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                  <text>Sugardale

Soviet arms
Catholic church

.
restoratiOn

c:oa-ned beef
bl-isket

l.ooal exlerl8ion offices_offer _programs lo help
farmel'll cope financially - Page FA

-

. .

-Page B-1
ames j. Kilpalrick contends a nuclear freeze
+"wnn'i work'- rage A;;2

.Page .D-1
cold Sunday

Aloag&amp;heRiver ............... B-l-8
"'wJr eiJa ............. .. ............ &amp;l
Deaiiii ................ ............. A-4
Edl&amp;orlals ......................... A·2
~ann .....•............ .......... ... E-4
8poris ........ ~ ........... ........ C.Fl

in forecast
-Page- 'A-3-

.Flats
.....

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--~:._:_:__· -:.~

..::'"':- -~:.;.

. lb.
Vol. 20 No.6

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

Copytlglitwd 1986

COLUMBUS, ' Oh1o . (1U&gt;f _:::=-A~Ight il\crease tn
Ohio's unemployment rate, from 8.4 percent in
January to 8.7 percent last month,. was not viewed
with great concern by state o'ftlctals.
Roberta Steinbacher. administrator of the Ohio
Bureau of Employment Services, said Friday that
"whtle we prefer to see Ohio's rate decline, I do not
· belteve that today's change signals a revE&gt;rsal of the
Improvement seen" tn recent months.
"We don't see thls as a stgntflcant change," added
Dixie SommE!rs, bead of OBES' employment rilatket
Information bureau. She said ' the slight Increase

U.S.D.A. Choice
·Boneless
Bottom

JIOUDdo..

a-oast

Flat
Cut

lb.

probaoiy ·was - itr"part~ an - ad)ustmenl trom a ·· ·u·
larger· than-expected decrease In the jobless rate In
January frorri tbe 9.1 percent recorded in December.
She said that, based on a comparison of last month
with February 1984, when unemployment was 9.3
percent, statistics indicate the state's steady
economic recovery Is continuing.
Nationwide, the unemployment rate edged down to
7.3 percent In February from 7.4 percent in January.
· In announcing the February uneinplayment
figures, OBES also released a study of 1984 data

12 Sectiona. 90 Pages 60 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

Sunday, March 10, 1985 ·

si\OWtng that t6tnessness ·among riien'COlfttnues to be "'
greater than among women -9.9 pert.-ent compared
wlth 8.8 percent.
Ms. Sommers said that reflects a continuation of a
phenomenon that developed In the early 1!ms, when
the recession hit the male-dominated Industries of
mining, manufacturing and construction. But she
said there are signs ·that the trend is returning to old
patterns In which women have had a higher jobless
rate than men.
·
The 1984 study showed that the unemployment rate

. Tayl.Qr returns
to face Meigs
murder charge

· ·Holzer"Clinic will"·o ffer.·
medical insurance alt..-native
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
'l'lrne!I-Sen&amp;lnel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - If everything
goes • according to pfan, ·area
employers and residents wUJ have _
an alternative to normal medical
insurance within nine months.
Doctors at Holzer Clinic are in the·
process of establishing a Health
Maintenance Organization, or
HMO. The HMO is expected to be In
effect by tbe end of the year,
according to Dr. Oscar W. Clarke,
pll'Sklentoftheboardofdirectorsat
Holzer Cltnic.
An HMO is · a bealth care
organization that provides compre·
henstve, coordinated medical servt·
ces to enrolled members for a fixed,
prepald fee. The organiZation ts
under pll)fesstonal ll)a·nageinent

.
'

and treatment is provided by bealth
care specialists, Including physi·
clans, nurses and other bealth
professionals. The prfliald fee or
Pt:!!mium covers treatment In both
HMO facUlties and hospitals.
· Outpatient, Jnp~tle nt, emer·
. gency, psychiatric and substance
abuse treatment wUt be covered by
the HMO, according to Dr. Craig
Strafford, a. member of the HMO
steering committee. J.ong.term
psychlatrtc and substance abuse
treattnents may possibly require
co-payments, Strafford added.
The HMO, Clarke told a luncheon
of area businessmen F riday, "wtll
promote health maintenance tnstead of trea anent," because preventtve care is emphasiZed to help
avert the high costs of providing

men:

amorig' black
noto nly In Ohio but in the nation,
was more than double that of white men. In Ohio last
year, the rate for black men was 19.3 percent
compared with 8.3 percent for whites.
"This obviously Is a very serious discrepancy and
one that we would like to do something about," Ms.
Sommers said.
She said officials are hopeful that the lon g·rang~
decline tn·the overall .emplayment rate·wm continue.
" We won't be satisfied u·nttl we reach tl\e national
average, and we'd like to be below that ," sbe ·said.

care in hospitals for illnesses which
have progressed to more serious
stages.
The prepayment. offlxed, periodic
p~mlums regardless of the se~lce
rendered, rovldes an Incentive for
HMOs to'avotd lnapproplate treat·
ment, Clatkeadded.
The primary coverage area Of the
Holzer Cllntc HMO will be Gauta,
Meigs and Jackson counties In Ohio
and Mason County, W.Va., accord·
ing Strafford. The secondary cover·
age area will Include Athens,
Lawrence and VInton counties In
Ohio, and Jackson County, W.Va.
Approximately 40,001 pa.rlllci!IIIJIIt':" \
can be covered by !be

POMEROY -

Lindsey Taylor.

35, formerly of Forest Run Road,
Racine, was returned to Meigs
County late Frida y to face aggra.
~ ?.'Btedmurder char.ges In connection
with· tbe October 1983 death of
DannyWayne Melt on.
According to Paul Gerard,special
Investigator for Prosecuting Attor·
ney Fred W. Crow III , the ret urn of
Taylor ended what is believed to be
the longest extradition fight Metgs
County has ever seen.
The much-postponed extradlllon
hearing was finally held at 2 p.m.
Friday before Judge Douglas or the
Wood County {}v.va.)C!rcuttCoun.
Gerard attended the· hearing on
behalf of the state of Ohio and Wood
County Assistant Prosecutor Rt·
chard· Richmond represented the
state of West VIrginia with Parkers·
burg, W.Va. attorney James Brad·
ley representing Ta ylor.
Taylor .Is charged with aggra·

added.

A feaslbutty study has been
(Continued on page A3 l

Housing shortage

·b:r'- -rng-u~~ " of,., a-··~··~-

~,..--va1!!d=¥P.!.Irder ,-....

Gallipolis, who owns an apartment
buDding in the vUiage, Informed
council he plans to construct sll&lt;
RIO GRANDE - More than 40
new.houstngunlts are expected to be
two-bedroom apartments.
The VaUey View addition, plus a
buUt In and around RloGrande in the
next year, but village officials sald
proposed 23 one-bedroom apart·
ment structure for senior citizens,
the need for more housing In the
are both · contingent on Harder
college community remains to be
obtaining Farmers Home Adminis·
answered.
!ration tundtng. To help Harder
Mayor Donald Walker said there
obtain that funding, the vUJage put
Is a housing shortage for not only
down new sidewalks on several
students, but for low·inCO!llfprople,
streets last November.
single famUies and senior citizens.
The village has already glve.J its
New housing developments tn Rio
blE'SslngtoColumbusdeveloperTed . Grande are welcomed by Walker,
who said that currently the vUJage
Harder to add 16 more apnrtments
onto the. Valley VIew complex on doesn't have the "variety" of
Ohio 325, and at last week's counctl
housing some people are looking at
meeting, Robert McCartney of
(Continued on page A3l
By KEVJN KELLY

'lbneii-Sentlnel Staff

Rio Gl'llllde Mayor
~Walker

HMO - A Health Maintenance Organtzatlon, or HMO; bebtg
e8tabiJshed by doc&amp;orS at Holzer Clinic will cover btpatlen&amp;, ou&amp;patlent,
eiJiei'II!IICY, JIIIYChlatrlc and su~ abuse treatment, J)r• Craig
Strafford, a member of the HMO steering committee told area
buslneMmen Friday. An HMO provides comprehensive, coorilnaled
services to enmlled members for a fixed, prepaid fee.

In an Indictment returned
Oct. 17. 1983, by the Meigs Coun ty
Grand Ju"'.
The indic1ment alleges Taylor did
purplsely, with prior calculalion
and design, cause the death of
Danny Wayne Melton, whose body
was found Oct. 10,1983, at the Taylor
residence on Forest Run Road.
Taylor is also charged with having a
weapon, a firearm , whlle being a
fugitive from justice or while under
Indictment for a felony of violence.
Aggravated murder Is a sp_ectal
category felony with a maximum
possible penalty of Ufe imprison·
ment . The wea pons charge is a
felony of !be fourth degree with a
maXImum possible penalty of 18
months.
(Continued on page A3 )

Senior citizens complex prepares for mid-May occupancy

·U.S.DA. Choice

boaeless

topsi..loin
i.i

By BOB HOEFLICH '
'Jbnes.Sen&amp;lnel Staff
POMEROY - Si!veral apart·
ments in "The Maples", Meigs
County's senior citizens housing
complex on Mulberry Heights in
Pomeroy, were open for inspectlqn
Thursday afternoon In

open on all three floors .
As explainec) by Matthews, ali of
the apartments are equipped with
emergency call systems which
Include· a complete fire alarm
system, a sprinkler system and
emergency lighting. There will be a
coin operated laundry · and a

occupancy in mid·May.
Renting of the 45 apartments is
cun-ently underway by the manage.
ment agency personnel, John and
Karen Matthews, of 'Stlvevheels,
Marietta, and appltcatlons are
avaUable · at the Senior Citizens
Center.
The units are broken down Into 11
efficiencies, 28 one bedroom apart·
ments, five one bedroom han?~·
capped equipped apartments, and
ooe handicapped equipped effl·
ctency apartment. Each has a
refrigerator, electrlc range, ex·
hau.st fan and garbage disposal.
1lte apartmentswereconst ructed
a cost of $1.5 mUllan with
appltan~ costing another
The complex Includes tberenovated
century·old children's home buUd"
tng tn which there are 15 units, whUe
the other 00 units are a new

The
personnel
Thursday explained to nearly 100
senior citizens attending tbe tnror·
mattomil meeting the age, income,
and med(cal criteria requirements
for Jtvlng In the complex. It was
stressed that aU residents of The
Maples must be able to Uve
Independently and iuUy care for
themselves. Any reslde.tt unable to
do so wUI be required to find other
Uvtng quarters.
·
·As for age, the apartments are
ltmtted tothose6'loroverbr a person
certified by a physician to have a
disabling handicap of indefinite
duraUon. For a married couple to
qualify, OJ)ly one spouse must meet
the criteria. In the eventofthedeath
of that spouse after the couple has
moved Into an apartment, the other
rematntng partner clln continue to
live there, if he or she contbtue to
qualify financially.
~!nee the construction of the
compiex was flnanceli by a ioan.
(Continued on page A3)

s:m.cro.

structure.

&gt;'i~=-:c; Enclosed walkways on each floor
-c
W11J c:oanect tlie -two buUilllip and
there will an elevator which will

I

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•

•

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Commentary and perspective
•

Why ·3 freeze
A Division of

.

.

· 825 Third A.ve., .G~!pn!!!i, Oldo

I! I

(~art

St.,. Pomeroy, Ohio

(614) 992·2156

(614) 446·2342

.

•

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

~

WilSON .JR.

LETTERS OF' OJ'l! ~ JO:-..' ••n · wl:l&lt;:~'JmNI . rt ... \ ~hnuld t)l • 11·~ ... rh &lt;lll :111
u 11'oHb
l on,e . A l l ll'ttf'r!oo ·•n· wlljl'd 10 f'd i tln g and m 11 ., 1 ~ io lg nf'fl 11 -HtJ n.:~mt•. &lt;tddn·!'s und
lfllf'phon(' numb(' l !'o . No unslp:nf'd lf'llf'!''i w il l hr puhlishf'£1 LC'!tf' t .o; ."i hould bC' In

~·rsonulilk&gt;.
• ood '"' " · adureS&gt;in "' '"""· ""' "'

do . with Incomes only slightly
adustedforinflatlon.Suchfamllles
J
put off buying a car or a piece of

kind of freeze are we talking about?
Are we talking of freezing actual
outlays In fiscal '86 at the level of

furniture: they squeeze the budget
for food; they make a dress or a suit
1 hes 1ast anatherseason. Why
.of cot

outlays in fiscal '85? U so,

can't the government follow a

.
=recovery reigns
.

--

we ffl!eze budget authority, we
freeze at roughly 1,004 billion.
The problem here Is that, con·
trary to widespread belief, Con·
gress does not control actual
outlays In a given fiscal year.
Congress may authorize the Pen..
lagon tq spend ·a tew billion dollars
On a Weapons Syst,em. but the
letting of a contract and the
payment of bJlls are left to defense

s

freeze
9
wbloilulld
spendlnglkiat
abo!ut
$94
on. f0lxrar.
e weta ngof
reezlng
a

agencies,
!hilt billions of dollars be
In
.
continulngcommitmentshave
to
paid aut. These payments must be
made, or contracts must be rewr1f.

ten and deliveries . must be
stretched out- and the s 1unn1ng

MONDAY TI-IROUGH WEDNESDAY :
· Mild with a chance of show«;&gt;-rs each day. Highs In the mid·SO. to_
mid-60s Monday and in the :.OS TuPsday and Wectnesdav. Lows
generally In the 30s.
·
·

defeat the whole Idea of economy.
There Is this further objection IQa
free?..e, by whatever term we define
It: Some feelings can't be frozen.
Wllly-nU!y, $130 billion mus~ be paid
out this year as Interest on the
national debt. Unemployment compensatlon offers another example;
these tax. a nd benefit levels are set
by the stales. and Congress Is
powerless to freeze them.

Cold

"This visit was Henry's 'mea
culpa; " one diplomat told my
associate.
· After years of mutual suspicion, a
measure of cordiality was restored
following the982vlsit to Washington
of the late Indian prime minister,
Indira Gandhi.
Now her son, Rajlv, riding a wave
of popularity at home tlvidenced by
his recent electoral landslide, Is
scheduled to visit nere In June.

.·~
-.

~·

,•

..,...

unrealistic 10 suppose
Con·gress will approve any significant
reductions In the major entitlement
programs. Without changes In

eligiblllty requirements, there fs no

"The Arms Control talks wlll
come lo order. Did the gentleman
from the Soviet Union wish to
speak•"
"My government must protest
President Reagan's request for
funding ol new MX missiles at a
time when we are In Geneva to
begin arms negotlailoris. How are
we to ·seriously discuss reducing
weapons at the very moment your
American leaders are asking Congress for authority to build more of
th em.?"
"It is very simple, Mr. Federen ko. Theon!Y reason the P resldenI

'

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'

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'

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..

" Well. I guess things could be worse! We could
be farmers !"

,•.

&gt;

'
~~~~~==;~-~~

~

'

·; .today Is Sunday, March 10, the 69th day ofl91l5. There are 296days left In
:fh¢ year.
; , ·Today's highlight In history:
'
·
; On March 10, 1876. Alexander Gra\lam 13ell made the flrsttelephonecall,
:tieillng his assistant In an adjoining room In Boston, ' 1Mr. Watson, come
J)l!;re. I want you."
,
, {)II this date:
,
";' ;rn 1496, Christopher Columbus coocluded his second visit to the New
;:wottd as he left Hispaniola lor Spa:ln.
~· -In 1629. England's King. Charles I dissolved parliament. He would not
•:CaU It back for 11 years. . ·
·'( .In 1785, Thomas Jefferson was appointed minister to France,.succcedlng
~njamln Franklin.
• In 1848, the Senate ratified the Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo, ending the
; war wtth Mexico.
.
~ In 1B64, Ulysses S. Grant pecame commander of the Union armies In the
. 'CivU War.
• ·
~ In 1.88), the Salvation Anny amved In the United States from England.
•, In 1948, tlle anll·communist foreign minister of Czechoslovakia, Jan
~:Masaryk, plunged to his death In PJ'ague.
·
} In 1949, Mildred E-Gillars, who had made wartime broadcasts for the
~'Nazis under the name "Axis Sally," was convicted of treason In
f.Washln'gton.
W
Tn 1lt.ii!ID. l!;!orY'IOC ~o:sr1 D •• ., .... 1.... .-..t.......l .,..,,llh. '- "'• ---'-~~ &lt;'Y' - tu iiJe~- ••• ..~, ""-· ·...-... ......,...... •-J y•~~ i!S"'.UH.,Y Ul ll'.l'Clllpra;,;- l0111,
~a.,asslnatlon of civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr.
1

.. _. '
-'

D

we

ve up

0 SO ete

-

verifiable treaty:
UWhy should we gtve up our
JCBMs It the United States keep$
building the MX?"
"Because, Mr. Federenko, you
know as weU as ldothatthe'MXhas
no strategic value. The ortginalldea
was to move It underground so we
could retall!lte If you launched a
first strike attack. When that Idea
proved too costly we decided to put
!lie MX In hardened Minutemen
sUos. The Instant we did that Its
value as an offensive weapon was

lost."

·

"It It has no value as an offensive
weapon why does your President
keep asking for money to produce
so many of them?"
"Because the MX Is the' secret
bargaining chip we Intend to use In
these negotiations. We're reluc·
tantly wtlllng to give It up at some
time If you are reluctantly wllllng to
give up one of your missile
oy•iernB.''
"Forgive me for saying this, but
·'

we need."

"Such as 'Star Wars'?."
"Exactly. 'Star Wars' will never
l:le used as a bargaining chip
because once we develop it, we
d!Jn't care If the Kremlin signs an .
arms treaty with us or not. It we can
knock all your weapons out of the
sky, why should we talk to you?"
"By the time you develop a
foolproof 'Star Wars' • defensive
system, we will develop a foolproof
offensive system to penetrate it."
"You're just saying that, Mr.

1

b

~"'"'"'' 'nM

, when they
work there. He noted that a walling
new revenue sources, but Walker Is
tlst stU! exists for the HUD-flnanced
worrted about -s tunting future
growth of tbe village.
apanmC'nts in t-he village.
Because-of the fundln!} problem _
"An Increase would be _such a
thf' ,·ll!agf' faces In constructing a · burden that Rio Grande residents
new sewage trl'atment plant. couldn't withstand it, and It woold
WaikE'r and village muncil arc impede any future growth In the
Informing new dl:'veiopers ihat
vil lage;· he said. "Under those
annexation Into the village is circumstances, who'd want to be In
nf'!:'essary in order to get water and a village with those kfnd of ra\es?"
.twage senlicc.
' Annt.'Xatlun ".s une or the major
The m ayor and council are options being examined, the mayor
examining such options· as In· said. lnunedlate concerns are
creased sewage rates and a limit on focused on the area where the

lines extending from It to Buckeye
Hills Cart'er Center that are In the
path orthe proposed V .S. 35 bypass.
1f t he. vJilage can annex the ar.ea. the state would be responsible for
paying for the replacement of those
lines, rather than the village.
"From this poinC we will ask for
annexation," be said. "Our services
provided out of the village will be
c'\il'talic\1, r.n&lt;i any requests Irom
landowners wtll include annexation.
I feel definitely there 'will be some
Increase In rates, but I really can't

H 0 lzer CJ iniCoo

(Continued from page All

By The Associated Press
Dl'nse fog· covered the Gull Coast early Saturday, with vlslblllty
near zero and coastal travelers' advisories posted from Florida to
Texas.
EL'"""'here, showers were scattered from northern Arkansas
across the Tennessee Valley to North Carolina. Rain was ·also
scattered over portions of New York and the southern Rockies, while
snow showers prevaUed over northern Maine.
Cloudy skies prevailed over northern New England and from the
sOuthern mid-Atlantic coast across the Tennessee Valley, portions of
the central and .southern Plains, the southern Plateau to Southern
California:
Early morning temperatures were fn the 20s from the upper Great·
Lakes across the northern Plains to the northern Rockies, but
reached the 60s from the south Atlantic Coast and Gulf Coast states to
t~.s"d.e£!1rt..Su!!lhwe.st
- -·---- - - - - - · -

CLEVELAND !API The
winning number drawn Friday
night in the Ohio Lottery's daily
game, "The Number, " was 300.
In thl' " Pick4'' game, the winning
number was 4417.
The lottery reported earnings of
$945,027.50 from wagering on "The
Number."
The earnings came on sales oJ
$1 ,492,474; while holders of winning
tickets are f'ntltled · lo share
$.'i47,«6.50.
In the parimutuel "Pick 4" game,
sales totaled $~.~1 . Holders of
winning tickets are· entitled to 45
percent, or $94,536. A winning $1
straight ticket earn.• $3.~. A
winning $1 boxed ticket earns $.'JJ5.
- Thf' numer: thre&lt;'-zero.zero.
Pick 4: four-four·one-seven.

"We can If his dreams are
destabltlzlng the balance of power
in the world. We have an allSwer to
every space weapon he dreams of
putting In the sky, and we Intend to
start bultding them light now."
"Is that your final word , Mr.
Federenko?"
"No, It's my opening statement.
Now let's s tart the talks."

1

Taylor has been In custody in
Wood County since Oct. 11, 1983,
when he was arrested on charges
from Meigs County. Gerard reports
that the extradition process was
begun immediately. Paperwork
was hand delivered to Columbus
and a governor's warrant was
obtained on Nov. 7, 1983.
Gerard expressed his apprecia·
lion to Wood County authorities for
their help and cooperation.
"We want to thank Wood County .
Prosecutor Harry Dietzler's office
for all the help, andwewanttoth'\nk
the sheriff's department for taking
care of Taylor for us," Gerard said.
Taylor Is being held at the Meigs
County JaU. On Friday night, he
complained of chest pains and was
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospl·
tal by the Pomeroy Emergency
Squad. Following examination he
was returned tO-Ule jaU7""

Gerard said thatwhileTayior has
been declared competent in Wood
County, It will probably be a firs t
step now to establish In Ohio that he
Is competent.
. Taylor's initial court appearance
before Judge Charles H. Knight in
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Coun Is expected to take place
Monday morning.

r-------------.1

4

1

Some of our Cable TV Bills were wrong. New bills
witt) correct amounts art;t being mailed immediately.

THE CHURCH - THE SAVED
William B. Kughn

We apologize for any inconvenience to our sub~
scribers.

CONSOliDATED ·COMMUNICATIONS
GROUP
For Gallipolis &amp;Point Pleasant
'

675-3398

Meigs County

1-800-344 3331

·Every Thursday

Dally Pn•ss Assoclalinn and 1hC'
Am&lt;'rl{'anN&lt;&gt;wspaiX"r Publls hi.'I'SAS·
sol'ialion, Nalionat Ad.-crlisln~ Re·
prPSenlalivr. Brunhum. 1717 West
Nln(' Mllr Road , Sui!C' :.!04, Orrrolt,
Mi&lt;'hlgun. 11!075.
suil!lfRIPTJON RATE.~
Ry ca.. ter or Molar Rouh•
One Woek.c ....................... .... ... suo
One Monl hsi'rii6l:f:'(iii'r\;"""' ,$4.1!0
PRICE

Federeilko, because you want us to

The Sunday Tlmc&gt;s.s.&gt;nllnrl wm not

put 'Star Wars' on the table."
"How can you put It on the table
wben you don't know what It Is?"
"How do you knowwedon'tknow
what It Is?"
"Because It you really had a 'Star
Wars' system we would have stolen
It from you by now. You should
know there are no secrets from the
KGB."
.,, ''Sillr' wars'ls~ar to Mr.
Reagan's heart, and whether It

mude by carriers.

bf:' rf'sponslb!C' ({) r ad\'anc«•p:tymPnts

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Sunday Only

One vrar .... ........... ....... .... ..... $26.80
Six riwnths ........................ ... $13.00

52
26
1:1
I
• 'l

•• · -

•

lS

The church. is composed of the .aved who are added to it b:r the

Lord, ''And lhe Lord added Co lhe cllt.,..:ll dail_r ncll 111 ''""'"' be
•aved" (Acts 2:41). The IG11td are made 0111 in Christ, "fur IV'! anr all
OM

m CANt Je•w ·· (Gal. 3:28}, and are

"01'

livelli

which build

ttcnMI ..

up the spiritual houoe (1 Pet. 2:5). The •pirilowl h.,...o io the cA..reA,
''But if I ta"'ll long. that thou ma11e.t k1IOW Aow tAo. o.gltU•t to

beflave thyself in lh.e houtio of God, which u the church of tfu livixg
God, the pil/.ar and ground of tho truth" 11 Tim. 8:151 .
OneWiildow
The one ....,.;ndowthrough which the light from heaven ahine• i.e "t.\c
liglal of !he gloriotol go•pel of Chriot" t2 Cor, 4:4). The word of GGd, of
which the ebureh is the pillu and J{I'OUnd, eon1i1t1 of Kripture inapired
of God and '']frofitu.bt. Jar dodnne, for nproof. for corntd-io., for
itulnu:tio'ft in n"ghteou.uu: Tlwit tAlc m4tt of God ftla.W b• · N'rled
tArovghtv fwrn.Yh.ecl unto aU good work•" (2 Tim. 3:16,17) . To"w.lk

the

Ut~ht

u;

as He is In the Ught 11 Jno. 1:7), we muat abide In Ood't

ha'"

doctnnc, "Who•oever C'f"(HU_gre.,eth, end cbtd•tA no£ i" CA• doctrn... o/

Chril&amp;,
not God. He tha:t abideth in IJ&amp;• doclrins of Chria&amp;, M AGe~
both I he FatAeraotd tile SMI" (2 Jno. 9).
O..eO...
There is but one door of entranee int.o the ehureh, and that door la
Christ, "1 am the door: by mo if Mil/ , _ 111tfT ift, fu 1foall be IGWd"
(Jno. 10:9). The steps that lead unt.o the door that opena int.o the
church wherein ia salvation are A•a,;,.g, HAeumg, re~, and
c011feuing. We can only paoa through the door by obeying the , _ of
doctrine, that is. the deotA. b"WNI. and Nt'K,.,..etioft. of the Lord (l Cor .

15:1 ·4). Thisfonn u obelfed when one Is "baptized i111o Juv Ch.rilt"
(Rm . 6 :3 ; Gal. 8 ;27).

Mt•mb&lt;&gt;r : ThC' ,\ ssoda!C'd Prf&gt;Ss In·

No ·'"bscrlpliohs b)' mo11 ,..,·mill«&lt;
In
I owns when• moiOrrarrtP~· servlce
Is ll\' allabl(•

.

A Muaage From

land

50 ( 'e ntM

•'

441 2nd Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 446-3382

WE GOOFED!!

AMulthnl'dla Nt•W!ipuper
Publl•hcd each Sunday. 825 Third

co nd clasS post a~C' paid ut r.alllpolls.

the

Taylor.,..__________tc_o_n_tln_~_ed_fr_om_p_ag_e_A_ll rr===============::;:=======::,

USP 52s-t!OO
Avrnu&lt;'. by 1hf' Otllo V&lt;~llry Publish·
In~~; Compa n ~·. Mulllm«&lt;l;~ . lnt'. Se· .

when

52

26

13

Dally and 8undlly
M.UL SUBSCRIPTIONS
IMide Ohio
W""k$ .... ..................... ...... $58.24
Weoeks ... ............. .... ...... ... .. 129.12
WN&gt;k S .... ....... .......... , ......... $14.56
Ralr.l OUIA"I! Ohio
WP{'ks : .. : ................. ......... . 159 .80
Weeks .... .... .. ........ ............. S:ll .20
Weeks .. ...... ........ , .... ......... . $1~ . 60

·
;
:
·
.:
·

sentor
• . h0USJfigo•e:.-.:..__
•
_____;____

iunba11 1l'imea- Jmtinel

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

appears hypocritical

the same amount of money.
into consideration the livelihood 01
Th r Holzer CI'tmc
. HMO w1'II be the village the establishment of a
rw
...,., S ff rd
'd
d'
•
a-pron,.&lt;~, tra 0
sa• · 1n •- lively growth pattern. We are
An HMO, Shouldice said, resuits
vlduals not covered by employers
gro
· wing, and we don't want to stop
. 1
bl
d Medl
1n fewer hospna
stays, compra e an
care recipients will also be
that .,,
or better care lor patients. the same eligible
to join the HMO. Should ice
d
(Continued from page All sal · Medicaid recipients will not be
immediately eligible, . Shouldice
said, "because it is not viable yet,
from HUD, the rent Is subsidized
rent. A $50 security deposit Is
but Medicaid is a part of the scheme
· w-r.il-till;-·"!rur&gt;Sitly ''i!lliOtmt."'jJleing · ·· ''Ji!(julreo alc)'Jijfwlth a oneyearli\ase.'·"··in--ti'i'e· lang nm.'- A"i'alTo orr-.i::;£-;:+·~!determined on an lndlvldljal basis
As for pets, restrictions are stU!
employees for each Medicare
d~pendlng,. Q!l . lncomP. lnrome..,.,_be)!!g .c0!!Sid!'red,- -Mau~.s !'f'-~-T-t&gt;&lt;:i!l)en t wU!_bero;;trunl-!!!ild, M •D!.!!· ~ ~....,,..
ceilings, accordingtoMatthews,are
ported. Fish and birds are permit - dice said.
$7,300 for,one person, $8,200 for two
ted, but It Is questionable as to
The HMO will also provide the
persons, with some adjustment
whether olher animals will be
cost of tro&gt;atment for out-of-town
possible lor medical expenses.
permitted because of allergies and
&lt;!CCident s, Strafford said . "We are
Income, the management agency
noise tolerance of residents in the
obligated topa y health carecosts, no
noted, Includes pensions of all sorts,
other apartments. It was reported
matter where you are ," he added.
Income from assets such as cenlfi - that overnight visitor.; will be
The HMO will cov!'r medica l
cateS of deposit and savings
permitted, sueh as a resident's
payments, although optical and
accounts, rent from property _or
children and grandchildren.
dental coverage may be included.
other sources, ail of which is
Funding for the construction of
" Optical will be covered to a
verified. Assets such as 10percent of
the complex which Is adjacent to the certain extent ," Strafford added .
real estate value Is taken into ·Senior Citizens Center was ar· "Dl'ntal mayor ma y not be included
consldera tlon In arrlvtpg at an
ranged by the Meigs County Elderly because of the cost. Howl'ver, it rna,,·
. adjusted .annua! Income. Thcrent ls
Hou g!ng Corporation, Rie-hard --be .. a Lack-on. ::....which would --be
then based at 30 percent of the
Jones, president. Construcllon Is by covered by an additional premium .
adjusted annual income.
Northland Home Corporation of Prescriptions could also be covered ,
All utilltlesexcepttelevlsloncable
Columbus.
wilh the patient paying a nominal
• The ama~ 1 n g rruf' srory of Public [ru~mlf's
and telephone art' Included in the
co-payment, he added.
who bem m•• Grnf• Pnwo Gooo

-Louery winning
numbers: 300, 4407

Pakistan, It wltl be forced to
continue Its relatlnshlp with the
Soviets as a counterweight to_
Pakistan's ambitions.
American diplomats said Indian
ofl!cials privately acknowledged
that the United States Is not
Intentionally trying to create problems for India with Its aid to
Pakistan but that the assistance Is
Intended to counter Soviet
Pncroachment .

come."
Walker said there Is JitUe differ·
ence between the sale value of
houses--inslde thl' village ·and out,
except for the 1 percent Income tax.
ThE' \1llage presently provides
one-tenth of a mill In real estate
taxeson$2.6mllllonofreal property,
Walker said, giving the m unty $260
annually.
"We feel the services we provide
will increase the value of the land to
the point that it offsets the cost of
Incorporating Into. Village," w. alker
said.
Walker noted that the statement

Is employed by George
Was hin"'
Umvers
.
lty Hosp It a I In
..,.on
W hlngt DC
as
on, · ·

doctors In the ar_ea. tho
number of
ho It 1 bro
d
·'
t tilt
sp a · s an vartous sa e "
.facilities.
·•n 1 1 ked t
k
ne oo . a ways we can wor
with employers toprovidecoordlna·

so you Soviets wtll know my cotml•rv
. The difficult
GOT
11er al Pomeroy, Ohio.
fftlF~r=~===~w;.a~n~t~s~the;M~;X~m;ls~s~ll~e~a;tt~hi~s~t~lm~e~ls~
w~ea~po~~n~s~l~t·~s~e~as~l~er~to~a~rr~tv~e
~
a~t~a~n
~
==
~~:=~/T~fOR~~7Hfi~I.E~V~~~
"
·
'
"~~=r~~~~~~~~
H=~==
'"'~"·
~
c
·
lr:::~'"-1J.
En•or&lt;'d "'""rond qta"
~
~~======~·p~:==~~~~==~~
1

a.&amp;JIL..,;I

.

If the MX Is relllly a secret . exists or not Is Immaterial. The fact
bargaining chip, why are you
that the President dreams about It
tellJng me this?"
makes the system non-negotiable."
"Because, Mr. Federenko, we •
"Then we wltl not agree to any
believe If we tell you what we are
nuclear arms reductions until the
wtlllngtogiveup, thenyouwlltoffer
President stops dreaming a bout
us a bargaining chip of your own'Star Wars ,' t•
something that has no real value In
"The Soviet Union cannot tell the
your arsenal."
President of !he United States what
"We have plenty of those. But If
he can or cannot dream about."
you eliminate a weapon you really
couldn't care about, and we ellml·
nate one that we don't want, how
OOnes ury
does ha
ed
I I r uce the risk of a
nuclear war?"
"U
both gi
b 1 •
All o1r-~n Tu"'rs

s trong enough to keep any foul weather systems from Ohio .- :c ,
Sunday prom Ises ,to be- even a lltt!P better. There w Ill be a Iot of
hi
d
·
suns ne, an highs will range from the 50s ln .too north to the lower·
and mid-OOs in the south.
0 rt t he Wf!a,ther map, high pressure was shown over sout.heroOhio
and northern Kentucky by Saturday night and over the Carolinas by
Sunday morning. ·
Showers may spread Into Ohio from the'southweston Monday, and .
they are forecast to continue on Tuesday and Wednesday. The
showers would re caused by low pressure headed toward the lower
· ····--~-· · --~-- ~ ·•w~· -~---~·J
OHIO
•.. .C1e!!r-Saturday night w!t!LIQ!'I£30 to :J.'iM&lt;JSt!y S'.!!l.~y en .&amp;!!l!!!!lh~l
with highs In the 50s north and· mid-50s to mid-60s south.
NOR'I'JIWE&lt;lT, CENTRAL Lt\KESHORE
WEST CENTRAL, CENTRAL mGIILANDs
Saturday night, clear. Low near 30. Sunday, mostly sunny. High 50
to 55..The chance of precipitation was near zero Saturday, Saturday
.
· ·
·
·
night and Sunday. ·
.
EAST lAKESHORE
Saturday night, clear. Low near 30. Sunday, sunny. High 50 to 55.
The chance of precipitation was near zero Saturday, Saturday night
and Sunday.
MIAMI vALLEY, S01.J'I'HWEST
Saturday night, clear. Low 30 to 35. Sunday, sunny but with some
Increase In cloudiness late In the afternoon. High 55 to 60. The chance
of prPClplta!lon was near zero Saturday aml .Saturday.nlght and 10...
percent Sunday.
CENTRAL, EAST CENTRAL
Saturday night, clear. Low In the lower 3fio;, Sunday, mostly sunny.
High In the mid-50s. The chance of precipitation was near zero

The nation's Weather

.,•
I

(Contlnuc&lt;d from page

. lo ed
"'--------h~::":.:------b-l-------..!--:~:3f~c~o~m~m:JS~s~n~:f~~~~~~:~~~~
,"saldtlle
am uatory servi~ _!! nd a more

Saturday, Saturday night and Sunday.
soum CENTRAL
•
Saturday night, clear with the jow In the mid·30s. Sunday, mostly
sunny. High 60 to 65. The chance of precipitation was near zero
Saturday and Saturday night and 10 percent Sunday.
·
LAKE ERIE
West winds 10 to ~ knofs through Sunday. The lake Is mostly'
iC('-covered.

..

,..

jorecast·

wa;

New spirit .in lndia_______J_.a_ck_A_nd_e_rso_n

~'

•
'

Sunday~

By The ·4-'lSCC!:Ited l're.is
Good weather is scheduled for Ohio through Sunday.
By early Saturday nigh! all the rain was out o!Ohlo, and during the
night
tr the skyh cleared over most of the state. Clouds covered the
ex emesout ernpartofOhlountlllateatnlghtbeforl'thlnnlngout .
High pressure
centered west of the Mi ssiss ippi Rivt'r, bu t It

may spend In 1!1!6 no more than you
spent In 1985, " the agencies would
spend every penny they could lay
their hands on before the fiscal year
ends In Sept em l:ler. Why get frozen
low when you can get frozen high?
The effect of a freeze Is to reWard
the big spenders and to penalize the
agency directors who have Uied to
keep their outlays down. It Is not a
reasoned way o g&lt;J a! the problem;
it Is merely an easy way.
The time for hard budget decl·
sions Is nearly at hand. U ·my
reading of the newspapers Is
correct, nor one single soul In this
whole broad land Is willing to give
up one single dollar In benefits now
l:leing recel ved. The college stu·
dents are howling, the college deans
are howling, the farmers are
·howling, the old folks are howling,
the Amtrak people are howling, the
f~cral employees are howling, the
retired servicemen are howllng.
They are all howling the Identical
refrain: Don't cut me. Cui him.
II Congress succumbs to this
caterwauling, but one alternative
wtll remain: This lsto raise taxes. A
budget freeze, by any definition,
wtll get us nowhere.

0

Berry's World

~

~il
··----------~----------------------------~
·
move to the \'lllage or
st&gt;rvlcesoutslde theviUage to create currenl sewage plant Is located, and
project what It wil l be or when It wUI

Extended Ohio forecast

w
· ay to f~a
or
•== food st•mps,
...
the agencies' authority to spend• It costs of delay or canceilcation can
student loans, or veterans' medical
care. More people are living for~
to 25 years after their retirement at
age 65. Social Security l:leneflts
-········· c~-~·~-~--~~ -l;·b'iiii·"'T, :1~~-t,"'llc»· ...n«: =-~~- ~ caO'T belroze£- ·-~--.,~· :.;;;;;~;;,,..,: ·~~·-!·-...~One more objection. If Congress

i

,.~·

March 1d. 1986

-

The economic expansion Is likely to.continue through this year, cooling
a5-the year goes on but probably not sliding into recession until sometime In
1• .:
.
•
.
:'lltls is one of a set of assumptions that seems to have ga ined wide •
c~bllity and broad dissemination over the past couple -of months In
stl,.Yeys, speeches, newstcners, corporate analyses, academic papers and
the1ike.
::The theme appears and reappears, each time gaining conv~rts that
sttengthen its base and who then spread the word to others.
,it Is has been compared to the spirit that developed early In the 1960s,'
wflen a consensus seemed to be developing that America was at a new level
•. o(expectallons' and' materlal accomplishments previously unknown by
rrl811kind.
That spirit was dashed by a numberoffateful events,lncludlngthedeath
of President Kennedy, the war In Vietnam, rampant inflation, severe
recessions, and the resignation of President Nixon.
• nie liltest rise in confidence is less euphoric, and In fact seems tainted by
~ realization that the dark clouds of economic disaster can rlde In from
tnany directions- budget deficits, the dollar, Inflation. foreign debts, war.
• Such possibilities, In fact, have created a legion of activist pessimists
whose appeal Is based largely in the belief that if so many people expect
~ood times the.opposite fate seems almost inE&gt;vltable.
·
{ The optimists, neverth~less, seem to have the more powertul following,
~nd it is hard not to be exposed to their ideas.
Ampng them Is the notion that the stock market is headed higher,
perhaps to 1.400 points or 1,500 points as measured by the Dow Jones
!Ddustrlal average, although the reasons offered are ·almost as varied as
the number of forecasts.
~ One of the most commonly cited reasons is the ·assumption of price
~lability . It Is probably one of the most widely shared of all, and It Uesat the
~ase of much optimistic reasoning.
'· Equally fundamental Is tbe assumption that productivity gains will
continue in the priva te sector, .thus helping Industry to deliver goo&lt;)s and
~rvices ilt a profit and without the need to raise prices.
.
· Inflation and productivity forecasts often are based . in objective
research. But S&lt;'Veral other assumptions appear to be less convincingly
documented.
: Many believe, for example. that the high-priced dollar Is not likely to
eollapw. But some of the arguments seemed based in faith rather tban
jlgures. In !he same category is the assumption that somehow the
~conomic world will muddle its way through the debt crises that bury some
les:s·d&lt;~w'IOI:&gt;ed nations.

'·

•ng
.----weather:----. Hou8l
-

Page-A·2

WOO't WOrk_ _ _J_ame_sJ_._Kil~·pa_t_ric_k :

WASHINC&gt;TON _ Talk con· family's frugal example?
uriues to be hea rd hereof a "budget'
The reasons have 10 do with the
freeze" as the simplest step toward . very nature of government, for the
working the nation back toward a
flexibility that Is available to the
balanced federal budget. That's the . famil y (or to business) Is not 50
trouble wllh the idea. It's too easUy avallable to the Congress.
deceptively simple.
The government Is locked Into 8
The argument in favor of a freeze
pattern of outlays that are ab,;o.
oftC'n equates the federal govern·
lutely uncontrollable, such as Inter·
ment with the typical American e5t on tbe deb_t, or are virtually
fa mily. Countless families manage uncontrollable, such as civilian and

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A:3

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

~·!''•"~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~t~o~s~
u;rv~~~~Income
v'e~.~y~e~a~r-they
~a~fite~r~y~e~a~r~,
o~n~the;;~~~~re~tl~re~m~e~n~t.~~~~;~~~
p~roc~u~re~m~en~t~offl
1s~Jes~pe~-::::~~~
In~t~h~eo~ryi~~~b
n~ly~,game.
l~h~t~h~eo~ry~~:;z:.::::~!::-~-::::-~
bu~hlnto Ohio, causing the dry conditions.
same
received
the
of ~c~la~l~s.~lt$but
It Is
evflY(hlng
else~u~t~o~
is falr
The
~,~~:~~"~~~o~~~=~~_:;~:~~~~~.~k~~~~~Y

,...:::'-:::::;"::.....
AMEMBEB nt The """'''"'''" p,-. ,, lnlunu Dull\.· """" '' ""''·"""" und "'•
AmcrtcunNewspu p...-Publlsho•&gt;,\S&gt;octullnn.

'
..'
•.·

March 10. 1985

The Sunday Times·Sel•tinel

At Smith Buick Pontiac Inc.
Our Service Depart~ent Is Offering A

10°/o

DISCOUNT

ON ALL PARTS AND lABOR
ALL
01 CITIZENS.

DeUver..t Aad Truolated
One must be dolivo,...d from the klnl'l9m of dark,_ (world! od
lra..,lale&lt;llnto the kingdom of God'o dear Son (the ehun:b), .. _
._.l
doliwo,...d "' trom tho J&gt;OWOT of &lt;farkMt!t_ mod lwltA tt"'IIUiated ., iloto
'"' kitogdom of Au doar s ... "(Col. 1:13) . The cl•n:lio •n-nthtl put
of God's plan in saving man, and Is according t.o Hu etenoal
"To tA• inl•nl that ftow unto t.Ja.e pritu"ipallri.. mad~" ita.

$

pluco1 miglll bo known by lAo chtorc~ tho mo,.Yold W.:.doto&amp;. of
·
Accordinlllo the dernol J&gt;11TJ&gt;OIO whocll Ae 1&gt;11TJ&gt;O"d Ill CANI Joltll
ovr Lord tEph. 8: 10 , 11).
For Free 81We Corre•p•••~-- C..U., Wrt&amp;e...

Chaptl Hill Church of C,hrlst
llot.,lle Rood • r . o. Boa Jll
G•lllpotll, 011.. 4Mll
s.tH~IirM~ I
..... !ll. .,t:..

'NCiftllllp lt:Jt

__
•..-

..

..,.

llle ...."

n~~t ....

�.
Page-A-4-The Sunday .Times-Sentinel

'

Area deaths

Edith-E. Burton
MIDDLEPORT- Mrs. Edith E.
Grover Burton, 91, Middleport, died
Friday at the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.
., Mrs.Rurlo(lwasadaughterofthe
late Benjamin and Sarah and
Fedilla Yeager. Besides her parelliS, she was preceded In death by
her first husband. John Grover; her
~ond husband, Ernest Burton;
.tWo daughters, VIvian Ruth and
L.outse Amstutz; an Infant son: a

March 10. 1986

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

•

March 10. 1985

~

.. - ...........

The Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- A-S

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

W alesa questioned about.union activities

Redecking set
·for local span

Star Advent Church,.Letart.
.
POMEROY - Anoouncement
He was preceded In death by his
wife, VelmaMarieHo!fman,ln1984. that the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Surviving are two sons, Bernard would undergo Improvements this
Gary Ho!frnan and Darrell Cecil summer and possibly be closed for a
Hoffman, both of Letart; two period was . not news to Pomeroy
daughters, Mrs. Joe (Kay L.) VU!age o!flclals.
Pomauj~ M~yor R!ch:::.rd Sey!er,
Keathley of 'Point J.&gt;teasan!, and
Mrs. John (Barbara A.) Gerlach of ln November 1984, signed an
Letart: and 12 grandchildren and 14 ordlnance glvtng the Ohio Depart·
. men! of Transporta tlon pezmissioil ·
great-grandchildren.
to ,r edeck the brtdge. The mayor
· signed the permission on Nov. 19,
' Evan L. Scott
and a report on the

'

GDANSK, Poland (API_ Solid·
arlty leader Lech Walesa crttlclzed
Polish authorities-for "arbitrarily
deciding who can and who cannot
participate tn public llfe" as he
presented himself loa prosecutor
Saturday for questioning about his
actl_vlttes.
Walesa defiantly nashcd a v ·
for ·vlctory sigh as ·ne walked oown
the sidewalk and Into the prosecutor 's office In Gdansk accompanied
by his lawyer and tw9 aides. About
10 clvlllans and a dozen uniformed
policemen looked on.
' The prosecutor sum moned
Walesa foz:
for the

acttvttlesasleaderofSol!darttyand warded or punished for this," · sharpestwamtngtoWalesa slnce he
for a separate charge o! organizing Walesa said. His statement was was released from 11 months of
JU~al protests and Inciting unrest. distributed to reporters.
Internment In Nov~ber 1~.
•
The first charge carries a max!TheprosecutorwarnedWaTesaon
Charges stem from · SoUdality
mum pena!tyof!Jveyearslnprison, Feb. 16tha t hefaceduptoflveyears plans to organize a nationwide
the second a maximum ot three
ln.plisonlfheconttnuedlllegalunion 15-mtnute strtke last month to
years .
activities. It was the government's protest food price Increases.
Afterwards he was greeted at a r~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;
nearby church by about 50 supporters who handed liLT. flowers and
c h anted "W a 1e sa" and
"Solldarlty."
Walesa was chairman of Solldartty, the first free trade union In the .
Soviet bloc, whkh was suspended
undermarllallawtnDecember1981
and outlawed
Parliament In

was told during the
hour-long meeting that he was
under Investigation and must tn·
form authorlties.of his whereabout s
each lime he leaves his home city of
Gdansk, his lawyer Jacek Taylor
said.
· Taylor, Interviewed after the
sessloti, sa id · Walesa was under

any of the prosecutor's questions
and Instead read a statement In
-which he vowed to continue his
Solidarity activities.
"I would like to remind you that I
still regard myself as chairman of
Solidarity and ... I will conltnue io
struggle by peaceful methods

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WHEN

..

lwo srejlsoriS,'-WUilal'll
Eugene Burton, a nd
Medical Center.
grandchtldren.
Born Sept. 19, 1901, at Vlnton, son
: Surviving are two daughters and
of the late Allred and Susan
Nercia and Boyvln
McC
. arleyScott, heretlredfromlhe
sons-In-taw,
·
Mlnor of Mlllersport. and Kathryn
Ohio Department of Transportation
and Fred Rowalt of Bucyrus; a son
after worklng there for Tl years.
and daughter-In-law, John A. and . · Surviving are his wife, Mary
Leota Grover Jr. of Chattanooga,
Scott; two sons, J.E. "Junior" Scott
renn.: a son, James W, Grover of
of Northwood. and Harold Scott of

portatlon wUI pay the totalcostol the
project.
Council last November called the
upcoming redecklng "general
matntalnence work" while the Ohio
Department of Transportation
noted 11 was an "emergenc
measure by reason of
fo~
expediting highway lmproverfienls

A BOOK 111AT TALKS - Storltis take 00 an extra diJnenlllon when
told hy a talking book. Preschoolers JennUer Sellers and Todd Rb:er,

need

~..-l1~Unt-;"'~klh,f'""---a.s!ti~.tan..-.~W1l"--· or.- G~~W'.-&gt;!lle~~'l;Ja~.es,F~!r.n! """ -"Wl)tblffffie"ffigi'JW-·'~ty:'·'-- ,~,.,..,~,.,-,...,

.Muncie, Ind.; two daughters, Carol · · Seyler said Sa~day he has not
, -~"~· ·t~nandllis~e~Elm~rs .. ':"~ .•• H!"'""n ofCo!~!flbus .. and Arlene , ~n advl$ed liS to when. \he~:~ . ....fietty Burton of Columbus, and 2'&lt;
Angles o!Westuma, Mich .; a ststeF,'" redecktng wlll be done and If the
SATURDAY MORNING FATALm'- A 'l9-year·
apparently headlaig north on VIand In the right Jane ln
.grand~hlldren, 36 great GametWelkerofVmton: andntne blidgels tobe rompletelyclosedto
old
Huralngton,
W.Va.,
man
died
Salurday
momlng
excelll8 of the speed limit and struck two northboond
grandchildren. and several great- grandchildren, four stepgrandchlld· traffic, forhowlongapeliodthatwUI
following 811 accltlent at 11dnl and VIand stlcetll In
vehicles stopped In traffic In the left lane, Evlck said.
great-grandchildren.
ren and seven great-grandchildren. be
Point Pleasaat,ln wblcli his car smashed Into autiUty
The vehicles, which
minor damage ta the
Services wlll be held a t 11 a.m.
He was preceded In death by by
·
pole
on
the
Shoney's
parking
lot.
'lbe
deceased
was
rear,
were
driven
byCharlcs'E.Jelfen;,42,Southslde,
Jylonday In Rawlings-Coats-Blower
twobrothersandaslster.
Identified as .Gamel Boyd, 508 N. High St., acconllng
W.Va., and Wesley Reynolds, 43, 300 Moore Sl.,
Funeral Home, with the Rev.
Funeral services wUI be held at 1
toPolniPieasan&amp;PatrobnanR.A.EVIck.
Exadcaw~e
Hendei'!IOII,
W.Va. ("nmes-Scntlnel photo by LeeK .
Robert Roblnson o!ficlattng. Burial
p.m . Monday tn McCoy-Moore
has
not
yet been determined. Boyd was
Withrow).
of
death
. wUJ be in Gravel Hlll Cemetery at
Funeral Home, VInton, with the
:c heshire. Friends may call at the
Rev. Allred · Holley officiating.
~
·r.~red
WOMEN'S
funeral home anytime on Sunday,
Burial wlll be In VInton ·Memorial
RIO
GRANDE
A
display
of
The
Converse"
Aerodyne•• lor
Pa'rk. Friends may call at the
with the family to tMi present from
aerobics. Unbeatable cushioning and
:Wayne
National
Forest
has
been
2-4 and 7-9 p.m.
.~.
funeral home from 24 and 7-9 p.m. developed by Rio Grande College
MOERS, We,&lt;;t Germany (AP) "It was In a service car and his
injury prolectiona add comfort
today. ,c.,,;..,
and . commun!ty .college .and the
Sl!ots were fired Saturday at an driver was with him," the British
Ia even the ~~~~~~t..
Ohio Department oJ Narurar
automobile carrylng Air Marshal spokesm&lt;Ui Said.
Dorothy G-. Fauble
Sir Patrick Hlne, head ofthe British
He refused to say whether the car
Resources.
William
Thomaschek
The display Js located on the first
Royal Air Force In West Germany,
was hit by the gunfire or give any
POINT PLEASANT - Dorothy
floorofDavlsLibraryatthecollege.
but he was not Injured, authorities
further details.
G. Fauble, 60, Hagerstown, Md ..
FAIRMONT, W.Va. - WWlam
said
Moerslslnthewesternpartofthe
originally of Point Pleasant, died
ThomaschekSr. , 70, Fairmont, died
Visitors may view scenic photo·
graphs of the various districts that
Duesseldorf pollee said a Blittsh country, about 18 miles from
Frtday morning In University
l'h~~~ horn on F eb. 2, 1915, in .comprisetheWayneandreadabout mllitaryveh!c!ewasflreduponbya Moenchengladbach,wheretheBrll·
Hospital, Md.
'
Its versatile terrain . and history , passing car on the A-57 West
Ish Army of the · Rhine is
. Surviving are three sisters, Clara
Philadelphia, son of the Ia te John
German autobahn near Moers at
rding
to
Dave
Mauer,
director
headquartered :
Mae Plants and Kathleen Moody,
acco
and
Emma
Thomaschek
and
Is
•
bo
mth of Point Pleasant, and Mayota
·
ofllbraryandlearntngresourcesat a utnoon.
The attack on the NA'f.0 o!flcer
survived by hls.stepmothe.r, Hilda
RGC-CC.
Both West German pollee and
followedawave-of-homblngstnfour
!!~lYre of RisingSun; and a brother,
Austin.
Texas.
Maps,
pamphlets
and
.
brochures
British
mllltary
authorities
l,'efused
West German cities on Thursday
Thomaschek,
of
-Frank Glll of Fredericktown.
Also surviving are two sons,
t
th
ta
.
t
f
h
k
:.· :Funeral services wlll be held at 10 ·
o name e rge o t e attac
and Flid ay.
a-r eavaUableatnocost.
H.
Thomaschek
of
Gallipo1
edl
t
1
B
·
·
Lef t·w1ng terrorJsts w ho say th'ey
Robert
/i.in.·Moooay ln Ricketts Funeral lis, and Wllliam Thomaschek
·
Harold Godt~ke. ·lorest supervl- mm a e Y·
ut a diplomatic
Jr., of
~
·
In
Bo
·
r, said the forestry service was source
nnsaldltwasHine.
wantlooverthrowtheWest Ge11llan
,!lome, Meyersville, Md.
SO
Fairmont; two daughters, Mrs.
Th dl 1
1c
d drl NATO 1
t f
Karl (BUlle Irene) Paulsen and Mrs.
"pleased" tohavetheopportunltyto that he P otmbeaitd soul rceed, whOasked
state an
ve I orces ou .ol
'•
.
Arthur (Judith Rose) Holt, hoth of work With the state, ODNR and
ho e no flredent fl ' ';"ld thnee
the country havefchalhomedbresponsd·
:(&gt;ris D. Hoffman
RGC·CC to produce the display.
s ts were
at Htne s vehicle
blllty for three o t e m tngs an
Gallipolis;
a brother,
JohnaThoma·
"We are looking lorward 10 more from
red BMWHtn,
automobile which
:. ~MA&lt;:nN, W.Va. -Funeralservi- schek
of LaPort,
Texas;
sister,
lhei! aped
•·~-~
of these cooperative projects relat·
s
away.
e scar was not
-ces wlll be held at 1:30 p.m. today In Mrs·. AI (Rosie) Shisler of Austin;
hit, he said.
~iiglesong Funeral Home, Mason, and 10 grandchildren.
tng topubllc lands, " he said.
AspokesmanfortheRritlshArmy
Oris Dale Hoffman, 85, Letart,
He was preceded In death by his
One purpose of the display wlll
f th Rhtn~tn M
h 1 dha h
ware- o e
~
oenc eng a
c
Student
a
to
Increase
serve
Is
w.Va., who ctied ThursdaY ln
wife, Irene Florence ~Jchards
confirmed a· shooting attack on a
·E'Ieasarit VaUeyHospltal.
Thomaschek, and by a son and a
nessoftheWayne.
NATO officer, but refused to say
: The Rev. James Looney wlll
brother.
"It's great to have a chance to let whether hew as Blitlsh. ·
:o!flclate and burtal wlll be In
-Funeral services wlll be held at college students know more about • "We can confirm that a NATO
·£vergreenCemetery.
1:30 p.m. Monday tn Carpenter&amp;
theWayneNatlona!Forest,notonly officer has been shot aton"':he
: -;Born Dec. 28, 1899, Jn Mason
Ford Funeral Home, 209 Merchant
In terms of recreation, but to help autobahn. We cannot Identify him.
Hearing well
them think about Forest Services There were no lnjurtes," said the
i!dds so. much ·to
:e lrunty. son of the late William R. -st., Fairmont, with th-. Rev. Steve
jnd Augusta E. Smith Hoffman, he
Snider officiating. Burtal wlll be tn
career opportunities," said Lionel Blitlsh army spokesman, who
the moment.
metla

Lelfhel~ of !"&gt;meroy; and a

..
..

r;a~re~s~us~pec~ted~-~ln~t~he~f~ou~rth;.;;~~~~~D~O~W~N~TO~W~N~G~A~W~PO~US~~~

s 0· u n d

:tor

memort• es •'

eng1neer~·for O.F~

--MeadGwdale-Gemetery, F--air.tnant. ....

Lel:n~JY

cHsttict

~j?alling bucket causes delay

••

: CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla. tAP)
; ~ A falltngmetal work bucket broke
workman's ·leg and Imbedded
~i~lf In the top of space shuttle.
~~very on Friday, causing
•!laJnage tbat forced a fifth delay of
: ~n. Jake Garn's trip Into space,
•)IASA officials said.
~: The space agency said It was too
:-l!arly to assess the extent of damage
:fq a cargo bay door or just how long It
•.\1'111 postpone the Olght. Launching
:t.ad been scheduled for March 28or

:a;

:29.
·: Officials said they did not know
~l\'hat caused the fall of the heavy
ib(lcket, whlchislargeenough to hold
;&amp;yo people, but experts were
•lnspectlng the device's hydraulic
:I!Qtst. A board of specialists began
:a6 Investigation which NASA spo.~esman Dick Young said could take
Several days.
'; The accident happened about 8
:a;m. In a hangar where Discovery
·Wa.s being groomed to be moved
:~liter Friday Into an assembly
:billldlng where It was to have been
:Rlatedwith Its two booster rockets
lind external fuel tank. That move

damage Is repaired.
Officials said a large movable
bucket used to position workers
alongthe60-footlengthofthehayfell ·
onto a steel work platform on which
technician Cary Sutherland was
··standing.
"I heard a bang, and I looked up
and saw the bucket coming down on
me,'' Sutherland said In a telephone
Interview from his hospital room,
where he was being treated for a
double fracture of the left leg. "I
tried to duck, but the bucket grazed
my back and then hit my leg."
Sutherland, 35, of Cocoa. Fla., Is
an employee of Lockheed Space
Opera tlons Co., which services
shuttles under a NASA contract.
NASA said the heavy bucket
struck the left cargo bay door about
six f~tfrom the point where the bay
joins the main shuttle cabin. The
exact depth of penetration was not
said
the Impact
damaged
several
Jltlinedlately
known,
but officials
heat protection tlles and the-door's
structure.

Dlscovery was to have rolled out
to the launch

--~· "'

hear well.

Ex•Meigs native
~hostm manager
POMEROY
. _F. 0 ., 1e Justt'", a
"
,
Big Bend native, now of Rt. 2.
Sharpsville, Ind ., has been named
0f Publl Se i 1 dl
manager
. c headquartered
rv ce n ana's North Region,
In K k
I d
o omo, n ·
As regional ma nager, Justis
oversees operations at five Public
1 ri
ffl
'
· Service Indiana d sl ct o ces,
Including RochPster, North Man·
chester. Hunt lngton, Wabash and
his own of·fl cc a t Kokomo.
J ustis jolned Public Service
Indiana In 1%'&gt; as an electrical
engln C&lt;'r at the company's Plain·
fleld headquarters. After working

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER ·

transferred to Kokomo. &amp;&gt;fore
assumlng hi s new position . Justis
served as division engineer and

SPECIALTY GRAPHICS

MIDDL(PORT, OHIO

divislonpoperations manager.
The West VIrginia native ea rned
his bachelor's deg-ree In electrica l
engineering at the Indiana Institute
of Technology in Fort Wayne. He Is a
member of the In stitute of Electri·
ca l and E lectronic E nglheers a nd
hoth th0 sta te and national Society of
Pro fessional E ngineers.
· Justis is active In the Kokomo
Cha mber of Commerce and serves
as a deacon and treasurer ol the
Fairfield Christian Church . al
Oakford.
Th~ new manager of the firm Is a
son of Mrs. Irene Just is, Mason,
W.Va ., and the la te FcnisJustls.He
Js married to the fmmer Sharon
Young, daughter of Mrs. Audrey
Young of pomeroy and late Victor
Young.
ThP rouple has two children, Greg,
18, and WPndy, 14. and the family
frequ('!ltl)' vis it s In the Big Rend
area.

614-992-7626

SILK SREEN .PRINTING
Order Team Jackets, Hats &amp; ·Shirts
Order Special Items for Family Reunions, Class Reunions and
Group Awards.

Pul your•elf in touch.
Make yOur good t1mts bel!er. More rrol. Mote
,. olive. Much mort understandable. Tf)(Ough
proper omplifteation, improlltd heonng con
change "huh·whot" confuJion mto enJoyable

commvnicotion .

'

·

We think you'll agree . . . . it'5 o reo! thrill to
hear better. But let your ears dec ide.

WE NOW PRINT GLASSWARE, TOO!!!

Benefit froni.

GLASSES, MUGS AND OTHER ITEMS
AVAILABLE IN OUR CATALOUGES

CALL FOR PRICES OR
HAft US COME SEE YOU!

DES·JGNER

~~======::==============~~

··Right now, during our ,
Springtime Super Sale, .you'U
find incrcdtbl~ savings on a
huge variety or SanltaS colors
and prints. It's an oppor·
tunlty you won ' t want
to miss.

tf/aHIJopa
SUPER-MARKET
762 3RD AVENUE
HUNTING, WV 25701
1-304-525-7090
1

CALL US FOR ALL Y·OUR NEEDS
SALES &amp; RENTALS

161 Upper River Road

614-446-7283 .

PI otect your hoi ne
against fire and burglary,
· and save on your

Gallipolis, Ohio

446-7227

l

Out Of Town Customers Call Collect

h011teowne• s Insurance, too.

Oxygen

Ask me about State Farm's Home
Alert Protection Plan.

Hospital Beds
Wheel Chairs

- £A ROLL SNOWDEN
4t7 second Ave.
Gottlpolis, Oh.
Pllont44t-4290
Home,.....45tl

Bathroom Aids
Walkers
Crutches &amp; Canes

..

WE IILL MEDKARE anti
OTHER INSURANCE CARRIERS
WHEN EUGIILE

~

-.ICHAIIIAND. MARY ANN "IDWMlN;-oWfaRS
GAWPOUS, 0..0
63 PINE ST.
4 HL SERYKE
WE DEUYER

At Our Special Price

S72S

FREE ESTIMATES

EXPERT PLANNING AND DESIGN
WIDE VARIETY OF $TYLES AND SIZES
u

Bowman's Home Care Medical Supply

MONDAY NIGHT BUFFET
S:OO to 9:00 P.M.

40°/o OFF LIST

MANY OTHER ITEMS

Like a QOOd ~1/Qr. IState

State Farm F•re and casualty Company
Home Ofhce BioomlllQton. llhflOia

•

LOS ANGELES lAP) - SegmentsofsomeTVshows, Including
the popular "TheCosbyShow,"w lll
be revived If scriptwriters ratify a
tentative contrac't and end a strike
that entered lis fifth 'day Saturday,
officials say.
" Yippee!" s houted Steven
.. Bochca.. Prodl!ffir nf ·:Hill Street
Blues, " on learning of the tent alive
agreement. The last two episodes of
the show had been threatened with
cancellation if the strike lasted
longer than a wc-'t'k, but they will be
completed if the con tract Is ratified.
NBC officials In New York said
they would revive the las t three

_r:_an~r,. ~ith...t:!' ~:s~po~"k~-e~·:·oJT'"~-·~"'~·AJ;.soc~-~-=·~&amp;~~ed~,·P~r~~~-.s~b~~~·~1~--=·~:~~-=~:~:··-~;A~.n~d~-~w~e;·;,£--a~;n~~~=~· ;~·==·~=~~·~:==~===:·=~===·=-~~~~~~~~~'i'i~~~lhc~~~~~~~~!;1~f£

"""'=~~:"a~n~d~a~~~e~m~tbe;;,r~~of~G~u~ldl~ng~~ho~m~e:7r~;~m~9~a
ro ~.m~.t1o~P~~ t:::y~a!, .. lr.onton unit_ ~ . ..
!_

GALLIPOLIS - A grand theft
months probation and had his
chargeagatnsta GaU!a County man
driver 's license suspended for 120
RENTAL OFFER-For a limited time, rent the tonal aid (or
was dismissed Friday following a
days following his plcJI.
any hearing aid) for 6 wMks for only $SO.OO.
preliminary hearing In Gallipolis
· In other !raffle cases, Carolyn
TRY IEFORE YOU IUYI
Municipal Court.
Whittington. 22, of Eureka Star
episodes of "The Cosby Show"lf the
Tommy Matthews , of Tommy's
Rout e', was fined $12 plus cost s for
See us at Holur Clinic Each Wtd111sday, i :00 P.M.
contract Is ratified Monday . The . Enterprises, Ohio 218. Gallipolis,
failure to yield.
segments had been canceled due to had been accused of taking a 706
Forfeiting $40 hond for traffic
lack of matertal.
.
I
d
c
11 J c d
nternauonal
tractor and hy rauuc
violations
arro
ana
"I'm glad, because people have lift
boom fromJohnRelville,ofRt.l,
26,
of Rt. were
1, Crown
City,. fail
ureay.
to
been yeUJng at me on the streets; Crown City, by deception.
yleld the rtght of way; Dennis R.
saying, 'No more repeats,"' Rtll ·
·A Vlntpn man was fined $17 plus Hurt, 3I,ofRodney. failure tostop at
Cosby said through spokesman costs following his guilty plea 10 a
a stopslgn; andEm!eL.Jones,3'2.of
David Brokaw.
· charge oldlsonleriy·comluct.Ftnro ~ ·GaHlpoHs ·!'eny; .. W.Vs .. assurr-d
Negotiators for the Write rs Guild was Wllllam Collins, 25.
clear distance.
of Amelica and the · Alliance of
PauiD. Mllchell,50,ofLangsville ,
Forfeltlng hondfor speedl ng were
HELPINC PEOPLE HE A fl.
Motion Picture and Television
h
was sentenced to 10 days In t e Charles A. Smith. 20, of Rt. 1.
WIUIAM S. DILES
Producers reached tentative agree·
Gallla County. Jall and was fined
l'hurman, $38; Salma Ta lhouk, of
(614) 594-357'
Alhtnt. Ohio 45701
326
W.
Union
Stroot
m ent Friday on a new three-year
$300 after pleading guilty to DWI.
Columbus.$41: and Sidney Huddlescontract after nearly 17 hours of
Mitchell was also pl aced on 18
ton. 37. of GaUl polls Ferry. $43.
bargaining overseen by federal ~----------------------_.1----------------~-----mediator Leonard Farrell, AMPTP
spokesman Chuck Weisenberg said.
"DetaUs of the agreement wlll be
.not tU.scussedpubllclyunl ll theWGA
membership vot~s on the agree·
ment," Weisenberg said, reading a
joint statement by guild executive
director Naomi Gurian and AMPTP
president J. Ntcholas Counter.

writers ponder new contract

at NATO off•"c•"al

.

~~~"'~!~~:t~~~:':~~·~:t~':~-~~.:=~~~ ......~~ t e . ~C? . ~g«:,__~-~~ppe .
talk with and IL&lt;;ten to the talking book.

SU!Italn""

Shots

-""'{v.as -Cf3triker

··~-·~~ 1"£':f;'U~~~~~~~~-:;~sa;L"tc~¥.,-;~t!l~ "~·c:~~~u?~o~••~~tlli~--·~~r:.;!"~::a-~~e!_h~:.": ~ _r: :.

.·-·-·

wayne d"ISp}ay
at colleae

'

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
when yo~ need it. The Argosy CCA Canal ha~rino

EASY CIEDII AVAIUILE

2199 IACISON AVI•..:..n. PUASANT, W.VA.

"

(304) 675-3106

CALL IS TODAY
'

..

per penon S39S per child (4-101
Children under 4 FrH

The Buffet includes an All· You-Can·Eat Sal!fCI, Soup, Appt·
titers, New Dishes Each Wttk, EntriH, Fresh Fruit Cocktail,
Fried Banana, Dessert, Hot T10 or Coffee.
Main Courses Will Change Every WHk-(No Carry Out)
' You ·can Also Order DinneWi"ftti1nni r:vartingillienu. iooi

BEGINNING MARCH 17 -SUNDAY NOON BUFFET

..

You know its an imitation. But what
about the many people today who have
decided they are just like a banker? From
stockbrokers to retailers, from credit
unions to insurance men, to savings and loans, they all seem to be
saying, "You don't need a banker,
we11 do just as wcU:' Oh, no they

won't. Because no one else has the banker's
hundreds of years ofbanking experience behind them. Nor do they enjoy the kind of
trust that bankers do from the
majority of Americans.
So why settle for an imitation
when you can have a real banker at
our Full Service Bank~
•

THE ONLY PLACE YOU'LL FIND A BANKER IS THE BAN!&lt;.
./

'

1".....v.-!. n·--!:~~~
ll~,r
,. ........, ••• I
1C\l...~o'~·
&amp;:.l..ll
T
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Locations

U.L&amp;.~

Member FDIC

~&amp;.&amp;&amp;.'-

I

Gall ipol is. Oh io
\

•

�Page- A-6- The Sund~y Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gal.lipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, VIJ. Va .

March 10. 1985

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

·~octors claim maverick

Westenrille resident
treated for injury

..--Local ·Briefs:-----Trio enter guilty pleas
POMEROY - Terry Eugl'ne Hysell . . 20, and William Joseph
Ri'ltffiire; 18; I.XJth--of Pomeroy, have--pleaded guilty .to forgery

GAbLIPOI:.IS - - A - FranklinCounty woman was treated and
released at Holzer Medical Center
Friday night for an Injury received
when her car was struck by a
tractor-trailer on U.S. 35.
Mary C. Wolfe, :.Ml, ofWestervUle,
was treated for a bump on the head,
hospital ot!lclals said.
TheGallla·MI'Igs postoftheState
Highway Patrol said Wolf~ and the
5ellll, drlven by Osble Smith, 55, of
Clnchmatl,. were eastbound on 35.
approximately six-tenths of a mlle

charges in Meigs County Common Pleas Court .
The pair allege&lt;l ly allcmpted to forge a chPCk March 1 at Bank One
in Pomeroy.
Judge Charles Knight onlcn'CI a pre-,;ent cnce invesligat ion a nd set
final sentencing for April 18.
.Harry Lee Barton, 19. Pomeroy. also pleade&lt;l guilt&gt; to a break-In
at the Modern Supply Store on Feb. 26. Barton was rep(,rtro ly ca ught
by authorities Inside the building.
·
A pre-sentence invest iga I ion was ordered ;md finalscrilenclng was
set for April 18.

1udge issues order
Common_ Pleas

11JCSON, Ariz. (AP)- Use of an
four-day ordeal dul)ng which a
unauthorized ar11flclal heart did not
heart transplant failed and the
experimental Phoenix Heart was
contribute to the death of a
33-year-old auto mechanic, but In
lmplantro in his cbest Wednesday to
factltn(irovedhlscondltlonasit kept · Keep .hftn alfvl' lor ·a second
transplant, although the dl'\•Jce
· him alive bl'twEell heart transplants, a surgeon says.
Jacks approYal of the 1.,1 .S. Food and
Dr. Jack G. Copeland,'chief of the Drug Adminlstrati&lt;m.
University of Arizona's heart transCopeland blamro thr presencC'of
plant team, - attributed Thomas
fluid in Creighton's lungs on the use
C.!&gt;'Jghtpn's cteathJrriday ID heart
of a hP~•1 -]u!!g w.ac!lme when he
faUure due to pressure from
went Into cardiac arrest 22 hours
fluld:fllledlungs .
alter receiving his first transplant
The Tucson man died afll'r a
Tuesday.
.

ag-e, troopers said.-'- -A Charleston. W.Va., man was
cited by the patrol following a
two-vehicle accident Friday. aftl'r·
noon at the Intersection of U.S. 35
and Ohio 160.
A pick-up driven by Robert
Caldwell, W, of Kerr, was stopped In
front of the Jackson Pike branch of
the Ohio Valley Bank, waiting to
turn onto 35 when the patrol said a
1\'!'Stbolind ~emt, driven by Ulysses
G. Berry, 62, of Charleston, report·
edly attempted to tiu-n left onto the

LEGISlATIVE RALLY - Rep. Jolynn Bester, center, talked Wtth
members of the Meigs and Gallla County Fann Bureau duriDglhe Ohio
Fann Bureau Legislative Rally held In CQiumblts. The Farin Bureau ·
m embers dist:ussed with Boster.the need for a
to call for a monetary
deposit for beverage bottles and cans, the need for SUfficient funds for
agr~ulture from the state budget and a progrliiJl to control multiflOra

law

.Court grants judgment
County common P leas Court to Racine Home

.

as she was making a Jpft turn into a . Berry's trailer struck the Jeftfront of
prtvate drive, striking her car ln the
Caldwell's pick-up, causing light
left side at 7: 25p.m .
damage. Berry's semi was not
Wolle's
sustained moderall' damaged in the 3:50 p.m. incident,
damage In the acCident, while
troopers said. Berry was cited for an
Smtih's semi received light dam·
Improper turn.

car

Four men cited after

~~~~:~Bi;a~n:~k~f·~ro;~m~~-J",-·-~an:d~rN~;o;;"~'~'an;;w~w~.·~bot~:h~o~f~M~::e~lgs::eo~~•un;:=:,ty:.~an::!d~G~Ienn;:':::~Grah
~~~am~~an~d~C~~.~A~. ·.........,;l:;;.:;.:;~,.;~:;;;11~~r.~,~L;:;': i::7
;:;·";.8
;:;J;l;:;S;·;W
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'~"·r'··-·~~--~·l- . ··~·-···--·-~. . . ,~

J'im Cyndl!f, Porriero)', et.al.
.
..
..
·
The judiimentfs tobe paid .wilhin.ttireEi"&lt;lays'o r "tt1e propertY In "

;;;,~lion. located in Syracuse. is to he foreclosed and sold at public

In other cou11 action, Steve J. Blackwell has been ordered to use
his Income tax refund to pa;y $425 in back child support payments to
CYnthia Marie Blackwell.
The balance, if any, is to be credited against a $3,600 judgment for
delinquent child support. awarded by the court in February 1983.
Linda Kelley , Racine, was granted a divorce In court from Rodger
Kelley, Athens, on grounds of gross neglect of duty and ex treme
cruelty. Linda Kelley was restored to her former name of Linda
O'Brten_
A restraining order has been issued in court against Russell D.
Murri.!,; ..Syracuse. pendJng a divorce action filed by Carrie K.Morris, .•..
Syracuse. The defendant was given 10 days in which to request a
hearing to determine if the restraining ordpr should he continued or
vacatro.
A divorce has be&lt;'n fi led in cou rt by Mary Belinda Warth Robinson,
Middleport , from Russell Alle n Robinson, Lebanon.

Money suits filed

Duncan both from Gallla County
~~.
. ... · · ~
.... · ·

· ....

·
"··~............... ~....... ~..... =

Council briefed on .
propo's'ed rate.ht.ke

POMEROY - Four Pomeroy
Route 3 men were arrested Friday
afternoon by the Pomeroy and
Middleport Police Departments
and the . Meigs County Sheriff's
Departml'nt.
Officers were summoned to Dark
Hollow Road when a fight was
reported taking place there.
Deputy Shprlff Kenny Klein said
that three of the men, Timothy
Davidson, VIrgil CoJJins and Carl
Stewart, are being charged with
disorderly - conduct while i.ntox!·
cated, and a fourth, William Collins ,
'is being charged with assault.
According to Klein, William
Collins Issued threats to shoot one of

the four men with a .22 guage rlfll'.
The four will face hearings In Meigs
County Court Wednesday.
Meantime, ShertffHowardFrank
reponed that Thomas Hoskins,
~xter, has been turned over to the
Athens County authorities on an
indictment charging grand auto
theft .
Frank says that ·Hoskins was ln
the Meigs County ' jall. awaiting a
slx-wrek pre-sentence hearing after
facing chargps of . breaking a nd
ent~r1ng fn 1\1elgs·County. Hoskins
will be returned to Meigs County at
the end of the six wPeks for
sentencing on the local charge, the
sheriff said.

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Village Office of .Consumer's Counsel. In
suppol1 of Spratley's objecllon that
Council received soml' enlightl'n·
General Telephone Is not holcllng
ment in regard to a proposed gas
hearings on a proposro rate
rate increase for the village !tom
Herb Gibson of Syracuse Home Increase In rural Ohio, particularly
Utilities Co., who ·was present at in this area.
Council approved tire hiring of
Thursday evening's regular meet ·George Holmap -to again ·i •• anagc
ing of-the group.
The proposed rate increase Is now the Syracuse pool.
Council also issued a remindl'r
undpr review by the Public Utilities
that March 11 and 12 wUI be vUlajl'e
Commission of Ohio.
According to Gibson, If the clean up days with free pickup Of
"
increase is approved, the com· articles. Garbagl' wJU·not be picked
pany's rate struc ture wUJ Increase upon those days.
Present for Thursday's m Peling
from a $5 service chargl' to $5.61;
and from a charge of$1.()9 per cubic were councilmen, Ken Cundiff, Oris
Hubbard, Ernie Sisson, BJU Arnott ,
The utUity's property In Athens
ft. of gas to$1.70.
ATHENS - Columbus &amp; S!mth·
ern Ohio Electrit Co, handed a
County Is valued at $36.5mllli!Jn and
Gibson assured council that Buddy Cundiff and Jack Williams;
check for more than $939,00J to thl'
includrs the Poston gl'neratlng
customers' gas meters are read· Mayor Eber Pickens; JariCe Law.
son,
clerk-treasurer;
and
.Milton
Athens
County
treasurer
Friday.
complex
nl'ar Athens.
monthly, never estimated. He a lso
The payment represents a portl6n of
Athens Division Manager John
pointed out tha t the company has Varian, police chief.
the
utUity's
1985
Athens
County
tax
·
Weeks
said that the Columbus·
made Improvements to lines and
based utilitY Is the largest property •
bill.
that his maintainance program has
taxpayer ln Athens, Franklin and !
cut gas Joss due to leakages from 35
Coshocton counties, a nd will pay ,,
percent to 17 percent.
A second pa~ent of comparable
Syracuse Home Utllltes' custoCALLIPOLIS-AGallipolisman
nearly $19.6 million In property
amount wiil be made later this year,
mers with questions or problems was served a summons by city
taxes to those counties In 1005.
C&amp;SOE officials said.
.police Friday cha rging failure to
should cali9l9-2403 or 919-2900.
Council authorized Bob Wingett, pay parking tickets.
fpiii~iiiiiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii't'
village grant administrator, to
Served was Bruce Henson, 23,
apply for an additional 40 percent 326 !-2 Second Ave.
grant to offset costs· for a vUJage
Regina A. Harold, of IOU Y., Third
marina . A $44,00J grant from the Ave., was Issued a minor mlsdeOhio Bureau of Outdoor Recreation mea nor citation for an open
·
•
has already been secured for the conta iner .
marina project.
·
Also cited by pollee were Terry L
\~
Council will soon be advert ising J ohnson, 22, of 941 Second Ave., no
for bids for hot mix to begin paving mumer; Gregory L . Green, 22. of
~
-I ·· Sy'!'a,'\is.~-strtths 7~-----~-·~· --.-l'l.t . .4~ .~Ga_!liPQI~ ,.imprQper lan~--

C&amp;SOE pays property taxes1 ·

POMEROY - Two suits for money, evolving from an auto
accident, have been filed In the Meigs County Common Pleas Court .
Elaine E. -Mayle, Stockport, has filed suit· against Richard D.
Thomas, TUppers Plains, and the. Auto Owners Insurance Co., .
Columbus, asking for $75,00J for damages and injuries incurred in an
auto accident on U.S. Oil in Washington .County on Jan . 19, 1~1. She
asks trial by a jury. The case was origtnally filed in Athens County
but a change of venue to Meit:s Cou nty was ordered.
Emery D. Mayle . also h a~ filed action for $40,00J as a result of the
same accident against Thomas and the insurance company. He also
asks trial by jury.

. Emergency runs answered

After Creighton was on the
machlne.for about eight hours, the
ar1lfictat heart, invented by Dr.
Kevin Cheng, a Phot&gt;ntxdentlst, was
lmpTanted n· kepflifrn alive whlfe doctors searchal for the second
human heart.
C!'!'lghton's condition actually
lmproYed on the:&gt; device. Copeland
said.
"! l:!eljeve !ba! Lhl&gt; i!Jterlm heart .
Improved his · physiologic status
during thl' 11 hours that It was
used.," he said. "He had excellent
pulses In his hands and fe&lt;:&gt;t and good

Tee
d
•
.
ft
·
h
t•
_ nager teS a . er S 00 tog

.....,...

of marriage.
Knight said that a II new divorce&lt;' or dissolutions of marriage cases
involving child support must Include a. typed sheet Including the
names of both parli('S, Socia l Sc&lt;·u rM)· numbPrs , dates of birth, and
the names of both parties' em plo)•ers a nd their business addresses .
The ord~•· was i'Sue&lt;l as a new law , House Btu 614, takes effect in
mid-April.

on a teen-ager who stood beside his
desk and shot himself In the hl'ad
during a high school shop class,
officials said.
Bruce Perry ,17 ,died Friday night
after 2~ days In a coma , a
.spokeswoman at St. Luke's]iospltal
said.
"His
caused SI'VI're brain

an order had been gtvrn to
shut off thl' respirator.
Ms. Cordeira said she did not
know the 'funeral arTangements .
With his parl'nts by his side, Perry
had been on the .r espirator slncP
shootinghlmsell ln thetemplewltha
single bullet W~nesday morning ln
Greater, New Bedford Voc~!tlonal ·

read by night superv lsor LO!Jise
Cordelra, "Medical conditions
wouid'- riol allOW
donation of
organs. An autopsy will most likely
be done. The medical examiner will
then give the officia l · cause of
death."

Classmates sa id Perry tl'arfully
to leave the room, li t a
- clgarefte~took "a~sip from a"can
beer and then put a gun to his head
and fired.
The shooting occurred about 10
minutes after a caller who identified

the

~ed them

of

he~

implant .dido't cause
color." ·
The fluid in Cl'elghton 'slungsalso
was a factor in the decision not to
seek another heart as the second one
lleganlli rau Frlda:y; ~said.
The m echanical heart had not
be&lt;'n approved by·the FDA, and the
University of Arizona M!!~Jlcal
Center, where the operations were
performed; had not been approved
for an artlfl~lal heart. operation.
The FDA criticized Copeland and
Dr. CecU Vaughn, who trrlptanted
lhe device, but agency spokesman

Jf
•
L.
I
~e
tn.S.ltOp C ass

rr--------.;._"'!"_____________

Buster

Brown ·

spend 10 hours on the heart-lung
machine and wouldn't ·have sur- ,
fered ail rtmnlarmrge-," sa !dG~ltge '
J . Annas, professor ol health law at ,
Boston Unlvprsi ty College of Medi· '
cine. He said he was not criticizing
Copeland's motlvt'S.
"We all want to sel' people's Jives
saved, " he sal&lt;;! . "But this Is not the
way. We' ve got this all mixed up."
Copeland told reporters, however. "It's pretty hard lo be
prepared with a total art!Ilclal heart
unless you have a program . We did
. everything that we cotJid for him ...
My eonsctence is clear."

'

I

...~

,ALL SHOES
ON MEN'S WOMEN'S, CHILDREN'S
COIMNINr (1(00 1tRMS AVAIIAIII - WE URRY 0U11 OWN ACCOUNTS

Choose From The largest Selections In
("''ltral and Southeastern Ohio
fr-·-,;..·-COUIPON .••logan Mooomon t. c;.,.,;- - - , Monuments Are Our Only Business
. Pomeroy, Otl•o- Vmton un 10
" ..m ••"d ,.,. r." bootr.r.,', 'ko""''1 9

m-orool1 In lvll tolor ,.,1h ltlt• and
pm•• httltd
.

. ,·

COME IN FOR A
BALLOON

BRANDS: FLORSHEIM - LEVI'S WOLVERINE ..:.... NATURALIIERS- SEBACO
- NURSEMATES AND MANY MORE.
SHOP EARLY AT

Hartley Shoes·

.

Brown ·

~~~~;~:~d~~!:'in~~~

" U Copeland had been prepared

the patient wouldn't have had to

·-" 20°/o "to 50°/o OFF.

EA-STER

"J11kle"
by

WUilam Grlgg1n Washington said It
was unlikely tllat stiff sanctions
would be Imposed ..
FDA Investigators are expected
to arrlvl' 11ext week;"sald· trospltal
administrator Alethea Caldwell .
Copeland said he did not forese&lt;'
"an Inquisition" from the agency,
only federal help ingettlngartlflcial
hearts and FDA approval for future
use.
'
Creighton 's mother Dorothy defendedCopeland,saylnghl'"puthls
neck on thellnl'''lntryingtosaveher
son.Before Creighton entered the
hospital for the tntttal transplant , hts
vlrtuauy no ·

on the
autl'lorlties halted classes for the
counselors In the Fall Ri\•er •offI""
the Samari tans, an organization day. When they students returnro to
which ma intains a 24-hour tete- school Thursday, they were met by
phon!' hot line to dissuade people · four psychiatrists who sought to
counsel them about the shooting.
'
from conunitting suirlde.

IT'S
. ALMOST

Time for new-shoes!
Buster Brown

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-7

Corner of S.l:ond &amp; Court

IN MIDDLE Of THE UPPER BLOCK

210

MAIN

992-5272

POMEROY

I
1

1

Not A Sideline ...

10(7, -Ot::PO!IIit M.d.•Ba!ance:- :r.
0 ..
•
lA.IW !'lonfldy Paym(•nts
OPEN EVENJ!II.'GS
.. 1\~.··n
1

' ' cr
i"i"'eMndm•oll•nf~ro••OI•ono~"'
. ... ol lgn

1I ('onvt&gt;nlt'n
· I

- ~dlriKI~•-""'""'''..:~L 090 "

1

"""''"'Co
....,,

"P'"•"'""~• collar my

I
" '" " ""d "'' d.«r•lt obovt Mo•uo·
I
levm• wuhaur obligaroa.-.
""m• - - ----I
St•Mt o• ltoyte
I
Cot'f'or l own _ _ _ _
I
l'hon•_ _
__
__
__
._ _~_ _ _ _ .;..jI

'

"1

SUN O,\ YS 8V
t\PPJNT:\JEST

l"'

"l ftlj)l\ \ I III I ' rl1• t"upr lu• Ft.r•llfor lnhr m..rlrl!n

WRfi'E t"UR HOOKJ . E'lli SH0\\1NG
MEMORL\1.~ L'li H .: tLCOLOR \\1TH
S IZE~

A.'ill PRl(' E!S ST,\1'ED.

LOGAN MONUMENT COMPANY
INC.
VINTON OHIO

POMEROY . OHIO

~~~~L~$~'i~1y N~AR

POMEROY ,MASON-BRIDGE
lEO L. VAUGHAN, MGR . ,
PHONE 992·2588

G~,LJ-~~fvO~:J~

JAMES 0 BUSH
MANAGER
PHONE 388 -8603

Citations issued

CAROL IN A

AND SUPPLy CO

G

.t:...f~

==t':"-"~~~~~1a~t 1r~?~p.~mt.~~~~~~®l~~i&gt;:~~r;~~~·~ "'~~"W1;~i:~=s;;~~:;;!;'6h;~ -- ~';1~i&lt;!:~~~:'~~~ii~~;. '
21

Ohio 124 to Veterans Memorial.

Commission initiates survey

YELLOW PINE

GALLIPOLIS -:- The Gallipolis City Commission Is conducting a
survey of c uy resrdents concerning cable television services.
Residents may pick up a copy of the survey at the city manager's
office or the water billing office in the Gallipolis Municipal Building.
The survey is being conducted in conjunction with other area
communiti("S. All citizens int eresll'd in expressing their opinion
concer.ning loca l cab!e television ser\l (ces ,a~] requested by the city
commrssron to fill out the survey form .

. Thefts trnder investigation
GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis man told c ity police a Briggs &amp;
Stratton 3.o horsepower mo)Ver wa~ taken from a shed he owns on
SprucP Str&lt;'CI.
Ja mes Rosr. of 40 Vinton St .. told officers Friday the theft from a
shro he hind 75 Spruce St .. apparently took place within the past three
days. RQS(' told officers the front door to the shed had a pparently
been prim open and two windows )lad been broken.
.
The Ga llia County Sheriff's Department is Investigating the
apparent I heft of two 15 1nch a luminum-slot tire rims from thl'yard
of his Kerr-Bethel Road residence.
Kendall M. Lemley told deputies [he theft took place around 2a.m.
Friday. The rims. Lemley said, were valued at approxim ately $,'iO
eac h.

A.W.P.A. Approved
ASK FOR FREE
COPY OF
"How·To

,.

Build A Deck

• I

4ft. X 8ft.· 15/32 CD PLYWOOD SHEETING
CASH-N-CARRY
$719 each

~~~~~U~DS--~

2X
4 Dr·. LS Sedan. V-8, auto. trans. with
air.
·power
windows, .seats, door locks and trunk release, rear delogcer, cruise
control. trlt wheel, AM -FM stereo, radial tires, low mileage. Aluxury
car loaded wtth all the extras. Compare the price to a new one Quipped
the same way. Beige w/beige vinyl top.

Pickaway man jailed for D WI

.aae

CASH·N-CARRY

each

4 tt.x gtt.- tf4" Wafer Board .....

GALLIPO LIS- A Ptckaway County man was lodged In thpGallla
County Ja rl Fnday following his arrest by the Ohio Highway Patrol
for DWI.
·

$462.

-$

request of Pickaway County officials, where he Is wanted on grand
theft and bad check chargt'S.
·
·

'

4ft. X 8ft. -7/16" Siding
Channel-Grooved

.

···~······$879ea.

5 GALLON BUCKETS
JOINT OR TOPPING COMPOUND
4 Or. Sedan, V-6 en&amp;ine, front whnl drive, auto. trans.
AII-FII stereo, vinyl top, cruise control, rear defoger power
~1ws, seats and door locks, wire wheel covers, radial tires, low
leage, sharp car. lied. met gray w/burcundy vinyl top.

THE WAUC WITH THE

CHEYRO®

$7800

CASH·N-CARRY

.

$750

each

Prices !n aHect March 4 thru March 16

. OVER 70 LIVING ROOM SUITES. IN STOCK, MUST REDUCE INVENTORY NOW

CAROLINA LUMBER
.

SUPPLY COMPANY

Mon. I Fri. Ill I P.M.
Twu:::Woi., lluw.
I Set. Ill S

•

AND

675~1160

312, Sixth Street
I

Point Plusant

,,.

•

�March 10. 1985

~

~

-o

..0

"'
==
I§

...••·~im.ea-

w

~""""

Section

lli5

March 10. 1985

,

;:...AI=il.. =

0'

Jentin.el

~~~~~

0
t;.

On exhibit al
the French Art
Colony are work~!
by six waterrolor

artists. . Included
are, from lop left
Interiors," by
Marlon Murphy
of Huntington,
W.Va.; uparis,"
by Joy 'lbompson, Ashland,
Ky.; and "Past
Perfect," by
Margo Adams of

-~1o~~
be on display In

'""
.. n_...t..,
....... -e;--..
............ u...tJI

,. - ~--

_FAC watercolor exhibit opens
By LEE ANN WELCH
'fimes.Sentlnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS - Fam!Uar!ty
and moods are the main course
seiVed up during the Watercolor
Exhibit In the galleries of the
French Art ColOny In Gallipolis
· during the month of March.
A 'jurl"""'evhlhhlfu•
•~
-· ··~ . •••••W•oiVOII thadJ•pl"'"·'
00 ".::0
was selected from approximately 60 slide submissions of
the artists, aerord!ngtochalrwoman ·J an Thaler. Following the
month-long showing, the works
are to become a c!rcula ted
exhibit, she added .
The a·rtists chosen were Ruth
Ettllng and Marian Murphy of
Huntington.. W.Va.; Margo
Adams of Russell, Ky.;- Polly
Trumbore and Joy Thompson of
Ashland, Ky.; and Frankie
Wheeler of Beckley, W.Va.
Adams' works areapartofthe
permanent collection In the
lobby of Holzer Medical Center,
as well as Robbins and Myers
and H!llcrest Clinic. she has a ·
B.A. from Centre College adn
graduate Work from Marshall
OU' J

and Morehead State universities. Many of her paintings are
scenes from Kentucky and the
coast of Maine.
Ettllng is a printmaker and
painter from ·Rhode Island
ortgtnally and studied at the
Rhode Island School of Design.
Her . works . ar-e .. par! of -1!Je
permanent collections of the
Huntington Galleries, Sunrise
Museum In Charleston, W.Va.
and the Dayton Art Institute, In
addition to corporate and pr!•
vale collections.
Murphy Is a past exhibitor at
the French Art Colony. She.
studied at the Cincinnati Art
Academy and worked as a
commerCial· artist. She has
taught watercolor at the Huntington Galler!esand the University of Kentucky Community
College.
·
· Trumbore began working
with o!ls and acrylics, the n
moved Into wa terco!ors. She
travels a gteat deal, uslngJhese
for subjects other work. She has
taught watercolor at the French

Restoration of

~acred .Heart

ByCIIARLENE HOEFLICH

In planning stages lor nearly a
year, the work of cleaning the
POMEROY- Restoration of the massive stone of the structure. then
the p!Cf1!_resque Sacred _ tuck - polnJ!ng_each...o!lf
new

.

,.

Q

...
n;

0
,.

. 81

.....
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.. .....
IR!!

..0

~

IIIII

0

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.

Built In 1818, pldurelque Sacml Heart Calholll: Church of Gothic
~ dealp II a P - oy landmark. From the botfAirn to the top of the ·
1tuJe .,_ on the towerlnr; tlleeple, It tllands 15'7 feet hlp.
Reltoratlon of tbe exterlor of the Sacred Heart Church r;o&amp; underway
' ! * week. 1118 native """"*'-'e uaed In Ita COIIIItnttilon bt 1888 II
~~ cleaned wllh Iteam and water, wDI be tuck P,Oittted with
IIIOriar, and bl&amp;ve a preltei'Vatlve applied. Aller an architect advlled
that further delay In rt!lllol'atlon coald I'8IUit In Irreparable damage
to the exterior, the parllhloael!l voUld to !tlrlke out on faith 1111d belln
the expmliiveproject. · '

"'0

-·1El
z

•' '

--.

J ......

-

..

..

.. •'

Church underzvay in Pomeroy

and the danger of Irreparable In 1970 the entire Interior of the members of the congregation with used to build that first church.
damage , that the parish voted to Gothic structure was renovated,
the help of miners and rolling mill
The cost of the present imprcssivc
strike out on faith and contract for and a few years later a new .roofwas
men who did not work during those church was$42,00Jand that included
the_r!"Pairwork \1/_ltlch Is expected to put _on the s hurch ,___
.
months, donated their labor during the altatr·!s~,-~~~~~;~~~'.:~lffii~~~ ~~~~J.~~~:!;,':;;.!~~~~~~J
i;;;&lt;F,;,.;';:;;;,;:;t,
-C
Ost betWeen $75,!XxJ and$s.'i)ro.- - - Thec hiirch- whlcfihas a seaiing - the day, while businessmert Wor~E'Q~ Tile l
W'-ii...:i;;-~.;,~:,;,:;c ,:-~~,-,::; '=ffi~1Sli-raffiiiiwiTave-,.:_bee~ =="fflpffi:li'f0Nxi6W~1T otnn€~i1·e · ""u i n·~ -'Cven::.-.gsT-ma;;?-im~=ui".--:1~-=, church be:~r'J1g..,rw:::wl'r'-".:g-=,:*'Pli~!'-'...;;:..~
stands three stories stretching 157 take three months.
liberal in theirp!edgestotheproject , which once was the location of the
midnight. moving the huge sand- topped by a high cross sta nds as a
It was at theurgtngofanarch!tect the church organizations have been parish orphanage. Later a school to
stones, many 25 inches thick, Int o monument to the time. efforts and
feet above theground. got underway '
who sensed a definite deterioration busy In fund raising activities, but . seJVe the P_ilrish children was built.
this week.
plate with crude equipment .
monetary contributions not only of :
'
still more money is needed .
The cornerstone for the new
The pews and altar, double membcrsoft.hcparish, but of others '
All three levels of the church's church was laid on Sunday, May 22, Gothic, were made In Dubuque and in the community who labored with ·
exterior alongw!ththeintpriorofthe 1898. and the building was com- moved here.
their Catholic brothers.
!
basement will be improv«X) by the ·pleted the following year.
'llle pipe organ, still in use today,
Ju st as great cathedral s around :
Greensburg, Pa : firm of Lori which
The architect, Fred Heer, bu- was made by Barkoff In Pomeroy. the world are sometimes histories of ,
has been contracted to do the buque, Iowa , designed the edifice. ' The bells . were taken from the arch itec ture and stories of com. •
restoration .
Much of the labor was donated and
original church which was a wooden munit ies a n\lthelr backgrounds. so :
The exterior-work w!ll complete history tells usthatdur!ngthcsprlnl! · structure built In 1849. Lumber from Is Pomeroy's Sacr('d Heati Church.
major rcstoratlott.of the old church . and summer months of 1898,
trees on the village hillsides were
Tlmes-Sent_lneJSiafi ·

'.

Art Colony and conducted workshops elsewhere.
Thompson shows moods In her
work. From concentration on a
park bench to a vtew of R!verby,
home of the French Art Colony.
She, as the other artists In the
exhibition, has won 'several
. ~.wards . ~nd . has ..,~ _pl~r~ in
various art collections.
Wheeler has exhibited
throughout West Virginia and
has spent several weekends In
the Bob Evans !"'arm craft barn.
She studied at Morrls HaiVey
College In Charleston, W.Va.,'
Concord College in West V!rgi·
nla and West Virginia University . She has been a juror and
also exhibited In several shows.
MJ:S. Thaler said the 24 exhibit
works w!ll travel to other
galleries, and arrangements can ·
be made through the French Art
Colony.
The French Art Colony galler- ·
!es are open Tuesday and
Thursday, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and
Saturday and Sunday 1 to 5 p.m.
throughout the month.

the end of the
month, and Is a
jurled e!dtlblt.

�Page- B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 1 0, 1986 :

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

Eood service

Beat of the Bend

]ox Sox aid ACS

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

March 10, 1985

I
t

STORE HOURS:
MON.-THURS.
9 am til10 pm
FRI.-SAT.
9 am til 10
CLOSED SUNDAY ·

to present
wok cookery

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Pege-B-3
.

.

ft

.•

Hallucinogens are drugs Utat
The former French colony of
a!fect perception, sensation, thinkUpper Volta has changed Its name to
' lng, sell-awareness and emotion.
Bourklna Fasso.

~~=';;go~od Thru Mar. 16, ·1986

..

GO TO CH!IRCil (V[RV SlJNUIIY

We Re~erve The Right to Limit

SWIMMING POOL KITS &amp; SPAS
THIS COUPON WORTH

THIS STORE Will
PAmCIPATE WEDNESDAY, :
MAR. 13 IN CAN(EirDAY

$ 100

Off

0111 lilY

(Invoiced in

IN-G!O!!!'!!I !'!!0!. !f.!T or SPA

Mo.-;:N
Coupon plus $100 holds your. Spa_ or Swimming Pool Kit at low discount pnces t1llsummer.

HOLIDAY POOLS INC.

II.

BULK CHOCOLATE
S1 70 S2 85
LB. TO

$139

LB.

DIETETIC CHOCOLATE
LB.

· Pomeroy High School Alumni
Association wUi stage Its annual
dinner and dance on Saturday, May
25, at the Meigs High School.
Music for dancing will be by
Gentlemen Three. A reunion letter
outlining all of the details will be
golhg into the ma il soon. Meantime,
if you have a ny questions contact
Mrs. Mary Wise, president, or write
the Pomeroy . Alumni Association,
Box 202, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

FRESH WHOLE
Talented Jonl Lee Carrington who turns out absolutely fantastic
paintings - will host the March
meeting of thE' Southern HiUs Art
Council at her Gingerbread Studio
In Albany Monday· evening,
Coffee will be senied at 7 with the
meeting to begin at ,7: 30. All
residents interested In promoting
the arts in their communities or
region are Invited. Surely seems
like W€·,need tliat, -

· Don -Mills, -M·!ddlcport. has re.turned to Fort Myers , Florida,
where he was vacationing when he
was ca lled home due to the serious
illnes s of his mother, Nora Mills.
also of Middlepm1. Mrs . Mills was
confihed to the Holzer Medical
Center for 10 days due to I he Illness
hu f is now a t her home .

Danceaerobics set

LB.

Speaking of Florida, Mr. and
Mrs . Paul Casci have been in
Middleport a fewdaysenroutefrom
Florida where they spent two
monthS to their home in Woodbucy,
Minnesota . I'm sure m a ny of you
remember Paul not only as having
been Middleport Postmaster for a
number of years but for his
dedicated publlc service to Drew
We bst cr 'Post 39, American Legion,
and other groups. The stay in
Fla,rida apparently did Pal!i goodhe's sparling a great tan.

CENTER

BEEF
LIVER

cuf' -~-

BOB EVANS

'59

.&amp;"

3"Rte3ftst

LL

:IfNI Second Ave.

La layette Mall
Gallipolis. 0.

Shoe Cafe

Eleven-year-old Travis Nease, ~p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;-1
son of Mr. a nd MI'S. Bill Nease. 1
ha ndled the situa tion well recently
when his great-grandfather, Vernon )'&lt;ease, fell a t his home and was
scr!ously in]urcd. Travis covered

HOLZER CLINIC LTD.

URGENT CARE CENTER
- OPEN 7

$
II.

199

EXTRA LEAN

GROUND

Whito &amp;

~

SMOKED
SAUSAGE

$1
~---_;__-~CHUCK
LB.

II.

$ 139 .,

SUPERIOR

: CH~CK R'O.AST

The

II.

$149

FRANKIE
WIENERS

12

CHOPPED
HAM

oz.

3

Bi\.NNING .. CaiiL !API - Science
1epc her Larry Ellis never thought
h,-d have to follow through when he
a!ireect 11 years ago to shave off his
bCard if all thf' students ln a class got
"A" on a lest - and he was right
until now,
; ' I'm nol)ooking forward to this ,"
EVIs , 36, · sa id Thursday as he
la thered up and began to shave- a
job lha t look thrl'l' di, posable
rftl;ors." l thought I'd never have to
d&lt;! it. ..
.T he Ba nning Hig h Sc hool
teache r's whiskers fell as the result
of a test las I wet'kinan advancedllfe
science class. in which students had
tO: identity 28 parJs of a dissected
wOrm in one minute to get an "A."
13ut it was a clllf·hanger fini sh

COUNTRY
ROCK -

for a time to be seen

3 II.

7 oz.
BOX

$18

MINUTE MAID

URGENT CARE CENTER HOURS

MONDAY-FRIDAY
SATURDAY -SUNDAY

MACARONI &amp;
CHEESE DINNER

79&lt;

175 CT.

SHEDDS SPREAD

446-5287

ORANGE
1201.
JUICE CAN

5 P.M.-9 P.M.
1 P.M.-9 P.M.

1---------------------------1 CHICKEN
. . - - - - - - - - - -. . . ,
CHUNKS ~:G~Z1
F~OOR

•s
I· INQER"'
.

MODEL ·s ALE 11· 2%

19(

.

--

KIDNEY BEANS ....••

$149

24

oz.

CAN

MAINE KENNEBEC

SEED .
POTATOES

P.arking tickets
•

30 oz.
CAN

$279

89(

,1n:OO&lt;J&amp;

GAlliPOliS '

446-8303

~l:;couraged because fewer than ,
h4If ot the parldng offenders
bOthered to pay their tickets, ·
Japanese police began to use a ·
tl~ket on a metal loop that locks on i
c!p' doors or side mirrors. Since the :
syste m was Instituted, most motor- '
tSfs tagged have come to the pollee '
s~tions to pay their f)nes and have
tJt tickets removed.

....,
·'

...
....

BRONZE MARKERS
MONUMENT CLEANING
CEMETERY LEnERING

seeo.oo

BRING US YOUR OUTDATED, WORN OUT
DIAMOND JEWELRY AND LET US SET
THEM IN FASHIONABLE ITEMS OF
JEWELRY. ENGAGEMENT AND FASHION
RINGS, PENDANTS AND EARRINGS.

~~9~
JNJ'Jfl

.oo aecciNo Av.NUI

• _...,
. liE-A -NCAHIIIIIIDCt.TY

t'Your Diamond
•

o _

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

Headflut~rttn''

,,.,-.,--,---- ...

--~~-&gt;&lt;co•

~

424 Second, GalllpGiis

FREE INSTALLATION IN CEMETERY
OPEN 9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
- -MOMDAl--TH!!I!..F !JDl!,. 5 DAYS. .AWEEL~-AA ~·
· ·QPIN ~:!!!~J._! _~!:!Q !..!!. .,~-TlL5.:.0.£hJ.!!._~. =:.~-~- ..
LOCATED ON RT. 141 AT CI:NTENARY. OHIO
2V. MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

PHONE

ESTEE LAUDER
BRINGS YOU A
SPECIAL OFFER
Masterpiece Showcase.
A 35.00 VALUE.

._...fa 10.00 .... ..,.

~.....,

446-9510

...••.

...""

BOLD Ill
DETERGENT·

-_.

·Ptoudlg

,.....

-.-·--.

•

--·....
--.,....,...
CORN MEAL
$649 Sll.$1 09
_,.
._----------------------------------~-----J ~..
GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE
----... -CRISP
·-SOLID HEAD

Sue
Ptice

....

•••

\

lAG

,....,.

CABBAGE CELERY

·--......
-. ::I "
......
.t:-·
z

---

·)
'
Al\pjltoxlmately 409 m!Uion people :
slfeak English throughout tbeworld. '

STAlK -

~-,

'fjeven-Up Is owned by Philip
~rrls.

•
•

1,.

'o

Markers - Mausoleums - Monuments

Compere 1t $300.00

Com. . . It $89$.00

SO Ll. llG

.

"Qaalllf Higher, Bat Prim Lower"
SELECT FROM LARGE DISPLAY
REASONABLE PRICES

HAIR DESIGN

~

MARTHA WHITE
SELF RISING

,

GUARANTEED DELIVERY FOR EASTER

ACROSS THE STREET

'"

••
,,,
.....

MORTON HOUSE

•

.

.Bi

RINGS

452 SECOND AVE.

=~~:F~~~~~~~~~~~==~

BEEF
STEW

MAYO MONUMENT CO.

IIUI'(f'-.of'7.50ormore., . ,-

•-'

GAL

a

POMEROY

rr;;;;;;;;=======:;;r.==========:t
. LADIES' FASHION
14 ~..
J.ICI.'IW

-~---"

9.92-6910

OPEN MON.-SAT. 9:00·5:30 .

~

$179
I MILK
I· VALLEY BELL
I HOMOGENIZED

trust
bunch of fr!'Shmen," E llis
sliid.
:Ellis' wife, Shirley, said, "I hope
htl keeps It off," but the flrstthlnghls
4-year-old daughter asked when he
r~rned home was to.grow it back,

•

A gourmand likes good food and
tends to ea t too muc h. A gourmet
likes a nd is an excellent judge of fine
food and drink.

VALLEY BELL

.''It just goes to show you can't

-;;

'.

' Of' ARC
JOAN

TYSON

~=x~~~~~d~o~wn~,"~G~r~a~nt~~~~~d!a~fte~r~,

In the first four months of 1983,
, there were 360,&lt;XXJ divorces In the
United States.

' REMO
liNG

KLEENEX
TISSUE

Pediatric patients should phone

fiict

-Reformist prime minister Robert
Peel was the founder of Britain's
Conservative Party.

'

Other clinic specialists available for consultations. Enter the Clinic at hospital Emergency Room entrante.

I
I
I
I

The reception will be held from
1-5 p.m. at the Kyger Creek
Clubhouse. Friends and relatives
are Invited to attend.

•STENCiliNG
•FOLIC-ART SUPPLIES

toffice), 4: 25-5: 10 p.m .; Reedsville
!Reed's Store). 5:20-6:20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (Lodwick's). 7; 20- .
8: 05p.m.; Baum Addition, 8: 25·8: 55
p.m.

Fails (E ffie 's Restaurant), 3; ffi3:50p.m .; Racine (Bank ),4:35-6:05
p.m.; Syracuse (Pool) , 6:20-7: 50
p,m .
Wed nesday . March 13 -Chester
(Fire Statton) , 2:15-2:45 p.m.; Keno
(north side of Keno Bridge), 3-3:30
p.m.; Success Road (near :i9060l.
3:45-4: 15 p.m .; Long Bottom 1Pos-

514 EAST MAIN

•CROSS~STITCH

'

II.

Gft:LLIPOLIS - The 50th wedding anniversary ceietira tlon of Mr.
a nd Mrs. John Merida Shaw has
been rescheduled for Sunday,
March 17.

YS A W£EK,,-_,_

Staffed by Family Practitioners and
Pediatricians for treatment of urgent
illnesses and injuries.

because two students were absent
aod had lo be tested Wednesday.
Gina Vallaro, 15, correclly identl32 pa rt s. but 15-year-oldStephen
G~a nt "was really nervous" because he'd never gotten a n "A" on a
""c nce test.
:.' If r failed, I would haw let

The event will be Saturday,
Ma(ch 16 at their Route 1, Gallipolis,
home from 5 to 9 p.m .
The couple requests gifts be

OHIO .VALLEY
BULK FOODS

--~~·

Anniversary
celebration reset
.

Meigs BookmQbile routes
.

89&lt;~

CANS

will

omit ted.

MAIN CLINIC ON ROUTE 35 NEll GALLIPOLIS

beard goes

GALLIPOLIS - there wlll be an
open hou se In celebration of the 25th
wedding annive rsary of Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Chambers:

ARMOUR

POTTED
·MEAT

'

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs . their soo and daughter-In-law,
Steven and Julie Stanley, Athens.
Duane Stanley, Pomeroy, wUI
Mr. and Mrs. Stanley were
observe their 40th wedding annlvermarried on March 13, 1945 In
sacy on Marc!) 17 from 2 to 4 p.m.
with an open house at the Senior Pomeroy by the Rev. Ralph
Keuther. Mrs. Stanley Is the former
Citizens Center in the Meigs
Hazel Townsend. The couple reMultipurpose Building on Mulberry
quests
that gift's be omitted.
Heights; Pomeroy,
,
.;«
.. ··•· ·-.The open houSE'
be liosied by'

Letart; Belinda Parkins, Parkers·
burg, W. Va .; Bruce, Beretta and
Benl!ta Deeter, all of Long Bottom,
and two great-grandchildren,
Megan Roberts and Eric Parkins.
Mr. and Mrs. Roberts have
resided In Meigs County all their
married lives. They arernembersof
the Freedom Gospel Mission a rid
are mlssionacy workers at the
church.
Friends and relatives are invited
to joln In the couple's anniversary
obliervance by calling at their home
during the open house hours.

Open house set for, Chambers'

PIG.

sou.

BARS

.CANDY -MAKiNG .SUPPLiES
&amp; BULK EASTER CANDY

Hazel Stanley

Roberts will celebrate anniversary Stanleys will note anniversary
POMEROY -George~dMarie
Roberts will observe their 50th
weddlng annlversacy on Sunday,
March 17, with an open house from 2
to 4 p.m. ai their residence, Bashan
Road, Long Bottom.
Married on March 20, 1.9.'15 at the'
MPig~ County Court. House, the
couple are the parents of a son,
Randall. Letart., ;md a daughter,
Audelle Deeter, Long Bottom, who
are hosting the observance .•
They also have seven grandchildren, Todd Roberts, Everman,
Texas; LesUe and Chad Robert s,

:~~~~ECE~K~-' $199,;

BONElESS .

·

$119 "

FRESH

PORK CHOPS

··Annapolis"

I'

SliCED
FREE

t"-~----------------1 SUPERIOR

Spring ~85

'"':. - - -

55(

George and Marie Roberts

.

PORK
LOINS

FRYERS

GALLIPOLIS - Registration for
danceaeroblcs classes sponsored
bythe Gallipolis Parks and Recreation Depa11ment Is now open.
Morning clasS'es will begin on
March 11 and meet for six weeks
each · Monday, Wedn!'5&lt;1ay and
Friday at 9: 15 a.m. at.. the Grace
United Methodist Church .
Evening classes,-meeting for siX
weeks each Tuesday and Thursday
at the G.D.C. Activity Center, wlll
begin March 12. Class times wUJ be
5: 30 and 6: 30 p.m.

Whistle while you work and you'll
drive everyone around you crazydo keep smiling.

WHOLE

...

Sue has been with across I he slreel for 3'years. She has al·
lended lhe lnlernalional Hair Show for lhe past 2 yeal'8
and spent a week al a workshop given by The Nalional
Hair Saylisl Association: Sue believes 1hat auending hair
shows and classes regularly is whal keeps her known for
giving her customers currenl and appealing slyles. We
are proud 10 have her as a Manager.
~ ~ue

s Schedule is:
~ -~ ·
Mon. 9·9; Wed. 9-9; Thurs. 9-9; Sal. 9-5

A tmc showcuse of essential
tre-Jtment, vibrant color, and
irresistible fragrnce
all

Offer Good Until March
23 or While Supplies last.
All Products Modo in tho

tu
I nd ud&lt;-d are:
Sw iss Performi.ng Extra&lt;lthe classic 24 -ho ur nourish ing lmion to sm\_K&gt;th, soften
and protect skin, Automa tic
Creme Concealer ·to hide undereye circles and tiny flaws
and Luscious Creme Masara
for silky tung lashes. For lips
- two lipsticks, rich, creamy
RE-NUTRlV Lipstick and
sheer, shining Automatic
Lipshine. Fragrance provides
a double treat also: the origi- .
, nal fragrance masterpiece of
Youth-Dew Eau de Parium
Spray and Body Satinee' to
lavish on all over. Plus two
more beauty essentials: a lipbrush and mirror to complete your own Spet'ial show-

300 Second Ave., Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis
1

�-Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,

- Page-B-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'VI/.

March 10. 1985

Va.

March 10, 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

The Sunday

Calendar
••

' POMEROY - Grade School
All·Star games to be held
SIUI(Iay, beglnrilng at 3 p.m., at
Southern Junior High _; South·
em against New Haven. Admis·
slon will be $1 adults and 50 cents
for students.

-------·

•

PI'. PLEASANT - Grubb
Famlly singers wm be at
Jacks,on . Avenue Baptist
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m. Rev .
. Bob Grubb will speak.

MQNDAY

·Happenings

RACINE - Raclnl' l...&lt;idl(l' 461
F&amp;AM will meet in regular
sessiOn, Tuesday evening, 7: :ll
p.m. Work will be in theenlerro
apprentice degree,

Daffodil Days
GALLIPOLIS - The Amer·
clim Cancer Society Is observing
Daffodil Days March 22 and 23.
The days mark the beginning of
lhE' annual April Crusade
against cancei·. with proc&lt;'eds
raised going to supporl research, education and services.
For tnfonnation, conlachl

· CHESHIRE - Kyger CI'E';\'k
Atlileilc Boosters wUI meet
.Tuesday, 7: :IJ p.m. for nominalion of officers.

GALLIPOLIS Gallia
__ Cnunty..Extenston Homemakers

mentary PTO wlll meet Monday
evening at 7 p.m.
POMEROY - A public lubercull!l skin tesling clinic wl11 be
held from 4:30 lo 6:30 p.m.
Monllay at the Pomeroy Fire
Station, autternut Ave. The
Pomeroy ..Emergency Squad

p~;;:~7

,...

Reservations are to be made by
Monday. Chip and VIcki WU!is
wUI be the speakers.

Chamber of Commerce will hold
tis monthly meeting Tuesday ul
noon at the Meigs Inn. All
.members urged. to .attend.

SUNDAY

•

-146-7479.

the Frist Presbyterian Church.
Program on til&lt;&gt; New You .
Potluck lunch at noon and 1 p.m.
fashion show. All homemakers
Invited to attend.

Gynmastt'cs
GALLIPOLIS- Youth Gym·
nastlcs Classes have a Itmited
number of openings tn the
· Intermediate anq Advanced
level groups for the second

GALl-IPOLIS - GFWC Riv·
erside Sludy Club will meel
Tuesday, 1 p.m. at the home of

~~~·-~I-iii\~~t~ ~fAr~~r CThT~~~~~~~~P7irWr~!~ "

ww 'conduct a bloOd
Truman.
testing will be
_1Vf.I5,., -lMrr Tewks~ary. R.N.. ~·-··"'- ""- ..,....=
Meigs County Tuberculosis ·
GALLI{'OLIS
LaLeche
Nu~
League or Gautpolis will meet
Tuesday, 9: :1) a.m. at 41 Spruce
MIDDLEPORT- The United
St. Topic is Advantage of
Metliodist Church Women wUI
Breastfeedtng to Mother and
meet at 7: :ll p.m. Monday al
Baby. For information, ca11
Heath United Methodisl Church
446-4195, 446-6314 or 286-4990.
with Betty Fultz In charge of the
program.
GALLIPOLIS- Right To Life
will meet Tuesday, 7: :ll p.m. at
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
Buckeye Rural Electric.
International Order of Job's
OaUghters, will meet Monday at
GALLIPOLIS - Gall!Polts
i JUll. at the Middleport Masonic · Rotary wUl meet Tuesday, ·G
p.m. at Oscar's.
temple. A council meeting,will oo
held at 6: ~ preceding the
meeting.

-'&gt;loOt··--~-

WEDNESDAY
TUESDAY

MIDDLEPORT - The Middleport Amateur Gardeners will
meet Wednesday at Bp.m. at the
home of Marge Felty. Veda
Davis will be co-hostess and
Carolyn Collins wtll have the
program.

EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Band Boosters wtll meet at 7: :ll
p.m. Tuesday in ,the high school
' band· room.
HARRISONVll.LE - Senior
Citizens of HaJTtsonv11le wi'll
hold a public blood pressure
clinic at lhe fire house fmm 10
a.m. to 12 noon Tuesday.'
Fendora Slory, R.N., wUI be In
charge.

.

CRAFTS - .M

FINE ARTS - THEATER .- ·DANCE
A.RT GALLERIES - SOCIAL EVENTS - ART LIBRARY - CREATIVE WRITING
•

MIDDLEPORT - A special
meeting or Middleport· Lodge
363, F&amp;AM, has been set for 7
p.m. tuesday. There will be
practice in the fellowcraft degree. All , members who are
taken pari are askPd 10 attend.

1985 MEMBERSHIP DRIVE MARCH 1 .THRU MARCH 31
'•

~

SYRACUSE · ~ The Rev.
David Street wiU conduct revi·
val services at . the Syracuse
- cnuri'll ofthe Nazarene at Tp:m.

I

POMEROY - The regular
meetings of Pomeroy Chapler80
Royal Arch Masons and Bos·
worth Council 46 Royal · and
Select Masters wUI be held
Wednesday evenmg at 7: :ll p.m.
Work will be in the mark master
degree.

'

'

.\
r

.........

!+ crc''"'-''"''"-··"'c-'

tlon ~pt.
The da.sse.s-beg1-n en !'.1~u·c h n
a:i'ld meet each Monday and ·
Wednesday evenings for six
weeks. The registration fee Is
$14. lnlerested persons should
call the Recreation office at
446-1789, extenUon 24 to reserve
a place in the class and for
complete details of class time
and location.
·

Bake sale
LONG BOTTOM - A bake
sal!' Will be.held from lO'a,m. to2.
p.m. Wednesday at the Long
Bot.tom Community Building by
the Long Bottom Community
Club.

Swim lessons
GALLIPOLIS- Youth Swim
Lessons, sponsored by the Gallt·
polls Parks and Recreation
Dept.,- wllh·begin on -March· 14.
~lmiled openings remain for
· Advanced Beginner and Inter·
mediate students each Thursday for six weeks at the G.D.C.
Acllvlty Center pooL Registra·
tlon lee is $10. For complete
details and registration. call the .
Recreation oiftce at 446-1789.
extension 24.

·'

.

All-stars play

RACTNE - Southern's sixth
grade All-Star Team. with players from Letart Falls, Portland,
POMEROY - Hyselr Run
Racine and Syrqcuse, . will play
Holiness Church wU1 hold a
the New Haven AII·Star Team
tnlsslonary meeting Thursday
Sunday afternoon a t Southern
evening, 7:·:1) p.m.. ill the
Junior High in Racine, beginning
churGh. The speaker wm be
at 3 p.m. A second game wUI be
·-oli!enjamLq-£ull!vant f.r.om Haiti. " ~piayed ''llie~Wl:'&lt;'lrP011iaird 'flftli

THURSDAY

-~=r~~~:;.~~~~:~~~:~:~~"-""'"~
ro~!W·~::--=.c=-·
-~ .. ·- -·4I'f!I~!l'l'~'"""".H:''~4}-=~=~~~
·
March 17. Services on Sunday
- Pomery Chapfifth grade All-Stars. Admission

TOPE
FURNITURE GALLERIES
151 Second Ave.

will be at 12::1) a.m. and 6 p.m.

MICHAEL .AND FRIENDS

354 Jackson Pike

330 Second Ave.

BERNADINE'S INC.

ACROSS THE STREET
600 Third Ave.

300 Second Ave.

CARL'S SHOE STORE .
328 Second Ave.

HAFFELT BROS.
CUSTOM CARPETS
397 Jackson Pike

SKYLINE LANES

.SPORT ABOUT

464 Upper River Rd.

248 Second Ave.

.

l o

I
I
I
I.

·Circle the
Areas of ·

GALLIPGLIS The Gallia provlded by Whitney Baker at the
County Extension Homemakers' . piano and floral arrangements,
Club wiD meei TuesdaY 10:30 a.m., . compliments of J R's Flower Shop.
The activities of the day are open
at the First Presbyterian Church,
5i State Street, Gallipolis.
A program on general skin care
and use of cosmetics will be given
by Juanita saunders at 11 a. m .
FolloWing a covered dish buffet at
noon wtll be a Fashion Show al 1
p.m.
' Modeling sportswear and Easier
FashiOJ\5 will' be Dorolhy Toler,
. Jackie Graham, Debbie Bryan,
Amy Hatcher, Heidi Bryan ~nd
J&lt;1mle Graham. The fashions will
· be provided by Bernadine's, Inc ..
CALL (614)
• Jack and Jill's and Dan Thomas
(304)
' and Son Shoe Store. Music wUI be

Your

MUSIC
DANCE
VISUAL ARTS

....
••
••
~

·404 Second Ave.

324 Second An.

Keep the Arts Alive in '85
.Support your community arts organization . .
through a membership to the French Art Colpny;

FRENCH CITY FLORIST

·~

21 Ctdar StrHt

300 Second Ave.

SHAKE SHOPPE .
Rt.

DOWN U_NDER
RESTAURANT

35

TAWNEY JEWELERS, INC.
422 Second Ave.

. JIM MINK
tN~. _

CHEVROLET -OLDSMOeiLE,
1616 Ea1tom be.

'

THOMAS CLOTHIERS

992-2104
675-1244

.................. $15 single ................. $100 donor

25°/o OFF
IN OUR STORE

·····•·•···•·····································•···············•·····
Name

GOURMET
COOKING

Phone

"Cash-n-Carry Only"

THURS., MARCH 17

···········································•···········•···············

ANTIQUE
SEMINAR
GARDENING
.

.••••••••••••••••..•...•...................•...........................
City

State

·U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

..••

'Btu~dtdd

I

Top Sirloin Steak
1

-.''
I

Pound

'I

- $28.'8

•

'·
•,

':

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

U.S. GOV'T GRA0£0 CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

•'•

'B~ttdtdd

'B~r~eled4

•,

Strip Steak

Boston Roll Roast

Pound

Pound

..

SJ88

..

sa••

SILK
FLOWERS

THE FRENCH ART COLONY
P. 0. Box ·472
Gallipolis, OH. 45631:
.

DECORATOR
ARUIIGEIENTS
Ill SIUI
FLOWERS

I

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

•,

·.'
•

•''

•

Zip

Please mail with your memberhip fee to:

.

•EASI.ER TO CARVE •EASIER TO COOK ·•:
•EASIER TO JUDGE SERVING SIZE ,

GENERAL ALLERGIST

GREEN
CREATIVE
WRITING .

\
I

..
"

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT

Address

~

•"

PAUL DAVIES JEWELERS

to the public at no cost. Anyone ·
planning to attend the luncheon are
asked to brtng a covered dish and
own table service.

JOHN A. WADE, M.~. Inc.

Interest:

208 Upper River Rd.

DAN THOMAS &amp; SON

•I

"

.......... :$50 contributor .......... $500 benefactor
500 Third Ave.

.•
..

.................. $25 family ................ $25'0 patron

AND LOAN

"

.,

~------------------------------------------~I ~

P.J.'s INC.

will be $1 for adults and 50 cen ls
for students. Refreshments will
be available.

NO
WASTE
...
Fashion, cosmetic demonstration .planned
MORE MEAT TO EAt
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area

145 Jackson Pike

The MEDICAL SHOPPE

ter of Women's Aglow wtll meet
Thursday al 6:30 p.m. for a
dinner meeting at the Meigs Inn.

tit

Go Krogering

'I

"'

·~
~

•
••

--

'~

Credit Clrda I

..

-

�.·
(
Page-B-6-The Sunday. Times-Sentinel

Camille Susette Swindell becomes
the bride of Brent Alan Bolin

,

-&lt;-

"""'

';

the guests.
knu:pUurrwas heid aT the'i\•ieigs
Multi-Purpose building in Pomeroy
with Bonnie Baker, Joyce Sauters,
Gloria Mcintosh, Becky Hunter,
Ta nnaSwlndeii,PattyArnold ,Rhea
Douglas, Sherrie and Diane Saulers, serVIng refreshments.
The bride is a graduate of Meigs
l'f!gh School a nd will graduate from
Ohio University month as a market-

NEW YORK (AP) ~Veteran 1V neWsman Da~iel SChorr says he
was fin:O . Uy=Cab1eT· Nevis NetWorK ~ arter·· nve- s·eats as .~ a
correspondent because CNN refuSed to guarantee hls " journa listic
independence. "
Schorr, 68, who gained a reputation as an investigative reporter
during 25 years with CBS, was fired Friday after the network ~auld
~in~~:=~ him on a new . contract, CNN President Burt

Mr. and Mrs. Brent Alan Bolin
lng major with a bachelor of
business administration degree.
The groom is a gradua te of Meigs
High School and Mariett a College
with a bachelor of science In

petroleum engineering. He is employed by Kramer Exploration Co.
in Rulland.
The couple reside in Athens.
1

'Et hnic groups In' Kenya include
Kikuyu, Luo, Luhya, kelenjin,
Kamba and other lesser-known
group.&gt;.. -· ~,..,
'

Only o2.4 percent of those eligible
voted in the 1932 e lection .between
Herbei't Hoover and Franklin D.
Rnose.velt, who was the winner.

·UR FINAL
CLEARANCE.
OF FAll AND WINTER
MERCHANDISE

Now--60·0/o

POINT .PLEASANT MEDICAl CENTER

25th &amp; JEFFERSON' AVE.

OFF

ONE RACK .OF SPRING AND SUMMER
MERCHANDISE 50% OFF .

AAROM BOONSUE, M.D.'

336 Second Avenue, Downtown Gallipolis

PHONE 675-1675

Queen - Walker
MIDDLEPORT- Mr. and Mrs. Whitehall and is employed at Mt.
George L. Queen, R.I. t 33997 , Carmel East as a nurse aide.
Walker is a graduate of Gahanna
Parkinson Rd .. Middleport , are
announcing the engagement and Lincoln High School and Is a student
forthcoming m arriage of their · atJheColumbusTe(·hnicallnstitute.
daughter, Janet Lynelle, to Richard
He will gradua te 'in June with an
Wa lker,' son of Mr. and Mrs.
assocatedegree In electronics.
, ._l~;rmonE_~alker, G!!~a_nna._ _
]1)£ ~edding, ~~!lne&lt;) .!or June.
Th&lt;' bride-elect is a gradua te of 15 at ,the Gahanna Community
wnlicna!t '='ieaiiiD'!t'HigiT"Scnooi·~u,"'-""ehuri'rt:iri~inlileifi'ternaoh~ ·

RIO GRANDE

CHESHIRE
STATE ROUTE 7

RODNEY

910 W. COLLEGE

STATE ROUTE 35

.!.. A.M. TIL 10 P.M.

---~...,-·~·~'--·0P'£tlH!4 HOUIIS-~~--~-"~_ .,!)~END~
., l4.1 _~O_U_R.;;,S_~-'"--~ -~ .
_

---""=~~~~-"-3"67 'fi;'i:,. if· -'--~..;;;;.....;;;,'C;c.;c,......~,c"=~

will be held following the ceremony
a t Teays Valley High School.
Miss Pitzer is a graduate of
Eastern High SChol and Rio Grande
College with a bachelor of science
degree in accounting. She is
employed by Ohio State·Unlverslty.
Timmons is a graduate· of Teays_
Valley High School and is employed.
wl lh Gurnrner Wholesale in Washington Court House.

will foll ow in the church fellowship
room.
The blide-elcct Is a graduate of
Meigs High School a nd Holzer
Medical Center School of Nursing
and Is attending Ohio University.
She Is employed at Pinecrest Care
Center.
Gulley graduated from Glenwood
High SChool and Shawnee State
College. He is employed at Southeastern Equipment Company -In
Gallipolis.

ECKRICH BOILED HAM ......... S2.29 LB.
ECKRICH BOLOGNA ............. Sl.S9 LB.
ECKRICH PEPPER LOAF •••••••• $2.99 LB.
COLBY CHEESE ..................... $1 ~ 99 LB.
SWISS CHEESE ..................... S2.39 LB.
FRESH POTATO SALAD ........;•• 79&lt; LB.
FRESH MACARONI SALAD ••••••• 79&lt; LB.
._'-...;.F..;.;RE~SH
SALAD •••••••••••••• Sl. LB.

PARTY . TRAYS
FROM Sl S9S .
10% OFF WITH
COUPON IN PHONE
BOOK COVER

R.C.
. COLA .
8 oz. $149

ATO CHIPS

16
BTLS.

99C REG. S1 .39
FOLGER'S
COFFEE

Halley, Crown City. He is the son of
Harry and Phyllis Woodyard, Route
2. Crown City.
The groom has enl isted In the
United States Navy.

.Plus Tax &amp; Deposit

ADC

liquid Detergent ..•.. M.Q~.S 1. 79
Final TOU(h .............li.!\t S1.19

can't

be

as.c:umM

apJTreciates
handiwork."

th~t e~eryone

this

type

Selected Vurietie~

GRC 30 WT

professlonally.There was no mallclaus damage."
The airport authority has received two or three reports of
plnstrlplng, but noonewaswilllngto
file a formal complaint, a n airport
spokesman said.
"I just wish the guy or guys who do
this wou ld Come forward and
:dentlfy themselves," he said. ;'No
criminal charges will be flied, but It
of .

(PIIICE WITHOUT DEU PUIKHA!E 59')

I
I

TIDE

Baby Food ...............4Yl.Ot.4/Sl

Pinstripe parking lot

BETSY ROSS BREAD FOR ONLY 49&lt;1

!.Tuna ...............:...... ~.R~·..•••. s9c

GlRIER

ALLENTOWN, Pa. (AP) Someone with a steady hand, an eye
for color and alot of nerve Is painting
pinstripes on cars parked at the
Allentown-Bethlehem -Easton Airport. b~t noonecomplained, airport
police say.
. "! 'm happy," said VInce Gal·
lagher of East Allen Township, who
returned Wednesday from a vacation in Bermuda to' find white
pinstripes on both sides of hls black
cilr. "It would ha~ cost me 60 or 70
·bucks. Thank God he picked the
right color and did the lob

pink, with pink lace stream ers and

Dolo;es_~bll!a~s.,Ti h~, co,".~le ,are

City. She w 0re a pink dress. and

Gallipolis.

.

monoxide

Is

a gas · ,.,nses. Because It is so difficult to

m-cpmtnete

the absorption and deli very of

closely corre lated wittl the severity

detect, Its preSimCels Very danger- · -·· 0x9gen i'u-lhe hea'ri-aa1d wthe bra1 n,-.

Com ·

bust ion of materials made from
ous and rarely suspected until after
carbon·. Wood products , gasoline
symptoms O&lt;:cur.
(used In internal combustion enPoisonings from carbon monoxgtnes), petroleum fuels (used In
ide are often ac~idental but also
Illuminating and heating appllanacmunt for a significant proportion
ces), and even tobacco products all . of suicide attempts . The- toxic
yield carbon monoxide gas. .
effects of carbon moooxlde begin
Carbon monoxide gas cannot be
when the gas Is unknowingly
smelled. It Is tasteless, It has no
Inhaled Into the lungs.
color a nd it Is non-lndtatlng. In
The gas itself Is . not directly
to the body. Rather,
short, it is very difficult, If not ·

--

------- ----------------------

leading to m arkedly low levels of
oxygen in these organ s.
Symptoms to nol a ppear.un til the
amount of carbon monox ide in the
blood reaches 20 percent or more .
Prolonged exposu re to low levels
of carbon ,monoxide can be 'lust as
dangerous as limited exposures to
very hil(h concentrations of Ihe gas .
'\'he first symptom is usually a
progressively throbbing h.eadache.

uf : n~·iiU130ning a-nfl wH11 :hc lc•..r('l o f ·

carbon monoxide in the blood.
The hr·adache can be followed or
aecompani!'d by nausPa and vomit ing, Hght -hcadedncss. palpitations,
and weakness. AI very high
concentt atlon. dizziness, coma.
cardiopulmonary fa ilure and eventu ally deiilh can occur.
Prompt tran,port to a medi ~ al
faci lity · should be undertaken.

-

STIONS.
:NEW GENUS II™

Success in a kitchen

"'DEU SPECIA16S

Delmonte Catsup ..})..% S1.09
GALLIPOLIS - Loretta Ga il
HaliPy a nd Harry LeeWOOdyard.Jr.
will many March 16 at the home of
fpe ~'TOUm in Crown City . She Is the
daught er of Norma Halley; 42o
Green Terrae&lt;' Dr .. . and J.W.

carried a single white carnation
tipped in bur.gundy. with burgu ndy
streamers a nd greenery.
Flower girl 'was .Jenny Lane of
Gallipolis. She wore a pink and
white dress. Her headpiece was of
baby carnations. rosebuds and
baby's breath , oilhe sa mccotors as
the bride's bouquet, pink, bu r~'U nd y
and white. She carried a white
wicker basket of petals.
Mrs. Nancy Rhodes of Gallipolis
attended the guest register.
Dick Browski of Columbus was
best m an. Ushers were Steve
Schumacher and Jerry Gool din of
Crown City.
Thegroom.wore.a dark blue suit ,
with a pink and burgtindy rosebud
boutonn iere. The other men wore
dark suit s, a nd their bou.tonnlcres
were pink rosebuds.
Following the ceremony, a recep- .
tlon wa~ held in. the church
fellowship room. A three-tiered
cake separated by columns and
cherubs, with side cakes and .,
stairways leading from second
layer of main cake was featured . It
was topped with pink satin bells,
burgundy ribbon and flowers. The
cake was decorated in burgundy
roses a nd rose buds. Around ihe
ba se Of Cake WCI'(; gree nery and
pink flowers.
Hostesses for the receptlpn were
Gladys F lowers, Tammy Lane and

area. besides 1h0 groom 's parcnls
were Car:, l.ongenPIIP, Long Bot tom. Donald. Lisa, and .Jos hua ·
Longenettr . Mineral City. and .Joan
and Bru ce RumSl:'y. Point Pleasant ,
W.Va.

Smart money

Danner Gulley
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas D. Danner, Gallipolis, are
announCing the engagement and
forthcoming marriage of their
daught er, Deborah Ellen, to ,Joe
Alan Gulley, son of Mr. and Mrs .
Raymond Gu lley of New Boston ,
Ohio.
· The open-church wedding will
take place Saturday, March 16. at
1:30 p.m. at the First Baptist
Church in Gallipolis with Dr. Fred
Williams ofllclatlng. A reception

Carbon

GALLIPOLIS Ms. Sheila
George, daughter of the late Russell
Peck and Mrs. Mar!ly Snyder of
GaUl polls. and Jeffrey Spiess, sop of
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Spiess of
Brooklyn, · N.Y., were united in
marriage Nov. 26 at Harris Baptist
· Church. Bidwell .
- "
..
Vows of the double-ring ceremony were read by the Rev. Rona ld
Lemley. The blide and groom Ill a
Trinit y Ca nd le during th e
ceremony.
The bride, escor ted to the a ltar by
Chuck Lane, was given in marriage
In honor of her parents. She wore a
gown of ivory lace over taffeta,
featuring a high Victorian neck and
sheer yoke, sheer long bishop
sleeves fitting light around the
wrtsts, a nd fitted bodice. The
fu!Hength skirt was ruffled at the
bottom . He_r headpiece, wa~ a
Victorian bndal hat with a turned _up side brim. with lace and pearls.
Hig h pouts ended In a cloud of elbow
veiling of polyester,'nylon netting .of
Ivory.
Ms. George carried a cascade of
pink, burgundy and white carna lions and rosebuds. "ith baby 's
breath .and long strea ms of pink,
white and burgundy ribbons.
Matron of honor was Ta mmy
Lane of Gallipolis. She wore a
burgundy dress and carried a
single white carnation tipped in

MOTOR OIL
~~5. 6'9(QT.

r

* * REGISTER
TO WIN * * I
Dntwing for
inch calarlY be held
I
lloiNy loadian March 25
2:30 • .M. l
I0

10
at

at

l-~-~~~~-~--~---J

SANDWICH DEAL

BUY ANY J's DEU SANDWICH AT
REG. PRICE &amp;GET ASMALL BAG OF ·
fRITO LAY CHIPS FOR 25•.
REG. 35•

,,

VA~LEY

BELL

2°/o MILK

1 79
GAL · $.

WHITE CLOUD
-TISSUE
6 PACK
ROLL

$189-

WINDEX
REFILL
32 QZ.

$159

STOP IN FOR A FREE GIFT
• AMERICAN EXPRESS • 76 CHARGE • COMCHECK

HOT COFFEE .___:FRESH DONUTS.-. BREAKFAST SANDWICHES

&gt;-

IN ALL SIOIIS

By Bruce WIU!am~
DEAR BRUCE WJLLIAMS - I
love to cook a nd T'd'l lke to go into
· _th.; catelingJ:&gt;uslness. I'm 25 years
old and have a four-year-old child.
I have about $2,1XXl, and my
closest friend wa nts to go Into
business with me. We assume we'll
have to star t out using our own
kitchens. Then as we "expand, we
can get a regular business sliuatlon
with the appropriate equipment.
How do we get started with the
little accounts? We have read so
many stories about women who
started out making fud ge In their
kitchen, and e nded up with a gia nt
company.
We have the a mbition and $2,oXJ.
Where do we go from here7 - I. L.,
SAN DIEGO, CALIF.
DEAR I.L - The stones about
success starting with fudge and
cookies from the kitchen make
grea t
but In the 19llls It's a
In mos( jurisdictions, you :-"Ill ~ot
be allowed to use your kitchen for
anything other than cooking for
your family.
You have a four-year-old child
and probably a dog or a cat, which
is fine. But how would you feel If you
walked into a restaurant and saw
two dogs and three kids playing in
the kitchen?
For that reason . In most areas
you're not allowed to use a kltchen
In a private home to produce food
for public consumption. You'll
either have to rent a small
restaurant or some other small
facility. ·
As to how you get siarted, let's
face it ; with ~.OOJ It's going to be
tough. You might want to put the'
whole thing on holrl and get a job In
the catering business .
This wUI gtve you practice
experience and you'lllearn how the
business Is tun. Also, you can put
this muneyastde-forcapa-a: to start·
your own enterprise. I WO\fld think
that a minimum of $15,00J to $~.1XXl

Is necessar y to ~ven give you ~ hint
of possi ble success.
With regard to how you find your
first accounts, tell all your friends
that you're In the catering business.
Sooner or later, one 'of th~m will
want to have an office party,
wedding or engagement party.
The greatest thing required In the
cate ring business is diligence.
Deliver what you say, when you
say, In the best professiona l
man ner.
You have the ambition. the
brains, and the ability. Do you have
the drive ahd the willingness to
make· the necessary sacrifices?
Only you know the answer.
DEAR BRUCE WILLIAMS I've paid m y taxes over the years,
but for reasons I don't want to get
Into I dldn'• t flle In 1982.
I've had the same job for the last
six years, and the appropriate
amount of money was withheld
bother to file.
Now I'm really scared. What
should I do? - RB., LOS ANGELES CALIF.
DEAR R.B. -.Your problem Is
nowhere as serious as you might
think.
You can call the Internal Service
and fil e an amended return~ It' s
very possible that •enough· money
was withheld from your income to
not only pay the appropriate taxes,
but whatever penalties may be
attached.
.
The major thlng In your favor Is
that you take the initiative and flle
before they come to you.l'd suggest
that you get on It Immediately.
· You might feel more comfortable
seeking the help of a professional to
make that flllns .
Write to Bruce WU!Iams In care of
this newspaper. Volume of m~ ll ,
prolllblts personal responses. Ques· '
tlons of general Interest will be
( New11paper Enterprise Assn.)

____,,..-c

~"-c"8y-6uv~·o.coNN'oR''"'"·'-i;;;lt;;;,";;;ii-;'e:;:;;~h;;~·~~;u-:.i'~"'~£i;~"~~~i'd~ i;;;~rte;.eT~wfth~·'T;;e=se-;:rn-GY'.· af· thTfit.iCfaCileis' ,._.,,~"~-·

' produced--oy Ute

Sheila George becomes bride
of Jeffrey Spiess in November

Sma ll, sisters of the bride , a nd
NancY, Bretz served a t the refres hment table . J aney Darning registe red the gui'Sts.
The couple now rcsid&lt;' in Chris·
ncy, Ind .

greerlery: The briae·s of her -au end· . . ,..,emp,oycu··- Y ua,, pGu-s veve~oP'"
~~'4&gt;¥~'~"' ;:.;.~.·;;o-;oc;,m-.· wll5'Bli:lliit'S--1om::&amp;;rt:'. .of;c· ~~-n- :j; .. m.::.•:-aL-~~G€n:~~.ad -' -·; ssidc.._Ju

Pitzer "" Timmons
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Clinton R. Pitzer, Bashan Road.
Long Bottom, ar0 an nouncing the
engagement and approaching marriage of their da ughter, Tammy
Lou. to Ronald Eugene Timmons.
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E.
Timmons. Sc ioto Street, Ashville.
'The open chur~h wedding will be
at Ashville Church or Christ In
Christian Union. Ashville, on Saturday. May 11, atl: ~p. m. A reception

...

the Alcoa Club Hou se. WhltP
tablecloths, lavender napkins and
lavender candles were uSed on the
tables.
The three-tiered wedding ' cake
was made by Rita Small. sister of

Carbon monoxide nnisoning' Odorless

First aid facts

~

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY-9 A.M.: S P;M.
SATURDAY ..,..9 A:M.-2 P.M.
MONDAY &amp; THURSDAY EVENINGS-6:30·8:30 P.M.

Tammy Lou Pitzer

~~J-,~--~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~·::::;~?~~~~~~
Vl~r-~a~ll~.d~-~M~~~·w~-~{.41'11'
ll~~~e11ett~-- . -~
was
at·
·-Attendin g Ihe wediliii'g from tt;JS~

..: and '·Candleon the Water."
The bride wore an off-theshou lder whitetullegownoverwhlte .
satin with lavender lace trim . She
wore a white floral wreath trimmed
with lavender and carried a bouquet
of silk flowers with lavender

on his job as liost of a Raqio City Music Hall salutp to The Nashville
Network because he was being " treated !Ike a nobody," his wife
says.
.
Jo.~es, 53, known for such Wts as "He Stopped Loving Her Today" •
and The Race Is On," left after singer. Ricky Skaggs went onstage
before him Thursday night to introduce the s how.
"George thought, 'WeU, they don't want me here, a nd they don't
need me,"' Nancy Jones said. "And he decided just to walk out."

FAMILY PRACTICE &amp;
PAINOFFICE
CONTROL
HOURS

ltichar&lt;l Walker

POMEROY ;- Robin Renee . streamers.
Wilkinson and Larry A. LongenPtie
Maid of honor was Carla Irvin,
exchanged 1\'ed.ding y_rms in a sister of the bride, and the
candlelight cereniotly Feb. 16th at
bridesmaid- was Shelly Kinman:
the Hatfield Baptist Church, Hat- They wore iloor-length lavender
field, Ind .
satin dresses. Their headpieces
The bride is lhe daughter of Mr. were circles of white and lavPI'Ider
and Mrs . William Wilkinson. Hat- roses wit h lavender streamers.
field. and the groom is the son of Mr.
Flower girls were Jennifer Small.
and Mrs. Duane GongenetteofLong nieee of the bride. and Nicole
Bottom.
Kinman. They wore identical long
The Rev. Charles Green per- lavender and white dresses a nd
formed the doubiP ring cerPmonv carried baskets of white and
follow ing a progl'am or mu sic b~·
lavender silk flowers.
Sam Little was best man and
Jon! Wilson. organist, and Sherry
Mlcan a nd Bllly Wilkinson. brother
ushers were Danny Neal and Gary

George
Jones walks off salute
...... -----.

BOARD CERTIFIED

Janet LynneUe Queen

'

HOLL:VWOOD- (AP) ~ Director Peter Bogd8nol(lch, whose
screen hlts Include "The Uist Picture Show" and "Paper Moon,"
demanded on the eve of release of hls newest fllm, "Mas)&lt;," that his
natne be removed from a title credit.
Bogdanovich, who filed an $11 million lawsuit last week, said that
eight minutes of footage were deleted from the film and 14 minutes of
m usic were changed while he was qn vacation.
·
HesaldThursday •hewanted music by Btuce Sprlngsteen, rather
than Bob Seger, to reflect the real-life preference of Rock.Y Dennis, a
young man with a severe facial deformity. The film , starting Elic
Stoltz and Cher, was release() Friday In Los Angeles, New York and
Toronto.

was best man, and ushers were
Craig Bolin, brother of the groom.
and Dan Thomas. The groom, his
attendants and the father of the
bridP wore dove grey tuxedos. The
groom wore ta ils.
·ThP mother· of the bride wore a
rose gown with an orchid .corsage
and the motherof thegroomwas ln a
1

•

Robin Renee Wilkinson
vowswith Larry A. Longenette

Go on vacation, things change

.,.~~i~~~~:r~V'~Ic~:t~m~:. ;i:an!ed~n:ec~k~l;in;f.e;a~·~n:d; ="f.co~~,:~-sa~g~:e~.~~.~~;f~:~~~;~r:eg: i~st:~e~red~.'"""'
puffed sleeves extendlng into sealioped filfed-cliffs ..._...,~ .~ =
She wore a ba ndeau headpiece
with simulated pearls and sequin
trim. Simulated pearls edged the
fingertip length veil. The bride
carried a bouquet of white silk roses
accented with white daffodils and
baby's breath.
Paula Chancey, sisterofthebride,
was matron of honor. Bridesmaids

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va .

March 10. 1985

r--People in .tbe news-

POMEROY _: Camille Susette
were Sandra GlassofPennsylvanla,
SWindell beCame-the bride of Brent - Karen Slater of South Carolina-, and
Allison Mcintosh, Athen s ..
Alan Bolin inaJan .]9weddingatthe
United P\'ntecostal Church of 'Mid·
The rna tron of honor wore daphne
rose and the bridesmaids wore
dleport. The candlelight cermony
burgu ndy Edwardian-style gowns
was conducted · by the Rev. Clark
Ba ker.
with flower sprays in their ha'ir.
The bride is the daughter of Mr. · They can·ied white hutTicane
candle lamps ttimmed with daphne
and Mrs. E. Ned Swindell, Shade,
rose and burgundy flowers.
and the groom Ts the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Joe M. Bolin, Rutland.
Kerl Swindell of Athens was the
Nuptial music was provided b)' . flower girl and woro:&gt; a bustlcback
piano and soloist·, Kim Paulson .
gown of daphhe rose. Shawn Hunter
featuring "Whither Thou Goest"
of Athens was the rlngbearer and
and "The Lord's Prayer" during th0
Monte Swindell, brother oft he hride,
in marriage by her parent s
and escorted 10 the altar by her
father, the bride wore a gown
fashioned of peau taffeta overlayed
with sheer polyester. The flounced
hem line ex tended In 1o a chapel train
of re-embroidered lace trimmed
with accordion plea ted chiffon
inserts. The bodice was of re-

March 10. 1985

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

'

3,000 Chances to Win

..

Look for corred anawers at diaplays in
participating stares. He Punllase Necessary.

&lt;

3,000 Pony Klfi .W IIIIt Awarded.

Each kn Includes a spectal, pttzeodntan at me Trivial
Pursu ll' Ganus tt• game: Including game board (not
avollobtalh retail version). coupon for otorge stze frozen
pizza. and two free coupons good tor your.chalco a_fa
carton of diet Coke or Sprite (whore &lt;Minable)

~·etCocaCIII•

One Paclftc Crulaelor .Two
ro Mulca

Winner witt ba drawn from 3,000 parf'l
kH wtnners. Trip tor two lnctuoes 51000
cash and round·ttlp air tare.

~o e tCOI&lt;t

Jlld

~''' ~• e •rQ •Ih!&lt;edtr~m•r ~sotlii~Coc•Co.~t;cto~n~n, l)etS~r·'t ·~•

t•Wtmar l ~llllt~COiiC(ln'l~¥

Olfl Pt~ IM Oottflt!~ll (.ola a!ltl il~tm.ll lb ~~ f!Ps(:o tnt
s-~·lJg m:l TUP

•

n ~ ;t:Jt~•ll l'l ott~~ UQ ~~"Y

' Nul'iSwttt Ifill !he NutriS "'~itl \ I~ Itt 111\tti!WI~'&gt; ill t 0 Se11~ A C3ll'llll"i&lt; lor •() band ot

\-..et=lil'llfll l!'taleG!tl'll
~ ~~ P.mu!T' II III t~•1 11!&gt;ed 1 1~ "\\l k ot ~(lift ... ~Uel !C,IIIUI lot !~'of -~ll'le'tliit•otlulel! 111!110oll on lilt u,.le(l
$1il6~/1de'r Uttvs.r-e hctrUIII Stlt!'IO* &amp; R.oglllel COf'llloi~~ Bay SINI•! ~~~ ~~-~ · :1'1(1 Piil Pitt$&gt; ' ~rt rtq•&gt; leii'CI
l!'l!l!ml t'&lt;$ 01 Stlcfloo. &amp; A&lt;~!'IM-r ~~

�•

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

March 10. 1986

SPorts

tLocal Ostomy Club preparing to affiliate with national group
......_
'
.
:': GALLIPOUS -:- The Galllpol!s
the club asslsted and emphasized
$'" and Surrounding Area Ostomy Club
the return of every ostomate to the
;::_ts encouraging all ostomates to
normal and productive llfe of which
:;attend the Thursday, March 21. 7
he or she is capable. _This Is the
,.m.-, monthly- meeting In the - -philosophy---of the Unite(! Ostom~'
... French500RoomatHolzerMedlcal
Association (UOA) .
:::Center.
Bob Graves, Southern Ohio State
;-· Throughout the past 18 months.
Representative fOI' the Uni!Pd

'

Ostomy Assoclatlon, wUl lead the
meeting. He has been an Ueostomate since 1976 and llves In Bethel. He
.Is the founding member of the
CtermoniArea- Cbapter and Is·
treasurer. His wife, Rita, recently
completed the Enterostomal Ther-

.

Spring probably ·is ·on the way

!:'Katie's corner
~~
- ~---------~-­
~

~

;

for the O)X'rallon of street llghts.
· If the levy would go down in
def('at i1 i!i V('tj' possible; probabt)·
almost certain, that street lights In
the village would not exist and that

By KATIE CROW

·"
~~

However, to make a decision on are those who have had ostomy
affiliation, at least 15 members SllJ'gery or may be non-&lt;l!ltomates
must be present.
who have an Interest In the
. The alms and purposes of the assoclstlon, such as reliltiV1!11 ot
United Ostomy-AssociatiOn are: ostomatM, ~- phJislclllns, enteros·
- To assist UOA mutual aid toma1 therapists, nurses, and tllofM!
chapters In thelr etforls directed who are engqed In the manufactoward the ~very and rehabtllta- ture or sale of supplles. The IaUer
tlon of those who have had, or will do not have the prlvllege of. voting
have, colostomy, Ueostomy, or or holding o!llceln the organization.
urostomy surgery.
Honorary members are those who
·- To promote the !ormation of . are elected to , this status by a
ostomy groups so that help will be majority vote of the member$blp,
caustng paln and disfigurement.
within reach of all ostomates.
These persons may not vote or hold ·
Terri Is approximately 4% feet ·
- To promote a better 'public office.
tall and Jeff Is smaller. Both have
understanding of ostomies . .
Lori Somerville, president of the
graduated from high_ school and
- To be of mutual assistance to ~a Ostomy Club, · said, "To
Jeff spent three years at Ohio State
·
each other.
affiliate with the UOA, we need the
~To assist the
apy program at Harrisburg, Pa.,
and will be with him at this
meeting. He will help to organize
the group for affUiatlon and explain
tn detall the philosophy, alms and
purposes of the UOA.
Affiliation with the UOA would be
of great benefit to the area club.

Thnes-SenUnel Correspondent
{. How !artunatl? we are, what with
:&gt;!be snow we had,
:'!:that we
·

Drug Treatment program at Saint
Anthon): Hospital, Columbus.
Linda also has her B.S. degree In
education.
The article that appeared In the
.about_

~imes- ~enthut Section
March 10. 1985

•

meet

ID
..
(30-41 wUI

mark there Is ~ wins agatrtsf!48 losses with three

tKIAC, of which Rlo Grande was a member and

"'?'c.-·

your decision.

:too

soon as we
.o;.stlll · have the

-----

.

_,!-

~:~n~th ~ 1 ::u~~ ..A
_?
0

I am very happy to report that
AvazhobeStsson; syr~cuseh, lsU much,
11 er ,a owrng er 1ness.
muc
Visiting with her this week is the
former Eva Zeiher, Columbus. Eva
Is a former Syr,acuse resident and a
close. friend of Avazo.

.

11

-;;:.;:
-~
..come rain ai;ld more ra in.
:: I don't know about you but when
:;.we were snowbound all I seemed to
~do was keep the refrigerator on it s

Haggy Spencer and their two
children.
Rodney and Margaret are
former Pomeroy residents having
· · attended Pomeroy High School 1!1
the 1950's according to Linda.
Rodney and Margaret have two
c~lldren, Terri and Jeff Spencer, :M .
and 21 years old respectively.

The two children remalrt cheerful
with the wonderful help and love
they receive from their parents.
nevJuest coshowslnyou0u- beswet s hotuhld__
1o e
r
mp1a .
r
Spencer lamlly.
--Everything seems to be "go" fo~
the marina at Byracuse, Council

~-·~~,~~"'.:,juotsft~_e;·Ia,t:r.an,gd""ie;roa·u'annidi'sc"a"'
'n 'I:It'e.~t,lnrict.l="''-~\lerii'r;,~·lf·;-ago'i' receiv'-'i a ····~mo~~.!~~&amp;fa~~'f~ii~~~~f~:r~~~ :J'!~~!!~,!~~ ,\YJ~ ~~$Is

•

.

.rw~~ tol&lt;~.P U!)

-

- To provide reassurance and
emotional support to the ostomate's
family.
-To provide a central organlza·
lion to unify, lead and support the
activities of Its chapters. ·
Membership In the UOA Is made
up of regular members and hOnorary IJlembers. Regular members

.

-~--

,.,h;.-.h
"'"'!'"::'&lt;!"'''......:~ J..,. '"' "' ,..,..,..~,._...,,~ ..,
n ·o"•'"-" C..f-'t"'"'""" t,.~ U "l Ul'l.7 '-'VIWIIIV'U.:.J

Dispatch, from Linda Crow Beegle.
Linda is the daughter of Fred
Crow Jr .. Syracuse, IO}lll attorney
and the late Eleanor Crow.
Since Linda sent me the article
she has been quite ill but understand she Is well on the road to
· reeovery and we are very happy to
hear the good n..Ws.
Linda is a registered nurse and
works with the Akohollsm and

:Z Like to explain about the 1.8 mill
;that Syracuse Villagl' is seeking in
May election.
~ The 1.8 mill, five year, new levy,
...js listed under current expense.
::: . Now this does not mean that the
,:money the vlllage will receive, if the
;levy passes, Is for everyday
~ of the village. The money
:!Jlerlved from ,the levy will be used
~

This will be another great step
_A
.......... ,.,. ... ~, ........ n.- ............ IJ.IIU
.... -H _,..,....
·
forward
fort'"-...
~rnan ,m~.a.o th::.t
~ . .,;-~ l\,. \oll...., VI. UU I
IIUuvn - ·-~"· ~ ·
-' -', . -....L!.P.:' =-----· · --o ~ · -~-alltles and both genders.
has one · of the flrtest par)&lt;s In
Its symptoms are prominent and. · Southeastern Ohio.
agonizing. From birth, the skin
erupts
constantly in lesions
resembling third-degree burns.
At the slightest touch, the skin
sloughs off and blisters form. Both
lrtside and outside the body . the
soles of the feet, the mouth and
esophagus, the face, the arms the ·
legs- the wounds keeping coming

-~

Kemper Arena, Kansas City, Mo., on Wednesday.
March 13, at9: :Jla.m. Central Standard Time (10: lla.
m. Tri-County ~a time) .
·
_This was announced Saturday by tournament
otflclals. The Rio-Berea contest wlll betheftrstofelght
games on opening day of the i985 single t&gt;llmil'ation
tournament.
·
Thirty-two of the nation's ·top small college teams
. participate In the siX-day tournament.

funds, 3 . out of 4 &amp;e)jev~
they got btgger refunds

than If they did their own
taxes. 3 out of 4!

$24471

.2:10 p.m.; Swala's Store, 2:20-2: 5o (Church), 11:45 a.m.-noon: Ewing·
p.m.; Crown City, 3:45-4:30 p.m.; ton, 1-1; 15 p.m .; VInton, 1:30-2:05
Grace Shaffer, 4:45-5 p.m.: Ohio p.m.; Morgan Center, 2:20-3 p.m.
Townhouse, 5: 15-5; 45 p.m.; Eureka, 6-6:30 p.m.
Thursday- Cora, 3: 15-3: :llp.m .; Hymn sing poslponed
Raccoon Tr. ·ct., 3:40-4 . p.m . ;
Thl' monthly go~pel hymn slhg of
Patriot, 4:15-4:45 p.m.; Cadmus,
the
United Faith Church, located on
5-5: 20 p.m. ;- Gallla, 5:30-6 p.m.;
.
the
Pomeroy-Middleport by-pass,
Centerpoint, 6:15-6: 30p.m.; Centerhas
been
postponed untll Aprll 13.
.
ville, 6:40-7:10 p.m.
Friday - .No route - Malnte·
Srf Lanka was ·formerly Ceylon,·
nance Day.
Saturday - Georges Creek, which used to be called Serendlp.
10:1:&gt;-10:45 a.m. ; Buiavllle Tr. Ct., That's where we got the word
11-11:30 a.m.; Evergreen "serendipity."

_2! SYCAMQif STilET,

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•

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=---=

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·~~--

season play.
.
· Mountalilei.r Coach Roland wterwllle cauedti\Ose
two wins "the biggest in the .school's cage history."
In 13th Year AtBera
Wlerwllle Is In hls i31h year year Berea . His career

• March 6 to oust defending District 22 charnplon Walsh ,

"'.~'·""~!";:':7;~~~~~:~~t;;-;;~:~;;:r;~~"'"~~J.;~!~5e~~~':~&amp;~~W~~~~kt~~

SEED RECORD

I

30- 3
23-9

Ft . Hay~ St. KS
Rocky Ht. MT

w

16

20- 6
2~- 8

Willian Carev, MS
David L lb ~cO'rb TN

2: '+5 "" TH

9

2J - J
18• 6

Athens St..

1:00

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27- •
ll-iO '
29- J
22- 7

c. of Idaho

!l5-08. ·

F1rst In 31 Years
This wUl be Rio's first trip to the NAJA post-season
·
national playoffs In 31 years.

.

tD

CA

,._____ . --

-

Hvfiti(.! F!.Ot'l', ·~AR

Loyola

"

30- ~
20- 9

Ric Grande

•

26- J
15-16

W.VA. Weslevan
tnc
IL

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28· 3
2J- 6

C of Char i ston

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23- 7
21-10

Southeast Okla. OK

2:4S

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26- 9
23- 7

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Mlm-Duluth

27-10
22- 9

9:30

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KY

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•

lv-PU Ind. IN

.

NCAA women' s patrings
. •
mystery ends Su·nday
.

· ar·e· 1~---.....-.....,\::'..-""''T"'
·J·y·,
"''"~""

con'lroveFsial; Willnelheseietlloh&lt;Ji - 8 tearn: rne No.'2 wtiffidtli'ma!clTro ~Mid&lt;•asF,Miqw-esturWestnegtlJ!r.'- ·
·
~~Na':~@a.rn, .e!~~·-: -~- .. --~- -"'-·· · "'";;,,_,;,:,,;~~!:o-:"""·.Ytr,-.,,~-;..Cf'_c~,,~
ments. This leaves
this year's NCAA Women's Basketschools can be placed
For example. if Texas, the No. I
and
16. Thus, Big
the areas would be held to their
at-large bids to lsssue, and most
ball Tournament wUI end Sunday anywhere In the country as the top team In The Associated Press poll.
geographic location, If possible.
powers Georgetown and St. John's,
observers feel the llon'ssharewlllgo
when the the 32-team field Is two teams In pach of 'the four was named as the NCAA's top
to four conferenceS - the Big Ten, ranked No. 1 and No. 2 In the
Nora Lynn Flrtch, who heads the
announced.
, regloll&lt;)l tournaments.
selection, and If Ohio State wa•
country, are unlikely to be In the
Atlantic Coast, Southeastern and
NCAA
tournament comrnlttee.tndiDuring the past week suspense
The mechanics call for the · declared the committee's eighth
same regional because both would
BlgEast.
.
cated
It
could be difficult for her
has bee!l bulldlng over the selection committee to select a No.1 team and national tl'am, the two would then be
surely·be among tlietop tour seeds In
Officials of the Big Ten and ACC
group
to
se!ect
a clear No.I team .
committee's two major decisions. then patr It with thecommlttee'sNo. placed 1-2 In either the East,
whatever regional they land ln.
have said their leagues could each
One Involves . choosing the 15
'
The e 32 first-round losers wlll
get as many as siX Invitations, whUe ·
at-targe
teams
to
join
17
conference
followers of the Big East and receivl' $141,600 apiece. more than
champions advanclllg to the tourna·
UCLA got for winning the title justlO
Southeastern Conferences are hop·
years ago. whllethel6second-rounil · m¢nt as automatic Cjuallfters.
lng for four or live apiece. The
The second, and perhaps more
losers will receive $783,200 each:.
last season.
DAYTON, Ohio !API. - Inde- post :;eason play." Dayton got as far
"It was oneofthosegarnes nelt})er
pendents Notre Dame and Dayton as the NCAA West Regional finals
1eam
deserves to lose, " said Phelps.
were hopful of lnvlta lions to the
Dame forward Donald
Notre
National Collegiate Athletic AssociRoyal
scored
:M points and Ken
ation tournament followlrtg their
Barlow
added
21
for the Irish who
final game, Notre Dame winning
wth
a
20-8
record. Dayton
finished
!l). 731n two overtlmes Saturday.
North Carolina 57 N.C. State 51
finished
19-9.
''The round· robin games between
Notre Dame80 Daytoo 73 2CJI''s
Notre Dame\ which had beaten
the major Independents shows how
Texas Tech 'Tl Texas A&amp;M 63
Dayton t&gt;arlil'r, led through the
equal we are," said Notre Dame
Aullum 53 Alabama 49
early part staying ahead31 -29at the
Coach Digger Phelps. "Dayton beat
Memphis State 90 FlorldaSta!Al86
ball. But Dayton 's Sedrtc Tonozy hit
DePaul twice, DePaul beat us twice
Tulsa 82 Wichita State 71
four consecutive jumpers li1 the
Temple 59 Rutgers 53
and we beat'Dayton twice. I felt we
second half putting the Flyers ahead
needed the w{n more than Dayton
Marquette 681lePaul 6t
35-34.
Dayton, led by center Dave
did (or our chances to get Into the
Artt.ona 68 Artt.ona State 48
Colbert
with 21 points moved to a
tourney."·
Wisconsin 61 Northwestern $a
47-41
lead
before Notre Dame
"They're 1!1 the tournament and
Arkansas 68 SMU 55
battled
back
but missed the final
lllnols 8% MlDne!!o(a 56
we salute the Irish," said Dayton
In
regulation
with the game tied
shot
WaslUigton 67 Stanford 47
Coach Don Donohor. "It wlll be
59-59.
Interesting to see where we are In
'-', .

.
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.o;. . . .

Kentucky school.
Lawhorn, Mid-Ohio Conference and District 32
Coach-o!-lhe-Year, Is completing his fifth year at the
helm at Rio Grande. His Redman teams have won 126
andlost42.Hisall-timecareermarkis399-14l sincehls.
first job at Belfast High Scttoolln 1961.
Rio Grande won the 1984-85 Mid-Ohio Conference
crown with a 13-1 record this winter. Rio flrtlshed
regular 5eason play with a 28-4 mark.

Saturday's scores

·-·- AND WILL HOLD ASPECIAL ONE DAY SALEIII
~

·

Berea had been picked to finish fourth this year by
the league coaches and media.
· During the Dtstr1ct 32 playoffs, Berea upset
defending champion Cumberland, 75-&amp;1, at Williamsburg, snapping the Indians' 53-game unbeaten home
streak dating back to 1982. At one time this winter,
Cumberland was ranked 11th fn .the nation In )'I AlA
ratings.
Berea earne(l Its rtrsttrlp to the nationals by ousting

·Not.re Dame defeats Dayton .

cu.

Societ~ ·

The Amerian Cancer

-

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Model
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ft.
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Freezer

DURING OUR 5th ANNUAL

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natural regions says squads from

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=~=-~-

""' GALLiPOUS

3"3~. :.--~~

'i(

..... ,...

. . '

48th Annual NAJA Men's National Tournament Basket boll Pairings

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) _
recoro Is five, by the Big East and ·
Eastern tl'ams figure 10 dominate the Big Ten two years ago and
Sunday when the f!eld Is announced matched last year by the ACC.
tor the biggest, ·richest NCAA
In anothernewwrtnkle, therewlll .
Basketball Tournament ever.
be no· first-round byeS awarded to
CHS plans live coverage of the the \Op seeds In each of the four
announcemen t a I 4 : 30 p.m. EST ,, regions. Teams In ·each regional wU!
h
when thl' nine members of the
be seeded one through 16• with t e
Division I Men's Basketball Com· _ top seed playing No. 16, No. 2
mlttee emerge from three days and
meeting No. 15, etc. There wut be 16 .,.
nlgi1ts of meetings with their first-round garnes March 14 and 15
selections, pairings and seedlngs.
at ,eight sites around the nation.
EI..Ven at-large berths have been se&amp;Jnd-round action wlll be March
added to bring the field ro 64. 'Thanks 16-17 In the same arenas.
The tournament co~lttee Is
largely ·to a new three-year, $96
million television contract, tourna- empowered to send any team to any
ment teams wUisharearecord$17.5 region It wishes In order to balance
mUllon In net receipts.
the bracket.
The NatloQal Invitational TournaThe Final Four teams that
.. assemble tor the semifinals March ment; thenaUon'sold:-'tpostseason
· ~ 1n Lexington, Ky., wlll each be basketball competitiOn, .has been
guaranteed $7!ll,tnl, which com- relegated to the leftovers since the
pares with $648,630 that went to the NCAA tournament began expand1984 Final Four and .'$133,381 lng rapidly In the late 1970s.
awarded tothesemlflnallstsln19'75.
The committee will work under
The championship game wlll be --te.w ~trlct!ons. But pne rule that
Aprll 1.
·
could send some teams out of their

Wh~t can we find for you?

District~

_ Berea wUl be repreSenting District 32 tn the NAJA ·
playoffs. RtoGrar\de\vnrrepresent Dtstftct :i:l.
The Mountalnteers finished third 1!1 their league
(Kentucky Intercollegiate Athletic Conference

Eastern teams
should. dominate
·-NCAl\ pairings-

We can't promise everyone
this. but in a recent survey
of customers who p;ot re·

Found Mabel and
_ . Howard Hajek

Charleston, C., (2S-3) against Castleton State Vt.,
( ~l- Al9, Waynesburg, Pa., (23-41 meetsDruy, Mo.,
(24-9}. Nightcap finds Hawaii Pacific (27-10} playing
Central Washington, Wash., (22-9).
.First round action wlll resl!me at -9:.ll .a.m.
Th~rsday . There will be eight more games that day.
Eight second-round gamesfollowFrtday. Quarterll.. nafs are Saturday, March 16. Finals will be Tuesday,
March 19 with the consolation game at 5:45 and the

Represent

against Davtd Llbseomb,

_ AlWI'I).QOn g_am~ flncl Mawrest, IIo~~w~a~~~~~g:~:r
Cabrlnl, Pa., (23-5) at 1, followed~
Texas (2&amp;9) vs. Mesa, Colo., (23-7) at 2:45p.m.
Evening Games
Evening games start at 5 on opening day. West

H&amp;R BLOCit

pallia County bookmobile route-,. planned
,;: GALLIPOUS - The Samuel L.
.::llossard announces Its bookmobile
~hedule for the week of March 11 to
~16.
.
':' Monda)&lt; Rodney VIllage,
~: 30-4: 45 p.m.: Galli a Metro Est..:Stes, 4: 30-5: 15 p.m.; Kerr, 5: 30-5: 55
:P.m.; Bidwell, 6:10-6:30 p.m.;
: coChri!n's, 6: 40-7 p.m.; Valley View
' Apts., 7:10-8 p.m.
_ Tuesday - Bane's, 11:55 a.rri.· 12: 05 p.m.; Dorothy Young, 12:1012:20 p.m.: Opal Franklin's, 12: 30- .
·12: 50 p.m. ; Harrison Townhouse.
' t:'os-1:·20 p.m .: Myers (Mary).
' 1:30-1: 45 p.m.; Mercerville, 1:50-

21 meeting, so tha( we who Uve In
this area wtll have the advantag~
of the UOA allilla tlon, and feel that
we are a part of a progressive
organization lor the benefit of all
ostomates."
For additional mformatlon, contact Phyllis Brown, R.N., E.T., at
446-50!0.
'

·Where more
Americans
a bigger

Q\..1[;.:1

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&amp;~Q:l:ll-"-rab(l·~ .. -..;-,,-

Mass.;

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like those nice
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Mike Hughes are now 21·2 mark. ball around in an Intense manner,
Hughes has previously bull! sue· symbolic of its patient deliberate
~
cesstul
programs at South Potrtt and otfenslve game.
ClflLLICOTHE - Behind a
Although both clubs had their
Wheelersburg,
taking the latter to
precision passlng_game and power·
chances
neither team scored for the
stall'
tournament
several
sea·
the
tul overall offensive effort, the
first
two
minutes and ten seconds,
Franklin Furnace-Green Bobcats sons ago.
when
Brent
Bissell broke the Ice
Eastern
bows
from
tournament
placed tour meit In double ligures
with
a
short
lumoer.
pia~ with a very respectable i3-9
enroute to a 61-54 victory over
Seconds later, a typical see-saw
recoi'd.
E~tern In the first round of District
district
battledeveloped 3li6-1guard
The Bobcats were led by sophoTournament play. at CbiUlcothe's
Mark
Pierson
nailed a jumper from
more foiward Brian Roach's 21
Ellis B. Hatton gymnasium.
at
the·5::Jl
mark . After a
the
lane
points, freshman post man Zane
Despite tremendous bustle and
missed
EHS
possession,
Darnell
determination that pulled the Ea- • Darnell added 13, while Dave Roa(lb
Inside
shot
alter
finally
canned
an
10 and John Wilburn chipped In with
gle5 within two points In the second
tour
attempts
as
Green
hit
the
!Oeacb.
half, Green utilized a powerful
boards
har.d
for
the
successive
Eastern WM led by sophomore
lrtslde game that thwilrted Eastguard
Eddie COllins, who drUled shots. Collins retallatedqulcklywitb
ern's spirited comeback bid.
through 1$ polllts while 'sophomore a short Jumper for Coach Dennis
· With the win Green advances to
EIChinger's Eagles to knot the!K.'Ore
Greg Leachman added 10.
.the Dlsti1ct dnaia tomeet the winner
at~; Dave Roach pat Green back
FtntUII
of the LucasvWe Valley Local.
C!l~~-Inclu!la!:l~ll:ltled
Grmi
grabbed
·
tt.e
~~
..
.g
tip
Lynchburg \-'JaY WinDer llext Salilrand Immediately began to whip the
Colli~ Jed 011 01
day at 7 p.m. 1be Boljcats of Coach

BY SC01T WOLFE

Making your world .a

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ATmMPI'II TO BLOC&amp; SIIC11'-" rt m'a Ed
CCIIIInl (II) llltenti*lv blodla Jump lbo&amp; by G.-'1
Da.- . (!I) ~- ~~ ('
" . _ ._
'l'ounulmiiiiF'rltlq nip&amp; M Cltllllc«he 111Jb Sdlool
8Gulb _flnlohed the pme wltll10 polaja, one~ four
If

playentobldoultleftpM•theitehcal.rolle.ttoa
11-lf vidal)' wltldl elmlnltted F•rt em l'rom further
.'"*@ 111)11111111 --~~.:-lacllnula
(42) blocb otd llctbtM lola
(G) In the
lorep'ouad.

•c

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~-

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.

~C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

March 10, 1986

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

Green eliminates...______:.,___eo_•lmaed_trom_c-_
1

it up at~
Green pushed the Eagles further
for the worse as J;:astern failed to
At the 23 mark Pierson hit the behind at 29-16.
!j(.'Ore during the nextfour minutes,
second of a two shot foul tor a 7-6
With 3:1J71eft in the hal! Eastern
unable to penetrate • the Green
"= ~ - -Uins""'l 15. t t · clllll!ll-ume lllldllnvelled-a-press-of "defensive .-barrier- .uccessfuUy.
""ge ....,.ore o ' ru a .oo er o
MeanwhUe Darnell added flve
giVeEasteinitslastleadof8-7atthe ltsown,catchlngthe,'Catsotfguard.
points incl~dlng a key three point
3: 00 mark. The momentum then Quick-handed Royce Bissell and
•
• d f
company made some hasty thefts
play that momentarily stunned the
swayed to G reen -S Pn o the court,
E 1· and
h·
Itin th
where Brian Roach canned four that put Eastern back In theganneat
ag es
per aps c g
e.
•full
rt
29-21
at
the
intermission,
holding
turning
point
of
the
game.
Brlan
cou
Roach added four points and
s tr a ig ht jumpers af...r a
. .
_
_
. . .
•
!)- · Int.,..•'&lt;..-! Gr...,n'• ~-f.,ns!ve , Green scoreless the last three
"~~~
orother uave KOacn two more xor a
efforts. With Green leading 15-8 m~~~~ ~h~h:Ond half Eastern 42-29 score. Jeff CaldweU nailed a
was aU "fired-up" as It grabbed the s~~~:ishlng jumper withlBseconds left
Royce Bissell canned a 'l:oal with
. four seconds left, ending the frame . tl
d hit
dirt
byB t to pull EllS closer at 42.31 .
at 15-10
·
Pan
pay
on a goa1
ren
·
·
·
·
Bissell. Eastern continued to apply
The hustling Eagles regrouped
For much of the first period, pressure the lenglh of the court, offensively during the final round,
Eastern actually controlled the again coming up with the baU and butGreenmaintainedltshotpaceas

:i:

c

-.

-·---'"-- ·---- - =---- ·

curtain closed on a 61·54 finale.
East1.'111 seniors Paul Collins, Jim
Weber, and Mark Shrlvers· played
their,.J.a.st _gi!Il1e_ II!_a~) Eastern__
uniform.
•
Eastern hlt25Df60for41.4peroent
and hit 4 of 8 at the line. Gn!en
canned 29 of 59 for49 percent and hit
3of7 atthe llne. ·
The Eagles had 43rebounds led by
E. Bi:;sell' ~ 12 aOO LeCM;hmOJ, 's 10.
EHS )lad 9 assists, ll·steals, eleven
turnovers, and 1B fouls. J. Caldwell
had another great floor game with
tl
ve ass·1sts, whlle Co11111·sended the.
seasononahlglmotewlthgreattl&lt;ior
playandsparklingoffenslveeftort.

5 7,
,.,.,r--'~-.""'""- ~r;;:c" ofu:;;;;,ft,";,':n";'C,: - ~~~~;:';~"f=~==?~--;~gli~~f"~e"~~i~;~~~~~~~.;i ·- Darnell's
tempo~ ~arne, but the Bobcats

cashln

in~-~t&gt;-G. ~I.:.etlc-hman......botb_club!Lbattled

on.even terms. _ ~

•

Florida

'

,,

Despite spending halt of the ganw•
Cincinnati rallied to 64-58, but flr6t halt.
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP)- Alton
Florida State came up with five
LouJsvtUe cut the lead to seven 'on the bench because of tools, die:
points In the
more points on a field goal and iree points in the final minutes of the 1&gt;-foot-10~ finished with 18 polntl. :·
second half Frld~y nJght as F1orlda
Andres -Thrner finished with · J':
throw by~rd Bean Shaffer and - game as Jeff-Han~ and Manuel
StatJ&gt; downed·€1nclnnatl"'15-65in the
points
for Memphis State, while ·
two
free
thr0111s
by
Myrlck.
FOJTest
began
to
hit
from
the
semifinals of the Metro Conference
Vincent
Askew added 12. FO!'!'eil';
F1orlda
State
was
19of28
from
the
outside, but Memphis Statenalled10
.. basketball tournament.
paced
Louisville
·with 24 poinl$r:
throw
Une,
whUe
the
Bearcats,
free
of 12 tree· throws in the stretch to
The Seminoles, 14-5, and who heat
while
Hall
had
22.
'
63
percent
on
the
season,
made
only
keep~he
game
out
of
reach
.
Cinc1nnati8&amp;6J just over a week ago
seven
ofl7.
to start a four-gamewinn!ngstreak,
Guard Roger McClendon led the
again played without No. 2 scorer
.
losers
with TT pOints. Myron Hughes
. Randy Allen, who pulled a calf
Raceway and paled $1B, .$9.:al all¢
chipped
In 12 and Brlan Helm and
LEBANON, Ohio (AP) - Baby
muscle in pra~Uce Monday.
~..
Buggie won his second strati:ht
Derrick McMillan had 10 each.
The- Bearcals, seeded third,
L.J . Express paid $8.40 and $3.89,
Meanwhile, center William Bed· outing Friday ni~t In taldng, the
bowed out of the tournament at
to
place, while Mollie's Champ pa~'·
ford scored 17 points as No. 5 featured ninth race at the Lebanon
16-13.
S3.40toshow.
~~ .
Memphis State dominated the
Gipson finished with 22 points.
inside pl;~y and
game In a 81-74
Freshman Jerome Fitchett and
.
inthe
·..
. ..
. ..
-.,...

Balry /Juggie takes · Lebanon's b_ig eve~:

·-:.

.

j'

.

•

..

-.

.••
' ..

Herd waits word on opponent

IDGH .FLYING BOBCAT- Mark Pierson of Green goes high off the
·• Door lor a rebound during Friday's Class A District Tuul1J8Illl!llt game
: between the lawrence Counly !iChool and Eastern. Pierson had seven
:: points In the Bobcats' 6l·ll4 victory. At left are the Bobcats' John DarneD
·; .(.,'If) and EMiem's Brent Bissell (34).
•

I

M1NNERYTA VD&lt;INGS-Namffi Pt:'lc
Carroll c\c'f('fiSIVP baCkfield conch.

HOCKE\'
Nauoaai.Hocke)l Lelll)te
NIIL-SlL,pended ,Jim Kytl:', dcft'nscman
·ot the Wlnnl~ JNs, for nvro j:lames for a
pundlinR ilch:k'llt In a Feb. 'l1 .(artlt'
aj;~illnSI 11\4&gt; Pittsburgh Perlii!UinS.

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~~:~ Reds completed training

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Saturday at thl' Rl'dsland
and moved opera lions to AI
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owner Marge Schott had
,r-eak!ast with Player-Manager
Rose.
Reds broadcaster Joe NuxhaU,
~·rm••r pitcher, made his appearPetersburg, Fla. Ted Klus.:i:I!Wski also scheduled to play,
because of a shoulder

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Georgetown, Redmen
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By Associated~ ... - · ' Stat~75-59tosetuptoday'sBigEight
Chris . Mullin did his job with
passing instead of shooting. Patrick
Ewing did it like he always has with muscle.
Mullinscoredonly14polnts-he's

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Georgia Tech beat VIrginia 55-48;
Duke 86, Maryland 73; North
Carolina Sl. 70, Clemson 63, and
NorthCaroUna72, WakeForest6lin
overtime. Saturday's semifinals
hadNo.9GeorglaTechagainstNo.7
·Duke and sfxth-rated North Carol·
Ina against No. 18 N,C. State.At Kansas City, Mo., No. 4
Oklahoma routed Missouri 1()1-84,
but lOth-ranked Kansas fell

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Latonia has bigge$l payoff in history
FLORENCE, Ky. (AP) - Latonia Race Course had Its biggest
mutuel payoff In the track's history
Friday, paying $114,6'18.20 for one
winning ticket In the Pic-Six.

"•

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M~phls State standout
went to the bench with his third foul
· midway iliroughHit' fh~t half.
Bedford scored eight points in a
- 16-6 nm that put the Tigers up lor
good at 38-26 with 1: 59 til play In the

•lnt~rstat

2 &amp; 4 DR;-SEDANS

_ ....... .
··-.,.... ____

~Ill

teams were tied 52-52 when \..mcm·
nat! 's JoeStlffendSCored with 9: 34 to
-piay. Trfet~earcats·went iliinost five
minutes without scoring, and FlorIda sta!J&gt; took 62·521ead when Gipson
nailed two free throws at 5: 33.

Satellite Systems
Available

The Big Sky at Boise, Idaho, pits
Idaho State, which heat Northern
Arizona 89-86, against NevadaReno, a 79-67 winner over Boise
Sta!J&gt;.
Saturday's ECAC North title
game has Boston University at
Northeastern . .In the ECAC South.
Navy faced Richmond In an
afternoon game at Williamsburg,
va.

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basketball tournament Friday
night.
Memphis State, :!G-3 and the
regular season champ, will meet
seventh-seeded Florida State, 14-15,
in Saturday's finals. F1orlda State
downed No. 3seedCinc1nnatl75-651n
Frlday'.s other semifinal. Louisville
ended Its season with a 11&gt;-16 mark.

-

USED 'CARS

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1n the Southeastern Conference,
which has featured upsets all week,
Alabama and Auburn surged into
the finals at Birmingham. Satur-

averaglng19.5-Fridaynightbut day's intrastate matchup was
he posted 11 assists, helping Walter secured when Alabama belted No.
Beny to 22 points as the second· 17Georgla 74-53 and Auburn nipped
ranked Redmen blitzed Villanova Florida 43-42.
89-741n thesemltlnalsoitheBigEast
No. 11 Nevada-Las ~egas sur·
basketball tournament. The vlctory vlved by a 60-59 score over San Jose
earned ~t. John'sa thlrdshotatNo.1 State in Friday night's semifinals at
Georgetown-thl'teamsarel-lthis Inglewood, Calif. The Runnin'
year - as the Hoyas downed No. 13 Rebels opposed FuUerton State, a
Syracuse 74-65. Ewing, the 7-loot 56-54 victor over Fresno State, In
All-American center, had 15 points Saturday's Pacmc Coast Athletic
and 12 rebounds and a near- Conference final.
......- ..knoJ:kouL .lL( . .S;,a:aCliS.e. ... guard _ .. _No.-l:i.. 'DIIsa played_hPSJ~to
Dwayne "Pearl" Washlnglon.
Wichita State Saturday for the
"What fight?" Ewing said, ignor· Missouri VaHey crown.
ing his tiff with Washlnglon in the
No.l6Loyola,lU.,downedXavler,
first hall. With thegameslxmlnutes Ohlo65-61 to earn a spot in Saturday
old and tied 10-10, Washlnglon night'sMidwesternCityConference
"p11nched Ewing in the midsection showdQwnatTulsa.Okla.,withOral
under the Georgetown basket and
Roberts, which eliminated EvansEwing retaliated but missed . a
ville 74-69.
.
punch before falling to the floor. . Jn the Atlantic 10 semis, It was
"That's over with. !don't wish to get
Rutgers '18, Duquesne 53, and
Into that."
Temple 62, St. Joseph's -61. Host

'

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1001 IT OMIA•.

Hill'S PlOOF
TIIAT MOIIEY
CAll IUY PEACE
Of-D.

a

I

VALUE
RATEO

DO fOil 11.1¥11001 WIS. nUiil CUU.I, 1oe1 .-..:, IICISSIVI C. .MMSAhOM
·an nt1 IIUIII PlOP'., wm1 lOll nOOIS All WAWI 101 Ul 10 MSI

-

final.

lively. while guard Dean Shaffer
added 11 and Joe Farrar added 10.
Florida State, which held a slim
36-34 lead at the half, packed In its
zone around Cincinnati's big men,
and Ihe Bearcats' shooting suffered.
For the game, Cinclnnatl was 43
percent on 68 shots, compared with
Florida State's28of 54.

..

ATTENTION: .

I l - l YOUI ,
IOOJ IS Till .

--·

-~·

[ULL SllE_2~\YHJEL~&amp;~4
-E~--~·-·;-~-"~:--::;"t~~i===:~~E~Jsew~h~ere~..~a~O: tl~oa~n.:~bu!sy~~nti~gh:t:ro~f~~~~~~~~th~ls~af~terL-i
___nr •-n.v)VHEEL. D:R:I~V~
.-. i RU\.i\~ "''iii _, _i=\X.-n-,-·n ·C fti;,-i

·'

I
I

Rose will takl' 28 players and all
coaches on an early bus Sunday
to open Grape Fruit
play against the Los
Dodgers at Vero Beach,

•

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..

. ..nnl'ur ••• . r•AI.J!

Automatic, Two-Tone Paint.
Was $11,376. NOW $9' 876
C• 10 Y•.8•••••••••••••••••••••--••••••••••••••••••••••••••
I
K 10 .y 8 Auto...C.tit, Custom Deluxe 4x4. Was112,547 NOW $11 047
C-1 0 v-6 ...~.~.u!:!'!c:~i!~~!~~!~·............·.V!::.!~·~.~! ....NOW sa,4.19

I
I
I
I
I
I
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The

- --

TAKING IT HOME- Cincinnati's Myron Hughes ( 44) drlveslhe bllll
toward lhe basket against Florida Slate's Jerome Fitchett durlnl the
-llrsl half oflhelr semJ.Ilnal Metro Coolerenoo game at Loulsvllle Friday
afternoon. (AP Laserphoto).

Qrl('-~'l'ar

Bryan Warrick, guard.
F00'111.W.
N~ Football Ll'que

.

.

Lee Gipson scored 14

13

super tough defense, thescoreJl-~. the round, untO Brent BlsseU fouled
turnovers, and eleven fouls.
The stunned Bobcats caUed for a out with 2: 12 as the elder Roach
Eastern mentor Dennis Elchintime out, but to no avail as Kevin completed a three point play that ger said, "The biggest'dlfference in
Barber abbed-a steal and dipped resulted in a 57-43 score the biggest . the game was their defense. They
gr
lead of the nlght
were too much physically on our
off to Jell Caldwell on the break for
·
guards. We couldn't start our
the score, then after another tight
During the last 50 ~onds offense the way we wanted to with
defensive spree by- Eastern. Ed Eastern substituted freely with the the mismatch outtront and couldn't
Collins sank two free throws to puU scoreSl47·In the lastlegolthe~~ent enter the balllnsidellke.weintended
i=•·l""'~:l:&gt;P;;cv&lt;nl ke-&gt; jampe,.. -~" "'"' J;:/l,s_!el'!!.wiQ,I!nJ~lloWinJs._Jl:1!9. --=.s!!!'l&lt;:!!'.-~TI~.. W-!1be-r~ .•!!fl!Loii'! c&lt;~ '=oo-·ao:·--··- . -·~··'- _ =-·-'"'"·-·-·~· ~·
Green quickly took a 19-10 lead In
Dde tums
dazzling lay-up and Tone Chapman
· "We wanted to power it out"
,th~ secon~ fr~l]1e.jlcjdlng addltiOill!l ,
From t~at ~lnt 011 the ~i?e turned sank a baseline jumper as the . E!~~Jnger.mnt!!!u"!!, "!mt they ~k
pressure to the outside: Unable to
that away: Besides th.a t streak in the
first halt we controlled the tempo.
work the ball inside effectively.
Eastern was content to warm the
.
We lost it for a while, but decided to
. HUNTINGTON, W.Va. iAPJ Guthrie, an Oakman, Ala., native go man-to-man and press. We made ·
nets with a good outside game,
however, twostealsoffthepressby
'Marshall University's basketball who came to Marshall via Walkl'r our comebacks ... at the end of the
players and coaches will spend the Junior College as did senior . ball and the start of the second halt.
Transactions
weekend "glued to the tube," as the teammates Robert Epps and Bruce We did some things good, &lt;:arne up
BASEBALL
saying goes, waiting to find out who Morris, said he doesn't have any With _key stea ls, but over-reacted
American l.~!~ e
they'll play In the NCAA strohg feelings about who Marshall and missed some opportunities. At
CAIJF'ORNIA ANGEI.S- SignOO Dick
SChofk'ld, tnflel!i'r. to a one--}'l'ar ron·
tournament.
plays next Thursday.
times we just got too excited."
tract.
AndnoneoftheThunderingHerct
Asked 11 he feared drawing a CoachEichlnger.concluded,"We've
INOIANS-Nan'll'd
CL E VELAND
players Is likely to be, sUcking any powerhouse such as top-rankl'd got super kids. They're the reason
Ju•
Klclf'l vlre pr&lt;'S!(I(&gt;nl ·basroall operatk:ms.
closer to the 1V set than 6-foot-9 Georgetown, MU coach Rick Huck- we had a gre.~• season. Thl'y played
5!gnl:!d Steve Farr, pitch('~, ~d Carnwn
Cnsnno. ouftil'l!Er:""
~ , -"'-'
juniur Jell Guthde, crt"ditec.iby his , a bay chuckied. hard for me( • - ··· · · .. ,
.
TORONTO HLL"E .JAY.~- Slgilldl}aW'
llASTEIIN (54) - Weber t-0-2; l.eachh
I
h
be
H
k
h
Th
ba
d
coac
w
t
ing
the
glue
that
held
uc
a
y,
w
ose
un
ermg
ma
n
5410;
COllins
Hili:
SUC'b, pltchc;r, to an ll · ~'t'ar oont ro.~cl.
1118,.11 4.().8;
N.tlonal IA&gt;JIII'""
the IJ&gt;am together this season.
Herd has won two consecutive Bacber 0.().0; Chapman 1-0-2: J. caldwell
CINCINNATI REDS-Sign&lt;'d Jd~· TllU,
Marshall, which will take a 21·12 Southern Conference titles, said he ~~Shrlvers ()j).(}; and Caldwellt).().O. Tololo
John F ranro and Fml Tollvf'r. pl tdwrs.
to
contracts.
record into the opening round olthe would Vl'ry much like to avoid losing · GREEN (61) - Pierson :n7: o. Roach
ST. LOUTS C'ARDTNAl-&lt;;_SiiQltd Tom
NCAA tournament, will learn the In the first round of the NCAA 5410; Brown 0.().0; Roach 10.1-21; Wilburn
HEn', SC'rofld bascm~ . to a four yrar
Identity of its first-round foe on tournament I as his squad did last 5410
' and Dameii6-I-L1. -row.- ~~U«~.
Byquarwn:
BASI&lt;EI1IAU
Sunday, when the pairings are year,bowing84-72toVUianovaofthe . Eastern ..... ,.,., "'-..............10 u 10 23-54
Natklnal Bad.eU.U AMoclal.lon
announced on nationaltelevlsion.
Big East Conference.
Gre&lt;n · .,. · .. ,.,. ........ -,.,. ,. ,. ... 15 14 1.1 19-61
1..00 ANGELES CLIPPERS-Walvt'd

·.·.·
..·...

State, Metro tournament .wmners

~G~ree~~n~~~~~is~~f:;;;:::;::

chose to place pressure on the
Eastern gu&lt;!~ to indirectly lake
away Eastern s usually effective
!nsidegameandbreak its successful
rythym. The outside • pressure
worked asH Pierson was chosen to
'guard Eastern's ace baUhandler
Jeff Caldwell at 5-6, although .
Caldwell's elusive abtUty broke him

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-·Page-C~l'

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

March 10, 1985

ONS

"This Car Will Compare With the Best."

OLDS·CAD•.
CHEVROLET

PH. 992·6614

--··-----·r-,un.
- ....._
ru•~:•u

SMITH-NELSON
TORS,
INC.
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--- ---rn

500 E. Main
II

111!11

Dill

Pomll'oy, OH.
•

•

�•
Page-C-4- The ·Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy~Middleport-Gallipolis,

Wildlife notes...

-..
March 1 0. 1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Uy.TOM..BELVILLE
Spe&lt;!lal correspondent
GALLI POLlS The warm
weather we have had the past.
couple of weeks slgna'!s a new
flsh.Jng Season. It 1s time 10 get out
the rods and reels and dust them
off. It Is a good time to check your
t~ckle, oil your. reels, put on new
line, and mayl)e even purchase
same of the new equipment availa·
ble 6n the market. Fishing-days arc
close at hand.
Our area offers unlim ited oppor·
0
:

:s

0

TOLEDO. Ohio (API - Ron
"He's certainly the best player · Mast of Ohlo umverstty as the
HarpE&gt;r ·of Miami tOhlol, the Miami' has eve~ had," said fonner
women's Player of the Year and
According to studi~s fish reach Mid·AinerlcanConference'sPiayE:&gt;r Redsklns' Coach Bill Rohr, now a
JennlferGrandstaf!ofKentStateas
sl7.es In direct relation to tht&gt; st7.e-of - of lhl'"" Year, safs· toe· probably wUI · Cincinnati InSurance-agent.
. · the Noel women's-newcomer.the bod~· of water tht&gt;~· inhabit . This b~-pass an oppo•·tunity to be drafted
Will Robinson, the Detroit Pis'
being the case til&lt;' Ohio River has 10 h\· the Nat ional BasketbaltAssocla· tons' chief scout, predicts Harper
A unanimous all-conference secont ain some mighty large fish.
fion this &gt;'car.
will be a first round NBA draft lection, Harper ranks S&amp;."'Ond In the
In Ohio the Division of Wlldli f&lt; •
" I lox I I will sta~· at Miami
choice in 1985. "Harper comes out a Mid-American In both scoring and
want s to rt&gt;mind anglers of the li lx'cauS&lt;' m~· . family wants me to cut between Dr. J (Julius Erving)
rebounding this wiliter with averinch and 15 lneh minimum !("-gat
stay," said, the 6-foot -6 junior and George Gervin," he said.
ages o! better than 24 points ana 10
length limit on largemouth bass at
forward fl·om Da}·ton, Ohio, ·
The Mid-American News Media rebounds per gar..-.e,
Sa lt Fork Lake and Lake Snowden
. With · onP season rE&gt;maining , Association also announced Friday
Harper was the1982-83Frestunan
resjX'Ctively. Since 1982 !lsht&gt;ries Harper alrcody holds the school
It had chosen Kenny Battle of of the Year In the conference.
blologlsls have tagg!'d several
scoring nx:01:ds wHh 1,533 carrer Northern Illinois as the men's
Battle, a6-6forwardfromAurora,
hundred fi sh at each lake as part of potnt&gt; ond DHI&gt; for '' smgle S&lt;'ason.
Freshman of the Year, Caroline
Ill., wasanearunanlmouscholcefor
a continuing study.

c . .]

!hes" !!s~i~g. s:&gt;O!s.

. ehgJ ple w~t•n:s. :It Jlnu. .c:atrh •nd

We a·r e also blessed in this area
with the Ohio River which yields.
many different types of game fish
as well as non-game fish.
- Pan of the fun of fishing the Ohio
River Is never knowing what you
might land or how bH 11 might be.

TAMP · Fla. \AP 1 - Veteran
outficldt&gt;r Cesar . Cedeno regained
his sta rting jobin leftfieldwhenPete
Rose was named player-managerof
thcCincinnali Reds last August,and
t)e intends to stay there this season.
. "I think lhlngs with myself are
hke I his. I felt in a lm of ways the
ba!l~_lub was not countmg on ~e last

the game," said Cedeno, whohlt.315
last season with 47 runs batted ln.
"J would not lest the frel'-agent
market unless it was necessary."
The Reds are hoping Cedeno can
regain the form of his early career.
. "Last year, I was . ln a difficult
SltuatJonand IrE&gt;allydldn't Ukewhat
they ~ere putting.me through. This

9

get so much more out of it with
things like that. I say it's difficult for
anyone wlien you don't know If you
are going to play Qr not."

ke-ep a tagged bass, biologists urge
you to return the tag to the Division
of Wildlife, 360 East State Street,
Athens, Ohio 45701.
They also ask that you nt&gt;ver
remove the tag from a fish that you
return back Into the water.

B b ll ·
ase U sign up Set

MERCERVll.LE - Slgnup for
the Hannan . Trace Little League
Association will be held at Hannan

on~;_;;ee_ g~ Ihin~s_ahead !or C.C.
~w, I cangQ home and sleep much
I m lOOKing ·tmwaro iu ~- a . oe.tt~r .. ···.
lremendou~ year, now that It looks
'I m havi.{lg ,a lot more fun In this
as th~ugh 1IIbe playmg a lot more, camp, and that s all part of it. This is
~nd I II defl~llely be more produc- a camp where everyonE&gt; is so much
llve. l am m the last year of my more joyous. It's relaxing. You
contract, and I would like to stay in enjoy yoursell and that means you

Boat Club seeks
~ members for 1985 campaign
'

GALLIPOLIS -:- The Gallipolis
Boat Club, a member-owned marina in Southeastern Ohio, Is accepting membership applications for
the 1985 season, it was an nounced
Sunday by Commodore Gene

&lt; Jones.
:: The club; located one-fourth mile
:: off the Ohio River on Chickamauga
•. Creek, has facil!ties for in-water
;: dockage, for boats up to45feet, with
•· a maximum draft of .three feet, on

.

U Local bowling
SkyUners Lequc

.:

'i

1~

Feb. 28,

..

Staadlnp

"": Team

W. L.

""• C(•ntral Trusl. .o-...... . .......... ...... ....... 40

16

: ~ CJIII£''s Oru~ ·-'······-······· · ·········--· .. ··· 38 18

• Mlnk's Aut o......... ........................... 37 19 ·
.. Robbins &amp; Myers ............................ 36 X)

:

McOon~ld's

•
,
•.
"

Central Supply ................•....... ........ 3! ?;
V!llagl' Ins ................................. 30 26
.lr&gt;fff"rs F.~ c
......................
26
FIXldlund ................... , .................... ~ 28

................... , ............... 3'! 24

:n

: The

f: I~L .................................... 26

:1)

•
..
'
:
..

P.:tsquale t:':lec .. ,. __ .............. ... .... 24 32
Sporn No . 8
......................... 22 4
Clrcll?'s Ca tc&gt;ri ng .......... , ......... ......... Zl lJ
Mlehal•l &amp; F'rl('nd~ ........................... 18 3
f:ino 's ........................... , ................ 18 3R
- 'Bob F.vans r~a rm ...... ; ........ .......... .. .. 16 40
Spon1 No. 8 wuil eight
from Central

...._.~ru-&lt;;L

1--Jig!l OOw\er for S~~~~-~~~;~~~~~~- ~
.. Davis v.1th 5b1 . High bowl&lt;~r

.: ,.-. .
E"c. won eight point s frnm ThC'

~~S:V.~k!!!Y£~
.lf'fl£'r ~

E;va ns Farm.

Hl~h

curemenl
and
policies
Ohio Power
Company. lhe opera! ion
of its Electric Fuel Com ponent and related mat·
ters . This hearing is
scheduled to begin at
1:30 p.m. on March 1t.
t985, at Cily Council
·Chambers. 218 Cleveland
Avenue. S.W.. Canton.
·Ohio 44702 .
All interested parties will
be given an opportunity ·
to be heard . Further lnfor·
malion may be obtained
by contacting the Com·
mission.
THE PUBLIC UTILITIES
COMMISSION OF OHIO
' BY : Mary Ann Orlinski .
Secrelary

bowl('!' for Gllli&lt;''S

Dru~

McDonald 's won six points from Clt·clc's
b:.lwh•r for McDona ld' s was ,J.
Wa rrrn "1tl1 535. High lxlw!('r for f'lrr!(''s
Ca!('rlnJ:: wus C. Conley will1 ~Gino's woo siK points from Ccmral Supply.
1-llgh bowler for {;!no's wiis D. BumPtt with
5:W. H!$!11 ~wier tor Ccntrul Suppl_y was R.
Jackson w!lh ~ll .
V!lli:!,'(P Ins . won " 'K ~ point s frum Mk·hal'i
and Frlrnds. High OOwi&lt;•r for VUiag(' Ins. was
D . Herdman '-41111 ~127 . Hlf:!h bOwler ror
Mil..' h&lt;ll'! and FriPnds u·a ... 0 . P. Johnson with

"'

#'

;
_
..
il'

:

-4~.

~-

I"'

Foodland won six point.'&gt; from Pasqua lr
F.l&lt;'C'. H 1~ 11 ho'-''l&lt;'f for Foodland was C. Lan('
~·lth ~1. Hl~h OOwk-rs for Pasqua!(• Elf'C.

~ Wl 'f(' L.

Norton and T. Wj:!.ujt.!h with 526.

,
Mink's Au1o won .!llx pJims from R obbins
" :.md My('f's. High OOu·ler-s for Mink's Auto
• Wf're .J. F inney and ,J. Mink wl1h 549 . High
: OOwlcr lor Robt&gt;lns and Myers was B . M ead

• wUI1 :i70.

and It's one of the richest.
"-""'"'" "·I-&lt;Can- dv--w-lc~- of-n·.!n.g:;·n'ith 'thc
numbers, but l don't want to,"
LaMonte said. "That's agent hype."
ln&lt;tead, the agent, who was
Stieb's high school football coach,
used a figure of about $25 million,
breaking it down to $16.6 million in
salary over the next 11 seasons and
in the neighborhood of S10 mtlllon

.. ~

40MONTH
UPTO 370
, COLD CRANKING

AMPS'

witfl
tJCcflonge

36!! ~~TH43!.!

UP TO UO CCA •

Save up to.
$200onyour
next vacation
Castro!
Vacation Certificate
in every
marked 12-Dac~

UP TO 640 CCI.'

NEWI700 CCA*
70 MONTH HI-TECH
•MOAI CUHICING POWIR
FOR MAXIMUM 58VIa.

.

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'

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AND SMALL TIUCIS

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1
~=.,.;""-~c~d'lr,,.;,ec;:,t,
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;: .?L!1l!bli£..rf!aJio;m,~J9U!W c~!~
!'.~~!;~1,!'.!!,~~
-.~·
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mostm
el!..as.1
·
1 J:~tshta~:..£

.

J

cONTRACf EXTENSION BRINGS OUT SMILES - Dave Stleh,
Toronto Blue Jays pitching ave, his wUe, Pattie and three-year old son, ·
Andrew, are all smll.., as Stleb leaves a press conference where II was
an nounced he had signed a oontract thai wW carry through the 1995

season. Blue Jay officials made the anmuncement at the learn's spring
tralnbig camp in Dtmedln, Fla. Friday aftemoon. (AP Laserphoto).

Baltimore led 17-0 before beln_g
Ued in, Oveni.T.e Jast w~k bY-~
pay, league-wide player Insurance. Oakland. The Stars also set a ieam
salary and medlcal costs for players · record for longest touchdown pass
recovering from injuries, minimum play- 61 yards from Fusina to wide
salaries, guaranteed roster sizes · rE&gt;Ceiver Victory Harrison.
Memphis, 2-0, is making Its home
and a grievance procedure to
this week, and Coach Pepper
debut
resolve playt&gt;r-club disputes.
Rodgers
says the Showboats are
Action began Saturday night
hunlng.
travels to Or·

Brmvner expresses.
desire t;() be .traded.-

special assistant to Kansas City
CINCINNATI (AP) -Now that
Royals' general manager John
his contract with the Cincinnati
Schuerholz. He had been general Bengals has expired, veterandefen·
manager of the Rangers from 1982 slve end Ross Browner s~ys he
untU he was flredwltha month left in would like to play for another team.
the 1~ .eason.
The National Football League's
Klein had also served ln the regulations make It very costly for
Rangers' organization as a minor an N:FL team to sign a free agent
league manager, assistant farm
fromanother clubtntheleague.But
director and. director of player Jack Childers, Browner's agent,
development and procurement.
says he envisions an arrangement
He will work with Dan O'Brien, whereby the Bengals could sign
whose title was · changed Friday Browner to a new contract, then
from assistant to the president to
trade hlm to another team.
"This really has nothlngtodowlth
senior vice president-baseball administration and player relations.
money," Childers said. "There
O'Brien was the Texas general comes . a tbne In every pta:;,er's
manager wl!en~· Klein
as-tjile---&lt;oareec when t.!.•.besUO.plck up.and
Rangers' assistant farm director.
move on to somewhere else, and
OneofKlein'sflrst dutleswlllbeto
that's where Ross Is now. He has
hire a director of player personnel
played seven good years for the
and scouting, who will be responsl·
Bengals, but now he feels II would be
ble for the scouting staff and overall
beSt to play and to live somewhere
player development activities. That
else."
job opened up when Bob Quinn
Mike Brown, Cincinnati's assist·
recently resigned as Cleveland's
ant general manager, said II
farm director.
appears that Browner's desire to
"Dan called me last Saturday and leave may make it more difficult to
PeterletmeknowSundaythat!was
re-sign him than other free-agent

"Jack Childers has stated to us
that It would be best for Ross to play
somei.&lt;here else, not for monetary
reasons. _but for his overall happlness," Brown said. "But 'more
dlfflcull'lsa comparative term, and
just because it might be mort&gt;
cllfflcult, that doesn't mean It's
ImpossiblE&gt;."
Browner, a ' 6-foot-3, 261-pound
former Notre Dame star from
Warren, Ohio, ranked fifth among
Bengal tacklers last season with 74
and was third in quarterback sacks
with eight.
"There'snothinggolngonwlththe
Bengals, and I don't know if there
wlll.be," Brow.neJ:sald this week.
Childers 1lecllnes to 's ay why
Browner wants to play elsewhere.
Childers also represented former
Bengals running back Pete John·
son, who said last spring that. he
wanted to be traded and that his
disenchantment with the Bengals
had gone past money concerns.
Cincinnati traded Johnson before
the season to the San Diego
Chargers for running back James

:~!"=~:~~se~n~.; ,0~1~-:::~:::~;_;~~
a candlctate.~-~ln.$ald.
i&gt;l
SWil!l!y..,gye!ll.ll!U\JI9
~~ tl:le"'We
e.M met
9f a ..:,;~;~i$~~a~~~1~~~~=~~;~a~n~d~J~o~hngso~n~~=l:at:.e:r·JI

.5'~·~!~A~!:·
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__

"'

OIL FILTERS

NO . MF-7

EACH

1

FRAM

season.•·
Stoudt connected with wide receiver
Players in the National Football Joey Jones for a 53-yard scoring
Leaguedldthesamethinglngames pass in last week 's loss to Denver,
tl)!'t preceded their nine-weekend the longest touchdown pass in
strike during the 1982 season.
Stallions' history. The Renegades ,
" Frankly, we don't care II they go led by quarterback Jerry Golsteyn ,
OU\ and hug each other,-as long as 11re next to la.st in offense a~d
when the game starts thetre · In . defense in the lea!:'!e. Golsteyn has
there pla;Ying,'' said Jim Byrne, . been sacked nine times, tying him

1

Stleb has ·twtce won 17 games for
'the team anitwas jQ-0 with .a 2.23 .
earned run average last season
when he led the American League in
inningspltchedwlth267. Healsowas
the league's starting pltcherlneach
of the last two All-Star games.
"I'm gratified totheBlueJaysfor
gtvlngmesecurltyfortherestofmy .
llle," Stiebsald .

the West coast.
Klein was most rE&gt;Cenlly the

tllorougli

iritervteW,~er

pres'

ented the job opportunity to me.

Willard-Bando in battle for No.I catching post
TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) - The
numbers speak for themselves.
Chris Banda clearly outplayed
Jerry Willard last season and
earned the right to be the Cleveland
Indians' No.1 catcher. .
~
Willard hopes to turn Iha l around
. this spring.
"! think I can hit 20 home runs or
more, bat .270 and drive In~ runs,"
Wlllard said at the Indians' spring
training camp. "I know those sound
like pretty big numbers, but If I get
450 at bats; I think I can dolt. And If!
gel off to a fast start . !'It get those at
bats. "
Banda, who is currently nursing a
sore shoulder, finished last season
with a .291 average, 12 home runs

and41 runs batted ln. Willardlilt.224
with 10 homers and 37 RBI . Willard
had246atbats, whlleBandohad2W.
"Chris did a great job, but I'm
going to go after No. 1 !lOW, and I'm
sure Chris Is, too,'' WU!ard said.
"But no matter what happens, we'll
be friends." ·
Willard expected to be the
In&lt;lla11s' starter a;ter Ron Hassey
was traded to the Chicago Cubs last
June. Banda, however, claimed the
job when hewas recalled !romClass
AAAMaine.
"The problem last year was that
when Hassey was here, I only got to
play about once every two weeks,"
WU!ard said. ''Then when he was
traded, l thought I was part of the

rebuilding process, y~l I wasn't
getting to play every day."
One weakness, according to
Manager Pat Corrales, was Wll·
lard's defensive play. Willard spent
the winter playing ball In Pueno
Rico to remedy that pfoblem.
"I went down there to work on my
defense and to learn to hit Ia the
opposite field," Willard said. "The
.power wUI take care of Itself, but I
have to learn to gn the other way and
take what pitchers gtve me."
With a year of experience behind
hlni, Wutard says he Intends to
approach the 1985 season with a
revised mental attitude.
"When I personally analyze the
whole (1!114) season, .I think .I was

1~T2

Intimidated," WUlard said. "I was
intimidated by all the good pitchers 1_
faced and by all the good pitchers I
caught. I was too conscious of every
little thing I dld wrong.
"This season will be different. If I .
make an out,] make an out.l!I take
strike three,l take strike three. It 's
not the end o!the world."

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~~~----

pitched another Inning, LaMonte
said, the pitcher still would get $12.6
mlillon. That money would come
from the three years Toronto
guarantees In all of Its long-term
deals and the annuity.
· .
Toronto's ·immediate outlay in
real dollars ls$1)00,000ayearforthe
next four seasons. The rest of the$1

Fonner Ranger boss
named Indians's GM
TUCSON, Ariz. (API _ Cleveland Indians· President Peter
· Bavasl says he was looklng for a
"fu·e in the eye" of the man he would
hirc to run the American League
team's baseball operations.
"We had a list of qualifications
and those qualifiCations were
shared by_ five men who were
interviewed by us and were highly
recommended," Bavasi said Frl·
day after· announcing the appointnient of Joe Klein as the Indians'
vice president for baseball
operations.
. "Each had tE&gt;Chnlcal compel ency, butwewerelookingforabtlnd
dedication, commitment and spirit
to the restoration of the Cleveland
IndijlllS ," Bavasi said. "We needed
to see a fire in the eye, and the first
man we saw it in was Joe Klein."
Klein, 42, former general manager of the Texas Rangers, will be
assuming some of the duties of Phil
Seghl, who had been Cleveland's
general manager since the 1974
season.
Seghl ,65.willservet helndllmsas

--~---=~-~

Catt&gt;r ln~ . Hl~h

;
;.
.-

Kent State player to win ·the
womi?n's Frest'u-nan -c!- --th~ YG.::.r .
title. Judi Dum did It last year.
Grandstaff scored m . points in
1~!6. morE&gt; than any other league
performer. She averaged 10.0
points.

·Take Off With

The Public Utilities Com·
mission ot Ohio has set
!2.r.J!ublic hearing Case
---:-No. 84-fFEL-"EFC SUOfife"" -

"" Was C. Barnf'!ii with h"7R Hl~h OOwif'l:· for Bob
: F.vans Farm was R. SIX'n«' with 5Cll.
,.
,.

Association President Cart Black
said iix:o signup-wilrcover summer
baseball and girls softball, ranging
from T-Balt to Pony League.
Entry fee Is $12. All new signups
.a re to bring their birth cerllf!cates
with them, Black said.

UTO

LEGAL NOTICE

Gillie's Drug won e ight point s from Bob

~

guaranteed annuity funded by
deferred payments.
·
"And that's lf •you forget til&lt;'
Incentives," he sald.
Those built-In bonuses for things
like the Cy Young Award, Most
Valuable Player · Award, Gold
Glove, AU-Star team selection and

·

•

By The "-'fated Pffllll
lando and Baltbnore goes to
When the players takelhefieldfor Memphis. On Sunday, Los Angeles
this weekend's United States Fool · will be at New Jersey, Portland at
ball League games, they will meet Denver, Tampa Bay at San Antonio
a! rrndfleld- for &lt;'•solidarity hand- and Houston at Oakland.
On Monday night, Jacksonville
shakes" prior to the kickoffs.
The handshakes, according to · will be at Arizona.
DougAllen,execut!vedlrectorofthe
Orlando and Baltimore will each
. USFL Players Association; wlll be seeklngtheir flrstvictqrlesofthe
express the players' "determina· season. The Orlando Renegades
t!on l!&gt;secureafour-yearagreemenl have lost both of their games and
with managellle!IWh&amp;t~rov.e.,...IN! Raltlmore.has.ollelo.s.s.aru!..Qne .

:.~- "IF~----" .!J[~;';g~in~~~i--rr[!~~e~~~~· ~f:~~~: ·:~ = ~~~~~~'!~~~~-· ····-~

....

-.

r:.o.

bowk'r for Jc! l&lt;'rs l::xc. was R.
: Ck&gt;nch wllh 531. High bowlf'r ror The Elks was
.., R. Rolh~('b wl!h !i24.

You can forget that old deal,
which would have paldStieb$7!j),OOQ
this year andS50,000moreln Mchof
Ihe next three seasons.
In its place, the 27-year-old Stieb
has agreed to an 11-year deal that
will pay him $1 million a year for
each of the. next four seasons and
then escalates by $100,000 to $2.1

"JJk're out to earn your busi~ess!"

open as well as covered sl!ps. ·
Electric, city water, and 24-hour
security are included in the dockage fee. Traile-r storage, launch
facilities, gasoline, clean private
showers and washroom facilities
are also available at the club. ·
The Gallipolis Boat Club lies
midway between Pittsburgh and
Cincinnati , and is 30 miles by water
from "Huntington, W.Va., and 6(f
miles from Charleston, W.Va., via
thE' Kanawha River.
The Gallipolis club was founded
in 1950, and currently has mort&gt;
than 100 members from SoutheastE&gt;rn Ohio, West Virginia and
s urrounding areas. The club will
open Its 1985 season on May 1, and
will close on Nov. 1. Applications
may be obtained by writing RIchard Scott , c/o Galllpol!s Boat
Club,
Box 240, Gallipolis, Ohio
45631, phone 446-&amp;'!64 or contact
Gene Jones. Box 20, Rt. 2,
Galllpol!s, phonE&gt; 446-3377.

~ Elks. Hl~h

...

..........

-

DUNEDIN , Fla. (AP) -Agent
Bob LaMonte, trained as a high
seho61 mslury teacher, tried to pur
sam~ perspective on the new $2.1
million contract extension he had
just negotiated for Toronto Blue
Jays pitcher Dave Stieb.
"Dave had $3.3 million left on his

has recelv,ed.".
Mast averaged 24.1 points pel
game. Her average of 11.7 alsG
ranked her among the nation's
_leadlngrebounders this season.
Wlthoneseasonleft,Mastalready
owns the conference career scoring
and rebounding records - ~lib 1,774points.and 973 rebounds. ·

7

:~Gallipolis
;:
'
::
.;
•·
:_.

....--

~.,...,..

.... ··-·--~~:~~~i!~;:;,;;rft~~=~~~~. -~in~~~~e;~f,~~~::;:~a;:~~~!~~··· ·{~~;!~i'c,~'!I;;;~~~ h~~,'iy~i:;" 1ti~~~~!:'~~;:'t~i~~~~--{,~a~.lg!t);cllooLWm1. 'S,!lJ11-..-·H~~:-~Jrt~··;;itJ:~-~~~i\~:~ir!flro~fim~·-

"'!i,'

Player solid_arity
demonstrations slated
this-USFL weekend -

th:::;~~:~r::~ ~ -;~~i~:~~ifs~
-:-·a5~~~ _
; .,:~-I:IA.@~Q ~~-·!1~~~!~~::;~~~~~~~!1~~~~~~'~g~~!~~~!=;:z;~-~A~m~y~P~rl~c~h~~a~rd~.~·~·!~:~~~:~t~h~t!~~~~ft~·u~a~ ~.:-~z~:b~=fol~d~co~n~tr~a~ct~,'~'~~La~M~o~nl~e~no;ted~.~t~h~e~U~ke~co~u~l~d~ba;lt~oo~n~t~he~pa~y~~~lf~·:.o'~~:_-~J~
_~

exoxllent bass and bluegill fishing.
thesE&gt; lakes. The tags are brightly
~any government impoundments colored and are located on th~ lt&gt;ft
are locateq within a couple houn;'
side of the dorsal fin. Tags may
drive throughout Ohio, West Vlrgibecome covered with algae, so
nla and Kenlucky.
chE&gt;Ck your catch carefully.
.These large Impoundment s conWith tod·a y's heavy angler pres·
lain bass, bluegill, catfish, crappie,
surE&gt;, bass length limits have the
walleye, and-other specieS depend· . potential to greatly ·improve bass
lng on the panlcular lake. Through .. flshlrig .
·

"

'

.Stieb be·c omes
baseball's newest
----multi-millionaire

tile freshman award.
He shattered the conference's
fn!shmanscorlngrHecordisinheaveranlyg·
lng 20.4 potnts.
et
o
freshmall at at DivisiOn I school who
averaged better than 18 p&lt;)lnis this
season.
Mast, a 5-11 junior from Coshocton, Ohio, has won the teague's
Player of the Yearawardforthelast
two seasons. She ~'OreoHi;i j)Oihls
this year,18l morethananyoneelse
In MAC women's basketball durfug
the regular season.
"Carol !he Is one of the smartest
players I've ·seen," said her coach,

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-6

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

March 10, 1985

· MAC's player of year will bypass opportunity

Hey, let's go fishing!

mind

.

y .......... ,.....

lla•atelaua.

SILVEI BRIDGE PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS
~- riiOHi 446-i i'iiJ --

··~

�Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

March 10. 1986

NBA

Jackson, .Logan both win, advance to district tountaments
•

ATHENS - Two Southeastern
Ohio League hardwood teams,
champion· l:;ogan and ·last place
Jackson, captured sectional tournament titles Friday night and
adva nced to district competition in
two classifications.
In Class AAA action at Ohio
University, loop champion Logan
had little trouble bouncing Miami
Trace, 84-48.
The Chiefs, now 18-4on the season,
led 22-8, 43-24 and 59-32 at the
quartermarlci.
.
Kerry York papped in 18 for the
Chiefs. T racy Reisinger scored 13

.

.

.

.OU, (&gt;owerlul Lancaster bombed
Ironton Sectional, and advanced to
Warren Local, 94-58.
the Athens District Tournament. It
- "LOgan wUl nowplayCambrldgeln - was the-Iroruiten's first sectlonar ·
the district meet · at OU on crown In 10 years.
Wednesday, at 8:45p.m.
Now16-7overall, thelronmenwlll
play the winner of last night's
Jackson 53, Fairland 52
G~nfield-Waverly (Untoto SecMeanwhile. at Ironton. rallied tional \ game in the OU District at 7
from 28-15 and 48:41 deficits to u~t p.m~Satun:lay, March 16.
top-seeded Fairland, 53-52, in FriFairland. ranked 17th hy Assoday's Class M Ironton Sectional ciated Press In this year's final
Tournament Friday night.
weekly poll, and Ohio Valley .
Coach Jeff. liodson's IroJ1111en, Conference champions, bowed out
who fin.lshed.last in the Southeastern with a 19·3 season slate.
Ohio Athletic League (2·6) thus
Jackson led 15-14 after one period
became the first high school quintet before
14

. ~~

.

after three periods, but fell behind
48-n with 5:04 remaining.
·JHs therrscored 10stratght points
for a 51-41! advantage at the 1:17
mark. Fairland fOrged ahead 52-51
with : 46 left on a bucket by Craig
Burg.
Pat Stevens' 15-foot jumper with
19 seconds left _proved to be the
game's winning goal. Dean Wilks,
who led· all scorers With 20 points,
had a desperation shOt roll of1 the
rim at the bUzzer.
Other Dragon in double figures
was Boyd Chapman, with 10. FHS
was 24 of48from thefleldandfourof

VInce Wolfon:l paced Jackson's
attack with 19 points. Shane Poe
added 11. Thelronmen W'ere?.lol54
from the field, sevenofl3atthe line,
picked off 32 rebounds and had 16
turnovers.
Box score:
IA(:IlSON (DI - Sr:l'\lf'IUI 4-0-8.; Mlllf'f 1-0-2:
l-lwnmond3-J.9: WoWrd9-J-19; B. Porl-{).4; S. Por
4-3-ll. TOT.W UJ..'J.SS.
FAIRlAND (I!) - Chaprilan 4-:!-11&gt;. ~ t--0-8;
Manns 7-0-l: Huc:tsm 4-0-8; \\'lllor; 9-2-'J); Fuller 1-0-2.
Tm'AJBM+II.

The

Scoreboard ...

ret~ults

Sow~

A1 konSJ ~ fofi, Tt')lif5 46
s,, Mt•itnll"t !!A HooUQII Tl

·1, ·1Ul., AlM !14, TM~Oil Chtbtlan

...,._

~a

1l!liliS 1~ ll1, &amp;fyklr 7li

.
.....................................
.. 1~ 6 16 1£-1'1
Fairland ...................... ,............. - H 21 6 12-!rO!

foiwl~m

8yQWII1t'I'Si'

Jac~

-

LOG-'N (84)~- Miller 3-2-8: Conricl 3-2-8:
Wrtgbt 7.0.14: Mym~ :i-J.Jl; York IJ.2-l8;
Farrar W-4; Wald 6--0-12; HOCld 2·1-5; Walll
1.0.2: Bun:ham 0.1·1: WoWe IJ.J.J: C4mpbeU
O&lt;W. 'l'olalllll·INt.
.
MIAMI TIIACE (til) - M. Reisinger 1.0.2;
T. Reisinger :i-3-lJ; Mathew! 5410: Hlgglns
5-0-10; Card 2-1-5: McDonald 2-2~; Klrkpa·
trlck 1.0.2. Tolall !l...U.
Byquu~en,

('-tr.ttu'

...... H&lt;JUnd

AtNrtk fcdt'l'tftl''

Alrom Sl . M!. Tf'Q~ Southl'm •.G
Sfaarhf.or·n U H7 Mi!ll~l-.sl~ Val 82

..

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

--

,~·

nwnp~

Ml•r('(•r lUi, Ark Ullk· Ro,fl &lt;f,

USFL results

.

Logan .............. .. ........ ........ ~ 21 16 2:&gt;-114
Mlaml Trace ....... ................8 16 8 JG-48

Jackson narrowed the gap to 40-37

·ou,.Miami advance to _tourney finaJs _
By GEORGE STRODE

AP Sport.• Writer
TOLEDO, Ohio

- Danny

15 points.
"The big thing about Ohio is you
have to control their size and their

hinted Saturday .that who
Peirson said.
th_e_.!empn wi!l.OO the..w!_n_rrer .Lfl.the -~ T.hp .Bobcat~, ot ..coJJrse~ must
Mid-American Conference Tourna- contend with Harper, a skinny 6-6
ment basketball title game with junlorfmwardwhoputonadazzllng
performance 12 hours after he was
Miami (Ohio).
The one-two teams In the regular- named the MAC's No. 1 player.
season conference race used conHarper missed only nlneof25 floor
trastlng styles in the semifinals shots, grabbed18rebounds, hltall13
Friday night to reach last night's of his free throws and had three
finals and · settle the league's steals.
automatic bid to the NCAA
The Miami star admitted a taunt
Tournament .
by Ball State's Dan Palomblzlo may
Ohio, 21-7, the league champion, have had something to do his show.
deployed Its power game and a Palomblzlo, No. 3· ln national
deliberate attaclt)ate to eliminate scoring, had only 18 points, nine

under PJsaverag~.-

Kent Sta!e 57-55.
Runner-up Miami, 20-9, with MAC
Player of the Year Ron Harper
posting tournament records of 16
baskets, 45 points and 13 straight
free throws, used Its speed to thump
Ball State 91-70.
"We used the slow-down, patient
offense two years ago to win the
championship against Bow ling
Green. We haven't changed," said
Nee, wjlose team split with Miami
during the season.
.
VIc Alexander, a 6-foot-7, 240- po\ind senior forward-center, came
off the bench to hit seven of nine
shots, grab nine rebounds and score

~

.

.

~--

.

•
mpionshiP
. . t Z2 Chll .
'JIIinnin9 Otstfl~ .. - .. . .
Tht

St•'!_l0~£Y

. oHIO v~

_

"After I made my second basket,
he told rrte, 'We'll see who the best
player in the MAC is.' He shouldn't
havesaldthattome,"Harpersatdof
Palomblzlo.
The records wiped out by Harper
were 14 field goals and 33 points by
Ball State's AI Gooden in the 1981
tourmiment and 10 straight foul
·shots by Jay Lehman of Toledo tlve
years ago.
His point total also established a
school record. Dick Wells had 44 for
the previous Miami mark In 1952.
Kent Staw, led by Larry Robbins'
· 21 points, finished with a 17-12
. record . Ball State went out at 13-16.

111c finest, giant, roUnd
baler in the field today

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JIVIDEN'S FARM EQUIPMENT

FIGB'IS FOR REBOUND __; -Miami Vnlverslty's 11m Lampe
flglds Mike Chesser of Ball State University lor a rel!oond durtng
Frlda3' night's 8ell)i·Bnal round of the Mid-American Basketball
tournament In Toledo, Ohio. Miami deleMetl BaH State, Bl-'70. (AP
Laserphoto ).

INGALS ROAD, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

614-446-167 5

ew-Reds -owner~b~g---·--r._..~...-..-;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
•
t'
,.

.•

TOUGH OFFENSE -nay Kuban! of Kent state University shoots
:over VIc Alexander (55) of Ohlo .Unlverslty. OU deleMet!KentStateand
,Wvanced to the final round of the toomament. (AP Laserphoto).

.~~llf~OL..:esults.~
•I·

l'm;t,

Anlwcrp 54,

t)-iday' !i ltt~db;
flllf'lo 1\,\J\ TQt!rnummiN .
,\:-J!t,,lktl&lt;• f-:AJg,"oouJ(i ~- l.itkro Lath. 411

I 'in 0 ;1k Hllls ~-.n. Cir1 . Nm•th'A~ .., I .t r
Cin C'oh,·ain a.J , !\1r.Hrorrllht" .t9
l "h• H o~ 1'-iam•• ~..-;. StronJ,,;;I'!III' ~2
nt· sr .h r.-.. 'Ph~ - Fil~11&lt;~k t• ~ rii
I Ja~ Dunb• r !*i, Day, Whi1f' 74

n.\

P&lt;~nr·r-..m 74. J\l"twrlnJl Altl't" ~;

11! f lanN· •16. ('dina 4R
f-" n ,., rol~md Shaw let. Ci!'. II ~ •\' 7-1
l ..ln(·aMI'!' &lt;JJ, Wm1'1'11 ) J)('af
l. r m &lt;~ ~- Lirn ;r Shaw~~~'(• .j8
~ ~~~~n )(.1 , MI;Jml1hn• 4k
MHTI\111'111 ffi. Ashl.1 nd .\1
N Cumon till, M as.~ll k&gt;n .l;wkson 0.1
l'.ll'm,t \ 'ollt'' For·~, 71. M•'C!Qa :.1
Pul"l Clln lon -14 . Sri.mdu.~ l(\.· ,'IIi
Tol. t"'r,!ltnrl .;.1, Tol M:~r ·o mbi Jr 61; &lt;n·
Tol l.lhhi'V bi. M tiUTTlif' ~{l
Tol IWi.'f'r,; Iii, Tul. [.lflYII bi ~~ i:i-'i
Tul SI:'OII ICI. Anlhrlrl,\ ' Wi!\"nl ' ~
Wii l\h .l(osult 71, Ki'fll lllliN'\4'11 IJI, 20T
Wurrm H;ndlnJ! fi l . S;ll1om ~~7
\\"a iiT'Il How l t~ nl ! ii7, Huhhard fill

rtt'

f "ltw; r\A TIAII'fUUllftllli

Ak.ron St.V ~I . M lfi.. Nor'~&lt;~'~l\"nf' ~:!

Aurora

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Lima f (ltll.

~:1. St.Mnl\ · ~

J..or-.•ln r;•Th. Ki.

W. 62, Bellaln&gt; SI.Jcl'rl ~7
rarctlnal 54. Richmond Hts ..lJ
f111 . CArE 81, Macon Easlf'rn ~
Cln. o\1ar1l'm0nt

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I!Cip('W('IJ·Lwdon 76.

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Lurht•ran W. 7'9. El\Tiu Opm r')wr Ill
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(Xlk !!arbor. 70, Gt•fiiM Ii-I
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Hldwdall' ~~~.. Johns tOol'n fit
Rossford rii. Mll!hul)" Lak.- 4t;
Sir ndv \':r i. ~7. Mlnl'l"\~ 1 49
Tipp ·rur ill. f&lt;Pnton Hl•il.!f" .a~
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Willard r)7, NOI"\I.'D ik ot)

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~

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ALLG~

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X·Greenfleld ...................... 20
x-Logan ............. : ............... 18
Gatllpotis .................. .......... l7
JC ·Nelsonvli!P.York ............... l6
x·Jackson ..................... ...... l6

Ellce8!l0r, Wells
complete irdtial
year at Urbana

1 00 1024

. 4 lal1ID.1
4 1314 1094
6 1413 l.l)2
7 llj89 1308

Chesapeake ........................ l:i 8 llti 1232
At hens ................ , .............. 12 9 1236 1159

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URBANA - Gallla Academy Southern ............................ 12 9 1223 1164
x·Wavcrly .. ,....................... 11 ll 1252 12t.6
High School graduate Chris Ellces· South
Polnt ................. ..... . .. ll U 1414 1295
sor has completed his first season of Portsmouth ..... ........ ::......... 10 12 129111343
junior varsity basketball at Urbana Ironton .............. -. ............ . .. 10 12 lEi ll9l
Rock Hill ...... ........... : ........ .. B lJ 1Z12 1105
University. He led the Blue Knights Whoole rsburg ....... . .............. 615 1156l331
In scoring by pumping in 19.5 points Pt. Pleasant ................ , ....... oJ 18 12941441
Northwest ........................... 2 18 t!lll 1111
per game. The 6-2 freshman guard
x - Still In toW"nament.
was honored by being named to the
Man::h 6 rei!IUits:
Rock Hill Sl Symmes Valley 55 (makeup)
OSU-Lima Baron Classic AllPortsmouth West 69 Ironton 62 loti
Tournament team. Ellcessor broke
West Union 84 Minford 73
Marc:h7resul:
the Baron Classic scoring record by
Waverly 89 Wellston 53
tallying 58 points in two game!;. The
Frlday'8 n!!IUitA:
Blue Knights' junior varsity fin Jackson 53 Fairland 52
Logan 84 Miami Trace 48
Ished the campaign with a mark of
Marc:h 13 pme'
4-11.
Logan vs. Cambrldg(&gt;, OU Class AAA
Dlslr1ct. 8:45a.m.
Southwestern High School graduMarc:h 18 ~"''"
ate Roger Wells also completed his
Jackson vs. Greenfield-Waverly w1nner, 7
first season of junior varsity . p.m., at OU.
Sheridan-Nelsonville-York winner vs.
basketball at Urbana University. A
Portsmouth West-West Union YJtnner, 8:4-'S
5-11 freshman guard, he averaged
p.m., at OU
(Wlnners advance to OU Reglonals) .
3.5 points per outing.

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AMMO, RELOADING, FISH,NG,
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SW Ml'i.ow:Airl Sl. '19, C11!\'t'land St. 'iti
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BRACES AT
THE DENTAL
CENTER
IN RIPLEY, W. VA.

I '

routine to the delight of a crowd of
reporters and photographers at the
Redsland training complex. It was
her debut in camp as the Reds'

vau~· ·s.

Mans. SI. Pf'11'r's 76.

rH

WE'VE GOT IT ALL, GUNS

majority owner. Baseball's owners
gave their approval to her ownership in early February.
"It's a fun game, and I'm going to
make my part a fun thing," Schott

=J~:~~J~~~a-llsthenics".:-~~·

•

Ohio scores

1~1

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - Marge
Schott, new owner of the Cincinnati
Reds, made a big hit upon her
arrival in th.e team:sspringtraining
camp Friday when she joined the

Crldi•I'S\'Uk• Pt&gt;rr)• ':i7. Wa.\'I'IC'SIIf'ld.C,rllih·

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Shadysll):&gt; 67, BU('kf'y(' S. ~
S. Amhf&gt;rst 52, Lorain G-an·lr-w
Van Burm 92, N. &amp;llirrnl"(&gt; ~
UpiX'f SciOro Val. R-1. Ada ti6

(1;.

.CiJidWiill'r 711, \'an Wt•r1 li2
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.J:•'t·k-..on "J;J, F'uu:h•nrl '&gt;2
K;_rn~ ns / ) lkiJJ;t 67, Fuw-.r1;a 'l.'o

Bt.rll~'('

SmK"_a E. 18, CarPy W

lll'lil•lrmt:dnf' 61. 1\ruok\'lllt • &lt;,.1
IW%·n.u· !11. Mm J!;ul'tt.t, 711
111"'\ ::rn Iii. S!wrv.-••)( 1 F:tbvlo..,., !i7
Tnnll\ •\1. l'l1• c;llm tll "ff
f 'nl. l.lndl:~ h'l, BI!K)ITI C'an·OIJ -12

hit in Florida camp

·~~r~~~--~~~~~:~~~~r·~a~.i~~~~e~{~~~j::;::::~if~ii~:==::::rl;
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lndlal'l

..

._

$10

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IIODlL 25 • MARLIN

on.. elll)ires June JO,1985.

HIP

ROOF
No. 8606
No. 1122
MMINUM

ll297

�.

•

' Point P.leaS8nt, W. Va.
Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-

Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

SUPPORT

•
March 10, 1

SHOP YOUR 'LOCAL FOODUND

5 °/o OF DAY'S SALES
PLUS SPECIAL CANCER DAY
SAL{_.. ITEMS GO TO SUPPORT
LOCAL CANCER SOCIETY.

WEDNESDAY, MA~CH 13, 1985
HEM'S
OlD FASHONED

-BREAD
(Off

•

~State/ ational
~m... - $-entintl Section 0
1 -·----------------------~--------------~--------------------------------------·-· ------------~M~a~n:h~1~0~·~1-98-~
.~S study cited as proof_of Beagan success
..

•

WASHINGTON (.AP) -Admlnistratlon$upporters

are cltlng an Increase In the numherof upper-Income
Americans and their share of the federallncome-la;x
• burden as proof that President Reagan's economic
· pbilciE'S are wotkl/tg.
A neW report from the Internal Revenue Service
• shows !be number of people with Incomes above
$75,00l a year rose by 50 percent Since 1~ and that
· they paid 25.6 percent. of Income taxes in 19&amp;1. That
compared with 20,5 percent In 19WJ, an lncri&gt;ase of 25
percent.
- - - :!The figures confirm what was...axgued.Jn.J.98 "

-

C~ngress' Jolnt Economic Committee, said Friday.
ThoSQ ari(Uments beld that if tax rates on
upper-Income Americans w&lt;'r(' reduced consldera -.
bl)', they would transfer their money out of tax
shellers Into productiv&lt;'. job-creating tnvestments.
"The C'Vldence Is clear" that L' happening, said
Rachelle Bernstein. manager or tax policy for the
U.S. ChamherofCommerce. The chamber has been a
vocal supporter of Reagan's tax policies.
But another analyst, .Joseph. Mlnarlk of tile Urban
Instllute. cautioned against jumping to conclusions.
H said a,.,mP.6Ide~al&gt;le -part of the...growth In the......-

economic growth and lnfiatlon. ,
The IRS report showed that:
Ms. Bernstein and Frenze agreed that part or the
-P.eoplemaklng oyer$15,tlXlfiled 1.7percent o. ~-Income boost was c11used by Inflation and economic
returns for 19&amp;1. up from 1 percent In 19Wl. They pa'l£
growth, but not to the extent that M~rlk Implied.
25.6 percent of the taxes . Their total federal lncolllj
Tne newligutesreieased this week w~re-tiu,:/iTSi to
taxes rOS€ 38 percrnt ov~r the .,.,., :od.
-· be based on retlirns flled for the 1983 tax year. They
-Those earning between $19,tlXJ and $75,00l ~
continue the pa'ttern noted In i982. the year the first
38.5 percent of the returns Iup from 33 percent I an
major portion of Reagan's tax reduction took effect.
paid 62 perc~nt of the taxes, the same as (or 1
of a. shift ln the total Income-tax burden to the
Their tax burden was up 10 percent.
wealtpler.
-Taxpayers 'inaklng lt&gt;Ss than $i9,00l a year Iii
Democrats . say the program Is unfair to
Just under 60 percent of the returns for 19&amp;1.
lower:Jncome_people,_who, )Je(;;ju.,'\Clbe,slze,l)!.!he.J.ilx~.•- ..!WJI'l66 rcent for 19~). TIIE'Y
perce~t

share of the tax burden - was caused by general

dollaus from the reduction than did the wealthy.

J'

' . _ ..;;:::-:.:.:'?~:.~z:~::-:;:-:;~:.:.:;:.,-,.;~~.:.;_ .. ,.... ;.:;~:...;.:...:._:~·- ~~ ...;;.,;;.,;,~~~~Ph-~~;:-~~,~·gm•r-~-..:.aru-·""'..-.:;;-z.... . :. . , :::..:.-"'";:.;~...;:::~~-..,.....;.-'"';; . :. . ... ::::.::;~....,......._~:!::":..... -· ~-~~7"':"~~ ~~- ·~;;:;:~~i::;i.~~~;i::,~~~===

.• Frenze,
.

an analyst for Republican members of

this group dropped almost

Lobbying for MX

;Fed moves to
fencourage
..~:farm credit ·

missile steps up

.

: ,·;-wi\SRINGI'OW'(AP)--::=., ·rll'e· ·

HOllY FARM

CHICKEN BREAST
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MEDIUM

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:· f:ederal · Reserve Board, ln an·
, : '~ttempt tc help ban!r.s prov!decred!! ·.
; to farmers for sprlng planting, Is
: uberallzlng its requirements for
.• making loans to agricultural banks.
: . The nation's 'central bank an• nounced the new program on
: friday, two days aner President
• Reagan vetoed a farm credit blll
passed by Congress to expand ald to
farmers. He S8ld current admlnlstra t ion efforts were sufficient.
The Fed said Its liberalized rules
would complement the·administration's program.
Agrlcu!turel &amp;cr.etar:y John R. ,. "
13lock, In a statement, praised the
Fed's action ·and said It would be
especlaUy helpful to smaU-and
medium-size lenders.
In a statement, the Fed said,
"While the great bulk offarm banks
appear to have adequate liquidity,
thE' modifications are designed to
ensure that liquidity strains do not
hamper the necessary flow of credit
In various loeal areas." ·
The Fed eased .requirements for
· an existing· program designed to
. help local banks meet credit
""l!emands occurring on a seasonal
basis through direct borrowing
from the Fed.
About !00 banks participated ln
,tl",e.progr8fl'l· la5 ~~year. ·Thc:&gt;amo~nt --·
• borrowed at any given time ranged
• from $100 million tQ S:nl million.
' Board officialS ·had no estimate of
• how many additional banks might
• be encouraged to participate this
~ year under the liberalized rules.
•
•
•; About4,146ofthemorethan14,tlXJ
;:; U.S. banks are classH,led asagrlcul·
~ luralbanks.

mis~i!~~ has -wamed-agaJn _tha1 the
success of next week's U.S.-Soviet
nuclear arms talks rPStsoncongrC'S·
slonal approval of the weapon.
Patll Nlize, President Reagan 's
special arms control adviser, toW
Congress on Friday that a defeat for
. the 10-warhead missile could hu11
the U.S. bargaining position.
Asked if the talks can suGceed if
MX loses, Nltze told the Senatl'
Appropriations defense subcommittee, "1 cannot see how It would be
done. We could try , but I dor't think
tt 'NOt:!d be--successful.;'
Nltze's argument was echoed
again by Reagan and other top
officials throughout a week of
lobbying to win MX approval.
•
Congress last year approved $1.5
"JUST FINE'' . - President•
billion for 21 more MX weapons, but
Re.lpn . gtv.,. the thumbs up to\
froze the money until thr House and
photographers as he leaves lhfi•
Sena te each vote lwlce this year to
Bethesda Naval Hospital after
goaheadw lththeprogram.Theflrst
undergoing a baltery of medical
21 of the 100 MX weapons were
tests. The President told reporters
approved 1n 19&amp;1.
he tell ju..t-nne. (AP I...aserphoto).,_
Linking the arms talks with the.
• ·•
MXwascrltlclzedFrldaybySenatc
:·~=
Minority Leader Robert Byrd as shock wav&lt;' generated by a nuciCfll' •
"hot rhetoric."
explosion. Thus. the Peniagon hill&gt; ,
The West Virginia Democrat told been studying methods of " hardet,~
his weekly newseonference that "to lng" the silos to make them more
DELEGATION DEPARTIJRE- Senate MaJor·
Geneva, declared that the groupwliS"very optimistic
exaggerate a linkage ... Is wrong. survivable.
ily'teader -Robert Dole,' left, l8iiiA Wltil"n!))II'ter!fat ·-0 ut an.. "vay· patlffltY" Seit:--Etlwi.fll l{enr.ed , - TOOr&lt;?-ls-no-eonnection.::............... ". ...... .,•rh-e---~''ie:t--abiliiy-to.--d~trov--~
Andrews Air Force Base In Maryland Saturday D-MIISII., center, and Sen. Richard Lugar, R-Ind.,
The link was also denied by Mlnut~man silos mmns MX will be
morning. Dole, a member of a delegation of senators look ori. (AP Laserphoto).
former CIA DlrectorWllllamColby, Just as vulnerable. criflcs of t\le
leaving for the opening or u .s.-sovtet arms taiko In
who has joined MX opponents. missile say.
t·
Colby told a Capitol. Hill news
But Nltze told the defense panet
conference that the weapon Is that "as a result of a n.'SCarcli
• . ,.
Irrelevant to the likely oulmme of program started about tWO ycart
tbe arms control ta lks. ago. there are new concepts for
The decade-old MX program Is super-hardening missile silos to
.
designed to replace the Minute man lev&lt;&gt; Is tha t were pr&amp;viou~
~
missile. the heart of America's unimaginablc."

u s a·eIegatio
.· n

.
.
.
arrives ID

G

.
•
..~_~_ri"!~;~~~:~~\~~~:i~ -~. ene~!l-!~r~: ~J!!"'l_S___~~g~1_!a1I~D~ _:;~~;JL~~~u;;::;~~ _p,;~~ni~~~~~~~:~~~~su;:clW.•.. _
,~.

•

HEiR'S

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lag

119

LB.

:· vetoed bill would . have Increased
:· funds for federal guarantees of
private farm loans and would have
\;Involved the government In efforts
'• to lower some Interest payments for
'"• f armers.
:l' But the president had attacked the
;' aid package as a "massive new .
said it was.
'• bailout" for farmers and
.
: not needed because the admlnlstra~ lion's current farm aid program
•. (&gt;.&gt;as sufficli&gt;nt to meet · farmers'
· : needs.

. ti,Jture t,ar_.J!reaJlv e!))l~n_~;.lng
~~ ···""-'-we·a(X)1fs;\vas----nanKro- oylo:rmt'•~"Burnte"=r-e~ifugun-t~as=-st"U~~·...... survrvao·ui f}r-=ijr"lto:: ~n- slrOs,.. ..-nv·
The U.S. delegation to new arms
"It would be folly to~~pectthemto Texas Sen. John G. Tower. IE'ader of
more than three dozE'n MX basing said ,
·
..
control· talks with the Soviet Union be bridged overnight, ~e said.
thedelegatlononstrategicwE&gt;apons ,
plans. tryingunsuccessfully to come
Grn . &amp;nnie Davis, chief ot til(!
arrived Sa tlirday and its leader.
In the talks, to begm Tuesday, and Maynard W. Glitman, wh~will
upwlthawaytom~cMXsafefrom Strategic Ai r Command. agrCC!I:·.
Max M. Kampelman, said the U.S. andSovletnegotlatorswUlde;tl he~d the U.S. group on med1um- atta_ck by. mcreasmgly accurate telling the panel that "individual
United States was ready to "help with three Issues- space weapons. range weapons.
Sov11'1 rrussiles.
.
.
missile survivability is better than
build a bridge'' to reduce the danger strategic nuclear weapons, and
Before leaving for .Geneva on a
Finally, the Pentagon dec1df'(l to we projected."
: ,
of nuclear war,
medium-range. nuclear weapons. U.S. Air Force plane on Friday, the
house the MX In the baslng pl~n for
Hcexplained that "due to a betlCI\
Kampelman told reporters at Moscow broke off previous arms ncgotiators met at the White House
wh1ch It was des1gned - Mmufe- understanding of the lnhereg\
Colntrln Airport that the80-member negotiations In 1983 to protest with President Reagan, who told
man silos. The 100MXweaponswill gmloglcal c haract eristics" of thit .
U.s. delegation was ready to deployment of U.S.-made Pershing them to negotiate a reduction In
be lnsih)son Warren Air Force Base_ Wyoming site· where MX will ~
bargain "thoroughly and responsl· 2 and cruise missiles ln Europe,
offensive weapons "so all God's
In Wyoming and Nebraska.
based, "we havP dlscovet·ed- tha•
bly." However. he said U.S.-Sovlet
Kampelman, who wUI also lead · children ean grow up without the
Thc biggest danger facing llw existing silos arc hal·dcr than.
differencE'S . "are deep and deeply .. the U.S. negotiating team on space fear of nuclear war."
silos In an attack is the enormous originally thought. "
. '~
....

..

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

. . , . and ~ubmarm~:launc~Lu mlss~es.

hio briefs:------------...,·:,

$219

Wednesday.
Bank officials and Ohio Commerce Director Kenneth Cox
repeatedly assured depositors this week that their money iS safe. But
customers still stood In lines at some Home State offices Frida y to
get theh: cash.

Glenn asks debt extension

RICH tOMATO

FOODlAND .CATSUP

Montgomery's buses.

Hundreds asked to evacuate

COLUMBUS (AP)- Sen. John Glenn will requestancxtenslonon
a $1.85 million campaign debt he owes four Ohio banks, he said
Friday after·a meeting with bank officfals.
,
AUSTINTOWN (AP ) - A!)out t&gt;'iO people were asked to leave their
Glenn told reporters that the payoff on the debt, Incurred during
Austintown Township home5 early Saturday because a tllJck was
his unsuccessful bid for the 1984 Democratic presidential
leaking a hazardous chemical on a ncarby road, a township workcr
nomlnallon, Is scheduled for March 31 "but obvio_usly we are not
said.
going to be able to pay It by the end of March.".
HAMILTON (AP) -Pollee found the bloodied body of a woman In
"We're evacuating about fi.'iO peopl e," SQid Dcc Hoelzel. office
He Indicated that the bank officials agreed to consider an
he r 80s at her home In this -southwestern Ohio city Friday, and state
managcr for the township near Youngstown In northeast Ohio. ;
extension. "I wUI be writing them a letter asking for the extension.
Investigators were summoned to help with the investigation.
"They're golng1o Fitch H.igh School."
We all arc working very hard on this deht," the senator said.
Pollee Identified the victim as Ann Zwiefelhoefer, BJ. Her body was
No injuries were reported. but polle&lt;•, firefighters and nmbulanccs
fouhd at her home In Hamill oil's east side at about 1:20 p.m. by a
were al the sccne of the leak on Victoria Road. Ms. Hoelzel sai.d.
Durlng last year's campaign, Glenn SQCllred loans totaling $2
million from Bank One of Columbus, BancOhio. Huntington National
niece who was looking in on her, according to Hamilton pollee
She said the truck was leaking the "hli(hiy toxic" chemical ethyl •
Bank and AmqiTrusl of Cleveland.
sergeant Jim Schmitz.
·
·
acrylate. but she did not know the precise naturc of the chemical or
•'
He said thai slnce he wlthd~•r~ew~{f~ro~m~t~he~~;,;almost a year
Schmitz salt! the woman had been stabbed to death 20-:ll hours
how the leak began.
~
the
~~~~~~e~a~r~ll~er~-~l~ta~p~pe~ar~ed~t~h~a~ta~fro~n~t~sc~r~ee~n~d~oo~r~on:~he~r~ho~m~~~h~a~d~bec;·~n====~~~~o~ln~f~orm~a~t~.io~n~w~a~s~lnn~m~ed~la~te~l~y:av:a:i:la~b=le~r~~:a:r~d:in:g~t~he~n~w~n~c~''~O~r==~~~

d h
Police investigate eat ·

•'

..

haven't lost .a penny," he said.

Activist
recalls her ·moment
•

Home State closes banks
CINCINNATI (API - Home State Savings Association said
Friday night that its 33 branch offices wouldeclose Satunlay and that
negoilations are under way to sell the beleaguered lnslltutlon.
. "I'm selling ou.t because I'm concerned about tile depositors,"
David Schiebel, president and chairman of the bOard, told a news
conference, "My only regret Is the &lt;;UStomel'S and depositors did not
have more faith In our bank."
Asked if the banks would be open Monday, Schiebel said: "I can't
siJ.y right now."
Schiebel refused to disclose the name of the bank with which he
was negotiating, adding: "I'll only say that It Is an Ohio Institution."
Monday .
He saki he hoped the transaction coul\1 be compleled
He said the decision to try to sell the bank was made because
depositors continued to withdraw funds after It was disclosed that a
Florida federal court had closed ESM Government Securities Inc.
The securities firm held an undisclosed amount of Home State
securities as collateral for a S6ill million loon.
Schiebel said the bank remains solvent and that all deposits are
safe. The deposits also are Insured by the Ohio Deposit Guarantee
Fund.
.
·Shlebel refused to disclose the amount of money withdrawn by
depositors so"'iar. About- SZi million - had~~ tak-en vut hy

b¥

OW. I I - The llltht To Umlt Ou1ntitlea ••

- ,;:._'•-

-~ -

PrkM GOCMI March 10 lhr• Marrh 16, 1915

-

CLE;VELAND (AP) -Young people need to be told of Ihe ~lvll
rights struggles so they can continue the effqrt and not lose the gains
blacks have achieved. t:tosa Louise Parks says.
"Racism Is evet· a'llve and will stay with us as long as It Is In
ourselv~." the civil rights acllvlst said Friday. "It Is lmporta~l for
us to bring up our youngsters In a world without prejudice ·and
hatred. This Is going to be the answer.
"But so many young people do not appreciate the suffering. Those
' opportunities we have earned can be eroded very quickly by the
powers that be."
.
She said she often thinks back to Dec. 1. 195.~. when she refused to
give up her seat on a bus IIi Montgomery, Ala .. but finds ltlronlc Ihat
the Incident often Is considered the start of the civil rights movement.
Originally from Tuskegee, Ala.. Mrs. Parks 8"'"' up In
Montgomery, where she and her husband were civil rights actlvists.
"Before 1955, I was very voc;al, but people didn't care then to listen
to me," she said jokingly.
Mrs. Parks was arrested and Jailed for causing a disturbance
aboard
'
the bus. The Rev. Martin Luther KiJ1g Jr., a young
clergyman who formed the Southern Christian Leadership
Conference In 1955, rallied to her cause, as did thOusands of others.
:g:ac:W ~-!d~- to· - ::c

.

....

The chemical . if Ignited. can produce hTitatl or poisonous gast.,;.
It also can cause dizziness or suffocation. Contact with it ca n irrit atP
or burn the skin and eyes .

City unsure of payback
TOLEDO (AP) - City officials composing an~wers for
bond-rating services that say they'rc reviewing Toledo 's finances
because $19 million of the clry's money may bC frozen in the probe of
a Florida brokerage housc.
Standard's &amp; Poor's has placed Toledo on its credit watch list, and
Moody's' Investors Sc1vlce Is reviewing the credit rating of Tok'!lo
and other municipalities that Invested through ESM Government
Securities Inc. of Fort Lauderdalf, Fla .
"We'reasking (city officials) threequesllons," said Bob Stanley. a
Moody's assistant vice president assigned to the ESM case. "What
funds are Involved In the repurchasing agreement? What Is the
Impact and what plans have been set In motion ?"
The Securllles and Exchange Commission has fro,en ESM's
assets, Including collateral the firm 's agents held for Toledo's
Investments.
Dan Hlskey, city treasurer, said Toledo will assure bond-rating
serviceS that It can pay Its biUs and meet Its debts. City FlnanaDirector James Kasch said Toledo will be able to at least finish out ·
the~! of l~e l&lt;N!\ ])1Jdgel ~P.ar wltl:IOut peedlng the $1~mlll1Qn.

•UIOA Faed St1m111 Olldy Accepted •Not Reapon .. ble For Typographlcll Er&lt;ora

.'

-·

';

�,..Page- 0 - 2 -

The

Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-

Pleasant. W.

Ohio- Point

March

Va .

.,

1 0, 1985
1985 "

March
31

Tribune - 446-2342
Sentinel - 992-2156

- -Register-~

Annou ncc meAls

Mere

Financial

1 -Card o f Thanks lpaod on a dva nc e )

21 - Busoness Opportunoty
22-Money to Loan
2 3-Profess•onal Servtces

2- ln Memory
IPBid 1n advance)
3-Announcements

Real Eslale
7 Yard Sale lpaod on advance)
8 - Pubtc Sale
8o Auctoon
9-Wanted to Buy

32 Mobole Homes for Sale
33- Farms for Sale
34 Busmess Bu•ldtngs
35-Lots 8o Acreage
26- Real Estate Wanted

Employment
Services

41 - Houses for Rent
42- Mobole Homes for Rent

45 Furnoshed Rooms

Announcements
3 ' Announcements
SWEEPER and sewmtJ me.
chtne repa~r . parts and
suppltes
Ptck up and
deltvery, Oavta Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mtla up
Glk:-t;n C;;;6k ~d
Caii
61i4-446 0294
Ba, ioons for Get Well. Ann1
vetsarys Btrthdays parttes
Stng1ng Gdrrtlla Call Bel
lodns &amp; Co 446 4313
Wijeva Evans--Found your
old book ' Smoky ·Valuable
paper therem Contact me.
Stoats 607-749 2638

4

Gdn shoqt at Ractne Gun
ClUb e very Sunday 1 00
p m Factory chocked guns
only

'

1or

and hand1capped
equ1pped for wheel
C~lr pattents Re1erences
Call 614 992 3596
H~me

.

Quonset 8u1ld1ngs Due to
cancelled orders we have
.s~ent l bU1Id1ngs at 40 per
cft'ht savmgs Brand new
n~ver erected w1th Galvalume F1n11h Call Tom at
419 659 2494
4i

9

Forest

Run

Methodtst

57-Mustcallnstruments

77-Auto Repaor
78-Campong Equopment

58-Fruots &amp; Vegetables
59-For Sale or Trade

F,nm Supplie s
&amp; L1veslor.k

81 -Home Improvements
82-Piumbong &amp; Heatong .

64-Hay &amp; Graon
65-Seed &amp; Fertthzer

84 Electrical &amp; Refrogaratoon
85 -General Hauling
86-M H Repaor
87-Upholstery

non-worktng

g1ve away
2249

cond1t1on

6

to

One S1amesa cat and one
bfack and white long-hatred,
declawed cat to g1ve away
Both instd8 cats Call before
1 00 pm. 614-992 -3229

6 adult c ats
7319

W1leva Evans--Found your
old book 'Smoky ' Valuable
paper therem Contact me.
Staats, 607 749 -2638

Black female Elk Houndw1th
httle silver Lost tn St1versv1lle H1ll area Ca\1614-8436127

M1sstng pup part Dachshund
and Baste1t Hound, redd11h
brown chtlds pet. R EWARD. 304-675-5466

CARD OF THANKS

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Auct1on every Friday mghtat
the Hartford Commumty
Center Truckload• of new
merchand1te every week.
Con5;1gmenta of new &amp; used
merch.. ndtse always welcomed Rtchard Reynolds.
Auctioneer Call 304 2753069
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean uted cart
Jtm Mink Chev Oldt Inc
811! Gene,Johnson
448-3872
Scashf f25 and up for your
JUnk c1r or truck Free
pock up. ColiS 14-245-9681 .
24 hrs
Wanted to buy lerge carpet
12x1 6 •nd good used a•r
condotooner Coli 614 2666307

'"·· Ga &amp;

IY Joann KMn &amp;
oon .... and Grandchildren

FmplnynH:nt
Si•rv1ces

LOST male dog, black With
whtte on neck Weanng blue
collar. antwers to 'Tango'
lo1t off Bulav1lle Rd If seen
446 1573
· ~ ..,
~...-. -lcLarge pupptet, St Bernard.
found '" Stmmons Olds
area Call814-992 -&amp;730

We WISh to express our

:::"..:0.

Buy1ng datly gold, silver
coint, rtngs, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coin1, large cur·
rency Top price• Ed Bur·
kett Barber Shop, 2nd Ave
Moddleport, Oh 614-9923476.

Lost and Found

Card of Thanks

soncere and heartfelt thanks
to our relatoves fnends and
neoghbors for theor prayeJS,
love. cards. floral anangements food money and theor
kond support at the death ' of
ol)t dear husband father and
gttndpa
: HARRY WILLFORD
Wt would especoally hke to
tl\¥1k Carol Jean Adams. Racone Emergency Squad, staH
on Emergency Room at Veter.tns Memonal Hospotal,
m.-ses on I.C U. DIS Mansltild &amp; Wotherell. Ewong Fu·
nl!llll Home Rev Roger Grace
arid Rev Paul McGuore Raco•e !.egoon Post 602 for ~II.:
""'
burers &amp; memonal Set\ltce.
Rac:one Masonoc lodge The
wtmen of Racme Methodist
Chu rc h for a mce dmner the
....
of the funera 1 your kIn d....,
ness woll never be forgotten
Mjy God blllSS each of you
Wife Libby children Kay &amp;

COMPLETE HOUSEHOlDS
FURNITURE Bodo . tron.
wood, cupboardt. chalft.
chetts . baakeu, d11hes.
stone Jers, ant1ques, gold
and 11lver Write-M 0
M1ller. Rt 2 . Pomeroy. Ohio
45769 or call 614-9927760

304 -675-

Set of car keys found on
Matn St In Farmers Banks
parkong lot Call 614 9927610

2

In Memoriam

Help Wanted

Adventure, challenge and
excnmentl Become a part of
our unique team of traveling
photographer• No prior expertence neceeaary Earn
whde you learn In our
tramtng program We are an

•nt11r11atJOo~l ~om~~ !~-

2 Beagle pups. 304 675
2075

8

11

call 61 4·992-

G1veaway

cute Call

Wanted To Buy

c1a1tz:1ng tn children '• photography on retflllloreo Mull
be frH to travalextenllvelyl
We oHer salary plue comm11110n wnh potential earningt to *12,000. plus per
year. travel elloWIInce per
dtem and excellent company
benefltt To qualify. you
mutt own a dependable car,
have a htgh school dtploma
or equivalency, end leke to
work with children end the
public This 11 a untque
career for the person seeking
profeesional1sm. challenge,
travel and excitement FQr
more de~etle and an Interv1ew call Cherry Smtth.
446-1683 Mon March t1.
9AM-Noon, 1-3PM Joneo
It pre1nell Stud1os E 0 E
M-F
Houriy--Citnoc- Aide needed

11

Help Wanted

AVON Sell AVONI Make
45% Call 446-3358
RESIDENT DIRECTOR OF
BOYO HALL Roo Grande
College and Communtty
College tt accepting appltca
tiont for the po11t1on of
Re11dent Dorm D1rector of
Hall Thit 11 a twelve·
adm1n11trative

reedy to tha
Student Development, the
Resident D1rector 11 retponstble for developing arid
mamtaintng a conduct1ve
hv1ng and lurmng enwtron·
ment 1n the resident hill
Thtt posttion 11 on-call 24
houra a day and requtrel the
respon.tbll1ty of a hve 1n
resident M1n1mum qualification of H1gh School Educatton. or equivalerlt. w1th
aome course work m h•gher
education preffered. Real·
dent D~rector related work
exper1ence destrable. excel
lent Interpersonal and com
municat1on sktllt, and 1he
ab1hty to work effectively
w1th students Salary is
$3 ,400 per f1scal Y•flr,
based of a twelve-month
contract plus room and
board Deadline for apphca ttont 11 Fndey, March 8.
1985 Send letter of tnterelt. retume, includtng 1h8
name• of three references
to Office of Penonnel Box
969, Rio Grande College.
Rio Granda. Ohoo 46674
P 0 No. 3245

part-ttme tn f1m1ly planntng
offices Must have h1gh
school diploma or equivalency, good communtcatton
sktlls accuracy wdh f1gt1res .
be

de~ndable,

Help Wanted

31

Homes for Sale

By owner 186 acret, custom
brtck home, 2000 1q ft • "
W· gerage. 3 bdr • 2 ba . FP
o1l HT 6 AC Modern equ1p
bldg , barn, county wa1er
M1neral nghts tncl • $1 39K
Coll614-669-6311
Mull Selll 3 bdr ranch,
fBm1ly room wtth wood·
burner. deck. carport. ci1y
utllitiet and schoolt, cable
TV , Weetbrook Sub
S36.000 Call446-7144

Seasonal Parks - laborer,
Aprtl B·Sept 20 Ma1n1e~
nance background pre farred. $3 82 hr Apply
before Mar 16, Gallipolit
Parkt a. Recre1tion Dept ,
618 Second Avo E 0 E

Reps Needed for bu11nets
accounts Full time $60,000
to UO .OOO Part tome
Situations
Wanted

your own
providod Call 1-DliZ · IO~II ·
1076 Mon thru Fn 8AM 10
5PM CST

II

:J::&gt;rtofto

0 ~~ ~u:~:

faOier. son -and brother
Stiectai thanks to the Hu·
~ FunerJI Home, the
Pl)llbearm, those who
Moll all tile beautiful
IM!Rn. ca-ds and money
- ' to 311 w11o sent food.

+

1-.,...s to

all the people
prayed lot US lnd
P" us strefi&amp;lh to make
it::UWOIIIIt. Thanks to the
All*tS Cllu-ch of God lot
their support. to R.lv. Wtllove for hiS consoliii words. May God bless
yOu all
Wife Julia, sons Dale
Dean, dauchter Jov,
H.l.n lnd •It htrs
and siite"rs

l.ill

•

r

In lovrng memory of
Lowell Glten who
departed this life
March 16, 1978 and
Wealtha Green who
departed this life
March 10• 1980 _

awn

F&amp;AM

S1nce losmg our Dad
and 11om
Thin&amp;s hnen't been lhe
Slme,
God took them both to
be Wllh Htm
8t
d
U some ay we can
m"t apin.
Until thlt day, we' ll
carry on
,
The best that we know
how.
Just trustincln our Lord
1b0vt
To give us peace and
Ion.
Sadly missed by dau&amp;ht•.,r_s_ &amp;_,f•,..m,~l~•.!.: 0

...u.1 .::~ '"&amp;
,.,,. "'""I"'

EA Degree

• •
Jack Estep, W.ll
Gordon fisher, Sec.

HOllE

MOITGAGE
5% &amp; 10%
Down Payments
F1xed &amp; Variable R1tes
Purchase or Rtftnance
fixed late
Construction Loans
Terms Up to 36 Years
11 J · Alii
a : en
•
16141 379·27B9

c

~ - ~·i·u!ot=c•IJa!lt!"•.:•!: ~ 1

.

.

I

\

I

House N G sch 2 or 3 bdr
and or garage dozer work
Call 614-388 8246

County Appliance. Inc
Good uMd appllences and
TV Mto Opon BAM to IPM
"Mon thru Sot 446 fl99.
627 3rd Avo Golllpoloo,
OH .

Ll;g, refrigeretor. lerOfi me·
tal c1binet, electric atowe Z
p1ece living room eultl.
washer •nd dryer. wood
burner 11ove0 Don W1tk1r
Allldlnce. Ftfth St tn Rs' Ohio

Vailey Furniture. new S.
ul8d Large section of qualtty furn1ture 1 216 Eas1ern
Ave . Gelltpolle

2 new wing back chltfl f
Coot *600 woll tako UtiO
Call 614-992. 395&amp;

Washer S. dryer aYacado
8226. Whtrlpool wather
196. 40' 1n electnc range
896, 30' 1n electrtc range
876 other range• to choose
from Hoover dryer t96 6
frott free rafrtgeratort t tert
at $1150 , small hsrvett gold
refngerator 812 5 9.11 r•nge
S65 Call 446-7398
Skaggs Apphances Upper
Rtver Ad

Modem 3 bdr on Rt 588
diShwasher tange fire
place Call614 367 7454
LangS'(III&amp; 3 to 4 be~rooms
B1g vard and garden area
$200 00 P.lus uttllttes and
securtty depos1t required
Call 614 992 5692

I

IS 1 Houeettold Goodt

=::5::4=M
; :::i=.=M
sc ::=e=
r c::h=a=n=d:::i=ae ;

KneuH Ftrewood Split 91% l
hardwood• You ptck up or
we dehver HEAP vender
614-256-6246

Are you an opportuntst?lfso
read on Sales Reprel8n1etlve needed to cover coal
fields tn South Eaatern Ohto
1!1. Northern W WVa If lnterestered m JOining a grow1ng
and aggret11Ve m1ne tupply
company, the mailadet11iled
reeume &amp; salary desired to
Box 100 tn care of Gelhpolts
Datly Tnbune, 826 Thtrd
Ave . GallipoliS, Oh 46631
Someone to stay with elderly man through ~eek.
weekend• free not bed faot
Call 614-367-7530 after
6PM .
Local Sando and D.J ·o
0 .0 Mcintyre Park Dollroct
11 accepting tepee and rate•
for po11ible bookings at teen
programo Call 446-4612 ,
ext 268

•

cut and deliver f.re·
wood Call 614-256-1528

Will

"I'm afraid this is more casual

than I care to look! "

NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES
4 Ml WEST GAlLIPOLIS
RT 35 PHONE 614 -446
7274

.

Must oell 1983 Jay Skyllner
14•52 2 bdr . completely
furm.ahed ucept bedrooms
cetlln,! fpn washer &amp; dryer
Completely underpmned
8x10 storage bu1ldmg. set
ting on prtvate rent lot. can
stay of sold Call 446-7200
ofter 61'M
1981 V1ctortan 14x70 26ft
expando Quat! Creek
sw1mmmg pool
pia
goound. LR {2h1B) 0
kitchen . m1crowave &amp; diS
hwasher. cen1ral heat a. atr,
spnnker system, fireplace.
1 1!2 bath. 3 bdr msulated
vtnyl
1981 V1ctor1an 14a70 26ft
eapando Oua1l Creek.
sw1mmtng pool. play ·
ground. LR i2h18) . DR.
kitchen rrucrowava &amp; dta.hwashor. central heat &amp; a1r,
aprtnker system. fireplace
1 Yi bath. 3 bdr Insulated
vmyl underp1nnmg Approx
1 100 sq ft of l1v1ng space.
e• neighborhood Call 614245-9296
""''QG

Call 669 -

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
52 Ohv~ S~ • G:!l:;:oh: N~w
ifiifiC&amp; P&amp;rklilg, $22.0 mo
It used wpod-coel stoves 6
Call446 -7515
pc wood LA su1te e 399.
3 rooms &amp; bath unfur· bunk beds •199, antron
mshed ground floor prt- rechnert e99. new &amp; used
bedroom su1tes, ranges,
vate Call 446-3356
wrtnger washers. &amp;t shoes
R1vars1de Apts Middleport New ltv~ngroom suttes
Spec1al rate1 for Sen~or $199-$599 , lamps. also
C1tb:ent $1 30 Equal Houa ~ buytng coal &amp; wood stoves
mg Opportun1t1es 614- Call61&lt;1-446-3159
992-7721

3 room apt good locatiOn,
Uttlit1es patd, prtvte an-

Schult horne by owner located K &amp; K Park Good
cond1t1on For mformat10n
call 304-675 -5417 after 4
pm
1975 Holly Park, 2 bed
room, allelectrtc, centralatr
refngerator, range. new cerpetmg, front awnmg 20ft
wood deck 8'x30' . underponnong . e12.000 00 304
675 3164 after 5 00

FOR SALE OR LEASE.
commercial property and
new bu1ldtng 70'x100'wtth
2 acret 425 road frontage.
no ~on1ng required. 2 mtles
nonh of Po1nt Pleasant, W
Va on Rt 62 Phone 304876 -1678 weekdays. 304675-7896 even1nga and
weekend II
35 Lots

8t

Acreage

2 acres on Cora Centerpotnt
Rd near Centerpoent Ap
prox 400 f1 road frontage,
good bu1ldtng site, enough
timber for heating 5 yrs ur
more. price $2.600 Call
614 -682-6944
1 14 acres restrtcted

10x60 2 bdr gas heat,
pnvate lot. $1 60 plus depoolt Call 446 9204 or 446
2851
Clean, 2 bdr furn1shed
close to 1own c1ty uttht1ea
no pets. $185 mo Cal
446 0939
N1ce 2 bdr mob1le home
completely furms hed. n1ce
locatton. no pet s Call 614
245 -5 8t8
12~~:60 2 bedroom tratler
furmshed. gas &amp; water pa1d
$250 mo rant, $1 00 dep
osll Call 446 6583

2 bdr unfurntshed 1 21C60
wnher-dryer hookup 'lz m1
HMO No 35 Call
4416-4-369 or 675 9760

YAMAHA PA SYSTEM &amp; COMJIONENTS
INCLUDES EMX200 Integrated M1m. prof1power
MD431 Sennheoser M1crophone.and two model
S3115H speakers woth slands (all equ1ment os m
very good cond1t1on)
ALSO Ftsher Aud1o Component Stereo System. Model MC725 FEATURING. turntable, AM -FM radto,
dual cassette deck and s peakers
INQUIRE AT

The Central Ttust Company, N A
358 Second Avenue
Galltpolos. Ohio 45631

Two bedroom apartments 1n
New Haven Newly remodeled 1n town Call 614992-7461
For rent. fum1ahad one
bedroom basement apt 1n
Mtddleport Ut1ht181 fur
mshed S200 a month end
$90 deposit Coll6t4-992 2603

-dopa.. """:"'~"!.'cd?':''"··•r_nu·~·t unfliilltrea na-mn.nt

move G8 800 00
675 4088

304-

2-50 Gas
3-35 Gas
T030 w/Loader
2-8N

&amp; wator Call 446 3044

1-(

w/tools
1-Cub

HIGH SCHOOL JUNIORSENIORS The Army National Guard can g1ve you
valuabl~ work experience
Good Pay. good benefits,
plus learn a lklll Call 304676-3960 or 1-800-6423619

18 Wanted to Do
H ~ D motorcycle repatr,
Amertcen made also weld
lng Call614-992 -5663

4 opentng• selling Marn
Mac's 100 percent guaranteed hne of g1ftt, toys. home
decor Your hours. no mvutment 304-675-6758
or 1 800 553 9077 BookIng home and ca1alog
parties
T1me to make money for
Summer Vacat•on Sell
AVON full or part t1me
304 576 23t8

IIIDGI
James Jacoby

~::;r,

Monday, Mar. 11
7:30 P.M.

r

House for rent 2 bdr S150
adults w1th 1 small
chold Ca ll 614-258" 6058

mo

51 Household Gooda

1-9N

By James Jacoby
Look only at 1hc South hand Your
partner opens one no-trump and the
nextplayerovercallstwo spades You
w~s, ~~pmbgddto beat thiS contract
en e I ong gets bac k to your
he doubles Is that good

lodge #7

KIT ' N' CARLYLE · by Larry Wright

Sunday

1 00 acre more or len,
commerc•al or
agnculture , near Pt Pleasant 3 bdr home and barn,
Century 21 Shopley Realty
304-372 8200

hoot,$ 8,500
7722

18 Wanted to Do

The

Va.

b~tautiful

-- tF0'1'1i~ ~i1C" ..,en ,

NORTH

3 , 85

Mtddl.,port Home prtced to
I NOTICE I
selll And we mean pnced to
THE OHIO VALLEY PUB
LISHING CO recommends oelllll Call614 992 -6941
1hat you do bus1ness with
people you know. and NOT In Southern Scho&lt;St Otstrtct
to send money through the mod1f1ed A-frame on 5
mall unttl you have tnvestl - 1-a ocr eo . large garden. woodburner own water well
gated 1he offermg
Ou1et and peaceful Fully
carpe1ed
F1nal offer
Earn $10 $16 an hour
S32.600 Cell 614-843&amp;how1ng Contampo Fa
5384
sh1ons Full or part ttme
Complete trammg For InterOlder tix room house lwith
view call 614 -246· 9248
two bedroom•) for 1ale or
rent Double car garage, full
Open a beautiful Jeans
sportswear or ch1ldrens basement On approxishop Free brochure Top mately 1 9 acre lot Ro1e
brandt! Low prtcesl Holl. Pomeroy 829,500
811 975 to 119,976 to Call614 678-2513
completely set you up Call
Smell 2-3 bedroom home 1n
1-404-469-4438
Middleport Attached gar
Wholesaler- Broker- Route age, corner lot, low uteht1es,
Busonesa Mig Co onvolved fenced Call 614 992 m mass markotong of conou- 3798
mar products II expanding
natoonwlde We are lookong 5 vr old ranch homo woth 3
for Hies-oriented person for bedrooms. 2 baths large
exclusiVe territory terviclng fam1ly room wtth buck sto\/e
accounts Htgh mcome po ~ tnsen 2 car carport,
tentoal Start-up Inventory drovaway. concrete
purchase 86-9 .000 Call and deck Extra ~oulatlo,n.
..

Tile fa moly of David SinciJor WISh to express our
Wllrtnesl apprectalton to
eit:h and everyone for
l~ir heartfelt love and

2 story frame tnsulated.
good roof. shop. garage.
garden, f5 000 00. under
appraosed, 304 675-6743

Houses for Rent

W.

Nice 2·bedroom houM 800
block F~rtt Ave . Galhpoltt
off street parkmg referen •
cea and depos1t Call 61
266-1529

1973 Rtchardson, 141C70
all electric 3 bedroomt
fumtshed, washer and dryer,
carpeted. bath and half
blocks
1979 14 X 66. 2 bdr, 1 both . underpenn1n

1 - - - - - - - - ----,

~~==1~~~~~~~1(h=~~~~~~~lt~~~~~~~~~~t~h~e;,:nn~~in
:;u~s~s~i~d~e~====~~"======~·~A~s~~~==~~=1~3~t~7~8~4~,~s~4~s~3~M~r tlP~ri~ce~d'"
D

=

..

Three badroomt, centralatr, "
vmyl wall paper. carpet
throughout, wall lniUiated.
new pamt. attached garage,
ON outdoor grill, awntng•.
many extras. Call446·2583
ttl 6 OOPM. after 6 OOPM
call 614-246 5869

Opportunity knocka. Inc
Needt full and part time
telephone aalea people Ex
e;U&amp;C'il o;;prv1un~ tu r th&amp;
homemaker Cell 312 3951850 •846 today! Call
refundable
1----------Ba•baii·Softball Umpires,
scorttkeepe111 for June and
July evening• Playground
leaders for June and July
afternoon• . Apply before
March 30, Galhpolts Parks !a
Recreation Dept . 518 Sacond Ave E 0 E

AggreSSIVe
' b. I' d S:

Announcement•

Pt Pleasant
Leon
Apple Grove
Mason
New Haven
LP.tart
8uffalo

Real Estate

Men 10 late 30's destresltve
in houeekeeper, ktdl wei ~
como Coli 876-5437

-~
.

In Pomeroy, 3 bdrm, good
qualities but needt work
Owner needs cuh. bett
offer woll buy Under 8 7500
Rudy to dull Call 614
992-6263

304

S3 00
Up 10 15 words
One day tnsertton
Up to 15 word~ - Three day onsertton .• $4 00
$7 00
Up to 15 Words Sut day tn&amp;ertton
(Average 4 words per ltne)

I
They'll Do It Every Time

41

Potnt Pleasant,

and responstble Tra1nmg
available for mature tnd1vid·
ual who 11 aenlit1ve 10
reprod~cllve health naedo of
chants Must have rehable
be willing to

Government Jobs .
115 OOO-S50.000 Yf. pooolble All occupation• How to
ftnd Call 805-887·8000
Ext R- 4682

3

orgam~ed.

11

6 75 458 576 773882 895 937 -

992 - Moddleport
Pomeroy
985 - Chester
343 - Portland
247 - Letart Falls
949 - Racine
742 - Rutland
667 - Coolville

446 - Galhpohs
367-Cheshora
388-Vonton
245 - Roo Grande
2 56-Guyan Oost
643 - Araboa Oost
379 - Walnut

Services

Area

4

LAFF-A-DAY

3 bedroom home, 8'/2 assu
mable loan garden spot
reduced down tq
549 000 00 304 - 67 5
5047

pages cover th e

Area Code

Area Code 614

Homes for Sale

A nice three badroom home
,m Pnnceton. W Va w1th
basement and garage alao
appro• . 1 acre of level lot
Shoppmg area w1th1n walk
ing dlttence Pnced to sell
Call614-992 3703 or 614
992 :!15 '! ~c· ·~!o:-~:t:o:1

following t elephon e exchanges ...

61 -Farm Equopment

Wanted to buy ch1lds swmg
set Call 614 256 1932

Church haa old commerc•al
1ce cream deep freeter '"

6
LoOse we1gt&lt;lt now Ask me
hOW' NUtritiOnal we1gh1loss
program, no drugs only
herbs Call 446-2061 or
4~6 -3 788
Management
p ~ 1t1on full or part ttme

4.6.-.Sp_an~ f L- A~nt
4 7-Wanted to Rent
48- Equtpment for Rent
49-For Lease

C la.~sified

71-Autos for Sale
7 2-Trucks for Sale
73-Vans 8o 4 WO

""'"=-'·-. ~~~-~~~d_~t!!!
_- ..-~.,,.. ,==" '~"~.f_a!_m~f_o_o:_FJ;,
n,t ~ - ----·~:~~~~~d-~-0!~!.~~--- ~~
1 ~ 1nsurance
,.,..Apartment Tor Rent
- - -E;n"a:.u'"'r..
•
14 Busoness Traonong
15_Sct}ools
16- Radoo, TV 8o CB Repaor
17-Moscellaneous
18-WantedTo Do

675-1333

e.

51 - Household Goods
52 Cll, TV &amp; Radoo Equopment
53-Antoques
64-Mosc l~erchandose

Aenlals

11 - Help Wanted

·

'"

Pomeroy - Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio-

In your methods he •s showong a
manmum no-trump opening. but only
two spades and not necessanly good
ones rtlf hed hhas four-card d1amond
suppo an 1s clubs and hearts are
helpful, you may easoly be able to
make three diamonds And yet two
spades may go set. Th1s kmd of dec1s1on makes a
1
b
d
strong
n u cer grow og an
South bod three d1amonds West
doubled that unfortunate contrac t
and tbe ultomate result was 800 t~
East-West, declarer gomg set three
frocks after stroking the dummy a Itttie clums11y Sadly enough, two
spades doubled would have been beaten a trtck,
I blame the bad result promarily on
North Although he had the right
- .nrengm· ana snape ior rtis reopenonr
double, his bod forced h11 partner to

• K32
WEST
+A J ~~~ST
• J
+ K Q 6 43 2
.Q8 54 3
•K7
• A 54
• 10 9 6
• KQ 9 2
• 53
souTH
0 98 7
2
• QJ 87
+ 864
Vulnerable Both

:!

Dealer North
wesl
North East
1 NT 2+
Pass
Dbl
Pass
Obl
p.,s
Pass

South

3.Pass
Pass

Opemng lead +J
play at the three level Noith should

have taken the more conservative
stance and passed
In a som1lar situation, where 11 1s
possible for Squth to b1d his suit at the
two level, It would be absolutely right
iur North to aouo1e
'
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I

22 Money to Loan
HOMEOWNERS-Refinance
to low fixed rate Uae equity
for onv purpooe lAader
co . 814-692 -

~o"i~gago

lower

:o~::.r~~';:;o: ~\oob !~a~t"

hvong opace Equopped kot •
chon. large rooms, 2 com
plote heatong oyllema On
paved rd 10 min from

~~~ 00 ~n ~~~r';~ 4 -~92.

1977 Regent 14x64 2 bdr
Call 614 - 245 5286
anyttme
Close out on all Redman
homes
Eumple New
14x70 three bedroom $544
down · S201 per month
We re Elsea Home Centers
onUS 2316141772 1220
or 773 3926

8

120 a cres 4 bedroom house .
R1 775 9 m1les from
Galhpoha Mmeral nghts.
tobacco base, &amp; barn ApproiC 65 acres cleared land
860 000 Call 6 I 4 37!t2286
Ideal 2 9 acre mint farm on
paved road Only 1 mtle from
town S35,000 00 Call
614-742-2460

Professional
Serv1ces

Ptano Tumng and Repair
Bruntcardl Muusic Co , 446·
0187 Twentieth year of
quality tervece lane 01 niab, 614· 742-2961
PIANO TUNING AND RE PAIR. Roduced rateollm~od
lime only Word' I Koyboord.
304-676-5&amp;00 or 176 3824
Permanent hair removal,
Profeaeional Elactrolysi1
Cltntc. New Houre by ap ·
polntment. 10 AM ·B PM,
Mon thru Fri. 304-178 !118 -

Beautiful 3 bdr home built
for you $16,900 &amp; up Soe.
our models Call 1·&amp;1tB86 7311
Price reduced, four badrooms. kitchen-family room
with ftreplac:a finished
basement. Pomt Ple..ant
304-678 3079, evanlngo '•
Brick home, 3 bedroomt,
1 Y2 beth, fire place, full
basement, 2 car brick garage, on large lot Colloge Rd
In Syracun Call &amp;t4-992 ·
5133 or 114-882 -3804
Cozy 2 bdrm home. partlllly remodeled Large LR ,
111 c1rpe1ed 1 country tcrt
i'-i U.iOU O&gt;Can- GTfi-=-742:2390

CONSIGNMENT AUCTION
DATE: SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 1985
TIME: 11:00 A.M.
located at Junctoon of Route 35 and Route 160 at Thaler
Ford Budding close lo Holzer Hospital , Gallopohs OH
· lookong for Farm Equopment, Tractors, Cars. Trucks,
Tools. Rototollers, lawn Mowers . Furniture, anythonnou
want turned onto CASH'"
ThiS auctoon os planned twoce a year for an ~Outlet) for somethtng you want turned mto ~CASH) .
PARKING
Call NOW lo doscuss selhng your personal property
By Sale Day we hope to have a aood varoety of merchandose
Not responsible for accodants or loss of property.
AUCTIONEER- LON NEAL (614) 367-7101
Merchandise must be on loc.tton by 10:00 A.M Sale Day
Call
to 8.00 A.M
Call
11 :30 P.M.

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141. Turn left onto Rt. 775.
turn nght onlo Patnot-Cadmus Road. Watch for
s1gns

Sale Every Saturday Night At 7:00 P.M.
Consignments accepted from 1·5 p.in. on Saturdays
Have something you want to sell? Contacl Marlin
Wedemeyer, Auctioneer. Arrangements lor p1c~up
serviCe aVailable.

BARN AND AUCTIONEER AVAILABLE FOR
PUBLIC AUCTIONS ON CONTRACT
Contract Includes haulina and t11nsport1n1 all
m11chanchst.

MAlLIN WEDEMEYII-AUCnONEEI
~4P5 »2 or 301·02-i,_
Apprllltlcet Flnlt
Resident and Business

ltaac. 311·9370
Se!vice

41

Also

Available

Parttally 1urn1shod 2 bdr
garage apartment Adults
only, secunty depos1t Call
after 3PM 446-9279

Furn1shed room $126 Utdt
t1es, range ref Share bath
Men only 919 Sec G•ll•po
los 446 4416 after 7 p m

44

House for 'ent Call 304·
675 -7263 875 -5104 or
675-5386

Furnished 2 rooms &amp; bath
downstairS, clean, adult
only, no pets Ref raqutred
Call446 1519

11

I

Apartment
for Rent

r---~~~~~--~~,.
TIRED OF PAYING HIGH UTIL ITY BILLS?
LET US PAY THE BILLS'

Houses for Rent

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

6093
23

Rent~ Is

t

Help Wanted

Attention RN's

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctoon

Maybe

AUCTION
SAT., MARCH 16, 1985-9 A.M.
CONSIGNMENT SALE
'
McCAULEY TRACTOR SALES

Emergency
Room
or

SAIIDYYIUE, W. VA.

TRUCKS &amp; TRAILERS •
FARM EQUIPMENT - MISCELLANEOUS

TURN OVER SURPLUS EQUIPMENT INTO CASH 1

AUCTIONEER: Edwin Winter, Lc. /334-85

is for

PUBLIC SALE
SATURDAY
MARCH 16
9:00A.M.
HOUSEHOLD

Norge 15 cu. ft. freezer, Tappan m1crowave
oven &amp; stand, Sunbeam Kerosun heater
(11,000 BTU), Zenrth stereo console, Anens
ndmg mower (doesn't run).

AUTO

You

200 Second Street
Poont Pleaoant, W Vo

•to use and expand your clinical knowledge and asseument skills in a patient
centered environment.
•to put patients first and paper work aecond - ward clerks on duty 24 hours .
'to obtain additional compensation for education.
•to participate in an innovative flexstaffing plan (4, 8. 10 lla 12 hr. shifts) .

•

72 Plymouth Valiant, 318.

OWNERS:
J. &amp; SANDRA K. HANDLEY

TERMS: CASH
JIM CARNAHAN - AUCTIONEER
?

If you would like to be a part of our special team of nurses. contact:

M•rcy

•

TWIN RIVERS TOWER •

An Opportunity

Located near Salem Center. Ohio. Turn off
S.R. 124 at the Little Coal Bucket (near
Meigs Mine No . 1). Approx. 1.5 m1 .

~ CHARtES

4

Hospital
ext .

En1or fhe secunty ond comforts thot ore ottorded with our
restncted bu•ldtng entrv aystem emerg•ncy calls t'fllem
lounge ond commumty room Plonn.d achvltles and
soc1al events provide a reloMed, and en1oyable en
v1ronmenl
All Utilities Included In t e nt •
Except Coble ond Telephone
L1m1ted number of apa rtments ovalloble for pertons
years of oge ond up
TWIN RIVERS TOWER
200 Second Street
Poont Pleasant , W Va .

orf'!Ce Houn ~ 0

Portsmouth, Ohio·
(61413&amp;3-2131

Hou smg for the elderlv and hond1coppe d Ren t ts 30~. of
adjusted income under HUO Section 8 program To quoltfv
for the r.duced rent your 1ncome must be o maxtmum of
$13 250 per yeor for one person d'nd $15 I00 per year for
a couple

"'..

.eo

675-6679

to 5 p m . Mo~n~riday"';; coli fer

oppo1ntment

239

•

'

.,

�,.
I

The Sunday Times-Sentinel ·
64 Misc. Merchandise

66 Building Supplies

tlrntatone, Sand, Gravel.
Pick· up at Richardt &amp; Son .

Building Materials
Block, brick, aewer pipes,

C.ll 448-7785.

Fmn

white. wood $50. Coll4460201 .

Pefs for Sale

Viand St.. Point Ploaaont.

AKC

Darkroom! Complete black
white darkroom $350 .

puppies:

Stud Serwice, Call614·446·

a.

7795 .

Coil 614 -388-9640. 6 to
8PM.

614·387-7220.

sional All - bre~d grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding fa ·
cilities. Engltsh Cocker Spai
Call 614 -388niel

Tee(ing down old barn .
Large beams put tpg~ther

: will scttll all

·oragonwvna
GE washer &amp; dryer set,

good

cond..

S225 .

446 -8351 .

Rio Grande,
.

;

- ....
... .. ..for sale ne8rly new social
: ~ -acurity plate stamping ma·
..-:"'chine with approx . 1.000
.. :: blank plates and plastic
: :: holders. Qnly $800 for all.

'AAA'. Call 446-3889.

For ule: 1972 Internation-al
341 4 industrial enclosed
cab, back hOe. 36 size

Call

Butcher hogs $nd bree(flng
gilts. rea$O!Jable prices . Call

675·7241 .

614 - 949 - 28~

446-3844 after 7PM .

$295. Call 614-266-6522.

AKC Boston Terrier female,
2 mo. old . shots &amp; wormed ,

Big lnternational340 tractor
wi1h International mower
and draW bar 82 ,550 . Mas·
sey Ferguson 65 tractor with
Freeman loader&amp;. 6ft . blade

AKC Registered Doberman
pEups: tor .sa~e . $50 . 'acl)_.

•••notclipped. 1 blackond
tan female , 1 red male and 2

red females . Call 614 -949·
2792.

AKC Female Cocker Spa·
niel. 2 Vz years old . $25 .00.

• • Call614-245-5601 .

..

Phone 304 -675-1036 .

:- .. Upright Piano . Industrial
: .. -Singer sewing machine . Ex·~· .. :Cellent condition . Call 614-

Pit Bull puppies, 4 months
old.

71

Are You Thinking Of Selling This Spring?
-~~ -·~Eall Us NOW
We~ Have · Buyers--"7Waiting. ·

I:::;6;5;=S;e~e;.d;llo~F~e~rt;ll;lr;e=r

1979 AMC Concord, good
cond. Coll268-1788.

Ford 5 ft. diac, Pfttiii&gt;Li'll 14
in . plow. Both 3
hitch,

1971 Volkowogon

pt:

HOUSE FOR SALE

Autos for Sale

6 rooms and bath, hardwood floors, full
basement, gas furnace,--11uminum. siding.
storage building, nice _l9t located 10 g~
neip!borhood at 28 Vmton Avenue, Galh·
polls. Appraised at $35,000.00. Shown by •
appointment only. Call 446-3469.

Faatbeck·needs engine.

exc. cond. Call 304·n3- 8odyeoodcond., 1100. Cell
5323.
614-367-7118.
Rul Estate General

Arabian Stallion at stud .
Pure bred and part Arabi•n
for sale. Ask about our
i'nc8ntive program . R &amp; J
Arabian, Leon. W . Va. 304·

458-1062.

64

$3 ,195 . Call 61 4-286 ·
6522.
.
.

·~wt·

M~GKEE
~

E. M. WISEMAN

Pluma Shang; Administratrix
of Estate of Garland F. Houck, deceased

Brolier-AuclionHr
C1ll 4-46-0552 Anytime
Beth Null 245-9507
Steve McGhH .
446-1255

HOW.DO WE ·SPELL RELIEF?

Real Estate General

---W-OOD REALTY, IN(.

on
acre lot
Possible 8%loan assumption to
I1
buyer. inc!• des 1~. eat-in kitchen, separate, utility room,
i
room with w.b. fireplace. Call for an appointment today!
BMR 446 - NEW LIStiNG -In town location includes 3
BRs, living room, dining·room, bath &amp; basemeot.lots of carpet. Gas heat. Priced at $29,900. Call for details.

Hay &amp; Grain

=::::i ~;;-;:~:~;;;G;;s·~:~~~-·

.

Very good condition . 430 T
John Deere Tractor with
f!'.ont end !o«!fer:. 72-0 John
Deere Tractor . Call 614·

purple

dbbon

63

&amp; trailer. hitch . 9.400 miles,
like _new .. Call ...aftAr . 5-PM__,

'

614-379-2712.

1979 Model Reg . Sorrell

,,._,

·coMFORTABLE 3R 0

\~U n

Rod ney

Comr'~~-'i. V~~\)w!!!b.s, .he~utifl!l
k1tchen, S , v•t•o $33,000.

· SINCE 1943

;

J.l

Ear corn $2.50 buShel. Call

Gelding ; started on barrels,
very gentle . 59' Reg . Sorrell
gelding shown in 4-H West·
ern Pleasure in open quarter
horse competion . Good con·
firmation , no bad habits .

446-3929 after 7PM.

500, 60 lb. bales for sa le.
Excellant second and third
cutting hay. No rain ; no

waste . Call 614-985-383.1.

Call 614-286-6522.

bred,

6AKC
mo.Minature
black with
tan mark·
Dachshund,
ings, loves children, shots
completed, $125 .00, call
304-675-1405.

r=====~~[]~!f!~~~c=====l Il l!'."'lll(l!llirlii ~~Yil'-""

i -;;=~::;:;===:::::~
I·

32 BEAUTIFUl

·:: :JI49·2234.
57
Musical
".,. ·- .-complete single exhaust·lcInstruments
for
'· -. 1980 Ford F-250. In good 1- - - - - - - - : condition . $25 .00. Also
r have a K-Mart brand deluxe
,. under the dash cassette
: player. 3 months old. same
•• .._ as new, $25 .00. Also have a
~ ~ -Black and Decker electric
... "' ..)Yeed eater . Uses an exten.~ ~aion cord, used about 6
... ~ ,ime1, ·_good condition .

Livestock

VERY ATT.RACTtVr · "J"'.l home on
1 ac. grOI'"\0 \/\_ uaths, li replace.
woodbur. C:,~ • ca r ga~age. $67.000.

JAY DRIVE - 3 PD iSS 1'h bath,
eal·ln klt "~()l\l '2./ \1, • car garage.
$42,000 ,
.

BRICK RANCH w1th f&gt; H' basement.
Close to hosp1tal '"/ ~1"'- . Ji et neighborhood . ~ o\)- \\ "'11. 2 car gara ge.
$45.000'1,1)\,:

CHARMING 2 ilorv · "~G l BR, 2
baths. FR. rpr.: l't~\)\ .. educed to
$49.500. ~[&gt;.l'l.
. = ...

II AC., beautrlul ''•" 'ti~ ~e 4 BR
ranch w11h \.o \'2.1~ . . . ,. and lR
Nea r Rro SO ·"""

3 BR RANCH w1th fP ~~~ .e. 2 car
gm ge and ne"'\) ').I~ ·" pool. barn, 3

OFF RT. 160 thrs brrck ·;,·r,;:h oilers
comlort of 3 BR. ? ' · ·j'l.\1 o, Jsement,
large law-c()l\) \t,lltry surround-

BRICK RANCH on Deb~!:, . •ve - 4
BRs. 2r1 llaths. ,, •. /'01 o o" and r

S50.00. 304-882-2832.

1970, 22 foot Winnebago.
~.,-,:~. :~enerator,
20 ft . awning.

~
•
.... ;
·-

Registered Quarter horse
breeding Irish Ray by AQHA
Champ: TontO ~ar Ouest ·

rotary mower, tiller &amp; sulky .

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-D-5

;;;R"e-~p~ly·- t ·:&lt;~Z=:.: : l2~-::.·_.:::::::::::::::.:::::::.:::_-~~ ~-~-~·~-~·~. ,.: ..~"~··::··:::-·~::::·~,.:::·"'~'

:.-·••Oti ~ti374 ..:...~=-,.;,.

:·- -885 -4212 .

electric

stan, 8 llpd., w ith 30 in .

b~cket .

113. Con doliwer. Cilll14·
949-2472 .

after 8PM .

w. va.

frdiiSporl.illllll

31 head feeder calves cro ..

tom plows $395 . John
Deere 1010 tractor S2 , 9~5 .
John Deere 2 bottom plows

Parakeets . Cocati.efs ,
Finches, Seed, Cag.es, All
Supplies:--' C11ll 614 - 985 ~

~. P.O.

t-ractor

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant.
I

Hay

b•od . Coli 614 -379-2436

Farm Equipment

nel. CFA Himalayan.
i
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 614 -

$150. Call446-7432.
- - - - - - - - -lc -

truck.

SUiJDIIes

Call446-4149 .

Briarpatch K8nnals Profes-

Coli 448-1563.

61

Gravely

Judy Tayior Grooming. Call

S11r1 refrigerator almoat
new. $300 . Dresser $150 .

with wood

Doberman

Kitchen dinette set red &amp;

&amp; L1v~stock

Boarding all breeds. Heated
houae. Coll614·245 ·5417 . indoor-outdoor
facilities .

64

1986

2 -Yt Simmental bulla tor . Hay, 800 lb round balea.

Whirlpool cheat type freeze,,
und 2 mo .. 15.2 cu.ft .
8.1 26. lo'll'e aeat t100.

HILLCREST KENNELS

Unfurnished finished dolls

Livestock

plants; fruit and vegetables
&amp; S Produce.

56

ple. effective. ,guaranteed .

63

--:::===;:::::::::~=;:::::::=J all types . 8

lintels, etc .

0 . Coll814-245-5121 .

Coll814-256 -1772.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

aolo. Coli 614-388-8178
after 8PM.

Claude Winters, Rio Grande,

FrM booklet showa how.
FnLgreat. ~njoy life~ Sim-

58

Onion nta 49 centslb; teed
potatoet 50 tb $6 .99; aweet
onion planu ; cabbage

windows,

Take charge ,.ot your health!

Pomeroy- Mi!eport- Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Upright piano . Call

4861 .

Just minutes outside of town.
Solid 7 room house, barn, garage and storage building•

1--- - -- - - -

Baldwin Funster organ, dou ·
ble keyboard , allaccompani·
ment, very reasonable . Call

614-367-7169 .
~owrev

organ .- eJCc. ~cond .,
orginal price $2, 600. Will

304-529-6().34

•"f10 .00 . Cell 614 -7.42 : 2373.
oell ior $1,100. Call 446.,
-lc 9476.

; " Will pay cash for old and
: used woodworking tools,
• carpenters tools or wood
.. Jshop tools. Call Jean (col ·

OR

304-697-2527

3 bedroom bi-level on Bulaville Road offers an
equipped kitchen, dining room, 2% baths, family room with fireplace, central air, 2car garage,
plus awell landscaped Y2 acre yard with 18'x36'
in-ground pool. Much more. &lt;Nmer anxious to
sell. $66,900.
#772

REALTOR

•

• BRICK 2 BEOKM., full basement, wbfp, central A/C, lev!•llol
• with nice garden area. Excellent condition . Price in

446-3644

SELLING YOUR RUL £STAT£ IS IIG IUSIIfSS..... . •
&lt;ALL AN EXPfllfNUD WOOD REALTY SALESPfiiSONI . •

•

CENTURY 21 .Southern Hills R.E., Inc.

CuI Wo1rl

11~1111'1'

1I lofiJ\1 )I

446-6610

1~1:.

111{

Guii11JOh\

10hb

mgs.

Real Estate General

Lowrey rhythm organ. _2
keyboards. 1.3 chord pedals .
Will sell for $1000 . or trade
for camper trailer of equal

• :.lectt at (304) 343-7100.

.·

VERY NICE AND WELL DECORATED

ROLLING ACRES

446·

REAL ESTATE
...

ac S55.9C &lt;,I)\:

;,

PINE TREE SETIING - ~Cjl sq. ft.
modern 3 BRhn'"\/'l.t./ ·""ned carport 3 ler ':,0\.\) ·'· pond, trees. As·
S!Jme 9't-l c-~• -$54 .900~.~~

: Color TV, $1 49 .; 2 refrigera·
... tors, S195 . and 5275 .;
.. f. .slectric
range $85 . and
~ : ... 149.; washer, $95 .; dryer,
"' .. "e95.; camper top, $95 .; oak
; ~ .qun case $250 . Call Fire-

, stone at 614.-992 -2238 .

·· ----------------~
~ : ·(Coal Delivered I good lump
" house coal 1 to 1 ton . call
: Jim . Lanier 675· 7397 or

SPRING VALLEY HOME offe1~ 3 BRs, 1'h baths,
full basement, divided. Nat. gas FA, dining area in
kitchen, fireplace . Reduced to $59,000.

#300

HOLCOMB HILL Beauty offe rs 3-4 BR, 2 baths,
country kitchen with fireplace. forma l dinrng, FR
with fireplace, rec. room and garage. $79.500 ..
#104

3-4 BR HOME on Jay Drive leatures 211 baths.
den, huge fR wilh woodburner, garage, pa(io and
lenced backyard. $67,000.
#401

IIIIACULAT£ 3 BR brick ranch offers I !I! bath,
DR, full divided basement, 2 c~' garage and 1car
carport. $59,850.
·
•
#306

PRESTIGIOUS brick boasts 41arge BRs, 21h baths,
gas heat and CA. in -ground pool and 2.7 acres.
$129,000.
.
#134

113 ACRE 'FARM with stately ol~ 7 room house rn
good repair, 2 good ba rns, machine shed. grain
storage and garage. Coal reported. $74,800.
#346

' 304-675-124 7.

.• PHOTO SPECIAL
.
now thru
· • March 31st , 6 reprints from
color n89atives or 3 prints
; ;. .from slides or 3 copy prints
, ...from prin1s. Your choice 99
~· "Cents . Hockenberry Phar·
:: ;nacy North .
¥

;

Saxon 301 office copier new

$3.000.00 sell S800.00.
304·937 -2120.
Gunsi!Guns!! Smith and
Wesson model 19 and 66 .

304-676 -7476.

7 foot hand carved pew .

Good cond, $75.00 . 304675-2635
Harvest Gold double oven,

875.00 . 304-882-2832.
Dune cart 6HP engine, ballon type tires, e"c: . con d . Call

304-676 -2972 .

18 hp garden tractor,
mower, snow blade, disc
and plows. Needs minor

repeiro. 304-675·6727.
Moving Sate, new refrigerator 14 cu h . Full slz.e bed
,complete. Very reasonable,

304-675-2268.

Six piece wood livingroom

auite $250.00. 304-675·
6084.

WAIBIIID CASH !AVO! Cornplota w- Woiorlood, Ki1g

• gu., lizo $219. Country

Watat.d! I fumiltl'o. 91

CoboiM lltl.. Albn, 5937191. Wo alao. Ill l!ot-tt*t,
•• ~10-lltd " • • bonts.

1

NEW LISTING - Eastern District - Neat and cute! Asmall
home with big appeal' 2 bed·
rooms carpeted, F.A. heat. Includes range, refri~. washer,
dryer. Vinyl ~d ing, front porch,
storage building: Approx. I are
lot. Owner may f1nance.
$17,500.00.
NEW LISTING - Middleport
- On~ 5 years old and has 3
bedrooms, lam1ly room, din~ng
room. fireplace, 2 baths, with a
garden bathtub, central air,
and many more beautiful features. On a nice s5reet.
$41,500.00.

•

NEW LISTING - Five Points
- Crow Subdivision - Approx. 1 acre lot with a newer
ranch home. Swimming pool,
basemen!, garage, many other
latures. All in e&lt;cellenl condilim. Central air. Owner wants
an offer. $54900.
HARRISONVILLE - Three
acre bwlding ~te wilh water
and electric avairable. Owners
will consider land contract
$6,000.00.

other buildings. Pasture, fencing and other features. In the
oountry and owners will deal
on financing and will consider
land contract $36,900.00.
HARRISONVILLE - Approx.
25 acres of wooded land. Several pretty pines, hardly no
neighbors. $10,000.00. ·
NEW LISTING -

Area - Mini Farm

acres, 15 acres tillable,,babnc~ · l
wooded. Enjoy living in this
bedroom double wide with lots
of space. New 2 car block garage plus storage building. Secluded setting. $48,000.00
REALTORS •
Henry E Cleland Jr.
992·6191
Jo Hill 985-4466
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5692

'"
I'

,

..._,.
I

•

'

II

r~
-

2

(j)

en

2
m
m

MUST SELL TO SETTLE ESTATE1 - fl·
NANCING AVAILABLE - EXCELLENT
TERMS - Cape Cod home oH~rs 3 BRs, 2
baths, kitchen with eye-level oven, dinette,
living room has beamed ceilings, utility
room , double garage, storm windows,
woodburning sto&gt;e, city sc hool district.
Addition al land can be purchased. Call for .
an appointment.

m

2

m

::E
r-

-

REDUCED TO $35,000 - NEAR HOLZER
- This ranch style home oilers 3 BRs.
kitchen . 22x24 FR, LR. bath, central air.
woodburnrng stove, electric heat, 16x28
unatlached gmge. KC school distric.t. 1

BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Greal INVEST·
MENT for the buyer' located on Graham
School Rd . Each unit oilers 2 BRs, living
room , bath, kitchen with stove, refrig., OW
and displ., laundry, large carport. central
air and storage area.

PRICE REDUCED TO $59,500 - 3 BR
ranch on 11 acres more or less. Pond, lull
basement, family room with wood burner,
living room, equipped kitchen , dining
room, 11h baths, attached 2 car garage.

REDUCED TO $44,900- HILLTOP SUB·
DIVISION - 3 BR home leatures kitchen.
living room. dining room, family room, fireplace, gas heal, central air and carpeting,
9V&gt;% assumable.

FARMER'S fARM - One ol the area's bel·
ter farms, 101 acres m/1, lot s of Syinmes
Creek bottomland, pond, new fences, large
barn, several other buildings, large tobacco base, modern 3 BR home, 2 baths,
located on Cadmus Crossroads. Call lor
more in(ormation.

103 ACRES MIL. SPRINGFIELD TWP. -

~ 40x60
~P~R':,pole~~t~.bldg.,r~bl~t~h~d~.
~o~n;~m:a~:r~
40x60 tobacco barn, va·
0

(j)

rious other outbuildings.

C

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A BRICK HOME?
-Then this may be just the one. Conveniently located on Rt. 35 West, lhis home olfers a large living room. dmrng room, 3 bed rooms, laundrj room , 11h baths, eq uipped
kitchen. carpeling, central air and a 2 car

en
2
m
m
0
m

gar~ge .

2

ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
m/1, all woods, old barn on property".

-~r-2
(j)

en

CREEK - Approx. 65 acres tillable and
135 acres woods . Comfortable two story
home offers 4 BRs, bath, kitchen, living
room family room. two fireplaces. barn. 2
large ' screened porches. Lovely quiet setting.

less, near Mudsoc k. t 1h story home. large .
barn and tobacco ba se.

1

2

200 ACRES MIL. FRONTS ON RACCOON

LOW PRICED BEGINNERS HOME!- 3BR
ranch style home.DIIers'LR, kilchen, bath
and utility roOm. gas heat. n_ew sictiQg, &gt;;ity
schools. Call for more information.

0 WALNUT TOWNSHIP - 30 ac1es. more or
0

CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN LIVING LARGE. ASSUMABLE LOAN - Very athactive two story home oilers 3 BRs, 2
balhs, 16x16 LR. formal dining room,
kitchen, enclosed porctl, new carpet, gas
heat. Within walking distance of storesan d
·- schools. Call today.

PRICE DRASTICALLY REDUCED! OWNER
SAYS SELL THIS MONTH - Rio-Center point Rd. !Che~ry Ridge). Appr6x. 75 acres
woodland , fronts on 2 roads, county water
available. $250 per acre.

OWNER HAS DRASTICA~LY REDUCED
THE PRICE OF THIS HOMr- Will finance
with 25% down and 10% interest on the
balance. Victorian style 3 bed room also
oilers l'h baths. kitchen wilh ra~e. rehig.,
OW, and displ .. laundry room, living room,
lam1ly room, carport, unattached garage,
16x32 fenced pool, alum. siding. Attached
beauty shop would help make the payments.

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres more or
less located south of Mercerville. Appro&lt; .
20 A, tillable. Balance wood s, tobacco
base. Ow ner will help linance.

JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR
- In-town convenience, extra nice lot
measures 87 by 174, 3 or 4 BRs, large
kitchen LR, OR, bath, large front porch
"and small screened back porch, gas heat,
unattached one car garage. Call for an ap·
pointment.
' ·

MITCHELL ROAD - GREEN TWP. - .5acre more or less, county water available.
VACANT FARM LAND- Morgan Twp., 84
acres more or less. level and rolling land.
Approx. 33 acres tillable, remainder
woods.

JUSTLISTEO!.- This I year old ranch can
be purcha sed with 5 acres or 20. 1584 sq.
lt. of livmg area, 4 BRs, 2 baths, kitchen
FR, 1Zx24 LR, dining room, carpeting'
electric 88 heat, Anderson wooden ther:
mopanes, county water, SW sc hool district .
CADMUS AREA - 26.5 acr~s. 1~ story
ho~e offers 3 BRs, kitchen, living room,
d1nrng _rpom, bath, carpeting and aluminum Siding. Call for an app~intment. .

I

(ij

MAKE US AN OFFER - OWNERS HAVE
MOVED TO FLORIDA- And would like to
have their home sold this months. like new
split level is located on Debby Drive and
oilers app1ox. 3000 sq. ft. of living area
plus2 car garage and one of the area's nicest pools.·

~

2
m

Clyde Walker

-~
r-

-

-~

C::

3 AC. 1n I he m1drll• "' "\!lG nde. C1ty
water , se sr&gt;.lll'll~o•. '&lt;I reel loca-

tion for Sl .... "' names.

100 ACRES ~/l, CLAY TWP. - Owner fi nancing ~vailable. 25%down, 10% on bal·
ance for 20 years. Call for more informa·
lion.
I

.

B. J. Hairston

vid W1s,ema1n·

REALTOR

REALTOR

REALTOR

446-3644
Eve. 245-5276.

446.3644
Eve. 446-4240

446-3644
Eve. 446-9555

en

FOR SALE
baths, large • eat-in kitchen, OR
hardwood floors, lireplace. FR with fireplace and indoor BBQ. $59,500.
#128

!:

en

2-·
-t

J600 sq. rt. plus lull basement. garage,
fireplace rn LR. woodburner '" basement,
eat-1 n kitchen, 1\.? baths. $63,900.
#224

kitchen
part1a l basement. In-ground
pool, 3 car garage. $69,900.
#238

(j)..

en

2
m
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c·
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DEBBY DRIVE -Brick ranch )Vith 4 BRs.
3 baths, formal OR, LR with fireplace, gas
heat and CA. Buyer's Prolection Plan.
$89,90D.
#205

2:

QUALITY brick home with full basement. 3
BRs, 2\.\ baths, fR, 2 car garage, gas heat
and CA: $59,500.

c:
YOU'LL BE DELIGHTED •• :with this 3BR bi·
level located just minutes from town:·Aiso
fealures 2\! baths, LR, kitchen, carpeting,
heat pump, city school district. Call for
more information.

BRAND NEW HOUSE - 'ttG 1nch on
'' ac. oller"sr&gt;.lll'lll\)~ ""and l R.
$34.900.

Friendly, Hardworking .Knowledgeable Salespeople Do.

g)

.

c::

108 ACRE prrme wn.:;OillG eage. 1h
rnrle N or'~r&gt;.l\: 1'\:" . ""' door to
H.M.C.

ADVERTISING DOES NOT SELL REAL ESTATE

"

c
c

.c

PRICE REDUCED TO $59,9001 - Owner
has bought another home and must sell
this lovely 3 BR ranch on Debby Drive. Ap·
prWI. 1700 sq. ft. dining rm., LR, fR,
kitchen, new custom drapes, carpeting,
woodburnin~ stove, deck, central air, natural wood Siding.
·
1·

IN TOWN. 3 BR. 117 stn• .. "u !ntly re
modeled. 2 '\:~ ?lll\)h~""k yard
$45,000. Sl\
.

:::1

COMMERCI~l BUILDING ~ 62x80 all , 2
steel construction with lireproof insula· n:t
m
lion, has ov~rhead crane, office and bath.
formerly US!'d for boat sales and repai1 . m
located across from Silver Bridge Plaza
wtlh access to Ohio River. Potential unlimiled.

m

~

VERY ATIRACTIVE home on 775 ha s 3 BRs, LR
with woodburner, OR, equipped kitchen and 2 full
baths. 2 car garage. $62,800.
#342

OUTSTANDING RtVr"t/~'.1- 2 BR
mobrle hom• "\) \/\ , porch. Edra
large Z ca c:,Q\;_•• and storage build·
mg $3 1.90u

z

Of ITS OWI ....dE!S_criiH!s
vely white brick home
or 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
room, kitchen with OW, i . microwave
and trash compactor, intercom, central air,
2 car garage, utihty bldg., deck and a ,
20x40 pool. Beautifully landsqped.

CENTENARY
24x65 mo.dular
offers a 15•24 LR,
galley type kitchehn fully equipped, OR with
love ly built-in c ina cabinet. 3 BRs, 2
. baths, carpeting,) cent . arr, electric heat,
storm wrndows and doprs, Bx8 ~tility bldg.
1
Call for an appo1htment.

m.
~:

-.
,-

SMALL 3 BR home 1n town . fu ll basement.
Buyer's Protection Plan. Well kept home.
$38,500.
#230

#201

r- :

•

3 BR brick ranch close to Spring Valley has
l'h bath, attractive kitchen, LR with fire·
place and 2 car garage. 1.5 ac. $62,500.

NICELY decorated 3 BR home has attractive kitchen and dining area, fR wrth warm
fireplace and nice clean bath. Good location . $47,900
·

QUALITY ) BR brick ranc~ with 2 baths.
lormal entrance, LR and· dinrng area and
FR. Heated with energy m&gt;ng gas and
woodburnmg furnace. 1 ac. $76,900.
•
#244

UNIQUE 3 BR home oilers 2 baths. Flo~rda
100m with (ireplace and cathedral ce1lmg.
and eat-in equipped kitchen. Satellite d1sh.
22 ac. $119,000.
. #229

#233

#211

.__________ We Have Many More To

II I

1.11 '1'1/ 7181

'•

CHAROLAIS LAKE - 1'h story contemporary oil ers 4 BRs, su nken LR with cathedral ceiling and 3
living levels. Reduced to $94,500.
#406

REDUCED TO $46 .91' 0 " ( ; BRs. new
krtchen and ~- ·~\:"\)\ carpel , wal ls,
ceilmg ':,1\\.'&lt;-..,.mg. la~ge (en ced
backyard.

1'11

2
m
m
0

..

r-

OWNER ~INANCING- 10%- ADDISON C
TOWNSHIP- 8.8 acres more or less va- •
cant land on Bulaville-Porter Rd. Electric- : ·•
ily, septiq tank. spring. rural water availa· Z
ble. Asking $10,900.
~

I

ADDISON TWP. - Appro&lt;. 7 miles from
Gallipolis. 39\! acres, m/1, fronts on town ·
ship road . All woods and brush. $8,900.

LOVELY 4 BR home with equrpped eat-in kitchen.
FR with fireplae, 3 baths. Qwet wooded locat1on.
$99,000.
.
#101

.

'

mg area, • ~\\ '1. ~ ~~ ~ent wtth rec

and fmr s1':.1) ram1ly room. Fenced
backyard $62 .000.

Real Estate General

walue . Call614-986·4392.

natural gas
a 4 bedroom ranch with lull basement.
Outbuildings and a big garden
area. Just $49.900.00.

•

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II

Choo~-· From--~-------

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

Page-0-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

10. 1985

March 1 0, 1986
72

71

Autos for Sale

71

71

Autos for Sale

_4.,6_-2
_2_8_2_· -=~~
_6_1_4_.4
84 Bronco II low mile1, 2
tone, new radial tires, V -6 ,

PS, AM-FM S-track. CB. 84
E1cort L low miles, auto. PS ,

2 dr. hatchback. 83 Eacort L
4 dr. ttationwagon , auto,
PS, air, luggage rack, low

mHos. Call 814-388-8889
anytime. Call 446--4470 af·
ter 6 .

1976. CutlaS$ Supreme AC ,
PS, PB, cruise, 8 track, new
tires. Call after 5PM , 614·

388 -9880.

owner, 2 dr., pa .. pb .• p .d .
locks. p.seau. ec, tilt wheel ,
AM ~ FM stereo, many extras.
E~tcellant condition. $6000 .

I Call 614-99 2-6271 ,

.

68 Chevy C-30 truck good

72

1977 Mercury Cougar XR7 .

V8 .351 . AT. AC , PB, PS.
AM · FM stereo TP. $1495 .

8, AT, AC, PS. P8, vinyl

Trucks for Sale

1977 Suburban , air. 4
wheal.- no rust. Call 446 ·

roof, AM -f.M radio, power
windows . S1996 . 1975
Ford Ranger. V -8 302, PS .
PB . S1d . transmission .

7500.

*1595 . Call 614 - 367 7760.

Cab, auto trans, 4 wheel
drive camper special. axe .

1979 Ford F-150 Super
cond . Cali 446-4422 .

1979 Buick Skylo•k . 76,000
Portl.and 8t 61 4 -843 -

198l

F-100 4 spd ..
1980

1979 Plymouth Arrow. sun
roof, hatchback . 304-675-

nagotiable. Call 445-1583.
1980 Malibu wagon , 1977
NOYa. 2 dr. hatchback, 1974
wi':'dow van, new carpet.
new seats, would takA trade.

l

.SOD. Cali 446-7626
e'lle' s between 4 -9.

1 979 MercurY Marquis. V -

1 l,h tori wrecker Homes 470,
twin boom. runs and works
good . Mu'tt Hll. can be teen

O.WiH-Rialtor~388-81SS
Mlrril (crllr~-379·2114

Judy

cond .

milet . S1800. Don John·-

1981 Buick Regal one
owner. PS. PB. air cruise.
tilt, AM · FM , c:ass . price

mechanical cond . •110.

1967 Chevy Y, ton PU, good

Call 614·367-7773.

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E.r INC.

4 4 6•6 6 1o

Becky ~Realtor-446-0458
Jim tociwan-Rialtor 446-7181
V'rginia Snith. ~-318-1126
Elizabtth.Long· ~-675-3968

1979 Ford Custom pickup

digital ·clock radio . 10,000

cyl. auto, PS. PB. AM -FM 8
track. rear window de fogger , good cond,

75

miles. Call 614-949-2273.

con d.

675-2486.
1978 Ford Bronco XLT PS,
AC, PC, CC, $3,600 new

1974 Ford PU, good cond.
197~ Pacer, ga1 saver, very
good cond . Call 614-388-

82,500 .00. 304-882-2687
alter 5:00 PM .

call morning 675-7334.

74

Cell 446-7832.

Boats and

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Business

SEWING Machine repairs.
servi ce. Autho rized Si nger

Sales &amp; Service Shi rpen
S ciuors . Fabr ic Sh o p,

Services

Pomeroy. 614 -992 -2284.

Cement Finlther, Rick Ga r·

field, 614 -986--4-464 . Now .

85 General Hauling
driveways. parking Iota. 'Any
1 i ze job . · R e.p I ace o I d · --:---:----:-:--::--:-Concrete.
Jam•• Boy s Water Service.
A tao pools filled . Ca ll 614 82

WHAT SO!Y1E

·81

-

~I"'EAKE'Ft5

Serv 1ces

exc

. THE F~OOFt.

Home
Improvements

RINGLES'S SERViCE, ex-

17 ft . Crestliner. 165
in.board - outboerd, power
tnm prop. power trim tabs,

application}
-2088
or 675-7368304-675
.

perienced carpenter. electri·
cian . maaon, painter. roofing (including ,ot tar

IYt&gt;SI.erda•('!

J

Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446·3888 or
614·446·4477
JIM'S

83

Jumbles: LOOSE ELDER PERMIT TONGUE
Answer: What an Inhibited person usually IsTIED UP IN ." NOTS"

I~;==~=====1;==:;;=====:81

trl-h$ul . 304-675-6286.

Home
Improvements

81

Ken"t Water Service. Well s,
- · 1-eii1iimi, pools fi~ led . Phcn~

- - - - - - --

Cor. Fourth and Pine

Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by tne aboYe canoon.

·Fetty Tree

256 -1141 or 814 -446 1 i75 or 814·446 -7911.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating.

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

PO WHEN ISIVE"-1

14 ft. boat trailer. 40 HP
Johnson, motor. extra prop
$1,150 or best offer .. Call

446-4337.

part. 6,000 on 'new mo1or,
$6,800 or best offer. Can be
teen 40 Burdette Addn. or

9909.

-~------- lc-

1979 S.t 1ucraft

cond. 0785 .00 . Call 304·
896-3458.

1984 o·odgo Coravon .
PS,PB,AC,CC,TW, AM -FM

Rd ..

Michael .. • Painting end Wa l·

lpoparing. Cell 614 -142 2328.

cond ., $3,600 . Call 814245-9183.

1977 Honda 554, Flairing
winshleld , headers,

Ptit NuJnber 1,to work for you:

73 Dodge motor home fair

Shadow, like new 2 700
miles, $2,500 .00. ~all ~ftar
5 PM 304-676-4382.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

84

Home
Improvements

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

one Iefier to eech square, to form
four O!'dinary words.
·

1983 760 CC Hondo

18&amp;3.

73

Campers

Call614-992 -5663.

1peed. standard shift, good
cond, e2,6DO .OO, 304-458·

Ollering CENGUARD'" Insurance Se"ices .

.

~ ~ ~~·

1984 Harley Da'llid'ton XLX .
2400 miles, extra•. excet lant condition. $3500. firm .

F-150. long wheel ba&amp;e, 4

REALTOR®

11\1\lf.\.0 fil1l .~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME 81
by Henri knold and Bob Lee

79 l\liotors Homes

lpd.. new tire,. Call 614-

256-6838.

"lr&amp;"K Molillo ROme ialoolot
Point Ple•nnt.

2635.

19.79 Mustang Ghia 200, 6

M otorcyclea

1 Yamoho 80·CC dirt bike, 1
'\'omoho 100 CC dirt bike. 1
Yamaha 250CC at,..t &amp; dirt
bike, 1975 Toyota Cellca 4

Call 304-675-7241 .

04 . 500 . 00 . 304-675 5403 ..

_

74

'8.

1980 Scirocco F; 5 speed, ·
A-C, AM -FM casaett, front
wheel drive, •cce11orie•.

TOP CASH paid lor •80 1980 Buick Park Ave., one

model and newer uted cart.
Smith Buick· Pontiac. 1 911
E81t
A
G
·
ern ve., allipolis. Call

Trucka for Sale

Autos for Sale

.

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0-7

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

Home
Improvements

Motorcycles

&amp;

614·367 -0823 or 81 4·387·
7741 night or day.

Waugh ' s Water Se rv ice ."
WellS, cisterns, pool s. rea'so·
nabla rates . Nig ht or day.

PLASTIC
GAS PIPE

Cell614· 266-1240.

HEAT·

up

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

Excavating .

1163 Sec. Ave., Gallipolis.

Good· 1 Exca'llating. basemenu , footers . driveway!ll, ..
teptic tanka, landscaping.
Call anytime 131 4 -446 ·
4637 , James L. Davison. Jr.
owner.

614-446-7833 or 614-44 61833.
A &amp; M Furniture Manufacturing. St . At , 7; Crown

· 20' ft. - delivered
Also pipe connections and water pipe.

City, Qh . Call 614 -2561470, call Eve. 446 -3438.
Old &amp; new

. I

~pho ste red .

S&amp;H PLASTICS
Central (Vienna). W. Va.
PH. 304·295·8615

Cadillac Coupe c._.
i
loaded. many new
QJn•. . . ~ l , ~QQ, 1-R?'..@ nu.m derbird Town Landau ,

82.800
0577.

Call 814-446 ·
1982 Camero assume loan .

1984 Dodge Daytona
Turbo, 5 spd .. air. tilt. cruise.
AM·FM cassette. Call 614·

258-1436.

1983 Honda Accord LX 3
door hatchback, 5 speed,
PS. PB. air. stereo cassette,
exc. cond, Call 446-3543 .

Call 304-675-5166 .

76 VW Dasher runs good,

S350. Call 675-7241 .

'78 Trans Am. automatic,
PB. AC. stereo. $3.500 .00.

30'4-576 -2218 .

1982 3A ton Chevy truck .
Silverado. 6 .2 diesel, 4x4,
auto'm atic, loaded . Call614-

949-2437.

---,.-----~
·

614·985-3885.

Brok•r· ...
Cheryl Lemley, ·
Meigs Counly Associale
Phone 742-3171

4 wheel drive $600. Call

814-367-7238 . .

1976 Dodge Chargar Sport,
expect the ~es!! 19_84 Olds
Cutlass Supreme 306 V-8. 4
barrel AM -FM cass .• 6,800
m) les . 1 982 Chevetta
25,000 mi ., 2 dr .• red., auto.
AM-FM caas., very nice. Call

814-245-9555 or614 -2465131 . B ilo B Auto Sales.
1964 Crown Imperial push
button transmission.
good cond._ I;!~;~JI
1 976 Jeep Wagoneer, n8w
paint. 1977 Monte Carlo
new paint &amp; sun root . Call

446 -0665.

Call 614-388-9857 .

. new warranty,

S1 ,760. Call446-8361 .

II. l."Bud" McGHEE

1,977 Olds S550. 1977
Chrysler 5350, 1976 Oodge

loaded, 35,000 actual miles.

1983 Honda

1981 Honda lnterst1te for

3972.

49.000 mi. 1983 Dodga

new

undef

Real Estate General

8 track, S8.00D. Call 446·

Omni 4 spd .. 36.000 mi..
AM -FM c~ss .. deluxe pkg .

Like

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing . Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 yaars experience .
specializing in built up roOf.

Shadow 600. 1,700 mi.

81 Monte Carlo t· tops, AC,
PS. PB, tilt steering, AM-FM

1980 Ford 160 Cargo van,
new tires, exhaust &amp; wheels,

-lc-

1984 Ford Ranger, 4 cylinder, 4 speed, AM-FM
cusetta . 17,000 mi. Call

MMR 561 - NEW LISTING- Spacious 2 story brick home
on Rutland St. in Middleport. 3 bedroom s 211 baths, library,
lormalliving room, family room and more! lovely hardwood
floor s throughout. Double porches to enjoy the large
130'x180' lot. Call now for showing.
'
MMR 560- Vinyl siding and Anderson windows are only a
couple of nice things aboul this home' 2 bedrooms, low utili·
ties and nice sloping loHocaled on lincoln Heights. Make a
nice starter home. Ready to move into at only $24,900.'
MMR 559 - Racine. 3 bedrooms, bath, nice size kitchen
and large 12'x24' living room. Heats wilh woodburner. Neat
and cute as an be. Sells lor $29,900.
MMR 558- Newer 3 bedroom ranch. situaled on 2 acres in
the country. Gas well , pine and lruit trees. Seils for $47,500.
MMR 539 - This home would make a real investmenl' 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, dining room, full basement and carport.
Small lol with outbuilding. On Easl Main. ONLY $15;000.
562- - NEW LISTING .:._ Approx. 611 acres fenced with
newly remodeled 2 story home. 2 baths, ~rge modern equipped
k~chen 3 bedrooms, lamiiy room w~h woodoorner, attached gar·
a~e. Nice country setting wiltl 2 ponds. Cali today for showint

LLIIIIIIN,~

.OF HOME" IN JHL

story, pleasing, eye- ·
bed,rooms, dining room. family room,
master bedroom L4'x29', large walk-in closet.
new carpet. Relinished origmal oak trim, brass
light fixtures, barnyard, barn, garage, other build·
mgs. 5 acres lenced pasture. This won't last. Stale
Rt. 775. ·
H792

·LOOK rORWARD TO COl!fHG HOME to tl\ts
unique . remodeled home. 3 large bedr?oms, 2
baths, eat-in kitchen, lormal dmmg, spac1ous forma l enlry. Deck, barn. 3 acres. Owners have reduced price and will consider reasonable otter.
Make an appointmenl toda~.
H756

· sale . Call 614·388·8244.

.I!~W

.USTI NG - HOllE FOR AL.l .SE~SDNS Well cared for 14'x70' Vindale mobile home
situated on almosl an acre lawn. Pleasing lioor
pian. 2 large bedrooms, separale dining area, central ;rir, completely underpmned and tied down.
Covered fronl patio. Unatlached garage. Only
$21 ,900.
H799

ng

white alumn for
10. like new,

Reai.Estate General

STUTES
EAL ESTATE

1980 Old• Delta 88 . 350
motor. AT .. AC ., good body.
higl;l mileage. uses no oil,
been serviced regular .

82200.00. Coli 614-7422503 .

OWNER FINANCING POSSIBLE lor qualified
purchaser. One story 1568 sq. lt., 3 1iedr1ioiifs;-2-·baths, low utiiilie s, close lo downlown. schools,
etc. Low maintenance, exce llenl condilion . Clean
and ready to move in. You can own this one' Only
$50,0001

POSSIBILITY OF LOAN ASSUMI'T
live home with invit1ng counlry
rooms, 2 balhs, large dining area , i
with
dishwasher, spacious l1vmg room. unlini shed
family room, 2 car garage. Heat pump, central air.
Over 1 acre lawn . Within 7-8 miles ol town . C1ty
school s. $59,900.
.
.
H780

1287.

Real Estate General

TEAFORD
Real Estate

m
LJ:!
RE~l1gll

BRIC_!( RAN,~H IN CITY -:-3 bedrooms, balh, dinmg room, l1vlng "room , ~'!chen , otlhty- room. ·At~tached .I car garage w1th breezeway. N1ce. SIZe
lawn w1th new cham link fence 1n back. Nicely
landscaped . Home m e•cellent cond1110n.
#740

OWNER WANTS AN OFFER - Must sell 3 bed room, I 'h slory home w1th new ·carpel, basement,
garage. Close lo town an d hospital. Pomeroy
$34,000.
#738

fi;

PERFECT ONE FLOOR PlAN - 2,000 sq. fl. in
this lovely brick ranch, formal entry lo sunken Jiv·
ing room. lormal dining room. 3 bedrooms, 2\?
baths, large kitchen with eating area . family room
with fireplace, ulil1ty room, mwd room, 2 car altached garage. Home Proteclion Pian.
#781

IIOOON RANCH -··an~ 2 minutes lrom town. 2 o:res of woodland.
f-k!me le.atures formal entry, lR and dm1ng room, mOOern krtcherl and

lreaklast area. lam1~ room wilh wb lireplace. 3 BRs. 2baths, 2car garage.
B'lb lnl. Rate could be assumed. MAKE US AN OFFER!
SfCLUDED PRIVATE NEIGHBORHOOD w11h1n walking distance to
downtown and city schools. Brick tri·level hOme has a formal entry, living

room wilh fireploce and abrealhlak1ng view ollhe Oh• Valoy. Stepsaver
kitchen w~h bUih·in modern ap~.nces, .den With fireplace, bu11t~n
lxlokcase and hall balh M1dd~ level o"e" ma~er bedroom Wllh lull bath. 2

large bedrooms, cerarr11c tiled full bath. lowiH level With large family room.
4th bedroom. slorage area, and ~undry/hobby. room. This home has

..

~.../'"'

rncenlly been recar~edlhrcugltout Screened-In back llOICh wtth bulh·in
barbecue grii, double carport wilh slcrage areil. Landscaped lot lo accenl
·lhe beauly of lhis qualily home. Give us .a call ttxlay.

" &lt;'&lt;i
Pt~ 'f -·· '~'!

~~

216 E. 2nd St.

.

Phone

RIO GRANDE AREA- 39.50 ARES ol vacanlland. 40 black wainul
lrees, lois ol woodland . A walerlali. Blacklop rd . LAND CONTRACT
- 10%down &amp; 10%inl. rale.
. ,

·1 -(6141-992·3325
50 ACRES - Near langs ville - 7 rm. home, barn &amp;
ol her bldgs. on good gravel
road .
NICE HOME - Lg dimng,
family rms., 3 lg bdrms.,
new balh &amp; good carpehng.
96 ACRES - F;ee ga s, lg.
barn, remodeled home antl
fences.
1
RUTLAND - N1ce remodeled J bdrm home. mod.
k1t lg. level lol:
BUSINESS PROPERTY - Excellent relurn on your mvest·
ment Middleport or Pomeroy .

,

YOU CAN1 BEAT THE LOCATION - ROUTE
HOLZER HOSPITAL UNLIMITED POTENTIAL FOR
INVESTOR VERY NICE 3 BEDROOM HOME HAS EAT-IN KITCHEN.
LIVING AND FAMILY ROOMS, GARAGE, PLUS INCOME FROM NEW
MOBILE HOME AND TRAILER PAD. CALL US. YOU Will BE PLEA·
SANTLY SURPRISED AT THE LIST PRICE'
'YOUR FAMILY DESERVES BUT THE BEST! AND THIS HOME
QUALIFIES. LUAN WOOD SIDING, GIGANTIC DECK SO YOU CAN
ENJOY THE FANTASTIC VIEW. 4 BEDROOMS, 22&gt;:20 LIVING
ROOM, FIREPLACE. FUU. BASEMENT, 2 CAR GARAGE. .6'h BEAU·
TIFUL ACRES, LAKE DRIVE, RIO GRANDE. CALL FOR AN APPOINT·
MENl

LG. HOME - One lloor ·
2205 sq. ff. ol floor spaoe, 31g.
bedrms., 3 lull balhs, maid's
rm .. 2 family rms.. f1replace,
lg. bar-8-Q&amp; I. 79 acres. Good
qualily home buill in 1983.

·· NEW LISTING - 6 rms., new
FA furnace, new kitchen, dbl.
S.S. sink, ail rooms carpeted,
1ust out of town. Askmg
$25,000.
Sue Murphy, Milton Roush
Heltn, Vircil and
Bruce Tulord

Housing
Headquarters

EASY LIVING- $35,000- Verycheerlul 3 bedroom, 2 balh, refrigerator, range, dishwasher,
woodburner, cement front and back porch, 'A
acre Wllh mobile home hookup: Home is in excellenl condition .
#747

PROFITABLE INESTMENT- 2 story home with 2
bedrooms, kitchen, lorlnal dining, iivmg room, ba sement. Aluminum siding plus 2 car garage with 2
bedroom aparlmenl. Additional small elliciency
aparlmenl. Ali presenlly rented wilh good income.
In-town location. Priced in 40s.
#760

ROOM TO ROAM on th1s 2 acres (approx) iol, 4
bedroom home Wllh large hvmg room, kilchen,
bath, basement, lrUII trees· and storage building
$33,900.
•
.
#727

PRICE REDUCED on lhls very altractive 3 bedroom ranch pl~ s 8'.1 acres more or less. liying
· room with woodburner, kitchen and dining area
have been recently remodeled, 2 car garage,
30'x24' oulbuilding, IO'xl2' woodshed . cellar
with 14'x12' shop on top, rural water.
H768

BUSINESS BUILDING - 5
rm . one floor with water. ga s.
chimney. Only $6,500.
NEW LISTING - 4 BRs, 2
balhs, FA lurnac~ garage 1n
basement and 2 lots. Used as a
duplex, in Pomeroy. New vinyl
sidinh\ Asking S40.000.

OWNERS LEAVIN~ FOR MEXICO and mu st sacrifice this charming 14'•70' Holly Park mobile
home situated on a 2 acre tract Furnished. For·
mal dining area , spacious Jiving room, 2 bed ·
room s, 1'h baths, 12'!35' covered patio, 24'i24:
garage. Shown by appomtmenl. Reduced price.
#761

insulated, large kitche~. electric heat, .84 acre
yard . P11ced at $29,900.
#763

NEAR TUPPERS PLAINS2 bedrm. !railer and about
orie level acre. $.14,000.

A HONEY fOR THE MONEY! NICE 2 BEOROOM fRAME RANCH
IN CITY ATIACHED GARAG[
l.NlGE BACK YARD. BEnER
HURRY! $29,500.

lB.

Gl
.... .....
...

~ ­
~

c.Aut!MJ Cnmth~F,RooQ!oA
- -'i\'f6-J6~ !,; .
Hn ~. •sex;tate

ACREAGE - FENCED PA31UR[
REMopELED 2 BtOOOOM fRAME
M•
HOM[ OUTBUILDINGS. NEAR ,.,.~, 446'-3383
MINERs'illl[ PRICED TO SELL AT
~ 1. ~;J\_go""'O.te

f...

plice

$17.500. ,

,IN CITY DN ADRIAN DRIVE - 3
llfl RANCH HAS fAMILY ROOM,
LOW f&gt;t\IN!EN_A_NfE. _V!~Yl_ S~
INIJ,

~l:IIU:U

tll\l;II"JAii!iCNltr

QUIET STREET. ASUPER BUY AT

$40,IXXI.

te~1S&lt;n ,,-.,~

4 6.•f 7

Qf) ~ust. gheet_

.

-

n".M

'

_n

t'I~IO

:;,ntdiJU~:I.0 -+-'

&amp; J's Siding Vinyl &amp;
aluminum siding &amp; roofing .
Free estimates. Call 614·

387-7468 .

SUNDAY PUZZLER
FREE NATURAL GAS
111 A. CLEARED
140 ACRES
ROLLING lAND
Approx . 10 miles fr~m Galli pol-·' Approx. 40 A tillable, 60 A.
is-lots ol Raccoon Creek Iron- pasture, tile block barn, approx.
!age-appro• . 30 acres Rae- 4()x60' eqlip. shed and klts of
coon Creek botlom land. Tolal of other buildings, 4 cherry trees,
aprox. 60 acres, tillable with lo· 3 apple, grape arbor, Slream
bacco base. N1ce 40'x60' barn . flows through property. All
6 rooms, 3 bedroom home wilh minerai rights go, 6 room
free natural gas, to heat your home, 3 BR, basement, storm
home in winter and cook your doors and . windows. Buin•n
food. lots of fruit trees . Nice krtchen cabinets, cook stove &amp;
counlry selling See this one. elec. refrig,, fuel oil forced air
·
#419 lurn. Plenty of water, 2 garages.
Areal good farm, ooly I \&gt; .niles
to grocery and school. Call now.
"""''L~..,.,.,..= ...,..,. ,.,.,....._•..,...."":'-"-"""' "'"-"""""~ ................,..,.....,jtfi....l7...

JUST LISTED - 12 EVANS HEIGHT-S- Truly a
aelightlul ranch home. 3 bedrooms~kitchen , tlln·
ing room, lull divided basement, with tamily room
and fireplace. Range, refrigerator, dishwasher.
Cily schools, water and sewer. Aflordabie price
$31,000.

GARDEN SPACE HERE' 5 ACRES, BEAUTIFUL 3 BEDROOM
HOME, CUSTOM BUllTTO CONSERVE ENERGY. EAT-IN KITCHEN,
2 BATHS, CARPORT. THIS IS A MUST SEE! $54,000.

.

446~7699

J

ACROSS

Toyota Corolla . 4

1982 GT Mustang black,
exc. cond . Call 614 · 256 -

PH. OFFICE

Rogers Basement
Waterproofing .

Sonseerhay
Bonnie l. Stutes
(Sonny) Garnes Cathy Clark Burdette
Broker
Assoc.
Assoc.
446-4206
4~·2707 Evenin1s 388·8118 Evenin1s

Canaday Realty.
.

8425 .00. Call
7403 .

Ask Yourself This Question-Then List ·with Us
•Willis T. Ludingham, Realtor, Ph. Home 446-9539

Call collect 1-614-237 ·
0488, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.

446-4206

Real Estate General

387-0441 :

FOR
THE WHOlE .
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOn WORLD?

Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantee. Local references
turnilhe&lt;t. ·Free ·astih1et81!1 .

-

1972 Olds Delta 67.000 mi.
exc cond . $700. Call 614 -

M~MB'~

$100.00, 304-675·3288.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

LOVELY HOllE IN THE COUNTRY - 3 bedroom
ranch can be bought w1lh 3 or 25 acres. Home has
new kilchen with all appliances,' formal dining
room with beautilul chandelier, living room with
stone lireplace, breaklast room, lamily room, par·
tial basement, utility room , garden tub in bath.
Barn and outbuilding.
#707
NEW ON MARKET - Start out or retire I ~ this 3
bedroom mobile home. Extra large porch. I acre
lot. City schools $32,000.
#795

. OWNER MAY TRADE FOR HOME - $30,000 will
buy a comlorlable 3 BR mobile home and 25
. beaul1ful acres of land . Spring, outbui lding, very
well
KC schools. 5
from St. Rt.

#714
OWNER MOVING TO FLORIDA- Must sell this 5
yr. old, 3 bedroom ali electric ranch on St. Rt. 160.
Hardwood floors are carpeled, fully insulaled, ba ·
sement w1th garage plus a 2 car detached garage.
S1tualed on a very nice I II acre yard . $35,000.
#764
SECLUDED 4 ACRES - Convenient counlry liv·
ing will be yours in this charming 4 bedroom , 2
bath ranch. Washer, dryer, range, 4 acres of natural scenic land. large 2\! car garage with work·
shop. 2 horse stall barn, rural water plus much
more.
#771 "
IAN D - Desirable lract, 96.62 acres more or less
on St. Rt. 124. Approx. 30 acres tillable. Pond,
some older barns.
#723
·owNER NEEDS QUICK SALE- 4 bedroom home
located on 1.8 acres, more or less. large family
room wilh fireplace and beamed ce1ling. Den or
ofl1ce, dining room, 2 large barns, tobacco base.
. #688

JUST LISTED - BE A PROUD OWNER - This
home sparkles with warmth and will invite you in
lor a tour . Very atlractive .carpet throughout 3
bedrooms, 12'xl7' kitchen wilh l ·Brick. Garage.
A11 cond1l1onmg un1L Hoi water heater recently
replaced. low maintenance. lovely fenced back
yard. Most for your money. $38,500. C1ly schools.

.

75 Con11nued slory

21 Hold on property

77 Lease
78 Walk on

22 Call
,23 Vegetable
24 Habilual

80 Rips
81 Prefix: 1hree
82 Let go

26 East Indian
native
soldiers
28 Altar. screen

84
86
87
89

Enthusiasm
Stern
Interior : pl.
Sum up

137 Pitcher

33 Female horse

96.Anglo-Saxon slave

139 Sunburn
140 G3elfc 141 Chore
143 Frame of mtr'Jd

36
38
40
4l

145 Saloon suds
146 Frame of laltice-

45 Idle challer

A washing
Roman statesman
Lessen
Ripped
43 Tense

97·Antlered an imal
100 Chal dean c•ty
102 Weary
lOS Wtld plum

109 Corn bread

46 More msane

11 2 Egy phan singing

49 Ray
51 Damp

girl
113 Oblalns
t 14 Command

153 Twirl
154 Permit s
156 Lead
157 Nerve network s

52 Tacltle Qrgan
of an1mal
53 Transp orted w1l h
del1ghl

116 Close-fitting cap
118 Me tal strand
120 Join
121 Trop1 cal fru1t

160 Separa tes

59

123 Stanctard
125 Elderly woman of

work

,148 Black eyes: slang
·150 Ravages
'
152 Admillance

~7 C1ty In Switzerland

~2~9~S"icko,~tl~is~h~r;o7r~-~-~-=-~-~~~~S-~~~~=-~=-~--~~~~-~~-~5;b-~N;~~,~.. ~~~~~:=~~;~~~~~~~~, ~·~~~====::~~~
30 King of beasts

34 Suffix like
35 Colorless
37 Pertaining to
the laity .

9B Want
.....
99 Lethargy
101 Narrow wa~erway
103 Remainder
104 Worm
105 Mix
106 Symbol lor n ickel

39 lrrltale

32 Bog d()INrl

33 Additional

4,0
41
42
44

Heci(Je
Three. in Spain
Narrow, flat board
Metal fastener

sud den
surpnse

DOWN

60 Lairs

1 Harsh to the taste
2 Scissors
3 Warning signs

107 Kind oltype: abbr.

4 Large bird

69 Three-loed sloth

131 Choose

108
110
111
112

5 Narrate
61ndlan mulberry
7 Sesame
8 Meadows

70 Ot sb anded S1 ng1ng
gr oup
72 Sw1f1
74 Symbol l or

132' Essence
133 Goddess of
discord
134 Chore

Cut
Nahoor sheep
Latin conjunction
Fish sauce

113 Donated

47 Cries.of derision
48 Pierce

115 Alternating
current: abbr .

50 Tie

Nice and solid 2 bedroom home located on State Highway
with no real close neighbors. Rural water system plus drilled
and a dug well. Extra waler tap lor a mobile home hookup.
Nice restlul area after a day's work.
#574

52 Flowerless plant

. LOOK WHAT SO UTILE WILL BUY
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, lovely wooded country setting situated
on State R oute . lots, lots more. Possible land contract.
.I
#621

9 Impart gradually

lantalum

10 Soft lim estone
11 Ndbleman

76 A state. ab bf
77 Happen adatn '

117 Develop

12 Underworld god

79 Perlormed

119 For example: abbr.

13 Span is h article

83 Bnm

53 Sun god

120 Stupid lellow

14 Gauge

55 Tints
57 Old Testament:
abbr.

121 Force delay
124 Wife of Geraint
1261ndetinite amount

15 Devoured
16 Flatiron
17 Makes amends

86 Ocean s
87 Arrow po1son
88 Bird 's home

58 Was borne

127 Partner

18 1s defeated

89 News-gathering

59 Withered

128 Lower In rank

20 Go by water

130 God ol love
132 Skin ailment
133 Dines

23 Ssucy
25 Brown kiwis
27 Calling

60 Physi~ian: abbr.
62 High mountain
64 Makes lace

dignlly

61 Nerve network
63 Iro ns
65 Let 1t st and
67 Bitter vetch

46 Clayey eanh

I Yr ACRES WITH COUNTRY SETIING

93 Reach
'94 Near: abbr.

126 No t abundan t
127 C'lurch servtce
129

Top

01

house

.'

'

136 Considera bl e
138 Musical sig ~s
140 ' · Lohe n gr 111 ' ·

hemne
14 1 Part of leg

• 85 Rema1ned at ease

142 Woody plan!
144 Fallin drops
, 47 Hawaiian wreath '
148 Health resort
149 Mustc as wntten

organ1zatton: abb1 .

1P1 Macaw
153 Compass point
155 Saini: abbr.

90 Gtve
91 Impel forward
92 Gr""k letter

35'x35' GARAGE &amp; 3 LOTS
2 mobile home or building sites wilh all utililies available 3 waler laps. Garage with air
and other ma1or air
lcois,
heat in gar -

water. I
i
.
1
slream crossing properly. P11ced
$15,500.

NOIITHUP AREA - 3.BR oomo. Large modern eal·in knchen. family roon,
i'l~g room. office or den. Nice klt and ~or age t.Jiiding Cily school• Shown
bY appL Pnced ~w 505.
IIOOERJI BI-LEVU! - Localedln ll)od nfilhborhood off st. Rl. 35. Three
or 4 bedrooms, IJrmal dining and living room, 2~ balhs, fR, lg mod.
kitchen w/Jots.ol good qualily cabinels. Let'sgel ready lor summer. ll's i"~
arour&lt;l lhe oomer. !6x36 swimm~g pool, orlll' deck area. Cily schools
.Priced right 50s. Lo~ ~ house ~r the money .

#698
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION and convenient iocalion makes this home righllor you Eat-in kitchen
with range and refrigerator. -2 or 3 bedroom s, ba ·
sement, I car garage plus attached carporl w1lh
concrele floor, B:xl2' outbuilding, nice corner lot
City schools .
#755

U ACR£S - More or If$, 3 bedroom mob1~ hOme, a~ 2 additional
I!ICbOe oome hOokups. KYJ!r Creek school district. Priced in lhe 20s.

6.7 ACRES - More or less oi vacant ond. 2Sx50 t.Jilding with ooncrele
floors. Gas is availa~e. Owner wiling lo lake traier in on trade. Cily schools.
Call IJr rror• dela~.

FA.RM - Approx. 60 acres w1lh barn, 2 sheds,
ch1cken house. garage. Double wide home with 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, living room. eat-in kitchen
with refrigerator and range. Property located al
St. Rt. 141. Owner anxious to sell.
H778

@ 19H4 Century 21 Real Estate Corporation ItS truslee for tl'te N~f: I» and,. - trademarks ofCf'ntury 21 ReafEstate l'nrJMJratitlll . Printt-el ln~ · S.A. P..ql.lllll h1usl n~ lli)jl~trtun it~ (i)
EACH OPFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED.

14 Fundamenlal
19 Sol of bells

28 Irritate
3 1 1n secX eggs

•

40 ACRES Tl MBER - 3 m1les oil Rt 7, Hannan

ONLY $19,9001- A value you can 't beat. 3 bedroom, lfame ranch. Approx. 1~ acres. Slorage
bUIIdmg. Good garden area. Close to Ewington
area.
N753
'
IN TOWN- Owner may help f1nance tlus oldc12
story home at 3rd Avenue. Includes 2 bedrooms,
family room, nat. gas heat. Garage. $20,000.
N737

2 ACRES PLUS NICE COUNTRY HOllE
Large 12 room remodeled honie. 6 bedrooms, 2 baths, with
modern kitchen. Home covered with carefree aluminum sid ing. Thermopane windows, 2 sundecks, luei oil FA furnace
with a wood burner insert. 4 car garage and numerous stor age bldgs. 2.093 acres. Rolling level land. A real Country
Gentleman home. Phone now..
_
-' #578

owned
6 Husb8nd of
Gudrun
10 Give up

134-0ffspring
135 Toad

SOMEONE · WANTS YOU I HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALL USII

#776

WANT ELBOW ROOM! -Raise iou r meal and polatoes on 4 acres of levelland. Home with 3 bed rooms, modern kitchen, bath . Some new And erson windows and olher improvem enls. 011 Rod ney-Bidwell Road. low price
#697

with 7 rooms carpeted. 4 bed·
rooms,
basement plus 3 car garage. Good barn
appro•.
plus chicken hlluse appro~. 12'•30'. Ap- ·
pro•. 10 acres tillable and 20 acres pasture with large pond.
Beautilul location with half mile frontage on blacktop stale
highway.
#598

1 Item of value

66 Symbol for
tellurium
6B Cyprlnoid fish
69 Solar disk ,
70 Type of block
71 Young salmon
73 Substance

HOUSE TO GIVE AWAY - ALMOST - ONLY SIUOO.OOif - a
bodrooms, 2 ~Ill)' • cily. Large iol; 40x 170. Formal living room, dining
,_, lam~y room, modern ~!chen. 721 Third Ave. Shown by appl
LOCATED IN COUNTRY - LR, 3 BRs. kllchen, balh. ulfily room, cedar
peneling, luliv carpeted, 3ir rondrtlone:l, seveial ap~i!'"~ washer, d~er.
0ree metal oult.Jiklng gatllen, 16 .,..,_ wil sell lor S3t000.
·'

.
A-FRAME HOllE on .65 acre lol mere or loss. 2 or 3 bedrooms,}',\

bllhs Nving room, k"chon. ulllily ri!Qm. third bedroom could be

used ior family room, \1.1 basement unfinished, 2 stoves, refrigeiatar,
washer and dryer included . Priced !Os.

EICEUEJIT LOCATION - w.ikin&amp; di!llnt.e locily sc1100s. Moder~4
bedroom home. 21ami~ rooms, 2 ball1s. t.J1h·ln kitchen, iNtng 100111, [.Ciily
001Jby~sri1'1Jt
lr~ cebl, scroen.t;&lt;!:_in_!!.'~:~~.'!~~~
wwmr
. · ~p.
rree!"IIIIU ·IUIIJI! ·IrUU! . nvr'~''n~r'ti'Cil"!Jl~
lcr. £""11
.
.

1:

home.
1 or build a new home and operate a
body shop or mecha · garage. Approx . \! mile off highway
35 West ol Gallipolis. Business w1lh your home nearby. -·
N624
.
BUILD! NG LOTS
21ots in Bidwell area. Suilable for mobile home or build your
own home. Rural water. Buy both lor '$2,800.
N608

I

VACATION CAMP BY BLUE LAKE
Owner linancing, sundeck, rural water, septic syslem , electric. Buy it w1th camping trailer or withoul, ccncrele pad.
Great fishing! Buy and move right in.

..
'

LOW DOWN PAYMENT - OWNER FINANCING
Are you looking lor a 2 bedroom home overlooking the Ohio
River with litlle mainlenance. Beginner home or retiremenl
home. We have it.

8 ACRES
Within 10 minutes drive to downtown Gallipolis, City school
·system. Has hookup lor mobile home. Gailla ru1al water,
electric and septic tank. Nightlighl on pole. 200 loot frontage
on Graham School Road. Timber. Building sites. Call now.

11477

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I

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•

~ :p~ljgge~~D~-8~-~The~~S~u~nda~y~T~ime~~s-~S~en~t~ine~l=====P~o~m~!l~ro~y~~M~idd~le~po~rt~~G~e~lli~po~l~is~,~O~h~io~P~o~int~PI~18~a~sa~nt~,~W~.~V~a~.============~Ma;;;rCI;;;h~~1;0·;;1;;9;;8;:;6

~ ltegulation
~ against

safeguard
higher rates

~-

Riverboat men read
because of librarian

EDrt'OR'S NOTE - Student
Jor Free .Enterprise.
• (li.A.F.E.) at ·Rio Grande Coilege
, 'riD be submitting a series of
~. commentblg on economic
.~ 111111 conditions that affect
':l!evtt.ellltem Ohio. Ills S.A.F.E.'s
:'economtc IMues llllllcondltlons that
"'1nroup tbe8e atticleS, area resi· 'lleals will become more Informed
AIJoal die ~bject of economics- a
. .bject which Imposes major 1ni111jiiCe on all of our Individual and
_,.,.,unlly dedslons.
-;
..- - -

term tigtdlty of ptice commonly
associated with regulation. __
In referring to the regulation that
the stale places on utility companles to supply their se!VIces in that
slaleorapartofthatlsinretumfor
the tight to operate without competltlon. The state also assumes the
light i:oteg-ulale tiie utilily compan les' ratt'S. The public regulation ·of
utilities Is concerned dl,reclly with
the rates and service focal points of .
contact between thecoinpanlesand
the public. _Regulation is · also
concemed with any and all aspects
org&lt;WI&gt;:a tlon. Jinanc·

GRANITE CITY, Ill. (AP)-Cold
Wind whips down tile concrete-alley
of Locks 'Z7 on the Jllltsslsslppl River
as "Lonesome" Jim Hearon Jeans
over a felice to ·lower a bucket of
books and magazlnes to waiting
barge workers.
The offering lncluded a farming
manual, a Reader's Digest and
Playboy magazllle. The Playboy
was scooped up, but nothing else.
Hearon hoisted up the bucke.t and
began waiting for the next crew to
pass by.
For three years, rain or shine,
Hearon,
has acted as librarian of

:::.~
• ·~

that bear on rates and services. As
consumers, many of us feel that
regulation Is. as quoted. "a little too
much, a llttletoolate,"meantngthe
regulation 'ts ·costly and slow.
Regulation attempts to protect and
aid both consumers and the ut!llty
companies, but In many-cases, th_e
latter party enjoys partial treat-

material to the men and women who
ride the river for up to 30 days '·
straight.
Sometimes, they thank Hearon.
Mostorthetlme, though, their faces
quickly disappear Inside the pages.
"That's the greatest, for them 10
h
love the reading so well t ey 1ose
themselves.. said Hearon who

•

~. Am...redom

S.A.F.E. Program
RioGrandeC.ollege
·~· RJO GRANDE - Each year
millions of Americans are faced·
with the dlfflcul!y of paying
monthly utility bills. We distribute
wr hard earned money to pay for
ConvenienceS.. like water, gas for
~atlng, phone, electric, etc. For

-····~~ .J!I~ ~f .IJ!! J!,~O ~~e .~ac!,pr&lt;Jbl!;pls

'l1IE COOKIE'&gt; ARE COMING -Meigs County Girl Scout cookie
customers will be receiving their orders just as soon as the girls can
make their deliveries. Julie Buck, left, of Pomeroy Junior Troop 1276,
sold 132 boxes of. cookies to become Big Bend West's high seDer.

..
c.
.

oal production on upswing

. LANCASTER - Not that eve- . ryone would want·tt; but American
• Electric Power's fuelsupplydepart\ ,;. ll)ent said it - will produce enough
·• coal at its mlnes to gove every
• Ohioan more than a ton of coal this
year.

.

: , J .E. Katl!c, senior vice president
::: of fuel supply, said that AEP's five
-- • mines will produce -- aoouf'12:3
:: mlllion tons of coalln 1~ .
: The latest U.S. Census put Ohio's
~ population at 10.6 m!ll!on people.

AEP, however, doesn't provide
electricity to ·all10.6 million, but to

projects included
in bid opening

2.7 mlll!on Ohioans.
~atllcsaid thepowersystem will
purchaseanother28.7mlll!ontonsto
prepare for a forecasted burn of
about 44 million tons tWs year. The
AEP System provides electricity to
more thap 7 million pe9ple in Ohio
and six other east-central states.
"AEP doesn't pian io' b"u""rd""e"'n"'e"'a"'
ch:---···--~ ..... - ·--·· ..··--· ..... ...... __
ofthose7miulonwtthnearly6tonsof
coal, but turn It Into electricity
Instead, Katl!c said.

J Couples file for marriage

.,

w!thwt the prOmise that two union . rnent on Thursday's talks, saying
Orrtclals. hold posts on the 11- they had reacl)ed a "sensitive"
1
memberboard.
,
stage.
Union arid company negotiators · "We're just talking. That's the
resumed discussions In Pittsburgh only thlngJ can tell you;' Rusen said
last week on changes to the CUJTent
In a telephollf&gt; Interview Thursday
contract aimed at trlmmlng the red
night.
Ink from Wheeling-Pitt's ledgers.

G.L. Valentine

Funds released
POMEROY - State Auditor
Thomas E. Ferguson announced the
March dlstrlbut!on of $61,479,844 In
Aid to Dependent Children to644,012
recipients In OWo's 88 counties .
Meigs County received $227,426
for 2,483 recipients.

was

, personnel se!"'-.'!ces

--l:vide
· ----1
, ......~

A .-.D. _ _,t,t___ ---L .
n.i!J.1 UJJ~rl'l u.mn- u~

!!'..anager:T.atJ_~

company's headquarters at
Piketon.
Valentine joined OVEC at the
Kyger Creek plant In November
1954 as an Instrument mech;mlc In
the results department, afterwork·
lng for the. OVEC construction
department slslce February 1954. .
· In March1969hewaspromotedto
plant personnel assistant and to
safety supervisor In October ·1977.
Valentine · Is a graduate of Rio
Grande College with a bachelor's
degree -l.'1 ~emcnta!j.r educatinn. He
and his wife, Clarice, and daughter,
Ann, 13, reside at Patriot Star Route.
GALLIPOLIS - Charles E.
. Hampton, safety administrator for
Woodland Center~ Inc., has been
named first vice chairman of the
public employees section for the 55th
All-OWo Safety Congress and Ex·
h!b!t, set for April 2·4 at the Clarion
Hotel in Cincfunatl.
Hamptonandseveralothersafety
administrative experts will discuss
specific aspects and problems
relating to safety and health. The
public employees section . wlll be
beld April3 at 9:30a.m.
The congress rea ture meetings,
exhibits.-demonstrat!ons and films.
Among the section meeting topics
are construction, rubber, food and
beverage. metal fabrication and
chemical. •.
. ...

CANI'ON - Ohio Power Co.'s parent, American Electric Power ·
Corp., on Friday paid Its :mth consceuttve quarterly dividend.
The .unbroken string or dividends began In June 1910, 3~ years
after the founding of the company.
friday's dividend was 56'h cents, which had been declared on Jan.
00 and was payable to AEP's .312,1B8 shareowners on rec;ord as of
Feb. 14.
· 01 the 1,543 companies Usted on. the New Yqrk Stock Exchange,
only 53 have paid consecutive quarterly dividends for as long as three
quarters of a centucy or more.
AEP · Is parent holding company_ of eight ut111ty operating
companies, Including Ohio Power. ·
WtaHunt

Accountancy exams scheduled

GALLIPOLIS _ Rita Hunt has

PORTSMOtiTH- The Aecredlt.atlon Council for Account.an.cy
has selected Shawnee State Community College as a testing site for
Its nationwide examinations testing thecapabUitlesofcandldates for
accountancy and federal taxation.
The six-hour examlnatlons are being administered on May 10 from
9 a.m. untll4 p.m., to an expected"""
"""can elida!es.
The tests are prepared by ACA and successful completion of the
tests 1s necessary for an "accredited" designation.
4
ApplicationS tO sit for either the examination in accountancy or
federal t.axatlon are avallable'frorn Larry c. Essman at354-3200, or
by wrtilng to the Accredl~t!on Council for Aceountancy, 1010 N.
Fairfax St., Alexandrta, va. 22314, phone 703-54~.

jolned the staff Raphael's Hair
Remedies, 44 Court St.
An appointment may be made by
calllng446-'7000. ·
HUNTINGTON,
Wllll
h ..__ W.Va.
ed -Terry
d'~t
ams as"""'' nam · up. or
of on-air promotion at WSAZ-TV,
Huntington.
WH1iams will be responsible for
thepromotlonandpubllclzlngofthe
station's programs and personnel.
Willlams holds an associate In
radio and television from Morehead
Stille. 1~. He has been a
member of WSAZ for
years,
serving for the past three years as
producer of PM Magazine. He Is

5~

. ..
-l JPlirfi.er presentOO .at =-=-=::~c:...-::::------meetJng

natlveofBar~rtoo, Ohl~. .

GALLIPOLIS - The following
·Homer McMillin, 25, Rio Grande,
couples flied for martiage licenses . cook, and Angela J. Blazer, 23, Rio
• last week In Gallla County Probate Grande, waitress:
: Court.
Harry L. Woodyard Jr., 19, Rt. 2,
... • Jehr:- W...Ba.·r-eus, ....24, ~·- CQntra! c-ro'!'!r-\"iiy; unemptoyea;· ana-- --Ve~er'aiii!!1\1omlO'ritd---·--j-·i
~.

.

• na1ey,

-- . . . ---' "-

~~14-ftfr~;::~~=~;~:~,::~:=" ::::=::~:=~--~~"1.·~-- ~-::.;;,
Ave.,

Terrace Dtive, unemployed.

-·--~-:: "':"-" ··-~-

Madol
LE/&amp;700

Southern .S tates board elected
POJNT PLEASANT- Four Mason County residents were elected

MOBILE HOME

.....
ETII

18 cu. h . modef teetures
"no-fingerprint" rext...ct
lfeel dootl. twin crilpers
.......... bto..pen, Olttionlfautom~dc
Ice maker 1nd much

morel

Automatic
Washer
Model
LA7680KK
4 Automatic

Microwave
. Oven

Anoiversary Sale
Price Only

Cycles

NEW liUSINESS - Middleport's buslnel!S section expMded last
. week when Sandy's Boullque opened Its doors to customers. Sandy
C,obb, bontlque owner, Is stocking the store with women's dressesllllll •
sponswear illcludlnc OP, Pacific, DeeCee and Co&amp;-Cob brand&amp;. Larger
and half stus will be available In addition lo' misses 111111 junior sbes.
.Helping In the store will be Ramona Slicker, sale~ clerk. Hours at
Sandy's Boutique,- located 320 N. Second St., will be 9 a.m.·5 p.m.
Monday through Thursday; 9 a.m.-8 p.m. F{lday; and 9 a.m.·5 p.m.
Satu~y. A grand opening celebration will be coming aroundtbefli-st of
AprU.

.

Stress factor in shipping
GALUPOJ,IS-JohnD.Northof
J.D. North Produce Co. In GalUpolls
says that the stress associated with

shortest time," he said. "And the
key to overcoming stress Is ·to
minimiZe It, proVIde · basic health·

~-·-,oeaning&lt;l.nd")lhlppling eallle·-steai~--- ""1lf'lteet~·aftd..get-ea1YeS-9fl.a

• t..a fge capac•ty model really handles the
BIG loads • Energy-Sav•ng Water Temp Control
• Waler· Savmg Load·S•ze Selec1or • Double ·

Duly Super SURGtLATOA Ag•lalor

.•
&gt;

~

r

'
'

••'

Chamber unveils
·- promotion·ai book
G
JJ•
c
(
on a 18 oun y

By KEVIN KEU.Y
bucks left over to establi sh a
Times-Sentinel Staff
perpetuating fund for tht• printing of
GAI..l.IPOLIS- "An investment
more copi(.os," he said. "Wo are
in the future" L' the wav
Gallipolis
sin~re
in our effort s to keep this a
,,
0
Area Chamber- of Commerce offi · perpetuating luna. soW&lt;' don't have
cia is are viewing the new industrial
to cume back for tnore money ...
brOchure they have produced to
Designed by Ron Bracken. the
attract people and bUBinesstoGallia . 24-page brochure bears the photoCounry.
graph or the Gallipolis park bandThe brochure, "Welcome to sta nd taken by the National GeograGallipolis," was unveiled at a phic Society on thdront cover, and a
Thursday function sponsored by the shot of Bob Evans Farms on 'the
~-]1 ---•zhamber ..- - ba k
..
It'll just be a nice thing to have called a "unique design" lor the
around the house." commented brochure, which covers such topics
Chamber Presjdent Paul J . Knotts, as history, community scrvic&lt;'s,
noting that the producl!on of the medical facilities, religious life.
brochure took more than a year and
housing, educa lion. cultural activl·
the effort.s of several committees to ties and special events, sports and
create.
· recreation. industry, climate, agri. With the brochure. Knotts said. a culture. shopping and restaurants
personnel managercansendlt out t6 and motels. Principal photography
a prospective employee·, the was done by Dennis Cherry , a ·starr
. .
It .

to the local board or directors of Southern States Cooperative at the ·

PH. 446'-0208

•

RIO GRANDE- A researchpaperprepareclbyBeverlyWllklns,
School of
Business Management, has been selectEd by the Education!
,Resources Infonnatlon.al Center (ERIC) Clearinghouse for Social
Studies-Social Science Education.
The paper Is entitled "Effectiveness of Economic Education
Programs with Employees: ACaseStudyofTRW, TheTimken Co.,
.S.F. GooQrlch and The Tire Group.''
Wilkins at the 1984 Eastern
The

·economic education coordinator or Emerson E . Evam

REVIEWING TilE PRODUCI' - The GallipiJiis Area, Chamber of
Commerce promotional brochure, "Welcome to GaUipolls," Is reviewed ·
by Chamber President Paul Knotts, left, and Lonnie Leonard, who
chaired tbe committee that created till! booklet.

"UnlesswPpulthisth!n~t~·~;;:-··· "~r~~k;n e~pl~;;;;.;h~tLeonard

'"',;;;.......,;..."'T,

Admitted - Frederick Ferris,
: studl'nt.
Scott A. Peck, 19, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
Pomeroy; Edith Lanning, Pome• · William G. Collins, 25, Vinton, u.s. services, and Ter.esa L. Donne\,
t'Oy; Faye Sauer, Middleport;
: unemployed, and Barbara L. . 18, 53 Vine St., student.
Preston Parsons. Racine.
: HaUer, 23, Vinton, unempll)yed . .
Discharged - Pearl Redman,
' Glenn E . Kincaid, 46, Patriot Star
·
Steven
Lush, Jell a Turner.
POMEROY - Marriage licenses'
: Route, salesman, and Karen S.
have been Issued in Meigs County
; Gilliam, 28, Rt. 2. Bidwell, student.
Probate Court to the following
MOVED OUT OF STATE
~ Bryan K. Gardner, 24, Miami,
couples.
~ Fla., laborer, and Natalie A. Shang,
Hobart Alfred Barker, 22, GallipoMUST SELL
i :O, Rt. 3, Bidwell, unemployed.
lis, and Janel! Kelly, 23, Langsville;
• Charles A. Hlll, 31, 2145 Eastern
14'.x70' LIKE NEW
David Alan Reuter, :0, Middleport, ·
.
· Ave.; musician, and Dawn M. and Paula Jean Frecker, 18,
: Houck, 22, 2n5 Eastern Ave., at
Reedsville; · Michael Christophe~
2 bclrms .. 2 full baths, total oloc.,
- home.
Dorst, 21, Pomeroy,andTammyJo
~~:tntral .htat and ait, woshtr, dryer,
• Richard E. Cook. 18, Syracuse, Landers, 17, Middleport; Mark
ontry porch, underpinning. utility
;: unemployed, and Teresa L. Whll ·
Wayne Gaul, :M, Chester, and Gwen
bldg. Walking distanu to school anti
; Ungton, 16, Rt. 2, Cheshire, student.
Ann Barton. :;a:J, Vincent; DonaldS.
downtown. $17,500.
• Timothy T. Klein, 19, Pomeroy,
Mohler, 19, Pomeroy, and Deborah
: unemployed , and Lisa J . Whitting·
Lynn Porter,17, R~tland.
: ton, 16, Rt. 2, Cheshire, student.

.

:.

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~--·

Jackson County

Govern"or pleads not .
•
gut•1ty to_.accu.sa(tons

J-usw_ ~embei:S
seek board seats .

March 1 0 1985

CHARLESTON , W.Va. (AP) Rusen haS said the company owes a
The United Steelworkers wm not
halt-billion dollars to about seven
agree to wage and beneiii conc6·
major len&lt;lers and races llatik·
slons unless Wheeling-Pittsburgh . ruptcy unless the debt Is restruc·
Steel Corp. Includes two ll!llon
turedsoon.
, .
representatives on the company's
In addltlon to representation on
board of directors, a USW official .the board, the ·unton Is seeking
says.
preferred stock as compensation for
Paul Rusen, the director of emtp~yee wage and benefit ronces·

and magazines and from volumes
discarded by the llbrary.
But after Hearon's miS!;Ion was
publicized in national news.stories,
readers .around the country began
sendlngboxesofbooksandlettersto
assure him that others are supportlng him each time he lowers the
yellow plastic bucket to the anx1ous

·"
"'"'
Chris Morgan a maintenance
·c·
- repairman at lh~ locks i:lcross the
Mississippi from St. Louis, said
liver workers are "always looking
for something to read." A local
11 ·
company stopped .supp Y ng news·
papers years ago.
COLUMB'l:JS, Ohio (AP) -Low
B~t about then "01' Jim showed, bids
totaling moiN.!tan $23 mllllon
up," Morgan said.
_ After two military stints, two
were opened this week by the Ohio
NEW ORLEANS (AP) -Gov. graphed.Allthedemeanlngaspects college degrees and world travels,
Department ofTransportatlon on 00
· Edwin Edwards and six . co- bond procedure q!lestlons about the silver-haired Hearon found
projects- the largest a $1.6 inttUon
defendanispleadedlnnocentFrlday net worth, drug addiction, health,
WmselflnGraniteCltyinl979 ,when
bid to resurface 16.3 tnlles of stalE'
to charges that they ran a
previous brushes with tl)e law and
he landed the llbrarlan job at the
and federal roads In Jackson
racketeering enterpriSe through
the like- had been handled earlier depot .. .:... an~ _pJcked Up_ his
County.
\Vhich big -hospital cha1ns ·became--'-" in private:
nickname.
-·- Othermajorprojectsillclude: $1.5 · ..
eligible for millions In federal ald.
Instead, each defendant was
When he took over the library, he
mUilon for new rest area and tourist
Each man was released on handed a typed list of the questions found that most people equated
lnformat!Qn centers for Interstate70
$100,000 bond pending a federal
and his answers tocheckoverbefore reading with KP !Juty.
in Preble County; $1.5 mlll.!on for
court trial at which the prosecution
swearillg that they were correct.
upgrading 2.16 mlles of U.S. 21 in
.
Ed rd
hi
"So I wrote a story in a base paper
will seek to both put them in p rlson
In a dd 1t 1on to
wa s,
s
where I'd make up conversations
Stark County; $1.2 million for
and confiscate $10 million ill
brother and nephew, defendants · . between myself and t~e lonely
resurfacing 15 miles of Ohio 329 in
"!ll-gottengalns."
were RonaldF.Falgout,45,o!Baton
Maytagrepa!rman,"hesald ." Inthe
Athens and Washingion counties;
"What a waste of time this was," Rouge; James.! . Wyll!eJr., 36,N'ew story, Hearon tried to outdo his
and $1.2 million for resurfacing and
Edwards, 57• said after the hour· Orleans;. Perry J . Segur~. 55 • New counterpart with tales depleting the
bridge deck overlays on Ohio 11 in
long arraignment before U.S. Mag- Iberia; and Gus Mtjahs, 50, depths of his lonelilless. Soon, he - Mahonlng County.
Shreveport . .
!Strate Ivan Lemelle.
Two Edwards family members
were among tht;&gt; defendants:
brother Marlon Edwards, 56, of
Crowley, and Charles Isbell. 40, a
nephew who Is a Baton Rouge real
estate dealer.
The hearingwascarefullychoreoseller. Chesler Brownie Troop 100'7was the hlghselllngtroopwlth a total
!!!"!oM. 'n'-~~~.!! !!!e a.~ Me!gs .C~.!!!!y gl~.-ec~.!~-!91!! ov.er 4,,..
bo"es of cookies this year.

file

became known around the base as
.Lonesome Jim. · ~- t
On a sightseeing visit to nearby
Locks 'Z7, Hearon asked If the.
workers would enjoy reading to pass
the. time. They would, Indeed, he
wastold.
.
So Hearon began ·regular visits to
the locks, sorr.etlmes supplying
hundreds of books and magazines to
a procession of barges from early
·evening until after midnight. Each
volume bore his stamp: "CompU. ments of Lonesome Jim, Locks 'Z7,
Granite City, IU."
The reading material came out of

~~n~ha~~~~u;;n;rkJ~~~e~~~t~1Te~·-o~2."'~f~=z~-~~=~~=o;~;,=='~;;~:~'f!~:;~~~=~crk~,.~~~~o~.

our uttllty bills In the past: •
!'t1llty companies have now devised better met by consumer group
ac.tiv!t!e5, t~.an the e!!cr-!z ef
~-''-"'"" · ----• rnonth!y pg)'m~n: ·p!an allcn.1»g
COnsumers to pay their utilities In a individuals.
llxed monthly rate. At the end of
Most people unknowingly have .
i!lat fiscal year many consumers consumer groups In their own
a_urpl'lllingly receive a substantia.! CO!llmunlty. For those consumer
groups cah arrange io have speak·
rel)lrn check, while others wm pay
ers
from the Public Utilities
ihe remaining balance.
Commission."
It you have questions
: · While utU!ty companies can, and
(i'equently do, raise their rate, we - about your utu!t!es and are having
depend on the state to regulate the trouble communicating wiih your
iUtltty companies that affect the utility company, contact the Publ!c .
f!lnsumer at the public level. There Utilities .Commission to find out
'!..re two tiaslc purposes for the what !nformat!on.ls ava!l,.ble.
public regulation of prices; the
Interested consumers can get In
' Curtailment ""Of .tlle exercise .. of.. t&lt;:luch -'.".ith -the-- Publle UUHt1es
!IIOnopoly powers and the ellmlna- Commission by calling P .U.C.O.
llon of certain forms of price hot line, 1-800-282-1298, or by wrltlng
cllscrlmlnation. There will no doubt to: The Public Utilities Commission
· ~ other effects on ptices Including of Ohio, Public Interest Center, 1!ll
unintended effects such as · short E. Broad St., Columbus, 0 h!o 43215 .
~ytng

~;,;.,- ltelltiittl Section ~

Business

Stop _in
todaywi
have
.

60 New Buicks &amp; Pontiacs In Stock
See Bob Brickl~, Harland' Wood, Jirn Cochran, or Greg Smith

• Choice of ten cook powers • Temperature
with Keep Warm • Time oi day clock • Cc&gt;mpect,
fils In most anywhere • Two cook cycles plus
• Solar Bronze styling.

All Whlrlpoolnppllances
have earned this seal

. . ...

'•

Making Y911J world,a little easier.

ELBERFELDS·
IN POMEROY
.

--

--

-~"-·

profits from
producers and
feeders.
•
·
"Producers who just take calves
off their mothers and ship them to
market could be overlooking a
significant profit .opportunity," he
· explained. "Catlle 'preconditioned'
before going to market could be
healthier, bigger and worth more to
buyers." '
~ And, North added, feeders who
just turn newly arrived cattle Into
feeding pens and walt for them to
reach slaughter weights also may
be significantly ·reducing their
prof!t opportunities.
"At both ends or the cattle sale,
stress Is the hidden thief." says the
dealer. "When calves are strp&amp;M
-they stop eating. This not only
red!lces growth, It cari lead to
weight loss, sickness and even
death."
"In almost every state precondltlonlng-and receiving programs are
a-ccepteO=rtreans- oi ',gt:"tting catUe
from weaning 10 slaughter In the

feeding program as soon as
possible."
A growing number of reports
Indicate that providing the light
feed program for preconditioning
or receiving significantly Improves
their benefits," he said. "Both
sickness and death rates are lower
atid gains are Improved when
complete rations such lilS
preconditioning-receiving chow are
fed for at least three weeks either
weaning or shipping.''
The local businessman explained
that this complete feed is formulated especlaUy for stressed cattle.
Its high &amp;:ilree of natural palatabll!ty, he said, encourages consump- •
lion. "When stressed cattle go off
feed," he said, ''Rumen microbes
starve eventually halttne nutrient
conversion which reduces a calf's
natural Immunity at a time when
they need all the protection they can
get. Cattle offered precondlttonlng· .
-r~-av...Ufi et.uw usually stru-}cat!.~. ·
right away.''

recent annual membership meetlng in Pi&gt;mt Pleasant.
Elected as directors were Jullus Matheny of Leon, W.Va., and ·
Ro~r Wallls of Southside, W.Va . 1
Thomas Bumgarner was selected chairman of the local board,
whlle George Hoffman was named vice chairman. Both are trom
Letart, W.Va.
_
Elected to the Southern States Farm Home Advisory Committee
Were Aaron Weaver and Michael Newberry, both of Letart.
Hottman was chosen chairman of the advisory committee and
Mrs. Aaron Weaver was selected as Secretary.
.
Also recognized were Floyd B.at&lt;er, Frank Yester, Mrs. Elmer
Newberry, Mrs. Marcus Weaver and Mrs. Michael Newberry.

.

. GRI examination slated
COLUMBUS - The Ohio Association of Realtors will offer an
examination for the designation of graduate, Realtors' InstitUte
(GRI) at the University Hllton Inn on Olentangy River Road, ·
Columbus, on March 19.
To be eligible for the examination, candidates must be members of.
the National Assoclallon of Realtors and have successlully
completed required ~~ In real estate principles and practices,
law, finance, appraisal, brokerage and special topics at accredited,
approved colleges and universities.
The exam tests koowledge learned In those courses and the ability
to apply that koowledge In solving current real estate problems.
licensees, will be held on the morning of the exam. The review
session will count as four hwrs of continuing education credit.
All partlclpallts In tile review session or exam should pre-register.
Cost of the examination Is $25 and the review session Is an additional
$.1'), For more lnfonnatlon, contact lhEi OAR Education Division at

2:/ll-6675.

Jlobbins &amp; Myers reports loss
DAYTON -Robbins &amp; Myersllic. says It Incurred a$3rnllllon loss
!rom the ~allons and sale of Its Comfort Conditioning Division .
during the second quarter ended Feb. 28.
. .
· .
The dlv!skln, which manufactures Hunter ceiling fans, was sold
Dec. :n, 1984, subject ID a past-sale audit and settlement that have
been competed. '
Fred G. Wali,·Robblns' prl!lldent and chief executive officer, said
Thlll'lday that altlloullh the company's continuing operatlon5 are
pl'ofltable and up over 1984l"EEIllta, the lolalncun'ed ln the operations
and sale of the dlvlslllll woold produce a lola tor the secmdquarter of.
about $2.6 mllllon or about $1.10 per share.
noted that
million ot. the loBs will be carried foiWard an.d
recovered as a tax benefit to earnlnp In fUture lllcal yean.
Robbins &amp;' ~ Inc. II a teclutolo&amp;Y·baled lndustJ1al products
•~'QI'I!!"'"Y wtt1!.9lanta ·ln.the Unlle(l States and_~.

wan

au

used to promote touri~m In the ··
county, which he called "the fastest
dollar we can make.''
Lonnie Leonard, area manager of
Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric
Co.. who chaired the brochure
committee. said the brochure was
financed by contributions from
sponsors, each o!whom wUJ receive
40 copies. It will also be made
available to local realtors.
Contributions for the project.
Knotts said. ranged from $100 from
some sources to$1,0ll.
'·
"We wanted . to raise enough to
print some copies, and have a lew

Chris Morris and Manning Wetherboll . On the editing committee were
Marianne Campbell, Rick Batyko
and Thelma Elliott , and top Salesmen .ror the project were Dan
Davies, Tom Wiseman. Ron Toler
and Jack Roderus.
Community information wlitPrs
were Leonard, Morris, Batyko.
Mrs. Campbell, the Rev. Albert
Mackenzje, Brysan "Bud" Ca rtPr,
Mrs. Dean Evans, Mrs. William
Cherrington. Ike Wiseman , Jan
Titaler, Jaseph Carter. J cnyBrockway, Charla Evans, J osette BakPr,
George Lukac and RobeJ·t Daniel.

·Rate increase denied,
utility issues warni~g
CLEVELAND (AP) - State
denial of a proposed $00 million rate
increase for the ,Cleveland Electrl.c
ruumtnatlng Co. will only coot
customers more money in the long
run, company off!clals SGy.
CEI said Thursday it wlll ask the
Pub!!c Utlllt!es Commtsslon o!OWo
to reconsider Its decision to grant the
utility oniy a $:0 million increase. ·
utilitY money for construction work
In prowess, orCWIP , at {}nit 1ofthe
Perry nuclear power plant. CEI is
bullding the plant about35 miles east
of Cleveland In Lake County.
"We have denied CWIP for t)]e
Perry I project because thecornmis-

sion believes it is inappropri&lt;Jte&gt; to

shift the burden associated with
financing this plant to thc ratepayPr
at this time," P UCO Cha lnnan
Th0111as Chema said . "Notwit hstandlng this decision, we hope that
the plant will be in ~ervlcc byt h~end
of the year."
CEI President Richard A. Miller
said that incJuding CWlP In the rate
increasr "makes good cconoml~ · ·
" II

assui'C'~

lower

borrowing

costs, whi ch sav!'s man~)· for
customers who cventua!!y havp to
pay those costs. and it hi' ips to phase
new fac i!!ties into rates, reducing
shook," ' he said . "Eliminating
CWIP Is very short -sig hted ."'

Two W.Va. bank companies
announce merger proposal
CHARLESTON, W.Va. (AP) the largest holding company In the
Two of West VIrginia's largest bank
slate. One Valley Bancoll&gt;. owner of
Kanawha Valley Bank, cun-ently Is
companies announced Friday they
plan a merger that will create the
the largest with assets of $890
state's largest holding company.
ml\llon.
The move wUI combine Key
· Key Bancshares last month
Bancshares, parent of First Hunmerged Huntini'\on TruSt and
tlngton National Bank, and CenturSavings Bank and the First Huntingion Bancorp, whl~h owns ·charleston" National Bnnk, bringing Its
ton National Bank.
assets to almost $500 million. Key
The resulting finn will have
also owns banks In Logan and Point
~ ~·
· _ _......
·a.sseSts or neariYSlbtlllon, mali'liiglf ---Pleasant.

I'

•

�..
March 10, 1986

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W

..

4'/e Re·s-enene Righflo-·-

_,......_

Tske
Adrsntsge

____

~ 01

limit Quanti.ties

~

STORE HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM -10 PM
Sunday
~0 AM -10 PM
......... ..,_
•
'
.,.--=: -

""""

.

-Tite .-

On Thets

=

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.1985

Good Fo·l

·one Dsg

=-~'"·~-.-o nm1~- -~---~--=-

· ...

''

·---

• -

-~'-

$

r---:-------------.
129
Po.rk .Sausage ••••••
·

MIXED

.

·

(
49

.· ...

Fryer .Parts............ .. . -..

-

Smoked Picnics ••• !~ 19 (

USDA CHOICE BONELESS
-

..

-

1
COUPON
I
I
GOOD SUNDAY Ol!llY
I
KRAFT
I
I
MIRACLE
I
I Reg. or
lig~t
'
I
32
01.
Jar
I
limit One Per Coupon..,
I
Good Only At Powell'•
I
I Good Sun., Mar. 10, 1985 Only
,_
I

WHIP

$1 .29 .

_____________ _

r--------------~

---~·-·

·Chuck Roast •..•. :~.
. USDA CHOICE

_

COUPON

:

GOOD MONDAY ONlY

I
I

STOKELY CATSUP

I

3201.
Btl. '

I

49;

I

I

"

limit One Per (oupon

.

Good Only AI Powell' 1
Go... Mon., Mor. 11, 1985 Only
. '

9
9
-·Rou nd-5-teak-••.•.••-!-h- $--1--------.. ·--··

-'--------------,_l

Ir----------------.
COUPON
:

WILSON'S SAVORY

Sliced Bacon ••••••••• 89·&lt;
LB.

I
I

GOOD. TUESDAY ONLY

:

GROUND BEEF

I
I
I

limit 10 lb.
Pleo11
18.

I
I

1

89;
"

r--------------COUPON
GOOD WEDNESDAY ONlY

: YELLOW ONIONS

U. S. NO. 1 IDAHO

_.

P.ot at oes ...............

-$ .

10 LB. BAG

199

• .

A.mer •· Cheese •••• :~.

· KRAFT PARKA Y

$

I

limit One Per Coupon
: .
Good Only At Powell's - ·
I Good Wed., Mor. 13, 1985 .Only

I

1

4·9

Peanut Butter •••••
ZEST A

:

GOOD TIIURSDAY ONLY

r

I
I
I
I
I
3Lb.
.I
Box
I
I
limit One Per Coupon
I
Good Only -At Powell's
I
Go... 1hun., Mar. 14, 1985 Only I

VIMCO SPAGHETTI

69( '

•

..

'"~-------------J
-------------·-~

P's-FROZEN

22

COUPON

.
oz.
·PIZZa ••••••••········••••••
' 9.5

.

·'

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

•

EVAPORATED MILK

~:!',

5J$2

limit five Per Customer
Good Only At Powell'•
Offer Expires Mo"h 16, 1985

CAKE MIXES
1
:a~z.

3f$2 .

Lilflit Throe Per CUitomor·
Go... Only At Powell's
Offer hpir11 Morch 16, 1985

•

MAXWELL !fOUSE

COFFEE
3 Lb.

Can

$599

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powol' 1
Offer hpim March 16, 1915

that time Bidwell became the home
for the pastor of the Bidwell Circuit
which Included: Bidwell, Ml Zion,
Bethel, Westerman, Eno and Por·

ln
ian churches In GaDia hlllory ilavt
also been located ln Chesltlre,
Porter, VID&amp;on, Sanctuary, Center·

Christmas without lhe 1: krlmlas,
but It's not wrongtosayltWITIIthe
t: krlsimas.

THE COLUMBUS CitizenJournal for Frfday, Nov. :ll, page12
of the tabloid section had an article
on Dave Diles, a former employee
of the Ohio Valley Publishing Co.
. The generic haidllon is "Sports on
TV" with a line In big type, "DUes Is
No. lin 'Race for No. 1.' "

a

Powell, who was lhe congregalion'sllrst Sunday School811perintendenl
as well. Two women - Cora WUIJarcer and Maggie Heatley, along with
, Powell and Dr. Nellion Slaoon- helped 11"1 this chureh org~d In 1890
!IJ'st as a Sunday School only.

commodities for the preacher's
use.
1'ou CBII write to·James Sands at
Box 12, Clark.sbun, Oblo 43115.

auar.t

Nationwide 1OW30
or 1OW40 Reg. 79' &amp; a•· or
Wiih mig's re'ba11
Kendaii10W40
Limil12
. 1.09 Sale 79'
M0 t or 0 I"1 Reg

4

after mfg's reba te
quart

Kendall 1OW30

Your Choice

2-~4

Qualco Muffler Weld w1 o1 Reg . us
Gas Tank Leak Sealer N91o Reg . us
Pressurized Belt Anti-Slip 1915Aeg. 1.79
Radiator Leak Sealer mo Reg . 1.79
Muffler Bandage • t5ou1s2Reg. 1.29&amp;1 .49
Exhaust Bandage Wrap • 151 Reg. 1. 49
'" .. l;Jitia~'.'leld·:TI'm:ad ·to,ei\ "'"'"""''"''1iQ~'-•-

Motorcraft or AC
Oil Filters

Misdirected
mail piques
• •
cunos1ty
to
..

01' Peeps didn't know 1111 last
week that there are two proouncla·
lions of the word, Chrllltmas.
'lbere's an a1moot lndetedable
dl!lerence, but Webster's little
collegiate dlctlonaey · oays U's In ,
there. Preferably, you pronouneed

--

~

PEEPS

sports

For most domestic .and import cars .

' Reg. 3.95 Llmll 2.

67(:
Snap
Windshield .
Washer
Solvent
Pre·mlud. Year
'round protection.

Reg. 99'

:"

·

.-

·.~· .·

Your Choice

64.8

•

Escort
Cruise
Control

1.4

pin I

'

Do It youroall. Easy
to lnSIIII. Reg. 79.95

Bondo Plastic
Body Filler •2a1 Reg. 2.89

Gumout Carburetor &amp;
Choke Cleaner or
Carburetor &amp; Fuel Injector
Cleaner m18 &amp; mso
Reg. 2.19 &amp; 2.49

Your Choice

1.2

WD-40 Lubricant or
Gunk Engine Brite or
Foamy Engine Brite
Reg . 1.95

GOOD FRIDAY ONlY

JO BO DOG FOOD
1

~.~:·a1s1

Lo8 Angeles."

limit Eight Per Coupon
Go... Only At Powell'•
Good Fri., Mar. 15 1985 Oilly

r--------------COOPON

DPMINO SUGAR

~~b. ' s 149
limit One Per Cu1tomer 1
Good Only At Powell's
Offer bpiros Mar&lt;h 16, 1985

GOOD SATURDAY ONLY

CRISCO SHORTENING

~;~·

THE SCHWARTZ writeup con·
tlnues about "the rugged schedule
the former host o! ABC's college
football scorebOard show has been
keeping the past 10 weeks." It says
that ·Diles Is host tor a video
program which may be seen an
hour past midnight Sundays. (That
would be 1 a.m. every Monday on
Channel 10).
THUMBNAIL SKETCH of hJI.

$219 .

------

6.88

.

.'1\IU!I

.

-34.88.
Remfg.
Carburetors

Fuel Pumps

Reg. 8.95

FIRST, THE YEARS and lbell
lhe names of the journals:

,____ _

1818-1825 -The Gallla Gazette.
_1Jt'l!I.!R11 - .T!o.e -Ga~ . Free
Press.
·1831-1832 ·-The Gallla Phoenix.
Continued on E-4.

.88

Fuel Pumps

I

22.00
7.OOo,,

Stock!!

Reg. 11..95·
Reg . 72.86 .

Does not Include Import or

electronic fuel pumps.
with ,rebuild. exchange

Ptlces In affect March 10. thru March 16. 1985. We rooerwe lht right to limit quantities.

2.09 UPPER liVER ROAD

····3107

·~-GPEN-~r~u£-Ti"R

From

Any Truck or
·car Tires in

fAiry ol Gallipolis journa~Bn:

Limit Ono Per.Coupon
Good Only At Powoll's
Good Sat., Mar. 16, 1915 Only

•

editor, the

stam otr: "Dave

Diles
didn't know what he Willi pCilnc
1n1o whea he left the cozy conllnee of
hl8 Southem Ohio home thl8 !aD lor

article

Crackers.••••••• ~~~ •• 89&lt; Fr.ench · Fries .'. ••••2.L!~. ·99&lt; ''-------------DUNCAN HINES

---

.
met the school house. Presbyter·

BIDWEU.. .VNITED Methodist church was buDt In 1893 on land

COliPON

ORE-IDA ·REG. or CRINKLE CUT

WILSON'S

Sunday &amp;hool and In honor o! his ·vtlle and Pahiot 1111 well ""
ter. TOday Mt. Zion and Bethel
slgnl!lcance In the community !or.a Gallipolis, the only Pnebylertan
churches are torn dOwn; Eno Is
short time Bidwell M. E. was commlllilon IIW baA 811l"Vlved.
closed andtheotherthreeareonthe
known as Powell Chapel M. E. In
There were 'J:I charter members
charge with VInton.
fact, the land on which the church In f&gt;l)well Chapel (Bidwell M. E.) :
The Reverend Mr. MUier In his
sltswas dOnated bY Powell.
" Ead and Edith JacliSOri , Anna, M.- - article on "Bidwell Beating Bos· ..
Wrote_The Rev. Mr. Miller In A., Belle and Mary Powell; James
ton" concluded that Bidwell won
1893:
and Elizabeth RandOlph; Alonzo,
out because o! Its hospitality, That
'"The thing prized perhaps most Mary. a nd Maude Fee; Mary,
particular week the people of
highly o! all by the community Is Wilton, Wealthy, John and Augusta
Bidwell had brought to the
the beautl!ul church of which the Kent; William, Martha, Laura and
preacher's family: "bundles of
peop!e.are-1ust!y prm.:d:They ...:1re 3 E'.1a Howard; --p!us.Samaittba V.a.r- ~· sugar, packages e:! ro!!ee, -saclr~ c!
church-loving, Sabbath-observing. ian, Maggie Heatley, Missouri
flour, baskets of trult, cases o!
people. The harmony and Christian Quickie, Charles Mcealn, Mary . honey and dozens o! other things
Including chickens." This collecting
fellowship which prevails Is a Martin and Annie Welker. In one
priceless blessing. Although there year the membership had more of foodstuffs for the minister In the
falJ was a COmi'!'On tradition ·of
8re several denominatiOnS repres· than doubled tO 55.
ented, the people worship and Jive
Pllr!iOnage Built
bygone days In the Methodist
as one
In ·1901 a
was built Church. and
as a

affords no small advantage lor
.business. Jbe stntes e~IT)IaltnP nf
· goods that suits the people and
these goods are sold at reasonable
prtces.
"During week days the planing
mUJ sends forth a hum which
makes music for every Industry·
loving citizen.
"The tUe factory Is now under lull
headway, and li Is believed that Its
products will be of Incalculable
bene!lt to this section o!the country.
At this point the writer suggests
that with four preachers resident In
, .the lllllage the keep!ng o! a poultry.
yard m lght be a profitable
enterprise." ·
Forty·Foot Stack
The Bidwell Brick and Tile
Company. begun by W. H. H.
Frederick and others In 1893, had a
stack 40 feet high with seven !Iring
grateS, seven under.floOr Dues, and
15 draft holes. The company, which
lasted Into the early 1900s, manufactured choice tile brick.
The year, 1883, was ..also the year
that th~ Bidwell Methodist Episcopal Church was built. What Is today
known as Bidwell United Methodist
Church began In 1890 as a Sunday
School, which met In the Heatley
School House. One of the organizers
of the chure-h.w&lt;!s,J, !&lt;..Powell-, who was the first superintendent of the

.

•

··Margarine ••••••••• ::·•• 59&lt;
JIF BONUS PAK

"

Bag

L.-------------,---------------

'

KRAFT SINGLE SLI~ES

9.;

. 3 lb.

II'

the sound of the hammer, the rattle
of machinery, and the roar of the
trains, It (Bidwell) Is destined to
spread over a big territory.
"The village has many advan·
!ages which her inbabltailts highly
appreciate. Among these Is a good
railroad having eight trains. a day
at a
carrying people and

PEEPS GALLIPOLIS - Charles H. and
Helen R. Wolfe, :W90 Kaufman Rd.
N.W., Carroll, Ohio 43112, mlsdi·
reeled something to J. Samuel
Peeps - probably something done
In the Christmas rush hurry. At any
rate, the address given was P. 0 .
Box 469, and a post oftl~e "anache
advised simply remaUing It This ol'
Peeps did. Piques your curiosity,
doesn't it? Does ol' Peeps's,
anyway!:

1
I
I

By dAMES SANDS
Spe&lt;..ial Col'l'ellpondenl
GALLIPOLIS - The heading o!
an lB93 Gallipolis Tribune read:
"Bidwell Beating Boston."
'llur ·autij:Jr of the article, theReverend W. H.
MUier, stated:
"This heading
Is not designed to
call attention to
·
competition be·
tween the places
mentioned. The city over on the
Eastern coast would hardly stand
comparison with this Western
wonder. Bidwell Is a thriving
of a
village In the southern

,,
.,

Pomeroy-Middleport-O.Uipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

»l!Y ~pe!ialll!le

Specis/

..-n

The Sunday Times-Santinei-Page-E-3

Rev. Miller writes about Bidwell, Boston_in Tribune

.Ssrlng1

HOMEMADE .

'

March 1 0, 1986

iliti

I.a. •7813 Reg 19 00

�Financially stressed fanners ··
·to get management assistance
.

March 10, 1985

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

Page E-4 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

By BRYSON H. CARTER

county level or the Immediate
Rl&gt;sponse team at the district level
Extension Agent,
where one-on-one assistance wtll be
- provided through the CES.FARM
GALLIPOLIS ~ In a move to program. Once the, immediate
help Jarmers rope with financial
crisis situation is resolved. farmers
stress and channel survival efforts are -urged to participate In sche·
into farm financial management,
duled workshops where specialized
the Ohio Cooperative Extension
training will be given families . on
Service launched a program March · · records, assets, liabilities and
1, 19il5, caiied CES-PARM, which
development ofcashfiqwprograms
stands for Cooperative Extension
lor their farms.
Service-Farming and Agricultural
Resource Management.
Continued from E-3
The CES-FARM program involves a state task force that wUl
1832-1918 - The Gallipolis
give leadership and coordination to, JournaL
1834-18.'!.'\ - The Buckeye and
this
on a statewide basis
· .· GaOia CoWl!)'

peepS

Meigs County agent's corner ·
By JOHN C. RICE
Extellsion Agent
Agriculture and CNRD
Meigs County
POMEROY - Coping With
Crisis _... The Pl!I!L. &lt;;Qgperatiye
Extension service has implemented an action-oriented program to intensively assist farmers
and their families who are facing
financial crises.
- While this program : will help

March 10, 1888

"

Extension
notes...
ot
tarm
'

charge for this Immediate Response program.
Immediate Rl&gt;sponse will include
on -site farm visits where
warranted.
The_Immedlate Iiesponse team's
responsibility will be to assist farm
families In the following areas: (1).
Identlfy the nature and scope of the
problem: (2) Analyze the financial ·

..

Pomeroy Middleport-Gellipolil, Ohio-Point Pleaaant, W.Va.

Ohio establishes ·'hot
line' to aid farmers

Doctors work to.
keep music playing

condition
the !ann ftrm; (3)
family, agree on the best
Analyze factors contributing to
course of action and assist in Its
unusual or severe stress suffered by
Implementation.
.:
the farm family; (4)· Identity
Upcoming Meetings This Week ~
particular resouri:es required and
- Monday, March II - Sale
enlist the- ..assistance-.. -Of- tllnse _ C.ommittee metlng_at3 L30 _p.m. at
resources from the district or state
the Extension Office; Tuesday,
Extension offices, other agencies or
March 12 -Meigs County Extenwherever avallable: (5) Determine
sion Advisory Committee meeting
viable options; (6) Consult with the
at 8 p.m . at the
Ofiice.

I

'

lng financial crtses, it will also help
farm families avoif facing a
financial crisis in the next year or
two.
The Ohio Cooperative Extension
Service (OCESi has 'Immediate

applied tor loanS from the federal
agency as long ago as November
and stW have not received word on--.
whether they_h3ve been approved.
The "hot line" will be open 24
hours a day although after business
bours, It will be shifted to an
answering device to record the
callers' name and numberforfollow
up the following day.
Locker said Janet Riley, a ·
department consumer Information
specialist for the past 15 years, wnt
he in charge of the opera lion.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Agriculture Director Dale Locker announced Friday-the-establishment
of a toll-tree telepivlne "hot line" to
try io akt farmers seeking loans
!rom .the federal Farmers Horne
Administration.
He told a newsconlerence thattbe
service is intended to "b4'd dog''
- loan appllcations 'for financiaflystrapped tanners seeking cash to
plant crops this spring.
The toll tree number Is 1-10).282·

CLEVELAND ' (AP) - A stiff . wt&gt;-would come up with a blank," '
shoulder, sore elbOw or laryngltl$,
said Ledennan. "There's almost
nuisances to most people, can eitd
nothing avaUable (In medlcal
the careers of musicians, singers or llteraturei."
actors.
.
Levine encountered such a void
One Cleveland hospltalis offering · whlletreatlngal6-year-oldtrumpet
performers treatment by medical
player. When the youtb.played, hb
professiOnalS whO h8vemore than a
neck would greatly expand.
physician's sympathy tor their
"I went ott to the medical
problems. Practitioners in the literature and coul~ 'I lind anything
Medical Center ·tor Performing like this," said Levine, who deals
Artlsls, recently established at
primarUy with wind Instrument
Clevelanc!.Cllnlc, Include 25 physi- players and vocalists. "As physicians and health
cians, )"e know almoSt notl\lng

rarm famUies -currently -e~po:rtenc­

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page E-6 '

1955.
Locker said some of the fanners

..

Response''

"Almost eveyybody In our group
has some personal Interest In music
-either they play an ins!rumentor,
at the very least, !hey are more than
casually Interested In music," said
neurologist Richard J. Lederman, a
leader In creating up the center.
Ledemlan plays the viOlin; Dr.
1
Richard Nodar, an

knowledge about their albnents, he

100" L.N.A.

added.

"Muslcla.nf are not about to let It
be knoWII that they have a problem
that could be caret&gt;r-llmltlng," saki
Lederman . ."They're just going to
tough It out and do the best they '

can."

.$179 5.INSTALLED

·

stall1tion 1nd hiYI
ventory of backup · to aive
btst SIIViCI iri thiS ire1:

"ILACI MESH AMTENNA
AVAILABLE"

ODDS '&amp;
ENDS SHOP
KEEPING THE MUSIC
SWEEl'- Dr. Richard ~nnan,
left, and Dr. Howard LeVIne, right,
have more· -than a pby!llclan's
aympaiiJy for medicai ·probte""'
lnvulvlog m~. Ledennan,
head of the Medical Center for

MIDDLEPQRT, OH.
PH. 992-6173

Perfonnlag Artists 'at the Cievelilnd Clinic, says many of the 2ll

physlclano and health care professionals Involved ha'\'e a pei'!IOnal-

lntenist bi. muiolc ·a..d Other arts.
(AP Laserphoto).

BUY AN 18"

12" PIZZA

PIZZA

, With Jwo Items
And Quart of 7.up

GET A 10" PIZZA
Save 37%. OUr 1.58 Pr.

JIM BILL'S

Men's crew socks of soft,
comfortable act'(lic/nyton In
choice of handsome colols.
FitsizwO=.JJ•._ __

SINCE 1933

. GAlliPOUS.. ElECTRIC..11RVItr .

a violin • that they are having
problems, I don't shake my head
and say 'Could you help me with

446-2362

SALES:
Industrial.V-Belts
Bearings
Lawn Mower V-Belts
Pump Seals
:Automotive V-Belts
Capacitors
:Electric Motors
Brushes .
:Fan Blades
Couplings·
Fuses
Pulleys
.._ ..;.. "-~~~~~, Regulator-s--·--~~-

!hat?'

TJf..SPE6Mb1§ 'l'fr~

•
• u•

$549

SS.99 EAT IN
S6.99 TO GO

REMEMBER - WE DELIVER

435 Seco~d Ave .. Gallipolis
Eat In Our family Restaurant or Carry Out.

.~

• '!-&lt;:-,r =.C~·O•I·C..-.UlY--1-

4~-6-036 7

for A Sl 00
Savings
On A Complete System.

..

Offtr Good Until March 31, 1985
(614) 378~615i QUAUTY SYST~S

.
"

.••
' 'I'" I

.,.,.,.

,,,,, ,

.

, ,,.,.""ne~n

&amp;.10.._11 &lt;-oi i i . J U U l " l . l l i U r l l " l i P =

-·-

- u II II IIUr:lfllnA U
r~~

u

1:1 ' '

n n

r.l

$77

~

U

:~

:·

STATE

~
R·tl·

$69

Our 187

Personal home computer, fu ll
teatured. SAVE
·

Slim Line loom lox

SEA IIEEIE

AM!FM/FM slereo radio, cas·
sette recorder.

10 fl. oz.

1.78

s
2 3

C91KIIuilefl'* 3.37

~-a~.••

"ff. 01:.

..~ . QI .

1101111111 WOIIS liCil- Sl
1Applicaflc?n

Umit 3

. l•otl

2.99

lale Price Ea.
Nice 'n Ealy«'
shamPoo-In h&lt;:!lr
color. Ali shades.

,... ,

Pump Ea., 1.99

·~...

~

IUSINI!S, Mon.·fri. 2-6

SON-Y Dealer

,,

·Does Your Policy
Cover Whiplash Injuries?·

J.r1

REMNANTS
GALORE

TOP-FLITE'
X•OUT8

AlL SIZES
AlL COLOIS

7.97

Save 20%. Our
9.97 dozen.
Spalding®Top Fllte
X-out goH balls.

SAV.EI
Many whiplash victims are concerned about the 'coS!. of steki~g treatm~nt and
oorrection ·o[ their health pro~lems th~t ~nsue ~?liowong a _whapla~h accadent.
Their first question is, " How much Wtllat cost . Our ans'_Vtr IS, . ~U:dly
anything!" for most patients. 'Most patients that .suffer whaplu~ IRJUrl~ are
covered by thF other persons li~bili!~ JIO,Iicy, thear Med·Pay pohcy, thear grou~
insurance private insurance, dasab1lity ansurance, etc. As a result, most
e
have adequate coverageto.meet ali of their..heaith expenses. Remember, ear y
diagnosis and corrective care can prevent Ide-long h~alth probl~ms. Call your
doctor of chiropractic today and prevent further suffenns, dasabahty and expense.

peof

limit 3

00

ONLY
LIVING ROOM
DINING ROOM
HALL
. . Based On
Sq. yds.
Other Sius Priced Accordingly

Reg.

$798.00
Value

40

Our 7.97 Otl Cllange&lt;, •.97

Salt P.rlc:e. 8-oz. •
Final Net® aer0101
hair spray. .
1~!§:

poo; fonnulas.

Hoe,_, OHktl

motor oil

'

For

Sale Price Ea.' lloz~ Ciairol sham-

tllni•

Sale Prtc:. Qt. Quaker
Stafe®lOWJO or lOW40

Antiseptic for the skin.

l•o71

~

TUPPIIS PlAINS, OHIO

79(

2.69

Our 179

l•osJ
For The "Look And Feel" Of A Large ~arden Tractor.
Efficient. Affordable. Built to Last. With additional power to handle
your mowing and lawn clean-up Chores.
• Cast·iron front axle with greasabte spindles• Precision pinion end
sector steering • Padded contour seat • Sealed beam headlights •
Maximum traction rear turf tires • Standard attachment tift • Optional
attachments for moWing, bagging grass and snow re;noval

.•

QUAKER

"~

u u u r::a

Commodore 16

GAU.IPOUS, OHIO

~

Clip This

•
•
"

~

COMMODORE

INGAU ROAD

Including !man Salad
..,d Drinks

If you ever knew her or know of her, ple,ase
·

15" PIZZA
·with Two Items and
A Piichtr or 2 Utor
Bottle of 7-Up

&gt;

A

.

'SUNDAY SPECIAl
2 SPAGHEnl
DINNERS

' I f~und an old book titled "Smoky" with her
name and other personal data on the flyleaf. T~e
volume contains·valuable. certificates which I'm
sure she desires and I w"nt to return.
·

$499

.,.

Motors
Battery Chargers
:Water Pumps
Small Welders
Aireators
Motor Controls
AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR:
Alternators
Starters
:Generators
· Troubleshoot Wirin~

viden' s Farm Equipmer:tt

You may know or know of · a 'woman whose
name in the early forties was.Wileva Evans. She
was at that time about 18-years-old and was
..!!!!~led at the Patuxent _!tiver ~~val Stati~n _
nearleonar town, arv.lanCI. Her home own I
believe is Gallipolis. ·

HOME SATELLITE

·Eie!ctrlc

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FREE

With Same Number
of

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(Super Value Satlsfaetlon 8uara•t11•)

NOT READY?
A SMALL DEPOSIT WILL
HOLD YOUR SELECTION
UNTIL YOU ARE!

INCLUDES COMPLETE WALL TO WALL INSTALLATION WITH
THICK SPONGE PAD AND YOUR CHOICE OF HEAVYWEIGHT 1ST
QUALITY CUT &amp; LOOP ANSO IV OR ANTRON Ill NYLON. IN
OVER 20 DIFFERENT COLOR COMBINATIONS.

IN STOCK

Sale Price kt.
Loving CCn® hair
color in choice at
shades.

614·446-1675
161 31D AVE. ON THE COINEI
• "Sametoeation /''or ·over i4--rears
1ts4 Haoen hmlnat Corp.

,.

. '

'·

~-11!-11____._..,.~

-•n•pv"••--

•

�I .
''

A guide to local
-_ ~elevision programming
March 10 thru March 16
-

~

..,..
~

.

.

·.,~~-.

?f,;..-

·--··

-.;~..,:

Includes complete

'

~~-

WHAI A
WONDERFUL

·

- DREAM.I

W~A.TWA5

IT ?

listings

Showbeat
Pages 5, 6 _

0

Filmeter

Station listings
'

_WSAZ
CBN
ESPN
- WTBS
WTVN
WT AP
WCHS
WPBY .
WBNS
WQUB
WOWK

'

.

'

Huntington, WV
CBN Coble Netwrk
Sports Networlc
- Atlente. GA
Columbus, OH
Parlcorsburg. WV

Charleston, WV
Huntington, WV
Columbus, OH Athens, OH
Huntington. wv·

WVAH

Hurricane, WV

HBO

Home Box Office
Cinemax

MAX

-· (I)

())
(!)

Cil
Cil
ill

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(jJ)

. lj)

''
[HIOI

[M•Jcl

'

OLYMPIC VOICE - Country linger lane Brody became a household voice during the I9jl4
Summer Olymplca when she 111111g the jingle for the Beatrice Foods commercial, whldl aired
during &amp;be
,l AP Laserpbo&amp;o ).

g.-.. .
'

The Private Eye
Page 7

'•

/·~=======================================tl

Serving Gal~ia, Meigs and Mason Counties
''

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