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                  <text>California brushfire battle continues

Three states remain
in running for Saturn
the Saturn plant, but is leery of
raisin~; false expectatlo~
"I know that we're a finalist. I
know that our proposal (to GM) Is
revolutl(lnary," Blanchard said.
Sta.te officials have declln€d to
disclose details of·that propOsal
"I don'! haveacertalnknowledge
that It's going to be Michigan,"
Blanchard said, adding he has "a
feeling I would know If we were
going to get It ."
In .[Uhany, N.Y., a state Commerce Department official said
New York ts still In the running for
the Saturn plant. despite the report
that G~ has narrowed Its choices to
three other states.
"1 don't know that we'reoutofthe
running. We haven't been Inform€&lt;!
of anything yet," said David
Murray, spokesman for the New
York Commerce Department.
"We're still waiting with hated
breath for a decision," Murray said.
New York has propos€d several
sites for the plant, while emphasizIng two locations as best sultro for'
GM's needs. The two primary sites
are In Shertdan, 35 miles south of
Buffalo, and in Newblll:gh near
Stewart International Airport.
As an added incentive, Gov. Mario
Cuomo has signed a bill that would
gtiarantee GM a steady supply of
hydroelectric power for Wyears at a
suubstantlal rrouctlon over normal
rates for the Saturn plant., If the
automaker picks New York.
In Kentucky, thesenateThursday
unanimously adopted a resolution
calling on GM to locate the Saturn
plant In Kentucky, emphasizing that
the special legislative session now
under way for education reform
indicates the commitment of state
government to quality of life.

. DETROIT (UP! - . General
Motors Corp. analysts have conduct€&lt;! last -minute assessments of
three potential sites for GM's
$3.5-billion Saturn plant, but other
states insist€&lt;! Thursday they are
_still in the running. ·
Quoting unnamed sources, the
Detroit News said Thursday the
three sites are in Maury County,
Tenn., 40 miles south or Nashville;
near Schoolcraft, Mich., 30 miles
south of Kalamazoo; and in Shelbyville, Ky., :lOmiles east of LoUisville.
A GM spokesman called the
.report "speculative" and said it
would be a week or two before a
Saturn decision is made. However,
the NI'Ws quotro sources as saying
that process could be speeded up
because of pressure on the
automaker.
''A lot of businessmen are getting
· disgusted wtth the way GM Is
ha_ndling this," a leading Michigan
banker, who asked not to be
identified, told the newspaper.
·'There's no reason to drag It out.
About 35 states are going to be
disappointed."
According to the News, the
last-minute assessments at the
Tennessee, Michigan and Kentucky
sites concentrated on competitive
electricity and transportation costs.
Sources quotro by the new$papef
said overall transportation cqsts
would be higher in Kentucky and
Michigan, since putting Saturn in
Nashville would place it right In the
heart of the subcompact car's
largest potential market.
All three are competitive on
electricity costs, the News said.
Meanwhile, Michigan Gov.
JamesJ. Blanchardsald he believes
Michigan still is in the running for

Meigs County happen~ngs ...
Emergency squads Swimming lessons
·answer six calls
being offered again ·
Meigs County Emergency Medi·
cal Service reports six calls Thursday; Rutland at 9:25 a.m. transporteq Fern Stansbury to
O'Bienness Memorial Hospital;
Rutland Fire Department to Side
Hlll Rd. for a tree fire; Pomeroy at
11:52 a.m. to NI'W St. for Crystal
Pridemore to Holzer Medical Center; Pomeroy at 4:09p.m. to Fisher
St. for Pearl Poulin to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
6: 15 p.m. was called to an auto .
accident on East Main St. for Edna
Smith who was treat€&lt;! at the scene
but not transported: Tuppers Plains
at 6:35p.m. to Reedsville for Junior
Blake to St. Joseph Hospital

Veterans Memorial
Admissions --A nnette Boyd,
Pomeroy; Patsy Spires, Cheshire;
Pearl Poulin, Pomeroy.
Discharges--Frank Clark, Mar- .
garet Goett. David Winland, ChesterMundry. Henry Sayre.

Board meets Monday
A special meeting of the Eastern
Local SchOOl District Board of
Education will be held al 2 p.m.
Monday at the high school to
approve a temporary budget.
accept resignations and employ
personnel. Theregular board meetIng lor the month is schedulro for
7:30p.m. on Thursday, July 25.

Lottery winning
numbers: 779, 1535
CLEVELAND iUPil - Thursday's winning . Ohio Lottery
number~:

Daily Number: 779.
Ticket sales totaled $1,181 ,182,
with a payoff dueof$340,773.
PICK-4: 15.35.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$182.417. with a payoff dueof$82,:l00.
PICK-4$1 straight bet pays'$3,400.
PICK-4$1 box bet pays$284. '

The Middleport Pool will offer
another set of lessons starting July
22 and running untll Aug. 2.
Courses being offer€&lt;! include
babl~. beginners. advaneed beginners. adults and water aerobics.
Participants do not Deed to know
how to swim to take part In water
aerobics.lt' sa program of exercises
that increase muscle and heart
fitness while being virtually free of
adverse effects such as muscle
strain and Impact to body jolnts:The
program adapts 10 the fitness
requirements of nearly everyone
Including individuals who need
modified exercises becauseof ages,
handicaps or any klndofllmitatlons .
It Increases body strength, flesibll ity and endurance.
Joyce Sti'Wart is the swimming
instructor. To register, or for more
information, residents are to call
992-9968 or 992-6212.

New phone books
being distributed
Copies of the 1985 telephone
directory are in the mall to more
than 4,500 customers who use the
Pomeroy-Middleport area book,
General Telephone Co. of Ohio

announc£&gt;S.
Phil Ramey, Athens distrld
service manager, said pny customers not receiving a new directory
by July 31 should call thecompany's

seJVice order center.

JOINS STAFF- The board
of directors of The Home
Nallonal Bank announce that
Jack 'Sedwick has joined the
staff. Sedwick bas 25 years of
banking experience. He will he
responsible for single family
residential real eState loans and
real estale coUectlons.

a south wind to start a "controlled set fines that have swarmed over
By ROGERBENNETI'
fire"
burning north to meet the main virtually the entire state.
United Press International
Hundreds of people were allowed
·
blaze.
The battle against the Western
Into their Los Gatos homes
back
"It
was
very
effective,"
Capt.
Ken
wildfires Is beginning to look Uke
Thursday,
but In a neighborhood
Gilbert
said,
adding
ihe
tactic
may
war. as heliCOpters drop Vietnamu.lt
was
stUI
·seal€&lt;! off, tempers
beusedagaln today totrylosavethe
era napalm to combat names in
flared
and
six
angry homellwners
California, and an Army battalion 2,&lt;XXJ hillside barnes still threatened
were
arrestro
trying
to return.
prepares tobackupthe r,ecord17,(XXl by the fire.
Scott Brayton of the IFC said
At Fort Ord near Monterey, two
firefighters.
nearly 400 new Ores start€&lt;! Thurs·
The weather again helped .on battalions of the 7th Infantry
Thursday · as temperatures re- Division began a crash CQur,;e in day in the Unllro · Stat~. but
main€&lt;! lower t~an the 100-degree firefightlng from officials of the favorable weather is helping.
"We're holding our own today,"
level of earlier in theweek, and some Interagency Fire Center in Boise,
he said. "We feel we. made some
Idaho. The 1,000 troops ·wUl be on
drizzling rain aid€&lt;! the firefighters,
progress. The temperatures are
especially in California. where the standby until next month, but will
supposed
to remain sllghtiy lower
probably
be
usro
'
o
nly
on
fires
week's fires have charred more
and
hui!Jldltiessllghlly
higher ... but
in
the
mop-up
stages,
an
already
than :uJ,IXXJ acres.
stUI
have
thunderstorms
and
we
Army
spokesman
said.
At Los Gatos, Calif.. where 20
·
tl)at
means
lightning
and
.more
houses have been destroy€&lt;! and
potential for fires."
Gov. George Deukmel ian flew
hundreds of people are still out of
Officials said the estlmated17,000
their homes In a 14,®acre !Ire over the Los Gatos fire Thursday
firefighters on the lines were a
ravaging the scenic canyons, na- and announcro a $10.1XXJ reward for
natloniil record.
palm left over from the VIetnam information leading to the arrest of
"I think there are still crews In
War was dropPed on ·names the arsonist who started the blaze on
Alaska we can draw from and as we
threatening huge communications· Monday and foreed evac;uatlon of
tol.vers in the Santa Cruz Mountains. 4,500 people. He also announced . get one fire coni alnro and the crew
rested up we can shift them to
Officials said napalm globules · formation of an arson task force to
another
fire."
deal
with
tile
scores
of
deliberately
were dropped fl'om helicopters Into

+

:·

Exchanges listro In the book with
Pomeroy and Middleport are Letart
Falls, Portland, Racine and
Rutland.
The front cover of the new
directory features a color photograph entitlro, "Country Farm". 1 Situation corrected
The ni'W directory contains 64
The pomeroy Fire Department
white pages and ·sg yellow pages.
·
answered
a call to a woodro area
Ramey said customers can pick
near
the
Hank
Cleland home at 317
up an addition copy of the new
directory at the company's phone Wright St., Pomeroy, at ri: 3i p.rn.
mart , 238 W. Main St., in Pomeroy. Thursday when electrlcal wires In
Business hours of the phone mart trees began sparking. Ohio Power
and thenumberoftheservicecenter workers answered a call to correct
the situation. ·
· are on page2 ofthedlrectory.

1

/baek ,

19 76 BUICK RIVIERA ......................... S1 09 5

A-I condition. 2 dr. HT.

1976 FORD VAN ................................. S995

Auto., PB. PS. 302 motor. Customized

197.3 FORD PICKUP. F-100 .....~~!~.~~.1!~ .. 5495
1972 .fORD F-100 ..................~!2~.q2!LS495

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!J - State
lawmakers are vacationing with
their famjlies, not to return to the
Capitol until after Labor Day, when
a number of Items of unfinished
business will a walt them .
The House of Representatives left
town last week, trailing the Senate.
and leaders In both chambers were
gtad for the" respite from the staie
budget and tax cut debate which
followed the long episode propping
tip the privately insuredsavingsand
loan assoelatlons.
Left behind in a House-Senate
conference committee was a bill
restoring sovereign Immunity (pro- .
tectlon from lawsuits) for local
government.
Rep. Vernon F. Cook, DCuyahoga Falls, said the Senate
render€&lt;! his bill"almost incomprehensible" and add€&lt;! he hopes to get
a , conference "committee report
ready by the end of August.
. Without sovereign Immunity.
local govel'll\'"ents are finding
themselves paying heavy premiums for insurance, and some are
unable to get certain liability
coverage.
But trtai attorneys complain the
bill unfairly sets iimils on the
amount that may be rerovered by
those injurro from government .
negligence.
Mandatory seatbelt use In all
_automobiles Is a whisker away from
final legislative approval, but thai

•
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has proven to be a tough whisker.
The measure got past the Senate
17-16last May 7, but Rep. Arthur R
Bowers. D·Steubenvllle, has been
unable to raise the necessary votes
to pass it in the House.
Bowers has close to 50 votes - a
majority In the House- for the bill
but says he wants 55 votes to be on
the safe side. Another try may be
made in the autumn.
The agonlzlngdebateover "death
with dignity" will resume in the
Senate In the fall. The House
narrowly approvro that bll1June26,
providing for termioolly ·m and
L'Omatose patients to avoid artificial
life support systems.
1\vodays later. theHoosesentthe
Senate another hot potato requiring that parents be Informed ,.
in most cases, if their daughter
under 18 is about tohavean abortion.
The House Commerce and Labor
Committee has custody of a blll
requiring annual auto emissions
tests for 3.1 million motorists in the
Cleveland and Cincinnati areas. A
major revision in hazardous waste
control has pass€&lt;! the House and is
in the Senate.
A child abusepreventlvemeasure
and day care licensing and tax
credit bills have cleared the House
and are awaiting Senate action .
The Senate still has to deal with
bills limiting campaign spending
and moving Ohio's presidential
prtmary date to March to tine il up
with Illinois and other midwestern
(Continued on page A-2)

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department. In recent weeks, the village has hired ·
four additional street department workers , contracted -with the Ben-Tom Corp .. to install several
stretches of guard rail in the village, made truck
repairs and purchasro miscellaneous tools.lncludi"g
'
two mowers and three weedeaters.
Nearly $4,1XXJ in incom...,tax money was spent to
help I!Jake a yearly payment on a Pomeroy Fire
Department truck. Four new police radios and a few
pieces of office equipment were also purchasro with
income tax money said Walton.
Indications from the Ohio Department ofTranspor·

Rio raises
• •
tuttton rate

Patrol votes
to unionize
CAR CRUSJIER- Bob Cllaltdler's Blgf~. which running over old vehicles at Turnpike Motors, 195
goes around the country crushing cars, adds ro 11s . Upper River Road, through Mbnday.
number Friday evening. The 4x4x4 vehicle will he

early restoration of the licenS&lt;' of a
Cleveland lawyer.
-Douglas said the investigation
by the Ohio Senate Jupiciary
Committee wUI proceed next week, .
and he will participate.
-Celebrezze said Douglas. at a
private meeting Friday, promised
the Senate Inquiry would be called
off if Ceiebrezze would rt'Sclnd a
scathing denunciation of GOP
justices in a dissenting opinion In
that case. He refusro.
-Douglas said Celebrezze, who
lost a 4·3 decision In that case
involving Cleveland lawyer James
M. WUsman, had accusro the
Republicans of "'fixing" the case. He
said CelellreZze was "an absolute
unmitigated prevaricator."
(Continuro on page A-21

BATJ'UNG JUS11C~ - In separare press .conferences held
moments apart, feuding Justices of the OhiO Supreme Coun, Chief
Justice Frank D. Celebreeze, left, a ·Democrat, and Justice Andrew
Douglas, right, a RepubUcan, exchanged charges of case-fixing,
payoffs, lying and poUtlcal orchestration. (UPI).

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'85

. By JOHN FRIEDMAN
Thnes-Senllnel Staff
RIO GRANDj!: - Tuition, fees
and room and board charges ~t Rlo
Grande College and Community
College for the fall1gj5 quarter will
go up by between four and nine
percent.
Joe Matthi'Ws, vice president of
business and finance, said tbe
increases will cover increasro
operating costs.
"Utilities are expect€&lt;! to go up
between five and 10 percent,"
Matthews said. "Fringe benefits are
expect€&lt;! to go up between 10 and 12
percent and salaries have gone up as
well," he addro.
Tuition for full time (between 12
and 16 hours) students at Rio
Grande College wUl go up nine
percent. to$1,3W per quarter. Each
credit hour less than 12 and over 16
will now cost $110.
At Rio Grande Community Col ~
lege, tuition for eacb credit hour lor
residents of Gailia , Jackson, Meigs
and Vinton counties has gone up
from $19 to $:D. For Ohio residents
outside the four-county district,
tuition has risen from $211o$Zi per
credit bour.
The lnslitulional fee at ltoth lhe
community college and Rio Grande
College has risen seven percent.
(Continued on page A-21

no
sign
Section of Reagan's colon
removed;
WASHINGTON (UPil - Surgeons removed about
two feet of President Reagan's colon Saturday and
said there was·no evidence of cancer. Reagan turned
ovl'r the presidential j:Towers to VIce President
George Bush while under general anesthesia during
the opel'atlon.
·
Capt. Dale OUer, chlel of surgery at Bethesda
Naval Hoopltal, said the president was "doing
beautifUlly" and ','aU fln&lt;llnlls were normal." .
He saki there waa no visual evkle!lce of cancer In
the larie bttelltlne, Uver or otller areas as SllflleGns
remO\Ied what waa delcl'lbecl as a two-lnch·wlde
tumor ll'cm lbe president's Intestine.
The operation lasted two hours and 53 minutes.

•
ID

tation are that Pomeroy may have to come up with
nearly S:JO,IXXJ of the costs to repair a land slippage on
Union Avenue. The repair project will cost
approximately Sl37,&lt;XXJ aand funds for the project
were secured by State Rep. Jolynn Boster!hrough the
Ohio Department of Development's Imminent Threat
Program. However, ·Walton has been· told by ODOT
officials that. statefuods may not covertheentlrecost.
The village will know Aug. ~when bids for the project
are opened by the state i1 additional funds are neroro.
If additional funds are needed, they will betaken from
the vlllage' s Income tax funds.

-

COLUMBUStUPI)-;Inanarena unprecedentro one in the omaie
that seemro to resemble a wrestling Supreme Court chamber - were
punctua tro by a brief bumping
ring more than the state's highest
between Douglas and a
match
legal trlbunal, two feuding Ohio
Supreme
Court clerk's employee
Supreme Com1 justices shro their
black robes Friday, reveal€&lt;! confi - ·who kept lhf Republican justice
dential judicial discussions and · · from attending. Celebrezze's press
conference In his prtvate ollie&lt;'.
exchangro charges of case-fixing.
Douglas later chargro that his
payoffs, lying, bugging and political
news conference was being tape
orchestration.
The simmering controversy be- record€&lt;! by Celebr=, whom he
said "didn't have the Intestinal
tween Chief Justice Frank D.
.• Celebrezze, a Democrat , and Jus- fortitude to come here and look me
in the eye."
UceAndrewDouglas. a RepublicM,
The news con(erences produt-ed
which had been mainly confined to
the cloister€&lt;! court offices, boiled these developments:
-Calling It politically motlvatro .
oot before Ihe capital city television
cameras. radio microphones and Celebrezze flatly rejected an invitation to take part In an Investigation
the St alehouse press corps.
by the Republican-controlled Ohio
Twin news conferences a few
moments apart - Douglas' an Senate . Into a case Involving the

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Two Supreme Court justices
; trade tough charges in public

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for indMduals was June 30.
Although an exact running total is kept of Income
taxes as ' tbey are paid, Long could not release this
lnfonnatlon because of provisions in the village's
Income tax ordinance.
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler has statro in
meetings of Pomeroy VUlage Council tba t income tax ·
money has to date been used to "play catchup." Jane
Walton, Pomeroy clerk-treasurer, says the catchup
period Is about over.
Acl:ordlng to Walton, the major expenditures from
· Income tax money have been In the vUiage's street

Lawmakers gone for
summer, but not all
the work is finished

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'l'lmes-Senllnei Staff
POMEROY - Basro on amounts recelvro in the
first six months of 1~. Pomeroy Village will
probably collect a total of $160,(XXlln Income taxes by .
Dec. 31 says Terri Long, Pomeroy tax administrator.
"There was no way of knowing how much would be
eollectecl until the inC&lt;lme taxes, start€&lt;! coming in,"
Long add€&lt;!. Feb. 28was thedeadllneforbusinesses to
turn In employees' wltholdlng taxes for January .
Wltholdlng t8l&lt;es ~paid monthly. Aprtl :J.l was the
deadline for Individuals to pay incon)e taxes for the
first quarter of the year. The second quarter deadline

.

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

~

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11111\l\ 111111:\1\\~

JU ~ I &lt;,;~I I &lt; &gt;!

.......................... .C.l-6

Pomeroy tax could generate $160,000

g ..... , ....

$1 Off

tmts

M

Vol. 20 No. 23

Weather forecast

J

Along the River .............•.. B+8
Deaths ....................... " .... 1).2

p

Il~Jc~[ii]~~[[ii~cc[ii]cc[lj

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

Ohio weather:
chance of'
showers Sunday

Inside:
Editorials ......................... A-4

Bob Hoetlich discusses Meigs County Fair
memberships .....: Page· 8-7

Recorders
recovered

EXPLeRI:RS

'Now if I were on, the school hoard ...' - how to
become a member - Editorial on Page A-4

-Page B-1

Packwood hacks off threat to kill legislation

PF

D-1

box'-

.Global

Field day
at the park

WASHINGTON (UP!) -It took but will not oppose the bill in Its provisions.
Senate Finance Committee Chair- · entirety on the ba;;is of those
"If I fall In . that, I will do
provisions alone."
man Bob Packwood about 21 hours
everything
possible to kill the entire
Wrorlesday, Packwood said he
and a "candid" talk with Treasury
bill,"
he
said.
o
told Baker before Reagan submitSecretary James Baker to dropUnder
usual
procedures,
tbe
bUI
·
ted his plan to Congress that he
for now- his threat to kill President
would
have
to
go
through
Pack€0RK, Ireland (UP!) - Two Reagan's tax reform plan.
would try to remove the timber
wood's committee on Its way to the
flight recorders recovered from tht&gt;
Packwood , ROre., deliver€&lt;! his
Driver
es-capes
injury
.
Senate floor.
wreckage of anAlr-Indiajetlyingon • second surprtse In as many days on
An aide said Packwood decided to
the Atlantic Ocean floor were the tax plan Thursday and conceded
in Thursday accident
issue
the new statement after Baker
shipped today to India, where they he had made an "ov.,rstatement"
telephoned
him Wednesday to
will be usro to determine If a bomb Wedinesday when he said he would
A vehicle was heavily damaged,
threat. Ask€&lt;!
discuss
the
senator's
caused the plane to crash.
trY to kill the bill unless changes but the driver escaped Injury in an
to
descrtbe
the
conversation,
the
The two "black boxes" were were made for the troublro timber accident on East Main St., at 6: 11
aide
said
It
was
"candid."
brought Into Cork early today industry - a key part of Oregon's p.m. Thursday.
"He (Bakerl was not pleased,"
aboard the cable-laying vessel Leon economy.
Pomeroy Pollee said that a
Packwood, who faces re-election westbound car driven by Edna the aide said.
Thevenin, whose robot submarine
The Incident was not the first time
located them at a depth of about' next year, said in a sta Iemen! he Smilh, Pomeroy, traveled tbroogh
Packwood
has object€&lt;! to parts of
6,700 feet below the ocean's surface. would "continue to oppose the the Intersection at E. Main and Nye
tax
reform
plan.
the
The flight data recorder and provisions to change the tax Ave., striking a stone retaining wall ·
cockpit voice recorder were Immetreatment for the timber Industry on the rtght. The Smith car then
diately load€&lt;! onto an Aer Lingus
backro across the street, struck the
Plan loumament
Saturday wedding
guard railing and then went over an
.
airliner for a flight to London's
Heathrow airport - the first leg of
·embankment onto the raitroad
A D·Ciass Softball Tournament
The open church wedding of Carl tracks;
sponsored by the Racine Fire
their journey to India.
Smith was not lnjurro but was Department will be held July ~21- ·
A member of an Indian govern- Wolfe. Jr., and Della Johnson will he
held at4 p.m. Saturday, July 13· at citro by police on a charge of falling Entryfeels$60andtworeddotbaUs.
ment investigating team In Cork
For more Information call94~3(J73.
said the devices would be trans- the Racine Unitro Methodist to have her vehicle under control.
ferrro to an Alr-fndia aircraft at
church.Areceptlonwlllfoilowlnthe
church
social room.
Heathrow and flown to India as soon
as possible.
In India. the recorders are to he
AdmiS1ion Price P.olicy·
MOurFAINHR
used by investigators Ia determine
Bargain MotlnHI
Cinema,'i)
.
the cause of the June 23 crash of
lat.
&amp; s.... All Seob Sf2s·
Partly cloudy today. with widely
Adm. Every.Tue.doy, ta.2S
"!
JIJ~ fl[(ii.S ~H.nrP!H, flA/A
Air-India Fllght 182, which plungro
scattered showers early this morn31,000 feet Into the Atlantic after ing and hlgiJ.s between 85 and !:IJ.
r----,----.,
being cleared for a re~eling stop at
Mostly clear tonight, with a low
·ntt:.\D\·b n:KE J~onr.
Starts
Fridar,
July
12,
1985
Heathrow.
Uf"TilE U:.\K.~
between 65 and 70. Partly cloudy
. -.}&lt;yiMI! nil: •lfM 'UIIl
All 329 people aboard died In the Saturday, with widely scalterro
,..,,.,,.. .. __ ww..
.... _... .... .oc&lt;"i-""111*•"'...
mishap. A search of the crash area
FROM THE DIRECTOR .;
afternoon and evening showers and
.....! ,............
1M
110 mUes of soothewest Ireland has 'thunderstorms and hlghs near 90.
"'lr.ll&gt; . .,..;... ... a""""""':...,,l
'GREMUNS:
I.
'"'/"'M
.
solar yielded 131 bodies, some4 tons
EKiended Forecast
of debris and the two flight
Sunday through Tuesday
i'ecorders.
A chance of showers and thunder·
YOU DON'T NEED~ DRIVER'S LICENSE
Some experts have speculatro the stonnseachday,wlthhlgh&lt;lranglng
10 REACH THE STARS.
plane was felled by a bomb and the
fromthe81Mtothelow90s.Ovemlght
two recording devices may provide
ro. "·
... A PAnAMOU,NT ~ICT~~E .~ •
lows will range from the 60s ro the
\1tal clues to the validity of the
low 70s.
theory.
Nightly 7 &amp; 9 p.m.
Nightly 7:10 &amp; 9:l5
The cockpit voice recorder was ·
Sat. &amp; Sun. Mat., 2 p.m .
SOt. &amp; Sun. Mat., 2:10
recover€&lt;! Wednesday by the
. .. Sot. Midr.ight, 12:10
Sot. Midnight 12~00
Scarab I. the Leon Thenevin ·s robot
••••••••••••••••••••.
couPON••••••••••••••••••••
.
submarine. The flight data recorder
Mounlalneer Chwma llpi•Y• W. Y•.
•
:
'!'as found Thursday.
•
50
One search team official llkenro ·
• To 'l'll~
•
Any Adult Admlnlon
•
heJutilully &lt; k-'~"~' 1
the successful operation to "finding
run~t~J ;J rr JnJ.wm~ni .
Not Valid Tuesday Eve.
••
,.,, ,,
a needle in a haystack."
'
Saturday or Sunday Matinoo or '
The night data recorder logs such
POMEROY
Midnight Movies
operational details as the power
•
, FlOWER SHOP
)..
' - n,~ II 1n """d''" ~nrl• /,,.,.··
settings oftheengines. thealrcraft's
•
'~ - M2-20l9 ~~ !92-5721
course, altitude, airspeed and other
instrume!ll readings. The voice
·recorder monitors cockpit sounds,
such as conversations, clicking
lllit~....l.a
IIMte/haek
switches, warning horns and engine
Kua
v
&amp;
pitch.
Neville Hunter, a spokesman for
Brttain's Cable and Wireless Co.,
which operates the robot submersible, said Thursday th~ flight data
recorder was found 400 to 500 yards
from where the voi&lt;;e recorder was
recovered. The wreckage Is spread
across 4 squaremilesofocean floor.

Vehicular homicide II
1977 DODGE CHARGER ....~..............,S1495
charge filed against Auto., PB, PS. Good shape.
·
Gallia motorist
1977 DODGE DIPLOMAT................... S1395
Gf\LLIPOL!S, Ohio IUPI I - A
GaUla County man has been
charg€d whh vehicular homicide in
connection with a Memortal Day
accident in which a 4-year-&lt;:Jld
Gallipolis girl was killed.
Larry Clonch also has been
chargro with driving under a
suspend€&lt;! license and making false
statements to authorities, Gallipolis
Municipal Court officials said.
Clonch's vehicle allegroiy struck
the rear of a car In which Cassandra
Canterbury was a passenger. She
later dlro of head Injuries ..
Clonch Is scheduled toU1edon the
charges In Gallipolis Municipal
Court Aug. 2.

Friday. July ,12. 1986

Pomeroy-Midc:lleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

.
the laboratory for
microscopic examination to see If It contain€&lt;! any
cancer cells - with the results expected Monday but an Initial test of material removed from the
surface of the polyp Friday showro no sign of cancer.
"It gives me great pleasure (to tell you) that the
president of ihe United Slates Is doing beautifully."
· "Our president Is doing very, very wen," Oiler told
reporters at a hospital briefing. "He Is "now awake
and conversing" In the post operatlve room.
He said even If cancer cells were foond, the
pre~~ldent would have better than a 95 percent chance
of having been cured by the surgery, as long as the
ceUs had not spread to adjacent tissue.
The tissue was sent to

•

The White Hoose walled for mure than an hour
after the surgery to announce that Reagan was out of
surgery.
Reagan check€&lt;! ·In Friday •to Bethesda Naval
Hospital for what was expected at the time to be a
routine excision of a non-cancerous growth In hls
colun.

"The preliminary indications are that there was no
cancer in the biopsy portions taken ," he said. "We will
not have final results·untu the surgery is complete."
The operation was expected to take as long as three
or four hours. Speakes said a whole body X-ray scan
of the president taken Friday night Indicated no
presence of cancer In the abdominal cavity.

~f

COLUMBUS iUPI) - Ohio's
1.400 State Highway Patrol troopers
have votro to recognize the Fraternal Order of Pollee as their union
representativ~ in the state's first
union representation election, off!.
clais announced Saturday.
The State Employment Relations
Board said 798 votes were cast
during the week-long voting. Two
votes were challengro and 64 votes
were cast for no union
representation .
The Fraternal Order of Pollee,
Ohio Labor Council, Inc., recelvro
the remaining 732 votes .
The balloting was conduct€&lt;!
Monday through .Friday at Ohio
Highway Pairol · postts In 53
counties .
The election re•ults must still be
certified by thethree-memberStatP
Employment Relations Board before the vote is declared official. The
board, under the new law, must
delay certifying the votes for 10
days, durtng which any challenges
Jo the balloting may be filed.
The election was the first conductl'd by state workers under
·Ohio's tiew collective bargaining
act.

cancer

Speakes said the CAT scan- a computer-assist€&lt;!
cross-section picture of his Intestines- " lndicatro no
outside Involvement (with cancerl in the abdominal

area.''
At the hospital briefing, Speakes also announeed
that" VIce President George Bush was canceling his
weekend vacation ar his summer home in
Kennebunkport, Maine. and would an·lve at Andrews
Air Force Base outside Washington just before the
surgery.
"It was a personal deelslon'and In no way related to
the presl~n_t:,s mrolcal condition. which Is good and
has not~ and It Is no way related to national
security," Speakes said.

�-, RI
I

Page-A-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
0

IV
dl
tJ

Si
sl
sl
.

.
Q

.

raJ•SeS
.

...

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio-:-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

(Continue(! from pag~ Ali
_.:,___,;__.....:......;......::..:::.:.:.::.::.__

Stu~nts wUJ be charged $5 per
quarter hour to a maximum of $70
per term.
Room and board for the fall,
winter and springqua11ershasrtsen
njll&lt;) percent. The charge for a
dormitory room has risen from $335
to .$370 per quarter, while board,
which includes 21 meals per week,
wenl up from $480 to $530 per term.
For each summer session, room
fees increased from $167.50.to $185,

while board went up from $240 to

$26\l

The extra charge per term for a
single room, however, went up 12
percent, from SllO to $125.
. The charges for room safety
~posit, key deposit and lost key
feplacemenl remain unchanged.
The room saf&lt;'ty d&lt;'p&lt;&gt;Sit will be $40,
the key deposit will be $20 and the
lost keyreplacem6nt feewm remain
$1Q.

Lawmakers••• --~'eo:::::.nt:::ln::u:::ed:..:tr:.:o::.:m:.!pa:.:!:ge:..:Al:::.l_
states.
handling of a caSI€ Involving tbe
A number of task forces and restoratlon of a Cleveland lawyer's
standing and special committees, license.
some potitical, some not, will be
Celebrezze has already refused to
busy during the summer.
participate and Senate Minority
Republicans on the Senat&lt;' Judi· Leader Harry Meshel, D·
clary Committee plan a hearing . Youngstown, said the Judiciary
next Wednesday on the dispute In Committee was an inapproprlat&lt;'
the Ohio Supreme Court over Chief forum for what he called "blatant
Justlc&lt;' Frank D. Celebrezze's political action."

.

July 14, 1985

July 14. 1985

Justices....
..

r-----Local
briefs:---------.
A bsentee balloting be.·uins Monday

(continued from page All

-Celebrezze said five justlres
agreed to tum over to tlle court's
disciplinary counsel an aiiE.'gatlon
thaI Justice J, Craig Wright, a
RepubliCan, violated tbe canons of
ethics by assuring an attorney
privat&lt;'ly that he could win a case by
filing II for rehearing.
-Douglas said he and Wright
were at tlle meeting unde~ protest

and did not agree to send tbecaS~eto
the disciplinary counsel...,
,
"It saddens me that the Supreme ·
Court has become suc,p a public '" ·
spectacle;" said ·Celebrezze. "The
antics of tbe Senate and tbe request
of certain members of this court to
the Senate are devoid of any legal
analysis or adherenre to established
procedures."

o

tJ
1
n

•

DOUBLE ~\~
OUPONS

v
n

"s
tl
tl
b

a

Special session set Tuesday
IIDEIM YOUI MANUfACIUIIII MONIY·IlVING COUPON! AT JOHN·
SON' I AND IICIIVI DOUIII IHI Ylllll WHEN YOU PUICHl!ITHIIPICI·
1110 RIM. ONE C...ON Pll RIM. NO lll'tiiiD COUPON! ACCIPIID. DO·
Ulll IIDIMI'TION OIFII DOll NOT APPlY TO "Fill OIKHANDlSI"
COUPONS 01 COUI'ONI 0'111 49' IN FICI VllUI. NO CAIH RIFUNDS
• WHIM DOUIU COUPON VIWE II(IIDIP~CI Of 111M. CIGAimll lND
CEIU.IN OTMU rf£1115 ARE EXClUDED IY LAW. TO tNSUIE PRODUCT TO AU
Out CUITOMIIS, WI lll liMITING 0111 "DDUIII COUPON" OFFEI 10
ONI Jll OF INSIANI tOFFII AND 0111 CAN OF GIO ...D tOFFEE PEl
SHOPPING Flllll Y.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla County Commission will meet in a
special session Tuesday at 2 p.m . to open insurance bids covering
liability and property.
The commission wm hold Its regular session at 9 a.m. Thursday,
Jul~ 18. in tlle commission's offices in the courthouSI€. '
.

Name clarif~ation

DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD JULY 18th

d
h
t
il

I'OMEROY - The Charles Whittington who was fined $100 and
costs for obstructing justlre and $100 and costs for fleeing polire In
the: court. of Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday Is not. tlle man by that
name who resi~s In Pomeroy. The Whittington who appeared in
mayor's court Is Charles "Buddy" Whittington of Connecticut
Middleport officials confirm.
'

.SALE ENDS

SUMMER

MEALS
JURI

SERVE

BEEF
CUBED STEAK

$18 9 LB.

BIG RED

:~~~D

DELUXE CLUB
BOLOGNA
POUND
PKG.

LB.

NEW YORK
STRIP .STEAK

3
9
9
CORN
~!Noz. 3 ~ '99~
SWEET PEAS

THRIFT KING

CREAM STYLE
WHOLE KERNEL

F

16 OZ.

0

CAN

OR

22
JAR

COFFEE MATE
HUNT'S

BAR-B-Q SAUCE·
AUNT J.EMIMA

BUTTER LITE SYRUP

oz.

18 oz.

BOTTLE

240Z.
BOTTLE

COTTONELLE

;.TOILET TISSUE

4ROLL
PAK

ttAPPY BUNS
;:G~T.
':SANDWICH
&amp; WIENER
.
/'

$139

BOILED HAM
CHUNK .BOLOGNA

LB.

SLICED BACON
SUPERIOR

79&lt;
59&lt;
49&lt;
49&lt;
69&lt;
59&lt;
29&lt;
.

18 CT.
SIZE .

LARGE

SOUTHERN PEACHES

·

$119

79(

LB.

CALIFORNIA

NECTARINES

LB.

CALIFORNIA

RED PLUMS

LB.

CALIFORNIA

CELERY

STALK

LB.

LB.
12 oz.
PKG.

oz.

12
PKG.

FRANKIES

Emergency runs

$199

SUPERIOR
DART BRAND

. LB.

CANTALOUPE

~11!UI= BAKERY=I:!IUil
fURITY

$169

•

$179

Meigs marriages end

POMEROY -Alana Butler, Racine, has been granted a divorce
in Meigs County Common Pleas Court from Gary Builer,
Ravenswood, on grounds of gross neglect of duty .
Cinda Lou Umbarger, Shade, has OC&gt;en granted divorce from
John Edward Umbarger. Albany, on grounds" of gross neglect of
duty.
FJIIng for a dissolution of marriage in M&lt;'igs County is Linda L, .
Rlffle, Middleport, and Ronald E. Riffle, Pomeroy.
Divorce actions have been filed by SaniPierce. Pomeroy, against
Donald E. Pierce, also of Pomeroy, charging gross neglect of duty
and extreme cruelty; and by DonnieW. Jacks, LongBottom, against
Myrtle L. Jacks, Shade, charging gross neglecl of duty .
A request lor a dissolution of marriage'flled by Betty and Ronald
Wagner, both of Racine, has OC&gt;en dlsmlsSied.

a

Teen charged in accident
GAUIPOLIS - A Gallla County teenager was charged by city
pollee with failure to yield from a stop sign following a two-vehicl&lt;'
collision Friday night at the intersection of Second Avenue and Court
Street.
Officers said a car driven by Anctle L. Carter, 24, of 90 Pin&lt;' Sl..
was northbound on Second, when a car driven by Scott A. Smith, 16,
of Rt. · 2, Gallli&gt;olis, allegedly pulled from a stop sign and struck
Carter's vehicle in the side.
No injuries were r&lt;'ported in the JO: 19 p.m. accident. which officers
said caused moderate damage to hoth vehicles.
No injuries wer&lt;' reported in a two car collision on Second Avenue
Thursday. police said.
Officers said a car driven by Sarldra S. Hutchinson, 43, of 10 Neil
Ave., was southbound on Second, when a car operated by James D.
Hannon, 16. of 746 Second Av&lt;' .. a llegedly backed fmm a private
drive and struck Hutchinson's vehicle ln the side. Officers sa id
Hannon's view was blocked by a commercial vehicle.
Both vehicle sustained light damage in the accident, police said.

79(
89(
89(
'

NEW YORK

GARLIC BREAD
PILLSBURY

'

MICROWAVE PIZZA

16 oz.
LOAF

$1
49
~·~~.oz.

POMEROY - Nine calls were
answ&lt;'red ·by local units Friday, th&lt;'
Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services reports.
At 7:01 a.m., Pomeroy wenl to
Route 33 for Elsie Stanley. to Holzer
Medical Center; Racin&lt;' at 12: 48
p.m., went toRoute338forC!arence
Lawson, to Veterans Memmial;
Pomeroy at 1:ffi p.m. went lo the
Farmers Bank parking lot for Anna
Brown, treated bul not transported;
Rutland at 3:00 p.m. went to the
Little Coal Bucket for Deputy
Sherilf Donald Snyder who was Ill,
taken to Veterans Memorial Hospl ·
tal; Rutland at 4:12 p.m. went to
Township Road for Cheryl Ferguson, treated but not transported ;
Tuppers Plains at 5: 26 p.m. took
Harold Brannon from Route 68l to
Veterans Memorial; rutland at 7:02
p.m. tookRolandSmithfromHappy
Hollow Road · to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Middl&lt;'pol1 flrem&lt;'n at
8: 06 p.m. went to Roule 7 wh&lt;'re
&lt;'iectric sparks from power lines
thr&lt;'atened a fire In trees and at 9:27
p.m .. Mlddl&lt;'port took Lester Bow·
ers from Shady Cove Road to Holzer
Medical C&lt;'nler.

Cheese, Combination, Pepperoni, Sausage

SUMMER SPECIAL · ·

SHEIL- Meigs Comity DepucySherifiBrianBissell l&lt; pl&lt;iuredwitha
!55 millimeter explosive shell which he and Deputy Tim Gumpf picked up
from a business location Thursday evening. Friday moring the U. S.
. Anny Bomb Squad, Dayton, was In Pomeroy w get this sheD and a~
mUUmeter shell. Sheriff Howard Frank report&lt; the homb squail
reL"Ommcnds all resident&lt; having artillery shells, grenades or bomb
Sbells of any sort ,shouid contact the ~heriff's department sint"e tflese
items are dangerous wpossess. A Meigs County man was killed recently
when a shell head fro1n the World War I era expioded.
•

Meigs marriage
licenses issued

TENDER CARROTS

POUND
PKG.

'

U.S. NO. 1 IDAHO

.BAKING POTATOES

10 LB.
· BAG

$199

COKE, TAB,
SPRITE
DIET COKE IOnLES
•-160z.

' TROPICANA ORANGE, GRAPEFRUIT

OR

APPLE JUICE . ' 64 oz. JUG

BLUE BONNET

MARGARINE

29

Plus Deposit

4 STICK
• POUND

$169

6'9(

1°/o MILK
REITER

COTTAGE CHEESE

$159
oz. $129
CJN.

GALLON
PLASTIC ·

24

SPECIAL

REG. SJ200
r----cOUPON.•- - 1 LOIIII'I Monument ComPtnv
1 :J Pomeroy, OhiO - Vtnlon. unto
I

,_...

,..... - - - ,,........... thowlnfl
~tinh.II(O!or--~... Wid

1 "len 11•-'.
I =·-.....-d- efl infotlftOtlon oODut
I ::- klttfly hoY• OU!ttorlnct l4ton
I Mcw~ .......,,c•. ,.....,,.u.,.~l,..m '

.....

00'1

I ~ "-ta.tdme ...lltolaovt~
I ~evm .... ~~.~.......

1"- -:---:-'-- - -

-

Si....lorlcwl&lt;e - - - - -

CotJo.r

r~n~m -

- - - --

$94500

...
•

•I

'
;·

. between early hours of 12:3
a.m. and 7:00a .m. Monday thru
.
Friday .

Ronald Kei1h Cinlher, 22, Pomerov

THANK YOU FOR
YOUR PATIENCE

CONSOLIDATED
COMMUNICATION
GROUP

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WH.EN
YOU NEED IT.

DIAMONDS
~I you are !ike most people with hearing loss you hear well

m some ~Jtuat1ons and have difficulty in others. A new
hearmg a1d has been developed that can give you the help
you _need, Y~he_n you need it. The Argosy CCA Canal hearing
a.Id IS so tmy tl ca~ b_e inserted in a matter of secqnds. It
f1ts ~om_fortably Wlt,hln the ear canal and is barely visible.
Help IS fmally here for those "parttime" hearing problems.

·After you've passed on
your furs and traded 1n your
car, your diamonds will still
be beautiful and very vatu a·
bl8. Diamonds outlive the
whims of fashion. Their setting s may ,age. but these
can be renovated for a very
modest sum.
If you 're intrigued by diamonds, as so many people
have been throughout history, come in lor a consulta·
tion . We 're Amencan Gem
Society Jewelers. dedicated to consumer service
and protection .

RENTAL OF~ER-:For o limited time, rent thecanal aid (or ·
a_ny hean_ng atd) for 6 weeks for only ·$50.00.
TRY BEFORE YOU BUY!
See us at H_olzer Clinic Each Wednesday, 1:00 P.M.

1

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER

lOGAN
MONUMENT
VINTON, OHIO
W. Main Street
PH. 388-B603

POMEROY, OHIO

HELPING PEOPLE NEAR
WILliAM S. DILES

401 Stcond Avtnut
Otlllpolla. Ohio

446· U4i

Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
PH. 992-2588

At Pleasant
Hospit~l. ~. we§re open
A:~y
fl

•
'

Wh ile l:1pgradinQ existing lin
equipment in M~son 8 Galli
Counties , Cable TV subscribe r ·
could notice loss of cable servic ·

and Kathie. Jean Terrell, is:
Middleport;
Nicholas Jay
. McKnight, 17. and Elizabeth Sue
Lewis, 18, hoth of Middleport; and
Ra)· Barber. Jr .. 47, Reedsville. and
Teresa Kay Barringer , 18,
ReedsvillE'.

MEMBER OF THE lNSnTUT£ OF
COMMERATIVE ARTS

Accidents
Do
Happen.
lii

~

CABLE TV
INTERRUPTIQN

POMEROY -Marriage licenses
have been issued in Meigs County
Probale Court toTimolhv Franklin
Barton, 20, Bradley. W.Va .. and
Renee Lynette Buckl&lt;'y, 17, Pome·
roy; GeorgeWashingionJessie, J r.,
30, Pomeroy, and Mary Frances
Gordon, 38, St. Pelersburg, Fla.;

INVESTMENT

•

REITER

'
:
;

NOTICE

MEMBER AMERICAN
GEM SOCIETY

37~

W. Ur', ;on Strtet

Athens, Ohio 4S701

This time of year you find yourself becoming more and
more involved in warm weather activities. You may decide to
spruce up the house some ... or devote more time to
athletic endeavors on tlle weekend.like softball and swimming.
However, with all the fun .and excitement of summer also comes the
not so fun accidents and m1shaps. They do happen . And when they do,
whetiJ.er major or minor, it pays to get qualified emergency medical treatment from a
prof~ssional medical facility like Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Our emergency services department is backed by highly trained physicians and
medical personnel 24·hours a day ... evel)' day.
•
. .
No accident should be taken lightly -and there's no better place to get the
immediate attention you need than Pleasant Valley Hospital.
· ·
We want you to have an enjoyable summer and you can count on Pleasant Valley
Hospital ... we're open all day and all night.
··

•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
Valley Dri~o1:, Point Pleasant, West VIrginia 25550

(614) S94·3S7'

. '-'- ~ - - - ·- - = = = = = = = = ' .I
•

'

CRUNCHY

•

are still a good

an'"
.
U
aII UUllg
• ftt · '
a~' n

l

•

Lottery winning numbers: . 690,8555
STORE SLICED

SHOULDER STEAK

.WESTERN

$119

•

$229

FRANKS

WHITE GRAPES

BOX

MACARONI &amp; CHEESE ·

:~~~D

THOMPSON SEEDLESS

$249

restrain Robert Fetty, Pom~roy. from interfering with or blocking
tlle plaintiffs rights to collect oil, ship oil, complete reclamat)on and
pertonn necessary repairs to a well. Dixie Efi&lt;'rgy Co. requests
$35,000 in damages from the ~lendant.
.
·
An actlon to quiel tille on property in Bedford Township has been
filed by Vernal H. Well and E. Louise Well, Sha~. against BUI Grant,
GaUl polls.
Also in Meigs County, a reciprocal action for child support has
been filed by the State of Pennsylvania and Mary Jane Nonnan
againsl Larry Norman.
· Roy Robert Vafighan has been ·appointed by. Meigs County
Common Pl&lt;'as Judge Charles Knlgllt lo serve a five year term as a
member ofthe board of dlr&lt;'Ctors of the Leading Creek Conservancy
District. The term commenced as of Dec. 16, 19&amp;1.
.
·

KAHN'S

:PRODUc~:

$149
GRANULATED SUGAR
: THRIFT KING
oz.
4 ~ $1 00
1

POMEROY - Dixie· Energy Co., Inc. of Wooster has filed a
request for an injunction in Meigs County Common Pleas Court to

FRESH PORK

(

s LB. BAG

SHURFINE

$169

BALL PARK

R

THRIFT KING
CARNATION

Injunction sought in court ·

KIELBASA SINGLES

$3 99 LB.
til@jl=GROC~RY=I:ll4il

$199
KAHN'S

CHOICE BONELESS

POUND
PKG.

Pleasant Valley Hospital Friday evening resulting from an apparent
self·lnflicted gunshot wound to the head, the Point Pleasant Pollee
Department reports.
The dec;eased is Francis Vltus Sayre, 55, 111 LII:J&lt;;orty Ave. ·
The Pomt Pleasant Emergency Medical Service was notified at
7! 21 p.m. Friday a spokeswoman said Saturday morning.
City polire r&lt;'port Sayre was apparently found lying in the
backyard of his home by a family member.
Patrolman P.E. Watterson Is investigating I he incident .

;

BONELESS
. RIBEYE STEAK
~SDA

Vf. PLEASANT- A Point Pleasant man was dead on arrival at

SMO~EYS

USDA CHOICE

$4 49

Suicide apparent cause of death

KAHN'S

USDA CHOICE

'o u

GALLIPOLIS - Absentee balloting for the Aug. 6 special election
In Gallipolis will begin Monday, accordinr to Gallla County Board of
Elections Directqr Charlotte Seamon.
Th&lt;' absentee balloting for tlle &lt;'lection, which could raiSI€ the city
Income tax by one-half of one percent to fund !he construction of a
municipal swtmming pool, wtll end on Saturday, Aug. 3, Seamon
sald.'rhe board of ei&lt;'Ctlonsofflcewill be open from9 a.m. until noon
on Aug. 3.
Seamon said ballots can be picked up during regular business
hours and the board of ei&lt;'Ctlons offlre will be open on Aug. 3 from 9
a.m. until noon for registered voters to cast their ballots. Ballots
must be returned to tlle board of elections by Aug. 6 to be counted;"'
Seamon added.

[

,. .

The Sunday Times·Sentinei~Page-A-3

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

Why should J1f1U consider
acareernsa

." STOCK BROKER»?
If your present job is no longer challenging • . . if you see
limited opportunities for high income • • • and if you are inter·
ested in a sales oriented career, consider this opportunity:
The Ohio Company is one of the coWJtry's strongest invest·
ment banking finns, dealing in all types pf securities. We have
cxceUent facilities and a strong commitment to the personal
success of.our brokers.
We are looking for individuals with a successful record in a '
sale&lt;·orienled field. We are· not interested in people who are
satisfied with a $50,000 per year income. We want individuals
whose long-range potential is s...,..al times that amoWJt.
.
Our company spends a great deal of time, effort arid money to
d~lop the skiDs of our people. Our sales representatives go
through an extensive four-month training program, during
which they
on salary. This training provides the knowledge
and responsibility necessary to conduct business with individuals, as ""'" as institutional cUcnts.
We have enjoyed steady and continuous growth in the
securities industry for over 60 years. One of the ways we have
achieved this is by selecting only the top people for our tr.l)ning
program. We do not make hasty decisions; therefore, if you want
to be considered for our next program, we urge you to contact

=

us """'

...

· The 1rcxt frrOgrnm bcgilu in Novcmbe.·.

CONTACT:
· Larry Hayes
Sales

Training

Direl'lor

155 East Broad Stro•t•l
' bus, Ohio 43215
Col urn
(614) 4M·681 I

7002

We llkt the time ro help rou lletormlne and achieve rour flnenclo/ oll/tctlves

�- --·-------

. ..... ...

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

' 1985
July 14.

Commentary and perspective
i'ttttbatt

Pl~yboy

~intts ..: jtn:f:iml
A Division of

825 Third Ave., GaiUpoUs, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992·2156

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
:HOBART WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

LETTERS Of OPIN ION arr ll'f'I ComNI. th£&gt;:V sholl lcl hf' ll"sS lh!!n ,10() wo1·ds
lon.'( . Alllt•thors un' sub jf'ct t o &lt;•eli !In~ and must be s lgnrd wlrn-namr. addt'&lt;'SS and

lr leph on&lt;' num b('rS, :'\o tjfl .'•dg nPd lrtl('rs will 00 publishN. Lf'tlf'rs sho li ld 'bP In
good ta Sl f'. addr Pss ln g I~SU('1, not pt'rson:llil i('s.

How to become a
school board member
"Now if! were on the school board ... "
l!ow many times have you said that a nd never done anything about it?
Perhaps you didn 't know where to start.
1"he Ohio School Boa rds Association has come to the rescue with its
second edition of a brochure "How to Become a School Board Member."
O:;&gt;BA officials said there was such favorable response to the first
brochure' two years ago tha t it has been revised.
·
Ohio's 3,500 school boa rd members are eleCted officials, serving a
four-year term, and by 1987, can earn as much as $8l a meeting.
The brochure details the .fob of a school board member and how to run for
the office.
The OS,BA plans a series of workshops throughout the state lohelp people
decide if they are qualified and really \yant to make the commitment
necessary to hOld the office.
The workshops will be held Sept. 5·in Zanesville, Sept. 9 in Dayton. Sept.
11 in Richfield. Sept . 13 in Col umbus and Sept. 17 in Perrysburg.
Alter tlle November election, the OSBA wiii conduct anotber series of
workshops to train new board members.
Major functions of a school board are to set educational goals and
establish policy fort school system based upon state laws and community
values. The brochure a lso says the board·ctoes a lotofP\]bllc r elat ions work
and is a link between the school sytem a nd the public.
Any American citizen 18 years of age &gt;fnd over who is a reside nt of a
particular school district and is a registerd voter is qu'a lified to run for !he
school board.
The first thing the JX'rson would do is obtain petitions at the county board
of elections office. TI1e petition has to be signed by 25 qualified electors of
the school district, or no tess than one percent of the school district e lectors
who voted lor governor a t the last general e lection, whichever is greater.
Petitions a to be filed wit h the county board of elections by 4 p.m . Aug. 22.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Page-A-4
'

July 14. 1985

needs help____Wi_i_llia_m_F._.B_uc_kley-=--·_Jr.

I h&amp;ve .here a form letter ("Dear
Bill" ) from tlle editorial di rector of
Playboy magazine, Arthur
Kretchmer ("Art" ), asking me to
authorize the use of my name In an
advert isi n g campaign aim ed
against groups who, protesting
those feat ures of Playboy that
made it famous, have urged
boycotts here and there against
stores tllat sell the magazine.
The letter Is wondertully complacent in tone, and, In its choice of
words, ratner more vulnerable
tha n it might have been. Its tone is
that of the fraternity · president
addressing his brothers. "You may
not be aware of it; but there are
some people out there who don't
like Playboy.'' Well , If you are not
aware of this, It may be you are not
aware that Washington was our
first president, and that Congress is
a bicameral legislature. The letter
goes on, ''I'm not talking about
those Effete Literary Snobs that
you're occasionally forced to diink
with In the Hamptons" (the allu~on

is to New York Review of Books
types who feel that you don't really
need to run a brothel in order to lure ·
people lntp good readings) . "I'm
talldng '!bout right-wing groups and
because zea lously makes
strange bedfellows - some leftwing groups as well." That the ·
~!tonal director of Playboy sbould
cavll at any .two people meeting In
bed (indeed, In Playboy, as often as
not the stranger they are to one
another, the better), is newsworthy,
though not newsworthy enough to
make It into the next Issue of
Playboy.
But the letter goes-on to complain
against "a kind of moralterrorlsm"
·,;a boycotts, a nd "on-site harassment. " Mr. Kretchmer reminds us
that last yea r his magazine won an
annual fiction prize and says that
" tile best writers in the world
publish In Playboy." This is quite
true, though it begs the point, which
is that the protesters aren't protesting the best writers in the world,
they are protesting, to say It again

exactly, that In .Playboy that made · speak, to write, to tllink and act as
they choose. ·T hat's . what the
it famous. Anotner way to put It is
American
Experiment Is ali
that If one were to take the whole of
about."
:
the sertous content over the last 10
But you see, the American
yeat;s of Playboy, segregate It, and
experiment
I s not working out just
stick it be.tweet\ the covers of, oh,
peachy-keen.
The current Issue of'
The Atlantic Monthly, or Harper's ,
Newsweek
magazine
announces
or the Saturday Review, these
that
by
the
end
of
the
decade as
publlcatlons would not be enjoying
many
as
one-half
of
the
children
of
a circulation of five million. More
Ameiica will be ·raise&lt;! by single
like 200,00!, nl,OOJ. About what
parents. Between 1970 and 19!lJ,
they have without tlle sex.
Illegitimate births in the white
What Mr. Kretchner et al. don't
community rose from six percent to
like to face up to Is tllat Playboy is
11 percent, and in the black
also a cultural statement. And not a
community, free 38 percen ( to 55
c ultural statement obliquely prespercent.
ented. The first decade or two of
Because they all read Playboy?
Playboy contained a protracted
Of
course not. But it Is unquestlonamo~thly essay by lts founder, Hugh
,bly
the case that sell-Indulgence
Hefner, In which he tirelessly
(".The Me Decade") has a grt&gt;at
deplored, assailed · and mocked
deal to do with the fragility of
traditional moral views Involving
personal relations. Wa nton sex, like
licit and. Illicit sex. The proposed
wanton booze or wanton idleness or
Playboy ad for which signatures
wanton thought, breeds undesiraare being solicited begins, " The
ble tlllngs, among them basta rds,
American Experiment, after more
but also broken homes. And broken
than 200 years, Is working out just
homes breed things iike violence,
fine. Ameiicans are still . free
neglected children and drug addiction - the stigma of modern
America . Most . emphatically not
w hat the Ameiican Expertement Is
AU About.
It Is hardly Playboy's exclusive
responsibility that this should be so.
But we have traveled a long
. distance from Nathaniel Hawthorne, who awarded a scarlet
letter to adulterers, to Hugh Hefner,
who thinks adu ltery Is good plain
American wholesome fun and takes
prid• In his magazine as' the
principal architect of the sexual
revolution.
I add this, that I have frequently
wiitten for Playboy, as I would
wnte for any journal that ·actdressed five million readers. And I
gave a straightforward answer to
the question why ! did this, feeiing
as I do, In a Playboy interview
publis hed 15 years ago. ! write for
Playboy, J said , because it is tbe
fairest way to communicate with
my 17-year-old son .

Compulsory education.______________:J_ac_;_k_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_D_al_e_Va_n_A_t_ta
religious beliefs.
WASHINGTON - At a disturbThe Sniders, who live In a suburb
ing rate, American parents are
of Richmond, are Catholics and
removing their childre n from pub·
members of the Pius X movement .
lie schools and plac ing them In
This
means they cling to the
private schools -or teaching them
church's
teachings as they were
at home.
This trend reflects a growing
before the cha nges that emerged
from Vatica n II .
disenchantment with the public
school system. Many parents think
Mrs. Snider had gone to parochial
schoo l as a girl and had Intended
their children are not only being
that her daughter, Domonique, now
poorly educated but are being
10. and her son, Karon, nine, should
deprived of the strict moral and
have· the same educ3tion. But Mrs.
et hica l guidance cons istent with the
Snider was disturbed at the local
parents' religious orientation .
parochial school's teachi ng o! sex
While many ed ucators recognize
education in kindergarten a nd first
the shortcomings of the public
grade. She tried two ot he r private
schools. they are not happy with the
schools,
and found them unsatisfacproliferation of non-Catholic, Christory also, m ainly beca use of a
tian schools caused by parental
conflict with her religious beliefs.
distrust of public school morality.
So in September 1982, Mrs. Snlder
Yet there are more thah 10,00! of
began teaching her two children at
these schools today, wi th perhaps a
home, using the "Our Lady of
million student s.
·
Victory" home study course.
·The number of " home schools" Is
A neighbor tattled on the Snlders,
impossible to estimate because
and the principal of the local school
many parents keep secret the fact
called to ask why the c hildren
tha! they're teaching their c hildren
at home. They fea r running afoul of • weren't enrolled. Then came a visit
by a county social service worker.
the law a nd having their c hildren
According to the Sniders' brief to
ordered to attend public school.
the Supreme Court, "(She ) wrote a
This fear is far from groundless,
as Richa rd and Margaret Snider glowi ng report of the Snide r
disoovered when the common- children's attitude and their a ppar·
wealth of Virginia took on the role of ent education, and a lso the genera(
uuant officer. Only the Supreme a tmosphere In which the children
Court can now save the Snlders lived. In addition, her report stated
from the possibility of jail, ru'Tnous that the books the Sniders· were
fines a nd loss of their two c hildren using appeared to be g rade level
- or capitulation to the state in appropriate."
In a subsequent exchange of
violation of their deeply held

Berry's World
•
•

•
•

,•

'

"I

'

" HONESTLY, GEORGE! I liked 'Cocoon.' but I
DON'T want to see It EVERY NIGHT!"

letters, the county superintendent
of schools insisted tha t the Sniders
enroll their children In the local
schools. The Sniders refused, claim·
ing exemption on religious
grounds. They reiied on the VIrgini a Compulsory Education Law
provision stating tha t a school
board "shall excuse from attend ance at school any pupil who,
together with his parents, by reason
of a bona fide religious training or
belief, is conscientiously opposed to
attendance at school."
But the . supeiintendent stated
that the exemption didn 't a pply to

the Sniders because, he said, the
Catholic Church did not oppose
attendance at public schools. On
March 3, 1983, the Solders were
charged with "truancy," a crim inal
miscJ.emeanor.
" I lived In consta nt fear that they
would come and take my children,
so I sent my children away," Mrs.
Snider told us.
The Sniders were convicted.
Accordi ng to Mrs. Snider, the judge
verbally warned them that they
would spend a t least a week In jail
and be fined $50 for every day t he
children were not e nrolled after a

set date tl)_e following month.
The wrttten decree was less
harsh, ordering a $100 line and
threatening the Sniders wilh contempt of court if they failed to enroll
their children by April 11. The
Solders hired a lawyer, William
~ton, and appealed to the circuit
court, which upheld the lower court
decision.
Circuit Judge L. P aul Bryne
acknowledged that Mrs. Snider was
not a bad teacher and her children
were probably getting at least as
good an education as they would get
In public schools. But he ruled that

they were guilty because their
views were philosophica l, not
· religious.
The judge based hi s conclusion on
" my personal knowledge of the
Ca tholic fail h." From thi s vant age
point, the judge concluded that the
Snlders' belief- that sending their
children to public schools would be
a sin - Was not based on their
religious faith.
The Sniders are claiming the
VIrginia school attendance law
violates their Iights under the First
Amendment to the free exercise of
religion.

Linament treatment ________;L=.ow==eu:.. .:w.:. . :t::..::l·ng:l::::e.:.::..u

If your eyes_burn and smart and we were younger. Wheh I broke m y
your nose drips like a leaky faucet,
hip last winter, I expected to be up
don't get excited. That 's not hay and back in action long ago. If you
fever you have but you have remember, I broke the other hlp 15
probably been unfortunate enough . years ago and now have two hips
to pass down wind of me. That's not loaded down with steel Instead of
pollen tha t's bothering you. It 's my the lead I had before. I don't
linament!
anticipate any trouble in the fulure
Linament and I go way back. I eXcept when T go by a metal
come from a generation that detector. That Is the reason I don't
b&lt;&gt;licvcd the more poweriul a visit the White House much these
medicine smelled, the more power- days, I don 't want to embarrass the
fulli s action. It 's hard to get money Secret Service more than necesfrom the beliefs of years but to ttrls sary but if ldogo to Washington, I'll
day I can't believe the miracle be sure to wear clean underweat:.
drugs are as effective as the doctors But enough of this aimless specula- ·
claim because they. are adminis- tlon. I started out to tell you about
tered by a snea k attack with a my linament.
hypodermic needle from the rear
If you are too young to have
and you can't even smell the result, attended a one ~ roorn country
That's wh y I was so receptive to the sc hool, your olfactory education
suggestion of a relative to try a new has been sadly neglected. There
li name~t on the market w hich she
you cou ld distinguish each family
had used wit h good results. It member by their smell. Each
wasn't Sloan's Linament which was family back then usull lly had a
a household necessity when I was a ,live-In ,grandparent who doubled as
boy on Pension Ridge but It smelled the · family medicai advisor and
almost as strong.
, provided the ingredien ts for their
Like I said, linament and I go way favorite home rem&amp;lies. Most of
back . Seventy some years, if you these remedies were for the
want a measurement of tim e. I can common ailments of the time and
rpmcmber one wi nter oight when I
were made by mixing common
woke with a croupy cough and
herbs then plentiful in the fields a nd
couldn't get my breath. Grandma,
woods. Today these are the weeds
who had reared nine children of her
we e~adicate with mowing and
own, met the emergency with chemicals. Each fa mily had a
outward calm • but betrayed her part icular ·remedy of which they
hidden fears by getting the wrong were extremely proud which had a
medicine and dousing me liberally smell of Its own and we kids learned
fore a nd aft. Instead of getting the to distinguish family members by
'-"(regu la_r croup home medication the way they smelled. But put 25 or
which I believe was kerosene and 30 children in a one-room school
la rd, she got hold of the Sloan
house with a Burnside stove and the
Llnamcnt and applled trn; liquid fire different mix of odors sometimes
to my c hest· and back. True, It
became downright overpowering.
cleared up my breathing apparatus
Spring and fall, as I remember It,
but I never forgot how It lett on my . were not so bad but when the
four-year old skin. But that didn't cla"ssroom was closed during the
end my adventures with SlQan's " 1nter weeks, Fiiday evening
Llnament by a long shot. I stJll had ·couldn't come too soon. The most
eight years ahead of me In one room overpowering smell of ali came
school houses.
from Sloan's Linament, which was
Like m ost Senior Citizens, I don 't p~rt of almost every families' stock
Uke to ' a dmil that Injuries lake of home remedies and was often the
longer to heal than they did when ·only -J:emedy which was store

bought . Most of the rest had been . torn from an old sheet. As a boy I
family recipes passed down from
ran remember my summer garb
generation to generation brewed by
consisted of three a rticles, a shirt ,
the eiders who guarded the secret •
eralls and a rag around my big
ingredients With almost fanatical
.. If you wore a nything else, you
zeal. Most of the neighbors re" re considered "putting on the
spected their privacy and I can't
d g" and you might be banished
remember of any secrets being
fr m playing with the big boys.
stolen. Perhaps It was because
PI ing with girls was absolutely
most of the neighbors already knew
unh ard of on Pension Ridge when I
the Ingredients and had their own
was a boy. Of course we knew tha t
methods of blel\dlng them togethe r .
In some m ysterious way girls were
There are only so many ways that a
made differently from boys but no
cold or cough can be treated.
one I knew had ttie nerve to find out
Minor accidents werf.' accepted
how or why. When I asked
as a way of life. Anything short of a
Grandma, she said, "That's somebroken bone was t.rea tedwlth salve,
thing you will learn soon enough."
poultices or homemade dressings
She was right !

r

Doonesbury

The Sunday Times·Sentinei__: Page- A·6

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Poin~ Pleasant. W. Va.

Federal Mogul adds personnel

-Business briefs:

Recent organizational changes at
;Federal Mogul has resulted In the
employment of a new employment
supervisor and a new general
accounting supervisor.
Ralph IU&gt;ner, the new employment supervisor, will be responsible

Goodyear, union reach accord
PIKETON- Tbe Goodyear Atomic Corporation and United Plant
Guard Workers of Amen can, Local 00, have reached agreement on a
new three-year contract. The union members voted on July 9 to
accept the contract.
Goodyear Atomic Corporation Is a subsidiary of The Goodyear
Tire. &amp; Rubber Company and operates the Portsmoutll Area
Uranium Enrichment Plant under a contract with the U.S.
Department of Energy. Local 66 represents the members or
.. Goodyear Atomic's hourly pollee force.
·
'
The contract, which was scheduled to expire July Zl, calls for
general wage and benefit increases over tllree years.

for all safely activitles,employment
related actlvltie,s and project
asstgnments.
A recent graduate of Robert
Morris College in Pittsburgh, Pa.,
Morris comes to Federal Mogul
from Kentucky Electric Steel. He

has also worked lor Standard Steel
and M&lt;;Craw-Edlson ln. accident
prevention and loss control
management.
Thomas Baarman, the new
general accounting supervisor, is a
Marshall University graduate and
will be responsible for the general
ledger, accounts payable and capital assets.
.
Baarman has . hcid previous
accounting management pos!tjons ·
at Chromalloy America-Sturm Ma chine, Kaiser Aluminum, Corbin
Ltd., and Callaway, Trainer a nr;l

Business workshop scheduled
ATHENS - Persons interested In attending the workshop
"Record Keeping for Small BuslnessatOhio Univ&lt;&gt;rslty's Innovation
Center are urged to make r&lt;&gt;servations Immediately lor the July 18
afternoon session.
Registration forms may be obtained by calllng (614) 594-6682 or
writing Innovation Ceq.ter, One President Street, Athens, 0., 45701. A
$5 registration lee Is required.
Sponsored by the Innovation Center, a small business incubator,
and the U.SD. Small Business Administration, the workshop wUI be
held from 1 to 5 p.m., July 18, and is open to all personswbo own their
own business or who are contemplating beginntng a business.
··
.Athens ae&lt;;ountant Lynn C. Crane wlli present the program, which
will cov&lt;&gt;r tlle following topics: pettY cash, cash control, cash vs.
accrual accounting systems, general journal and ledger, basic
bookkeeping systems, payroll records and depreciation.
_
Interested persons may tour the Innovation Center from noon until
1 p.m . prior to the beginning of the workshop. The center. provides
low-overhead space and access to business and technical consulting
to start-up and some already existing small businesses.

Bob Hood

.Hood becomes
.4th generation
of clothiers
~

GALLIPOLIS
Bob Hood has
joined the Haskins-Tanner Company lull time, effective June 10. He
·graduated from Cedarville College
on June 8, with a Bachelor of Aiis
Degree In Bu~ness Administration,
majoring in marketing and
management.
He will become the fourth
generation of clothiers at the store.
He is the great grand5ono!JamesL.
Haskins, who was -associated with
· the Harry Frank &amp; Sons Co., which
became the Haskins-Tanner Co. In
June 1936 under the directorship of
Mr. Haskins and his son , Mortis E .
Haskins.
Burhl ·D. Hood ( Bob' s grandlather, wbo married Virginia Ha s·
kins) joined the store in 194!1. The
present manager, Rgger L. Hood
(Bob's father! joined the store
lull-time in 1960.

CUSP 52!&lt;-8001

J

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

George E. Woodward Jr.

Doctor joins
clinic staff;
administrator
gets degree
GALLIPoLIS - Robert Daniel ,
Holzer Clinic Administrator, announced today Dr. Chris Johnson
will be temporarily joining the staff
of Holzer Clini c's Surgery
Dcpmt ment .
Dr. Johnson fs a fully qualified
· surgeon. havingrecentlycompleted ·
his residency in gen&lt;"t'a l surgery
through the Cniversity of Cincinnat i. Dr. Johnson received his
medical training at the Un iversity of
Wisconsin. ·
"I feel that we arc extremely
fortuna te to have Dr. johnson on
staff at this time," Daniel said,
"since hP will soon be Starting
fellowship in transplant surgery at

'
Dr. Chris Johnson

a

Veterans Memorial
Hospital news

the.University of Minnesota.''

Futhcr, it has been announced
'tMt clinic admini strator Daniel has
received his degree as Master of
Business Administration through
Ohio University. T he program
involved a two year cour·se of study
integrat ing both thecretical a nd
practical applica tion of concepts in
the operation of orga nizations.
Daniel received top honors and
placed first in his class.
He has been the adm inistator of
Holzer Clinic since 1971. f.le a nd his
wife, Jane. together with their four
children reside on Garfield Ave.,
Ga ll ipolis.

GALLIPOLIS - Katrlnka V.
Hart has been promoted to assistant
cashier and manager ,of the Jackson
·Pike office of the Ohio Valley Bank
Company, effective July 1.
According to Jim Dailey, the
bank's president and chief executive officer, Hart joined the bank In
September, 197\l, as a teller at the
Jackson Pike office. Hart assumes
reponsibillty of all operations of the
office after a three-yeartenue In the
bank's Co n sumer Loan
Department.
.
President Dailey also announced
Gecrge E . Woodward, Jr., has
joined the bank's Consumer Loan
Department. Woodward, a graduate of Ga!lia Academy High School
and the Ohio School of Bank
· Marketing, is a member ana past
president of the Gallipolis Area
Jaycees, as well as cha irman of the
advisory committee of the 0.0.
Myintyre Park Dishict .
He brings six years of banking
experience to his new responsibilities, which began July 1.

Qffl('(' .

Membli'r: UnH('d P re ss lntl'rriiHional,
Inland Daily Pres s Ass O&lt;'I a tlon and tht'
Ohio Newspaper ASsiV"Iatlon . Na tiona l

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

Personnel
•
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announced
Katrinka V. Hart

and Thomas Baannan

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Published each Su nday, 825 Third Ave .,
Gallipolis. Ohio. by the Ohio Valley Pub·
Us hlng Compa ny: Mullimedla. Inc. Se·
cond class postage paid at Ga llipolis.
Ohio 4fiG.1L Entered as second class
maUing rriallf'r at Pom ('roy. Ohio. Pos1

2fi WE'eks ............ •. ................... $29.12
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:l :! WC'C'kS ......... ... .......... .......... $59.80

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422 Second· Ave.
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"We tiO~f be u.. erprlced on dlamolds."

.&lt;-Se1rs, Roebuck ond Co., r985

'

.

�-Pleasant, W. Va.

14,1986

Amy Sisson joins
Gallery Hai~ Arts

Completes Course
POMEROY- Brad Alexander of
Pomeroy recently completed a 540
through the adult education department of Buckeye Hills Career
Center and the Gallla-JacksonVinton JVSD.
The course Included basic engine
block. power train, brakes, suspension, alignment, balancing, engine
tune up, ignition, charging systems,
heating and · air conditioning and
·
computer literacy.
For in forma lion on courses to be
pffered next fall residents may
contact the department at 614-2455336.

woman 'cited after accident

GALLIPOLIS - A U(ngsville woman was cited Friday by the
Gallla-Melgs post of the ,State Highway· Patrol following a twO-car
colllslon on Township Rood 324 ln Meigs County.
·
Troopers said Danny D. Barrett, ~.of Dexter, was·northbound on
32C, around tM&gt;tenths of a mile north of Meigs County45, when a car
operated by Bernice R Searls, 22. of Langsville, allegedly struck the
rear of Barrett's vehicle.
Searls' vehicle susta,lned light damage ln the 4 p.m . accident,
lroo!lers said. Searls was charged hy troopers with !allure to stop In
an assured clear distance.

Police iss_ue citation
GAlLIPOLIS- Rebecca C. Jones,~. of 627'Th!rd Ave., was cited
Frtday by city pollee for failure to display valid registration.

'

'

tZEJII~

Fire damages building's rontents

CHARGE IT (MOST STORES)

BIG WV.'NER- Juanita Pullins, 39819 Union Ave., Pomeroy, was the
big winner in the "Have a Picnic o~ Us" sweepstakes of Fruth
Pharmacy. Her prize is seven days for two offun and sun bt Acapulco on
the Mexican Rivier-a. Only murri~'CI In 1\fay, she and berhusband,Gerald
Pullins, will he making this their honeymoon trip. Pidured with Mrs.
Pullins, right, l• . Gwen Smith, pharamlst-manage• ... of the Fruth"
Phm1nacy ln Middleport. All eight Fruth stores partiCipated in the
sweepstakes.

GAlLIPOLIS - An electrical short in the work area was the
apparent Ca!Jse of a Friday night fire at M.R. Chain-Saw on Mitchell
Rd ., according to Gail!polls Fire Department officials.
The 6: 19 p.m. blaze ca)lsed approximately $8,!XXJ damage to the
building's contents. No damage to the building's structure was
reported. The contents of the business were valued·at ~.COJ, while
the structure Is valued at $8,())), officials said. Firefighters were on
the scene for more than an hour, the officials added.

Hurry In for Big Savings!

Multimedia names new veep;
expands duties of two others
GREENVILLE, S.C. - The
Multimed ia Newspaper Co., has
named 'One of liS newspaper
ers who are already vicepresidcnts.

Multimedia is the parent company of Ohio Valle)' Publishing Co.,
which publishes th£' OiJ ily ~ribunr,

The Daily Smlinei and the Point
I Pleasant Register
W. deBerniet·c Mebane, the
· publisher of the Greenville NewsPiedmonl. was elevated to vice
president by Donald J . Bari]yte,
ptl'sident of Multimedia News-paper Co.

PublishC'I'S H . Doyle

Hmvill of lhe Al"bama Jouni"aiAdvet1iser, and Richard B. Wynne
of the Asheville Cir!zcn·Times have
been giver broader rC'srxmsibiliries

Save

The three men will retain their
posilions as publlsher in addition to
I heir new responsibilities. Harvill.
who was appointed Vice President
of Operations In 1979, will oversee
Multimedia's publications in Mont gomery and Prattville, Ala., Wint er
Mountain Home, Ark. Mebane will
supervise operations for the Greenville. S.C., newspapers as well as
those In the Ohio Valley and
Staunt on, Va. Wynne, who was
named Vice President of Planning
in 1981. will be responsible for the
Asheville newspapers, pl~s the
Clarksville and Middle Tennesse&lt;.&gt;
opera tions , includingtheMus!cCity

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Ohio: 800/582-7391
Outside Ohio: 800/543-7331 •-

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klns, 100 sq. rods, Orange.
Viiiage of Middleport to Middleport Housing Corp., Lots, Middleport Viiiage.
Ethel M. Kauffman, William B.
Kauffman to Max E. Pickett,
Thelma R. Pickett, Lot 24, Letart.
Thomas W. Harper to Robert
Fife. Lot 48. Middleport.
,.
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Senna K Mart!n,
David Marlin
eo
Schultz to Leah J. A:itiaugh Haw- ·..to''Rebert .FJ!e;-tot 84. Middiepor1.

.

Fined$12 andcostsfornodriver's
license was Clifford D. Simpklns,18,
Pleasant, W.Va. Simpkins
had his fine and cos(!; on a

charge of failure ·to ' control
suspended.
Kenneth L. Ours, 30, or Rt. 1,
Crown City, forfeited $40 bond for
failure to display valid license plates
and $347 bond for an overweight
truck. Kevin D. Halley, 26, of Rt . I,
Crown C!ry, forfeited $423.30 bond
for an overweight truck. •
Fined $12 and costs for driving left
ofcenterwasAI!sa D. Ralney,20,of
Rt. 4, Gallipolis. Terry D. Hale of
Gallipolis, was fined $10 and costs
for speeding.
Forfeiting $40 bond for traffic
violations were Edgar G. Cline, 42.
of Rt. 1, Crown City, insecure load;
Betty J . Lambert, :!2, of Rt. I,
Langsville, driving left of center in a
curve; Robert E . O'Dell, 56, o!Rt. 2.
Gallipolis, improper backing; and
Heory J. Sheets, 72, 'of Eureka Star
Rpute, passing without an assu~
clear distanCe ahead.
Forfeiting bond for speedin~were
Dennis R Davidson, ~. of Gallipolis, $38; and Michael R Russcii,19, ·
o!Rt.1, Crown.C!ty, $40.

NOW YOU

648 Jackson 'Pika, Gallipolis, 614·446-1760
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9-6; Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9-7:30; Sat. 9&gt;3: Closed Wed.

•

•

'\
•

I

WOMAN HONORED -Mildred Barlow Sisson, personnel director and office cashier oft he G.C. Murphy Co., Second Ave., Gallipolis, was recently honored after having completed 25 years of
service. She began her career at ~lurphy's In August 1953. She
worked as a salesperson, then became a bookkeeper. She left the
company due to the illness of her husband. After his death, she returned to the company working in various areas of the store. She
was later promoted to Personnel Director. After three years, she
was given additional reSponsibilities as office cashier. She was /
presented with gifts from the company recently, including a Certificate of Appreciation signed by the company president, shares of
Murphy stock and a vase of 25 red roses, presented by manager
John Garrett. Former manager, Roy Chose, was also present for
the occasion. The employees purchased a cake.

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AAA WAIITSYiJuR 11*0 TO HAVE ASAFE TRIP.
I'J.AAA. we do everything""" can to make sure your
vacation is free from wort'(. That~ why we offer American
&amp;press'1iM!ers Oleques-theones travelers cheque
uo;ers'prefer~ And, lfleo{ re available with no service
charge to AMmanbers. So before\'&lt;)u go, stop atMA

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and get l\meriam Express liawlers Cheques.
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.
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·~ H &amp;ru..JriOmnll.tS... dv..r~~&lt;~n~ C~tiOtf\Cia,l\llfj"lll&amp;t

•

GALLIPOLIS - A bad · check
charge against a Gallipolis man was
dismissed wltllout prejudice Friday
In Gallipolis Municipal Court
Clarence E. · Thompson of 123
Klneon Dr., was ac.cusedofwrlting a
$1,&amp;kl check to Arthur W. Wro·
blewsklof818FirSi Ave., on Mar. 23.
Chris W. Waugh of Eureka Star
Route, forfeited $75 bond for
marijuapa posess!on.
A charge 'of no child restraints
against Michael E . Russell, 19, o!Rt .
1, Crown City, was dismissed after
he ohtalned proper restraints.
In tr '" • cases, Rober1 L. Bates,
22.of978First Ave., received twosix
month suspended jail terrns and was
fined $24 plus costs for driving under
financial responslblllty suspension
and no driver's license. Bates was
also placed on 18 months probaNon
on each of the charw;s.

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Arthur. T,. Woodyard, deceased,
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Richard · B. Payne, Sherry L.
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Court were Lant ~ts, Galliilo-' ~~
lis, $45, assLi-el'l\ clear distance;
Howard Bahr,~ r)mg Bottom, $50,
speedi ng; Rodney Tripp, Pomeroy,
$50, . speeding; Robert Winston,
Wadsworth, $50, speeding; Terry
George, Hamden,$45. failing to stop
before driving vehicle across railroad grade; Craig Phillips, Wadswor1h. $50, speeding.

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Pomeroy, 525 and ;,.,sts; Byron
McCoy, Reedsville, S2l a nd costs;
Alelha Wagner, Middleport ,$~and
costs; Harold Laughlin, Athens, $25
and costs; Dee Dalley, Long
Bott~m. $22 and costs; Lloyd
Blackwood, Pomeroy, $23 and
costs; Thomas Wolfe, Middlepor1 ,
$20 and costs: Charlotte Dillard,
Pomeroy, $28 and costs; Chr1stopher Wolfe,Raclne,$25andmsts;
Guy Gibbs, Columbus, $23 a nd
costs; Jesse Copley, Gnadenhuu~n.

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Landers, Middleport,~ and costs,
30 days In jail suspended , restitulion, six months probation, crtrninal
mischief; DarleneCuJ111, Pomeroy.
$a) and cosV., restitution, passlng
bad checks; James Will,· Jr.,
Pomeroy, ~ and costs, expired
Ohio license, $10 and costs, fa!llngto
transfer registered plates; Dannie
Jacks, LongBottom, $25 and costs,
reckless operation; Gregory John·
son, Middleport, $10 and costs,
restitution, passlng bad cllecks;
Mary Moreland, Raclne, $20 and
costs, restitution, passing bad
checks; Carl Rose, Racine, $2V and
costs, restitution, passing bad
checks; Carlos McKnight, Rutland ,
costsandrefrain!romcomplalnant ,
disorderly conduct; John Bentley,
McDowell, Ky ., $15' and costs.
overw!dth; David Cundiff, Racine,
$10 and costs, assured clear
distance; Alice Chapman, Langsville, $10 agd costs, running a stop
sign; John Litchfield, New Haven,
$10andcosts, improper start.
Fined in Meigs County CourtJor
speeding were Vio(et Walker,

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dismissed in court

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report fUed by Pollee Chief Sid L!Uie.
The department Investigated five accidents and pollee vehicles
were driven 5,110 miles during the month.
Merchant pollee collections totaled $38; and, parking
collections were $743.17.
There were ~1 parklng meter tickets written.

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All of the fatal accidents ln Meigs County during 1985 have been
alcohol related, Henderson said, while alcohol was not a factor in any
of the fatal accidents in Gallia County.
To combat the problem, "the troopers will continue to work the
federally funded S.T.E.P. program (Selective Traffic EnforCement
Program) I'!_apprehend the drinking driver," Henderson said. The
Gallipolis posthas made 220 DWI arrests in the first six months of
1985, Henderson added.
Additional STEP hours have been scheduled in Meigs County in an
effor1 to curb the alcohol -related fatalities there, Henderson added.

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GAlLIPOLIS - Fatal accidents in Gallia and Meigs Counties
durlng the first have of 1985 have lisen by 40 wrcent over th~ same
petiod last year, according to Lt. Dan Henderson, commander of the
Gitllla-Melgs post of the State Highway PatroL
Four fatal accidents were reported in Gallia County during the
first six montrn; in both 1984 and 1985, Henderson said. However, he
added, three fatal accidents were &gt;&lt;?ported in Meigs County during
lh~ first balf of 19!1i, compared with one during the same period in

for ot her Multimedia publications in

publishers as a Vice president and Is
expanding the duties of 1wo publish-

,POMEROY .:.. Judge Patrick
0 Brten concluded thirty-seven
cases this week In Meigs County
Court. -·
Fined were Mary Fowler, Coolville, $.1i0and costs, tendays!njail,
120 day license suspension, DWI;
Jackie Smith, The PialnS, $om and
. costs,10days.!njail, 120day license
suspension, DWI; CleU LaBonte,
Jr., Long Bottom, $250 and costs,
three days In jall, 60 day license
suspension, OWl, costs only for
failure to .control vehicle; Steve
Stanley, Albany, $100 and costs, five
dayslnjailtobesuspendetl!fanOh!o
license is obtained within M days, no
bhio license, $35 and costs for
making a left hand tum lnto the
wrong lane of traffic; Alexander
May, Pomeroy, $75 and costs, three ·
days ln jall suspended, six months
probation, faillng to stop after an
accident, $25 and ·costs for drtv!ng
left of center; Margaret Cox,
Mlddlepor1, $50 and costs, no valid
operator's license; Donna M. Lahey, Big Pine Key, Fla., $60 and
c~ts, no operator's license; Charles

Gallia, Meigs fatals increase

their res peel ive regions.

The

W. Va.

- ·Local.briefs:--- 3 7 cases settled in ·Meigs C9pnty C~urt
.

POMEROY - Amy Sisson is
being welcomed as a new member
of the staff at Gallery Hair Arts, E.
Main St., Pomeroy. A 1!flolgradua\l'
ot the Meigs High School cosmetology program and a graduate of
Parkersburg Beauty College, Sisson Is a previous employe of Janet's
Hair Go-Round ln Mason.
She holds licenses for both Ohio
and West Virginia. Her hours at the
Gallery Hair Arts are Tuesdays,
Frtdays and Saturdays from 9 a.m.
•to5p.m. andfrom9a.m. to7 p.m.on
·
Thursdays.

hour auto mechani~ course offered ·

Ohio-Point

GAmefiCi nEl&lt;p&lt;od n....tbl•l.. 5oil'llfcU~Il'/.lrlll". LilliS

~-eney
·
360 S.COIIIfiYil
0

446-0699

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SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA '
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July 14, 1985

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

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i'eutiu.d ·

Section~
July 14, 1988

COOLING OFF -The wilier
sUde was the most popular ·
adlvlty of GDC F1eld Day at .

Raccoon Cn'ek County Park, DO
. matter if you participated or
were a speCII!ior. Here, BID
Da~ (f.alllpolls Developmental,.
~ctlvlly Therapist COol'- • :
dlnator. shows everyone how It's : ,
done, taking the lln!t of many : •
trips down the cooL sUppery • ;
plastic. The water slide was • ;
provided and supervised by the : ;
0.0. Mcintyre Park Dlstrld.
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Times -Sentinel
photos by
Lee Ann Welch

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GDC Field Day: sun, fun, slide
as everyone gets into the act

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CINDY HAD A Ll'lTLE LAMB - Bleallng along
· was lhls Utile lamb, !rom the !ann ofP...,t Volunteer
•Assoclaiion Secretary Glenn Graham. His daughter,
'Cindy, keeps a reign oo the little animal, while another

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daughter, Mary Lynn, a GDC resident, pels it. Also on
hand that day were dogs and puppies from the Gaflia
County Animal WeHare League.

ByLEEANNWELCH .
11mes-Sentlnel staff
GALLIPOLIS- Everyone likes a
day ;!Way from it all, time for fun
and frolic; and residents of Gallipolis Developmental Center are no
exception .
Recently, they conducted the first
field day ever for the residents, held
at Raccoon Creek County Park.
Residents and employees alike had
a great time sunning themselves •
visiting with each other and eating
the grilled hot dogs and h~m- ·
burgers, along with other picnic
goodies .
While there was a variety of
activity for the residents tot ake part
in, the hit of the day was a water
slide, compliments of the 0.0 .
Mcintyre Park District. Everyone.
some more willing to "take the
sllde" than others, seemed to enjoy
the cool water on a 90-degree day,
coming back for ride aft errldedown
jhe hill on slippery plastic.
"The water slide was a new
experience for the residents,"
according to Lucy Earwood, volunteer. service director at GOC. She
said they enjoyed the new SC'nsatlon
of sliding on the water, to which a
llttl~ dj,swashing detergent was
· added. ·
Members of the Gallia County
Animal Welfar~ League brought
dogs and puppies for the' GDC
residents tosee;hotd, pet and talk to,
sort of a "traveling pet therapy

program." They were coordinated
by Marilyn Smith of the league.
There was also a lamb bleating Its
way into everyone's hearts. sent by
Glenn Graham of Northup, who is
secretary of the Parent Volunteer
Association at GDC. He has been
awanled Fat her of the Year byGov.
Richard Celeste for the Gallipotls
Development Center.
Pul together by Mrs. Lucy
Earwood.lhedaywasmeanttogive
residents an oi&gt;Portunlty to have :
some time away from the facility
and take part in games and other
outdoor activity.

velopmental Center residents maae
the trip by shuttle bus, and about SO
staff members helped, Mrs. Earwood said. In charge of the
transportation was Bill Davis,
activity therapist coordinator, she
said.
Another activity for residents and
employees was a tractor-drawn hay
ride, with everyone sitting in a
wOOden wagon piled with bales of
hay, provided by the Park District .
The ride took them around the park
and through theshadywoodedareas
and along the creek.
"The day was very successful, the
residents really enjoyed the hayride
and animals," "1fs. Eatwo(ld said .
"It would he treat to make an
annual thing, " she added. Mrs.
Earwood admitted it was a lot.of
work for just a few hours activity',
but the residents enjoyment made It
all worthwhile, she said .
·

"There is a picnic area here (a1

GDC,) but this was a change of
scenery," Mrs. Earwood said. A
picnic on the grounds can be pretty
and relaxing, she added, but getting
to new surroundings makes it
special, she added.
Approxim.ately 150 Gallipolis De-

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TOURING THE PARK - Hay rides on a wooden, lrador-drawn,

wagon were l!lvm thniupout lhe day at Raccoon Creek Ceunly Park
for the l'l'lllldenl8 Md employees al Gallipolis Developmenlal Q!aler at
their J'l!lllllt field day. The ha.v ride was a very popular aUivtty at the·
event,.aooordlng to Volunleer Services Dlredor Lucy Earwood, who
headed up ll!e project. She llllid lhe l'8!liclonts were "" happy wllh the
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day, she hopes to make It an annual evenl for them. Approximately 100
resident• Md liO staff members look pari. 'The day, designed for a

mange of scenery at a plenlc, was weD received by 8iafl members and
the resldenlo alike, and residents were bused to the park lor the day's
actlvllles, which hegan early, ending around 3 p.m.

OLD-FASWONED FUN - Tossing a bean bag can he plenty of
excltemenl lor some people, and preCty entertaining. Here, GaDipolls.
DevelopmEnlal Cenler,resldent Joe Clark waits his tum to toes. Other
acttvlttes Included visiting with a lamb and several dogs and puppies, a '
water slide and griDing hot dogs and hamliurK'I'rs.

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Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio~ Point Pleasant,

July 14. 1985

Va. ·

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The Sunday Tin'les-Sentinei-Page-8-3

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

· O'Brien - Pape
RACINE ~ Carol Ann O'Brten,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
O'Brien, and Pfc. Allen Lee Pape,
son of Mr. and Mrs.Jolm Pape, are
arutOUnclng their engagement and
approaching marriage.
The couple. wUI -'be married on
Aug. 31 at 2:00 p.m. In an open
church ceremony at the Racine

We Reser,ve The Right To
limit Quantities

.

STOR-E" HOURS
Mon ..-Sat. 8 AM-10' PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JULY' 20, 1985
.

POMEROY - Plans have been
completed for the open church
wedding of Catherine Loul,9e Blaettnar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jolm
William Blaettnar, Pomeroy, and
Richard Allen Johnson, Son of Mr.
and Mrs. Hany Johnson, Flatwoods
Road, Pomeroy.
The wedding will take place on

Coupons

Ground Beef ••• ~.$1 °
•

USDA CHOICE

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('huck Roast ••••• 99&lt;
(

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DINNER BELL KIELBASA

·Smoked Sausage ::

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Whole Fyre.rs •••• 49&lt;
LB.

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ACROSS

Saturday, July 20, at the Trinity
Congregational Church at~: 30 p.m .
The Rev. W.H. Perrin wlll officiate
ai the ceremony.
A reception honoring the couple
will be held at the Royal Oak Park
archery building following the
wedding.

9 AMto9 PM
Saturday 9 AM ta S PM

·rHE

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· Gallia County Local ·
Education Association

Monday thru Friday

Will MHt

WALK ltr. OR (ALl fOR
AN A~()IN llolfNT

~

Tuesday, July 16 at 4:00 P.M.
For Contract Ratification

446-9510

A NEW 0/IIECTION IN HAIR DESIGN "

Woodland Center,

412 Vinton Pike, Galipolls

Watermelo.ns··:v:·. S1 99

....
•

2 I $1 0
Country Crock •••
0
IND. AMERICAN SLICES
(
Sandwich Mate •...• 99
_
TOTINO'S
(
HYLAND CHUNK
ezza
.
9
7
Pl
•••••••••••••••••••••
29
Dog Food ••••••• ::!!•• $2
JELLO
FAY GO
$1
59:
Diet Pop •••••••••••• 5/$1 Gelatin Pops •.•••.••
SHEDD'S CLASSIC QTRS.

\

1 LB.

12

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28 at 2:00p.m. in an open ceremony
at the home of Mr. and Mrs .
Sherman McGuire on State Route

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Reception will follow at ihe home .

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Addison.
The open-church wedding wlll
take place July 27 at7: OOp.m. at the
Addison United Methodist Church.
Reception will follow at the
Addison Townhouse.
, Wiping your refrigerator with
vlnegar ~an help eliminate mildew
andoctor.
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(BRING YOUR OWN PENCIL)
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for thi&amp; cause he i&amp; the medVJtOf' of the new testament, that by mea118 of
~eath for the redemption of the tromgresllions that were under the
first testament the11 whith are Cdlkd might receive the prw~ise of
eternalinheritdnce"(Heb; 9:15). A "medt4tor"is the "one who acts as a
guarantee so as to secure something which otherwise would not be
obtained . Christ is the surety of the 'better cove!la1tt.' ~he new
coveoont 'guaranteeing Its terms for His people." Jesus, the Testator,
has made' the new eovenant, and He being th_e Mediatirr, guarantees its
terms of redemption, having sealed it with His death.
Before Atd After The Deatll Of Josuo
After the death of Christ, His testament has become legally bound
to-us, and no one can change the terms on which He promises to save all
mankind. Prior to His death, He could sal to the man with palsy, "Son,
be of good cheer; thy linl are forgiven"( k. 7:48), and to the thief, ''To
dn~ shall thou be with me mpanuii&amp;e" (Lk. -23:43). When Jesus spoke.
these words, He spoke them on the. other side of the cross. before His
death. Prior to the death of Christ, His will W85 not in force, and He·
could so speak as He saw fitting. But, after He died, He sealed His last
will and testament with His death, making it impos~ible f'!r us to make
any changes in regard to HIS terms of salvatton. Smce H1s death, and
on this side of the cross, Christ ea11not speak to us today 85 He spoke to
the thief on the other side of the C1'088. He.can only speak by way of His
will, and everyone has been given th&amp; same testament, revealing the
same plan of salvation for everyone, regardless of. nationatity or sex;
By receiving H~ testament .and abiding by the c~nditions He hss
stipulated therein, we have.HIS guarantee of redempt&amp;~n.
In every case of eonver8&amp;on, after the death of Chrrst and under the
new covenant, eaoh convert had to be baptized. It is a perversion of the
gospel to ignore these eight examples· set forth in Acts requiring
baptism on this side of the croos and under the new covenant, and hold
up the "thief on the cro11" who tived and died on the other side of the
cross under the old covenant, so ss to refute baptism. We are not saved
as was the thief, but as those from Pentecost on, under the New
Covenant of which baptism is a requisite.
For Free Bille Correopoadeace Couroe, Write ...

2

oz.

•The totar value of the double coupon may not exceed

., .00.

•·A ny manufacturer's coupon greater than 61 e will be
redeemed at face velue
only .

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1o.s oz . .

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ROLL

·

16 OZ. BTL.

....·cou:pm-· .......•
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SOF-PAC

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ROLL$1 09
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~······

SHURFiNE i

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GRAN. SUGAR

G~L. $199

:A~· $139

limit 1 Ptr Custornor
Gaod Only at Powell's
Offor Expiros July .20, 1985

limit 1 Ptr Customer
Goool Only at Powell's
Offer bpirts July 20, 1985

•

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•••••••••••••••••••••

• .

PUREX BLEACH
GAL.

.•

•••••••••••••••••••••

•Only one manufacturer'•
coupon per item.

•The total value of the double manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchaH
price of the itam. Money
will not ba refunded.
•This offer does notapply to
Powell's Super Valu Coupons, free cqupons, or any
competitor's coupons .

······coo
·

• • • • • II

HEINZ VINEGAR

PAK

limit I '•r Customor
Good
at Powell's
Offtr
20, 1985

II

CIDER or WHITE

·TOILET TISSUE
6

•

(69

limit I Par Customer
Good Only at Powell's
Ollar bpiru July 20, 1985

VE
.i
• BRING YOUR OWN PENCIL ••• new sale tags
have not been made. You make your own re-ductions on bedrooms, dining rooms, sofas,

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chairs, sleep sofas. pictures, lamps, minors,

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reduction on the merchandi.s e you

• o ·ELIVERY • , . of course, wq'il give you our
same Full Service on anything you buy ~t no
extra charge.
·

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';

• REMEMBER .•• you make your own add~
want, even if it alrefJII.y bears a reduction.

' 1/ I
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tables, -chests, and more.

.

• YOU'LL BE AMAZED ••• and even astonished
at the bargains you'll find in this most unusual
sale event!

• EVERYTHING • , • in the store will be on sale
except a lew Fair Trade items.

• CREDIT TERMS•.••••. will be available
on all purchases if you wish to budget your
purchase.
• GET HERE EAJ:!LY ••• this sale is for one week
only, so gel hera today for the best selection.
All Items subject to prior sale.

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• No Mail Or Phone Orders

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Chapel Hill Church of Christ -

•This offer excludes cigarettes, or arw other items
prohibited by lew.

BulavUie Road • P. 0. Box 308
Jlalllpolls. Ohli.H631
S•dar Mornln111:
Bible !Mud)' t:•

•Offer is only good for product on hand. No fttil1checka.

Wonlllp II:.

•
•T, &amp;ere ia a limit of 20 coupona you may redeem,

.

and before the testament can be of force, the testator must die. Jesua is
the testator of the same covenant of which He is the "medt4tor," "And

Q

8•ndar E\'enlnr:
Wonhl,l:to

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Jeout The Testator Atd Mecllalor
"For where a testament i&amp;, theN mUll allo ofnecellity be the death
of the testator. For a testament i&amp; of fOTCe o,fter me~ ar.;, dead:
otherwise it ;., of 1t0 strength at all while the te~tator liveth (Heb .
9&lt;16 17). A "testafor" is "the (one) making a testament (or covenant)."

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examine this case in li~ht of the scripture, we call readily see that the
·incident involving the 'thief on the crou" was not recorded in order to

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· William B. K ughn
"And Jesus said unto him. Verily I say unto thee, To dn:y shalt tAou
be ioith me In pamdi&amp;e"(Lk. 23:43).
'
The "thief on the eros•" is often used as an example to prove that
one does not have to be baptized in orden to be saved. After we
minimize baptism.

~

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Blondlug In swnmer
Lightening the hair still means
using peroxide. even It It now comes
In a nice cream formula.
• If hair ends become dry, or the
harr feels mushy when wet, you've
bverdone the bleaching for you~
hair type. tightening · must he
.adjusted carefUlly to avoid hair
damage.
This Is especially true in
summer, when sun and wind
exposure can increase the damage.

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THE TIUEF ON THE CROSS

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A Message From The Bible ...

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GRADE _A

Reunion omission
Jimmy and Patti Sherman,
Marla Rasp, Lenora and Clayton
Rasp, and Timothy Peck attended
the Spencer reunion held recently at ·
Racine. Their names were not
included in a recent account of the
reunion.

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GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Robert R. Taylor of GalllpoUs
announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Lori Ann, to
Charles Randell Taylor, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles W. Taylor of

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S.teak •• ~ ••L:- 51
29

results.

Taylor -Taylor

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GALLIPOLIS - Sherry Cox and
:Jeff Seagraves are announcing
their engagement and approaching
marriage.
.
The couple will be inarrled July

wa.shed.
'" , •..,
While the skin Is damp, gently use . :
pumice stone or an abrasive cream .. :
to remove some·of the darkened top : "
~n.
·~
Finish with skin cream worked .:: ;
Into the areas. Lemon juice Is : &lt;
sometimes recomJ11ended as a mild : :
bleach, but only long use gets · :

Lori Ann Taylor
Charles Randall Taylor

Sherry Cox
,Jeff Segraves

Cox - Segrg_ves

= c:,.,...
&gt;

Carol Ann O'Brien
Pfc. Allen Lee Pape

Blaettnar ~Johnson

.20
9-

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MIDDLEPORT- The approach- take place in' August at the Sacred
Ing marriage Of Patricia Anne Heart Catholic Church, Pomeroy.
Cremeans, daughter of J.J. CreThe brlde-eleci Is a graduate or
means and Teresa Cremeans, 591 Meigs High School and ·Is employed
BroadWay St., Middleport, and
at the Sundry Store in Middleport.
Matthew M. Weaver, Rutland, son
Weaver Is a graduate of Meigs _
of Sue Grueser, Long Street, High School and the Hocking
Rutland; and,William Weaver, Mill Technical College and Is employed
Street, Middleport, Is being with as a junior teclmlclan systems
announced.
· operator at the AEP main office in
The open church wedding will Columbus.

Limit

••

First Baptist Church. A recepton
will foUow in thechurchsoclal room.
; 1)1e bride-elect Is a graduate of
Southern High SchooL
Pape, alsoagraduateofSouthern, ·
Is stationed at Fort Hood with the
U.S. Anny in Killeen, Texas where
thl&gt; couple wUI reside.

Cremeans - Weaver ·

SUNDAY
MONDAY
TUESDAY
AND
WEDNESDAY
JULY 14-15-16-17

•

Fade creams
'
Fade creams for brown spots are · ::
merely very mild bleaching ;
formulas.
.
By law, the amount or bleaching ;
Ingredient In such a cream Is ;
strictly limited to prevent skin , ~
damage.
- :
The cream must he used'daUy for ' :
quite a long period to get results and •
seldom completely fa·des brown ,. :
spots. Foundation tint can conceal :
whatever color remains.
'"
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Elbows and 1rnees ..
. . Elbows and knees can oft~n IDD!c . ~
dark and dirty, even when freshly : •
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Wedafllday:

Bible Study
'J:ttp.m.

...

MASON FURNITURE CO.
j

2nd Street ·

(304) 773-5592

Mason, W. VCI.

�Ohio-Point

M~igs

Natalie Annet-te Shang becomes
bride of Bryan Keith Gardner
RIO GRANDE- NatalleAnnette had carried for her wedding.
Sbong and Bryan Keith Gardner '·
RQbenaHamlltonservedasmald
were united in marriage In a of honor. She wore a floor-length
double-ring ceremony on March 6at goWn · of burgundy pOlyester and
7: 30p.m . lnCalvaryBaptlstChurch, carried a long-stem pink rose
Rio Grande, wtth the Rev. William trlmmed with white ribbons. Bri·
Clark otrlciatlng.
des maids were Samantha Gardner.
The bride Is the daughter of Mr . sister of the groom, and Lori Copley.
and Mrs .. Larry Shang of Bidwell. , Their gowns were of rose polyester
ThegroomistheS9no!Mr.andMrs. and llllCh carried a !ong•stem
Wllllam Gardner of Gallipolis.
burgundy rose trimmed-With white
The organjstwjl.S Robert Powell of ribbons.
'
Alva Johllson of New Haven,
Bidwell, and the soloist was Jean
Ann Vance, also of Bidwell. As the W.Va., was the best man and ushers
bride and her father entered the were Btl! Gardner, brother of the
doorway to the church, Vance read groom, and Todd Shang, brother of
the poem "On Her Wedding Day," • the bride., They, along with the
which the bride dedicated to her groom, wereattlredlngray(IIJiedos
father.
wtth pink bautonn!eres.
Given In marriage bY her parents,
Registering the guests was Mrs.
and esconed by her lather, the Lisa Johnson of New Haven, W.Va.
bride's gown featured a stand-up
The church was decorated With
neckline with a sheer Inset of two whitecandleabras and pink and
embroidered sch!!!l!. The _ fitted
white aisle bows. A fireside basket
bodice was. encrusted with simu- arrangement of pink rosebuds sat
lated pearls on venlse !ace. The · on the altar and long-stem pink
full-length sktrt was embroidered
rosebuds In white vases adorned
v(!th schlffi! and chantilly-type lace each window.
"!)d exte.nded to form a chapelDuring the Ceremony, as tbe
·
length train.
couple lighted their unity candle,
: Her fingertip-length vel! was of Powell played the hymn "0 Perfect
Love ...
s~eer polyester net attached to a
bandeau trimmed with simulated
A reception followed In the
~arts and venlse lace. She carried a
church's fellowship hall With Shari
~uquet of pink rosebuds trlmmed
Dixon and Cheryl Hardiman servIn white lace with pink and white Ing the guards.
streamers. She also carried her
The bride Is a graduate of Gall!a
Great-Grandmother McClaskey's
Academy High School and Rio
l'!,ce handkerchief which her mother
Grande College and Community
•

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Bookmobile routes set
Gallia County
:'GALLIPOLIS -The Dr. Samuel

L: Bossard Memorial Ubrary
announces Its schedule for the week
of July 15 to 19.
· Monday - Children's Res. Tr.
Ctr.• 11:30 a.m.-noon; Children's
Home, noon-12: 30 p.m. ; Scenic
Hills, 12:40-12:55 p.m.; Meadowbrook, 1-1:35 p.m.; C&amp;S Bank,
'1: 45-2:15 p.m.; Rodney Vl!la~.
2:'45-3: 45 p.m.; Gallla Metro Estates, 4-5:15 p.m.; Kerr, 5:30-5:55
p.,m . ; Bidwell, 6:10-6: ll p.m.;
Cochran's,6:40-7p.m.; ValleyV!ew
Estates, 7: 10-8 p.m.
Tuesday - Ewlngton, 10-10:00
a.m.; Vinton, 10:45-11:40 a.m.;
Morgan Center, noon-1 p.m .;
Africa Road, 1:15-1: 45 p.m.; Che·
shire, 2: 30-3:30 p.m.; Addison,
3:454:15 p.ll\,; Addav!lle Ele.,
4:254:55 p.m.; Bulaville Tr. Ct.,
5-5:30 p.m.; Georges Creek, 5:406:10p.m.; Kanauga 5th, 6:15-jj:JO
p.m.; Southeastern Equ. Tr. Ct.,
6:35-7 p.m.; K&amp;K Tr. Ct .. 7:05-7:30
p.m.
.
Thursday - Cora, 2:45-3 p.m.;
Raccoon Tr. Ct., 3:10-3: 00 p.m.;
Patriot, 3:454:15 p.m.; Cadmus,
4:45-5:15 p.m.; Ga!Ua, 5: 30-6 p.m.;
Centerpoint, 6: 1:Hi: 00 p.m.; Centerville, 6:40-7:10 p.m.
Friday - Bane's, 9: 55-10:05
p.m.; Dorothy Young, 10:10-10: 20
a .m .; Opal Franlllin, 10:30-10:50
p.m.; Macedonia (Hawley) , 11:05-

'

Mr. and Mn. B1yan Keith Gardner
&gt;....._

College·Hoizer School of Nursing.
She Is presently employed with the
Hollywood Medical Center, Hollywood, Fla.
The groom graduated from
Kyger Creek High School and

Moisturizer cream

served four years in the U.S. Navy.
He Is employed with Publlx Warehouse In Miami, Fla.
The couple is residing at 18903
North Miami Aye., Apartment 03,
Miami, Fla.

dan, thomas &amp;

moisturizer can prevent

~un

dam-

age unless it also contains a

sunscreen, as many do.

SOFAS, LOVESEATS
SECTIONAL$ &amp; PIT GROUPS
LOTS OF STYLES I COLORS

SOFAS STAlliNG AS LOW AS $499

I&gt;,

•GALLIPOLIS - Good News
Church presents fitm. The
jiea!lng, Sunday, 7 p.m.

I

Save 25°/o-50°/o

~

300 Second Avenue
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

~

•FREE DELIVERY
•FREE PAlliNG
OI'£N DAILY TO 5 P.M.
MON. &amp; FRI. TO I P.M.
"

WITH HEADLIGHT

I: LECI'k- Rev. Ernest Ba kerwill
!tie at Walnut Ridge Church ,Sunday,

EUREKA

0

'7; llp.m.
I

4-W•v OW-A-HIIpl'l'
cleans !rom low
naps to deep shags.

I

DELUXE EUREKA
POWERTEAM

'

And don't forget our Summer Clearance...

2 5°/o-60°/o Off
.
SWIMSUITS 25°/o-50°/o Off

,.
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~ .

•

•

language.

One of the most excitin&amp; thinKs about opening your home to a European ,
high school student from Educational Foundation for Foreign Study i5
sharing each other's world - in Eng]ish. With EFFS there i5 no ,

.TRADE-A~SHADE
. -·

JULY SALE!!

MORE
POWER

HUGE 6.5 AMP MOTOR
•Exclusive Vibra Groomer II leoter lor ~
Over 20,000 deaningpulsations per minute.

language barrier, because eYery one o£ our students speaks English in
addition to his native language. And EFF'S iemOves other barriers ILii
well: all students are thoroughly screened. have full insurance coverage
and their own spending money ... and you don't have lo ha'lle children
to host a studenL So there's nothinl !tanding betw~n you and this v~ry
Sl)f'rial friendship. r
Call us and discover how you can host

u European student.

•or Danish, Cennan, Dutch, French, Italian, Norwegian, Finnish
Spanish, Japa!iese, Melican, Swiss. BelgiM or Austrian.
At Efi'S, lrloo .. ~lp iJ our '""-•·

'
Call Carol &amp; James·Svoboda, Gallipolis,
OH.
(614) 446-6318
•

EFFS/Educational Foundation for Foreign Study, 235 CreenMch Ave.·
Greenwich, CT 06830 .. .. . . . .. .. . . .. . . .. .. .. . .. . . ... 800.243-5400
I ..,..,...

'

.

ClrJIIIIutioclll

Reg.'1$f9

Sale S3 99

Sale 5899
•Convenient •Portable •Powerful
·~uy No_w for Summer

1000,f f

ONTHEPURCHASEOF
EACH NEW ILINQ

22 COLORS IN STOCK-READY MADE
DOWNTOWN HUNTINGTON
Acrou from the Civic Ceriter
(304) 525-7090
704 GRAND CENTRAL AVE .
PARKERSBURG
1304) 295· 4532
M-F 9 TO 8; SAT. 9 TO 5

3115

BALL FURNITURE CO.
220 TfiiiRD AVE.

Navy Seman Scott M. Johnson,
son of Maurice E. and Margaret D.
Johnson of 32479 Bailey Run Road ,
Pomeroy, has completed recruit
tralnlng at Recruit Training Command, .San Diego, Call!.
During Johnson's eight-week
tralnlng cycle, he studied genera!
mUitary subjects designed to prepare him for further academic and
on-the-job training in one of the
Navy's 85 basic fields.
Johnson's studies Included sea·
manship, close order drill, Naval
history and llrst ald. Personnel who
complete this course of Instruction
are ellgible for three hours of
college credit In Physical Education and Hygiene.
A 1982 graduate or Meigs High
Schoo!, he joined the navy in
February 1985.

. Pvt. Ronnie T. Bevan

MONDAY

.GALLIPOLIS-Ga!llpollsJunlor
Women's
Club meets Monday, 5
1
:p.m. at theShlrieen Wiseman home,
:30 Oakwood Dr .. for annual picnic.
iJ?ring covered dish, mear provided.

I
I GALLIPOLIS - Gal!lpo!ls Bus!·
Professional Women meet
at the Senior Citizen
I center.
1ness and
1Monday

TUPPERS PLAINS · - Meigs
t'ounty Churches of Christ meets
~: W p.m. Mon!laY at tbe Tuppers

Plains Church of Christ .
POMEORY - Meigs Athletic
Boostersmeets7p.m.Monday,Ju!y
15, at the high school.
MIDDLEPORT - M!ddleporl
Business and Professional
Women's Club, 6 p.m. Monday at
home of Marge Fetty, 963 General
Hartinger Parkway; take covered
dish, beverage provided. Mrs. Pat
Peoples, district direct., wut make
annual visit.
RACINE - Rev!va) starls Monday runs through July 21 at Morse
Chapel Church, County Road 35,
7:00 each evening with Rev. Ralph
Workman speaker; special singing
.each service; pub!tc Invited.
COOLVILLE - Revival at 7:30
each evening this week at Troy
Methodist Church, 3% miles off
Route 7 on North Route 144 at
Coo!vute with Rev. Eddie Boyer,
pastor, spealdng; special singing
Pach evening; pubUc II)vlted.

'11JE&gt;DAY
GALLIPOLIS- Lafayette White
Shj!ne meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m.,
Masonic Temple.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rotary meers Tuedsday, 6 p .m . at

Oscar's.
GALLIPOLlS- Gallia Academy
High School band practice for the
Junior Fair begins Tuesday, 9 a .m .
In the band room. Anyone unable to
attend should contact R.od Tolliver
prior to rehearsal.

Bible Schools
MIDDLEPORT - "Discovering
God's Love pn Sonrlse Island" will
be theme of the Bible school to he
held at the Middleport Church of
Christ, July23-Aug.2. Classes will he
held from 9:30a.m. to noon each day
and on Aug. 3a carnival will beheld .
The closing program w!ll be on
Aug. 4. Classes will.be available for
children, ages three, through the
12th grade. Further Information
may be obtained bY calllng992-2914.
MEIGS - The Chester, Alfred
and St. Paul of Tuppers Plains
Unlted Methodist Churches wUI be
conducting vacation Bible schools
!rom 9 to 11 a.m. beginning Monday.
Classes will be held for chlldren and
youth ages, 3 to14. Chidren under the
age of three must be accompanied

by a parent or guardian .
Classes will be taught at each
church by work campers from First
United Methodist Church In Cham·
bersburg, Pa. and Maize Manor
United Methodist Church In
Columbus.
For additional Information on the
schools residents may call Don
Archer, 985-4312.
Neh!on retJnlon
FOREST ACRES - The Nelson
reunion will be heldJuly28at Shelter
House 2 at Forest ACres Park.
Dinner will be at noon.

Pvt. RDnnle T. Bevan, a native of
Ga!iia County and a 19Slgraduateof
Southwestern High Schoo! and
Buckeye HJ!!s Career Center, has
completed basic combat engineer
training at Fort Leonard Wood, Mo.
Bevan enlisted In the U.S. Army
last Feb. 12.
Son of Mr . and-Mrs. Lusher Bevan

thC'ir own table services and
beverage. _

a

Deem reunion
ROYAL OAK - The annual
Deem reunion will be held July 21 at
Royal Oak Park with a potluck
dinner at12 : 30 p.m.

-446·2454

I,

His wife, Da!een, Is the daughter
of Dale and Betty Harbour of:;·
Gallipolis, Ohio .
The sergeant is a 197'l graduate of •
Southwestern High -School, Patriot. : ·

R&amp;M FAST STOP

Ill. 1&amp; 218

"Ou, 0•••• &amp; Oo"

ICE CREAM
HALF
$199
GAL•

POTATO CHIPS
99¢ SIZE

PEPSI
8-16
Oz.

2 LITER
BTL.

Plus Dtp.

'

$109

This week only!
.'

POMEROY - The Van Meter
family reunion will be Sunday, July
14. A potluck dinner Will he served a!

REG .
PRICE ,

noon.

Swim lessons
SYRACUSE - the final sessions
of swtmmlng lessons at the Syura·
cuse Pool will begin at 9 a .m .
Monday with beginner and adv"nced beginner cou'rses to be
offered.

'

PEPSI

$139

Btls.

Gallipolis

VALLEY BELL

MIKE SELLS

Van Meter reunion

Taylor-Harper retJnlon
RUTLAND - The 17th annual
reunion of the Taylor-Harper fam! ·
lles wl!l he held Sunday, July 21, "t
the Forest Acres Park, Rutland.
Dinner will be all p.m. and families
attending are to take a covered dish ,

LL FABRICS* .
SELECT

3207

NOTIONS

•

• Stitch Witchery®
• All Coats &amp;Clark Thread
• All White Elastic
• All Scissors:
Farr', Fiskars• . Marks &amp; Wlss'

•

50%0FF

.•

All Butterick Patterns

GALLERY HAIR ARTS

Our entire stock of reg. price panerns
lecturing the latest toshions ot great solrll r1os.
Limit 6 per customer.
Sale ends Saturday, July 2oth.
'Fabrics already reduced not lncluded'in this
25% oH sole, Including Er&lt;tro Special

"Specializing In Cuts For
The Entire Family."
*Perms *Frostings
*Highlighting *Nails
*Manicures *Ear Piercing

''

I

20'to TO 50% OFF ALL REGULAR PRICE SEWING MACHINES.
Sewing mOchlnes available at stoned I•) locations
below. or by special order through oil other stores.

DONNA FRANK

PABRICJ®

OPERATORS-CATHY LIPSCOMB
LINDA O'BRIEN
AMY SISSON

118 E. MAIN ST.

Dotson is scheduled to serve In"·
Zanesville, Ohio.
·•

Buy 1, Get 1 FREE

Cancelled
POMEROY - A meeting of the
Meigs County Association of
Garden Clubs scheduled for Monday night has been cancelled. Mrs.
Bernice Carpenter, county contact
chairman, is recuperating from
recent surgery as well as the death
of her husband.

OWNER -

Graduates of the eou;..e Jearnt'!f •
to .!nsta!i and maintain high:·:
powered ground communications
equipment, and earned credits •
towa rd ap ~ssocia te degree In -'
applled science · through the Com· ·· .
munlty College or the Air Force. ·~

~ ~·

Revival
RACINE -Revival services
be held at fhi. Racine First Baptist
Church at 7: 30 each evening, July
21·28with the Rev .Jim Franklin and
the Rev. Steve Deaver speaking.
There will be special music and a
nur:;ery .Will be provided.

wlll

AIR National • Guard Stat! Sgt. · .
Bobby R. Dotson, i;on' of Jack and ·' ·
Ruth Dotson o! Rural Route 4, Oak .. •
Hill, has graduated from the U.S. ·
Air Force ground communications radio specialist course at Keesler , •
Air Force Base, Miss.

.-----...;,.---'------------------'. '

Bevan·

PH. 992-3233

Owned ond o o eroted t:l~

Fobu·Cente iS ol Ameuco In c

SILVER BRIDGE PLAIA

POMEROY, OH.

TEN PIECE

DINNER.

Ten delicious; hand-breaded ·
fiied shrimp, with our
n$rakut french fiies, fresh
cole slaw, Southern-style
hush puppies, cocktail sauce
and a lemon wedge.

$3.39

BRING IN YOUA .OLD BLIND
ANDRECEIVEAN $
ADDITIONAL

''

POMEROY - Victory Baptist
Church will· hold Vacation Bible
School beginning Monday and
conttnulng through July 19. Classes
Will he from 9-11:30 a.m. da!!y .

EUREKA ESP UPRIGHT

50 0//0

Reg.s4lfg

: TROY- Troy Methodist Church
Will hold revival services beginning
JSunday and continuing !ndef!nit!y
•With services at 7:30 p.m. each
1
even!ng. The church Is located three
; and one half miles off Rt . 7 on Route
•144 North.

SYRACUSE-Spec Ia t meeting of
the Meigs County Board of Mental
.Retardation and [)('velopmental
btsab!lltles wll be held Monday at ~
p.m. at the Carleton School,
Syracuse. The meeting is open to the
publlc.

;

You both speak

-'---

,•

•Powerful 3.0 Peak HP
•Exclusive Vibra Groomer
II Beater Bar
•Roto-matic Powerhead
•
4.0 Peak HP #1714
ONLY $249.95

30°/o-40°/o OFF

What do you have in common with a
Swedish* exchange studen!?

---

, : BURLINGHAM - Revival Sun·
iday through July 17 at Burlingham
&lt;;ormnunlty Church at 7 p.m. each
evening wtth Harry Wringler as
evangelist. SlngersareSunday, The
United Gospel; Monday, Old Ttme
Rellgton; Tuesday and Wednesday,
1
Saved.

I:

_,

---

urch will host the Ohio Valley
hrlstlan Schoo! program Sunday, 7
~m. All thoselnterestedlnChrlst!an
f.ducatlon are Invited to attend.

EUREKA UPRIGHT
l_

.

I~
; CROWNCITY -Mt.Z!onBaptlst

SALE

.

---

GAGE The Pathfinders
artet will sing at Salem Baptist
urchSunday, 7p.m.
·

I

BALL FURNITUR

I~;:;;::;;;~;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;=:;;;:;,;;;;;;;:;;;;fl
!

,

GALLIPOLIS

1

SAlE .

•Huge Top filling
Disposable Dust Bag
•12" Brush Roll
Beater Bar

.

- Vacation Bible
hool closing program at Faith
pt!st Church is Sunday, 7 p.m. .

SUMMER SIZZLER -

C.learance Sale
Continues

SUNDAY

~pt!st

0

Joseph R. Baker, son ol Mr. and
Mrs. Donavan J. Baker of RDute 2
In Patriot, has enlisted Into the _
·Navy's Delayed Entry Program.
The 'Navy's Delayed Entry 'program allows men and women to
enlist on Inactive duty up to a year
before they receive their !nltla!
training.
Baker, who Is a 1985 graduate of
Southwestern High School , Is scheduled to receive recruit tralillng at
the U.S. Naval Training Center In
Great Lakes, Ill.
FolloWing recruit training, he will
receive further schooling In the
Navy' s Advanced Electronics
Field.

Communtiy calendar/ area happenings

I ,

300 Second Ave., Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis, Ohio

STOP IN TODAY/

........ c111te. .r wthfectien is ••r . .h•
COI'tNEI't OF THII'tD

..•
'·

SAVE UP TO 70°/o
"324

IDSJ'ORJCAL SOCmTY ANNIVERSARY- Marjorie Malone of the
Malone-Hende.,_ Fann, Coolvllle, hokl8 a copy of Tyee~~, the 11113
,s wvenlr World's Fair booklet, lourid In the farm granary. Other
·antiques IJun the !ann piCtured with Ms. Malooe are apple picking
baskeao, Comforia, a quilt, coffee grinder, school bell, shovel, wood rake,
ox yoke, Ianier, splnnlnc wheel, a handcrafted chair; china cloD and
o&amp;her Items w!Wch she wtll share with the Athens County Historical
Society and Museum when Its annlve~ lsobf!ervedonJulyOOaud~l.
The !IOCiety Is located at 611 N. Court st., Athens. The public Is Invited to
IIIUnd the annlver!lary ollservance.

son

RACK SALE
CONTINUES

Sk!Q experts believe that the
skin's natural moisture content,
lts.oi!, keeps It supple. However, no

·sHORTS &amp; TOPS

Lifestvle --- -

~:~

t

~ !.

Baker

Johnson

•
•

Dotson

of Patrlot and grandson of Mrs.
Lillie Marklns of Rutland, Bevan
was home recently on leave lor one
week. He
. left June 24 lor Fort
. Hood,
Texas.

Michael D. Shellne, son of Henry
D. Sheline ol RDute 1 and Donna L.
Shellne of Route 2 In Gall!polls, ·h as
·reentered tile U.S. Navy.
Sheline, who Is a 19*! graduate ol
Galtla Aclldemy, w1ll report to the
Naval Training Center In San
Diego, Call!. He wUI reenter the
Navy as a Machinists' Mate '1\hlrd ·
Class.
,

.:J/.., q,..,a/

Wednesday, July 17 - .Chesler
(Fire Station), 2: 15-2:45 p.m.; Keno
(North side of Keno Bridge) , 3-3: W
p.m.; Success Road (near 39060),
3:45-4:15 p.m.; Long Bottom (Post
Office), 4:25-5:10 p.m.; Reedsville
(Reed's Store), 5:20-6:20 p.m.;
Tuppers Plains (LodWick's), 7:208:05p.m.; Baum Addition, 8:25-8:55
p.m .

f_URN_I_T_IJRE SHOWCASE

Sheline

Mountain
Festival

Meigs County

4: 3$-6: 05 p.m.; Syracuse (Pool),

---------In the -service-- - - - - - -...

cauliflower, tossed salad, pineapple -:
POMEROY - , The following
marshmallow delight.
:
schedule has been planned for the
r
Friday
Salisbury
steak,
mlxec!
:
week or July_ 15-19 at the Meigs
vegetables, mashed 'pollitoes,' bls- .
County Senior Citizens Center,
cult
, lee cream.
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy:
Choice
of
milk,
coffee,
tea
or
fruit
Monday Physical Fltness,
drink available with meals.
11: 45 a .m .; Square Dance, 1-3 p.m.
•
Tuesday - Physical Fltness,
11: 45 a.m.; Chorus. 1-2 p.m .
Wednesday - Blood Pressure
Check. 9: 30-11: 3(j a.m.; ' Soda!
Security, Representative, 10 ·a.m.noon; Black Lung Representative,
10 a .m .-noon; Bingo, 1-2 p.m.;
Bowling, 1:30 p.m.
OCTOBER 3·6,· 1985
Thursday - Ceramics, 10 a.m .-2
p.m .; Slide Show at 11 a .m ., Rev.
William Mlddleswarth will be
showing slides of flowers, scenes,
anti other Interesting facts about
Meigs County.
Friday - Quilting, cards, and
games.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday -Salmon loaf, peas and
carrots, tossed salad, butterscotch
pudding.
Tuesday - Escalloped potatoes
. GAUI~OLIS
wtth hem and cheese, green beans,
cole slaw, peach cobbler.
'I'I'Mel Agency
Wednesday - Texas Tommy,
. 360 S.Contl An.
sauerkraut, mashed potatoes, fruit.
Thursday - Johnny Marzettl,
446-0699

r------------------------i

6: 20-7: 50 p.m.

.
•

Most skin c;reams and lotions are
called "moisturiZers" because they
11:20 a.m.; Myers (Mary), 11: 3(). create a barrier to evaporat!on of
11:45 a.m.; Mercerville, 11:50 the skin's own moisture. They don 't
a.m.-12:10 p.m.; Swain's Store, ' add moisture.
2:20-12:50 p.m.; Crown City, 1:45·
2:W p.m.; Grace Shaffer, 2:45-3
p.m.; Ohio Townhouse, 3: 15-3: 45
p.m. ; Eureka, 4-4:00 p.m.

POMEROY - Bookmobile service In Meigs County ls brought by
the Meigs ·county Public Ubrary
under contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries.
Bookmob!!e schedule lor Mon·
day, July 15- Carpenter (Laura's
Store). 3:10-3:40 p.m.; Dexter
\Church), 4:1(}.4:40 p:m.; Danville
(Church), 5:20-5:50 p.m.; Rutland
(Civic Center}, 6:30-8 p.m.
Tuesday, July 16 - Portland
(Post Office), 2:10-2:40 p.m.; Le·
tart Fails (Effie's Restaurant),
3: 05-3:50 p.m.; Racine (Bank),

senior activities

W.Va.

MONDAY N~f8&gt;AY AIJI DAY SPECIAL
2-Piece Fish Dinners

Each dinner includes: 2 golden brown fish fillets, nalurakut french
&amp;ieS, flab cole slaw and 2 hush puppie5.

• ·

·

$3.99

.'
'

'•...

.
'·

'
\

'

�Tonya Keebaugh weds· Roger Balser May 3 - - .

Lawrence and Shirley Balser,
Thppers Plains.
The Rev. Don Archer performed
the double ring ceremony IX'fore the ,
altar decorated with yellow and
white roses, unity candle arrange.

TUPPERS PLAINS - St. Paul's
United Methodist Church was the
setting for the May \l wedding of
Tanya Elaine Keebaugh, daughter
of Mruvin and Marjorie Keebaugh,
and Roger Allen Balser. son of

July 14, 1986

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

Page 8-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

men!, and seven branch candleabra. Pews were marked with white
bows and cascades of _ yellow
sweetheart roses. Music was pro.
vlded by Sue Matheny.
The bride wore a formal gown of
white lace with a victorian lace
collar on Ulusion attached to a
sweetheart neckline which featured
a wide lace ruffle falling over the
blshopsleeve5. The skirt with tiers of
lace at the bottom flowed into a .
chapel train.
The bride wore a brimmed hat ·
with ' lace trim and a large yellow ·
rose at the back from which a
fingertip veil of illusion flowed. She
carried a cascade bouquet of yellow
roses with baby's breath and
greenery, along with a small white
lace Bible.
Kelli Headley Vierling, Thppers
Plains, was the maid of honor a nd
Irene Wilson, CoolvUie, the bridesmaid. Theywore !loorlengthyellow
lace dresses fashioned with sweetheart necklines , bishop sleeves and
ruffles at the bottom, and swee-

theartrose hatrpleces.t;achcarrled
personallzed white satin bear!·
shaped p!Uows topped with yellow
sweetheart roses.
Lisa Golden, GuysvUie, cousin of
the groom, was the flower girl and
wore a white lace dress with
dropped waistline accented with a
yellow satin sash, a white hat with
yellow satin ribbon tl'lm, and carled
a white lace basket of rose petal. ·
R. Leon Craft, Thppers Plains,
was best man:-and Mike Connolly,
Tuppers Plains was the usher.
Randy Kaylor, Tuppers Plains,
cousin of the groom, was I'lng bearer
The groom wore a white tuxedo
and yellow rosebud boutonniere as
did his attendants.
The groom·s mother wore a
cream colored street length dress
wih a peach jacket and matching
accessories and had a corsage of
yellow roses.
A reception was held inthechurch
socia l room . The three tiered cake
was decorated with yellow rose
sprays on each layer, with entwined

. 1985

Church, Pomeroy, president of the
Eastern Alumni Assoclaton , and a
former dance teacher. She Is
employed with Keebaugh's Shake
Shop In Thppers Plains.
The groom, also a graduate of
Eastern High School,ls a m ember of
the New Testament Church, Silver
Ridge, and Is· employed as a
salesman In Parkersburg, W.Va.
Among the guests attending were
Allee Balser, Letart Falls, grandmother of the groom; Connie Ross.
Athens, an(! Ruth Ann . Golden,
Guysville, 'both cousins of the
groom.
The couple · resides at 39561
· Kcebaugli-Follrod Road, Pomeroy.

h&lt;:arts with the names of.the·couple
on top. A procelaln bride doll and
monogrammed wine goblets used
for the toast wei'!' on the table.
Serving were Sharon Matheny
Thttle, Karen Matheny Showalter,
twincousinsof·thecouple,andUnda
Clark Kaylor, couslri of the groom,
served at the reception table. Pam
Balser MU!er, sister or the groom,
registered the guests.
Following the recepti&lt;m at the
church, guests went to the Balser
home decorated in yellow.and white
banners and wedding IX'lls for other
refreshments.
ThebrldelsagraduateoiEastem
High School, a membPr of Trinity

Fair memberships
are available now
B~B

----------------'-------

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL AlLERGIST
'

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

.

S:ummer skin care.
...A

Meets Monday

"clea ~sing" cream is so-called

The Meigs County Churches of
Christ will meet Monday, 7:30p.m.
at the Thppers P la ins Church of
Christ. .

to distinguish it from "cold " cream.
The latter also is a cleanser but is

made of a definite formu la known
silice medieval times.
In summer. a lighte r cleansing
cream or lotion may IX' IX'tt er for
tile skin. Also use a milder toner,
..ath a n herbal formula labeled for
~s kin . even if your skin Is oily.
--use of mild skin-care Items In
su \"m er helps pr ev~ nt ski n
irritation.

Annual ' 'isit set
Mrs. Pal Peoples, district director, wUI make her annua l visit when
'the Mldd!Pport Business a nd Profcs·
sional Women'sC!ubmeets a t6 p.m.
Monday at thehomeofMarge Fetty,
963 General Hartinger Parkway in
Middleport. Those attending are to
take a covered dish with the
beverages to be provided.

:The Ba nk of Vernal in Utah is the
only bank in the world built from
bricks sen t through the m a il.

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-::::.::::: SALE ENDS JULY 16

l1egUtar Prices May vary At SOme
S10I&amp;5 Due To Local C~an

Open Daily 9-9;
Sunday 1-6

tlc~~elgs

HOEF11.CH
ship
Councy
Times-Sentinel Staff
· Fair.
Congratulations to,Mr. and Mrs.
MemiX'rship tickets this year are
James iilon) Ey. $7 and entitle the purcj1aser to gate ·
)DOn who w1ll obadmissiOn and free parking dUring
seiVe their 51st
the entire fair which wUl IX' Aug.
wedding annlver13-17.
sary on We&lt;)nesHere are the locaf.lons where you
day, July 17. .
can purchase your membership
Mr. and Mrs.
tickets: •New York Clothing Hou~.
Eynon were mar·
Green Lantern, Middleport Departried on July 7, 1934. They have two
mt'!lt Store, Miller Brothers Grocdaughters, a ~n. 14 grandchildren, ery, Wald Cross Sons, Baum
and 14 great-gr~ndchildren.
LumiX'r Co., Sugar Run Flour Mill,
There was no big celebration on Swlsher-Lohse P~armacy, Five
Points GriD, Nita Jean Ritchie,
their 50th anniversary butthls year
friends are planning a card shower Gloeckner's Restaurant, Whaley's
for ~ednesday. The address Is Grocery, Clay's Shake Haven,
4m Christy Road, Silver Ridg~&gt;, Helen Baer, Dorset Larkins, and
ReMsvUie, Ohio 45772.
Dj.'s Trading Post-.
---Jim and Randy Bahr, sons of Mr..
Tile - Middleport Chamber of
and Mrs: Henry Bahr, continue
Commerce plans surrey with the
doing well with their college fringe on top rides as a part of the
·studieS. BOth received perfect four
annual block party - well point averages for their spring maybP, not quite that fancy .
quarters. Jim has just completed
Anyone with horses and buggies,
his fourth year at Rio Grande
wagons, surreys - whatever College and will be going another
whowouldbeavailableasapartof
year in his studies of computers. . the block party attractlons·ls asked ·
Randy finished his freshman year ~.o contact Bill Blower, president of
at Ohio University where he's
the Middleport Chamber, at 9925141.
majoring chemical engineering.
Incidentally, both Jim and Randy
---are holding down summer jobs:
Now that was quite an uproar
---about the new Coke! With the high
· Hats off to Mrs. Norma Goodwin,
cost of living, !buy the cola that'son
retired Pomeroy business women,
special. However, my personal
who still manages to remembP~
reaction to the Coke problem can be
;,: !Cads of people on special occa: expressed by that final Rhett But!Pr
·• slons. She is a whiz at reme(TliX'ring
line in "Gone With the Wlrtd" .
·. those special days- she must have
Speaking of final lines - do keep
smiling.
. not only a very accurate date book
: but a very full one.
• Maxine Wingett of Ra cine points
out that Norma has remembered
; she and husband. E.A. (Bud), on
· their :wedding anniversary every .
year for 54 years.
And - the list of people so
remembered by Norma through
the years is absolute ly Incredible.
· Talk about a star In a crown :Norma should have a gaiazy.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

Roger and Tanya Keebauy,h BaLrer

A note to David A. Brewer, 31581
. Brewer Road , Portland.
• ; •• ) · think I can solve your problem
- just give me a few days.
I feel that I have the words to the
song yo~ mentioned and I'll IX' In
tmich.
' Davi&lt;l points out In his not&lt;&gt; that
his Mother. now SG,Joves to sing a nd
knows so many of the golden oldies.
There iS one song which his sister,
now deceased, ·used -to sing in the
19l:l's and they've lost the words. I
don't rememiX'r the title either, but
it was an AI Jolson number - Jet
me check that out.

NIKE CANVAS

Meigs library
offering
programs

l

Beat of the bend

I"

STORE HOURS:
MON.-THURS.
9 am ti110 pm
FRI.-SAT.
j
9 amtil 1 0 pm
,·
CLOSED SUNJ&gt;AY
July 20, 1986

I

l~;r~;~::r~~::~k~1

craft program on paper mosiacs, to
be held on July 18 at 2 p.m.
Jackie Shaw, children's Ubrar1an
at the Sylvester Memorial Wellston
Public Library, w1ll show examples
of paper mosaic plc)ures donP by
adults and children, and explain
how the pictures are made. Each
child at the program wlll then have
a chance to make a picture to take
home. "Children always come ' up
with good ideas for their pictures
and they're glad to discover thai
you don't need a fancy prepared
arts and cr~ kit, you can use
"lmple materials and do a project
that you can be proud of," Shaw
said.
1
The Ubrary will provide the
necessary materials for makinithe
paper mosaics. Children under six
years of age should be accompan·
ted by an adult or older child .who
can he!p•with the picture.
This program Is sonsored by the
Meigs County Public Uhrary and
by Ohio Valley Area Libraries
(OVAL). The program wUJ last
about 45 minutes and Is open and
tree to the public.
·
For more information aboul. this
program or any of the other
library's summer programs, call
the llbrary a t 992-5813 or 992-5713.

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James Buchanan, the nation's
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administrations of 17 chief executives, from George Wasliington to
Andrew Johnson .

Color awareness, a eommon·
sense approach to color selection
lot wardrobe and cosmetic selection, will be taught IQ groups of f9ur
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instructor's home, 6.S Halliday
Heights.

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�..
Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel.

l

July -'1-4. 1985

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

Sports

r

'iimts· ientintl

Section

July 1 4, 1985

56th All-Star tilt scheduled Tuesday
outfielder Tony Gwynn of the 1984 pennant·winning
Picked as · reserves by AL manager SparkY
San Diego Padres. St. Louis sends Its keystone
Anderson of the Detroit Tigers were shOrtstop Alan
combination of shortstop Ozzle Smith and second
TramiJlell of Detroit, catchers Carlton Fisk of
baseman Tom Herr.
.
' Chicago and Ernie Whitt of Toronto, first rnisemen
Other NL starters are Atlanta's Dale Murphy al)d
Don Mattingly of New York and Cecil Cooper of
New York's Darryl Strawberry In the outfield, and
Milwauke&lt;&gt;, second baseman Damaso Garcia of
New York's Gary Carter behind the plate. All but
Toronto, .third basemen Wade Boggs of Boston and
Nettles and Herr are repeaters from last year.
Paul Molitor of Milwaukee and outfielders Gary
The starting AL ieam will be composed of two
Ward of Texas, Harold Baines of Chicago, Phil
members each from Baltimore, New York and
Bradley of Seattle and Tom Brunansey of Minnesota.
Detroit and one each from Kansas City and Boston.
Anderson's pitching staff will be composed of: his
Balttlnore first baseman Eddie Murray and New
own Jack Morris, Dan Petry and Willie Hernandez,
York outfielder Rickey Henderson received late
Bert Blyleveri of Cleveland, Jimmy Key and Dave
support In fan balloting to win places In the starting
Stieb of Toronto; Donnie Moore of Ca lifornla and Jay
lineup.
Howell of Oakland.
Teammates joining Murray and Henderson In the ·
NL reserves tabbed by San Diego manager Dick
starting lineup will be outfielder Dave Winfield of the
Williams were catchers Tony Pena of Pittsburgh and
Yankees amt .shortstop Cal Rlpken of the Orioles.
Ozzle Virgil of Philadelphia, first basemen Pete'Rose
The Tigers will be represented by catcher Lance
of Cincinnati and Jack Clark of St. Louis, second
Parrish and SI'COI'Id baseman Lou Whitaker while
baseman Ryne Sandberg of Chicago. shortstop Garry
third baseman Grorge Brett of the' Roya~ and
Templeton of San Diego, thfrd baseman Tim Wallach
outfielder Jim Rice of the Red Sox complete lineups
of Montreal and outfielders Jose Cruz of Houston,
selected by the fans.,
Pedro Guerrero of Los Angeles, Willie McGee of St.

MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) - Safe from ra!JI bUt not
the asSorted treacheries of the Metrodome, the
American and National Leagues meet Tuesday night
In the 56th · All-Star Game with baseball's labor
· dispute an, unpleasant sidelight.
·
The game marks a chance for the fans. WhO have
' selected the starting Iineu ps, to decide for themselves
. whether the Metrodome Is a "Little League" facility.
Visitors to the indoor stadium have ripped playing
· conditions in theMetrodomethlsseason, saylngthata
: showcase situation will expose all the flaws. Pop files
1 have been known to disappear in the lights and a bloop
· single can quickly bounce Into atriple. Ifthesefactors
. don't produce chaos, then labor trouble !1Ught.
, The player representatives are meeting Monday in
' Chicago and may set a strike deadline in their
, contract dispute with owners. After some ominous
. ' rumblings, the players now appear disinclined to
' boycott · the All-Star Game. A strlke deadline,
IIE'Vertheless,- would hardly enhance the mood for a
mid-season party.
·
.
Leading the ,National League are third baseman
i Gralg Nettles, first baseman Steve Garvey and

'
!

Louis, Dave Parker of Cincinnati and Tim Raines of
Montreal.
·
Williams has selected a pitching staff of: his own
LaMarr Hoyt and Rich Gossage, Dwlghi Gooden of
New York, Nolan Ryan of Houston, Joaquin Andujar
of St. Louis, Fernando Valenzuela of Los AngPies,
Scott Garrelts of San F rancisco and Jeff Reardon ot
Montreal.
Absent from this year's All-Star rosters are relief
pitchers Bruce Sutter of Atlanta and Dan Quisenberry
of Kansas City, co-holders of the major league record
for most saves In a season (45) . Neither pitcher has
performed up to expectations this year.
Two players who raised a few eyebrows by not
being selected were rookie Vince Coleman of St. Louis
and Glenn Wilson of Philadelphia. Coleman, whose
haserunnlng exploits have made the Cardinals one of
baseball'~ most explosive teams this year, Is on his
' way toward a possible shot at the single season stolen
base record while Wilson Is·among the NL ~(lers in
RBI.
'"G.;"),
The National League leads lh~.~erles 35-19-1 and the
AL has won only twice in the last 14 years.

tubs, Giants, Yankees triump
'

CHICAGO (UP!) -Dave Ander- bases on singles by Candy Maldo·
son opened the game with a home nado and Mike Sciascia and a walk
run and Bob Ballor had three RBI to to Sax, Valenzuela ser)l one run
·' support Fernando Valenzuela's home with a ground out.
: 'five-hitter Saturday, powering the
Warren Brusstar replaced Gura
Los Angeles Dodgers to their sixth and Intentionally walked Anderson
straight victory, a 9-1 triumph over to reload the bases but Bailor's
the Chicago Cubs.
two-run single made It 7-0. Russell's
Valenzuela, 10.8, struck out eight fielders' choice grounder then
and walked two. He did not allow a scored Anderson.
hit untll the fourth when Davey
Bailor tripled to center and scored
Lopes hit his eighth homer of the on a wild pitch by Brusstar for a 9-1'
year. It was the first home run advantage In the seventh.
pennltted by the left-bander in 12
games.
Anderson knocked !he third pitch
of the game from starter Larry
PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Dave
Gura, ().2, into the left -field
LaPoint
scattered eight hits and Bob
bleachers. The Injury-riddled Cubs
Brenly
blasted
a two-run homer
recalled Gura from Iowa of the ·
Saturday,
helping
the San Fran,
American Association this week.
Los Angeles made il4·0 with three cisco Giants to a 4-1 victory over the
runs in the third. Steve Sax started Pittsburgh Pirates.
LaPoint, 4-8, walked two and
the innlngwlth a single, stole second
and went to third on a single by struck out five In his secon&lt;)
Anderson. Sax then scored on a complete game of the season. After
Pittsburgh starter Jose DeLeon
suicide squeeze bunt by Ballor.
Anderson came home on a single singled with two out in the fourth, the
by Bill Russell, whostolesecondand left-bander retlred 15 straight untU
Marvell Wynne'ssiftglewlth two out
scored on a double Enos Cabell.
Los Angeles made It s.d in the in the ninth.
DeLeon, 2·13, worked seven
fourth. After the Dodgers loaded the

Giants stop Pirates

innings and was tagged with his fifth

his 20-game hitting streak. ~ the

consecutive lOss~

longes,t in the majors this year.
Before an Old Timers Day crowd
San Francisco took a 4-11ead in the
fifth when Brad Wellman was hit by of 45,274, Nlekro, 8-8, snapped a
a pitch and Brenly followed with his personal five-game losing streak.
12th homer of the season, a shot over The knuckleballer struck out two
and walked two. Righetti finished
the left-field fence.
for
his 16th save.
The Giants took a 2-0 lead in the
Rickey
Henderson and Willie
second when Brenly walked, moved
-Randolph
led
off the first lnnlngwit h
to second on David Green's single
singles
off
Mike
Mason, 5-9, to put
and scored on LaPoint's groundout.
runners
at
first
and
third . Mattingly
Green thenscoredonasingle by Dan
then
grounded
into
a force play to
Gladden.
The Pirates got their only run in score Henderson.
New York made 112-0in the second
the bottom of the inning on Jason
Thompson's lOth homer of the on a double by Billy Sample and an
RBI single to right by ·Andre
season.
Robertson.
The Yankees buill a3-0advantage
In the fif1h when Bobby Meacham
led off with a walk and Henderson
NEW YORK (UP!)-PhllNiekro singled him to third. Randolph then
scattered seven hits over seven grounded into a double play as
innings for his first victory sinee Meacham scored.
June 3, sending the New York
Nlekro had five-hitter entering
Yankees to a :n victory Saturday the eighth but surrendered leadoff •
over the Texas Rangers.
singles to Gino Petralli and pinchNew York has won nine of its last hitter Bobby Jones. Righetti re10 games and 15 of its last 19.
lieved and was greeted by Bill
Don Mattingly drove in the Stein's run-scorlngsingletbal made
winning run with a groundout In the it 3-1.
first inning but went ().for-4 to snap

Yanks nip Rangers

a

·Baker overcomes record-setting performance;
.takes third round lead .in U.S. Women's Open
SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (UPII Kathy Baker, Overcoming a recordsetting performance by Judy Clark,
'birdied four of the first six holes on
the back nine Saturday io grab a
ORE"stroke lead through three
rounds in the 40th U.S. Women 's
Open.

. Baker, who parred the first nln&lt;'_
holes, had a4-under-par68Saturday
to enter the final round with a
S-under total of 210. Ciark fired a
7-under·par 65 to share second place

with Nancy Lopez at :111. Lopez, the
leader through the first two rounds,
had a 1-under 71.
Another shot back was Vicki
Alvarez, who shot a 1-under. and
Janet Coles, who also had a 1-under
at the par-72 upper course at
, Baltusrol.
"It was a very conslsent day,"
said Baker. "The front nine was
' uneventful, but on the backside the
putts started dropping."

Thunder showers late Friday at 4-under 32. .The eight-year
sof1enedgreens and lowered scores. veteran also birdied Nos. 10 and 11
Baker had birdies .on Nos. 10. 11, and sandwiched birdies on 16 and 18
13. 15, hefore she bogeyed No.I?. She with a bogey on 17.
took her share of the lead with a
"I am extremely pleased with the
birdie on tbe par-41.8th.
position," said Clark. '' What you try
Clark's 7-under65 tied a record for to do is,get to the last group. All! can
a U.S. Open round set. by Sally Little do is go out and conCPntra le on
at Indianapolis dn 1965. Little's hitting fairwa ys. hitting greens and
6-under65 came on a par-71 course. making putts. "
Clark birdied the par-5 first hole . Jane Geddes (218\, Jerilyn Britz
· and bogeyed No. 2. but birdied Nos. (220) and Cathy Mores 1216) each
4, 5, and6andN'?. 9tomaketheturn had 3-underffisSaturday.

GIANTS COI..LIDE -Giants Dr.it baseman David Green (L) and
third baseman Chris Brown collide as they go for a short' Dy ball hit by
the Pirates' ,Jason '111ompson Saturday. The Giants won, 4-1. UPI.

/(eller quits Seattle GM post

SEATI'LE !UP!) - Seattle
" Withth~epressuresofthelastfcw
Mariner General Manager Hal · days - not the merits of the
Keller, who came under fire this ' (Perconte) decison- Hili just felt,
week for sending veteran second and I mutally concurred,lt was time
baseman Jack Perconte to the he resigned his duties as general
mlnpr leagues, has resigned.
manager.' '
. Kelter, 58, had, been Seattle's
Under Keller's direclion, the
general manager since October Mariner farm system developed
19&amp;3. Before that, Keller served as Into one of the best regarded in
the club's director of player baseball and hegan producing a
development.
Kelter will stay on steady streamofyoungtalenl for the
of gone through a lull where I
with
theMariners
fortheremalnder major league club. ·
haven't tluuwn thai well and I
But itwasKelter'sdecislonearlier
hiven't been pleased with the way of the season as a consultant.
His
duties
will
be
assumed
on
ali
this
week to go with one of the most
I'm throwing. I felt like I pretty welt
interim
basis
by
Mariner
president
promising
youryg players in the
came out of It tonight."
Chuck
Armslrong
while
!he
club
organization
- second baseman
Thursday didn't start out so well
looks
for
a
permanent
replacement.
Harold
Reynolds
- that precipifor Ryan, who Jives in nearby Alvin.
t'eslgnatatf'd
the
sudden
I'!'Sil(llatlon.
Armstrong
said
Kelter's
His wife, Ruth, said Ryan's car ran
lion was based primarily on health
over a kitten Thursday morning.
To mak~e room for Reynolds, who
considerations and not because of
had
been hitting .365 for the
. "I thOught it was going to be a bad any disagreement within theorgani· Mariners' Triple-A farm club in
day," she said. "I know it (themarkt za tion over the decision to demote Calgary, Kelter S&lt;'nt the 31-year-old
was on our minds aU day. He take Perconte.
Perconte to thP minors. Percontc
things very calmly. I'm theonewho
"Hp's had some heaHh prob- had been Seattle's s tarting second
·gets overly excited.
baseman and leadoff hitter for the
"There were times when he was lems." said A1mstrong. "With Ihe past 1 ~ years. r
ready to quit, but he didn't. I'm so pres.,ures df being a baseball
Perconte·s assil(llment to the
general manager continuing to
proud to have been a part of II all."
minors
drew criticism from the
Ryan got an added bonus Thurs- build, Hal and I had already deCided media, fans ande\·en some Mariner .
day when he was named to the this would be his last year as general players.
manager.
National League AII.Star learn.

Ryan's big wish.to pitch in Series
HOUSTON (UP!) -Nolan Ryan bander. ''That's still pretty much
says he's never been one to consider my grnii."
Ryan went Into Thursday's con'1'lilestones In his career. but now
1 that he's struck out more than 4,&lt;XXJ test against the New York Metswlth
; . batters, his remaining wish Is to 3,993 career strikeouts. He struck
• pitch for the Houston Astros In a out Sid Fernandez twice, Len
Dykstra, Rafael Santana, Darryl
t World Series.
Strawberry,
then came within one
I
Baseball's soft-spoken, tow-keyed
: strikeout king. added another cate- when he caught Gary Ca11er
·
. ' gory to baseball history Thun;day · looking.
night when he fanned l l batters to ' Ryan then opened the sixth
cross the 4,&lt;XXJ mark, a feat never against former Astro Danny Heep
and needed just threepltchesforNo.
hefm'e accomplished.
Ryan's career total now stands at 4,&lt;XXJ.
4,004, and when asked what his next
The crowd of nearly 21,&lt;XXJ, which
mHestone would be, he didn't
included baseball ComnU!llilonei'
mention an lncjivldual goal.
"My goal when I came here was to Peter Ueberroth, gave Ryan a
pitch In an Astros uniform Jn the " lengthy ovation.
"I felt like the fans tonight came
World Series and I haven't done that
out
to see meaccompllshlt and they
yet," said the 38-y~ar-old right.

were behind me," he sa Id. "The last
twostarls, there's been bannersa!JP
the fans have kind of been behind~t.
·"The fans gilt into it more tonight
than I've seen them get Into a game
here slnoe. the 1980 playoffs. It's
always,rewarding to see the fans get
into something like that. I wanted to
do it at home in front of the home
crowd. I knew If I didn't do It tonight,
I was going to do It on the road. That
was definitely a motivation to do It
tonight."
Ryan, who came away with no
decision In the game and was tryln
for the Dfth time to get his nlntfl win
of the season, said he broke out of a
slump.
"! had good stuff," he said.
"That's the best stuff I've had in
ahout three or four starts. I've kind

I
:Strike threat 'j'l~tinues at diamond season's halfway point
By MD..TON RICHMAN
UPI Senior Sports Editor

baseball's second strike in four years already has been
staked out and Is now In place.lf your sympathies lie
with the players, then you hold the owners responsible
for creating the present strike atmosphere, and if you
go along with the owners' Hne of reasoning, then you
blame the whole thing on the players.
Personally, I don't think there will he a baseball
strike this year. My Impression Is there will be some
late saber rattling and we'll come close .to another
walkout, but It won't happen again this time.
I say that with somereservatlop because although I
lind It hard to helleve both sides are sothick·headed, so
brainless, as to make the same mistake twice, I am
fa!1Ullar with their past history and that makes any.
prediction perilous. I mean when Is the last time you
can remember baseball people acting logically•
Either players or owners.
I'm sure the players have to wonder what the fans'
level of acceptance of them would be If they decide to
lay down tltelf bats and gloves and go out again. Last

NEW YORK !UP[) -Thegrowingthreatof
another baseball strike calls to my mind that
passage in the Bible which says: Father, forgive
them, for they know not what they do.
Both the players and the owners.
I've heard the players' side and theowners' side. and
whlle each has some valid points, frankly, both sides
put my ears to sleep. •
Actually, theplayersandollinersactuallyaren'tthat
different. They always wind up dwelling on the sl)me
1 problem - thelr own. Believe me, It can get 'a little
boring.
After they finish pointing up all the Inequities they
are helng asked to accept, they generally a~k me
whether I think there wlll be another strike. The
Commort questiOn they have tells me something. It tells
me they don't know themselves whether or not there'll
Ilea strike, sohowdotheyexpeci anyone else to know?
From all the evidence at hand. the battleground_for

l

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'

'

•
•

time, most of the fans came back, some of· them
grumbling, but I think testing their patience and
altegiance once more could turn out to be a grave
mistake.
I listened Tuesday to George Sorter, professor of
accounllng at New York Unlversl\y, an inde,,.,ndent
expert who reviewed the clubs' audited financial
statements. Remade It quite clear that the owners lost
$27 mllllon last year. The players should listen to him ,
too.
Usually, ballplayers stick together. They tend to
think alike for the most part. Thai makes me wonder .
why so many former players are not the least bit
sympathetic with the present ones In their
disagreement with the owners.
.
Possibly, the answer can he found In that old
green-eyed monster, envy. It's not hard to Imagine
how yesterday's ballplayer must feel over the seven
figure salaries being paid today. But I think It goes
deeper than· that.
Take someone like Warren Spahn, whopitchedfor21

"

years in the big leagues, Hew as one of the best pitchers
of. hi s time. one of the .best of ail time. and his 36.1
victories are the most ever ~rded by any le!thancter

In major league history.
Spahn, a Halt of Farner, has no money problems at
64. He's COI'JX'rate president of his cattle ranching
business In Hartshorne, Okla., and does some public
relations work for Borden'sMUkCompany in his spare
time. But deep down he still thinks like a ballplayer.
You 'll catch him using the word "we" instead of
"they," even when he talks about today's players, so
you get a pretty good Idea what side he'son. Yet,llsten
to what he has io say. He makes sense.
"M'J&gt; concern Is not for the players who are playing
now but for the future of baseball and I hopeloGodwe
don't have a strike," Spahn says.
'"Thanks to the media, all that extra money Is
available but we have to keep a marketable product In
front of the public so the sponsors want to continue
spending their money.''

•

�•

Page-C-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

14. 1985

· July 14, 1985

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

POINT PLEASANT - July
Fourth weekend actMtles at· Hid·
den Valley Country Club were a
success according to officials at the

club.

TARGETS.PURCHASED-'TheCheslerBowhuntersaildArchery
Club recently purchased 20 new largets for Its new tree stand range. 'The
tree stand range consists of five tree stands at various heights with lour
tnrgets at each stand, all of which are placed at various ynrdages. 'The
new range was added to the existing range for the upcoming
'club-spoll!iOred shoot set this weekend. The tw&lt;Hiay jamboree consiSts
of four shoots of20 target small game and 20 tnrget coonsbool. Trophies
and prizeS will he awanled at. each event and an overall wtnner for both
days will he crowned.

Wildlife report

Great Northern Pike
By TOM BEtVILLE
largest northern on ~ord weighed
Special Correspondent
90 plus pounds. They demand a
GALLIPOLIS - The northern stout rod, .heavy line, and I prefer
pike, synonymous with northern steel leaders because of their
freshwater lak~s and rivers, espe- torrnldable teeth.
cially in Canada, has become quite
Although my favorite lure lor
; a JX&gt;pular game !Ish. Long consl- pike Is the Johnson Silver Spoon,
. dered a trash fish or nuisance to they often hit other lures readlly.
: anglers going after more gamey My brother, Lance, caught a 15
: fish such as smallmouth bass or pound northern three years ago in
: walleye In ·northern waters, the the Geoi'glan Bay on a red Erie
· 'northern pike has In recent years Dearie. In a Quebec lake I fished a
· -gained the respect it deserves.
lew years ago, they went after a
' Not only does the northern strike' Bayou Boogle with the smiley face.
" with a vengeance and llght'ttkewlld Rapalas also seem loworkwell, but
; fire, It Is good table fare. The fish Is sliver spoon types usually glve the
: a bit boney but has a very good best results. Pike can also be had on
: flavor. I always enjoy catching a Uve bait.
~ few while hi Canada and eating
When fishing lor northerns, don't
them also.
• worry about using an overly large
, Northern can be finicky about size lure. Tl\ey are long sUm llsh
· biting, the same as other llsh, but and often attack things near their
most often they are not. On a recenf own size Including their own kind.
trlp to Canada, Bret Wilson, my Taxidermist Jerry · Coleman of
hunting and fishing partne;- on this Gallipolis told me of a 36 Inch
hip, and I ca ught 25 northerns In
northern he cut opcn for mounting
about two hou.S. We were getting and found a n 18 Inch northern
, strikes about every other cast. We
partially digested in Its stomach.
" were both using weedless Johnson That !Ish had had quite a dinner.
; Silver Minnows. Tl\e !Ish ranged
Well, 11 you are thlnklitg you can't
,• !tom around two pounds to four
make a trip to Canada to fish for
' pounds. However, two days later
northerns, don't worry! Many nice
we went back to the same lake a nd
size northerns are helng taken from
~ only caught one fish.
. the Ohio River. The West Vlrglnla
The northern can grow to a very
Department of Natural Resources ·
large size In a rela tlvely short
began stocking northerns In the
amount of time. According to
Ohio a few years ago·and they seem
. - reports I have read they can nearly
to be doing quite well.
: double their dlze each year of their
I know of several 15 and 16
! life. They also reportedly eat about pounders helng caught which puts
; half their weight dally.
them In the neighborhood of three
•
That means a 10 pound northern
feet long and better. Those are
•• eatS about five·pounds of other fish mighty nice fish. A three loot
~ and water creatures per day.
northern not only puts a lot of meat
! . Twenty pounders plus are not on 'the table, It makes a beaqtlful
.; uncommon in northern waters, The
_specimen to hang on the wall.

Results of the weekend festlvllles
were as follows:
In the annual long drlve contest
winners In their respective · age
groups were Jefi ·Slone 'and JuUe
Slone; Don Swi'!her and Lana
Wlleeler; Bud Forte and Jewell
Stelle. The closest to the pin
chipping honors went to Julia Slone
and Frank Capehart. Puttlng
crowns

Darby Downs resuhs
GROVE CITY, Ohio (UPil
l)onrty's MVR, ridden by Felipe
Santos, won the featured race
Friday at Darby Downs, one length
·ahead of Smlling Sandy.
Santos guided the four-yea r -old
CJ'o&gt;er the six furlongs in I: I3. Mo
l)on't Miss was third .

•

•

Grey Eagle Tournament
Tl\e Fourth Annual Grey Eagle

INTEREST FREE CREDIT.90 DAYS SAME AS C 4 SIII

Avalge

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strength. tread wear. and luel e lhc1ency
• Tread des~gned to d iSSipate heat for lm&amp; dura bility
· Steel and ootyeste• dent set no tor anyth•ng le5S

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CA ROU. ~NOW DEN
417 SrC'ond A.,e,,
Gallipoli~, Oh .

Ph . 446·4290
Homt'- 446-45 18

THAT'S RIGHT, 35,000 MILES. THIS IS A LOCAL, ONE
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}-----------------=------

suffered thelasswitha goodefforto!
six strikeoilts and just 011f walk.
HT had six hits including a double
and single by Mike Klinger, and
singles by Brian Unroe,J .J. Bevan,
Chris Strow, and Jimmy Brace.
In Thursday's action, the New
Haven Orioles defeated Tuppers
Plains' Tigers ~1, while Blackburn
Ap~llance forfeited to Big Bend
Foodlimd.
For the winners of New Ha.ven , .
Chris Oller had two singles, Chrls
Gardener single, Tommy Knapp a
single and triple, Ronnie Roach a
single, and BirrI Diehl a double.Wes
Bumgardener was the winning
pitcher.
For Tuppers Plains Michael
SMith singled, Aaron Wilson
singled, Jeff Durst singled, and Wes
Holter singled. Durst suffered the
loss despite a good effort.
. Saturday,lheNewHaven Orioles
meet Big Bend Foodland, while the
Tuppers Plains . Bears. meet the
Albany Merchants at7: 45.

1979 MONTE CARLO WITH ONLY 35,000 MILES.

=

Ul.fl5
S!il ,ts

•

.
.'
.

JULY 15TH • AUG. 3RD

U5.i5

• PonoOn In!! Sfl&lt;:!Oilleenng
•6Scttueltlnk
• FrOtlllfld rear lu~ tore I

~IN

SENOUR
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THfl! IM!C FEATURES
•tt""Syrcflfo-Balant..:I'UICI
Bf~g~~s &amp; Strallon engone"
• ,....l"f·duty. Oflf·Pf'(! "'"'llrarrMI

ONLY

Oil Base Exterior Paint Sale
GAL. S26.95

•

••

0

MARTIN
PAl NTS

0

beam tlt~dtogtlts

POMEROY - "The continue $100, fuU page; $Ill half, page, and shipsareavallableat$2eachandthe
success of the Meigs Athletic $40, .quarter page. These prices names of those purchasing such
Booster Club hinges on complete represent. a savings' of up to $35 memberships will be prtn'ted In the
cooperation among the admlnhitra- compared to last year. Ad prices lor football-basketball programs protion, athletic department, coaches, either football or basketball will be vlded they are purchased before
athletes and all interested pecple," $75, $50 or $25, SOuiSby states.
Aug. 9.
James So\ihiby, booster president,
The boostersareagainsponp~sor·
"The boosters want to thank those
emphasized Saturday. '
lngthe "200Club"withmembership !Inns and individuals who have
"We wish to promote all phases of tickets reduced !rOm $30 to $25 thiS contributed to the success of the
the athletic program Including the year. In addition to the 45 winning . organization over the years. They
upgrading of facUlties at the high ' selections held al\long club have been able to purchase equipschool,'' Soulsby commented In members during the basketball- ment such as a video camera,
announcing activities by the boos· football seasons, special winners pitching machine, wrestling· mats,
ters lor fall.
will be se~ted providing all uniforms for volleyball, baseball,
Within the next two weeks, memberships are sold. Those who track and cheerleaders; provide
members of the group will he wl•h to keep the same membership food lor atllletes prlor to away
contacting business houses and number they have last year may do games andmany otber services and
individuals regardfng advertise- so. Anyone wishing to join should !terns not available through athletic
ments in the 19ll5-86 football and contact Souisby, Pat Kitchen or department funding ," Soulsby
basketball 'programs with ads to Susie Tracy. Regular club member- concluded.
·

~~·~'j; ~~ -'·i·~

'

~SNIId

' Wol.le, who had three singles strlkeouts and four walks.
Chris
Red Sox win
and a home nm, Roy Johnson two
In
the
nightcap
GaUipolls ' Red
singles and a double, Todd Grlnd·
plated
six
runs
in
!be first Inning,
Sox
staff a single and borne run, and
proving
to
be
all
thai
It needed In an
Chris Stewart two slllgles. Andy .
S4wln.
Baer, Mike Beaver, Scott Usle,
The winners had 9 hits, led by
Mark Taylor,and Jamie Anderson.
Stout with a double,slngle,
Brlan
each sing1ed.
··
.
and
home
run;. CXhtls Tackett a
For New Haven Mike Harbour
doubled and trlpled, while ~hrls single and home run; Robby
Skidmore a double, Clint DaV\s a
Zerkle slllgled.
.
Baer was the w!nnlng pitcher In a . trtple, and singles each by Chris
great overall effort, striking out Howell and Don Hill.
Chris Howell was the winning
seven and walklng one, whlle
allowing just three hits. P.J. Gibbs pitcher with relief from Skidmore In
and Chris Zerkle shared pitching the sixth. They oomblned for six
duties for New Haven with two walks and six strikeouts. J .J . Bevan

:· Booster president seeks .cooperation

hi'fl"
ltt••••''

- One Week .On

'•

by

&lt;Carl's
snoe store

and Kevin Taylor, D. J. Herman,
Frank Blake, Robbie Fields, Eric
Heck, and Todd. Grindstafl each
single one time. Wolfe started and
was credited with the win. Fields
relieved in the fourth and finished

''

•

won

SYRACUSE - Action in the
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department's "Bill Hubbard Memorial
Little U!ague Tournament" continued here FridaY evening with
Syracuse and the Gallipolis Red Sox
posting big victories. Syracuse
ripped NewHavenl4-l and Gallipolis defeated Hannan Trace 84.
Syracuse struck early with three
runs In the first Inning enroute to
.scoring Its )opslded victory over the
usually tough N&lt;"!" ·Haven Reds. '
Two live-run Innings secured the
vlclory lor the horne team despite a
• lateniUy'byNewHave.
'
Syracuseeruptedlor16hltsledby

AmateUr Golf Tournament .at the
Hidden Valley Country Club Is
being played this weekend.
Dedicated to parents of the
owners and other Grey Eagles
(parents) who guide the growth of
youth, to maturity, thiS outing has
held previous winners of John
Jewell, ·Ty Roush and defending
champion Rusty Saunders.

putts went to the 1eam of CUff
Bellamy. Clarence Anderson, Opal
Casto and Margi C~pehart.
~
After the eventS everyone en·
joyed a covered dish picnic and
closed the evening with a flreworl(s
display.

Now W. Easler Than Ever To 8uy The Bestt·

Swisher and Frank Capcharl IV.
Winners in the afternoon swimming events in their respectlve age
groups were Jodie Wheeler, Curtis
Capehart and Scott Zimmerman.
Second place honors went to
Alexander Dickens, Erin Northup
and Pat Sothern. In the raft race
Wlleeler, Capehart and Sothern
captured first place titles while
second place awards went . to
Dickens Northup and Zimmerman.
In the sprints first place finishers
went to Wheeler, Northup and
Zimmerman, with second place
titles going to Dickens, Capehart
and Sothern. Biggest splash awards
were given to Sara Smith, Curt!s
Capehart and Brlan Stepp. Seconds
went to Zander Dickens, Northup
and Jan Haddox. First place
awards for cretlvedlve went to Jan
Haddox with Stepp corrtlng In
second. The basketball-toss..,n-dlve
was won by Haddox with Sothern
c9ming in second. Underwater
swim titles were won by Curtis
Capehart and Pat Sothern. Second
place finishers went to Erln Northup and Scott Zimmerman.
Playing in a large field of Scotch

,
: Big Bend All stars advance
BELPRE - The Big Bend
• AU-Stars, a little league aU-star
..• team comprlsedofthellnestplayers
In the Meigs-Mason area, advanced
Into the winner's bracket of the
• double elimination Belpre All-Star
~ Little League tournament here
; Saturday with a 24-13 slugfesl·wln
• over Buchanon, West Virginia .
• Big Bend faces host Belpre
; tonight at 6 p.m. Belpre defeated
: Nelsonville to galnthe berth into the
- second round.
• Big Bend came out with their bats
. on fire as they crossed the plat 10
' times in their first at battotakea 3
: lead and never trailed thereafle
;
Pacing the 2().hit Big Bend att k"
: picluded three singles by J a n
: Wrtght , a single and home run by
• Chrts Stewart, Wesley B4mga er
: cracked a home run, Andy B r,
• Chris Wolle, Teny McGuire, nd
• Randy Corsi each had two singleS,

were

Foursome play, two tied for first
with four-under par rounds.
. Winners were Bud Forte, BUI
Wlieeler, Julia Slone, Jim Capehart, Ed Cromley, Topper Forte
and Lana Wheeler. Just behind
those two teams with a three-under
par round was the team of Jeff
Slone, Rick Northup, Marllyn
· Browning and Jewell Steele.' Low ·

Sox victorious

Syracuse, Gallipolis R

July 4 events successful at Hidden Valley Club

The Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

POMEROY

•

BACK LOT BARGAINS"

IF YOU DON'T LIKE THESE PRICES
MAKE US AN OFFERIII
1978 CADILLAC ELDORADO local Trade, leother Interior ..............$3900
1977 FORD LTD . 4 Door, Red, Runs Good........................................$1200
1978 CHRYSLER LEBARON WAGON , Red, low Miles ................... $2900
1978 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 Door. Blue. Good Cor ....... .' ............... $1500
1978 FORD LTO WAGON White. High Miles ........................... : ...... $1200
1981 CHEVY MALIBU CLASSIC 4 Door, Blue, OneOwner ............... $3500
1980 CHEVROLET MONZA 4 ~pee'd, Air Condition ......................... $1600
1977 FORD LTO Gray, 4 Door, Good Work Car ......................... ........ $900
1978 FORD FAIRMONT V-8, Air Condition, Automatic ...................... $900
1978 BUICK LIMITED 2 Door : Ton,local Trade ......... : .................... $2800
1978 OLDS DELTA 88 4 Door, Gray.............................................. $1200
1979 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC iDoor, Black &amp; Silver .................. $2500
1977 DODGE DIPLOMAT 2 Door , Brown, V-8 ......... : ...................... . $900
1976 CADILLAC ELDORADO . Silver &amp; Gray ................................... $900
1978 CHEVY CAPRICE CLASSIC 2 Door, Blue ............................. $1500
1977 FORD LTD 2 DoCJ;r, Gray •••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••.•••.•.••.••• $1000
1979 8U ICK LE SABRE LIMITED 2 Door, White, loaded ............... $2600
1980 FORD GRANADA Maroon, 4 Door, V-8, Air Condition ..... : ......... $2400
1978 MERCURY COUGAR Silver, Moon Roof, Runs Good ........... r ••••• $1900
19t6 CHEVY 'NOVA SS White, V-B, 3 Speed .................... ; ................ $600
1976 FORD LTD . 2 Door, Silver, V-8. Air Condition ............................. $900
1977 FORD LTD II 4 Door, Green, V-8, Runs &amp; looks Good .................$1900
1972 VOLKSWAGEN BUG 4 Speed, Sun Roof .................................. $500
1977 JEEP CJ7 6 Cyl., 3 Speed, Body Rough, Runs G®d ..................... $2200
1977 PLYMOUTH VOLARE WAGON V·8, Air Condition; ...... ; ...... ..... $850
1976 DODGE ASP!:N WAGON Red, V·8 ........................................ $600
1976 PLYMOUTH VOLARE ROAD RUNNER V-8, Automatic ..........$400
·1977 FORD F·150 TRUCK 6 Cyl., Automatic, High Miles , Reo I Good Body..$2000
1978 CHEVY CAMARO Z-28 White, Automatic, Air.•••••••••..• ._........... $1800
1978 PONTIAC BONNEVI' LLE 4 Door, Block &amp; Silver ...................... $1800
1978 KAWASAKI KZ-750 MOTORCYCLE ................... ~ ................... $900

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·Hours: Monday thru Friday

a·a.m. To 6 p.m., Sat. 8 a~m. to 3 p.m•

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BOB'S ELECTRONICS
"EVERYTHING IN TWO· WAY RADIOS, ANTENNAS &amp; ACCESSORIES':

UPPER RT. 7 •
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Phone 446·4517
•

•

�'

.

Page- C-4- The Sunday Times-SIIntinel

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

July 14, 1985

Throwing error gives.Reds··5-4 extra Inning win
LMders

Majors
Y. L.. Pt'C. C08
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i\mj•rh;-an L&lt;'a~ur - Fisk. Chi 2.1:
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Nallona l Lra!(UI' - Hfi'rr, Sll. and
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PhiltiO: Parkl'r, Cin 59.
Amf'rkan U•aMI.it'- Mal!lng!Y. NY 611:
R&lt;•y lor, N:Y and Gi bson, [)/(•1 GO: Murru"
and Rlpkl'n , &amp; 11 58.
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stolen

Bll.Oie~t~

National l.&lt;&gt;a~u£'- C'oli"t:'flll n. S!l. fi2 :
1\kCl'l'. StL :R); l. oll('S. Chi JJ; Rcdu,s. Cln
an d Samut•l, Phll .lO ..
Amerlo;-an Ua.gu1' - H1mdrrson, NY
-11 : l"f'llls. Ca 1.10; Bull(.'f', C le~· 27; Collins ,
Oo:~k 25: Mosf'by. Tor and Wll~on . KC 2.1.
Pll thln~~: Vklnrle!rj
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GoodC'n, N\' 12-3: Hoy t, !iD 12 ~ :Mah le r.
All l 2-7; Hawk ins. Sb 11-2.
Amf'l'lean L('a~ue- Culdr\', NY 11 ·3,
Romanlck. Cal IU · ~ : Morrl~ . [kot a nd
\'lola~ MJnn 10 ti: Bo.\ 'd, Bas ond Pi"try.
O..•t lu-7.
.

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Tim and walked three times.
Wallach, named earlier in the day to
Montreal tied the score 44 in the
·!he National League All·Star team. seventh when Vance Law tripled
committed a throwing error with a nd scored on a wild pitch by
two' out in the hth Inning Friday reliev~r Tom Hurne.
night, giving the Cincinnati Reds a
ln the Montreal first, Law doubled
5-4 victory over the Montreal Expos . . and Huble Brooks followed with an
, With one out ln. the lith, Eddie RBI single, taking second on the
Milner singled off reliever Randy Sf. thr&lt;?W home. Dan Driessen's single
Claire, 3·2. Milner stole second and, scored Brooks: f9r' Montreal's seone out later. St. Claire walked Pete cond run.
Rose and D;lveParker intentionally
The Reds countered with a run in
to load the bases.
the bottom of the inning. Max
Pinch·hitter To n y Perez Venable singled, stole second,
grounded to Wallach. whose throw moved to thi ro on Dave Parker's
pulled second baseman Al Newman groondout ansJ scored on Wayne
off the bag and allowed Mllner to Krenc hicki's hit.
· score. John Franco, &amp;.1, worked the
Cincinnati made it :J.lln the third.
lith inning to pick up the win.
Milner opened with a single and
Cincinnati player·manager Rose Venable sacrificed. Milner moved
moved within 35 hlts of Ty Cobb's to thiro on Rose's groundout and
record hit mark of 4,191. Rose, who scored on an RBI single by Parker.
started a t first base, ·singled once
The Reds made it4·1 in the fourth.

Dave Concepcion and Ron Oester
singled, and Concepcion scored on
Dann Bilardello's single. Two outs
later, Rose walke&lt;j with the bases
loaded to force home BUardello.
Montreal closed within 4-3 In the
fifth. Withtwoout ,Drtessendoubled
to the right-field corner and scored
on Terry Franc6na 's single.
Addujar smoking
Meanwhile, lhesmokeonJoaquln
Andujar's fastball Is now corning
from hiS ears.
Andujar, leading the majors with
15 victories. Is boycotting the
All·Star Game because National
League manager Dick Wllilams
hedged on awarding hlm the
starting assignment .
The San Diego manager said he
had nar;owed the starting berth
down toPadrertghhhanderLaMarr
Royt and Andujar and he wanted to

see how the two looked in Friday
night's matchup.
' Hoyt wound up outdueling An·
dujar, helplng the San Diego Padres
snap St. Louis' flv~game winning ,
streak with a 2·0 victory over the St.
Louis Cardinals.
Hoyt, 12·4, went seven Innings
with Rich Gossage carrying the
final two innings. Hoyt gave up two
hits, struck out two, walked none
and retired the last 15 batters he
faced. Gossage.earned his 18th save.
Andujar, 15·4, took the loss and stU!
says Williams' decision"! unjust.
" I don't thinl&lt; that's right," said
Andujar. "I'm first In wins, second
In complete games and I have a 2.37
ERA. You can look it up. Those are
good numbers. 1 think I'm being
cheated out of this. How many guys
go into the All·Star game with 15
wins?"

v

VAIJIUIEAll-CLIMATE

L.Ync c...., Sohedule

MOTOR OIL

Week of Jtdy 14, 1965

Date - Gymnwdwn
July H Cl~ ....

Pool

.. , ... ..

... J 1 p.m. Open Swim
6-8 p.m. Qp('n Swim

;

July L'i Closed .......... ,, .

p.m . Camp Crescendo
6-8 p.m. Open Swim
July 16 Closed ............................ ,... .. ..... .. ............ 14:ll p.m. Camp Crescendo
July 17 Closed ........................................................ 14::\0 p.m. Camp Crescendo
July 18 Closed ......................................................... 14:30 p.m . Camp Crescendo
·tt-R p.m. Open Swim
• July 19 6-8 p.m. Open Recreation ............................................ 24 p,m. Open Swim
6-8 p.m. Open Swim
July 'll1·3 p.m. Open Recre&lt;Jtlon .............................................. l·3 p.m. Ope n Swim
... ,....

July 21 Closed ................ ,....

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

14:30

10W·30~ lOW-40

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Economy chaih link fen~e

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OIL FILTERS

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AIR FILTERS

.l ·J p.m . Ope n Swim
6-8 p.m. Open Swim

Frida.'''!i Re!;ult!i
Los Angc-k-s 7, Chlcalro ~
Pl n shur~ h :1. San Frandsro 1
Cirlelnnati ~.Moo! rea l~ tll lnnln~-;1
Atlanla 7, PhlladC'lphlo 4
NN' York 3.

San
..

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LIMIT 12 Qn.

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H ousto n ~ illlln nin~r.l

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fOR MOST U.S.
. PlSSINGIR CARS

LG9826

liMIT 2

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San 01~ a! St. Luul~

£0
ransaccl"'tons

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1

C' tltca~

SHOCKS
HEAVY DUTY

H11.ooehall
iALI- ~ ·SIJ;:nall·dou lftrldrt•

fh'st ba§C'Iman Tom Pucl orrk for n •as
slgnment to Buffalo of lhl• Amt•rka"
AlislX'iatlun 1AAA1 ; pur(·ha!&gt;l'll tho• !'On
tract of pitchf'r ,J,~r!)' Don Glea ton fmm
nu ffalo.
Seat til ' - Grnl'rnl Mnnua{'r Hal Krllcr
r{'!':lj;!nl'd: Chuck 1\rmsrrona took O\'f'l' as
ll.l' nt&gt;ral malli:llo(l'l" un an ln!(•rlm bu~oi.o; .
Ba~k!•tb;tll
•
San Antonio - SIF!fll'd Alfrf•lklck
HuF!hi'J\ , it~ flrsl -round drult l' ho\Cf'.
C' ollc~rc

t: ast 1"i"nl'K'SSi"i" S!utt• -

;\nnoum•t•d

Gron:;P "Budd~·" Sass('r will lx&gt;rom••
athlf'lh: Uln·•·tor. mmwd Mlki" A,I'C'rs

hl•ad fool ball ooach.
l.oui !l!ana Shil l• - IJIM'Onllnu!'d wr£'S ·

ti"l ng as a ''ill'Sit~· !tp:Jrt.

Foolhall
Oalla9 - Sl~ n rd guard ('rawfurd KN
an d Jln('(m('kl'l'-" Nea l Dd larono and K:HI
Jordan .
O.•nvrr - Sl~nl'd wldr T&lt;'c&lt;'l\'i"T Ca ry
Kolle to n .o;rrll'!i of l · ~· rar contrarts:
w-strurturPd ron tract or runnln~ back
Sammy WlndPr.
Houslon- S!J(tll'd fr('('·aj:lt•nl i!~hl l'nd
Rich Ell I.~
L,\ Rams - Si,lmed puntrr Dilll'
HatChi"r. a third mund draft t' hOI('(', and
drl cn .:;tw rnd Krvln Gr('('l"' c, a rift~
round draft chui('('.
Wa$hln~lon Plan•d "afrll Mllrk
Murph~ · rm wah'f'rs.
Hot·kry

NY Han~rrs '-Named Robbll' F!Oi'f'k
fOil ell of i\'{•W Jia\'f'n tAmC'rl,can Hockf'r
l.raguf'\ &lt;J nd w.,.~· n ~· Thom011- roach ol
l'al1 Lak,.. rit~ l!n TC'I"t'lo1tlnn;ti Hockrv ·

•
• .L---------1

Q\

SHOCK ABSORBERS
BY THE MAKERS OF

U

GABRIEL

If you are looking for a deal, take advantage of this
1984 Century Limited 4 dr. This car has all the equipment, and the price! Driven only 18,000 carefree
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INGI~I CUANIR

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Durable Economy chain ·link fence ·
Our Economy line ot chain link fen cing he lps pro· As
vide you with security, privacy. and value. Long last· low
ing tinish for dependable service. 36·in. high .
As

MARVEL
MYSTERY
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FOil BEmR

Pficc •S catalog pnce now avB•Iable •n ou• ' LG "sele catalog" Shipping. rnstalla!lon
e•Ua • ASII about Suars oecht plans

SILVER IRlPGE
PUlA
GAlLIPOLIS, OHIO

446·2770

Sat/atactlon guaranreet;f or your money back

LESS ENGINE WIAR

1~.
.

tiiiOD ENDS. .. . . .. . .. .. ..... 9.11
IALLJOim .............. ... n.l9
IDLD AIMS ....... . ...... ... 11.19
Cllml LilliS .......... , ..... 16.19
WHnL IUIIIIGS . .. . • .. •.. . ,_ 4.11
WHEELSEAIS .. . .. .. .. ... . ·'- I. 9t

Doug Stover For
Free Estimates

't-Sears, Roebuck and Co., 1985

PERFORPMNCE AND

SUSPENSION {STEERING PARTS

Ask For

EACH

•

'

LIMIT 2

UMIT2:

RESISTOR/
SUPPRESSOR

SAl~

99¢

APPLIES TO AUTOMOTIVE SPAR II: PLUG PUACHA~S ONL '( . LIMIT 16 PLUGS

BRAKE SHOES &amp; DISC PADS

TOTAL TUNE-UP
EXCLUSIVE AT (:ORVAIRS

50,000 MILE RATED

BRAKE FLUID

-UP KITS1 Autotron

HEAVY DUTY
120UNC!S

·.•

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50t

UMIT2

BONDED
RELINED
SHOES

/Jemlllle~

7·99

NEW BRAKE SHOES
OR DISC PADS
RIVmD

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QUin

FUEL
FILTERS

DO· IT-TOUISELF
Sill

DISTRIBUTOR CAPS
STANDARD AND ELECTRONIC
IGNITION

STD. IGNITION 7mm
SfTS IN STOCK.

.gs9

MnALLIC DISC PADS . . ..... .. •... 12.99
All BRAICI SHOO SOLD
WITH EXCHANGE

WIRE SETS

NEW WHEIL CTLINDEIS .... . .. •.... 9.19
MAStD CYLINDDSw/ ..cll •. ..•..• 11.19
NEW DISC IOTOIIS ......... ...... 39.
CALIPIIS wlllo 01. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19.

HEf IGNITION Bmm
SETS IN STOCK FROM 8.89

Deflecta=5hleld"
PICK-UP TRUCK

KIT
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liQUID OR PASTE
CAR WAX

SOMO.

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36.89
43,89
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AND FREE OF DAMAGE.

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THill
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199

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CLEAR

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SMOKED

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HOURS:
MON. thru FRI. 8 to 8
SATURDAY 8 to 6
SUNDAY 9 to 6

RUNNING
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SILVER BRIDGE .PLAZA

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DIAMOND

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FOR PICK-UP TRUCKS
SALE PRICE 34.99
EASY TO INSTALL

PlATE

SALE 54 .99

2499
99

*49~N~

PHONE 446~933.5·

9
*29 !

STOCK

Bill Kelly; ~anager

·-

•

\

�July 14, 1985

OhiO-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Allen cops Ohio Valley Junior Golf Tourney
GALLIPOLIS - Bo All e n
chalked ~P his first !o41'nament
V)ctory In the Ohio Valley Junior
Golf Association as he fired an
eight -over par 80 over Pt. Pleasant's steamy Hidden Valley Country Club Tuesday. Steve Bradbury
took the runner-up trophy and Tom
Mead ows recorded his third
straight third place 'finish In the
15-17 age group.
Eddie Crooks scored his second
straight wln.ln the 12-14 age bracket

old - Bo Al len 80, Steve Bradbury
81, Tom Meadows 83, F rank
Capehart 84, Ray Hoobler84. Marty
Hart 86, Rodd Harrison 88. Jooy
Stewart 89, Kyle Saunders 92. Tim
Lauder 131.
12·14 years old - Eddie Crooks
97, David Russell 101. Matt Baker
104, Chad Leach 109, J ohn Hol,lack
UO, Pam Allen !II, Matt Willis U2,
Tom Ra wllngs 128.
11 years and under - J amie
Harris 43, Jeremy Duncan 47,
Curtis Capehart 49, J ason Leach 54.

as he won over David Russell. Matt
Baker cap~ the third plaee
trophy.
.
Jamie Harris made it two wins In
a row In the U and under group as
he shot a 43 to lead second place
finisher, J eremy Dunca n.
Next tourney (ln the Ohio Valley
Juniors cir cuit will be held Monday,
July 15, at Pome roy's Jaymar
course. Registration .time Is 8:M

a.m:

·

·

·

Hidden Valley reSults: 15·7 years

July 14, 1985

Ewington Academy used for Literary Institute
Bt

JAMES SANDS
Special Col'l'ftlpondent
EWINGTON ....:. The bulld!ng that
we feature today served as home
for the Ewington Academy from
1857 to about 1904. ThE•bulldb:~g
not flnlshed until
a few years alter
the school was
started; there·
fore, one will see
the date on
Schoolhouse

1!!59.
Theoriglnainameofthishouseof
leamlng was the "Ewington Cltl·
:zens Literary Institute." Three lots
were purchased by the trustees Of
the school from E.A: McCarley for
$60. George Ewing supervised uW

5,

T

•

NTU

ROOF SHINGLES

BATHTUB
WALL KIT

20 YEAR PRO-RATE WA~RANTY

$2144. Sq.

by

E ASTERN T-BAU TOUR CJtAMPS - The
Tuppers Plains Blue J's took first plaCe In the Eastern
1'-hall Tournament ending their season with a
winning record of 9-1. From left ui right, they .are
front., Daniel Murphy, Shaun Long, llason PUne~,

John Gaspers; second row, Jason Parker, Seth
Carleton, Mlk~ Guess, Sean Maxey; third row,
Michael Barnett, Brian Bowen, Amanda Gaspers,
Jeromee .Calaway, Mlke Laughery; and biWk row,
steve Bowen, coach: Tom Gapers and Rod Pullens.

8

PL
I

____

No. 15 or No. 30

.,_

I

"

$

59

Roll

WHITE VINYL SIDING
• Do-it:yourself, easy to install
• Beautify and r:nodernize your bath
• Five pre·cut formed panels
• Four molded-in roomy shelves
• Covers existing tile
• Cleans effortlessly
• Waterproof resists mold and mildew
• Fits tub areas up to 32 ' x 64" x 58" high

$3495

1983 CHEVROLET CAPRICE CLASSIC
3 SEAT WAGON

Featuring a low 32,000 miles with only one previous owner.
This car is loaded with equipment and has been treated with ...
TENDER

(ARE

Double 4 or Double 5

•4400 Sq.
ANDERSEN WINDOWS
0/ DISCOUNT OFF
/0 Andersen List

25

Caro ina Lum.ber &amp; Supply .Co.·
312 Sixth Street
Store Hours: i

i

675-1160
Point Pleasant
8 a.m.·5 p.m., Saturday 8 a.m.·l2

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DISCOUNTED OFF
MSRP ON All FULL SIZE TRUCKS
TON &amp; lf• TON, 2 &amp; 4 WHEEL DRIVES
SAVINGS EXAMPLE:
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Financing $9,000.00
S.AVE S666.86

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THIS GREAT SAVING OFFER IS GOOD ONLY ON
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cars wo lf! rllgulllr wheels

$7995

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PH. 742-3011

llo GraiiiiO. Oh.

Open 1·6 Man."Sat; Fri. 1-8

Phone 245·5131

ROAD HAZARD

$22 95

'1911• ·w1m co upon .

RUTLAffD - RIO TIRE
TIRE
SALES EXCHANGE
Main St., lutt..ol, Oh.
l04 llerth Atwood
I .II you don't see 'four size, call us.

~eq

time was Alexander Salrd Jr. For
the remainder of Its exlslence the
school appears ro have been owned
by the principal. For It was the
academy's last principal, Fremopt•
Vale, who sold the school In 1905 as
the school had closed a year or so ,
before that.
• ,.
During Vale's awnership we note
an emphasis on business courses
and on preparing .students to
become teachers. Several Welsh
people were trained here and one
Welshman who !liter became a
teacher and then a minister near
Penlel mentioned ·that the Welsh
had a tough time 1n the Ewington
Academy because of their speech
pattern.
THE WEUIH especia.lly had

On one , occasion this Welshman
stated that he was on his way !rom
Ewington to Gallipolis and stopped
to ask directions:
"Ill thUI the way to GaUipollll?"
;ne answer came back to the
Welshman several times: "What
did you say?"
Alter the aeademy · closed, the
Grand Arrny bf the Republic used
the buDding. Thls school house w~s
later used by the public schools
alter the public school burned
oown. It was · about 1945 that a
school was last held here, the
American Legion being the next
owners.
H you should want to write to
James Sands, his address Is 00
North Buckeye, CrooksYille, Ohio

-- •11f!

~EWINGTON CITIZENS literary Institute was eompleted In 1859• .
The name was ehanged in the 1800s to the Ewington ACademy, and that
name remained unto the school's closing aboui!B04. In Its later years
the school, under Prof. Fremont Vale, emphasized training teachers
and ln!¢ructlng yoong men lor business careei'S, being the first school In

thearticle
schoolhouse.
"s:::..'_' _;43'73:.;:1;,:,.==========the=co=unly=to=ln=c=lu=de=t=hls=ln-t=he=cu=rrt=cul=wn-·-------==-. construction
According of
to an
wrltten ·In .-_tru_s_tees_t_o_the...:,prlncl=..:pal::-,-w_ho_a_t_th_a_t,;,tro:..:.:.uble=.:.;p::.:ro.:.n;::ou.::n::;c::in:!g..:the:.:..:l:::et::;te;;_r_;
· 1976 for·the Sunday Times-Sentinel ·
· by Beatrice W. Clark:
"Most of the 00118&amp;nlctl~n WJ!II.
done by volunteer labor of.~net) who
were arudoult that their children
have the opportunity lor more
education thaD the one-room coun"
try ochool rould provide. Some who
were unable to work gave money to
buy slate lor the roof, glaM for the
windows, the hand-made square
oalls lltat held the building together
and other suppUes that could not be
taken from the land.
"So anxious were the people of
the community that they did not
walt untll the building wa. finished
to begin holding classes. This
resulted ln a tragic accident.
"One day during recess some ol
the students went out on a scaffold
Fits most foreign and domestic cars and
from which the builders were
light trucks. Reg. 3.29 &amp; 3.89 Limit 2
trying lo fasten bt place a heavy
comlce board. 'lbey asked the boys
to put their shoulders to It and bold It
untn U could be spiked Into place.
The weight WI"' too much and the
stnactnre leU. A man named Burk
was ldlled, a Turner boy had a
broken biWk, and at least two others
Reg. 4.49 &amp; 4.9&amp; llmll 2
were hurt In the taU."
The first mention we find In the
old newspapers of the Ewlngton
Institute was In the summer oll858
: when the school advertised that it
was ready for Its fifth term. Tuition
Dorey Open
for common courses was $3. If you
Dorey
wanted to add algebra to that, It
Face Helmets
Rag. 24.95
would he an additional $4. The
Motorcycle
Van Truck Shocks
higher branches were also taught,
Batteries
consisting of mathematics and the
High quality batteries lor
classics. The cost was $5 lor the

7t;

1.99

Castroi10W40 Or
20W50 Motor Oil

Purolator Oil Filter

3.49

Purolator Air Filter

19.88

7.95

&amp;

49.95
Two Air Shocks

term. The summer term, which
was the longest term, lasted 17
w~ks. Other terms during the year
lAsted eight to 10 weeks. The first
principal was A.R. Martindale.
The. Ohio Conference of the
Methodist Church was favorably
Impressed with the new Ewlngton
Institute and In 1860 It recom·
mended the Institute for persons
wishing to become Methodist
pastors.
DURING THE CIVIL War, R.
Wheeler was the prlnclpal. He was
followed by George Cherrlngtort.

True Creature
now in Cincy

WE'VE GOT 'EM AT

112 Ton

While Cherrington was principal In
18'70 the Galllpolls Journal s\ated: ·
"Ewlngton Academy (the name
.changing to Academy In the 1&amp;i0s)
Is pleasantly situated in the vlllage
of Ewington, which place Is noted
for Its lnte!Ugence and moral
Influence, togetherwithltsfacUltles
and cheap .boording offered stu- ,
dents and ' for Its few vices which
surround young men and wo~en in
a large city."
The ad went oa to state that
Ew!ngion Academy prided Itself In
the practicality. of Its courSes "We spend so Utile tlnie theorlzlng
for In building up this vast country
we have little time to theorize."
IN 18'75 EWINGTON Academy
wa~ deeded from a board of

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?

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lkr!!: I ;

NEW BUICK TRADE-IN

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

CINCINNATI (UPI) - "The
Animal" Is gone, but "True Crea"
ture" has arrived.
'
·
The Cincinnati Reds lost a great
nickname when wlldman pitcher
Brad "The Animal" Lesley departed a couple of seasons ago, but
have no • fear nickname-lover.;,
''True Creature" Is ready and
wilting to assume his duties.
"True Creature" Is 23-year-old
pitcher Ron Robinson, brought up
by the Reds rrom the mlnor leagueS
a couple of months ago. But 1\ardly
anyone calls him Ron Robinson.
VIrtually all Roblnron's teammates call him "True Creature."
Those close to him just use "True.' '
And the Inner circle gets away with
"T.C."
R&lt;Jblnson, who has curly. flaming
- but also receding - red hair,
.readily accepts the nickname. After
all, hL~hoss-managerPeteRose­
gave It to him.
"!'think Pete did It to get hack at
me for some ribbing I gave hiril at
the end of spring training," said
True Creature. "When he dldn ' t put
me on the major league roster. I told
him, 'I hope you don't get your hits
(to bre.ik Ty Cobb's hit record).'
"WhenlwascalledupinMay, the
· fu.dswereplay!nglnMontrealandl
·. joined the team there. Pete asked
· me If I kriew any Montreal players
and I said I knew Jim Wohlford and
, mentioned that some of his friends
· called him 'Creature.'
"Pete looked at me and said, 'No,
. you're the True Creature.' And It's
· beenTrueCreatureeverslnce.Pete .
even gave me a T-slilrt that says
'True Creature."'
Asked · why he thinks the nick ·
name quickly became universal
with teammates, True Creature
shrugged and said, "Well, some of
·!hell) kid me about being ugly."
But what does True Creature see
·when he looks In the mirror?
"I think I'm good looking," he
smiled. "Anyway, my wife and son
stWioveme.
"lllkethenickllame, though.Hey,
theNo.lplayer in hasehallgaveltto

me.
)

most popular

motorcycles.
l.o.t21·1080
Reg. !rom t2.95

&amp; Hose Kit
At; Shocko 21.00 oi,'Rog. 28.95
Hooe Kit
7:e5

Your Final Cast

' 1~09

. 1•99

alter mig'• 1.00 rwbote with purch. C.t 2

Puncture Seal

otter. mlg'a 2.00 rebate

Air Conditioning Freon
Prepare your air conditioner for hot
summer weather.

Reg. 1.119

alter mig's 1.00 rebate .
with pur. of 1 ot ea. ,

Dorey Closed
~g~ Face Helmets
'

Ra11. 39.95

Your Choice

2.19

Heavy Duty 1
Puncture Seal

Lan-Lin Hand Cleaner &amp;
Liquid Wrench

Driveway Oil &amp; Grease
Or Rust &amp; Stain Remover

tltt2 &amp; tM10-86 So!e88' Rog. 1.29

160405 &amp; 160510 Reg. 2.95

32.88

Two

tM11-18 S.te 1.59

Midwest Mobile
Air Tank too9
Nine gallon copactty. Reg. 39.95

With rebulldable exctlange.IJ

-Brake Shoes

6•88

38 (;

Your Final Cost

32.88

Reg. 8.88 I 9.9,5

Rivited Brake ShoeSwlex.
Or Disc Brake Pads
Prices In effect July 14, thru July 20, 1885.
We reserve the right to limit quantltlee.

209 UPPER RIVER ROAD
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

8.oo·

Logo T·shirts Or
_Baseball Caps Reg. s . ~5 ••

18. 95

Superior Wheels

I.e. Super Star t t34-4046ZR
Reg . tram 23.95

�\

I

Page-C-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel .

.

. July 14. 1985

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

'

Twilight tour planned Hay marketing service available to farmers
at David Ne(lSe farm
And So It Goes_ Tomatoes are
not only our favorjfe garden
vegetable but also a favorite for a

By JOHN C. RICE
Extension Agent
Agriculture and CNRD
Meigs &lt;A!unty
numberthose
of l!lsects.
among
insects. cutworks are
Calendar of Events - Monday,
Most of us like to buy transplants
July 15- Meigs County Beef Cattle
because we are ahead of the game
Association will have a meeting at 7
p.m. at the' Meigs County Extension · with well-grown-out plants that give
(nfice.
. ·
us fruit without having to walt too
long. Unfortunately, cutworks ·llke
Monday. July 15 and Wednesday.
July 17 - Dr. Dave Krawsczyn.
theplantanddonothavetowaltf6r
locaJ veterinarian. will be checking
the tomato. They are generally
waiting In the soU, and as soon as
all junior fair llvestock projects at
you plant your tomato transplants,
the members ' homes. U you know
the cutworm caterpillar cuts them
of any 4-H or FFA member
off at ground level.
planning to bring livestock to the
About the same time the cutfair (other than hogs) wbo did not
worm is working, there is a tiny
receive a letter concerning this ,
please let us know immediately.
black, hopping beetle that loves to
chew tiny holes in the leaves. These
Wednesday. July 17 -All market
are called flea ~ties. They are
lambs must be sheare(i the third
actually sitting tl)ere waiting' lor
week In July in order to sell at the
you to set those plants out so they
fair . We will he doing this shearing
can start feasting on them.
on Wednesday evening, from 6 to 9
Another important and annoying
p.m. at the fairgrounds for those
insect _Is the !'Phid or plant louse.
members who need someone to
shear their lambs.
Aphids are sucking 'Insects that
appear in large numbers on the
Thursday, July 18 - State Fair
newest growth. They suck sap and
Horse Show Qualifying to he held at
produce honeydew that is a clear'
7 p.m . at the Meigs County
sticky liquid. Later, a black, sooty
Fairgrounds. Three Meigs County
4-H members wlll be selected at this
mold grows on the tomato foliage
and fruit.
show to represent the counly'"l£ the
Whiteflies can he a problem, too.
State Fair Horse Show. The publtc
They
plague the tomato grower
is invited to attend.
from
the
beginning to tne end of the
Twilight Dairy Tour Planned - A
~ason.
We
often get whiteflies on
Dairy Tour is scheduled for Tuesplants
we
buy.
Because they are a
day evening, July 23. at 7:30p.m. at
the David Nease Fann al Nease
· greenhouse pest, whiteflies freSet'tlement.
quently infest plants started there,
The Nease Farm Is recognized
And, don't forget the tomato
state-wide as having one of the top
worm that eats aU the leaves.
10 Jersey herds in the state. Plan to
Fortunately, they never appear In
come- ~,nd see the outstanding cows, . large numbers. Therefore, we can
the no tillage corn, the excellent
hand pick and destroy them.
forage program. There will be a
What can you do to protect your
demonstration on soil losses and we
garden against these pests? Sevin,
will discuss dairy records and dairy
malathion and Dipei Insecticides
rations and feeding.
can he · used. Dlpel is a biologtcal
Bring your own lawn chair. The control material for caterpiUars. u
Women's Auxiliary of the Soil and
you use these Insecticides every
Water Conservation District will
seven to 10 days as directed on the
serve drln~, coffee and cookies.
label, you will bE' pleased with the
The Nease fpmily will he serving
results.

By BRYSON R. CARTER
Extension Alent
Agriculture and CNRD
GaiDa County
Ohio farmers thnough the joint
efforts of the Ohio Cooperotlve

wllh buyers and bE' responsible for
distribution of the hay sellers '
listing. Currently, ODA, lhrough lis
contacls in other state'S, receives
requesls regarding available hay
for sale.

Extensio!l
Service (OCES)
and the
Ohio
Department
of Agriculture
(ODA) wUI have a hay marketlng
servtce available to them In 1985. A
· hay sellers' listlngWUI he complied
and distributed to buyers in ;areas
-where there is an interest In
purchasing hay. .
The OCES Is responsible for
conducting an educational program informing farmers about the
program requirements. Emphasis
will be on marketing quality hay
accompanied by a laboratory
analysis. The Ohio ResearchExtension AnalytJcal Laboratory
(REAL) is purchasing rapid testing
equipment known as Near Infrared
Refectance .&lt;NIR) that permits
testing to bE' done In a few minutes.
Only hay with a lab analysis of
protein, moisture, acid detergent
fll&gt;E'r (ADF) and neutral detergent
fiber (NDF) wilt, be Included in the
hay listing. An educational program is needed to explain the
meaning of these terms.
County agents wUI help compile
the hay sellers' listing by securing
Information from farmers destrlng
to sell hay. Forms wlll he provided
to county Extension offices for 1hay
sellers to complete if they want to
participate In the hay marketing
program.

Additional
efforts will
lml)le. mented
to advertise
and be
promote
. the avaUabUity of good quality Ohio
- hay.
.
REAL testing charges wUI be an
expense of the hay seller. The exact
charge has not been established but
Is expected \o be about $5 per
sample.
,
Funds to assist in operating the
program are being sought. Depend!ng on the success in obtaining
funds to defray operating costs of
the program, there may be a
nominal charge to hay sellers.
Regardless of the i!Vailai:&gt;Ulty of
outside funding; the hay marketing
program wlll be implememed ..
Glvlngleadershlp.totheprogram
from the Ohio Department of
Agriculture Is Marty MOler, acting
chief, Division of Markets· David
Miskell, a'ssociate state • leader
agrt~ultural Industry; and Donald
Myers, Extension agronomist, forages, The Ohto State University.
Let me kl)qw if you have an
interest In this activity.
As a result o( a new theory
developed by the Ohio Supreme
Court, employers may now he
faced with employee Jaw suits for
on-the-job injuries. These law suits
can result even if the employer did

even if the employee receives
Worker's Compensation bE'neflls.
AU employers, Including farmers,
must now ta ~e extra precautions to
prevent such an occ urrence. Under
this new system, the inju red

.

B &amp; 8 AUTO SALES
S R

P.O~·Ro~

554
215

614/ 245-5131

~~·

I I W

ON Al l FULL SIZE PICKUPS
IN STOCK.
Special
Rate
Applies
Thru
July 31, 1985

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•Automatic contrast/ color
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•U nitiZed Xtendedlite chas sis .
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· •Durable plasttc cabmet wtlh
silver fini sh.
Mod~l FKA423 S

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diagonal

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Eledronic Tuning
Brill1ant color performance featurin g the convenience o! sm·
gle-knob electroniC tu nmg. De·
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and up to s•x UHF channels
w1th one convement control.

lllummated channel numbers.
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•AutomatiC f1n e Tunin g (AFT)

$499

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IVIONDAY TIIROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Chance of showers and thunderstorms Monday and Tuesday and
lair Wednesday. Highs were forecast to be in the 8Js_ Lows were
forecast to be in t~e 60s.

53 FUll SIZE AND
0 TRUCKS TO
CHOOSE FROM.

State zone forecasts

You won't walk away - You'll drive away!

Northwest Ohio, Central Lake Erie Shore
West Central Ohio, Central Wghlwuls
Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms
· through Sunday. Highs both days were forecast to be In the upper 80s
and lows Saturday nigl)t were forecast to be in the upper OOs.
The probability of precipitation was 40 percent Saturday. 30
percent Saturday night 'and 50 percent Sunday.
Winds were forecast to .be from the south at five to 15 mph
Saturday and less than 10 mph Saturday night.
·
East Lake Erie Shore, Northeast laland
· Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thundertorms through
Sunday. Highs Saturday were forecast to be in the mid 60s and
Sunday near 90. Lows Saturday night wUI range between 65 and 70.
The probabllity ol precipitatl&lt;m was 30 percent Saturday and
Saturday night and 50 percent Sunday.
Winds were forecast to he from the south at five to 15 mph
Saturday and less than 10 mph Saturday·nlght.
Miami Valley, Central, E. Central
Southwest, Soulh Central
Partly cloudy with a chance of showers and thunderstorms
through Sunday. Highs both days were forecast to be near 90 and ·
lows Sal\lrday night near 70.
The probability of precipitation was 30 percent through Sunday.
Winds were forecast to be from the south at five to 15 mph
•
Saturday and light and from the south Saturday night.
Lake Erie
Winds were forecast to be from the south at 10 to20knotsSaturday
and Saturday night and from the southwest at 10 to 20 knots Sunday.
Waves were forecast to be one to three feet. Scattered t.hunderstorms
thnough Sunday.
•

OLDS
98 REGENCYS IN. STOCK
FINANCING AVAILA'BLE ON THE SPO.T TO QUALIFIED BUYERS
. #+4-Chevrolet Cel~britys, 4·dr sedans 0+\4.0~4-0id Cutlass Supremes, 2 dr. - Just

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4-0ids Cutlass Cieras, 4 dr. --- Just· Arrived
'

NOW IN STOCK

1985 OLDS DELT"A BROUGHAM COUPE
tM~DIUM

HARD TO FIND -

BrilkJnt rolur perfCJrmcmce lealur11g IN! coh·
veruence Dl electrOI'IIC ~board conts6lland
mulb·bilnd cal:'e lunng

D dlannel number dfSPay

, I

"'·I

•

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WILL BE DOWN-SIZED IN 1986

8-DELTA ROY ALES AND BROUGHAMS

.Channelock Ol~a! Keybo.ard ContrOl IJO·
Yllles mult ~ban.:l IUOfll l! ol ~p to 127
broadea~ and table channels "Bnghl LE

HERE NOW!

"86" Models will be Smaller

-Qwn crystal tunlfll system features pr1
j)Oinl accur11ey on all chan~-no l1ne
lulling necessary.
~UII}rTlaliC

Extended Ohio Forecast

ON ALL
RCII

M oc;lel GKR648
25" Cl•ago n al

FORECAST - During early Sunday morning, rain Is forecast
for porilono of the upper and lower Great Lakes regions. Elsewhere,
wealber will be fair In general. (Ul'l).

A.P.R.

net. Deluxe features include:

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The nation's weather
By United Press Intemallonal
The National Weather Service continued its flash flood warning for
northeastern Utah Saturday where surging flood waters roared
through ·a mountain canyon, submerging roads and burying a
campgiound In mud.
·
The western states prepared for another scorcher with
Iemperatures again heading for the 100-degree mark.
The Utah deluge was fed by heavy thunderstorms Friday night .
It hat dumped 3 inches of rain over the area In one hour. Sheep Creek
In the Flaming ·Gorge overflowed its banks, leaving parts of State
Highway 191 under 4 feet of water, said Janette Porltt, a Utah
Highway Patrol dispatcher in Vema!.
Flood waters In the Sheep Creek Campground tossed boats around
and covered the area Wlth mud, Poritt said. At one point, highway
officlals were concerned that the rising waters might take out the
Sht!el) Creek Bridge, she said.
"''l'bey've got a log or boulders and the road is washed out in some
afells," Porttl said. "They say there's quite a few boats buried In

mud."

ca~ le

DEPENDABLE SERVICE
AFTER THE SAL£

Elherlelds
POMEIOY 992·3671

. Chevrolet-Oldsmobile 1nc

IS THE TRADING PLACE
1616 EASTERN AYE., GALLIPOUS, OH.

446~3672
....

."

BAN~ &amp; GMAC FINANCING

I I I I I I I I I I I I 1 I I I I I 1
I

the feeling. which was familtar as
Sepp9: .
the ma(n engines started to ltght, an
Utsrnan . emphasized no firm
plans could bE' made until Chal- Increase in noise level and a definite
shaking of the whole vehicle." he
lenger'sprobleinistullyunderstood
said.
and top mission managers sche"I wa~ expecting to feel the big
duled meetings Monday to come up
bang
of the (soltd rockets) about
with a new launch schedule.
four
seconds
after that first shilklng
Commander Gordon Fullerton,
started.
As
the
shaking went on, I
co-pilot Roy Bridges and .crewwas
the longest four
thought
thts
mates Karl Henlze, AnthOny Engrever
waited."
seconds
land, Story Musgrave and civilian
He said his crewmates were "just
astronomers Loren Acton and
fine" and hopeful they would get a
John-David Bartoe had planned to
chance to get off the ground as soon
spend a week fn orbit studying the
as possible.
sunandEarth'SSPiiCeenvironment.
Engineers do not know why the
Henlze and England. who joined
valve
In Challenger's No. 2 main
the space agency in 1967, have
engine
failed to operate properly. It
wait!!d 18 years for their first
could
have
been trouble with the
spaceflight.
engine's
computer
controller, the
Fullerton, who previously flew
·
valve
itself
or
the
linkage
responsiaboard the shuttle Columbia on Its
ble
for
moving
the
valve.
thlrd .. fljght In March 1982, gave
A NASA spokesman said contamreport.e rs - his Impressions of the
ination
In the hydraulic Duid of the
abort from the vantage point of
valve could have caused the
Challenger's flight deck.
' "I .s aw perfectly normal Indica- probl,em. Similar contamination
was blamed for Discovery's launch
tions aU the way through the count
pad abort last summer.
and I remember from my last flight

''

.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST 7·14·85

homemade ice cream.

I

Jul 1 ' 1986

r---Weather:--- Western fires
· now under control

· -;;;~Th~e20~D~A:w:i:ll:h:a:n:dl:e::==~=:::no~t~i=n~te=n~d~t=o~ln~fl~lc~t~t~he~i~n~ju~ry~a~n~d~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~
I,- . ..

I I I I I I I I t I I I I I I

• -. -

I.

RIO GRANDE, OHIO 45674
PHONE: (614) 245-9555

Bob Brandcherry

.

-

By WilLIAM HARWOOD
with well-rehearsed precision to
· UPI SdMce wtitO.r
e~surethe safety of the crew and the
CAPECANAVERAL,Fla. (UP!)
$1 billion sl;luttie. The seven shuttle
L Challenger's dramatic launch· fliers left the spaceship 40 minutes
ipad abort just seconds before its
aftertheshutdown..
It was a trustratingsetback for the
•planned blastoff wUI force the space
agency to juggle Its fJtght' plans to National Aeronautics and ~pace
' $alvage ari already Ughl shuttle Administration, which has been
trying 'to maintain a repeatedly
:schedule, otficials say.
. ; Challenger's planned 4::ll p.m. interrupted launch-a -month pace.
EDT takeoff Friday was aborted
"'We're back about a week from
!hree seconds before liftoff when a
where we started through the
fuel valve in one of the ship's three
(countdown) sequence," said Tho,jJowerliouse main engines failed to . mas Utsman, manager of shuttle
operations at the Kennedy Space
bperateproperly.
: The spaceship's four on-board Center. "'My expectation is we
would be capable of flying again
computers ordered the engines to
Shut down before the shuttle's twin
seven to 10 days from !lOW."
Utsman speculated that If Chal·
solid rockets were to Ignite, which
Ienger can be repaired and launched
would have cornrnlted Challenger to
~a¥.
later this month. the shuttle
: Trouble with a ditlei'et\t valveln ····· Discoverycouldtakeolfonscheilule .
an engine aboard the shuttle
around August 24.
Discovery forced a similar abort
But a planned test-firing of the
June 26, 198&lt;1, spoiling Its maiden
new shuttle Atlantis's main engines
launch attempt.
would have to be delayed, which
p!pbably would force a delay ~or the
, Ground crews Friday quick!~
ship's malden flight, now set for
worked through the abort sequence

300 Big Six, 3 speed, dark blue, one owner. Sliding
back glass, Prem1um all-season radials. Still shows
its good care.
Cars

1!imm- -tunnel Section~

Challenger mission Scrubbed

'

Us~ri

'

State/ ational

employee can recover both from
Worker's Compens~tlon and from
Ihe employer If 11 is proven that the
employer acted in such a way as to
c reate a substa nt ial risk of danger.

~[~J~lr1=r=r1l-Fr~r~~~~~=~1

Qualit1

.

'

Dlspa tcher Susan DeBonis said all the flooded roads have been
reopened except for a small county road that may not be cleared
until Monday.
"It rained like crazy for 00 to 45 minutes and then It stopped
suddenly," DeBonis said. "It seems the stronger !hey are, the
quicker they pass !hrough. I guess it's kind r1 a blessing."
H!ab temperatures Friday reached 100 degrees over much of the
Pla1n8 !rom the Texas panhandle through parts of South Dakota.
Plmenlx sweltered In 114-degree heat, tying tbe rewrd set Jn-1939.
Tuscon checke1ln at 109 degrees, topping the record set Jrt i942.

By SUSAN SEAGER
United Press International
Firefighters across the western
United States were reported Friday
to hewinningthewar against dozens
of wantng wildfires. but hot,
rain-free w~ather threatened their
efforts and a senior official predicted "a long fire season."
In California 's Santa Cruz Mountains, most of the4,500 homeowners
evacuated earlier this week from a
community south of Los Gatos were
allowed to return home Thursday
night.
Many had waited to discover
whether their homes were among
the 20 destroyed In the blaze, which
was set by an·arsontst as were many
of the others breaking out in
California at a ra teof between 50 and
100aday.
In Central California, a violent
lightning storm early Friday scored
mtJ!,&gt; than 400 strikes on hilltops east
of Bishop, butfirecrewspouncedon
the resulting small fires before they
·
could spread.
Firefighters also managed to
check the advance of three small
fires in the Los Angeles area that
threatened expensive Malibu Canyon homes, a trailer park and a
mountain highway. The brush fires ,
which burned about 500 acres, were
the first major blazes in the area
since an arson fire July 2 set In the
dry brush in Baldwin Hills killed
·
three people.
On the jagged coast of Big Sur,
Cailf .. crews used bulldozers to clear
brush from the path of three fires
that burned 24,00J acres. destroyed
·two hOuses and shut down a 50-mtie
stretch of scenic Highway 1.
The two-lane road, heavily tr a·
veled by summer tourists. was
expected to be closed through the
weekend to non-residents from the
San Luis Obispo County line to just
north of the town of Big Sur.
In northern Nevada, mop-up

operations were under way at the
site of a number of range fires
c-ontained early Fridaywlththehelp
of out-of-state reinforcements and
thundershowers. Some 300,000
acres have been consumed by fire in
Nevada.
Weather conditions also helped
firefighters tame the blazes that
have scorched 300,00J acres In
Oregon and thousands more ln
Artzona, Idaho, Montana and Utah .
But drizzle, fog and low clouds
that helped firefighters for two days
were expected to desert crews In
California and other western states.
Rich Ochoa ol the National
Weather Service said the last of the
scattered showers were expected
Friday, to be followed by a return to
warm, dry weather, with temperatures ranging from the 90s to the

100s.
"We had a good day yesterday,
an"- the weather is stU! a little
cooler," Bill Bishop of the Interagency Fire Center - a federal
agency that helps coor'dinate the
dispatch offireflghters, aircraft and
supplies- said in Boise, Idaho.
.- "But the basic overall weather
pattern is still with us. We have a
long fire season ahead of us."
Nonetheless, officials were confident they would rna intaln their edge
over the fires that have burned 1.5
million acres In the United States
and Canada.
Bishop said that while the
fatigue-factor is high among the
16,00J firefighters amassed in the
West, no fatalities and very few
serious Injuries have !&gt;E'en reported
in the two-week-long flreflghtlng
campaign.
'
" I think that's a tribute to the men
and women working these !Ires," he
said. Organizers are trying to rest
crews as much as possible, especially between fires, "but that's not
always possible, " Bishop said ,

SIIU'ITLE ABORTS -The main engines of the shultle Challenger;
briefly, but shut down three seconds belore'Uftofl due to amalfuncttonlng'
coolant valve, aborting Friday's scheduled shuttle ffight. The rught will ,
be delayed at least seven days. (UPI)

Reagan pledges action
•
•
agamst terrorists
By HELEN TIIOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPl) - Prest·
dent Reagan is pursuing a wide
range of options for fighting
terrorism and recognizes the need
"to take action and we will take
action" in retaliation against international terrorists, a White House
spokesman declared Friday.
Deputy press secretary Larry
Speakes declined to elaborate on
whether any reprisals were planned
in the aftermath of the 17-day Beirut
·
hostage crisis.
"We recognize the need to take
action•· against terrorism "and we
wlll take action," he told reporters.
He confirmed a Washington Post
report quoting unnamed offlciais as
saying the administration is discussing the risks, benefits and timing of
reprisals and that the president
"now believes military force should
he a component of that response.1•
Of the Post story, Speakes said, "I
think I'll leave it right there. The
early morning paper Is t1ght where
we want it . What was said in that
story was sJpposed to be said."
Officials the Post quoted said that
many options are being considered,
including the rt"Prlsal bombing of

terrorist .training sites.
"There can be no effective
long-term ' strategy that doesn't
include a' wiUingness to use for~." .
an official "'id in the report.
· However, he added. that the key
requirement· for tha t strategy is
"that the use of that force be in

keeping with American values and
that it bE' effective in achieving what
you wantto do."
"'
National security affairs adviser
Robert McFarlane said in a
broadcast following the release of·
the 39 American h.ostage that thee
administration was considering
ta rgeting Middle East terrorist
tt'llining camps for U.S. retaliatory
raids.
The United States is watching
" with close interest" whatever the

Lebanese govemmen t doE's. he said
to prosecute the gunmen wh~
hijacked 1WA 's flight Sl7, and killed
Navy diver Robert Stethem ·on ;
board. ,.

.. ;

The state-owned Beirut radiQ .~
today revealed lhe names of ti1t' ~
hijackers who killed Stethem and =·
said they would he prosecuted.
•
The radio, which is in mainly

Moslem west Beirut and ·no.i· ;
controlled by the Shiite Moslem :
militiaAmal. named Ali Younis and •
Ahmed Ghorbieh as the pair who :
commandeered 1WA Flight '817 on June14after it left Athens for Rome.
State Department spokesman
Bob Smalley said the department . :
could "not ~nfirm the accuracy" of :
the report. but would welcome the •
reported action "iflt is true. "
Speakes said that the United
States has "no quarrel' ' with the
names and has heard them before.
"We'veseen the announcement ... .

and as wp've stated many times , ...
President Reagan ha s called on the
Lebanese government to bring the
hijackers to justice." he said.
•

Live aid raises money for famine relief ·
By CAROLYN BEIAROO
United Press International
Thousands of rock fans and some
of tile biggest 'p erformers in
contemporary music made their
way Yo stadiums on two continents
Saturday to ta~e part in the world 's
largest televised rock' concert that
could raise $50 million to fight
African famine.
By dawn Saturday thousands of
music fans had lined up outside
London 's Wimbley Stadium hoping
to get good positions when the gates
were scheduled to open at 5 a .m .
EDT.
The Live Aid conceM was
scheduled to begin at 7 a .m. EDT in
· Londqn 's Wembley Stadium and be
beamed by sateUite to Philadelphi a's JFK Stadium, where the
mEDTega.conce.rt conclu~_at .ll.Jl. m .

- P"

The National Weather Service in
Philadelphia forecast sunny skies
and temperatu1-es il) the80switha30
pertent chance ..Of an aft ernoon
thundershowen
G~tes were to opened at 7 a.m.
EDf in Philadelphia and folk singer
Joan Baez took the stage at 9 a .m .
following an introduction by actor
Jack Nicholson.
Checks of the mass)ve Philadclphla sound system , which Includes
1W speakers stacked on both sides of
the stage, were made Friday as
pertormersandconcertgoersbegan
arriving in the city.
Hundreds ol the 90,00J fans to
attend the JFK show camped
outside the stadium overnight to be

among the first in the gates.
A similar concert _got under ":"Y
before 72,000 people m Loildon. 1 he
pertor:nan~s on both sides of the
Atiant 1c, w1U feature Mtck Jagger,
Tina Turner, Bob Dylan, Paul
McCartney and an unprecedented
host of others.
Twelve satellites beamed the
concerts around the world to a.n
estimated 550 mill ton of the world s
600 milliOn teievtslon sets, said a
spokesp\an for Worldwide Sports
and Entertainment In Philadelphia .
J:he concert was also a television
and radio event that was transmit·
ted In its entirety over the cable
television network MTV and radio
stations· around the country. ABC
television broadcast the conclusion
of the concert hnm 8p.m. to 11 p .m .
EDT.
The 16-hour concert was also
beamed live by satellite to abo'ut 00
nations in Europe. South America,
the Middle East, Japan, India and
Australia. Some Eastern-bloc countries including Russia, also received
the live concert but there was no
Indication when It would be shown to
televlson audiences.
Richard Lukens, international
director for Worldwide estimated
the potential worldwide viewing
audience at 2 bU!ion people.
Those responsible lor staging the
show. which Involved 38 separate
acts and :llequipmentchanges In 14
hOurs, were not worried, however,
about the weather.
"I'm notundulynervousaboutlt,"
said Keith Bradley,oneoftheshow's

three production managers. "But If
1 wasn't nervous, I'd be insane."
They will be faced with the
challengeofusingarevolvingstage,
which will he moved by stage hands,
to set up the equipment for one act
while another act is performing.
Both the London and Philadelphia
stages, which are' n!ne stories high
and as wide as a football field, also
featured a gtant banner hearing the
Live Aid symbol, theneckofaguitar
emerging from the African conti-

nent, so that those in the audience :
can't forget why they are there.
"To band together at this time •
means a . Jot not just to the
pet'formers. but to alit he people who
are making it happen, that this
power, which is usually used .:
· commerciaily. can he harnessed to further international understand- :
ing," said Bill McManus. a Philadel- ~
phia concert promot er responsible :
for providing electricity for the
show.

LIVEAID-AseaollansftlledWembleyStadiuminLondonSalurdaya~

lhe tnwlallanttc pop spectat'lllar to aid starving AfricW1s J!Ul unden.ay, •
'lbe concert was viewed In IfNI countries through TV salelllle linkup;.

�~

-,

'Page--D-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

- -----:...- Area deaths------ Fonner UMW chief dies·:
Eleanor R. Casey
AKRON- Eleanor R. Casey, W,
of Akron, died Thursday at Akron
City ,Hospital following a long
Illness.
She was bom in Gallia County on
Oct. 22, 19L'5 and was a member of
the ~rlington Memorial Bapt lsi
Church.
She was preceded in death by her
husband, Clarence, who dted in
April.
She is survived by three sisters.
Mrs. Eima Walker and Mrs. Edna
parsons, both ol Akron; and Mrs.
Garnette Hall of Middleport; one
bmt her, John Roush of Grove Ci ty
and several nieces and nephews.
Funeral setvlces will be 1 p.m
Monday a t the Hopkins Funera l
Hom e, 547 Canton.Rd., Akron, with
Rev. Robert N. Zirkle officiating.
Burial will be in Hillside Memorial
Park, Akron. Friends may call at
the fl,meral home from 2-4 and 7-9
p.rri. Sunday.

a.m. at Waugh·Halley-Wood, Fun·
era I Home, wlthRev. Carl Litchfield
officiating. Burial will be at the Zion
Cl'\netery, Gallipolis Ferry.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Sunday·from 7 to 9 p.m

Rosa K. Martin
PT. PLEASANT- Mrs. Rosa K
Martin , &amp;5, Texas Road, Route 4,
Gallipolis, Ohip, died Friday morning in Pleasant Valley HospitaL
Born J une 25, 1900, ·at Passaic,
N.J., she was thedaug hterolthe late
Emory A. and Rozalia Swartz
Vanco.
She was a retired employee of the
G.C. Murphy Co.'s Galli polis store
and a member of Grace United
Methodist Church, Gallipolis.
She was preceded in deat h by her
husband , Gomer Martin, who died
in 1949, and by two brothers and two

sisters.

Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Eimer (Marjorie) Grueser,Route 1,
Poin t P leasant; one son, Eugene
Martin, Nitro: three sisters, Mrs.
Alfred Derenberger
Henry (Anna) Smit h, Whitman ,
Mrs. Jack (&lt;Judy) Rothery, Pontiac,
P AGETOWN - Alfred E ugene
Mich., and Mrs. Kenneth (Tary l
Deren berger, 55. died Saturday · Byerr Mtddlepm1, Ohio; three
morning a t his residence in
brottjcrs, Witliam Vanco,Galllpolis.
Pagetown.
Ohio, .J()(&gt; Vanco, Thurman, Ohio,
H e was bom at Thurston, Ohio, and John Vanco, F inley, Ohio; five
Fal!1te td County, on J une 10, 1930, a
grandch il dre n , two s tepson of the late Ha rley and Margaret
grandchildren and 13 greatE. Hicks Derenberger.
grandchildren.
Surviving a re his wife, Pauline
Funeral services will be at 2 p. m .
Dere n berger of the Pomeroy Health
Sunday In theCrow-Hussell Funeral
Care Center; three da ughters , Hom e, P oint P leasant , wtf h theRe'ol.
Paula J ean Derenberger , Page- Louis H ussell officiating. Buria l will
town ; Ca rol Ann Boring and Joy
foll ow in Mound Hill Cemetery,
Shir tsinger, both ol Columbus ; two Gall ipolis.
·
sons . Ter ry Allen Dere nberger,
Friends may call a t the funera l
Pagetown, and Alfred E ugene hom e from 2·4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m .
Dere nberger, Columbus; two broth· Saturday.
ers, Robert Dercnbergcr , P ageJohn M. Motley
town , a nd Holly Dere nbergcr,
Columbus, and two sisters, Hazel
M,IDDLEPORT John M.
Sprague, Pomeroy, a nd Bess ie
Motley,
6~. Hamilton St . Middle·
Boring, Middleport.
Besides his parents, he wa s port. died early Saturday morning
at Camden-Clark Memorial Hospi·
preceded in dea th by a brother,
ta l in Parkersburg, -A Va .
Homer .
Arrangem
e nts arC' bei ng made at
Services will be held a t 1 p.m .
the
Rawlings-Coats
Blower FunTuesday a t the E wing Funeral
era
l
Hom
e.
Home with the Rev. Carl Hicks
offic iating. Buria l will be in Miles
Dessel MI'Carty
Cem etery. Fnends m ay call at the
funeral home anytu:ne a fter 2 p.m ..
VINTON - Dessel McCarty, 89,
Sunday.
of Rt. 1. Ewi ngton, died at Housto n

great grandchildren.
Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Tuesday at the Fairview Church of
Christ in Christian Union in Allee.
Burial in Radcliff Cem etery.
Friends may call a t the McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home in Vinto n on
Monday from 7-9 p.m .

Pearl M. Poulin
POMEROY - Mrs. Pearl ·M
Poulin, 67, 12 Fisher St. , P om eroy,
died early Saturday morning at
Veterans M emorial Hospital.
A homem aker, Mrs. Poulin was
born J an. 14, 1918atDeerlln,N. H .; a
daughter of the late William and
Cora St. Cyr Ovellette. She was a
member of the Sacre(l Heart
Church, Pom eroy, and the Catholic
Women's Club.
Surviving are her husband , J .
Lucien Poulin, two sons, Raymond
Poulin, Columbus, and Rich ard
Poulin, Middleport; two grandchildren, Richa rdJosephPouUnand Lisa
Poulin, both of Middleport, and a
niece, Shirley Ann Therrien , Lewis·
ton, Me.
Besides ber parents, she was
preceded In death by a brother.
At her req uest, cremation took
place. Ther e wlllbeno calling hours
or services. Friends may contribute
in her memory' to the American
Cancer Society. Arrangem e nts
were made by the E wing F uneral
Home.

Pleasant, and employed by the Iron
Workers L:ocal 787.
Surviving in addition to his
mot her ~ his wife, Carolyn Sayre,
Point P leasant ; two daughters.
Nancy Shor1 and Donna Cheesbrew,
both of Point P leasant; one son,
Francis (Buster) Sayre J r., Point
Pleasant ; two sisters, Geneva
Fisher, Ga llipolis F erry and Lucy
Jackson, Gallipolis, Ohio; one
brother, Jam es Burton Sayre, Point
P leasant ; one stepbrother, Herbert
King, Columbus, Ohio and fou r
grandchildren, Lesley and Jim
Cheesbrew, Kellie Lewis and Alissa
Short, all of Point Plea sant.
He was Preced!:d in death by a
sister, Lillian lson, who died in 1975.
Funeral services will be Monday,
1: :vJ p.m . a t the WilCOxen Funeral
Home with the Rev. David Gibson
official ing. Burial will follow at the
Kir kland Memorial Gardens with
Masonic graveside rites by the
Minium Lodge No 19 of Point
Pleasant.
Calling ho urs are at the fu neral
home after 4 p.m. Sunday.

LISTEN IN ON LIFE

"ROAR"

"PURR"

Mtllvtew
Clintc
I
603
Unton
Athens. Ohio 45701
Phone 16141 592·2863

w.

Jane Ann urr M A

AUiiiOIOQI St CCC A

We 'll Help Y o u listen In On Life

SIRING TRIMMERS
~200GASOLINE-POWERED

:_, r

STRING TRIMMER

CHARLESTON, W.Va. tUPl i Arnold Miller. credited lor Introd ucIng democracy into the United Mine
Workers as the union's president
from 1972 to 1979, died Friday after
belng near death 11\ a Charleston
hospital since May.
The funera l for MOler~ 62, who
resigned as UMW president because of recurring·heati attacks, is
scheduled at 1 p.m. Monday at the
Bible Center Church on Oakhurst
Roall'in Charleston.
Widely hailed for lntroducmg

CARRIERS NEEDED
BOYS AND.GIRLS, AGES 10 TO 1 SIN
THE MIDDLEPOIT AIEA.

CALL THE DAILY SENTINEL
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PT PLEASANT - Francis (Bud I
Vitu s Sayre, 55, Ill Liberty Ave.,
Point P leasant, was dead on arrival
at Pleasant Valley Hospita l Frid ay

evening.
Born Sept . 8, 1929, inLeon, he is the
son of Wavie J. Barnette and the la te
Pearly Sayre.
He wa s a veteran of the U.S.
Army, me mber of the Masonic
Mlrjturn Lodge No. 19 AFAM of
Point Pleasant , the Scotttsh Ri tes
and Ben&lt;!l Kedem of Charleston. the
Pa t Wilson Shrine Club, Point
P leasant , Legion of Honor, Arnerl·
ca n Legion Post 23 of Point
? leasant, Fi rst Church of God, Point

aUMPERS

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WASHINGTON (UPil - Rep. Tom Lukens.. a n
Ohio Democrat who sits on a ·House broadcasting
panel, says TV networ ks should gather for a sumnnit
conference on voluntary guidelines to " neu!Ta llze
· te levision as a tool of terrorism."
Lukens suggcsted Friday that broadcasters ,
chlt'fly the television networks , make good on-their
own criticisms ott heir performance during the Beirut
hostage Incident .
He said they should develop a way to avoid playing
into the hands of terrorists and becoming part of the
story instead covering It .

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Public Notice

Public Notice

SHERIFF'S SALE
OF REAL ESTATE
GENERAL COOE.
SEC t t681
REVISED COOE,
SEC 2329.26
The State of Ohto. v..tan
County.
Edsel James, et al
vs. Plaintiff- .
Stevaf\ James. at at
DefendantCASE NO., 84CV1-5
In pursuance of an Order of
Sale from Common Pl8tl
Court in the above anti1ted
action, I will offer for sale ..
publte auction, at the Court
House lobby, in McArthur, tn
the above named county. on
Thursday. tho 18th day of July
1985. at 10 o'clock a.m .• the
following descnbed real est·
ate, situate .n the County of
Vinton and the State of Ohto,
and in the TownShip of
Wi.esvile to-wit.
'
Situate "' tho State of Ohio,
County of Vinton, and in the
Townohip of Wllcasvilo.
Being a p.. of Section
Number Seventeen (1 71 ,
To-ip Number Eoght !8), in
Range Number Sixteen 116),
commoncing ot tho Southw·
oot com« of H.H. Biohop fond
and tUnning South to
Josephine Pierce ' • land,
thence EMt to Jaeper Patten's
ltne, thence North to H.H.
Bishop's line thence West to
thll place of beginning. con·
tairWng twenty-two ond oneholt t22.5t acres, more"' ten.

5:00p.m .
TERMS OF SALE: $8,000
calh. or FmHA financing
availab .. - 10 percent down
for 5 .years at the pr..ent
above moderate lntere.t rate
!present rota - t 3 parcont)
The structure on tht. prop erty p r - y dooo not meet
the standards of "Decent,
Sole, and S.niury Houoing "
01 defined by tho Fa'""""
Home Administration. Prior to
being used for residential
purposes. the structure must
be restored or repaired to:
A. Be structurally BOUnd and
habitab'e.
B. Have a potable water
oupply,
c.!. Have II functionally ade·
quote, sate. ond opwabla
heetlng, plumbing, electrical
and sewage disposal system,
and
0 . Meet tho Thermal Pwfurm.-a Stendardl for exi8ting
construction as required by
Farmers Home

Sub;ect. however. 10 any
righta and privileges outstanding by virtue of dood from
Vinton Purdy to Daniel Ryan •
recordodinVol. 16. Pg . 149of
the Vinton County Deed Re·
cords. Above being ltho """"'
t'8111 estate as recorded ln Vot
8t . Page 221 ol tho a-t
Records of Vinton County,
Ohio and also Deed Vol. 74,
f'g . t29 ond Vol. 65, Pg. 148,
the last previous convevanc::e
of said 22.5 ec:res being from
C C Wright and Hazel G
Wright to grantors Vot 86, Pg.
295. Atoo the following dnaibed r•l estate situated In
WilkeMIIe Township in Vinton
County. Ohio being in Section
16 r
hi s R
· owns P • ange 18·
ond being a .-ttoftho Second
Tract of land mentioned 10 1
warranty deed from Sadie
Atbough and James Arbaugh
to John 8iohop and Ethel
Bmlop and recorded in Vinton
County Recorder's Office Vol.
71. Pg 21 as follows. Begin.
ning at the center . of the
intersection of the Hanley's
Mill and Wilkeavile Road 'nd
the section line On the West
lide of the land of John
Bishop, a distance of 133 faet
to paint; thence South. a
distance of , 33 l&lt;iet in tho

*****************************

*************************
MORE SA~INGSI!
ICE CHEST ...............~1.q,,•.U,?.S••• Now Only S2 4. 99
3/4 ACRE BUG LIGHT ........... ~f.q..'.~!.?&gt;. •. Now Only S64. 9 S
6' STEPLADDER ..................~f!!.~.~?.?a .. Now Only S2 S. 99
ElECTRIC STAPLE·-GUN ....... ~f.q,~.~?.?.S... Now Only S16.99
22 -qt. PRESSURE COOKER Jf,q,,•.~tr.s... Now Only S68.49
3 gal. GOTT COOKER .........W!.~.~~.?!l... Now Only S19.99
MAASON JARS ..........S~.\t9!•.1.Um,.'.U?... Now Only S4. 99
FRONT LOADING HOSE REEL ....~fP.·.~.3.M9.Now Only SJ9.99
SUBMERSIBLE PUMPS ........................~!.~9.~.~~... S219. 9 S
tf2 hp SHALLOW WELL PUMP!!L~!~.t?~. Now Only SJ29.9S
CON AIR WATER TANKS .... Pf.q,,'.U;\-! t Now Only S94.9S
REINFORCED GARDEN HOSE .~m·.~.1.9,1?... Now Only S7 .49
KENNEL DIP ........................PJ,q ••'.~·.~9••.•••• Now Only $4. 19
MANGE MEDICINE ..............~f!h~.U~......... ow Only SJ. 99
FLEA &amp; TICK POWDER ........Pf!h~.U~••••• Nnow Only ·s1.49
CATTLE RUB ........................PJ!h.'.!?.~R.~ Now Only S16.99
20 ft. EXTENSION LADDER .....~!!L~?.t!~.. Now Only s74; 9S
1.3 cu. ft. WHEEL BAIIROW ••••~m-.~~.9.!~.. Now Only 'S2 2. 99

48 qt.

'\v\'''''
IJ While.W.,stlnohouse

creek. thence

W While-Weotir.qhou"'

MOWERS ,_ TILLERS - TRACTORS

WAS
ONLY 3 LEFT-20" 3 hp B.S. PUSH MOWER ..........,'.................................. S 139.95
ONLT 4 LEFT-22" 3112 hp B.S. PUSH MOWER .................................:........ I 59.95
ONLY 31EFT-3 1/z hp B.S. REAR DRIVE SELF-PROPELLED MOWER............. 231.95

3S9.9S

TILLERS......................................................................

ONLY 2 LEFI-3 hp
299.95
ONLY 1 LEFT-10 hp 30" CUT TRACTOR-MOWER .................................... 1,079.95

IJ

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

White House'&lt;! effort to re-start sta lled budget
negotiations between the House and Sena te. The pac t
also calls for offsetting cuts in federal programs to
make up for the m oney spent on Socia l Security, no
taxes and increased funding for the military.
Thoug h the White House action shook up the budget
process, no agrec-me nt was reached last week a nd all

1
J

I

1
1
I

J

7/ 3t/15

7131/ Sl

MGM Farm City .-

Pomtroy, Ohio
IS WORTH S2.SO OFF

NOW

$JJ2.19
5132.05

$191.35
$259.95
$199.95
$887.93

..

Vinton

J

Such voluntary guidelines, he said , would include
He offered the assistance of tbe subcomm ittee
such
things as " no cash payoffs for victims' la mllles
should the four m ajor networks -ABC, CBS, NBC '
a
nd
no
m ore on-air dialogue l.x&gt;lwecn a nchor men a nd
a nd CNN - find It difficult to sit down togrthcr
spokesmen
for the abductors.''
because of their com peting interests.
Joining
Lukens
wit h a sta tem ent on the ma tter was
" We must find a way to neutralize television us a
Rep.
J
a
mes
Broyhill
of Nort h Caroli na, ra nking
tool of terrorism ," he sa id .
Lukens ca lled the 17 day hostage crisis an "act of - . Republican on the parent E nergy and Commer&lt;'e .
Committee, who sa id the networks were "used as
war" and said the Issue should be examined because
ransom for tbe safe return of nearly 40 American
"future terrorists may conclude all they have to do is
cit
izens. "
kidnap American s to get sympa thetic international
Lukens
said writing legisla tion on the subject was
tclevslon exposure."
" the last thing I would do. We' re not in the business ol

,

I

~EAL ESTATE SALE

MGM FARM CITY

ByUnitedStotoo
ofA..-a
Goltio County
PROPERTY . Three bed·
room. 1 1f~: •orv hou11, 1.480
............ alac1ric
oanl

540 EAST MAIN

992-2181

t

·

Botdridvo

304

•

Glllipolla, Ohio 46831
Phone: 446-8688
Tho property witt be sold
without~ U&gt; race, religion.
color, MDI;, ege, m.ttal status.
or national origin
July t4, t5, 16

Announcements

11

Babysitter needed in vicinity
of Holzer hospital for 8 yr.
old boy Call 6g· 446 ·
25,5 .

1 mala orange Tabby kitten.
10 weak• old. Littered
trained. 614-992 ~ 7194.

Part-time in home sewing,
drapery 9 drapery a1tera·
tions . Gallipolis area only.
Experience rfquired. Call
6t 4-446-0690 9AM -5PM .

3 month old part white
Shepherd and pan Huskieto
give away. Female . Will be
good wetch dog. Call 6 'fl4.
742 · 2565
Redbona dog. Larga sized .
Last seen near dog pound 1n
Pomeroy area . 614 ·9925854.
Kittens to a good home .
litter trained . 304· 676 ·
6751 .
White female
months old.
3776 .

Poodle. 9
304- 882·

3 puppies, 304-B82- 3362.
Hall Colhe puppies, black
and white. will make beauliful dogs. One black kitten .
304 -876·6933 .

6

Lost and Found

Reward for information
leading to recovery of black
female lab Call 614-4467732

Announcements
la- IP.Jiii;Z'i;;;iie- 1-::-::-'-------- 18
3

Announcements
1- - - - - - - - - -

SWEEPER and sewing me ·
china repair, parts. and
supplies.
Pick up and
delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mila up
Georges Creek Rd.
Call
6t4- 446-0294.
1-B-at-to_o_n_s_lo_r_G_o_t_W
_e
_I_I.-A- n- n-i versarys, Birthdays, parties.
Singing Gorrllta. Call Bal ·
loons&amp; Co. 614-446-4313.
' - - -- -- - - - •·
Control hunger and lose
we • g h t with N e w
Grapefrult· PPH Combo at
Fruth Pharmacy -Jackson
_P
_ i_k_•·- - - - - - - 1
You can slim up for summer.
All Natural Weight ·Loss program can help you lose
1 0-29 plus pounds in your
fir1t month or your money
back. Call now 614- 742·
2328 .
The 0 ~las• softball tournament sponsored by the
Racine Fire Dept
takes
place July 20th 2ht . Fee:
$60 pluo 2 Red Dot bolts.
For more information call
6t4-949-3073.

a.

t500 . raw.rd for informa·
tion leading to the arrest and
conviction of the person that
stole my tool box and toolt
from the office trailer at
Southwestern Efementarv.
School. Paul R Kerr 614 ·
985- 3538.
Vacancy available for adult
female . Harpers Adult Care
Center 304- 675·1293.
Single• Club for Wast Virgi ·
nians Olily . Statewide. All
ages, Dozens of members.
Ootolts: 12 .00 Hillbilly
Hearts Club. leivasy. W . Va.
26676.
R • J Mobile Home Movers.
Re81onable rates, complete
line of service . 304 · 372 4664, 273-5297. Anowor -

Giveaway

t

ltictlord

LOCATION: On 8T X 18e'
lot In lllclwol. Ohio. on

s-

Pure white 3 yr. old female
cot . Spoyod, deol. muot be
koptln house. Call 614 -31170t84.

a..

gle puppies. Cell
8 ·Yt
llt4-371-2552 .
2-YI Siameu kitten1. littllf
lralnad, prefar ~arne horne .
Cotlll14-44e-3897 .

~8M
~---------------OPEN HOUSE. Hou• wll Yard Sala hems to givel·
Cott814-446-3732 .
be on Wedt-1• .hlfv
17, 1981i, from 4:110 p.m. 10

w..,.

Help Wanted

4 month old puppie!l. Mixed
bread Will be medium sized.
shorf haired. had some
ahoto. 304·675-1222

1- -- - - - - - RICK PEARSON- AUCTIO·
NEER SERVICE
Estote,
farm , ant1que, liquidation
sales. Licensed Ohio and
West ,Virginia . 304 ·773 5785 or 304-773 -5430 .
9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614 ·446-3572
Wanted to buy stroller lnot
umbrella ltyle). Call 614379-2182.
Used mobile homes
614- 446 -0175.

Call

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Beds. ~ron,
wood. cupboard s. chairs.
chesu . baskets. d i shes ,
stone jan . antiques. gold
and silver Write · M .D
Miller, At 2. Pomeroy , Oh1o
45769 or can 61 4 -992·
7760.
Alum1num scrap . Sell your
aluminum scrap d1ract to the
smelter. Buying all grades of
aluminum Premium paid for
large loads Call for quote .
Scipio Energy, located 1 JA
miles east of Pagatown on
Township Road 141 . Meigs
County. 6t4·992 · 3466
Standing timber. AI Tromm
6 t 4 · 742-2328 .

Buying daily gold, silver
coins. rings, jewelry, sterling
ware, old coins, large currency Top prices. Ed. Burken Barber Shop. 2nd . Ave .
Middtoport, Oh . 6t4-992·
3476.

fmploy1111~n1

Servtces
11

Help Wanted

2 male &amp; 1 female puppies.
Colt 8t4-448-0924 .

Public Notice

- . Iormor -

INFORMATION: Farmers
Home Admilllltrat1on,
629 J~on Pike, Room

4

l

I

·Administlation.

3

Coun:.~ l :i;n:::g: a:orv:::;ic;e:t:it: 6= pm=.= ==

Juty 14

~----------~-----------------•

POMEROY

a wettetty

J

(Must Be PreJented At Time of Purchase)
I

tn

direction; a distance of 150
. feet to a point in said wwt
aection ltne. thence following
Nid soction ine about 230
10 tho place of beginning
and contain•ng about 3/ 4
acres. L.ast Prior Conveyance:
Vol. 717, Pg. 171. Also IH
Vol~ 90, Pg. 256, ond Vol . B6,
Pg. 619. Also Vol . 90,
Page 256, Vol. 94, Pg. 56, al
Vinton County Deed Recorda.
Last Prior Conveyance. Vol.
107, Pg. 227. Vinton County
Deed Records
Said Premises located at Co.
Ad. 9, Wllkosvile Township.
Seid Pre,.... approiled at
tta.ooo.oo tEightoon Thou·
- d Dolton], ""d connot be
IOid lor ten than two· thirds of
t,hat amount.
TEAMS OF SALE: Cuh or
certffied check for lh8 entire
purchase price day of ale.
Delno L. McClure

I
I

THIS COUPO~
On Any 525,00 Purchase At
MILL - STORE - STATION

part ies to the budget conference say a pact Is '
necessary this week if a budget Is to be passed by both
the House and Senate before the Aug. 2 recess.
,
"It 's pretty m uch up in 'tbe air wbetber we wUI get •
one t a bUdget) or not," Senate Republican leader
Robert Dole said. Friday.
•·

Oh-io Congr,e~sman calls television a tool of terrorism

~----- ·~----- - --- - - - ---------,
hpirtJ
,
hpir"
I

Hom elite · ST ~200
! tring lrimmer
with 20 " culling
swath.

cost-of-tlvlng payments as a demonstration of trelr
concern about cutt ing the defic it. But Democrats,
sensing a hot issue, ~I'E' ready to pounce.
The vote could look even worse If Congress falls to
agree on a budget this summer.
Reagan's decision to support full cost,of-livlng
raises for Social Security next year was part of t he

censorship."
But, he sa id, many television conun('lttators a nd
crit ics have urg&lt;'!l a summit to draft specific •
voluntary guidelines. He said&lt;a summit might "avoid .
, tho continuing possibility that potentia l te rrorists can : ·
~bduct Americans from a ny street ramer, a ny place on th&lt;"globe, with lheex]X'{'t"tion they will be paid the •
usua l ransom paid terror ists- exclusive TV network
interviews." Lukens said it is "clearly time ... to draw •
thP line where network TV, radio people. anc horper- ·•
sons, are dea ling direct onP·on-one In a IPrrorlst .. ·
situation with those who abducted
"

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

G M.

easily handles ta ll grass and weeds

OJ:Ihonal acce.,ssOf'ies turn lt1e
'ST-200 1nto a powerful blower or a
bladed brushcul\er
~ • Sot1d state IQM1on
• 20" cuflmg swath
• L1Qhl we1gh t-onty 13 1 -1 lbs
• Aulomahc stnng advanc1ng
system
• AdJUStable harness and handle
• OptiOnal bladed bru shculter
ana'chment
• 2-year warranty
• Top-mounted eng1ne

WASHINGTON (UPil - President Rea gan's
about-face on Social Security may force many of his
fellow Republicans Into the sticky polltlcal position of
having to defrnd - without presidentia l support their votP to limit the payments.
SomP Republican senators are boplng the voters
will Inte rpret their move to curtail Social Securit y

PRICES REDUCED G.M. 73-80 FENDER$ S49
DOOR SHELLS S99 AND ROCKER PANELS Sl9
DUNDEE NEW REPLACEMENT PARTS FOR TRUCKS AND CARS .(SATISFACTION GUARANTEED I

Francis V. Sayre

1 ONLY-HEADGATE .....

Democrats seize SOcSec as campaign issue ·

-

.

'

ONLY 6 LEFT-5 hp TILLERS......................................................................
ST-200

mi~rs

democracy into the
union
lorn-.erly ruled by the U'On fists of
John L. Lewis and Tony Boyle, the
sm allish man with the curly white
hair and ruddy face made his e arly
mark by fighting for blacl,l lung
compensation for m iners. This wag
an issue shunned by early union
leaders.
Miller campaigned for UMWhelp
in gaining for black lung victims the
right to compens.ltlon under West :
Virginia's Workme n's Compensa·
tlon Law.

The Sunday Times- Sentinei- Page~D-3_

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

~~~~~~3~-D~~~!~~~~~TER

Charles Joseph Litchfield

Health Care Center In Hamde n
Saturday morning She was born
.KANAUGA - Cha rles Joseph · J une 7. 1896 at Radcliff to the late
Litchfield, 87. 414 P ikeSt .. Kanauga,
Cyphe' and Enuna Peck Moliha n.
died Friday a t his residence
She was preceded in death by her
following a brief illness.
husba nd Peter McCarty in 1966, five
A retired employee of the State children seven brothers a nd five
Highway Department , he was born
sisters
Sept. 5, 1897, at Gallipolis Fen y,
A mem ber of the Fairview
W.Va. , the sonofthe la tc J ohn H.,md Chu rch of Chnst in Chris ilan Union,
Rosie Litchfield
shp is s urvived be three sons. E lme r
· He is survived by his wife. Bessie McCarty of Wilkesville; Andrew
Windon Litchfield . He was preceded McCarty of Rt . I , Ewington; J oe
in dea th by one son, Olen Wade, on McCa11y of Raymond ; lour daugh·
August 12, 1972.
ters, Clara Ward of Hamden;
One gra nd-daughter. Mrs. Dale Evely n Kilgore of Columbus; F ran(Jane) Chapman, Columbus. and ces Ma lone of Wilkesville; Bert ha
one great grand-son survive.
McCarty of Rt 1. Ewin gton; one
· Also surviving are two sisters. brother. Nolen Mlolihan of McCarAften Stevens, Ga llipohs F eny; and
thur; ont' stster. Bessie Hgerty of
Vaus le Elkins. Columbus.
Wellston; 39 grandchildren, 81great
. Services will be held Monday at 11 gr"ndchildren and several great

July 14, 1986

July 14. 1985

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

Cashier. National corporatiOn has opening for cashiercollections person in the
Gallipoli s area ~~~ be able
to walt on customers at
counter and enjoy challenge
of a busy saiB!i office
Plaasmg telephone person·
ality. You must be good with
figures , typing. and well ·
groomed for public contact
Apply at 417 Second Ave
Tuesday, July t 5, t985 ,
Room 1B. tt :OOAM
Experienced farmer
Call
614- 379 -2351 alter . 7PM .
or all day Sunday.
Telamarketing account re·
presentative w anted . Must
have pleasant telephone vo·
ice . Prefer someone with
telephone selling expe rience. Hourly wages plus
commission. MultipleK, 1800-232- 0500. 8 to 5PM.
Easy Assembly wor"'f6600 .
per 100. Guaranteed payment. No experience-no
sales . Details send self·
addressed stamped e"'velope; Elan Vltal -176. 3418
Enterprise Rd .• Ft Pierce, Fl
33482
G ove rnmen t J o bs .
$15 .000- $50. 0 00 -v• · pos·
Sible . All occupations. Call
805·687· 5000 EKI. ~ -9805
to fmd o ut how.

11

Own your own Jean ·
Sportswear, Ladies Apparel .
Childrens. Large Size, Com·
bination Store. Accessories.
Jordacha. Ch1c, Lee, Levi.
'i:asy Street, lzod , Esprit,
Tomboy. (;alvin Klein, Ser·
gio Valenta, Evan Picone , Liz
Claiborne, Members Only,
Organically Grown, Gasoline, HelthteJt, Over 1.000
others. $7 ,900 to $24,900
inventory . Training, fixtures,
grand opening . etc. Can
open 15 days. Mr . Keenan
13051678- 3639.
Own your own Jean Sportswear. ~adies Apparel.
Childrena. Large Size . Com·
bination Store, Accessorie s.
Jordache, Chic, Lee. Levi.
Easy Street, lzod, -E sprit,
Tomboy. Calvin Klein . Ser·
gio Valente, Evan Picone, Liz
Claiborne, Members Only,
Orgamcally Grown , Gasoline. Helthtex. Over 1 .000
others. $7,900 to $24,900
inventory Training. fixtures.
grand opening . etc. Can
open 15 days. Mr . Keenan
{ 305)678-3639.
BIG BUCKS! Your prior
setvice is worth a lot of
money Monthly paycheck·
$35.000 Life Insurance·
New trainmg. Call 304-676·
3950 or t -800- 642-36t9.

Experienced babysitter anct
housekeeper in my home,
must have own transjjO;rta tlon, salary negotable, send
resume With references to
P . O . BoK ' 287 . #Point
Pleasant.

Now hiring! Toy party dem·
onstrators. Work no w thru
Nov Free k1t , free traming ,
no collecting. no d eli very .
Also booking parties. Phone
Sandy .6t4-247- 493t
1 -----~---::-:-:-:­
Wanted Beautician, Bobbie
Seamstress wanted to do , Annes Curlette, 304 -675altering in their home, Send t950 or 675- 1781 .
resume to P.O Bo x 61 2,
4 o penmgs selling Merrt
Pomeroy. Oh1o
Mac' s 100 per cent guarThe Meigs Local School anted line of gifts. toys.
0 1strict IS currently seekmg home decor. your hours, no
applicat1ons from certifi ed mvestment. 304-675 -5758
applicants for en Assistant o r 1 · 800 -55 3- 9077 Book·
Varsity Football Coac h, 7t h mg home and catalog
&amp; 8th Grade Football Coach , parties
Girls' Varsity Voach. G• ol · ·
leyball Coach. G1rls ' Assi st - Waitresses needed. apply in
ant Varsity Volleyball person only, Casey' s.
Coach. G1rls ' Junior High 1- - - - - - - - -Bnketball Coach, Hig h Wanted someo ne to cut hay
School Yearbook Advisor for half. 3 04 -675· 7283 or
and Junior High School 304· 895· 3641 ,
Cheerleader Advisor for the
1986- 86 school year . Appli · Expanding business needs
cants must hold a vahd Oh1o someone With motivation to
teaching certificat e and for manage a termite and paari·
coaching positions must s1de control office . Area to
meat certification reqUire - cover will include Point
ments of Ohio for sports Pleasant and Henderson, W.
medicine and CPA. Persons Va . Racine and Pomeroy,
interested should l:onta ct Ohio. Serious minded per·
Dan E Morris. Superintend - sons onlv need apply. Call
ent of Meigs Local Schools, collact 5t4-423- 8887.
at 621 South Thtrd Avenue
Expenenced babysitter in
in Middleport, Ohio .
my home, must have own
As par Art icle IX. Transfers transportation . send resume
and Vacanc1es, Sec tion A, with refer enceS to Rt . 2 Bo x
Posting. of the Negotiated 856, Point Plasant, W . Va
Agreement betw een th
MLTA and the Board of
Situations
Education, the M e1gs local 12
School District is posting
Wante~
the following vacancies for
it 1 regular t e ach i ng
staff : Instrume ntal · Vocal I have room in my ho me tor
Mus1c Teacher (new po.· elderly people . livi" on
tionl. Fifth Grade- Po meroy Gallia~ M e 1gs County line
Elementary , Second Grad e· Phone 6t4- 367-7148.
Pomeroy Elementary, Chapter !·Pomeroy Elementary,
DH · Bradbury, OH-Rutland 15
Schools
Elemantarvlona year only),
Instruction
LD-Maigs Junior High, Elementary Art Teacher , Assist·
ant Band Director( new position). Assistant Varsity HIER' AV 2 day ground
Football Coach. Wrestling school. Privat&amp;..,commercial.
Coach. Eighth Grade Bas~ CFI . July 27 '&amp; 28, South
ketball Coach, Assistant Point , Ohio . Call collect
1 -614- 532-0677.
Varsity Softball Coach

Dental hygienist needed for
part time work. Experience
preferred . Please send re·
sume ta lo•40 in cere of the
Gotllpolls Dolly T~buno, 825
3rd . AVe, Gotllpolia. Oh
45631 .

Wow- Freli toys and free
gifts . Have a Friendly Home
Party now and wrap up your
Chri1tmu shopping lltt
early. Gifts for all occasions .
Something for everyone
Also looking for women who
would hke to eam extra
money in their spare t1m 8
For more information call
814-992- 3561 '

1 B Wanted to Do
G•ve piano lessons in my
home to beginners. ad·
vanced and adult students
Also teach transposing and
chording. 614·992- 5403.

Wanted to Do

1----"-- - - - Need carpet installed. Call
Maf. k Griffin , 614· 446·
3282 work guaranteed .
COLEMAN WATER WELl
DRILLING
Pump sales. urvica. Regis·
tered in Ohio . All work
guaranteed Call 304· 273·
28H Ravenswood , W . Va .

-- .... Gaiiliioils........ .

FinanCial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends
that you do business w1th
people you know, ·a nd NOT
to send money through the
moil until you have investigated the offering .
Governmentjobl. $15,000$60,000 yr . possible . All
occupations. Call 1· 805·

&amp; Vicinity
Garage Sale 247 Neighborhood Rd. Everyday, 614446-81 8t .

--·---i''omerov ·--·--··
Middteport
&amp; Vicinity
Monday and Tuesday. July
15th, 16th. Corner Broad·
way &amp; Walnut, Racme.
Children's clothes. typewri -

July 15th and ·16th. 527 N o ,
Second Ave , Middteportt
Oh1o. Good clothes, high ·
chair, car seat, toys. Wid&lt; '
appliances.

·.... ·-p• ·Pieiii'ilnt .... ·
&amp; Vicinity
4 family Yard Sale. Baby
things. Antiques, Misc . Fri.
and Sat. 10:00 till 1. 120
H1g~land Avenue .
Men, boys and baby clothes, ,
Second house on left Grear

r :boo::k:s:a:n:d:m~o:r:e~.~::+:R:o:o:d:.====~=:::

687-6000,
R· 4562 to t:te:r:
,
find out howext
.

Open an off-price apparel
store I Sell BOO top brands at
20%
to 60 % off! F1rst
quality.! 619 ,975 includes
everything. For brochu-re call
t - 404·469- 4438.

GRADUATES-Still trymg to
f1 nd yourself? !Nhy not check
w1th the Army National
Guard? Good Pay -Good
22 Money to Loan
T raining · Educat1onal
Ass1stance·Graat Benefits- HOME OWNERS ·Refinanca
Delay your Active Training to low fixed rata. Use equity
until fall. Serve your State for any purpose. Leader
and~_~ ion. C•II.....3_Q4..,__61.5.!..- - Mbrtgage Co -. - 614· 592·
3950or 1-800-642·3619
305t

1B

Hou1~nper to ltve ~ in . per·
manent home for the right
tody Con 814-446 -34t9

Help Wanted

23

Professional

.services
Superior Exterminating Co.,
Inc. ' People who ,ppre·
ciates your Business:. licen sed : Ohio -WVa . Call
614-245 -9 t 52 or 6t4-3792712 .
Window Tin t ing. Aut o, com mercial , re sidential . Free
eslimates . Call 61 4· 4469346 .
Water wells drilled 'and ser·
v1 ced. Prices on request Call
6t4-742-3147 or6t 4 -9925006.
PlANO TUNING ANO REPAIR . Summer rates m
effe c t - free est1mat es
Ward 's Keyboard. 304-6755500 or 675 -3824 .

Real
31

Eslate

3 bedrooms . detached
24ft .x28ft. garage, rural
water. satfilllite Bnd applian ces. one acre Hysell Run
614-992 ·2369

Price Reduced . One or Two
bdr 's. 64 Mill Creek St.,
Gallipolis Call 614 -446 2539.
Price reduced 4 bdr .• full
basement, five miles from
Point Pleasant, acre lot , will
finance under land contract.
Call 614-446· 1675.
Government Homes from
$1 . (u repair) . Also delmquent tu property Call
1-806 -687-6000. oxt R4662 for Information .
Investment-Shelter no has·
sels. Multi-unit apartment
complex. all 1 bedroom.
~me furnish•d. reaident
manager. Renters pay all
utilities, tess than 6 % vacancy . Approx. $1 ,400 mo.
income. sariou l Inquires
only. Oayo 614-592- 1189
even . 614- 594-2874 .
House. 6 rooms, bath, basement, garage, $2~.000 .
Texas Rd ., Gallipolis . Cal
St4-446- 2604.
3 bdr. Jay Or., 3bdr , 2bath .
hmllyroom . livingroom.
eat· in kitchen. utility room ,
2 c:ar garage. many extras.
Leaving town Last week
beforalisU:lg Call614-448 ·
29
4
_8
_ _ .J. .

P ------.,

~TMi5W~~1N'l:A~~:~~::7274.
1970 12x60 mobile home~ .
air- conditioner. washer •
dryer. Underpinning, uc.
cond. Call304-676-3734or
6 t 4- 379-2822 .

~-------.---

1974 14x70 Cahmpion
5 rooms. bath . ut1hty, s_torm good conditon.~ total elect·
windo ws, doors . Alum1r~um ric, set Quail Creek with
sLc!!_ng ,_ new roof. wlnntL.,_ ...underpinning, outbuilding .'
plumbmg wall. will carpet . Owner must sell quickly . .
Central heat. Garage. 61 4· rnoving out of town. C•ll
992- 5204.
614-245-5504or6t4· 245·
9246.
Government Homes from
$1 . IU repair) . Also delin· 1973 Baron 12lll66. 2 bdr .• •
quent tu. property. Call e.11c cond . m · out. Set :."'
805 -687-5000 Ext . GH · rented town lot.
9805 for information .
Underpinning·awning. par-·
tially furnished. price nagoti- •
Must sell Small farm , 5 96 able. Call 614-446-6677 or
acres. 3 bedroom house. 6t4-446-2905 alto• 5 :00.
wood burner. barn, chicken
coop, pony shed. all fenced .
Only $35,000. Call 6t4· t 972 Castle 1 4x 70, 2 bdr.,
992 -2143 o • 6,4 -742 · 2 bath. washer. dryer, nova,
2289 after 6 :00pm
refr1g .. red wood deck , located near Gallipolis on 3
Thr ee bedroom , living room, acres. with option to buy,
dining room. kitchen , f1re $6 , 500 Call 6t 4 · 448 ·
plaoe. 202 Butternut Ave .. 8215 .
Po mero'f' $3 . 000 . 614 992· 2007
198 1 Nashua Governor.
t4x60 with 7x21 expando.
7 room house. 1 Y2 bath. 4 Alt electric, 2 bdr. garden
bedrooms. garage on Gravel tub. asking t14,600. Colt
Hill . Middlepo rt , Ohio Call 6t4-388-974• or 814- 3BB614-992 5714.
8589.

3 bedroom hom e, 8% per·
cent ass\Jmable loan, garden
· spot Reduced down to
$49.000. 304- 575· 5047

Homes for Sale

6 room house appro.w. 6
acres . Barn, buildmgs, cellar
house , near Eureka.
$27,000 Cell 7t 3 -370 3624.

1_

For sale or lease. 2 bed·
rooms, double c ar g&amp;rage.
1 2 acres. Rose Hill, Pome·
roy. Reduced $26,000.
614-678-25t3.

NEW AND USI'O MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES;

Log home, 3 acres, 2 mi. out
IJerrico Rd . 8 V2 assumable
loan. Call 304-675-6622.
House, 3 bedro oms. full
basement, 6 acres. 1 mile
hom town. Rt . 2 , phone
304-675·5844.

Vary good condition . 1974
Vindale 14x70, with 8•18
e.11.pansion in livingroom. 1
yr. old utellite dieh. woodburner, 2 air cond . ~ dis· .. •
hwasher. wa1har • dryer, • :
t9 ,000 . Coli 1114- 4411- . ,
4472.
• '
1975 Ch1mpion 1 4.11.81. 3.. ..,
bdr . CA . woodburner,
locks, underpinning, neW" :
hot water tank .
614 -379- 241B evenings. • •

•a.soo. eel( . .

3 bedroom fram e, 2 baths,
a~r cond, large attached
- ne-,- w-il-1-••
-c-r-il-ic_o_t..;o_M
--":.r:
garage. 1OOx 188 lot, out l -0- w
building , w alking d istance to 1983 Fleetwood mobil• .. ;
school. Har tford . asking home. 14K70. 2 bedrooma.: ,.
$40 , 000 .00 . 304 - 8B2 · 2 full baths, washer, dryer• • ,;
2695 .
furniture , underpinning, ev, • :
erything goes . Best oHer ..
3 bedrooms, 2¥2 baths, 304 - 375 · 4837. Ownot ~
family ·dming room , eat-In wants to relocate.
..
kit chen , 1 acre lot . Finane·
1ng available , 304 - 882· 1979 14•70 mobile ·home "
2095 .
on J acre lot. Excellent l
condition . Double car ;
2 story frema, good cond. 7 20x 24 garage . *18 .100. ~
rooms, 2 baths. garage, Call 614· 992·8609 .
•
shop Price reduced . Mason,
• ;
304- 675-6743.
1972 Champion trai.., in
1---------:-::.-:-: . Portland . 1 Ox50. Portly fur- ~
3 bedroom frame . dnllad nished. new Coleman
wall, access to rural water, furnace. $2,400 8i4~ 843· "'"
3 .8 acres, frontage 1tate Rt
6310 or 614- 843·5408
)
2. Flatrock near fire stalion ,
·
, ,.:
Stokermatic coal furnace. MOBILE HOMES MOVED :~ ~
lo.,v low annual heating bill, Insured, 20 years e!lpei· ' ;
garage and storage bUild· rience 304·676·2868 or :;_
ings, 304·675· 5078 oven- 576- 2998.
' •
ings un~it 9 :00 PM .
,
1973. 14x65 Schuh - l e ~
2 bedrooms, bath with home. 2 bedrooms, central
thower. living room and air, det k, 4 cer garege, 1 :
dining room, kitchen , large SOx 115 lot, Henderson,•,
tot . 304-675- 5123. Close 304- 675-5660 oftor 8 PM &lt; •
to stores and schoola.
S20 ,000 .00.
1Ox48 New Moon, .,.,.;~~
clean. new furnace. ce~ ,.,
Eleanor-. HouM with or and drapes. $4.200.00. WiU ..
Without extra Iota. Rl . 62. deliver. block end level . :
304-586-3572 .
304-675· 3000 .
•

t

.

e•• . ,

'

·----------------~·•

•

Ii

..

•

�_...

' .

~-

- - -~

.

-~

.

I

'

~

r

I

Page-D-4-'T'M
32

Pomeroy Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio

Times-Sentinel

Mobile Homes
for Sale

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Apartment
for Rent

Trailer and 4 acre• of land on

furntt~ed,

Furnished 1pt 2 bdr , $1915
water paid, 131 "r. 4th Ave .
Col) 446-4416 ofler Bpm.

Tribble Road. leon ere1
Phono ~04· 458- 1811
Must .ell 14Jt70 furoithed
mobtle home, concrete
dnveway, out buildings.

drilled well, 1 acre of 1.-.d.
Ashton Road " " ' Hannan
Htgh School, $35,000 OOor

make an offer. 304-6782718

33

Farms for Sale
- - - - -- --lc212 acre farm. Parker Run
Rd . Mul1 sell Moved tq
Anzona Mtneral rights Ill•
Ciuded

Make offer. 614-

742-2862 l'jo reaoonable
offer refuted Terms ilvailable

2 bdr
all utilltes
pd.. ••cept elect.. convenient location, security deposit reuqtred Call614·4488558
Furnished. 1ir cond , ceble.
no city texes, beautiful riVerview, K,_neuga. Fo11er's Mo·
b1le Home Park. 614-4461602

2 bdr. mobtle home. dep: •
ref. requtrad C1ll 614·2561922
2 bdr 2 ml from HMC at
l;:vergreen. Partially fur ·
niahad. children accepted .
Calll14-446·3697 or 614·
245-5223.

2 bedroom mobile home.
Fumtahad. AC 1 chtld. no
Farm tn l.etart Townthip, pat• &amp;180. per month. New
known •• Hague Land on Haven. 304-882-2418.
Fa~rfleld Road near Syra- " - - - - - - - - : · ·lccuse. 30 acre~. mineral Mobile home on ,pice lot. 2
rights. no buJid1nga. near bedroom Utilities paid. C1ll
water hne Atktng $15.900 614-9!2-9!103 or 614-992·
form. Call 1-216-385-7520 5949

or w~:ite C H Sayre. 689 Hill

Blvd. E. Liverpool. Ohto
43920

34

Business
Buildings

For rent 8000 sq . ft brick
butld1ng 2-10ft garage
doors Also furnished are1
for retail business. Located
on S . F1fth Ave., Middleport
614-992 -6658 or 614-9926113

2 bedroom trailer ptrtillly
furntshed eHiO. a month
deposit. You pay
jc-u,ltililiOI. Soe at 40814
Kingabury Rd ., Pomeroy,
Oh1o or caii614-992-244B

44

Apartment
for Rent

a.

1 acre building or tra1ler lots
lor Ale. Call814-992- 7411
or 814-992-2386 or 114992 _3543.
For ale: 100ft.~t100ft . va·
cant lot. Corner 91 Mill end
.fifth m Middleport 614· ~92-66&amp;8 or 114· 982 ·
'1113.

I-F:::-u~r-ni-sh-od
--,--a-ll-oc-ien-c-y~7-0-1
4th Ave., Gollopolio. $160,
utll1t1et patd, shere beth.
edults. Call441-4411 after
8PM.
l-5-1_3_3_r_d_A_V_e_1_bd_r_p-ri-vo_t;e.
b•th. 8136 mo., tncludes
water,depolltreqund Cell
614-446-4222. botwoon 9

- - , - - , - - - - - - -, • 5.
r8.63 acres. PI!IIBiant Velleys
"F,•rms. 304· 876-4208.

R ~ nl o l ~

',

41

Houses for Rent

4 large rooms and bath, 63
Garfleld Ave. References
Srnall3 bdr. house... 2 baths,
mostly fum~hed, 2 working
adultt. 8300 mo renter
pays electric Call614-446_1822 •
•Juat hated 1mmedi1te occu· pancy Gellipolis · Rio
· srencte area Extra ntce 3
~ ·dr
home Super clean,
lustefully det::oreted. 1nclud
~ ing drape• &amp;. curteins. Air
• tond , nice yard, pe{fect
·family home Call t::ollect
' 114-288-5447 lor more
.4etails
a bdr house, 2 baths Call
• 304-876-6104 or 304-676•5386

'

. 3 bdr. house $195 mo,
- t100 dep., no poll Coli
114-446-3617

•f bdr bath&amp;: "h. lower river
' 1d .. $200 mo , dep req Call
614·446·4222 between
· 9AM-5PM.
•2

1----,-----Furntahed eff1c1ency •145.
utilt1es pel d. share beth. 607
2nd. Ave. Gellipolis. adults.
Call446:4416 after SPM
2 bdr apt . ulilit1es panty
patd·ntce. $149 mo Call
304-675-5104 or 304-675·
5385

1--- - - - - - --

Large Atttc apt , furnished
8175, utilities pd , 919
Set::ond Gelhpplla, male preferred. share b•th. Call
448·4416 after 8pm.
2 bdr State St .. 3rd floor.
$175 mo. partly furnished.
hot water mcluded, 1 ch1ld.
Coll614-446-3919 or 614448-0021.
New efftc•ency ept wtth'
garage. Northup area. prtvete yerd maintained, lena
requ~red. water mCiuded.
washer &amp; dryer hookup Call
814-446-7209 or 614-4483287.
2 bdr. dupleJ(, new knchen,
bath, new cerpet, fenced
~ackyard , 55&amp; Third Ave
Cell 614-446-0690
3 room1 &amp; bath, good
neighborhood, appliances
furn11had, ut1htles paid, private entrance. convement to
shOpping. ltl!:e new 1ns•de,
dep &amp; ref requtred Call
614 448 7515 .

In Memoriam

IN LOVING MEMORY OF

Oakwood apt 1 bdr. '"
cond . quiet, convenient lo·
cat•on. no pets. aec dep.
CoiiS14-446-2055

JACKIE BIICKLES
Who passed away

Furnished ept .. 920 4th
Ave., 1 bdr., &amp;225, utilities
pd , odulto Call 448-4416
after 8pm
Furntahed effictency, adults,
920 4th Ave , 11 85 ut1htNtl
pd
Coli 446-4411 alter
lpm.

3

I
your lauahter over_the
earth fillm&amp; the space
of etern1ty.
I touch you always for
you are of my flesh.
You are m my souL
Sadly missed by
Jodee,
John

3

Announcements

Announcements

SfMI-DRIVER TRAINING
•DOT Ctrtifkalien
•NtottiMI/ Loco I IH pla&lt;t·
flllftt GSSISI•MI
• HolM I r11illtnl
•flitiWo imtituliOft ltr
F. . ral Ai4

•G•r•nteH stutltftt

'""'

1-100-231 -2233, hr.-131
UNITED TRUCI MASTERS
COI.UMIUS, OH.
Ntmt Offtcr. Clllt'wlltr, fl&amp;

OPENING

MONDAY, JULY 15th - 9 A.M.-I P.M. _
llODtEr HO. &amp; SUPPLY GNIU. 1K.
Compltt1

U111 tf Milt"- l'«ts, s.,.lils,
El!lliptMnt •1111 Ann,.ries
' ~ II. U-~

~

!lM

Rl. Sll

IIDWELL-IODNEY ID.-PH. 2&lt;15-5308
Owlllll &amp;

~,

loifll lrown &amp;

.

ovr••c . Merchandise

Small riding mower . 7HP.
Runs good Cell 614· 9864346
2 Early Americen end tables.
150 each EKCeller'11 c:ondilion. Coll814- 992-6181
Have king IIZ8 WIIBrbet;l.
Naed to ull. Will ~e;ke $300.
Coli 614-992-8140.

2 bdr apertment at 74 W
Coun St. Call 614-4464428.

Firewood $20 00 pickup
loed. $30 00 delivered . Call
304-676-5762 or 675 2991

Rivertide Apts Middlepon
Special Jatel for Senior
Citizens $130. Equal Hous·
1ng Opportunities 814992-7721 .

1-------:---2 bedroom apirtments

New Haven, WVa Newly
remodeled. In town 614992-7481

1 bedroom ap!}:::,for rent.
Nicely located. '"!~ VII·
lage Monor on Middleport .
&amp;14-992 - 7787 . Equal
Houoing Opportunity
Furnished apt foi rent tn
Syrecuse Phone 614· 992·
7889
alter 5 .00 p, .mmobile
APARTMENTS
homeo. hous"" Pl. Pleasant
ond Gollopolol 614-445·
8221
One br furnished apt, a·c
ground floor, outsktrtl
Hendeuon Utiltttet included t241. month 304676-6730.
Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping flooms
and hght houa8 keepmg
rooms. Park Central Hotel
Coli 614-446-0756
Furnished room, range, re frig $125, ahara beth, ttngle molo. 919 2nd. AVe .
Gallipolis. Call 446-4416
efter 8PM

46

Space for Rent

Mobile home lot,. 12'x50' or
smeller, 876 Wlter patd, 4th
&amp; Noll. Gellipohs Call 446 4416 aflor 8PM
Mobile home apace, 855
mo Coli 614 -441-3617
large tratler lot 8ulavllleAddison Rd Call 614-446
4215 or 814-357-0232
COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy. Large lots Call
614-992-7479
Trailer spaces. Small ch1ld·
ren accepted 304-675107&amp;
.

Merchandi se
51 Household Goods

N~eel'f

furntshed apt, central
heat, atr. parking. nallt door
to library. One profe11ional
edult only Call 614-446·
0338

54

Small apt. for one. nicely
cleaned , furntshed Call
614-446-3511 or614-9922430.

45

,Modern sto,.. with oaltia-"1 JACKS 0 N ESTATES
mentlikeneworbuy
APA,.TMENTS (fquel
ment and atock
Housing Opportunity)
building Good
monthly rent at1rt1 at $161
for the rtght person SeriOus fDr 1 bedroom end •204 for
inqures only. Write in cere ef 2 ltedrttom. deposrt •200.
Point Pleeaant ,.egister. lox located neer Spring Valley
C-1
Pleu end Foodlend, pool
and Cable TV a\111l1ble . .
hours•• poaslble 10 am to 4
pmend7pmto9pm
36 Lots Acreage
Monday·Frtdey. Call 1114·
448 - 2745 or leeve
86 acre• woodland, 10me _m_os_•_ag_e_._ _ _ _ __
1
t1mber, some new fence. N1cely furntshed mobtle
good etceaibility, lou of home. eff. ept , centrel air
firewood. 515.000 Coli
61 4~ 266-8011
and heet in city, adult• only .
Coll814-446-0338

Point Pleasant, W. 'i/a.

A-DAY

Ed't Appll1nce Servtng atr
t::onditioners. refr~garators,
washers. dryers In Gallia,
Meigs • Maaon Co. Call
614-446-7444 or 614-3677187.
Washer &amp; dryer $135 Call
614-446-0924
Vtctonan &amp; Edward1an oak
&amp; mehoganey furntturefrom
England : din1ng chatrs,
carver, occas11onal tables.
drop leaf &amp; drew leaf tables,
p1ctures, mtrrora, marble top
waah stand. chest of drawers, 11de board, nest of three
tebles. and more All at a fatr
price. Call 614 446-8558
Used waV'er &amp; dryer cheap
Coli 614-446-9441
Hoover portable dryer $70.
We111nghouse dryer SJO
Coli 614-446 -3574
Tw1n beds, good cond. ,
$200. Coli 614-256-6846
Used washer &amp; dryer
Washer needt some work
Coll614-245 -5815

. ,,

1984 Ma11ey Ferguson
tractor. 194houra,M.F 8ft.
disc, 2 bottom plows new.
$11 , 300 304-676-5861 .

"And 1 d On•t k nOW W h y, b Ut
a11 t he k'ds
1
at SCh001 Called
ffie 'stinky'."

Smith and We11on, Model
11!, 367mag with holotero,
$27500. like now. 304773-6730. pleoao no calla
after 5 00

-S~,.-W~M--~~-o-.-.-c""'o-llo~n-t_p_lu-o

r:~~~~§~~~~ ~~~~~~~§~1$195
SloW
M-38
2Yz"
blue ..Nl8
$235
. CASH
51

Goods

1

Country Oak tables, chatrs,
cupboards, desks, lea boxes
Conkle•( Tuppera Pletna, Rt
7
Hand crafted and
finished.
Kenmore weaher and dryer
$160. 40 111ch electr~c
range $66 40 inch gas
range $45 Refrtgerater
865 ClotheS dryer 845 GE
heavy duty waaher 8100
Kenmore heavy duty
WISher $100 614· 742 ·
2352

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and che1rs pl'iced from
$286 lo $896 Tables. $60
and up to $12~ Htde·a·
beds,8390 and up to
$660. solo beds $145.
Rechners. 8225 . to $376 ,
Lamps from 828 to S125
pc dinettes from $1 09 . to
435 7 pc $189 and up.
Wood table wtth stx chatrs
6285 to 6745 Desk $110
up to $226 Hutches. $550.
Bunk bed complete w1th
1.-n-&gt;ollresolos. $275 and up to
$395
beds. 6110
Mattreases or box springs,
full or twm, S68 , ftrm, $68
and $78 Queen sets, $225
4 dr. chests, $49 6 dr
chesta, 959. Bed frames,
S20 and S25, 10 gun ~ Gun
cabtnets, $350. Gas or
elec:tnc ranges $375 Baby
mattresses, 825 &amp; $36, bed
frames $20. $25 , &amp; 830,
kmg frame $50 . Good selection of bedroom suites.
rockers. m8ttl cab•n.e.ts,
headboards $38 &amp; up to
$65
Used F~rniture •· Refr~gera­
tors, ranges. metal office
desks, electric range. 3 mtles
out Bulavllle Rd Open 9am
to 6pm. Mon thru Sat
614-446-0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrtgerators. r nges Skaggs Apphanc . Upper R1ver Ad
b s'
Stone Cr~t Motel.
-445-7398
County Apphance , ' Inc
Good used appliances and
TV sets Open BAM to 6PM .
Mon thru Sat 614-4461699. 627 3rd Ave Gallipolis, OH
Valley Furniture. new &amp;
used large section of qualIty furn1ture 1216 Eastern
Ave , Galhpohs
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St , Gallipolis New
&amp; used wood-coal stoves, 6
pc wood LR su1te $399,
bunk beds $199, antron
recliners $99, new &amp; used
bedroom su1tes. ranges,
wrmger washers, &amp; shoes
New llvingroom su•tes
$199 · S599, lamps, also
buytng coal &amp; wood stoves.
Call614 -446-3159
Wanted

SUPERMARKET MANAGEMENT
NEEDED
Including Department Heads
Must have 4-6 years on the job
experience. Send -resumes to Box
30, c/o The Gallipolis Daily Tribune, Gallipolis. Ohio. 45631.
All resumes confidential

Collep, a umque college
wtthm a pnvate baccalaupos1t1on opemng for an

An1onc tho mponstbthttes of the EdocahonaiMedta Specoalist
art coort11•11011and superv1s1on of the cloy-to-day ope11toons
of the Instructional Media Center. coord111ation lind promotion
of the ClmtiUS-widt strvtces of the lnstructienal Media Center,
as 1 colleat representatiVe to audiO vtsual commumcations Nlrtad orpnizattons; adminiSter teacher edueatton acltvities of the IJI!tructional Med11 Center and Instructional Resources center, coordinate and SUptNISe the production servK:eS of the coli~&amp;~; asslstilll the preparation of admimstrJtiVt
raports and coordinotion of budpt actlvttlts wit111n the area of
responsibility.
Qualifications include a Master's Oe&amp;ree m instructional
technolo&amp;Y. educational medta or educational commum cations. At least one year of related expertence and taach inl uparionce is destrable. Must show evidence of abthty
to Interact elfoctively with students, faculty and stall.
~ - . n i l with education and experience. This position ts a~Jnpy full time _PO$ition with the posstbility of re- ' - Doadl111t for application is July 26, 1985.
Submtt letter

54

Misc. Merchandise

ONLY Firm Prlco 304 -675_2 _8_23--,----- - Knauff F~rawood Summer 3 rooms shag carpet
ratesJbig loads . May 1st- 5100 00. Phone 304-575July 31st Doesn't apply to 2508
HEAP 614-258 -6245.
SPECIAL cui olobs 6 PU
loads delivered
dump
truck &amp;100, or21oads $180
You pockup $15. Call 614-

in-

~46 - 6804.

Pool People Special
Shock liquid $2 .55 gal. PH
up &amp;3 50 4 po Middleport
614-992·5724 or Galhpoha
614-448-3051
GUIIIS 700 - Rom 243.
870-Rem
12 ge 1100
Rem. 12 ga Red Hawk 44
mag Coli 614-367-0482
Mason S. Hamlin parlor
organ &amp; stool, good condition Call 614-379 -2727
10 apeed Rala1gh Gran Prix
27 m frame, $100 Call
614-446-7209 or 614-4463287.
H f85 World Book encyc·
lopedla. 6150 off, Ch1ld
craft $50, World Book d1c
t1onary, $25 off Call 614·
446-9479
2 chest type freezers, round
bales of hay s 1 2 ea., 2 end
tables, cookstove Call 614·
379-2798 or 814- 266
9392
3 ton centralatr condttioner,
20 kw electnc furnace. Call
614-446-0274 af1er 5

New w&amp;ddmg dress size 12,
$100 Call 614-446-2452
after &amp;PM.
Crehmans 32 in rid1ng lawn
mower 8 HP. good cond,
$140 Model 77 Ruger 220
sw1ft, wrth scope, S400
Call614-446-2495
Walnut mar resistant-top
coffee table &amp; end table,
closed doors for storage hke
new, used deck &amp; chair. Call
614-446-8024
3 spd Ross b1ke w1th racmg
handle bars, speedometer,
exc cond. $55 Cal 614·
446-4885.
1980 car tra1ler made tn
Germany SA, hke new,
S200 Cell 614-446· 9456
Used chairs &amp; beds
614-446- 1167

Call

56

IJuly 14, 1986

1985,

Building Supplies

Building Materials
"'
Block, bnck, sewer pipes.
w1ndows. l1ntet1 , etc .
Claude Winters. Rto Grande.
0. Call 614-245-5121
BUILDERS
Surplus-Salvage· C Iosequts
1, Interior hollow core doors
300 ••.
2 Steel embossed 1n1ulated
6 ~nel exterior door' s pre·
hung H9.95.
3 Interior hollow core prehung door ' s $19.95 and
$29.95.
4
9 ft steel msulated
entrance door'• with s1de
light $275.00.
5
Wood door panels
1 3A x34x78 wtth full glass 1f•
plete $39.95 .
6. New shipment of Keller
whiter thermal brea~ shdera
en tinglehung wtndows at
below wholesale prit::es.
7 Embossed wood grain
twtn 4" and 8 " pattern,
aluminum siding w1th foam
back . colors and white
$39 95 sq .
8 Whtte tw.n nb chanel
drain siding or roofing
S41 .95 aq or galvenized
$28 00 sq , •
.
9 Delulle 1 pc fiberglass
bath tub's with grab bar
Color tJr white $199 .95
1 0 17J( 19 wh1te &amp;. gold
vanily with top fiberglass
$29.95 marble top $39 .96.
1 1 Plaatic counter top
Solid pattern wood gratn's
Jl.O" by 8'-10'- 12' 50 cents
sq.ft
12. Ptt::ture window• thermanl pane 6' high by 8' · 10'·
12' wood an clad 8199. 00·
0299 00-$;199 00
13. 6 gal aluminum mobile
home roof coating $21 96
ea 6 and up $19.95 ea
14
Orive way t1le
112"x72 "- 119 951
11 O"x60" - $12 95)
18" x60"-$8. 95)
16 4"x10' PUC aewer and
dram pipe (1 pc. $3 49 ea.)
125 pc -53 25 eo I 1100
pc -s3 OOea I
Penn's Warehouse
Wellston, Oh1o
614-384-3645
Block, brtck, mortar and
masonry supplies. Mountain
State Block. Rt. 33, New
Haven, W Va 304 ·8822222

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST ~EIIINELS
Boarding ell breeds Heated
indoor-outdoor 'facllltiea.
AKC Doberman puppies:
Stud Servtce Call614-4467795.
Briarpatc.h Kennels ProfesSIOnal All · breed grooming
Indoor-outdoor boarding fl ·
cilitie1 English Cocker Spaniel pupp1es Call 614-3889790.
'

.

Dragonwynd Cetttrv Kennel CFA Himalayan. Persiln
and Siames.e kittens AKC
Chow pupptes. New littw.
Call 446· 3844 alter 7PM.
AKC Reg Airedele'o. All
shots. Call after 6, 61 4· 446·
9346
AKC Reg
Chow Chow
pupp1es. all colora. 2 littera,
taking depotltl now Call

Mu1ical
Instruments

67

61

Lea Paul deluxe euitar, exc
action, maroon with htrd
oholl oooo. •no.oo. Mloa
items optionet. 304·1711317.

58
&amp;

White Y2 runnera . you pi~
&amp;7 bu , wa pick with •d·
vance notice t 10 bu. Iring ~
own contllners. Call t14·.
246- 5184 or •14-24893&amp;9.
Home grown tomatoel,
wholelale end ret•ll. Delmlll'
Garnes. Lotan . 304·111i·
3400.

614-~68- 1271 .

SiiiJPii''·

/&lt;; liVI ~C.I III&lt;

3 pupp1e1 Y2 Gorgey &amp; %
Pekinese $10 each. Call
814-266-1919.
Parakeet $4.00 each, Finch
$3 00 eoch. Cal 814-448 3732
AKC Reg. German Shepherd Police puppies, e.w.c.
watch dogs, 7 wks old.
0100 oach Call 614-4460~73.

Colhe pups-AKC regiatered
Sable and wh.1te. Shou and
wormed. Call 814 -698 4179
Fiah Tank and Pet Shop.
2413 Jackaon Avenue ,
Po1nt Pleasant, 304-676 2083 Fish. bird• and more
3 AKC female Poodle pups,
304-882-3872

Musical
Instruments

K·12 string S1 00, UnivoJt
hollow body guttar &amp; amp
$200. custom aemi-hollow
body electric $150. All have
cues Call614· 446-7077.

8

CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S 36 Welt . .Jockson , • _
Ohoo 814-21&amp;-1411 . '
Mas ..y Ferguson, Ntw
Holland. E sh Hog Ioiii • Service. Over 40 uud ·
trectors to chooM from •
complete line of new •
used equipment. Llirent
selection in S.E Ohio .
Farmall Cub tracotr with
cultivators &amp; other ~uip­
ment . Coli t14-2111-1141.
440 John Deere doier
•4.300. 11 fl. equl,rnont
trailer with rarrii'S •110.
1956 Ford 12 II flot dump
bed $435. Coli 814-2111560.

For sale Troy-bUt wheel TOP C.ASH p8id for ·eo
horn g.rden tiller, practi· model and newer uaed ca,.,
colly now •aoo. 304·882· Smoth eulck-Pomlac, 1911
1-- ' - - - , - - + - Eaotern Ave .. Gollipoloo. Call
3_4_2_
' 614· 448-2282.
Homelite water pu
5200.; Solo 5 gal. bock pak 1984 Cavalier type 1 0. 6
sprayer ·•70.: A modet Inter epd,
aluminum wheels, fuHy '
with cult •1100.. ljomellte loaded $6900 Call 614EZ choln sow •100; 3 pt
Fen • Soed 1111•eeder 150 • 448-7399
5' luoh hog U60; 28'
Pnce reduced-~1978 .
tobacco pipe traitors •600 : Chryeler
CQrdoba, 2 dr, air.
52 " tobeet::o lticka 1 5c PS. PB. rear window defros·
each; tobacco baler• •so. ler, AM ~ FM udio~ one
ooch. 304 -736· 2342 or
owner, good condolion. Call
175-1288.
814-448-2857.
.

Tobact::o ttekea, phone 304·
676 -2727 8:00 to 4·00 ond
evenings 675-1128

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SPECIAL SALE

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN

I

+tay for 1111 you PICk up. For
'more
1nform1t1on oall 61 4·
1
1 441-1411

1

MARLIN WEDEMEYER -AUCTIONEER

munity .

CAN YOU:

RESIDENT MANAGER for 9 apartment-complex in Ra~ine. Provide on-site supportive
supervision and occasional transportation
for tenants'. Responsible for rent collections. routine &amp;rounds/facilities maintenance, including minor repairs and cleaning/painting of apartments. Salary, 1 BR
apartment and utilities paid. Couple preferred, but will consider individual. Experience working with emotionally disabled
preferred. Must have chauffeur's license.
CLERK for data entry and retrieval on ~om­
mputer system. Operate other office
machines such as calculators, typewriters.
wood processors, etc. Experience in- general. automated office environment preferred. Accuracy and efficiency essenial.

SALE EVERY SATURDAY AT 7:00
Door Prizes Given Every Sale

Ha~e somethmg you want to sell? Brina it to the ratr •ot Auction Barn and we'll sell 11 for you. Consicnments accepted from 1:00 P.M. to 5:00P.M. on Saturday Arrangements for ptckup serv1ce available . •
Rest dent and Busmess Auction Serv~ce Available.

9·

Not le

CAIN - POSinYE ID - U TS
on1lblt for Accitftnh or !.11 -. , Pr

~r . unfurnished house
with storage building &amp;
garage Ref &amp; depotit required. Call814-446-9686.

1972 Ford. Runs good 361
W~ndaor. 8200 , 614·378·
6349

:r r r x)HER( xxxr J

FOR RENT OR LEASE

FOR RENT

dining room, family room , new kitchen, patio

for retail business .

Fef(l and seed barley for
&amp;ale Call Don Johnson
614-843-6206

with 1as 1rill.

Located on S.
Fifth, Middleport.
Oh.

Hay for sale In field County
Rd. 19andU S. RT.33. $ .80
o bolo: Call814-986-4295.

For Rent or Lease With Option to Buy $580 mo.

With Option To Buy
LAR~IRY CAL~ORNIA BRICK RANCH

REFERENCES NECESSARY AND
1
ONE MONTH RENTAL DEPOSIT REQUIRED

446-2206 or 446-2734

··
.

1975 Honda Xl1 00. """·
cond., call 304· 676-1687.\

'

1093 Honda Shadow 760:•'
plua accea1one1. EJ(ctllent't
c0 ndotion 304-576-2136 ·
1982 Suruki 650 $1,000
304-676-7270
-.

1984 Ford Ranger shortbed .
two-tone paint. 4 cyl . 4
apd., AM-FM tepa. ahde rea r
window , running board.
oloan. •&amp;.400 Call 814446- 1761 or 814 -388 ·
9811 alter 5PM

USED GUNS
Remington 700 BDC 22-250 Varmet
with lOX leopold ........................... S429
lnterarms 7mm Mag w/3x9 Scope ..... S190
Winchester 30 30 Lever ................. Sl SO
Winchester 1200 2 ga. Pump ........ SISO
Winchester 1200 12 ga. Pump ...... SISO
131 870 Remi!lgton ................. s210 &amp;Up
16 ga. Single Shot H&amp;R.....................$65
Ithaca 37 12 ga............................. S190

1975 Chevy PU 4 new tirea.
good work truck, $900 Call
614-367-0394
1979 Ford AutomatiC lock
on. 4x4. PB, P~ . AC. AM-FM
stereo 4 new tires low 1n
mtleagl). c,au 61 4 · 9926815 .8ftor Ji OOpm, 54 Misc. Merchandise

I

Check our new Gun, Almo, Black Powder
and Hunting &amp; Fishing Supplies.

FOR SALE
WHIRLPOOL

AIR CONDITIONER

BAUM LUMBER

7500 B.lU
Almost New, $185

CHESTER

446-9844

985-3301

WORTH A TRIP FROM ANYWHERE

WOODBURNING

FURNACE
COMPLETE WITH 15 FT.
"SUPER FLUE-2100°"
CHIMNEY KIT

••

HEATS AVER .
SIZE HOUSE

sass
NO MONEY
PAYMENTS TILL SEPT.

EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO BE WARM &amp; COZY THIS WINTER
OPEN WEEKDAYS NOON TILL 8 PM -

SAT. &amp; SUN . TILL 6 PM

Rea I Estate General

Real Estato General

----------;JI

DUTCH COLONIAL- 2 story home on 15 acres only 1
m1le lrom hosprta l Beautrlul ho me rn very good
cond1t1on 1nculdes 5 BRs, 2 balhs llvong room. de n and
much more 40x50 metal bldg contains ~-ground
sw1 mm1ng pool, balh and garages 2 cars Resltng on a
grassy knoll wolh outstanding VIew and pnvacy

SINCE 1943

#240

AVERY PLEASANT PLACE TO UVE -

NEW USTING - Commerc~ l b url dtng m downtown
busrness drslncl Super localton on Galll~rs 44 ft
fronla ge oncludes 2 new slore lronts One ~de
extenSively remodeled Loads and loads ol slorage
space 1n rear Full basement and 2 olher floors for
addition~ slorage Newe r gas lu rnace Across lrom
publiC pa rkmg lot
#215

Peacelul settmg

ove rlook1n~ lhe nver large, 4 BR ranch ~~&lt;th lormal

enhance, large LR plus den, DR, 3 bedrooms and 2
baths on ma~n lloor Den mcludes solid wood panelmg
and woodburmng foreplace Upslarrs has one large
bedroom and a huge floored att1c lor storage All on a
beauloful 1 ac sett1ng at the edge of town ovenookrng
th e nver
#100

REAL ESTATE

JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN lOOKING FORI - In
Vinlon, well buoll and well kept 2 BR ho me woth
attached garage, partal basement, luel 011
burH-m cabinels m kitc hen, also range, oven
Woodburner on LR. well tnsulaled on 1"_'~;-';';'V,:
additional lois Corner of Van Buren

HAVE WE GOT A OEAL FOR YOU'- 2 mo~le homes a
l2x65 Marlette w~h expando 1n excel~nl shape 3
BRs. complele kotchen and DR. gas heal AND an ~der
12x60 New Moo n 1n A-1 sha pe woth 2 BR and mostly
fu rnoshed Also 20x40 garage IIJI on a 42 x387' ~I and
all lor on~ $22,500
#212

REALTOR

446-3644

$50s

,.

1982 Kawo10ki 440-LTD,
like new S950 304-773- ~
6779.

54 Misc. Merchandise

*~

I
I

Motorcycles

PH. 992-6658
or 992-5113

24x28 garage Perfect for workshop Home has
hardwood floors. eat-1n k~chen, 1 balh.llvrng room, and
I car carport. Gas heat and c,ntral atrfor your comfort.
Trailer space, currently rented, as 1nco me Wrll fi nance
quallhed buyer $49,900

~I

W .O.

74

1972 Dotsu'lo/'U truck 1600
series. axe cond , 8500
Call 814-448 -9456.

conven~nllo hospital and town Includes extra loland

!I

a. 4

1979 Jeep Wagoneer limited, leather 1ntenor, ps.
pb, tilt wheat. cruiae control,
air cond very good cond
$3,000 304-896-3008.

2

1981 &amp;orvet. 10,000miles,
jus' hke new. phone 304
875-4384.

3 bedrooms, 2'12 ceram1c baths, lg. living room.

I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I
I

Somethmg for Everyone,
Aniiques &amp; Collectors Items : dmner bell , capta1n's
• trunk. lsi &amp; 5th McGuffey Readers, one speller. IP·
pie peeler, wooden planes, ice tons . railroad lock &amp;
hatchet. Many misc. 1tems.

AUUIONEEIS: ha Smith - 992·7301
. Jim Carnohan - I.
McCoy

\

(

il~ED
P~OF'OSINI&amp; MARRIAGoE
TO iHE MOONeHINE~.

60i

Vans

1971 GMC 1 ton step van, in
good cond Cell 614· 446·
8034

1984 Bronco. V-8 . AT.PS.
PB, AC. am· fm cauette,
Captein Chairs, pay off or
take over paymenta. Call
614-256-1215.
-

1978 Pontiac PhQenix
62.000 mile s. Need to sell
quickly. Car 11 very mce
Mak~~ooffer 614 -949-3039

Wfof( HE NE'VEIR

73

Trucks for Sale

3 BR HOME WITH FULL BASEMENT- Good klcat10n,

P.M.

JANET E. THEISS-ExocutriK
Cast NO. 24713 - Frank W. Parlor, Attornoay

Please send rsumes to Personnel Administrator,
Woodland Centers. Inc., 412 Vinton Pike, Gallipolis,
Oh1o 45631, or call for ntors infor1111tion (614) 4465522 . WOODLAND CENTERS, INC. , IS A PRIVATE,
NON-PROFIT CORPORATION AND AN EQUAL OP·
PORTUNITY/AFFIRMATIVE ACTION EMPLOYER.

-

72

r---------1

PATRIOT AUCTION BARNns.

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141 , turn left onto Rt.
Turn nght onto Patnot Cadmus Road. Watch for
signs .

This is the personal property of the late Eskey ••
Htlllocatod from St. Rt. 7 N.E . of Pomer0 y, '·
Ohio at Five Points. taka Co. Rd . 26 - Watch '
for auction signs.
•
ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS
1975 Easllake hogh top beds walnul day bed, Emptre day
bed 187 5 poplar Eastla ke stand la bles, 1890 oak po~u
chatr, 1880 oak dropleaf secretary w/ bent lronl door, 45" '
oak gra1n round !able w/ leaves. 1930 wood chatrs, 1893 ,
daled prmt ptelure. poplar flat wall cabmet w/6 pane glass.
1900 dresser, 1910 lurn ol century wardrobe, oak disp lay
ca ses, 1875 poplar Jen ny Lmd bed handmade rocktni .
chatr, wooden carousel horse, Sun Ma rto coffee dtspenser l
chrld' s h1ghch01r, camel &amp;flatllunk s, 1920 carved lovesei
woode n butler bowl and plarn and patter n butter molds, oak
ltbrary table. poplar slan d w/ dra wers, lots of gramte ware,
leaded glass panels, cast tron matc h holder, walnul wall
rack, churn and other slone 1tems krtchen cabtnet (parts
only). 1870 walnul Eastlake ch01rs, 1898 golden oak harvesl
table, walnut clock shell, walnul diSplay !able, scrapbooks,
btsque dolls. pom ter dog covered glass dtsh, butter pots. salt
&amp; peppers, ch tld's toy d1shes, old stlverware, mrsc old dishes
and kmck knacks, 1865 flower wrealh made wlfeathers. oak •
lern stands walnut Side chatrs, 1920 bedroom sutte, bayo ,
nets, old mtlttary pictures, lots of han dmade wooden otems ·
1920 magazme stands oak mghlsla nd, lables, chtld's rock - :
mg ch atr , 1870 walnul sla nd, oak des k chatr, sewtng rocker,
glass slanf-lront showcase, lots of nr ce piCture lrames, hand - '·
woven coverl et, oak man ch31r, lots oltron and stoneware •·
soda fountatn and topptng container w/porcelam tops, wal. ;
nut spool cabrnet (no doors), copper wash booler, oce cream •
wagon, gram cr~dles miSe adverl1smg 1tems, cream andmilk cans. chtld s tron bed, ch1ld's day bed, miSSIOn oak
rocker, sponmng wheel, oak manlle w/ beveled mirror, pte
sale, old lools maple kttchen cabmel, coffee gnnder, cup
board, kerQsene and 011 hghts , ~utltmg frames
HOUSEHOLD; Maytag wringer was her, B&amp;W TV, mtsc
dishes Fngtdatre stove, relng~ralor, Maytag automallc
washer and dryer! 1930 Masoc Chel gas range, couch and ·
char~, k1tchen lab e and cha11s
MISC. Wheelho rse garden tractor, chutch benches, car pen '
ler tool chest, wood wagon wheel s, old cor parts

•Invest $6, 000- $15,000 for inventory depending area
•Live comfortaby on $100.000 per year
•Run business thlt can
th11 kind of money.
IF YOUR ANSWER IS
NORM HARRELL
(615) 584-11641
Shear
Inc.

(]

Real Estate General

FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY JULY 19 &amp; 20
10 A.M. 'Til ??

•W•II create a residual mcome for years
•That will be a prestigious business in your com-

~

8,000 sq . ft. brick
building w /2 1 Oft. garage doors,
also finished ares

245-5152- 388-8249

ESTATE AUCTION

•Has immedtate mcoma

~ -~

Trucks for Sale

For sale 01.' trade 1979 Ford
F160 pockup . Call304-875l1 06 efler 5 6J'6-8&amp;36

f3iiil
l!!!!l

I

Truckload of new furniture: Bassett &amp; Broyhill. liew
bedroom su1ts. dining room suites, hvina room
suites, rechners, rockers, lamps, fans, stereos,
wood swings, mattress sets, many new misc. Items .'

J

~ _

Mswei:HEt

For sale Ear corn-$2.40
/ buehet Alto, first cutt1ng
hoy- •1 50 b•lo E Hollon .
. 614-949-2131.

P.M.

~

64

100,000 PER YEAR (POTENTIAL)

WOULD YOU LIKE A BUSINESS THAT:

I':=~::!::r.,~L..-.J.....J
I V

I ] J
in~:~-~~:r ~~~~-·i~~~i DXUJQI Ll I
r (]

1975 Chrysler C Qrdobo.
fully equlped. new ball jointa

Topper for small trunk $60
814 -992-6722 Also. 1979
Pont1ac Su,-.btrd. Automatic
V6 61.200 614 · 992·
2222. Aller 9pm 614-9492484.

j

245-5152 - 388"-8249

•Requires no travel

Call614-949 -2605

72

Autos for Salo

1976 Camero. good body.
runs good. new tires. 304675-3123.

I,________________

•

Holp Wanted

WOULD YOU LIKE TO OPEN YOUR
OWN BUSINESS HANDLING A PRODUCT THAT
•Is needed by everyone n'l your area
•Is guaranteed by y, Billion $ Ins. Co .
•Now being used by largest Corporation in Nalton. Fodera!. State, County &amp; City Agencies

1 979 Chevy Caprice Claa·

flog . o .H. Polomino veorhng
[
Now arrange the drcled lett~fS to
form t!1e surpnse answer, as sug·
l chix colt. lerge handmade·--- - - - - - - - (
gested by the above cartoon.
l thow uddle. Call after 1980 Chevy Citation . 4
73 Mercury MarqUis; 650
! 5:00PM. 114·446-2293.
spd . front whool drove . Coli
Kowasoko 304- 875 -1684.
I ,
814-258-6735
! 2 \Quarter horse mare.. 6
Ford LTD. good cond.
IAns-. Moncloy) 1977
old Call 814- 379·
1983 Camoro Z-28. v-8.
phono 304-875- 2727 8 00
2818.
low mileage Call 814· 441·
Jumbles JUMPY APRON RENDER MADMAN
to 4.00 and evenlflQI 675·
-lc9637.
Yestefday's j
Answer:
What
the
golf
addict's
children
called
their
1825
For sale or trede. Hemp
father-"PAA·PAR"
I brood eow du1 in 4 weeki 81 301 turbo TronoAm 1-----.__.;,;;;;;,;.-1"'""""--------11975
LTD Brougham. 4
Aulng $200 Full blooded 1ilver, blue customized lnte·
door pillard hard top, vtnyl
Homp 8001' weighs 275 lbs
rior, air, PB, PS, POL, PW,
roof 79 000 miles AC PB
Auing $150. 2-5 piece PA. Alpone •ltO&lt;oo. 45,000 71 '
Autos for Sal"
71
Autos for Sale
PS , 'rea; window dolr~oler:
brealcf11t aeta. $40 each . mi .. A-1 cond Call $14wheel covers and more
Coli 814-742-2322 814- 448-9587 or 814 -448
$1 ,000 oo form . 304-675742-2051 .
2459
1...-· De- 81 Chevatte air, auto. 2 dr.,
'
2902 alter 5 -.oo.
1972 Cedillac Coupe
38 epring lambt for•ale Call 1984 Big Red exc. con d. ville, loaded , full power. very 43.000 milea, $2,400. CaH
1981 Olds Cutlaas Su·
114-992-6108.
1978 Volkswagon Rabbitt. good condition. dark blue.
814·379-2682
preme,
axe cond, 304-676·
1978 Dallun 510 Call e1,600 Call 614 -446 ·
1977 Mercury Capri Ghia 7478.
6 year old gelding Regtt~ 814- 245 -5818.
0577 •
1tared Quener Hone, t4150.
very good cond , 81,600 or --~---1976 Datsun 280Z, sun
I Colll14· 992-5310.
1977 Ford LTD II 4 dr ., AC. The followmg daacribed beat offer Call after 7 , roof. louvers. AC. AM ·FM.
new carpet, newly uphol· itert' will be offered for 614-367-0602 or anytime new 70 serie$ tires,
f Ragletered Quaner horse stared saata. high mileage public tale to the htgheat 614-367-7658
$3, 100 00 negottable 304! Gelding. 11 veers old. will but good cond, $1 , 600 bidder on the 16th day of 1983 Ford Escort. L-Spon . 875-1317.
' tekt horee, saddle. tac or etc form. Call 614-448-0514
July, 1985 at 11 OOAM
4 speed. front wheel drive .
on trodo. 304-676-8799.
1976 Plymouth Fury Sport Excellent condttton 6
1981 AMC Sporil hatch- Coupe, 2 dr , Ser. No
54 Misc . Merchandise
months cost gard warranty
Registered Quarter hor~e. beck, 4 cyl., standard, AC,
FH23G8A
121934.
Sole
will
Call
614-742-3063
.
Uttle luc Hobo. ttud fee PS, PB, aa:c cond Call
be Jleld at the Commarciallc
5 150.00. Will talco horso. 814-246-6040.
Savings Bank, Sliver Bndge
'saddle.
tiC or etc oq trade,
1 304-176-5797.
Plaza, Gallipolie, Ohio
46 Spaco for Rent
70 Plym,outh Duster 340 Terms. Cash. Seller reserves
wedge, floor 1h1ft, A-1 the Tight to bid end the right
~ Hereford cow with 9 week
cond .. $1.050. Call 814- to reject •nv and 111 btds.
\ old helor ooll. Phone 304- 446-2495
SUBLET - Retail space
l 882-2750 or 882-2187.
82 Chevette PS. PB, air. 4
1977 Formula Flrebird , dr , eutom1t1c, 41,000
located at 42 Cpurt Stre~t,
l P1g1 for ••le, mete and good cond . new paint. mlleo, $2 ,700. Call 614- Lalayette Mall, Gallipolis .
female, ceurated and 82.800. Call 614-446- 379-2882.
Ohio Square footage of
wormed. $30.00. Coli 304- 8124
1.157 sellm~ space and
1
l 675-4689
'l,
68 Mustang convertible 289
227 square leet of storage
1982 Toyota Tercel, 4 dr, PS. pony interior, new topS..
space on the second floor
AC, 37 MPG. one owner, paonl, 79,000 miloo. $3.600
of the LafayeHe Mall. .
Hay &amp; Grain
$3 ,875. Call 614 245 - firm Cell614-379· 2682.
Call 614-446 -7653
9118.
EASY TO
9-30 'Ill s·oo
Monday 1hru Satllrday
INSTALL
Alfelfa hay. oats hay. excel41 Houses for Rent
lent never wet Call 614·
: 251-6011

MARLIN WEDEMEYER -AUCTIONEER
11

· Livestock

71

Autos for Sale

11c. e2.000 Good •hape.

IFLQRGE t

63

71

I
j

Pole Buildings ConstntctH
for commercial. prtges.
farm, stores, etc. Any size.
free eaumetea Cell 304·
675-3981.

FRIDAY. JULY 26, 1985 at 7:00
TRUCKLOAD OF NEW CARPET
ALL TYPES, SIZES &amp; COLORS

iflf~~ fi}if ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORO GAllE
~~·
by Henri Arnold and Bob Uee

Q;J "!iJ

!

AKC redistered tmy Red John Deere 70 diesel ti'IC·
Pomeran1en pups, both male · tor For pana. bad mater.
and female. 1150 00 and &amp;200 Phone 1114-7425200.00. 304 895- 3958.
2503
'
57

Autos for Sale

iv"-

Farm Equipment

61

71

·-=--=-.
.
I VALIT j

Fruit
Vegetable•

f .m11

Farm Equipment

The Sunday Times.Santinei-Page-0-6;

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

N427
'
FRENCH COLONIAL RANCH7 - (Is lheor sach a
thrngn Yes, and we have d lor you Maon" lealures
"Huge famjy room.'' "Brg VIew", "Excellent Condllion'
Includes 3 BRs, 2 full balhs, lormal dmon&amp; It's all brick.
has new roof Quoet screened porch for mmt )uleptrme
$69,900
#107

J
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Ike Wiseman - 445-3796
B . J. Hairston - 446-4240
Clyde B. Walker - 245-5276
David E. Wiseman - 446-9556

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QUIET lOCATION JUst off St Rt 160 wttfltn one mtle of
new grade school 6 moles lo J:lolzer Hospttal Noce
homes on the area ThiS 3 yr old &lt;fUallty bu rll home os on
1
,
a large lol~~&lt;lh nrce shade trees Home IS 3 BR, 2 baths
hvtng room w~h rrreptace, dtnmg area, effoetent kotchen,
1
24x28 2-car garage attached 40' antenna and rofar
ontl! very IIJOd TV receptiOn 0\/er Mde area Alllhos with
_. central ar Buyers Proteclim Pla n Lrsted at $53 800
•
#320

II
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ENERGY EFFICIENT - 3 BR home 1n crty 12"
msulation rn cetlmg. fnple wmdows, year around
comfort heabng and coolrn&amp; Extra large closets wrth
shelves, 1~ balhs, 'Stepsavtng ~lchen. 9x 10 workshop.
8x!O storage bulldtn&amp; flat lol fenced Quality built well
mamtarned home Good buy al $44,800

I

HOME IN TOWN - 3 BR, 2 balhs, partoal basement,
gas lorced atr fum ace 111th cenlral cooling
Redecorated on go J taste lro nt porch. enJOY the shade
trees Pnced at $\&gt;4,000

#323

II ACRE SPECIAL- Just one mrle out 218 soulh ol
GallipoliS A home of character. 4 bed rooms, I II baths,
large lam~y and lrvtng room, cozy lamtly room w~h
slone fireplace, wde pteaser kitchen, 3 BRs and 2 baths
all decoraled very nocely lhroughoul Ready to move m
condition Very 1100d netghborOOod perfect lor ra~ong
you r famoly. 2 car garage $69.500 Buyers protecled
lor full year
#249

.,.m_ •

DO IT FOR YOUR FAMILY - Thrs l shaped ranch rs
su~ed 1usl lor lhem 3 BRs, 2 lull baths, equrpped
k4chen wittl drnette. IM ng room w1th ~1d1ng doors
leadtng lo covered deck. Plus full basement with lamdy
room, rec. room !partially finoshedl and ~ bath. 2 car
~arage, no mamtenance Vl~l sid11~ Super locatiOn on
. pnng Valley Priced to lit amtly bud,get $64,900#
235
MINT COIIOITIONEO HOME - 3 BRs, bath, utiilly,
la111ly rooon with wood/coal ~ove. lt~ngroom. carport.
stcnge burldm~ AN late model appl1ances. Nice lot
8\\% assumable mortgage Usted at $39,800
H318

-

Overlookong the

~enly olloVI ng space m fhos

2800

sq It ho me wh1ch mcludes large llv1ng room and
d1 nong room wrt h calhedral celltn&amp; den wtth fireplace,
fa mtl; room wrlh ~replace, 3 lull ceramoc balhs, 3-4
BRs, lully eqUipped kilchen and 2 car cari)Jfl Very
good buy at $69.900
#207
BEST BUY IN TOWN' - Broker lhtnks you must see
lhe mlenor ol th rs one 1o apprecoate what a wondertul
home ol • QUiel, peacelul klcation on the nver (I 3 ac)
Beautnu l 1ntenor decorahn&amp; large rooms, 2 ftreplaces,
4 BRs and 2 baths You musl see ~ Reduced to
$75,800

#306

RIO GRANDE' HOUSE AND 60x200 LOT NEAR
CAMPUS - 5 rooms, wrth lull basement Well
COIIstrucled home 1n good condrMn Thrs would be a
rentaL Pnced at $27,600
N312
.• ... PED UIC" HOllE _ n.-........ ,n• all
UIIIQUE . . . .
A
·~IOUs 3 BR ranch offers ""II"""'
of Gallipol'~. tha .,....
~'
flo d ,. u.wh
sq ft of graciOUS , .. ng spiCe. n a room w~
cathedral cetlmg. fireplace, 2 \\ balhs, dtnong room, den,
plus~ dish, 2 car garage and 22 acres Wl!h pond.
Free gas on property lor heatin~ $119,000
N229

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YOU CAN AFFORD THIS 2 BR HOME located in
Ewmgton Includes eal-on k~chen, llvmg room, and
bath 2 n~e garden area $15.000 buys thos one
#216

#108

NEW STING - 3 BR home on countrydbut on~ 4
1
mrles 11om town Incudes
lovmg room, tnongarea
I "'
ped t kitch n ~~&lt;th center IS~
amt., room, eQUIP
ea ·In
e
range, arid 2 lull balhs. large 24x32 metal bUIIdrng
with 17 fl htgh ceolm~ All on 15 acre lract ofj and on
Neighborhood Road As~ng $45,000
#227
'

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NEW LISTING _ Beauldul Cedar Home Thffi stylish
chalet home on a large mcely ~ndscaped lol offers
contemporary livtng on Jlevels Includes 3 BRs, Wile
destgned k~chen wittl dmette, lrvmg room, lamo~ room
d
nd ba~
hi
c~
an rec. room, a a m on eac eve1 """a 1ea1ures
such as woodburner, wet bar, wrap-a round deck
overloo~ng prtvate 16, 32 In roond pod Very
fort ble d 1 ble ho p g ed t $89 000
· ~
com 8 an ~a
")i: nc 8

245

,

TAKE YOUR TIME - You havtllo go on to apprecrale
lh~ lovely 3 BR Ianch LR w1lh ftrep~ce. OR, ealrn
kolchen and 2 ~aths 2 car garage 1 ac lol $59,900

#304

coo~ SHAOEO, LEVEL LAWN -

Qual!y a der home
remodeled on good laste. 7 rooms 1n all Well msulated
With new w1ndows, part~al basemen!, l 'h bath
Excellent garden area, 2 storage blllldongs, 1 car
garage 15 m1les from Gallipolis Pnced at $53000.
#30~8

HERE'S ONE FOR THE BAAGAI~ SEEKERS - 2 ~ory
home with mao ntenance lree Sldtng tncludes large lR
DR,eQulppedkttchen w~h eat-rnbar,3BRsandlbalh
Huge wrap-around porch lor relaxation, ~rge I acre lot
wttl! 2 car garage 14x18 oulbUIIdrn g and partial
basemen! Buyen; Prolectoon Plan for a lull yea 1 On~
1$39 900
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*200

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14, 1985

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

14, 1985 . '
74

Motorcycles

75

Boats ·and
Motors for Sale

1979 XA 185, been rebuilt, 14 h . aluminum boel . Call

excellant condition, 8600. 614· 446-6290 .

Coli 614-367· 7506.

2·,:1 983 Honda Urban e11· 76 • Auto Parts
prfsa, low mileage, e11c.
8r Accessories
eond. Coli 614-446·4262 - - - - - - - - •11•• 4:30.
Complete front end for
71 Harley Supargtide has 70· 73 Camero &amp;. Ford herse
n~ front end. new engine. 4 apd. short shifter. Call
hu '"tras. Call 614 -266- 614-,446-7077.
6gog,
Ne~· rep•acement
pick·up
1 !f74 Kawasaki 900. Faring 'truck parts. G.M. 73·80 ,
and towers . Several exlru. fenders, $49 .. Ford 73· 79
Vrry good shape. 614-992· fenders. $45. Tailgates.
5Q72.
hood, locker panels. do.ors.
etc. available on m~st pick1977 Sporister. $1,900 or up.s and cars 4'1 810V~ W .
be:at offer. Can see under Main St. in Pomeroy. Ohio.
MJ d dIe port- Pomeroy 614-992-6778 or 304-882·
bridge. 614-992-6846.
3581 evenings. ,r •
Hirley Davidson Super - Shop holst. 3ton. ContinenbLind. Per-fect shape . tal 400.- Brand new, nevar
812,400. firm. Can see under been used. $400. 6·14·843·
P~meroy - Mason bridge . 5310 or 614·843-5406.
U4-992-6846.
'
JJ's car c;leaning. Can
1~80 Honda 750 Super· wa1hed and polished. Inside
SAOn. EJCcellent condition. and out. Specialize in wire
9100 miles. Asking S1.300. wheels and .oxidired p8int.
C~!~II;;j6;;'1A4~~t9~2~·-;61;i7;;'5:;.
Can arrange tor pick-up and
H;.,.da ATC for sale,
delivery locally. 814·9922065 for detells.
. Rod. 91 1SO. 304
2F1 .
1978 Subaru, pans only.
Rear end rusted thru . En·
gine, act·. good shape.
&amp;260.00. Phone 304-7735877.
76 • Boats and
Ford truck part1. rear end.
: Motors for Sale
front bumper, 3 speed trans•
miuion, heavy duty trailer
1S ft wooden boat, e"c. hitch, 304-675-1195.
cctnd., 25 HP Evenrude 1 - - - ' - - - - -- - - mQfor 20 hours. Boat, mo1or
&amp; ..trailer $1,800. Call 614- 79 Motors Homes
388·8476.
&amp; Campers

fficiiii,; j

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79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers '

James Jacoby

Active defe·~ns~e;-~---;::::::::===------,
NORTII
7-13·85
or passive?
:~;:
' Jacoby
By Jame•
Do you know the difference
between active and passive defense?
When you defend actively, you try to
quickly take enough tricks to defeat
.the contract. When you defend
passively, you take your tricks as
they come to you, and then sit back
safely and wait, hoping for more
tricks. You can't always he sure
which type of defense will be .called
for until you have seen the dummy. So
it was with today's deal:
Some other time the circumstances
might be right for East to let declarer
win the club king at trick one, but not
here. Since it was possible that
declarer had the singleton king, East
won the ace. Note however, that it is
OK to consider whether it might be
right to duck the ace with the .East
hand.
Having won the ace, East had to
ask himself, ~' What next?" With his
own poor holding in diamonds, East
.was correct in assuming that the suit
would be an excellent source of tricks
lor declarer. Accordingly, hearts
needed to be attacked. This was an
active hand. Unless the defense ~ould
take three quick heart tricks, the contract would be made. Because of the

) 979 Wilderness camper 23

ft. sl..ps 8. Coli 614-446-

1158.

Amerigo Cab over carftper.
sleeps 6, atove, ref., sink,
furnace, a·c toilet, shower.
&amp;1,000. 304-895-3006.

tAKJI09

•s~

EAST
.76

WESt
• ~2
• A J 10 7
• Q2

82 Palaimo camper solid

•Qu

side walls. forecad air furnace, 3 way ref . 3 burner
stove. see at 207 4th-Sti-eet.
Milson anytime.

t8763

.QJI0~2

.A984 .
SOUTif
.KQI0983
• K92

•

I

1972 Storerah 21 ft. fully
contained Dodge motor
home. AC, PB, PS. CBredio.
new tires, 21.000 actual
miles. electric water heater,
gas~eleclric rofri6etJ~lOr, 91111
range. e"c cond, call 304875·3686.

t54
.K7

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North'
West North East
1+
Pass
Pass
2•
Pass
Pass

Pass

.

South

1•
4•

81

Home
lmpro,vements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Unconditional lifetime gua·
rantee. Local references

furnished . Free estimates.

Coli collect 1-614-237-

Home
Improvements

RON 'S Televi1ion Service.
House calls on RCA. Quuar,
GE . Specialing in Zenith. ,

Coli 304-576-2398 or 614·
446-2454.

0488, day or night. Rogers
Basement Waterproofing.

RINGLES'S SERVICE, ••·

Tabor Upholstery. For reu pholstering, free estimates.
Free pickup &amp; delivery. Call
614-379-2859 .

ing

D.and M. Contractors. Vinyl
siding. replacement win·
dows. insulating, roofing,
new and remodeling, concrete. Call 304-773-5131.

perienced carpenter. electri·
cian. mason, painter. roof·
(including

hot

Opening !~ad: 4&gt;Q

81

need for haste, East tabled· the hea.r t
queen. That set the contract. If East
had carelessly played a low heart,
declarer would have ducked and West
would have won the 10 . But three
heart tricks would nO longer: have
been there for the taking.

Home
lmproveme"!ts

Marcum Roofing &amp;. Spout·
ing. Now lns~alling rubber
roofs, 30 years experience,
specializing in built up roof .
Call 614-388-9857.
Fetty Tree'·'T'rimming. stump
removal . Cat! 304·675·

tar

application) 304-675-2088
or 676· 7368.

Starks Tree and Lawn Service. stump removal, 304·
576-2010 .

1977 15 'lzft. Starcratt triboat with trailer, no
motor. Excellent condition.
Colt 614-992-21113 or6147~ - 2289 after 6:00pm.
1 8:12 20 foot pleasure jet

great family boat.

b~t.

t%',600.00. Will take cars,

hone!l, saddle, 1ac on trade.

.. '
.

304-675-6799.

1977 Plvmore camper,
.sleeps 6. totally self contained, air cond., full bath,
wall to .wall carpet, &amp;ICC.
cond.. many extras. Call
614-446-2297.
1978 Tee lark 15 ft. crank

S10 B"HL-MORTON RD.
BONNIE L. STUTES SONNY GARNES CATHY CLAaK ,
BURDETTE
Realtor
388-81111 E"nl,nqr

GOOD LOCATION - FACING GOLF COURSE
3 bdr. home, newly redecorated, storm windows , well insulated. $38.500. Can

Quiet, country location, 3 BR situated on 1.3 ac. offers 2 baths, 17x20
LR, linie-savi ng kitchen, 2 car garage attached . 20x32 unfinished add ilion. Will finish to suit buyer. $59,000.
·
DIRECTIONS: Rt. 141 to htroad to right past Rt. 775, go to 1st road to
right, 1st house on right. Watch for signs.

Wiseman Real Estate Agency
••
Real Estate General

Fjeal Estate General

87

51 D BUHL-MORTON RD.
;IOPINIE L. STUTES SONNY GARNES OTHY ClAR'K
BURDETTE
Realtor
388·8118 Enn;nqs

•C£

$85.000 - TARA ESTATE\
l)ures a large master
"room. breaklasl nook, ~tl)u .· •" oasement. DR FR. kiilchen 1
with d~posal and ref .. J...:ter. Also haspool and ' lubhouse
lege.
REDUCED _:. 40'S - MODERN BI-LEVEL - 3 or 4 bed ·
rooms. 16•32 sw1mm1ng pool. C1ty schools.
BUILDING LOT·.:._ Ju st 3m1les lrom c1ly . Green Elemenlaryw/pd. water tap. ,

135 ACRE fARM w1lh 2 story home, 3-4 t.;ct;~~~ ~:~a~~=·
. foom, utJiity room, bath, part pature land, part
lor hunting Garden spce, outbu1ldmgs. Call us. we Will be
sell thrs home to you.
4TH AVE. - Conven~ence ol !own but m a i
. 2 bedrooms, LR. FR. ea1-1n kitchen, bath
tub, utility room, large lot w1th room lor a garden.
$32,000.00.
'
GREEN ACRES - Oean 3 bedroom, modern kitchen anddm~rt• ,
room comb. w /~1di ng dooo leading lo large lenced m yard. l1v·
1 room, balh, laundry room, •ngle car garage. Garden space
ar.oor. City schools. Gas heal. Air condrtiomng
$40.
•
RUSTIC LOG CABIN - 4 bedrooms, greal room w/ wood butner. Back deck. Lg. lol partrally wooded . Cily schools.
GEORGES CREEK RD. -Three bedroom home,
1am1ly room combination, new stone firep lace
'large wooded !Ql with plenty ot trees, room lor a garden.
Two car unattached garage. Ask1ng price, $44,500.
HENKLE AVENUE - Approx. 2,300 SQ. ft. LR. krtchen with
appfiances, 2 family rooms, J.4 bedroom~ 2 bath~ laundry
rooms, linished basement with lireplace, hobby .room,
worksrop and screened in porch .. 9 acre lot wrth garden, lru~
~ees and grape arbor. Centr~ air, gas heat. attic fan, ~orm
windows. Walk1ng distance of city schools. Priced low 50s.

.•
Put Nt1tt).ber 1 tO work for you:

lhis wttk 1111kl us an offer. 8 room hom• in lht
Heatley Addition to Bidwell. 4 bedrooms, built-in
cabjntts, dbl. s/s sink, shin&amp;lt roof, wood or coal
hntsr. Applt trees, side porch, rUIII watsr system.
Call us now!!
*622

UADINGHAM lEAL ESTATE
446-7699

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

PRICE REDUCED TO $24,500! - lovely
24•65 modular on Green Terrace Drive in
Centenary. Home tealures a 15•241i~ng room
galley type kitchen 1s lull equipped, dining
room has a built-in china cabinet. 3 bedrooms
2,baths, carpetin&amp; central air, elec. hea1, slor.;
Windows and doors and an 8x8 utility bldg.
CLAY TWP. 100 ACRES MI L
OveriOf!king the Oh10 River. Owner reports
some l1mber. C1ty sc hools. Owner may consider
some financing
THIS HOME HAS A LO~ TO OFFER! _ Bnck
and stone Cape Cod 51XIe rome leatures Jiving

QUALITY !N EVERY DETAIL- 3or 4BR bnck
home otl~rs a 20x40 lamily room, 3 baths,
k~chen w1th OW, displ., m1crowave and trash
coml)actor, dining room, intercom system,
central air, 2 car gatage, deck and a 20•40
JXlOI. Over $100,000. Call lor an appointment
today
CADMUS AREA - 26.5 acres. 1'0 ~ory horne
offers 3 BRs! kitchen, l1ving room1 dining room,
bath, carpetmg and aluminum ~ding Call tor
an appointment
RESIOEN11Al -COMMERCIAL- OR BOTH
- Very nice brick home located at 225 1hird
Ave. has had excel~nt care and·offers 1424 sq.

room wrth beamed cerlings,
· ~;{~~: with a full
partiallyworksrop
finiShed ·
1n
wKhwoodbu~ne~rl,~bu~ilt~~ft~.~~of~l;
a carport,
roncrete block commercial type
3 bays formerly used as an
repair shop. Call lor more
BRING YOUR HAMMER-&amp; NAILS! - 1~story
·rome located at 62 lincoln needs some work
lull basement, City waler,city schools. $13,000:

wL

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - 30 acres. more or
less, near Mud sock. I story home, large
barn and tobacco base. $27,900

JUST LISTED - Th~ I year old ranch can·l:e
purchased with 5 acres or 20. 1584 sq . ft. of
living area, 4 BRs, 2 baths, krtchen, FR, 12•24,
LR. dining room, carpet1n ~ elec. BB heat,
Andersen wooden thermopanes. county water.
SW school district
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 62K80 all steel
construction with fireproof insulation, has
overhead cl!me, office and baths. formerly
used lor boat sales and repair. localed across
from Silver Bridge ~aza wrth access to theVhio
River. Potential unlimitoo.
VINTON AREA - 5 YR. OLD MOOUIAR - .
1152.sq. ft. 3BRs, 2 baths, kitchen, living room,
dining carpetin&amp; cenlral air. NGschool district.
THIS 3 BEDROOM HOME CAN BE YOURS For just $2,300 down illld $374 per monthll
Other attractive fealures In this rome include a
family room with Jots of windows and a
woodburning fireplace, k~chen, dining livii\V
room, bath, unattacned ~orage IJdg., carport,
nice shaded backyard. Call lor an appointment
today.

~

A'SON TWP. - Possom 'Trot Rd.
92
acres, mil, all woods. Old barn on property.
$21 ,90{)

GENTLEMAN'S FARM- 35ac.res
mo;lly
lillable, 3 m1les north Ql.Rodney. Sprin&amp; w~l
anj counly waler, lenced and cross tenced
tobacco base. Very nice 3·4 bedroom ranch
, style home with kitchen; LR, bath; breezeway,
woodburnmg !~replace., Call for an
apporntment.

CONVENIENT DOWNTOWN LIVING ASSUMABLE LOAN - Very attractive two
story home offers 3 BRs, 2 baths, 16xl6 LR
formal dining room, kitchen, enclosed porch:
new carpet, gas heat W1Jhln walking distance
of slores and schools. Call today.
.

ONE OF THIS AREA'SBETTER FARMS - 101
acres, MIL, lots of fertile bottom land, pond,
new fences, large barn, several other buildings,
. large lobacco base, modern 3 BR home, 2
baths. Call lor more information.

WHITE HOLLOW ROAD - WALNUT TWP. 23 AMil all pasture, 2 story home has 3BRs
bath, LR, knchen, lull basement. wellwater.SW.
school distnct.

OHIO RIVER VIEW - 210 acres m/ 1, localed
approximately 6 miles below lawn with
lronlage on SR and Raccoon Road. A feW
scenic building srtes, balance could be used for
pa~ure or recreation. Priced to sell at $350 per

CENTRALLY LOCATED - GREEN TWP. 22.11 Ac. MIL, wilh fronlage on St. Rt 141 and
Neighborhood Rd. ,IJso adl(lins Sanders Hill
' Subrlivision. Owner financing available. Call for
more details.
'

APPROXIMATElY 3 MILES FROM RODNEY4111 ACRES, MI L. AU TillABLE - Older
home has been remodeled. 3BRs, LR, kitchen,
bath, gas and wood stQve, carpet~n&amp; county
water, small pond.

acre.
COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL - INDUSTRIAL - 50 acres, more or less, vacant land
ideal tor investment or any type development
Road frOiltage on U. S. 35 and Mitchell Rd.

JUST USTED - AlTOOION HORSE LOVERS!! Make an appoin1ment today to view this 39 acre larm.
You will appreciJle the q~aljty ol matenals and
workman to build lar10 hcrse"/6am. Box staH• 4 bay
machine shed. Cement wllerin&amp; trough&amp; Excellent
crop land, recently lmed and fertilized. 3 bedroom, 2
bath, 24'x56' doublewide pllced on permanent
foundation. Use either rural or w81 water.
'11924

NEW LISTING- ONE LOOK IS AlliTTAKES -II you
want to lluy Ibis house don'tsrow 1ttoyour wife. One of
the prettiest decorated homes I've seen. It coul8
probably be the best described as an 1mmaculate doll
house. 3 bedrooms, ~vely hardwood floors, 2
tireplaces, large krtchl!f1. 1he family room, rec room
and bedroom in basement are professionally
decorated. Electric hot W?ler heat carport, %acre yard ,
Located 4 m11es west of town at St Rt 141. $63,000.
#9ZO

~etails.

, NEW LISTING - DELUXE MODULAR - Very
attractive 24x65 modular home oo rented Jot Includes
3 bedrooms, 2 llaths, dining room (buttt ·in china
cabinet), den, gal~y k~chen wi1h all the buitt-ins, utility
wrth washer and dryer, central air, storage building
Very mce lor $23,900
·

-

s~~~:
Located
Si
on a 2 acre
LAKE DRIVE - RIO GRAN.OE - PRESTIGIOUS FAMILY
HOME 4 BEDROOM RANCH , BASEMENT, DECK NEARLY
SURROUNDS HOME ON 6 BEAUTIFUL ACRES $95,000.

'FRIENDLY RIDGE ROAD - 25~ A. m/1,
approx. s·acres tillable, 900 lb. tob. base. Older
2 story home has LR, kitchen, dinrng room,
bath. Barn on property.

TRr &amp;TATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave .. Gallipolis.
614-446· 7833 or 614-441·
1833.
R &amp; M Furniture Manufacturing, 51. Rt . 7. Crown
c;ty, Oh. Call M ·4·258·
1470, call Eve. 614-4463438. Old &amp; new
Uphostered.

ENO - 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH . NICE CARPETING.
KITCHEN HAS RANGE ANO REFRIGERAlOR, FULL BASE·
MENT LESS THAN 4 YEARS OLD. OVER AN ACRE LOT. MOVE
IN CONO . $45,000.

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR A BRICK· HOME7Then this may just be the one. Cllnvenientiy
located on Rt 35 West this rome offers a large
li~ing room, dining room, 3 bedrooms, laundry
room, I ~ baths, equipped kitchen, carpetm&amp;
central air and a 2 car garage.

I

lEAR RUtl ROAD -THIS IS A BEAUTY! 5 ACRES WITH A 3
BEDROOM, 2 BATH RANCH HOME IN EXCELLENT CONDI·
TION . CARPORT. ORCHARD. $54 ,000.
tiEIGHBOIHOOO Rll'. -JUST MINUTES FROM CITY. 3 BED·
ROOM MOBILE HOME 16X321 N-GROUNO POOL APPROX. 5
ACRES $32,000. NEW LISTING'

EVANS HEIGHTS- $27,000- SMART BUY' 3BEOROOMS.

selllh~ 1\1 story, 4bedroom home. 11h bat~. spac~us

kitchen, llasement 2 iJrlge!. Good garden area.large
lawn. Localed at St Rt 141. Only $29,500.
N888

located on corner
of Mill &amp; Fifth in
Middleport.

.

OAX HILL • AREA - COMMERCIAL &amp;
RESIOENTIAL - 3.62 acres m/J wilh approx.
275 ft fronlage on SR 93 appro•. l mile N. ot
Oak H11l. 2story home offers 4BRs LR kitchen
w1lh range and retrig, bath, carflelinr.' nat gas
heat and city water. CllmmerCial steel bUilding
(Stumbo's Garage) measures 40x96 and has .
concrete llooring Mobile home hookup on •
property. Owner financing at ·10%. Call lor
appointment. ·

992-6658 or
992-5113
Real' Estate General

VACANT FARM LAND - Morgan Twp. 84
acres more or less,' level and rolling land.
Appro1. 33 acres lillable, remainder woods.

563 JAY DR.
By Owner
Three bedroom ranch in gr,.t
neiahborhood. Two baths ..eatin kitchen , livin&amp; room, family
room With fireplace. utility
room. foyer. attached 2 car
earace. air conditionina, aluminum siding, al1d patio . Must
see interior. many extras.
Owner movinc. 1rut baraain.
last woek before

BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Greatmvestmentlor
,the buyer.,l ocated on Graham School Rd. Each
un1l offers 2 BRs. liv~ng . room, baih, krtchen
Wll!J..stove, relng., DW and d~pl., laundry, large
carpo!l; cenlral air and storage area.
103 ACRES M/l, SPRINGFIELD TWP Approx. 96 A. tillable, older home has 5 BRs
bath. LR. krtchen, county water, 40•60 pole
llldg, . 40x60 tobacco barn, various other

outbu~d rngs

' RACCOON CREEK HOMESITE - Otters
swimming boatmg and lishin&amp; lot size is
100•600 and has electric, water tap and septic
tan~ Call for more delai~.

FOR SALE
I

2 BAY
SERVICE srAnoN
&amp; GENERAl STORE

On U- S. 3S
Ooirc aoad business in name

IA-IFRAI~I

HOME ON .65 ACRE LOT -3bedrooms, l ~balh, liv·
ing room, krtchen, utility room, 1;\ basement unfinished. Price
$2!UXXJ
.

bland products. Inquire

1t~

470 JaCUan Ave., Gallipolis,
Olrio. May be - lfter 5 p.

m. Mondly, July 15.

.,

ENJOY 'rHE WOODED SElliNG- SPACIOUS HOME HAS 3
BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS, 2 COMPLETE KITCHENS. FAMILY
ROOM. 12'X50' PATIO PARTIALLY COVERED PLU S IO'X4'
DECK. 6 ACRES. VERY NICE PROPERTY. $79,900.
$74.000 AND WORTH EVERY PENNY- BEAUTifUL RANCH
HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS, FORMAL 0\NING, FULL •
BASEMENT. 2 CAR GARAGE. CENTRAL AIR COND ., 5 ACRES,
ROUTE 16D-LOCATION. NEW ON THE MARKET!
•'
ROUTE 35- SUPER LOCATION, 1.6 ACRES, LEVEL. NICE 2
BEDROOM DLOEB HOM£ \'liTH GARAGE. !;!lEAl INVEST·
MENT PROPERTY. $74.000."

3 HOMES FOI $30.000 - All IN GOOO CONO\TION. I 11.
ACRE LOT. IF THIS SOUNDS TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE. CALL
FOR AN APPOINTMENT'.
$29,000 - A JOY TO OWN' 2 BEDROOM BRICK COLONIAL
HAS FABULOUS RIVERVIEW. PERFECT HOME fOR SINGLES.
NEWLYWEDS OR RETIRED.

#909

PRIDE OF DWNEIISHIP sparkles throughout this
undated raoch. 3 bedrooms, ll!modeleil k~chen, nice
carpet, prage, full basemen\ vinyl sidin&amp; low
maintenance, central 1ir, ln·town location. Ptusmuch
more.
#860
I

209 ACRE FARM WITH APPROX. 90ACRES TILLABLE
- Rest pasture wrth very little .woods. 2 story farm
home w1th 5 bedrooms, livmg room. famtly room,
krtchen /d ining comlined, bath, 50'x75' barn,
machinery shed, ch~kl!f1 house, 3 garages, 4 watering
troughs, tobacco base, almost all new tence, rural
·water. Localed on state highway.
#.847

LOOKING FOR ~ PLACE TO IUtlD7 - All cleared .
Rural water and electric availa~e. Priced a1 $6,900. No
restricti&lt;lns.
NEW USTIIIG - AlTENTiON MOBILE HOME
OWNERS! - Own your own lot with septic Ian~
driveway, electr~ pole already mstalled. Water line
instilled, oo lap, county water available. Owner willing
to help w~h tinancint

PERFECT ONE FLOOR PLAN - 2000 SQ. ft. in this
~vely bnck ranch, formal entry io sunken living room.
tormal dining room. 3 bedrooms, 211 baths, large
krtchen with eating area, family room wrth fireplace,
utility room, mud room, 2 car attached garage Home
Protection Plan.
#781

SUITEIRAtiEAtl HOlE - Unbelievable. 30'•90'
house beautifully localed on five acres. Rural setting 4
bedrooms. extr• ~ri!! Jiving room. 2 baths. Localed on
state rotJte Only 3 years od. Th is is a rome to see.
.
#890

168 ACRES - Priced less than $260 per acre. ApproK.
40 acres pasture. 100 acres woods (some timber!.
small orchard, 2 wells. new fence, small barn ,
outbuildings, garage. Good homes1le. Off st. Rt 554.
$42,600.
#833

30s.
30 ACRES - Owners will cons1der helping ,;ith the
financin&amp;· on lh1s wooded tract of land Qeared
homes~e. Rural water milable. Within a lew minutes
of \OWn. City SChoo~.
NEYf LISTING - S4UOO - Attrac1ive 3 bedroom
bJ.Jevel home located I mile off SR #218. Situated on a
HI acre lot this rome includes 2 baths, 18'•26' family
room waswoodbumer, equipped k~chefl, 2 car garage,
larllf! deck and patio. Owners anx~us to sell.
11915

'

I

'

121 ACRES --' $79 ,000. RT. 775, WALNUT TWP., 4 BED·
R&lt;lOM HOME NEEDS SOM£ REPAIRS .

BIG BARGAIN - SMAlL PRICE - 8 acres more or
Jess, plus adoloblt 3 bedroom ranch styl~ home.
Recen11y remodeled kitchen. Stcrage buildmg and
shed. Owner says sell. Reduced to $35,000.
.
~854

BIG WHEEL CAUY OUT- SUPER RT. 35LOCA TION . BUSY,
BUSY, BUSY. IFYOU ARE SERIOUS ABOUT BUYING AGREAT
INVESTMENT PIIOPERTY, GIVE US A CALL!

AUDREY F. CANAOAY, REALTOR
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR. 448 -3383
. EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 448-1897
211

LOCU~T

.

.894

2 ACIES I'I.US 4 IEOIIOOIS - Th~ ~x year dd
ranch has al tilt! touclles. Nico carpet mlivmg room, 2
nicety deeorlted fiJI baths, dinine· and fllni~ mom
romb., pl1io docn and deck Mrlooking tree studded
back ~wn. Pnced lD sell at $42,500.

MAKE AN OFFER- 3 bed rooms. 6\? acres wrth good
garden areas. Storage buildmg Additional hookup lor
mobile home wilh separate utilities and septic.
$25,000.
~893

BUILDING LOT - Localed al Clearview Estales.
Beautiful sett1ng with nature all around. Large corner
lot. Access to Raccoon Creek lor camping boating,
lishrn&amp; elc. Restncled, no mobile homes.
-~872

ASSUMABLE MORTGAGE - Low DOwn Payment. 5 ·
year old cedar bl·level located 5 miles lrom town.
Includes 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, Ill(~ lamly room,
eqUipped kitchen, garage plus 2 24' worksrop.
1.247 acres. Kyger Creek and Ad aville Schools.
$49,900.
.
#814
PRICE DROPPED $10,000 - You won't find a belter
buy in loday's market Remodeled 3 bedrooms ranch.
with 9 acres of George's Greek Road. Equipped kitchen,
woodburner, garage. Mostly wooded land with large
garden area. $29,900.
#828

WELL MAINTAINED -I don't think you'll lind anicer
rome lor the money than this attractive split level. 3
bedrooms, 11h baths, large ~!chen and d1mng area.
Carport New carpel recently in~alled. Spacoos
~ ndsca ped lawn. Pnced lo sell in the mid 40s. '

PICTURE THIS'!! - large lam1ly home al a very
peaceful area. 4 bedrooms, tamily krtchen w1th
lireplace, formal living room, formal d1mng 2 baths, lull
basemen! wrlh lam1~ room and rec. room. gatage, plus
many mll&lt;e' extras. Qty .schools. Pnced at $6~.000.

~876

#881

BE A RPOUD OWNER. - Th1s rome sparkles l"(llo
warmth and will invite you in for atour Very attractive
carpet throughout. 3 bedrooms, 12'x17' krtchen wrth
Z-brick. Garage. Air oonditiorung un~ Hot water heater
recently replaced. low maintenlince Lovely lenced
back yard. Most tor you money. $38,500. City schools

CAN YOU AFFORD THIS - ONE OF OUR BETTER
HOMES7 - Exceptonal 3 bedroom, 3 ~ baths all
brick, city schoo~. close to OayCare Center, good
neighborhood. quiet, little lraff1c, close to shopp1ng
cenler, hosp1tal, wcular dnve, shrubbery, trees, 9
acres, more or les&amp; P1cture preffy Ju~ drive by on
· fa~rti~d-Van co Road. You'll call lor an appointment
#llll

33.7 VACANT ACRES - ApproXImately 15 acres flat,
2 creeks, 2 road frontage. Located Metheney-Fa11play
and Co. Rt 38. S15,000.
11931

#857

A HOME TO APPRECIATE - Beautrlul modular home
with 3 bedrooms, 2 full ba1hs, garden tub, walk-in
soower. Kitchen comple1e with special lighting Nving
room. lamily room. Walk-in close~. ceiling fans, cenlral
air, woOOburner. 2car garage. Convenient to swimming
pool, stores, ban~ elc.
#855

~858

BEAT THIS FOR COMFORT AND PRICE - Three
rooms and bath in city on 40'&gt;120' lot,Vinyl siding
storm doors and windows. Roof, hoi waler heater
1ecently replaced. Shaded backyard, plus much more.
Only $11,000.
#873
JUST LISTED - DONl PASS THIS ONE BY - 3
bedroom ranch with attached garag~ lull divided
basement. fireplace, gas forced air heat w~hin mrnules
ol town. Owner would con~der trading lor large home.
#913
MOVE UP TO A DREAM and be your own txlSS when
you purcnase this property. Block constructed building
wilh approx. 2,000 sq. ft. building used formerty as a
roadside market Partial~ equ1pped. located on SL Rt.
!60. Call lor more delal~.
#914

11869

NEW LISTING- FAMILY RETREAT- In the quiet
suburb you'll lind this beautilul remodeled 4 bedroom
ranch with carpet, drapes and curtains. Offering central
air, healed by gas and electric. large 2 car allached
garage. 2 acres m/1. Mom will ~ve the new kitchen
loaded wrth cab1nels. Priced ngnt.
#928
'

2 ACRES - ONLY $4,000 - To be used as you
please. No restnG!ions. located at state route w1lh road
frontage. Rural water ava1lable.
#907

#n6

FARM - Modein in every way. House ·has 6 rooms,
bath buitt 1n 1978. Three barns like new, used lor
Iobacco and show horses. Clay Township. Gallipolis
school system. $51 ,400.

NEW USTING - .VACANT IDT- $6.500 and~ is all
you~. Excellent Jot 100'xl80'. _Rural. water avai~ble,
plus electric on Jot Owner fmancm&amp; avadabl&lt;! to
qualified buyer. located St Rt 775, a srort distance
from the county park entrance. Call tor a sixlwing.

IIOUT£ 35- COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL. $68,500. ONE
ACRE PLUS 3 BEDROOMS, ' LIV'NG AREA, PLUS LOW£R
LEVEL. SUITABLE FOR ANY TYPE COMM~RC!Al BUSIN~SS.

REAPING THE HARVEST - Start with II acres· to
grow your own garden, raise a beel, apony lor the k1ds.
lncludes~pp rox. 1500 lb. tob. base, tie rouse, 2 barns,
new in-ground cellar house. 14'x70' 3 bedroom, 2bath
mollile home 1n e&gt;cellent condition.

IMMACULATE IIAICH wrth 3 bedrooms, bath, krtchen
iocludes ranK!! 1nd retrireralor, living room. Special
f..tures iocludo nat liS hell, 11'•23' tam~y room,
Woodbumer, carport ftat lol. 2 miles from town. Mid .

$323,000 - EVERGREEN ~ NICE COUNTRY HOME, RE·
CENTLY DECORATED. NEW CARPET, CUSTOM BUILT CABI·
NETS IN KTICHEN. HUNTER CEILING FAN, LOVELY WALL ·
PAPER, WOOOBURNER PLUS SEPARATE BLDG. SUITABLE
FOR APT. OR OFFICE. GARAGE, SUPER VEGETABLE GARDEN
EXCEPTIONAL BUY' JU ST,. LISTED!

•

·Well Established

THIS IS A HIDEAWAY WITH LOTS OF PRIVACY- 3
bedroom ranch, well water. wood and coal heat 2stall
t&gt;trn. 5 acres m/ 1. $39,900.

#925

OWNU FINANCING AVAILABLE WITH $5,000 OOWN PAY·
MENT, BALANCE 15 YEAR TERM AT 12'1 MONTHLY PAY· ;
MENT $288.05. VERY NICE 2 BEDROOM, FULLY CARPEfEO;·I
GAS HEAT, CENTRAL AiR COND . $29.000.
.

OPEN HOUSE
2-5 P.M.

11927

2 BATHS, DECK, ,11h STORY FRAME HOME. EXTRA LOT .

FOR SALE
100'x100'
VACANT LOT

NEW LISTING...:_ 18 ACRES: $32,000. Good solid
slucco and trame home. 3 bedrooms, bath, kilchen:
dimng rm., hugh liv~ng room. 27'x40' woodksrop ·
w/220 electr~ Good well and spring water.

NEW LISTING - 3.61 ACRES - Surveyed wooded
ld at SR~7 near Gallipolis locks and Dam. 115' river
tronlage. Land on both sides ol highway. Building or
molile home Sites. $5,900.
#923

Real Estate General

GUYAN TOWNSHIP -108 acres moreor Jess
Jocaled south ol Mercerville. Approx. 20 A.
tillable. Balance woods, tobacco base. Owner
will help tinance.

'

#921

lot This redecorated
bedroom rome ~ just lor you. Includes 2 nice baths,
tami~ room, formal dining room, basement. 3 car
garage. Vert nice decorabn&amp; Thermal windows,
aluminum sidin(L fully carpeted, insulated, fireplace
w/woodburner Priced to sell at $59,900.
#916

NEW USTING - DWNEI HAS LEFT AREA and must

FOR SALE
62YI Acres M/l. 9 yr. old, 3
bedroom. 2 bath house. Closed-in back porch, 30130 gar·
age, bam. tobacco base, and
pond. $79.900.
446-7508

•

NEW LISTING - REMODELED HOME NEAR VINTON
- Nice decorating 1n IbiS 3 bedroom. II&gt; story home.
Vinyl sidin~ tamily room, large krtchen, dmmg room,
insulated windows rural water, 1h acre yard w~h
'
.
garden area. $32,000.
#919

-

THEY DON'T BUILD THEM LIKE THIS ANY MORE! INO\ANA
STONE HOME HAS STONE FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM,
FORMAL DINING ROOM, 2 BATHS, LOVELY CARPET THROU·
GHOUl. OUTDOORS THEil&amp; IS A 0\NING TERRACE WITH
BUILT·IN GRILL. PLUS PAlTO WITH GAS GRILL ALSO A GU·
EST HOUSE. IMMACULATE COND .

Real Estate General
321.65 ACRS, M/l, MORGAN TWP. ·
frontage on St Rt. 160 near North Gallia HS.
1250 lobacco llase, 2 BR rome wrth krtchen,
LR, bath and fun basement. Call for more

.

(.J': ..

,

Upholstery

. Real Estate General

JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING FOR In-town convenience, extra nice lot measures
87' by 174', 3 or 4 BRs, large k1lchen, LR OR
bath, large front porch and small screened
back porch, gas heal, unattached one car
garage. Call lor an appointment

Ollering CENG.UARD'"Insurance Services

M. H. Repair

.....
DON'T LET 1HlS ONE GET AWAY - 3 BR
ranch on 1.2 acres m/1, with lots o1 pine trees.
ThiS home has LR w1lh lire~ace, k1tchen, bat~
carpetm~ 2 car garage with openers, elec. BB
heal plus a new heat pump, new 12x20
covered rear deck and a 12x16 utility bldg. Call
lor an apporntmenl.

Qngu1..1rd

MOBILE HOMES MOVED .
Insured. 20 years experience, 304-576-2866 or
576·2998.

446-A206

SITTING IN 20 ACRES OF WOODLAND- Contemporary home
leatunng asolanum w/ rot lub wrapped by an open formal livi ng
and dm1'ng room w/alrium doors, maSSI~e stone f1replace. Amodem complete kitchen and a breaklasl nook, 21h balhs, 3 bed·
rooms w/master surte, slidin~ doors to apatio area. l aundry and
mud room. Unl1nished basement 2 car garage. Vegelable gar·
den and war! truit trees. Shown by appOintment.

. SEWING Mochine repairs,
service. Authorized Singer
Sales &amp;. Service Sharpen
Scissors. Fabr;c Shop,

86

REAL ESTATE

15 ACRES more or Jess in Spnngt1~d iownsh1p. Wooded. Mi·
neral rrghts w/the property Only $7200.

84 • Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Haul limestone. sand,
vel,dirt, bulk or bag_fentil~"" I
and lime. Excelsior
Works Inc. 638 E. Main
Pomeroy. 614-992·3891.

STUTES

RIO GRANDE AREA - Only $21,500 lor lh1s edra nrce 3
bedr~m ranch. Livmg room, lamil~ room, din1ng room and
nrce k1tchen. Half basemen! lor storage. this ~ld be
exc~lent lor a starter home. N~e large lot with good garden
space.
MODERN 3 BEDROOM. BI-LEVEL - fealures lg kkhen w/lots
ol quality handmade cab1ne~ II&gt; balhs, living room, I~ tam1~
room w/Buck stove. Backyard is large w1th a lg. covered pat~
and an on top ol ground pool to l!f1IOY ~Is ol summer ptcnics.
Wash1ngton School Oistrrcl.
·

4 4 6 •6 6 ·1o

Waugh's Water Service.
Wells. cisterns. pools. Fast,
reliable service. Call .614256-1240 or 614• 256·
1'130. Reasonable rates.

446-3644

REALTORf)

SOUTI-iERN HILLS R.E., INC.

Ken's Water Service. Wells,
cisterns. pools filled . Phone
614· 367-0623 or614-367·
7741 night or day.

. . . . . . . . :w-

Realtor
446-7707

I

'

'

&amp; ....w-,ter -gas-sewer~

Also pools filled. Call 614256·1141 or 614· 446·
1175or614·446-7911.

u,1,1n.ru - 3
room, utility room, I
room, eat-in kitchen. stove, ref., 2 car garage, above
~ """"" pool, new satellite dish, la rge outbuldingtrl.lot with'
and septic. l ol is large enough to build several
on. The price ... call ... Owners willing to help with
the financing.
•

Real Estate General

Realtor
446-4206

Good-1 Excavating. base ·
ments. footers, drivewayt,
septic tanks, landscaping.
Call anytime 614-4464637, James L. Davison, Jr.
owner.

J~:es::~:::~e:::~~: Canaday Realty
446V':)63"6 ~~
'

Real Estate General

Bastiani Drive

II

Pomeroy. 614-992-2284.

up camper. Call 614-2561117.

-

elel:trical lineir.; . .

Estate

unday,

HOME NAnONAL BANK
for Tim

Excavating

tr,ucks,~

446-A206
Realtor
· 446-2707

"

Judy DeWitt-Realtor-388·8155
J . Merritt Carter-Realtor-379-2184
Becky lane - Realtor-446-0468
Jim Cochran..:.:Realtor-446- 7881
Virginia Smith-Realtor- 38B-8826
Phyllis Lovaday-Re~ltor -446-2230

Construclion Co ..
Rutland , Oh . 614· 742·
2903. Basements. Footers,
Con'er~te work , Backhoe's,
Dozer· &amp; ' Ditcher, Dump

•
•

h~l

JIM'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATING. Rt . 1, !lox 355, Galli·
polis. Coli 614-367·0678.

Real Estate General

RNI E•t•te General

J.A.R.

REAL ESTATE

(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN .)

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Pl1ono 614-446-3888 or
614-446-4477

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE with 3 bedrooms, 2 complete baths, dining
room, living room and large recreation room·: located on B·
acres. large farm pond. Racine
area-

Dorer Work land clearing.
landscaping. etc. Free ntimatea. Call 614·446·8038
or 614-992·7119 anytim.e.

STUTES

W.Va.

REAL EST.ATE FOR SALE

.&amp; Heating

Rotary or c[llble tool drilling.
Most walls completed 11me
da_y. Pump sales and services. 304·895· 311{12.

J.and L Installation. Roof·
ing. vinyl siding, storm doors
and windows. Free esti- ..!..-::c--....,..----mates. Call614-992-2772. tte General

Realtor
446-4206

Ohio-Point

Plumbing

Services

Pass

.

81

·,

#818
lAND - Oesira~e tract. 96.62 acres more or less 011
St Rt. 124. Approx. 30 acres tillable. I'Dnd, some other
barns.
#723

2 ACRES lo&lt;;ated below Eureka on Rt. 7. BUild aoome
or put your mo~le horne there. No res1r1ctions. Priced
al the low pnce of $3,500: N1Ce vltllll ot lhe r~er
#883
THE SELLER'S LOSS Iii" YOUR GAIN w1th this 3
bedroom ranch. Custom made k~chen cab1ne~.
Carpeled lh1oughoul. GMport. Recently construcled
garage. large lawn. Good garden area. state Route.
#812

.
.
\
(ll984Century 21 Real Estate CorporatlonasLruatee.rorthe NAF. ® iOd,. -trademarktHJH't-ntury21 Rt:al E.~tate C.:orporation. Primed ln1· S1\ . t:qual Uulhin~ llppnrtunih•(i}
'

•

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SO MUCH FOR SO LITTLE - Attrachve bnck and
frame ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, oulstanding
~rtchen , 2 car garage. storage bUilding. Immaculate
rns1de and out Appro• I ~ m1k!s H.M.C Call for
appoinlment loday,

'

EACH OPPICEISINDEPENDENTLYOWNEDANDOPERATED.

.

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STREET, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
I

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�'·

Pegia D-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
Reel Estate General

Real Estate General

f - 01 llvtSTMENT

m
Real Es!qte LJ::!

&amp; BUILDING LOTS

130 ACRES I mile from OhK&gt;

•

Rivar. Features huge dutch
style barn. ·excellent ~ke s~e.
crop land, pature and woods.
Owner says"'MKE OFfER ON
All OR PART". Priced to sell as
a farm. Possible excellent
terms available.
· ATENTION BUILDERS
Th~ ~perty has been subdivided into I acre - 10 acre
sites, can be sold individually.
leax water obtainable, priced
tow, possible excellent term&amp;
Th~ ~ an · excellent buy for
either farm or development.
POMEROY- 2 nice building
lots on Wngh! St. Water &amp;
sewer. $4,000.00 each .
6 ACRES- $6,000 on Spring St. "EXCELLENT f iNANCING AVAILABLE"

MONTGOMERY
REALTY
16141' 315-6740
~ollect Calls Accepted

Real Estate General

Linda L. Riffle
REALTOR
Home Phone

992-3535

IIEW

LISTING IN RUTlAND
AIIEA- Privacy and convenience in an e,;cellenl location
close to school. Fully equipped
kitchen-dining area, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, large family
room with fireplace, 2 car gar·
age, deck. $55.900.

A GOOD BUY AT $43.900 Th~ 3 bedroom home localed
close to town offers 2 baths,
large iving room, convenient
kdche~. den, sunporc~ deck,
central air.

ATOUCH OF C~S IS YOURS
with th~ 3 bedroom bnck
ranch on 1 acre. Huge livin~
room, fireplace, equipped
k~chen, 2 baths, 2 car garage.
Plenty ot storage. One miUe to
Meigs Mine No. l. $70s.

Real Estate General

Services

Phone .

POME
NEW LISTING - 5 rm., t
floor, lrame 1n M1d dleport
with bath, carpeting and
large ' level lot Only $1. 6,500.
NEW LISTING - 2 'BR.
carpeted home '" Middleport. gas furn ace and enclosed porch. N1ce tor onl y
$8,000.
NEW LISTING- 2 Bedroom
home on Un ion Ave.. Pomeroy. One fl oor, bath and
furnace.
NEAR VESTS. HOSP. - 3
Bedrooms with full basement, bath and central heat.
Reasonable.
FAMILY HOM~ :- Excellent
location with view ot river
and large lot. Near Kroger's,
central heat and all utilities.
RUTLAND - Remodeled 2
bedroom home on one floo r.
Big kitche n with attractive
dinmg area.
LINCOLN HTS. -Real nice
2 bedroom home on large lot
w1lh porches.
LAND CONTRACT - Home
un~er roof, 20 acres of
woods tor $16.000 cash or
96 pay men ts at $195 04 al
NO interesl.
BARGAIN - 2 hom es on 3
acres. Owner will furni sh
matenal to fini sh. Small payments like rent.
NEAR RACING LOCKS - 4
room lrame with lull basement and ni ce lot. askmg
$16.500. Need otler.
R~NCH - 2.47 acres, dbl.
garqge, large ·stove, wood·
burning !~replace. dwarf fruit
trees. Excellent condltton .
MIDDLEPORT - 2 bedroom home with dbl. garage
tor only $17,500.
CERTIFICATE APPRAISALS
IT'S NOT WHAT YOU PAYIT'S WHAT YOU GIT.

·su, Murpiiy, Mittari'lfoush
Helen, Virgil and
Bru&lt;l hofor~

REDUCED AGAIN! Owners want this attractive ranch
sold immediately and have reduced the price to
$29,500. 3 or 4 bedrooms, larte kitchen, family
room , recently remodeled. Low maintenance and .
utility bills. Make an
today!! #38B7 ·
Inc.. 446-661 0

FOR SALE BY OWNER-713 3rd Avenue

Very attractive 2 story home offers 3 or 4 bedrooms. 2
baths. formal living and dining rooms, 2 kitchens, refinished hardwood floors and woodwork. Walnut stair railing
in entrance hall, beautiful vinyl covered walls, gas hot water heat. garage with concrete driveway, storage building,
chain link fence. great garden spot. Within walking distance to stores and schools. Not just any house. Welt work
a look. Could be a great investment. Priced on inspection.

Real Estate General

1

MOBILE HOME along Patnot-Gage Rd. Reduced

•

$16,500.

•
•

MOBILE HOME AND 24 ACRES along Hazel Ridge Rd.
Buy now for $24.500.

•
•
•

COMFORTABLE 3 BEDRM. HOME along firsl Ave., ac ross'
from island. Low maintenance, handy location. Buy now
for $45,000.
•

•

WE HAVE SOME GOOD BUYS ON ACREAGE - Buy 16
acres along Rt. 554, Cheshire Twp. for $10,000; buy 46 ..
acres at Spruce St. ExtenSion tor $21,500.
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE II IIG BUSINESS ....
CAU AN !XPERtEN&lt;ED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON 1

ever seen and this home will top il.
(trees, small pond, huge boulders) lor a very
some brick, 1'h story overlooking the river. 4
larae family room, 2 fireplaces, formal dining,
baths, inground pool. Owner has moved out of state,
must hll. Price reduce,d to $119,000.

#134

W'seman. Real Estate Agency
.

446•3644

I

PLASTIC ;IPE
PRODUCTS

Copxrtghted 1986

4" Sewer .............$3.70

· "Ftu Dtflmg"
PH. 304-295-7845
Mineral Wells, W. Va.

JUST OFF THE BYPASS!
Near town, seclusion and ap·
prox. 48 ~ acres of land with
free natural gas tor no cost
. heating! 4 bedrooms, full ba·
sement. O~tbuildings &amp; a big
garden area. $49.900.00.

PH.

OFFICE 446-7 699

I

-==SU==N==
· D==A==Y==P==U==Z==ZL==
I E=R=---:Jj

L_

ACROSS

21 Wear away

74 Birds' homes
76 Noise
77 Farewell:
Latin
78 Prohibits
79 Threefold
82 Slander

22 Bay window
23 Meat pie
24 Suitable
25 Decay
26 Exclude
28 Periods of time

85 Pinches
86 Cuts
88 Mature
89 Market: poetic
90 Point of view

1 Snake

Fl NISH IT YOURSELF
And save money. ThiS 6
rooms, 4 bedroom, colonial
home in the country with appro!. 9~ acres. Great place
to ·raise your children . Small
farm pond stocked with bass
and blue gill. Tobacco base.
Lots of timber. Phone now
for an appoint ment. Priced
at $29,900.

30 American ostrich

32 Babylonian deity ·
33 Malden loved
by Zeus
J 34 Alcoholic beverage
35 Greek le1ter

36 Hastens

37 Through
38 Cloth measure
,40 Pertaining to
the nose

117 ACRES ClEARED ROLLING LAND
Approx . 40 A. tillabl e, 60 A. pasture, tile block barn, approx.
40'x60' equipment shed and lots of Other buildmgs. 4 cherry
trees, 3,apple, grape arbor. Stream llows through property.
All mineral rights go. 6 room home. 3 BR. basement, storm
doors and w10dows. Built-i n kitchen cab~nets, cookstove and
elec. retrig .. luel Oil forced a1r luinace. Plenty of waler, 2 garages. A real good Iarm. Only l 1h m1le to grocery and school.
Call now.
lf6l7
BUILDING LOTS
2 1o\s 1n Bidwell area. Suitable for mobile home or build your
own nome. lfural water. Buy both for $2,800.
11608
VACATION CAMP BY BLUE LAKE
Owner financing, sundeck. rural water, septic system, electnc. Buy 11 with camping trailer or w1thout, ·concrete pad.
Great fishing' Buy and move right in.

S584

42 Prefix: three
43 ~ult

44 · Its lightly
45 Poem
47 Crowns

49 Ward off
50 Pig

51 Wooden boxes
54 Hints

55 Lairs
56 Lead
$!(Hurry
60 Owing
·62 Holds back
64 ·Disband
65 That man
66 Printer's measure
67 Dance step
69 Flo\Wlrless plants

70 Pari in play
71 Study
72 Drunkard

People in .t he news•••

84 Hindu queen

92 Unexcitable
persons

94 Dislocates
98 River in Africa
99 Winter vehicle

100 Belongs. to
that man

102 College officials
103 Soak, as flax
104 Diocese
105 Frog
106 Cleaning
substances
106 Hold a session
, 109 A state: abbr.
110 Prefix: out of
111 Cry or owl
112 Minute pores

114 Short sleep
•116 Brim
117 Come back
119 Body of water
120 Tear
122 Boundaries
124 One, no matter
which
125 Subtle emanation

126 Alloy ol tin
and copper

128 A Beatty
129 Linger
131 Actress Bancroft
132 Legal matters·
133 White poplar

135 The sun

138 Everyone
139 Kill
140 Contend
t4 1 The wallaba
142 SymbOl for iron
143 SymbOl for
tantalUm

t44 Twin
\ilil5 Climbing plant
147 Macaw
149 Sched. abbr.
t50 Babylonian hero
152 Follower of Artus
154 G,oes on fqot
156 Enticing woman
158 Part or fortification
159 Small fish
160 Smallest number

161 Stems .

DOWN
1 Eagle's nest
2 Speak foolishly
3 Speck
4 Revised: abbr.
5 Crimson
6 Lusty
7 Syriac language
8 Title of respect
9 Hebrew letter

10 Crafty
·11 Algerian
cavalryman

12 Edible rootstock
1~ Curve
t4 Near
15 Innumerable

16 Spanish for
"three"

171nlet
18 For example: abbr.
t9 Wool bearers
20 Heavenly bodies

27 Pitching stat.
29 Transgresses
3t Pronoun
36 Chickens
37 Boy attendant
39 Grant use of
-40Want
41 Praise

93 Old name of
Thailand
95 Principal
96 Forgive
97 Halts
' 99 Promptly
t01 Extras
105 Cons«Vatlve
42~1enced
'·
106 Portico
43 Writ..,
107 Cook stov.ly
44 Civil Injury
111 Search for
46 Delirium Ire.,. ,-,
112
F&gt;atnrul
abbr.
113 Pilaster
48 Sand bar
115 Evergr_. tree
49 Marshes
50 Lease
116 Covers
51 Peak ·ofwave
118 Shadow
52 Report
119 lnslglflcant
53 Stage extras:
121 Leaves a ship
colloq .
123 Myself
55 Repast
125 The pineapple
56 Small valley
126 Point of hanmer
57 Stint
127 Meal
58 Taut
129 Liquid
61 Direction
130 Winged
63 Dry
131 Mohammedan
64 North or South
name
68 Pompous
132 laughing
70 Ancien! Egyptian
134 Mai;ly gibbon
monarch
136 Frequently
71 Run easily
4
73 Stinging sensation 137 Inclines
74 Back of neck
139 Bridge
75 Remained standing 140 Small bottle
77 Stale
144 Nahoor sheep
78 Sharp projection
145 FalsehOOd
80 Heap
146 Shoemaker's toot
81 Slender finial
147 Southern St.
83 Wooden pin
148 Cinder
84 Male sheep: pl.
149
Blunder
87 Educational
151
Paid
notloe
Institution .
153 Room: abbr.
89 Intellectual
155 Diphthong
90 Genus of geese
157 Malden loved
91 Female relative
92 Narrow, flat board
- by Zeus

.
enttne
'

.

.

1 Section, 1.0 Page•
26 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. NeoNspaper

By United Press lnlematlonal
Scattered power outages caused
by thunderstorms around the state
overnight were aggravated for
customets of the Columbus &amp;
Southern Ohio Electric Co. because
of a sttike by the utility's linemen
and repair crews.
Southeastern Ohio was under a
fiash flood wat~h this morning, and
a special marine warning was In
effect along the Lake Erie shore
from Cleveland eastward.
Rain started Sunday, and weather .
forecasters said It would continue
throUgh today. More severe storms
also were expected.
Heavy thunderstorms caused
some property damage In central
Ohlo Sunday evening. A portion of
southbound Interstate 7llnsouthern
"Franklin County was cloSEd and
traffic was being rerouted because
of high water.
striking unlon members. The Galllpolls repair and
CROSSE'! LINE - A WOE repair truck passes
Six people attending a festival ln.
maintenance station serves approxhnalety 12,000
the mEW picket lineal the Sycamore Street overhead
the Wood County community ot
customers in Gallla, Jackson, Vinton and Meigs .
line statlotlln Galllpolls this morning. Utility officials
Bloomdale were Injured Sunday
Counties.
said supel"'lsory .personnel will assume tbe dulles of
when hlgh winds blew . doWl! the
30-foot-high tent ln whlch 200-200 Nearly 5'n Inches came down at
hood ofElectrical\Vorkers couldn't
Ohio. A fujsh-flood watch was In
effect this -morning for the soupeople were celebrating.
Belpre along the Ohio River
have come at a worse tlme.
theastern portion of the state.
· One person was treated at the
between midnight and 4:30a.m.
Company supervisory personnel
The National Weather Service
scene, and five other people were
Columbus got J&gt;n inches between were working this rnornlng to
said thunderstorms would continue
taken to Blanchard Valley Hospital 11 p.m. Sunday and 5 a.m. today. ' restore power for custdmers whose
to roll across Ohio today, leaving the
In Findlay and released.
Many streams and creeks in air conditioning was knocked out
southeastern part of the stale
Large hall and strong winds hit central and southeastern Ohio were
while daybreak temperatures Itotonight.
much of central Ohio Sunday
running at bankfull this morning.
vered tn the 70s and humidity
Sunny skies are expected Tuesafternoon and evening. Heavy rains
Considerable flooding was reported
ranged from 90 percent to 100
day.
Temperatures wm not be much
followed, and the downpour conin Washln~on County.
percent.
cooler, sald forecasters. but the air
tlnued overnight.
·- :For C&amp;SOE cu,stomers, Ihe mid·
As slrong thunderstorms conwlll .be much less humid.
Between 3 and 5 inches of rain fell
night strike by members of Local
tlttued to develop over Indiana and
.In central and southeastern Ohio.
1466 of the International Brotherillinois, more rain was forecast for

NEW LISTING - Over one
acre in the oountry &amp;alike new
3 bedroom ranch type house
w~ 2 garages Equipped
k~chen, all 1n good condition.
$42,900.00.

'

Ask Yours,lf This Question-Then List With Us

-

C&amp;SOE linemen, repairmen
strike; B~lpre area drenched

4'' Ell ...................$1.00
1" 16011 Wator ...... 191
1" Gas Pipe ............. II'

. REALTOR

WHY SEnLE FOR TELLING THE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHE~ YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?

.

Pomeroy.:.Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July i 5, 1985

Vol.35. No.83

Am

LOW DOWN PAYMENT :..._ OWNER FINANCING
Are you looking tor a 2 bedroom over.looKihg the Ohio Ri.er
with li ttle maintenance . Begin ner home or retirement home.
We have it.
#260

~n 2 bed rm., .2 bath: home m Eureka. I

,~:~~l~~~~:t:.:l:~:

at

REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992-6191
Dottie Turner 992-5692
Jean Trussel 949-2660
Jo Hill 985,4466

ONLY $9,900_
_
.,
l2'x 65' VINDAL EMARK II -5 rooms, bath with shower, nat:
gas FA furna ce. 20'&gt;60' wooden porch w1th awning, carpetlOg, w1ndow ilr I Ondihon~ng. Like new in si~e . Buy it and
move it or buy it and move in by rent10g Ihe lot it is presently
sitting·on. Phone today
#628

COLONIAL DUTCH HOME - 2 or 3 bedrooms. Located
across lrom new courthouse. Detach ed garage and parking in rear. Excellent locatmn lor retired or professional
office. Call tor appointm ent!!

$SAVE$'
the prelliel
homeDin
THE
AMERICAN

•

e

N.EW
sett~ng

NEW· LISTING .,... Middleport - Excellent location! 2
bedroom home, I ~ story
with modern kitchenette.
'Nice lot. $34,900.00

•Willis T. Leadingham. Realtor. Ph . Holl)B 446~ 9539

Housing
Headquarters

. ,992-2259
NEW LISTING - Nichols
Road - 3 bedroom ranch,
Needs some work but a real
bargaio at $17,800.00.

prox. 7 acres,
shed, and a nice I ~
home. Basement &amp; 2-3
rooms all in gooil repair.
Must be seen. $29,900,00.

Pages 4, 5
Pages&amp;, 7, 8
PageD
PagelO
Page2
Page3

(P.IJ

,0. '

NEW LISTING-. Racine2 story home w1th 3 bed·
rooms in town. Gas f.a. heat.
large rooms . In good condition . $16,500.00.

SOMEONE WANTS YOUR HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALL US!!

.:

By the Bend
Classltleds
Ccmlcs-TV
Dealhs
Edllorlal
Sports

e. M•ircW

1-(6141 -992 -3325

CLOSE TO RIO GRANDE ON 325
6.49 acres more or less. located jusi south of Rio Grande on
St. Hwy 325. Lots of large, tall pine trees. Beautiful building
sites in the woods. It you like trees, this is what you want.
#631

•

'

216 E. 2nd St.

LOVELY SE'TTING WITH SWIMMING POOL
5 room s, bath, 2 car garage, natural gas FA furnace, window
oir conditioners, satellite diSh, swimmin g poolll81t. diameter) . _garden space. fenced-i n backyard . Storage building.
PosSI51e lOan assumptio n. See thiS nice home.
#627

.•

Inside today:

R!N.TOII .

2 ACRES PLUS NICE COUNTRY HOME
Large 12 room rem odeled home. 6 bedrooms, 2 balhs with
modern kitchen. Home covered with carefree aluminum sid ing. Thermopane windows, 2 sundecks. fuel oil FA furnace
with a woodburner insert. 4 car garage and numerou s storage bld gs. 2.093 acres. Rolling level land. A real Country
Gentlema n home. Ph one now.
#578
.,

. PRICE REDUCED
Call for 1n fo.

Berry's World...

Business

TEAFORD

Located on State Highwar.
#160 , close to high schoo .
Nice front porc h, built-in
cabinets and dbl. s/s sink in
kitchen, qath w/shower.
Lots of shad e trees and fruit
trees. Garden space, .84
acre ot ·land. Blown-in i,_·
lat1on, •8 rooms, 4 bedrooms.
Mu st sel l. Phone now lor an
appointment. Priced at
$26.900.
#266

•
•

Real Estate General

(Papt)

6 Grates
11 Vapor
16 Lock of hair

.. •

14, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Plea•nt, W.Va.

r-------~~--~~----~------------~

Strike·touched
Veterans
Memorial
to
open
by violence,
company says c~re facility next Monday

NEAR TOP - Three workers of the Lori Construction Co.,
Greensburg, Pi, were working near Ilk&gt; top of the Sacred Heart Clmrch
In Pomeroy bt.Saturday afternoon's 90 degree ternpera!unl preparaiAlry
to reaching the,_cross, 157 fe!ll above ground level, on top of the steeple.
Palating of .Ill&lt;! cross was expecled to begin MoJUI'a!r-momlng but was
postponed due to rainy conditions. Overseeing the work on the steeple Is
David WeDrnan, fonnerly of Pomeroy and now a resident of Galllpolls.
Once painting on the cross Is stuied It Is expected to take one hour.

Fire causes $5,000 damage ·
Damages were estimated at

$5,001 as the result of a ftrewhlch hit
a large frame home at10.1 High St.,
ln Pomeroy Saturday evening.
Pomeroy Fire Cnief Charles
Legar said that the fire in the
unoccupied home started In a closet
and moved to the attic of the
building. Firemen had to tear out
ceilings tQ reach the blaze, Chief
Legar sald.

Firemen answered a call to the
house at 7: lo and returned to their
station at 9: 3D p.m.
Chief Legar said two workers
were doing some repair work in the
house at the limeofthefire.Causeof
the blaze, however, is,not known at
this time, Chief Legam-eports. Also
it is not known lf there Is insurance

coverage.

't

Continued on page 10· : :

COLUMBUS (UPI) - Within
'
By
CHARLENE
HOEF1..1CH
That
survey
is tentatively schethree hours after International
Senllnel
News
Staff
doled
for
July
31
and approval for
Brotherhood of Electrical Workers ·
The
skilled
nursing-Intermediate
payment
through
public
agencies is
Local 1466 struck the Columbus &amp;
of
25-beds
at
Veterans
expecled
to
follow
soon
after.
care
facility
Southern Ohio Electric Co., a
Memorial Hospital In the east-west
Costfor a semi-privateroomis$55
security guard at the utility's
wing
of
the
buGdtng
wltropen
next
a
day,
for a private room, $65. This
Conesville generating plant near
Scott
Lucas,
hospital
includes
not only room and board,
Monday,
Coshocton was beaten today by a
administrator.
announced
today
.
but
24-hour
nursing care. Patients
band of club-wielding assailants, a
At
the
present
time,
according
to
Will
he
charged
for additional
C&amp;SOE spokesman said.
Rhonda
Dailey,
R.
N.,
services,
such
as
physical
therapy
Lucas
and
The walkout began when the
director of the extended ca re and pharmacy services. They wlll,
union's contract with the company,
facility, only " private pay" patients however, be given the option of
which has 470,00J customers, exwill be accepted next week.
providing their own medical ion to
pired at midnight Sunday.
This
Includes
those
who
have
IJI&gt;administered by a member of the
Coshocton Hospital officials said
~rivate
insurance
to
cover
extended
nursing
staff.
three secu·rity guards were treated
those
who
wilt
be
paying
Dailey
explained thai both short
care
and
for minor Injuries and releaSEd after
from
private
funds
,
but
does
not
and
long
term patients will be
assailants stormed a guard house at
include
at
thistimeeitherMedicare
accepted.
She
further noted that
Conesville.
or
Medicaid.
·
several
of
the
patients to be
One guard escaped injury by
·
"
It
is
anticipated
that
both
admitted
nexr
week
1vltl come in as
remaining concealed in lhe guard
agencies,
Medicare
and
Medicaid,
"
private
pay"
and
then be transhouse, satd th·e company
approve
payment
for
careinlhe
·
!erred
toMedlcareorMedlcaidonc'e
Will
spokesman. ·
new facility in theveryneartuture." certification from those agencies
. Company officla,ls said that at
has been received.
Lucas
said.
approximately 2:25 a.m. tnday, a
As
explained
by
Daliey,
a
survey
The east -w£'St wing has now been
group of men wi1h ax handle-type
of
services
being
given
to
private
vacated
of acute care patients. The
clubs riding In at least one pickup
pay
patients
Is
required
before
rooms
are beLng cleaned and
truck attacked the guard house.
payment
through
Medicare
and
otherwise
prepared to receive
The guards sald that when the
can
be
approved.
patients
who
require skilled nursing
Medicaid
. (Continued on page.lO)

and Intermediate care, but do not
'have acute conditions requiring ·
hospital care.
All patients must be.admitted by a
doctor, not necessarily on the st aft of
Veterans, and must. have a regular
physician, or come under the care of
Dr. Wilma Mansfield, medical
director.
To apply for admission' or for
further Information, ~- or
their families may contact Dalley at
the hospital, anytime from 9 a.m. to
5p.m.
As •explained by Dalley, a
registered nurse will be on duty day
shill, seven days a week, while the
evening and night shltts will be
staffed by licensed practical nurses.
Being In the .same building where
acute hospital care is belngprovtded
is a decided ''plus", according to
Dailey, who noted that all of the
services of the hospital, including
the emergency room and its
doctors, the pharmacy, and the
physical then. ,.y depa,:tment, "lill
be available Ia the patient s.
Continued on page 10

Reagan awaits.word on .s iatus of.tumor
WASHINGTON iUPll - Prcsi·
dent Reagan, amazed at how g'ood
he feels and on his way 10 a
"spectacular" recovery, Is awaiting
word today on whether a 2-inch
tumor removed from his Intestine is
malignant.
· Described as uptleal and optimistic by Whlte Hail~ spokesman
Larry Speakes, Reagan told his top
aides Sunday, "I'm amazed at how
good I feel" - less than 12 hours
after the unexpected operation In
which the large growth and about2
feet of his intestine were removed.
Results of 'a biopsy on the
5-centlmeter polyp removed SaiUrday from the juncture of Reagan's
small and large Intestines were to he
releaSEd by hospital pathologists
later today. An Initial S~~mple Of the
tumor turned up no evidence of
cancer but doctors said il was
btconclusive.
"The presldCnt ls an upbeat
person ... pretty much of an
optimist: very weD-prepared," said
Speakes. "He can handle anything

thai comes down the pil&lt;e. And I
think he will have a good attitude
about whatever" the results are.
Allhough Reagan, 74, had a
slightly elevated temperalure ,

pressure. Later this wee~ he is
expected togo on a liquid dtet before
returning to solid food.
.course."
Speakes stressed that all of his
Speakes said the White House will vllal signs are "good" and ·his
viewed as "certaihly normal'! be back in business as usual thls temperature is under 100 degrees.
following surgery, Speakes said his
week. "Really, we just took the presenting "no problems."
dqclors were euphOric over his ·weekend off to have surgery," he
Reagan mel earlier Sunday with
rapid. "pain-free" recuperation.
said. '
White House chief of staff Donald
Speakes told reporters lat e Sun.Dr. Steven Rosenberg, chief of Regan and was 10 meel briefly with
d.ay, "Allin all, thepr&lt;'Sidenl has had surgpry at the Nalional Cancer him ·again today and with n!ltlonal
an execellen 1day."
lnstiiUte wbo also served on the security affairs adviser Robert
He said Reagan took a few steps operating team, said polyps of the MacFarlane.
around his room in the presidential size and type removed from
Speakes said Reagan is strongly
sui1e at Bethesda Naval Hospital Reagan's Intestine are malignant
urging Senate and House budget
and sat in a chair for 45 minutes more than 50 percent of the time.
conferees to reach a compromise
reading Louis L'Amour's new
But even if the polyp is found to be this week and told reporters the
westrrn novel, " Jubat Sackett."
· cancerous, he said, tbe three-hour president does not ex;xect a "symSpeakeS said Reagan's doctors
operation Reagan underwent Satur- pathy'' vote because the budget
have beCOme "more impressed by
day would be"curatlveln Itself" and
"can stand on Us own merlls."
the hour" with hls remarkable
no further surgery will be required.
Nancy Reagan spent most of the
recuper·a tlve powers.
The president will have to have day a II he hospital wll h her husband,
Dr. Dale Oller, head of the more frEquent checkups, however. , bringin,; hlm nostalgic photographs
operating team, said tbe president
Reagan, who receiv~ gPt-well
of their Callfomla ranch and their
"is on a post-operative course,that
wishes from govenunent leaders
children. The White House later
surpasses by 99 percent all patients worldwide, Is beLng fed Intravenreleased a photograph of Reagan in
that undergo this type of surgery." ' ously , with a tube running from his
hls hospitai bed straining to kiss ber.
"That includes all patients, much nose to his stomach to reileve gas

•

less one who Is 74 years old ,"
Speakes quoted Olier as saying. "So
far it Is a spectacular post-operative

G~TS PRESIDENT WITH A KISS -

lreet8

Mrs. Ronald Jteagan
dent Reogan In his hospital bed a1 Bethesda Naval Hospital

Sunday. ( UPI).

.,

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