EXTRA BONUS

1987
PONTIAC
SU
RD
2
DR.
AUTOMATIC, AIR COND .. AM-FM STEREO. ETC.

$1690°

officials' cars.

CHOOSE FROM 3

IN STOCK

ONLY SSOO
DOWN. •a MOS.

\\\~t.\'' Pontiac Factory
t.+t' Sponsored Free Air
~onditioning on Fi~ro,.
6000, Sunbird and. F1reb1rd
Dec. 22 thru 31

SAVE $4000 to $5000

~USTOM

r

th

'"ff,

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\

~'~~ 71986 Buck Riviera's
\' ~...~~ 5 ·FACTOIY OFFICIALS' CARS

By BOB W~~BSTER
UPI Business Writer
1• ·LOS ANGELES (UP\)
.. •Whe the r tqey sell hl ~h· end kitc hen gizmos, execut ive gadgets
or clothing more at home on the
.veldt than on city street s. spec ia lty stores have beco me the
:Pa rlin gs of ret&lt;~iltrade.
•. Operating !rom the protective
s helt er of a niche in the market·
, place or carving out territory
· tl\r ough the mail wit h !:lossy
;c ata logs, a growing number of
-specialty retailers have evolved
,,into chic na tional chains with
.:stpi'efront s in top fa shion malls
~~ d resort de~ tin ~tions .
· ; &lt;'1\,nd , du ring a time when ·m osf
1;.1iollday shoppers weie ca u!(ht in
• _a(Oredlt pinch tha t is expected to
,further wound slumping d epart men t store giants, the specialty
,;stores likely will be packed with
,?JStome_rs.
• : "Spec~a lt y stores have been.
·;growing at the e xpense o f trad i' -tlonal retailers for the past 10
·; 'years ," said Sarah Stac k, a re tail
-:a nalyst wit h Bateman Eic hler,
· •Bjll
Ri~hards Inc . In Los
..
; ·&lt;\ nge les.
•. · ;specialty rela il ers. s uch as
;-'the Sha rpe1 Image, Bana na
::f!.i-public and William s-Sonoma.
-: n~ ve s ucceeded by reversi ng the
:'1'1hll osophy· upon 111hic h depar t·~ment stores wer e founded.
! ;.~Ins tead o f trying to . bo a ll
:·things to a ll people. the new
·:b1'eed of retail specialis ts ha s
•', leii rnc&lt;i to become s pecifi c things
to target ed cons um er groups.
" '" P eople who started s pecialt y
u~erat ion i saw a n oppo1·tunit y in
1 areas where traditiona l retailers
wei'(' not addressing co ns umers'
· · product dem ands." Stack said .
In 198~ . sa l&lt;: s by spec i;llity
retailers - in clud in g ho me fu r' nis hing and improveme nt , hard·
ware.
cons umer electr onics. a p'1 p~rel
.,
and accessory s tores ',to)alcd $20R.6 billion. com pa red
with $14:!.6 billion for ge neral
'.-tl'l('rcha n&lt;lise s tores and Sl.3
i.trillion iri ov erall reta il sales.
, ;according to M a nagern ~&gt;n t Horiz;·'Qns, a Dublin, Ohio-ba sed div:.dz;lo n of Price Wate rhouse &amp; Co.
' .

·wo

Buick Factory
Sponsored
Free Air Conditioning
on Buick Skyhawk and
Century Dec. 22 thru 31

Insurance premium
offers last refuge
for tax shelters

ltelllll for families In need, especially children. In the photo ahove

at left, realtor B.J. Hairston presented a check for $500 to Dr. Nell
Johnson, superintendent of Gallla County Lm·al Schools, who Is
Oanked by school nurses Candace Pope, R.N., lf'ft, and c: an
Pohlmann, R.N. In the photo ahove at right, realtor Bonnie Stuto•s,
left, presented a S500 check to J ean Cl'll'k, R.N .. ernh•r, Galllpolls
City Schools nurse, and Superintendent Joseph l'arter.

�The Sunday Tmea-Sentinel
P~~ge-D~2

'
December 28. 1986

, Quota
cuts irk
refiners
·of sugar
By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON tUPI) -Rea
gan admtn!Stration of!!C lais
- want to tnm domestic sugar
price supports that coun te1 !01
e1gn policy toward such nations
as the Ph11ippmesandthe Domm
1can Republic
Secretary of State George
Shultz and Agriculture Secretary
Richard Lyng ra1sed 1he 1ssue
with President Reagan last "eek
after Lyng announced that mam
tammg prices for U S sugar Will
force a 41 percent cutin the U S
sugar 1mport quota next vea1
The United States 1mpor ts
sugar !rpm 39 nations and the
two largest sellers combmed, the
Dominican Republic and the
Phlllppmes, stand to lose about
l250 million a year m sugar sa les
because of the quota cut
The Dominican Republic Is one
of the low mcome Canbbean
nations promtsed special access
to American markets under
!{eagan s Cari bbean Basm lmti
alive and the Phlllppmes Is a
strategically important site of
key US a!f and naval bases tn
• _the Pacific

..
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l

" If we contmue on as we a1 e

we will not Import any sugar
Lyng sa1d las t week m a tele
phone lntervtew with reporTers
• "This of course, has grave
•'•
problems throughout those coun
,,•• tries that normally depended on
•• us over the decades as a home for
•• their production
Sugar experts are dra" mg up
legislation
to send to Capitol Hill
·'"• early next year that would
•• gradually cut the sugar pnre
••
,• su pporT probably from 18 cents
•'• to 15 cents a pound and wou ld
•••• compensate sugar cane and
••
sugar beet farmers with transt
lion payments to be phased out
•• over
••
fJVe years
Lyng sa1d the progra m should
••
••• be designed to do as little harm as
'•' possible to U S pi oducers
This will requ~re legtslatlon
•
and I think II ca n be sa fe!~ sa id It
•• will be cont roversial Lvng
said
•• Agncullure Depart ment ofh
•• cials are analyzmg the economtc
and production 1mpacts of such
proposals
"The purpose of this would be
to redu ce the productton and to
permtl a continuation of at least a
!llOdest amoun t of Imports to
keep some balance between the

..
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lradlllonal SituatiOn and v. hat we

:: .are now faced wtth Lyng satd
::
A few years ago the Umted
~
States Imported abou t half of It s
" sugar and produced the 1est
In 1981, US suga1 Imports
r; were 5 mtllion tons the reflmng
~ Industry said The 41 perce nt
:; reduct ion will pull down the
,. quota to a little more than I
•, million tons next vear If cutt ent
~ trends con tmue the Umt ed
r, States wil l Import no sugm m t\\o

f.

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ypar!'i

~
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The sugar reh nmg !ndustn
stronglv cnllc!zed the size of the
~ Import quota 1 edurtwn, warmng
~
I will 101 ce closmg of more
.: refineries that handle sugat
•· Imports
•
Nick Kommus prestdent of the
U S Cane Sugar Refiners Asso
: elation, complamed that the

~

t

admm1st rallon usC'd ove1 kill m

lowerlngthequota which hesa td
should have been 200 000 to
,. 300,000 tons higher
Regardless the key cause of
::
~
the lower quota IS that sweeten
~
ers derived from cor n increas
: lngly have been substuuted for
'l sugar For {lxa mple- corn sweet
~

~

enttrs have replaced sugar In soft

,• ~rinks In 1985 the use of corn
'; sweetener surpassed suga 1 usr
~ In the United States for the f11st
• time

I'

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Plan suggests less
roads thru forest

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
f,Lrm, featured hy the Meigs Soil and Water
Conservation D1Nlr1ct, is located somewhere In
Meigs County lndl\ tduals wishing to participate
m the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
Iarm's owner Just mall, or drop off your guess to
The Dally Senhncl lll Court St., Pomeroy Ohio
H769 or the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 1!23' Third
Ave , Gallipolis, Ohio, 43631, undyou may win a$3

Farm Flashes

Year-end inventory of items
necessary for tax purposes
By ED"ARD M VOLLBORN
County Extension Agent
Agrtcullure
GALLIPOLIS - Yeat end in
vrnt ory 11mc IS here' F'armprs
should take a !('w mmutes to
count and" nte down numbers of
livestock amount of feed s upply
and anv othet production supp
lies on hand An update of your
maehmery and equipment listmg
can also be taken care at the
sa me lime As we move Into the
uncertamty of the 1986 Tax
Reform Act documentation of
mventory may be even more

Important You must cap tta )Iz('
expenses of growmg livestock or
CJ ops if more than tv.o years to
matunty or produrflon, an tax
years aft er Dec 31 1986 So,
"het her you are a beef or datry
far me• or Chr istmas tr ee
growe1, mvent orv count with
so me age breakdowns w!ll be
very Important
Several different versiOns of
farm accoun t books are avatla
ble at the Cou nt v Extenswn
Office lor a small fee These
mclude the
original ' Ohio
Farm Account Book and the
'revtsed Oh1o Farm Account
Book These are the paperback
8'1, Inch b1 ll mch type that
have been used by Gallla Count y
fat met s for many years The
Oh10 Commercial Farm Account
Book was ftrs l copynghted m
1970 "11 h several rc1 tslons smce
It IS a vcr) good double entry
ledge• svs tem Local farmers
may choose to purchase the total
package whtch meludes hard
bark bmder annual expense and

'f'CC'Ipt section and fJve-yPar
Inventory sec tiOn if they are

loo king for a new record keeping
system Refills are ava ilable for
those alread1 on the svstem A
ne" opt ton that I ' eall y like
because of r ase of handling ts a
sptral bound book that mcludes
the annua l receipt and expense
sPCIJOn of the Commercial Farm
Account Book only Confused
s top at the County Ex tension
Office and loo k at all the opt ions
before makmg a deCIS ion
A remmdet of the Accelerated
Farm Financial Management
Pt ogt am that IS now available
thtough the Countv Extension
Off1ce Th1s program was started
last August and has been well
recetved by those who have used
the srrv1ce The obJective !s to
ass 1st commercJal farmers m
dr1 eloping and ('va luating their
fa1 m fmancial management

•

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:.. Gallia SCWD receives funds
~ for multiflora rose program
~e
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By CONSTANCE S WHITE
Program Administrator
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallio
SWCD has recently recelv~d the,
grant lundlng for the Multiflora
Rose Control Program The
Steering Committee has made
approvals on Cost Sliareapplica
ilons Letters will be sent ex
plalnlng to the applicants how
many acres were approved and
l~e amount ol cost share
Gaiila County received $1 l 000
Four other coun tif'IS received an
~ual amount which w.1s the
highest l!gure any of the 62
counties submitting requesls
were granted This amount !s a

beg!nnmg If we are able to use
lh ls money the most effe cllve
wav possible and show positive
results then we will be able to
justify future grant proposals
The funding should be availa
ble !rom th~ state legislature for
the next four years Depending
on appropriations and Gallla
Count y's success rate In the
control effort, we hope to con
tlnue assisting local landowners
In ('!lminatlng this dreadful
1Cgetat1on
Dc monstra llon plots will be set
up and landowners In the progra m wtll be making sites on
their land available for touring

~: ~

I

cash prlzelrom the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
Leave your name, address and telephone number
with your card or letter. No tele~hone calls will he
accepted. AU contest entries should be turned In to
the newspaper office by~ p.m. each Wednesday
In case of a tie, the winner wUI be chosen by
lottery Next week, a Gallla County farm will be
featured by the Gallla Soli and Water Conserva
lion District

(

plans Th~ program attempts to
attach dollar figures In answer
Ing questions on possible changes
In farm operations Everyone IS
looking for an opportunity to
generate more mcome The
program lets you look at It on
paper before Invest ments are
made It also does a good JOb of
getting a ha ndle on thmgs In
sit uations where several enter
prtses are Involved Each
farmers' records are used if
avatlable
A small computer is used to
make the calculattons and gener
ate projected profltabtltty. Uq
utd!ty and solvency To some the
fact that a computer ts Involved
mak£'s the program scary Mr

Joe Fostet Is handling this
program In Gallia and the
surrounding counties He has
completed severaltodateandwe
feel verv comfortable with th~
accuracy of the figures gener
a ted The program !s designed to
help thos~ who need to adjust In
order to survive or help In
evaluatmg opportuntlles to grow
and prosper To get mvolved In
this new farm management
program, call the County Exten
s1on Olftce at 446 7007 It's free'

malned around the $159 per
hundred mark The pool received
12 3 percent for the week ending
Dec 18 Th~ season percentage
going to the pool is 4 8 This
compares to ll 7 percent last
year for the before-Christmas
marketing
Amertcans will consume an
average of 616 pounds of milk
products this year, 20 pounds
more than 1985 Most of the JUmp
resu lts from Increased demand
for cheeses which account for
about30 percent of all mtlk used
Polnset tia the Christmas
plant seems even more popular
than ever this year Care Is very
Important In maintamlng the
plant Examine the soli datlv
and when the&amp;urface !sdrv to the
touch water the soil until !I runs
rreel1 out of the dramage hole in
the container Don 1 leave the
plant sta nding in water The

(Second In a series)
IRONTON - "Traditionally
there hasn't been a lot of
variation over the Wayne Na
Ilona! Forest as a whole,"
comments Harold Godlevske,
Forest Supervisor "This, how
ever, will change with lhe proposed Plan "
In a series of articles on
proposed changes In the manage
ment of the Wayne National
Forest, Godlevske outlines several of the more slgnlllcant
departures from the way the
Wayne Is currently managed
This, the second tn the series,
concerns the changes related to
forest road construction and
limiting vehicular access on the
Forest
According to Godlevske, at
present , the network of state,
county, township, private, and
Forest Service roads limit the
areas of the National Forest
where a vtsltor can find a
recreational experience re
moved from the disruption of
vehicles "The percentage of
roads within the boundaries the
Forest Service controls Is rela
t!vely small, but because they
access some of the more remote
areas how we manage them
makes a difference "
Godlevske estimates there are
300 miles of state, county, and
township roads on National
Forest lands In addition, there
are as many as 500 miles of
mineral access roads which are
needed for oil and gas activities
The Forest also has a maze of
unsurfaced roads In various
conditions which have onginated
over the past hundred years AI
present almost all of these roads
are open to public use
"Under the proposed Plan "
explains Godlevske, "657 m!l~s
approximate amount of water
needed for a six Inch diameter
potls12ounces Tokeeptheplant
In bloom mamtain it at a
temperature of 65 to 70 degrees
Fahrenheit during the daylight
hours and II possi ble, at around
60 degrees Fahrenheit at night
Polnsetttas can be reflowered
next year A step by step proce
dure is outlined In Extension
Fact Sheet 1222 Call the Exten
s!on Off!re for a free copy
1446-70071

Bill to affect farm owners
By Patty Dyer
District Conservationist
Soli Conservation Service
GALLIPOLIS - If you have
wondered about this and are a
farm owner and/ or operator the
answer Is probably yes Anyone
wishing to participate In a USDA
program In the future w111 be
affected by the Farm Bill
Different portions of the bill wm
affect farmers at different times
Of Immediate Impact is the
sodbuster and swampbuster pro
visions Essentially this means
that anyone wishing to grow a
crop on land that dtd not have
crops certified on m from 1981 to
1985 must fill out some 'forms"
These forms will ask If you plan
to sodbust or swampbust In
plain English It Is asking if you
are going to farm areas which did
not have a row crop certified on It
from 1981-1985 or !I you plan to
drain wetland areas
The Farm Bill does not prevent
you from doing either or these
things II does however require
some 'paper work" to document
that the areas are not highly
erodible or do not contain both a

Did you know? Some plants
Withstand cold weather while
others do not Cold hard y plants
produce a chemtcal called l!no
tenic acid This ac1d !s produced
by the root ol the plant and cold
weather brings It on to protect
the pla nt Scientists made the
d1sovery when trying to fmd out
why some new herbicides
worked Scientists may no~&lt; be
able to develop plant vanetles
toleran t to unseasonable low
temperat ures
Demand for burley tobacco
weokened during the fourth week
of sales Sales for the week
endmg Dec 18 average $154 93
per hundred That was down
$2 14 per hundred from the
previous week The season aver
age ftgure stands at $157 n per
hundred with around 83 percent
of the current crop bemg sold
Accordmg to the Market News
Service, the practical top re-

hydric (wet type) soli and
hydrophilic (wetland type)
plants
If we can look at a soils map
and say that these are not present
then you are "home free If
however It Is determined that
highly erodible so!ls are present
(and they are on most farms In
this part of the state ) then you
may work with ym.r local Soli
Conservation Service to docu
ment your management practl
ces On a Conservation Plan An
approved conservallon plan w!ll
make It possible to sodbust
and/or farm highly erodible soils
an still remain In compliance
with the farm bill and thus
remain eligible for USDA
programs
The long 1erm portion of the
farm bill requires that by 1990all
farmers wlshmg to participate In
the USDA programs have their
fa rms reviewed for highly erodl
ble soils and wetlands To remain
eligible for the program benefits
at that time you must have an
approved conservation management plan on those areas deter
mined to be highly erodible

of old roads will be closed to
motorized vehicles " In addition,
the Forest will provide certain
areas, a total of 95,565 acres, In
which all unsurlaced roads under
Forest Service jurisdiction w111
be closed and revegetated At
present, there are also an estl
mated 100 miles of county and
township roads on National
Forest land lhat are not being
maintained As they are vacated
by the county and township,
these roads will be closed. as
well, to provide a more remote
experience for Forest users
Forest-wide, the Wayne has
outl!ned an ambitious road re
ductlon plan Most are blocked
until vegetation grows In to close
the road naturally Since many of
these old roads are eroded and
unsightly closing them will help
protect the resource Godlevske
emphasizes that a road closed to
motorized use does not prohibit
use of the road "Quite the
opposite," he said, "these roads
will be used for years as foot
trails for hunters and other
people visiting the forest "
"The Forest will be construct
Ing roads only II those roads are
needed for managing forest
resources Normally," says Godlevske, 'these are conslructed
on existing road beds" The Plan
outlines an average of 8 9 miles
per year of roads to be upgraded
to permanent condition Only a
quarter of these are new con
struction, the rest are basically
upgrading an existing road This
does not mean thatovertheyears
there will be a cumplatlve
Increase In roads open to the
public Many of the upgraded
roads will be closed all or part of
the time depending on their
designed use
Temporary roads are built to a
lower standard and are only open
for a limited time The Forest
estimates an average of 6 7 miles
of these roads will be In use at any
one lime All temporary roads
will be closed and revegetated
when the need for them Is
completed
In some cases, state, county,
and township roads are needed
lor Forest management In these
Instances, the Forest may enter
Into cooperative road agreements with the agency holding
the jurisdiction, to assist with
reconstruction or maintenance
funding
Godlevske explamed that In
the Initial contacts with the
publ!c one of the major areas ol
of the Forest to be closed to
motorized access With the ownership pattern on the Wayne
and the Interspersion of private
lands and homes needing road
access this Is a difficult goal to
meet Over time we expect to be
able to offer a reasonably good
semi-primitive recreation expe
rienceo for Forest users, '' said
Godlevske He points out that
ongoing land acquisition will also
make this long•term goal more
obtainable
These and other changes on the
Forest are proposed In the
recentl y released Plan The
proposed Plan Is open lor publ!c
comment until January 22, 1987
Copies of the proposed Plan are
available at most l!brarles or
contact !he Forest Service o!f!
ces In Athens, Ironton, or Ma·
rletta. Ohio, or the headquarters
ofllce In Bedford, Indiana
The next article In this series
on changes proposed for the
Wayne Nal!onal Forest will be on
timber and wildlife management
practices

chocolate mllkshake at Dairy
Queen has 29 teaspoons of sugar
-nearly three limes the sugar In
a McDonald s 10 2 oz chocolate
shake
And they probably don't know
that a regular order of french
fries at Burger King has twice
the Sodium found In regular fries
at Kentucky Fried Chicken
Then again, does anyone care•
The Center for Science In the
Public Interest, a consumer
group thai has crusaded for
nutritional labeling of fast food,
thinks more Americans should
care The center Is concerned
about the salt, sugar, rat and
caloric content of all those
burgers, chicken, fries and
shakes
With a recently published
book, "The Fast Food Guide,"
the center Is trying to lift the veil
of nutritional secrecy that has
surrounded fast food for years
The 225-page paperback Identifies and rates for nutritIon a!
value dozens of specific fast food
Items sold by the major chains
The $4 95 book also discloses
which fast food firms use food

r

'

dyes, MSG nitrates, sulfates or
other additives
Authors Michael Jacobson, the
cenler's dtrector, and Sarah
Frltschner food editor of the
Louisville IKy 1 Times and
Courier-Journal, also Include a
"gloom Index ' In their ratings to
more easily Idenhfy fast foods
with the mos t Iat, sodium, sugar
or calories and those with the
least
The lower a food 's gloom
rating the better It Is for the
consumer
_
For example, among 18 Items
studies In the french fries category, Hardee s large fries had
the most gloom points (27) while
a regular order of Arby's fries
had the fewest gloom points (9).
The large Hardee's fries had 10
times more sodium. more than
twice as much rat and nearly
double the calories of the regular
Arby's fries A regular order of
the most popular last food fries,
McDonald' s rated 13 gloom
points
Among hamburgers, the Wen
dy's triple cheeseburger had by
far the most calories (1,040), fat

(15 teaspoonst and sod tum !1 R4R
mlll!gramsl of the 39 dtfferent
entries listed It also h,,d thr
most gloom pomls of ""' lust
food Item 10 the book - R7
At the othrt rnd of the liSt the
D'Lltes chain J1 D'L1te bu rger
had the few est calories i2110t the
least fat 12 teaspoons\ and the
least sodium 12111 mgs 1 f01 a
rating of onh nine gloom pomts
A Wendy' s K1d s Meal" but get
was next best with ll gloom
points
For companson, a McDonald ,
McDLT had 'i4 gloom points
while the Burge! King Whopper
had 47 points - 54 with cheese
The authm s say adult men
should ltm!l gloom points to a
total of about 104 day while
adull women should cut !Ito S:l a
day Figures can be slightly
higher for youngsters but should
be slightly lower for women 45
and over and for men 55 and over.
they say
Because fast food has become
a diet staple, Jacobson says
consumers should know "what
they 're getting when they order a
meal"

a

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pag&amp;-:"D-3

• '· ::======~=======~~~~~~~~~~====~~~~~~~

~:In

this W.Va. town, One man has the power

By EDGAR SIMPSON
GILBERT, W Va (UPI) Don Wilkes sat up !n his nondes
crlpt chair In a nondescript
building plunked In a nondescript
southern West Virginia coal
town "I've got the power," he
said
It's true, he does
The normal checks-and
balances system of government
has been stripped away by a
special judge, who said the 1985
municipal election In Gilbert
population 780, was such a mess
no one could figure out who
should have won
After a 17-month Investigation,
, no evidence of wrongdoing was
1 found on the part of the lncum
' bents or the challengers lor the
seven spots In city government
The solution - an agreement
reached by the West VIrginia
attorney general's olflce, the
special judge and the secretary
' of state's office- was to appoint
a receiver to run the town until a
new election can be held
The decision threw out of office
Mayor Luck Compton, Town
Recorder Joann Walls and five
' city council members All had
won election by 20 votes or less In
' voting that prompted complaints
to state offtclals
Secretary of Stale Ken Hechler
Investigated the matter and
turned the results over to a grand
jury whtch indicted several
people -Including election offlc
ers - on charges of Ignoring

Illegal voting, vote buying and
vote selling
Wilkes, Special Judge Dan
O'Hanlon's longtime friend and
handpicked receiver, may be the
llrst to serve In a such a position
since the ClvU War, when the
federal government replaced
most local administrations In the
South
The attorney general's office
researched the s~bject of remov
Ing an enUre governmenl and the
best It could come up with was
the ousting of a beach commls
slon In New Jersey sometime In
the 1930s
Halting the wheels of otemocracy lies heavily on Hechler.
who Is trymg to get the state
Legislature to set a special
election Otherwise, the regu
larly scheduled election w!ll be
held In May
"The judge wanted someone
who was apolitical," Wilkes said
"That's me - I don't care for
politics at all "
Wilkes truly has "the power"
In Gilbert, and he Is using It His
reign as mayor, recorder and ~
town council will last, at most,
about seven montbs. He took the
lob Nov 19
Wilkes, 39, who grew up In
nearby Logan, holds court In a
two-story brick building In downtown Gilbert There Is no sign
announcing It as city hall, but the
frequent presence of pollee cruls
ers out front on the gravel
driveway and the tiny brick jail

out back, with a hand scrawled
''No visitors" sign, gives guests a
hint as to Its function.
He keeps a copy of the court
order giving him reign over )he
town on a coffee table In his office
so "people can read It anytime
they want to "
Like many small towns, Gil
bert was run for years from the
heart Instead of the bankbOok,
and finances were grim when he
arrived, Wilkes said With char·
acterlstlc e&amp;ergy and audacity,
he set about changing things
He announced plans to raise
the business tax for the first time
In 10 years He's moving ahead
with plans to build a new water
treatment lacillty, a project that
had languished for more than
three years
He's paving streets and Instal
ling fire hydrants and replacing
dllapated equipment All the
plans projects and actions require no more approval than his
own signature
His only constraint comes from
a Citizen Advtsory Board, made
up of the people who "won" lhe
canceled 1985 e(ectton The
members can only make
suggestions
The situation may offer a
unique study of the Influence of
politics on the efficiency of
government Wilkes has no cam
palgn obl!gal!ons, the town res!
dents are people, not voters and
he Is leaving by sprmg
"Thts stranger comes in so.

naturally, there was a little
resentment," Wilkes said during
an Interview In his olflce at
Gilbert
Wilkes, who taught for !tve
years at Marshall University, Is
director of the corporations divIsion In the secretary ol state's
office He does his state job a
night In Gilbert and on periodic
trips back to his office at the state
capitol In Charleston
He has plenty of lime to bury
himself !n work- he's single, his
fiancee lives In North Carolina
and there just isn't that much
nightlife in Gilbert
His philosophy Is simple make
an Impact
"Whatever the powers of the
mayor and city council are, I
have," he satd ''Whatever I do
has some effect on the district
We been able to get these things
done' '
The town of Gilbert lies In the
heart of coal country In the
politically torn county of Mingo
Railroad tracks checkerboard
the county and the rumble of
trains and long stops at crossings
are a part of life here
In Gilbert, wealth and poverty
live side by sfde A stream of
lraf!lc moves through downtown,
Mercedes Benzes creep behind
rusted Chevrolets and coal
trucks throw up clouds of dust as
they rumble down main street
Wilkes understands his court
ordered constituents and their

Jewish
festival
of lights
undenvay
,

,
'"

comment was the desire for more

Group requests nutritional rating for fast food
WASHINGTON (UP!)- After
the big holiday dinners of turkey
ham and lamb are eaten, Ameri
cans again will flock to their
favorite fast food restaurants to
spend $50 billion a year on
burgers, chicken, fries and
shakes
Price and convemence are
major attractions or fast food
operations, but new quesllons
have arisen In recent years about
nutrition
Nutrition-conscious adults
may religiously read contents
label!hg Inlormallon on food
prepared at home In an effort to
provide balanced meals for their
children and lor themselves But
do those efforts go out thew Indow
when the family car heads out the
driveway In the direction of the
Golden Arches•
Odds are that most fast food
fanciers don't know that a
Wendy's triple cheeseburger has
1,040 calories - slightly more
than twice the calories in a
Burger King bacon double
cheesburger
More than likely. Americans
also don't know that a 20 o~

December 28, 1986

'

By United Press International
The JewiSh hollda) Hanukkah
began tis ftrst full day Saturday
after the first lighting of candles
and oil lamps Friday night The
eight day festival of lights celebrates a victory more than 2 000
years ago of the Jews over
Antiochus IV and Syrian Greeks
who were attempting to subdue
the Jewish people
The observance marking the
Maccabees' vtctorlous revolt
against the Greeks began at
sundown Friday, the start of the
Jewish sabbath
Every year, Jews gather at
thetr holiest site - the We-; tern
Wall at Jerusalem s walled Old
City- for a public l!ghtingol the
eight pomted menora candela
bra that IS one of the principal
symbols of thetr religion
The huge ancient wallis said to
be the only remnant oft he Second
Temple, destroyed by the Ro
mans In 70 AD
The Hanukkah miracle" celebrates the triumph of the Jewish
Maccabees over the Seleuc1d
HelleniSts In 160 B C and the
rededlcahon of the Jewish Tern
pie In Jerusalem
The Seleucld empire, set up
after Alexander the Great's
death, emphasized the spread of
Greek culture and religion Jew s
rose up In a revolt led by Judah
Maccabee after hts father killed
a Greek official rather than
worship a Greek god
The Maccabees drove the
Greeks out of the Holy Land and
won about a 100 years of freedom
for Jews, the lasttime the Jewish
state extsted until modern Israel
was rstabltshed In 1948
The Maccabees Immediately
set out to celebrate their victory
by rededicating the Jewish Temple, but found only enough sacred
oil to keep the temple menorah lit
for a day
Muaculously, the oil burned
for eight days - and that Is the
miracle celebrated in the feast of
lights
Hanukkah Is mostly a festival
ofthehome Arandle!sl!teachof
thr eight days of Hanukkah in a
cert-monv around sunset In Jew

Ish homes The family gathers
around a menorah, a candela
brum that hold eight candles, to
ma1 k the ancient victory
Hanukkah, like many religious
feslvals Is surrounded by lradl
tlon Gills often are exchanged
' each evening Coins, or Hanuk
kah gelt, were often given In the
past
There are songs for the feslval
and games a replayed- the most
popular is played with a dreidel,
a toy top long associated with
Hanukkah traditions

Seniees planned

. ,

BURLINGHAM -The Word of
Life Church at Burlingham w!ll
have New Year's Eve services•
Wednesday evening beginning at
7 p m Singing by the Full Gospel
Travelers and United Gospel
Singers will be featured Rev
Ray Laudermllt welcomes
everyone

"

didn't find anything wrong
'It will take 20 years for things
to return to normal This is not a
btrslness here, these are people "
went unanswered
Stlll, he relishes his job as
Many ol the things Wilkes is
doing
are good and wlll help the
receiver
41
This is a manager's dream," town, Browning said ' Yes, II
he said, smiling 'This has been, needs to be done," Browning
and Is going to be, better than any said "But a stranger shouldn't
classroom experience I've ever be raising taxes "
Maybe not, Wilkes said, but he
had ''
took the job on the condition he
For James Browning, who won would be more than a municipal
a council seat In the since-voided caretaker, pencil pushing was
election, the experience has been for someone else O'Hanl'!!lfl
one of disbelief
agreed
An out of work coal miner who
Wilkes accepted the reslgna
has lived within a few miles of lion of the town's pollee chief.
Gilbert all of his 38 years, hired a new one and then rehired
Browning feels the democratic the former chief as an officer He
process has been tainted
Is sending three of the four city
Brewnlng dectded to run for officers to the state pollee
council after noticing that things academy He has put In a
"weren't going right' ' In City purchasing system· any check
Hall His campaign consisted of for a bill over $25 must nave his
knocking on doors and shaking signature on II
hands
'He (O'Hanlon) knew ' J
"I don't like 11 - not at all" wouldn't be a caretaker," Wilkes
Browning said of the Wilkes said
receivership "I don't have any·
His control extends to more
thing against Don, but this has than the $126 000 city budget,
never been done before. If they reaching Into the dally events of
had the authority to throw out the town life
'
election, why dldn t they have the
A man was caught going 33
authority to hold another one mph In a school zone A city
Immediately?"
ofllcer, apparently swayed by
The whole process has chinked the man s tearful story, brought
both his own reputation and that the man to see Wilkes to to get
of the town, he said The voters the charges dropped
are disillusioned and resentful
The traffic violator told a
woeful
tale of fearing for his new
"The people have the Impres
sian that we have done something •job of driving an ice cream truck,
wrong," he said "They (state o( his new wile, of rising auto
and court officials! dragged a tnsurance
Wilkes shook his head, telling
bunch of people down to the
church and grilled them They the man, " The law Is the law "

reticence a&amp;out his Ideas For
Instance, a plea lor comment on
the planned Increase In taxes

try

---Ohio Briefs:----.
Adjustment aids consumers
YOUNGSTOWN iUPII -Customers or Ohio Edison Co will
be seeing a sllght decrease tn their electric bills as a result ol an
adjustment made by the Public Utllllles CommissiOn of Ohio
The PUCO alter Its semiannual review of the Ohio Edison
electric fuel component rate reduced Ihe EFC rate by a small
percentage
As a result, the average residential consumer will save 41
cents per month , based on average monthly usage of 750
kilowatt hours of electricity
The rate decrease wllltak(' effect Jan 1

Fatal fire appears accidental
'

OFF THEY GO - People gave Verlln and
Valerle Kruger a sen doll from Farnsworth Park

In WatervUie, Ohio, on Friday. The Krusers are
canoeing from the Arctic Ocean to Cape Horn, a
journey of more than 21,000 miles. (UPI)

Congressman, welding finn
fight to keep defense pact
YOUNGSTOWN i UP I) - Rep
James Traflcant and McDonald
Welding and Machine Co are
fighting to preserve a federal
court ruling that prevented the
Navy from awarding a
multimillion dollar defense con
tract to another bidder
US District Court Judge Alvin
Krenzler ruled Nov 26 that the
Navy had acted Illegally In
awarding a contract for con
strucllon of mobile shelters to
Glchner Mobile Systems of North
Carolina, but the Navy and
Glchner have flied motions ask
lng Krenzler to alter, amend or
stay his judl!'ment
Trallcant, D-Ohlo, said Wed
nesday he and McDonald Weld
lng have jointly flied replies !n
federal court contending that
the motions filed by the Navy and
G!chner are untimely and
Improper
The Youngstown lawmaker
said under the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure, motions chal
lenglng Krenzler' s decision
shOuld have been filed within 10
days of the ruling He said

G!chner and the Navy did notllle effort," Traflcant said Now our
valley is hurting, and when we
their motions until Dec 11
are eligible for a federal con
The dispu te began In mid
September when the Navy tract, we cannot be overlooked
awarded the contract toGichner, and brushed aside
' I will not back down from the
even though Glchner's $6 8 million bid was Sl 8 million higher Navy," the Youngstown law
than the price submitted by its maker said
McDonald, Ohto, competitor
In his ruling, Krenzler did not
order
the Navy to automatically
Traflcant said the Navy's
award
the disputed contract to
move to overturn Krenzler' s
McDonald
Weldmg, as requested
deciSIOn Is a continuation of Its
by
the
company
and Traflcant
Inexplicable attempts to harass
Krenzler said neither bidder
McDonald Welding and exclude
them as a competitor on other met the Navy s requirement or
lots of this contract by using the previous proven performance In
unlimited resources of the go· building the specific type of
vernment to prolong an already mobile shelter requested in bid
exhausting and costly litigation specifications
But Traflcant said McDonald
process "
Welding
Is uniquely suited to
Despite some !ears that his
strong attack on the Navy will handle the project because It Is
hurt theMahonlngValley schan currently working on cons tru e
ces of obtaining future govern lion of the same mobile shelters
ment contracts, Traf!cant ha s under a previously awarded
remained firm In his support of contract and Is the only company
that has passed the majority of
McDonald Welding
"When the bombs were fl ying testing requirements on the
during the Second World War, we vans
'They are the only firm In
here In the Mahonlng Valley
America
that has developed a
came through and fu eled the war
state of the art product," Trail
cant said "Not only have they
produced an excellent producl
they have come In with the lowest
Dec 23, 1983 The high court bid of any competitor They
reversed a lower court ruling and should be the only company
said the landlord, who did not co nsidered by the Navy for this
create 11 " was not responsible contract "
A Trallcant aide said last week
for an accumulation of snow and
the
congressman's office has
tee
In the Tiffin case, Lopatkovlch received no word on the contract
sued a Tiffin jewelry store and !rom the Navy or US Comp
the city of Tiffin She claimed she troller General Charles
fell and broke a leg on an Icy Bowsher, whose Involvement
sidewalk on Jan 23, 1981, as she was sought by Traflcant
and a friend walked toward her
Pizza party scheduled
car after spending "some hours"
In a bar
MIDDLEPORT Job's
The high court upheld an
Daughters
and
DeMolay
appeals court ruling that said no
members, and their guests, are
evidence was presented to prove
Invited
to a pizza party to be held
Improper snow removal or other
Monday night, from 7 p m to
action on the part of the business
midnight, !n the basement of the
or property owner contributed to
Middleport
Masonic Temple
more lhan the normal hazards of
winter
Lopatkovlch contended a deTrustees to meet
pression In the sldewal~outsldea
jewelry store near the bar
PORTLAND - Lebanon Town
contributed to an unnatural ac
ship
Truslees will meet Tuesday,
cumulation of Ice, and she said
7
p
m
, at the township building
the sidewalk was not properly
lighted

I

CLEVELAND t UP I\ - Fire officials sal an apartment fire
on the city's East Side Frida\ that claimed the llle of a man
appears accidental
Ofllclals said Friday the actua l cause of the blaze that klllell
London Mock Sr , was not known but they were not suspecting
am foul play An mvestlgatlon was contlnumg
The Cuyahoga Cou ntv cot oner's office said Mock, 59, died of
smoke mhalallon
Fire officials sa id the blaze caused $2,000 worth or damage
ev~~~';,';~enants in th~ building had to be temporarily

Youngstmvn man held in stabbing
YOUNGSTOWN (UP I) - A Youngstown man laces a
felonious assault chatge for allegedly sta bbing another man
during a Christmas Eve argument
Daniel Mitchell told pollee he and Derek White were argumg
late Wednesday night when White produced a knife and stabbed
him in the face
White was arrested near M!lchell's home and pos ted bona
after being detained In the city jail
Mitchell was treated and released fr om a Youngstown
hospital
'

Celeste reappoints panel member
COLUMBUS !UPI I - Edward P 0 Bnen of W~stiake has
been reappointed to the Ohio Board ol Butldlng Standards for
term ending Oct 13 1990, Gov Richard F Celeste announced
Friday
0 Brien has served as vice chairman oft he board for 15years
The governor also reappoi nted RobertH Alexander of Bexley
to the 011 and Gas Board of Review for a term ending Oct 14,
1991 He has been a memlx&gt;r of the board s ince 1979
'

a

Ex-mayors die on same day
SPENCERVILLE (UPI ) - Two former Spencervtlle mayors
died on Christ mas Day, less than three hours apart
Glenn H Morgan 66, who served as mayor oft he Allen County
communit y It ofn 1961 to 1967 died at 2 45 p m Thursday HI,,
successor Stanley V Rockhold 61 who served from 1967 to
1971 died at 12 37 p m
Morgan died at a Lima nursing home whtle Rockhold died a.t
St Rlla s Medical Center in Lima Both men had been Ill for an
extended period
The two will be burled Monday in the Spencervtllc Cemeterv

chairman.~hip

Justices reject damage suit

Senator retains

COLUMBUS iUPii - The
Ohio Supreme Court has ruled
against two northw es t Ohio
women who were trying to collect
damages for Injuries they suf·
fered alter falling on snow and
Ice
In rulings issued Ftlday, the
justices upheld ' the simple fact
that snow and Ice are part of
wintertime life In Ohio
The court said the two rulings
do not relieve landlords or
property owners of reasonable
responslbllly to keep walkways
and public areas safe, but the
rulings place the primary rep
sonslblllty for caution on those
who walk on snow and Ice

COLUMBUS (UPI ) - Ohto Senat e President Paul G11Imor.
R Port Clinton, Friday announced the teappomtment of
Senator Stanley Aronoff, R Cincinnati as rhau man of the
Senate Finance Committee
Gillmor said Aronoff will continue to lead the vttal commit tee
whtch next year wil l work on a new state bi{'nnwl budget due til
June
'Aronoff s years of experience with the states budgM
process will serve all Ohioans well as his com mtttee help~
prepare the new two-year state budget,' Gll lmor said
Aronoff also was recently elected President Pro Tern of the
Ohio Senate And he ts vice chairman of the Senate Ruks
Co mmittee and a member of the Senate F1nanc!al Institutions
and Insurance Committee

As a result, Barbara LaCourse
of Toledo and Leda Lopatkovich
of Tiffin were denied damages.In
separate cases
In \he Toledo case, LaCourse
llled suit against her landlord
alter suffering back and elbow
Injuries when she slipped on a
patio step to her apartment on

Theft suspect extradited
LOS ANGELES (U Pli - Geraldine Wright charged with
stealing money while administrator of an Oh10 firm that
operated group homes for mentally retarded people has been
ordered extradited to the Buckeye State
'
Wright , 40, was ordered to be ret urned to Ohio no later thari
Jan 12 by Los Angeles Municipal Court Judge Mel Recana
during a hearing Friday
~
Wright was Indicted by a special Hamilton County Ohio, '
grand jury on two counts of theft of more than $5,000 each
Wright resigned In September 1985 as administrator of
Meridian Community Care, Inc In Hamilton County

�.

Page-D-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~·

·~

'- '

·•

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

components.

In addition, a separate "orbit al
maneuvering" r9cket would
have to be ·in place full time to
keep the structura l element s in
the proper positions.
Finally, the use of expendables
could force NASA to beef up
station components - a cos tly
prospect - to safely endure the
higher liftoff forces experienced
by unmanned roc kets.
The accelerated construction
sc hedu le was based on us ing the
cur rently planned number of
shuttle construct ion flights as
well as up to three Tit an 4
launches during the first two

years of station assembly in the overall rev iew of space station
early 1990s.
organization and management
Because of ' the "substantial that was presen ted r.o NASA
technical and programmatic un- Admin istrator James FINcher
certa inties" associat ed with us- las t wMk
n- •
ing expendable rockets, DunNASA has decided to modify
ning's group "recommended the - some aspects of the space station
space shuttle be retained as the to improve efficienc~a nd safety.
baseline tansport ation system For example, con trol systems
for assembling the station's originally designed to be outside
manned base."
the station will be mounted inside
But the National Aer.onautics "nodes" connecting the manned
and Space Administration: kept modules. .
.
open the option of using unThat and a more powerful
manned rockets to launch some electrical system will add up to
sta tion components or for use $49 million to the fina l cost of the
' carrying supplies up to the station. Originally advertised as
or bital outpost.
an $8 billion project, the current
Du nning's study was part of an design Is expected to cost as

. ........ ,__
~·

··~ "

.

'

10 percent to 40 percent increase
in potentially dangerous astronaut spacewalks required duri ng
the first four shuttle construct ion
fl ights t o asse mbl e th e

-~·

•

much as $1:1 billion.
A major review of sta tion costs
currently is under way and the
res ult s ar~ ex pected to be pres-" fO F letcher in m l'dPntt:"U
Ja nu ar)'.
In any case, management of
the mu ltibillion-dollar project
will be centered in washington
instead of the Johnson Spa ce
Center tn Hou ston with key
element s of the project managed
at NASA field centers across the
nat tc 1 .
The Johnson Space Center will
be responsible for the external
framework or the sta tion and th e
myriad life support systems. The
Marshall Space Flight Center in

.
-

in '._ l990~

Hun tsvil le, Ala., will be responsl: .":
bli' for design of the laboratory -~
and habitation modules as well , ;
as the station 's propulsion ;
sysl"m
' ~•'
. ._. •
.
Some of the work now charged ~
to Marshall originally was in the ~
domain of the Johnson • Space :
Center and when the work -~
division was announced I~ tile, ,:,
summer, Texas lawmakers pr~ ''
tested . fearing jobs in the Hous· ,
ton area would be lost.
:'
Congressional pressure was ••.'
responsible for Fletcher's !!eel-;, :·,
s ion to review overall space •
station management and those ::'
Iss ues now apparently have been·;,:
resolved.
....,

Committee says rebels violated cease-fir#,·-·
By JACK REED
Ramos, who had called the Dec.
MANILA, Philippines (UP!)- 11 incident ·on the historic Bataan
In the first confirmed breach or a peninsula "provocative" and
17-day-oid cease-fi re agreement, warned It could lead to a "violent
a nat ional monitoring committ ee confrontation."
'announ ced Saturday that com·
National Ceasefire Monitoring
munlst rebels violated the truce Committee Chairman Antonio
when they brandished their wea- Fortlch, a popular cigar·
pons during a peace celebration chomping bishop from the cenearlier this month.
tral island of Negros, told reporBut offici als said no sanctions ters the tru ce between the
would be handed dow n because of government and the communist
the "euphoria accompanying"
rebels was holdin g despite the
the historic ·cease- fire In the .breach.
17-year communist Insurgency
Of 11 other milit ary complaints
and because "no untoward inci- of rebel violations, only one has
dents happened."
been dismissed.
In a 4 to 1 decision, the
"Beca use of the cease-fire,
committee upheld a complaint of
Armed Forces Chief Gen. Fidel that was the most peaceful

Christmas We ever had," Fortich
said. "We hope t.his will tarry on
through the New Year."
"We should cooperate with this
woman, " he said of President
Corazon Aquino. "We thank her
for having initiated the ceasl?flr e. ''
The cease-fire was negotiated
to allow talks to proceed on a
peaceful solution to the 17-year
war. The negotiations begin
early next month, but Aquino's
government already has rejected · several key rebel demands, including the removal of
U.S. bases in the country and
power-sharing.
The violation stemmed from a
cea.se-rtre celebration in the tow n

'

of Sarna!, 40 miles northwest of
Manila. a day after the truce
went into effect Dec. 10. About SO •
New People's Army rebels bran· .
dished their weapons in the town·
square during the rally .
·
The NCC decis ion, reached
Dec . 2.1 but not ann 0un_
ced until
Saturday, said there was "sub- ;
stantial evidence" to support a '"
violation of a "tacit" agreement ·:
by the NPA and the government•· ·
that armed rebels would nof '
enter towns and cities.
· .The NCC called , the Incident :
"detrilliental" to the truce and.·. .;
appealed to the insurgent leader:· ·.~·,
ship to "exert every effort to '• ·•
avoid and prevent similar acts in ~ ·
the futur e."
.'
'

Gunman warns, 'Don't look;' shoots commutei{
By MARK HALPER
NEW YORK !UP!) - A
gunm an warned a grou p of
bystanders "Don't look," then
shot a man in the head and
robbed him before calmly walking away from an elevated
subway pl atform near Yankee
stadium in the Bronx, police said.,
Detect ives Saturday took pho·
tos of the vtctim at Lincoln
Center Hospita l, where he was in
critical and guarded condition in
an effort to identify him_
"II looks li~ e an unp rovoked
attack," said Officer Jay Harri ngton, a transi t police
spokesman.
WOMAN OF THE YEAR - Philippine President Corazon
Aquino has been named Time's Woman of the Year. Pr.esldent
Aquino was given the honor for her det ermin ~tion and courage In
leading 'I democratic revolution that cap1ured the world's
Imagination In 19S6, (UPI)

This mail -makes
reporters' day
By IRA R. ALLEN
WASHINGTON tUPI) - When
President Reagan told Time
m agazine in an interview this

mon th " there is a bitter bile in
my throa t' · abou t press coverage
of the Iran scandal, it seems he
was . speaking for a lot of
Americans .

The Whit e House press corps
has been receiving a flood of mail
this holiday season- almost ail
negative. most of it profane and
none In the spirit of good wilL
Here is a Yuletide sampling or
mail addressed to the Whit e
House press and thus X-raycd fo r
dangerous objects by the Secret
Serv ice.

Names

are

bl?i ng

withh.eid.
-"Why don't yo u clowns stop
your witch hunt over the ar ms
sale to Iran ' The president has
my support. and I have informed
him or tha t fact." -Oklahoma
City, Okla .
- "You s hould be ashamed of
yourselves! ! ... Doing your job

does not include being rude ... I
do not need to be informed to thls
extent .. . Please mend your
ways." -Newport Beach, Calif.
-"The fact tha t the medi a
s la nts, underreports, omit s and
dis torts Instead of reporting ail
facts in a balanced way to the
public makes them a real enemy
or the U.S."- Memphis, Tenn.
·-"To use the word mildly, you
people all s tink ... Pres. !Reagan I tried to get hostages home.
1 s this a cri me? So some arms
were traded -so what? We are
try ing to keep commies out of S.
Amer. " - Terre Haute. Ind.

•Betty

Cr~ker'

MINNEAPOLIS (UP! )- Ma r·
jorle Child Husted, who created
an d portrayed fictional homl?maker Betty Crocker, has died.
officials at General Mills Inc.
said Saturday.
General Mills officials rl?ported that Husted died Tuesday
at her home in Minneapolis. She
was 94.
Husted's career began in 1924
with the Washburn-C rosby Co ..
which later became General
Mills. She artd her staff created
the fictional Betty Crocker and
s he served as the voice ol ·the
homemaker in a radio program
that started in 1927.

-"Merciful Hea vens, how
long are we going to have to listen
to the news media rant and rave
and foam at the mouth over the
Reaga n admin is tration's sale of
arms to lran 7 " - Opelika, Ala.
-"Sirs: You jackasses have
ca used fi ve host ages to be kepi in
captivity b)' terroris ts ... Ali i ca n
say to ~ou jackals is 'Get
Lost!~! "

-Anonymous.

-"The libera l iynch-moborgyis ts are alive and have a n
orgasmic iss ue at last. Each new
revelation genera tes another media orgasm_ Ain 't 'sho biz'
grand!" - Hilton Head Island,
S.C.
-" We wish we had a bu tton on
our TV th at we could press and
have your camera bounce billiard balls off vour head when
yo u start irresponsible babbl ing.
One more thought: We wish you
would go to Russia and criticize
tha t government and get your
free ti cket to Siberia_" - Emmitsburg, Md . '
-(To Bill Plante of CBSJ:
"The pres ident Is st ili a genti l?man , a s tatesman a nd a lrue
American. You are stili a jerk.
Why don' t you Jlve in Nicaragua?" .- Signal Mountain . Tenn.
-"To the Fludest Man in
Washington, a. k.a. Sam Donaldson: " fofound it interes ting that
at one point (on a particular
program) you said, 'reporters
are human beings.· So glad you
clarified your identity. I~ any
case, you co ntinue to be a jer k."
-Arlington, Va .
-"Merry Christ mas to the

A man approached the victim
at 10: 47 p.m. Friday while he sat
on a bench wait ing (or a
Manhattan-bound No. 4 !'rain at
the 167th Street stop, about six
blocks from Yankee stadium,
and yeii.ed at other P.eople on the
platform.
"He said 'Don't look. Don't
look," ' Harrington said.
"He pulled a small black
handgun from his righthand
pocket and shot the victim in the
head, and went through the
victim's pockets. He then walked
down· the stairway and casually
left the system," Ha rrin gton

said.
The gunman stole money and
jewelry , he sa id.
Transit and city police were
questioning at least four people
who witnessed the shooting and
robbery .
Harrington said the gunman
said something to the 'victim
before the shooting, and a · city
police spokesman, Sgt. John
Venetucci, said the gunman told
the man, "Gimme, what you
got ."
The victim looked up and said.
' What ?' a nd the suspect "produces a firearm and shoots the
victim in the head," Venetucci

sa id.
"I don 't think anybody tried to_...
Intervene. What can you do If :
you're a bystander and the guy-':has a gun?," he said.
• ·
An administrator at Lincoln
hospit al said detectives "\\'ere ·, '
here toda y tak ing photos of the
man, because he didn't have any "
identification on him."
Police did not have a suspect in : ,
the attack and did not find a,.;:
weapon. The subway stop Is In ~
the infamous South Bronx sec- ......
lion, an area notarized by thEt •
movie " Fort Apache, The

A0LU attorney Meir Wes·
!reich said the ACLU would noi
take any legal action against
Chabad ior going ahead with it s
religious ceremony.
"That doesn' t concern us_
· We're concerned about the offi cia! sanction ," West reich said.
"We're concerned about what
the city was planning to do, not
private individuals. Anyone can

light a ca ndle.in fron.t of city hall
as long as they leave with it."
But Rabbi David Eliezrle, who
led the ceremony, pointed to a
living pine tree decorated with
lights 50 feet from the spot where
the small menorah stood.
"We are not challengin g th e
city's rights to have a Christmas
tree," he said. "We live in a
plu ralistic society. We feel if

"

sta le

Cooper said groups are allowed
to hold religious ceremonies in
public parks, bu t cannot leave
behind a display.
The Chaba d Community Center of North Orange County had
erected a 10-foot menorah in
Sasser Park f~:" ca ndtelightlng
cer€'mony mark in ~ the firs t nigh t
of Hanukkah. the eight-day Jewish festival of lights.
City workers removed the
nine-arm ca ndles tick from the
park aft er Cooper revoked the
permit for the menora h.
But Chabad members instead
tit a smaller, portable menorah
in the pa rk short ly after sunset
F'rlday an d defied t he citv's
orde r by leaving ·it there wtien
they left.
' "The Chabad position is that
the city of Sa nt a Ana Is dealing
with a publi c forum dedi cated to
pub lic express ion," said Daniel
Spitzer, an attorney for the
gro up.
"By rescind ing its permit for
erection of the menorah, the city
is denyl'Ul to Chabad its First
Amendment ri ghts to freedom of
express ion and free exercise of
religion ," he said.

Betty Crocker became a wellkn own advertising symbol fo r
General Mills. Husted was responsible for developing the
"Betty Crocker Picture Cookbook," first published in 1950.
In 1948, Husted was named
Woman of the Year by the
Women's Na tional Press Club In
Washington. The award was
presented to her by President
Truman. In 1949, she was named
Advertising Woman of the Year
by the Advertising Federation of
Amer ica.
Husted had no immediate
survivors. Services were pendIng.

'\

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-- ...

.

.

' Glveewey

.,'

'

'I

•

''".;

DEMONSTRATION -Under the watchful eye
of local residents and police, some 500 demonstra·
tors chanting ant~ racist slogans and carrying
placards m~ch through this predomlnanlly

while Queens nelpborhood Friday, where thre~
blacks were attacked last weekend. Although ·
tensions were high, no incidents were reported (UP!)
'
'

•

· 8 room house. .1.2 ICJM. Double

n~ ¥Mr akl ltmlle Coc~~w
SpiNII, Whtlt • gold. GOOd

with children Ph. 114·318·
8253 10am. to 9pm.
Rltlbftl to Ofvt IWay Ph. &amp;46-

..•

t1•9.

' Red Tldt COon· Dog, milt.

115';"0. old Ph. 614-992-7103.

••
?

/

.

.... e14' 317·03~3 . .

2 bt. kitchen , batflroom, with

.,

81ol-ll2-2631 .

Lost: lerge white Huatcy type
dog In Utert FIHa trtl. Call
61•-20-3&amp;11 .

"Have you thought this

LOST 2 hiQie mala pupa, I
months otd. 1 black and white, 1

through, Preston? If ·I gave

rid. 304·175-llstli .

you a salary increase, you
would lose your eligibility
for food stamps."

9 ' Wanted TQ Buy

2nd. Avo. Mldtll_., Oh . IU992-3478.
8UYINO RAW FURSI Gir~~eng.
Yellow Rc,ot, beef and liM'·

hidret. Atto

Hlling

Attired couple to IIY•In tdiOin·
lng tplrtrnent. rent ""· pklt
ulary in exch.,... for ful c•aof
II patient. land lett• of .,aacatlon toP .0 . Boa Ill, Galllpolll,

Gtorgtluclllll¥ 114-164-4761.
, QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD
C11h paid . Pre 1150' &amp;. Single or
whole coHICtion. C.tl Mtrc: and
Ellen. Fultz 114-IU-2101 dayt
or 814-182-2411 evening• and
WHkenda.
QUILTS
. IOUGHT· SOLO
Ctth paid. Pre 1950's. Single or
whole col..ction. Call Mire and
Ellen Fultz 114-912· 2101 d-v1
or 114-182-2411 awnings 1nd
Wllktnda.
SAVEO Goopol Singing Group
... ing booking aterting Jenu•ry.
1917. Anyone int...ted in
booking "SAVED" c~ cellarq
code t)04) 611·1013. ThMk
you for your tupport 1nd miY
God lilA You. "SAVED" .

'

·rop

CASH paicl for '83 modal
and MWet" UHd c... Smith
Buldi;-PonfiK, 191 1 Ead.,
Ave., Gallipolis, CaN e14· 446-

22a2.

Athant Mental .... etth Canttr. A
200 phla bed JCAH acertdtted

It's nurslno alr\llcea ancl mff
dwel'"'int proorama. Ohio
Univer1tty BSN Progt'ltn ltu
than · 1 ml!e from hotpital.
Sttrtlnt

ui•I• ~ Bteff

oa2.ooo to1o.l58 P•

Service scheduled
RACINE - New Year's Eve
services will be held Wednesday
from 8 p.m. to midnight at the
Eagle Ridge Church.
Special singing by Wayne and
Linda Rhodes: and others, wlll be
featured. Rev. Carl Hicks weicomes everyone.

NurM

hou~ .

Nurtt Supervltor· Ut,IOO

1012.20 pw

'-~ ·

Aftornoon

tnd night shift diH..-antial. h callanl banaflt P'otli•"· Cqn·

.... , P•nonnol Office. A.,.,,
Mentll Heltth Cen1er 114-592·
3031·,.• 388. EEO &amp; AAP.
Govemm1nt joba. tUI.040 .
"19.230 yr. Now hiring. Call
IJ05-IB7· 1000 Ext. R-910&amp; for
current faderalllllt .
P1rt time work· tuM time banef·
lts!l Mlmbeta of the Army
NttM)n• Guard cen racalve a
montflly pay chtc:k.
lite
insur•nca, f1B,OOO tdut11ion

•so.ooo

anl.rMca Md much more.
304-175-3910 or 1·800·642 3619.

Public Notice

In Iovin&amp; memory of

A11 11 uun r, e111 ~ 11 ts

JERRY NELSON

3 Announcements

who passed away on

his birthday, Dec.
28, 1983.
God saw 'h• wos suftorina
The hills were hud to
climb,
So he closed his weary eyes
And wtlispered, Puco be
thine.
Time will never dim lhemt-

GOVERNMENT HOMES from
n IU repair). O.llnqu.nt till
prop.rty, R1pouH&amp;ion1. C1ll
BOIHSB7· 1000 Exi.GH ·UI2

for curr..,t repo 1111.

A1clnt Gun Shoot aponsor-.:1 by
A•c!n•OunCiub. Ev.ry8und8Y.
btgmnlng It 1:00 p.m. Futory
Cho.., 12 guage 1hotguna.

mories

thoe;e pcm Chrinm• billa 1nd
.,..,.., FNt gift with flnt order.
eo11 :ro.-u2-2M5. ·

w. v..

• t
HOME ASSEMBLY
hceflent IPif• time income;
tiiOITOniCI, cnfta. no e~~pe-­
rience.
lnlormttion 104141 · 009 •t. 2987. 7 d-vs.
CALL NOW!

ou. ...

Uicty to lhte In li9ht houakllping
Ph . 304-1715-1104.

. REPS NEEDED
Fot buliftlll KCOUnu. FuMnme. . .0 .000.110.000. Pwf.

nm.,

IJ2,000-t1B.OOO. No
Hll6hg. NPMf. busln. .. Sat your
own hou,.. Trainlnl provided.
Cell: 1·112-138-1170, M-F.
8Mn to ISpm IC.n1rwl Standtrd

nmat.

'

FuR time poetdon for ptraon
••.,.,lenCid in cotmetle saiM
IJ'ICI m...., .. dlslng, .arne w.n·
lng Mid w ... and work requlrld .
Send,_ loll C-23, c•• Point
" - - "'-"'"'· 200 Meln St.•
Pt. Ptt., W. V•.
DIRECTOR OFNURSING.krngterm ewe. uc 18'fel position, left
ltlrtlfwfth penonal budg...-,.
m•eeement ·end tuptrV61ing
tk11s ...-.c~ . Knowtldoa of
,..,.. and stlte w0111aure end
certifiCM:ion NIUI81ion, wtth 3
.,._. nutting managsment In
kmg term Ctrt rtQuhd. BIN or
ICfUhllln with GetomologiCIII
Nurtint •PI'rience or fflinlng
dlllrad. laltry negotleble. Contact AdmlnlttriiOr, Hillview
Nuflinlend Rehlbilitatlon Can·

E-ced - · noodod tw, 304-529·1031 .
inmyhom•callt14-256-1781.

1-------'----

3 Announcemenh

Asmile, a voice is missina
When God called him 1bove.
· Sadly missed by
mother. Garnet,
Children. James, K1thy
and wife, Betty.

WWTADS

'0.11!6116

'

I

1971 Wlndtor. 70a14, 3 bed·
rooms. In v.,. nice condition.

,.., my on lot. 08000. 7•23033.

34

ph ... C.lll14-ll2· 1873.

Room end board for s.ntor
citiz.nt. Plenty of TLC . Call

1

I
'

I

1

l
j

I

AltiS$1•• SUD PO , _
11.!11 Fll CIILID _ . U

. ,. - ••._,I Gill tiiU (114\)

~.

.

Business
Buildings

Nicety fllrnr.hed mobile home
CA &amp; heet , ex cel . location.
eduttaonly . Call614-446·0338
Furniahed efficiency 1160 utili·
tin paid, 1here bath, 701 4th,
Gallipolis. Call448·4416 aft..- 6
pm.

Nicety furnr.hed 2 bdr. apt .
Adutt1 only. Inquire 1t com•
First &amp; Olive St . at Sheppardt
Sales &amp; Service.

Duplex 646 Second, clt'peted. 3
bedroom, LA . DR . naw kilchen
• ba1h. WISher &amp; dryer hook-up,
1285 .00 mo. plu a utilitin &amp;
security deposit Ph. 614-0690 .

514-992-6173.

1 B Wanted to Do

l---------

For Sela: 901.110 lot in Tw in

CUSTOM SEWING
Ah11'11iont or niiW g•rn.nts call

W.V. 141500 lirm. 304· 8823206.

IU-44&amp;··56t .
Reliable women would like to
bibytft any houn. Ph. 01 .. 4-46-

R~ nl als

92011.

Will babytit in my home anytime
white you et11br111 ttte Holl·
d.,.,, Ref•encet. clll 304·
671-2417.

41

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom houan
tor rent Ph. «8-1876.
2 Bedroom. 1 'h batht, loC11ed in
downtown aru. Adults ontv
refll'tnCM &amp;: deposit reQUired

21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I •
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. riCOnti'nendtr th~ you
do busin- wtth peopte you
know, and NOT to aend money
through the mltil until you h.,a
lnvlltirgatld the offering.

23

Profeaaional
Services

ltMkl frM and Llwn s.Mce.
Hedge1. shruba, buahtt
t'imfned.- 1111 dac~lng , stump
lftd leef ,.....,..,.., 304·111·
2842 Of 171-2010.

Ph. 1514-441-3776

Homes for Sate

614-446-0322.

1 &amp;ldroom buic UN'I1 $176.00
plul electric. AltO required · a
$200.00 ncurity diJI)otit , CON ·
TACT : Jackton Estatas Dept . Ph
4415 - 3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Unfurnit had apt . 4 rooms &amp; bath
cantraly located. Refl!ll'llf'tcet &amp;
Security deposit required. Ph.

47 Wanted to Rent

Apartment
for Rent

2 1nd 3 bedroom apartme;nts
and houses in PomerOy or
Middlaport . Furnished or unfur·
nished . Pay own utilit iet . Call
. day &amp; 614-992-2381 .

Appattments for rent in Pomeroy. One and two bedroom .
Clean •nd nice. C.ll 114-9928216 or 814-992·7314.
2 bedroom 1pt1 , New He .... an .
Atso commerciel space auitable
for aerobics, tanning , craftt. Call
304-882- 3681 or 814· 992·

7481.
One bedroom, unfurni1hed, totll
electric: apt. Own• pay a w•ter
•r'ld traah piCkup. Call 614·992·

2094.

61.·992-5170
APARTMENTS , mobile hom'n .
hous•. Pt . Pleaaanund Gtllipolis. 614-446 -8221 .

114-446-0444

Fum. 1 bedroom apt .. tint floor .
$215.00 month . Heat and water
furni1hed . Ref. 8. dap, 304·675·

Furniahed 1pt. $176.00 watet
pd. 2 bedroom. 131 'h Fourth
p.ve. Ph. 446 -4416 after 7pm.

2Yz bedroom apartment for rent ,
phona 304-675-6988 1ftar 5

2661 .

New 2 bedroom 1pt1. In Muon,
W. V1. Qu iet sening. off street

parking . R1nt starts at S 199.
Call Linda C.rson at 304-ns6011 or Denise Streib at 614·
813 - 41o1,1 . Equal Housi ng
Opportu~hy .

.

P m.

0766.

2 to 3 bedroom 1pt. Conv11nient
loc.-:ion In town. All utiliti• paid
1325.00mo .. relerancat &amp; dep·
oslt required . Wiltmtn Real
Estate Agtncy Ph . 614-446·

.

81"-992-5304 .

3S.4

2 badrooma. In Middleport.
Complltety remodeled. ni'W tiM'·
1)811ng, new ublnen. Call 1514·

Furnished I unfllrnished apl s ..
t150.00 and up. refll'll'll:fl Ph .
304· 676·5 104 A· 1 Reel Estate .

992-6188.

4 bedroom•. built-in kitchen ,
dining room, ltvint room with
fireplace . Avellable immt·
dl .. aty. t1815. p• month . 114-

742-2410.

2 bdr., all u1 ilitia peid IIICapt
elec., furn . Of' unfurn ., aee.
deposit urquir... ConviH'IIent
location . C.ll814-446 -8668 or

814·44•-•na .
2 8adrooin hrrnished. We ICCtpt

HUD. leM~tilul river view. Fol·
111'a Mobile Homa Park 1514·

448-1102.

Help Wanted

HBJ FARM UNIT
Seeking individuals in Gallia and
surrounding counties. If you are
seeking a 'career which include,s
great earnings. advancement opportunities, and unbelieveable
incentive programs we shouldtalkj

B

Furtl is hed room 9'9 2nd. Galli·
polia. t115. Utilili• pd . Share
bath. Single mal e. Call 446·
4418 attar 7pm.

45 Space for Rent
COUN f AY MOBILE Home Park,
Routt 3 3 . Nonh of Pom•ov .
Larg alots. Call 814-992 -7479.

Public Sale
8o Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY, JAN. 3, 1987-1 PM

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

NEXT TO POST OFFICE IN VINTON, OH.
This is a partial listing os there is too many
items to list.
HOUSEHOLD AND IIISCELLANEOUS
Washer. dryer. wri nger was her, refrigerator , lree.z er.

Sears gas stove. bedwom suite, sola. chairs, ktlchen Ia·
ble and 4 chairs. metal ktlchen cabmets, metal wardrobe,
sewmg machine, desks. en tertainment center, dressers,
chest ol drawe rs coflee table. end tables, TV !color). hall

tree, lamps. clocks, swe eper, flom polisher,luggage. iron
skillets lood grinde r. dis hes. hamper, tots ot bed ltnen,
baby sttofler and car seat. girl's btke, tnsulalors, shoe
lathe, tools and lots more.
TERIIS: Cash or approved check with positive I.D.
FOOD
HEATED BUILDING

OWNER: FRANK HUTCHINSON
AUCTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC

licensed and Bonded
Not Responsible for Accidents or lostltems

Company benefits and full training
For personal interview mail name,
phone number and brief summary
of employment to: Gallipolis Tribune, Sox T-900, Gallipolis, Ohio

46631.

Rio Grande Colleae/ Community College announces
the re-open inc of the snrch for the position of Diretor of Cotleae Rel1tions.
Reportinl directly to the Vice President for Development responsibilities of this position include enhancement 1nd coordination of cotlep public relations: mistina f1culty with media needs: interfaclne with newspapers. redio and television stations
and conducting muketinc for the cotleae.

Interested persons should send sletter of interest.
complete up-to-date resume includinc names and
addresses of three references, before the deadline
of December 31, 1986 to:
Personnel Officer
Rio G11nda Colle1e/Communty Collqe
P.O. Box969
pio Gr111de, OH. 45674
l io G1111dt Collop/CooullllniiJ Coll111 it 111 !quo!
O,""'oity/AIIInultYt Acttoo I•IIIDft'

54. Misc. Merchandise

Siil&amp;le or double car
garage lor show car.
In Porter/ Bidwell or
close by.
Call 446-2890 anytime.

Merchand ise

County Appli~n ce, Inc. Good
used appliances and TV letl .
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat . 614-US-1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis , OH .
Valley Furniture, new &amp; used.
Llrge section ot qu1lity furniture , 1218 Eutern Ava .,
Gallipolis .

Tippen eltc. COOk ltOVI, aVIC ·
oda green . 1200.; 1979 Chev.
pickup 4 wheal drive, 360 auto .,
8 tt . bad, IJOOdtires. $2 ,600 , Ph.
372 -6390.

8

For rent Sleeping Room1 and
light house keeping rooms. Ptrk
Central Hot el . Call 614-U15-

BeMiful new house In Pom•
roy . Alao new ana ~room
furnithecl 1panment in Mlddl•
pon. Cell 814·446· 1552 or

.

Pickens Used Furniture. Good
quelity uaed furniture. Open 91o
6 or call for appointment .
304-676·6483 or 676-1460 .

WANTED TO RENT

45 Furnished Rooms

2 Bldroom hou&amp;e, 842 First
Ave., Gtlli~is. No pets, r.t•enc:tl 6 deposit requlfed . Aveil·
•bleJan. 1. 1987CIIII14· 2156-

t529.

Family for adults needa 3
bedrooms and basement in Pt .
P1aaunt within 5 miles. Refer ences furnished Ph. 676·1091 .

Weshers,
GOOD US
dryef1,
EO APPLIANCES
rsfrigetltors.
ranges . Sk•ggs Appliances .
Ul)per RlwoM Rd. beaide Stone
Crut Mote l. 614· 446· 7398.

51 Household Goods

One bedroom aptrtm.,t in
Middleport . Fully c•petld, t011I
electric, equipped kitchen. good
location. Call 814 -992·3667 or

2 Bedroom 1pt . nice carpet ing ,
w1tar p1id, w•&amp;her A dryer Room• for rent, dty . week.
hook -up, stove. relr~ . fumilhad
month . Gallia Hotet. Cai1 ,614av•ilable Jan 1 . 1987 Ph . , ,.U8-971 6 . Rent aalow as S120
614-445-7026.
month .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
31

•

44

Furnished Apt $210.00 lltlletl• Pd. 1 bedroom, first,ftoor Ph.
Utl-4416 •fter 7p .m.

ottlca spec• · Store spec::e in Pt.
PI-tnt, f200.00 A-One Rul
Ettate Ph. 304-876-6104

Usad Furn iture: Wa1her &amp;
dryer, gat range, wood table &amp;
2 benchet. beds, dre.set", wood
wardr obe . 3 milel out
Bulav ille Rd. Open 9AM to
5PM . Mon. thru Sat .

~,::••::":-::•:·==::::==;:::::;;;;;;;;;;:=====~

Apartment
for Rent

Furnished efficiency 1175 .00,
2rm1 . &amp; blth utili1ies Pd. 4464416 after 7p.m .

QUIIiliCitions include successful uperience in
writincand editine institution•! publications, lamiliari" with m1rketinc techniques, inctudine public
sptlktn&amp; and presentations, solid record of experi- •
ence in rnarhtinc. joum1tism 1nd information services. A Bachelor's Decree is required : advanced
decree preferred .
Startinc sallry $18.000·$20,000.

•

-

Call

DIRECTOR OF COLLEGE RELATIONS

•I

'

botho.

Room and board for employed
m1n . Nice home. Ftmly ttmus ·

11

Anyone having any information regarding this criminal act are.urged
to contact the Meigs Sheriff's Office
or notify Carl E. Smith Petroleum.
Int. at 304·273-9313.

eBME dBIN 0§ fiT

l'*'tlt•-111...

Situations
Wanted

3 bdr .. lit, poot, g•ege. Nlct.
Commtrcill propeny. comer
Iota • higttw.y fron~•· Ust
with us. We h~• buytrs. A -One
Reel Estat•Brok•. C.ll 304674-8104 Of' 304-17o4-15381.

A reward of $500 cash is offered'
for the apprehension and Convic·
tion of the person or persons res·
ponsible.for firing several gun shots
into a gas compr~ssor station
owned and operated by Carl E.
Smith Petroleum in Portsmouth.
located on Silver Ridge Rd., Orange
Twp., Meigs (ounty, O,hio.

!

Of the one we dear!, loved.

12

~t Avon help you Ol't thl belt of

u.p.ienc. e plu•. write Box
C·22, Clll'l ot Point Pl,.nt
Aegitt•. 2QO Mllin St. , Pt. Ptt .•

,1_1 Help Wanted

tuu

C.d• llddtdon.' New H1ven.

P.-t dme employm~nt, compu.
t• bedlpound and accounting

l·t•plt '11'11"11
:J t' r v 11. ~~ : -;

44

-lc -

trap~ng , paychlltric holpital ls •plftding

tuppMn, Whtlt Ut11. Nit~ li111.
Hourt 1 :00·8:00. .Cto111d Wad.

-.om. 2

1-801-687-8000 Ext. A· 9806.

.

NEW ANO USED MOBILE

114-992-7183.

Alrlin• MW hiring. Flight At·
tendsnta, Ag.m , Meetu1nic.,
Cuatorner Service. Sal•l81 to
•IOK. Entry lell'el po1itiana. Can

Ohio 45631 .

R1j dlr - 675-1333

LETART FALLS - Leta rt
. Tow nship Trustees will meet
Wed nesday, 9: 30 a. m .. for the
final business meet ing o( the
yea r . Publle welcome.

11 Help Wanted

Help Wanted

0

0

12a10 2 bedroom p1rti1lly fur·
niahad In Centenery Ph . 614-

876-3000 .

PHONE IU-446-7274.

(hf\OVERS ~

Mobile Home Stella Court Ph
614-446-0786 .

K &amp; K Mobile Homes, 2 tnd 3
bedroom mobile hom". 304-

HOMES. KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOilLE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST, OALUPOLIS. AT 36.

Cl-\~tSIMAS

614-446-7157

f40,000. C.ll 304-676-6440

t;;::;:;:;::;;:::;~~~'T;;:;;::;:;:;;;;,::;:;;;~::'i"BI5
home
for tela.
14•70.mobile
••callant
condition
. 2
11

ri"ffi, jewelry, sterling w1re. okl
coint. ,.,.. cunll'lcy. Top pri·
011. Ed. lurkaq &amp;arbar Shop,

Hospital C.ll
llfl• 8 :00pm .

2 bedroom mobila home, Mid·
dlaport, 0 . Re1•ence with ••
curity depo1it . 304-882-3267
or 304-773-6024.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

AI\, MYrAVOF!tT€ ~

1&amp;•70 Mobll e Homefor rent in a

IM.~ndry room, living room A
dlnine room, Ill alec. Approa . 7
mt111 from Pt. Pl. on At . 62. 2
traett....,rOII . 1 acremoreOI'Ins
ovarlooking tt.nawha River.

t.Mwean 8:30 and 4;30.

Sof11 end chltirs priced fr om
&amp;395 tO 1996. Tabl es 160 and
up to 1126. Hide-a-beda 1390
to 16 95 . Recliner~ U25 to
$316 . Limps UB to 1125.
OiniUft 1 109 tnd up to 1495 .
Wood table w -6 chtirs 1285 to
1795 . Desk 1 100 up to 1375.
Hutchel 1400 a nd up . Bunk
bedt • eomplet• w -meur"tes
U95 and up to $395 . Baby beds
S110 &amp; I 1 75. Mattresses or boll
springs full or twin $63, firm
S73, •nd $83. Queensett 1225,
Ki ng $350. 4 drawer ch"t $86
Or"tert S89, Gun c tbinets 8,
10. • 12 gun. Gu Of elect ric
rang&amp; 1376. Baby mattreu&amp;s
•35 &amp; $46 . Se d frames $_2 0.
$30 &amp; King frame $50. Good
selection of bedroom . suites,
met al cabinets. headboard• 130 .
and up to $65.

quiet countf"¥ leTting on 0 . J .
Whitt Rd . .Ciote to Holr:er

446· •292

Somlltlmt Fridey, mans
mouth mtln•. In Mkldlepon ,
Pomeroy wldnity, Pink with
lilwatwft. Rtw.trd. If found, can

Buvinl dtity gold. sllvtr coins,

In Eurek• nictandclean, adults
onty ,· No pett. depoai1 rtquifed.
180,00 mo . eaii614-2S6-1636
before 1 Oa m.

c•

nw Red,.-. Inn O'l At. 31 C.ll
814· 446-1071 .

ltol-«1-3872

Oowrnmtnt hom11 from t 1. IU
rapairl . Delinquent It• prop.-ty.
RapotMAiona. C.ll 801-1871000 Eat. GH·9801ii for curr«tt
repo 1111.

2 ttorv. 3 bedroom houHwi1h 1
g•ag• on Appro11 1 .15 acnts.
133,000. Call 114-192-,104.
Hemlock Orovt ,,..,

Found· bllldc a QrfY' malettfrM)r,

used
Clrl
.
Jim
Mink
Chtv.·Oidllnc.
a;o OoneJohnoon

2 bdr. fully furnished adults onty,
util. paid. Call 814-U6-4110.

3D4-n3-6784.

FOUND· PO!'IY on Whit a Oek Rd.

Lot1:t

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

114-678-21513 .

2 bedroom hou. . lor sale in
Clrtton (Mabla Johnson prop·
erty) . Filii'( ·e•pelecl, r.centl'(
remodeled, riew roof. Allling
1111,000. Cell304-173-15634or

8 Lost end Found

'f&gt;*'

JuWv timet· ie11thid

Letart trustees to meet

;/

,{

(

51 Houeehold Goods '

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

c., u•-v.. Loc.t.ct on RoM Hill.
Barglin priOid 120,000. Call

. ..•

'

Spitzer said Chabad wou ld r---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - ' - - - - - . . . , . . . ,
seek .unspeci fied legal action ln
Orange County Superior Court
TrltAn - 44&amp;-2342
Monday agai nst the city fo r
revokin2 its permit.
Seulilll - 912-ZI!I&amp;

31. Homea. for Sale

LAFF-A-DAY

we payclllh forl1te mQ4111ciNn

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-0-5

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

REWARD

vu lturesu- Youngstown, Oh io.

dead at 94

4

. •t•'
.'

there is a Christmas tree. there ts .'.:
no reason there shouldn't lle' '
Hanukkah menorah."
·
Chabad, an international Jew- :
Ish organization, arrived In Cali-' :
fornia in thel960s. Itrunsschoois from elementary to high sc hool ,,
sta tewide, as well as a Los •
Angeles non -sectarian drug ·
abuse treatment center and a.' ;
shelter for the homeless.
' ·
' ·~
· .::
'""
.,
.4,..
"""'
-.;'

~

December 28, 1986

"1-"i
•"'.t. .

Bronx.''

Jews light· ~~norah in defiance of ordef:,
By ANNE'ITE HADDAD
SANTA ANA, Calif. !UP! ) Hasidic Jews lit a menorah in a
public park F~ld~y night in
def1ance of the cll y s decision to
revoke a permit allowing display
or the traditional Hanukkah
candelabrum on park grounds.
. City Attorney Ed C?"per rescmded the permit Fnday after
the America n Civil Liberties
Union charged that sanctioning a
display of a religious symbol in a
public park violated the const ituIlona! separation of church and

..

..'-

December 28,.1986 ~

NASA announces space station plans; construction
By WD,LIAM HARWOOD
UP! Science Writer·
(:APE . CANAVERAL. Fla.
(UP!) - NASA has ruled out
using unmanned rockets to ferry
s_pace stallon components into
orbit during the ea rly phases of
the project even though such
throw-away rockets cou ld speed
up construction.
A study conducted by John
Dunning. a space station manager at NASA 's Lewis Research
Center in Cleveland. found that
use of new expendable rockets,
along wit h the shuttle. could
accelerate assembly by up to
nine months compared to using
the space shu ttle alone to ferry
components into orbit.
But Dunning said the schedule
adv ant age provided by unmanned rockets was offset by a

.,_._ ~ -- .....

FRENCH HILL
FARM SALE
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30·
11:00 A.M.
LOCATED: S miles W. of Gallipolis on
Rt. 35 or 6 miles E. of Rio Grande
52 HEAD GRADE HOLSTEIN COWS &amp;BRED
HEIFERS- HERD AVE. 11,127 - 3.7 II
EQUIPMENT: N.l.#707 Uni Harvester-125 .HP.
Wide Tires (only 643 hrs.) Model 717 Combtne,
Straw Chopper. Model 738 4 row head, 713 Grain
Platform (all VG.): Farmall Super Mw/ 3 pt Hitch,
Overhaul 1984 (VG cond.), J.D. 40 ft. Elevator
(needs repair), N.l. 310 Corn Picker (good); Delaval
PTDAitemator 25 kw(newcond.),J. D. 1454d6se·
mi-Mt. Plow 20" coult. Liquid Fert. Systemlor4 row
pl1nter, w/ elect. pump, Heat Houser for flrmall . I·
Freeman loader lor Farmall, S steel Ftrt. Jenks,
5-2" Banjo valves, 3 pt. boom, heat houser lor J.
D.. 2-t8.4x34 Good-year tires (30% tread no
holes), cattle heftl gala, 70 ft. Jamesway silage
feeder, 16 Dtlaval Autocord takeoffs.
TRUCK PARTS: Alum. Topper, 48"hillt wood topper,
1979 Chev. PU bed, lenders. F&amp;R llumpers.
2500 BALES VG HAY
BE PROMPT
LUNCH

JOHN CARMICHAEL - OWNER

614-446-2412
J. 0. FENSTERMAKER - AUCTIONEER

Public Sale
8o Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, JANUARY 3, 1987
10:00 A.M.

LOCATION: From Point Pleasant follow Sand Hill
Road 9 miles, turn lett at old Town Board Church and
go one mile, turn right at church and go one mile,
then turn left. Watch lor signs. The following will be
sold:
·
TD9 International dozer, 2 Mass1e Harris tractors. flat bed
wagon, lwo wheel tra iler. 12" planner. belt powered cement mtKet, CraHsma n electric welder, wench, tobacco
stick sa w, cut-off sa w, Remin gton chain saw, 1965 C-60
Chevtolet truck 18' bed frame . 1979 Dodge ca r, cane
mill, molasses pan , 700 BDL 30.06 Remington rille
w/ Bushnell night vision scope. Mossbefi 243 w/scope,
lruc k aKie. hydraul ic wood splitter, copper kettle, canning jars, garden planter, platlorm scales, Barrell pump,
vise. anvil. blacksmith longs, 2 forges. gasoline motor, 2
window fans, hydraul ic pump and cylinder. 40 gallon
electric water heater, 4000 watt generator. brooder, 2
wheelbarrows, small air compressor. pol bellied stove.
circular saw, hydraultc jacks. log chams. chain binder s.
and other miscellaneous items.
Terms: Cash or Check w/ ID.

,.

ff:,

STANLEY KINGERY, OWNER
Lee Johnson,
AUCTIONEER
CROWN CITY, OHIO
256-6740

Not Responsible lor Accidents or loss 'of Property

&amp; AUCTION &amp;
Tri-Green
Interstate Equipment, Inc.
7 mrles north of london. Oh to alrntersectton of 1-7 0 ieKrt # 791
and U.S. Aout e42 12 m1leswestofColumbus. 19 mtles east of
Sprrnghe ld and 40 miles east o l Davton

Thursday, January 1, 1987
Thursday, January 29, 1987
Both sales begin at 9:00a.m. sharp!!
NEXT SALE : Thursday, February 26, 19B7
SALES HELD I.AST THURSDAY OF EACH MONTH

Now l Uood Fonn l tnduotriol Equipment Of All Kinds
Constgnments l rom severBI Loca l Farm s and Dealers
Many 11ems at Absolu te Au c 1tOn .

PlAN TO ATTEND THIS AUCTION
AS A BUYER-SELlER-VISITOR

TRACTORS: J.D., tH .. CoM, M.F, Ford. Etc.
•11~M-.. • MoOellto choose from 25to 150 H.P.
Several Makes &amp; MOOels of Corn PICtCfs &amp; Gravtt'(Wagons
lndusu.a l Eqwpment and sa lv;,ge uacto rs
T1llage EQUipment Plows 1· 7 bottoms. d•sc s
F1eld Cu lhvatou , Pack ers, E1c , Grtnder· Mt•ers .
Round &amp; Square Ba lers. Rakes &amp; Mowers of all kmd s
, . . . fqt I; •• It to suitbetfOi... , . . ._

• LUNCH SEAVEO e

Tri-Green
Interstate Equipment, Inc.
1499 U.S. Route 42 N.E.
London, Ohio 43140
(614) 879-7731 · 879-7732 · 879-7549tP""'

Dick G'"" Judy Green Connie G. Bellah
Mad ison Go. Airport &amp; Motels nearby
Licensed &amp; Bonded in favor ol the state of Oh10
NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR ACCIDENTS
TEAMS: Cull 01 cllectt w/ proptr I.D.

~

•

�I

Page-D-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
51 Hou•ehold Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 12

Olive St., O.llipolia. New~ t.Mtd
wood-cotl ttOYII. I pc wood LA
.ulte t399, bunk bedt •199.
antron r~ln•• 199, new &amp;
uud bedroom auitas, ''"Iiiii,
wringer wathlrt. • tho ... New

llvlngroom tuitq t199-tl599.
lamps, alto buyinlit coel &amp; wOod
atovu. C.IISU - 441 - 31~9 .

66

Pets for S.ale

W!nt..- fahlons • spac:ill christ- ·
m• grtt. for your pets. Groom &amp;
Suppty Shop Ph. 614-448-0231
AKC Regist..-lld Chow-COOw
PuppiN. Excelltm pedigra..
R. .dy -for Chrinmas. Ph. 614268-1948
Reglst..-ed ,Greilt DaneUOO.OO
Call 81 4· 446-1756.
·
AKC Registered Siberian Husky

64 Misc. Merchandise

puppies. 4 lema\81 lett. Shots
end wormed. noo. each. Call
81•·949-2940 after 15 :00.

oecember 28. 1986
December 28. 1'9 86

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.
56

Pets for Sale

66

61

Pets for Sale
. SPECIAL'

wHh tNcllng
&amp; a.-viae door 14,288.00

AKC Registered buff female
Cocker Spaniel p_uppy . Ateo
Siam"' C.t. No checls. Call
814-992-2807.

..ald. .
lulkllnQII Ph.l14-

AKC reais1tred Colliu . Sable
and Wh11e female, all shots and
'"'l?rmed, phone304-458- 10611.
3 year old BeagiM rabbit dog,

O.hl Grlnd•· r.'ll•er. New HOIlend 7 ft. hl'fblna. 1884 Fotd

$80.00. 304·876-2231 '

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Registered Beagladogs, Dwight
Baker, 'phon a 304-895-3938 .

Whitney Kimball Piano, lib new. F350 Long-whlllblletontruck.
Ph. 614-446-2961 or$14·982- 22.000 actual mil•. AI exc.elent condttion. :JtM.273-•21B.

3018.

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 31 W•t. Jackson. Ohio.

814-ZBII-8481 .

MIIMY ,_guton. New Holland,
lush Hog Btl• &amp; ServiN. Over
40 uaed trtctors to cltootl from
• ·comptlte lint of new &amp; unci
~qulpment. Urg..t selection In
S.E. Ohio.

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER · SA· 35 W. Gtlllpollo,
Ohio. Cell I 14-~-8777 , eva.
814-441-31582. Up front trat·
tore with 11\fananty over 40 usad
tractors, 1000 _toc;tls.

&amp;1

Liveatock

Farm Equipment

Gr.W. fed Anous Sta..-s Pll .

. '
7' heybinet ·t6,400.00: Model
488 9' htVblnes t6.70p .oo;
Modal 489 9' haVbli1u
t7 .eoo.oo . Kaefer• thrvice
Center, St. At, 87. Pt. P1euant
Ripley Road . Pfl. 304: 895-

DEUTZ·ALU8 LAST OF VEAA
TRACTOR SPECIALS . Model
103133 PTO HP dl•el. 8 spttd.
pow• at..-lng, dlt loclt hvd
spool value, rops with canopy .
Selll prict •8.91!10.00. Check
whh us on Ill HP renges . We can
finence on 7.97 percent lease
purQhlle piM1. NEW: HOLLAND
hay tool 1811 with 111 cash
dllcour1ts. Otcamber Only.
Model 451 7 ' mowers
t1 ,100.00: Model 168 10'
tedc:lltr 11 ,250.00; Model 266
,.kai t2,000.00; Modal 472 7'
hayblnM ti.IOO.OO: Model47(

3874.

614·4411-0710.

62 Wanted

rtnon•bly . Cell 814 -317 7U9.

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t!J 'Bi!y·

Now buyln'g shell corn or ur
corn. C. II for l1111t quotH:·River
City Farm Supply, 814~ 448298&amp; .
,,

' Large round bella of hay for slile.
· .n o.oo each Ph. 814-4481012.
~

Callallan'a Uted Tire Shop. Over

Plastic clttem state approved,
PIIS1ic

septic

tanks,

Dried lhellld COlt:' · U. 60 per
cwt. Ground t&amp;.OO par cwt.
Ground with moi..,IIIU. 715 per

cwt. 304- ~8- 1031.

1,000 tires, aizea 12. 1'3. 14, 16,
16 •.' 16.6. 8 miles out Rt. 2'18 .
Call 614-265-6261 .

ISEMAB·

plastic

culverts, metal cutnnt . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·

ton. Oh. 614-286 -6930.

, 71

REAL.ESTATE

1 elecuic wheel chir with
b1tterl11. 1 man1.1el wheel chair.
Bar with matching swivelttools
$120.00, consolstereo 175 .00.
ceth r~glster UO.OO Ph . 814-

446·1324.

New lully self-conttlnld jacuui

spa . 1981 Gallia County Fair
Olalplay. Retail 14,900 .00 atk·
ing *2.900.00. Padded cover &amp;
·~ chemicals included. Ph .
814-448-1324.

I

COUNTRY LIVING!- 9 acres and modern home.
3 bedroom ranch with attractive kitchen, living
room, small den and large baln. Quiet country
location in Add ison Township. $44,900.
N246

';, j

Autoa for Sale

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25 ACRES OF LAND; BARN room
step-saving kitchen with lets of quality cabinets,
dining room, living room with fireplace, 12•20
family room, 3 bedrooms, large bathrooms, 2
miles to grade school, 4 miles to nigh school. Quiet
location, useable land. Priced at $77.600..
m3

NEW
corner
car garage. with storage area above. Basement
with gas hot water heat. large living/family room.
Enclosed porch. Priced at $32,500.
#300
r

SOLD

Shop tor Christmas with
FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS,

New lull-langth Norwegian Blue
Fox fur co•t for sale *2,500. Call
Donna at 304-n3-59n or

882·2194.

Summtn~ille' s

Army Surplus, Eut of Ravenswood, Ph.
· 304-273-15656, New Hours Frl ,.
Sat., Sun .• 1 :2-Bpm.

TO RETIRE - Great location in town. 2
bedroom nome wi\lllivrng room, large dining room
and kitchen. Househas been well cared fer and rs
nicely de&lt;:orated inside. Partial basement. Ga s
heat. Would make a good starter home or
investment property also. $37,900.

56 Building Supplies
Building M•teri ..s
Block, bflck, sewer pipn, windows. lintels, etc. Claude Win ~~•- Rto Grande. 0 . Call 814-

#204

245-5121 .

Canery Kennel .

Siamesa kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. Call 614-446-3844
efter 7PM .

Real Estate General

601
E. M1in

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- large 2 story stooe home
with 4 bedrooms. I ~ baths,
Iami~ room. dining room and
full basement. A really mce
home lor just $28,900.00.

SYRACUSE - Country decor.
sin~e level. move rn condi·
lion. 4 bedrooms, eal-in
kitchen, family room. garage,
fireplace, bookcases. closets,
interior window shuHers, dra·
peries. Appliances ne~trab le.
$49,900.00.

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Henry E. Cleland, Jr
992·6191
Jtan Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992- ~92
Office ................ 992·6191
'

A·

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·[H
IUUOI

tl-l&amp;

REDUCED PRICE!! - Remodeled from head to
toe: Cozy smaller home ready for you. Perfect for
couple or single person. Newer carpet, eat·in
kitchen. living room , nice deck overlooking
wooded backyard. large carport, lull basement,
gas heat. $22,400.

m5

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WE NEED LISTINGS!

'78 Custom Oodga Vln, IUIO
1ransmlulon, good running
cond. af1• 1 :00 PM. l&lt;M· nJ-

441-9700

25 ACRES WITH 20 AC. CREEK BOTIOII -6 ac.
of hilly, partially wooded area including new home
under c6nstruction. Many young lru~ trees and
grape vines. Good place to live and have part trme
farm . Holding at $22,000.

mo

NEW LISTING - KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS Terrific smaller home with outstanding river view.
3 bedroom home includes living room with
attractive fireplace with insert. eat· in kitchen and
large covered side porch and 2 car sarage. Well
manicured 0.9 acre · lawn. $31.500. Emllent
. starter or vacation home.
#240

up~ai rs.

ms

STATE ROUTE 160- 4 bedroom brrck. lull basement. lr·
&lt;eplace &amp; finrshed family r.ooms 2 car garage f1nrsned
No trad e-in allh e prrce ol $45,000 00 Needs some TLC
Prrce Reduced, any reasonable oiler accepted accepted
prior to tst ol year'!!
PRICE REDUCED- fnr"' bedroomhome inPlantsSub·'
drvision. E&lt;eellent condition illd read y lo move into. Full
basement. carport. Comfortable. Was $43 .500.00. NOW
$39,500.00.
.
NEW LISTING - 3 Bedrm. home situated along Hannar
Trace Rd ., Walnut Twp. 1.8acres. Priced for immediatesale
$38.000.00.
APPROXIMATELY 5 ACRES of level ground adjacentlo Plea
sant Valley Estates: 350· of road frontage, with city water
sew• -• ·~s on premises. $400.00 per front foo.
NEAT o--JROOM HOME located along Rouin i!d~
Cheshire"'I:1J. Kyger Creek Schools. ApprOK. 'h ac re,
i wbfp. pool. Buy now lor $49 .500.00.

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SOLD

1979 CJ 6 Ooldtrl EtgiL Y·8,
3-apeed, spok•wh ...s. AM-FM
Stereo, low miiNge, Ph. 614-

...

e

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74

BLACKB
REALTY
514 ..
Au•nue•
~

IU~N\' HJ.M:KnrR~

Rroke•r

3 BEDROOM HOllE Ill KATHY OliVE nau Holzer Hostifal.
Low traffic area, ~rge back yard, WBFP. Gal !lei• Crty School
District Price $45,@ .
.
NEW LISTING: Downtown restaurafit business with D-5
license included. Call for more information!!!
. '

1 1~!1~~~£:_132 acres, 30 acres of bottom land. Buy now lcr
,oo,,uuu.•ru. l$265.00 per ACRE!!I)

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SELLIIG YOUR REAL UTATE IS BIG BUSINESS ....
AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON '

Hsppg Nsw y,,,,

FAIIILY ORIENTED NEIGHBORHOOD - Great
location for everyone. Convenient to shopping and
hospital. 6 yr. old ranch wrth 3 bedrooms 1~ ·
baths. livingroom and large eat·in kitchen the wife
will love. hcellent condition. 2 car garage.
hc~ll ent beginner home. $54,900.

m1
NEW! NEW! - Newly listed 1.570 SQ. ft. ranch
with full basement may be 22 years old, but looks
like new inside. Completely redecorated with
" cellent color scheme, plu sh carpeting, kitchen
appliances. floor life and on and on. Home has 4
bedroom s, 2 baths, rec: room, central air and
garage on a flat lot. $47,000.

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N408

209 AC ., 11/ l, _FARM- Located on St. Rt. 325
JOining land of SOuthwestern High School and
new grade school buildrng. Excellent road
frontage for building along St. Rt. 325 and Roush
Road. Also good sites for off road development.
80·90 ac. ol crop area, 100 ac. of pasture. 14001b.
tobacco base. 8 room farm hoose with modern
features. Farm buildings lor crops, .livestock and
equrpment storage. Very good water supply, also
county water. Will sell en land contract with
sizeable down payment and reasonable terms.
Holding al $150,000.
#331

· 13 ACRES OF VACANT LAND just 2 miles north ol
Rio Grande just off Pleasant Valley Rd. Mostly tree
covered. Good road frontage. County water
available. Asking $35,000. ·
1333

MOBILE HOME - 12x70- Has been used only
on summer weekends. 1972 Bonanza ine~cellent
condition - 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, compjete
kitchen, dining, bar and central air. New carpet in
living room. Some underpinning. Owner must
sell- Has priced it at $6,900.00. It's a good deal
for somebody.
'
#127
HOllE WITH SMALL ACREAGE- Nur Vinton17 acres with 1 ~ story nome. Remodeled home
has vinyl siding, new woring, includes 3bedrooms,
I bath and lets of storage room. 10·12 acres flat
ground. Ought to lock at it! $40,000.
#250
COAL MINER'S DREAM- Here isas ~per buy for
anyone in the Vinton area. located just north of
Vinton on Stale Route 160. Pretty 3bedroom
home with III baths, very nice large kitchen, huge
living room and large 411 acre lol With in-ground
pool and small pond. $43,500 buys ~ and we can
get you financed!

Nl04
YOUR OPPORTUNITY to become a homeowner.
$20,000 buys this cozy 2 bedroom home. Good
location on the edge of town. I bath, kitchen with
lots of cabinets, full basement, forced air gas
furnace.
1223

Galli11oliM, Ohio 456:J
l•honl' (614) 446-0008.

Motorcycles

#112 '

448·7414.

Auto Part•
&amp; Acceuorie•

W~nttd to buw. front 1nd for '71
I,.Uick Skyl. .. 1170, 1971,
1972. Clift b4 used, 304-175-

, , Real E1tate General

fEAFORDrn
Real

'

Estate~

216 E. 2nci51 .." •
Phone
Hfl14)-992-3325 ;

···::'!i ·•··~ . . .....

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..f .. '::'"':i- ..:,~ ... _'

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c-unei

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Motor cycle trlilor, 1881 Y•
maha, 760 Vir • . C.ll 114-

DON'T
AHUGE HOUSEl -Here' sa
buy for you. This 3 bedroom ranch providesenough space for a small family. Good '
neighborhood, privat e lot. Family room wjtlr :
fireplace. Kyger Creek Scno~l s. $44,900. · . • ;
' #247·'

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BIG 2 FOR'J SALE - Golden opportunily to own
your home and havean income frcmtheother. We
are offering one ol the nicest country settingswilh
total privacy for both. no uses on a 6.8 acre lot only
miles out in Green Elementary. Bolh homes ar•
less than 10 ~ears old. 1), An 8 year old quality
burtt 2 bedroom mcludes nice kitchen, large living
room with beautiful stone fireplace. a huge deck,,
nrce bath. Was bu1lt so that future e.pansion
could be added. The setting is so nice - "You'll
love II!" ·2) Very small, nearly new 2 bedroom
rents for $225.00. They're yours lor $69,900.

(101m(

6178.

HOUSE &amp; MOBilE HOME - $l5,900 - Good
place to live at edge of town . Would makea go6d'
mvestment property. Should rent for $250.00 per month. 2 bedroom home needs some repair as
does the 2 bedroom trailer.
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THE AMERICAN DREAM COME lURE - Just ·
imagine the prettiest home in the loveliest setting
that you've ever seen and thrs home with top il. ·
Perfect setting !trees. small pond , huge boulders).·,
lor a very handsome brrck, 1 ~ story overlook ing
lhe river. 4 BRs, large family room, 11rrepla ces·,
formal din in~ 2 baths, in-ground pool. Owner na; .
moved out ol state. must sell. $95,000.
'· .

OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL, Priced ,at
$39,90011 lovely ranch style homeon St.
Rt. 141 offers 3BRs. I lull and two ~ baths.
eat-in kitchen, LR, fireplace. full basement,

#134·'
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· MAINTENANCE FREE OLDER HOME - Very well'
maintained ·home on the edge of town might end
~ our house hunting worries: 2 or 3 bedroom s~
lrvmg room, drnrng room. eat-in kitchen with
breakfast room. Good si1ed backyard E xce ll er1~
location, close to town. Good neighborhood Gas"
heat, central air. $42,500.
'• #2oi'
,

GET CAll AFTER CALL... - For a Prop-~rty' .
Uke This! - Ranch style home on 13.4Jcres-ln~ .

Sprrngfreld Townshrp. Privat ely nestled against a.
stand of mature prnes overl ooking som e cl ~e '
most scenic rollin~ land in Gallra County House~
rncludes large lrvmg room. attractive krlchen:'
enclosed bree1eway Icould be family roomeasily!."' :
lull basement, attached I car garageplus anotl!er ·
separate block garage. Nice po nd. large yarq
garden space. Outstandin gplace torarse abeelo;·
keep horses, etc. New fence around part 'ol
acreage. $50s.
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43 ACRES - 9 rm. heme,
furnace, basement, bath, 3
car garage &amp; farm bldgs.
S45.000.
BU!INESS &amp; BLDG.- Plus
lour rer1tals. Can be made
into 6 rentals very easily.
Wrll sell without business for
$40,000.

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LARGE RANCH WITH ROMP IN' ROOM ... ,
Spacious home on 3.3 acres which includes large '
flat ,,wn offers 1920 sq: It large Irving room wrlh
dining room combo with fireplace, roomy kitc he~ '
with family room uti hom rl. 3 bedrooms and 2'
baths. Full unfinished basement with outsid~ ' ·
entrance. Plenty of room for kids to play City.. '
schools. $69,000.
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#213 '

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IAUIIS SUB. OIV. - lg.
1cned lot about 200•300 for
$13.500.

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NtH•Wille Oltf
CIU lruct II 992·3325

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~tcliJ ', IIHj

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tl( .t d, ,, J
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AFFOROABLY PRICED AT JUST $29,900!
- Clcse to city on Rt. 141 this home offers
kitchen, LR, family room. dining room and
lull basement. large unattached block
garage. Call lor ah appointment.
COUNTRY CHARM - Nice older home
offers 3 BRs, bath, LR, dining room and
kitchen. Situated on 2 lots on Rt. 160 in
Vinton. Call for appointment.

IIAKE THIS ONE YOURS- lovely home
situated on 35 ac. m/ 1near Rodney. This
home oilers 3 BRs. bath, LR w/ fireplace.
large attraclrve eat-rn krtchen, breezeway.
OWNER FINANCING AVAILABLE - 9.5 Spring, well ond county water.' fen ced and
acres m/1. Morgan Twp. frontage on Rt. cress fenced, barn , tobacco base. Call for
an appointment.
160. Call for details .
RODII TO GROW- Z: 5 acres, more or less,
very attractive ranch style homefeatures 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, LR, knchen w/ range,
refrig., microwave, lull basement, carpet·
ing, heat pump/ cent. air, one car attached
garage plus an unattached garage. lots of
room for gardening and enjoying lhe
outdoors. Callloday.
GREEN TWP. - 2.5 acres m/ , very nice
home offers 5 BRs, 2 bath, kitcner1, dining
rm., LR. carpet and hardwood. wood·
burner, new furnace. Call lor an
appointment.

business.

POMEROY - 7 acres, 2
bedrooms, natural gas f.A.
furnace, paneling, I ~ baths.
in nice condition on Plea sant Ridge. $25,000.

#206 ' '

ATIENTION INVESTOR OR FIRST TIME
HOllE OWNER! -Nice home in city offers
3 BRs, LR, bath. kitchen, gas heat and a 2
car unattached garage. Priced at $19,500.
Call today. ·

4.85 ACRES -Near Burlingham, 2,BR 12•65 trailer,
I \\ baths, range &amp; refrigera·
tor. Only $16.000.

100 ACRES - 2 oil·gas
wells. minerals, 2 water taps
on good country road near
Rock Springs.

WE

uti!itv barn.

6100 SQ. FT. BUILDING- Solid concrete
walks, 200 ft. frontage on SR 7 rn Crown
City. formerly used as a furniture factory.

4.76 ACRES- Near Salem
Center. 3 BR ranch, elec. ba·
seboaid heat, carpetrng &amp;
carport. $32,500.

I'• •

Rara~e.

county water and well. All thi s situated on
2.494 acres. m/1. Call for an appointment.

67 ACRES - Nice laying
land at Sumner with the mi·
nerals.

ROCK SPRINGS - Good 7
rm. home rn e~cellent condi·
ticn. Birch kitchen. cook &amp;
ba~e units, 1 baths, furnace,
basement, 3 or 4 BRs, gar·
age &amp; lg. lot.

86

General. Hauling

Wllitterson ' s Walar Hauling,
rea10nable rates. immedit1e
2.000 gallon daliv., 1 clst•na.

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Plna
Ga!UpoNt, Ohio ·
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446-4477

Coal. limeslOfl•· grwlll. etc.

86

7397.

General Hauling

pools, well, etc. call 304-&amp;76·
2919.

Deliwered 1 ton ~d up. Jim
Ltniar, 304-67&amp;-1247 or &amp;75-

S11rks Trea and Lawn Service,
Hedges , •hrubs , bu•hes
trimmed. landsceping end
stump removal. Lest r.moval .
304-578-2010 01' 578-2842.

James Boys Water Service. Also
pools fitted . Call 814-256-1141
or 814·448- 1 175 or 814-448·
7911 .

T &amp; LWeter delive'rv envtima Ph:
814 · 389 -9732 uma day
delivery.
en-3ao2
1:::::-:---:""-----:~-~~ heul stone, coat. din. etc.
Athby Con•hue1ion, carptn· Vaughn E. Teylor trucking 614- ·
tarv, r~dellng, roomaddllion. 215-&amp;816.
ct~ment btock work. roofing,
int•iof arid el'lterior .,-nting. Umestona and 1labwood hauled.
.tcMng. Roofing. Free nlimat•. At Tromm, Autllnd. Call 614·
304-&amp;715-54415 Of 671-5162.
742 - 23~8.

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B7

Uphol1tery '

R &amp; M Cu11om Co..chH and
Reupholstery, St. At. 7. Crown
City, Oh. 614-2156-1470, Eve.
614-446-343fl . Open ~aily 8 to
6·, $at. 9 :30 to 1 :30, Old a new
Upho sl~red .

Mowrey' s Upholstering serving
tri county area 21 ye8rs. The belt

in furniture upholstering. Call
304 - 676 - 4164 lor free
estimates.

. Home
.Improvements

' BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondit~ll lifetime guarantee. local refartncH fumilhed.
Free ntimltet. Call collec-t
1-114-237-0488, day or nlgtn.
Rogers Baaement
Wet..-proofing.

'

FTM Gan'eral Con1rec-tlng 13yrt
IXP•iance. Rooting a Conatruction Ph. 814-388-9308.
frH ntimatn 10% off during
the holidiYS, oHit' llllplrea Jan
U, 1987.

RINGLES' S SERVICE, axp•
rlenced csrPentll', lllec:tricien,
muon. pelnter, roofing llncludlng hot tar appticatlonl 3011876-2088 or 816-7147.

Real E1teta General

1974 Ford F100.. 351 engine,
like new aluminum topper.
needa tome bodv work. El'lcelltn1 WOfk vthlde. As is t750 .
Phone 614-742-27.&amp;5.

Van• &amp; 4 W.O.

HCJV.llll
:nruBl
!1\CN!IA
VJ'iHLSif

Sl!ii'Ii'MI:JS
01 SliMSNY

St-!1

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NEW LISTING- Good 6 rm .
one floor home near the
Pim Hut. 2 or 3Bdrms .. gas
heat &amp; river front. for only
$12.000.

flavor
room
lhe
entrance, parklr,
living room, dining room ,
2 staircases and 2
baths. Beautiful trim enhance hardwood floors.
New gas furnace and central air. Reduced to
$14,900.

.......... ......: ...

.. 'SONYH DNI010H
1811WJtl II JtljltDOI qn1 IIIII
llufdatllllullll ,ljuo 8111.. 'P8MOI111Cf til
,,'tiPIJ81,. "IJIIIIIrljiLIOOIIIIIIM I8CXI
petn ~w pa.laiuns JOIIII PIO ti!J.

1981 FDfd, F-100, 'h ton, 3&amp;1 ,
V-8. Stlndttd, 6&amp;,000 mila,
shert bed, good condition,
13,000.00 C..lll14-245-&amp;077,

. ,48_28.

53'•174' lot ·Awnings, insulation. Can haverooms
127. ~ 0 . 00 .

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SYRACUSE - Anrce ranch
type home in Rustic hills. 3
bedrooms. garage, elec. B.B.
heat. Patio and nice lot. In
good condition . $37.000.00.

"'

73

638 THIRD AVE.. 2 btdroom cottage, large rooms on ;

1

good condition, aluminumSid -

LETART TOWNSHIP - DEER
COUNTRY - 29 acres ol
mostly wooded land, burldrng
site for home or hunting
cabin. Most minerals. Wanting
$14,000.00.

~~s.,~~nrla~ds;~aJ_i,~J

ranch will satisfy botn.
street only blocks from town. , bedrooms, 1
baths, large attractive livinp .oom/dining ro~m·
combination with woodb·.rner, wrfe-approv\\(1 ..
eat·in kitchen and far:;ry room. Plus. above:.
·groond swimming oool. 2 car garage. Plenty. ol.
storage and ~o. &lt;Shop. Owners want il SOLD!·
.$64.900.

,

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ALONG 3rd AVE. 1300block)bedroom homo. 2 baths, recently renovated. new g.,
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$50,000.00
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·SYRACUSE AREA - Hrgh
on a hill, great lor a CB or
ham radro operator. large
yard area and a newer modular with 3 bedrooms.
MAKE OFFER. PRICE RE·
DUCED. $24,900.00.

by filling In the missing words
you develop f~om step No. 3 below.

:Jl!lNlll'

T.rucka for Sale

76

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the cfluckle quoted

!mMit:Nm&lt;l!

one· car attached

•

RACINE - Cute lillie one
bedroom home in Racine m
ing. all storms, 11!'1 ~ lot. RE·
DUCED PRICE. $12.000.00.

O Complete

81

448·0294.

Gallipolis. Oh 41131
614-UI-2&amp;32
Wide Selecton· New 1987 GMC
Pick-up INcll, low prices .vary
tf&amp;lf'. S,.clali.l:ingln oenuine GM
.,ns, in atodl 111d ap..Sal
ordering IV"IIblt,
Htrb Smlth. Own..-

SOLD

Coli 304-676·1090.

Himelayen, Persian and

'

~981 Thundarblrd. loaded. Excall•1 gas mllltgt. very dependable. tlOQO. Negotiable. Clll

Tony' s Gun Repairt , hot rablueing. Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM.
Call 304-675-4831 .

Dr~onwynd

I

Fetty Tr•e Trimming. stump
rtmO'Itl. Call 304-876-1331 .

Plumbing

· &amp; Heating

SWEEPER tnd ••winQ mtc:hine
repeir , p.-ts, 1nd suppliea. Pick
up and deivary, Oavis yacuum
Cleaner, one halt mile up
Georges C1'18k Ad. Call 814-

• • SMITH OMC TRUCKS
133 Pk1a S1r111

Firewood, ell hard wood. Heat
vouchers accepted. $35 . a
r::e~ load. Phona 81!4-742 -

CFA

1121

RON 'S Televition Service .
Hou11 c.Ut on FICA. Quazar.
GE. Sptclllino in Zenith. C.ll
304-578-2398 or 614-44624&amp;4.

82

!!!-·

3797aftllf lliprn.

~2

8411 .

Pets for Sale

The old sailor surveyed my
used boat with a scornful
"~!e." he bellowed,
the only thing k~ng this
tub together Iii termites -

11tl!2· 3119.

Mixlld h1rdwood slabs. $12 . per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 1h
tont. FOB Ohio Pellet Co.
Pom..-oy, Ohio. Call 614- 992-

56

'715 Toyotl camplf', 4 cyl, auto.
air, 1 2.200.00. 304· 671- 28&amp;1 ,

GUN.J E L

Home
lmprovem,nts

Rotery or clble tool drilling.
Mostw.n.complet:adsemedav.
Pump 11111 and service. 3011-

79 Motors Home•
&amp; Campers

UNOVES

.

'

001&amp;.

6782.

Flberglan truck ~oppar, B ft.
bM. sliding glus windows,
gDOd condition , 12150.00. 304·
882-3231!J.

19B2 ChtiYette, good shiiPe.
t2,000.00. Phone 814-446-

Maple drop leaf coffee tabla.
NFL electronic footbell game.
rowing exerciaor Ph. 614-446-

Pole Buildings by Quality
luild..-s. Workahops, c•pons.
animal sheltars, garages. Free
estim1111. Phone 814-3B4 -

I' I 1~ I I

B1

Auto Parts
8t Accenoriea

7

The Sunday

22~0 .

I

I I I I' I

MOVING SALE

Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
de6ivery. Mason sand. Gallipolis
Block Co.. 123'/:t Pi ne St.,
Gellipolh:. Ohio Call 614 -4462783.

,. ...r.,vu

END DUE

Chevelte •uto, 28,000ml.
12,991.00. 84' Ford EXP, &amp;·
speed. 43,000ml. U,SIO.OO.
79' lnttmt1tonal Scou1 4x4
82.000mi 1900.00. Dodrllls
AU1o Set• Ph . 114-3BB-9015.

1

Various items, Refrigerator ,
ltova. anttque bed &amp; drester &amp;
chNI. ttc. Ph. 814-446-9819.

Sam

SAMATH

76

Buda-t tranamluions uMd &amp;
rebuilt alltytM~. Torqu. conver·
tars &amp; transter c•n. Engine
over haul kits. AMison Transmitlion parts .m1 eve Joln1s.
Mintmum 30 day 10 lltadmt
wananty. Will d ..i\1., cah and
carrry or · install pt..· t14 - 37a ~·

·1-rillri'-rslr5.--:;l;-.;:;.,lr-1

e.ooom1 t3 .ae&amp; .oo . B4'

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE-446-7699:

Black Pow~r 15.96, Caps 2.25,
Muzzlaloader Speciality Shop.
Mlllcrttk Rd . Hrs. 5- Bpm, Sat,
Nlpm Ph.814-446-2316

I

Chriatmll Specials
84 ' Ford !non 4-speed,
63.000ml. u .eoo.oo. 81' Mer~urv lyn'l, euto. 79,000ml
t1 ,159&amp;.00. II' Chwy Chwatte

E. M. WISI;MAN, BROKER
DAVID WISEMAN, 446-9666.
B. J . HAIRSTON. 448-4240
CLYDE B. WALKER, 2_.5-5271!
LORETTA McDADE, 448-7129

· BUY HOMESITE NOW, GET READY FOR
SPRING BUILDING
.
Two largelots in oneof the area's mcst prestigiouslocations.
Eac~ lol is 101.8 by 171.2.City water, city sewer and natural
gas are available. SPECIAltnrs week. Buy one or both.
#456

1" -rr:...r-(~j2nE1-11

ALBHEC

446-3644

Call614-25&amp;-1989

the 6 ~era~bled

below to make 6
simpl11 words. Print !tHen of
eacl\ In 1t1 .)ine of squares.

Tt ,•IISIJIIII.tllfl ll

'

'

Firewood dell\ttred Oak &amp; hicl ory, split. HEAP voucl)ef. pickup
load Uli. Call814-446-2223 or
614-446 -3028.

0 words
1 -r-Ic

lfay 8t Grain

64

T=~~;~v $@~~}A-~£~S' ::::
- - - - : : . . . . : id"td b~ CLAY I. POLLAN .,.....;;.__ _ __
Rtarrange

13 I'OOit..-s and 2 hena, g.me
chtcken• for · ula. Will s•

•

Pomeroy-Middlej)ort-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant W. Va.

Ideal for retai ( sales or manufacturing

KANAUGA - $18,900- 3 BR ncmewrtn
kitchen, LR, bath, gas neat. Call lor an
appointment.
STEP INTO ELEGANCE when you enter tne
foyer of one ol the f rench City's finest.
FormallR. formal drn in~ spacrous master
bedroom with office or sewing room
ad jacent, den, 2 BRs upstairs, 2 ~ baths, 3
fireplaces, I ~ family room, solarium,
covered patio, screened porch and much
more. Call lor an appt.
$39.000- 1. 7 acres m/1. Very nice ranch
style heme features 2 baths, 3 brs. LR.
family rm. and formal dining c arpelrn ~
woodburning stove. Call lor more
informalion.

PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP· - lovely home
offers 3 BRs, 3 baths, equipped kitchen,
14•44 familyroom, dineHe, fireplace, 2 car
attached garage, 20•40 pool and satellite
disn. Call for an appointment.

LOOKING FOR YOUR FIRST HOME!
This attractive home is pnced at $33,000
and offers 3 BRs. bath, kitchen, living
room ; family room. woodburning stove.
electric heat. Call today and let us show PRICE R~OUCEO TO $39,900! -GREAT
BEGINNER HOllE - Tnis home offers a
you th is home.
large LR witn fireplace, kitchen. dining
area.
3 brs. bath. lull Dasement, 1 car
COMFORTABLE LIVING PRICED AT
$19,900!- This attractive home offers 2 garage, deck, fenced yard just minutes lo
BRs, bath, kitchen with range, dining room, town on Rt. 14 1. Call for an appointment.
LR, carpet, 1 car unattached garage,
DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great investment for
srtualed on two lots. Call today.
the buyer. Located on Graham School Rd.
SPRING VALLEY ESTATES - Tri·IMI Each unit offers 2 BRs, living room, bath,
home offers 3 BRs, 2 baths, nice equipped kitchen and stove. refrig., OW and displ.,
kitchen, l ·shaped LR. dining area. 24112 laundry, large carport. central air and
family room with woodburning fireplace. storage well.
gas heat, cent. air, 2 car garage. Call today
EWINGTON - WOODRUFF RD. - 1.55
WAIIT TO OWN A BUSINESS OF YOUR acres. m/ 1. 3 BR home, LR. kitchen, bath.
OWNT - 1500 SQ. ft. concrele block North Gallia sc hool district.
building situated en .66 acre presently
GREEN TWP. - FRONTAGE ON ST. RT.
being operated as a carryout.
141- 116.5acres m/.1vatant lot. Call lor
more
information.
CHAROLAIS HILLS - 3.2 acres more cr
less. Owner financ ing available.
47 MADISON - One story home with LR,
kitchen, balh, BR. gas heat, priced at
NICE STARTER HOllE AT CENTENARY $15,000.
This heme offers 3 BRs, LR. kitchen, balh,
fireplace and full basement. Priced al
LOTS OF POTENTIAL HERE!- 2000 SQ.ft.
$31,900. Call today .
bldg. wrtn frontage en St. Rty. 160, 11x20
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL HAS REDUCED walk-in cooler, 12 ft. dairy case. Call for
PRICE TO $47,900! - This home at613 more details.
Second Ave. has lovely woodwork which
accentuates its style. living rm. w/ lire· REDUCED TO $39.900! 132.9 acres, m/ 1,
place, formal spacious kitchen wrth lots of pasture farm, springs, 42•94 barn,
storage, gas heat, unattached garage. tooacco oase. Utaer home in good shape
has 3 BRs, bath, LR, kitchen. Call lor an
Convenient to downtown.
appointment.

446-0008

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Goal
7 "- Mlserables"

10 Haggard heroine
13 Mortified
1901ack1MB
20 High mountain
21 Dress border
22 ,Shipworms
24 Concerning
25 Early mom
27 FootbaM pos.
26 Hoop. area
29 River In Italy
30 Threefold
3t Separate
32 Jog
34 Canlllmed
36 Tim Hutton film
38 Verve ·
39 Those holding
office
40 Exlal
41 Lorge tract of
land
44 Hall an em
48 Scheel. abbr.
47 Delirium tremens'
abbr.

q

48 Animal coal
49 Before
50 Foollfke part
51 Cry of dove
53 Latin conjunction

54 Bone
55 Shade trees
57 Short sleep
59 Dine
60 Cowt
61 Selenium symbol
62 Starts
64 Amusing and
sl_range
66 Became aware of

68 Meadow
70 Related on
mother's side
72 Recede '
73 Tint
74 Native moral
77 Sin
78 Lamour made
them tamous

80 Balllmore team
62 Cut
83 Tricks
65 Parts of cameras
86 Floated In air

87 Small amount
88 Simian
90 Latin for "God"
91 Spread for drying
92 Pale
93 Flexible
96 Slender
99 "Family -"
10t March
104 Hurried
105 Female d107 Guido's high note
108 erick-carrying
devlca

109 Nolle
1t0 Sesame
111 Beln debt
112 So" drink
114 Boundaries

116 Heslthy
117 Slender finial
118 Fulfill
120 Rhythmical swing
122 Permit
t23 Evaluate
124 Hypothetical
force
t25 Prell"' twofold
127 Negallve prefix
129 car features
131 Burning
133 Mother
134 Freight agl.
136 Running
137 Parcel of land
139 Youngster
140 Summer, In Paris
141 Carter or
Hernandez, e.g.
142 Near
143 Soulhwestern
Indian
145 Emerged
victorious
147 Image
151 Vaal age
152 Unit ol Siamese

currency
153 Ray
155 Moccasin
157 Brown. as bread
158 Chart
159 Quale
160 Translator: abbr.

161 H-month
163 Dravidian
165 Leases
167 Father
168 Prlnler's measure

169 Move sldewl&amp;e
111 In action ·
172 Gladden
173 African antelope
175 Encounter
176 Inclines
177 Repul&amp;e
178 Word of sorrow
DOWN

1 Occupants
2 Oeclares
3 Lease
4 Ship channel
5 Spanish article
6 Former Russian

ruler
7 Los Angeles'
abbr.
8 Clolh measure
9 Lance

10· Bed linen
11 Not him
12 Gl, e.g.
13 Halt
14 Hallum symbol
15 " Honeymooners:·
co-star

16 Simple
17 Ramen official
18 Gives
19 River In llaly
23 Lawmaking body
26 Speek
29 Remunerates

32
33
35
36

Concluding
Gull·llke bird
Agave plant
Allowance for
waste

37 Supported
40 Projections
42 Peruse
43 Libra's blrthslone
45 Loops
48 Toll
52 Poem
58 Trapped
58 Iron clothes
59 Jolnl
60 Cured
62 Haggled
63 The Rolling 85 River In Siberia
66 Young hogs
67 Conrrolled
68 Limb
69 Period or time

71 Store In a silo
73 Strained
75 Decay
76 Female sheep
79 Earth goddess
81 Sun god
84 Health resort

67 Deface
89 Finishes
92 Diminish
93 In favor of
94 "L.A. -"
95 Instrument
97 Sick
98 Posts
99 Greelc letter
100 ISland In Aegean

Sea

t01 Heap
102 Short swim
103 Valle
106 Redact
109 Tropical fruit
113 Landed
115 Neon symbol
116 Rabbit
119 Lubricate
121 Snare
123 Ceremony
124 Grain
125 Wavers In opinion
126 Tha meantime
128 Ba&amp;e
130 Issue

132 Productive
133 Males
134 Makes plump
135 Is presen1
138 Cover
141 Swab
144 Baf:l)'lonian deity
146 Pertaining to birth
148 Indianapolis team
149 Tantalum symbol
150 Escort
151 Artlsl 's stand
152 Three-toed slolh
154 Masculine
156 - au laft
t 58 Apportion
t59 Hall
162 Wager
164 EKtlnct flightless
bird
166 Knock
167 Split - soup
170 Olivia Havilland

17 4 Cooled lava

�Page-0-8 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Week's
-stock
•
pnces
retreat
By ELLEN·FRE1LJCH
UP! Business Wrltpr
NEW YORK (UPI) - Most
stock prices rt&gt;treated last week
in four sessions .oi trading dominated by tax-Jaw seiling and
other _end-of-quarter portfolio
adjustments.
The quietest session of the year
concluded the week's trading as
investors stretched the Thursday
Christmas holiday lniO a fourday weekend.
-Blue chip issues fared a little
better than the market as a whole
- the Dow Jones industrial
average edged up 1.55 point s to
1930.40.
Analysts said year-end tax law

30 lr idliSl l rd l•,

-December 26, 1986
30 Industrials
,------!"----.1-_ _.

'1980 - r - - - - - 1

. 1940-l:
1960~~~~~§::=:§~=~

1860
1840
1820
1800

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i'J Y S E
Volum e Prof 1IP

Up Down Unch.
·1790 lls73 lls29l _
Issues Traded: 1892
---------1 ndex--.;,____ _
141.14Up0.14
Composite Volume
. 62,,148,625 .

I

I

S.&amp;P . Composi!Ps

•

December

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Students
at four Columbus high schools
who aren ' t· planning to go on to
college are· getting some -assist,. .
ance in how to obtain jobs.
That help comes from a Ieder·
ally funded job-training program
that local officials hope can help
. as many as 160 students gain job
counseling an d placement
assistance.

High .... :..... 1939.12
Low ........... 1919.71
1 Close
.......... 1930.40
Up............... 3.52

The Jobs for Columbus Gradu·
ates Is a- pilot program in thP
schools and is sponsdred by The

~e

PHOTOGRAAN

SPRING VALLEY PlAZA
GAlliPOliS

We will be clo~ed
Christmas Day
and will reopen
Fri., Jan. 2 at 10 a.m.'

WOOSTER. Ohio (UPI) -The
highly popu lar " Vagabond
King" highlights the 1987
summer season for thC' Onto
Light Opera .
The "Vagabond ,King" premiered in New York in 192~i Five
years later it was turned into a
film starring Dennis King and
Jeanette MacDonald. Generations have been charmed with Its
songs of "Only a Rose, " "Love
for Sale" and "Song of the
Vagabonds."
This Is one of .the works that
will be performed at Freedlander Theatre on the College of
Wooster campus during the season that opens Ju ne 10 and runs
through Aug. 9.
"Operetta lives," says OLO
artistic director James Stuart ,
known to OLO fans for his many
roles In the Gilbert and Sullivan
offerings.
Revivals of works of the great
light opera masters are drawing
fans to theaters.

NEW HOURS:
Tues. thru Sat. 10·5

Thurlllay 'tit I p.m.
CLOSED MONDAYS

·

Mu_sic by Billy Lee _
CHAMPAGNE

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t

Have Cable Service's?
Have A VCR?
'

.

Posey acknowledges supplying
· By NEIL ROLAND
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A tons of food, clothing and medi·
federal grand jury Is Investigat- cine to the Contras but says he
Ing whether Robert Owen, Lt. never had anything to do with
CoL Oliver North's alleged mid· weapons shipments.
dieman with the Nicaraguan
Contras, helped plan an illegal
The shipment that left March 6,
shipment of arms to the rebels In 1985. Included rifles, mortal's and
19ll5, a U.S. official says. -.,
ammunition and · was one· of
But the probe by the Miami many weapons transfers to the
grand jury, which convened hi Contras supervised by North, the
November, has bogged down fired National Security Council
while the Justice Department aide, according to tht&gt; witnesses.
and spt&gt;eial prost&gt;eutor Lawrence
The Miami investigation. one
Walsh dt&gt;elde whether Walsh of several federal Inquiries into
sliould take over the case, said U.S. aid to the Contras,Js the first
the official, who asked not to be to reach the grand jury stage:
Identified.
The U.S. attorney's office in
The official said Sunday that Miami. which has been overseemore than ro·witnesses have told Ing the probe. expt&gt;ets to find out
the FBI that Owen, a former in the next lew weeks whether Its
Republic~n Senate al&lt;!e. particicase will be Included in the
pated In meetings in Miami in special prosecutor's Inquiry, the
February 1985, when plans were U.S. official said.
made to ship six tons of weapons
The grand jury 's proceedings
from Florida to rebels based In h·ave been curbed partly because
Costa Rica .
of quespons In the Justice De·
Government documents show partment about whether Owen's
that these witnesses, some of apparent link to North places the
whom have testified before the Investigation under the special
grand jury about their role ill the prosecutor's jurisdiction. the ofshipment. also placed Tom Po-- ficial said .
sey of Decatur, Ala., at the
Walsh was appointed by a
planning sessions, the official three:judge panel Dec. 19 to
said.
Investigate the diversion of proPosey heads Civilian Materiel ceeds from I ran arms sales
Assistance, a non-profit, non- · through Swiss banks to the
government group that supplies Contras - a scheme which
non-lethal aid to the Contras. · Attorney General Edwin Mt&gt;esr

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CABLE CO.
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-

Anti-te~orist
. By PAT O'BRIEN
WASHINGTON (UPil - Two
political action committees that
may have rt&gt;eelved profits from
the Iran arms deal also collected
thousands of dollars from private
donors, but nobody wants to talk
about it - if they rt&gt;member at
aiL
A random sampllnR of those
who donated to the PACs In 1985
and 1986 drew some host lie
responses and foggy memories to
&lt;questions about their donations.
Severalofthelargestdonorsto
t the American Conservative
'! Trust and the Anti-Ter rorism

.

Menu
Bclr
Nell \'o rk Strip Sirloin
lflit/; Mu shroo111 Cap

"' Tail
Broiled Lnlmer
Twic. l!aked Po(ato
Broccoli Polmtaife

-

..
.-

Gallitmli~

American Committee said they
could not . remember what they
gave.
"Did I send them money?"
asked Frank Darlington of Lt&gt;etsdaie, Pa. "I don't know . They
asked me to. I'm all alone. I'm
sick."
•
Federal Election Commission
reports say Darlington gave
$5,000 to ATAC and$2,000 to ACT
this year, b!lt when contacted by
phone, h_e seemed to Interpret the
qut&gt;stlons about contributions as
a solicitation lor more money .
"I can't give any more; I gave
too much," said Darlington, 95.

effect all over the country,"
By United Pre&lt;s International
Martin said. " I have seen fog and
Dense fog that delayed air
traffic across the nat !on on one of delays In 1986 but so far this year
the busiest trav el days of the I have not seen fog so thick as It
was early today or as many
year clung to the South for a
second day today, reducing the aircraft bAcked up and waiting. "
Martin said it was expected the
visibility to zero in Atlanta and
fog would burn off early today,
Birmingham, Ala.
Hartsfield International Air- and predicted airlines would
port In Atlanta, a hub for flights catch up with the delays by then.
"I feel like I was born and
nationwide, was shut down by the
In a plane," Jim Smalraised
fog for 2% hours Sunday, delaying nearly 2,000 flights to and lwOod of Norton, Va., said
from the airport during the day, Sunday . ''I've been sitting in a
some for up to five hours, said plane lor seven hours from
David Martin , airport operations Knoxville, Tenn., to Atlanta ....
And Lord knO\vs where my
supervisor.
luggage
Is."
Federal Aviation AdmlnistraThe National Weather Service
t ion spokesman Jack Barker said
the backed-up air traffic in posted travt&gt;lers advisories early
Atlanta triggered delays acrosss today 'tor log for north Georgia,
the country Sunday, the end of Alabama, the Florida panhandle
the Christmas holiday weekend and northwt&gt;st Arkansas.
Visibility was one-quarter mile
and one ol the busiest travel days
·
In
much of the warning area
of the year.
"Anytime you have weather early today, the NWS said, and it
sloWing. airline flights In lhe was down to zero In Atlanta and
major hubs ... it will cause an Birmingham, Ala.

R(J /If aud B11t1 er

Sherbet aud Cookie
Sixreeu Ni11af} -FiJ ·e

STORETOHOURS
9:30
5:00
MON. THRU SAT.

· Pt. PlcnMnl

J·

EIII 8rf8Icl s
'

,J

,.

said was englneerl!d by North.
North tapped Owen, 32, to
serve as his liaison to the Contras
and the private network supplyIng them with military aid as a
way of skirting congressional
restrictions on official participation. according to administration
officials, American mercenaries
fighting. with the rebels and
Contra sources.
Owen relayed North's Instructions to the field, delivered pay to
the mercenaries, and briefed
North on the rebels ' weapons
needs between October 1984 and'
October 1986, the sources said.

'

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass .,
cited a witness's account in
October that Owen was at a Costa
Rica rebel camp when , th~
weap6ns arrived In March 1985 -·
from Floriqa's Fort Laudt&gt;rdaleHollywood airport through Tlopango Air Base in El Salvador.
Owen invoked his Fifth Amendment rights and refused to testify
before a Sen~te committee earlier this month and has repeatedly declined reporters • requests
for comment.
The grand jury, which has not
met since mid-December and is
not expected to reconvene until
late January, Is examining Owen's and Posey's activities for
possible violations of at least two
federal laws, the official sai d.

)I

"I'm sick with two Incurable
diseases and I need the money for
myself."
Tht&gt; two PACs art&gt; among
several groups managed by Carl
Russell Channell, whose or.gani·
zatlons may have received money dlvt&gt;rted from the profits of
U.S. arms sales to Iran .
A story published In the' Lowell
(MijSs.I Sun newspaper two
weeks ago said Channell's National Endowment for the Preservation ol Liberty received $5
million that was part of the arms
sales profits.
The new s story prompted
members of Congress to call lor

.

Farmers
confront
gloomy
future

REACH FOR CONTROL - An unidentified Peebles player
reaches upward to block a shot by Southern's Dave McMillan (40)
during Saturday's matchup of Peebles and the Tornadoes at the
Convocation Center In Athens. Southern won, 99-65. Coverage of
the game appears on Page 4.

P ACs collect from private donors

:Heavy fog disrupts
Christmas travel

St~lad

'

1 Section, 8 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper :

the mine, some 100 feet deep, wasn't completely
filled when mining stopped. About $75,000 is
needed for that site, said Brockmeyer.
Rep. Ralph Regula . R-Ohlo, of Navarre, said
the federal program was a good one but was notworking properly because "the administration's
been dragging its feet getting the money out."
Regula said Congress would look Into the
reclamation funding next year.
The federal government does not recommend
spending as much as Congress thinks Is
necessary , said Regula, who also criticized the
state program as being too slow .
"I can't. figure out who's at fault," he said .

Federal grand jury probing
alleged illegal arms shipment

/

For Re;oroatio"'' 446-0090, ht. 306
Din111r Stnict 6 p.M. to Midnight
lal !t"i&lt;t to I UO Ut.

Research Council of the National i\cademy of
abandoned coal mine areas. It is funded by $3.3
Sciences shows Pennsylvania accounts lor more ' billion in taxes on U.S. coal mined between 1977
than one third of the nation's problem areas,
and 1992.
followed by' Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio.
One top priority mine hazard in Ohio~xlsts near
In all, there are several million acres of
the football field of Rosecrans High School In
abandoned coal mine land in the United States,
. Zanesville. There. a )l lgh wall of crumbling clay
some of It mined and abandoned in the 19th
left by miners is considered a hazard to stud ents
century.
who clinib on It and play nearby.
Mining companies have left behind tht&gt; dangers
It-.w lll take a minimum of of about $300,000 to
of uncontrolled fires, pollution of nearby streams
reclaim the land,' says Frank Brockmeyer, an
and unprotected opt&gt;nlngs to deep shafts.
environq~ental scientist with the Ohio Depart To protect the public, Congress in 1977 passed
ment of Natural Resources.
the Surface Mine Control Act. which established a
A turn -of-the century mine in Palmyra Is also on
15-year program to reclaim or rehabilitate
the Ohio priority list. The main elevator shaft to

MEMBERS &amp; GUESTS

1987

d Jnd n.~-: pll'Jiiur('. P:my Fa vms.

enttrte
l

Winter Coats, Jackets &amp; Snow Suits

For )'our rn rcrtu inmenr and

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mon~ay. December 29, 1986

By United Press International
Ohio ranks among the leading states In having
abandoned coal mine shafts, many of which are
hazardous and need to be reclaimed, but money
lor reclamation work is scarce.
More than 300 mines in Ohio are part of a
national Inventory of hazardous areas.'Reclamation work Is complete on about 60 of the most
dangerous.
Though a minimum of $113 million Is needed to
reclaim the remalniJlg sites, the state has
received only $8.5 million from the federal
government in t&gt;ach of the last two years.
A report recently completed by the National

WED., DE(. 31
9 PM TO 1 AM

.

GEOR GE Hiii.L

1-39-19-40-37-2

Cloudy tonight and Tu•esd11!j
with ll chance of snow.
tonight will lw near 25
highs Tuesday near 311.
probability ol precipitation
30 percent tonight and
percent Tuesday.

Ohio's UnuSed mines rate high·on priority list

ALE
MEN'S, BOYS', WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S

•

- Lotto

at y

Vol.36, No.166
Copyrighted 1986

ELBERF.ELDS

~

Daily Numher
840

•

•.tee

SNACkS PARTY FAVORS

Ohio Lottery

~·~~., -Page 4

FREE
FREE
· · ~ Year's Eve D0,.

L------,....------------------..J.L-----------'

Company
schedules
operetta

Redskins,
Jets advance
in playoffs

Pl'ivate Industry Council of Columbus and Franklln County Inc,
The council's ·executive dlrec·'
tor says the re has always beet\ a
need for such a program wlth the
high rate of teenage
unemployment.
"There are many high school
·grads who don't Intend to go tq
college, but. _hav!) a net&gt;d for
acquiring. job-market · skills," .
says Wiley Clodfelder. "Many
don't know how you go about
getting a job, how to set up
•·
appointments."

AMERICAN -LEGION POST 27

· 246.92 Up 0.17

seiling
pressurt&gt;d
prices
term capital
gains
lose. Longtheir
preferential treatment under the
DOW JONES AVERAGE - The Dow Jones up 3.52, stock market analysis reported. (UPI)
new tax law.
average
of 30 Industrials closed Friday at 1930..!11,
The market retreated Monday
and Tuesday and advanced Wed·
nesday and Friday .
to 22 ';i .
year-earlier period.
,
with 853,819,002 a week earlier
The only popular group of
Merck jumped 12 % to 129 amid
UAL fell 4\i, to 54%. It said late and .129,828,820 during the same
stocks were D) akers of pharma- favorabl e publicity about its new Tuesday It would buy the Hi! ton week a year ago.
ce utical s. Publicit y abou t drug. The sharp rise stimulated
International hotel group from
Composite volume · touiled
Merck 's new an ti-cholesterol interest in other makers of Transworld for $980 million in 607,776,927 shares, compared
drug; which some analysts said pharm ace uticals . Squibb · cash and securltles.
with 1,007,605,412 a week earlier.
they believe will be av ailable in jumped 434 to 118\;. and Bristol·
Prices were lower In moderate
Lucky Stores fell 3% to 27. The
1987, stimulated interes t in the Myers climbed 3)'2 to 85.
company said it had accepted
group, and in Merck espec ially.
Alt er OPEC reached an agree14.4 million shares in Its buyback Exchange.
trading on the Amerlean Stock'
On the tradin g floor. AT&amp;T was ment to curb oil producfion to offer, part of a restructuring
The Ameplcan Stock Exchange
the most active NYSE-Iisted raise prices to $18 a barrel, des igned to deter an unfriendly
. ln~ex fell 1.36 to 264.10. Losers
issue, rising Y. to 25 '\i, . II fe lll 1\, storks of oil companies firmed.
takeover bid by investor Asher outpaced gainers 415-297 among
points a week earlier when it sa id Exxon rose '4 to 73 % after
Edelman.
the 918 issues traded. Volume
it plans to lay off about 27.400 jumping 1% the week before;
Overall, losers outpaced gain- was 45,861,060 shares. comp11red
employees as part of a corporate Phillips Pe troleum rose %to 11 % ers 1;233-676 among a total or with 64,103,920 last week and
reorganization.
and Texaco added V. to 35 Y,..
2.199 Issues traded on the New 33,502,735 during the same week
Commonwealth Edison fol Sears slipped % to 40%. K mart
a year ago.
York Stock Exchange.
lowed, falling J to ~4 .
fell 2';i to 44 and Federated
Wickes led the Amex actives.
The Dow utility index fell 2.59
Navistar was third. un cha nged Department Stores fell3 % to85Y,
to 209.47. The Dow transportation unchanged at 3%. Wang Laboraat 4%.
ami d persistent concern about
tories class B followed, slipping
average slid 16.21 to 819.65.
Among other blue chips, Amer · dis appointing Chris tmas sales.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock % to 121/g . Falcon Cablevlsion
lean Express eased % to 58%,
Internal ion a I Technology fell
index fell 2.81 to ,246.92; the New was third, unchanged at 19Y, .
USX slipped V.. to 21\1 . IBM fell 6!1, to l6 ';i . A week ago Friday,
York Stock Exchange composite
3V,. to 122. General Motors rose% the company said earnings for Its
index dropped 1.51 to 141.14.
to 67\1, and Union Carbide rose V, fiscal third quarter will be below
Big Board volume totaled
the 16 cen ts a share earned in the
490,987,697 shares, 'c ompared

A trade publication recently
ran a survey that said " never
before has there been such an
abundance of reviva ls of Victor
Herbert , Sigmund Romberg and
Rudolf Friml. In addition to
Strauss, Lehar. Ka lman and
.Offenbach."
"We're deligh ted that the rest
of the country has begun to agree
with us that it s obituary wa s
premature," said Stuart.
Since 1979. OLO produ ctions
have played to a near ly sold -out
house during it s nine-week season. More than 24,000 patrons
have purchased tickets for the
program that includes some
popular as well as so mP lilt!P·
known operettas.
"People have lea rned to trust
us," said Stuart. "They know
they'll leave the theat er smiling,
whether or not the show has a
pre-sold name."
America 's foremost operatta
authority, Richard Traubner,
will return again this yea r to
direct and translate a new
production of Jacques Offenbach 's "Biuebeard," with a score
that Traubner says Is " most
delectable."
The Viennese school will be
represented by the--qscade of
Johann Strauss waltzes In
"Wiener Biut." Carl Mlllocker's
1882 !llasterplece "The Beggar
· Students," performed much In
Europe, makes a rare appear·
ance in the United States.
Offering ol Gilbert and Sulli·
van, the basis of theOLO , Include
"H.M.S. Pinafore, " the comic .
" Iolanthe." and " Utopia Ltd."

Job-seeking grads get help

Duw ,j,,,,, .. , Av•·I.HJP

Jones Average .

1920
1900
1880

D~e!llber 28, 1986

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

an investigation of Channell and
at least seven organizations he
mana!(es. Recently published
rt&gt;ports also say the FBI Is
probing Cha nn ell's activit ies.
ACT and ATAC , as well as the
endowment. spent millions of
dollars on advert ising campaigns aimed at persuading
Congress to fund Nicaraguan
rebels and to target co ngres·
slona i candidates opposed to
aiding I he rebels, known as
Contras.
Robert Driscoll. of Chappaqua,
N.Y. , also said he couldn't
remember the $15.000 donations
he and his wife. Jane. made to

both PACs. Driscoll said at first
he "was not sure" if he had given
anything.
·
Later, Driscoll said he wrote
checks to the PACs but couldn't
remember the amount s. FEC
records show the Drlscolls gave
the maximum amount allowedS5,000 to ACT and $10,000 to
ATAC.
.
Channell reportedly was in
close touch with Lt. CoL Oliver
North, !he National Security
Council aide fired from hi s post
Nov . 25 after Attorney General
Edwin Meese finger ed him as the
architect of the clandestine
profits-diversion scheme.

By United Press International
Economic conditions 'continue'
to deteriorate lor Ohio farmers,
many of whom are struggling
with huge debts, forcing them
into liquidation and , in som~
cases, prompting thoughts of
suicide. "You know you are In trouble
when you know your family
would be better off without you,"
says Jim Troxel of Ashland
County who lost 1,316 acres of
land and his dairy farming
career two years ago after filing
for bankruptcy.
Troxel. 47, sold his 650 cows
last December to pay off part of a
$1.3 million debt. Last weekend
his son. Terry, signed papers to
purchase 240 acres of the farm.
Creditors took the rest.
"We were ail paper millio·
nalres," says Troxel. "Who
cared about owing a million when
the farm was worth $3 million?"
He says at the time when he
flied lor Chapter 11 , farmer ~ 60
miles away confided In him about
their thoughts of suicide alter
losing t helt land. He says he
harbored the same thoughts.
Because of a variety ol problems plaguing agriculture, 30
percent of Ohio farmers wit~
gross sales of more than $40,000
had debt-to-asset ratios larg~r
than 40 percent In 1985 and can
expect serious financial troubles
ahead, says the the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
A spokesman for the ODA says
8 to 12 percrnt of Ohio's 100,000
farmers are facing voluntary or
forced liquidation. The number
cou id get as high as 20 percent If
agriculture conditions remain
unchanged.
For farmer s who have held·
onto their land , the outlook Is still
grim. U.S. agricultural exports
have fallen as a strong U.S.
dollar made it more difficult to
sell agricultural produc.ts
overseas.
Foreign products are st ill
flooding the market. putting
downwa rd pressure on U.S. prices for wheat, grains and soybeans - some of Ohio's prime
agricultural products .
David Jordan , a Plckaway
County farmer , bought his first
larm In 1972 - 60 acres for
$32.000. Three vears la ter he
bought an 87-acre farm worth
$!'&gt;8,000. By 1978. he was rrnt ing
1.200 acres for soybean and corn.
Early In hi s career, Jordan
says, the creditors wr rc his
partners and the federal Production Credit Association was more
than willing to lend him_monry.
"I was going full force with the
PCA," he says. "I never WC'nt out
with less than I wanted to
borrow ."
But In 1980, Jordan's farm was
hit by a hailstorm that set off
chain' r'enctlon of disaster. still
felt by farmers In that area of the
state today .
"I knew I was done for." says
Jordan. "You just can't weather
that kind of storm. " It goi every
acre I had."
The crops and buildings were
gone and animals were running
lose. Two days later. a man from
the.PCA saw thedamageand toi!l
Jordan there would be no more
loans . Jordan had no Insurance.

a

CLOSED IN - A Jumbo jet broke through the
heavy fog to land a1 Rlll'tlfteld lnlemallonal
"lrport Sunday wblle another waited liS tum to
take off as more thiUIIOO Dl1hl1 were delayed with
vltlually no landlnp between 1:_30 and 9 a.m.

•

Traffic at the facility backed up delayln1 flights
all over the country on one of the busiest travel
days of the year, causing havoc ·with Olghl
schedules. (UPI)

I

J

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