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.... --

-----

Rush on

_Stressi~_g Black_
It's Kurplzy"'s Kart Polley lilt To Bit ·
Undersold On Any Item Wa AdvartlSe.
Iflt OOCIUl"l. we'll bDDI:r tbe lowW -.le prloe an
tile aame 1t41m With a oapy ~ ~ OUl"I"'IDt looal-.1.

t

- Inside.:

Ohio is WM'klng with Olher6reat Lake8 state!! to
push industrial expansion,- Page U.l
·.· -

- culture,nistory
PageB-1

D-1

offices
Along lhe River .... .....••. :.; B-1-8
Business•...
D-2
l)eatlts '''''""''*.. ' "" ''''""1' A-7
Editorials .•; ..................... . A·2
Sport.l!il ••• •• ' ........... ........... C-1-7
Take-One ••...•.•••... ...•.••. Insert
0 ••••••••••••••••••• ' • •

President

- Ohio-weather1
wanner temps
in forecast
A·3--

.MOdel
36ll·04

Rugged,.ll HP
L

Riding Mower

Vol. 20 No.2
Ccpyolglilod 11186

899.88

Pageville

ll.el\llar 999.97 '

~

--

~

,

.

~=~-...._""''"'

w~ter
. -. . - -

-

-- _.____

project: not .a dead issue, yet
_.,,-,_~

-•

~· -·-~--'---__:_..:=c- ·r:·

---.:..:~~ ~~·~- ..........,:;... ,.,._ -~-------- -~

"· Guard 'copters ·aid

157.88

APlO

Bave24.00

BavelLOO
S.l D, II" m ww. Bl'lggs &amp;!
Stratton engine. Deluxe throttle
on folding handle.

han-

i.92.88

save 2o.oo

I.ID,IIw~~tu'll·-m

w

•· Brtggs &amp;! Stratton ~nll!n•
Folding handle with throttle.

.

.

.

~~~
~
- ~~~~~r-~~~~,

·in locating downed
:r ural power lines
ROPER

-

-

ville was left orr· their prop(&gt;selpackage"lot .\Rc "~ ....~ ~i'Om rnan:•ng!fii!eting;cii was!!eeiaeif'Uiilla~ru
whl'n it was sent from Buckeye Hills. According ro
percent .grant would be necessary to fund r h~
probJeins~f8cingthe tru.Sl~ nr---~uririgtuild's' fof'tile ""' ..~ Jennings, BOC:keye HUls dM -1.vt g!·.;f!--- an ad~uate proposerl !li"'!P&lt;'t .JMhirh amQ.pgQf.MrJhl'2p-s wglllt1 (',::111
project. James Jennings Jr. says."'lhlngs are slowing
explanation for the deletion of Pageville.
for alteration of a present boos1er station and
· down a bit but the Issue Is not dead."
.Jennings added, with President Reagan wanting to
placement of a tank These two procedures wnuldcost
The Jennings finn Is RO\Y trying to persuade the
phase out the Appalachian Regional Commission.
about $50,0XI said Lyons, but the ma jor cost would be
Appalachian Regional Conunlsslon to Include the
there might not even be another ARC package in
in laying pipelines.
project In 1lts upcoming grant package. Jennings said
which Pagevllle could be Included .
··we have looked to ali sources for muiriple
State Rep. Jolynn Boster. D.Ca111polls. has written to
Jennings and others a~ now trying to get Pageville
assistance," · stated Lyons, but those scurces.
o(ficlals In the Ohio Department of Development
on "high priority .. llsls ·and are hoping thai some
·Including the ARC. Farmers Home Administration
I[€&lt;1Uestlng ARC Inclusion of the project.
.
.
discretionary dollars from tht&gt; state or fed~rallevei
and the Economic Development Administration.
Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Develop·
might be lound to hind I he water line extension.
ha ve seen budge! cutbacks and are "sh&lt;m on funds.··
· ment Conunlsslon has alsQ bren Involved In the
Prellmlnaiy engineering for the proposed wa ter
he added .
1Continued on page A ·3)
Pagevllle project. However, Jennings said, "'Pageline extension has been carried out by Tuppers
·
Plains-Chester.
Township Trustees to help obtain the necessary
funding for the Pagevllle project. Aware of the

By NANCY YOACHAM
Times-Sentinel Stall
.-.= ~-"'PAGJ!;VU..LE - ·No(Lkas16fe · - that's-'-"-"fhe
determtnatlo~ of the board of supeiVIsors for the
Tuppers PlalJ\S-CheSterWatet District regarding the
extension of water lines to the PagevllleareaofSclplo •
Township In Meigs County
According to Lindsay Lyons of Tuppers Plains·
Chester. the project- which would provide water to
approxlmately50familleslnthePagevllleareaandto)"
Scipio Industrlal Park -Is ··out at this time:· or until
a method of financing tbe undertaking becomes..
available.
James Jennings. Sr. and Associates, a· Columbusbased consulting firm, has con.t!!ac!ed with the Scipio

Model

11 Sections. 72 Pegea 50 Cents
A Multimedie Inc . Newspaper

Sunday, February 17, 1985

-By KEVIN KElLY
Atbens. Leonard said. Crews from
·Athens. Gallipolis, Jackson, WellTlme&amp;Sentlnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - Nat1o11al Guard ston and Columbus were In the area
helicopters aided Buckeye Rural
trying to correct the sltua lion.
A transmission tine structure at
E;lectric Cooperatlvr crews in
spotting downed · power lines In
Addison snapped during the storm
and was being replaced this
Gallia and Meigs counties as
residents recovered from theeffects weekend, Leonard said.
of)ast week"sstonn.
In Meigs County. road c~ws
PoWer remained' off to nearly 'l'elllalnedout plowing and cindering
2,500 BucKeye Rural customers. roads. Ted Warner. wperlntendent
some withOut service since the of the county highway garage,
reported that roads were passable
storm hit last Tuesday.
except
lor some icy spots. A partial
Areas affected In Meigs County
crew
was
working Saturday.
Included Columbia Township and
.
"We're
trying to give them· a
Rutland. and the sheriff's depart ·
rnent there was still receiving calls rest:• .he said. '"They"ve worked
around the clock for 48 hOurs.'"
about utllity outages.
Gallia County roads were open,
Buckeye Rural manager Glenn
Smith said many repairs by the County Engineer James Baird said
~"""_,_ampany wcre=tLI'!OO.ne _hy.. . trPf:IS_ ... J\illunll!JL..Tilf.&gt;h!g!lw~y dei&gt;ar!Jll"'!IL

Candidacv.,
• •
pettllons
accepted
by villages

-POMEROY - Petitions of candi · ~
dacy for council and board ofpubUc
affairs posts in bolh Pomeroy and ·
Middl~r1 are being accepted by
the Meigs County Board of
Elections.
Since ir was closed two days las!
wt'&lt;'k due lo bad wealh~r !he board
office wUJ remain Op!'n Monday.
Prc&gt;sldents' Day. &lt;'Ven thOugh Ills a
to aoua
ll&amp;le
Interest
candidates. 'nile olllce
will be
n from B: 30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. M,onday.
' In Middl~rt. ,t&lt;'lms or lour
.council members are expiring this
year. Voters will nominate in May.
The incumbents wh~ terms are
t&gt;Xpiring are Bob Gilmo~. Dewey
Horton. Allen Lee King and Jack
Satterfield. Two members" terms

-)l.i'-

~-ou·th~-board of"'p~b!lc...a-f.fair:t;-w4.H~...

revenue
'hardship' for cities, says Morris

JWIIJIDIIP - The ellmlna-

ruro·-....•

•:.;:=..=·,. •..,

....,.._.,JCUIIrW.IJOUIIIW.WIULY....,._ AD'IILii
lea

---

T--1-.c.t.~

IILIAIAHT
~
'!!!fl• UfJIUN,, POM
IIIII. . , , 1111. tiii.'O" 'DALY NIWI,IIIONJTUII., Pa.

---·-

•a ''"'.,.....,..

·-

-

~

.....
wtl.

~ii '

llon .. ....... "wwwd
alwdlllllp"
...,.. CI&amp;J u.,...... Clu1l Mol'
riL ''i!lvttl)'- waultl lull\le 18
wark....._.IIP
wewtll&amp;lll

..._.....................
....
·-·-------~-----

The lll!t . - lliiiiM be a
.teoiGI~k• Ia nwpower."

"

By JOHN FRIEDMAN
'l1nle8&amp;ntlnel !llalf
GALLIPOLIS - It President
Reagan's proposal to eliminate
federal revenue sharing funds to
citieS and countieS Is passed by
Congress, Gallipolis City Manager
Chris Mortis says while the cuts will
have an effect on the city, GaJUpolls
wUI not feel the pinch other
communitieS will.
Gallipolis' $96;tnl share Is used to
purchase· capital needs lor ·the
general hind, Morris said. '"We have
not lncorpomted the hinds In our
dally expenses, .. Morrla said. "In·
stead, we have tried togearlhem tor
our capital outlays."
Some counties and cities through·
.!l!lt- !!!e !!!J!!nlcy .!!JII! llw!_!Und to
supplement their general fund and.
to pay salaries. It is thole agencies,

I

Morris said, who will be hurting It
the cuts are approved.
The elimination of revenue shar·
lng •'would cause a hardship.. lor
Gallipolis, Morris said. '"Everyone
would have to work harder because
we will stlll have to replace certain
items~ The net effect could be a
reduction in manpoWer."
In the past few yean~, Morris said
thetund hasbem Uled topruchlll!ea
pollee cruiser, re-furbish a tire
truck, re-surface some city streets
and purchase equipment for the
street department.
Lobbying against the reductions
will probably be coordinated
through the National Lague ol
Cities and the U.S. Contermce ol
Mayors, Morrlladdicl.
ReVenue wring wu de'VeiOPEd
(Continued on
A3)

page

Ileal deteded In a •mile !ttn!Wh to a...as-,
W.Va. 'l1le U.S. En\lllmumtal ' ~ "JJIItl'
!!:!=.- ~. An ~ 101\'en;t u a ~~
cauUll CGIJIIIOUIId.
.

_,..,

�~

=-=··=-=-= -=---,:--=;;:::; --=:::::
.I

-----.--.

-----

Febrruary 17, 1986

Commentary and perspective
--;-------

·.

The Sunday T.,.._Sentinel ·
Page-A-2
February 17. 1985

..

r.• • •.Jtf "':'"·"',... ,., ·' ,. I'!J• •--,.,. • • .. -. .,.. ,..;-:po~ _ .,, -.os -~ '"'
-

... ~ •

-~-

.. .

"'

••

= - - - --==--""'

F'

•

~

-~--.-

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

,-;---Weather:
The Forecast for 7 a.m. EST, Sun .. Feb. 17

Proud independence-- ~---.··

-. ...... _

0

The Sunday Tunes-Sentinel Page A-3

.•••

Llttery chief explains .·...••
security bond policy
•••

•

A Division of

825 Thlnf Ave., GaiUpolls, Ohio
(6l•J) 446·2342

111 Court St.. Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

Executive Editor
A MEMBER of Thl' Assoclalf'd Prrss, Inland
Am£'rlcan Nl'wspaP&lt;'r Publishers Assoc l at l ~n.

Oa il ~· Pr&lt;'SS

.\ ssocla tlo n ':tnd lhl.'

LETTERS OF' O PrNION art:" W£'l comed, thE'V should be ll.'ss th&lt;&amp;n 300 w ords
. long . Alllt.'t lt• rs are ·subjE'CI to e:l !t ln JO: and ,must ~ ~lgrwd with nam ('. addn:•ss a nd
1t•le phonE' num twrs . No un s ignE'd leu ers "wlll tx&gt; publis h£ld . J_.('llt&gt;rs s hould lK' in
• good taslt&gt;, addrt&gt;Sslng IS!:U{'S . not J&gt;('rson a llt!PS .

The following Financial Institutions will be closed
Presidents' Day, February
18th.
BUCKEYE BUILDING
&amp; lOA"

CENTRAL TRUST
C&amp;S BANK
·GALLIPOLIS SAVINGS
&amp; LOAN
OHIO VALLEY BANK

!i

Wa~

a

Jv~r

'fou'Re LUCK'/ You ·6oT
MiLiT3R'l PeN~iONa 3Re

-roo

weL.r...

IN OUR TODAY'S INSERT
RETANGULAR LAUNDRY .
BASKET ON PAGE 2
manufarturer k unable.
to shiJI in time. Howenr
fain checks will be issued. ·
We are sorry for any inconnnilfiCe to ow cust-rs.

Get record savings tOday on a beaut1ful ArtCar11ed 14K gold h1gh
school ctass 'ring. You'll get FREE custom lealures and
ArtCarved's Full Ltfetime Warranty. too. Hurry. th1s great oHer
expires May 31 , 1985 and is to be used.only for the pur·
chase of 14K gold ArtCarved high 'schOOl class ~1ngs .
FREE custom fe1tures on 10K and 14K gold
Artearved H.S. class rings .

~UiCiDe Mi55iON,

~TocKM3N I

f,GICK 1

CORRECTION

1/eFeNDe.D!

liRTQl~X6Q®
·..
0

Reagan's secret_________--:--____

Ar_t_B.:.:..:uc..:.:..:hwa=::.::ld

046 J- 0000

BAING THIS AO " ' • - .-.. • - -

OFF•.

•

0

An instant cure~
for insomnia .
•

0

• •

: It somebody could find a way to bottle what goes on IR many legislative
Jt$"1ng rooms, they'd have an Instant cure for Insomnia. More than one
IJKlslator has, on occasion, been known to nod In the mldsl of dull
tnllmony.
: But some relief was offered recently through the humor d. Rep. Robert
~aJtan. both In hls role as a member d. the House Highways and Highway
ilafety Committee and In the costumed portr.yal of Abraham Lincoln for

limlch be's de-veloped a reputation.

·
.
ijagan, D·Madlson, chose Rep. Arthur Bowers; 0-SteubetlvDie, for some
&amp;oqd-natured kidding at a hearing on Bowers' DIU to make seat-bell use
inandatory. Hagan is co-sponsoring the legislation.
- ~ bers, a World War II veteran, tried to demonstrate the need for the
O:wasul't' by telling the committee that traffic accidents claimed more lives
4mtuaUy than did rome of the biggest battles of the war.
. •
·• Later, Bowers wanted to call on Hagan for any commentlJ he mlghl
__ ~•l{e !!.!!.ro-!lpOII!!Or, but he dld!J't"S(JOI him at firslln the realigned healing
~

(OOm.

I"

OPEN MONDAY TIL aP.ft1.
.

.' "The fact that you didn't~ me, Mr. Chairman, doesn't do ·
itlythlng for RIY Insecurity," Hagan deadpanned.
.

&lt;'I

;

I'

0

�......

f'&amp;JJa A-4.:_The Su~y Times-Sentinel

. 17, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

--Local Briefs.·--. Bloodmobile vi.sit rescheduled
I ~GAmiPI'lur="Th~ne.iam Red crosslli-State BloOdmobile:

Plane lands
on area span

thru Feb. 23, 1985

GO TO CH'IRCtt [VlR• SIH\HlAV

. We Re.-ve The Right to Limit

.GROUND BEEF. HOMEMADE
PORK

Local government funds released

FRESH

CHICKEN

License bureau closed Monday
· GALLIPOLIS-;; The Gall.ia County License Bureau at the corner
of Third Avenue and State Street wilt be closed Monday for
P.residents' Day, said Deputy Registrar Ruby Wijt.

.
•

Furuling hearings slaif:!d this week
. POMEROY - Public hearings to discuss submission of a funding
application to the Community Development Block Grant Small
Gities Program of Ohio will be held by Meigs County Commissioners
i:D the courthouse Wednesday at 10: 3J a.m.
: The appiication will be submitted under the comprehensive
housing-neighborhood revitalization program.
The primary goal of the program is to improve housing stock and
Ii'Ying environment in Ohio's communities.
,-Total funding available statewide is approxirnately.$6.952milllon.
Single-year awards may not ·exceed $600,&lt;XXl and tw~year awards
may not exceed $1 million. Funds are allocated on a competitive
b;lsis. Jurisdictions eligible for funding are · counties, cities,
townships and villages.

f hamber officers elected
: GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Area Chamber of c.;mmerce
IN'ITlbers reelected Paul J . Knotts president during a recent

..,Wnon.

' Dan Davies was voted in as first vice president. and Lester
Plymale is second vice president. Jeffrey Smith was elected
secretary and Peggy Evans· is the new treasurer
; In other business, the chamber awarded a bid to French City Press
fOr publishing Its brochure on Gallia County, and the budget and an
i~crease in dues were approved.

29

.

1.69

LB.

HAM
SALAD

BA.CON

CHEESE
SPREAD

$-1!9
99(

- 11.

SUPERIOR

FRANIOES
SPARE
RIBS -

LEAN-JUICY

CUBE___ _
STEAK

LB.

~-~--

12

oz. .

.
I

.

··11:-$~1 -4 9

FRESH

WHOLE
FRYER-S

Ll.

59~ . ;:

COKE
REG. OR DIET
TAB, SPRITE

$109

FAB

LAUNDRY

la nd Dail y Pr('ss Associati on a nd fhe
Amer ican Ni&gt;wspa JX'r Pubt l sh('rs As·
soclallon , :o-J a tional Adve rli s ing Rl.'·

BUSH'S
CUT o• SHELLIE

Nln Et.·Mlle Roa d, SuiT e 20.1. Dc&gt;trol! ,

Michlg:a n . .&amp; 0075

SUBSCRIPTION R~TES
By Carrier or MotOr Route
On(' \VeE'k .. ..... ...... ...... .... .. ...... $1 .10
Onf' Month ... ..
. .......... .. ... $4 .80
SINGLE COl'\'
P RI CE .

BEANS

2%
MILK

In town s whN"E' mot or ca r rier ser v ice
Is available.

MEDICARE PATIENT
ASSIGNMENTS
ACCEPTEC
.
.'

OFFICE HOURS

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Si x mon ths .... ...... ........ .. ... .. ... $1 3.00

Point Pleasant Medical Center
PHONE 675 -1675

32

Bottles

Deposit

69(
DECORATED ·
COLORS

$179

LARGE
ROLL

L!QUID
0

:::s

$159
2/89(

PASSBOOK INTEREST ON 2V2
MILLION DOLLARS WILL BE GIVEN AWAY
IN PRIZES AT:

OHIO VALLEY BANK NIGHT
RIO GRANDE vs. CEDARVILLE

t
f

FEB. 19, 7:30 P.M. AT LYNE CENTER
Pick up your Free Game Ticket at any of our ~ffi(eS. You
. nay be a millionaire for a day. You must be present to wiri .

OhioValley Bank

t
t
t
.t

-· ..._--- --- ------ ------ -· ~
•

"

C ,I II •IIC)Iol ()hoC

.... ,. ' I'•&lt;

•

MEAT

IRISH SPRING

BAR
SOAP

•

$ 129·

I
,I

. ' :'

!I

CAMPBEU'S

'I
l j

TOMATO

I,
' I

.,
' I

' I

.,
II

'I

.....,,
•;

.,
' I

CANS .

I

.,
'I

'I

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

RED 01 YELLOW

'POTATOES

DELICIOUS

'·

APPLES
.

•

WRITE: BREAD AND .MILK
P.O. BOX 334

Easter promotions
merchants' topic
GALLIPOLIS - Easter promotions and the election of officers tor
the executive committee are on the
agenda of the monthly meeting of
the Gallipolis Retail Merchants
Association, according to president
Tommie Vaughn.
The merchants will meet at noon
Tuesday at the Down Under
'Restauranl. : · The special guest for the meeting
wUl bethelntroductlono!theFrench
Art Colony director.
Each member of the organization
that participates In the security
.Rrogram, Vaughn said, will receive
"a)lO percent reductiOn, starting with
the April security payment. Vaughn
said merchants will be contacted by
the security committee concerning.
the amount of the payment.

M.~.

AT

Inc.

PAT HILL FORD,INC.

~

I

'

~

--

8.8% APR Financing
$169.00 PER M0./4B MONTHS

60 Mo. Finoncing Available

~~·89(
- -

SOUD HEAD

•

'•'

CABBAGE

YELLOW

~

.

. 69C

SI 0.100.00 Tax &amp; Title
2365.00 Nat Included

$8435°0
•.

--·
.,'

If you are like most people with hearing loss you hear well ·.
in some situations and have difficulty in others. A new
. hearing aid has been developed that can give, you the help
·you need, when you need it. The AI'IOSY CCA Canal hearing
aid is so tiny it can be inserted in a matter of seconds. It
·fits ·comfortably within the ear canal and is banily visible.
Help is finally here for those "part time" hearing problems.
RENT~l OFFEI-For a lilllitfll time, rint tht canal aid (or
HJ
aW) for 6 Wttks far only $50.00.

liT IEFOIE YOU IUYI
Stt .,. at Haber CUnk hch Wlllnisclay, I :00 P.M. .

DILES.
HEARING AID
CENTER ·

'

I

COOKING
ONIONS .

~~

4 cyl. 5 sp. trans.,
radio, P.S., P.B.,
step bumper.

Was
DiKount

I

I03f4oz3/89(

MAINE

Sl 0 ~

•.

known It had happened,'' Schiffer .
said.

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WHEN
.
YOU NEED IT.

'

lAG

-..:.--

'

,I

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE

10 Ll.

(SUIIABLE FOR ·
FRAMING) COPY OF

THE TEN (IOMMANDMENTS

(304) 675-1244

,,

SOUP

$

:.a,:• 199

FREE

85 RANGER 4X4

~::'·$1.49

E
. POTATO
CHIPS 1 oz.

-

:

. CALL (6l4) 992-2104

'·

BEEF
STEW

1

t
t

Ulllllr~

student. and Angela K. Ramey, :aJ,
536 Jackson Pjke, bookkeeper.

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
- GENERAL ALLERGIST

ARMOUI

u oz.

O'GRADY'S

'ft:o.

:IU " " . , , , . '""'''

and fro as usual. The area of the roof
collapse was masked with the same
sort of walls that cover the Food
Court under construction. ·
"If you hadn't heard about It and

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

,.,•

69(

~~

:

20% Down &amp; Approved Credit

TROPIC ANA

t

Rick L. Cade, 19, Ht.
City, unemployed, ancl Ktrrilll~rly

.

JOHN A. WADE,
I

Pelt21'r called pollee at 10:45 a.m.
When o!flcers arrived a minute
later, they found him sitting on the
front steps of the home. Peltzer had

oz.

ORANGE
$
JUICE oT.
09

A MILLIONAIRE
FORA DAY?

SCOTT.
TOWELS

DISHWASHING

Dail)· and Sund ay ·
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Ohio
52 W('{'kli .... ... .. ......... ........... ... $58.24
2ti )\I'Pf&gt;kS ...... .. ..... .. ........... .. . $29.1 2
13 WP.£&gt;k s .......................~ ....... S14.5ti
Rates Outside Ohio
52 Wt&gt;eks ...... ...................... ... S:/ 1.80
26 WeE-kS .. ........ .... .... .. .~ .... ... .. $31 .20
13 \\'e-eks .. .. .................... .. .. ... $15.60

Dl. AAIOM BOONSUE, M.P.

GAL

LUX

I!Ius

A neighbor, Carol Saunders. said
she thought she saw Melanie go out
tor a walk between 7: :ll and 8 a.m.
Thursday. She didn't recall hearing
or seeing anything that Indicated
anything was amiss at the home,
pollee said.

--- -·••-t.

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_

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GALLIPOLIS .- The following Cox, 18. Rt. 2. GaUl polis, nurse
couples filed this past week for assistant.
marriage licenses In Gallla County
Steve B. Click, 22, Mount Alto,
J7obateCourt.
.W,Va.,laborer, and Janice A. Hunt,
Jeffrey D. Dunn, 21, Oak HID, 19, Pati'lot Star Ro!JtC. student.
laoorer,andLorettaL.Lloyd,18,Rt.
Paul J. Knotts. 51, 716 Second
2, Patriot, student.
Ave., retired , andAnna L . Border,
Terry M. Bums, 19, Wllkesvllle, 56, 1!17 Second Ave., medical
r.tichelle D. J3or- --retortis-Holzer Clinic .

0 I'

16 Oz.

· forcewasusedbytheklllerorkUlers
ttfgaur-entryto1 he'VlctimS'
They had lived 1n the bouse only a
month, he-said.

Couples file for marriage ·

,.

'

against Harley were dismissed.
Fine and costs for failure to use a
child restraint were dismissed
againSt Roger D. Ashworth, ~. Rt.
4. Gallipolis.
In traffic cases, Edward Cain, 40,
Rt. 1, Galilpolls, forfeited $40 bond
for failure to yield;-and Maurice M.
Trant;-28,- Columbus, ·rorfeited $40
bond for failure to display valid
registration.
Forfeiting bond for speeding were
Tam! L. Staten. 21. Oak Hlll. $38;
Michael P. Wolfe, 36, NeW Haven,
W.Va., $399; and Angela Eblen, 39,
Rt. 2, Gallipolis, $40.

'

COTTAGE $139
CHEESE ~;.;._oz.

Sunday Onl)'
Ont&gt; yra r ........ ..... .. .... .... .. ..... $26.80

MONDAY THIU FIIDAY-9 A.lll-·5 P.M.
•
SATUIDAY-9 A.M.·2 P.M.
: MONDAY I THUISDAY EVENINGS-6:30-8:30 P.M.

99

WHITE &amp;

VALLEY BELL

Th(' Sunday· TimC"S·S&lt;'ntinel will not
~ rE&gt;Spons ib)(&gt; for adYance paymenu
mad&lt;' by ('a i"rlf'rs .
~lr\IL

2a oz.

VALLEY BELL

..

Ce nts

oz. $1

DEnRGENT aox

PI'('Sf' ntatlve. Bra nh a m . 1717 Wrsl

M)

49

nff.JOr thP rema.tQ(t~r of the

day as a precaution,
"We speculate It was the heavy
load of snow" tha t caused the
collapse, Schiffer said , adding that
"wewUI not be sure until we get tests
back from the engineers. There was
a drift approximately 10 feet tall up
there.! '
.
The Food Cpuri cluster of
restaw-ants and stores wlll open
Feb. 28, as planned, he said.
On Friday, shoppers strolled to

GALLIPOLIS - A charge of
disorderly conduct against Theodore Bailey, 339~ Second Ave., was
dlsmlsse&lt;l Frid~yl In · GalllpOlls
Municipal Couli at request of the
prosecution.
Fined $17 for disorderly conduct
was Stanford E. Fulks, Rt. 1,
~.Bidwell.
The court fined Uavld J. Harley.
45, Ravenswood, W.Va.• $.nl, sent·
enced him to three days in jail,
suspended his driver's license for 60
days and placed him on proba tlon
for 18monthsonaDWl charge.'
Fine and costs on a failure to use
headlights after dark charge

SIRLOIN
STEAK

S1.99

wa~

but the west wing of the mall
~a l.ed

-D isorderly charge dismissed

riG~

No subsc riptions b~· mail permitted

..

.i

HOLLYWOOD

USP525-l!OO

•

f

$189

II.

HOMEMADE

$1.29

LB.

II.$] 39

CHICKEN
SALAD

BATHROOM
TISSUE

Mrmber : ThC' Assoc la1Pd Press••Jn-

.

for buslnesl; this W&lt;'PJ&lt;en(!, a~
normal," said Paul Schiffer. adver·
Using marketing manager for
Salem Mall Inc.
· Only the Cargo Express housewares store and the adjacent
Mayor's Jewelers are, whlle work
begantorepalrtheroof. _
On Thursday, as a worker was
shoveling snow from the rooftops,
Cargo Expressernployees heard a
cracking noise from above, Schi!fer
said.

HOMJMADE

PIE·SLICEP

J'unb~ ~imr11~ Jmtiml

sessiGn classes in
1110rnlng and evening danceaerobics , women 's exercise. swimnastCcs and youth swim lessons has been delayed on week in order to
allow for snow make-updates In the current session, according to the
.
Gallipolis Parks ~n d Recreation Department.
Gymnastics classes will not meet on Feb. 18 because of President s
Day, officials said. Snow make-up dates are scheduled for March 4
apd 6 at regular class times, officials said .· Questions can be
B!'swered by contacting the recreation department at 446-1789.

25th I JEFFEISON YE.

.."

Store officials cleared the buDding
Of its approximalely 10 customers
and 10 employees as a precaution,
Schiffer said.
The
fell in at about 1:

is safe. We'll be open ·

COITONElLE

seco~d

.Interviewing the victims' friends
-and aequalniJIIIees~to try-to- flnd le~~s in the case.
_ _ _
Slil&gt; eMs. Rundli&gt;l had a lot of
acquaintances, sowedon'thaveany
specific leads operating," Thiede
said. "We're golngover the physical
evidence at thescenethismornlng."
The · bodies were face down in
separate bedrooms. Ms. Rundle and
Melanie were bound with electrical
eords and articles of clothing and
were on their beds. Detriecht's
unbound body was found on the floor
of his bedroom, pollee said.
The children's father. who was •
Ms. Rundle's first husband, llves in

finding the bodies, pollee said .

DAYTON, Ohio (AP) - It's
business as usual at the Salem Mall,
where shoppers are strolllng whtle
workers are re-

EXTRA LEAN

STEW

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- A-6 . . ~

.Mall .roof collapse-cleanup begins

•

4 ROLL

.: GALLIPOLIS -The begi"&lt;ting date for

County Deputy Coroner Michael

_s~an said. Ms. Rundle. and-her .

•

he had been circling and was having
trouble finding a suitable landing
spot lh U\e moulita1nous area when
he spotted the bridge.
Local residents call it the "Bridge ·
to Nowhere" tx;cause it is part of the
unfinished Appalachian Corridor G
highway, which stops on the ·West ·
Vlrginla side when It runs Into a
sheer rock mountainside. From
th~re. traffic is diverted around the
mountain on a two-lane road.
. Witnesses said the aircraft had
almost reached the West Virginia
end of the bridge when it came to a
halt. Three Slater's Branch, Ky..
men who had sjxJttcifif held traffic
off the snow-covered nort.hbound
lanes during the landing.'
"We saw the plane doubling back
and knew he was in trouble," said
Dennis Fouch. "We stopped the
traffic and he made a perfect
three--point landing."
Fouch and his companions, Troy
Chafins and Joe Webb, then helped
. push the. plane- back off the bridge
into a parking lot on the KentuckY
side.
·
Police. said tht&gt; bridge would be
cleared once again when Eggers
refueled and decided to leave,
because there was n9 place else In
the area flat enoug h for a take-off.
Eggers. however, said he would
wait a while before continuing his
trip.
'
. "I've had enough excitement for
one day so I'm not going to take off
today." he said .

cHstribution of state local government funds .
, The_ state auditor·~ office report'ld _that Gallipolls~ived $879.58
and Rio Grande, $65.12, bringing the total distribution to $39,73f.50.
: The money is distributed to counties and communities levying
·
local income taws.

.'

SAUSAGE II.$149

GIOUND FlESH SEYEIAL
TIMES DAILY

~

f death, leads sought in triple murder·:

daughter also were sexually as37-y~ar-old Colorado Springs
saulted, authorities said.
woman and her two children,
Pollee said the three were
vlctbns of a grisly triple murder In murdered Thursday morning, but
•he time' of death hadn't been
their home on Thursday.
Pollee Lt. Bill Thiede said there established.
were no suspects in the case.
. 1biede sald pollee were awaiting
Four police detectives, four autopsy results that would have the
Investigators · !rom the district cause of death and ihetlmewhen the
attorney's , office, and fingerprint murders .o ccurred.
Douglas Peltzer, 37, who was Ms.
specialists ·from the Colorado Bu- ·
Rundle's
second ex-husband. found
reau of Investigation were at the
the
nude
bodies Thursday·morning
murder scene Friday, he said.
he
went
tothevlctlms' homeio
when
Cassandra Susan Rundle, her son
Detriecht Sturm, 12, and her deliver a Valentine's Day present,

.,

Florida and had taken off in his
Cessna two-seater from Greenville
S.C., FridaJI morntni. He said h~
was planning to refuel but the Mingo
airport was closed because of heavy
snow this week .
Witnesses said the plane came in
from the south, passed over the
intersection of U.S. 119 and Ky. 292

.

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=

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

FRI.-SAT.
SPRINGS, Colo.
- 9-llm til '10 ~ -1----~~.1~~=-~~~__QII_Frldav
CLOSED SUNDAY
intetViewed acquaintances ot a

- ·· ~·

will not be In school that day, Superintendent Joseph
Garter said. but the original confe rence date. Feb. 22, \1111 be a
regular school day with students tn attendance.
Although GAHS has bl'en closed since Feb. 12. parents can still
walk In on Monday for conf~rences with teachers, according to an .
announcement from the GARS guidance office.

---- --;.====~="=

9 am ti110 pm

small plane, running low on fuel in
heavily mounlaiilous territory,
made an emergency landing Friday
on a highway bridge over the Tug
Fork river between West VIrginia
and KentuckY.
" I figured this was my only
chance," the pilot. 40-year-old Bob
Eggers or Cleveland, Ohio, said
.a fter his smooth landingon the span,
· which is known locally as the
" Bridgl' to Nowhere."
"I hadn't much fuel to take me
faliher because the Mingo County
Airport was closed, so I was

Parent-teacher day set .Monday

', ...

February 17. 1986

"1

STORE HOURS:
MON:-THURS .

Wlll.IAMSO!Il, W.Ya. (AP) ~"---t-1--c

-slated to stop-ln·GaUipolis last Thursday, has l&gt;tlE'n-rescheduled for
Monday.
The bloodmobile will be a t Grace United Methodist Church from
nOon untO 6 p.m., said Thelma Shaver, local Red Cross
spokesperson.
Mrs. Shaver said a critical need still exists for 0 positive, 0
negative and A negative blood types. The bloodmobile has been
'?reed to cancell5 visits since January because of weather .
• Prople from ages 17 to 65 may donate blood, and 17-year-olds no
lbnger require parental permission to give blood, Mrs. Shaver salp.

-- .... .

·'
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I

' I
.

'I

' I

326 W. liiiile Strwt

ltltiM, atlie 45701

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COMPARE ANY COMPARABLE CAR 01 TRUCK JO PAT HILL FOlD'S FORD CARS
. . AND TRUCKS. AFTER TEST ·DRIVING THE FORD, IF YOU PURCHASE THE
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OFFER ENDS SOON.
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PAT HILL FORD, Inc.

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stereo, R.H. m1rror power windows; power locks, pl us more.

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�February 17, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolill. Ohio-Point Plea~~ant. W.Va.

Page-A-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

. Demjanjuk loses deportation order. appeal
::-:---c:c

()

~ -~~-

CLEVELAND (API -'- A suburban aulOwor](er act"Usell of having been a guard at a Nazi death camp
cou ld be deported to the Soviet
Union or extradited to Israel within
a month or'two "if the courts refuse
to look at the evidence of fraud ",in
the case. his attorney says.
John Demjanjuk's U.S. citizenship was revoked in 1981 when a
federal ·c ourtdetermlnedhehad.lied
on hi~ immigration papers In the

I

EMS squads .a.n swer 9 calls
~ ,...--.

..

&gt;·---.-~~
'- wt"'

'-."'hn~-10 1"' -~~ 1 ;,1-a au.'r

'

-

Pem-Amoid
POMEROY -

~ ~ Puttaeroy

went tv BEiitL Tioad -fur
Goldie Lawson who was · taken to
VPfPrans MPmor iat. At 11: l5 a.m ..

Friday night in an auto accident
near Newark.
She was fhlo daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold E. Weaver, St. Loulsvllle, Ohio, and the granddaughter
of Mlggie N. Winebrenner of
Sy!'llcuse.
· Funeral serv!ces wlll be held
Monday in Newar~.

HOLZERME.DICALCENTER •
. DISCHARGES FEB. H .
Scott Brinker, JackDavis,Sharon
Fisher, Hohert F:idley, Virginia
Grover, Mary Hall, Richard Kaiser.
H,Jward Lemon, Mrs. Richard
L!!onard and daughter, Blanche
~Calla. Macy Pauley, Bonnie
Piants, ,...Wiibur ;· R1e:e, Ha-rcrl6·
Spencer, Phyllis Stevens, Joshua
Wallace, Joseph Young.

.Mr. and Mrs. Marcus Lawhon.
son, Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Manerlng, son, Jackson; Mr. and
Mrs. Junior Massey, son. Bidwell;
Mr. and' ' Mrs. Rick Zinn, son,
Thurman.
VEf)l;Jt~S MEMORIAL _
Thursday admissions - Donald
Martin, Middleport ; Cari·Tennant ,
•

~

By CJIETCURRJER

AP "'•±ell Wfler

Cameron and Allison Elecl!ic Co,
retiring In 1982.

YORK (AP) - The stqck
market's rousing start on1985l)olds
out the promise of a thriving
economy In the months ahead.
This may offer llttleconsolatlon to
farmers and other people grappling
with s~lal tlnanclal problems. But
·most im!lysts say the upsurge ·In
stockprlci&gt;SslnceearlyJanuaryhas
dispelled fears of ·any broad
recession Iii the near future.
The market commands a great
deal of respect as a leading Indicator
NEW

Dorothy n..dderer
COOLVILLE - Dorothy Dodderer, 69, Tuppers Plains, died at
her reslde~ce Friday_
Born In ReedsvUle, she was the
daughter of Effie Founds Sanders of
Tuppers Plains, and fhlo late Ira
Sanders.

1

-~

-

.......

-- --

closely on the heels of a broad-based
adll~ UketheoneWall Street has
enjoyed lately.
"The stock market keeps doing
just about the same thing, day after
day," the Value Line Investment
Survey notes. "But so far we haven 'I
heard any inve:;tors complaining
about being bored.
·''The Dow Jones industrials have
created a Uttle drama aboui
whether - or .when - they'll gel
over the 1,300 mark . But there's no :
uncertainty as to fhlo direction the
broader market has been moving

:..7.;:-:;::::::;:::c..
, POMEROY - LeS&gt;ne
jlows Handley, 83, formerly of
'IJ)exter, died Friday afternoon In
~artland Nursing Home, Bucyrus.
i Survivors lncludeflvesons, RoyS.
· tlandley of Cheshire. RaYmond
!"andley of Wellsburg, W.Va.,
:Elmer R. Handley of Buffalo,
).V.Va., and Lowe!~Handley and Jim

· from her residence on Ohio 684 to
Veterans MemoriaL Racine was
called to Ohio 1241n Portland a t 1: 00
p.m. and transported John Myers to
·
Veterans Memorial.
At 6:18 p.m., Middleport was
called to 157 Dock St. for Mroatn
Caughy to Veterans MemoriaL
Tuppers Pia ills was called 'to Oak

New Haven. W.Va .; Charles Hud·
son, Middleport; Bertha Brlckles,
Middleport; Robert Flyer, Pome.
roy; Mary Wipple, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - Mary
Wipple, Rohert King, Nelson Watson, Lou Hutchinson, Nancy Aldrldge, Ralph smith, Carl Tennant;
Hattie SeHers;--Judle-McNickles.
Friday admissions - Norma
Baker, Pomeroy; Wather Evans,
Pomeroy; .Goldie Lawson, Racine;
Shelby Myers, - Gallipolis; Lou
Fraley, Albany; Ufwln Nease,
Racine; Avis Hartley. Pomeroy;
Nadine Futch, Pomeroy; John
Myers, Poitland.
Friday discharges - ·Opal Barr,
__Elsie Hines, Katherine Felter,
Shelby Myers. Carl Tennant, Mari
Wipple.

ter, Esther·. Riggs of Logan; a
brother, Robert Sanders of Reedsville; a sister, Inez Belle Whitehead
of Pataskala; andsevengrandchildren and five great·grandchlldren.
She was precedeQ,tn death by her
husband, Robert Dodderer, and by a
brother, Ernest Sanders.

OLD SPO:r, THE SNOW DOG- Myrtle and Mllde Klein, e••lsted by
their mother, Connie, created this tJ11UiA!81 sculpture ellhelr Mulberry
Avenue home. 1be ••snow dog'' has black and brown spots made with
markers, 1111d buttons for 118 eyes.
·

Stock
prone to unwiurantect extremes of broader samples of New
Issues
than
the
30
stocks
Exchange
optimism and fear. Nevertheless, ·
observers point out that It would be that make up the Dow Jones
unusual Indeed for any period of ·Industrial average have regularly
record highs of late.
great economic trouble to follow been

r.~~:~~~r~~J:n~~~~~~a~~--Po~=.;;~~:::~~~L,.c,·JLi~~~iP.~~l~~

transported Eric Thomas to Holzer
Medical Center. And at 9:55p.m.,
· IViiddieport went to:ilil,h Race 'St. for
Hallie Zirkle to Veterans Memorial.

Mich.; a brother,

·'M".a~ ~ V!lo •

c.w. Meadows of
2

nrt

nllmPmaJ~

~;:-~~d~hlld~;~ ~d--g-;:eat,

grandchildren.
· Hunter Funeral Home, Rutland,
Is In charge of arrangements.

Hospital News

BffiTHS

otllclatlng.

--c..--'-r-~ -n~e::.;aece~ased
"'.=--w
-"-"as employeafor
more
than
&lt;10
yeArs by Harry
Pe!!gy Weaver

Arnold, formerly of Syracuse, died

.

Mar-ket performance
~ignals good economy
--------

Area deaths

..

answered Friday by various units of
the . Me igs County Emergency
Medical Service.
At 6:58a.m., Pomeroy was called
to Ohlo 143 for Luella Fraley who
was trea ted liut not transported. At
7:35a.m., Racine went to County
R()l!d l for Nell Mlddleswart to
Veterans Memorial.

I~

...•

case to the 6th U.S. Circuit Coort of
accu.sea Of- operaf!ilg-- the -gas- ~Appeals In Ci,"JCinnati.- despite -a - -Chamber-S a1 the.Treblinka death
camp. He was captured In 1942 by
warning from U.S. District Judge
Frank J_ Battisti in Cleveland that
the Germans, and U.S. governmeqt
lhe allegations of a conspiracy In the
attorneys say he subsequently '
case were "humorous" and ('QUid
became a guard for the Nazis.
bring sanctions against O'Connor.
Demjanjuk has admi1ted be lied
The warning was Included In a
about hlswhereaboutsdurlngWorld .
Feb. 12 order that O'Connor
War-IT on his Immigration papers.,
received Friday, he said.
but said he Ued because he feared he '
Demj81)juk, 64, a Ukrainian who
would he sent back to the Soviet .
served In the Soviet Army, Is
Union.

19505 to cover up h!s past as a guard - ~
Demjanjuk's Iawye-;::- Mark
- JateSt appeal. ;'We want tills man's
ai
death camp In Trebllnl\3. O'Connor of B\lffalo, cont1•nds -·citizenship returned. There is absoPoland. Millions of Jews were killed Demjanjuk is the victim of a · lutely nothing any longer to tie John
at thecampduringWorldWarll.
conspiracy by the Soviet KGB
Demjanjuk to this individual (the
Since the 1981!1lling, Demjanjuk secret pollee, who O'Connor says
death camp guard) ."
has been appealing the case and supplied doctored evidence, Inc lullO'Connor said the Justice Departfighting deportation to the Soviet ingaphonyNaziidentlflcatloncard,
ment's Office of Special InvestlgaUnion. He Is also battling Israel's to Incriminate Demjanjuk.
tlons had learned of the frraudulent
wish that he be extradited there for
"The case ls.grounded In fraud,"
evidence against Demjanjuk but
trial ori war crimes. That case is · O'ConnorsaldFriday,aftertheU.S.
coveredltuptomalntalntheofflce's
pending In U.S. District Court In Board of Immigration Appeals on
credibility.
.
Cleveland.
·
Thursday rejected Demjanjuk's
O'Connorsaidhewouldappealthe

a·

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••

.

J.

''

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- A-7·

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

February 17, 1985

'

David Sinclair
. POMEROY_ DavidSinclalr.J9.
l'tt. 1, Shade, was accldeDtly killed

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friday afternoon at Diamond Stone
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: Born at Burlingham, he was the
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~.Shade, and the late Alba Sinclair.
of Pomeroy High
'School,
A graduate
hewasaformeremployeeof

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Plains Christian Church

Cemetery. Frienils may call at the
funeral home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
today.

Emmons 'McConihay

By Radlo,Shack

HALF PRICE!

Home, Coolville. Burial will be In

Tuppers

l3roughton's Dairy and Motyre,
~th In Athens, and. Pepsi Cola ·
Bottling Co. tn Cheshire.
, He was an Athens County Fair
J3oard member and president of
' Shade Elementary PTO.
; In addition to his -mother, he is
~urvlvro by his wife, Julia Tippie
lltficlalr; · two sons, Dale and Dean,
both at home; a daughter, Joy, at
home; four bro!hers, Kenneth,
Paul, and Lyle, all of Rt. 1, Shade,
~ndBoydofAthens; andtwosisters,
Loretta Douglas of Rl. 5, Athens;
imd Vickie Bolin of Albany.
; Beskles his father, he was
preceded In death .by a daughter,
~anle Marie.
; ServiceS will be held· at 1 p.m.
Tuesday in Hughes !funeral Home,
Athens; with Rev. Williard Love
.Officiating. ,Burial wUI be In Bates
Cemetery, near. Athens. Friends
(Jlay caU at the funeral hOme from ·
· 2-4 and 7-9p.m. today and Monday.

POINT PLEASANT_ Emmons
Bright McConihay, 85, Point Pleasant, died Friday morning tn
Pleasant Valley Hospital follow!ng a
brief illness.
Fu
1
1
ill be he!d at 1
nera serv ces w
.p_m _TlleSday !!!-W!!C!ll!~n Funeral
Home, with the Rev. Bryan Blair
officiating. Burial will be in Greer
c ernetery. Frl
_ en&lt;ls may call at the

NEWARK-AUtlcawomanwas
Arnold's mother, Mary Weave•r,
killed FridaY 'ID what authorltJrs . 62. of Newark, a passenger In
believe Is Ohio's first weather- car, was admitted to Licking
Memorial Hospital for treatment.
related fatality since Tuesday's
winter s;torm.
authorttles said,
Pffigy N. Arnold. 28, of 11170
'llJ.e milk truck driver, Charles
Marttnsburi Rd., was killed when
Ray, 32, otorrvllle, was not injured
her car slld Into a mUk truck,
in the accident ,-troopers said.
approximately one mlle south of
Arnold was married to Larry
Purity, In northeastern Licking
Arnold, an assistant Licking County
County. Authorities said she was
prosecutor and former: highway
pronounced dead at the scene.
trooper.
.
The victim has failllly Uvlng In
Among the local relations are
M 1 C ty
Mrs. Roy Winebrenner. Mrs. Ar- '
e gs oun .
ThP GranvJUe. post of the State
nold's grandmother and mother of
Highway Patrol said Arnold appar·
Mary Weaver; Gordon Wine'ently drove hPr car left of center to
brenner, uncle of Mrs. Arnold; and
ld
hlttln
hild
!nth
d
d
Thomas
Weaver, Mrs. Arnold'.s
avo
gc
ren
eroa an

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:-Wllkesvllle, died Friday · night ln .
P'Bienes~· Memorial Hospital,
Athens.
f Born June 26, 1901, at Wllkesvllle.
. son of the late John E. and Verna
~rapes Mulholand, he was a
~If-employed service sta tlonowner
Wllkesvllle.
r Surviving are his wile. Gladys
Altien Mulholand, and several
hleces and nephews.
1 Funeral services wlll be held at 1
Monday tn McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home, Vinton, with the
C.J. Lemley officiating. Burial
will be In Vinton Memorial Park.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 4-7,p.m. today .

AND

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GALLIPOLIS - Pallbearers for
the funeral of T.P. "Phil" Langh.Qrne, 75, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, who died
Thursday, will be Richard MacKen:ile, Ron Patrick, Tom Saunders,
·John Saunders, Charles Stover and
Freddy Stover.
, Tile service will be held at 2 p.m.
today In Waugh-Halley-Wood Fun·
~ral Home, with Denny Coburn

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COLUMBUS.
Ohio (API - Lt.'
.
:Gov. Myrl Shoemaker, n,, conjlnut'&lt;l to be listed In stablecondlllon
.friday night In the Intensive call"
•mil of the Chillicothe Medical
tenter Hospital.
~ An emergency squad took Shoemaker from his hOme In Bourne.
lo'ille to the hospital about 3 a.m.
Fridaay atter he devel!)ped dlffl('Uity breathing, Gov. Richard
Celeste'sotrlce said.
David Heiss, the hOspital's dlrec·
tor of community relations, said
,Shoemaker wtderwent tests and
was expected to l,'l'lllain under
oboervatlon In Intensive care for at
least 24 hours.
Shoemaker was discharged
Thursday from Riverside Mefuo.
. diSt Hosoital here, where he had
·t~een a patient since Monday. He has
'been undergoing regular treatments for cancer and phlebitis.
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Page-A-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Februery 17,

198~

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From Meigs to Denver, woman

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February 17, 1981

=··•

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

- --·- -.... ---

_takes the ·gOod, ·forgets the rest

' ••

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IL~ U..LLLU .LLU •..t

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~nd

By CBAluENE HOEFUCH
na-&amp;ntlnel Stall
MIDDLEPORT
''I'VE' .
learned from E&gt;Verything I've

happy
productive llfe.
The daughter of Amold and
Florence Richards of Mlddij&gt;port is the arts administrator at

community. . .
/
Keel is concerned about dis·
crimination, rights and equality.
for black students arthe unl•ver·

times . .And I know that If you let
defeat get you down, It Will keep
you dOwn. My philosophy is to
take thE&gt; good rfpm every
situation and forget the rest."
Jo Richards . Keel, ~rn and
reared in Middleport, educated
at Ohio Unlversl1y, and emas a chemist for two

at the multicultural arts facill1y, Studio E, in
Denver.
At the unlversl1y, she is
director o( the Marcus Garvey
Cultural Center and teaches two
classes in Black Am!'rlca thea·
tre, and anothE'r on Marcus,
Malcolm and Martin, famous

create
awarf)lless not
only for them . but also for
others,. and convey an ·educational awareness to th!' city of
Greeley where the school is
located.
She describes the black students at Northern Colorado as
being "In
. because the

into the art perfonnance field,
'Y,\l"sjj.lklng about &lt;fhlev!ng!he

emphaslzf&gt; dev!'lopment and
economics
for the black
.......-""
-~

=

I

over 50,(00 has
residents. "Part what l do Is to
··netp those snraents ore11k out oi
that Isolation," ~ he commented.
Well V!'rsed oo the history and
problems o(hetpeopleaswellas
other mlnorlt~· , she referred to
results of th 1960's and E&gt;Ven
early 1970's hen they were
saying "we want control of our
comrnunltl1" This, she said . .
was taken
a threat and the
conflict tha began ·t hen ron·
llnJles now.!
"But whilt we really want Is a
say,-_an Jlnportant say, In our
destiny." ' ·
"One thing that I think people
dO not rloauze is that I can be
very proud of my culture, but
that doesn't mean that I have to
be negative to you and your
culture." the arts director
emphasized.
. •'
Besides her job at the univer·
slty, the talented and articulate
Keel directs, teaches,~ chorro--- - ·~
- - - _
Jo Richards Keel, who was hom and reared In the
graphs and performs with Stu·
and choreographer. As a11s ~. Kliel I!;
dio E In' Denver. She describes
Bend area, Is now arts administration at the
director of the Marcus Garvey CuJtural Cenler and
· the studio as having a multi·
University ul Northern Colorado. In addition, she hilS
-also teaches classes in Black tltealn! and the
cultural focus where thE' teach·
her work with Studio E as director, dance ln..tructor
philosophies of Marcus, Mai«Am and Mariln.
ing emphasis is on dance,
creative movement, acting tech·
nlque. voice and theatre.
Tall and willowy. Jo presents
A talented jazz dancer. Jo has
first danre training. She left
assess 'Iter own qualities, she's
a picture of the bi&gt;st of things in
performed for many years not
there to ti ke a job as a chemist
quick to give credit to those early
personal development and
In Cinculna!i, and a few years
only In the Denver community,
years when her parents' continu·
achlE&gt;Vement, yet malntalnln~
later after the birth of a son. a
but numerous otht'r states. She
ous encouragement and support
the qualities of humility, under·
·was a featured dancer with a
broken marriage, and more
inspired ho&gt;r to reach for the
standing arid compassion.
education, went to DenvE'r in a
black jazz company, the subject
stars.
But while she's hesitant to
reseach position for an uil
of a story in Ebony magazine.
Self-confident and poised, Jo
company.
descrtbes herself as "being into
She joined an African jazz
self-actualization now.''
group and began dancing profes·
She Is quick to give her
sionally. This led to her career
goal change and she went from
parents credit for the Inspiration
':l.ult!&amp;.eliQ.~thine:.of
"
chemist to dance teachE'r and
~rl'e learned from e!'erything l'r •e ever done-

..

~~~~~~~~

!,

Dancer Jo Richards Keel loured with a black jlllZ company for
several years whDe operating her own dance studio In Denver.

emphasized "that you
all things are poss•l61e and
whatever you learn,' Jearn well.
and it will sustain you."
She expressed appreciaton for
the discipline and challenge of
the Middleport schools. F:rom
there she went to Ohio University where she actually had her

Her son, Brett Bunton, who
literally followed In his mother' s
dance steps. is now PE&gt;rfonnlrig
in a Las Vegas nightclub. Her
second son, Miles Keel. Is a
fourth grade academic and
athlete, and not tuned in to the
rhythmic movements of a
dancer .

And I know that if you let
get y~o~u~~~
will keep you down. My philosophy i.~ to take the
good from t.'Very situal.ion and forget the ~est. "I
.,

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songwrit~.r

returns to the area;

seeks to expand ~is production business
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
'llmes-Sentinel Stall
POMEROY - Every man
has his dream and for country
~ger and pianist Paul Click,
It's becoming a successful producer and publisher in the
recording business.
in the music
performing in clubs across the
country for years,' he manages
SE'Veral groups, and he's had
limited experlen~ in the business end of the industry.
It's just that his interests arc
broadening and hi' now looks
lmward to expanding his management and production business while continuing to do some
performing.
Meanwhlll!, lllllll he can get
back to Nashvlllewhere hesper)t
many happy years; he ts biding
his time In Pomeroy, doing some
entertaining In local lounges and
clubs. But returning to NashvillE'
Is definitely in his scheme of
things for the fu ~re.
While "Click recognizes the
producing and publishing busi·
ness Is highly competitive, he
also knows that II offers unllm·
!ted ea..'1'..L".g po!~nUa! for bnth....
the perlonner and the manager.

"We're all only t.tiree minutes
away from everything we
want." Click quoted a friend as
saying·- that's the length of a
record.
"If you can write the tight
song and cut the right recol'd,
you can make II kind of quick,"

only in the quality of his
performance, bill his smooth
easy styk&gt;.
Pleasant and with a light
. sense of humor, Click through
the years has appeared on
numerous television and radio
talk shows, including the Ralph
Emery Show at NashvUie and .
the Red McEivane Show in Las
Vegas. His records have been
played on virtually every 50,001
wart country radio show In the
nation.
Click has lived on Lincoln Hill
in Pomeroy since his marriage
to the fanner Sabra MOrrison
last year. He fn{'t her whO!'
doing a gtg·at the Holiday Inn in
Gallipolis.
But he's not a newcomerto.the
shores of ' the Ohio Riller. He
grew up in Ironton ·w here his
father was a preaciM!r, his
mother, a pianist, and the family
sang gospel music in IIi church.

He is a "natural" at the plano,
and his wife jokingly says "that
music goes in his ears and out his
fingers ."
After leaving htgh school,
Click joined the Navy . Since then
he has made his Jlvtng playing
and singing in piano bars and
Artist s

well as the Opry. His next
record, "Old Slewfoot. " pushed
him into national prominence
and he followed that with
"Smokey, Trucks and CB
Radios."
"My one claim to fame and
really the high point of my
career as a slngercamein 1974. 1

and a couple of agen·
truck song that year." Click
cles In Nebraska .
commented. Thp song was a
It · was In 1968 that Click
success and made U to the
headed for Nashville to make a
number one spot In about 30
name for himself in country
cities before U peaked out at 57th
music. He made It to the Grand · · nationally. The n ;rord produced
Ole ()pry as a plano player and
on an indePE&gt;ndent label. sold
JJ,(XX) copies.
cut eight records as a singer,
Click maintained an office,
one of which was in the national
charts for three months.
Nashville Click Enterprises, in
His first big break in Nashville
Nashville and commuted from
came whell/ 'TIIE&gt; Four Guys,''
Pomeroy until last fall when he
Grand O)e·Opry stars, hired him
decided to close the office there
to fronf thj;&gt;lr show and play
and operate his business from
ptanD.' This e!qiOSUre brought
the couple's home on Lincoln
him his first,record release, "He
Hill. HowE&gt;Ver. he does an tiel·
Can't FW t&gt;f:Y Shoes," a song
pate reopening the Nashville
which Jt&gt;rry Lee Lewis later
office sometime later this year.
recorded.
Meanwhile, Click ts doing his
The singk&gt; garnered attention
bookings from here, pe1ionnlng
from Nashville's music industry
in local clubs, doing some
and ted Click to share the front
writing and brushing up on his
position with Randy Parton in
business expertise as he looks
Jean Shepards' band, "The
loJWard to moving ahead Into
~ FiddlE'S." He appeared
publishlng.and produc~
with them on roncert tours as

slncer.

Enterialller Paul CliCk,
pianist. ...,.... Ud wr11er, _.
looks to coml*llng aD that wllh the record pHICbjllm t I
A
perlonner In NashvDie lor !IOI1Ie yean, he Is opel'll&amp;llt« NMhvlle
CUcl&lt; Enterprlsell out of his Uncoln 1011 home In l'llmeroy. L11aer 11M
year· heoplans to reopen ofllce!l In Nulwlle Ill ll*'e llhead In die
!!'.an~l of aJtlol8 al!d the record prodootloll btskn

-I

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�- . - _,

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The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-8·3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolii. Ohio-Point Pieasant. W. Va.

February 17. 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

-..;...·--r--- -

·Her personal ad brought friendship, trus_t, love and marriage

a,. Fred llld 1., YIIW
, magazl;.., and The VWage Voice. It
me to answer one ol those ads ... "
dates every night, but Fred man· let alone a family.
several t1111es but she alway$
NEW YORK (NEA) :.... we met began: "One-ln·a·mllllon. I'm a
He went on todescrtbe himself as a aged to work around that. I decided
As soon as 1 saw Jan.l knew s he returned to cigarettes. Realizing K
last year on Dec. 7, Pea Harbor pretty, ~year-old Ph.D., published
"tall, 38-year-old screenwriter look- he was the funniest, sweetest, most was special. · As we talked, we w ·probably the cigarettes or me;
~ Day; and got marrted 23da:ys later. - author; 11!111 artist ..;'-'
~
·lng for a collaboratGr-- ln love-and- lnteUigent and-kindest- man I had -becam6-awa&lt;e-ol boW-similar 011( _ J!!!J decided_!o stop for jOO&lt;t__HatlniL._
,--- &lt; Or. the battlelleld of klve, ttJs -- 1 .received 100 letters. After
war."ever met, a nd too gOOd to let get lives were - not just the present , and loving me at the same llme" courtship was cleflnltely a sneak talklng to about ~ men on the
ThiS was more Uke,lt. T'nere was ··-away. So ! proposed._
but the past and even our hopes T&amp;-Jan sul'ferca severe withdrawal. I ; anack.
.
phone, I made dateswlth15. But the
a refreshing directness to Fred's
Fred'11lory
the future. 1 decided ! wanted to stayed with her. and by the en~ of
; We met through an ad, we !ell lit ad was attracting dOctors and
letter, but even more Important
My first Impulse when I heard spend as much time with her as the second week when she had quit,
~ love, we decided to get married, lawyers, which was line, but not for
was the sincerity In his voice when I Jan's proposal was to run. But I possible.
1 knew Jan was the woman I was
' and we managed to do It allln three me. Whatl wanted was a successful
called hlm.
said, "I'm not qulte there yet."
By the end of the week. we had looking for because of her courage
; weeks.
fellow artist.
When It came to meetings Whl~h was true. I had recently grown every close, a proposal was . and the commitment she h!lll
:· ThlsJs our story ~riil. like most
So I wrote a new ad that read: · through personals, I usualiysetupa ended a four-year relationship and on .my rnlnd, too. But there was
made.
• love&gt;stories, 11 1s reaDy 'II bout trust
"Cicero wrote: 'Love 1s the attempt
rendezvous In a public place atleast was just starting to date again.
something I had to confront first On Chlistmas, 1 met Jan's
;' and courage.
to form a friendship Inspired by
a week . after the lnltlal call . aut
Although I had been combing the Jan's three-pack·a·day cigarette parents. Then we drove upstate aod
'
.Jan's story
beauty.' I'm a successful non·
there was something about Fred personals · for weeks, I hadn't
habit.
she met mine. On the drive back , I
It started when I decided to apply llcllon writer looldngfor an equally that shouted " Immediacy," so met responded to any. But her second ad·
Jan told me spe had tried to quit asked Jan. "Will you marry me?"
some of what 1had been teaching in exciting successful man, 5-9 plus, him that night.
got me to take action . 1 was
We talked non·stop for three attracted by her creativity and her
my
seminars to 33-45, who .wants a wife and
chlldreyt. I'm
35, fun ... "
hours. He asked me to see him the desire to have children.
'

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

..

ShewmakerAllen

. chlldri!il - l
to meet as
•.' many people as possible who
: ·shared that goal.
:~ So I Qlaced an ad In New York

WEST LAFAYE'l'TE. Ohio
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Shewmaker of
;&amp;105 Township Road 1195. West
Lafayette. Ohio. are anr.ounclng
!!'t~ &amp;.::g2~e~~!--e!" !ll&lt;li,..&lt;iau!rh!&lt;'",,'4
Martha .J. Shewmaker. and Dan W.
Allen. He Is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Allen of 1551 Patriot 'sfar
Route.
The wedding will take place June
14 a t Lake Park in Coshocton. Ohio.
11 will be! an O!'*n wedding.
Miss Shewmaker attends Ridgewood High School. Allen is , a
graduate of Ridgewood High
SchooL He is employed by Crown
City Coal Mine In Mercervllle, Ohto.

'
,.~;Bridal
.

·~

SUPERIOR SMOKED

. . anltudes have paved the way for"a
new type or bridal Service - the
. bridal consultant who helps plan the
·weddlngorwhomayeventakeover
most ot the responsibility for the
event.
When an elaborate wedding has
. been p!annedorwhen both bride and
her p10ther are busy "with full-lime
1 jobs
or when the bride llv~ 1n one
city, but wUl he married In .lV'other,
. a COnSultant may be called In to turn
a logistics nlghtmarelntoa manage-·~ able (ask._
"
Consultants provide a variety of
: services from fitting the wedding
, ·dress to planning the entire wed,

'

Sausage •••••••••••••••• 89&lt;
ll.

I

SUPERIOR

~- : '-~--.-

Ground Beef •••••• !~

s- 29

Fryer Parts •••••••~~ •• 49&lt;

Seaver~PeLong

FRESH PORK

.

Steak/Roast .••••• ~8; $119

LouiS(' DeLong.
Tho bride-elect is a graduate of
Ravenswood High School and Is
employed with WMOU Radio Statio.
Ravenswood.
DeLong. a graduate of Southern
High School is employed at· the
.Jackson Genera l Hospit a ! in Ripley.
W.Va.
An early March wedding is being
plann\'(1.

• 'which the photographer will be at
1, the wedding taking pictures as Well
~• as the size of the wedding album and

Lettuce •••••• ~ •••••••~(!~. S9&lt;

MIDDLEPORT - Mr, and Mrs.
Paul Swisher of Hysell St., Middleport . observed their o7th wedding
anniversary Monday. The couple
have a son and daughter ·in-law, Bill
and Nola Swisher. three grandchild,
rm . David Swisher, a ca ptain in the
u.S. Army currently stationed In
. Korea, whoS('wife .Sandy.residesln
Middleport. two granddaughters,
Velvet Lee, a nu rse a t the Holzer
Medical Center. and Paula Kay, a
student at the Nelsonville Technical
College, a nd a great,grandson.
Robbie Edward. son or Capt. and
Mrs. Swisher.

POMEROY - Bookmobile ser·
,1ce in Meigs County Is brought by
the Meigs County Public Library
u.n der contract wtth the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries. Bookmobile ser·
vice for Monday, Fe b. 18 - No
se•;vlce due · to President's Day
hollday.
Wednesday , Feb. 20 - TUppers
Plains (Lodwick's), 7:25-8:10 p.m.;
Rlggscrest Addition, 8:25-8: 55 p.m.

BROUGHTON

2°/o

On Sept. 15, 16al, Puritan separa,
tlsts from the ChurchofEnglandleft
Plymouth. England, on the MayflOwer, Their destination was Virgt"'"nfa, but they landed on Cape Cod on
• Nov. 19. Of the 103 passengers who
_: m::de up t~ P!,..vm(lllth Colony! haJf_
died before their first first year on
the new continent was over .

•

'I

Your original picture will
be returned to you unharmed. Bring your cherished old photographs to
us now!

The Association ot Bridal Consul,
Jajl.ls.,w~PJW~~~&amp; ~"q
members to those who send a
self·addressed stamped envelope to
the asSUcii:l"i:ivr1 ai iAAH:h~i:nutianU
Road, New MUford, Conn. CJ6776,
2521, says Monaghan.
If requirements for guidance are
less extensive, or the brtde'c an '!find
a consultant who is suitable, a lesser
degree of help Is ayallable free by
developing a good relationship with
a consultant fu a bridal department
or a specialty shop.
.· . u

. SPE..IAL OFF~g
Umlled nma onlY
Beautiful 5x7
copy of your
favorite picture

Milk •••••••••••••• ·$169
GALLON

•! number df·prlnts Included.
; ' Typically, packages start around
: $350 and range up to $1,00Jor more.
:; The more costly packages provide
• ' for larger albums, more photo.
;; graphs and may aalso Include
:•portrait sittings at the studio.
·; Besides a feeling of rapport with
• ' the photographer, It's important
;;·that the couple Uke the style the
:• photogra;&gt;her works ln. Visit sev·
:: era! photo studios before making a
·~ decision. Comparewhateachoffers
' :and Insist m looking at finished
'• albums at each ·studio. Ask for and
•: check references, as well, she
.';,suggests.
•
, : Large pboto studios often employ
' 'a number of photographers. Make
) surelhatthephotographeryoumeet ·
• and whose samples you see is !heone
1 who will actually be doing the work
I ' at your weddlng, she says.

. LEAR.

•CROSS-STITCH
•STENCIUNG ,
•FOLIC-ART SUPPLIES

P+iOTO&amp;RAPIIY

452 SlCOND AVE.
GAWI'OLIS

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA - GALLIPOLIS

'

·

DOZ.

Sl
Crackers •••••••••••t:·.a~!. 89 &lt;,,White Bread .....,... 99&lt;

oz. 99,
&lt; Cooking Bags .:.o:·3 /
Pie Filling •••••••••••••
21

ZESTA

.

RHODE'S

· 5 PAK

••

CHUNK DOG FOOD •
25 LB.

lAG

$329

limit One Por Cut-r
Good Only At Powtll't

·-·--Vftll'

.., ••
• ••
'••r
·~, • ..,-:..

TOILET TISSUE
6

~~~. ~ 169

like one• In
says Paul D.
J&lt;ennamer.
Those seeking video cameramen
Ww find an unusually wide price
range from a low of $150 or so to
several t)lousanddollars, he says. At
the most modest prtces, expect to
hire an Individual who may do
videotaping as a part-time avocation and use personal horne equtp.
ment. Going up the price ladder,ata
cost of between $.'lXl and $500, you
can probably find someone with
more experience who may use
professional equipment to produce
an unedited tape with a single
hand-held camera.
Among questions to consider: will
you receive the tape In a format you
can use on your own videotape
player? wm professional equlp.
ment he used? Is there a backup
camera and recorder In case of
malfunction of the primary
equipment?

446-8303

C~OSED

~l'ltceiMayVory

Umit Ont Ptr Cwtomtr
Good Ooly At hwOtl't
Offer !:p!::: Fe!:.-!!, ! C!l!!

'.

'

MONIIAY

Open_Daily 10-9; S~nday 12-6

-

c:::~~· .---.. .

Al!omeSicnloDue
To Local Coo upetltklh

The Saving Place®

I
•

Y041l Choice

79

87 a_ .
OUr Reg. 99.97

UnaA.mbled

~

.4.44
PiUih Conan lath T-1

OUr"-6;7, Absolbent. 24x46:

so-.• ~ Dllh D•t•rgent

1. , ,
...__

...... ,..

Lemon-scented or regular for automalic dish washer .
.

OUr ... 7, 161126" Hand , _ . 2.4A
OUr
l~!,!faaf claH•, 7~

Our 2.39
Funnel...

.... 1.37

60 IN WOOLS
&amp; BLENDS

40°/o OFF
60 IN. WOVEN

K mort® Sole Price

POLYESTER

Our
844

40°/o OFF

Facial Tissues

60 IN. BALLET

Box of 175, 2 ply tissues .

40°/o OFF

SHURFINE SUGAR

:A~· 79~

~1:· $139

Isoal

2.00 Less Factory Rebate
7.97X:=:

hballl ~to •

.\~

lluggld 12g II I laughtiiCII~Tralli CCin
CCIII

\

60 IN. POLYESTER
·suEDE

• .GOLD MEDAL FLOUR
limit Ont Por-Custtri\tr,
Good' Only AI Powtll't
Off• bpin• Ftli. 23, 1915

"

40°/o OFF

SOle l'ltc.

sale Pl1ce P1lg.

1.66

1.77
.......
.,..puallln

2--.•1111111'
Du fa wil

Sc•nt•d or

....

IIIICei I ~.

limit One '" c..,_,
Good Only At Pew~l't •
Off• bplm ftli.ll, ltiS

.

'

•

(6141 446-7494

GRADE A

\
2
Med •.Eggs ••••••••.• f$1

$495

Eo&lt;h Addilionol of SGme &gt;2 .50

1

HYLAND

Plymouth

OLD PICTURES COPIED

beai

.

Swisher
anmversary

gave seminars on time management. My first thought was how
was she gotng to have time lor me.

+ • .,

' Count on signing ·a Contract that
By'The .A'I'ioclated Press
spells
wt what you'D be getting and
Many couples WhO plan a formal
much
It will cost. Since the
how
;.,. wedding also elect to have tt
negatives
will
remain with the
:·recorded with professionally-taken
photographer
and
you will have to
; :photographs.
.
order
additional
prints,
asj&lt; to see
: ~ Ninety-seven percent of those
::responding to a swvey taken by the prtce Ust for copies.
If ywdecldetohaveyourweddlng
••artde's magazine saJd they arvideotaped
as well as photographed,
t! ranged for photography as part of
make
sure
both
know the other wUI
•lthe wedding. The average expendibe
there.
Some
video cameras
' •ture was $485
,
require
bright
llghts
which make It
~ "The
photographs come
·Impossible
for
lhestW
photographer
',rrom a good relationship beiween to work.
:'bridal couple and photographer,"
Videotaping was rare as recently
' says VlckleMal,markeltngdlreclor
.
·as
1981 when only one couple 1n 100
; for Professional Photographers of
chose
iO videotape their wedding.
; 'America, a trade association ol
Nowadays,
figures lndlcatethat one
(lphotograpl)ers. She advises couples
couple
1n
15
elects to videotape the
. ' to shop carefully.
wedding
or
parts
of II.
Most photographers offer wed·

12 OZ. PKG.

.

one,

•
·,

1

. ••.•••••••••••••
' 99&lt;
Fran k1es

scheduled

other needed services and Items.
The ~tMtanLI1'\!!Y. hejpJ!!e. bride
choose Invitations and stationery,
today's Increasing nwnber a! work·
organize. rehearsal and wedding,
lng women and special situations
i"ii!ip chuse--wedd1f.g ~ attire, ~t up~
nave led~tij a W!llen1ng 'iiitheir
pre-wedding parties and festMtles,
popularity, aecordlng to Gerard
arrange for places for out.of-town
Monaghan, presldentoflheAssocta·
guests and weddlng party to stay
.lion of Bridal Consultants, a trade
· and even helpadvlseonhoneymoon
group 1n New Milford, Conn.
destination and trousseau
Mary C. Weaver, a consultant 1n
wardrobe.
:Avon , Conn., for the past seven
Since the service !sa personal
. y~ars. summarized typical services
the
speclflcs depend a great deal on
of consultants. Most Important is
the kind of help thatisdeslred. Those
providing Informed advice to the
expertencei:lln the !leld say a feeling
bride and her parents to help them
of rapport and trust between
get the wedding they want for the
consultant and bride Is essential.
budget they have Set.
To find a pro!esslonal bridal
Besides giving advice, a consul- ·
Cdn.suitant, -ch'E!Ck·with depaa-uoent
tantmayarrange!orselectlcinofthe
store wedding gift reglstlies, hDtel
reception hall, church, Dowers,
banquet managers and friends. You
caterer, m.uslc. photographer, and
can also look 1n the yellQw pages ot
the telephone directory under
"wedding suppliers" or "party
planner" headings.
dlrig. Though hlstortcalty they have

:Wedding photography
~: can become very .costly

SUPERIOR

POI\IEROY - David and Esther
Seaver are announcing the engagement and approaching m arriage of
their daoghter . Wendy Ann, 7ll
Crooks Ave .. Ravenswood. W.Va. to

By 'Die A-oc!•ted PM&amp;

-.'oo'.~e~ ~~' the wedding. But new situations and

MIXED

-

me afterward. I did, and spent
almost the entire day with him.
During the corning week I had

connsultants replace ·traditional plans

: j.and her mother plan the details of

Lunch

Wendy Ann Seaver
Jeffrey Scott Del.Dng

zlne on Dec. 3. Four
received a batch of letters: Fred's
was among them. "It began: "WeD,
now you've done it. You've gotten

=~!~-:~=·-2-~~t.'le-br.lde-'- !:::e~.-. . ,!!.,~LVI~!tb....allte-.~szs.

·-·-

·

IIIIRi duty

~

I 'l1ellel
A '"M"; 2 "C";
2 "D": 1, 9-V.

clvtded or
lal plalet.

--

. . . In OUt lporttng

"

•
l

�~~

B-4-The Sunday Time•Santinel

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

SUNDAY
BRADFORD - Evangelist
Hoy~~AJien will reguest speaker
Sunday night- at the- Bradford
Church of Christ Services begin
at 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS Gallia
County Historical Society will
meet Sunday, 2::JJ p.m. at St.
· Peter's Episcopal Church. Election of members and· Show and
Tell.
'LECTA - The Rev. Eart ·
Hinkle will be at morning
services at Walnut Ridge

ByCJIEl'CURRIER
AP Business Writer

particularly Interests them, and for
which they have good Instincts.
Secondly, theyputtnagoodtlealof
in great works of_ t.lme and effort deyeJoptng_ their
art or old comic books, miUions of -expenlse on their chosen subject, ·
Americans seek .financial as well as making contact along the way with
ps)ichlc rewards In "collectibles."
fellow aficionados and · dealers
Rare coins, stamps, antiques, wh&lt;JS(' opinions and Integrity they
vlntage cars or bast&gt;ball cards respect.
they all can offt&gt;r· beauty to the
Furtht&gt;rmore, they operate with
ptacticed eye, and a pride of money they can afford to keep tied
ownership that's hard to get from a
uj1 for long periods of time. In this
bank account statement or a
way, they a void the difficult task of
Treasury bond.
trying to turn quick profits, and they
Furthermore, a well-chosen collect!ble can be ! a hedge against
inOaticln. a store of
when the

protect themselves from being
forced . to seD at an Inopportune

little value amOng kmwiedgeable
tnve.tors.
.
moment.. ~When you buy a rolli&gt;ctlble, you
Expertise Js particularlY netes- _ also may pay an _oppCr1\lnlty cost._
. sary because collectibles are not
The money you tnvelll earns no
standardized and lnterchangealilt&gt;,
Interest or dividendi that It could
and the markets for them are far
bring If It Wl'l"f' put instead In some
less formal and organized than, say,
flnaociaiiDVestment.
the stock market. ,
In fact, owning a collectible often
With any collectible, there Is the
results In a negative cuh Dow, with
· chance that Yt)U may be sold an
t&gt;Xpettses for such things as appral·
outright fakt&gt;, or an item that has
sals, inSurance, storqe and othel"
been altered, restored or cleaned so
measures to keep Its coodltlon from
that it looks good, but h3s relatively
deteriOrating ()11/ef lime.

GALLIPOLIS -

St. Peter's

was running at a rapid rate, stories
abounded of the huge profits being
reaped In these tangible assets.
Now that In Dation has slowed. the
· collectibles craze has cooled conslderably. Many disillusioned people
have learned that the price of any
investment, no matter how rare or

~.-_

POMEROY - A hymn sing

:Will be held Sunday at the
:Burlingham Community
·Church at 1 p.m. The Lovell
:smith Singers and The Gospel
Travell'l's will be there. The
Rev. Ray Laudermllt Invites the
puhllf' tn

:-~tte_nd_

;-- ,_

MONDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Churches of Christ Men's Fel]owshlp will meet at the Zion
~hurch of Christ Monday night
. ilt 7: 30p.m .
~

•

•

. :_ __ TilESDAY
POMEROY- XI Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta. Sigma P.hi
Sorority will · . meei at 7:30
Tuesday night at" the home of
,._.l'"FS A.R. Knight.
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
will hold its regular
.monthly meeting Tuesday at
:t: 30 p.m.

j ••;,...,.,

..

:j POMEROY - Drew Webster
.· Post 39 of the American Legion
:will have a dinner for its
)nemhers, Tuesday, 7 p.m .. at
Jhe RQSt home.

-·. GALLiPOLIS

- American
l:.t:·~~ Auxiliary wUI conduct a
I~
election ·for first officer
7: :lO g,m. ~&lt;tt

; GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
-Rotary Club will meet Tuesday,
E p.m .. at Oscar's Restaurant.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis
l""·'un&gt; Club will meet Tuesday,
:30 p . m.. at Oscar's
'Restaurant.

potential profit has a long, rich
hi,story - and almost certainly a
long future as well.
The people who fart&gt; hest in ,
collectibles seem to have several
things In common_ First of ali, they
specialize In a given art&gt;a that"

Limited Time Only!

MIDDLEPORT

~_A

, .Your Original Will Be
Returned Unharmed.
Bring Yo!!rs !!!

meeting of

This Week.

'

Satisfaction Guaranteed

LEAR.

PM0106RRPIIY
Spring Valley Plaza
Gallipoli!l

-

446-7494

_.c··

-

'\

-

•

---

~~:::=~=:;~:::~~=:!.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~5~~~~~~~~~~~;?_

Now '14.50
Now '16.50

PETER PAN BOOTS
BY Buster Brown

'16.50

Right now, during our Great American
.
.
Frigidaire Sale, we're offering great, great
values on all Frigidaire appliances in stock! Choose now from our full line of
Frigidaire Refrigerators, Ranges, Washers and Dryers, Microwave Ovens and

Now S) 0.95 to S13.95

_ RASCAL'S

The Children's Shoe Store

Second &amp; Coun, Galli olio

~-

I

society- an&lt;llf investing In !bern Is_~
profitable, so much the Wtter.
'

HOLZER CLINIC

tf2 PRICE SALE

By Willets
log. 123.95 to &gt;77.95

are tleaiJJtg, they say, In_
obJects of great aesthetiC value to

Tbry

.

LITTLE BOYS' HIKERS

Reg. 132.95

But collectible fanciers pay no

great attention to thf:se irguments. ·

CENTER

the Middleport Garden Club scheduled for Monday night has been ~
cancelled due toweatherconditions.

Reg. 128.95
Reg. 132.95

.more""7'"'.all..at GreatAmerical1-11rigidaire.Sa1e.prirgs_That:s_;m onlerL

~~~·~ ~-"~

",. .~~~--~ · "--~

Mr~,~~~~!;. ~'!!!!IM!!- (T~)~~zt.\

M Da • l

c

GALLIPOLIS - Pembroke
wUl meet Tuesday, 8 p.m .,
at the home of Mrs. Clarence
fviasters, 616 Fourth Ave.

To meet
POMEROY - Meigs Local
j::t~~:,~Boa:rd will meet Monday
session instead of
as was originally

11 n ,

·.:- ·;

Mr. and .Mrs. Wi!ht&lt;r;.bL R 9uABJo-s" --

l b

1

·- :.··

'"'-~·~~

•

• "~' ~-

~-

-~-

•

0

.!~:-~:~~~:~:!_&lt;;'i~~;~~~~~
aye;,r loll)!; series In 1985.

~~~~reth~ ~d~~~~t~~~~r;;'~r~~ .

.Rowleys ce e rate annwersary

·

-~·· "-;;,- -~c-

Jr., Ironton, They have seven
grandchildren, and six great grandchildren.
They are members of the Brad-~.
ford Church of Christ. Rowley
retired from his busm
· ess, Wilbur
Rowley Construction Co., and his
wife retired from the Betsy Ross
Baking Co. which formerly opera ted in Middleport .
Reiaiive; anll"fri~udsare lnviti.'d
to attend the reception . The couple
requests no gifts.

want this type of fantasy concept
with a toy product." said Stephen G.
Shank, chairman oftheboardofthe ,
ToyManulacturersAssociationand
president ofTo'!ka Corp.
But it is controversial. " What isn 't
OKistogiveoverprogrammlngto
ut 1
d
t h
·t
man ac urers an no
ave 1
Identified as commercial speech,"
2506 Grande Central Ave.
.I
said Peggy Charren. president of
I
r·
··=
Y!ENNA,
.
WJ/
_
26105
MUon For Chlldren:s Jelevision.
"It completely displaces a U of the
(304) 295-8133
other kind of programs we should be
!"o_ff_er_in...:g::..t_o_ch_i_ldr_e_n_:_· _ _ _ ___~._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

..

.

cars
compqred
~~~urner i~~ -: ·:Efficleflt:
luxury
.
By 111e

.. ·.

.
~-- ~ ,_ over-drive ~lon ~armed _. notse

ESI

-n.

of Coiww111er ··,art. , ·
,
thro1Ue1 1 p IIWwaaoverlen·
The Buick Elecll'l allf.:tJW'· ' litiveonllippel1l.~, allowChrysler Flflb AWftlle anf liolfl
lng the wheels lb'ipln tllo ea.u;.
promoted as large' cars ~ till'
The auto enjneera l8ld ~~
Mercury Grand M~~~quis. Altliouatl
while the EledNI111 not a INid CIU',
the Electra Is !lllll'l8llat MN!ier·, Its handling alld ltde '111ft! 411apoutside than a Gralld Manpli, it'Ji' · l*OIDting. It 11!SJ* " • dlhQI'IAy 1n
just as , roomy inside. 'nle Flltll
the abrupt accld!ril·avoiGinoet!!sts
Avenue Is basically amedl~~ · and Its numb powl!t steertna made
CIU".
·
,,
..
, · the car hard to~l*«lltely; Its
Consumer . Reports' aufo i'lilil- ' tide over secaiiiJary roads lind
neers recently tested a Buick bUmps was rougiJ.
Electra and Chrysler Fifth Aveliue
Still, the Electra is roomy and
along with a Mercury Grand comfortablt&gt; inside and It offers
good mileage for a big car. 11
Marquis.
The !ront-wheel ddve E:aira.; , .Qellve~ about 21.mlles per Pllol1
and Its corpora~· cous~~t,;·' • ;' overall. Beca,.ltle Bllltk Ekttra
Oldsmobile 98 Regency," Ia · ~VJter Is new for '85, ~·s no reliability
than' other large can and ~: ·, data yt'l avallalle. The flllllheen
better fuel e!flciency. The i!Jittni say you may wtl(t to stay away

1=-~~~-~ '""'',.; CU~hifWr.d s.t5,810 ~'Ilea- untU

.

mark it ~ _a_ medium-sized
model.
· .
The Filth Avenue is baslc~lly a
dressed-up version of the mediumsized Dodge Diplomat and Plymouth Gran Fury. The Fifth
Avt&gt;nue tested by Consumer Heports' auto engineers cost nealry
$17,!XXl when equipped with a
luxury equipment package and
oltier options. Its 5.2-liter V-Bengine
always started easily, ran well and
accelerated wltb plen!Y of powerThe Fifth Avenues automatic
transmission shifted very well. The
car delivered aboutl7 mpg overall.
The Fiflh Avenue's routine handlllig was not as precise as the auto ,
l!nglneers would have liked. However, they Judged that the car
handled disttn_c_l!!tly~!llbe:e.tnt&lt;e!Yr than the
in "'

_The_ Eifth _Avet\l!f''i ride was
bouncy and uncomfortable on
rough roads; Its rear seating was
cramped and lacked support. The
Fifth Avenue was dlsappolntly
noisy at highway speeds. The
engineers say that tts very wide
rear roof pillars . and a skimpy
"limousine" rear window severely
limit the driver's ,vlew to the rear.
The engineers were also irritated
by other design faults such as
hard-to-reach seat adjustments and
Its small trunk.

ONE GROUP

SHOES

$99,0

ROlli! ~!fOOD

_..._CI!!E_(;ROUP

SHOES . Athletic Shoes

BOOTS •

$1995

CANDIES

_

S)490.S)990

~~9~ $1250.

THE SHOE
CAFE
Lafayette

Mall, Gallipolis. OH .

300 Second Avo.,

Bite·Size
'.

.

NO FINANCE. CHARGES FOR 12 ·MONTHS
•

· . . .,,.,,,_.,....,,,, cd
. Tri-.W 10"

,_' ....... t,. -~"-~"'''!!··'
floJin~ !' ;
· ,,pt .._.'}. '

-~-~&lt;&gt;..,v·--..

I

*.

..:..o"o...

SAME AS .CASH ••••• •

·'

DrastiC ~
&amp; No
..,

'

· ·•. · '

•

.' ~~~ ~\bt\ q .&lt;t s ~ /1

L...,'-_

..
'.

'

_«

,.~ ·~ futer

•'.,. YEAR

No.w is fhe,tiM to buy your IUNO or ORGA~.

. " 1\)i&gt;h,,
;~ systelli

.
...
.;l .

'

"

'

Ou ges For One Year.
..

.

.'

~-

...~.~

;

'·

~heduled.

1'

nte;,, .a.'m"~~sary ~bra~

••••

The .Stihl® 028 Wood Boss"
- plenty of muscle for any
cutting chore large or small.
Easy to handle. Wood Boss"
digs its teeth in and won't let
up until you do. There are
lots of chain saws on the
market, so why buy Stihl?
. Simply because you get what
you pay for!

~

3.11-lllter V-8 engine
'l'ell at all Urnes.
' Although the

YOU GET
WHAT.
PAY -FOR

•

.. .

r
.
l

nand. and Claren&lt;!PI!'!:Mcna

t

&lt;American Samoa, a group of six
~aU Islands 2,fUJ miles southwest
prnonoluiu, hecarriea U.S. territory
1&gt;r treaty with Brttaln and Germany
~ 1899. Blessed with spectacular
~nery and delightful South Se~s
eUmatt&gt;, lt Is themostsoutherlyofali
LIJ,ds owned by the United States.
1ie Island's natives are Polynesian
ln,origin, and all are natiOnals of the
~ited States.

'. •

RUTLAND - Mr. llllfh~i'·:· u Poluemy; ~Ill,~~
·P OMEROY _ Mr. and Mrs ,
Clarence (Tiny) Mcllilllll$ d Ru- ;Ida Mahaffey, ,'trtstl Mwhalllll:r, WGbur H. Rowley Sr., Bailey Run
tland were hono~l!lit! ~'!!f!llra-i.'·•~ S!DJ~.V ~..till·
Road , Porrit&gt;roy, wll!ceit&gt;bratethelr
27thweddlng ~. \.:.&gt; ~l'les Smith, ..... -~: .f'ol, _ 5p111 wedding anniversary Feb. 2 ~
The couple was united lli'mar: l-.flddlepoct; aid '-~ Black, with an Ollt'D reception from 2 to 4
riage on J an. 26, .._,
"""' at M
Rutland · .
~
··
·
p.m. at their home. The reception is
WVa bylhelateR.eY Mad d " " ' Othersrema t' .._tllttma.tlle ....,_ hosedby
•
· .
•
M-.f. -•
. ..,u.g
t
theif,chiidren.
In celebratlotl olille ,,.hjl•l, ":t\CCasloa"tllft"l&gt;MQvl'l!!lMunilfllltl
Mr. and Mrs. Rowley were
Mrs. Ada Mahatley·M M\' S(Jl ~ .. 'lbunnan smJdi,)UKD j' «; ·Mr. , married Ft&gt;b. 22,19:5 at Sandyville, .
entertained ~1111 a ~ illllner• -ad Mrs. ClanN'ji'Pa'*Y,. Mlm- W.Va. by ,Pastor Albert Poling.
Which inciUiled a {\Me dl!&lt;ialiiiiC'~:'D!rs; Mt. ' attif-••· J•tk iiiliiAt, · Ttiey are tbe parents of three ~with blue rosette~. -, .. - . :, . . 'lh Racine; Mr. ~PIIIIIJol 11'11 children, Laura Harrison, PomeAtte!ldliJI werP tJr c:oup!e'I·IWO _ at Mr. ·find iiil: KRny a.tk, ruy; Mrs. James 1Kathryn 1Parker.
Worthington; and Wilbur Rowley
sons, Dwaine I&lt;.- ~:·ku- ; -Mason.

GALLIPOLIS .:.. Gallla
. Right to Life will meet
7:30p.m _, at Columbus
Ohio Electric Co.'s
room . The public is
:Invited.
" GALLIPOLIS - Lafay{&gt;tte
Wi1ito· Shrine will meet Tuesday.
p.m _, In the Masonic
jprnole.

. Ms. Chl!l:ffih who_f!led a com- ;
By-lAWRENCE KilMAN
~· 1 &gt;1:" Press W.rller - - . plaint with the Federal Communlca- ,
lions Commission about -the prac- 1
NEW YORK (AP)- Television
tic~. said her organizatiOn counted
will he fiooded this year with
20 such programs advertised In tht&gt; 1
children's programs created by
trade press for the coming season. 1
toymakers hoping to duplicate
The 1985 Toy Fair opened
successes like Mattei's Masters Of
Monday, and the Industry trade •
The Universe characters, the popu show d!'l"w thousands of buyers l
lal" playthings that spawned a
seeking the "hot" new toys of 1~ !
television series to help sell !bern.
How the manufacturers markel I
1 In what Is apparently the hottest
their creations Is Important to the ~
marketing strategy In the toy
buyers. Among the new toys to be ·
business, manufacturers plan to
introduced
with movies, specials ;
Introduce feature-length cartoons .
and
television
series ln 1985 are:
Saturday morning series and )loti -The
"
Princess
of Power" col· :
~specia].s_jea turing animated
-~~.._,-tr;..""]:""
~H.:o:I....JJ..tbl9.b
..;u~~J~ :;!'!'::":=
~--··~ '~
1·:nt,;;;,ans
to
ihe
Mastt&gt;rsof tne ,
cou
CritiCS say the practice makes the
Univt&gt;rse.
The
"Princess
of
Power"
:
children's shows into commercials
collecllon
will
he
Introduced
by
a
,
:
at the expense of other
!eature-l.ength animated film to be :
programming.
released In March and a five-day-a - •
. The Cabbage Patch Kids · have
week television series to begin In :
already had a Chrl&lt;ttrlas special,
and Strawberry ShOrtcake has
starred In a half-hour film . The
Masters of the Universe action
figures, one of the hottest·. selling
= loys;]Otllielrowtl arumiiated series

j

or encour•F · added
production of goods and services.

IEHAIIUTATION

~'--"""~~="·

;;;;;~;:.~·~i~(~i'~i;;;g {a";--h,;~~;d

Club meeting cancelled

1

lobs

'Pifients _wno-ilave ilrd'llea rt atilc'lli'ieuie nljireliiHiii~iiP',.,-.--,=1"" =
farctions), heart pain (llllina). or cardiac by·pass surgery,
To ........................ .
Help restore patients to the highest level of acttvity pQssiWI
and help reduce the risk of future heart attacks.
Providing ............... . Education and closely monitored exercise.
By ....................... .. Suzanne Mize, M.D .. Cardiologist and Center Director.
Roger Gilders, M.S., Ewc:ise Physiologist and Supervisor,
and Nursing Staff trained in cardiac i:are.
At ...•. I ••••••• I.' •••••••••
Holzer Clinic Sycamore Branch facility in Gallipolis.
Beginning .............. · Feb~uary 1985
Consisting of.........
T,!m!e~-1-&lt;!!'ll!r exercis.e ~MJiods a _
wetkftlf 12-18 weeks, .plus
education and EKG testing.
Insurance coverage by Medicare, Blue Shield, Aetna and aost group plans.
To learn m_ore or regi,ster for this new pro1ram, Clll1sult ym doctor and/or call Holzer
Clinic's Cardiology Department at 446-5348.
·
. ·
.

players In thecollectiblesgame. The
htthh•·h nr thn_na~t four IIO!lr~ ta(:lrk•

MIDDLEPORT - A meeting of
Group 2 of the Middleport Presbyterian Church scheduled for Tuesday night has been cancelled.

oy compantes create
programs to sell toys ·

•

.-

Have additional pictures
professionally made of ·
your old treasured

Group 2 session off

The Sund8y

' - : : : : : : : : : : : : . ; ; : . - : : . :: :':.:..-

!:ico~~n~:~':;~:~e~ w_~.il~, l "-h ~:~~e:' !g;~o~~~~t~~~~~~ _J! ••c'~"cll
,Parish Hall for a · luncheon
)lusiness _meeting. SpPakPr w_ilJ
;be the Rev_ Lee Mlller, rector of
;Grace Episcopal Church, Pome.roy. His topic wlll he Media
Puireach in the. Episcopal ·
9Jurch.
·

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

7

· ·~---~-•o
-· ~~~~
-- 1!~~~~~-~-:::'C
In the late 1970s, when inflation

GALLIPOLIS - Tryouts tor
children's.parts in the upcoming
productiOn of tbe Sound of
Music, at Gallia Academy High
School will be conducted Sunday. 2 p.m., in tht&gt; GAHS vocal
room.

.

,•

'l'here are some who say that
colleCiibles are not the most
desirable. of Investments from a
aoclai vtewpoint. Money that goes
InfO theln does not !timili!te much
edlnOmiC activity, ci-eate many _

new

-

,~

. • '! ~ .

•

Collec_tibles can be personally, financially, rewarding

Calendar

.

February 17. 1986 ·

•

••

. ~ .. ·"t

3

..

.'

.'

YSO LY
18,J9 &amp; 20

SUPPLY
CHESTER, OH.
985~3i08

ST/Ht.

TltE 1101~0'$ I.AIIiiT sui111 eilll saw

Monday thru Friday '

FREE
Bench
Tuning
Delivery

AN APf'OIN IMI NT

448-9510 .

-K1~AY

$ 299

DAY

1J:l2-Piece
Fish Dinners
natural-cut french

• 9AMio9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM
WALK IN Ofll (..All F()fl

An extra large serving of delicious bite-size fried shrimp .
served with the Captain's special cocktail sauce, nab.lral-cut
frem;h fries,·fresh cole slaw, and two Southern-style hush
puppies.
·
·

Inc.

Each dinner includes: 2 1101den brown fish fillets,
fries. fresh cole slaw and 2 hush

.

$3

�February 17, 1986

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

Pege-B-6-The Sund&amp;y Times-Sentinel

Sweat to the beat on
.,

,.
.'

NEW ·yoRK (AP) - It's a new
way ol. watdllnc--teleYialon -- on
youl' teet, to tile. belli. In motkln.
From dlaco danciDa to hatl)a
yoga, television
are
,~ something physical for
everyone. lt' scheapel'than Joining a
health clul:l, Qlld fancy workout
clothes aren't needed toswel!t.ln the
privacy of your ~~~me.
Cable network!l · are -In the
· · vanguard of this vt&lt;lfo fitness craze.
And while some comrnerci{ll sta-,
!Ions carry exercise progrjlmS
locally, they're usual)y broadcast In
the wee hours.
F1tness prograiDmlng dates

&lt;

programs

,.

.

'I '

r·
'

dog "Happy"
encouraged kids to wake their
mo~ and drag them in front of
the television set. He's still at tt.
"I want every man, woman and
child to be physically fit," said
LaLanne. :'Ifyoudon'texerclse,you
can't be physically fit, and if you're
not physicallY fit, yau have

••

'-

TV ~

went ol! the alr Jn 1979, but !he
70-year-old muscle man Is making a
comeback. }le'scurrently negotiatIng a TV dear for JUs~'Wake-Up
AmeriCa," a dally, half-hQUr-PI'Ogram produced from his home In
Moro Bay, Calif. LaLanne .Is also
marketing a _vldeotaped regimen.

.

recrulten slalion. By now, with the temperatures wanntng, he's being
. demoted to a puddle.

.

·(1BC's 'Hollywood Wives' begins on Sunday
'

sleek cars - all to the crescendo of
By FRED R&lt;miENBERG
sappy violins.
AP Television Writer
"Hollywood Wives" ("Hollywood
NEWYOP..K(API-Oolunch.Do
fits better) is about the
Whines"
dinner. Do anything else. But don't
women
behind
the powerful men in
:waste time watching "Hollywood
the
movie
capital,
their quest lor
:Wives,'' ABC's plaStic miniseries
an&lt;!
fortune, and
vicarious
fa.me
:that needs a lot more than a
their
lunches,
facials
and
affairs, or
·ttjrnmy-tuck and a face-lilt . .
.
asABC'sgushingpublicitymaterial
•: This lethargic video version of
"Jackie Collins' tJest"seller- will be says, "the p_rivate lives of the
world's most public people."
_lxoililcast (n three two-hour instal·
All these public people and plot
!1tiients Sunday, Monday and .TuesinterSect at the t!Jlrdnight's big
lines
~day nights.
-'
bash,
which Elaine Conti (Candice
: l"roducer Aaron Spelling !:'DynBergen I throws in the hopes of
!
~ty," "LqveBoat." "Finder of Lost
resurrecting her husband's fading
~--- Loves") has turned Miss Colttns'
career. Elaine believes that if
film
rfetcblngly sattycal novel into his
.
Ross'
star can rise again through a
•standard series glop: humorless,
·plum
role in the movie "Final
meaningless pap that takes refuge
Reunion,"
he'll be more macho in
&lt;In llll!ZY costumes, lavish sets and
bed
and
she'll
be restored to her
I

.

rightful place at Hollywood's chic
spots.
Meanwhile. Ross (Steve Forrest), a former rna tin"" Idol
relegated to low-budget, spaghetti
Westerns, is having a torrid
dalliance with Elaine's ·friend,
Karen (Mary Crosby).
"Final Reunion" is the local point
for much of the story's scheming,
-Jockeying 'and pnilos6phlzlng. The
"Final Reunion" script was written
by Montana Gray (Stefanie Powers~ whose husband, Neil (Anthony
Hopkins). is a reformed alcoholic
who wlll be directing 'thefilm. ,
Sexpot Gina Germaine (Suzanne
Som.,rs) is ready for a career
change and the part of the innocent
young thing In "Final Reunion." We
learn about her new acting direction

'

,.. Central assets accounts good finance
-~
~·

By CHET CURRIER

BOYS LEATHER

OXFORDS

BOOTS

$10

$18
-·

· WOMEN'S

WOMEN'S WESTERN

REG. PRICE

SHOES

$20
BOOTS

BOOTS
By 'Connie

sso

DEFYINGPARALYSl'OWJTHACOMPUTER-SeoltBoJ&amp;o;oneault
demonstrales the volce-controUed computer Utat w let him resume
studies In .accounting that he gave up when ll diving .HL-cldent left him

REG.
S34 NOW

EDITOR'S NUfE - Built more
. than
century ago when ·tne oid
· factorytownofTroy,N.Y.,waslnlts
heyday, the Troy Music Hall is an
,acoustical marlvel and no one is sure
· just why. Whatever the reason, It
: has attracteo;l many of the world's
• greatest singers and musicians.

BOOTS -

a

ONE
GROUP

By DIANNE WILLIAMS
"-iaaed Press Writer

$2_5

TROY, N.Y. (API ~ Plaster and
: wood masked by muted shades of
.: pink and gray paint are a visible
:: contrast to the brilliant acoustics
: that have attracted audiences and
' performersformorethana century
; to the Troy Music ·Hall.
: Original wooden seats with racks
: for top hats underneath accentuate
· the distinctive 19th-century charac;_ter of the hall where -even without
; amplification sound travels
• distinctly rrom orchestra seats to
the gallery, 69 feet from the shallow
stage .
"People want to come to this
music haU because It's one of the
ltnest In the country. lf not the
_world," says Executive Director
'Alison L. Connors.
' Completed In 1875, the hall on the
~ rourtir iioor-of - the--·~.i Sav-ir

••

VALUES TO SJS.

limillll Sires All Groups- Mow. &amp; Fri. til I P.M.
Tuas., Wed., Thur.
· &amp; Sat. til 5 P.M.
\

.. O)uch larger.

. APBuslnessWrlter
;. _- NEW YORK (AP-) - As the line
;' ·between different types of flnimcial
, . :Institutions has bl~rred In recent
• l'"-m"~,.~ a-n&lt;:)V__IQ.nJL ~~ lD.O!llW· -

Experts in personal finance
-It rnilkessensetoconsiderbefore recommend that anyone considero~ning an account whether the Jng opening a central assets account
benefits It brings you will be worth as get applications and a sample
muchas,ormorethan, thecostsyou monthly statement from several
wllljl)cu
_
_
J!!lttitn!JI.l!!S ~fQ,te-s~lectil)g_one.

Jo·Ann Fabrics
PRI:SIDENTtS W E E

.,
'

I

•

,.

I

"'

central assets accounts with cau!ton, smce they typically make It
very easy . to . borrow from your
savmgs by stmply · presenting a
credit card onyriting a check.

: your money.
~ Tbe automatic Investment of
:su!JIUS cash Jn a money-market

you ~o complete your obedience by repenting, c~e11ing, and being

baptiZed.
Faith Co-.la RepeaYou must repent or perish, "/tell !IOU. Nail' but, e:rcept II• repent
ye shG/l alllikewiBe periah" (Lk. 13:8,5). Repent means to change o~
turn from. You repent bJ: having a chana'e of mind or will resulting in
your turning from the vile w,_y of life. You turn from Saian to Christ
and _from _sin to righteouoneao. If you do not repent, you do not have
~amng fmth!
Faith
Coafeulcm
You are to cM!fell Christ, "Mo,..v.ir tloerofare •llall c~eu me
before men, him will I ttnt/•11 alto be/oro 11111 Fatll..- whid ;, m
heaven"(Mt. 10:32). You are to confeu Him u the
of God "TIIou
art tile Clorilt, ·the Sot&amp; of tile liW., God" (Mt. 16:18; Aeta 8:38(. If you
do not make this cM!fe•,.., you do not haveratimg faith!

r-··pd,

Son

"n,.,.,,.._•;._
miaalcm .,;.-:::.:::~·,··
==~~-~~nd~;or~~mo~Bey~-m~a~rk~e~t~de~po~st~-~~~~~~~~~~]'~F~alth~~p~.-th·o•readaBsptlwn
as

can

; circumstances.
.
• For one thing, they usually come

,

i With

a minimum initial deposit of

• t!J,OOJ, $10,000ormore, depending on
~ the

I.

policies of the individual
: IJIStlturions that offer them.
~ In' 'addltlon, most sponsors of
1

~ central assets .accounts charge
~ apillljll fees to cover their adminis;&lt; .diatfVe'l:osts in handling them.
' -'l''rt 'it Is a relatlve)y strnple account,
) tl)eannualchargemaybe$40or$ro.
~ 11 It Is an elaborate package that
~ InCludes such features as financial
ptannlngandadvtce, the fee maybe

Bal&gt;tilm.. saves,
,
even ~p1tjrm
now
•ave u• (1 Pet. 3:21). If rou have not been baptized for thip purpooe
you do not hav. .avingfaithl
·
'
The Oae Faith
A · d' 'd 1 b0 d
ny tn lVI ua w
oes not obey the gospel does not have the
fmth pleasing to God. He Is seeking to direct his own etopa and
eotabiish his 'own rlghteousneoa t hrough the doetrlnes of men or hla
own feel!n~. He ma~ boast of his great fa!th but t;tover obeys the will of
God. Thill ts not aavmg f11thl The one .(oit/1, uYJDg faith, c:omea from
God's word! Tho faitho of :rour choice c:ome from the doetrlnes of menl
Fmth is of God, butfrAtlll are of llii!I!Whieh faith do you have when It
comes to God'a plan of oalvatlcm? If you obey His will, it Ia oaving faith!
If you refuse it, you are deceived aod have not the faith I
For Free Bible Coo aeopaodeaee Coane, Write...

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

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~, , _.1111111
. IITAM
.....
' ........ lf.E£.1110
i~ ."·
l ,_
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, .,, •.i'.t

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E.-.:

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-_,.,.
-

Albany Symphony ~ntly
released an album recorded at the
'hall and CBS Masterworks Recordbigs used It to record an album by

Llnen·looks

Calico

cotion, 43-44" : washable._hg; $3.49 yd.

Dainty poly/coltons.
machine wash, 42-44".

Dress &amp; suit weights.
Ramie linen/colton.
Hand wash, 43-45' .

For country crafts,
more: 100% colton,
machine wash, 45".

hg. $4.9. . $5.ft yd.

Reg. $5.99'.$7.ft yd.

hg.$3-"yd.

25o/oOFF
now $2.62 yd.

25o/oOFF
25%0FF
25%0FF
now$2."yd.
now $3.74 U4A9 yd.
now $4.49 •ts." yd.

Pllueaa

Eyelet
Embroldertes

Cotton. poly/

· pucken .

Madras

Shirtings

T-shlrt prtnts

Colorful spring
'p ialds.100% colton,
machine wash, 44".
hg. $4.99 yd.

C lassic p laids &amp;
oKfords. Poly/conan,
machine wash. 44--45'.

For tops &amp; kldsweor.
Poly/canon. machine wash, 60" wide.

$3.88vARD

$2.48vARD

Reg. $3.49 yd.

• VINYL FOr CO'Ierlng chairs, pillows. Knit bock,
54". Reg. $5.49yd. NOW
YD.

$3."

• DIIESSMAKER THIIIAD Block or white spools
from Coats&amp;Ciark. Reg. $1.29ea.
NOWIIOIACH

hg.$4.ftyd.

I

Sheellngs
Earth tone stripes &amp;
p laids. Cotton,
machine was!'l. 44-45",.

hg.$4.ftyd.

$3.48vARD $3.88vARD ,·.
Simplicay

6576

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SUCCESSFUL BUSINESS

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Star Pitcher
Tommy John

Think
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• BUTTONS A colorful assortment for closures,
spring accents. NOW 40 CARDS FOR $1
e PISKAIIS® SCISSORS Quality 8" dressmaker
· shears forsmooth culll~g. Reg. $12.95 NOW $9.,.

Handkerchief
linen

• EYEUT 1'111MS Many widths lor garments and
crafts. From a select group. NOW 2 YDS. FOR $1

Poly/rayon blends.
Machine wash.
44-45" .

seams

• FRAY CHICK"' Stop
from raveling with
our regularly priced liquid. NOW 21% OH

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hg.$3.ftyd.

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• Canon 6X l/t .2 PQW6 zoom lens ""th macro
• Exclus~ Canon Auto-Focus System
• New II&gt;'' High-Band Saticon~ tube for high resolution
• Low light capability
• Built-in Title Generator ""th stopwatch function
• Super Jightweig~t- onty 31bs., soz.

• Sup&lt;!r cornpecl/lightweight-weighs only 3.21bs.
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• High-output Canon muRi-play 4-nead system
• Auto Index search/ repeat playback function

VT·E'IO
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• tOS cable TV-ready channels
• ProgramrMbte up to -4 times in 2 weeks
• Recharges battery P'JCk lor the recorder

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Sale ends Saturday, Feb. 23rd.

Director, 1'1tty Fellur1

hlltt

Tap

Jan

laton Twirling
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ii

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LAFAYmE MAll
GAiiiPOUS

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canon
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Performing
A-rts

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
STATE ROm 7- GALLIPOLIS, OH.

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~=EL~E~CTRONtCS
-= Sar~con 15 ~-h:'gl5iered UodiiT.Ui'.:.
of NHK (Japan Broodcast1ns (o&lt;p .)

Upper Route 7
Next To Bet1 Honda
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

~

-

:flntre• "People have told me that New

,
•;
~
'•
:.

IN

'.......

of

It's not known if architect George
B. Post knew of tlhe acoustically fine
hall he bad designed within the large

7:11 ....

.,..,. ...IDt
II:ML&amp;

_ KABL A. KEBLER. Ill. L.P.A.
Li&lt;ensed Publi&lt; A«ountant in the State
Ohig-PARTNERS and ASSOCIATES :
KARL A . &amp; MARY C. KEBLER. JR .. E.A.'s

about."

Sprtng prints
For separates.
kldswear. Poly/cotton, machine wash,
44-45"wlde '
hg. $2.ft yd.

.classical
pianist Rudolf
Serkln.
.Miftrecordingcould
beinthehall's
York City is a buzz wllh the Troy
.Music Hall · because of the CBS
)'Tlaster," says Ms. Connors.
• Judith Shearman, who eng!:neered the Serkln · and Albany
.Symphony recordings, says she first
;heard of I~ hall during a lecture by
-conductor GeorgeSzeliwhen hewas
:with the Cleveland Symphony
Orehestra.
• "He was raving ahout some hall
somewhere that was on top of a
bank," she says. ·"Many years later
I found out what ball he was talking

WM.....,:

.. ,,......

I ,

The New Compact Smm Video
System From Canon.

~ , The

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GoiUpolll, Oh~ 45631
s.•JNo...,..,
s-a,

ACCOUNTING &amp; DATA PROCESSING
4) 992-7270
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
618 lAST MAIN STI!IT

Gn
UFE.

C#Japel
. Hill. Cflurch oj Christ.

f
(

'
were conducted, but no conclusions
with the departure of the city's
granite bank, Ms. 1 Connors says,
were'
drawn
as
to
the
~
..
m.d!on
ofJllP
majar.Lttrlustr:!e:;:·.,
-·
PoSt aiSb crdeslgned the· 'vVtlUams·
cylinders
or
the
secret
of
the
hall's
But
activities
at
the
music hall
burg Savings Bank. the&gt; Morristown
continued, with opera- festivals.
Library and other New York ability to transmit. sound.
TheodoreThomasandhisorchessymphonies,
dance recitals and
structures.
civic speakers.
When ihe hall first opened to the tra presented the premier concert at
Numerous well-known per socialites of the industrially pros- the hall on Apri119, 1875. when the
formers have dottedthemysichall's
perous city, critics said the acous- city was a cultural center.
Steel mills prospered due to
concert list sine" the turn of the
tics were terrible.
century, including American conv
"We do know that thereare 'tuning Troy 's strateglclocationnearmajor
waterways
and
raHway
lines.
The
tralto Marian Anderson. basscylinders In the ceiling," J\_1s.
was
once_
the
world's
largest
baritone Paul Robeson, soprano
city
- Connors.. say.s. R~archers l}ave
m~nufacture
r
of
horseshres:--Th&lt;'·Leontyne
Pl'lee:compoS(:r-planist
suggested that 100 cylinders 2 ~
.
manufacture
of
shirt
collars
and
Sergei
Rachmaninoff,
Irish t"nor
Inches in diameter were installed in
alone.
which
began
·in
the
19th
John
McCormack,
baritone
film
culls
the ceiling in 1883 to correct the poor
In
Troy.
employed
rrtore
and
stage
star
Ne)son
Eddy,
and ,
century
acoustics.
ot'c hestras ranging fro!ll the Na"Acoustical science wasn't dis- than 15,!XXJ people in the area in1925.
tiona! Symphony to the Russian
Troy's social and economic afflu cussed ... it wasn't a science in the
Symphony.
1870s," she says. Acoustical studies encc dwindled in the 20th centurv

1JOt to mention its historic mUJeu.

Jaceount also has great appeal. It

, while you ponder other uses for it
: ttlassets aecounts may be less than
: Ideal for all people tn ali

KEBLER BUSINESS SERVICES

uncertain

audience alike for its rich acoustics,

account is to simpU(y and organize
your financial life. If the statement
is hard to decipher, how likely ls Jt
that the account is going to help you
accornpllsh those goals?

A Me8Bage From The Bibt. ...
SAVING FAITH
Willoilm B.,Kugiln
God h~s given one plan ohalvation to all. It consists of hearing (Mt.
17:5), be!iemng (M~. 16:15,16), repenting (Lk. 13:3), clY!ife•ling (Mt.
20:32,33), and baptum (Acta 2:38). It is simple, easy tO understand
and mtut be obeyed by aUI
'
•
H,eanng preoe~es. be!ieiJing, while repentm~U, cM!feuion, and
bapt18m foll~w be!ievmg. The_ f~t requirement Is ileanng the word
beca~se th1s1s the _cmly way fait• 18 received, "So tilenfaitlo cometlo b11
""!'"!'9• a"4.heann!'l by the word of God" (Rm. 10:17). At this point,
fa•tll IS rece1ved. It ts the ~t/a, conlidonee and conviction, that movea

r~asons

•

.as

~~,~~~~;J~~~~gw~~~~·! ~~~-~~~~~:~e1~~:~~;h- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~d~
The banks, brokerage houses and
other firrns _that offer it call it by
: various names. Generically, It is
• known as thecentralassetsaccount.
• In a single account , with one
• lllbnthly statement, It may combine
·, many investment and other finan:-clal activities - including a stock
~ and _bond brokerage service, a
• credit card, check writing, and
: automatic investment of idle funds
: at money-market interest rates.
·
' Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner &amp;
: Smith Inc. pioneered in this field
:~witHlhelntroduction lnthelat•h970s
"·()f Its Cash Management Account.
,
• Within a few short years, the big
: tnvl'stment firm claimed its onE'~ rttUUonth CMA customer.
Central assets accounts plainly
: have some attractive features.
~ One of the most obvious is
•convenience. Coordination-of a wide
,
•: yar1ety of transactions into a single
. acc&lt;lllnt can reduce the time you
;'ltave to spend on paperwork and
•:record-keeping, and perhaps make
:you a better-organized manager of

paralyzed in 1979. The 29-year-old Sandusky, Ohio, man now expects to
he gin making money with his bookkeeping sldlls by the end of the year
and plans to someday have a full-fledged business. (AP Laserphoto).

/Troy Music Hall marvel,

WOMEN'S

RUBBER BOnOM
NYLON TOP

$25 $40

shots ·and

WOMEN'S
LEG WARMER

30°/o OFF
GROUP OF MEN'S
DRESS &amp; CASUAL

~~~~
----.--: -'ii'iil~Jd~_J~j~a~m~o~no~t~one~·~;;~~~:=?-::::

about. . .
.
-..,..,...,..n- .,.-vo..-.- ~ , -• - ·v.... .-... ·- -··--------- ::
rather than type them. after
it pdnt a letter 'B' and a 'C' then
convincing state officials the ma- erase both.
"Originally I had problems with
chine would let him resume the
aecountllig studies he had begun at
the mlko," he said, explaining It
11Je University of Toledo and Wright would hear him ralking to someone
State University .
Plse. take lhenoiseascuesandbegin
"We contacted the Ohio Bureau of doing things on Its own.
He since has gained more control
Vocational Rehabilitation. and we
had to show them I aotuaUy had a of the machine and can list payrolls,
9asefor the useofonc&gt;·otthese,"sa id , balance accounts or do other·
ScoiC WiiDSpends eighth(iu~a-clay "' IXioklieeplnif. . _.,~,-~,- '=c"=~='"'~=y•"'
or'more with his bed In front of 1hr
"I'm working with Pizza Brothers
, ~:n..7.u-r:-!ee-t-i.~g~ w!!·h--l!··-· -~r~ to p-Jt t ho!Ji ~yrnllOOCi'll'(l}nite~
via a headset microphone.
and get their bookkeeping compuOnce the bureau re.allzed Boisso- lerized ," he said. "Hopefully by the
neauil was serious about his studies. end of the yea r I'Ubema king a little
it bought the computer program to money .

who don't need much toning up
themselves demonstrate proper
breathing, while exhaling through
pouting, paint~ lips.
Showtlme, a pay-TV channel,
~arrles "Aerobicise" as filler between movies. The fit, firm female
bodies are accentuated by scanty

BOOTS .

In a breathless interview with Mary
Han of "Entertainment Tonight"
who plays herseH quite bellevably.
Gina ends up seducing Neil for a
screen test, blackmailing him with
tapes of their atfairand causing him
to have a h"art attack in the sack.
"Apparently, he's been under a lot of
stress lately," the doctor who can't
save him tells his wife and ex-wif&lt;'
(Joanna Casslim.-·
Buddy Hudson (Andrew Stevens), an ex-gigolo, is alsodes~rate
for a part In "Final Reunion,'' but·
will he stoop to sexual hijinks,
jeopardizing his marriage, to get his
big career break?
What will audiences Jearn about
Hollywood Uves? Nothing of import.
except that casting isn't always
done by the merit system, and
nobody ever has any trouble finding
• a parking space on Rod)'-'0 Drive.

SANDUSKY, Ohio (AP) -Scott get him started and--lent--it- to him,
Bolssoneault's -plans- to .. be an
then put him in touch wtth..Bob
accountant were brought to halt in
Morrisey., a computer Instructor at
1979, when a dive Into a backyard Fremont's'l"erra TeehnicaiCoilege.
swimmlng pool went awry and left
Since October, Morrtsey has been
hlmparalyZI.'d, unabletowrlte, type
teaching Boissoneault to program
or go to schooL
the computer, which now recogBut six years later, Bolssoneault, ,ntzes about 150 commands and can
·29,hasbroughthlsstudteshomeand
be programmed to learn up to Dl
.·plans tobemaklngmoneybytheend
more, the Instructor said.
·of the year with his own aecounting . Th" device is set to recognize
business, using ledgers and letters llolssorieault's voice or a similar
he forms on a computer screen with voice.
his voice.
·
" Beta ... charlle ... backspace ...
The Sandusky man got a device backspace ... return," Boisso~ault

If LaLIIIine•s r!gkl physique Isn't
the Inspiration you need, there are
women In skimpy leotards demon·
stratlngvarlousaerobtcexerclsel;to
the home audience in the syndicated
'.'20,Minute Workout." Oes!ined to
become part of the viewers' daily
routine. the show starts with slow
stretches and buUds to Jogging In
to raise the heart

~"'no&gt;thlnu«Wg.,"1rt0lfi1Wn·~~~l'l'efof"a"=tiouifttijjitsiffi'uii~tlght camera

SNOWY ANCHORS AWEIGH -The Httle snowsallor, complete with
cap, stands guard atop a Navy vehicle on First Avenue In front of the

Paralyzed man continues .
career goal by computer

cenrucy, the "Jack LaLanneSI!ow"

By MARJORIE J\NDER8
Aeool·w P.,. Wi'ller

7

The Sunday

.,

••

'

•'

�Page-8-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

•

February 17. 1986

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

Beat of the bend

Holiday in Pt. Pleasant
set t~em up alld' get tl!eni going,
.
according ·to word received by
·- - -~IDeiS&amp;alf
Rice.
I know. You're
--the ice and snow.
Monday
is
Presidents' Day and In
So- J have a
case
you
have
time on your hands
suggest ion. How
you
might
want
to do some reading.
about a vacation
Even
though
a
lot
of places wiiJ be
In Point
for
the
hollda)',
both the
closed
·
Pleasant?
Pomeroy
and
Middleport
Public
Not an exciting
Libraries
will
be
open
tor
their
suggestion
regular hours. The libraries offer
Yeah, it Is. Th'• Poilnt "P1~a,iant
serviecs
that more of us should takr'
the Island of St. Thomas in the
advantage
of even when it Isn't a
Virgin Islands and is being proholiday.
·
right now as a
motl'd
---

- -

--·=..-=::;=---

-- uyooBim~FlJCir

grab
a
for two at
$1,323 for seven nights. You also
have to get there and then there arc
meais .... BliT no Ice and snow. Care
to bu)'-thaLdream?
----Wonder why it is that too many
times good intentions backfire?
Bruce Davis, former Rutland

Practice doesn't make divorce easier: study

Giovanni's Pizza
"n• lt1ll1• P11u ta

singles.
He made an Parlier study of
"What 00es the man get? He had
singles and marrieds to .separate
to leave the familiar home, neigh·
myths and realities of being single. · borhood, perhaps even the friends.
"Out of that study came the fact
He doesn't have that kind of
that it appears that the people that
relationship with friends that a
have the most trouble with being
woman does, doesn't have the
single would be the divorced male," · children, he'susually alone, and he's ·
Cargan said.
'lost his main role, that of provider.
1
0
1 1
1

This Week's S~eeial
•II in. Ptna with twa items
eS1.39 bag of Chips

•2 liter Soft Drink

That was the
of an article by
two professorsrfrorn tl~e UnlvPrsitv
of Windsor, Canada, t~t Is being
edited for submission to sociological
journals.
"There have been a few compari·
sons of singles and marrieds, but
nonethatlknowofdlddlvorcedand
redivorced," Cargan said.
Out ofl,400questlonnalres sent to
the lnteractloninaqlng llst,205were
returned byfemalesandll1bymen.
Of that sample, 146 women and !'iS
men were divorced once; 25women
and 20 men were divorced more
"When we think of divorce,

usually

thin~.

we

a woman comes out

$

·

949

WEDNESDAY
FAMILY NIGHT

:.,*"~~-~~~;i;i"!;":;!~~Y~~~~~~!~~~,,:",\Fl~~~~~ili be"ieit'!ng''iist·i&lt;ru)W'""lN'tfiThtia\~nii"l'di;irtoir~ihei~sec
:fu,o~niid;ia;ifYi,it:- ·~Hsiem·t1i"~%~ih~iKmbse~lf;is;~i~tt~ln•~g~h;tm;i~"r~a~l~o;~n;~e" !
on the road because of the weather
about when the event will be and
· ana tnOUghTilFcmiTff;'"nelp out m - huw yvu ~vb·Wut-parti~:pati..og. Rutland clearing streets of snow.
---At noon, . he went home for lunch
Winners of the promolion held by ·
the Meigs Baseball team were
and as he was returning to the
tractor when he tell. It wasn't an
Fenton Taylor and Homer Parker.
easy fall. He fractured a rib which With their prizes they should soon
punctured a lung.
be half to tell us if " half a hPg Is
The Rutland Emergency Squad
better than none."
----took Davis to Veterans Memorial
Kathy Sayre of Syracuse advised
Hospital where a tube had to be
us that a jigsaw puzzle using a rural
Inserted after his lung collapsed.
Fortunately, Bruce is getting along
scene from Meigs County has been
fine- but it does make you wonder
creatl'd by a . Wisconsin puzzle
about being a good samaritan
company. Mrs. Harlan Wehrung
· doeSn't It?""'
m:iyiseU ~rr-.ai 1he ·sc...:ne 1S ttom a ,..
photo at Royal Oak Park.
And- last but not least, William
This could help you if you're an
agricultural person.
(Biil,l Righthouse of Long Hollow,
advises that he has had a copy of
Meigs Agricultural Agent John
that puzzle for some 15 or 16 years.
Rice received word through Rep.
It
w~s purchased by his daughter In
Jolynn Boster's office that emerColumbus
and Rlghthousecan even
gency generators are available for
pinpoint the location of the scene ·
, agriCultural people who are without
used in the pu22le.
electricity.
__
All this ln!Q_in three days. Now
- If you have need, you can contact
that's communication!
Charles Legar, · county disa's ter
director, · at 992·5314 or 992-:WOO;
II you don't lighten up a bit, we're
Tony Logaft 889. 71'77. or CoL
gonna
send you for an indefinite
'Middeler at
-7ll0. The National
stay
·
In
. Cl!'veland. Better keep
Guard will liver the generators,
smiling...

tube. He also finds that single life
lsn'tas_gr:eatas he thowzht It would
be."
-Lack of a satisfactory sexual
relationship Is among the top three
male gripes, Cargan said.
"He finds out hecangoout and get
it, but with diHerent penple. He
doesn't have that ·kind of warm,
steady relationship he had prior to
the divorce," Cargan said. "It isn't a
question of gettlrig laid every night.
It's a question Of getting laid with
somebody you're comfortable
with."
~tvor~ed.Jllen listed depression
as a problem twice as often as
redlvorced women, but were the

'mimes- ~tutinlt

vorced males wanted the divorce,
Cargan said.
_ ~
_
Mm said the most help In
adjusting to dlvo!W earne from a
posltlve attitude, new friendships,
keeping busy, social activities,
dating and expressing feelings. For
women, t_hey found the feeling of
IndEpendence, a positive ·attitude,
j)elng able to expl'l$5 feelings, new
frlemll'hlps, keeping busy, and
social actiVIties the most helpful.

B! DIANEM. BALK
the pooresi,"he said. "If you're
least llkely to seek therapy.
-·
AMOO!•""' ""- Wrller
ll!:;lllng with finances; Jbe does.
Stngle. males are- more Ukely 10
. DAYTON. OhkUAPl - PJvorce
She's going to have financial · have tried suicide than females, but
inaybehartleronmenthanwomen,
problems. Maybe she didn't have
for the rt.'dlvorcm, l:lle woman IS
and practice dOesn't make It any
theeducation.Golngbacktothejob_ most likely to have irled suicide.
easier, according to a survey of
market, she'sgolng to get perhaps a 1 Extreme drinking behavior Is more
. Dayton area residents.
' lower paying job. ·
characteristic pf men.
Leonard Cargan, sociology pro"But she's got almost everything
Seventy percent of redlvorced
lessor at Wright State University,
else going for her. Usually she gets women and 72 percent of divorced
Included · never marrll'd, · once- . · ·t he familiar house, custody of the
women wanted the divorce, whlle49
divorced and twice-divorced res!· . children. Being a woman, she has a
percent of the mates wanted the
• dents in \he survey. He sal(! he's
nurturing, different kind of relation·
divorce, and 22 percent 'of i-edJ.
• Interested In the topic because "up
ship with friends than a man OOes, r-:-~~~
untll19811 was a single man."
Usually, she has the kind of
"Back In 1973, I started a singles
relationship where she can talk to
~':li~t\.'\.
program In Payton called lnterac·
friends about things that are
tlon," he said. "I've
been
her. Usuallyshegestmore

dentist, has been named chairman
of the Racine spring bike-a -thon to
benefit the Cystic Fibrosis
Foundation.
Proceeds will help suppOrt re·
search to find a cure or control for
cystic fibrosis and to help fund a
nationwide network of clinics which
specialize In diagnosis and

Sport

REMEMBER - WE DELIVER

435 Second Ave .. Gallipolis
Eat In Our Familf Rettaurant or Carry Out.

446-0367

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
Marquette won Its fourth straight · . TheWarrlorsthenscoredtheflnal
(AP) -David Henderson came off game to Improve to J.5.7. Dayton lost six points of the first half, with
Trotter hitting four free throws and
the bench tosco!'l'l8polntsandNo. 7 its second In a row to drop to 16-7.
slipping in lor a
In the
with 14
en routeto_ _
basketball victory over Notre Dame
Saturday.
DuketookcommandlnlhefirstlO Dave Colbert
a free
minutes. scoring the game's first 10 Marquette's Walter Downing hit a
points and then running off a 9-0 7-footer and Kerry Trotter followed
string to grab a 21·7 edge.
with two free throws tor a 31-22 tead
The Blue Devils lead 39-29 at · with 16: 34 remaining.
halftime and the IriSh never got
AfterDaytonclosedtowlthln3J.27
closer than eight points on two on Colbert's three·i&gt;olnt play with
second half.
1&gt;: 30togo,BennyMooretrtggereda
iloints ·!or ''"~stfeaK'wimsevl!ilwiniS'tumwt:'
Duke, Johnny Dawkins had 15 and
Marquette out to a 42·27 advantage
· -!JruJ-~eg~r ccntr!tl'~ted· l:! as the with 12' 31rPmatning in the g;~me.
Bluft Devils raised their record to ,
The Flyers could get no closer
19-4. Notre Dame fell tol4-7despltea than five points' the rest of the way,
27-polnt performance by l&lt;e~
the last time at 58-53 on Sedrlc
Toney'sfreethrowwith2:40togo.
Barlow.
·-Kerry Trotter led Marquette with '
David Rivers added 16 points lor
Notre Dame. ·
17 points, while Moore addl'd 11 and
Waniors top Dayton
Tom Copa contributed eight.
Mll..WAUKEE (API - Mandy
DaytonwastoppedbyColbert's14
Johnson hit ·two long jumpers to
and Toney's 12 points.
·
spark an 8-1 spurt at thestartol the
Marquette opened a 17-131ead on
second half that carried Marquette JohnsiJn's baseline jumperwith5: 19
left In the half. The F1yers then ran
to a 61-55 victory over Dayton In a
non-conference college basketball ' off eight straight pillnts to goup2J.17

ga;r.eSat..u-rl;;yO:ternn:m. ..

. Mlchlgan edges Gophers
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Butch
Wade's layup with 16 seconds left
enabled third-ranked Michigan to
stave off the upset bid of the
Minnesota Gophers. 66-64, In Big
Ten bas~etbaii. Saturday.

Show-stopper gets guys
but not all guys go lor the prettiest
face. Forties film star Hedy
Lamarr used to say: " Any girl can
be glamorous. All you have to do Is
stand stU! and look stupid." But In
· the long run, men want more than
that.
DEAR MEG -1 have a question.

,CAR FUI'S - Tom Gloy from Lafayette, caHf.,
Dips In the grand8tand stt'alghtaway "" other racers
nm Friday during the numlng of the .lntematlonal

..

'

'

•'

Baby Shoe
BRONZING SALE!
DURING
FEBRUARY

'•

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'

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.

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S lyl~:t l

Sl!lr 6? !h•l
y,~'''"'

Wrtli tlt1 Pdl)t!t wr. tgl t1

t

.

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$62.95$47.21

Many ol your laiJoute mementos

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can be bronzed. Baseball Gloves.
Cowboy Boots. Hats ... or that old
beat up paor of Tennis Shoes.
Ali at SALE PRICES&lt;

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All ll,tH In Brit:ht Bronze, Antiquo Bronz~. "Powtor". Sliver,
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SALE ENDS FEBRUARY 28

comes to Jackson Pikl
Jeanie, Ohio Valley Bank's Automatic Teller is now
at our Jackson Piko Office for your convenience.
Jeanie makes your everyday banking easier,
quicker, and trouble·free ... because Jeanie is an automatic teller that
around the clock for you

aooOJCI.oURIU- ,_VI:.

balances, accepting loan payme~ts and more.
With Jeanie you can get cash fr many of your accounts 24 hours a day, 365 da s a year. You can
make l~an payments o~ deposits at any hour that is
convement., You can fmd out your balance on any
account, any time you want to. Plus, you don't even
have to be ~t Jackson Pike, because you can do all
of the•• thmgs at any of our branch lo'cations. You
can also do many of these thincs in ot,her cities that
have JEANIE or Money-Station Automatic Tellers.
All it takes is an account at Ohio Valley Bank and
your own personal Jeanie Card.

.

=-"-""........

.,=.,_,..,..,....,_....,...~~~

~

esta bllshed
incredible 37-second victory Thurs·
day In one of two 50-lap quailfylng
races over a track where a
one-second advantage is conslderl'd
comfortable.
Considerably less Impressive
than Elliott's romp through the field
Thursday In a Ford Thunderbird
was a two car-length victory In the
other qualifying race by two-time
defending champion cate Yarbo·
rough. The 44-year-&lt;Jid driver from
Sardis, S.C .. occupies the outside of
the front row In another Ford after
qualifying at 203.814.
"There Is no such thlngasaman to
beat In the Daytona 500," said
Yarborough, a four-time winner of
the event. "Do you remember '79?"
In 1979, Yarborough and Donnie
Allison had the strong cars and

~--

... _ _ . . , -

the final lap. Richard Petty was
beneficiary, driving past the wreck
for his sixth of seven Daytona 500
vic tortes.
One aspect of this race that bears
watching, particularly in the early
laps, is the placement far back In the
field of such hard chargers as Chevy
drivers Dale Earnhardt, Neil Bon· .
nett, 1984 Winston Cup champion
Terry Labonte and Joe Rullman.
Others whowUJ be forced to make
their way through slower traffic at
the start are Tim Richmond, who
starts 33rd ln a Pontiac Grand Prix,
and Bobby Allison, · whose Buick
Regal is 34th on the grid.
A crowd of more than 150,000 is .
expectI'd to be on hand for the race,
which will be televised live on CBS
startln~ at
15 p.m. EST.

p:

.

Laserphoto).

•

J£ANIE
CARD
,
at any of

Ohio Valley\Bank's
Four l-tlons

·

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(ot!}hio Valley Bank
Four.locatlons to serve you better.
Member: FDIC

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~ *-* .,... ~
wMe MJreUa, cea&amp;er, 111141 *mother
aD llllllerl u they leave a Lee Aapletl

!!.-\..~

~-

,

ar-, ...
OIIIJll, -

'

Islamic Jihad terroriSt group.
The former·champion refu$ed all
comment on a stopover at Paris'
Orly airpm1, but a member of his.
delegation said, "We are going to
Lebanon to try toassuagethegriefof
the families of the hostages ."
An American jouJ11l!lisl, Jeremy
Levin, escaped Wednesday after a
year in captivity, but four others are
stlll being held .
According to reports, Ali Intends
to seek the frel'dom of the four.
"Our trtp has no political motive ...
and we will slay In Beirut for as long
as Is necessary," the delegation
member said.
Earlier Saturday, the shadowy
Islamie--JihaU__,.~roop·'---sai.O -it-=liad

,

RICHFIELD, Ohio (API -Kent
State sen.tor Thomas ,Jefferson Is
glad all of last year's Olympic
hoopla has dil'd down. but he's
already set his sights on the '1988
Olympic Games.
"Life Is llnaily getting back to
normal for me following the
Olympics." said Jefferson. a bronze
medalist in the Olympic 200-meter
race last summer and a schedull'd
participant In this Sunday's Bud
Light Knights of Columbus track
meet at th~ Coliseum.
"I really enjoyed myself," Jefferson said. " It was justa lhrUlbelngon

.

"Thi; time. I don't want that to
happen . I think I have a strong
chance of winning."
Jefferson has run the shorter
55-meter race at tl1ree other indoor
meets this year.
"In the final 30 meters of a
5.'\-meterrdce, i'm abletousemy leg
strength," said. Jefferson . "That's
probably the strongest pat1 of the
race for me. I have to work on my
start because it's just below being
real good," .
Jefferson, 22. who rah the fastest
200-meter race of hi s life (20.26
seconds) to give the Unitl'd States a

ar -

there were too many social
engagements and banquets on my
calendar last semester. My cuiTE'nt
routine is much better."
Jefferson spent three weeks
running in meets In Europe after the
Olympics, and he' s now (ooklng
...
ahead to the 1988games.
• "I want to compete until I can't
compete anymore," .Jefferson said.
MINFORD, Ohio (API - Cincln· · "I plan to stay lri Kent and let the
nail Reds player-manager Pete
coach (Orin Richburg) train me and
Rose and his son, Pete, escaped
help out with the team after I
Injury Saturday In a weather·
graduate this summer. I hope to
related traffic accident in southern
stay around for th£&gt; 1~ Olympic
Pike County.
.
trials."
Rose was eastbound on Ohio
He'll be running In the 55-meter
Route 32 when he apparently lost
dash Sunday as he continues his
control of his car on Ice and slid Into a
preparations for thP NCAA outdoor
deep snowbank, the Highway Patrol
season.
at Portsmouth said.
"My eyes are looking toward the
Although the car was damagl'd,
NCAA 200-meter outdoor champion·
Rose was able to drivt&gt; It to the
ship and beyond," said Jefferson , "I
Minford Airport where he and his
flni~hed lOth (at the NCAA meet)
son boarded a chartered plane to
last year because I didn't run the
continue their trtp to Charleston;
turn very well .
W.Va.
Americans it holds.

.

Rose., son
escape InJury

Indoor track season as a means of
bulldlng himself up for thP outdoor
competitions later in the year.
"What this time of year allows me
to do is to work on drtving with my
legs, positioning m y body. develop·
ing quick rhythm and building leg
spel'd for when I move outdoors,.-.
Jefferson said.
He'll haw highly regarded com petitional the 45th annual Knights of
Columbus meet Sunday. Calvin
Smith, who was a member of the
n'COrd·setting U.S. 400-metr\ h'lay
team at thP Olympics. will compNP
in the ~~.. meter 0vent. a~ will
world-ranked sprinters Emmit
King, Allx'rt LawrenC(' and lX'sai
Williams.
Defending Knights of Columbus
champion George Nicholas of Ohio
State will also participate.
In all. morel han :loOiympiansart'
expcctl'd to compete at the m PCI.

Olympic gold medalist ·Moses

Get Yow Personaf

•

•

.

We are happy to have Jeanie now in all of qur branch
locations, Jackson Pike, Rio Grande and our down·
town Mini-Bank, so you don't have to drive ·several
miles out of your way to do your automatic teller
banking.
_

GALLIPOLIS

,.

-

If a jury could be
decide the outcome
Sunday's
Daytona 500 on the hasls of the
• evidence, any ·deliberations would
bPonly a formality.
'The jurors could award the lion'.s
share of a $1.2 million purse to Bill
Elliott, who starts the 27th renewal
Of stock car racing's crown jewel as
the driver of the fastest car In the
· hlstoryofthesport.
Bltt tbe 29-year-&lt;Jid driver from
Dawsonvllle. Ga·., mindful of the
tradition of upsets at the 2.5-mile
Daytona International Spel'dway ,Is
taking nothing for granted.
"1 think there are some things we
have to change to be ready for the
race," Elliott said, although he
wouldn't elaborate.
Ell!ott sits on the pole thanks to an
all-time stock car record qualifying

®

TAWNEY
JEWELERS
. , •A• ----··. . .111: . .

Race ol Champions at Daytona International
Speedway. Gloy was aOt oertously Injured Ill the·
miAhap. (AP Laserphoto).

~~~~f!~,n~ ~()() scheduled today

__.Qf._,9.,!.1f

.

Beirut mission

Kent State senior
E~1~~:~!:E~1~:E"~~ sets_sighte _
UpQn _
~~st~~:ro~~rt.!~ ~~~~~~ .~! '88 Olympt·c
· ·g am·e·s··

Dear Meg

I think I am in love with two men.
I have been seeing both of them
since last sprtng. They are as
different as night and day, and they
are both wonderful. My question: Is
It possible that I could be In Jove
with two men at the same time? NEED AN ANSWER, PADUCAH,
KY.
DEAR NEED - Yes. It is also
possible that you're not in Jove with
either one of them.
II you are a teenager who Is
getting pressure from the guy In
your life and you're not sure how to
respond, send for Meg's newsletter,
"Teenage Sex : Should I or
Shouldn't I?" Send $1 and a
stamped. self-addressed envelope
(business size) In care of this
newspaper to: TEENAGE SEX,
P .O. Box 928, Cincinnati, OH 452tll.

•
begtns
•
AI

GOT
THE
UP-N~!'e
DukeDame'!f
lorward
Mark
Alarie,
foreground
ee!!ter,
~..es
t~lRISH
hAll ~..!..1!!1.
Ken
BM'Iow
1\8 the
pair play
Salurday afternoon. Moving Ill to the play Is Irish Jbn Doll!n, right, 1n
the nrst half at Meadowland Arena 1n East Rutherford, N.J. &lt;AP

PARIS (AP)-MuharrunadAll.
the former world heavyweight

-----

· tsn't around I do just fine attracting
my own men. But when we're
together, they all flock her way. I've
noticed that JUI acts cool · and
unapproachable when they start
circling. The guys start with me.
Then, after some small talk, they
zero In on her and I'm out of the
, picture.
;. · It has occurred to me that maybe
• she knows what she's doing and Is
; justusingmetoboostherego. What
• do you think? -IN HER SHADOW,
HOUSTON, TEXAS.
DEAR SHADOW - J think she
knows exactly what she's doing,
and It probably wouldn't matter If
you were on the scene or not.
But since you are,lt wouldn'thurt
to branch out and do your own
.· number. Sticking with the queen
bee works when there are Jots of
men because of the

never led again.
Also In double figures for the
Wolverines were Gary Grant wlth14
points and Robert Reliford with 11.

I

rr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;;::;::;::;::;::;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;~~;

By MeK WNWomb
DEAR MEG - I go to parties
with a friend (I'll call her Jill) who
a.lways draws hordes of men. She's
very attractive, though nothing
really boffo, and has ·done some
modeling. But I don't think she's
that much prettier than I am, or any .

with 16, went back ahead ~9 with
.
Tarpley got hot a aln down the
stretch. His two Up- baskets tll'd

6\i, minutes left in th~game.

Iowa state edges Iowa
AMES, Iowa (API Jeff
MarcWIIso~'slayupattetnptwlth Hornacek's layup with eight se·
two seconds remaining was off· conds to go snapped a tie and gave
,~on-.g.o~;c.;=,t.~::pl'~ "!::1!:11 ~,~ 19ll!•L~.~~ 3;1~.79 ylcto~. pver
detour Michigan's march to Its 11th lOth·rankl'd Kansas In a college
Big. Ten~v1ct9ry against only two has!&lt;etball game on Saturday.
conference losses. Titt? Big Ten.
-ivw~~Sfijii-, whic-ta :ro 3!)..28 nr
leading Wolverines now are 20-3 Intermission, never ' trailed in the
overall. Mlnnesota,l2·10,1s5-7 1n the second half.
BlgTen.
The victory improved Iowa
The Wolverines, paced by Roy State's record to 17·9 overall and 5-5
Tarpley's21polnts, twice overcame In the Big Eight Conference, and
seven-point deficits .
dropped Kansas to 20-6 and 7-3.
Minnesota led 23-16 midway
Kansas . was led by ' Danny
through the first h~lf, but Tarpley
Manning with 19 points, whlle Greg
scored eight of his team's last 12
Dreiling added 18 and Ron Kellpgg.
points .of the first 20 minutes as
who had til'd the game at 70-70 with
Michigan took a 34·32 lead.
56 seconds left, had 14.
·The Gophers, It'd by Tommy
BaiTy sievens led Iowa State with
~ Davis with 17 points, and VVils•qn--"~22polnts. ...... -·"'·'··

\\4tl!o-!:43-tago.

Section

r'

'!'itlo.-

coun Frlcia.Y

w11e1e he -

faaDd INO'J ce•l o1

IOIIclllllc 1111 IIDdereoiver ]1(6 Wwa.lll Will WM

IPOIIIII u a JN a IM rte. (AP Ie

,....).

LOS ANGELES (AP)- Olympic read.
The track star was overheard
gold medalist Edwin Moses may
asking
Lipton to obtain the names
have cleared the biggest hurdle of
and
addresseS
of the 12 jurors so he
!Us public career. ,
.
·
could
send
tll&lt;'m
a note of thanks.
The 29-year-&lt;Jid Moses, who won
Lipton said he would.
gold medals In two Olympics In the
As the group waited at a
400-meter intermediate hurdles.
was acquitted Friday of a charge of crosswalk for a traffic signal to
change, ·three people approachl'd
soliciting prosutution from an
Moses to congratulate htm. Two
undercover policewoman.
shook Moses' hand, and be thankl'd
The charge was a misdemeanor.
the three.
but It had threatened not only to
After the verdict \\'aS read In
tarnish the reputation of one of
America's best,known athletes and Municipal Court, jury foreman
Olympic heroes but also tP damage Harvey Adelman said the phrase
his future ability to make a living · "lleyond a reasonable doubt" was a
through commercial key In tile panel's unanimous
verdict. The jury deliberated for 2
endorsements.
Although Moses left the court. :hours :II minutes.
Moses . who won gold medals at
house without commenting, one of
the 1976 Montreal Olympics and the
his attorneys, Harold Lipton, said,
1984 Los Angeles Games, smiled
"We couldn't be happier."
MPSeS smiled and joked with his widely and hugged a not her PI his
attorneys, Edward Medvene, when
· wife, Myrella, his m&lt;&gt;ther and
he heard the decision. llle cour·
· attorneys as lie made his.way tn his
troom filled with applause.
car :II minutes after the verdict was

During the trial , MoS&lt;'s dcnird
Ihat he offerro Officer Susan
Gonzales $100 for two sex acts. He
said he struck up a conversation ·
with her because he thought shewas
a fan who recognized him.
Last year. Moses was named
winner of the 'prestigious Sullivan
Award as the nation 's outstanding
amateur athletl' for l~l
He has been a ll'spectedathiPtt&gt;on
and ofl the track.At the 1984 Los

Angeles Olympics. he was chosen to
recite the Athletes Oath at the
Opening 't:eremonies. He a Iso has
been selected to represmt his
country on the International Olympic Committee; the International
Ainateur Athletic Federation, too
world governing body of track and
field, and the U.s. Olympic
Committee.
He alSO has been a spokesman for
the Unlted"Wayaod trw Aln&lt;'rican
Cancer Societv.

•

I

•

•

�t

February 17. 1985

19th-ranked Meigs girls open
play in Athens Sectional meet
' " ' l'TIIENS -

" o......
Meigs ............. ""'""'""""""'" 12 • 10.1&lt; 819
Alexander ................... ...... 1l 4 1lHi 9:11
Ne!sonvtll~ York ... ............. 11

~1

Warrm Local ....... ~.............. 7 8 1CB41112
Vinton County .... ,.................6 9 861 ~
Federlil·Hocldng ...... .. .. .... .... 6 illo:M 11.172
Wellston .... ............. .. ... ........ ll5 !IIi 1210 .
Miller '""'"" " """""""""'' "'" '"" 116 · lit) 1103

·~~;~~.J.l!Je.J~!lfh.l!': v~ar MPioc.tV\~u·"'h

Logan .. ~;.;~ · bi;~M-;;,:;;;;:
;~~~~~c~annot just take the floor
::
a win"
hard to beat the same team
• three times In one year. Belpre Is a

"1\ICONLY

Team

W L Plo Opp
BelprE' .............................. 13 3.1031 927

Meigs '""""""""""""'""'""' """" 11 3

91'1 Trl

AlexalldE&gt;r ...... .. ................:.11 3 1015 875
NelsonvtJie--York ... ............. u 3 98J &amp;"ll
Trimble """"""" """"""""'""""'"8 8 1llll llllll
"""" ""'""'""'"'"6 7 946 972
7811

bad

handed
M~lgs Its only loss, 42-38, In the
Meigs Countlans seventh game of
the year Since then the Maraud
It
led 'ff 12
lgh
ere es averee
o
stra t
willS, Including a 43-38 wtn over
Alexander. Included In the Meigs 18
wins are a patr of wins over SVAC

w

Team

WONDER-TONES'"

L

Interior Latex Flat wall Paint

Warren Looal '"''"" ' "'"""" ""'""'"'""""'" """'" 12 1
Belpreu.'"".. ,"""'"'"""'""""'" ""'" "'""'"""'" "'""" 14 2

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• One coat when applied as directed.

Ai&lt;'xa.- "'"" "'" "'""" """"'"'""""'"'""""" 11 3
Melgs """""""'"'".'"''"'"'"'"''"""'"''''"'"'"'"" "" "'" 6

VInton Counzy"x """"" "'"""""'" """"'"'"'""'"""""6

6

NE'lsonvUJe.York
......... .. .................... .55 10
9
Milk&gt;r
...............................................

F-raiHocklng"x '" '"'"

Include "the J -Team" of 5-5 soph9·

""""'""'"3

~· sg97"G'""n"-c~cc •·.

lJ

x - VInton County-Federal-Hocking reo
serve game to be playt&gt;d later.
FeU. iii- ~
=-· ...

more..,.Jennt_ Couco.h~.and 5,4=fynlnr ·

Jodi HalTisOn at guards. 5-6 ~enlor
B. J. Gordon and 5'11 sophomore
Julie MUier at forwards, and 6-0"
sophomore Jenny Miller at senior.

::: GLOUSTER - The Meigs BoxThe Pomeroy native Garnes won
:::lng Club recently traveled to by a technical knockout In his first
:::Glouster and notched three vlc!o· houteverindefeatlngJbnBragllon
·.· ·: ..;rtes among a.frtt touts agai.-.st some of Glouster.
•:-or the toughest competition sou·
Clxnerdf of Pomeroy was a
:: :theastern Ohio has to offer.
declslon-wtnner over Buddy Wolf of
:-: Wlnnlngforthelocalclubwere!IO Ohio University and Nltz, a Mlddle-:)Xmnd Lee Garnes, 118 pound port' native, also won a decision
::-R9nnle Clxnerdf, and 147 pound over Scott Coartler of Ohio
:·:Brtan Nltz.
"
University.
::: BruceMcCioudofMiddleportlost
Roy See,
148 pounder from
:::a.spllt decision to Earl McKee of Pomeroy, lost to Brian Thornbury
•: ..(;!ouster In a 75 pound hout while 00 of Glouster and 150 pound Nelson
::;pqund_f\1ark Hal~ of Pomeroy lost MorrlsoJl ot Pom~!lll' lost a close
:•:another split decision to Randy decision to Scott Sabine of Ohio
•: ·Byrchette of Coshocton.
"University"
·-- •
Charles Whittington, a 170
::~C~ts to play Boston
poimderfromPomeroy,losttoTom
--Fletcher from Coshocton and 175
::: CINCINNATI (AP) - The Unl- pound Bryan Peck of Pomeroy lost
::~~fly of Cincinnati will open a to Jbn PlnpeU from Glouster"
'•loetball game series· with Boston
The 'Melgs Boxing Club extendS
on Oct, 26, ijccordlng to its thanks to Clxnerdf for his help In
Currey, football coach and training and preparation for the
:.,&lt;,tlnlg athlt&gt;tic director.
fights. Since moving to the area,
Clxnerdf has aided the local boxers
Penn State plays hereon Nov. 9.
Immensely"

a

• Dripless.
• High hiding "
• One coat when
applied as directed"

Trimble al VInton County
Alexander at Warren Local

Nelsonville- York at Meigs ·
Vinton County ai Wellston
Federal Hocking at MOler

SAVE

Feb.2Sprt~a~;

"

Now
only

Federal-Hocking

Nel'&gt;onvllle-York at Miller

Milner inks contract
CINCINNATI (AP) -TheCincln·
nat! Reds announced a one-year
contract agreement Friday night
with outfielder Eddie Milner, void·
ing his arbitration hearing scheijuled for Saturday a!te!:!JOO!!:,._
Terms of the contract were not
revealed.
"
Six of the 7 Reds players who filed"
for arbitration have now signed.
Outfielder Gary Redus, whose
hearing Is scheduled for Fel!. :ll,"Is
the only one stlll"unslgned.
Milner,lnll7games,hlt.232wlth7
home runs, 29 runs batted ill, 21
stolen bases. He was on the disabled
list with hepatitis from June 30 to
Aug. 6"

All Purpoae Primer/
Sealer Stain Killer

Latex Flat Paint

al Federal-Hocking

Be1Pl1! at W8.TI'f?'n Local
Feb. Z2 l'&amp;l'nelf:

Meigs at

KILSTAIN'

CEILING WHITE

Feb.IJprt~a~:

:~Meigs ooxers pick up three ..
~~~riumphs in nine recent bouts

·

Custom Colors 110.97

All games postponed

Feb.l3pma;
Alexander at NelsonviUe-York
Feb.l9pma:
Meigs at VInton County
Warren Local at Wellston
AJ~xander

f

SAVE s3oo ..

6

Trimble""" """'"""" "" """ "" """ "'"""" """'"'""""'6 10

~~~~ll_aJ ~!~S_8 ~~-~t:=~ l~t:~~~~;~;t~~:~u':~'es"'
:4.JIIhotigh Belpre has chalked up

4 lOLl 937

Trimble ......... , .... ... ............ . &amp; 9 }tf; 1lJ6

wUI

the
Saturday, Feb. 23, at 7: 15
Championship Is set for
::S~f,;rd.!Jy, March 2 at 3 p m
'
. ."
Is the defending
as they knocked off a
Local five that had rung up
~ ~~~~~~ wins, by a whopping 40

.· _DRLANOO, Fla ... (AP) - rknlg
, Flu tie called It ·:a C-plus"gal11\:."
The multbnllllon-&lt;lollar quarter:~ back had a rough nlgl)t In his
· profesSional debut, but his New
: ' Jersey Generals got the breaks and
whipped the Orlando Renegades
: 24-14 Friday night In the last
· preseason game for the United
·:. States Football League 'teams.
, "It was a typlcill rookie debut, "
:: Flutlesald. "Ihadashakystart,but
: I bounced back .... I give me a C·plus
·. for coming back strong""
.• His shaky start consisted of two
·
on "hi§ flj'st two

f

,...,.
-" W L I'll' Ow
Bt&gt;lpre ..............:................ 14 4 1152 1063 1

All Pur~S&lt;··~
Primer· ·••·
Stain J(ili&lt;f

•ro

$785
:
Gallon

ink, bleeding paint,
other stains"
• Use under latex, 611,
or alkyd topcoats"
• Easy application.

Cranston ~way out of his league' Friday

High·school results
Fon IWI..'CV('()' -nr. ParJM·ay ~
F'J'anklln Iii. M!amL~bl.n~ tfJ. ar
F'ranklln F'W'tlaC'f' CJN'C'fl til. lronr on.
St ..I().'I(Tlh -15
f&gt;alllpnlls 1.'i .•l;1r k...oo ~-~~
f'o('l'lwa frr . Palnf'SVI!I(' ·Rh·{'!"!ti&lt;k&lt; 64. OT
Gira rd 6'1. Wa1Tm l&lt;mnc~ ~
Guiht'll ,.,7, &amp;1avia !iO
•

Olllo H ~o;;. Bo,\o" llll.;koth.U
Hy Th;&gt; ~i~-d Pn.WI
. f'rldtQr'" ~ .....

~$}2tt

r\ rla IR Put~ldl n~ ~2

Almon 1\udll t~ 63. Akron Ci&lt;J)'flt'td M
Akron C'o'll .IJIM'Pr 111 •.,\ki'Orl F., -1!
Akwn l&lt;t'flmot'f' liJ, 1\ki'on f ln :..ton(' .J-1
Akron S!.\'-StM li.1. W;t L~ h ,lf'llull 61
1\r~ · hi JOJd fb, OMia 4!i
1\~tllhullt UJ~t'\\'IUI -i4i, Madison 4.'i

t.rand R!vC'!' :.!, Mmlcr Chr. 0, fork&gt;U
K.\ ·. 72. P ort.'(moufh rt

Hamlllon JtOfo!; !fi, SprlnJ::bOtu H'l
Hlllstxlro 6.1. Wl!mlnl!:fon 62
Hilllop :'ill, I'Nils\iHc• 5.'!
!-lubban1 ~- Brooktk'ld -17
Hudi-ltn Iii, Gt'f't"t'l&lt;;bul'll' Gnm ffi
lndlun Vol)t',\ S. t~- C'onollon VaL lil

r\u~llnJCM· n· Fitc• h 711. Hbotrdmun ~
r\w,.-. l ~ tkl' 71 1. Olnt~ l lod Fall.,~~
ll.ttl.:rr· ~~1. }\',..,.,.,on Fall~ ~ 2
Rot~· Ml. '1\'fO..:Ilakt• -1!1
Bt'tlfunl tWi. C1&lt;&gt;. Rtu~h .j;
,
llrul'unl &lt;'h:tnt~ !f'!. fk. C'!'l'lll'l'll ,"~t
Bf't·J.!!J.ol l Sprln5:. tilt, 1.t'C'tookl 4~1
&amp;&gt;rl!n Hiland Ti. 1-&gt;klmn !'hr . :rt
· &amp;-r lln ~\'. lk1ii''l''C• It! .. l ;t~-k...;nn .Mitlon ~oR
Buc il ~~· :,. J,!.'l. 0UC")it')'&lt;' K. il
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Budt('\t' Trail ln. Tu.'W'an r"A·,.~ C&gt;t lh 41
HU("kt':'ot' W. 62. C'a dll !'i2
&lt;'IJmbt" ldgf• :i 2. "' tpul~~:'fll' ill (' ~1". OT
CHmpi:I'II ·Momt•rlal :tl. Pol and St.ml
notty~i
l
f'u nr.tl t'ullfm t&gt;:W tl1, r\lo'oo MunC'/1Ni1t•r

SUPPLY COMPANY
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----------

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F:. {'k"''dnnd Sh;l\1 ' il. I';Jrm&gt;t Nurmart ·
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J-:~ tia C'hl' . -1.1, Mt&gt;dlna ~~"'' Ro.t/11 .' .U
F:utild .Jl'! , Willw ~h ~ S. ~ 7
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BUY A NEW • 1o.·PICKUP-FOR

P;rrk ti:l. N. Olrn:l!'d
f'll.l 'f'l l(' M2. f:don i'l
Fk'ld fti. WudSWOI"! h :11;
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WITH I'IJROIASl Of 12 QUAin

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STAHDARD PlUGS

Rl\'1'1' fi:l. \\'oetd&lt;ifl('ld $'i

FORD-·496

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Ran,ll{' 4-l, Im'{'! l, ·ilk·

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All wiTh rtbuiklalttt tllthctn9t

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RESISTOR
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PlUGS

n. OT

Uppt'l' r\rlinJ!'Ion 6.\ Col. \l.'('!:tiand 61
V11nlur 46. Arcadlu -II
VltJma M:llhf'II.'S Iii. South!nl!loo r.1
Wi rrffi Champkln 71. \\'an-m l.uRI'II('
Wmn'fl HurdlnJI. 'i)i, Wat1'C'n \\'. HC'!&gt;('t'\'1'

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Warrt'll HOI'.·land ifi. !\'ill '!'I ~~d&lt;ln~ fi.'l

-

60 MONTHS

,.EA "
'I

FUEL SYSTEM PAm

3789
4989
6989

DOUBL£ BARREL

4 BARREL

AIR FILTERS

99

wilfl rtiMIMtt . . . .

c

ORDER YOURS NO . !

89

SING!.£ BARREL

tori . Cum~lilon :0.1

t:nklnlown l.ukC' WI, Mln&lt;&gt;T'I"a

599

IMPOm

Slrmlt'WIJI('•ti."t, l.ak~· CJ;lll StEdvoat'd 1).1
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Tot . R(lf.:t't.'5 m . Tot . S1a11 ~l
Tu.t . St..l ohn m, Tol. Dr\'1\bls.~ 67.
Tol. Srol! !{!, Tol. Wa h., .11
Tol. WoottY.·urd·79. 'Tol. S t. J'ntncl~ i.J

PER MONTH FOR

•

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.... --~11

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Solml ~. ,\IJinn&lt;'f' fil
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R&lt;l\'mno Ill, Na~·donla !'16
Rlllman til. ·[b~· IC&gt;SIO\\'n ~

1-h"C"hcroft R'l. Col. ~th 111
{'ol. Rrookh;i\'lfl !1.1 ('ol. Mar·ion F t,mk
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PMmrt· Pudu;t li!i. ~C'I\101' Lakr ('JJJh. r~
Pt• l +'t"OOI'~ !:\Jrlng. 7.1. C'oh.Jm billl'l11 ~~
Pon C11nton .'lr!. M ~trj.!..u'f'Ha ~
ron~. F.:t~t &amp;1, ~('\4 ' llos too :'ol
Pons. NO! t,; Dame' 1&gt;1, ~- Wt'tJ..I(,- .iA
Pons. w~r Iii, W;t\'f'l'l,1· ~7

-411

rt~'f'!Oild HIK ·H , f:a11I C'I d HI,.._ J1J
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O:ne call gets it all.
dial 446-BANK

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Ma~~U ! Ion Wa .~hin¢ nn 71 . Lou l~vi l!€' ~

(11-. St.IJotnalius !l..i, l3olt'bl•non hti

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Zllnl'li\'llk' 72

M&lt;lrkln C'nlll tit. C'ludinJ!Ion
Mason 1&gt;1, Kin~ -19

Maumt1' !\1. P...n'}'shu~ :rr
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MN!Ina HlghJand ~ Nurtun ~
Mmtut· il , E&lt;~ .~llakt • K !'16
. Ml~rk ~. !'\'. R~·alton 'II
Mid\·(N· TJ, l.oruln C'if'III'\'IC\1' 47
Milton UniOn 1i. Mlaml F.. 5tl
Mln1't·uJ RlcJRt• 72. McDonald ft.l
MOm!X'IIrr 72. Uhf'~· ('(,11'1' tZI
Mt.Hraithy .'i9. Cln. Nun hwr~T 51
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l.anC'USi t•t Fl~tu 59. Libe•t'f\' L.'nlon :l:l
1A'Ct$:tmon t .'ill, Pymatunin~ ·\'ul. ~7
Lf'!p~k' 73. Arlln£1on :17

C'antun

lim Mink Chevrolet-Oldsmobile
·•
conti-nues

''m're out to earn:"
your bUsiitess!"

01'

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"

0

24
TOWING

.Jeffl'lwn !'ll. F'airpor1 Hanli n ~ .J.I

71 t,UT

,•

•

DON OR STEVE
HOUR

.INT'It·S(·Io 00. :o.:,...,.rot'll('•-.;l ~·n ."'l
K&lt;lllel&lt;l ~. ronfinmlal ~ ~
Krl'll Roost•w'll 71. CIJ,\•nhOJo:a F'all~ 62
Kt'll !'rlnK Altf'r 71 . Dav. Ml•uduwdak&gt; 5.'1 :,
l{dtf'l ·ing Fairrnunt ~.' Da~·· Strh~ns 5-I
Kr-yst&lt;nf' ~. A\'00 7'1J..akN'ood I', Parma \' all~· For~ 1i.

,"o!i

You don't'have to hunt
ee
•
Time -Weather-Tem'p erature.

•

446-4060

OPEN 7 DAYS

MON. thru FRL I to 8
SATURDAY I to 6
SUNDAY 9 to S

CN~-nup,

1\.~h!aiJ.tla Harbor t~l. A!\htabuh.1 4ti
1\shlaWia ~! .• John IH ConrK'aul 7:.!

NEW S-10
"

second-roundleadatlhelsuzu-Andy who survived tile cut all covered 36 year, fashioned hlsfJ/ by plckbig~
AP Spor18 Writer
. Wllllams San Diego Open. "It seems
holes In 139 strokes- 5 under par- three birdies and an eagle ori fht
LAJOlJ..A.CaiH.(AP)-It'sthat · toblockwtaUthenolse."
or fewer.
backside -all ofthoseoomlngatter
'who had Jess than two WEeks of
hat. -Gary Halllx&gt;rg- says- - &lt;~~ llallberg' s &amp;Core ~him !Iedwith ~ - · - - •
----'- ~ ·-'c111Fra!Flirrtval- or tile lUCky· hat.
pnoctlce"before starting hlsJirst pro _ wtdeollr"lmmed, off-wblte4itrawJe-_ Peter Oosterhuls, wbo•t a 64
llaU!JeJx, who wpn heie In 1983 whl~h he Inadvertently had ) eft"
game. "1 took .my lumps. I was a " dora he just can't Imagine being Frtday and lurned In a nille-hole andwasrunner-uptoGaryK~hlast behind.
"
little nervous at the begfMillg ... but
without when he takes to the golf totalof:.J, bestonlhePGAtourthls
'NeraU, It was a good start ."
course.
year.
The Renegades put on a furious
"I'm In my own world when that " The golfers blls~ the twin
pass rush In the first baH, forcing
hat's on top," Hallberg said Frtday Torrey Pines courses agalnFrtday,
Flu tie to scramble around, h!!ITY his
after cardin~ a 67 for a 13-under-par wtth 114 ol155 pros turning ill sCores
passes and throw off balance most of
131 that was good for a share of tile that w~ better than oar. The 74
thetbne.
Flu tie said he t~led todrlU the ball
Into a seam on both Interceptions.
" I should have waited a little
SANDIEGO(AP)-Accustomed champion.
longer to throw the ball."
as he Is to running, U.S. Sen. Alan
To compensate for Newman's
New Jersey Coach Walt Michaels
Cranston was way out of his league and Dennis's youthtulness, the
cal!!'d flu tie's performance" a good

it Seals water stains,

Kilst;iil1

AND

312-, Sixth Street

'•
'•
'

ByMARKJ.KJlEIDLER

·. same man, Renegades' linebacker realized that he made a
t he
· Jeff Gabrielson.
Minority Whip, wasoneof~men
' It didn't help. The smator got out
mistakes, but he settled down.' '
From there, the 1984 Helsman
Fl\ltle's counterpart, Jerry Gol- to compete In the "Legends 60-yard , of the.blocks with no difficulty, but
. Trophy winner, playing with a steyn, outplayed the highly touted dash" at the Mlchelob Invitational ' soon was passed as though he were
; reported $7 million pro contract,
rookie 1n mmpletlng 23 of 35 passes Indoor track meet here, and the standing stU!. He finlshe!l dead last,
· went on to complete 7 oilS passes for
for 199 yards and touchdowns of 10 results were far less flattering to covering his 45yards In 7.1 seconds.
' 174yardsandnotouchdowns.
yards to Joey Walters and :llyards him that those ofhts campaigns for "
Perhaps · the results can be
Two TDs came from Generals to Jerry Panish. · "
office.
" blamed on his training habits.
The rest of the schedule had
: linebacker John Joyce, one on a
Cranston was given a rousing Cranston said there's nohody on
· '78-yard scamper after a fllmble Tampa Bay against BaltimOre at ovation from the crowd of hetween Capitol Hill with whom he can work
• "'""'· ;rei'oV~&gt;rY lino ·tl!l f"6tHer ~ii'""'ru.-· c..llartotte, N~c:~·Metnpms at Ja~"'·.~ ~~-=€t.m ~·~:h:::t~.e..,;....o...~·~ = cut, .,,. .. "''- =
: end-wne fumble recovery. The sonvllle, Denver at San Antonio, and Introduced along with Darel New·
"We're just Incompatible," he
"' thLr.Q N~ J.er,sey.touchdown w::a ~ nn L&lt;&gt;S.Ae.ge!"" "~- p 910ti;md at Sal!. man, best known for defeating said, smiling as he referred to his
then""hamplori eBOb Haye$-'lit 'the ~~senatorial "ci&gt;lleagueS. ~ "1:'tii&gt;v·,...-+
: a 1-yard" plunge by Maurice Car- · Fernando, Calit
Oakland playsArlzonaonSunday 100-yard dash more than 20 years distance "runners: I'm
; thon" Roger Ruzek added a 28-yard
_ field goal.
at Fresno, Calif.
ago, and Ken Dennis, former sprinter in the crowd."
two-time Caiifornla sprint
"!was happy to win,': said Flutie,

CAROLINA LUMBER
•

Halberg shares San Diego ~pen lead

:Generals win opener
:j behind Flutie, 24-14

Whale of a

TVCcage
standings

The ·state'S 19!h - PIIYJIClil ~ tl!am and 1Wr"!llayed
ranked class AA Meigs :Marau·, _ many,teams close. Berrang scored
·i:lerettes open sectional tournament 36 points and Fifth 24 points against
play will be Monday night at 9: 15 . us In our two games this year and
against Bj!lpre tn the evening's we'll have to stop them," com·
- third and final first round game.
mented Logan.
first at 5:45 will he
Meigs whipped Belpre 46-:.J at
(16-2f vs. NelsonvUie- home and 4840 at BelPre In their "
(7-9) and Sheridan (114) goes two games this year, At Belpre, the
Gallipolis (114f at7::.Jp.m, Lady Eagles had a 24-23 edge at
"!Alxlngton, the siate's 1ninth haHttme before the Marauderettes
team, drew the number one rallied back.
and wtU sit out tile first round .
Meigs Is 18-1 on the year and can
jlO)I'erfuJ Lady Panthers
clinch the TVC championship wtth
~·6~v the Alexander-Nelsonville
a wtn over VInton County this
'~Od&lt; winner on Saturday, Feb. 23,
at McArthur. The game

,"' -

17. 1986 ,.

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-3

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

IN SOUTHERN OHIO

I

I'

Don't.Miss This Big Promotion.

-·-·--·

\

•
••

~kir

•••
•.,

.,..

•

Chevrolet-OldsmobilP

•

.•

.
•

•

• •

•

.

0
0

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0

"

•&lt;

·'

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cars

Bank Q

'The Conunerc:lcll • Savings Bank

25 Court Street

Silver Bridge Plaza

"

Member FDIC .

"ALWAYS ON YOUR SIDE"

Spring·VIiley

r•
I

""J;...."'

1616 EASTERN AVENUE
GALLIPOLIS

446-3672
'

'·

.' ·
r•

.... GaUlpolla, Ohio 45631
L--------------.____________.
•

': ·

441 2nd Avenue

"

'•"
- u••

' (614) 446-3382

'fl.,,

Plara-Phane 446-9!1!15

~&lt;

I

l

)

j

l'I

Bill bl., ...
I;
0

�= -.. . . ._

·-,
Febrwry 17. 1986

,.

Gallipolis keeps faint title
hopes alive' tops JUS, 75-59,
GALLIPOLIS- Logan will have
to walt untO at leastTuesdaynlghtto
clinch this year's wtdlsputed Sou·
theastem Ohio League ba~ketball
championship.
Friday night, In what was totiayl"
been PJe.league finale for all five
confi(rence teams, only Jackson and
Gallipolis managed to play because
of Inclement weather.
And, Coach Jim Osborne's GAHS
Blue DevOs returned to earlyseason form em"Oute to a 75-59
over Coach Jeff

year.
Jackson beld a brief 2.0 lead on
Brian Rosebeny's . goal. Todd .
Bergdoll and Todd Slone · hit
back·tcrback buckets.to put the Blue
DevOs ahead to stay.
· Gallipolis led :Jl-9 · after one
quaiter,. 40-25 durlng the halftime
IntermiSsion and 56-37 after
periods of the Parents Night battle.
Five In Double Figures
Five Blue DevOs finished In •
double figures In scoring. Bergdoll
Dan Dressel each had 17. Gary

tlln/e

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-P.oint Pleasant. W. Va.

I

By WilLIAM R. BARNARD

foul Une for·5!r percmt. JHS' had 23
reboUnds, seven by Stevens, and 12
turnovers.
"I thought we were able tocontatn
Poe (Brad) real weU tonight," said
Osborne. "He makes a lot Qf things
happen for tht&gt;m. We we~ able to '•
' '.'
put It in the bole, am~ we controUed l'~l
•
•
thetx&gt;ards."
~•
JHS mentor JeH Hod.'IOII com·
men ted, "We bad only one practice'
all week beCause of the snow, and , •:
Wolford (Vince) played despite
beingslcl&lt;. Wedldn'tgetofftoavery

AP Sports Writer
The Cleveland CavaUers, long·
' · - Thne Natlonal""BasketOOJI AsSOcla·
tlon doonnats. may have,-taken a
giant step toward shaking some of
the m\1(1 off their Image.
The Cavs broke a .22·game losing
streak at the Philadelphia Spec·
trum, dating back to Feb. 6,1976, by
defea tlng the 7Gers 112·107 Friday
night.
"It's a speciaL wtn," Coach
George Karl said. "It's another
small step for .this franchise. The
thing I've harped on Is that, for us to
make the playoffs, lYe have 19 start
w1nnb\gagainstgoodtearnsathonne
and somet~on.the.road.''

\

.,.,
.. .. .
'•

surprising to lose ·to
said Julius Erving, who managed
just 14 points on 6-for-18shootlngfor
the 76ers. "We know now that we
have to · look more intently at
Cleveland than before and realize
It's not going to be easy · to play

them."
111 other NBA games, It was
_ Bos!Qn 1!17~ GQI®n State 100;
. ·•

=

BERGDOLL GoEs ll'o"SIDE FOR TWU · Galllpoli•' Todd Bergdoll ( 22) sUps behind a Jackson
defender for two of his 17 points in thls'l'lmes-Sentlnel
action photo. GAllS won, 75-59. On rildtt, Gallla's JeH

Atldnsiin boxes out JacksOn's R&lt;id Mllk!r ·(22).
Looking on In llackgowtd is Jack."""'" Brad McC..rkle
(40).

SEO cage
s.tanding~
AU. GAMES _
W L P

Team
GrPCnfleld ...................... 16
Gallipolis.. .. .... ... .... . .. . 13
Logan .............................. i2
Jackson ....... ...... .... . ...... 12
Clx&gt;s~;~peake ............... , ....... l2
Athf'ns .... .. ..

OP
1 1071 825 ,
.1 .1013 &amp;12
3 952 8.ll

4 1068 897
5 1159 972

Boxseore:

.. 9 A 1(0) 924

.

f.WJ - C:m·otl !'). J.Jl;
('ompsiOn I I :1: Hayrr.; JM; H a llf~IHr, Cofftt.•l-'Hl:
.r~·K'S()!It;

Ironton ............ ............... 7 7 809 'ffl8
Soulh Poln1.. ... ., ................... 8 9 1000 1014
· Ponsmouth . .. . ..
. ..........7 !f 943 ~

Humphrrys 1·02. TOTAU'i ta+;l(l.
GALIJPOI..r;i IIUJE ~ 1·131 - Mlllff H~2: C'.
HM~·ard .J.:l-1:1: 'Sprnlff l-U·ti: . Ja rk ~ln fl.(Ftl: Holt

Waverly... . .... ..... .... ......7 9 911 923
Soulh('rn ... .............. ..... ....... 7 R 800 fm
Rock Hill .

lfWJ'Ir,'BO\'~

2·2-fk Flnli-y liN): A. ll~·ttrd 0.{1.11: Wlckllnr 0.1-2:
Sp!Pir 1..0.2. TOI'AHilti-8-U.
.
Sron· tJ:I.·ttuar1 (n;:
Jack.ll()n .......... ............................. ll :\ 6 ~:11
C.aiUPOls, ................................... ... B !2 fl _1~1

. .......... . 6 11 10M 1145

Pt. Pleasant ... ................... .2 8 601 647
• Wheelersburg .. ,.................. .. 3 11 751 915
Northwest ..........
1 15 859 tOM
Friday's Nolt-SEOAL ·nt1Uil8:

Found Mabel and
Howard Hajek

$244.7!

.

Valley 66 Northwi'SI 44

Oak Hill at South Point, ppnd
Minford at Wheelersburg, ppnd
Ironton at Athens, ppnd, resE&gt;t Feb. 26
Eastern at Southern. ppnd

this. but In a recent survey
of customers who ~ot re·
funds. 3 out of 4 6elieve

I

I~ _!t~ce_J!!i\~

'

than ifthey did their own
taxes . 3 out of 4 !

•

What can we find for you?
27 SYCAMORE STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
618 EAST MAIN SliEET, .POMEROY, OHIO
419 MAIN ST., PT. PLEASANT, WV
Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Weekdays, 9-5 Sat.-PH. 992-3795

Jac~n

59

SllOAL RESiliiVIlS
Team

WLPOP

Gaillpolls ... ..........................6 1 284 J'Z&gt;2

Ironton ...............................3 .2 223 19'1
~an ................................. J J 251 Z'l4
Athens ............ ,................... 2 5o 270 .119

APPOINT' . .NTS AYAIUIU

' '

..

Jackson ................ .............. 1 4 ' 169 ~
Totals
15 15 1197 1197
Frldtly's reMIIt:
Gallipolis 43 Jadtson ~

Monday's game:
Pt. Pleasant at MUton (makeup)
1\teflday's p.n1f.8:

Pot1smouth at Galllpolls (makf'Upl
Ripley at Pt . Pleasant
Ironton at Logan (makcupt
Ru."-.'1('11 at Chesapeake
South Pcint at Huntington Viru&gt;on
Frtday'H pme8:

,

Pt. Pleasant at Huntington East

St. 'John's wins 16th straight, 84 to 63
NEW Y~RK (AP) -Chris Mullin
Panthers, 15-8 ah~ 1\-6, who saw a

fiv&lt;--game winning streak snapped.
The St. John's streak is the longest
a,rnong Division 1 teams In the
nation.
The Redmen jumped to a 46-33
halftime advantage behind 13 points
from Mullin and nine from Berry.
Smith converted a three·point play
I :Ollnro the second half and that
10-point deficit was the closest
Pittsburgh could get the rest of the
way.

PLYMOUTH HORIZON

$6ffT7••

Galllpolls at Jackson cmakf'upt
N011hwest at Waverly
Wlx'elersburJE at We51

SaturdaJ'• pnw:
C..alllpoHs at Pt. Pleasant (mal«.&gt;up l

w....-,·......,

_,_
_..,Le....

ParkPrsburg South at , pt. Plea sant
(make-upl ,

WhipJtJsb

For

1\:'

Local bowling

· PLYMOUTH TURISMO

. '

$7470 ••

·,

BtJY PLYMOUTH HORIZON OR TURISMO WITH
THIS SPECIAL VAWE PACKAGE:...

T£'8m standings as of Feb. 8. 1985:

"
,,

W.L
' CeramiC!!; ..... ... .. .. .. ...
Bcyan's SE-rviCt" Center

GallipOlis

. .... 97 63

. ....

Ire Co............................

. 00 70
74

811

Jordan's Gas StrviN' ..................... TJ 87

Ferreu·s Glass ................................ 45 :US
Individual hl~h ~~and ~~h series:
Jordan's Gas Service - BeMy Wise high
gamr of 186; . Many Hunt h!Mh SPrlPS of 4!11.
Bh:an's S£&gt;r\r1('(! Cenf('f' - Karen ChatTin
ld~h ·~~.ame 181; Pam RJfDe high series of 495.
Fm-eiJ's Class' - V~kl Wtse both high
gall'lC' and ~ !ll'rlf'5 1!n464.
Sue's Ceramics - Vk&gt;iet Cox high JO:ame of
183; Gak!- Fer,ueon hiR"h S('rtes or 482.

GaUipolJ5 Ia- - Sandy Courtney both h gh

game and hlllh ..nos 16Ckll3.

Bob Cline Taxidermy - Sharon Watterson
high game and high series 116-512.
ConverllnK splits:
Shirley Morrow the 2·7 and 5--10; Debby

one
was
an
accident in whicq major damage occurred to the
vehicle last year. If you have any of the following
symptoms: headaches, numbness of the arms
and legs. stiffness or soreness of the neck, back
pain. leg or knee pain. di?:Ziness ·or nausea you
need the speciallzed services of a chiropractor. a
doctor specially trained to adjust misaligned
vertebrae and Temove pressure and tension on
delicate. sensitive nerves. Consult your
chiropractor with confidence and prevent
further suffering. disability and expense.

Barcus the 2-7; Sharon Watterson the S.B-10;
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·

Denison ed~ Oberlin
GRANvn.LE. Ohio (AP) -Tony
Emrick, with :ll points, paced
Denison to an 8Hi9 victory over
Oberlbt tn a North Coast Athletic
Conference coUege basketball
game Friday night.
·

D Power ~tearing
D AM/FM stereo
D Console.
D Center arm rest
D Rallye Wheels

game and extended Its Midwest
Division lead to 2\(, gam~ over
Houston.
George Gervln, whoaisoscored39
points, gave San Antonio Its last lead
at 107.105 wlth 7: 16left. Bill Hanzlik
responded with consecutive
jumpers to put the Nuggets ahead to
stay.

in the final quarter and finished wltjj:
14 assiSts.
Terry Tyler led Detroit with
points.
Pacers 114, Bulls 96
Indiana, only 17·36 for the~~!'::~:=
won for the third time In "'
against Chicago as Herb WillliaJn~·
scored 24 JXJints and Steve Stli&gt;an&lt;~

• "' "....,.~.~ . ...,.,,.,..,.,~.,.~.,. ·no......,.,~,-· ·~ '·"""'~-~&gt;7r.:.-o-&lt;:r"'··- '""""'~J&gt;;;"" '"'~~,JIJ,;.:======="'·~
· ·;~
,:;=··;•==~:'l:'::':::====""-"-'=::;;;.~"""=

· Boucher captures opening race on ice
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••

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ming Pool Kit at low diocount prices till summer.

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mlle at the Mlch.eloblilvitatlonal, as
exiJ!'Cied, and Eamonn Coghlan
finished before anyone else, as
expected.
Very little else about Friday
night's race, hOwever, lived up to Its
pre-meet bllling.
Coghlann had been warned h~
would face his stiHest competition of
th~ year, primarily from Sydney
Maree, who had requested that a
record
be set. Instead, the

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...........
slotwly, finishing In 3 minutes. 57.5
second&lt;;, nearly nine seconds sloWer
than his own Indoor best.
Maree was nowhere to be found.
Australian Mike Hllllardt and
, American Steve Scott were second
and third, respectively, while Maree
carne In at 3:59.
Jt was a' disappointing conclusion
to an otherwise exciting meet in ·
which Valerie Brlsco-HookS and
Johnny Gray each'set
Indoor
marks in their everits, the Mlchelob
living up to Its reputation as a forum
for fast times.
"I decided to just follow the
leaders, whaiever the pace," said
Coghlann, who has not been beaten
·indoors this year. "I wasn't really
worried about a record. I was just
trylilg to run the race. "
Maree had asked that a searing
pace be set lh hopes be could hold off
Coghlann, who had beaten him py
three·hundredths of a second in a
meet last week . .
But the paC&lt;Lsetter, or "rabbit,"
Arizona State's Eddie Davis, turned
the half-mOe tn 1 minute 59 seconds ·
instead of the 1: 5&lt;1 Maree hoped for.
Scott took the lead momentarily,
and be, Coghlann and Tom Smith
battled for rontrol untU one lap
remained. At that point, Cogh!ann

"

•

HOLIDAY POOLS
429-471:·;·~~~~!!!!!!;.;;~~

w.i!h purchase. of 12

· with the victory.
His time was surprisingly slowJor
the Mlchelob event. Ten of the W
fastest mlles ever run1ndoors have •
been recorded here. ·
''Sydney didn't Ioree the pace,"
Coghlann said. "Obviously, be
waSn't feeling as good as be
expected to."
Brtsco-Hooks, wbowonthreegold
medals at . the 1!11!4 Olympics,
overtook rlval Diane Dixon wllh 15
yards to go in the SOO:yard run and
covered tbe dlstancelnlmlnute, 2.3
seconds, bettering the old Indoor
best of 1: 03.3 set by Roslyn Bcyant in
1!m.
'
1'lrnl's set In Indoor meets are not
c'lllsslfled as world records because
!!If tracks are 1101 standard.
Gray, thPAmPricanl'ft.'lll'd holder
iftcthe 1D1 meters, outclalled the
flftd bl the men'slk&gt;lnl minute, 46.9
1«011d8, JJ101:E! than3 seconds ahead
of his nearest competltor on the fast
~boardi at tlie :san Diego Spol'ts
Arena.

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80 Month Reg. 44.88

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Yo!lr Ch.olce
•

neiv

Logan at AthPns tmakeup1

Ross·SOuthE'astern ar Wawrly
ManciM'!Iiter at Whrel~r~burg
Jackson at Northwt"-j;t
. Ironton at Ponsmourh

=

'

AP Spori8 Writer

Vince WoUord
toward the bucket. Harrl.un tallied 13 markers
and lwd nine of Gallipolis' 21 team assists In a 75-59 SEOAL victory.

Scored 21 points and Walter Berry
added 17 as No. 1·ranked St. John 's
registered its 16th consecutive
victory, an 8463 Big East Conference decision over Pittsburgh
Friday night.
Center Bill Wennlngtcn added 16
points for the'Redmen, 21·1 and 12·0
intheBigEast,lnaddltiontopulllng
down 11 rebounds and blocking five
shots.
Freshman Charles Smith scored
a game-high 2.1 points for the

~

·to live up
to billing
SAN DIEGO (AP) -They ran

14 14 1'719 ITI9

Gall !polls 75

.'.

By MARK J. KREIDLER

..

t'rlday's l'ftllllt:

"'-'

•"'==~·. •=

~~

Celtles ltn,
The' Warriors, with the league's
worst reronl at 1141 compared to
the Celt!cs' NBAbest mark of43-10,
ledby15pointsinthesecondquarter
and 62-58 at halftime. But Golden
State, which got 29 pdints from
Purvis Short and '1:1 from· Mickey
Johnson, managed only 38 points in
the secoild half .

Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas and
attends Gallla Academy Junior
High School.
Eric Hoffman won first place In
the boys' division, age elght·nine.
He 'Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl

.

------+-~
Tntdt".

·•••~ .o .

'

=

Lany Bird scored :D of his :1!
s.- 12$, Maverida liD
:;:
JXllnts ln the middle two periods,
Phoenix broke a ]().game road :-;
Including a three-point goal in the losing streak.
'•.
thlrdllt'rtocnhat - purthe-eelt Ics~ ba~ N~ seored 23 polntund-Y--~
abead to stay. , James Edwards-21,·
_ :·
·Boston extended Its Atlantic
The Mavericks got 25 points from
Division lead to 1 \(, games over Mark Aguirre.
• •
Philadelphia.
;Nets U.t, PlsiAIIIs 123
:::
Lakeni 1.00 Hawks Ill
Micheal Ray Richardson out·~ •:
Los Angeles w~n Its sixth straight dueled lslah Thomas down UJe.~ ';
game as Earvln "Magic" Johnson stretch to boost New Jersey pa~t;•
had 23 points aod 15 asslsts.Eddle Detroit In front o! a S&lt;'llout crowd&lt;( •::•
Johnsori scored 10 of his 29 points in W:I.49 at the Meadowlands.
• ~::
the thlrd ,quarter as Atlanta clostd
Richardson, who had 14 of his ~:•;
within 93-85.But a 13-2 spurt at the points In tht&gt; fourth
hit • •
start of the fourth period built the three-point goal to J·ie thesco•re 11iitl~ :.:
LosAngelesa(lvantage.
59 seconds left and then hit a
129, Spurs 119
throw with two seconds rennal111ln1~·~:
final

She .!£.t~ daught!l!" cf ,

..
refunds

.e;ot bl6er

SllOAL VAIISI'I'Y

Jackson .......... ........... ,.......... ~
Athf'ns ... , ......................... .2 4 375 JBS
Ironton .... ........................... } 4 283 lJJ

.=

'·•

The Sunday Timea-Sentinei-Page-C·5 .-•·

We can'l promise everyone

AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION-

Portsmouth West f1l Waverly 47
Chesapeak(' 59 Fairland 57

r

I

Grl'('Jlup 72 Portsmouth 58
Grrenrield 59 Clrclev11J(' :W

.,.....:_~'-

~mpetUton.

;....,-

~-lhf!y

.....

Portland 93. Washington 89; Los
Angeles Lakers l:D, Atlanta lll;
Utah 109, LosAngelesCIIpperslOO;
Denver '129, San-· Antonio 119;-Phoenix 126,-Dallasi03: Indiana 114, Chicago 96; and New Jersey 124,
Detroit 123.
Oeveland got 25 points, eight
rebounds and three blocked shots
from Roy Hinson before he fouled
outwlth4:40toplay,and16polnts,l5
assists anjl eight rebounds from
John Bagley. Philadelphia got 26
points and 23 rebounds from Moses
MaiOIJI!.
The76ers rallied for a IOH061ead
on a basket by Erving with 57
seconds remaining, but .Cleveland
onWorldB.Free's

GALLIPOLIS - . Six area
Hoffman and attends Rio Grande
HAMAR, Nmway (AP) - Gea·
record of 38,22 at Bislett Stadium in
winners of the GallipOlis ElkS LOcal
Elementary School.
·
tan Boucher of Canada surpassed
Oslo. Norway, in 1979.
Jenny Pickens won second place
HoopShootContestrecentlypartlcl·
American Eric Heiden's champion·
Oleg Boshev of the Soviet Union,
pated in the Dlstrlct competition at
In the girls' division, ageelght·nlne.
ship remrd with a clocking of 38
the overall t!tie defender who raced
MarysviDe.
This is her second year to advance
seconds Hat Satunlay as he won the
in. the first pair Saturday, placed
Two won first place honors and
to the District competition. She IS
opening SOO.meter race at the 1985 second in 38.49 seconds. Vlktor
one finished second after having
the daughter of Joan Pickens and
world men's speedskating Shasherin, also of the Soviet Union,
tied ·for first place and losing after
attends Racine Elementary School.
championships.
. was third in 38.82.
Th~ two first place winners will
going through three tie breakers.
Helqen, now retired and attending
Mark Mitchell was t he top
Krist! Thomas, Gallipolis, won
now advance to the State competl· the event at Hamar Stadium as a
American finisher, eighth In 39.24
tion at Delaware on Saturday, Feb.
first place In the girls' divisiOn, age
television reporter, set the form~r seconds.
12-13. 'Ibis Is tbe second consecutive
23.
year she has ' won at the Dlsbict .-----------------~-------------------..L

Where more
_Americans
a bigger
H&amp;RBLOC~

_

(:leveland .snaps 22-game losiqg streak

1

•

Shoot" wlwen from G•I!Jpn!k Lod&amp;e No. 117 were, Jelt to right- Jenny
Plck,ena, Racine Elementary Scbool, eecoocl place In tlllrlt' dlvlsloil, at~e
elghl·nlne; Krl8ll 'lbomas, Glllllil Academy Junior Wgh School, first
place In girls' dlvl8loa, "'" 12-U, and Eric HoHman, Rio Grande
·Elememary Schoo!, .flnt plaee In boys' dlvllllon, age elgh!.nJne.

GALLIPOLIS- Down 14-8 early
in the $econd period, Coach Jack
Payton's Gallipolis Blue Imps
rallied to defeat visiting Jackson,
43-30, in Friday night's preliminary
basketball game on the GAHS
hard,,••.tOOC!.
The triumph earned GAHS at
least a share of this yl"8r's reserve
crown. The Imps can win the title
outright by defeating Jackson at
Jackson this Friday In a makeup
game.
.Jackson led 11·8 after one period,
but trailed :Jl-16 during the halftime
Intermission. The Imps led 28-22
going into the final stanza.
~ Charles Howard ' led ·Gallia's
attack while Mike Holt and Joel
,&lt;;pencer each had six.

•-

..

febNBIY. 17, 1986

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�--

--

--

--

-~-

Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - "Boys, It just
doesn't get any better than this."
Those famous words spoken In a TV
commercial sum up my feellngs
about hunting and ·fishing in
Canada. There is something excit Ingly satisfying about being out doors In the almost unending
expanses of Canadian wilderness .
One trip there usually creates a
·· yearning -a return.

standings

(Part I)
: tool you. With today's high prices a

- - - - - - --~ G.um;:- - , - - ~-

c-'l'eam

J.

W

·

P ~ ~- _By JOliN NOLA!\1

~~~,':~ ~~~.:::::::::::::::::::.~ : ~ 1m
~~;~~~k ~:::::::::::::::::::::::~ ~· : :

. outfitters who advertise In the back
of many outdoor magazines. It is
lmportaat when choosing a guide
from the magazine adds that you
choose several. Call or write them
to request Information and references. Be sure to check the reteren·
ces. They may help you decide
l'(hlch outfitter you will finally book
with. ·
According to reports aU provinces contain numerous numbers o!
bears. Ontario Is still the top

Nor1hGallla .. ., ..... .. ......... .. .. • 10 ~ 949

Southw"tern .. ..... ................ 1 14 811 9lJ
SVAC VARSrn'
Team
WLPOP
Hannan Trace .....................6 1 412 3iO

SOuthern .,; .. ...................... ..4 2 392 326
Eastern ..... , ... ........ ............ .&lt;~ 2 379 396
Ky,..- C""'k.. .. .......... ..... .. .. o3 3 ~ :lSI
Nort lt Gallla .... ; ..... .. , ........ ...2 4 lU
Southwcstern .... .. .............. ...o 1 :rti

379

436
19 19 2231 tl-'11

:rotalll

SVAC RESI!R~ L P

province once • part of the more
populated southern portion. Quebec
also has good numbers of bears as
does New Brunswick where two
bears may lle. taken. I use these ·
three eastern provinces as examples because they are In closest
proximity to our area. The central
and western provinces, while offer-

or

..................
. ....... .. ............. .3
Kyger C.,.k ........ · .......... · --·2

219 319
i:m ............................. i~ ·1; 1719
1719
F'rld:'\ ·-~ M&lt;WIIi.::
1.\!l C&lt;llttt':'i posiJXlfll'(.h

Registrations ·

~""'"'~--~-~~~~~~;:~;;J~t~~~~\dt~~~,~~~~;.,.~~-~~F~~~ a~~{i~hl~¥~~ . -~ought- fur"iffl~'
area sportsman to travel. Hunting
~ ..-.."ith u gtdde is usually - more .cage. topmey . ~,
• might wish to plan a trip to Canada
productive than trying It on your
• this spring or summer need to start
own. Many · areas have Changed
.; making arrangements now If you
hunting and fishing !'eg4latlons so
·: haven't already. Most reliable
check first to avoid costly errors,
· ·~ guides book ei'rly ·on a quota
Ontario bea r llceh_s e are a
system. Since the spring . bear ·bargain at $25 and the spring bear
. season begins May 1 and som e of
hunter can get In plenty of fishing as
·· the ~lest fishing Is also available
an added bonus. The season runs
- then, you don't have a whole Io ~ of
through June 15. In Quebec license
·: time.
'
are the same and the season
·; There are a couple of ways to
extends through July 15. Most
:- choose an outfilter or guide. You . guides recommend a rifle of 30
. may know someone who has taken
ca liber or larger for black bear bull
a s pr!ng beav hunt cr fis-hing trip
have known them tc be taken •N!th a
a nd can get infor mation from them.
100 grain bullet from a .243.
Or, there are numerous guides and
Contlnued .next week!

Meigs· gir [s cage stats

Pllly&lt;.,.
.
o
J • nnl Couch ................ ......... : ...................... 19
Jodi Harrison ............................................ .... 19
Jenny Mllk'r .. ...
. .... ... ........................... )9
B. J. Gordon " ·"'"" --··--~- - . ...................c.. c.. .-19
June Miller .......................................... ,.... ... .. 19
R honda Haddox ................................... :.......... 19
Jenny Swartz ............................... .. ......... -.... ... . 19

:

Fg·fra Pet Ft·lta
5J.l~ 49 2'HiO
••
53-137 39 722
•
93-XI9 44 39-~
.•
44·143 31- 65-91
·•
ffi.157. 42 37-7•
·:
!IH5 22 12-27
~
5-31 16 14·34
· Ruth Fry ...... ...... ....
. ...... .. ......... .. .... ...... . 11
2-11
18 0.3
• Be11v LOftus
....................... !2 2·5 oJQ H
: Rhonda N('(.'{'(' ..... ...... ,.... .. ................
.. .. ... 10 :\.10 :n 4-5
~· M arta Musser .... ................................... ...... ...... 9
1-8 lJ ()..()
,· TntaJs
19 331-864 · 98 om
•• Opp
19

Pet Rh A•r Tp ~.,.
M 41 2.2 133 7.0
32 36 1.9 109 5·7
67 125 6.5 W 11.8
71-102 ~-· l li3 8.1
50 163 S.fi Jill 8.9
4! :51 1.1 32 1.7
U :r7 1.9 24 1.3
o 10 1.0 4 0.4
50 8 0 7· 8 0·7
Ill B ,0.8 10 1.0
0 6 0.7 2 0.2
116

118115.7

1111 31.&amp;

•

Scoreboard ...
K \' . Han g~.; ~,; A. Edmonlon i
SundiQ''Ii GwnCM
1"oronlo at U :~ nford

NBA results
SlltiniUll &amp;ooklilmll i\ !NJdl&amp;iloin

-: Dl·lmll a l Chicaco

Bf Th• ,\Moc1at.•d l"'n&gt;s."'
EJ\.'\D::RN I 'O~'FF.tU;Nn:

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•

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Col~ Stu!('

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tn :1 ~-:a nw
Or-Jrolt on Fri.11"U1uy If.
ST. UJl!JS BJ.l'F.S-E,.;Ifontnt lhc• m n·
lrar•t ol Rooald C;~n::n . \·In• pn~ldm l und
dln:'('lur or opr1·a t lon~ . ttu·(~ £h Ill:· 1!-H;.,Ifl
l'l.if't pn-wtty or llr.• .'il'ason
a~oui ln~l

NHL results

S('ilsor\.

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w,u.~ C"OI\'t"'ERE..""HE

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NOIJ'ftt
l.qo.·ola. C'ullf. !Ji, St. Maty' ~ Cn llr. -loll
NC'\';tdu Rmnlfl. Mont:uw $1
S.1n Ofc'J:'o m, Santu Cl;m_, !'ii

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Mon1 rra/ ·l. J}ufrak) :t 01'

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16·1. 00.11

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po!o'lponf'd.

•

·

: : RICHFIELD. Ohio tAP) - Kent
: State senior Thomas Jefferson Is
: :glad all of last year's Olympic
,;hoopla has ~led down, but he's
1 •already set his sights on the 1988
: :Olympic Games.
~; "Ute Is finally getting back to
;-:normaf "for me foUowtng tne : Olympics," said Jefferson, a bn.nze

'

the Old French City tills year. 'lbe.
IH winter cold Wllll almo8t
nonexlalent a year ago and two
years liP - In fact, It W88D't the
chlBy type eve!! two or three weeks
ago, In fact, II wasa'l the chilly type
even three or tour weeks IICO·

c:

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~.

NN.• C'oncon:l ,Jot'rl Gli.'ll n, 16-1!. vs.

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INCLUDING LABOR

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AND WE WILL GIVE YOU
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!!, B&lt;'lk.'o.·IIC', 15-~ , vs. Rocyru~ fo"rtdow.
~ hcl~·

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Girls ~res

!101\

-··-

Ohloo B.S. GtrM ~
Cit'. c rmvUII' ,\1, {1(&gt;, South 2.J
.Easllakl' N. 81. Eudld 49
Garftl'id Hts. 41, Parma 33
~ion 86, Map)(' Hts. ~
s . Ranfl(' 61. Lmoni.a :L1

me&lt;lallst In the Olympic :&lt;ro-meter
race last summer and a scheduled '
participant In Sunday's Bud Light
Knights of Columbus track meet at
the Coliseum.
"I really enjoyed myself," Jetlerson said. "It was justa thrill being on .
the (OlymplCl team.- r-expe iencea
enough emotion to last a llfetinne.

(J;o Wl.Uiv-

Frld;1y,

73-60.
2. Wlnlllam. 19-0. bt•at

or.

Mot~adof'C'

3, V.an Bur«1, 16-0. bt'ut

l411·7-l.

ftnw~n C'OI''Y

fbaWliOI'I (W).~I. vS. Lll••rry &amp;tllon Fr1tla .~·.
p:mlponcd, pla}'E'd New Ricliel Satun:kt~· ·
4. MlddiPIOW"n Fmwlck, 17·1. vs. Mta mbbura '1\W'!day. po~~I IDfl«&lt;. v5. TR'illon
~ F11&lt;Sa.y, po&amp;lponi.'d .

5. Arthbold. 16-0, bt&gt;al ~It a 8'&gt;-45.
6, CraysvWe Skywe, 14-1, \'!l Old
Washirtl{lon BuckpY(I Trail 'J'Uro5da~·. jBI·
ponl'd. pUcyed Hannlb61 Rin'l' Sohm:lay.
6, Sprll1i!fil'l.d CetOOik', 17-1, \'S. Tlpp
Clry F'rklay. po~~ tpoof'd. Jlla)lfod at Wl~t
MII!CI'I MU!on·Unb'l SafUrdey.
8, Marla Stl'ln Marlon, lS.l , vs. Nl'\lo.'

l&lt;noxvtllt

Friday,

I)OIIIIX&gt;Jlfd.

pta~

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St.Hmry Saturday.
9, Old WashJn~t~on BUC'kC'Yr Trail. Jr,.J ,
vs. Gr1ysv1Ue 511,\'\1\Jl' 'T'Ui:&gt;tiday, ~I·
ponl'd. beat New Phllildro~hla 'f'luc111·
raw•~ Central Catmtlc m-41.
10. F'Jwlldkl Furnat'f' Cn!m. ltl-0, llll .
COli 0r:ow- Oe~BI')'Inl 'T'ue!!day. !Xfil•
ponOO. beal Tronton !Jt.Jolcpft 614~. Jlla.\t'd
81 i'wawr Eallit'T1J'5anmiay.

UNITED VIDEO &amp; COMMUNICATIONS -

541 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, OH.
"N11t to Spring Vall1y Cinlma"

T

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Offll UPtiES J/10/15
' PIIASI Rltltll (()111'011 Willi PAY.NT

.

IICHAID (OUJNS-GEOIGE IIKHANNON
• SERVIU MANAGERS •

WITH FACTORY TRAINED TECHNICIANS AND
PROFESSIOAL MANAGEMENT, THE PLACE TO CALL IS

fl. Gnmnetd MCOain . 1&amp;1. \'5. J...toNr.
post1Jl11«1. bt&gt;at
rtrr iC'\'1111' ~:W .
~-

Display1'ird Near
Pomeroy-Muon Bridce
Leo l. Vauchan, Met.
Phone 992-2588
Vinton , Ohio-Gallia County
Display Yard
James Bush, Mgr.
Phone-388-8603

._I _____.:.____ _

\'

~IJUI('d, playt'd 31 NOI'Willk Sll turda~•.

LOGAN
MONIMNT
P.Dnroy, Ohio-l!e!Js County

1
I1
I

~

bull( F'atrflelel· TuP!d!ly,

JXfiiJ:OOl'd
JO, Willard , 13·.1.

.BARRE ,
GUILD

mduslri- VISit OUf d'splay.

i - C OUPON REDEEM BY 3130185·-,

Thoi'D\'U](&gt; Sheridan Frldiiy. poslp()f\1'{1.
I . Zanf'5VWI' WPSI Mu!' kin~m Sa!ur·

~.

unaffected by ttme and the
elements - backed by the
strongest RUorontee '" the

~

1-\mlon

l

memory of those tt~d dear. Made of Select
Bar•e Grantle, 1t holds 1ts natural beauty

ON ADVICE OF the Rev. Scott
Westerman, Peeps moved fl'O:IJl
G...., Metllodlat Churdt to the

.I
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II·
SPECIAL

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S-10 · BLAZER, · V~6. automatic, air.
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equipped. air. white &amp; blue
K-BLAZER; V·B. automatic. Silverado,
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StOol' Walsh ..k&gt;sull ti.l-61 .

WHEN LADY PEEPS. a Presbyterian, · wed Peeps, a Methodist,
they had two Baptist preachers
olliciatD1g iu the- little -white PJo
Grande church. One of the Baptists
was the president of Rio Grande
College, and the other was the
regular pastor of the church.

ABar;e Gutld Monument 1S a beaultful arid
ptlmanent symbol . It preserves forever ttle

WITH HIS MANY YEARS OF
OF SERVICE PROBLEMS, WE FEEL THAT RICHARD IS THE .
MAN TO CALL FOR All YOUR _SERVICE
·NEEDS.
.
...

"'I

• l 'l.ASM AA
1. Mllnllflc&gt;ld 1'.1!tlabur. 1':'.0, \'!i . M&lt;mll·
fl ('ld Madlson F'rlday, IXJBIIXJn('d .
2, YOUIIf:SIOI''n Rlil~, 16-1. brol E1il'

ev•·

ate the Winter, and It re81Jy aMalled

P T

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10. CtmiOn McKinlcoy. 1-1-t playt'&lt;l ramon

\ ':&lt;o.

YOUR AGE HELPS you

= -- 1"1;='"

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-11

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SAT. 9 TO 4

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:1, Akron St.VIncml·!-ii.Mu ry ,

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!!, Clc'\'f.'land Stl,ltTiall\ut. 16-.1. 1..-.a1
lr11oo W'Hlfi. pli!,wd Cll'l.'f'llmd Wt-,;1 T1,·h
Sa !Urda\' ,

~

YOUTH TENDS to radiate
warmth In more ways than simply
British 'I'Itermal Units. So far we
haven 't seen any measurement of
success In mamage based on

WE PROUDLY ANNOUNCE .THE ADDITION
OF RICHARD COLLINS TO OUR

"Your Dealer On
~-lh
•.. 8 Ri VI.r"
HOURS•.

of heartfelt love •

SER~ICE­

NOTHING "WORKS UKE A CHEVY TRUCK

II, Akroo C'c'lllrnl·l'l()l.l.•l'l', 16 2. lx'al ,\~

I'On F.E.I~ 81 ·4A.

1. Columbus Wt'hrk'. 19-0, lx'al rotum ·
b.Jx Brl~s 67-411., b:&gt;a1 Culumta..s W;~!I! 'J ·

:~Jefferson sets sights on ~s~ Olympics

.........

KIJIR.

w, ·omlnJf ~- Soul t\c&gt;rn C'olot·am .r;

•

,.

Lnra!n · Admlriil
WN !Iakr ii ~ . \'~.

51

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TO QUALflED IUTIIS ON SELECTED MODELS

Hun:llrn.: 'm-fili.
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surviYor, marry a pi a jp'l!8&amp; deal
younrer tiWI you.

c:

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&amp; silver

W;tm'fl

have a IIUI'\'Ivor

Board said its mail survey of 45,!XXl
farmers In late January and early
February also showed tha t plantings of. some other major cropg .sorghum, bar_ley. oats ancl ~ring
wheat -will beincreasro!roml98t
Cutbacks from last year were
Indicated for soybeans , cotton,
·w inter wheal, rice, peanuts and
tobacco.
The 1984 com crop was planted on
lll.4 million· acres and went on to
produce ~umper yields last falL

.,...

S-10 SHO~TBED. Tech IV, 4 spd. manual . Apple
Red - Price leldtr.
S-10 SHORTBED. V-6. air, automatic, Galuy blu,
&amp; white, 4X4
·
.
S-10 SHORTBED. V-6. 4 spd . manual. red, 4X4

J7.:l, lx•al

1o

I1NI

r;==========;;;

WASHINGTON (1\P) -A mid·
winter survey by the Agriculture
Department s hows that com
farm~rs -intend to boost plantings
this spring to 82 mill(on acres, a 2 .
percent Increase from a year ago.
B ut o!ficia's cautioned that the
actual plantings could tilt some
because some farmers may not
have made up their minds on
whether to c ut back under 1985
acreage programs.
Thedepartment'sCropReporting

S-10 LDNGBED, V-6. automatic , Doeskin tan
S-10 SHORTBED , V-6. 4 spd. manual, Gal~xy blue

GAUIPOllS, OH.

andjolntt.e"lndustrlalarmy:"He- ··-~ ·-'ended up in the river, but did make
By J. SAMUEL PEEPS
· Ftnt Unlled Presbyterian Church,'
It back to dry land eventually.
GALLIPOLIS - Thls Is the where Lew Glshler was the paator.
We notice, too, that Dr. Newsome
month that ol' J. Samuel Peeps
was a musician and was for a tlrl)l! a
lives up to the ol'.:... Peeps will be 77
RAMBLING TYPE of column
member of the 25th Regiment USA
years of age come Feb. 28, wlllch
today, eh? Good thing It snowed, or
band and prpbably the Goens band
also Is the date of the Peepses'
Peeps wouldn 't have had anything
In GallipoliS. He also was active In
wedding.
to reminisce about.
the Knights otPythlas ;~nd attenc!ed
a number of state conventions.
LADY PEEPS. Is t10mewbat
Judging from the newspaper a~ younger ·the ol' 01811, and Ioiii who
counts, the doctor llked to sUp off
sees the Peepees top,&amp;ber CIIIIIIDell&amp;
"':caslonally after a hard day of
fraoldy ttw the old bloke robbed
church and
work and go
the cradle. Let tbat be a le8oon io
Island .
the

It Is Interesting to note that In this . presslve Emancipation Day was ·
same year 1894, parts of Coxey's organized by Dr. Newsome In 1894
labor army came through Galllpo- and It Involved not only blacks but
lis headed for Washington, D.C. most of the prominent w.h itesl.n !he
with the same concerns - the town Including the mayor. A big
hiring of ~heap Immigrant labor parade featuring several car.rtages,
over so-called "native laborers."
tloats, horseback rtcters and the
In June, 1894 when Fry's rontlng· Goens band marched through the
ent of the labor army docked tllelr town.

TRUCKS~~--TRUCKS--- TRUCKS--:--TRUCKS

HARDWARE
SPRING YAUEY PlAZA

As the army pulled out of

446-2411

P. &amp; P.B .• Desert
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C·1.0, V-8, automatic, custom deluxe,
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.
.
.
C-10, V-8, automatic, Silverado, power equipped, silver &amp; Galaxy blue
C-10, V-8. automatic, Scottsdale, air, Lt. blue .
. ~
C-10, V-8. automatic, Silverado, loaded, ~II white
C-10 V·8 automatic, custom deluxe, whete &amp; Apple red
K-10: V-8: automatic, custom deluxe, Doeskin tan &amp; bronze, 414
1
K-10, V-8, ·auto1111tic, Silverado, power equipped, loaded, Lt. blue &amp; Dk.
blue, 4X4
K-10, 6.2 Diesel, 4 spd. manual, custom deluxe, all bla~k. 4X4
·
K-10, 6.2 Diesel, automatlc,'Scottsdale, air, loaded, wh1te &amp; Galaxy blue, 414
K-20, 6.23 Diesel, •utomatic. custom deluxe, hnvy duty, Apple red. 4X4
K-20, V-8 (340), Reg. gas, automatic, custom daluxe, heavy duty, Apple
~.4U
·
·
4X4
K-30. Y·L(4U.)-!!!tO~t!!tic, 1ir, Scottsdale,~~~~ duty, ln_dian bronze, "
EL CAMINO, V-8, .automatic, tilt whHI, cru1se, atr, bed nuls, Lt. blue
1

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StWTtJo flh.Won
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:li 19 Ill tr.l tt l :nl
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Mlni\I"''O,t
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ti, W,HT('fl WP.;II'I'n

"

•SUITS •SWEATERS
•ALL WEATHER COATS
•SPORT COATS •JACKETS
•DRESS SHIRTS
•SPORT SHIRTS

pu; t!Xn'd.

19!1

DI,·Won

~~ho 'f'

lh1nn
llmrl!ll'tl

"
7

"

l&amp;l

Winter assails
Old French
.
.
Newsome was also active In Gallipolis, the town hobo, Galle
rl•ty cl.oo!llae
··ntn
Februarv
soclal·and-polltlcal matt~partleu---Barnett, ~rled to jump on the barge "· ~
ooA&amp;-- ·
Y
" ·
-7 -.-"rockY looking guys."

was entitled: "A double-mind man
Is unstable In au his ways."

Com plantings expected to rise

DR. SHERMAN JORDAN AND Dr. C. E . NeWIIOme used this
hoUIIe at 'l'ldnlaod Pine for a doctor's office. II was buUt aboull&amp;lll for
Da\'ld Ripley. Dr. Newsome perfonned a number of operations In the
baek pan ol the boulle, aod he aloo lel'Ved • the pastor of John Gee
Chapel of the African MetlJodiJt Episcopal Cllurclt at the same time that
he was _a ~- The 'lbne5-Sentlnel building Is a half-block to the
rear of thiA comer bowie.

·-

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

lle was
board the barge
was pulled
John A.M.E. Church In
by the -st.:-amOOat-~. ;J, ~·Guru.ell·!___.,_....,.~ii:ia - as=we:J· o.s ;a p:ra-&amp;Ictiig
and forbade any of the army of over physician.
300 to setfoot In the Old French City.
U you waol to comment; please
The Gallipolis Tribune reported write James A. Sands, Box 92,
that the barge contained two · Clarksburg, Ohio 4.111$.
wagons, four horses and about 300

&lt;

Sprbl,l:lflf.'ld SQtllh, 17·1. V.'i . 81'3\'t 'l'·

AU!o.1l111cn~n - Fikh

..

'

-1, Sl\M', 19-0, 1X':1! H udson YJ.7ti.
Fl'ld u~- .

added to tile rolls and "several
others were at the anxious seat."
One of Dr. Newsome's sermons

.
INTER

PRICE

won from OSU, Wilberforce

away, on Third.
- The· hoose- Itself-dates to abou.t1845 - w!Nm Bavid Ripley ·had It larly lnlffilwhenagreat-dlspute
arose over the bulldlngotthetown's
erected, possibly 'by John Gee and
others. Ripley served as the sheriff
first water system. The builders of
of GaUia County. Alter Ripley tile
the system were accused of brtnghouse 'VaS .used by an a norney
lng In outside cheap labor and not
Joseph Hunt who Is best known .In " using local people. ·
Gallla history as one ot the
Several protest rallies were held
originators of Memortal Day obser- and Newsome was a speaker at
vance in Gallipolis In 1868.
them all. He usually cameupwlth a
Dr. Newsome, who was born in
rather humorous poignant story
Buffalo, N.Y., In 1856, was- a
at:&gt;out a mule. Probably due to the
capable physician and apparently a
involvement of some of the clergy,
flne preacher. We notice from the
an ugly labor uprising, like what hit
1895 Galllpols Trtbune tha.t , In a
some other southern Ohio towns In
held
In

~ALL

,,,..,_
~.

·c.

another black doctor. The 1985
Times -Sentinel Is a halt-block

-=

Mom:h;lll tn&lt;r.&lt;.
.1. Totroo !'&lt;Yin . tiLl. bfotll Totr&lt;lo W11l11'1

n 't'('k

By JAMJoJ:I A. SANDS
Special Correspondent
GAU.IPOUS- One ot the more
Interesting of the former pastors of
·Jo@ Gee AtricatLMethodlst Epls.copai.Churcb In Gallipolis was Dr.
E. Newsome,
who served the
CO!Jgregation In
the 1890s.
Dr. Newsome
was not only a
graduate of '1\'11·
bertorce College
'with a theolo!!lcal education but he
also had adegreefromOhioStateln
medicine. Dr. Newsome's "doctor·tng" office was located In the house
we feature today at Third and

d~grees

f~rldn~· . paitponcd.

Friday's scores

I. T l"t11 HI" Gi\

.I

' f'alrmool Tul •sda,\ ·. JJ;JSI~nro. tx&gt;llt Dil\ "·
101'1 Mt•cKiowdall' 71-~.
:.!. C'Jto\'('land Gll'I"VUII', -11HI, blv.11 C'IC'\~ ­
la~~d .Jotvl Ha;o· R2-ffi. IJt'a l Clr'\'l'ltlnd JoiUJ

•

f'OOJ'&amp;\LI.

lridlan;1 11-t l 'hic·nl!o !ii
POOifiL~ l:!ti, l .t;:llla~ llU
0.'!llt•r Loq. S.111 Ant011io II !~
l'lah ll'.l. I.A Clll)tM'!'~ lfWI

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C'll'\'('l:md 111. Philadt'lph i.J Ill';'

Phu('llix

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ClA..t;.&lt;i AI\A
1, K('lte&gt;r lng Al!l'l', 19-0; VI&gt;. k't'IIN'Ing

1har .tUM' Dd..-..m. Jlllt'ht•r. R:1f a:•l IX•!
liard , lllnridt'r, and llrd i \'ar~m· . lirsl
b.:t!6Tl:Jil , hii\'C' a,~:CfT'C'(i !t1 011("-~va r ('On

.:~Ill
. ~1:.!

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lliRA~-Announl'f'd

-191 11
- ~ ti l!

•'rldu,l· '~ li:lllw ..
1\'t ~·

MOf\'THJ:r\l . f:XPQli-SI)Ulrod ~lt'\'f' !\'1
cusln. ('01C'IW&gt;r. 10 .1 DrW"" ,W'111' f'OnlmM.

·'"'

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W Z7

C(Jf.UMBUS. Ohio t,\PI - How 11!1'
~·
stulr-rnnkC'd hl~~:h
!&lt;C'hOOI boy~&gt; ba!lkC'fball trtlfrui far«!:
A~lalt-d

Dr C. E. Newsome's

.MERCHANQISE

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page C-7

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

iSgiiai-,rnteed._

LEVI'S,
AROUND SUITS

How they fared

to a ont\ \l•a r t'l'llllr:u·t.

Ill'!', outfk•ldl.•r.

l)h·t.....

P~~t·!n,·

rontn1c'!

CINC1NI\,\TI H£DS-SI.._'lln:l F..ckliC' Mil·

-

while he played In 1!*!4. His career
totals were a .m batting average in
2,649 games with 9,m at-bats, 1,6.'10
runs scored, 2,517 hits, 1,3..1 runs
batted In and 6.1\9 stolen bases.
Meanwhile, veteran Tony Perez
will be 'with the Reds again this
spring but as a non-roster player
who will be tryingtomaketheteam .
In

Carpet Cleaner
lifts out ·
deep down
spots and
spills._

man .

San t\nl on~ &gt;
U lah

···a e&lt;:imed"16wu rejx&gt;fie~wnat'fiiS ..

h.:&gt;st. "Dry"

t lt l('A( ;O CL'HS-i\nnoul'\('(-d lhf' rNli~ ­
nal lon o1 fln(l1'11\l.' MrKml'\a . Uxlrd diilll'·

19 •

'! I .'

chances are good . real ,;~~ , .
his chances are bettei than a lot of ·
guys. At the same time. he can't ·
make·an out every atbat,elther,and
I think Tony knows that and wants It
that way." ·
· Perez last year hit .241, 33-for-137,
and was seventh In the National
ln
at .289.

CARPETS
DIRTY?

r-.i; ltioruiii.A·~ ·

11'1,

.~&gt;fOI

he sees something wrong on the
sidelines or In thedugout,lhopehe'll
tell me,'' Rose said. "In that respect,
we'll take a lot of advice from hinn."
Officials announced Frtday that
Morgan wlll serve' in 1985 as color
commentator with play-by-play
a nnouncer Ken Wilson on Cincinnati
television st a lion WLWT, which wlll
broadcast 47 Reds games. Morgan

«l op. &lt;~lll l Tnmm.,· MrC;n1ro and Mll&lt;' h
.John.'&gt;On. PiiC'hC'r'-

~·t'l'll Ulv l.lvn

Om\'t·r

rtF:r&gt; .

(40-man llrniO. of course.
Bergesch indicated that a good
spring-training performance by
Perez would mean a spot on the
'25-man roster come Opening Day.
"U Tony hits the way he did at the.
end of last season, we'lLhave a spot
for him ," Bergesch said. ·
To clear a place on the roster, the
Reds must make a tradeorrele~;~sea
player.
.·
Player-Manager Pete Rose says
Perez's chances of llelng with. !he
team Opening Day, April ·8. $re

,q.:mmt •n1l-- with llll•nn Hotfmun . si'llrt

~I ,

..!llli 111

:a :n
Ji :r,

/\ 11:ml .&gt;

-

February 17. 1986

general_manager~~~r ~ter Is full

walk by the bOOth EVery day without
Associated Pres8 Writer
stopping by the field ."
CINCINNATI tAP) - Former
Morgan said he has no Interest In
Cincinnati Reds star Joe Morgan Is being a major-league manager or
coming back to the city this season coach. He ended a :»year, bigas a television commentator tor league career by retiring from the
Reds games, but Cincinnati Player- Oakland A's after the l!BI season.
Manager Pete Rose says he would
He said he thinks today's young
still welcome Morgan's advice.
players · lack Incentive to excel
Rose, an old teammate of because of blg-inoney contracts.
Morgan's on Cincinnati's "Big Red
Morgan was chosen most valuaMachine" teams of the mid-l!Yltls, ble player for the Reds In 1975 and
praised Morgan on Friday as a 1976, was the National League's
savvy baserunner and a student of · rookie of the year in 19ffi with
base
1he_ .leading

salary will be, but said he is taking
.. , _ th_e. jnh ~au.~ he loves ha~.b:a 11 ,
not for the salary.
Morgan, 41, told a news conferADDISON - Registration are
·
ence, " lt' sgoingto be hard lor me to
now being accepted for teams
wishing to !}artlcipate in the second
annual Ohio Valley Rlnky Dink
Basketball Tournament. The tournament, held at AddavUle Elementary School just north of Gallipolis, ·
. will showcase rinky dink and biddy
ball basketball teams from the
tri-state area.
Participants In the tournament
Don't soak them
must have played on a rlnky dink or
wlttJ_water.
biddy txlll team this past season
and must not have had their 13th
birthday before Sept. 1; 1985.
No entry lee Is required h this
single elimination tournament. The
tournament will be open to a
maximum of 32 teams with regis!rations being filled on a first-come
first-served !)asis.
To register a team or to Inquire
further Information contact Gary
. Phillips, Tournament Director, at
446-3289 or 367-7283. Deadline for
• Nothing else Is so easy,
entry into the area's showcase of
so effective.
youth talent Is March 1.
• Has lust the right
amount of moisture to
dissolve and absorb din.
• Quicker, easier, more
convenient than wet
· R~D action brief
methods. Furniture does
not have to be moved.
• Carpets may be walked
GALLIPOLIS- Only two games
on Immediately.
were played in the Gallipolis
• No other way gets
carpets cleaner.
Rinky-Dink basketball league last
• Non·toxlc.
week before the heavy snow fell .
• Recommended by
Clay's girls downed the Rio Wild·
leading carpet makers.
cats, 34-6. Wendy Fraley had 16 for
the winners. Stephanie Varney had
two for the losers.
·
The Rio Rebels downed Ihe
Nuggets, 16-14, in airother girls
_game. Lisa Bickle a nd Kinn Bloo-mer-had fiveapiece-fo.r t~...».'L'1ner.s-.

I

•, - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

:_:.· f

February 17. 1985

.

... 6 0 310

Tares- as"-saml'
= fresh water fishing In the world.
• The cost of such an excursion might

-~

Name Joe ~organ Reds TV
.
.
'
'
an~ounc_~r;_ ~erez__to -=try out_

·svAC cage

Spring hear and
__,____ fis~~g-_in -C~a&lt;Ja
By TOM BELVIUJ!:

---.--

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

new~

Wildlife

.

~ 992-6614

FOI QUAUTY GUARANTEED AUTO &amp; TIUCI SERVICE

JE !\AVE

CHAN OED

....

•
"'~ AND

OED FOR THE BEST•

c:

I
I
I

301 E. MAIN ST.

POMEROY, OHIO

i

992-6614

"'Q

...

. ~.

h

• .

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......... "'

...

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·.
February 17, 1981'

State/ ational

"it'imt•· ~entiattt

Section ~

February 17, 1986

Goventor, others testi on.. industry

14llet•.•4

U6·
__ Ctllitol h.
- ,h~t

Iw )\11\IM'I-~11\"'
-\

.••

~w,

CLEVELAND (AP) -The state of Ohio Is working
closely with other Great Lakes states to find a source .
of capital for the machine tool Industry, a state
development official says.
·
•
The purpose, G. Raymond Lorello told an Ohio
House panel, "is to directly address a critical lack" In
the financial markets of "long-term capital on stable
and · affordable terms to smaller manufacturing
firms, so that these firms become techl\ologlcally
competitive."

Governors' Commission on the Machine Tool
Industry, which Gov. Richard Celeste chairs.
The House committee on Economic Development
and Small Business, chaired by state Rep. Rocco
Gololllia, D-Brook Park, Is trying to come up with
ways to put the recommendations to work.
The report rioted that the machine tool industry has ·
particular financing needs becaUS(' thE! Industry Is so
sensitive to business cycles, making debt financing
difficult. Equity
Is equally difficult because
risk diluting the

Lorello said one possibility Is a form of Business and
Investment Development Corporation, a Ca_ltfornia
fi1131]Cial Institution that Is state-chartered and
non-profit. The BIDCO lends money,leases property,
guarantees loans, or serve as a balding company for a
particular industry.
·T he committee tncludl'(l representatives ,from
Illinois, Indiana, Mlchlgan, Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Ohlo, according to testltnony from Jai)'M's A. Gray ,
president of the . National Machine Tool BuUders '
Association, Is
for about aJ

twa;thirds of the nation's metal-working machlnery
plants are in the Great lAkes, the commission said.
Machine tools are power-driven machines that cut,
shape or form metal. They are used in almost all other
manufacturtng.
Celeste, Gray and Lorello stressed the Importance
of a petition !lled early in 1983by the trade association
· with the Secretary of Comnlerce under the national
security clause of the 1962 Trade Act.
The petition alleges that Imports of machine tools
sEcurtty
machines are

recommendations made last year by the Great Lakes

··· Angela~· Davis

says Reagan
sparks .Communist ·inlere.~_t

activist Angela Davis believes that
Reagan Is so anti-Communism
., th~L-RQ!ll!l&lt;!f. cDnt'@tlon of si\K!enJs there must be somethlilg positive
being less politically active than In
aoou!Us:-·~-the 1900s Is incorrect.
Ms. Davis said the United States
"There is less activism, butlthlnk should recognize that the Soviet ·
there Is a more sophisticated Union has no unemployment, restconsciousness and .what's nel'ded I dents pay no more than five percent
think are more efforts to actually ofthelr income for rent, that women
orxanlze this sympathy. The· free
have virtually free child care that is
SouthAfricamovementlscertainly accessible 24 hours a day, and
catalyZing a tremendous move· students have supplies and lodging
ment, not only in student s," she said.
provided for them when pursuing an
Ms. Davis, who was the vice education.
She blasted the Reagan admlnis·
presidential nomlneeo!theCommutratlon for "racist assaults and
. nlst Party USA ln19Siand1!m, told
a ..ni'Ws,. conlen;nce Fridav. sbe a"!aults · on wqrklng people," the
believes people may be - more ,. ;,interislfiectoppresston of women,'' ...
receptive to the Communist party and "highlyreactlonarypollcles"of
· today than they were in1969, thanks , intervention In South Africa, Nica·
partly to ·President Reagan.
,ragua, and El Salvador.
" Reagan has made such a big
Ms. Davis, the founder of the
issue out of Communism that they
NatlonaJ Alliance Against Racist

'---~y·n--~~:.tad-Pr-.a;; ..·- .·~··

·:;ne-'fclid an- aurliffi&lt;X ol 'irfci'ii~""
hundred that the black political
movement'had paved the way !or
the anti-war movement, student
protests, women's liberation, and
groups such as S('Dior citizens,
homosexuals and the ecology
movement.
Ms. Davis,whohadfol1)'lerlybeen
on the FBI's 10 Most Wanted i tst
and wai; acquitted1n1972ofcharges
of murder, kidnapping and conspiracylnconnectlonwlthacouriroom
shootout that left four people dead,
denounced iiie death J'l'flalty as '·'a
racist weapon."
She said thatofthemoretban1,400
inmates on death row, 586areblack,
7~ are Latin, 14 are :mtlve
American, !l'ld five are Asian.

University withdraws
·~ honorary· degree offer

..........

Higher rates
lead to rush
on post offices

.·

WASHINGTON (AP) - Educa- positlon ... coutcf be so)ll{~nsttlve to
lion Secretary William J. Bennett the needs of higher education and to
won't be receiving an honorary 'studentswhorequtreftnanclalald ,"
degree from the University of the wrote McCaffrey.
"I find· your views to be directly
Paclflc' because the school's pres!dent says Bennett disparaged contrary tot hose held bymeandour
students and slighted prtvate unlverslty .... We ~Imply cannot hecolleges.
nor a person holding these views,"
Stanley E. McCaffrey, theunlver- said tbe preslllent of the private,
slty's president, ·wrote Bennett to 6,00J.student scbOOI In Stockton,
withdraw an offer of an honorary Calif.
Bennett said that for a college
· degree, saying he was "shocked"
and offended by the secretary's president dealing In "the l;ll3rket·.
JClmarks that some students might place of Ideas," he found some of
have to forgo such luxuries as those words "a little chilling."
stereos,carsandbeachvacatlonsto
"I certainly will not come. They
makeupforlostfederalaid.
don't have to worry about that. I
·''McCaftrey, whose Institution wouldn't think of coming then -or
tuition;'""' anytim~n. ·- said

SHOCKED AT EDUCATION
SECRETARV'!l INSENS1'11V·
ITY TO STUDEN1S - staaley
E. McCaUrey, president o! the
University of Paclllc In Stock·
ton, Call!., look offense at
Education Secretary WIUII!fll J.
Bennett's "Insensitivity" to·stu·
dents during his recent """ark
that ~ otudents would have
lo forego stereos, cars and beach
vacatkl111 to make up for lol!lt
federal , ald. Mc~aUrey withdrew an Invitation to Bennett to
speak and recel.ve an honorary
degree at the unlvel'!lity's conve&gt;catlon May U, saying, "I find
your views to be directly ·contrary to thOse held by me and oor
unlver.olty." (AP Lase~hoto) .

displayed insensitivity to the needs professor.
Bennett, who took-office Feb. 6,
of mlddle-incor:ne students who
w311t to attend private universities . said Monday the student .aid cuts
Bennett 'said Friday the degree would force some families already
.was "theirs to offer. It's theirs to strUggling to pay for college "to
revoke." But he added, "I don't tlghtenthebeltevenfurtber." Buthe
think it's a particularly good day for added that some students simply
the University of tbe Pacific, would have to accept "dlvestlfureof
frankly ."
certain sorts - stereo divestiture,
Bennett told The . Associated automoblle . divestiture, three·
·Press he was "a Utile dismayed" by weeks-at-the-beach dlvesllture .... It
some of McCaffrey's remarks In the wlll, like the rain, fall on the just and
letter . rescinding the invitation to unjust alike."
speak and receive an honorary
Mc(;;affreysald morethanhalfhis
degree at a university convocation students receive federal aid and
May24.
- nearly2,!XXJwouldbeaffectrobythe
Bennell had said It was more Reagan administration cutbacks.
Important for the government to
Those proposals, if put Into effect,
help poor students attend some would deny Guaranteed Student
college than toglveothers the choice Loans to students from families with
of attending expensive Institutions.
Incomes above $32,500; cut off Pell
Grants !or those earning a hove
"I find It hard to comprehend that $25,00J; and put a$4,00J.per·student
one In your vitally lml_X)rtant cap on all forms of ald.

Patient 'perfect' for implant .

LOUISVD..LE, ~Ky. (APJ _
FriendS and relatives watched
Murray p. Haydon "wasting away"

PREPARING FOR HEART

IMPlANT- Loulavllle l'l!llldenl
MU~TQ P. lfardeon, a reilred

.. ----

..

.

-

J

-~- _JI

-~-

'

truck aaeembly Une worker, II
aw&amp;Wnl an artlllclal heari
Jmpllllll operation at Hoanana
HMpltal Audaban. Doclors ti8J
be e~~~~'t Jve wllhold the p1Mt1c
and · melal pump . ( AP

LaaeJ1Ihoto ),

until his falling heart prompted the
retired autoworker to volunteer for
the third artificial heart Implant Into
a human being, scheduled for

Food and Drug Administration to
perform the operation.
Haydon was admitted to Humana
HospitaJAudubononWednesdayfor
further
and was selected

real bad
was getting ready to die," said his
cardiologist, Dr. Jerome Lacy. "He
and the family said, 'Is this It? Is
there anything else we can do?"'
Haydon, 58, -of LouisvWe, Is
sCheduled to undergo the expertmental operatiOn ~ay morning
at Humana Hospital Audubon.
where Dr. William C. DeVries will
Implant the Jarvlk-7 mechanical
heart.
,
Haydon's wife of 32 years,
Juanita, and their three children
support tbedeclston.
"We were hoping for anything,"
said hls daughter, Diana Haydon
Welsh. "A,II u\e kids just want their .
dad alive!'
I'edrklden and winded by the
slightest movement, "he began to
feel himself wasting away" when
his medication proved ,lnetfectlve,
Lacy said.
· . Lacy contacted Humana Heart

Inc.
Haydon could expect to live Jllst
"a matter or days" without the
plastic and metal heart, which Is
powered by a 323-pound drive
system connected to the patient by
air tubes, Irvine said.
Uke the first two artificial heart
recipients, Barney Clark and WU·
Uam J. ~hrOeder. Haydon suffers
from dilated cardiomyopathy, a
disease cllaracferlzed by enlargementoftheheartmuscleanddllated
ventricles.
But the first two also had other
medical problems, and Haydon
does not.
"His heart Is his only real
problem," Lacy said Friday. "He is
just the perfect candidate."
·
Clark, fi2, lived 112 days before
dying of clrc1.ilatOry collapse after
multi-organ system failure. Clark
also suffered from chronic respiratory problema. He received his
!.'!'.plant !!I tbl&gt; llnlwrsUy of Utah.
where DeVries worked unWAugus1
wben he came to LoulsvWe.

. lndttntD lnf,:srnnthrull And J.IAwtnn

by-Devr!;.;; ·

;;;~t;rv~ed 'F;t;:-9

the only surgeon authorized by the

Postal carriers reported bulging
bags In Boston, Little Rock and Los
. Allgeles this week, and sales of
two-cent stamps were booming as
the days of the 20-cent letter
dwindled to one. But sane Post
Offices reported barely a ripple of
anticipation.
First class po&lt;tage· goes up to 22
cents on Sunday.
In Los Angeles. mail volume
Increased. this week by more than
100 percent, and. postal workers
were working four hours of overtimeonSaturday to keep up with the
antlclpat~ load.
~
..
.
"We're noting a bigtncreaseslnce
Wednesday. mostly in business
mall. what you would reiPr to as
junk mail," said Larry Dozier,
public relations specialist for the
U.S. Postal Service in Los Angeles.
"The letter carriers going out
have been delivering a lot of mall, so
it seems Uke a lot of businesses are
tryJng to capitalize on the current
rate," said Lisa DeVincenzo, a U.S. .
PostOHices;x:&gt;.keswoman In Boston.
One doWntown Boston post office
sold 80.!XXJ twa:cent stamps this
week, she said, compared to5,00Jin
a normal week. _.
"But we can handle it," she said.
"There are a lot of stamps in
Boston."
"We almost have more mail than
, we can handle," Don Jones,
postmaster In Little Rock, Ark., said
by telephone Friday. "I think our
mail volume this week is a good 60
percent above the same week last
year."
Jones theorized thattheimrntnent
'tncre35(' in rates ~prompted . more
•:• .,.... :. ·sweethearts to exchange ValenANGELA DAVIS - Black Activist Angela Davis blasted the
tine's Day cards. "We don't count
administration during an appearance at Wript · State
Valentines. but the mail looked
·""-"-''·- u.e-aaminiSiration~suppltss'•unuf--'Wum-m~·
'MeFi'his")'P"aF,J-ilt" satd. --

Escaped American hostage
reported in good _condition
FRANKFURT, West Germany!
(AP i. Kidnapped Amertcan
journalist Jeremy Levin, who said
he was "treated miserably " during
his 11 months in solitary confine·
m ent in Lebanon, is In good health
and there Is no reason to delay his
return home, the U.S. AlrForcesald
Saturday.
However, Levin will not txleavlng the Air Force Regional
Medical Center in Wiesbaden Satur·
day and no departure time has been
established. according to an Air
Force statement.
Levin, 52, was admittro to the
hospital for a routine checkup late
Friday after arriving at the U-S. Air
Force's Rhein-Main Air Base In
Frankfurt from Damascus, Syria,

aboard an exec4tive jet chartered
by Cable News Network.
Levin was Cable News Network's
Beirut bureau chief when he was
snat ched off a ~treet in Moslem west
Beirut last March 7. Theshadowy,
extremist group, Islamic Holy War,
claimed responsibility for the abduction, and said it had released
Levin.
He said he had escaped from his
captors, and did not know who they
were; he never saw their laces.
'
In Beirut,
an anonymous caller
cla iming .to represent the under·
ground organization told The Associatec:jPress by telephone that It had
sentepced to death one of four other
missing Americans it claims to be
holding hostage. The call could not
be verified, and theca llerdid not say

REVNrl'ED WITH FAMILY- Jeremy tevlll,
Na;.-;;;a.:.,-:, left. waves a.8..er he
, was Rift by his wife Lucille, daulhler Clare and son
~.a-=..-1;'--a-:! ~.8.

'

which American had been sent·
enced to death.
"Mr. Levin is in good hea lth and
there shOUld be no reason to curtail
his return to the United States,'' Air
Force spokesman .. Lt . Col. BUI
Johnson told The Associated Press
by telephone from the Wlesbaden
hOSpital.
He was quoting a medical bulletin
Issued by Col. David C. Lohr, a
physician at the Wiesbaden
hOSpital.
Johnson said Levin's departure
date for home had not been fixed. "It
is firm, however, that his departure
will not be Saturday," he quoted the
Air force statement as saying.
The statement said Levin would
not meet the p!'('Ss before returning
to the United States.

Clarence upoa arrtvll at tile Jlbeln.Mala Air FCII'ft

nl!hl.

~ hMe Friday
Levin was Jddn ....... .,llt!!!WI!!!!t
~b and escaped from capUvJty. (.!\I' I
!
h).

rra

••

�~- ====:::::::=~

February 17,

rmes-Sentinel

The

Goodyear:_ siatistics__detailed

activities for numerous school and
community organizations - she
relished having control over her
own schedule. She had taught
school for several years, quitting
only when her children were born.
"Teaching was .g reat, but I'd miss
!he freedom I couldhave In my own ....
business," Dailey said.
... ' 1 'Seas0lur--·ureeuitgs~=,rorrr=·rne" ...,._,. , ... ~ Bcfv,c-~u.-.. ,t""i~ l'c. . ~®{'~F -=~
Smiths" and "Dalton High Tigers,"
Dalley visited other sign manufac·
•• nn:l"llll' ,.,....
&amp; • AT 'r.V"'.h lP .. Tr.l a .,.,:,
.1.1..
W
for
~.s!~l!ce.
_
ture~. including a majOJ:'_com~y
•••.au vuuu. l'Sl"':.. ..·vu w a~tu\1.3-vVi'fnuY'-'V.uDU.J:-;c:t-uiigbi'i.lly
"We
believe
there's
a
market
for
located
&lt;in Alabama. She...coliecled
ofGallipolls,wasrecentlyrerognmidbyBobEvansF~fo;25yearsof
this
product,"
says
Dalley
as
she
Information
on parts and cons!·
service with the company, Daniel E. Evans, chalnnan of the board and
sits In her new office surrounded by dered size, shape, construction
chief executive omcer, malies the presentation. Jolmson Is secretary for
the white plastic cases and designs
materials, mold costs, decoration
the company'ssau""guales division In Columbus. TheGa!UaAcademy
of signs she hopes to manufacture.
and olher !actors.
IBgh School graduate joined the linn In 1959.
"First, because people have
"We felt the ·10 by 10 rectangle
always responded to the sign Dan would give us !les!biHty. l can use
gave me," she explains. "And !he same shape and size for various
secondly, because I've worked with occasions and promotions, and I
'
volunteer organizations since l was can hang It on a wall or stand it on a
Akron.
AKRON, Ohio (AP) -Despite a
in
high school: P'ros, PTAs, Twigs, shelf," she said.
·
Goodrich earned $60.6 million or
fourth-quartet loss of $7.2 million,
you
name
it.
And
these
.
g
roups
are
The
vacuum-formed
cases
are
$2.52 a share in 1981 on sales of $3.4
the B.F. Goodrich Co. had a sharp
always looking for a good . new
being produced In Columbus and
billion.
Increase In earnings for 1984
prcduet
to
se!!.''
silk-screened
ln. Athen,s_,. Signs.w.W
'Trtat compares With i983 nei··
compared wiih ·the previous year,
Dailey
is
taking
orders
for
the
be
assembled
at Personal Signs'
income of $18.4 million m· 68 cPnts a ·
the company t.as reported.
her
Jnnova·
headquarters.
personalized
signs
at
The Improved 1981 profits camp In share on sales of $.12 billion.
So far, husband Dan and sons
The improvement in overall ~ionCenteroffice.Butshe'sprimar·
spite of a $12 million pre-tax loss !hat
ily
selllhg
them
through
an
Ohio
David,
14, and Michael, 10, have ·
earnings was attributed to better
caused the drop in Goodrich's
Gamma
been
very
supportive. They helped
University
sorority,
Alpha
performance in the specialty chemifourth-quarter performance. The
Delta.
move
office
furniture, cases of
cals and tire businesses. which are
company bl~p1ed the loss on the
She hopes to rely on similar plastic signs and otrer paraphernatwo of the five segments of the
costs of plfasing out industrial
·
groups
- particularly band boos· lia Into Personal Signs' headquar·
corporation.
rubber prD9ucts manufacturing in
ters, athletic hooster clubs· ·and
ters last weekend. Many aspects of
youth groups - to sell her other the business have been the subject
designs later lii tfie spring.
of !amlly discussions; and one son
Called "'Lovf Lights," the valen· took a prototype sign to a schoOl
tine signs are ~&lt;Hhch by 1Q.Inch and dance to get feedback from his
·
,decorated with a heart silk- classmates.
1969 in its management training screened on the front of each sign.
"They're reaily pleased that
CHESHIRE - Three employees
program at Baltimore, Md., a nd "Love Lights" can be personalized Mom's doing· something on her
at Ohio Valley Electric Corp.'s
Kyger Creek plant recently rewas assigned a year later to with the name of the couple: "BUI own," Dailey explains.
ceived the company's anniversary
Cleveland as an internal auditor. He
a'\'ard !or-30 years of service.
worked In a number. of positions in
Presentations were made by
Chessle's finance department until
LoutsR.FordJr.,plantmanager,to
January 1979, when he became
Charles E . Fields; Crane operator;
assistant to the president of Beckett
t.
Freddie L. Moore, assistant shift
Aviation, one of the subsidiaries of
operating engineer; and Jack H.
CSX Corp., of which Chessie is a
Shiflet, assistant shift operating
unit.
engineer.
Hawk , 40, rejolnedChessieayear
GALLIPOLIS - In spite of · most or the area, tre !rigid spell
Fields joined OVEC on Jan. 17,
later as staff assistant to the senior near-record cold, Columbia Gas started in the middle of January,"
1955, as a coal haridler. He
vice president of finance in Cleve- has maintained full service to Koebel explained. "l do. want to
progressed through !he vartous
land, and ayPar lateqnoved into the customers without any significant &amp;tress that natural gas rates have
classlftcations In the yard depart·
operating department..
disruption anywhere.
Increased very little In the past

LilttLlPGLiS- Dr. Roberfii Terry, ~JaCKsOn""?ik~allipoiis,
wa s one of 300 optometrists attending the recent taU educational
conference at SawmUI Creek Lodge, Huron, Ohio.
Sixty-four hours of continuing education were conducted by 16
speakers at thP conferPRCP.

~

Keiser declares dividend
Cal~.-

OAKLAND,
A regular quarterly dividend of 15 cents per
share has been declared by Kaiser Aluminum &amp;Chemlcal Corp. on Its
common stock.
,
The dividend is payable Feb. :18; 1985, toshareholdersofrecordFeb.
8.
Regular quarterly dividends on Kaiser's preference stocks,
payable March 1 to shareholders of record Feb. 8, wprealsodeclared
as follows:.
$1.03Y, per share on the 4Y, percent cumulative convertible
preference stock; $1.18\1 per share on the 4\1 percent cumulative
convertible (1957 seril'S) preference stock; $1.18% pershareonlhe4'\l
percent cumulative convertible (1959 series) preference stock;
$1.18'% per share on the 4"-' percent cumulative convertible (1966
series) preference stock; $1.3125 per share on the $5.25 cumulative
convertible (1984 series 1preference stock.

.

M U lttme

d. ,

Ul S

~

L......_

Area personnel file

Columbt.a Gas servi·ce
k ept up tn
• wea h er

,
d
earnlngs OWn

GREENVILLE, S.C. - Unaudlteil earnings of $33,688,000 ·were
r&lt;&gt;eorded for Multimedia Inc. In 19&amp;1, compared to$35,174,000 in 1983,
repotted Walter E. Bartlett, president and chief executive officer.'
Total revenues tor 1984 were $3)4,360,())), up 13 percent over 1983
...

T1o

Goodrich earnings inc~ease

coordinator appointed

FORT WORTII, Texas- Joseph D. Sobsey r&lt;&gt;eently joined Tandy
CDI"P•'s Radio Shack division to manage the company's efforts in the ·
cPIIular mobile telephone and paging fields.
SQbsey will coordlnatP the company's programs, Including new
product'"'procurement and the n1erchandising Cii"'id:· marketiug of
Radio Shack telephone products.
He was previously employed by Stephens Engineering Associates
in Seattle, Wash., Motorola lnc. and the New York State Senate.

i

$202,000.sought
for drug probes

Road.
The sign was the Inspiration for
Dailey's new business, Personal
Signs, located at Ohio University's
Innovation Center. Starting with a
valentine sign she is markoting
n6w, Dailey plans to seU an array of
small electrified signs , The face
designs and greetings will vary:
"Bill's Room," "Jan's Kitchen,"

OAK HILL - Employees of Boggs Pest Control Inc., llO Boggs
Road, Oak Hill , attended !he recent 49lh annual Purdue University
pest control conference.
E .C. Boggs, Steven E. Boggs and Jerry L. Boggs were among900
people from 36 states and several foreign &lt;;ountries attending the
conference, where many aspects of pest control technology were
covered .
-.

~roduct

'

ATHENS A large rectangular - Loves Mary," !of' example.".
white plastic sign sits 1n a window In
The Ughts can be hung on a waD
the corner of ·Kit Dalley's new or placed on a sbelf or desk and can
business.
serve as a nightllght. They sell tor
Beartng two hearts pierced by an $20 and are more permanent !han
arrow, a jaunty cupid and the !lowers, DaUey says, polntlngtotbe
legend, "Dan Loves Kit," tre sign 23-year-old model in the window.
was a gtfl !rom Dailey's husband,
Thenewentrepreneursetupshop
then her college sweetheart, wben at the IMovation Center, a small
she was a sophOmore at Miami business Incubator that provides
University.
. low-overhead space and support .
lt first drew attention when she · services to fledgilng business, after
hung It In her dormitory roo.m; · researching her project for almost
years later, It eliCited admiring two years. Shr considered several
comments from friends who saw It other options,· lncludln!i! taking a
Job.
Kit

API'LE GftOVE , W.Va. - Employees at Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rublier Co.'s Point Pleasant plant earned $10.2 mllllon In 1981, said
Jim Carver, the plant manager.
Average employment remained level at 459, he added .
Carver said the plant contributed to the local economy through the
purchase of goods and services totalling $12.8 million from 237
businesses within a 50-mile radius of the facility.
.
.
The plant paid more than $1.5 million IIi local and state taxes in
1984.
Tile plant also com!lle!ed the safest year in hlst~ry. Six months
were accident-free, Carver said..

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

February 17. 1986

Sign· business locat~d
at Innovation Center ·

Business Briefs:

=-=-

1985

tncrease over
s \Rl recorif'"__ _
"Narcotics cases worked by
agents increased from 21.5 during
the 1982-1983 biennium to a projectfd
710 cases by the end of the 1984-191!5
biennium," be said.
Altbough BCllsn't asking for any
more agpnts, 11 would like $164,()))
!or them to use over the next two
years as drug bUy money.
Paul Ferrara, the BCl ·superln·
tendent, said there isn't enough .
money lor.such ~XJrposes at present.
"We have Increased 247percent In
two years In drug cases that we've
from215to

COLUMBUS; Ohio (AP)
"Chaz,"theflrst narcotics detection
dog In the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identtflcation and lnvef!tlgatlon,
. soon may have a four-legged
partner to help him take a bite our~
crime.
Atty. Gen. AnthonyCelebreu.eJr.
is asking the General Assembly !or
$14,500to buy and maintain a second
drug-sniffing dog and to train the
handler.
·
The money Is part of
In
· expanded funds sought by CeJe.
brezze to help combat Ulegal
the-state

acr

Sm,soo

"Chaz" is only one part of that
effort. But Patrick Garrity, the
attorney general'sexecutlveassist·

(also) hasgoneup,"Ferrarasa!d.
"Wehavehadtostop,sometlmes,
short of large Investigations IJe.

ant,toldaHouseFlnancesubcom·
mittee the dog has compUed an
impressive record since joining
state
servicethe
on June
15,1984.period
six-month
"During

causeweranoutofmoney,"hesald.
·Ferrara said BCl agents PRter
such cases only at the request of
local
authorities.
"We
don't do anytliing unless

fromJunel through0ecen)herJ ,
1
5

we're . requested

the local

of the reserve and varsity hwlketbaU teams, cheerleaders

v·ol.u nteer·s a1•d
ByDIANEM.· BALK
Assoclatedl'ressWrlter

_

_

_

·

· -

$125,319,())); newspaper revenues totaled $100,!m,OXI, compared with
$90,6.'i8,000; and cablevision revenues were $66,046,0XI, compared
with $53,179,())). Operating profit increased 15 percent from
$70,043,000 In 1983, to $80,824,())) in 1981.
Bartlett said Sports Time, a cable pay channel in which Multimedia
is a P!'rtner, accounted for the decline in earnings.
During 1984, approximately $6 million, after tax, or 36 cents per
s hare, was charged off the company's entire share of losses from
Sports Time. No further losses will occur in 1985 or future years.
1\'el.earnings for the fourth qu~rter ended Dec ..31 were $9,440,000;.
compared · with $ll,OOO,OOO. Revenues for the three months were
$83,898,1XX), versus $74,018,000, a 13 percent increase. Earnings per
s ha rp were56 cents versus 67 cents for the quarter. Sports Time losses
recorded during the quarter were approximately $2,:nl,OXI after tax,
or 14 cents per share.
·
•
Muliimedia'sBoardofDirectorslncreasedthequarterlyd!vidend
!rom 15 cents to 16 cents per share. The first quarter dividend is
payable Feb. 15, 1985, to sharehOlders of record Feb. 1.

can',! affgrd P!"Qt~lonal help In
coping with !he annual chore of
Nineteen additional BCl drug feelings with local police and
calculating income taxes. Now, the
;,gents hired over the last two years damage an Investigation.
. Volunteer Income Tax Assistlfnce
also have Pl"9Ven their worth.
Although some of the drug buy program is gearing up for the 1985
Garrity said they assisted local money Is eventually recovered,
onslaught.
law enforcement agencies in seizing Ferrara said it goes Into a different
narcotics wilh an estimated street state account and is not made
The program, administered by
·
the Internal Revenue Service, is .
value of $40.5 m!Uion, a 100 percent available for BOuse again
aJmed primarily at helping !he poor,
elderly, handicapped and non· English speaklngpeoplefigurethelr
taxes.
.
•
, Those Interested In VITA help or
In helping prepare 1040, 104().A or
• 104().~ retuiJIS for . th~ VITA
program can call H0)-424-1040 for
more lnfonnatlon.
By OLD COUNTRY JAKE
can recall.
Help for other taxpayers ts
• GALLIPOLIS -Shorty Rocchi
Fred Foster had taken over the
available 'through regular Internal
had worked for Oscar Bastlan!for a old Harmony creamery building
Revenue SerVice brochures and
number of years, .but aboutl925 or and ran a dairy; he also pasteurized
through the Ohio Department of
1926 he worked !or himself; he went
milk and hauled it to Huntington.
Taxation,
at 1-!ro-282-1'180.
down the street In the same block ·
VIctor i&gt;llday and Sons also ran 1\
Bernice Weaver, 65, of Dayton,
and opened a pool room and bot dog dairy and each peddled their milk
stand - a success from the door to door In Gallipolis.
beginning.
In tre period l!!ID-1925 you saw
Tablt's-Department Store was on · . more Modei- T-Fords and Chev·
the northwest corner of Second . rolets t~an any other car, but the
Avenue and Court Street. Tabit was · big cars a~ound town were Hudson
an astute businessman and had
Super Six, Big Six Studebaker,
various stores plus a broom
Buick, Hupmobtle, Patge and
By JOHN C. RICE
factory; later he put up a ootel on
Cadillac; only one Packard l can
Extension Agent
the site of the department store recall owned by Col. John L, Vance
Agrtculture, Meigs County
after It burned.
or one of his sons.
POMEROY -Workmen's ComAt the upper end of the park was
Swtmntlni In the Ohio River at pensation ... The Ohio Workers'
the Park Central Hotel; It is owned
lhe east end of· Cedar Street and
Compensation Law provides proand operated by Mr. and Mrs.
cJtlwnthebankwasafavolilesport
tection for all workers who are
Alfred Arnold; there were not any
In the swnmer months.
injured on the job and frees the
motels at that time.
Of course, many of the yqunger
employer from liability for such
It must have been about 1921 or
boys preferred to go skinny dipping
Injuries.
1922 when a widely publicized
In Chickamauga Creek back of
Every person, firm and private
murderwascommittedlnthebotel. . Washington School or at the saw
corporation that hires one or more
There was one furniture factory
yard bole below the bridge going
workers, regardless of pay, is
and one chair factory at that time;
down the riv!"r.
required to carry workers' compena Iso there was a t 0 bacco
Omar O'Dell had the largest
sation insurance.
warehouse.
planing mUI and lumber yard
When two farmers agree to

-over11.58a,.,.,;'"-Garriiy-saKi. ~

:=JAJt?J"""itluHy--bw.~cruU.:i", Ci:JU5e

h'lild

Back in '25, Shorty had pool
~m,_ popJilar hot d.!Jg stand

'

• WINNERS' REWARD8 - Award-winning consentatlonltlt Frank
"Buzz" MDis ID of Crown Clly relaxes a&amp; tile Wigwam Rellort Hotel,
Utcltlleld, Park, Aliz. He waa 111110111108 reprtlleii&amp;Mives o1
place
CQIIIC!I'Va&amp;iondllll;ttdlln llte37Ut u.al GoodyearCoa8ervatlonAwlll'ds
who partHpMMln a VIICII&amp;IoiHiudy lour of GoodyearFanns and other
points of lnlemlt In the Phoenix area.

nne

. CLEVELAND - Dale R. Hawk
has beennamedgeneralmanagerof
the-western Division Business Unit ·
of Qlessle Systeni Railroads.
Hawk succeeds Robert L.Stender
in !hat position, headqua'"lered in
Cinclltnatt. Stender has been promoted to vice presldentcimerchandlse sales.
Hawk has been division manager
of Chessle' s Akroii DlViston since
February 1984. He joined Chesste In

JOINS HEADQYARTERS
STAFF-WeudySbnms,above, ,
daugh&amp;er of Mr. and Mrs. Jay
Simms, lonnerly of GaUipolls,
has Joined the sta!f of Headquarters by JUIIIllia, 313 Third Ave.,
Galllpolls, u a hair ~~tyllat; She Is
a IP'8IIuale of Gallla Academy
IBgh School andi'relllon Beauty
ScJiool, (lp: ppeake.

CINCINNATI- Central Bancor·
poratlon Inc., parent company of
Central Trust Co; N.A., Cincinnati,
reported record earnings of $26.413
million for Ire year ended Dec. 31,
1984, up 18.5 percent versus $22.287
mltUon for the 1983 year.
Net earnings per share for 1!114,
· adjusted for a five percent stock
dividend, were reported · at $4.1ll
vers~ $4.00 for 1983,
The corporation ended 1981 with a
record high quarter. net earnings
for the three month period ended
Dec. 31 were $7.345 mllllon, up 25
percent versus $5.875 million In the
fourth quarter of 1983: On a per
share basis, adjusted for tre five
percent stock dividend, figures
. w~re$1.33asopposed.toS1.00!orthe
last quarter oll983.
-

The corporation's 1984 earnings
benefitted from substantial growth
In commercial loans and leases,
lmproveml?nt in Interest margin
and Increases in fee Income.
Central Bancorporatlop ended
the Yf!!'l" with total assets of $3.2
bUIIon, a new hiRh, and with capital
of $all mUllan, $16mllllonabovethe
year-ago level. prior to the merger
ol the $300 million United Midwest
Bancshares, parent of SouthE-rn ·
Ohio Bank. Regulatory approval
has been received and consumma·
lion is expected to be completed by
AprU.
Central BanCjlrporatlon has nine
atf!llates; slx regional banks, a
mortgage company, a real estate
boldingcompany and a reinsurance
co!l'P,iny resulting irom 28 acqutill·
tlons since Its founding In 1961!.
'

'•

&lt;.;

·
has volunteered
tor more than 10
years to help the underprivUPged

dl strict of Ohio.
volunteers run across some·

·
headquartered
in Cleveland and
covers 47 counties, 419 volunteers

a tax accounting company. So after I
rettrea from
my regular job, I
decided to get into that," Mrs.
Weaver said.
"Each year the tax taws are .
changed. They say they want to

help.
.. '"!"hey have ·a ~pretty tilgll accuracy rate, in the 90s !percent). The
accuracy is a bout as high as the
professionally done returns," Ms .
Budai said. If there is a mistake, the

IRS office in Cleyeland.
- '"Liist year~'r saw about u u
people," said Vernon Jones, 64, of
Cincinnati. Jones is the accountant
at the Free Store and FOOd Bank In
Cincinnati, which began opera ting a

.u

make It more simpilfled and they
taxpayer is liable.
end up confusing even the person
.1)\e IRS is compil ing a list of
that's dealing with II."
locations of volunteers who have
To help the volunteers keep on top completed their training. Commun·
of tax laws and to make sure they
tty groups , ministers and cotlege
know what to do, the IRS requires
students studying law, accounting
VITA workers to participate In a
or business are often among the.·
four-or five-day seminar or take a
volunteers.
correspondence course. Volunteers
Wright Sta te Un_iversity's acare tested ·-afier lhelr training to .. eounting ctub is parilclpatin g for th~ ·
make sure they'll make the grade.
·first time this year, a nd the
' The IRS also runs random
University of Daylon&amp; hool of Law
computer checks to make sure wUl be helping for the filth year . II '~
lhey're fUing the returns properly, fairly common for universities and
5ald Linda Budai, public affairs community a ction groups to house
officer for the Cincinnati district or VITA programs, Ms. Buda i said.
!he IRS, which covers the soulhern
In 1984, the southern Ohio IRS
district, which covers 41 counties,
- had 545 volunteers prepare 9,965 tax
C()r_!!..er~
~eturns al149 locations, Ms. Budai
said.
.
1n the northern district. which is

Me_igs Co11:_nty agent's

_

Extension notes ••.

aul~taethth?s·- 6
• "i.ilvu ~·..,
-wn
--- -~,

resldPatRt.1, GaU!polls.
executivemasterbus)ness adminis· meeting the heaviest sub-zero
Koebel urged customers to he
· Moore went to work at Kyger
!ration .degree from Case Western · demands, " the company satd.
aware ot these special problems
Creek on Jan. 17, 1955, as a C!)al
Reserve University.
The fact that January's weather associated with winter weather.
handler In !he yard department and
-especially since the middle ofthe
- Heating systems can be
transferred to ·!he operations de·
CHESHIRE - Two more em- month - was unusually frigid, and strained because they sometimes
partment on June 18, 1955, as an . ployees of Ohio Valley Electric
far colder than a relatively balmy operate continuously for long peri·
auxiliary equipment operator. He
Corp.'s Kyger Creek plant have
December, will be reflected In ods during very cpld weather.. If
then progressed through the various
received 30-year anniversary
monthly natural gas bills now being there is an indication of problems
classifications until his promotion to
awards from Louis R. Ford Jr. , received by customers, the com- with heating equipment it should be
his present position on Nov.1.-1979. . plant manager. .
pany cautioned. January's weather checked Immediately by aquailfled
Moore and his wife, Della, live at
They are Glen E.' Beebe, ma!nte- was 102 percent colder than De· heating contractor 'o r serviceman.
Rt. 2, Cheshire.
nance supervisor, and James K.
cember in the Gallia-Melgs area.
- While Columbia generally
S~lflet joined OVEC on Jan. 26, , Bragg, maintenance mechanic A.
"December's weather was sub- recommends setting the thermos·
1955, as a bargeattendantln !he yard
Beebe joined OVEC on F eb. 7,
stantlally warmer than usual, so a tat ~t 68 degrees during the day and
department. On June 18, 1955, he ;1955, asamaintenancemechanicA
customer comparing a December 65 degrees at night, special atten·
transferred · to the operations de·
in the maintenance department. He and a January bUI wUII!kely lind a t!on should be given to the
partment asanauxiliaryequlpment
was promoted to maintenance significant increase," said Jake . thermostat &lt;ettinglf there are older
operator. He went through various
supervisor in May 1973.
Koebel, Columbia Gas manager.
persons or very young children 1n
classifications In that department
He and his wife, Roma, reside at "This Is because the colder ills, the the household. Older adults are
until his promotion to his current
Che$hire.
more natural gas It takes to keep especially susceptible to "hypother·
position on Nov. 1, 1979.
Bragg transferred to OVEC on our homes warm.''
mla," a condition In which the
Shlfletandhiswtfe,Ellzabeth,llve Feb. 7, 1955, as a maintenance
The amount of the increase wUI internal body temperature drops
at Rt.1, Rutland.
helper!romAppalachlanPowerCo.
depend on hOw many of the colder abnorarnlly low, to 95 degrees or
He progressed through the various January days are included In a
below.
In
the
maintenance
customer's
monthly
bill.
- Deep frost can cause outdoor
classifications
COLUMBUS - Eddie R. Bare,
department
until
his
promotion
to
"Our
billings
are
staggered
natural
gas pipes to shift and
ortginally from Thurman, has been
his
present
position
In
Apri11967.
throughout
the
month,
so
a
custo·
weaken.
If there is an odor of gas,
promoted to manager of the Bob
Bragg
and
his
wife,
Lelia,
live
at
mer
should
check
the
current
biU
to
the
gas
company
should be called
Evans Steak House In Gallipolis.
Gallipolis
Ferry,
W.Va.
see
how
many
of
tre
very
cold
immediately.
Bare had been assistant manager
January days are Included. For
at the Sausage Shop In Rio Grande.
HestartedwilhBobEvansFarrns
In ~as a manager trainee. Bare
attended Rio Grande CoiiPge and

STRONGSVILLE - Harold L.
Schacht of Canal Winchester was
recentcy ~elected to the board of
directors for MUk Marketing Inc.,
!he regional mUk marketing
cooperative.
Schacht wUI representDistrict10,
which Includes Gallta and Meigs
counties.
Schacht operates a 51Q.acre farm
In partnership With his sons near
Canal Winchester. He has been In ·
dalcy farming !or 39 years.

...

c:Jem -ara:l

··n·come tax pr·eparati•o·n

=·=--·~~e~ ~ q:~:fco~has~n~;r:a~ban~d~ se~lzit:u~res.:wu~ft1~ ~· ~ "~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-;~- ---~· ~D~A~2~~:~;:~::~~~, ~~:~\t:~::~;;~::ii~"~ .;~~~7~~~~:;~. '"~=~~~l;:~:7:;~:~-=:~
0

... "'
·---·--=:·
tfielr'
,
Otber
revenuesuf$269~1 i9;000. =~::·~:~~~-~~-~~~~:::;~-i~m=..e~n~-1-~-!.! !~n~!l1~h~t&lt;~.llf9~·~~m,~~o!h~io~_!J00·IA&lt;~.~cr~.MJ;~n~e':':" ~·~H.~~m~w~.ki·~~~i~&lt;~-~a~,..nat~~·~.,~~f~-~N~Pw~·~·~-·~·auft.~r~s:~u~p~p~l~e~s~~~av~e~"...~bee::~n~Es~uf~fl~··
;)y~eto ~a;r~.;So~~·t~he:~ln~c~r~ea~s~e~ln~b~IUs~!s~d~u~e.;;;!i~~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~.;~a~round
and had helped
more people

~7"': ='=~ .........~!:rr'Ol:!Ct.~-P.ng
- y.e\"~r.~es-

and managers totaling

OBSERVE PMmNI'S NIGHI' - Pllftllls night was oboerved prior

down any of the Nghweays on theb'
There were stiU numerous Civil
way to market.
War veterans around and it was
Boss Fontana was looked to as
interesting to hear trem talk II you
the head of the Italian population.
could Just get them started. My
He was a genial man, always ready
grandlather and two of hts brothers
to stop and talk a minute or two.
served In the same regiment and
· Earl Carter worked for him !or company all through .the war.
years. Later Emerson ·Ward
Uncle Ben Gardner, who had one
worked there.
of the three marble and granite
Boss' oldest son, Columbus, went
monument shops In Gallipolis,
to Columbus, where he was an enlistedwhenhewas14yearsofage
attorney; his youngest son was and was a drummer all through the
ldUed in World war 11. ·
four years of the conflict.
On Saturdays In the fall aU of the -· John C. Rue and Son owned one
older boys would .be out squirrel monwnent shop and John and
hunting and at that time trerewere Oecar CaDahan lite other; Herbert
lots of squirrels; the younger boys Saunden, I believe, later bad this
and some girls would be out shop.
gathering hickory nuts, walnuts,
Well, It looks as !lit is time torOid
butter nuts, hazel nuts and chest· Country Jake to find a haymow
nuts. This was just re!ore the bl!ght f!lled with clover hay and liP down
hit tre chestnut trees.
for a nice rest
'lbere were a number of two-year
If you want to write I be author,
high sehools In GaDia County;
please addi'C!IIS your Jetter to Old
notably, Crown Clly, '111lvener , Country Jake, 252 U.awthome
('l'eUowtown), one on Utile Bulls- Drive, Lake City, Pa. 16423.
kin (HUlon), and Chesblre that I

the claim, the employer farmer
who has workers' compensation
Insurance Is protected.
The safest thing to do is for the
farmers to agree on the value of the
services and report that value for
premium payment. Both farmers
are then protected.
Under the revised Workers'
Compensation Law. members of a
tamlly must be covered where
there is a definite employee·
employer relationship. The em·
player"' memrers of a partnership
also can secure coverage and
receive the benefits, but the Bureau
must be given written notice
naming all to be covered.
All farmers should maintain
coverage for self and family
members by applying and paying a
$10 application fee. The cost of
coverage varies depending on
classt!tcatlon and amount of payroll
estimated.
ln periods of no payroll, the

farmer still must file a payroll
report and submit a $3 minimum
administrative fee h he expects his
coverage to continue. This protects
the farmer from liability If anyone
working on the farm is injured,
including contractors Who may be.
repairing a building or equipment.
Prospective agricultural employ·
ers desiring coverage should write
to the Underwriting Section, Bu·
reau of Workers' Compensation,
246 N. High Street, Columbus, Ohio
43215. Information is also available
..
from our office.
Did you know that .. . Ohio led the
~.natinn in S!IYbeJ!fl Y.ieL~ a_vt!t.:i!J~!l!l .••

VITA site last year.
"'Pr;or to that I was in another
location wh~re they were lined up a ll
day every day," he said.
Jones has been a VITA volunteer
for a little.more than th ree years.
" ! find it very interestin g. U you
like to help i&gt;eople , that 's one way to
help them. They're very gr.,:teful.
They say 'thank you'; you ·vc !1efped
mea lot.J hope you have a good day ,
God bless you,' andthatsort ofthing,
which is very pleasing. You know
they appreciate it ,'' he said.
The IRS also sponsors a commun·
ity outreach assistance program,
where an 1RS employee will go on
the road if no tax advice is availa ble
in an area, Ms. Budai said.
The IRS also-...offers_ a _ tax...
counseli ng program specifically for
the elderly.

r--Local briefs
.•• .
Health department closed Monday
POMEROY - The Meigs Count)· Health Department will be
cloSl"!! all day Monday for PresidcnJ"s Day.

Courthouse closed Monday
POMEROY - All of!icrs in the Meigs Cou nt~' Courthousr will be
closed Monday _for Pres ident's Day.

Eastern plans Monday open in!{
,! _ EJ.$1;,...-!\l!'E:IGS=---=-V.leai hflr-- ~rmH1 i ng.= .

major corn-producing state at ll8
bushels per acre. •

Tribune - 446-2342

Sentinel """'" 992·2156
Reai~er - 675-1333

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

3 Announcements

Police · ·· · · · ··· · ··· ·~ -- 29 . 000 .00
Fire .. ..... ,. ..... .. .. ..42 ,930 .00 Gun shoot at Racine Gun
[$36,929 .00 Enc.l Club every Sunda'f , 1 :00
Parts·...... ...... .. .. .. 10,000 .00 p.m. factory chocked guns
Recreation ..... . , .. .... 2 ,000 .00 _o_nt_v_. - - - - - -Cemeteries ............ 9.500 .00
Crty

Building ........... 30.000.00
Streets .... .... .. ...... 12.000 .00
l$1 ,602 .73 Enc.)
Eastern Avenue
Improvement
Financing(ul22,500.00

Eastern Avenue
Storm Sewer -

CDBG Funds .. .. 21.000.00

Total

S 184.276.80

Christian P. Morris
City Manager

Jan. 21 . Feb. 3. 17

Happy Ads

5

Bob. You light up my life . 1
love you. Signed, Nancy.

6

lO!i,t&amp;nd found

LOST: in Foodland area Rt.

35 . 2 Pit Bull &amp; Doberman
mil{ . , tan. 1 tan &amp; white.

Call 446· 7547 o• 446·
6570.

8
Balloon• for Get Well . Anni 'lerseryl. Birthdays, parties.
Singing Gorrilla . Call Sal ·
loons &amp; Co. 446-4313.

Thing.... burzln'ln the

WANT ADS
...................

3069.

htlld To Buy

We pay c01h for tote model

IIABD AGROUND - 'l'be S'll-loa&amp; felT)' bcNtt, lbe
A. ............. aplllllll 1111

Auction ewery Friday night It
the H~r1ford Community
Center. Truckload a of n..,
merchandise e'lery w.M .
Comigments of new • uNCI
merchandise alw•v• wet com~d . Rich1rd Reynolda,
AucttOneer. Call 304 -27!-

9

·- -·

Public Sale
&amp; !Auction

.....

euV fl'rida,y

near &amp;be .............. .._. ,._,, betweea Puerto
Rleo .... lbe .,.,......,. . Repultlc. •

A:"'~-

wlllell carrtell ,_..,n tllld lllllomoblles, WIUI
_,.... to lbe. DomiDielln Republic when It ran
~·Wid. Ne waa _li!Jiire!! In tile ..;dcJent. (AP
Ia .....).

Rev. 8·17·73

- ....
-......:;"9
r
. . ,,,-

clean uaed cart.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oide Inc ~
Bill Gene Johnaon
- ~6- 361.!_

�.:' Page-0-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middl~port-Gallipolis,

17,

February 17. 1985

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

31

A111101111 r.e 111 P. nIs
1 ·Card of Thenko (paid in advance)
2-ln Memory
(paid in advance)
3-AnnQuncaments

~:OiYeawav .

-- -

21· Business Opportunity

51-Houeehold Goods
22·Monayto Loan
52-CB. TV &amp; Radio Equipment
23-Prt&gt;fesslonal Services
53-Antiques
~4-M(sc . Merchandise
R~dl btale
55-llulldlng Supplies _
56-Pets for Sale
31-Homes for Sale
57-Musical instruments
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
58-Fruits &amp; Vegetables
33-Farms for Sale
59-For
Sale or Trade
34-Business Buildings
35-Lots &amp; Acreage
26-Real Estate Wanted
f dill! SUiJJIIit~S
Renlals
II. Lrveslur:k

- -

&amp;· Happy Ads -.,....-48-Lostand Found
7. Yard Sale (paid in advance)
8-Pubic Sale
&amp; Auction
9-Wanted to B~y .

Employ men!
S~rVICt!S

. 41-Houses for Rent
42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
fc.. Rent

1 1·HelpWanted
1 2·Situated Wanted
1 3-lnsurance
14·Butiness Training
1 5· Schools
18-Wanted To Do

9

Wanted To Buy

lran~po rLillon

Mere 11t!lrlise

Financial

71·Autos for Stle
72· Trucks for Sale
73-Vane&amp;4WD
7 4· M otorcyclea
75-80111 &amp; Motors
_
76-Auto Parte &amp; Acceaaorlea
77·Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment'

Services
81 ·Home Improvements
82-Piumblng &amp; Heating
83-Ekcavatlng
84-Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration
8 5· General Hauling

61-Farm Equipment
62-Wonted to Buy
63-Livestcck
64· Hay &amp; Grain
65· Seed &amp; Fertilizer

- Melgt Countw·
Area Codel14
992-Middleport
Pomeroy
985 - Chaater
343-Portl..,d
247-IJtart Falla
949 - Rocina
742-Rutilnd
667-Coolv"ht

446- Galllpolla
367-Chaahlre
388-VInton
246-Rio Grande
266-Guyan Dial.
·643-Arobll Dlat.
379-Walnut

LAFF·A·DAY

Homeafor..._

- .32

'M81on Co~. wv Area Code 304
875-Pt. Ple•ant
468-Leon
5 78-Apple Grove
773-Moaon ·
882-New Haven
895;- Letart
937 - Buffalo

44

Rlverlido Apto.

Ml~dleport .

Special

for Senior

r1t11

In Middleport on North 4th
Av1 o Two bedroOm-· fur·
nlshed •P•nment. Also, .a
large 2 room furnished

apartment. Call 304-8822586
Two b•droom
l

RepQtHIMd homea .

.t

1 bedroom furnished apt. for

f

ront. Call 814-992-5434 or
304-882-2566.

.~t

1 bdr. fumithed apt. in

M

I

Homes for Sale

Reel Eetate General

Call 614-992·

~

Buying daily gold, silver
'Coins, rings, jewelry, sterling
Ware, old coins, large cJJrrency. Top prices. Ed. Burkatt Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave.
Middleport.
Oh. 614-992-

-3ii70.

.

.

Standing Timber-Call AI
Tromm et 814·742-2328.

Enrployn11:111
Servrces

3 bdr, home located outside
city limits on St. Rt. 588, 1'12
bath, LF, kitchen, fam. rm.
priced to sell. $42.000. Coli
448·9395 or 266-6205.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO. recommends
that you do buaineas with
people you know. and NOT
to send money through the
mall until you have investi-

, . ~g~o~te~d~t~ha;;;;off~e~r~ln~gC.~-~==
22

to

1

HOME OWNERS-Refinance
to low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpose. leader
Mortgage Co.. 614-5923051 .
Professional
Services ·

Help Wented

; Deck Han~• Many positions
available with On-the·job
training, good starting salary. excellent benefits pack·
age. world travel. 17-24
years old with High School
Diploma or GED and in good
· physical condition call toll
1 free
in Ohio, 1-800·282·
; 1384, Mon.-Wed.. 9AM·
. 2PM for an.appointment .

••••••· Ni&lt;&gt;!l.3~!

oion. 143.000 or $325 rent.
call614·245·5281 .

23
:11

..... •••• rAn't nr

bd~.-ho-m·e-in-Piantz subdivi-

Business
Oppo11unity

For 18 te by Owner: 3 bdr.
remodeled country home
with &amp;Jtposed interior log
walla &amp;: additional woodworking. Master bdr .
(13•22) with separate bath,
LR 1i 3x24). lg kitchen
j11x13) &amp; dlningroom
(12~t20), laundry area lSI
second bath. 2 wood atovos
with fuel furnancej&amp; county
water. 3 · car garage with
1000 sq ft workshop &amp;
outbuildings. 40 acres, good
fencing 9 water. Some
timber (30 .l!lcres with pond
&amp; 6000 white pine 8lso
8vailable). 1. mile off At.
160, 11 miles past Holzer
Hospital. pnced $54.500.
Call 614-388-8710.

Real cute Middleport! Real
Piano Tuning and Repair. bargain price!! Call 614Brunicardi Music Co., 446- 992-6941 .
·
0887. Twentieth year of
quality service. lane Da· In Rutland Township 6.96
niels, 614·742-2951 .
'acres with 1Vi story. 3 bed.
house. small barn and
PIANO TUNING AND RE· chicken coop. ponay shed ·
PAIR, Reduced rates limited and outbuilding. Propprty is
time only. Ward's Keybo4ud, fenced in, only 835,000.
304-675-5500 ·o• 675· Coll614-992-2143 or614·
3824.
742-2289 ask for Michael.

Sell the beotl Sell AVON.
Call 446·3358.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Receptionist wanted. Phoile
11 communicative skills vary
important, secretarial skills
appreciated. Please aubmit
hand written resume to Box
7070 In care of tho Gallipolio
Dallv Tribuna. 826 Third
From Gallipolis. take Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt. 775,
Ave .. Gollipolio. Oh 45631 .
turn right onto the Patriot Cadmus Road. Watch for
Babysitter in mv home only.
signs.
•• --Own
;
·i - l---~~1ia_l:.uaruS.-.+.urdau
1t ·.--.
7·t:l0
·""""~-OIUV &amp;..--.l~IJ v"CI .. Io.11U J U"
v v- ..P
- •.,~·-.~-~;

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

Work at home. American
Cancer Society needs telephone recrurtars for 1986
Cru11de. Make your own
'hours. for information call
'446-7479.
aged man neads live
]n houu keeper. Call 6756437. Kido OK.
~lddle

Opportunities in Geriatric '
.Nursing. Positions open for
quality RN"s on call·in b..la.
Contact Nancy V•n Meter,
· ~N.DON, Pomeroy Health
-Care Center. 614-992--eeo&amp;. Application• taken
\hrough , Feb. 22, 1986.
l.O.E.
Work from home, earn up to
.. 25.00 to t1 00.00 par
wNk. Generous bonus in·
come opportunities. Call
)14-992,7446.
.Equipment operator ·
-cemetery maintenance
'Work. Not over 36 hours per
week. t4.00 per hour. Sand
'rief reaume to Olive Town, ahip Truatees, long Bottom,
'"'hio 45743.

.---8•rtender

and w1itre1MI
wanted. Experience preferred but not neceaury.
-.&amp;end reaume to The Daily
'Sentinel, P.O. Box 729M,
)'omeroy, Ohio 46769.

dO IN THE ARMY NA·
' TIONAL GUARO.

Secretarv· Bookkeeper. Ma• 'ion County Public Librory.
'lolature and reliable paraon
.-eded. Ganeral offlca du·
'!leo Including typing, tele.....lfhona and bookkeeping
with ••parlance In payroll
3lnd tlkeo. E•parlonced only
'Mod apply. Submh -ume
Mlith refar•n••• and talery
4equlrement to Ma1on
· ~ountv Ubraiy, Attention:
'"•~onnel Section, 8th and
.\/land Strootl, Point Plea·
....... W. Va. 25!!0. Appll·
,ptlon deadline: Fob. 20.
' 19811.
&gt;l!xparlonced tolophona oo·
11citor for Homo Improve·
...nt Compt~ny, muat have
,.,d phone volca. be ag·
irnalve and ombltlouo whh
deelra for hlah -nlnga.
,04·87S·821f2 batwoon
.,0:00 am ! :00 prn.
·
WIH· baby oh In my homo.
,CIIIIdNn to five y-• old.
· lrllothlr 'o two. Call 814·
7U-2H8 or S14· 742·

"f

j778.

·-1I

1

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house coel 1 to 7 ton . call

SWAIN
.
AUCTION· 6 FURNil'UR~

7397 or

62 Olive St .• Gallipolis. New
lk utod wood-eo•l stoves,.6
pc wood LA tuite 1399,
bunk

beds

suites,

a.

304-875 -6762 or &amp;75 ·
2991 .

used

ranges ,
&amp; ahoea.
livingroom suites

wringer
New

•

$199. entron

recllnera 8 99. new
b&amp;droom

F!rowood ..-20.00 pickup

load, 130.00 delivered . ~au

washer~ ,

Capitol

$199-$699, lamps, also
buying coal &amp; wood atoves.

1984 models. We mutt kMp
our crews working. YO"'

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

gain our loll. Save big .
Financing and layaway eveil-

Sofa. chair, rocker, otto·
man, 3 tables, (extra heavy),
Sofas

and

In- grodnd

aveilebte. brand new lift ovllf

Col) 1114-4411·3159.

$686 .

Pools.

speciel. free inatelletien .
Cuotom mode. only 25

oblo. Call304-727-8844.

chalre

priced from $285 . to $895.
Tablet, $50 and up to $125.

55 Building Supplies

Hido·a·beds,U90. and

pc .

One month free rent 19
qualified applicant. large

435 . 1 pc. $189 and up .
Wood table with six chairs

room, free Wlter and,traah,
nau Holzer Hospital.

up to $225 . Hutches. $560 .
Bunk bed complete with

t2B5 to t746.,0eol&lt; 8110

51 Household Goods

54 Misc. Merchandise

1217.00 par month. Call
814-44&amp;'-3474 after

mattresses, e275. and up to
1395. Babv beds, 1110.

RICK'S NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Used stoves

SCM 1201 drv copier.
$650 . Coli 446-0644

4 :00PM.

Mattreaaea or boJC apringa.
full or twin. $68 .. firm. $68 .
end 878. Queen seta, 1195.

and refrigerators . Compare
our price~. save today .

RELIEF NURSE

N~-1

IB

'IN REAL ESTATE
.SALES IN GALLI A CO.

NICE HOUSE. NICE NEIGHBORS, NICE PRICE
3 BRs, I ~ baths, lull basement divided. Wood
stove, nat. gas FA, convenient kitchen with dining
area, fireplace . lllndscaped yard, fenced area
and storage building. Assumable loan. $61,000.

.

#3GO

RIVER VIEW!
Ranch home only 2 years old. Still1n perlectcond•t•on. 3 BR home wilh lull basemen!, leatures a
beauliful kilchen, deck overlooking Ohio River,
vinyl siding and I car garage We can heop you
buy lh1s home lor only $45,000. Kyge r Creek
Schools.

·I

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STARTER HOME FOR THE FAMILY THAT'S
ALREADY STARTED
Allordably priced at $29,500. This older 2 stoiy
home has had a glorious past and w1th a mrn;mal
amount of work, ~as a b11ghl future 5 acres o f
gmund ~!th geod nve~ !rc~tflge she;-:s ~ !ct cf premiSe. Mature trees, good garden potential and
river view. Inside the house has new carpet, and
panelmg, J.4 BRs, l•ving room, fam1ly room (w1th
place for wood burner) and l'h baths. Also has out·
building Wllh attached carport
#242

~104

#315

...

•
EVERY MAN'S DREAM
To own a rustic cedar ranch just like this one
Perched on a pine studded and surrounded by Z3
rolling acres. Ideal spot lor that bass pond you've·
always wanted. The w1fe won't object because
she'lllall in love with the home and there are alew
neighbors wrthm yelling reach . Beautiful view of
peaceful countrysides. Th•s 1s every lhmg you've
been lookmg for and more. We can get you l; nanced Reduced to $79,900
~203

HOUSE WITH A PAST
And the future could be yours in this 2 story brick
home built about 1818. Features beauttlul hard·
wood floors, 4 lireplaces, 4 BRs, 2 baths, new gas
lurnace w1th CA. LR, den, library, DR and enlrance
Ioyer. Extra: 3 room apt. )separate sta~rcas:l

ONLY 2 YEARS OLD
Hardly broken in. This very attractive brick ranch
has a lot to ofler: 3 spacious bedrooms, 2 baths,
lormal entrance, living room and dining area, fam·
ily room and an out ol this world k1tchen. Heated
w1th energy savrng gas aQd woodburmng furnace.
Home restmg on I acre of ground which includes
workshop, garden area and nice yeard. This is one
you don't want to pass up. $76,900.
H244
MOVE TO THE COUNTRY. BUT DON'T
SACRIFICE A THING
Very attractive clean home on 775 justs off 141.
Offers, ~ounlry featues like 2 acres of grotJRd,
beautiful view and peace and quret, but Without
giving up convenices ol modern living. 3 BRs, hv·
mg room wswood burner, dining room and
~uipped kilchen and 2 full baths. 2 car garage.
$ 2,800.
#342

4&amp;

Furnished room, 1125. Utili·
ties, range, ref. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Sec .• Gallipo·
111. 446-4416 after 7 p.m.

'

35
• road frontate.
tapa includM.
west of HMC. one
north of US 31 Oft
Watoon Rd. ' '
152,500. 8~%
availeble. Clll

46 Space for Rent
Nlcley IU?nlohad omell
hO\lN, •mollllo hctnO, eft.

•· •d-*• ·onlY. c.• «6·
0131.

2

One acro lot eleAg Nt: U
south, 304-8711-71141 ,

\.I

•. ,

~iiii;;ti;;m;;-'j

Reel Estac.-,

36

WI

Wanted
W&amp;nted one acre of unu••·
·blaland tor hobby P.U,,....
·mineral righta not ll'npor·
-tant, must be " " - · .wMr. Sparlco, P.O. Box
' san Marcoo. Cellf. 921188.

,.30.

for Rant

Fumlahed. no city tuta,
.water llld s•w•o• fur·
nlolled.....utlful riverview,
lu••~:;,. F"o~ter!.t

...,_.

Mobila

.

,441·1H2.

bdr. apt., refrigerator 6
lf0¥e fwnllhild, Water •
tr11111 pakl. m. • dep. req .•
ua mo. -~ ..e-o, t6 .
Ofttt u ~If • .. t Wr. quiet
• c.,.,..,ient toc.tlon. no
poto, ...,, dep. Call 446·
20SS tftor 2PM.

Apt., small. kltcheto II&lt; bdr.
fum .. utllltloo pd .. preferably
werlc ... raalo, m . Cell U6408:S• .

Mobile heme lot, 12'x50' or
amaller. $76 water plid. 4th
1o Neil. Gallipolis. Call 446·
4416 after 7PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Perk. Route 33, North of
Pomeroy. Large lots. Call
814-892-7479 .
49

For Leese

(Retired Senior Volunteer Program)
Rio Grandi Collep and Community College serving as
project sponsor of the multi-county (Gallia, Jackson,
and Vinton) Retired Senior Voluntnr Procram (RSVP)
is tcceptina appliutions and nominations for the position of Director of RSVP. Twelve-month, administra·
live conlrtct. Appointment for this position is effec1ive June I, 1985 .. SIIIIY ruae Sl2,700·$13,350. The .
Director is responsible for the development and dtyto-dty operation of tilt RSVP Project. Qutlificatlons
include: proven m1n11iment skills: tbility to work
with people: experience worflinc with older persons;
tnd becqround in community development ud social
11rviee dtlivary prdertlll are dtsirtble. Education and
experllflce will bl considered in lo1tlity: Colleae edu·
c1t!oa dulrlblt. Persons interested in the position
should send letter of interest, education transcripts,
tnd resume includinc the ntmn of three references by
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1985. to:

P.o.

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MAKE AN OFFER
Owner says he Will consider any reasonable offer •
on three bedroom, six room in all home. Two car
garage attached IO'x26' deck, screened in porch,
18' above ground pool, 10' satell~e d1sh-push
button conlrol, trailer pad with septic tank and
water tap. All this one acre of land. Located,on Ev·
ergreen-Prospect Road.
H341

IN GALLI A COUNTY

WISEM AI ~ ·{~A
SO

CALL'

.

Gas or

frames 820.- 125, II&lt; 130,
king frame e&amp;o. Good selection of bedroom suites,
rockers, metal cabinets ,
headboards • 38 81 up to
166.
Used Furniture ·• 6 pc
dinette. head boards. and 2
bedroom suites. 3 mile1 out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to
6pm, Mon. thru Sat.
•
614-446-0322
GOOD U.SED APPLIANCES
Wa1hers. dryers. refrigeratora, ranges . Skaggs Ap!..!~e~ - ~!~!!!' ~~

beaide Stone .Crest Motel.
614·446-7398.
County Appliance, Inc.
Good used appliances and
TV oets. Opan SAM to 6PM.
Mon thru Sat. 446 -1699,
627 3rd. Ave. Gallipolio,
OH.

Block. brick. monar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
Stote Block, Rt. 33, NHaven, w. Va . 304-8822222.

Phone 304-773·5430.

d~r~.j~:::=::;:::::~===.="l~

electric ranges $376. Baby
rhartJBIIBI , $.26 Ot-.36, Dod

lintels. etc .

56

54 Misc. Merchandise

Pets for Sal• .

HILLCREST KEN NELS

-!-JiU&gt;,••d''~2·· !!!!~~~~e . .~!:ed "'""

indoor-outdoor facilitieS.
AKC Doberman puppiea:
Stud Service. Call614-446·
7795.

Knauff ·Firewood Split- 96%
hardwoods. Seasoned or
green . You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614256·6246.

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220 .
• .

Limeatone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick up at Richards a. Son.
Call 446-7786.

Sriarpatch Kennels Profet·
lional All·breed grooming.
IndoOr-outdoor boarding facllitiea. E!'!Qiilh Cocker Spa·
~ial puppies. Call 814-388·
9790.
'•

Firewood cut up slabs . $15
PU 'load. Larger toads delivered . Call for prices, 614245-5804.

Oragonwynd Cauerv Ken ner. CFA Himalaysn, Peralan
and SiameH kittens. AKC
Chow pup'p i••· Call &amp;14446-3844 after 7PM .

House coal for sale. LaMey
Coal Co. Call 446-9200 .
Winchast&amp;r modal 12. 18
gauge. 1450. se.w model
34, 22 cal. stainl111. new.
0275. Call 446-0019.

Real Estate General

Valley Furniture. new 81
used': large section ot quality furniture, 1216 Eutern
Ave;;Gallipolis.Trade Canter Furniture
Outlet, Konauga, Oh. New
MaYtag II&lt; Crosley Appjlancos. Call 446-4466.

594·354'.1
Mmberof
ATHENS~P

14 cu.ft. cheat typea deep
freeze, very reasonable. Call
448·0848.
King size water bad with
bookcase headboard, like
new cond , $300. or trade
for good eat of bun) beds
Call 614-388-9783.

For lease 2 bdr. unfurnished
apt .• overlooking city park,
stove e. refrig .• 8190 mo. Pickens used furniture. 304·
Call PJ's 446·1819 or 446· 875-8483 or 675· 1450.
2326 eve.

r~~
• t

•

COLUMBU11l.L S

COMMERCIAL
G-62 BUILDING w1th potent;al fot,
restaurant, off1ce &amp; eel
Overlookmg Ohio River. Only
$37,500
.
CALL ZELLA-593·5244

GIVE' AWAY ALMOST - ONLY
• "'·•''"·"'"· 3 bedrooms. 2 ·story in city, Owners
have gone their separate ways and want to sell their
home. Now! large lot, 40x170 . Formal living room,
dining room. family room. modern kitchen. Only So/o
down. Give us a call today.

,P-38- FARM, ·I50 acres 1
more or less , of pasture,
meadows &amp; woods. 3 BR rl!'
modeled home, barn , sheds;
located rn Me1gs Co.
·
CALL WORLEY-696-1356

STUTES REAL ESTATE

DON'T SACRIFICE
Quiet - peaceful· surroundings, fresh and clean
country air just to be close to shopping or work.
Th1s brick and frame 1s Ideally located in Green
Township sv you're virtually close to everything
you'll need. llul you'll still have a large flallot and
beautiful c011ntry v1ew. Offers excellent mamte·
nance and care, ri1ce equipped kitthen, three ..
bedrooms and one and hall bath Owners ere offering buyers protection on lhe house. Pnced in
lhe 50s.

NEW LOOK
Take a seeond look at this home 4 m1les below
town w1lh an excellent river view, olfersan ettrac·
tiv livin&amp; room with hardwood floors, artraclive li·
replace and b1g prcture window. Nice kitchen also
with bif picture window IJktng advantage of river
view. hrae bedrooms, partial basement. Gas
heat. Block buildrng for auto workshop. Excellenl
buy al $39,900.
N216

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200 ACRES 1/L, FRONTS ON RACCOON ClEEK- Approx. 65 acres t;lla·
ble and 135 acres woods. Comfortable.
two story home offers 4 BRs, bath ,
kitchen, livine room, lam1ly room, two
fireplaces, barn, 2 large screened
porches. Lovely qu1et setting.
JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING
FOR - In-town conven~ence, extra
nice lot measures 87xl74, 3 or 4 BRs,
large krtchen, LR, OR, bath , large front
porch and small screened back porch,
heal, unattached one car g~age.

· N233
EXCEUEIIT INVESTME~T P)OI'ERTY!
Owners residence plus 2 rentals or rent all 3.
Brick twin single-! side has 3 BRs, LR, OR, ,
kitchen and bath, full ba.sement; other stde has 2
BRs, LR, IUtchen and bath 2 story frame with 3
BRs, kitchen and bath. Owner may help finance'
till
ronR~
Seeing is believing. so lei us show you this qual~y
built, top cllflditioned 7 room, I\\ bath home at
reasonable price. Gas f;red hot water heat system
wiHI well insulated home results in nol only the ul· ·
tin11b! in lllllire home comlort but abo lowest in
cost we have neard of this winter. Full basement
divided, pralflatlached with addilional cirport
Excellent Ieveil garden, shaded back lawn. Well
located on St. Rt. 7 for convenience to Point Pleasant. Wol. All for $59,850.
·

fOU'LL 1£ DELIGHTED with this 3 BR
bi·levelloc:ated JUSt m1nutes from~own .
Abo fealures 21! baths, LR, kitchen,
c•petlng, heat pump, city school dis·
IJict. Call lor more inlormation.
•.

PIICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED!
OWII·£1 SAYS SELL THIS IONTHI Rio-Centerpoint Rd. (Cherry Ridgel. Approx. 75 atres woodland, fronts on 2
roads, countY waler available. $250
per acre.

II
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... •

....:446-3796
t11 Clwdt
...._,, A.OC.
EVENING
a:J. Hllrsto11,
Assoc.zc5-sm
446-4240

I_ . _ _ ~ H_OU~E ~WORD~ ~446
__-_3..,.~,..._3_CA__,.LL:-·-~..,.•~~-:_~~-·~::~·:.C=:'_an. _~_~. 55_-~· !
!----------------------~--~----------~·
,,

149. 5

wi

Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
o Call614, 246-6121 .

'
LR, formal din10g
,
garage,
concrele drhleway.
and swimming
pool privileges. Immediate possession. $65,000.
t403

H210

THINKING OF IUILDIIIG7 DOII11
We have a brick rancn thetis in impeccable condition. Home includes 3 bedrooms, spacious eat·
in kitchen, 21! baths, livine room and famil~ room,
and an oversized 2 car garage. interior is trimmed
in oak. House is very well insulated, keepinll b~ls
to a minimum. Central air and ps heat. Located
ideally in a quiet neigltbl!rhOOd close to everyth·
ing. Landscaped lot. ~sking $59,900.
· f201

to

Maple dinette set. Call 446·
2317 anytime.

M

DIRECTOR OF R.S.V.P

.

/'I

YOU'LL BE IMPRESSED!
Owner has done a beautiful job redecorating this
older 2 story. Nothing fOJ you to dG except 1110ve
in. Includes 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR and large kitchen
with beautilul cabinets and all the built-ins. Well
ins~lated and easy to to heat, low mamtenance
vinyl srdmg, 2 car garage and well maintained,
landscaped lot. Kyger Creek schools.

202

Fumiahed Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms
end light houH · keeping
rooma. Park Central HoUtl.
Call 614·448-0756 .

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AnENTION QUIET SEEKERS
Brand new l1sting of a brand new house that's just ·
what you're looking for. Resling on a flat '.4 acre
country lot this ranch slyle home offers 3 BRs, I
bath, attractive eat-in kitchen, OR and LR. Everything is brand new just wailing for you. $34,900
N201

cabinet&amp;,

to!!=~===·

1

n4o

Llureland Apanmenta. New
Haven now •ccepting appli·
Clttona for 2 bedroom apts.
Baolc rent 1183.00, en
equ•l housing opportunity,
304·882-3385.
.

' 1970
Priced
5214.

I1'-

WORK
And trme
showplace .
1600 SQ. ft. ol lving space
3 ·BRs, I 'h
baths,-family room and living room-witn wood·
burner. Nice corner lot, attractiVely landscaped.
·
·Good neighborhood, $53,800.

'LOCATION 'LOCATION 'LOCATION
. The 3 most imporlant features to look for whl!tl
buying a home. This location Will please the mo$1
discrimmate buyer- in town on Holcomb H1ll, 3
or 4 bedrooms, wile approved country kitchln
'with liraplace, lormal dining, 2 baths, family room
w1lh !;replace, rec. room, and garage. N1ce view of
the city. Owner transferred . Must sell.

TWO ACRES MORE or LESS
W1th exira good cond;lioned seven year old 14x70
mobile home set on permanent loundat10n w1lh
expando, screened in porch,
deck
aii'deif lo rna ke a fine
I

2 MILES FROM TOWN
AttractiVe Cape Cod slyle home on 2 acres oilers 3
bedrooms, I bath , mce complete kitcben with a
den oll1t, living room and dimng area. Hardwood
floors and country v1ew add to value of home.
Easy to heat. Garden space: Buyer's Protection
Plan warrants home components lor a full year af ter sare. $39,900.
·
H209

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SUPERIOR QUALITY CONSTRUCTION
In every deta;l ol this attractive 2 story brrck resr·
dence with 17 rooms (Includes 6 rooms whiCh
may be used for prolesSional.off;ces: doctor, lawyer, C P.A., insurance, etc., or a retail store.!
From 4 to 6 bedrooms, mce k•tchen. lormal dming, 21ireplaces, 2 car garage, enclosed courtyard
on corner lot in downtown GallipoliS.
#136

ll4x8 outbuilding and partial basement. Buyers
Protection Plan for a full year. Only $39.900.
#200

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Twin Rivera Tower. 200
Second St. Point Pleasant,
WV. Apartment• available
for elderly. Rant Ia 30 par
cent of adjuated income. All
uttlities inCluded in fent.
Convenient to downtown
.,.. and grocary itore. Call
304-675-11179.

I

REALTOR 0

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1
I HERE'S ONE FOR THE BARGAIN SEEKERS
2 story home wilh maintenance lree Siding inI cludes
large LR, DR, equrpped kitchen wrth eat-in
bar 3 BRs and I balh. Huge wrap around porch
I for 'relaxation Large I acre lot with 2 car garage.

Office of Personnel
Box 969

Office of Personnel
Box 969
Grande Colleae
~ Rio
Ohio 45674

mobile

Two bedroom apt, 304·
DID:ZMii Or'D'i0 -tii03.

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Help Wanted

Rio Grande Colleae and Community College invites
letters of application and nomination for the position
of Relief Nurse. Effective date of appointment is March
I. 1985. Part-time. professional, 12·-month contract.
Salary is $7.00-$8.00 per hour. Qualilications incude:
Valid State ef Ohio registered nurse certification iequired; erperience in public heallh nursina and young
adult care preferred, with the ability to work cooperatively and independently in providing routine and
emer1ency health care. Reporting directly to the Coor·
dinator of Health Services. tha Relief Nurse is respon·
sible for assistin&amp; the Coordinator in maintaining
health service objectives and performing standards for
the safeguard in&amp; of the health of the College community. Persons interested in the position should send let·
ter of interest and resume includina the names of three
references by FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 198S to:

·

!Cool Delivered) good lump

ii1~~lt'lJl:~j~,~}l'~l~;~-~4~~dr~.~~

'

Antiques. Something for Everyone.
New &amp; Used Misc. Farm Equipment
Doo'r Prizes Given Every Saturday
Have something you want to sell? Bring it to the Patriot
Auction Barn and we'll sell it for you . Consignment accepted from 1:00-5:00 P.M. on Saturday.
Marlin Wedemeyer - Auctioneer
245-5152 - 388-8249
Apprentice: Finis (IKE) lsaac-388-9370
11

-od. Call 614-256·15,8.

51 Household Goods

One bedroom aportmenu.

modern kitchens. utility

Rtal Ee1ate General

245 -5859.

21

and

Coli 814-992 -2381 or 614·
992·2509.

l•

pay 1500 down -

hOU181

apertmenta In Middleport
and Pomeroy. low utilitiea .

APARTMENTS

{;OMPLETE HOUSEHOLOS
FURNITURE. Bado. iron,
Wood, cupboards, chairs,
cheats, baskets, diahea,
'tone iars, antiques, gold
and silver. · write·M .D.
Miller, Rt.2, Pomerov, Ohio
..C6789 or call 814-992'7760.

54 Miac. Merchendi~

'~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ii~~~~~f.i~~~f~~~~~5~P
~M~c~al~l~6~1~4"~:'~~~~ f~~::.)109.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1!~~~SS
CaD '· Start Counting
31

1nan

KIT 'N'

Mr~rr l'dlllli~t·

Cltlrono. 1130. Equll Houolng Opportunitlfl. 61 4·
882-7721 .

Mob!le Hamea
for Sale

take
over peymentl. E..Z crec1tt
chock . No cherge far doll¥·
ery. Sever~~l to choo•tron..
Coll614·772·1220•7733926.
.

Apartment
for Rent

The

Will cut and deliver fire·

NEW ANO USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBILE 110ME BALIS,
4 MI . WEST, GALli,OUS,
RT 35 .. PHONE 814-448·
7274.
.

49-For

18 Wanted to Do

Ohio~Poin(Pieasant, -W. Va.

Prlco Nduced. tow Md·
roomt, klt....,·ferllllorwlth flreplece, fllllelle•
buement,....,. ........
304-171-30,., .........

Classified pages co.v er the
followi'ng telephone exchange~ ...
Gallla CouniY
Areo Code 814

....

11116

,,

'"

.' .

..

PRICE REDUCED ' TO $59,900! Owner has bought another home and
must sell this lovely 3 BR ranch on
Oebby Drive. Approx. 1700 SQ It drn·
ing rm., LR, FR. kilchen, new custom
drapes. carpeting, woodburnmg stove,
deck, central air, natural wood s1dmg.
BRAND NEW-DUPLEX- Great invest·
ment lor the buyer' Located on Graham
School Rd . Each unit offers 3 BRs,
· bath, living room, k;tchen w1th stove,
relrig., OW and displ.. laundry, large
carport, central air and storage area.

CONVENIENT DOWNTOfiN LIVING LARGE, ASSUMABLE LOAN -Very al·
tractrve lwo story home elfer s ~ BRs, 2
baths, 16xl6 LR . formal d1ning room,
kitchen enclosed porch, new carpet
gas he~t. Within walkmg distance ol
stores and schools. Call today 1

MUST SELL TO SEmE ESTATE!- Fl·
NANCING AVAILABLE - EXCELLENT
TERMS -Cape Cod hOme offers 3 BRs, •
2 balhs k1lchen w1th eye-level oven, C
dmette, 'living room has beamed ceilings, utility room, double garag&amp;, storm 'z
windows, woodburnmg stove, c1ly a
school d1slrict. Additional land can be
purchased. Call tor an appo1ntment, •

.LOTS OF POTENTIAL- GREEN TOWN·
SHIP1- 180 acre larm located in Northup area. Two story frame older home
w1th seven rooms and bath .~ounty wa·
ter, 16x60 concrele silo , corn cnb.
, m1lkhouse and barn.

'VACANT FARM LAND~ Morgan Twp., ·•
84 acres m/ 1, level and rolling land . Approx . 33 acres tillable, remainder ;
woods.

LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOME! - ·3
BR ranch style home offers LR . ~itchen,
bath and utility room, gas heat, new
siaing, city schools. ''II for more in lor·
mation.

REDUCED TO $35,000 - NEAR
·HOLZER - This ranch style home off·
ers 3 BRs, kitchen, 22x24 FR, LR, bath,
central a1r, woodburnmg stove, electnc
heal, 16x28 unattached garage. KC
school dislricl.

COMMERCIAL BUILDING- 62x80 all
steel construction with fireproof rnsula tion, has overhed crane. office and
bath Formerly used by boat sales and
repair. Located across lrom Silver
Bridge Plaza with access to Oh1o Rrver.
Potent1al unlimited.

lAKE US AN OFFER - OWIIERS
HAY£ MOVED TO FLORIDA.... and
would like to have their home sold this
monlh. Like new split level'is located on
Debby Drive and offers approx. 3000
sq. H. of livrna area plus 2 car garage
·and one ol the area's nicest pools.

MITCHELL ROAD -GREEN TWP. .5 acre m/1, county water available

.•

·!:;

r

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THIS COULD BE YOUR PERFECT
HOME! - 10% FINANCING- FilED
RATE - 20 YRS.! - This home offers
4 BRs, 2 baths, kitchen w/range and
eye-level oven, 15x48 LR, lireplace,
woodburning stove, 6x40 fronl porch ,
I Ctr garage, storm windows, n1ce flat
garden .~rea , city school district.

I
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ADDISON TWP. - Approx. 7 miles
from Gallipolis. 39 1\ acres, m/1, fronts .
on township road All woods and brush.
$8,900.

•

�---===-= =::=:::;;:::

-··~

J

The Sunday
61

I ''ill ';upfllrr"
,\ lrVI"&gt;IIIrJ

Rog. Mlnoturo Dochohund 8
mo. old red male. Colloftor
4:30PM 448-7307.

)-,.,--::--o:---=---

Bolton Teri200. Coli

3020 John Deere tractor
1911 model. gao. Alsomioc .
oquit&gt;mont.
eftor 6"
Ue:ot7ll0. CoU
-

_..~~~~======-!
-

61

71

Farm Equipment

The hand
of t_
he _master _ _

NORTH
•to 5 s

.

AJbi
no Feml'l-houa&amp;·broke·n , l~;:=:;:======
3!-~~- H5. Coli 814- 63
Livestock

.WEST

AltC Siberian Husky Pupa, 7

\'tO 54
tJ·876
+QJt0853

...-...old. TWo female, one
ltlllck lnd whlte and one grey

•iii!

white. Call 304-882·
3258.

~~---~11-­

+J982
• J963

••

+K942
SOUTH
• AKQ761

bacco poundage to my farm.

Gallia Co. 10% down now
with egreement i~ price per
lb. for remainder in leaae

opd., 74,000, 12,485. Con-

toot Horold Oeorgo. be·
twotn 8:30 &amp; 5PM. Call
448-11348.

.7

T..,o ..,.,lo AKC Cocker Spa·
n~ IIQ~ploo. whelped Doc.
~,984. ~04- 675- 10~8.

118(1 Chev. Clllltlon 4 dr.
hotchbeok. a oyt.. auto
trona. fr. wh. drive, AC,
gougeo, loco! owner. good
cond. Coli 814-245-5120
ofttr IPM.

Dili••l 4 dr ., d.tuJte ailv.er
with red lntodor, air cond., 4

\'Q
tAKQt09

paid •• ooon eo pooolble to
2 AKC female poodle pup, aign · ASCS loue tronlfer
pl01. S-128. ooch. 304-882- lormo. Coll448-2364.
36'72.

Auto• for Sale

71

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: ,North

1979 Dido Cutlooo Supremo

Well

power sun roof. Call 446·

71

Auto• for S1l1

w

1971 Oldo .C utloll Su· _72 _ Tm.ckl1l!_r Sill

•

7.~ . Trucka for Sale

72

1878 Chevy 'It ton V-8,
outo, elr, PS. P8. radio,
oherp. John'• Auto loin.
lulevllle Rd. Coli 4411-4712
Golllpollo,-011.

1983 Dotoun pick up by
owner, 304-678-4568.

Trucks for Sale

1988' 4x4 Jeep and 1980

vw

ppickup, PB. cruiu
control. air. Call 614-388""

8248.
truck, no ruat with tool box

bod. Cell 114-286-8622 . •
1978 Jeep PU ·4x4. good
cond.. S2. 760. Call 44840~3.
• '

Alwo. living ro.,., IUite. like
now 1350.00. Phone 304-

1711-84111 oftor 4:00 PM
1711-111120.

0848.

1977 Chevy 81ozor 360,
auto. 4 whnl drive, 304·
675-6828.

86 Chevy, '4 ton. 4 opd. runo
good. Coli 1114·268-6574.
Story &amp;
Cl•rk . l .o wrey . Honest
values, no 'repossession

'
''

~

- .... ~=-

""'"ld ond Bob lM

74

1978 Honey Sportotor In·
&amp; apoke mega, CUI·
tom pelnt &amp; chrQml, many
Yldef,

Coli 1114-

1983 Hartev·Dovtdoon, iour
glide, full dr•oo, AM·FM
lteNO . c..a.. ·new cond ..
,4.000 mi. Coli oftor &amp;PM,
441 -2166.

I

5KY WA'&amp;.

1

UFTOia

rl· .

r

j

Now arrange tne circled

~ttereto

form the surprl&amp;e answer, u suo-

gested bY the abOve cartoon.

BUXOM

Sales &amp;

Business
Services:.

Service Sharptft .1-- - - - - - - - - ·

Sciuort . fJIIir...ic

Shop,

4-992-2284.

··Plumbing
Ill Heating

86

dllllrlbuter drive toch ., oloct.
fuel pump, Soli only 11 1
1660. Coll814-248- ·

87

Stock 327 lock pilton• &amp;

Aloo pool• filled. Coli 614266 -1141 or 614-446 1175 or 614-448 -7911.
Ken'o Weter Service. Wello,
ciaternl, pool a filled . Phone

PUSTIC
GAS PIPE·

alum. roller rocker arms.

GOo'il-

septic ianka, landscaping .

SOIREE BONNET

Coli onytlme 614 -446 -

~P. r V I I:P.S

4637. Jlmf"tl . Davison, Jr.
owner.

Dozer work lend clearing.
l•ndacaping, etc. free eati ·

Home
Improvements

motoo. Coil 448-8038 or
992-7119 anytime.

Real Estate General .

Upholstery

1" 160 PSI

ments. footers,

Answer: What people with tireless energy olten

·•

General Hauling

814·387 -0823 or 614-367·
7741 night or doy.

Auto Pert•

a. Acceaaorl8s

tAnown
Jumt&gt;tes: DAILY

day. Pump •••• end nntl·

•••. 304-895-3802.

~EWING Machine rePalra,
urvice. Authorited Singer

.JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEAT·
IND. Rt. 1, Box 366, Gollicrank, 2 seta of 2.02 heada, pollo. Coli 614-367·0676.

WHAiiHAI

. eo~eeoous

Rotary .or clble topf drilltng .

Moot wello completed oamo

82

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

James Boys Water Sentice.

76

DEBIH@j

84

Home
Improvements

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth ·and Pine
.
Galllpollo, Ohio
Phone 814-448-3888 or
814-448-4477

~--------------------------------~81

very good cond., all orginel

.a.eoo.

245- 8421-otter-IIPM~
. --.

become- TIRESOME

42.387 oct. miloo. $1,200.
Coli 448-4482.

81

Motorcyclea

..tru•

,I

LOwery organ. like new
cond., orginal price $2,600.
Willselllor 81,300 firm. Call

~"448 '9478 :

Henri

Unecrarnt&gt;torlllle tour Jumtllle,
one letter to each equare, to form
four ordlnarv warda.

Yesterday s

1862, Oldo 88 collectors
Item, 2 now dreo. toll pipe,
bottory, runo good, body

linlriilckl'. Brunicordl
Mwoic. Inc,. 61 Court St..
Oolllpollo, Oh 46831.

by

1978 Ford converaion van

1871 GMC '14 ton pickup, econOiine, automatic: . air
auto.. 11,1100. 1871 Chevy .conditioning, PS PB,
Comoro I cyl .. auto.. PS. i4.500. CoU 446-7413.
i7110. Coli .14-992·1814
or 814·H7-8878.
.18B2 CJ 10 Joop truck 4
WD, f4,500. Coil 446·
.
,..74, F100r.ickup. 13,000 8108 .
'original ml ••• 1800.00 .

1977 Ford F-350 ono ton

Broughm all fectory optlone,

Kimbel,

~ ~ ~~·

73 Vane
~~----~------ '
1171 Fo,.S f. 2110, '4 too. ·1977 Dodg~r 4x4, 1'6, 1'8,
350, 4 tpd .. ·good tlroo, . cruiM, tHt. AM-FM c ..s.
many now peru, utllty bed. Clll445-7414 oftor 4..
f1 .200. CoD 441-4412.

'•

Pll'nos-

~i}~~~ fii),. ~THAT SCAAMBLED WOAD GAME

The Sunday

W.Va.

Ohio-Point

S1l1

AutoI

~mo,AC, PS.PB.eru-.,--1

1981 Chevy Chevotte, 4
door hatch bock, auto, 1c,
low mlloaga, U,OOO.OO.
304·876·6884.

17,1986

1111 Muotong Cobro, blue. •
4 •Plied mago. runo good,
f750 .00 . Coli 814-U) ·
8077.
'

1883 Plymouth Rellont, 4
dr .. ••· cond .. 11,000 mlloo.
ii,OO trade lor 4x4 truck of
oquol voluo. Coll441-7019.

19.78 Plymouth Fury.·~~~-·-I· 8-trock, R!IW tlrei. 11.
rodio. now tlreo, i
Coli 814'· 388-9180
5PM.
John'o Auto Soleo.
Rd. Coli 448·4782 Oolllpo· - - - - - - - - 111. Dh.
'80 Oldo Omego. 4 dapr.
AC, P8, PS. ~~~ wheel, AM
For nlo 1880 VW Rabbit rodlo. 4 cyl. 304-176-8286.

EAST

-- .

Wanted to lease: 1985 to-

1-1&amp;-85

\'AK762
t1s~
~AB

17. 1985

w.

Ohio-Point

UPHOLSTERY
1163 Soc. Ave .. Gollipolio.
614-446-7833 or614-446·
1833.
New &amp; Reupholstered furni'ture. R &amp;: M Furniture
Manufacturing. Sf. Rt. 7.

Crown City, Oh. Call 614266-1470, call Evo. 4463438 .

20' ft. .
Also pipe connections and water pipe. ·,-

S&amp;H PLASTICS

Central (Vienna), W. Va .
PH. 304-295-1615

~

KlmHII Pecitn Piano with

•
,r _.... _... ...__. - •- ....
.-..;u-;-.-. -..,~w·v••ua,

·' " -- ' '

Will

••u

for 8'995. Con1act Racine

BAS.EMENT
WATERPROOFING

Barik .

Fruit
Ill Vegetables

Lilt -ioad Rome Beauty ::7::1:---:l\-u-,.t_o_s-:f:-o-r-:S:-a-:1-e-

•s·.oo bu. Hard green cabbage 10c lb. Jacks Maritet,

Hemlerson, WV.

TOP CASH paid lor '80
model and newer usad cars.

Smith Buick-Pontiac. 1911
Entorn Avo .. Gallipolis. Call
614-448-2212.

.SOUTHERN HlU.S.R, E., I.NC.

Judy DtW'Itt-Realtor-383~8155
J. Merri1 Carter-Realtor-379-2184
Becky lane-Realtor-446-0458
- Jin todtron-Realtor-446--7881
Vlrpia Snith...:..Realtar-.388-8826
llhtDth ~-Realtot-675-3968

BMR 44-4- OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL! 3 BR ranch situated
on 2.35 acre lot m/1. Possible 8%loan assumption to qualilied
buyer. Includes lg. eat-in kitchen, separate, utility room, family
room with w.b, fireplace. Call for an appointment today'
BMR 446 ~NEW LISTING~ tn·lown location includes 3
BRs, living room, dining room, bath &amp; basement. Lots of carpet. Gas heat. Priced at $29,900. Call lor details.

WE NEED LIST

l-1 \L,.I ....._,.,
Rl:fl.I.Tf"'D®

992-2259
PRICE REDUCED - MIDIiLEPORT ~Colonial with all
ljlodern features, pool, firepla.ce-1cen.tral air and more.
$40,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED ~ MIDDLEPORT~ 3 bedr.oom mo·
dular, 2 baths, lamily room,
lire place on nice lot. Bargain
priced. $32.000.00.

Real Estate General

STUT~ . .

PutNu•ttberl toworkforyou:

POME~OY,O.

COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TEll THE
WHOLE WORLD?

ADORABLE HOME. NEAT AND COMPACT~ 3
bedrooms, nice krtchen with dimng area , living
room, bath, living room. attached garage, attic
fan, new sash windows, fenced backyard . Good location .

Ask Yo..,solf This Quootlon-Thon List With Us
•Willis T. Leadintham. Realtor, Ph. Homo 446-9539

MUST BE S~EN -Cozy, warmth and charm, low
upkeep, low utilities, clean and mint condition. all
fit this one story, 3 bedroom modern house
located in Gallipolis. $33,900. Don't miss this one!
•
#681

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

NUR RACINE ~ Mini·
farm- Approx. 10.50'acre5
·with 2 bedroom home plus
barn and outbuilding. This is
a buy at $24,750.00

#717
JUST LISTED - BE A PROUD OWNER ...: This
home sparkle5 with warmth and will invite you in
for a tour. Very attractive carpet throughout. 3
bedrooms. 12'xl7' kitchen with Z-Bnck. Garage.
Air conditioning unit Ho1 water heater ~centy replaced. Low maintenance. Lovely fenced back
yard. Most for your money. $38,500, City schools.
#776

RUTLAND - 3 bedroom
ranch with hardwood floors,
hlige famrly room, storage
buildings, anda b1g garage &amp;
big 3'h lot yard. $42,300.00.
"

I'

A.,

~-

IB

. RULTOI

!'eel Estate General

,,
i'

~~IB
• •· ·

REAlTqR ;

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(614)-992-3326
2RE11TALS~ In Middleport

near the schools &amp; slores.
One up, one down.
I"''

•

LffiLE HOlE - Has 2 bedrooms. bath, lurnac~. wood
stove a.nd T.P. waler. Only
$20,000.
50

''I'
&lt;i

'

PERFECT ONE FLOOR PLAN - 2,000 sq . lt. in
this lovely brick ranch. formal entry to sunken living room formal dining room. 3 bedrooms, 21h
baths, lar'ge kitchen with eating area, family room
with fireplace, utility room, mud roQm. 2 car 1t·
tached garage. Home Protection Plan.
#781

'

•

~

.

•

.,

WHAT A DEAL - $24,900
Come see for your5ell. Cory 6 room5 and bath, 3 bedrooms,
range, dishwasher, storage building and.2 car carport. Kyger
Creek Schools. large level lot.
. #552

living room, attached garage. Low maintenance,
gas heat. level lot. Walking distance ol downtown.
Great condition. Price reduced to $50,000. lm-.
mediate possession.
H758

....

PROFITABLE INVESTMENT~ 2 story home with
2 bedrooms, kitchen, formal dining, living room,
basement. Aluminum siding plus 2 car garage
with 2 bedroom apartment. Additional small efficiency apartment. All presenHy rented with good
income. In-town location. Priced in 40s.

COUNTRY STYLE HOME ~Custom built with over
5,000 sq. h. Raised ranch with 4 bedrooms, 3
baths, formal dining, spacious kitchen, fireplace,
full divided basement, 2 car garage, in-ground
pool plus 40 acres. Don't hesilate, make an ap·
pointment tOllay.
#74 1

·,,
'

..·t. .

...

WELL PRESERVE li- Inviting country home with
4 bedrooms, bath; large cozy kitchen, dining
room, living room, fireplace, partial ba5ement. Na·
tural gas forced air heat, rural water. Great location . Cenlenary area. Priced at $32,500.
#704

PRICE REDUCED on this very nice 3 bedroom
ranch plus 81A acres more or less. living room
with wood burner, kitc~en and dining area ~ave
been recently remOlleled, 2 car garage, 30'x24'
outbuilding, IO'x 12' wood shed, cellar with
14'xl2' shop on top, rural water.
#768

'

' '!

#731

LOOK FORWARD TO COMING HOME to this
unique remodeled home. 3 large bedrooms, 2
baths, eat-in kitchen, formal dining, spacious for·
mal entry. Deck. barn. 3 acres. Owners have re·
duced price and will cons;der reasonable offer.
Make an appointment today.
#756
NEW LISTING ~Owner moving to florida. Must
sell this 5 year old, 3 bedroom all electric ranch on
St. Rt 160. Hardwood lloors are carpeted, fully insulated, basement with garage plus a 2 car detached garage. Siluated on a very nice t \\ acre
yard . $35,000.
·
\
• ',
#764

.

tray, lg. barn, workshop and
4 bedroom home w1th free
gas. $60,000.
IUSINESS BLDG. ~ 5 rental units, over $800 income
In- ius. Section. Asking
!54.900.
~-·--

RUTLAND - One floor, 5
rm. business bldg. Only
$6,500.
" ' ..,.,, lllltrin lo•m
IIINII. Ylr&amp;ll IIIII

1111Ct Teifar41

l!_tiliti~s J!_nly _$.5,!!00 ~-- ·~ _

--- #620

VINTAGE OF 28 COLONIAL STYLING ~ 2 story
brick overlooking the river. Stories of

scenic land. large 2\\ car garage with workshop.
--2 horse stall barn, iural water plus much,more.

H720

RUSTIC LOG CABIN - II you're looking lor alog cabin you' ll love

on a partially wooded lot. City schools. Prictd in the SO's.
MODERN Bl-lEVEL! -located in agood neighborhood off St. Rt.
35. 3 or 4 bedroom5, formal dining &amp; liVing room, 2\i baths, F.R..

EASY LIVING- $35.000 -Very cheerful3 bed·
room, 2 bath, relrigerator, range, dishwasher,
woodburner, cement lront and back porch, ll
acre with mobile home hookup. Home is in excellent condition .
H747
GREAT LOCATION~ More than a house- this is
a home! Brick ranch within a mile of Holzer Medical Center, St. Rt. 160. 3 bed&lt;ooms, 2 baths,
equipped kitchen , spacious living room, full base. ment, 2 car garage, 2 acre flat lawn, m-ground
swimming pool. A home w1th a lot ol charm . .
#668

large modern kJtchen w/ lols of good Quality cabinets. let's get ready
for summer. It's just around the corner. 16x36 swimming pool , large
deck area. City ~chools. Priced ri@h l. SO's. lots. of house for the
money.

PROFITABLE BUSINESS FOR SALE
Owner leaving aree. Computer, typewriters, desks, chairs,
file cabinets!, and calculator all included with sale. This is an
ideal business for the right person or couple. A RQing busi·
ness with lots of room for upansion. For lull inlormation
p~one now for an -appointment.

1611

SPRING VALLEY SUBDIVISION
Vacant lots. Nice size building lots with all utilities lhere. lot
size 101.8 by 171.2..Better gel one now.

IMMEDIATE POSSESSION and convenient location makes this ~orne ri1ht for you. Eat-in kilchen
wilh range and refrigerator, 2 or 3 bedrooms, basement, I car garage' plus attached carport wilh
concrete floor, 8'xl2' outbuilding, nice corner lot.
city schools.
,
1755

ROOM TO ROAM on this 2 acres (appro•.) lot, 4
bedroom home with large living room, kitchen,
bath, basement, fruil trees and storage building.
$33,900.

H721

OWNER MAY TRADE FOR HOllE - $30,000 will
buy a comfortable 3 DR mob~ ehome. and 25
beautiful acres olland . Spnng, outbuildmg, very
well landscaped. KC schools, 5 miles from St. Rt
160 on ~t. Rt. 554.
H714

IN TOWN ~ Owner will help finance this older 2
stor1 home al 3rd Avenue. Includes 2 bedrooms,
famtly room, nat gas heat. Garage. $20,000.

1737
OWNER NEEDS QUICK SALE- 4bedroom home
located on 1.8 acres, more or less. large lamily
room with fireplace and beamed ceiling, Don Qf'
office, dining room, 2 large barn~ tobacco base.
#6U

SOLID OLDER HOME - 4 nice lots, 2 car~arage,
outbuilding, cellar house. Home has 4 be rooms,
kitchen, bath, family room, formal din in !I. as had
some remooeling. Home needs a family. Take a
look.

•
•

'

, HISTORIC 4 BEDROOM. fiATH COLONIAL HAS BRIDAL
· STAIRCASE MAIDS QUARTERS WITH PRIVATE STAIRWAY TO
• 'KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING ROOM, HUGE ATIIC. EXCITING
• -HOME TO LIVE IN PLUS RENTAL INCOME FROM 2 APART• MENT HOME ON SEPARATE LOT. PLUS 4 TRAILER PADS. All
, FOR $85,000.

'

ONLY $19,900- A value you can't b•at. 3 bedroom lrame ranch. Approx, 1\l acres. Storage
building. Good garden area. Close to Ewinglon

area.

#753

WANT ELBOW ROOM?- Raiserour meal and po·
tatoes on 4 acres of levelland. Home with 3 bed·
rooms, modern kitchen, bath. Some new Anderson windows and other improvements.,OH Rodney-Bidwell Road. low price.
1697
STATE ROUTE 160- Remodeled 2 story 4 bed·
room home neer North Gallia High School. Fully
~nsulated, large kitchen, electric heat, .84 acre
yard. Priced at $29,000,
#763

l.&amp;nl~r.aJ!.I!m*'*'!nBm.,!~.!M!.'!.I!IIl.lTID.

t

..
'.
...'

T

m.

.

~

Priced

SECLUDED PRIVATE NEIGHBORHOOD Mthin wal~ing dist.lnte to
schools. Brick·tri-ltvel tome has-;lormal .,try, lving
rqom with fireplace and a breaiht&gt;king view ot ltle Ohl&gt; Valey. Slop-saver
ki\cherl' with ooilt-in modem aiJPiances. den wiltl fireplace, ooilt-i1
ixlokca!e and half bit h. Middle level oilers master bedroom with lull bath, 2
large bedrrx&gt;ms. cerom~ tied fuH bath. LDW&lt;r ie'lel with lll'f!l! ilmiljroom,
4th bedroom. storage area and laundry/tobby room. THis 11orne has
recently been recarpeled throUQtlout Screened-i1 back porch with ooit·in
bartlocuo ~- double r:~rport with storace area.lM!dluped k* to accent
the boo~ ot ltlis quality ix&gt;me Give us a r:lil ttxlay.
1.1.FAIRIOIIT MOilLE HOME - 14x52 in
condillln. On a
lenlod Ill ~ city schOO district Ooi)- $9.100.

"'""""t

LOCATED IN C:OUIITIY - LR, 3 IIRs, kitchen, bait!, liiity room, cedar
panoiinz lui~ carpeted. air conditioned. severafiiPpt;ances. wasller, dryer,
llr&amp;e mellll outbuildin~ prden, 16 "'""· 'MI set tor $32,000.

•

LANII CONTRACT - A-frame t-ome "' .65 acre k* more or.less, 2or 3
bod111111m, I~ bath, living room. kitchon,liiily room, tlim bedroom (IIUid
be used for ill'lli~ room, ~ basomenl unfirlislie:l. 2 refri.,W .
washer and dryer included. f'!1eld 201.

·.,,'

25~St-

••I

_.

1

'

!

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•

, NEED IIEATHIIIG SPACUTBEDAOOM BRICK HOME HAS ·.
NICE OPEN FLOOR PLAN, SPACI&lt;IUS ROOMS, EQUclm~
. COUNTRY KITCHEN, ONE ACRE LAWN. KYGER
SCHOOLS. $54,000.

.

- ••

SlntNG IN 20 ACRES OF WOODLAND- Conlemoral)' !me lealunng a
saarium wl hot lub wrapped by an OIXf1 tormalliving and dining room
w/atnum d&lt;m. massive stone fireplace. amodem complete ilitchen 3fld a
breokfost 11001\ 2~ baths, 3 bedrooms w/ master suit~ slidrng doo!s to a
patio area. Laundry and mud room. Unfinisl1ed basem"'t 2 car ga&lt;age.
Vegetable garden and dwart fru~ trees. Shown by appointment

downillwn·and ·~ly

' RIO GRADE AIEA ~ $16,500- NICE 3 BEDROOM FLEET;
• WOOD MOBILE HOME. APPROX. 2 ACRES. EXCELLENT BUY.

~

crete floors. Gas is available. Owner willing to take trailer in on trade.
City schools. Call tor more details.•

acres d IIBClllll ~nd.
and rwivate. Blacltlill

.'

,.

6.7 ACRES - More or less of "canl land. 25&gt;50 building wlcon-

NOIITHUP All~ - 3BR loole. Large modern eat-in ~~chen. Family room,
wing room, office ,. d"'. Nice k* and storage ooi~in&amp; City S&lt;hools. Sllown
by appt. Priced klw SO.
_ ~
_

..•.,.

some older barns.

Cll11114 Centuey !llloolr.tol.oCoip(llllloo 11 - f o r lire NAI'. II ..... _,_,_,.rc..;tury 21 ~~uit.w. Cof110rllion. Printed lr\ LU. EqualllouslnRI~lp&lt;ortuniry Gl

, -

8.6 ACRES - More or less. 3 bedroom rriobile home, also 2 additional mobile home hool -ups. Kyger Creek School District. Priced in
the 20's.

·.

40 ACRES TIMBER ~ 3 miles oil Rt. 7, Hannan
Trace Road. These are approximate acres. Rural
water, electric available. Fencing and small
stream crossing property. Priced for quick sale.
$15,500.

#711

~

JUST WAITING FOR YOU
Lovely 3 bedroom brick home in a very desirable location
and close to Holzer Hospital. This home has a formal entrance, a large living room, a nice large kitchen with lormal
dining area and garage. The home is situated on a large well
landscaped lot with chain link fenced in yard. Also natural
gas and central air.
11488

SIX ACIE ESTATE - BEAUTIFUL HOM£ HAS 4 BEDROOMS,
~ COMPLETE KITCHENS, FAMILY ROOM, 3 BATHS, FIREPLACE WITH BUCK STOVE INSERT, DECK. PATIO. QUAliTY
·CONSTRUCTION THROUGHOUT!
this country style decorated 3 bedroom. Features a cozy lnting room
w/ field stone fireplace w/ woodburner. Convenient countrr style
family room, dining &amp; k1tchen combinat1on. Only 2 yrs. old. Settmg

71illi~~~~~~~5~.iro~o~m~h~ou~s~e. ~~lo~~~~~~(U~~d==~S:EC~l~U~D~E~D~4~A:CR~E:S~~Co=n=vecn~ie~nt~c~o=un~ty~l~iv;in;g==~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~ '
buihling anc 1.87 acres. Give a call
will be yours in this charming 4 bedroom, 2 bath
LAND~ Desirable tract, 96.62 acres more or tess
..,.,',
VACANT LOT - CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
ranch. Washer, dryer, range. 4 acres of natural
on St. Rt. 124. Approx. 30 acres tillable. Pond,
40'x130' lot H65 locatecl .on Madison Ave., Gallipolis All city

IIEAtiUPPERS PLAINS~
2 BR trailer with 2 added
rms. and almost one level
acre. Only $14,000.

'

7 ROOM FRAME .
One floor plan, 3 bedrooms, no upkeep white alum. siding.
Built-in cabinets. FA furnace, nice carpeting, well kepi property inside and out. 14'x20' block garage. Concrele drive.
Chain link fenced-in level yard. Insulated walls and ceiling.
Phone today.
#615

LOW INTEREST LOAN ASSUIIPTIO
CI d
N - al an
ask about the E-Z financing lerms on this attractive 3 bedroom home. Includes equpped kitchen ,
fireplace, family room, 2 baths, heat pump, 2 car
garage, workshop and much more. Over I a~re
tree lined yard .

r'l 1111 ... .

A.. _,....-tlL1n

-~~Upu&lt;«

(I .

-'- - -------- ..

-

EJCEllEIII LOCAnON - Walking distanll! to city ,..... Malern 4
bedroom OOme. 2 lamily room. 2 bollls. blit-i1 klchel1, liVing room, ulilily
room, tob1Jr room. worksl'op, lruit celar, scrOI!Ilfll-in porcil, en~ oi"•.9
"'"' k* witli llltrden, 1M trees and ,..,. P!r. Homo has been ... end
for. EnercJ 8llcierlt
IfillAI.- 2 mobiio i1Drne lois
ll:hlat di!lrict

tar

--==StJ=
-· ==N==
-D==A==Y==
·-P==U==Z==Z==t==
- E;::::R~j ,:

L___.__
.

1 Establish In a
particular spot
7 Becomes Insipid
12 Arrogant
17 Mixture
21 Exalted IQ spirit
22 Whine
23 Vetvetllke fabric
24 Toward and within
25 Spanish article
26 Caudal appendage
28 Ollve-gr_,
flycatcher
30 Pricks painfully
32 Engaged in
33 Male Sheep

pmaday Realty

~ About 40 in

IIIDDLPEORT
Good 8
rm. home overlooking the
river. Gas F.A. furnace &amp; all
city utilities.

'''

kitchen is lully equipped
and · designed for convenience. Central heating and
air. Attached garage. Includes 5 room. caretaker
home.
#610
HOME IN THE COUNTRY
7 room house with 3 or ossibly 4 bedrooms, kitchen with
built-in cabinets, storm windows and doors. Located on state
highway. Priced at $39,000. will consider trade. Call for your
appointment now.
#364

2 ba h 3 bed
d' · ·
t
room, foyer,
t s.
rooms, mmg area, a·
tractive kitchen, family room, full divided basement, 2 car garage. large landscaped lawn. Price
reduced to $S 2,900 .
. #670

(including hot

ACROSS

..

- Lg. 3 bedroom

fire wood . Asking

~-

is move in. Approx . 8 acre5
•nd stocked pond. located
•
on a state highway. You can
own your own business. Just
call for more details.
#599

1331.

opplicotionl 304-675-2088
or 875· 7388.

- - ·sonseerhay Bonnie L Stutes
(Sonny) Garnes Cathy Clark Burdette
Broker
Assoc.
Assoc.
446-4206
446-2707 Evenin1s_ 388-8118 Evonin1s

3 LOTS PLUS 8 ROOM HOME
Heatley Addition to Bidwell. 4 bedrooms, built-in cabinets,
db I. s/ s i shingle rool, wood or coal heater. Apple trees,
side
. rural water system. Asteal at $14,900. You better

•&lt;••~ , ~Creek Water,

96 ACRES

...
corated and well planned
living. Stunning living and
dining areas with beautiful
hardwooo floors. The lovely

houoe Cillo. Call 304-6762398 or 614-445-2464.

ing

J

446-4206

LOVELY HOME IN THE COUNTRY ~ 3 bedroom
ranch can be bought with 3or 25 acres. Home has
new kitchen with all a i
lormal dining
beautiful chandelier, · · room with

sq. ft. of beautifully

RON'S Television Service.
Specializing in Zenith and
Motorole. Quaur. and

RINGLE&amp;'&amp; SERVICE, ex-

~~J~~~~~~~~~.~~~:t~~~~~t;J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;
~~;;~~;;,~~~~;;:;;;~~~~~l~·~b·m·~o~~-~~~~1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~,
=
polis.
you believe t~e price
owners
reduced
#707
DISTINCTIVE'!- 3 bedroom, 2 full baths , large
home •·a~1nes
furnished. you
this brick ranch to? Over 2,000 sq. ft. Large llvmg
REALTORS
Jl'lnry E. Clelend, Jr.
992-6191
.
.' DOttie Turner 992-5692
: urn Trussell 949-2660
. Jo Hill 985-4466

Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

perienced c.rpentar, electri·
cl•n. mason, p11inter, -roof·

REAL ESTATE

FARM ~ Approx. 60 acres with barn . 2 sheds,
chicken house, garage. Double wide home wrth 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, eat-in kitchen
.with refrigerato1 and, range. Property. located at
St. Rt. 141. Owner anxious to sell.
#778

II!!~~FOiffiiiiiGT~E~~H~fE~

Call collect 1-814-2370488, 9 1.m. to 6 p.m.

Fetty Tree Trimm~g._ •!ump
removal. Call 304-676-

446-6610

E Ma i r)lool.lllliiililllloolc. .

Unconditional lifetime gua·
rlintee. Local reference's
furnlahed. Free eltimates.

with--_145.00 per morrll\ KY&amp;I!I Croeil

39 Mr. Preminger
40 Hall!
41 .Hebrew month
43 Go by water
45 Watched secretly
47 Plural ending
48 High c..-ds
49 Fiber plant
52 Walk
54 Stings
56 Writhe
57 AriJled bands
59. Pungeilt
61 Mantallmage
62 Bound
63 The sweetsop
64 Ast..-as
66 Brown kiwi
67 Recent
58 Dress borders
69 Near
71 Possesses
72 Pitch
74 Besmirch
76 Portion of
medicine
77 Couple

78 Exists
791terale
81 Follows Fri.
82 Nuisance

83 Steep, rugged rock
84 Sooet of glass
85 Transgress
87 Cylindrical
89 Crown
90 Remains erect

92 Metal ·
94 Antlered animal
95 Municipalities
96 Harbors
97'Seesaw
99 Period of time
100 Son of Adam
101 ChOoses
105 Frightens
107 Symbol lor
chromium
109 Legal mailers
110 Native Egyptian
111 Slumber
113 Allowance tor
waste

114 That woman •
115 Symbol for
tellurium
116 Sleeveless croak
· 117 Mohammedan
name
118 Tear
120 Coroner: abbr.
121 Bridge
122 Additional
123 Haul with eHorl
124 Unlock
126 Most mature
128 Squander
130 Ate to lose weight
132 Short Jacket
134 English streetcars
t35 Woody plant
136 Spanish lor "yes''

137 Sp$nish t1ile
139 Pierce
141 Period of time:
abbr.

142 land measure

143 Ventilates
145 Large ledle
147 Send forth
149 Drink slowly
152 Above
153 Regard
1551celandic writings
157 Black
159 Agave plant
160 River duck
162 Chemical
compound

164 Covered Inside of

170Goin
·171 Church officials

19 Heating devices
20 F.ree from fraud

27 Meadows
29 Excluded
31 Proceed
34 Churcn setVices
36 Baseball glove
38 Chief
40 Sour
42 Food fish
44 Shakespearian
king
46 Attrac1ed
48 Inspires wjth fear
49 Algerian
cavalryman

so Specks
,_
51 French article
tantalum
56 Measure duration

of
58 Mine excavatiOns

DOWN
1 Condescending
' lOOk
2 Spanish pot
· 3 Symbol for calcium
4 Unit of Siamese
currency
5 Afternoon parties
6 Redacts ·
7 Symbol for lead
8 High mountain

9 Dregs
10 Sheer cotlon
fabric: pl.
11 Saturates
12 Pianissimo: abbr.

13 Ethiopian title
14 Preposition
15 Joins
16 Depressions
17 Towel inscription
18 Article

60 Scottish caps
62 Trial
65 Dollar bill
o.
68'Stockings
69 Cognizant ot
70 Roman garments
'72 Cares.for
73 Slmptesr
75 Dine

97 Strip of cloth
98 Fish eggs
102 Head of Csthotic
Church
104 Danish island
106 Umb
107 Abyss
108 Leases

110 Pasteboard
~

11 Lists of candidates

112 Metal tube
114 Lances
116 Fruit ot the pine
117 War god
119 Fondles
121 Agile
122 Reward
127 Kind of type: abbr.
128 Walks pompously
129 Urge forward
130 Most dreedful
131 Aimless SCribble
133 Title
136 Locations

138 Sculpror of The
Thinker
140 BOOk of the
Scrlptur".

143 Equally
76 Lessen reputation 144 Bristle
77 Spoor
146 Gasp !0&lt; breath
79 Rages
148 Instrument
SO Wearies
. 150 Roman road
'
82 Equals
151 Transfixes
83 Quotes
153 Shade tree
84 Separares
154 Encountered
85 Negative
156
Diocese
88 Female ruff
156
Bow
89 Country o~ASia
161 Thre&amp;-toed sloth
90 Game
t63 Concerning
91 Pith helmet
93 Act of carelessness 165 Physician: abbr.
t 67 Compass point
95 Calling

... . •.'

. '.,

..'·

�'--·

.

·,

Local News in :Brief:
;

· February 17, 1986

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

, :Pega 0-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Veteran officer
kills wife, kids

Marriage license issued ·

CLAYTON. Mo. (AP) -Pro-

~~-~~~U~~~;~~~~~fj§~~~~j~~t+~c~la~Im§in~g~F~r~id.a~yE~~~~t~od;ie,"
POMEROY -

a-

A

'

on himself_ after . fa\IJIIY.his wife and their two
teen·age Children in Qteir west $1.
LOuis County home, authorities
said.
Virgil Twlllman, 52, a JO.year
veteran of the University City pollee
forcp, shot his wife, Patricia, and
their son 'Scott, lB, and daughter
Dawn, 15, before killing ~If.
. said county pollee spokesman Jim

'

.Court grants divorce
POMEROY - Bruce. \f. Blackston, PomPrDY, has been granted a
divorce fu Meigs County Common Pleas Court from Chris~na Kay
ataCkslon, alsO of PomProy, on groUndS Of gross neglect Of duty·
Custody of a minor child has been awarded to thP dP(Pndant

.

'

Brady~

A daughter who lives In Washing·
ton, Mo., but was .riot Identified bY
_.llra_t_W_ID) to th~.. house

Couple files for dissolution

gave ber a dero to the houSPthatwa,s
signed over to her, some guns· and
money, Brady said,
She told. police her father was
despondent and wouldn't IPt her Into
the house.
· "She also quoted him as saying: .
'This would be a gaoo day to die,"'
Brady said.
·1
surroundro the
but .

Young, LoWPll, O!Iio, have
Meigs County Common
Pleas Court for a ·dissolution of their marriage.

.One-vehicle accident · investigated
GALLIPOLIS- ARt. 2, VInton, man escaped Injury when the car ·
• he was driving struck a guardrail along Ohio 160 Friday morning.
•· ·
when he

. . l

. Minor accident reponed
• GALLIPOLIS- A car owned by aRt. 2, Gallipolis, man sustained
: light damage when it was struck by a car drlven··b y a Gallipolis man
" in the Foodland parking lot, city police sait,l.
Officers said a parkro car, ownro by Harry D . Snowden, was .
:: struck bY a C'!r driven by Carl E. Maniskas, 61. 2UHerikleAve., while
: Manlskas was apparently backing from a parking space. No lnjuties
_were reported following the .lncident, officers said . Snow(len's car
: 's ustainro light damage in the 4: 2U p.m. Incident. No damage was
~~!l_;.. !ceo&lt;&gt;rte.:Ho Ma.ni~k....as' vf.hide: , ·
, . -."1:: -··-~----~~.. -·- •
"" ••___,.,.. y

H""

• GALLIPOLIS ~ A city man is lodged In the Gallla County j all on a
: summons charging indecent exposure and habitual sex offender. ·
: Arrested was Robert W. Garnes, 24. of 751 Fourth Ave.

.

~-

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·

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Cable billings
late, says CCG

: City resident jailed

· Two killed
.

,.;.o.....-

A guide to local
Television programming
:Feb. 17 thru Feb. 23

ili ~acciaent-·

POJNTPLEASANT-Asaresult
of a nPWbiUirigsystem being used bY
Consolidated Communications
Group 1nc., the firm which provides
local cable television service, cable
'lv- bllls were -lniiy:r tate
delivered.
. Marty Crawford, Consolidated's .
regional general manager, an.nounced . that all late charges for ·
February will be cancellro.
"The fact that we have gone to a
· new bi-monthly billing, plus the fact
that our bills were late . being
dellverro, which include(! the movie

·

ALBANY-;- Two employ~ pf Diamond StonP Quarry's Mine No.

: 1 hPre were killed about 2:30 p.m. Friday when they fell Into a
• limestone loading bin.
: According to a report from the Athens County Sheriff's
; Department, limestone had apparently stuck in the upper part of the
• bin and the two men had climbet,llnto the bin to knock It looSP. The
; limestone cavro in causing the men to fall into the blri.
• Killro were David. Sinclair of Shade, and Ed .Smith of Athens.

,guides,
a severe
snow
storm, couplro
causingwith
power
outages
everywhere, our phone lines have
been flaooed with phone calls,"
Crawford explainro.
Crawford apologized for any
!nronvenlencecustorners may have
experience(! and said the company
hopes to have aU of Its computer
"bugs" lronro out before the next

County court sessions reschedule(~,
POMEROY- Traffic court that.was schrouled for last Thursday
has been rescheduled for Wronesday-at 10 a.m. Smail ciaims court
from last Thursday has also been reschroulro for Wednesday
beginning at 11:30 a.m.

I ndudes complete

---'

MEIGS TIRE CENTER·

242 WEST MAIN ST.

listings -,

POMEROY

.9 92-2101

JOHN FULTZ- J. MARCUS FULTZ

•

l-------------------------------:----:'-·

Ask Dick. Kleiner.
J
Pages 2·, 7
l

. _jJJ)Iing..ln.Marc)l~----

Page 4

with

~~~\~)··

. .

Slation
listings
.
..

Front Wheel Dri~e Buicks &amp; Pontiacs

* '8S Buick Centurys
31N STOCK

* '8S Buick Skyhawks

* '8S Buick Park Avenue
·

Huge Sa.,hags On:
;RE. . 5

...•c

*NO
NONSENSE
PANTY
HOSE
.
•aovs'-·swtiiEIS ___ ~·~--.--·
.

.

I

0

MAX

Huntington. WV
CBN Cable Netwrk
Sports Natwork .
Atl~nta,

urn

Cll
(!)

GA .

Columbus, OH ·
Parkersburg; ·WV

Charleston. WV .
Huntington, WV
Columbus. OH
Athens. OH

Huntington, WV
Hurricane. WV

Cll
())

IIl
CICJJ
())

...

llll
liD

~

Ill

Home Box Office
Cinemax

IHBO] ·

IM:.Xl

1 IN STOCK

* '8S Buick .Skylarks
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6 IN STOCK

.

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~*
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.
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.. 21N STOCK

21N STOCK

--.,....

-----.-,---·-- ----

c

*SONY VIDEO CASSEnES
*BATH TOWELS AND HAND TOWELS
*SU EAM .COFFEEMliERS

BUICK
PONTIAC

· 2 .I N STOCK

3 IN STOCK

*LADIES' DEVON SPORTSWEAR
*MEN'S SWEATERS .

WSAZ
CBN
ESPN
·WTBS
WTVN '
WTAP
WCHS
WPBV
WBNS
WOUB
WOWK
WVAH
HBO

11.-4°/o·
48 MONTH
FINANCING

. COLUMBUS SYMPHONY SCIIEDUUID'"" TllellitunbusSymJihoo\YC::ba!nberOrehelltra, with
Gary Sheldon, prlndpal1!11"81 conductGr, 18 seheduled to perfonn Feh. M, 2:3l'p.m. ai the Fine and
Perfonnlnl Ana &lt;:enter, Rio Grande CoUege. The perfonnance Is sponsored by the Valley Artists
Series with suppori of 'be Ohio Arts Couacll. For furiber lnlorrnailon ooatlld die arts cen'er at

246-11353.

.

Filmeter
Pages 5, 6

•

••
•

.Serving Gallia, Meigs and Mason ·Counties

.

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