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Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

By United Press International
Bone-chilling cold air and
thunderstorms rumbled across
the south-central United States
today following a day of record
heat, while snow and rain hit
much ol the frigid Midwest, tile
National Weather Service said.
A cold front pushed into Oklahoma behind a curtain of thunderstorms late Thursday, dumping less than an tnch ofralnalong
the way across the state and In

Pair await sentencing
. Two Pomeroy men who.in AprU broke into the Pomeroy Post
Office, are now awaiting sentencing after pleading guilty In U.S.
District Court to the offense.
.
According to Assistant U.S. Attorney Dale Williams, Gregory
Uicks pleaded guilty Monday when he appeared in Columbus
before U.S. Magistrate John Holschuh. Vincent Knight Jr. had
pleaded guilty earlier to U.S. Magistrate John Kinneary .Both men now await sentencing by the respective
magistrates. However, the sentenclngs may he delayed, said
Williams, since sentencing guidelines are now under review by
t he U.S. Supreme' Court and magistrates are wait in!: for any
changes in guidelines which may be forthcoming from that

State...

review.

EMS has five calls Thursday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Thursday; Rutland at 1:34 a.m. transported Harvey Erlewine
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 4:38a.m . to Dusky
St. for Troy Zwilling to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tup~rs
Plains at 8:41 a .m. , to Success Road for Qyde Adams to
Veterans MemorlalHospltal; Tuppers Plains at 4:15p.m. to
Success Road for Raymond Holsinger to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Chester Fire Department at 10:09 p.m. to a chimney
fire at the George Gumm residence on Hemlock Grove Road.

Texas with more rain predicted
for today.
The same cold front produced
storms Thursday from Arkansas
to the Great Lakes states where
winds topped out at 45 ,nph at
Fond DuLac, Wis. Winds gusted
to 47 mp!l at Lansing, Mich. , and
signs were blown down across
the c&amp;O Railroad tra,cks In
downtown Lansing, forecaster
Harry Gordon said.
Cool air trekked Into Kansas

Continued from page 1

"The drania of theli demonstration today underscores the
seriousness of the problem,
which has evolved over the years
as Ohio bas attempted to move
people ftom Institutions to small
community homes," said Brown.
· ''I have conveyed to the governor and General Assembly my
assessment of this critical need
throughout my term- not just In
my role as dlrei:tor. but as a
parent, a citizen and a former
legislator.;,
Brown said his agency's program funds homes for almost
3, 700 Ohioans and Is running a $6
million deficit beyond Its $63.4

mUllan budget for the fiscal year.
He said Medicaid will pay for a
retarded person to live In an
Institution but not In a group
home.
:..-•

early today , and a freeze warnlng was posted for northwestern
Oklahoma. Texas temperatures
rose to the lower 90s In some
sections Thursday , breaking or
tying records.
San Angelo and Midland,
Texas, broke records with 90·
degree readings, while Rosewell,
N.M., broke an 1898 record of 86
degrees with an 87 -degree read·
lng Thursday.
Today, however, will rnark a
dramatic contrast at the TexasOklahoma border.
"This will be the coldest
morning of the season for the
northern portion of the Texas
panhandle, Including AmarUio, "
Gordon said, predicting temper-

atures would reach near freezing
along the border with strong
wtnds bringing a chill of 15 to 20
degrees above zero.
Late Thursday, strong winds
blew down trees near Denison
- and Paris, Texas, • while hail
pelted parts ol Texas and
Oklahoma.
Snow- possibly a.c cumulatlng
to 10 Inches at higher elevations
- was expected to fall across the
upper Great Lakes states with
lesser amounts expected In
northern Wisconsin.
On Thursday, winds gusted to
65 mph In the north central Plains
and left tbe mercury at the
below-zero mark in some areas.

Brown said his agency sought
an amendment allowing Medicaid funding for services In a Jess
restrictive setting. "Although a
federal appeals court ruled In our
· favor in 1986, Ohio has still not
seen one dollar of funding for
these services," said Brown.
"More people need small·community homes, butwedon'thave
the money to develop them," he
said.

I

Rhinehart counterattacks
on recent babysitter reports

Statement ....

Stocks

FALL SPECIALS
BRAKES

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"FREE DELIVERY"
TO THESE AREAS
MIDDLEPORT, POMEROY, BRADBURY, MINERSVILLE,
RUTLAND, SYRACQSE, MASON, W. VA.

.

OIDEU MIST II PHONED II IIFOIE 3 P.M.
ss.oo MINIMUM PUICHASE 0111 PIESCIIniOIS PLUS
HEALTII ANI IUUTY AIDS.
\

IPCil I Y

S3995 FRONT S3775
OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER

ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS

S1500

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S3895
6 CY. S34 95 4 CYL S2 7'
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED

LICENSED SHOP

NIASE CEIUII'IE[II

l

Beat of the Bend: Politicians in Meigs
Page 8

Bl

In Oun;II'own: Shadle Bridge stories

Page B4

. I nl"lidi·

.

Along the River ......... BI·S

Business ................... .. .. D1
ComicA- ................... Insert
Classlflecls ................. DZ-7
Editorial ..... :................ A2
Deaths ......................... A3
Sports ........ ,.............. Cl-8

Sunny and cool. Wgh
50.

4~

to

•

•

tmes -

me
10 Sar;tions, 76 Pegee

Middleport Pomeroy Gallipolis-Point Pleasant, October 30, 1988

A Multlmedlaliic. Nowopop•

Bush tours Dlinois; Dukakis says he's gaining
•

h ::)sNOW

-RAIN . (?2J SHOWERS
fAOfiTS: "
Wmm "Cold
. . Sialic . . Occluded
Map shows minimum tomperaiUres. At least 50% of any sfladed area Is forecast
to receive precipitation indicatl!d

UP!

WEATHER MAP - During early Saturday morning, showers
and fhuaderslorms are forecast for parts of the southern Plains.
Snow showers are possible In the Great Lakes. Rain and showers
are possible In parts of the south Atlantic Coast. Rain Is possible In
parts of the central Plains and the mid-Mississippi Valley. (UPI)

By United Press International
George Bush, leading a nine-bus convoy
through suburban Chicago Saturday, declared his
"liberal" Democratic rival woukl divide the
nation while Michael Dukakis Insisted he Is
making gains in his bid for the White House.
Dllnois Is one of the fiercest battlegrounds for
. the candidates, with 24 electoral votes at stake.
The state Is viewad as a swipg state, with Its
largest city, Chicago, primarily Democratic, but
Its governor, James Thompson, a Republican .
Thompson joined Bush for the tour.
Bush appeared upbeat during the bus trip,
apparently basking In the glow of polls showing Is
maintaining his lead over Dukakis.
Dukakls campaigned In South Dakota, Insisting
he Is gaining on Busb, while Democratic vice

presidential nominee Lloyd Bentsen released the
text of a five-minute message to air Sunday at
10:55 p.m. EST on ABC-TV.
A Chicago Sun-Times-WLS-TV poll of 1,242
Illinois likely voters published Saturday showed
Bush edging Dukakis 49 percent to 41 percent with
10 percent undecided. A Chicago Tribune poll of
2,344 voters In Dltnois, Texas, California, Florida
and New York showed Bush leading Dukakls 49
percent to 40 percent with 11 percent undecided.
A poll of New Jersey voters also showed Bush
leading In that state by l4 points. The poll,
conducted tor the Newark Star-Ledger, had Bush
leading Dukakis 52 percent· to 38 percent.
· Bush, appearing at a rally In Crystal Lake, lll.,
with country-western singers Moe Bandy and
Crystal Gayle, joined In a medly of Americana
songs such as "This Land is Your Land."

South-Central Ohio
Tonight, clear and cold. Low 25 ,
to 30. Nearly calm wtnd. Saturday, partly cloudy. High 50 to 55.
Extended Forecllllt
Sunday through Tuesday
Showers and flurries likely

pOtential. ••

over the northeast corner Sunday·
and fair In the south and central
areas. Chance of showers Monday and Tuesday with flurries
possible In the north. Highs 40 to
50. Lows 25 to 35.

Continued from page 1

peau Is in a bit over his head. He' s
a real estate person taking over a
retail company."
The offering would provide
long-term financing for the Federated takeover, paying orr a $1.1
billion bridge loan from First
Boston, PalneWebber' Inc. and
· Dillon, Read &amp; Co. that was used
to complete the acquisition last

Hospital news ·
Veterans Memorial
Thursday Admissions - Harvey Erlewine, Rutland; Tina
Jacobs, Pomeroy; Woodrow
Zwilling. Syracuse; Clara Gilmore, Pomeroy; Delcie Forth,
Middleport.
Thursday Discharges - Shelia
Hlndy, Hugh Thompson.

Hyrim sing cancelled
A hymn sing scheduled for
Saturday evening at the Morse
Chapel Church has been
cancelled.

May.
Investors, however, were not
enthralled· with tile yields In·
itially proposed on the high-yield,
high-risk bonds. Allied bonds, for
example, had a higher yield and
First Boston was forced earlier
to raise the yield on thP Federated issue.

MIZWAY
TAVERN·
CROSSOVER

BAND
FRI., OCT. 28TH ,
SAT., OCT. 29TH
SJ.OO COYER CHARGE
MUST BE 21 AND OYEI

ENLARGING POOL AREA - Come summertime, wbell awlmmera return to London Pool In
SJracuMI, they'll notice Immediately that there 18
mueb more concrete ourrouadlng the pool than In
years put. Contractor Eldon Walburn began this

week on tile t8,400 job to e•ilend the concrete
surroundhlg tbe pooL The project Is being funded
by Commualty Development Block Grant funds
through tbe Meip County ~mmlssloners.
(Times-Sentinel pholo)

Park sprinklers to be .instal~ed
(See photo, pare A3)
GALLIPOLIS- The Galllpolls
Area Chamber of Commerce
announced that a complete wa·
terlng system will be Installed in
the Gallipolis City Park this fall.
The watering system project was
proposed and plans were coordinated by the chamber's Beautlfl·
cation Committee, co-chaired by
Michelle Jenkins and Pamela
Matura.
"The need for a watering
system became apparent during
the recent summer drought,"
said Matura. "The beautification
committee has worked with
many of the area youth groups,
service clubs, civic organlzaltons and local businesses and

industry for the past two years,
maintaining the city park as a
focal point for various community evenls, activities and as a
tourist attraction. The water
system will assistln our efforts."
The Gallipolis City Parks Commission supported the project by
purchasing the design plans and
pledging an additional $4,000
toward the completionof the
project. The city is donating the
labor, with the total cost of the
project being $10,800.
Star Bank, N.A. Tri-State has
made a $1,000 contribution to the
project and has agreed to provide
temporary funding until further
donations are received. The
watering system will be Installed

as soon as the' materials arrive.
"This project further serves to
illustrate the community's desire to continue our park beautification as we prepare for our
Bicentennial celebration In
1990," Matura said. "We want to
make the park the most beautiful
and the best It can be."
Anyone Interested In making a
contribution to this project can
do so by contacting any beautification committee member or by
mailing a check payable to the
Park Expendable Trust Fund,
c/ o Beautification Committee ol
the Gallipolis Area Chamber of
Commerce, P.O. Box 465,
Galllpolls.

DST began as energy-saver·
1981 Mercury Grand Marquis •••• S1695

4 Door.

1979 Olds Cutlass Wagon ••.•••• SCJ95

Runs good.

1978 Chevy C-20
.................. S1095
.

4 Wheel Drive.

1978 Ford F-100 .•••••••.•••••••••••• S895

Short bed, auto.

1976 Ford F-250 ..................... S695
1974 Ford F-1SO ......~.............. SS95

Flat bed.

1980 Chevy LUV •••••••••••••••••••••• S495

Topper.

SHOP
IIDDLIPO_,, 01110
I
~ ~~-

".....,... ,_,

''I' • • '-.!

;•...-... .. '

When Bush got down to the business of
campaigning, he accused the " liberal" Dukakis
of dividing the nation along class lines .
" ! am not going to let that liberal governor
divide this nation. I am going to keep us together,"
he said.
Bush was asked later on the bus to explain his.
statement.
"It's very clear that that 's what they're trying
to do, saying he's for the working man and all of
this," Bush said .
"Values are the thing. The working man Is
gollig to decide on, and a working woman, that
I've got those values on our side. That's exactly
what I mean . He's trying to go talking about my
elitism, resurrecting all this in the end. The
American people are not going to be fooled by It,"
he said.

At another stop In Gilberts, Til., where he
addressed GOP precinct leaders in Kane Co.,
Bush told the crowd of about 500: "I am not going
to let up. I'm going down to the wire every inch of
theway."
.
Hammering away at Dukakls as a liberal, Bush
asked: "Do we move forward' or do we go back to
those dark days of the misery Index and malaise?
I say we move forward."
Referring to a Chicago Bears football game , he
said. " They've ~t to whip a team from
Massachusetts and so do I ."
In his television message, Bentsen, refusing to
mince words, declared the national campaign has
been •'absolutely miserable. I think you deserve a
lot better than -night after night -distortions
and lies on the evening news. But, for the most
part, that's all you've been getting."

Standardized school testing
may be hannful to children

------Weather------

Pl-.c:YI

992·6669

Ariel

•

STOll£ HOUIS: . . ... f ri. 9 A.M.- 6 I'.M.; Satur., 9 A.M.· I I'.M.

271 IOITI SICOU

Cl

Cleveland to host Bengals

Renovating

Copy~1888

Flat bed.

TUNE-UPS

50 cents

VoL 23 No. 38

Personal income up

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Per- clothing, In September, but even
sonal Income increased 0.5 per- in this area they spent consideramore campaign appearance outhome of comedian l3ob Hope, cent in September, even after bly less than in August, when
s Ide Washington before Election
telephoned Reagan to chat about taxes, but people curbed their spending for quickly consumed
Day.
the campaign and to compare spending, which was unchanged goods shot up $6.6 billion.
Bush, also in Los Angeles
notes.
from August, the Commerce
When It came to purchases ol
'I;hursday as guest of honor at the
Department said Thursday.
e)!:penslve, long-lasting items,
Personal Income Increased 0.5 such as cars and appliances,
percent In September to a season- people simply stayed home.
ally adjusted annual $4.1 trUUon, Spending for big-ticket durable
after a revised 0.3 percent goods dropped $3.1 billion In
increase In August, the depart- September, compared with an
ford, Jr., Wllllam H., and Paul, a ment's Bureau of Economic Increase of $400 million in
Michael Fields ·
sister, Marie Brinkman, 12 Analysis said.
August.
Michael Andrew Fields, 43, 35
Even after the tax man's bite
grandchildren and 23 greatPeople banked their extra
Oak Acres, Washington, W.Va.,
was taken out, disposable per- money rather than spending it In
grandchildren. ·
died Wednesday at his residence.
Services were held at 7 p.m. sonal Income was up 0.5 percent, September. Personal savings
He was born In Mason County,
Thursday at the St. Matthew's the bureau said.
was up 0.2 percentage points in
W.Va., a son of Andrew and
. People held onto their money in September to 4.2 percent, the
Episcopal Church In Toledo.
Nondls Gibbs Fields, New Haven
Graveside rites were held at 1 September, as personal spending bureau said.
residents. He was a member of
p.m. today at the Letart Falls was unchanged from August at
Wages and salarJes Increased
the Hartford United Methodist
$3.4 trillion, after a 0.6 percent
Cemetery In Meigs County.
$14.1 billion ln September, comChurch and was employed with
jump In August. That was the
the Borg-Warner Corp. for the
most sluggish rate of personal pared with an Increase of $5.1
Clyde Adams
billion In August, the bureau
past 19 years. He was an avid
spending since October 1987, said.
sportsman.
Clyde Ashley Adams ~ 65, of when spending fell 0.2 percent,
Tax payents Increased $3.6
Surviving In addition to his
the bureau said.
Long Bottom, died Thursday at
billion
In September, compared
parents are his wife, Peggy
Vetetans Memorial Hospital.
People spent $400 million more with an Increase qf $2 billion In
Owens Fields; a brother, TIBorn Oct. 18, 1923 In Fairfield on necessities, such as food and August.
mothy Wayne Fields, New
County, he was a son of the late
Haven; a sister, Carol Gardner,
Ashley and Viola Miller Adams.
New Haven, and several nieces
He was a U.S. Army veteran of
and nephews. .
Work! War II, a member of the
Services will be held at 2: 30
Long Bottom Community Associp.m. Saturday at the Leavitt
ation and had been an employee
Funeral Home In Parkersburg
of the Lancaster Glass Company.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Tuesday, Rinehart fired Marwith Mr. Tim Hatfield officiatSurvivors Include one son, After enduring weeks ol reports .. gan from his position as deputy
ing. Burial will be in Sunset
Richard Adams, of Lancaster;
about a 10-year-old allegation by development director over the
Memory. Gardens at Parkerstwo daughters, Connie Adams, of a babysitter, Mayor Dana Rlnelatter's refusal to answer ques·
burg. Friends may call at the Stewart, and Carolyn Giffin, of
funeral home anytime after 3 Guysville; six stepchildren; five hart held a two-hour news tlons from pollee officers investlconference Thursday in an at- gating the secret probe.
p.m. Friday
grandchildren; one sister, Betty tempt to defuse the controversy.
The Incident was reported
Ruckman , of Baltimore, Ohio; a
Apparently sparked by rumors when Pardue first made the
Ethel Amott
special friend , Delores Hawk, a new report would surface soon allegations In the summer of
Mrs . Ethel W. Arnott,82,Lewis
and her son, Robbie, both of Long In the Cleveland Plain Deafer, 1978, and was given new life
Ave., Toledo, formerly of Meigs
Bottom.
Rinehart called the news confer- ·recently when several Columbus
County, died Tuesday at Flower
In addition to his parents, he ence and opeiledlt by announcing media outlets, spurred by an
Memorial Hospital at SylvanIa.
was pre.ceded In death by one he would "stay here until mid- Ohio Supreme Court ruling, tiled
Mrs. Arnott was the widow of
sister.
night," If necessary, to answer request to have all files made
the late Clifford 0. Arnott, Sr•.
Services will be 1 p.m. Sunday "every single one" of the ques- public. The Plain Dealer, report·
who preceded her in death In
at White Funeral Home, Cool- !Ions from reporters.
lng on the requests flied by the
1972.
. .
ville, with Pastor Duane Syden"I guarantee you, I will be the other agencies, also reported the
She was born May 22, 1908 In
stricker officiating. Burial will last one to leave this room," he girl's allegations from a copy of a
Marietta, a daughter of the late
be ill Stewart Cemetery. Friends said.
' pollee report.
William and Rose Farley Willimay call at the funeral home
The case dates back to 1978,
Subsequently, newspapers
son. She was a practical nurse
after 2 p.m. Saturday.
when Vicki Rae Pardue, then 13, have uncovered the Morgan
before her retirement.
accused him of sexually assault- angle and other developments.
Surviving are three sons, Cllflng her while she was babysitting
"Ninety-nine percent of the
his children. A grand jury time, the local press is fair and I
investigated and declined to think they try to be fair,"
(Continued from page 1)
hand up any indictments.
Rinehart said. "But this whole
·missioners certainly have faith
In 1983, when he was running thing ... is unfair to me, unfair to
Daily stock prices
- In our State of OliTo and faith IIi - for mayor,- police detective John - my family, unfair to John Mar(As of f0:30 a.m. )
their director to submit budgets Morgan undimook a secret lnves- gan and unfair to Vicki Pardue.' '
Bryce and Mark Sm lth
that adequately secure the funds ligation of the Pardue family on
Rinehart called Pardue a
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewi
requested and needed for the Rinehart's behalf, but without"troubled girl" for whom he has
services of these other county both Morgan and Rinehart have sympathy, but noted she had
D.H.S offices.
Am Electric Power .. ............ 28
said- the mayor's knowledge.
been picked up for shoplifting
AT&amp;T ................... ..... .... .... 27%
"Why can't Meigs County be
several weeks after the babysitAshland Oil .. .............. .. ...... 35% successful•"
ting Incident and lied to officers
Homecoming slated
Bob Evans .. ... ...... ..... ........... 16
about her name and home
Charming Shoppes .............. 15% Slug shoot Sunday
address.
Dan Hayman and the Faith
City Holding Co .......... .. ... .... 34
Federal Mogul .... .. .............. 53%
A slug shoot will be staged at 1 Trio will he singing at the Da~'!es Trick or treat ·slated
Goodyear T&amp;R ....... .... ...... .. 51 '4 p.m . Sunday at the KenAmsbary . Grove Baptist Church, Happy
Hollow Road, near Point PleaHeck's ................ : .... .... .. .. .... '4
Izaak Walton League farm.
Trick or treat night In Lebanon
sant off Route 2 when homecom- Township will be observed from 6
Key Centurion ............. ...... .16~ Shoots will consist of free hand
Ing Is observed at 1 p.m. Sunday. to 7 p.m. Monday evening.
Lands' End ........ .. .... .......... 25\&lt;; and bench rest events at various
Limited Inc .. ... .... ...... ......... 25% distances. Rifles and scopes will
Multimedia lnc ................... 70~ not be shot In the same category.
Rax Res taurants .. .. .......... .... 3% Various prizes Including money
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12'4 and meat will be awarded. The
Shoney's Inc ............. .. ......... 7'4 shoots will he held for the next
Wendy's Intl. ......... .............. 6l(, five Sundays at the same hour
Worthington lnd ................. 21y. and the same location.

Sun d ay

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 8 AM EDT 10..29-88

Jle~(J1l... __c_o_nt_ln_u_ed__fr_o__
mp_a_g_e_1______________

Area deaths

....

Friday. October 28, 1988

..---Local news briefs-----. Cold air follows rain into Midwest today
Continued from page 1
been Investigated and will continue to be Investigated.
At this point, there are not any reasons to believe that children
are In any danger, the sheriff said.
.
According to the sheriff, several reports or a blue van have
been repor~ but no license number has been obtained.
Sheriff Frank urges all parents to warn their children to stay
away from .s trangers.
"False rumors can create a needless panic," he concluded.

"

WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sunday was time to set the clocks
back one hour as most of the
nation returned to standard time ..
Remember: spring forward, fail
back.
Under a law passed In 1986,
da}•llgl~t SIIVilltg time Is observed

from the first Sunday In April to
the last Sunday In October. Next
spring, daylight saving time will
begin April 2.
Hawaii, Arizona, the Eastern
Time Zone part of Indiana,
Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands
and American Samoa are ex-

eluded rrom having to make the
time switch.
Historically, the Idea of juggling the hour hand about to
adjust personal schedules to the
longer and shorter days can be
traced to Benjamin Franklin. He
wrote a paper while serving as
the U.S. envoy to France, recom·
mending that shops be opened
and ·closed earlier during
summer months to cut the costs
ol providing lighting.
The United States took up the
concept late in World War I when
President Wiison, on March 31,
1918, signed legislation designed
to make daytime longer and thus
save energy . However, It was
repealed the following year.
The practice was revived In
World War II, and In 1966 the
Uniform Time Act provided for
the first nationwide observance
of daylight saving time during
peacetime.
During the energy crisis of1973
and 1974, the nation went to
daylight saving ilme year-round
to conserve energy, but standard
time was reinstated .late In 1974
tor the four-month winter period
with the fewest hours of daylight.
The Transportation Depart- .
ment Is responsible for administering the time change. This
dates to the days when time zones
were of great lmpor'1nce because of the need for publishing
_stanclardlzed railroad schedules.

NEW YORK ·(UPI) -Standardized testing can hurt certain
schoolchildren ages 4 to 8, and
educators should use It sparingly
and offer smaller classes to give
pupils a better chance of becomIng "winners instead of losers,"
an education official says.
Dick Owens, president of the
National Association of State
Boal'dl ol Education, also advocates more parental involvement
for students In the 4 to 8 age
bracket.
He said these suggestions were
Included In the report "Right
from the Start, "Issued Friday by
the NASBE during Its national
conference In Chicago.
The report by the group's Task
Force on Early Childhood Education contains Ideas ·rrom child
development experts, teachers
and parents who spoke during
hearings In Atlanta, Boston,
Chicago and San Francisco earlJI
this year.
Owens, head of the task force,
Is a member of the State of
Georgia Board of Education.
"We heard some disturbing
testimony about the ~armful
effects or Increased testing on
young children, about class sizes
of 33 children In klndergar ten
and other things," he said. "We
need to give kids starting out a
chance to be winners instead of

losers.
3.
•'We need much less use of
He also said, "It is clear we
standardized tests. We think need less structured, more develmany of the younger chlldren are opmentally appropriate early
not developmentally ready for childhood education.
pencil and paper tests - putting
"I have children of my own and
a pencil to paper and filling in I have suffered through some of
bubbles or whatever i s this In my own family because
required."
they didn't have good begin·
· The report said:
nlngs. A lot of children have little
"Learning oecurs best when
learning disabilities that are not
there Is a focus on the whole chlld picked up in the early years and
.. . learning for children and they fall and they go. on as l9sers.
adults is Interactive rather than
"They see themselves as failundlrectlonal, that young childures. We are saying, let's turn It
ren learn from concrete work around and have some posltlye
arid play - much of which Is experience, some successes.
child-initialed and that young Smaller classes and developmenchildren are profoundly Influ- tally appropriate work. Let's let
enced by their families and the them win.
surrounding community.
"The price of not moving in this
"Schools often assess achievenew direction, we think, is that
ment using tests that do not · some youngsters In the beginning
reflect current theory and pracschool years will continue to have
tice or how children learn.
negative experiences. As a result
"Becau·s e young children are of negative school experience
not experienced test takers,
maybe there will be more dropaper and pencil tests adminispouts, more involvement in discitered to large groups under
pline and drug problems.
stressful conditions rarely yield
Owens said Georgia has manvalid and meaningful results. "
dated a "pass kindergarten"
The report calls for a different
test.
kind of schooling for toddlers and
"In Georgia we are flUnking
youngerr grade schoolers. Owkids in kindergarten. To move
ens said It would take a child's from kindergarten to first grade
development Into account, start- they now have to make a certain
Ing with pre-kindergarten· and score on a paper and pencil test. I
don't like it .
running through grades 1, 2, and

Teacher won't be ·'tied' down ·
POINT PLEASANT, W. Va ..
(UPI) A Mason County
teacher suspended for the third
time over his refusal to be tied
down to a dress code has some
definite plans for his month off
the job.
.
•'I •ve got to get the corn in, I'll
go bowhunt and I have some
things around the house that need
to be done, " 's aid Bill Webb, who
lives In a farm outside Gallipolis,
Ohio.
Webb, a 20-year veteran
higher-level math teacher at
Point Pleasant High School,
received word ot the latest
suspension of up to 30 days on

Friday.
Webb received the suspension
from Mason County Schools
Superintendent Charles
Chambers for. his continuing
refusal to wear dress pants and a
tie.
On Tuesday Webb, on his first
day back from an 11-day suspension, showed up for school in the
outfit that has gotten him Into
trouble - cowboy bools, jeans
and no tie.
The dress code Imposed by
Chambers before the beginning
at the school year requires male
teachers to wear ties and bars
any teachers from wear-Ing blue

MARINA PBOGBESSING - The 183,000
marina project at Syneuae Is DO'I' aP.proxlmately
80 pereeat complete. Boae'• Excavallal, Racine,
Is the contractor on the Job. Sevealy.flve percent
ol the oo&amp;ta for this ftnt phaae ol the Syraeue

jeans.
Webb has said the outfit makes
lor a more comfortable class:
room atmosphere, but Chambers
contends that dressing up makes
for more professionalism and
respect from the students.
The rebel without a tie said he
will not comply with the dress
code and has said the board will
have to fire him If it comes to
that.
The dress code, which was
formally. upheld by the Mason
County board last week, is being
challenged In a grievance filed
by the West Virginia Education
Association.
'

marina Ill belnr funded by grant&amp; from the Ohio
Department of Nalual Betiources. '111e remala·
lnr 21 percent will be provided by Syracuse
Vlllqe. Work on the proJect began In early
Seplembtr. (Times-Seatlnei.Photo)

••

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•

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Commentary and perspective

October 30. 1988
Page-A-2
October 30,
. 1988
-

.DOT pursues charges against pilots
A Division of

825 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(&amp;14) 446-~2

Ill Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(8U) 992-2156

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

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher·Controner

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Assocla·
tion and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

.,

LETTERS OF 'OPINION are wei rome. They should be JesS than 300 words
• long. Alllertersaresubject to editing and must be sign¢ with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be In
aooo taste, addressing issues, not persooalltles.

WASHINGTON - Dangerous
lies' are finally coming home to
roost with some of the nation's
pilots.
The Department of Transpor·
tatiori· Is pursurlng charges
against pilots who lie about their
past alcohol· and drug-related
offenses. Twenty-seven pilots
· were lndlctw in Florida last
month on charges that they made
false statements about their
records when they applied !or
mwlcal certlllcates to certify
they were 'fit to fly.
We reported last year on the
disturbing outcome of an Invest!·
gallon by the Inspector General's
otflce of the Transportation
Deparlrnent. The department
checked the pollee records of the
more than 711,000 licensed pilots

Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

In the country. Investigators
found that 10,300 of t~em had lost
their driving prlv!'-ges In the found . out. The FAA had no
past seven years 'tor driving uniform policy !or revoking a
while lntoxlcatw. The Inspector pilot's license because he. or she
General planned to do a similar had a drunken driving convic·
check for drug -related lion. The strongest thing the FAA
convictions.
could use to nail a pilot was to
Pilots are supposed to report charge him or her with lying on
those convictions when they are the federal medical forms.
given periodic medical exams
To its credit, the FAA did just
that they must have to keep their that with the 27 pilots charged
pilots' licenses. Not surprisingly, last month. Transportation Se·
76 percent o!the pUots with drunk cretary James H. Burnley IV
driving records failed to mention promised there would be more
it. That's 7,850 pilots who lied to indictments to come. Burnley is
the Fed•ral Aviation eager to show that his depart·
Administration.
ment is n&lt;it soft on drugs or
Until the recent crackdown, alcohol. Some of the pilots
the pilots could file false ln!orma· . indicted in Florida were report·
lion with a strong degree of edly involved In drug-related
confidence that they would not be crimes.

a...Backstairs at
§
the
White
House
,.
..,
,.,.:•

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
•: WASHINGTON- Wasl)lngton's Belgium-born hair stylist, Yves
~Graux, may win out for the title of the first lady's hairdresser, no
:matter who wins the election.
·:. Graux has been styling Barbara Bush's hair for years. Kitty
&lt;-Dukakls's press secretary, Paul Costello, becam~ familiar with
· ~.Graux's work when he served as an assistant In Rosalynn Carter's
!l&gt;ress office. Costello called on Graux to style Mrs. Dukakls's hair
i-when the wife of the Democratic presidential candidate was in
ashlngton r~cently.
·
.
,. Both Mrs. Bush and Mrs. Dukakis are "very nice" women, says the
~lion-political Graux, who has a salon in the.elegantPark Hyatt Hotel.
:: Graux and his wife, Nancy, have suggested to Mrs. Bush that she
t!night want to tint her silvery hair, but she has resisted. "What you
;.see is what you get," she says.
,

i)V

I'

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.~

President Reagan has not held a news conference since last June,
;and there is none in sight. He has had only three news conferences this
;}'ear, two of them In foreign countries: Moscow and Toronto.
f• The president is still tossing off answers on the run. A shout here
;itnd a shout there and then he is gone.
C All the while his wary aides stand by smiling. The presldj!nt still
~uses as he heads for the helicopter straining to hear the questions
~houted at him, turning to his aides, asking If they heard. Then he
1throws up his hands and moves on. Reporters can only wonder if the
~echnlque wlll be passed on to his successor.
;= If the successor Is George Bush, reporters are wondering about the
tTegularlty of news conferences. Bush may steal a page out of
;R.!agan' s book and hold them ·only on rare occasions.
;: Bul Bush's campaign manager, Jim Baker, is giving the cold
•Jhoulder to suggestions of periOdic news conferences. Baker, who
;.,sed to become apoplectic as chief of staff along with form~orney
'Peneral Edwin Meese and former deputy chief of staftilllilchael
:peaver when Reagan was questioned during his first term,
:apparently does not believe that a president has to be subjected to
·regular cross examination.
;. But the tradition Is there and it cannot be Ignored. The news
:eonference is the only forum In American society where a president
•bn be questioned. Evading that responsibility Is to evade
. accountability.
Presidents can give all the speeches they want. They will be
ce,vered. But a speech cannot replace a president being compelled to
~plain his policies and actions.

..

;:Two White House aides expected to move' to California with
fl.resldent and Mrs. Reagan on Jan. 20 are appolnlrnents secretary
~ed Ryan and assistant press secretary Mark Weinberg.
:.~eagan will undoubtedly accumulate a larger staff when he sets up
Ills plush office in a modern building In Century City, a part of Los
~geles. H~lll be dividing his time betW!!en his multimillion-dollar
twme in nearby fashionable Bel Air and his Santa Barbara ranch.
.;weinberg is expected to handle press relations for Reagan, who
Wllnts to be an activist ex-president.
·:weinberg, who worked in the Nixon White House, joined the
~agan administration in the 1980 campaign and is one of the few
~urvlvors remaining from press secretary Jim Brady's original staff.
·: Weinberg travels with the Reagans to Camp David .nearly every
~ekend and he is adept at taking the mammoth press corps In tow
$fld handling ·'photo opportunities ."
·: As former president and first lady, the Reagans also wlllleave town
Wfth a contingent of Secret Service agents. They will be provided
(e)Jnd·the·clock protection for the rest of their lives.
.
~

~tters

..··.

·.

to the editor

ArtiSt's Resourre Day Nov. 5

••
Dear Sir:
:;An exhibit Is being prepared
tlir November l-11, 1988 at the
Ftench Art Colony by the Bl·
Centennial Commission Art Com·
· $tttee. Focal points In the
s4ltling and development of the
Gl,pllipolis community will be
~sen ted for public viewing and
a4 ·a component of the Artist's
:Resource Day scheduled for
~vember 5. On this day, art ·
ptofesslonals who are Interested
liT preparing proposals for a .
~mmemoratlve work of public
aft will come to Gallipolis !or a
~mlnar otlocal history. We want
tddlsplay In the galleries a visual
O!ervlew of our past to supple·
ment research material the
aftlsts will receive.
."We would like the assistance of
.;ea residents In locating memor4bllla such as models, photos,
riews clippings and souvenir
Items to display In the gallery.
~e exhl))lt will be divided Into
tllree areas: (l) History Including the French 500, 19th
ctntury Immigration, Civil War

Era, Black ijlstory, River Life,
Religion and disasters such as
yellow fever, Silver Bridge col·
lapse and fires. (2) Business and
Industry - lncludlfig transpora·
tlon, furniture and skilled crafts,
agriculture, medicine, Bob.
Evans Farms and the electric
power Industry. (3) Outstanding
People- Including leaders of the
orlglnlal settlement, Anne 'Bal·
ley, Samuel Vinton, Grandma
Gateweed, 0.0. Mcintyre, A.P.
Kerr, and Dr. Charles Holzer.
If anyone has Items !or Joan to
the exhibit or suggestions for
additional consideration, please
call thli French Art Colony,
446-3834, and leave a message
with the secretary for a return
call. It ·is not possible for us to
·know or contact everyone who .
can help with this effort, so we
are depending on residents to
share their Interests and collec·
liOns with us.
Thank you,
.
Teresa Blhl
Art Committee member

·roday in history
I

•

...

•
By .United Press International
•Today is Sunday, Oct. 30, the 304th day of 1988 with 62 to foUow.
: Daylight Saving Time ends at 2 a.m. local time.
;The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
•The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Jupiter.
; The even lng stars are Mars and Saturn.
"Those born on this date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
Jehn Adams, second president of the United States, In 1735, French
16\presslonlst painter Allred Sisley in 1839, French poet Paul Valery
in 1871, poet Ezra Pound In 1885.

.

"

r

We . didn't win any friends
among the pilots when we re·
ported the alarming statistics
last year about drunken driving
offenses . In !act, the Air Line
Pilots Association accuses ·us of
unfairly singling out their
membets for criticism. Thirty of
the 7,850 pilots allegedly caught
In .a lie by the Investigators were
employed by major airlines.
That Is disquieting to anyone
who flies the airlines, but no
more disquieting than knpwlng
that more than 10,000 commer·
clal and private pilots with
drunken driving records are
sharing the skies· with airliners.
The Inspector General's lnves·
tigators did not draw the conclu·
slon that a drunken driver means
a drunken pilot, and neither did
we. But, the presence of a
conviction while on the ground Is
enough to sound the alarm about
the pilot's judgment and ability
to weigh his or her own fitness to
fly or drive. In the case of drug
trafficking convictions, the FAA
should think twice about llcens·
lng a person In the transportation,
business, even If that person has
paid the debt to society.
The investigators turned up
.s ome cases where evidence
pointed toward a pilot who drank
In the air as well as on the ground.
.For example, a Milwaukee
pilot died at the controls of his
cargo plane in a 1986 crash. His
blood alcohol level was four
times that which the FAA consld·
ers Impaired. A Florida pilot who
was seen drinking before, during
and alter a flight, buzzed an
airfield so low that' he took the
roof off a parked van. ·
In the past, the FAA com·
plalned that It did not have the
resources to keep track of the
pollee records of Its pilots. That
lack of resources forced the FAA
to rely on the pilots themselves to
tell the truth. We commend
Burnley for realizing that trust
doesn't always work.

Is Judgment Day near?_-----;,..---Ge_.;org.::.._e_Pla....::::_ge_nz
Phew! We have survived,
another close call! The world
catastrophe predicted for Sept.
12 or 13 did not take place.
The self-taught Arkansas Bible
·Student who made the prediction
was just another In a long line of
believers In Bible prophecy who
have pinpointed the Second Com·
lng or the end of the world only to
have to wipe egg off their faces.
Forty years ago a fundamentalist preacher In my community
told his congregation to get ready
!or Judgment Day, which was
coming, he said, on a certain day
In March that year.
His credibility was damaged,
however, two days before the
scheduled cosmic occurrence
when somebody saw a truck back
into his driveway delivering live
tons of coal to his house. .
In 1950 Billy Graham told an

audience, "We may have another
year, l"aybe two years. Then I
believe It's going to be all over.!'
Graham has learned to· be
more cautious. Today he says, "I
don't know the hour, the day, the
month or the year. God alone
knows. But what we see happen·
lng today may well be prepara·
tlon for God's Intervention in
human affairs when Jesus Christ
will come and set up a new social

order.''
The all-time big blunder con·
cernlng the end of the world
occurred In 1844. On Tuesday
morning, Oct, 22, of thai year,
100,000 of William Miller's follow·
ers, known as Millerltes, climbed
the hills and housetops around
Hampton, N.Y.,andcockedthelr
ears for the sound of the last
trumpet blast.

It was never heard.

answer came back, "For 2,300
Many of the people were
mornings and evenings, then the
Holy Place shall emerge
dressed In their homemade,
white "ascension robes," confl·
victorious."
dent that on this morning the
Daniel was trying to figure out
what that could mean when the
Lord would return in fulfillment
of the Biblical prophecies.
angel Gabriel said to him, "The
When the Lord didn't appear,
vision points to the end of time."
Miller and his disappointed disci·
Miller figured out that .2,300
pies concluded there was some
days was only a little more than
mistake in Miller's arithmetic.
six years. Obviously the world
Miller, an upstate New York
hadn't come to an end six years
farmer, deputy sheriff and jus- .. after Daniel's vision.
lice of the peace who had become
Today's believers ln .an lmml·
a Bible student, made his calcu·
nent Second Coming don't pin
themselves down to a specific
lat!on of an 1844 end of the world
mainly on the basis of a passage
date. They use such expressions
In the book of Daniel In the Old
as "We are living In the last
days" or, like the Jehovah's
Testament.
In a vision the prophet had
Witnesses, th~y go so far as to say
it will come "In our lifetime" or
heard the question asked, "How
long will the Holy Place be given
"within the lifespan of some of
over to be trodden down?" The those now living." ·

Both Bush and Dems will win
Dan Quayle will go down in
history, no matter who wins the
presidency.
In a curiously pe/iverse way, he
has catapulted the vice presld·
ency Into a choice Instead of an
echo. For the first time In
decades, a pivotal number of
voters are reserving judgment
because of uncertainty about the
one-heart-beat-away candidate.
It George Bush is elected (and
a Leo Tolstoy theory suggests
that )le's favored), It means
Quayle's Jell-o-soggy credibility
did not damage Bush's more
solid persona. If Michael Duka·
kls is elected, the pundits will
J,mcover enough statistical data
to show that Bush's candidacy
' shattered after falling into
Quayle's stature gap.
But that hard-to-define momentum Is still clodhopplng
along with Bush. Even after
Quayle and his Democratic conn·
terpart, Lloyd Bentsen, reduced
a 90.mlnute tap dance In non·
r~sponses to who was a better
John F . Kennedy clone, Bush's
finger-tip lead in the polls didn't
slip.
A Bush win would keep the
Republican Party In the White
House. But, as Aristotle observed, one swallow does not
make a summer, And one Republican president does not make a
Republican nation.
In the Republican Reagan era,
which Is about to evaporate like a
morning mist, Democrats still
control the Senate, !W-46; the
House, 259·176; the governor·
ships, 26-2t... the state leglsla·
tures, 28 to9; and the mayorshlps
of 22 of the 25 largest cities.
What this Democratic doml·
nance suggests Is that Reagan
may have succeeded In shaping a
national agenda through his

..

Scrooge-like people-gil tUng
budget cuts. But a majority of
Americans have never bought
his agenda at the-state and local
level.
Nationally, however, It ap·
pears that the majority of voters .
are lined up at the George Bush
supermarket. After two debates
which the Democratic preslden·
tlal and vice presidential candl·
dates decisively won, alter polls
which show that Plnocchlo
Quayle damages his creator,
Geppetto Bush, the presidential
race Is still a cliff-hanger.
How does one explain this
unfathomable unlikelihood?
Tolstoy asked a similar ques·
tlon In his epnogue to "War and
Peace.'' How did one explain the
reasons behind so many lrra·
tiOna! events that led to the
Napoleonic Wars?
"We are forced to fall back
upon fatalism In history to
explain irrational events (that is
those of which we cannot compre·
bend the reason)," Tolstoy
wrote. And fatalism Is about the
only reason that explains the
selection of Dan Quayle. Intelll·
gence doesn't.
The Russian novelist then
explained that men ·may have
tree will to act, but they are also
governed by, '·' the elemental life
of the swarm.''
After they act freely, hlstorlcill
Inevitability sweeps them along
In "bondage to the whole course
of previous history, and predes·
tined from all eternity,"
Doris Day sang It another way:
"Que sera, sera. Whatever .will
be wll be."
Were Tolstoy alive today, It's
hard to believe that even he
would try to convince us that a
grade-B movie actor with the
attentlon·apan of 2-year-old was

Predestined to lead the greatest
nation on earth.
But some of us are convinced
that the future holds no sur·
prlses .
Bush and Dukakls will fumble
together In one more debate.

---Area d e a t h s - - - - - - - - - - - - Christmas village set
Marie E. Eddy

two brothers and four sisters . .
Memorial services will be
conducted
Nov. 5, at ·2 p.m., In
LAKESIDE, Ariz. - Marie
Wright
Funeral
Home, Liberty
Esther Eddy, 86, of Lakeside,
Center,
Ohio,
Rev.
William Golf
Ariz., formerly of Gallipolis, died
officiating.
Eastern
Star Servl·
Oct. 20, at Pueblo Nor te Nursing
ces
will
be
conducted.
Memorials
Home in Show Low, Ariz.
may
be
made
to
the
Alzheimer's
BornJune·9, l9021n Toledo, she
was the daughter of the late John . Disease and Related Disorders
Foundation, 2155 Arllngion Ave.,
and Della Thiesen.
She was married to Elbert E. Room 309, Toledo, Ohio, 43609.
E.ddy , on June 28, 1922, and he
preceded her In death on March Charles W. Pyles, Jr. .
26. 1976.
She was formerly a member of
GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.
the Liberty Center (Ohio) United - Charles W. Pyles Jr., 63, of
Methodist Church; and was a Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., died
member and past matron of Friday at his home following a
Napoleon Lodge 232 Order of the long illness. He retired !romACF
Eastern Star.
Industries in Huntington,. W.Va.,
• Surviving are one son, Cletus !oUowlng 20 years service.
(Mac) E;ddy of Lakeside, Al:lz;
· Born Aug. 25, 1923 at Gallipolis
two sisters, Mrs. Cele Keller and Ferry, he was a son of Ethel Love
Mrs. Gretchen Schwamm, both Pyles of Gallipolis, and the late
of Toledo; two grandchildren, Charles E. Pyles .
and one great-granddaughter.
He is also survived by his wife,
She was preceded In death by Helen v.trglnla Henry Pyles;

Chuck Stone
--~-------------

Geppetto's Plnocchlo will
make more outlandish· claims.
The historical odds will still
favor- Republican Bush- !or the
pres ldency.
And the Democrats will still
control the rest of the country.

..

GALLIA COUNTY

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Published each Sunday, 825 Thlrd Ave.,

Gallipolis, Ohio, by ihe Ohio Vall~ Pub·
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TEMPORARY FUNDING- Star Bank, N.A.
Tri-State has made a $1,000 contribution to the
project and bas agreed to provide temporary
funding untU further donations are received by
the Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce for the
watering system I~ the city park. Pictured with

the contrlbutloa are, from left, bank Vice
President Robert Henlle8y, Pamela Matura ofthe
park beautification committee; Scott mnsch,
bank senior vice president and Beth Vandawallrer
of the Chamber of Commerce. (See story page AI)

Lawy~er jailed after dining with jurOr
CLEVELAND (UPI) - A
Chagrin Falls lawyer who had
lunch with a juror during a rape
trial has tieen sentenced to jail
after being cited for contempt by
a Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas judge.
Judge John E. Corrigan sent·
enced defense lawyer Rick
Drake to 12 days in jail and fined
him $400 F.rlday after declaring a
mistrial after the first day of
testimony.
Corrigan said he believes

Drake acted dellbe~ately b,!!"
cause his client's case was
damaged by the victim's
testimony.
"It sounds incredible, and in 20
years I have never seen anything
like this," Corrigan said.
Drake's client, Mlcl)ael Sea·
rles, 28, Cleveland, was indicted
In April on three counts of rape
and one count of gross sexual
Imposition involving a minor
girl.
Corrigan found Drake
guUty of refusing his order to

remain In the judge's chamber
during a hearing and refusing to
appear at the bench for a
discussion.
Dnoke, Searles, and three of
the defendant's witnesses had
joined an alternate juror !or
lunch In the court house cafeteria
Thursday, the day the trial
began. Drake had walked out of
the court room after Corrigan
asked him about the lunch issue
and was found in contempt.

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Subsidiaries)
State Bank No. 983

Star Bank Gallipolis
Federal Reserve District No. 4
of Galllpolis, Gallla County, In the Stale of Ohlo4~831 atthe close of business on September 30, 1988.
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions :
Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coln...................... 1,957,000.00
-.- · sec,rrltler.: ...... :.. :::::-.....
~
_8,333,000_.00_
Loans and lease financing receiyables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ............ 57,043,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............... 681,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve .................... :............ ................... .... ...... ... 56,362,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ................... 1,170,000.00
Other assefs .... ......... .... ... ........ ........................ .... ..... .............. ........... .:..889,000.00
Total assets .... .... ... ... .............. ............... ......................................... 68, 711,000.00
LUUBILI11ES
.
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ........... .... .. .............................. ......... ........... 62,988,000.00
' (1) Nonlnterest-bearlng .................. .. .................... 6,655,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ............ :................. .. ............ 56,333,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreement
to repurchase In domestic offices of the bank and of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBFs .................................550,000.00
Other !Ia billtles ........................................ ............. ... ......... .................. 324,000.00
Total liabilities ..................... : .......................................................... 63,862,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of shares) a. Authorlzed ....... :..... 1,800
b. Outstanding ...........1,800 .................. 900,000.00
Surplus .................... ...................................... .. .... ... ...... ............. ...... 2,850,000.00
Undivided profits an'd capital reserves .. , .......... ................................. l ,099,000.00
Total equity capital ...... ,............................ ·....................................... 4,849,000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock,
and equity capital .............................. :..................................... .'... 68,711,000.00

.

LIMITED OFFER

TWO BUIIAL SPACES.. SIDE BY SIDE
SAVE
MONEY

$555·

•11oe 1555 cortls the total cost of
tloe burial tpactJ. 11M a_..,,
required by otato law f• por·
petual care, which io a ont·tlmo
cha..... io indudod.

STOP
INFlAnON

CONVENIENT MONTHLY DEPO·

SITS: The two spaces can Itt
paid far with monthly pay·
mtnls to fit your budgtt.

\

PRICE
Sunday ..... ......... ... .·............. . 50 Cents

No subscriptions by mall permitted In
areas where 1JlOtor carrier service Is

available.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel will not be
responsible ~or advance payments
made to carriers.

0 Without obligation 1 would like to recei•e information on your
Limited Offer for two burial spac~. I would like to receive your Fam·
ily Portfolio FREE.

0 Please furnish information on your pre-dweloped mausoleum
crypts.

0 Pleaselurnish information on dweloped •eterans section.

MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Suoday Only
One Year ................................. $37.44
Slx months ............................... $19.50

Dall) aad Sunday
MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS
Inside Coun&amp;y
13 Weeks ........................ .......... $19.24

26 Weeks ................................ .. $37.96

52 Weeks ......... 1....... . ................ $74.36
Ratel Outllde Coun'y
lJWeeks ................................. $20.80
26 Weeks ................................. $W.30
52 Weeks ................................. $75.40

"••• -----------------------------------Ad* HI------------------~--------------(lty/Statt _______________________ zr,___ ___

BOX 659 -

GALUPOLIS, OHIO 45631

Pre
.Christmas
Sale!

= ............. :................. ...........................

We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condl·
lion and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In corUormance with official Instructions and Is true
and correct.
D. Dean Evans
Daniel P. Davies - Directors
Scott J. Hinsch, Jr.

'

.•• '

Marina set

1, the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that.this Report of Condition has
been prepared in conformance with official Instructions and Is true to the best of
my knowledge and belief.
Allee K. Stover
Vice President and Comptroller

i)

.' •...

MIDDLEPORT - Tiny TeCh lng by children from other .
three sons, Fred and Bob Pyles of Carl Schuhz Sr.
Preschool, Middleport, In coop. schools, and other activities
Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., and
which are being descrl~d as A,.:
David Pyles of Point Pleasant;
RACINE - Carl Schultz Sr. , era lion with Middleport Elemen· children's extravaganza.
·:
two sisters, Ruth Cline of Che- 81, a retired ~oal miner and atry PTO,' is sponsoring a Christ·
Tiny
Tech
is
also
sponsoring
a
.·.
mas Village at the elementary
shire and VIrginia. Dunlap of nlghtwatchman for the Atlas
Santa's
Workshop
where
child·
:;
Southside, W.Va.; five brothers, Towing Co., died Saturday morn· school on Nov. 26 from 10 a .m. to4
ren may buy affordable presents : ·
Everett of Columbus, Larry, lng at his residence on Mile Hill p.m .
Any local craftsman or mer. for parents and grandparents : :
Sandy and Jack, all of Gallipolis Road, Racine.
chant who would like to rent without JI"Y peeking by their . ;
Ferry, W.Va., and Richard of
A native of Kanawha County,
.,
space at the Christmas Village to favorite ~ults .
Ashton, W.Va.; five grandchild· · he wa~ born Oct. 2, 19()7 at
or
display
crafts,
bazaar
Items
ren and several nelces and Springhill, W.Va., son of the late
nephews. He was preceded In Mitchell and Ida Williams baked goods may contact repre·
sentatlves of Middleport PTO at
death by a bother, Peyton Pyles. Schultz. In addition to his par'
992-6961
or 992-7452. Tables are
He was a member of Faith ents, he was preceded In death by
SANDUSKY, Ohio (UPI) ·A ::
Gospel Church, of which he was a
North Olmstead company has : •
three sons, James and Orville being rented for $10 and it is
hoped that table reservations
founder , deacon and charter Harless and Carl Schultz, Jr.
announced plans to buDd a •:
will be made by Nov. 18.
member.
700-sllp, $5 million marina on : ·
Survivors Include his wife,
In addition to merchandise, the
Services will be conducted 11 Mrs. Ella Schultz; one son, Jack
the Sandusky BaY'
;:
Chrlslrnas
Village
will
feature
a
Angelo
Holy,
owner
of
Hoty
a.m. Monday at Wilcoxen Fun·;
Schultz, Racine; two daughters,
live nativity scene, free cookies
eral Home, with pastors Don Mrs. Luke (Phyllis) Walker.
Enterprises, said the facility : 1
and elder, other refreshments
McQueen, Wlllam (Bud) Hat·
should be opened In the spring. · :.
Portland and Mrs. Charles (Ann)
which
will
be
sold,
face
painting,
Four vacant buildings will be : :
field and Don McMillon official·
Findley, Minersville. along with
spill
art,
Chrismas
caroling
by
torn down to accommodate the ; •
lng. Bur!B.l follows In Beale
several grandchildren and great·
Tiny
Techsters,
possibly
carol·
Chapel Cemetery.
project.
he said.
.
. ::
grandchildren and nieces and
Friends may call at the funeral
nephews.
.
home Sunday, 2 to4 p.m., and 7to
He was a member of the Mt.
9p.m.
· Moriah Church of God at Racine.
Funeral services will be at one
p.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
Funeral Home at Pomeroy. The
Rev. James Satterfield will off!·
elate. Burial will be in Letart
BOX 659
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO •
Falls cemetery. Friends may
call from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
NEIGHBORHOOD RD. AT LeGRANDE
p.m. Monday at the funeral '
home.
PHONE 446-3615

'

..

Sunday Times-Sentinei..:..Page-A-3

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipo6s, Ohio Point Pleasant. W. Va.

State of Ohio, County of Gallla, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 24th day of October 1988 and I hereby
certify that t am not an officer or director of this bank.
Faye L. Williams, Notary Public
My commission expires April17. 1993.

Our enrire invenrory 9f Qualicy Diamond and Colored
Gemscone Jewelry (i ncluding all birchsrones )' as well as
Cuscom .Remouncing of your worn our diamond jewelry
now Reduced 20-33%!

9 ENJOY OUR BEST SELECTION EVER
&lt;;&gt;LEGITIMATE 20-33% SAVINGS
9 LAYAWAYS FOR CHRISTMAS WELCOME

Jewelers
The Smart Christmas Shopping Store
..
404 SECOND AVENUE • 446-1647

·,

�•

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Paga A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

October 30, 1988

October 30, 1988

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

-------Area news
briefs----------...;._--..,
Emergency runs reported
·
Officers said a truck driven south on First Avenue by Michael
Class starts wednesday

.!!

RIO GRANDE_ A limited number or openings still exist In
the 30·hour Introduction to Computers class, which wlll begin
Wednesday at Buckeye Hills Career Center.
The program, sponsored by the school's Adult Services
Department, meets from 6 to 9 p.m. on Tuesdays and
Thursdays, The tuition Is $60.
The cour~ wUI cover basic computer operations, lntroduc·
uon to word processing, spreadsbeets and data base:
Registration can be made In person or by sending a check or
money order to Gallia·Jackson-Vlnton JVSD, Adult Services,
P.O. Box 157, Rio Grande OH 45674. Make cbecks or money
orders to Gallla·Jackson-VInton JVSD .

Bonds forfeited in court
GALLIPOLIS- Harold D. Ratliff, 25, Rt. 4, Gallipolis, was
fined $300 and costs Friday In Gallipolis municipal court. He
also was s~ntenced to tbree days in jail and given a 60 day
license suspension. On a· second cbarge of left of center, Ratliff
was fined $12 and costs.
Gladys Gehring, 49, Bidwell, was fined $50 and costs for
disorderly conduct.
Fifteen persons forfeited bonds for speeding Including Henry
F. Clark, 41, Roanoke, Va., wbo forfeited a $71 bond after being
clocked at 76 miles per bour In a 55 mile per hour zone. .
Others forfeiting bOnds for speeding were: James A. Plants,
22. J;tt. 2, Letart, W.Va., $48; BlllyR. Robinson, 32, White Pine,
Tenn., $46; Freda J. Wickline, 50, Grove City, Ohio, $45; Terry
R. Jarrell, 32, Anaheim Hills, Cal; James D. Williamson, 32,
Canal Wlncbester, Ohio; George D. McCarley, 35, LeGrange,
Callt.; and Billy W. Groom, Plk~:ton, all $44; Ronald E.
Jobnson, 25, Rio Grande and Craig S. Burt, 26, Columbus, both
$42; Keith A. Erickson, 28, Philadelphia; and Dana D. Garber,
41, Rt. 2, VInton, all $41; Richard L. Briggs, Jr., 22, COlumbia,
S.C. and Winfred A. Britton, 47, ClarksvlUe, Ohio, both $39.
' Forfeiting $41 bonds on other traffic violations were: Allen L.
Jeffers, 40, Southside, W.Va., failure to display a valid
registration; Paul E. Butler, Jr., 31, Rt. 2, Crown City and
Kenneth R. Riggs, 21, Rt. 1, Reedsvllle, boll! for !allure to stop
within the assured clear distance.

Pardlse, 18, Mayfield Heights, Ohio, failed to follow the state '
route, started down the "Do Not Enter" street and colllded with
a car driven by Charles E. Dalton, 50, Rt. 1, Bidwell. Damage
was moderate.
Pollee cited Pardlse for !allure to yield the right of way.
Dalton and a passenger, Christina Dalton, 47, Rt. 1, Bidwell,
complained of Injuries but neither was treated.
Gallipolis pollee also Investigated an accident at 1:19 p.m. In
the 300 block of Second Avenue. Officers said a statlonwagon
driven by Henry G. Thrapp, 36, Rt. 2, Bidwell, struck tile back of
a truck driven by James C. Wilburn, 53,122 Vine St., Gallipolis.
Da(llage was minor. There was no citation.
Arrests by pollee Included: Keith A. Nibert, 26, Johnson's
Trailer Court, Gallipolis, drMng under tile Influence, an
expired operator·~ license and Uttering; Keith H. Petrie, 33, 22
Grape St., Gallipolis, driving under the Influence and driving
under suspension; and Brenda Jones, 29, Racine, speeding.

Pomeroy at 9:22a.m. to Peoples
POMEROY - Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services . Terrace for Ellen Gibbs to
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
reports . four calls Monday,
Racine at 11:06 a.m. to Bashan
Pomeroy at 1:22 a.m. to Spring
Road for Charles Bissell to St.
Ave. for Genevlve Melnbart to
Joseph's Hospital; Rutland at
Veterans Memorial Hospital;
7:15p.m. toVance.Road !or Mike
Norris to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
·
RACINE - Morse Chapel .
Church, COunty Road 35, Racine·
-Portland Road, will be in
revival Monday night through
Friday night at 7 p.m. each
evening. Rev. Ralph Workman,
of Gallipolis, will preacb. Everyone welcome.

Gallipolis pollee reported a theft Friday evening at Smith's
Ashland Sta!ion, 118 Vine St. Pollee said a male and two females
came into the station, purchased several bags of potato chips.
The map went to tile beer cooler, grabbed a 12 pack and all three
jumped into a dark green car and headed south on State Rm1te 7.
Pollee also Investigated a burglary at the reslde{lce of Danny
Gillenwater, K&amp;K mobile home court, 2145 Eastern Ave.
Officers said someone took a walking stick and a 3 by 5 foot wall
rug.

Merchant's meeting

Gall'lpOI'IS pof'lCe report t heJt
,f

Four arrai.o7u&gt;d
in court
~· --

Two injured in Gallipolis wreck

GALLIPOLIS- Two persons claimed Injuries In a car-truck
collision at 5:25 p.m. Friday at First Avenue and Sycamore
Street, according to city pollee.

Only one person, Indicted by-the last grand jury, stUI needs to
be arraigned along with the person who was secretly Indicted.
That person has not yet been apprehended, or located and
served a summons.
·

School bus accident · investigated
GALLIPOLIS - A GaiUpolls
city school bus was Involved In an
accident at 8:35 a.m. Friday at
the Intersection of ·SR 325 and
Buckeye Hills Road (01d.US35),
according to ·the State Highway
Patrol. Tbere were eight stu·
dents on tile bus, bowever, no one
was Injured.
Troopers said Valerie R.
Miller, 20, Oak Hlll, beaded north
on SR 325, turned left and struck
the left rear tires of the bus
&lt;!riven south, by James E. Clark·
· son, 31, Rt. 2, VInton. Damage
was mlnnor to the bus and
moderate to tile car. The acci·
dent Is stm under investigation.
The patrol cited Miller for
failure to yield the right of way.
Pickup trucks operated by

(;

Benjamin F. Price, Jr., 22, Rt. 2,
Friday on SR 160, just south of .
Vinton and Anita K. Merry, 32,
Porter. No one was Injured.
Rt. 2, Bidwell, were Involved in a Damage was moderate to both
·
vehicles.
rearend collision at 11:10 a.m.
Friday on SR 160, abOut two
Tile pa I rol cited Wllllamson for
miles soutb of Porter. Damage Improper passing.
was moderate. No one was , The patrol lnves Ugated an
Injured.
accident at 3: 45 p.m. Friday on
Troopers said Merry had SR 7, 0.1 miles north of Addison
stopped for another vehicle makPike. No one was injured.
Ing a left turn when her vehicle
Troopers said a car driven Roy
was hit from behind by Price's Stone, 72, lsban, W.Va., was
truck. The"patrol cited Price for atlemptlng to pass another north·
!allure to stop witbln tile assured bound car when Hazel C. Hughes,
clear distance.
72, Galllpolls, pulled onto SR 7
Robert 0. Fink, 46, Rt. 2,
and collided with the Stone car.
VInton, was slowing for a left
Damage was minor. There was
turn and Bllly Williamson, Jr.,
no citation.
17, Rt. 3, Bidwell, was attempting
A Point Pleasant woman was
to pass wben Ills pickup truck
cited after an accident at 2:40
struck Fink's car at 2:46 p.m.
p.m. Friday on SR 160, 0.1 mile

Meigs County Court

. POMEROY - Tile following days suspended upon proof of probation, restitution, passing
Individuals were fined this week operator's license, suspended bad checks.
.
In Meigs County Court by Judge operator's license;
Josepi!Nelson, Albany,$10and
Patrick O'Brien.
~enny E. Lunsford, Pomeroy,
costs, failed to transfer owner·
Raymond A. Burgess, Ravens· $75 and costs, three days In jail, ship registration; Kevin Petrie,
wood, W.Va., $250 and costs, $50 of fine and tbree days Gallipolis, $10 and costs, expired
tbree days In jail, 60-day license suspended upon proof of opera·
license plates; Calvin W. Mayer,
suspension, OWl; $25 and costs, tor's license, no operator's II· Long Bottom, .. $20 and cos.ts,
open flask in motor veblcle;
cense; Richard Bennett, Ripley, failed to control.
David A. Malloy, Long Bottom, W.Va., six months in jail sus- • Fined for speeding were Fred
$250 and costs, suspended to$100, pended to 30 days, six months · Brake, Madison, Tenn., $25 and
flomtlng prlviledges suspended ,probation, restitution ordered,
costs; Randy J. Smith, Pomeroy,
one year, three days in jail costs, !alsl!lcatlon; 10 days In ja11 S:io and costs; Arthur A. Tobin,
suspended, .six months proba· to be served concurrently with
Pomeroy, $23 and costs; Scott
uon, taking and possessing a 30-day sentence, criminal Ires·
Hudson, Hurricane, W.Va., $23
deer with a gun during closed pass; six months probation sus- and costs; Randy Musbtare, Mt.
deer gun season; Kathy V. pended to 30 days, six months Hope, W.Va., $23 and costs;
Shocky, Pomeroy, $75 and costs, probation, restitution, costs,
Cindy Vondran, Ft. Wayne, Ind.,
three days In jail. $50 or fine and petty theft; Bllly F. Phillips,
$28 and costs.
tbree days suspended upon proof Grove City, $250 and costs,
Bonds were forfeited by Opal
of operator's license; no opera· , spotllghtlng; Crystal Barber,
Turnbu U, Clifton, W.Va., $50,
tor's license; costs only for lane Reedsville, six months proba!allure to yield; and by Kelly
straddling; Tony Barringer, tion, costs, disorderly conduct;
McCarthy, The Plains. and Ml·
ReedsvUie, $75 and costs, three Bunky Sue Huddleston, Kenna,
chael Hickman. Ashland, Ky.,
days In jail, $50 of fine and three W.Va., $20 and costs, six months $55 each for speeding.

I

north of US 35. No one was·
Injured.
Troopers said Mabel Shirley,
69, · Point Pleasant, pulled onto
SR,. 160 and her car collided with
a truck driven by Carey M.
Mahley, 25, Wellston. Damage
was moderate.
The patrol cited Sblrley for
failure to yield the right of way.
The patrol investigated two
car-deer accidents. A car driven
by Rhonda M. Cox, 27, Rt. 2,
Galllpolls, struck and kllled a
deer at 4:39a.m. Friday onSR 7,
0.6 miles north of SR 218. The
other deer was kllled by a car
driven by Harold Wells, 58, Rt. 1,
Bidwell. The accident occurred
at 6:10 p.m. Friday on SR 554,
abOut seven miles west of Che
shire. Damage was moderate In
both accidents. No one was
Injured.

1

'14.,.._

,..,,4ij

ALL t-1\ERC.~~ND\SE \N ST()P.E.
INC.LU 0 II'H-,. 'T\\t ~ ~\l \ PMENI JLlYW E P. ~lit&gt;l&gt;&amp;\)P
S\L~ ARRA~6E.MEf\\i5, C..\\i\\~\t-'\A-~ t&gt;t.t(:)~Al'\bNS,t.\C.
QPEN 8:00 \a 7:00 WEEI\OAI(~SUNDAY ~~:()() \() ~: ~()

· 4 H \ LE S W t~l\

NEAR

E&gt;All\PCUS 01'4 U~ ~~ o5 .'
~R

MEO\tAl tE.NIE~ . .,
... .. 17"'

•

Veteran's Memorial
POMEROY- Friday Admls·
slons - Genevlve Meinhart,
Pomeroy; WUIIam Williams,
Pomeroy; Ellen Gibbs, Pomeroy; Sbauna Tackett, Racine;
Leona Wallace, Pomeroy,
Friday Discharges - Charles
Bissell, Lawrence Babbitt, Mar·
garet La! lance.

ONLY

$ 39 • ·

2. :

We're not JUST Tacos·.
any more. Now serving
Breakfast!

e
e
e Mon.-Sat. 6 a.m.-10:30 a.m. e
e Sunday 7 a.m.-11 :30 a.m. e ·
e 446·TAC_9
e

••
••
•••••••••••

James Sands

..

Uc. #005-32

MEMORIAL PLANTING -Mrs. Dorothy Roller of Middleport,
last surviving member of the famUy of FrankE;. Hobnes, donated
and planted a dogwood tree near the Syracuse Municipal Building
Tuesday In tribute to her famUy. Pictured bere with Mrs. Roller Is
Syracuse mayor Eber Pickens. (Times-Sentinel photo)

.

.......

-

'

I''

mUis that had offices 1n or near
Moody: Harlngton Brothers·
Roadarmour, G.B. Little, and F.
·Walters. Moody even had an
attorney by the name of John

' ON THE -LITrLE BULLSKIN ROAD, one can find these
steps that lead up to the
remains of Mt. Carmel Methodist Church and cemetery. At
one ttmr. the chul"h was
surrounded by the prosperous
town of Moody, which once
had six factories, two bus!·
nesses and a lawyer.

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Frl·
day's winning Oblo Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
288.
Ticket sales totaled $1,346,321,
wltb a payoff due of'$468,40~.50.
PICK-4
1103.
PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$228,68with a payoff due of
$~03,267.

PICK4 $1 .straight bet pays
$1,776. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$~48.

Lewis.

The town of Moody and the land
on which the church and cemetery
were located appeared to have
belonged to Stephen Neal, who
settled on a farm there Is the 1840's.
Mr. Neal was born In Forsythe
County, North Carolina In 1818 and
moved to Gallla COunty In 18:11
wbere he ran Olltboiits for Aleshire
and Hutslnplllar. .In 1842 Neal
married Sarah Berridge and the
pair had 6 cbildren Including E.
Lincoln Neal wbo became a
prominent druggist and citizen of
Gallipolis. In 1866 the Neals moved
to Gallipolis where Siephen kept
store on Vine Street until his death
In 1898. In 1873 Mr. Neal remarried
one year following the death of
Sarab. His second wife's name was
N.J. Poole. MI. Carmel Cemetery
bears the remains of Stepben Neal
andseveralmembersofhls!amUy.
It Is Interesting to read the news
In the various Gallipolis newspap· ers from the town of Moody back In
the 189!Ys When the place was at its
height.
For Instance a llt\'l'ary society
. was formed from members of
Moody and Hilton, another "ghost
town" that was located on Little
Bullskill below Moody. One of the
first activities was a debate on the
following question: "Resolved that
man will go further for love than for'
money."
.
The newspaper reporter giving
the news on this even edltorlallzed:
"Oh, bOy, won't some of the boys
propound their knowledge and

: SYRACUSE - A Christmas
auction will be held Saturday,
Nov. 5, 7 p.m., at the Syracuse
Fire Station, with auctioneer
Dan Smith.· Everyone welcome.

ORTA11t34

'

'

State of Ohio, County of Meigs, ss: '·
.
Sowrn to and subscribed before me this 11th day of October, 1988.
Jo Ann Crisp, l'jotary Public
JoAnn Crisp, Notary Public, State of Ohio. My commission expires July 17, 1993.

•

~Tr~elAgency

YOUR CRUISE
HEADQUARTERS . - Over 400 Discount Cruises
AVAILABLE ONLY AT
SAVE UP TO S600 OR MORE
PER PERSON ON SELECTED CRUISES
FOR MORE DETAILS STOP BY

GALLIPOLIS
~ Tra11el AgenGy
360 SE(OND AVE.
446-0699

GALLIPOLIS

Electrolux, Like New ...... *39900
Eureka Power Team, New '239°0
Kirby, Like New ............... 1 499°0
Eureka Express ............ :...... 1329°0
Eurekas; Hoovers; Kenmores
Eureka, Mini Mite ....................1 299 5
&amp; Singers, Upright ... 1 2995 &amp; Up
Eurek~ Quick Up ..................1 39 94
·
and Lots More ...

~

•

•••

i-

Vacuum Cleaner Repairs • Belts, Bags and Accessories
'

750 hl Ave.

446• 7 441

.

Leave your
family a
mortgage·
free home

.

Modern Woodmen life
insurance can Include
this important provision
for your Iamity's pea&lt;:e of
mind. Call me for details:

BOWMAN'S H.OMECARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

New &amp; Used Vacuum Cleaner SALE

;

needing a3slstance with their
applications.
For further information, call
446-0611 or 367-7341 In Gall Ia
County and 992-5605or992-6629
in Meigs County.

•

'

A Chair You Can Depend On!

i
,·

•

tillJ

~ ~

Auction set

!

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Depart·
men I of Liquor Control Director
Karen L. Nowak announced
persons applying for new liquor
POMEROY - Monday, Oct.
permits ·and transfers of location 31, will be the first day Gallla and
or ownership.
Meigs County residents wil l
There were no applications for become eligible for tile HEAP
new liquor permits In Gallipolis Emergency Assistance Pro·
or Gallla County, however, there gram, according to the Gallla·
was one application for the -Meigs Communlly Action
transfer of a permit.
. , Agency.
An application was flied for the
Emergency HEAP was
transfer of a C-1 and C-2 permit created to provide financial
from Crosswhite Hutchinson, do· assistance to households that
ing business as D &amp; J Carry Out, bave had utilities disconnected,
RR·1, BolNO-A, SR. 554, Cheshire face !he threat of disconnection
Township,' Bidwell, to Georgia or bave 10 days or less supply of
Maxine Cook, doing business as bulk fuel. The program allows a
Mac's Carry Out, same location, one-time payment of up to $200
same address. Tile application per heating season to restore or
was flied Oc;t. 21, 1988.
retain home heating services.
Under the department's review process, city councils, or
Households applying for Emer·
county commissioners and town· gency HEAP must report total
ship trustees are notified of gross household Income for the
applications witrbln their juris·
past tbree or twelve mon.ths.
diction. These local authorities
Applicants whose Income Is
have the right to request a
equal to or less than 150 percent
hearing upon the advlslblllty of
of the federal poverty guidelines
Issuing a permit or transfer.
are eligible.
Applications are processed In
Those housel\olds serviced by a
about 6 to ·s weeks. The depart·
PUCO-regulated utility must
ment. conducts a thorough Inves- sign up for tile Percentage of
tigation of both the applicant and
Tncome Plan (PIP) In order to
Intended premises before a deci·
receive emergency benefits.
slon Is made to issue or deny a
Bulk fuel users must certify In
permit.
writing that they have 10 days or
less fuel supply In order to be
eligible.

Applications ror the l!:mereloquence on that wonderfUl word
takers except one letter from a Mrs.
gency
Assistance Program wlll
love, especially those wh9 have a
Besureyoucanprovide who said
be
taken
at ·the GalUa Outreach
pretty girl present and think .that she would step In while the
220
Jackson Pike, GalllpoOffice,
probably he will take her home
water Is troubled- "I have been
lls;
the
Meigs
Outreach Office,
,even If he does lose his overcoat In
married ~~!co times and have 13
39350
Union
Ave.
, Pomeroy; and
doing so. Why bOys will try to make
babies all of whom have bel!n kept
the
CAA
Central
Office in
girls think they wUI climb to the
by public charity." It sounded like a
Cheshire.
moon for love notwithstanding the
match made In heaven.
Applications wlll be taken from
fact that the girls have got better
About this love business In Moody
9
a.m.
until 12 noon, and from 1 to
sense than to believe such stuff as · In the 189!Y s Uncle Rastus wrole his
3:30
p.m.
Monday through Fri·
that now-a-days.''
NEIL MORRISON
opinion In verse: "You will think
P.O. Box 3461
We not that In reporting news yourself In clover until the boney· day at tile two Outreach offices.
Rio Grande. OH . 45674
about activities at the MI. Carmel
moon Is over, and then you will wish The Central Office In Cheshire
Phone' j614j 245·9319
Cburch the correspondent seemed
yourself dead." Whether or not will accept applicatiOns Monday
more Interested In what happened
Uncle Rastus was married either tbrough Thursday 9 a.m. to 12
~ ·
noon and 1 to 3:30 p.m. No
In the pews thl!Jl what bappened In
before or after his peom was
applications will be taken at the
the pulpit. For Instance we read this
printed we do not know.
Cheshire
office on Fridays.
front the Moody column of March 9,
It was reported that one resident
Applications for the Regular
1895: "We congratulate Miss Stella of \\1oody received the Madison
• MOOUI.N W000M£N
OJ AMU.ICA
HEAP
Program
are
also
avalla·
Arthur on being the only girl at
County Weekly News even though
SINCl 1863
churcb last Saturday night tllat got
she knew no one who lived there. It ble. Home visits will be made by
a fellow. Where are YO\! boys? Why
seems !bat the newspaper was CAA staff to help any elderly,
disabled or bomebound person
do you stand back? Are you waiting
always full of love stories.
for the girls to ask you to accept
their company.''
Later that year the correspond·
entobservedatMt.Carmelhowthe
girls would slip around and look In
the church window to· see If the
A lift chair is designed to give vou confidence and freedom.
fellow they had their eyes on was
Tha easy to use control brings the whole chair up, giving you
free or ·If be was sitting next to
the additional support and stability needed to stand upright.
another girL
The chair, with its full electric recline feature is bound to
The Moody correspondent also
give you hours of comfort, peace, and relaxation .
ran adverllsements from men for
It comes in"a variety of fabrics and colors, making it a stylwives. Some were legitimate but
ish addition to any decor .
perhaps some joker thought he
The lift chair is Medicare approved and will not be a finan ·
would see bow co-operative the
cial burden.
Moody correspondent was In her
For more information call or stop by today.
matchmaking and he wrote:
CALL TOLL FREE 1·800·458·6844
"Wanted a wife who Is a good cook
and one that knows how to care for
cross babies. I have been married 5
times previously and have 24
63 PINE ST.
GALUPOLIS
children all of whom live at home.
446-7283
Leave your. resume at Boster's
store.''
So far as we can telltherewereno

'

I

HEAP program set
for Gallia, Meigs

~

Gallla COunty has more tban Its
sbare of "ghosl towns" and the one
we Include today was located on tbe
Little Bullskht
Road. All that Is
left or what was
once known as
Moody Is a cemetery and tile stair·
way that led up to
the Mt. Carmel
·
Methodist Church.
Tile · churcb was organized ·
around 1840 with a cburch building
being put up In 186L By 1881 Moody
had a postofficeandln thel.8liO's the
town listed among Its business
people: Wylie Angel wbo had a mill,
A. Bosler ran the dry goods store,
J.N. Broyles operated a chair
factory, Dan Gill owned a harness
sbop and Kerns and Neal had a
grocery. There were tbree saw·

Pomeroy Eagles Club

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-5

The once-prosperous town of Moody

BY JAMES SANDS

STARTING SUNDAY,
OCT. 30TH
WE WILL BE PLAYING
·BINGO SUNDAY
AFTERNOONS
1:4 5 P.M. INSTEAD
OF SUNDAY
EVENINGS
'-'

We, the undersigned directors, at,test the correctness of this Report of Condition
and declare that it has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge and belief bas been prepared In conformance with the Instructions Issued by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System and ihe State Banking Authority and is
true and correct.
Theodore T. R€ed, Jr.
Fred W. Crow
- Directors
Paul E. Kloes

FLOWER 5\1C&gt;P i, GAP-.DEN C..t:NIER
453 JACK501'4 PIKE
GALLl Pt;)L\ 5, OH \CJ
~4 'o ~ ~!_g8l

POMEROY - The Pomeroy
Area Merchants Association will
meel Wednesday, 8 a.m., at Bank
One. The regular meeting date
:
has been changed to accomodate ·
more members. Please attend.
•
•

•

I, Roger W. Hysell, Vice President of the above-named bank do hereby declare that
this Report of Condition has been prepared in conformance wltb the Instructions Is·
sued by the Board of Governors ofthe Federal Reserve System and the State Bank·
-lng Authority and Is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
•·
Roger W. Hysell-VIce President ·

SMELTZER'S
44lD- 4Sl\8

•

TACO SALAD e
e SUPREME e.

:

ASSETS
Cash and balances due frqm depository Institutions:
a. Nonlnterest·bearlng balances and currency and coln .................. 1,949,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ... : ......................................................... 250,000.00
Securities .. ... ... .... ... .•.... , ... ,, ....................................... ..... ............ ,.... 22,579,000.00
• Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under agreements to resell:
Federal funds sold' ....................................................................... 1,875,000.00.
Loans and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned income ................ 28,614,000.00 ·
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ................... 227,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve ................ ....... ................... .. ....... ..............28,387,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ............... .... , ..697,000.00
Otber real estate owned ......................... .................. .. ................... ....... 74,000.00
Intangible assets., ... ... .......... .... , ......... , ....... ,..................................... , :.140,000.00
Otber assets .................................................... :........ ........ ............ ... .... 936,000.00
Total assets , ...................................................................................56,887,000.00
Total assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(j) ....... 56,887,000.00
LIABILITffiS
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ................ : .......... .... .......... ..........................51,742,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng' ................ , ... , ............ .. ..... 5,022,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ............................................ .46, 720,000.00 ·
Other lia b111Ues ........ , ........... .. :..... ,........................................... ,.......... 471,000.00
Total liabilities .............................. ,, .. ..... .. ........ ........................... .... 52,213,000.00
.
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock ................................... :................................ , ............... 500,000.00
Surplus ........................................................ ,,, ........................ .. ...... . 1,000,000.00
Undivided profits and capllal reserves ....................................... ....... 3,174,000.00
TOtal equity capital ......................... ............. .. ..... ..... ........................ 4,674,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 U.S.C.1823(j) ......... ......................................... ........ 4,674,000.00
Total llabllltles, limited-life preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C, 1823(j) ..........................56,887,000.00

A \N \DE S~l £&lt;.:..\ \tlN -BEA\J\\FUL t\DLL \ E S '(ELlOW
'
?"1\J EI'\''( P.AC.AN\~\1\ I YELLOW A~O P.ED BAR'OERRYI
HU(', "() PINE~ I JUNIPER~. tv\A&lt;3NDLIASI AR EOV\lAE~
AND . MAN'(. 1'-'\ANX M~R E.
~ • .. .., I ' - ~ _

• •

of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the .close of business
September 30, 1988, a state banking Institution or1anlzed and operatinK under the
banking laws of this state and a member of the Federal Reserve System. Published
in accordance with a call made by the State Banking Authority and by the Federal
Reserve Bank of this District. .
,

BUS\NE~S SALE
All SHRUa~ A~E . R£.0\.\C.ED 1D 1/i P~IC.E
EVEP.GREE.N~ ANO &lt;J~NAME.N\AL~ ·"''t: ~~\JE

~ _ . J . .._

•

Far111en aa..k cnl Savings Company

GOING 0\Jl" OF

_

:.

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION FOR

.

-

~ SPECIAL

Businesses apply
for transfers

SYRACUSE - A memorial
planting In tribute to the late
Frank E. Holmes and Ills family
was made Tuesday In Syracuse
by the last surviving member of
the family , Dorothy Roller of
Middleport.
Tile dogwood tree donated by
Mrs. Roller was Pi!!nled on the
side lawn next to tbe Syracuse
Municipal Building facing
Bridgeman St. since tile Holmes
family borne had been build on
land purchased from the Bridgeman estate. The historic Huston
home-Is also a part of that estate.
The late Frank E. Holmes was
Instrumental In helping to lncor·
porate tile village of Syracuse
under the late Fr'lnk Stowe, then
serving as mayor.
. :Holmes served on village council for a number of years. Also
assisting with the Jncorporatlon
of the village was the late Leroy
Holmes, son of Frank Holmes. A
third generation of tile Holmes
family Involved in the village
government is Kathryn (Katie)
Crow who Is currently serving ·
her third term on council having
earlier served as vlllage clerk.

•••••••••••••
• THIS WEEK'S : ·

Hospital.. news

GALLIPOLIS- Four more persons, Indicted ten days ago by
the grand-jury, were arraigned Friday before Judge Donald A.
Cox, In Gall Ia County Common Pleas Court.
Pleading not guilty to the Indictments were:
Richard Allen Green, 21, Rt. 2, Vinton, complicity to breaking
and entering and carrying a concealed weapon. Bond
continued.
Edward Earl Taylor, 24, Charleston, W.Va., theft. Bond
reduced from $5,000 recognizance bond to $2,000 cash bond .
David Gullet, 26, Scottown, breaking and entef!ng. Bond
continued.
'
co!~~!iDavldson, 30, Pomeroy, trafficking In drugs. Bond

Memorial
planting
completed

Seroices set

OCT. 30-NOY. 5

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

Gallipolis

New Rebates
just Announced!
CHEVROLET
CELEBRITY'S _
4-CYLINDER ............. •1000 CASH REBATE
6-CYLINDER ................ •400 CASH REBATE
CAMAROS ......................... .S500 CASH REBATE
CORSICA ............................. '400 CASH REBATE
BERETTA ....................................... .'500 CASH REBATE
CAPRICE'S ....................................... •750 CASH REBATE
S-10 PICKUP EL MODELS
REGULAR CABS ............. ,.... •500 CASH REBATE
S-10 BLAZERS (4X4) .............. •600 CASH REBATE

OLDSMOBILES
CALAIS .... .-....................................•500
CIERA'S ....................................... .'500
EIGHTY-EIGHTS .................... .'600
98'S ................................................. •750
CUTLASS SUPREMES ............ •500
(88 Model)
CUTLASS SUPREMES ......... •1000

&lt;;:ASH
CASH
CASH
CASH
CASH

REBATE
REBATE
REBATE
REBATE
REBATE

CASH REBATE

~~-:-LL.ItP..~ ,..,n.~OF THE OHIO VALLEY-

ti-JIM MINK
!

'

CHEVROLET

OLDSMOBilE

16U EASniN AYE. • GALliPOliS, OM. • 446-31172

WE DON'T TALK ABOUT DEALS,

"WE MAKE DEALS!"

)l, .~

r
I

�Page-A-6-SI.inday Times-Sentinel

October 30. 1988

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

Governor calls for Fernald prosecutions·
HAMTI.TON, Ohio !UP!) ·Gov. Richard Celeste said Friday that public and private
officials should be prosecu ted for
covering up health hazards at the
Fernald uranium plant.
" Nobqdy's been prosecuted
yet, butsomeoft hem should be."
thP governor said on th e nationally televised Phil Dona hue
Show.
After the show, Celeste told
reporters that of!lcials of the
Department of Energy and prl·vate contractors like National
Lead of Ohio and Westinghouse
should be subject to prosecution.
' 'People who _lied to the American public should be prosecuted." he sai d. " We've had 35
years or cynica l manipulation of
what the' public knows. The
pub! ic has been ask ing for years
abcut safety of the plant and
they've been told by officials this
was ' not a matter that would
cause danger to their health."
Some people living near the
plant have claimed for several
years that ra dioactive contami·
nation from the facility has
caused cancer and other diseases. At a recent congressio nal
hearing, documents showed that
gove rnment officials had been
aware of serious health hazards
at the plant, but had ignored
many of them.
·
The plant, which processes
uranium for nuclear weapons, Is
owned by the . federal govern-

ment, controlled by the Energy
Department and operated by a
private contractor, which previously was Nat tonal Lead and Is
now Westinghouse.
"The Energy Department cannot be trusted to tell us the
truth, " Celes te said on the
Donahue program,. which was
telecast from Hamilton High
School, located about 10 miles
from the plant. "Every time we
get an answer , we find out later It
was wrong. When we can' t trust
our own government, we're in

trouble.' '
Celeste, who has called for
shutdown of the plant until a n
Independent panel can evaluate
the problems and start a cleanup, was joined on the program by
Sen. John Glenn, D-Ohio.
"Department of Energy secrecy on this plant must end,"
said Glenn. "Secrecy is how we
got into trouble In the first place.
We had production take precedence over safety for ,'l5 years
behind a veil of secrecy. Production must be done safely and it
ca n be done safely."
Added Celeste, "People will
support the plant only if they
believe it Is being operated
safely. And tht1 don't believe
that today.''
Many In the audience of 800 ·
were neighbors of the plant who
said they were afraid of health
problems.
"What good does it do to

"

GM agrees to comply
with ground water law
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - The General Motors Corp. has
agreed to comply with Ohio ground water laws and pay a $30,000
civil penalty fo r a monitoring problem at one of its
manufacturing plants in the Dayton suburb of Moraine.
According to the set tlement reached with the Ohio attorney
general's office , General Motors must submit a plan for
identifying ground water problems to the state within 60 days,
said J ulie Graham , a spokeswoman for the attorney general's
office.
The plan is designed to detect the rate and extent of ground
water conta mination.
Once the pla n is approved by the Ohio Environmental
Protection Agency, Gene ral Motors has 90 days to install four
new monitoring wells at the site, Graham said.
Attorney General Anthony Ceiebrezze said his office became
involved at the req ues t of the Ohio EPA after the agency filed a
comp lai nt aga inst General Motors on Sept. 24, 1987.
Negotiations led to the settlement approved Thursday by
Mon tgomer.y County Common Pleas Judge Waiter Porter.

Police investgating series
of violent deaths in Toledo
TOLEDO, Ohio [UP!) - Authorities were inves tigating four
vi otenr deaths that occurred in
Toledo Friday. in Cluding the
shooti ngs of a pair of teenagers in
a west side apartme nt building.
Police also ar rested the supervisor of a security guard who was
staobed ro dea th last Sunday.
· The teenagers, Mar tha Hancock, 19. and her live-i n boyfriend, Brian Bloom . 19, were
found in the woman's appart menl Friday.evening. Both victims suffered a single guns ho t
wound to the head; Sgt. David
Noggle sa id.
In another part of town, Joe
Mttcheil, 25, Toledo, was shot in
the head during a struggle over
money. He was prounced dead at
an area hospital. Pollee said a
relative was taken into custody
but no charges )Vere filed
immediately.
A fo urth victim. Arnold West,

33, died on the city's north side
after being stabbed In the throat.
A warrant was issued for a
64-year-old Toledo man in that
Incident, which police said occurred when West went to the aid
of a woman who was a llegedly
threatened by the suspect:
Also on Friday pollee arrested
a suspect In the multiple stabbing
that lead to the death of a
building security guard. Charles
Henry Buck Jr., 34, was charged
with murder in the death of
Timothy B. Williams, 21, Toledo.
Williams, a security guard at a
northend business, died from
multiple stab wounds. Pollee
said Buck was Williams'
supervisor.

NEW EXPANDED SERVIci

woman.
Said another woman, "The
federal government and NLO
allowed us todrinkcontaminated
Water for four years and that's

"FREE DELIVERY"

wrong. ''

TO THESE AREAS

..

.- Mldchport • Po. .roy
ltcoclb~ry • lutland • Minarsvill•
Syracuse • Mason, W• Va.

...
..-'

,-

.1.00 MINIMUM PURCHASE ON

PRESCRIPTIONS PLUS HEALTH AND
BEAUTY AIDS.

l

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

'•''

(formlrft

'

•'

OIDERS ·· y IE PHONED IN
IEFOIE 3:00 P.M.

•

GOV. RICHARD CELE'ITE

•

s.c.-

Bill Harsha •.

Will Bring the Following
Qualifictions to Office:

•

,

''''"·

•
'

f111.tvt~"ff,'l~· ' , ,..
y

•UIOI.f. sue¥"'·

au\.\l

C"OPPEO
S\ltLO\tl
PAtl\ES

.S\.\CEO '"cott
S \.8. rt(G.

s ll•"''·

'

'~~~:.sutl\tS .................. '11 JCJ
6 \.B. fAll\ES .............. ..

'

49

THROROFARE WHOLE KERNEL
O
CREAM $TVLE

C~rn .................... Jf1Ui· $5 00

THOROFARE SLICED

_

.

.

.

White Potatoes ••••• 1n\n $5 00

FOULAS

2417r;, oz.

. Macaroni &amp;Cheese ..... $900
SNOWFLOSS

Tomatoes ••••••••••••• Jf,\n $5 00

SNOWFLOSS

.

rkraut ···········lflUi~ $5 00

Start Today!!!
"Clean Up" for a Clean Environment

SNOWFLOSS

Kidnev .Beans ......•l{tn·.~f¥ $5 00

SNOWFLOSS

·

Chili Beans •••••••••11{1l~·.~f¥ $5 00

SNOWFLOSS

Pork-N-Bea.ns ••••••1/{tn·.~f¥ $5 oo
HUNT'S

.

• L ..........V$1/~U~-.
·
,.f
.Man wrc,
• OOO
ASSORTED FLAVORS

lots-A-Po•
.
r •••••••if1\01.gfl\

This is a donation collection ...Sponsored by

·The Gallia County Litter Control Program
4ny Questions? Call 446-4612-Ask for Litter Control Offiu

• •

TREK YOUR TRASH-NOVEMBER 12th

''
.'
•,

Star Bank
introduces a new concept
in home mortgages.
.
The Bi-Weekly Payment
Adjustable Rate Mortgage

\

•'

1

TENDER SWEET

RED RIPE

TOMATOES

'

,., You Pay Less Interest
,....vour Pay OfJ C~mes Sooner
,...Your Payments Are Automatic~;:::
,.,You Gain Equity Faster

LB.

TEIIDER CRISP
C~LIFORMI~

25 or 3()-year, mortgage••

.
"
•

If you've bought a home within the last
By switching to a Star Bank Bi-Weekly
5. 6 or 7 years and are making
Paymenl Adjustable Rate Mortgage, you
payments on a 25 or 30-year
may be able to save tens-of-thousands of
mortgage, you need to stop In and talk
dollars in inlerest paymenls and put your
to us at Star Bank about a Bi-Weekly .
1ncreased home equrty to work for you.
Payment Adjustable Rate Mortgage. We'll ·
shoiN you hOIN much you can save by
Call or stop by any Star Sank, NA, Tri·
refinancing.
State office for more information. ·

.

CELERY

LB.

Russett Potatoes

CARROTS

If you already have a

STALK

69•
89•

$ 98
so LB. BAO ALL PURPOSE

Potatoes

$J69

10 LB. BAG

APPLES

You C~el": R•• D1lleleu, ieldu Delleleu Ro•t
Btulf, lllellten, Wluatt
8AL. JU8 APPLE CIDER ....................... '2.69

1

$~ 99

OCEAN SPRAY
FRESH PK8.

_,

Yellow Onions
5 LB. BAG

Yellow Onions

$1S9

+ Yellow Onions 99+
3 LB. BAG

2 Energy to Attack
' Case Backlog
3' Commitment to Fairness

4 Success in
Prosecuting Criminals

Tile S11hl 028AVSEQ flllllle

.., rou . - wt1t1 "- rc*'

.::n'::'

~.=.::

OUIIInl

S Civil Representation of
County Elected Officials

fiilu:CI d, FIItU •aliCIIonlc:

IGnitiOn. Qulckatop"' 11111111
Chain llrlke, ml-viiMIIIIM
I'J"'m and a 3.12 cu. ln.

RIDENOUR
SUPPLY
CHESTER

...
~

I

•'
."•

·coun srrm OfrW"M : . i.ll1 1 Ylli~

Poi~

X

"

Judge, Court of Appeals

1-:W";;:I-:7-LL~IA~MH."":":H.;.:AR;.;.;SH~A~

ltr llf (tfMIIttN tt filet ....... t.r JY11t11, fr•. Wlliam H•

...,,ha, .....Old Or.,

PortJ~~~~tUth.

Oh.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

',

Star Bank, N.A., Tri-Stale Office I.QclotlnN

B•

ttll4) HtJ.fl6fi2

.,

'

.'

STAR BANK
Re.:ldJ. frtre Star

Vote for •••

181-3301

.

•'
•

7 COMMON SENSE

lllglne. .

· .

r--~--=

I

Where: Silver Bridge Mall lbahind Star Bank)
When: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.-Saturday, November 12th

69~
9~

aot.t. s~us~&amp;E .......... J~~ ... 79~
"fl~tll\ES.............. .... u.'l\··~1
·
,,,

Saturday, November .12th
•
• Glass llids removed) • Aluminum Cans • Tin Cans •
• Cardboard lfrom toothpaste to regular boxes) •

•• J.IA··'•\0.·.

.
~S''
pQUS" S~US~&amp;£ .... MMff•· 19~

(SUtEO.)

What: • Newspapers I no glossy magazines)

S\Ui~.aA

~tQ\.().,
..,. ••••••••
P

Vt poatt
LO\tl ·

',.

I

1 Extensive Appellate
Experience

. ttEO

,,4!

••

seven years.

As Your Judge
of.the Court of Appeals

8AC0tl ..................

Groao4 e"aek

,•

YOUR TRASH IS VALUABLE
·-Recycling Collection Day-

"~··················
CllSP~ S£l~£

coMao
'''·
Stet\, ttout,

it

Manufacturing meeting
rebirth, leaders say
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) - OrAnd Wickham Skinner, a Harganizers of a "competitive manu· vard business professor and
facturing'' conference next week proponent of strategic manufacsay It sold-out audience of 700 turing, will discuss whether
Industry leaders testifies to a industry is regaining Its competirebirth in U.S. manufacturing.
tive edge.
Representatives from 20 states
Gov. Richard Celeste Is scheand Canada have signed up for duled to address the conference
two days of seminars and Wednesday on innovations in
speeches by CEO's of turnaround manufact urlng.
companies, authors of business
"The m a nufacturing renaisbes t -sellers and finance sance is taking place right here in
theorists .
Ohio," Shaw says. "We are the
"Global competition has
heartbeat of manufacturing for
forced American manufac turing the U.S. This conference Is abcut
leaders to discover a nd Implethe resurgenc e of manufacturing
ment ne w and better a p- in this cou ntry and the , turnaproaches," says Carol Shaw,
round that has happened here in
conference orga nizer and assist- the Midwest."
ant dean of the School of
Also Wednesday, Robert Hall
Engineering at the University of of Tndiana University, a uthor of
Dayton.
"Attaining Manufacturing ExBilled as the largest confer- .cellence," will talk about reence of !ts kind ever held,
forms In Industrial management,
"Competitive Manufacturing :
and E liyahu Goidratt, author of
Winning Management Strate- the underground book "The
gies." will be at the Dayton
Goal, " will discuss business
Co nvention Center next Tuesday management.
and We dnesday.
Shaw said companies are
In a kickoff event Monday
learning that .finding new 't echevening, industrial consultant nologies is not the most dltflcult
Mitchell Fein will talk about part of revamping manufacturbcostlng productivity in factoIng plants. "The most difficult
ries. His "Improshare Plan" to part ·Is how to effectively manage
divide productivity gains be- , the company-Wide cha nges netween management and workers
cessary for success," she said.
has been adopted by 250 U.S.
"You can't run out and buy
companies.
technology and thtnk that is the
answer. If you don't have people
working together In synergy, all
·On Tuesday, Masaakl Imal,
the technology in the world won't
management consultant and a uhelp you," Shaw said.
thor of the best-selling book
The conference is sponsored by
" Kalzen, " will speak on the
the National Association of MaJapanese philosophy of "incre- nufacturers, Ohio's Thomas Edim e n tal , unending
son P rogram ·and other industry
improvement.''
and community groups .
Stanley Gault, chairman of
Rubbermaid Inc., will explain
how Rubbermaid surged in sa les
from $300 million to $1 billion In

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Stturday 9 A.M.-1 P.M.

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Sunday TIITI8s-Sentinei- Page- A-7

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protect ourselves !rom the So·
vlets (by building nuclear weapons) when we're poisoning
ourselves doing it? " asked one

However , several people said
they did not feel threatened by
the plant.
" I work there and I'm not
afraid," said a woman. "! think
the media Is just playing on the
public's sympathy."
Many people in the crowd said
the 1,500-employee plant should
be cleaned up and kept open, but
when Donahue quoted Energy
Department officials saying a
clean-up might take 10 years and
cost $1 billion, Glenn said, "!
heard one clean-up estimate of$3
billion.' '
"We've got to get money for a
clean-up," added .Glenn. " We ·
have to start paying for all those
years we didn't clean It up. "

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

"SUn•r
Pinz.11&gt;f'fil'f'.( :alli 1 ~.u...
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TELEPHONE: 992·3471

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
8 A.M.-10 P.M.'

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A-S-Sunday THTMtS-Santinel

Benefit auction set /or Cub Scouts
POMEROY - The Nov. 5
benefit auction lor Pomeroy Cub
Scout Pack 2491s drawing nearer
and·Cubmaster Clarence Molden
reports that approxlmatly 80
auction Items " have come In so
far" from Pomeroy businesses.

Including cash donations to the
troop, over 90 donations have
been collected, Molden adds.
A partial list of donated Items
which will be auctioned by Dan
Smith on Saturday, Nov. 5,

Martian "invasion'
anniversary Sunday
WEST WINDSOR, N.J. (UP!)
- Martians are Invading Grovers Mill again Sunday, and
almost everyone agrees that
visitors will have a .far better
chance o! actually spotting one of
the aliens this time around.
The last armada o! Invading
Martians - though they panIcked the nation - were visible
only In the minds of the listeners
of Orson Welles' legendary CBS
radio broadcast, "The War of the
Worlds.··
Grovers Mill, the tiny central
·New Jersey hamlet picked as the
fictional landing site with a jab o!
a pencil at a roadmap by
scriptwriter Howard -Koch, Is
celebrating the 50th anniversary
of the Oct. 30, 1938, broadcast
with a lour-day weekend festival.
The festival wraps up Sunday
• as thousands of schoolchildren
llortraylng Martians and Earthlings battle It out, then make
peace.
The War of the World Commemorative Committee placed a
monument at the "landing site"
Saturday, In between a Martian
parade and a panel discussion,
"Could It Happen Again?", featuring radio humorist Garrison
Keillor.
On Sunday night, nearby Princeton University's McCarter
Theater wlll stage a reenactment of the Welles broadcast from the original script. And
many National Public Radio
stations will broadcast a modern
version of "War of.the Worlds,"
starring Jason Robards Jr.,
Sunday night.
"It is a kind of strange
occurence, " said Koch, now 86
and still writing In Woodstock,
N.Y. "I suppose people like to
celebrate things on an anniversary. To me, it ' s just another
day."
The "War of the Worlds"
episode of Welles' popular "Mercury Theater on the Air'' drama
series has become the most
famous broadcast of radio
history·.
Welles, adapting the H.G.
Wells novel to' locations In
Depression-era America, arranged for Martians to "lar.d" in
the obscure village of Grovers
Mill, now part of West Windsor
Township where Princeton Is
located.
The Invaders wiped out a
mUitla unit and proceeded to
take over the world, all In a
one-hour program.
The show was presented as a
series of news bulletins InterruptIng regular programming. Thus
disguised, the fictional piece set
off a very real . panic among
listeners who tuned In late and
missed an opening disclaimer.
Farmers In Gravers Mill shot
up a water tower they mistook lor
an invading Martian assault
machine. State troopers with gas ·
masks and riot guns rushed to the
scene, as dld scientists from
·
Princeton.
An estimated 1 million of the 12
million people listening .a cross
the nation are said to have fled
their homes to fight or run.
Koch, dead tired after writing
the "War ofthe Worlds" script In
only six days, was at home that
fateful night in 1938, rather than
at the CBS studios In Manhattan
where the radio play originated.
"l just listened to the broadcast and went to sleep," he said.
He discovered the panic he had
caused only the next mo~nlng,
when newspaper headlines In
New York proclaimed "Fake
Radio 'War' Stirs Terror
Through U.S."
" I suppose Heel prldethatl did
a script under difficult conditions
-very difficult conditions- and
that it came out as well as It did
and affected as many people as It
did." he said. "I'm not very
proud of the people being put Into
"'ott' •panic. That I would not do
again."
Koch has rellected many times
on the program and the effect It
had. He would not be surprised If
a similar broadcast today updated lor modern threats and
perhaps presented on television
Instead of radio - could produce
a similar reaction.
"The way the world Is today,
with the nuclear thing' hanging
over us and all the cold warriors
busy making enemies, people are
expecting anything," he said. "I
would hesitate to take part In

October 30. 1988 .

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

anything that suggested a war."
The lesson to be learned from
llle program "Is to ask people
listening to television or radio or
reading the news to think, to use
their power to rationalize,'' Koch
said, "not to accept everything
that comes over." ·~

Big Chill hits the Midwest . .

starting at 10 a .m. at Meigs High
By United Press Interaatlonal
School, will be two ·hours of
Residents awoke Saturday to
backhoe time, golf clubs, a
telephone, a model rocket kit, frigid air In the Midwest and the
northern Rockies while up .to 4
bowling games, ceramic Items,
Inches of snow blanketed parts o!
flower arrangements, video ren·
Montana, the National Weather
tats, cakes, pies, doughnuts,
Service
reported.
popcorn, pizzas, pop and more.
The
early
morning temperaThe cubscouts ate hoping for a ·
ture
sank
to
a record low olll
good turnout from the public for
degrees
In
International
Falls,
the auction, proceeds from which
Minn.,
betterlngthe1980markby
will be used to operate the troop
throughout the year. Last year 1. degree. In Deluth, Minn., the
the troop had 35 members and mercury dropped to 14 degreesspent abo\lt $300. Tbls year the 1 degree lower than the 8-yeartroop has doubled In membership old mark- and It was 23 degrees
and at the present time, only has In South Bend, Ind., 2 degrees
below the 1966 record.
about $100 In t)le troop treasury.
Overnight, the mercury
After the auction, a plaque will
dropped
Into the teens and single
be presented to the highest
digits
over
the northern Rockies,
bidder. Certificates will be presNorth
Dakota
and the upper
ented to all others who donated to
Mlsst,slppl
Valley
while, the
the auction.
readings were In the 20s over the

upper Great Lakes, the Ohio
Valley, the northern hall of
Dllnols and most of Iowa, South
Dakota; Nebraska and the central Rockies.
The most snow reported In th~
natiOn Saturday was 4 Inches at
Cutbank, Mont. Three Inches !ell
at International Falls, Mont.
The early morning tempera-

1rhntii-

tures were In the 50s and 60s over
Texas, the Gulf Coast region,
Georgia, South Carolina and
central and southern California ..
In the desert Southwest ,and
Florida, the mercury was In the
60s and 70s while the rest of the
natiOn generally had tempera•
lures In the 30s and 40s.
-

By LEE ANN WELCH
Times-sentinel Staff ·
GALLIPOLIS - A small seed
has been plan ted in the minds of a
• few people, and as the Idea
grows, so do plans for the old
Gallipolis Theater.
The theater has been vacant
for 25 years, and was cleaned up
during the past two weeks so
plans can be completed for the
-auditorium's renovation and restoration, according to Lora Snow
of the Ariel Cultural and Performing Arts Centre board of
directors .
In mid-October, the group

SWEETLIX
DEER BLOCKS

graduations, recitals and a bookIng service for local talent.
" We're not competing with
other facilities already es tablished In the area," Snow said.
The Ariel will be a complimentary facility , to be used In
cooperation with others, such as
the French Art Colony.
Originally opened In 1895, It
was home to the Ariel L'odge of
the Independent .Order of Odd
Fellows (IOOF), and became
known as the Ariel Opera House.
It's building cost was $28,000 at
the time, and was one olthe most
expensive of that lime. In 1919, .

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Get ready now for a happit:r
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ESTABLISHED 1895
LOGO UNVEILED - The newly-created logo for the Ariel
Cultural and Perlonnlng Arts Centre was unveiled Friday, and
wUI be used on a number of Items and give the complex an Identity,
according to co-founder Lora Snow of GaiUpolls.

' signed a 50-year lease on the
facility, and Snow said she
envisions a number of uses for
. • the complex when It opens in
· '; 1990. She, and John R. Spinks of
; · Charleston, W.Va., co-founded
, . the group and are overseeing the
' . planning.
·
To be develped In phases, the
total renovation and restoration
are expected to cost $1,5 million.
She said the complex has a
number of proposed uses, lnclud·
ing a symphony, community and
.• children's theater performances , educational programs, spe•·• cia! even I programming, miniconvention center, a facUlty lor
lectures, speeches and rallies,

DINING llOOM SUl'L'ES:
•

the Masonic Lodge purchased
the building.
According to Spinks, the complex will provide a boost for the
local economy.
The first phase of restoration
and construction wlll cost
$290,000 and the majority can and
wlll be contracted locally, Spinks
said.
He said the first year economic
Impact on the downtown economy Is estimated to )le $482,625
arid does not Include Income
generated from outside bookings
of the complex or ticket sales
generated by use of the theater
for movies.
It would create jobs, generate

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new tax revenue and attra ct
visitors to downtow.n Gallipolis,
Snow said.
The plans are in place, now .
come the big hurdle - funding.
While there are some grants and
foundations to help, the majority
Is going to have to be raised by
private means.
There are a number of grants
to provide program!lllng and
equipment, but few for the
theater's renovation and restora tion, Snow said. She added a fund
raising committee is being established and expects to begins the
las k shortly.
Fortunately, the building itself
Is structurally sound, and many
of the theater's features are
intact, with little repair needed.
The first obstacle In the physical project Is nearing completion
.- cleaning the building, which
was home to hundreds of pigeons
in the past 25 years.
Community response to th.e
board's plea for cleaners was
tremendous, Snow said. Four
large dump truck loads of debris
were hauled away. The trucks
were provided by Jenkins Concrete and the city of Gallipolis,
Snow said. The cleaners - all
community volunteers - were
fed by Lafayette Bakery. Vlllage
Quick Shop, Johnson' s Supermarkets and McDonalds; Snow
added.
Recommendations from the
Center for Disease Control in
Atlanta were followed in the
cleaning and disinfecting, and ·
Akzo Chemical (formerly
Stauffer) provided respirators.
It Is the plan of the board to
have the complex ready to open
for the Gallipolis Bicentennial,
and would provide a place for
programming in that year' s
celebration.
Among plans for the facility
are the Ohio Valley Sym~hony
Orchestra , Snow said, which
would be the only professional
orchestra In Southeast Ohio.
·The orchestra proposal includes a series of subscription
concerts, In addition to pops and
young people ' s concerts .
Members of the orchestra would
also be part of a Chamber group
of brass, string and wind quintets
and quartets, all available for
prograll)S in schools.
It will also provide after school
Instruction on all orchestra instruments, and be a catalyst for
orchestral programs in · the

'"~.~~.

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TALKING OVER PLANS - The Gallipolis
Theater wUI become a useful, functioning part of
the downtown area once again, with plans to
renovate and restore the facility Into a cultural
and perfonnlng arts center. Here John Spinks,
schools, and eventually a youth
symphony would be tormed.
Snow, who was formerly a high
~chool music teacher, says there
is a need for a group of this type_
- an outlet for the young people

left and Lora Snow, center, discuss plans for the
metamorphosis of the theater's Interior with R.J .
Loyd, owner of Theatrical Designs and Technology, who has evaluated the facility and estimated
It potential. (Times-Sentinel photo)

to use the talents they have be suitable fo r touring and
original the at r ical productions.
developed.
The complex would bean outlet
"The res ponses have been
tremendous,"
Snow said, not just
for many talented individual s
for
help,
bu
t
for
the crea tion of a
and groups in the a·rea. Snow
place
for
th
e
perform
ing arts in
added, not just for music. It will
town.

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90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

8

Renovation of theater will provide another outlet for the arts

•

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Section

October 30, 1988

. ' - -

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RESTORATION - Members of tbe Ariel
Cultural and Performing Arts Centre board of
directors have planned to restore the facility Into
a mull-arts complex In downtown Gallipolis.

Rutland Furniture willnzahe sure your trip to their store

during the Giant 1st Annual Unadvertised Sale-A-Bration ·
will save you hundreds of dollars and give you na1ne brand
furniture at roch-bottont prices. You must visit our store to know
how nzuch you can save. Conze in, look us over, see our already low
prices, picll. out what you want, then talh t-o one of our salesnzen to
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Storezvide Unadvertised Sale-A-Bration.
Sale runs thru Saturday, Nov. 5th.

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Here, board member Lora Snow and R.J. Loyd of
Theatrical Designs and Technology of Charleston, W.Va., discuss restoration olthe private box
area of the theater. (Times-sentinel photo)

BEFORE THE CLEANING CREWS - The
Gal llpolis Theater had been vacant lor 25 years,
except lor hundreds of pigeons roosHng there. The
Interior was In need of major cleaning and

disinfecting before a complete evaluation of the
Interior could be completed. Dozens of volunteers
from the area spent a weekend In th e theater,
cleaning and hauling away debris.

A chat with Houdini, Batman i9 Chicago - Halloween's here!
By RUSSELL SNYDER
United Press International
A Philadelphia doctor faces probation for
selling human heads. Witches predict Nancy
Reagan wlll be on "Hollywood Squares. " A
seance Is planned in Wisconsin to chat with Harry
Houdini. Batman is hanging around I~ &lt;;hlcago.
And In Detroit, pollee and firefighters are trying
to keep "Devll's Night" revelers from burning the
place down.
II must be getting close to Halloween.
Six years of probation and 1,600 hours of
community service are ahead for an elderly
doctor who pleaded no contest to charges of
selling human heads and other body parts .
Dr. Martin Spector, 72, an eye, ear, nose and
throat specialist from Philadelphia, also was
drdered Friday to pay the maximum fine of
$35,200 and to suspend his paid practice until he
has completed at lleast 300 hours of community
work.
_
Spector's lawyer, Joel Siomsky, said the doctor
only was attempting to help other doctors In their
training by making body parts available.
The case came to light In August1986 when a
United Parcel Service worker In Louisville, Ky.,
discovered live severed heads inside a leaking

center. Spector and. four others were charged
three months later.
At the time of his arrest, pollee said Spector had
.been buying body parts from dieners - people
who sew up bodies after autopsies - since 1976,
although the doctor said later Ina court hearing he
had been dealing In parts for 20 years. .&gt;fl
America's witches, meanwhile, are t!ti¥-iwlth
their annual Halloween predictions for 1989. They
see Nancy Reagan on "Hollywood Squares,"
Elvis Presley inside the Kremlin and the
Japanese buying the Los Angeles Dodgers.
The wacky predictions reported Friday were
made In the 15th annual poll of 310 witches by the
New York Center for the Strange.
The misty glimpses In the crystal balls also
forecast that building tycoon Donald Trump will
announce plans to rebuild the Great Wallo! China,
and Dr. Ruth Westheimer will run for mayor of
New York.
They also predicted that George Bush will win
the presidential election, and Ronald Reagan wlll
run for a third term as governor of California.
Stay tuned.
In Milwaukee, admirers of Harry Houdini plan
to gather at a secret location In Appleton, Wis., at
midnight Sunday where they hope a seance will
tune them Into the famous escape · artist and

Appleton was Houdini' s hometown and the
seance wlll be the second conducted In the city,
said Sidney H. Radner, who Is directing the
seance.
Radner, who owns the largest collection of
Houdini memorabilia In the world, said he will
bring a pair of handcuffs that Houdini gave to hls
brother , Theodore Hardeen.
"He told his brother if he came back In a
physical way, that pair of handcuffs he would
open," Radner said Friday in a telephone
interview from Holyoke, Mass.
" Maybe we'll get results," Radner said. "Keep
in mind that Appleton was his favorite place."
A favorite place lor Fernando Fontanez- aka
"Batman"_ seems to be In the air.
The 25-year-old Chicagoan, outfitted In a blue
cape, tights and mask, climbed a 10-story steel
mesh sculpture of a baseball bat Friday located In
the heart of downtown. The noontime climb by
Fontanez was his second In as many years.
Witnesses were amazed as Fontanez raced
through at least 15 pollee officers and security
gu 11 rds who were positioned to prevent the
publicized event from taking place.
•'He ran right through them," said specator
Keith Dudley. "It was bad."
"He ran up on the sidewalk, and In one single

bound he was on the bat and au\ of reach," said
. onlooker Darryl Swa in.
Fontanez scaled the bl ack sculpt ure and
shouted to the small crowd th at had ga thered:
"Batman is not dead."
Firefighters finally coaxed Fonta nez into
coming down on a ladder. He was arrested and
charged with criminal tres pass a nd reckless
conpuct.
For Fontanez, It was an anniversary of sorts. He
performed the same stunt last Oct . 30 wi th the
same results.
In Detroit, another kind of anniversary has
pollee and firelighters on edge.
This weekend marks the return of Sunday's
traditional "Devll's Night" th at in recent years
means dozens of arson fires will rage throughout
the city.
An emergency curfew Is In effect that ba ns
youths under 18 from being on the stree ts fr om 6
p.m. to 6 a .m. through Monday. Las t year, 485
juveniles were detained under a similar program .
The peak for Devil' s Night came In 1984 when
there were 810 fires repor ted. Last year 290
erupted.
A pollee spokesman . remarking on official
preparations for the weekend, said: '' We' re doing
everything we can to have a nice holiday

'· •-~bo~x~th~a~t~w:a:s~ad~d~r~e:ss:ed~t~o~a~C~o~lo:r:a:do~r~es:e~a~r~ch~-m~a!g~lc~la~n~w~h~o~d~led~6~2~y~e~a~r!s!a~go~on~H~a~ll~o:w;ee~n~-~--------------------------------------~w~ee;;k;e:nd:-~"----------------------------~

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�--Anniversaries-Isabel Sheets, Myrtle and Ellis
Thornton;
Robert Massie and Travis,
Clarence and LaVerne Stewart,
Delsle Burgess, Mary Riddle
Garwood, Jlenlece Newberry,
Bonnie Tabar and Nicholas Ta·
bar, Mary Notter, Ronda and
Kayla Johnson, MaeBelle Pope,
Harley Myers, Mr. and Mrs. J .
Merrtll Carter;
Mr. and Mrs. Kall Burleson,
George and Clarice Dillon, Ray
and Edith Davis, Mildred Sisson,
Loris Barlow, Miriam · Allison,
Jean Gillespie, Paul and Madge
Northup, Roxanne Lyon, Claudie
and Eva Lyon, Sadie Notter,
Opal and Bill Lloyd, Teresa Hall,
Karen, Philip and Stephen
Roberts;
Kathryn Massie, Jackie Hall,
Flora Dalley, Joy and Donald
Bar low, Karen, Larry, Sarah and
Suianne Marr, Beverly, Dan,
· Netl and Kathy Watson, Ed,
Paula, Chris, Heather and Na·
talte Marr.
Out of town guests were
Norman and Lady Coleman,
Cleda and Alex Abonyi, William
L. Marr Jr. , Gene and Garnet
Engle, Kathleen Shoemaker
Sirback.
Sending gifts but unable to
attend were Ethel Grbntnger,
Vickie Grbninger and gail Jones,
Thurman and Inez Mays, Janice
Mays; BerniCe Brewer, Pual and
Anna Mae Perroud, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Harris, Mary Morgan,
Floyd Folden, Mrs. Murre!
Folden, Mr. and Mrs. Ronnie
Folden and Mr. and Mrs. Duthie
Marr.

Receive

ELL

.Marrs observe 50th anniversary
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn T. Marr were honored with
a reception on Oct. 2, tor their
50th wedding anniversary. The
reception at their home was
given by their children and
families.
Mr. and Mrs. Marr were
married at the bride's home on
Oct. 2, 1938.
Mrs. Marr Is the daughter of
the late Isaiah and Margaret
Wells Notter of Northup and Mr.
Marr Is the son of the late
Wllltam and Mary Ann Buchanan Marr of Cleveland.
They are the parents of tour
chtldren, Beverly watson of
Patriot, Joy Barlow of Northup.
Larry Marr or Gallipolis and Ed
Marr of Groveport.
Assisting at' the reception were
Kathryn Massie, Jackie Hall and
Karen Roberts. Registering gu·
ests was Flora Oatley. The
golden theme was carried out
and a three-tier fountain cake
baked by Jackie Hall.
Attending the reception were:
Helen Johnson, Hazel Sheets,
Bea Elliott, Leona Sewell, Lu·
ctlle Smith, Polly Elliott, Rus·
sell, Pat and Robbie Saunders,
Wanda Fillinger, Sterling, Rachel Carpenter and four grandchildren, Wtlliam and Ruth
Houck, Smeltzer and Mary Fran·
ces Rose, Helen A. Murphy,
Dorothy Rodgers, Mariam Purs·
ley, Jan Matson and chlldren;
Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Watson,
Shirley Boster, Bonnie Hutton,
Cleeland and Wanda Wtllts,
Keith, Betty and Leighton Ad·
kins, Jim Oatley, Becky MuiJlns,

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.

October 30, 1988

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

PBQ6- B·2-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

Up To
• •
We Reserve .The Right To
' Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH .

PRICES GOOD MONDAY
10/31/

MR. and MRS. CHARLES CASEY

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Casey of Route 1 Bidwell
will observe their 50th wedding
anniversary with an open house
on Saturday, Nov. 5, from 2 to 7
p.m. at the Kyger Creek Club
House.

1/4 ·Pork

Charles Casey and Velva White
were married Nov. 7, 1938 by the
Rev. Jennings Cremeans. They
are the parents of 13 children,
and have 24 grandchildren and
eight ·g reat-grandchildren.

RACINE - Lt. Michael F.
Sterrett recently completed the
U. S. Army Ranger Course at
Fort Benning, Ga.
The course Is designed to
develop leadership skills of se·
lected male officers and enlisted
men by requiring them to per·
form effectively as small unit
leaders in realistic ~nvironment
· under
mental and phy,.sical
stress approaching that found in
combat. Length of the course is
58 days averaging 19 hours of
training each day, seven days of
week.
There are four phases of
training, each 14 days in length.
The Benning phase ts at Fort

Dugway Proving Grounds In
Utah.. Approximately one per·
cent of the total army personnel
achieve this status.
.
Lt. Sterrett has successfully
completed the infantry officers
basic course, airborne school and
is presently attending Bradley
Vehicle Commander's Course at

~;'ect~~~in~s~~:n ~~~~B~:d:::;

Platoon Leader with the Second
Armour Division at Fort Hood,
Tex., on completion of this

co~~.sesterrett

ts a graduate of
Southwestern High School and
PurdueUniverslty.Helstheson
of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Sterret,
Greensburg, Ind., and the grand·

:~:~~~~:h~ar;:~~n~t;!~ b~a~~~! ~:c~~~rH~n~~~~~~~~nt~p~~!

Florida phase on Elgin Air Force
Base and the desert phase at

former Stacy Marks of Pittsboro,
Ind ..

Savage receives airborne training
Army Cadet Thomas E . Sav·
age, son of Elton D. and Deuna F.
Savage of Rural Route 1, Nortnrup, Ohio, has received the
parachutist
badge upon airborne
cotnpletton
of the three-week
ci&gt;urse at the U.S. Army Infantry
School. Fort Benning, Ga.
During the first week of trainIng, students underwent a rigor·
ous physical training program
and received instruction In the
theory of parachuting. The second week they received practi·
cal training by jumping from
34-foot and 250·foot towers. The
final week they made five stall-

cline parachute jumps Including
one night jump.
He Is a 1985 graduate of
Southwestern High School, Pa·

Leg Quarters •••••••• 49&lt;
LB.

Fryer Part~ ......'!•••• 49&lt; .

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COUPON

Logan Monument Co.
0

Loo•n. Ohio
send m~ FRE_£

PI•••
booklets
showin&amp;•emontls llftntlll •.n full

cotoi with sizes and pnctlllslld.
Cl Kindlr hwe an authoriZed Lopn

Monument Co. ttt~rHenlllivt call
at mr home.
Cl PI,., send me dellil~ •.bout
ll10soleums w~hout obhptton.

StrHt or Route--------

or Town - - - - - - - f'llone - - - - - - - - - City

MONUMENTS ,lRE OUR ONLY
BUSINESS, NOT ,l SIOEUNE ...
0

LOGAN MONUMINT
CO., INC.
Ill. 110

388-8103
POMEROY. OHIO

Turkeys •••••••••..•':·•••• 99 &lt;

Samsung... MultiTech
Shin tom ... Zenith
D ynaT_ech ... Emerson
.
.

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Deposits:
a. In domestic offices ............ ....................... .. ... ........................... 26,234,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest·bearlng1 ............... .............. .......... , 2,642,000.00
(2) Interest-bearing ....................................... ...... 23,592,000.00
Other liabilities ...................................................................................387,000.00
Total liabilities ...... ........ ....... ... ............ ................... ........................ .26,621,000.00

FRESH

BAKERY DONUTS .................[}.%. S149

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I, Gary P. Norris, Cashier of the above· named bank do hereby declare that this Report of Condition Is true and correct to the best ot my knowledge and belle!.
Gary P. Norris, Cashier
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness otthts statementof~es~urces
and liabilities. We declare that It has been examined by us, and to the best of our
knowledge and belief has been prepared ln·conformance with the Instructions and
Is true and correct.
John T. Wolfe
George Nelgler - Directors
Carroll Norris

Pomoroy-M•on B•ldQO

982-2188

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FLAVOIITI

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limit 2 Por (Uit..n•-Good Only At Powell's Supor Volu
Good Monlloj, Oct. 31 Only

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POTATO CHIPS

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11 01. lAG

$129
,

limij I Por Cuot..n•-Good Only AI Powtll'• Super Vatu
Good Monday, Ott. 31 Only
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MAXWELL HOUSE

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INSTANT COFFEE

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GoO&lt;! Monlloj, Oct. 31 Only

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•••••••••••••••••••••••
NO TRICKS
ALWAYS A TREAT TO SHOP AT
POWELL'S SUPER VALUE
PRICES GOOD MONDAY ONLY!
10/31/88 ALL DAY

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Pumpkin P1e ••••••••• 99&lt; .: - ;!;!~ ~ .i
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Large Eggs ••••••••••••
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Head Lettuce ••••• 2/

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Stew Meat .:•••••L:.••• $219

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Common stock .................................................................................... 125,000.00
Surplus .... , ..........................................................................................125,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .............................................. 2,848,000.00
Total equity capital and losses,.tJeferred
pursuant to 12 u.s.c. 1823(J) .......................................................... 3,098,000.00
Totalllabtlittes, limlted-1!1e preferred stock, and equity capital,
and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S. C. 1823(J) .......................... 29,719,000.00

I

BONELESS
SAVORY

.
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Sausage ...,~ ........... $ 119 :: ·=Ill.
O&lt;!t3W ~:

Chuck Roast ....L:.•• ~ $179

E NATIONAL BANK

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P~:::l:=&lt;
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U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

HOME
.
W[
ENTERTAINMENT . REPAIR
CENTER
ALL MAKES
391 POMIIOY,
WESIIUINOHIO
STIEET
AND
992-352.
MODELS
-10 AM-I PM MON.-SAT.

~m• --------------

VtNTON. OHIO

SWIFT'S BUTTERBALL:_6 to 22 LB. AVG.

FACTORY AUTHORIZED SERVICE

1111

!:!::!

~~

HOMEMADE PORK

LB.

Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
a. Noninterest·bearing balances and currency and coln .................. 1,174,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances ..... ........................... ............... ..... .. .......700,000.00
Securities ....... ...... ....... ... ..................... ,, .. ................................. ........ 4. 764,000.00
Federal funds sold .......................................................................... , 4,886 000.00
Loans ana lease flnan·ctng recetvao1es:
·
'
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income .... ...... ......17,833,000.00
LESS: Allowance tor loan and lease losses ............. ......332,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned income,
allowance •.and reserve ........ ....... .......... ............. ... ....... ...... ... .... ... .17,501,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (including capitalized leases) ...................... 170,000.00
Other assets ..................................................... .'............................ ...... 424,000.00
Total assets .................................. .................... ........... ................... 29, 719,000.00
Total .assets and losse&amp; deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(J) ....... 29,719,000.00

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YELLOW ONIONS ••••~.~~•• Mg•• 2 j$ 100

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(Thom .. C.mpbetll

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of Racln~ In the State of Ohio, at the close of business on September 30, 1988 published In responae to call made by Comptroller of the Currency, under title 12.
United States Code, Section 181.
Charter Number 9815
Comptroller of the Currenty 4th DistriCt

•

•••••••••••••••••••••••
••
••

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CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Forelp Subsidiaries)

"To live in hearts
we leave behind
is not to die"

Loin .~ ••L:.••• S1 ·19

MIXED

t::io:t,~O:h:io:._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _: : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : : :

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HERE IS. HOW
IT WORKS.
BRING THE
ATTACHED
COUPONS AND

CHICKEN

Sterrett completes training course

.

On The
Purchase of
Your
Thanksgiving
Turkey

PRICES EFFECTIVE SUN., OCT. 30, THRU SAT., NOV. 5, 1988

Casey ,anniversary to be observed

•
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OFF

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•

HALLOWEEN
CELEBRAliON

$1200

STORE HQIJRS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM~ 10 PM

Monday thru Sunday

-

Stuffing •••••••••••~~~ •• 79&lt;
DE!ERGENT
. $
oz. 59 9
'Ide ••••••••••••••••••••••
·····couf(fi·······•

LOTSA POP

•

COFFEE

tl:z. $299
CANS

lilllll 24 (IIIII hr ,,.._

Good Only At fow.'s !up• Valu
S..., Oct. 30 thru Sat. Nov. 5, 1981

•

39

oz.

$599
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STOKELY

TOMATO JUICE
46oz. '

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GRAN, SUGAR

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

Page-B-4-Sunday Tnnes-Sentinel

W~en

In Our Town ...
By DICK THOMAS
GALLIPOLIS- They're plan·
ning to replace the Shadle Bridge
acros.s the Ka·
nawha River betwee n Point
Pleasa nt and
Henderson, a nd
it ' s aOOu t' ti me.

T hat structure
was built in 1931,
according to an article I read
somewhere in a paper the other
day . Of course, l remember when
they were building it.
The Shadle Bridge brings two
s tories to mind: one about selling
a pencil: the other about a
governor.
I was In third grade at Central
Sc)10oi at Point Pleasant while
they were building the bridge.
We had a contest to see whO could
sell the most pencils. I· forget
what the prize was, but, I
remember well trylng to sell a
pencil to one of the workmen
perched high atop one of the land '
piers of the bridge down on First
Street. He said "Sure, bring it on
up." I took one look up at him and
gulped. 1 remember thinking "It
must be a mlle up there." And,
the ladder to the top didn 't help
much. The rungs seemed to far
a part for a third grader's legs.
But, l made it and sold him not
only one pencil, but two. It wasn't
as hard going back down the
ladder.
Then there was the press
conference a few years ago at
Shoney's Restaurant at Point
Pleasant with then Governor Jay
Rockefeller. I don't remember ·
what we were discussing, but
s uddenly the Shadl"e Bridge bec ame a topic of conversation. As
1 gazed out the window behind
Rockefeller, l turned to the
Governor and asked, " What
a bout that monster?" I have to
c ross that bridge a couple of
times a day and I keep wondering
if it's safe. He assured me it was
safe and to further quell my fears
he ' told me the State of West
Virgin ia was going to hire an
e ngineering firm to Inspect all
the State's bridges and he said
he'd send me a copy of the Shadle
Bridge report. Did you know lhat
to date I have not received that
report. And, Jay Rockefeller Is
long gone from the State Capitol
and the Governor's Mansion.
Robert W. Greer, 2213 Jackson
Ave .. Point Pleasant , called me
the other day and then stopped at
the office the same afternoon.
Bob and l worked together in·the
;.JO's at the old Marietta Manufac·
turing Co mpany , fondly referred
to as the " Marietta Plant." Bob
is the gra ndfa ther of Todd Miller
who played basketball at Gallia
Aca demy High School with Gary
Harrison. Bob's daughter, Carla,

your cross is too heavy to ·bear

Dear Ann Landers: Noone gets you wlll shorten our name to
married Orin Miller. They're
througi!J
this life without some something that Is easter to say
Todd' s parents.
small
(or
large) patches of and easter to remember." I
We talked Shadle Bridge, Ma·
personal
grief.
I could easily tell promised htnn that I would and
rietta plant, basketball and bo·
you
about
my
trials
and tribula- last year I did.
wllng and about all the old
Today I ran Into a friend from '
tions,
but
Instead
I'd
like
to share
timers, some ol whom have
a
story
that
has
helped
me
face
school.
She said she heard that I
departed for the great beyonmy
problems.
I
hope
you
wUlleel
by• name and said,
had
changed
d .. .including John McDermott,
it
is
worth
passing
on.
C.B.,
"I
don'
I
blame
you for trying to
Sparky Lucas, Charlie Fowler, a
Sayrevtqe,
N.J.
hide your Jewlshness. It can be a
boss-man at MMC, the wizened
big handicap. " I !Qid her that
TqE CROSS ROOM
Oscar Kelly, Bob's brother
The yoimg !Dan was at the end wasn't the case at all, and that I
"Doc" Greer, Bob and George
ol
his rope. Seeing no way aut he never felt being Jewish was a
Ca rr and many others including
dropped
io his knees In prayer. handicap. She looked at me in
George "Gloomy" Kenny . Bob
.
"Lord,
I
~an't
go on," he said. "I sh~ked disbelief. Her comments
said he saw Frank. Carpenter
have
too
~e'vy
a cross to bear." got me to thinking. When a
recently. Frank worked at MMC .
The
Lord
replied,
"My son, if you person changes his or her name
Bob said he's a retired trucker
can't
b!!~
its
weight,
just place as I did, Is It perceived as an
now, living In Indiana, he thinks.
your
cross
inside
this
room.
Then attempt to hide one's ethnlcity1
Took a short cutfrom Two-and·
open
that
~Jther
door
and
pick
out I'm proud of my her ltage and
a-Half Alley through Haskins·
would hate to have anyone think 1
any
cross
rou
wish."
Tanner the other afternoon and
was trying to hide lt. What do you
The
man
was
lilled
with
relief.
was greeted by Roger Hood.
think,
Ann?- Buffalo Reader
"Thank
you,
Lord,"
he
sighed,
Actually I had gone In to see Carl
Dear
B.R.: If a man changes
dldi
as
he
was
told.
Upon
and
he
Waugh, then I remembered, It
his
name
lrom Cohen to Kingsaw
entering
the
other
door
he
was Carl's day off. But, Roger
ston,
one
might
get the lmpres·
many
crosses,
some
so
large
the
said "He won't be In tomorrow
sion
that
he
would
rather be
tops
were
not
visible.
Then
he
either or for that matter the rest
considered
an
Aryan.
However,
spotted
a
tiny
cross
leaning
of the week. He's In Hawaii on
shortening
a
name
that
has 17
against
a
far
wall.
"I'd
like
that
vacation.'' Miss the late Ted
·letters
In
It
seems
like
a
sensible
one,
Lord,'
i
he
whispered.
And
Wiseman at . Haskins-Tanner.
the Lord replied, "My son, that IS thing to do, and no one should
There's a new face 'on the staff,
suspect ulterior motives.
the cross y~ just brought In:'
Gene Brown, used to work up the
Dear Alln Landers: I don't buy
Dear C.B,: What a touching
street a few doo~.
reminder of\a lesson we all need the line that it's OK to go to
Guess who's gonna open the
to
learn and relearn! When life's church in jeans and cut offs,
1989 Cincinnati Reds baseball
barefooted and in hair rollers,
problems
seem overwhelming
season at Riverfront Stadium?
I
'
look
around
and
see
what
other
·
because
"God loves us no matter
You're right, it's the World
people
are
coping
with.
You
how
we
look."
Champion Los Angeles Dodgers.
God loves adulterers and pros·
The game's at 2:05p.m. Monday many consider yourself
fortunate.
tltutes,
too, butthatdoesn'tmean
April 3. It's the first ttnne the
we
should
use them as a
Dear
Ann
Landers:
My
grand·
.
Reds and Dodgers have met on
standard.
parents
were
Jews
who
came
to
opening day "since 1975.
People dress up for things they
The probable pitching mat· America frol)'l Eastern Europe.
value
- job interviews, wed·
·The
family
n11me
began
with
a
W
chup features the National ·
and
had
171etters
in
it.
Need
!tell
dings,
important
dates and.so on.
League's wlnningest pitchers of
you
It
was
extremely
difficult
to
church
in beach
Appearing
in
1988 - letthander D;;~nny Jack· ·
pronounce?
clothes
says
something
about
the
son for the Reds and righthander
My
father
struggled
through
about
the
Lord.
way
we
feel
Ore! Hershiser for the Dodgerslife
with
that
name
and
told
me
Young
Monk
In
Collegevllle,
both of whom posted 23·8 regular
many ttnnes, "Son, when you Minn.
season records In ~988.
finish
you schooling I hope that
Dear Monk: When I see people
And, while we're talking base·
ball, the Reds' single game ticket
prices will be unchanged for 1989
home games at Riverfront sta·
dium. This marks the second
WlLLIAM E. LEWIS JR.
· Front St., Marion, W.Va., has
year in a row with no increases in
Pvt.
William•
E.
Lewis
Jr.,
son
completed basic training at Fort
ticket prices for Reds' home
Dix, N.J . .
ol
William
E.
Lewis
Sr.
of
games. Prices for Reds' tickets
During the training, students
Syracuse,
Ohio!
and
grand~on
of
have been and will remain
Beulah
B.
Lewis
of
727
47th
Ave.,
received
instruction in drUJ and
among the lowest in the major
Gallipolis,
Ohio
has
completed
ceremonies,
weapons, map read·
leagues: &amp;8.50 for Blue, Green,
basic
training
at
Fort
Dix,
N.J.
ing,
tactics,
military courtesy,
and Yellow box seats; $7 for Red
mUitary
justice,
During
the
training,
students
first aid, and
Level; box seats; $6 for Green
received
instruction
in
drUl
and
Army
history
and
traditions.
Level reserve seats; $5.50 for
ceremonies,
weapons,
map
read·
Red Level reserve seats and $3.50
lng, tactics, mUitary courtesy,
MARK S. SMITH
for "Top Six"reserve seats.
military
justiCf\, first aid, and
Air Force Staff Sgt. Mark s.
Marge Schott says the Reds'
Smith, son of Vernon L. and
only ticket price increases In her Army history and traditions.
He Is a 1988 graduate of Janet R. Smith of 618 First St.,
four years as team president
were 50 cents in Blue and Green Hannan Trace, High School, New Haven, W.Va., has arrived
Crown City, Ohle.
lor duty at Altus Air Force Base,
box seats in 1987.
Okla.
A belated Happy Birthday to
THOMAS d. WAUGQ:
Smith is a parachute and
one ol Rio Grande's Grand
Army National Guard Private fabrication specialist with the
Ladles, Cecelia Jenkins who
celebrated a birthday last Mon· Thomas C. Waug)l, son of Robert 443rd Field Maintenance.
day .. She's the widow of Steve C. and Donna M. Waugh of Rural Squadron.
His wile, Terri, Is the daughter
Jenkins. She was 95. Many Route 1, Gallipolis, Ohio, . has
completed
basic
training
at
Fort
of
Judy Roush of Hartford, w. Va.
Happy Returns.
Knox, Ky.
·
He Is a 1979 graduate of
During the trAining, students Wahama High School, Mason,
received instruction in drill and W.Va.
ceremonies, weap,ons, map read· .
lng, tactiCs, military courtesy,
KENNETH R. COOK
Staff Sgt. Kenneth R. Cook, son
military justice, ,first aid, and
ol June Cook of Rural Route 1,
Army history andl traditions.
Syracuse, has re-enilsted In the
He
is
a
1987
gralluate
ol
Kyger
RUTLAND - The Rutland
U.S. Air Force In Turkey, for four
Garden Club will meet at 7:30 Creek High School, Cheshire,
years.
1
_
p.m . Monday at the home of Mrs. , Ohio.
Cook is chief of transportation
P earl Kennedy.
with the 7392nd Munitions SupROBERT W. -~OHNSON
port Squadron.
Pvt.
Robert
W.
Johnson,
son
of
TUESDAY
He Is a 1980 graduate of
E.
Johnson
and
grand·
Kathryn
GALLIPOLIS Gallipolis
Southern
High School, Racine.
son
of
Kathryn
L.
Johnson
of
106
Lions meet Tuesday, 6 p.m.,
Oscar's.

BIDWELL - Lay man day
services, Sunday, beginning
10:45 a. m .; afternoon serviceat2
p.m .. Mt. Carmel Church. Shape
NO\e singers will provide music.
BIDWELL - George Kelley
preaches Sunday, 7 p.m., Poplar
Ridge Church.

SYRACUSE - Tr ick or treat
night In Syracuse will be Monday
from 6 to 7 p.m. Sirens will sound
the begi nning and ending of the
hour .

.

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Ro·
tary meets Tuesday, 6:30p.m.,
Down Under.

POMEROY- BeglnningTues""!tay the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie
2171 meetings will start at 7 p.m.
Health board
GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County
board of health meets Wednesday , 9 a.m., courthouse
basement.

The
Select Island
Cruise

presents

The magnificent
wv Regent Sea!

.' '''•
#

'

•
•
••
•

Hall-Steinbeck

Community C,orner

POMEROY

CHRISTMAS IN OCTOBER

. By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Phlecones are
fantastic for us~ 1in holiday
decoratiqns,
and they see.Jll
be in quallttty
this fall.
So If you've
gathered up a
basketfuU and
are thinking in·
door use, you might want to kill
the insect eggs whlch lhide Inside
so they won't hatch out and fill
your house with nasty little
spiders and other bu~s.
But how to do that?
That's where our garden club
friends came in handy .
Rutland's Janet Bolin, Immediate past president of the Ohio
Association of Garl)en Clubs,
provided us with jus.t the Infer·
matlon we needed.
Pinecones should be placed on
cookie sheets In an oven set at 250
degrees for an hour. We found
that not only did that take care of
the insect problem, but It also
dried aut the pinecones causing
them to -spread their )tttie petal·
-like parts and com~ out of the
oven · nearly twice the size as
when they went in. ,
So If you have lots of pinecones
and are going to use two racks,
place them far enough apart for
the expansion.

LAYAWAY SALE
1411 GOlD

0

CHAINS, CHARMS,
ClUSTER

EARRINGS
' NOW $1995

IRACElETS

$4995

NEW WGI SEIICltON

I====SA=VE=''=3.9~l -~=:::::;;;;:;;:;; ~SA;;VE;:3=0=A=o::::;

0

NOW

1/4 URAl

tU GOlD
IUITIISTOIIf I D I -NICNCE 01 IIIG

$1 '1Cll951

Son '40

$39500

112 CARAT S19500
EVElY Dt.-D II STOCI

25% Off

LA1AIIA1110111

BULOVA•SEIKO•PULSAR WATCHES

PIANOS

SAVE AT
lEAST

Uf'AYmEUU
GALli'OUS, 011.

2 50/0

Birthday greetings to Allen
Eichinger, · Mulberry Heights,
Pomer-oy.
Allen will be 80 on Nov. 5.
His health lsn' t the best and he
spends lots of time i,l)side these

ON FAMOUS
NAME WATCHES
-FEATURING THE COUIUIE (OUICTIOH Of FINE WATCHES-

~~

•1111 Battery FIH

•1 Ynr Warranty

•We Sel\llce What We Sell

•Largeat ArN

Selection

MICICEY MOUSE

Brunicardi Music

RINGS

CORNER THIRD &amp; COURT STS .. GALLIPOLIS, 0.

NEW EOITIONI

DID YOU KNOW?

•PENDANT WATCHES
•POCKET WATCHES

~o11

m t1ke yur phyale•l thmpr
prucrlptlon to the ellnle of roar eholeel

•QUARTZ LIGHTERS

•ME ' S JEWELRY

liE THIS
GliAl NEW
(Oil(CIIOit

IODAYI

THE MEDICAL
SHOPPE, INC.
HILlCDST Pl&amp;U • G&amp;LliPOUS, OH.

SU JACISOfll Pill •

200fo

SAVE
ON EN111E
STOCI

45631

PHYSICAL THERAPY • SPORTS MEDICINE
BACK REHABIUTATION • WORK RECOVERY
CARDIAC REHABILITATION • ADULT FITNESS

c~

GALLIPOLIS
The Tried·
stone Baptist Church will observe the 18th anniversary of Its
pastor, John D. King, on Sunday,
Nov. 13, at 2:30p.m.
Speaker for the event will be
the Rev. Earl Strother of Colum·
bus, and music will be,furnished
by the Triedstone Youth Choir.
Morning speaker will be minis·
ter Harry Scott. Dinner will be
served after the morning wor·
ship service.
'
The anniversary will be pre·
ceded by revival ser~ices Nov.
7·11. The services will begin at 7

60TH

. AIIIII~ERSARY
ITEMS

KREMENTZ
14K GOLD
OVERLAY
JEWELRY

lARGEST AIEA
SEIEOION Of

SAVE

DIAMOND DNIER

25°/o

RINGS AND CWS1ERS

ENTIRE STOCK

AUAl

25°/o

WltV PAY IIIORE?

Industrial Medicine Seminars
Pain/Stress Management
LAIDE 1111(11011 OF
141 &amp;OUI Alftl 0010 fWD

SERV•G THE PATIENT
AND THE PHYSICIAN FOR
30 YEARS.

!TElliNG I liiTIISlONI
lADINGS

446-2206
446-2225

.I U - AT LUST 25"!. Off

"

p.m. A reception Willfo!low at tn'e
church.
Miss Hall is a graduate of
SoUthwestern High School, and Is
employed by Irvin's Glass of
Gallipolis.
Steinbeck is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School and
Is the Rio Grande Village
Marshal.

.MICHAEL L. HEMPHILL
MS. AT

days so you might like to send
along a card to cheer him up.
For many years the Meigs
County Churches of Christ have
been trucking all sorts of things
over to the Grundy Mountain
Mission in Grundy, Va.
This past week a truckload of
clothing and miscellaneous
Items, along with a love gift of
money , donated by local
Churches of Christ and other
individuals, was taken to Grundy
by Mary and Osby Martin and
Olan and Pearl Knapp.
· The project is sponsored by
Christian Hope Ministry, Eugene
Underwood's program. This Is
the second load taken to Grundy
. this year.
The mission is a Christian
operated orphanage for 300chlld·
ren which does not receive
government aid, and operates
only with free wil offerings . ,
A . support group for lamily
members and caregivers of those
with Alzheimer 's Disease or
related disorders-stroke, Parkin·
son or Huntington's Disease-Is
being organized at the $enior
Citizens Center.
First meeting has been set for
Friday from noon to 2 p.m. at the
Center.
Purpose ol the support group Is
just that · to lend emotional
support to each other, to share
problems and discuss possible
solutions, and even to provide
some social outlet.
· Andforthosewhowanttocome
for lunch that day, just call

\

r .

Valley Brook Cement and Supply
Company, Lakin.
The wedding will be Nov. 5 at
2:30 p.m. at the Good Shepherd
United Methodist Church, Flatrock,
W.Va. All friends and relatives are
welcome to attend the OJY!n
ceremony.

Whether you're walking to get in shape,
~, or just to get the mail, there's a shoe for you.
#!',;{;::;,-. ~ The BodT Shoe ; by Hush Puppies.
·
Only h e Body Shoe features the Comfort
Curve ; a special sole that flexes where your
foot flexes for maximum comfort.
After all ; whereyou walk is your business.
How you walk is ours.

TheBodyShoe

w.ill&lt;ing Shoes ByHush Puppies.'

WOMEN'S

MEN'S

before 9 a.m . to make a
reservation.
If you're lnter,ested but want
more information about the
support group, just call, Linda
Friend or Beth Theiss at the
Center, 992-2161.
Plans are- alread' getting
underway for the 25th annlver·
sary celebration of the Middleport High School graduating
class of 1964 in May .
Members of the class Inter·
es ted in helping are asked to
meet at the Pizza Hut Sunday,
Nov. 6, 6:30. If you can't make
that meeting but are willing to
help out, just call Iva Sisson.

S4600

ssaoo

DRIVERS EDUCATION
CLASSES
STARTING NOV. 1
CALL 446-0699
GAWPOUS, OHIO

Mon. &amp; fri. ~I I
lu•. Wed. Thur. Iii 7
til S P.M.

Have a nice week!

THE MEDICAL
SHOPPE, INC.
Establlshed 1977
Complete Health
Care Line
KNEE BRACES
ANKLE BRACES
WRIST AND ELBOW
SUPPORTS
BACK BRACES/
SURGICAL SUPPORTS
HERNIA TRUSSES
TRACTION UNITS
TENS PAIN CONTRAit
UNITS
FOOT PRODUCTS
SPORTS MEDICINE
.ITEMS
SURGICAL SUPPORT
HOSE
JOBST GARMENTS

Dee Dillon, R.N. • Manager

p.m. with the Rev, Hosea Davis
of Colubus as evangelist.

565 Jackson Pike
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-2206

Bowman's
HOME CARE MEDICAL SUPPLY

Your Home Town Medical Store

•Ensure, Ensure Plus, Osmolite, Enrich
•Carrrington Skin Care Products
•Convatec Sur-fit Ostomy (Ship Ups)
•Jobst Support Stockings
·
•Accu-chek Diabetic Supplies
•Attends Briefs (Bulk)
•Durasorb Underpads (Chuxs)
•Sween Cream
•Gaymar Air Cushions
•Wai-Pil-0 Cervical Pillows
Medicare and other

Third &amp; Pine St.

'

LEON, W.Va. - Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Ridenour Jr., Leon announce
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Charlou~ Rae, to Steven Wayne Norvell,
son of Geraldine Zuspan, Letart,
and Carl Norvell, Elyria, Ohio.
. The bride-elect is employed at
A.O.K. Builders, Inc., Cheshire,
Ohio. Norvell is an employee of

Pinecone safety?

~I

REV. JOHN D.IUNG

(,

230 Broadway, Jackson • 286-2559

Open Tues.-Wed.· Thurs.-Sat. 9:30-5:30
Mon . &amp; Fri. till E-1 :00

A.

·Ridenour-Norvell

Pastor's anniversary planned
by Triedstone congregation

Priced For

Layaway Now

The Maternity Orchard

, CHARLOTTE RIDENOUR,
STEVEN NORVELL

"TERESA MAE HALL
RALPH E. STEINBECK

NORTHUP - M~ . and Mrs.
Danny Hall of Nqrthup, are
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Teresa Mae Hall, to
Ralph E. Steinbeck of Rio
Grande.
The open church wedding will
take place Saturday,, Dec. 3, at
Elizabeth Chapel Church,
. - -- at 7:30
.

W'

THE SHOE CAFE

•

360 Second Ave ., Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 446-0699

141( GOlD
DIAMOND

· •Taupe
•Black

LAFAYETTE MALL
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

0

. ~ &lt;@) GALLIPOLIS
..... TrcD.reiAgency

A

UNO

Halloween Specials Oct. 24 70ct. 31
25% Off Gowns, P J's &amp; Robes
25% Off Select Sleepe rs
Select Pantyhose 99tt
Assorted Lingerie Now 50% Off!

~

1DO's IN STOCII TO CHOOSE

HEIMAN L. DILLON
MS, PT, CO.

THE SHOE CAFE

•

~

0/Jmame ln•ff••r.

"

Fly from Columbus to San Juan to board your floating hotel. Visit
the select ISlands of St. MtuJNtn, St. Croiz, Santo Dominro, and
Grand Caym~~n. All meals and entertainment are includea aboard
ship. For the vacation of a life time call today!
,

GAWPOUS -

The open
POMEROY church wedding of Sally Rad·
ford, daughter of Mr. and Mr s.
Rollin Radford, and York Ingels,
son of Mr. and Mrs . George
Ingels, will be held Saturday,
Nov. 5, at the Rock Springs
United Methodist Church.
The ceremony will take place
at 6:30 p.m. , preceded by mu sic.
A reception honoring the couple will be he ld at the Meigs
Multipurpose Building on Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy . .

',

AAA Hostess
Thelma Darby

aboard

THE TRU-MOC OXFORD IS STYLISH, CASUAL .

COMFOfl FROM..; .

~

-.,.....-

COUNTRY CASUALS GO UPTOWN.

.,

'

•elf-addreued, .ttomped bu•inea.,..
tize en'Velope (45 cenu posiQKe) to
Ann Londer1. P.O. Box 11562,
Chicago, Ill. 60611./)562.

~

KYGER - Cheshire towns hip
GALLIPOLIS - Henry Doss
trustees meet Tuesday, 5:30
spea ks at Triedstone Baptist ' p.m.. township building in
Missionary Auxil iary, Sunday,
Kyger.
10:45 a . m. Vesper serviceat6:45
p.m.
CHESHIRE- Rev . Sam And·
e rson preaches at Old Bethel
EWINGTON Ewington
Church, Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
Ch urch of Christ in Christian
Union homecoming is Sunday:
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chap·
songfes t at 2:30p.m . with Glory- ter 186, Order of Eastern Star,
land Grass a nd Revelators.
will hold open installation of 1989
oflicers at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Shade River Lodge Hall in
GA LLIPOLIS FERRY
Chester.
Grubb Fam(ly Si ngers at Zion
Baptist Church, Sund ay, 7 p.m.
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Flame Fellowship Chap·
POMEROY -Pomeroy Chap·
ter will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
ter I 86. Order of the Ea_stern Tuesday at the Mt. Olive Com·
Star. will meet at 6:30 p.m. munily Church In Long Bottom
Su nd 1y at the Chester hatl for with Mary Bush of Racine as
installation practice.
special speaker.
MONDAY
CHESHIRE - Meet the candl·
dates night at Ches hire Village
Ha ll is Monday, 7 p.m.

&lt;

-

Community calendar
SUNDAY
GALLI"POLlS- Junior Birch·
field preaches at Dickey Chapel,
Sunday, 7 p.m.

Timet Sr ndi('lle •nd
Crnlon Syndltae

January 15-22, 1989

In the service

,

ANN LANDER SO
"'1988, Lot Anpjs

newly revi.ted boo)det, "The Lowdown on Dope." Send U plu1 a

'Ct!)'

Radford-Ingels
.

/
'

Everyone does drug&amp;, riHht ?
Wrong. And today. more and more
people are aware of th e danger.J
involved. If you want to be I n rhe
know, too, write for Arin Ltmder~ '

~

--.....;..._Engagements----------__;..-,;._

Ann

In a place ol worship dressed for
a piCnic I get the Impression that
they are careless and lazy. As
you said so well, "People get
dressed up for things t))ey
value."
~

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- B-5

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

Octob!lr 30. 1988

October 30, 1988

Insurance~ 4 '1r

446-7283
1-800-458-6844

•

In a recent survey, Shoney's Breakfast Bar was chosen 1he best breakfast
in town .
And it's no surprise when you consider that you can get all the
freshly scrambled eggs, bacon, and sausage you can eat, along with home
fried potatoes, country milk gravy, buttermilk biscuits, and southern-style
grits. .
·
·
It's Shoney's Breakfast Bar, not only the best breakfast in town, but
also the most popular breakfast in town.
Come see why and register for Shoney's/ Folger•s®NASCAR Weekend
Getaway.
·

You"

Gallipolis

Fo lger's i!' a registered tradt:·

mark of The Folger's Coffee Co.

\

�Paga

MARK aodTAMMI (TAYLOR) GOEGLEIN

~eglein-Taylor
yar, Columbus, nrldesmaids;
and Sara Nelson, !lower girl.
The matron of honor was in a
peach floqr-length gown of ·s atin
fashioned with a round neckline,
puffed sleeves and peplum effect
at the waist. The bridemalds
were in aqua gowns of the
identical design and carried long
stemmed roses. The flower girl
was In peach gown and carried a
basket of petals.
Best man was Steve Nelson,
Stockport, and the ushers were
Chuck Hall, Whipple, and Dennis
Mingyar, Columbus. Alan Nelson
was the rtngbearer.
Tile bride's mother wore In a
peach suit. The groom's mother
wore an aqua ensemble and other
mothers had rosebud corsages.
A reception was held In the
church social room Immediately
following the ceremony. ·The
four-tiered cake enhanced with
peach flowers and topped with a
miniature modern bride and
groom was baked· by the aunt of
the bride.
Amy Reilovlan, Pomeroy, reg·
lstered the guests.
· The couple resides at Coolville.
The bride Is a graduate of
Eastern High School and Sou·
theastern Business College. She
Is employed by the Cole-Layer·
-Trumble Co.
Goegleln Is a graduate of Meigs
High SChool and Is employed with
Cisler Corp., Marietta.

The maid of honor was In a
REEDSVll..LE - Brenda Cal·
mauve
gown while ihe brides·
away, daughter of Guy and Annie
maid
wore
burgundy gowns.
Calaway, Reedsville, and Rod·
They
were
fashioned
of taffeta
ney Smith, son of Arnold and
with
puffed
sleeves
and
V neck·
Betty Smith, Coolvtlle, exlines
In
front
and
back,
and
had
changed wedding vows on Sept.
fitted
bodices
with
slightly
17 at the Torch Gospel Baptist
dropped waistlines. They carried
Church.
The Rev. Jerry Wilson per· bouquets of burgundy and mauve
formed the double ring ceremony roses.
The flower girls had on tea
following a program of music by
length
taffeta dresses with lace
Teresa Davis . ·
ruffling
and contras Ung Inserts
Escorted to the altar by her
with
dropped
waists. and puffed
father, the bride wore a white
sleeves.
satin gown fashioned with the
David E. Welch, Coolville was
neckline trimmed lri alencon
best
man, and Steve Follrod,
lace. The sunburst yoke of
Athens;
Jerry Welsh, Coolville;
Illusion net was accented with
Charles
Calaway, Tuppers
sequins. The bodice was ap·
pllqued with alencon lace motifs Plains, and Allen Welch, Coolwith pearls and sequins. The long vll)e, were the ushers. Ringsleeves featured satin poufs at bearer was Jeromee Calaway,
the shoulders with the nylon net Reedsville. The attendants wore
extending to a tapered point at gray . tuxedoes with matching
~ummerbunds and burgundy and
the wrist.
Appliques of alencon lace were mauve boutonnieres.
The bride's mother wore a pink
also featured on the satin bouf·
chiffon
tea length dress while the
fant skirt which had peplums at
groom's
mother was In a pink
the back accented with a large
and
-.gray
jacquard ensemble,
.satin bow and streamers and
also
tea
length.
Both mothers had
flowed Into a chapel train.
corsages
of
miniature pink
Her matching tiara was ac·
·
rosebuds.
cented with pearls and sequins
Anita Calaway registered the
with a large pouf of nylon net at
guests.
A reception honoring the
center back. Her veil of Illusion .
couple
was held at the Lit tie
net was in a bow adorned with
Hocking
Grade School cafeteria.
alencon lace and accented with
The
table
featured a three-tiered
pearls and ' sequins. She wore
fountain
cake
with staircases on
diamond earrings and her grand·
either
side
leading
to two other
mother's wedding band.
The bride c·a rrled a bouquet of cakes. The cake was decorated In
bu'rgundy flowers surrounded by the burgundy and mauve colors
mauve rosebuds along the out· and arranged before an archway
side. Baby's breath with minla· trimmed In the same colors .
ture double heart replicas ac· Pauline Roberts, Belpre, pre·
cented "the. bouquet along with sided at the table.
·They reside In Coolville.
strands of pearls.
The bride Is a graduate of
The bride's attendants were
Eastern
High School and Trl
Wanda Phillips, Little Hocking,
Adu
It Vocational School .
County
maid of honor; Denise Gaddis,
where
she
majored
In phlebotand Linda Boggs, Coolville;
omy.
She
is
employed
with Drs .
Shirley Hawk, Reedsville, and
Thomas
and
Susan
Quinn,
Karen Follrod, Athens, brides·
Athens.
maids. and Sarah Roush, New
The groom Is a graduate of
Haven, and Janet Calaway,
Hocking
High School and Is
Coolville, flower girls.
employed with the Athens
County Sheriff's Department.
Among the out-of-town guests attending were Cathy Mor·
ris, Chicago, Ill., and Nancy Cole
GALLIPOLIS - Classes will and Denise Gaddis, Columbus.
be offered Nov. 14 or Nov. 28 for
making the "Picnic Baske '
from 6-10 p.m. at the French Art
Colony.
The basket, which can be
completed In one ,even!ng, Is 8
Inches tall and Is 15\2 by 12\2
Inches on the bottom. It features
a closed bottom and laced
handle.lnstru~tlons wlll be avail·
20 PT.
Rog.
able for a cover and a lining with
DIAMONDS
•m 5299
utensU pockets.
To register, mall $30 for
40 "·
...
non-member, or $27 for member,
S650
DIAMONDS '495
fee to P.O. Box 472, Gallipolis,
'II CT.
•••
OH 45631 before Nov. 8 with
5595
DIAMONDS
•100
chosen class date on you.r check.

Speaker set for Meigs SWCD dinner
POMEROY- Emerson Mart·
Ing, livestock auctioneer of Wa·
shlngton, C.H .. will be speaker
tor the annual meeting and
banquet of the Meigs Soli and
Water Conservation District to
be held at 7:18 p.m. Nov. 15 at
Eastern High School.
Hartinger has spoken to many
organlzat Ion In at least 85 or
Ohio's 8S counties. He Is an
auctioneer specializing in pu·
rebred livestock In 27 states and
Canada. He farms 1400 acres In
the corn belt of Ohio with the
operation of corn, beans and

livestock. He speaks an average
of two or three times a week to
service clubs, farm organiza·
Uons, schools and youth groups .
While he Is considered .mostly a
humorist, he likes to speak of the
opportunities and privileges of
being born and reared In
America.
.
He is a member of numerous
civic organizations especially
the Washington, C.H., Lions club
to which he has belonged for 35
years and has held nearly all
offices of the club. He Is a
member of the Ohio Auctioneer
Assoclaton · and the National
Auctioneer Association and has
been an Instructor In the MIS·
sour! Auctioneer Schools in Kan·
sas City, Mo. He is a member of
the American Hereford Cattle
Association and the Ohio Here·
ford Association having served
twice as pres !dent of the latter
group.
Tickets for the annual meeting
are $6.75 with the meal to be
served by the Eastern Band
Boosters.
~II judging, the outstanding
farm family, the Goodyear
farmer of the Year and affiliate
members will be recognized at
the annual session.
Elect Ion of two supervisors for
three year terms will take place.
Candidates for supervisor elec·

!Ions are Janet Bolin, Rodney
•Chevaller, Alan Holter and Leroy
Welsh.
Tickets must be purchased by
Nov. 4 from SWCD supervisors,
office personnel or from the
SWCD or ASCS offices on the
second floor ofthe Farmers Bank
Building.

Rog.
•3,000

52295
30% OFf

DIAMONDS
WEDDING BANDS

..•

TAWNEY JEWELERS

SEC offering new
security officer
program to students

-·
· RODNEY and BRENDA (CALAWAY) SMITH

Grimm-Juniper
RACINE - Goldie Carson and
James Wolford, Syracuse, ex·
changed wedding vows on Oct. 8
at the Racine United Methodist
CI'Iurch.
The Rev. Roger Grace per·
formed the double ring cerem·
ony. The bride wore an off· white
silk suit. She was escorted to the
altar by her son , Jeffrey Carson,
Athens.
.Music was provided by Jane
Wise, Rutland, pianist, and Jea·
nle Nease, Racine, soloist.
Jeannie Johnson of Portland
served as her honor attendan-t
and wore a pas tel tea-length
dress .. James Turner of Sandy ·
Level, Va. was the best man.
Guests were registered - by
Dottle Hawkins, Racine.
At the reception which fol·
lowed, Darlene Newell, Chester;
Rex·a nna Knighting, Roma

We offer complete tuxedo rental
ser.vice to help you look your best
on thet specie I dey. Priced from

$2995
HASKINS·
TANNER
332 Second Ave.
HOURS
Galllpollo, Ohio
Mo11. &amp; Fri. 9·1 "Quality ME!n'~ Wear Since 1866"
Tuts.·W•ci.·TINrL
I !at. 9-5

"'

THANK YOU!!
It's Our
4th Anniversary

Sayre, and Donna Johnson, Ra·
cine, and Marsha Russell, Ml·
nersvllle, served.
Out-of-county guests attending
were Ann Danko, Mariam Woi·
ford, Bluefield, Va. ; Libby Wol·
ford and Steve Huffman, Cha·
rleston , W.Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Loeffel man, . Columbus;
James Turner and Betty Clay,
Sandy Leva!, Va.; Mr. and Mrs.
Dave Pontious, Columbus; Mr.
and Mrs. Larry Betterton, Rock
Mount, Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Andy
Mulato, Louisville; Greta
Pickens, Tennessee; Steve Bar·
rows, Athens; Mr. and Mrs.
Alfred Dufl, Athens.
The bride Is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ohlinger,
Harrisonville, and the groom Is
the son of the Mariam Wolford,
Bluefield, Va. and the late Robert
Wolford.

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . Bridesmaids were Ellen Mea·
Lana Marlene Juniper and Ml· dows and Lisa Dyer.
chael Curtis.Grimm were united
Best man was Troy Hesson.
In marriage Sept 10 at Good Ushers were Fred Smith and
Shephard United Meth171Ust Curt Sayre.
Church.
)
Lighting the candles were Sam
She is the daughter of Mr. and · Juniper and Jer-ry Juniper,
Mrs. Samuel J. Juniper Sr. of brothers of the bride.
. Point Pleasant and the grand·
Flower girl was Erin Shilling·
daughter of Nora E. Berkley, ton. Rlngbearers were Lea Ann
Gallipolis, and Grace Juniper, Berkley and Greg Mayes, cou·
Point Pleasant. He Is the son of sins of the bride.
Lowell Grtmm, Cheshire and (he
Guest book attendant was
late Shirley Grimm.
Loretta Maynard.
The Rev. Jack Ferrell per·
A reception was held In the
formed the double ring cerem· church with Jo Wigglesworth and
ony, Music was provided by Cindy Lee assisting.
Marquetta Crum, pianist, with
The· groom Is employed by
Mark Thompson, vocalist.
American Alloys.
The bride was escorted by her
The bride Is employed with
father and given in marriage by Holzer Clinic.
her parents.
They will reside In Point
Maid of honor was Jennifer Pleasant.
Juniper, sister of the bride.

Dave and Charlotte extend their •lncere thanks
for your business the past four years and look
forward to serving you in the years to co•.

...

·-::~

FOR VACUUM CLEANERS SALES &amp; SERVICE
CALL ON US ...

~-~\

GALLIPOLIS- Monsters and

vampires, circus clowns, cats,
dogs, and mimes emerged from
18 eager faces at "Make-up
Madness", the October Parent·
Child Workshop at the French
Art Colony, 530 First Avenue.
The Cosmetology students of
Evelyn Abbott and Diana Lin tala
at Buckeye Hills Career Center
guided parents .In making Halloween faces for their little gobllns.
Seniors who helped were Shan·
non Wonders, Angle Day, and
Rochelle Conwell. Juniors were
Deanna Ervin, Tam! Akers,
Wendy Vltltoe, and Amber
Howell.
The next Parent·Chlld Work·
shop will be "My Own Christmas
Stocking'' stenciling on fabric on
Dec. 4. These sessions are
offered free to the public, sponsored by. the Ohio Company.

THE CADMUS
COMMUNITY CENTER
(Old Cadmu• High School)

GALLIPOLIS, OH.

446-7441

TIM and MARY (BARRETT) SPIRES

KAREN
WAUGH
BROWNELL
For
RECORDER ·.

v Experiended

•in county government
•as deputy auditor
-•financial office management
•skilled in computer proficiency

I KAREN WAUGH BRO,!!!~U! I

Spires-Barrett

1.1111 -~ lll.tt£,1i
!,I. I!

at Kaiser Aluminum, Ravens·
POMEROY - Announcement
Is made of the marriage of Mary
wood, W.Va.
Barrett, granddaughter of Verna
Sturgeon, Wolf Pen Road, and
Timothy Spires, son of Charles
Spires and Elaine Quillen,
Rutland.
614-221-0881
The ceremony was performed
by the Rev. Paul Taylor at 7p.m.
on Sept. 16 at the home of the
AnORNEY -AT-lAW
groom's grandparen1s. Floyd
336 S. High St~ Columbus, OH.
and Lola!Iarrison, Rutland. · .
A reception was held at the •
lOCAl CONSULTAnON
home of Rick and Brenda Bolin
in r-or 992·6417,
for relatives and friends of the
in Gallia County 245·9591
couple.
County 245-9591
In Pom•ov With ATTORNEY D.
They now reside on Depot St. In
MICHAEL MULLENS
Rutland. The groom is employed

BANKRUPTCY.

0

JON MICHAEL and VlKKl (HAYES) FREEMAN

LARRY'S
CARPET
OUTLET

SAVINGS UP

MIDDLEPORT- Jon Michael carnations, roses and butterflies.
The br-Ide is a graduate of
Freeman and Vlkkl Lynn Hayes
Wahama
High School and Hock·
were married by Judge Patrick
:tng
Technical
College. Freeman
0' Brien on Feb. 12 In Pomeroy .
.
graduated
from
Meigs High
The bride Is the. daughter of
Nancy Hayes, Clifton, W. Va .. School and Is employed by
and William Hayes, Dexter. The American Electric Power In
groom Is the son of Richard and Lakin.
A family reception was held
Allee Freeman, Pomeroy.
following
the ceremony at the
The bride wore a white floor
home
of
the
groom's parents.
length gown and veil and carried
The
couple
reside In
a bouquet of purple and white silk
Middleport.

LARGE INVENTORY

150G COLORS TO CHOOSI FIOM

EXPin INSTALUTION :
20 YUIS EXPERIENCE

FINANCING AVAIUBLE
90 DAYS SAME AS CASH

HUGE SELECnON OF REMNANTS
AS LOW AS

S2 95

PIRYD.

.
... ...
-.

HOLZER CLINIC
EYE CARE
CENTER

• ;.

••
•••
-~

::;

.•'•,..,'

INSTALLED SPECIALS
KITCHEN VINYL
20 YARDS

$139

..,

...

LIVING ROOM
AND
DINING ROOM

20 fADS

40 TAliS

$214

KITCHEN CAIPO
20 YARDS

,,

$179

$426

S22" PIIIIOII1'11

S2C"PUMONTH

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET
BUSINESS AT. 7
MIDDLEPORT

.

•.
..•..
••

•••
. ...

Ol'HTiiALMOLOGISTS

'

.. ...-·-·
:-.:

.

•
•
•
•

EYE EXAMINATIONS
CATARACT 8. LENS " JMPLA:'IT SURGERY
11'\-0FFI CE LAZER SURGERX
CHILDREN'S EYE EXA~UNATJONS
AND SURGERY
• GLAUCOMA SURGERY

Notes On Your

''HEARING

By Diane E. McVey
MA

Audi o ltl ~i s t

Do You Want To PREVENT

HEARING LOSS? Do You

Time Around Noiae?

I

$
i. ~VINQS.

I

I
I ·
I

I
I
I

:

SAVE 30°/o

PHONE 448-5481

HEARING

THANK YOU ALL

:

.fr''W: '

111

1

l

on
Penns ($25 &amp; higher)
Conditioners and
Color services.

·1

~

l
1

J

I
I
I

I
I
I

I
I
I

Dinner includes fried shrimp, golden-brown fish fiDe~ 2
Southern-style hush puppies, fresh cole slaw, natural-cut
french fries, lemon wedge and cocktail sauce.

I

I
1...,.. ..-

441-6442

DILES

:

•

1
HOLZER CLINIC
I
EYE CARE CENTER ~
Located At HOLZER CLINIC Main Facility

On Rt. 35 In Gnlllpolis

Committe Members. Tow111hip
Trustees, Community People
wish to extllld a liiKtre
THANIS to tYiryaM who at·
tended &amp; supported the Hala·
ween Ftstival 22 Oct. 88. The
aucti-rs, volunteers, thoH
who donated money, pin &amp;
cakes, auction Items, an the
buyll's, restaurciirts &amp; busi·
-HI, sheriff, his deputies &amp;
the candidates.
·

Remember, at DUes we oHer
a professional evaluation.
you can depend on our service every day.

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

.I

;

.

881 SI!COND AVE .
GAWPOUS •

992-1173

JEAN A. DISSELER, M.D .
MAUREEN A. MAY, M.D .

~1

LIVING lOOM
CAIPO I PAD

MASON - The annual Christ·
mas Bazaar of the Mason Volun·
ter Fire Department Ladles'
Auxiliary wll! be held Saturday,
Nov. 12, fr om 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Anyone wishing laTent a table at
$5 per table may do so by phoning
304-773-5437 or 773-5414. Also
on that day , the Auxiliary will be
selling vegetable soup, chill, hot
dogs, soda pop and coffee.
Everyone Is welcome to attend.

L. W. CENNAMO

Freeman- f.Jaye_s

To40%.

MIDDLEPOIT &amp; GAWPOUS

Christmas bazaar set

.•

FlOOifcRAE
dAtil ·
750 1$1 AYE.

Kotallc, brother of t he groom,
from Somerville, N.J . Grooms·
men were J .R. Kotallc and
JOShUa Kotallc, sons of the
groom.
Guest -book a ttendant was
Mary E . Kotallc, sister of the
groom. An outdoor wedding
reception was held .at the river·
front res lqence of the bride and
groom, Music played by the
passing Delta Queen Riverboat
and Mr. Entertain er were heard·.
The bride is a graduate of Ohio
Valley College, Har ding Unlver·
slty, Parkersburg Community
College, and is at tending West
VIrginia University . She Is em·
played as a registered nurse at
Charleston Area Medical Center
and Cabell Huntington Hospital
In the surgical Intensive care unit
and emergency rooms.
The groom attended Rio
Grande College and is owner of
Kotalic Landscaping of Hunting·
ton, W.Va . and Gallipolis.
The couple will reside at 2814
N. Staunton Rd. , Huntington,
W.Va.

~'

M~eup

madness
classes given

GALLIPOLIS- The Gallipolis
branch of Southeastern Business
College, with the start of Its fall
quarter, has enrolled its first
students In its newly organized
Security Officer program.
The Security Program Is com·
prlsed of business classes as well
as the actual Security training.
Five young men began their
business training in September
at the Gallipolis school. They will
join students from the Wellston
branch to liegtn the security
training on Saturday, Oct. 29, at 4
West Broadway In Wellston.
Security is one of the fastest
growing professions In the world
today. Each day more and more
Industrial plants, businesses,
and federal and state agencies
are hiring security to protect
their assets. Southeastern Busl·
ness College Is answering this
need for trained security officers
by offering a 24-week course of
security service training.
The course Is in two phases.
Phase I includes learning laws,
search and seizure, techniques of
arrest, as well as business
classes In math and computers.
Phase II Is extensive training In
self defense, flremanshlp, shoplifting, and business classes In
communications,
' accounting,
and word processing. Graduates
will also hold a standard first aid
card and a CPR card.
Upon completion of this program In March, 1989, these
students will receive a certificate
of credit for qualification In
Security Service.
Anyone Interested in a security
career may stop In the Wellston
school Saturday and observe
classes; or for more Information
about the progtam, approved by
the Ohio Peace Officers Training
Council, may call the Gallipolis
school at 446-4367 .

MICHAEL and LANA M. (JUNIPER) GRIMM

Wolford-Carson

for That
Special Occasion ,

WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
IN DIAMONDS.
COMPilE OUR PRICE!
422 Second bo.
GaHipelis
44•·U15

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. - De·
borah Lynn Munday and George
Hugh Kotallc exchanged wed·
ding vows Oct. 1 at First
Presbyterian Church In Hunting·
ton, W.Va. She Is the daughter of
Delmar and Doris Munday, Wa·
shlngton, W.Va. He Is the son of
George and Dorthy Kotallc,
Somerville. NJ.
Dr. Ernest Thompson per· ·
formed the ceremony. Musical
selections were performed by
Lois Skeans on the pipe organ.
Matron of honor was Rebecca
S. Pierce, sister of the bride,
from Columbia, SC..
· Best man was &lt;;:hristopher T. ~

•

Picnic basket
classes planned

1.04 CT.

.· Kotalic-Munday

- -.Weddings--

JAMES and GOLDIE (CARSON) WOLFORD

7

Times- Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

October 30. 1988

Smith-Calaway

-Weddings

POMEROY- St. Paul Lutheran. Church was the setting for
the wedding of Tamml Lynn
Taylor, daughter of Alvin R. and
Ruth Ann Taylor, Pomeroy, and
· Mark Anthony Goegleln, son of
Charles and Maxine Goegleln,
Pomeroy.
The wedding took place on
.Saturday, Sept. 3 wlt.h the Rev.
William Mlddleswarth perform·
Ing the double ring ceremony.
Music was presented by Beth
Mayer of Pomeroy, organist, and
Mark Thompson, Point Pleasant,
soloist.
Given In marriage by her
Plll'ents and escorted to the altar
by her father, the bride wore a
formal gown of white organza
with schlffll embroidered lace.
The sweetheart neckline was
enhanced by off shoulder ruffles,
long straight tapered sleeves
with schlffli lace trim. The lace
covered bodice ·was accented
·With pearls and sequins and the
natural waistline had a peplum of
lace over the full skirt. There was
a double ruffle around the hem
and chapel train. The bride wore
a matching headpiece with pearl
!llament and sequined leaf spar·
kle Illusion pout and a tiered
!Inger· tip veil.
The bride's attendants were
Cindy Durst, Reedsville, matron
of honor; Tina McGraw, Point
Pleasant, and Charlene Ming.

October 30, 1988

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

8·6-Sunday Times· Sentinel

1
1
I

SILV~R

BIIPGi-PL.lll
'446-3353

Carol Iaiiey, llgr.
Tammy HIMIIIII,
1
Sus.. laum, Shirley Durst, • 1
Carla Milhoan
I

Captain DS®·
Seafood

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P.ga

B-8 Sunday Times·Sentinal

October 30, 1988

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

Beat of the bend

Job Bank
helps senio~s

Politicians in Meigs ....

'

keep sm lllng.
By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - Two major
Former Pomeroy Postmaster
Republican candidates on the
Jim Souls by extends a big thank
national level as
you to all of you for your prayers,
far as Meigs
cards,
flowers and Inquiries. You
Countlans and
took
him
a long way on the road
Ohio are conto
recovery
from a recent heart
cerned wUI be In
at
tack.
Thanks!
Pomeroy
Wednesday.
If you want to pick up some
They are
pretty
good stuff at a right price
George Volnovlch, mayor of
you
might
try Heath Methodist
Cleveland, who Is running for the
Church
In
Middleport
from 9 a.m.
U. S. Senate and Clarence Miller,
.
to
4
p.m.
lloth
·
Tuesday
and
long-time representative to
Wednesday
.
Women
of
the
Congress who Is seeking
church
will
be
staging
a
rumreelection.
mage sale In the church social
Traveling by caravan, the two
will arriVe In Pomeroy about9: 45 rooms on both days .
Meantime, women of the
a.m. Wednesday morning and
Sacred
Heart Church are getting
will speak on the stage at the
It
together
for the annual bazaar
upper parking lot.
which
has
been set for Nov . 10.
You're Invited.
The dinner will be served from 5
to 7 p.m . and I wish you luck In
Middleport made national teledealing
with the line of people
viSion Friday.
Willard Scott on the Today you 'II encounter In getting
Show spoke on the 150th anniver- dinner. Of course,_ the line Is
sary ot the Middleport Church of . worth the walt--the food's
always great. The bazaar will
Christ beh'lgobserved today. See,
also feature the usual games and
some people In the media do
undoubtedly some craft work.
actually report good events.
Well, I declare I dldn' t know
that.
Local banks did actually many
years ago Issue their own money.
Pete Simpson, Columbus, mentioned this recently since he is
trying to collect some of the
locally Issued money.
Later Edison Hobstetter, long-time former president of the
Pomeroy National Bank - now
Bank One - stopped by to show
us the real McCoy.
Edison was wise enough to
save a few of the bills Issued by
the Pomeroy National Bank
some years ago. By the way. he
keeps the collection In a safety
deposit box at Bank One and not
at his home.
Some of the bills carry the
signature of. Mr. Nye who was
cashier at the time and John
McQuigg . who was president of
the bank when the money some of
the money was Issued. This was
just after the turn of the century .
Edison says that the bills came
In sheets of five to the sheet and
they were cut Into single bills
with scissors. Can you Imagine
handling it that way In today's
busy times? Stalls of banks
would never get done.

I understand Ferndora Story is
undergoing a bit of a down perlod
right now. She's always done so
much for so many people, It
might be well if you urged her to

The smash musical, ''42nd
Street" a revival which won the
1981 Tony Award as the best
musical on Broadway will play at
Memorial Auditorium In Athens
on Nov. 9.
Many of you will remember the
1931 original movie which
starred Ruby Keeler, Ginger
Rogers and Dick Powell.
For tickets call the box office,
593-1780. By the way, there are
less than 200 tickets available at
this point in time.
Meigs High Future Farmers of
America members are again
selling fruit for the Christmas
season. If you want to order but
haven't been contacted, stop by
655 Diamond St., MiddlepOrt,
near the Dairy Brazier, and
place your order or call the
school and leave your name and
number. You pay whenyou pick
up your order. This Is the final
week to place orders, I'm told.
And a masked Halloween party
will be held Monday frorn 7 to
midnight at the Riverboat Inn.
You don't have to be In costume
but there will be costume judging
with prizes to be awarded and
there will be a band.
Hope you enjoyed that extra
hour of sleep. You know when
you're rested It Is easier to keep
smiling.

GALLIPOLIS- Th.e Job Bank,
located In the Senior Center 220
Jackson Pike, Is In need of more
applicants who are 50 years of
age or older, to come In and fill
out an application.
The bank needs more Job
orders as this Is the time of year
for leaves to be raked and the last
morning of yards. This Is also the
time to reset shrubbery, flower
bulbs, and a lot of other various
Jobs to be done.
The Job counselors will be
listening for those Job orders to
be called ln. The Job Bank Is open
five days a week Monday through
Friday from 8 a.m . to 4 p.m . The
number to call Is 446-7000.

SINGING AMER.JCANS - The Singing Americans will be appearing at the First Church of God
In Gallipolis, Thursday at 7 p.m. This will be the

World

Comm~ity

. GALLIPOLIS - World Community Day, observed on Friday,
Nov. 4, is an annual event that
unites Protestant, Roman Catholic, Orthodox and other Christian women Ina common worship
experience that thiS year affirms
the .ministry of "everywoman"
In the church. Sponsored by
Church Women United, this
ecumeniCal service recognizes
the many and varied ministries
women perform, within and
outside of the organized church,
that touch famllies, friends and
neighbors ... the sick. elderly,
hungry and destitute.
Entitled, "Everywoman' s
Ministry," the World Community Day materials were written
.by seven church .women, both lay
and ordained, from Lynchburg,
VIrginia who brought diversity of
Insights and background to the
creative task of preparing both
the service and the study resources. Participating were three
laywomen (two Roman Catholic
and one Disciples of Christ) and
four clergywoman from the
Presbyterian, United Methodist,
Christian Church (Disciples of
Christ) and National Baptist
church"". This year's celebration was designed as a challenge

Day Scheduled

to women to .recognize and share ents a broad spectrum of rellthe gilts of their own individual glous tradition. race, age, ecomlnlstrles and to encourage one nomic status and ethnic
another to utilize their .gifts and background and functions
talents to the {ullest.
through a national unit, 52 state
World Community Day Is one units, · (includlpg Greater Wa·
of three ecumenical observances shlngton . D.C. and Puerto Rico)
sponsored annually by Church and 1, 700 local units throughout
Women United In the USA- the the U.S.A. Unified by a common
others being World Day of faith in Christ, the women of
Prayer, the first Friday In Church Women United work for
March, and May Fellowship the elimination of poverty of
Day, the first Friday In May. women and children and Issues of
Offerings from World Commun- peace and justice.
lty Day make possible In part the
In Gallipolis, World Communmlssion and ministry of Church ity Day services will be held at
Women United through pro- the First Presbyterian Church,
grams for spiritual and personal ·, 51 State Street. A Luncheon
enrichm·ent, development and beginlng at noon will be served
ecumenical community, the by the Ladles of the Church. All
Celebration days, networking area women are invited to help us
with Christian women all over celebrate this year's program
the world, In tercontl'nental "Every Woman's Ministry ." For
Grants for Mission and programs other Information call, Jeri Allie
related to Ecumenical Action, 379-2789 or Ann Butler 256-6771.
including the United Nations
office and activities of the CWU
Washington office.
'J.
Church Women United (CWU)
is the national ecumenical Move• ~
UNIFORM
ment that brings Protestant,
- { 1
FASHIONS
Roman Catholic, Orthodx and
Dl\1 ~~~ ~ ~"
other ChriStian women together
/
:;;
I' ANT&gt;li JT &gt;
Into one community of prayer,
.._\
'
L A H (O ATS
advocacy and service. It repres~
I KIIJTS

r''·

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Time change set
POMEROY -Beginning Tuesday the Ladles A~xlllary of the
Fraternal Order of Eagles, Aerie
2171 meetings will start at 7 p.m .

'M
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sl~Ulnll A\ t:.
Cr,d l ipodi., , Oh

1

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP
GOING OUT OF
BUSINESS SALE

ALL FABRIC REDUCED

Open 1 0-5 Mon., Tua..
Wad. &amp; Fri.
Sat. 10·2
Closed Thurs. &amp; Sun.
St. Rt. 7. 5 miles north of
Chaster

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
_Sliding fee scale. No one refused services because of inability to pay.

·- PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

BAZAAR PLANNED- The women of the First·
United Pr!!Sbyterlan , Church are planning a
hoUday bazaar, Nov.l2from9a.m. to3p.m. atthe
church. There will be Christmas Items, baked
goods, crafts, fall arran~~:ements and wreaths for
sale. A chicken noodle dinner will be served from

GALLIPOLIS
414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
446-0166
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
ALSO: Jackson, Chesapeake, Athens, Chillicothe, logan &amp; McArthur

11: 38 a.m. to 1 p.m. Pictured are, from left, Marie
Shear, Kay Cameron, Francis Kingery, Charlot.t e
stockman, Judy Ball and Ruby Briggs. There will
also be tickets sold for a handmade quill to be
given away by the p-oup.

POMEROY _ The Meigs
County Seniors Citizens Center,
Mulberry Heights, Pomeroy, has
the following activities scheduled lor the week of Oct. 31-Nov.
4:
Monday - Meigs County
Health Department Influenza
clinic 9: 30-noon and 1-4, cost ts
50¢ for persons over age 60 and
disabled; round and square
dance 1-3, exercise class 3:30
Tuesday- Chorus 1-2, bowling
1: 30
Wednesday - Knitting circle
10-12, bingo 1-2, bridge 1-3,
exercise class 3: 30
Thursday - Cheryl Brinkley,
Audiologist, wlll have a program
on "Hearing Loss'' -8/- 11 a.m.
Friday -Arts arid crafts Show
form 10 a.m. to 7 p.m., ,16 area
craftspersons wlll be displaying
a wide variety of crafts for ~lfts
and holiday decorating - plllows, quilts, painted sweatshirts,

wreaths, crochet and knit Items,
ceramics, country crafts, back
good. Soup, sandwiches, and pte
will be available to the public
from noon to 6:00.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday - chicken pattie,
mashed potatoes, mixed vegetables, fruit

Tuesday - Weiner, saukerkraut, mashed potatoes, pudding
Wednesday -Cream of potato
soup, peanutbutter sandwich,
tomatoes, bread pudding
Thursday - Beef stew, cole
slaw, biscuit, peaches
Friday - Chill, slaw, cookie '
Choice of beverage available
with meals.

Ferrellgas

"For A111our Propane Need•"
•FARM •HOME •INDUSTRY •COMMERCIAL
CALL NOW FOR IHE PRICE ON OUR
FAU TANK SR SPECIAL...
OPEN 8:00 A.M.-4:30 P.M.
FEIIELLGAS
614·992·5097

,.

.

POMEROY:
236 E. Main St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
8:30 to 5:00 Monday-Friday
Closed Wednesday

~~'t?i?sfActf!~~z:'!!lnf;nter schedules planned

•

LONG BOTTOM - The Long
Bottom Flame Fellowship Chapter will meet at 7: 30 p.m.
Tuesday at the Mt. Olive Community Church in Long Bottom
with Mary Bush of Racine as
s pecial speaker .

Family Planning
It Makes Sense .••

Friday _ Macaroni and
Cheese, breaded tomatoes, kale/ vinegar, whole grain bread,
cookies.

Michigan State hands
Ohio State fifth loss
'

EAS'I' LANSING, Mich. (UP!)
- Hyland Hickson rushed for 179 ,
yards and scored a touchdown
and Blake Ezor added 155 rushIng yards Saturday, lifting Michigan State to a 20-10 victory over
Ohio State In a Big Ten g~me .
Hickson carried 37 times and
Ezor 29 as the Spartans con'
trolled the ball 11nd improved to
3-4-1 overall and 3-1-1 In the
converence. The Buckeyes
dropped to 3-5 and 1-4.
Michigan .State quarterback
Bobby McAllister ·snapped a
10-10 halftime tie by scoring on a
1-yard bootleg at 11:31 of the
third quarter. The Spartans
drove 61 yards after Derrick
Reed recovered Ohio State fullback Carlos Snow's fumble.
The Spartans extended their
lead to 20-10 just 1:58 later when
John Lan~eloh kicked a 32-yard

~

Attention -Churches
As written in God's Word, Hebrews chapter
12, "God has punished me and given unto me
feeble knees, and a lamed condition".
Now He instructs the churches to "make
my path straight, and to be heard".
In Revelation, chapters 2 and 3, Jesus commands, "he that hath an ear, let him hear
what the Spirit saith unto the churches".
As it is written, "God is not the author of
confusion". Please allow me, with God's help, -·
attempt to bring us in one accord, as it was in
the day of Pentecost.
My services are rendered free of charge
for Jesus paid it all on the cross for each of us:

Sincerely in Christ
David A. Reed
Phone 378-6225
'
•

field goal. Michigan State regained possession after defensive end ChriS Wlllertzrecovered
Greg Frey's fumble at the
Buckeyes 8-yard llne.
Ohio State marched to the
Spartans 5-yard line late in the
fourth quarter, but Reed intercepted a Frey ·pass In the end

zone.
Ohio State capitalized on
Ezor's fumble at his 17-yard line
to take a 7-0 lead at 3:39 of the
first quarter. Linebacker MIchael McRay recovered the ball
and two plays later Frey passed
14 yards to ~rnard Edwards In
the left corner of the end zone.
Michigan State had a chance to
tie the score on its n.ext possession, but Ezor fumbled at the
Ohio State 1 and cornerback Zack
Dumas recovered in the end
zone.

The Spartans tied the score 7-7
with 0: 05 left In the qJJarter when .
Hl!=kson dove over the top from 1
yard out. Hickson ran for 41
yards during the 10-play , 64-yard
drive.
Langeloh put Michigan State
ahead 10-7 at 11: 19 of the second
quarter with his 35-yard field
goal. Langeloh had a 20-yard
field goal blocked earlier In the .
quarter by Dumas.
Pat O'Morrow's 28-yard field
goal tied the score 10-10 with 27
seconds left In the hall. The kick
cu Iminated the Bl!ckeyes' long' '
est drive of the half- 51 yards In
nine plays.
Michigan State dominated the
first half, producing 229 yards
total offense, Including 201 yards
rushing. Ohio State was held to
124 yards.

Thundering ·Herd• rallies
to defeat Appy State, 30-27 ·

Flame Fellowship meets

~~
: '- \ eazCJtgn

Installation set

menus for the week of Oct. 31
through Nov. 4, at the senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson
Pike, will be:
·Monday- Chorus, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - S.T.O.P./physlcal
fitness, 10:30 a .m.
Wednesday -Card games 1-3
p.m.
'
Thursday - Avon personal
color check, 9-3 p.m.; Bible study
11 until noon; blood pressure
check 11 a.m.; herbalists, 12: 30
p.m.
Friday - Art class, 10 a.m.
untn noon; mini-craft class 1-3
p.m.
Menus consist of:
Monday - Welners / sauerkraut, whipped potatoes, stewed
apples/cinnamon and raslns,
whole grain bread, chocolate Ice
cream.
Tuesday - Beef stew, 3 bean
salad, cornbread; pear hal'lfes
Wednesday - Oven-baked
chicken, parsley buttere&lt;! potatoes, broccoli, biscuits, Ice
cream
Thursday - Meat loaf, au
IP'atln potatoes, spiced beets,
whole grain bread, fruit/cup

October 30, 1988

0

POMEROY - Bookmobile
Schedule - Oct. 31-Nov. 4, 1988.
Bookmobile Service Is provided
In Meigs County by the Meigs
County Public Library under
contract with the Ohio Valley
Area Libraries . .
Monday - Dexter, 3:15-3:45
p.m.; Danville (Church) , 4: 154:45 p.m. ; Rutland (Civic Center), 5:15-5: 45 p.m.
Tuesday -New Lima Road (1
Ml S. Ft. Meigs ) , 3-3:30 p.m.;
Portland (Post Office) , 4: 15-4:45
p.m.; Letart Falls (Effie's Restaurant), 5:15-6:00 p.m .; Racine
(Ban!l). 6:45-7:45 p.m .; Syracuse
(Ball Field), 8:00-8:45 p.m .

group's second appearance In the area, the last
being at the Gallla County Junior Fair In 1987.

RIO GRANDE - A rehearsal
of the community perforll)ance
of Handel's "The Messiah" for
all who plan to particlp~te has
been set for Sunday, Nov. 6 at
2:30p.m. in Room 115 of the Fine
and Performing Arts Center at
Rio Grande College/ Community
College.
Solo tryouts will be conducted
after the rehearsaL All lnteres ted persons are Invited to
attend and bring a "Messiah"
score, if possible.
The date for the public performance has been changed to
Thursday, Dec. 8at8p.m.ln the
Fine and Performing Arts Center. The performance will be
co-directed by John Dougherty
and Ann Fischer.

POMEROY - -Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star,
wUI hold open Installation of 1989
officers at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at
Shade River Lodge Hall in
Chester.

SectionC

OVAL bookmobile
routes planned

'Messiah' solo tryouts
scheduled for Nov. 6

•

ports

,.

FAllS TO SCORE - Mlchl1an State tailback
Byl!llld IDckson goes over ·the .top near the goal
line but falls to score a~talnst Ohio State In

Woods said ·his whole squad
· \HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!) yards to Sam Wesley and 51
was
disappointed.
yards
to
Nate
Young.
The
field
- Freshman Dewey Klein's
"We
lost to one of the best
third field goal with two seconds goals·by Bjorn Nlttmo covered 21
In
Division 1-AA with a lot
teams
left gave unbeaten Marshall a yards and 43 yards.
of
great
players," Woods said.
Fuller did not play the second
30-27 comeback victory over
half because a shoulder Injury "Turnovers cost us the game. It
Appalachian State Saturday.
In pre-game warmups just shows what turnovers will do
received
Marshall, 8-0 and rated second
to you.
tightened
up during halftime.
In NCAA Division I-AA, moved to
"Having our quarterback hurt
The
8-0
mark
Is
the
best
slart
5-0 In the Southern Conference
really
was a shock to us. I thought
for
a
Marshall
team
since
the
with games left at The Citadel
we
played
hard enough but we
1919
finished
the
season
8-0.
It
and Western Carolina. Appalachdid
not
play
well enough to win."
was
the
Thundering
Herd's
12th
Ian; 5-3 overall, slipped to 3-2 in
Woods
said
the Mounaineers
straight
home
victory
and
Its
16th
the conference where It has beeri
20-7
lead
wasn't eru;&gt;ugh
knew
a
In
the
last
18
games.
triumph
champion the past two years.
against
"an
eJ!:plostve
team like
Marshall
coach
George
Klein's 34-yard field goal with
Marshall."
Chaump
lauded
Appalachian
two seconds left came after
Appalachian used a series of
Appalachian failed to make a coach Sparky Woods lor going for
laterals
In an effort to pull out the
first down at Its own 34 on a it all on his fourth-down gamble
game
on
the final kickoff with
fourth-down pass. Klein's 52- late In the game. On fourth down
Young
finally
getting knocked
yard field goal with 2: 39left tied at Its own 34 and the score tied at
of
bounds
on
the Marshall ·26
out
at 27. Ron Darby's 11-yard 27, Redding through an Incomby
the
last
defender.
Young was
touchdown run with 4: 49 remain· plete pass to fullback Tim
the
fourth
'Player
to
handle the
lng pulled Marshall within 27:24. Sanders and Marshall gained
ball
on
the
return.
.Klein's 49-yard field goal In the po5sesslon.
Fuller completed 7 of 15 passes
"They had to win ~nd they
third period and John Gregory's
for
165 yards and two touch34-yard scoring pass to Mike were playing for , the win,"
all In the first half.
downs,
Barber brought the Thundering Chaump said. "I admire coach
Redding
completed 6 of-15 passes
Herd within 20-17. The Mountai- Woods for playing for the win In
for
77
yards
and was Intercepted
neers went ahead 27-17 on a that situation.
"The hero of the game, without twice.
37-yard touchd9.wn pass from
Darby netted 96 yards on .22
a doubt, Is our little freshman
Lance Reddlng"to Joe Briggs.
carries.
Gregory completed 23 of
It
was
a
great
job
kicker
(Klein}.
Darby ran one yard for Mar39
passes
for 309 yards and was
great
win
for
us
to
by
him
and
a
shall's only first-half touchdown.
IW\ce.
Intercepted
come
back
after
being
down.
You
Appalachian notched two touch·
Barber
had
six catches for ss·
gotta'
play
good
football
and
downs and two field goals for a
yards,
-Michael
Bryant five for·
overcome
adversity
andjustwln.
20-7 halftime lead. Bobby Fuller
82,
Bruce
Hammond
five for 60
We
took
the
game
rlghtoutofthe
fired touchdown passes of 13
and
Sean
Doctor
four
f.or 59.
tiger's jaws.

Saturday's Big Ten matchup. The Spartans~~:otln
on the next play on their way to a 20-10 victory over
the Buckeyes. (UP I)
·

Irish drop Navy; Nebraska,
West Virginia post triumphs
Nebraska 28, Mlssourll8
BALTIMORE (UP!) - Tony
LINCOLN,
Neb. (UP!) .,..
Rice threw a 10-yard scoring
Bryan
Carpenter
raced 49 yards
pass to Derek Brown and Rodney
for
a
touchdown
and
set up a field
Culver and Ryan Mihalko ran for
goal
in
the
closing
minutes
touchdowns Satlll"day, helping
Saturday,
lifting
No.
5
Nebraska
sluggish No.2 Notre Dame defeat
Navy 22-7, marklng the Fighting to a 26-18 comeback victory over
Missouri In a Big Eight ConferIrish's 25th consecutive victory
ence
game.
In the rivalry.
Carpenter's run came about
Playing a Navy team that has
lost 17 straight games to NCAA two minutes after Missouri's Jeff
Jacke gave the Tigers an 18)7
DivisiOn I -A opponents, Notre
Dame was held 12 points below lead wii!La 51-yard field goal, his
Its season scoring average, but /fourth field goal of the game.
Nebraska, 8-1 and 4-0 In the Big
remained undefeated by stifling
Navy's wishbone offense before a Eight, added a 23-yard field goal ·
crowd of 54,929 at Memorial by Chris Drennan with 2:15 left.
Stadium.
· Carpenter, who finished with 96
Notre Dame reached 8-0for the yards on 12 carries, set It up with
16th time In school history and a 21-yard run .
Mike Croel's Interception with
the first time since 1973, when the
26
seconds left sealed Nebraska's
Irish finiShed 11-0 and defeated
victory.
·
Alahama In the Sugar Bowl to
Nebraska
fumbled
seven
times
capture the national
In the game and lost three.
championship.
Missouri,
2-5-1 and 1-3, lost three
West Virginia 51
of
five
fumbles
and threw two
Penn Slate 30
MORGANTOWN, W.Va. Interceptions.
LSU 3i, Mlsslssippl20
(UPIJ - Sophomore quarterBATON
ROUGE, La. (UP!)back Major Harris passed for
two touchdowns and ran for a Tommy Hodson threw three
. third score to spark No. 6 West touchdown passes, two of them to
Virginia loa convlncing51-30wln Tony Moss, to lift No. 15 Louisiana State to a 31-20 victory over
over Penn State.
Mississippi
Saturday and keep
West VIrginia, going 8-0 for the
the
Tigers
tied
for the lead In the
first time In Its history, charged
Conference.
Southeastern
to a 41-8. halftime bulge and led
The Tigers climbed to 5-2 for
41-14 entering the fourth quarter-·
the
season and to 4-1 ln league
In the nationally televised game.
play.
Mississippi Is 4-4 for the
The final 49 seconds was not
year
and
2-3 In the SEC.
played as Mountaineer fans
Clemson 38
poured onto the field and the
Wake
Forest21
teams left the field, similar to
WINSTON-SALEM,
N.C .
West VIrginia's first victory over
(UP!)
Quarterback
Rodney
Penn State In 28 years four years
Williams ran for two touchdowns
ago.
and passed for another Saturday
Penn State, 4-4, lost its third
to lead No. 18 Clemson to a 38-21
straight game.
over Wake Forest In an Atlantic
Harris completed 12 of 20
Coast Conference game.
passes for 230 yards and rushed
Georgia 19
36 yards.
William &amp; Mary 24
Washington State 34
ATHENS, Ga. (UP!) - Re·
UCLA 30
serve
Greg Talley threw two
LOS ANGELES (UPI) Topscoring
passes and Tim Worley
ranked UCLA was upset 34-30 by
and
Keith
Henderson scored two
Washington State In a Pac-10
touchdowns
apiece Saturday to
Game late Saturday afternoon.
lead
No.
20
Georgia
toa59-24 rout
With tess than a minute lefl,
of
Division
I-AA
William
and
Troy Aikman's fourth down pass
Mary.·
1
fell Incomplete In the endzone.

Oklahoma State 45
Kansas State 2'7
MANHATTAN, Kan. (UP!)Barry Sanders rushed for a
school-record 320 yards and
thrj!e touchdowns and Mike
Gundy threw three TD passes
Saturday, lifting No. 12 Oklahoma State to a 45-27 victory over
Kansas State In a Big Eight
Conference game.
Oklahoma 63 Kansas 14
NORMAN, Okla. (UP!) Scott Gar! returned an Interception 80 yards and Glyn Milburn
recoverd a Jamelle Holleway
fumble In the end zone for
fourth-quarter touchdowns Saturday, sparklng No.8 Oklahoma
to a 63-14 victory over Kansas.
Holleway became Oklahoma's
career total offense leader with
4,852 yards, adding 104 passing
yards and 25 rushing yards
Saturday. He broke the record of
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI) - Jim all and 1·4-1 In the MAC, had on 13 carries and Kevin Sims
taken a 21-13lead with 4:04Jeftto adding 115 In 19 tries .
4,818 yards held by by Jack .Del Verne kicked a 37-yard field
Mlldren, who played for the
goal with seven seconds left to lift play on a 10-yard run by quarterWestminster 40, Tiffin 0
!'\Goners from 1969-1971.
Ohio to a 17-17 tie with Eastern back Eric Smith. It came at the
end
of
a
93-yard,
12-play
march
NEW
WILMINGTON, Pa.
Oklahoma Improved to 7-1 · Michigan In a Mid-American
and
ate
up
nearly
six
minutes
off
(UP!)
Joe
Mlcchl passed lor~
overall and 4-0 in the Big Eight
Conference game Saturday.
the
clock.
119
yards
and
two touchdowns
Conference. Kansas fell to 0-8
Ohio, trailing 17-7 going Into
15
and
ran
47
yards
fQr .another
Baldwin-Wallace
and 0-4.
the final quarter, narrowed the
Capltal10
Saturday
to
lead
undefeated
gap to 17-14 on Chris Mobley's
Wyomlng48
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Westminster (Pa.), rankect No.1
5-yard TO run with 12:41 left.
Colorado St. 14
bulled over from
nationally In NAIA Division n, to
With 11 seconds remaining, Ohio Doug Schreck
Its eighth straight victory, a 40-0
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (UP!)
faced a fourth and seven at the one yard out with 2:52 remaining
romp over Tiffin.
- Quarterback Randy Welnlak Eastern 20 and called on Del·
Payton 40, Wls-8tout 13
_ to _tift !'~Bldwin-Wallace to a 15-10
ran for two touchdowns and · ·verne to kick the -game- tying Olilo A:thletlc Conference victory--- DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) _sCOtt
passed for another and the field goal. De!Verne had missed
over
Capital
Saturday
afternoon.
Hullinger
passed
forth
t
hnation's top offense rolled- up 531 a 27-yard field goal try In the
AIIegheny 7 Denison 0
ree ouc
· yards Saturday, powering No. 10 second quarter.
MEADVILLE' Pa. (UPI) _
downs, two of them to Tim
Wyoming to a 48-14 triumph over
Eubank, to lead Dayton to a .40·13
The tie left Eastern with 4-3-1 Derek Paxton caught a 20-yard
Colorado State.
-~·
touchdownpassfromJohnLogue
win
over Wisconsin-Stout Saturrecord overall and 3-2-1 In the
Wyoming won Its 18th straight conference. Ohio Is 3-4-1 and in the third quarter Saturday to
day afternoon.
regular season game and Im- 3-1-1.
lead Allegheny (Pa.) to a 7-0
Kenyon 17, Wooster 14
proved to 9-0 overall and 6-0 In the
victory
over
Denison
In
a
North
WOOSTER,
Ohio (UPI) .:.
Bowling Green 17, Mlamll7
Western Athletic Conference.
game.
Brian
Bortz
ran
eight yards for a
Coast
Athletic
Conference
BOWLING GREEN, Ohio
Sean
Ward
kicked
the
extra
touchdown
and
Paul Becker.
Bennie . Caldwell
(UPI) for
the
Gators
to
complete
kicked
a
33-yard
field goal to
point
Miami 31, East Carolina 7
plunged one yard for a touchthe
scoring.
highlight
a
third
quarter
In which
GREENVILLE, N.C. (UP!)- down with 34 seconds remaining
18
Kenyon
rose
from
a
14-7
halftime
Ohio
Wesleyan
Steve Walsh threw for 287 yards then ran for a 2-polntcoverslon to
Oberlin 0
deficit to defeat North Coast
and lour touchdowns Saturday to lift Miami to a 17-17 MidDELAWARE,
Ohio
(UPI)
Athletic Conference rival Woospower No. 4 Miami to a 31-7 rout American Conference tie ·with
ter 17-14 Saturday.
Bowling Green Saturday Kelly Wolfe ran 60 yards for a
of East Carolina.
first quarter touchdown to Ignite
otterbein 17, Musklngum 14
Walsh has thrown 23 touch·
afternoon.
WESTERVILLE, Ohio (UP!)
down passes this season. He·
Caldwell's TO capped a 10· Ohio Wesleyan to a 16-0 North
play, 69-yard drive by the Reds- Coast Athletic Conference win - Otterbein rolled up a seasonthrew TO passes on the first and
high 349 total yards Saturday In
last possessions of the half to help . klns, who stopped a 10-game over Oberlin Saturday afternoon.
· The Bishops, now 5-3 overall posting a 17-14 Ohio Athletic
Miami, 6-1, take a 17-0 halftime losing streak, longest In the
and 3-lln the NCAC, rushed for Conference victory over
lead.
·
school's history, with the tie.
Bowling Green, now 2-6-1 over- 339 yards, with Wolfe getting 123 Musklngum. ·

OU, EMU battle to 17-17 tie

a

Browns host Bengals in key AFC Central Division battle
By ROBERTO DJAS
UPJ8porta Writer
CLEVELAND- BoGmerEslason of the Cincinnati Bengals Is
the top-raled quarterback In the
AFC and the Cleveland Browns
boasttheleague'sstlnglestpass
defense.
The two statistics will collide
Sunday as the Ben gals, a leaguebest 7·1, visit the Intrastate and
AFC Central rival Browns, 5·3, at
Cleveland Stadium.
.
Cincinnati's arsenal Is overflowing. Eslason has connected
on 120 of 204 passes for 1,985

, \.. . .. ,,

yards, an AFC·hlgh 17 TDs and 10
Interceptions. The five-year veteran has plenty of targets In
wldeouts Eddie Brown (29
catch!!S for 708, 6 TDs) and Tim
McGee (20-421-4) and tight end •
Rodney Holman (22-287-1).
"Everybody says ·I'm more
focused this year, butldon'tplay
defense and I don't play special
teams. There are 44 other guys
who play each game for the
Bengals," said Eslason.
"This team has been through a
lot of adversity. Of all the
coaches In the league, none has

been more ridiculed or maligned
than Sam (Wyche) was last year.
It's good that we're finally
winning for him."
. The Ben gals also are second In
the league In rushing with a
161.4-yardaverageandsecondln
overall offense as well. Rookle
runnlngbacklckeyWaodshasan
AFC-leadlng eight touchdoWns
whUe James Brooks has three

consistent. Cornerback Eric Tho- cornerbacks Hanford Dixon and
mas has five Interceptions.
Frank Mlnn111eld have teamed
"The Cincinnati Bengals are with rookie safety Brian Wa1-0. That's lt. We just started Qver shlngton to provide strong pass
after (the) upset (a 27-21loss at defense. The Browns have perNew England Oct. 16) ," said milled ' just two touchdown
Wyche. "We have to play as passes, both last week at
effectively against Cleveland as Phoenix.
we did last month. It's no
"Cincinnati knows how to
secret."
stretch a defense, much the same
The Browns, second to Chicago way our offense can," said
In overall defense, have permit- Minnifield. "But we have played
led just 13U passing yards per · pretty well. Wecankeepltupand
game. Defensive end Charles we have to, no matter wh9 we're
Buchanan has 4 ~of Cleveland's Iplaying.
15 sacks 1n just two games, while
"Having Bernie Kosar means

scores.

Cincinnati's defense ts medloere agalll8t the run, while defenslve end Jim Skow has 5 ~sacks
and nose tackle Tim Krumrle Is

.

I

.

a lot to all of us. We know he can
mal{e the big play."
Kosar (28 of 51 for 353 yards,
three touchdowns, three Interceptions) returned last week
~Iter missing six games. He Is
likely to look for running back
Earnest Byner (28 receptions lor
289 yards) and wldeouts Reggie
Langhorne (26-314, 3 touchdowns) and Brian Brennan (2227&amp;-1). Byner may have to handle
ground chores If a neck and
shoulder Injury keeps Kevin
Mack, the team leader with 351
yards, from playing.

'

�•

~.

P.8Q8 C-2- Sunday Times-Sentinel

Meigs defeats Federal Hocking 28-6 to
tie for second place in Tri~Valley
e
ROCK SPRINGS - Meigs
closed out play In the TVC with a
Friday night win over Federal
Hocking 28-6 to earn them at leas t
a tie for second place.
·The win may prove extremely
costly, however, due to a severe
ailkle Injury to Jeff {Cbeez)
McElroy and to KellyOgdln both
of whom may be lost!or the finale
a&amp;alnst GAHS.
Neither team exhibited much
ot an offensive punch throughout
n!ucb ofthe first quarter as It was
mOstly three downs and punt.
The Lancers mounted a drive at
tl!e close of the period that
reached the Meigs 23 before It
was stymied.

October 30, 1988

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

The Marauders then put together an eleven play series that
ended with McElroy JCOrlng
from the one. Howard and
McE;Iroy shared the carrying
chores during the drive which
was aided by an 18 yard Crooks to
Blake pass and a 15 yard
roughing the passes penalty
against Federal Hoelting. Dennis
Boothe tacked or! the extra point
for a 7·0 lead that stood until
halftime.
Takllig the second hall kickoff,
McElroy bounced ciff most of the
Lancer defensive players for a 31
yard return to the Lancer 46. The
drive was stalled, however, when
the Marauders lost the ball on a
fumble.

The final scoring drive for the
Meigs went up 14.() at the : 29
mark of stanza three. Starting at Marauders came on a 49 yard
their 14 and using 12 plays, sortie culminated by Wess How·
Crooks connected ·on four of four ard ' s · 11 yard toucbdown
passes to sustain the drive, the scamper. Boothe made It a
last to Kurtis EngllshforlOyards perfect night on extra point
and the- score. Boothe again attempts as he drllled the ball
through the uprights.
converted.
Randy Shuford tallied the
At the outset of the final
Lancer's
only points as be broke
quarter, Frank Blake Inter·
loose
for
a 41 yard jaunt on the
cepted a Lancer aerial to give the
Federal
Hocking series of
next
Marauders possession at the
•
plays.
Good
overall
defensive
enemy 41 yard line. On the next
and
play,
led
by
Seniors
McElroy
play , backup• quarterback
VInce
Vanaman
and
underclass·
Jeremy Phalln hit Blake with a
pass that the took In stride and men Dave Lester and Frank
sprinted In to the endzone for the Blake, prevented the Lancers
six pointer. Boothe was again from mounting a sustained.often·
perfect on the point after slve for most of the night.
attempt.
McElroy was the leading
ground gainer for Meigs as he ·
garnered 137 yards In 21 carries.
Wess Howard added 78 yards In
14 attempts. Crooks passed tor 98
total yards and Phalln connected
on one for 41 yards. Blake had
three receptions for 68 yards,
English two for 26, Ogdln one for
22 and Howard two for 23 yards.
Shuford gained 101 net yards as
he carried the ball 16 times for
the Lancers. Jarvis completed
five of eleven throws for 59 yards
to lead the Lancers In the passing
. department. ·
Statistics:
Deparlr!&gt;enl

M

----- Spo~

Plmllco Race Course Increased the Preakness Stakes
purse to $500,000 from $350,000 to

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.99

scrimmage before Friday night's game with
vlslllng Federal Hocking. The Marauders won

2&amp;4.

'

Sports briefs

GtVING INSTRUCTIONS - Melp head coach Charlie
.~; Chancey, right, gives Instructions to quarterback Ed Crooks as the
.•. offensive unit takes the field In Friday night's game against
:::Federal Hocking. The Marauders won 28-6.

f;Vikings down
hannan Trace 36-8
~;

AID - Fullback Kenny Da·
•:btels crossed the 1,000·yard rush·
:,ng mark In SVAC play with an
;.fiG-yard rushing effort that got a ·
•}ouchdown for him ·In Symmes
:"Valley's 36·8 win over Hannan
•!rrace Friday night.
;.; The Vikings decided to change
;tears on the Wildcats and start
•ltle scoring at the 1:11 mark In
'
first quarter, when quarter·
:-b11Ck Paul Hayes fired a four·
paydlrt pass to running
' '"•ck Scott Miller. Hayes ' two·
conversion run gave the
:fuJSI&gt; an S.O lead.
With 1: 31 to go ln the first half,
Gary Holschuh wrapped
hands around a 32·yatd pass
·;,...nrn Hayes for the Norsemen's
touchdown. Hayes ' serond· two·polnt conversion run
:.r,avE Symmes a 16-0 lead.

Tennis
Sweden will hold a tliree-day
tournament for six players at·
tempting to make the team
facing West Germany lri the
Davis Cup final In December.
The six are: Anders J'arryd,
Mlkael Pernfors, Joaklm Nys·
trom , Jonas Svensson, Peter
Lundgren and Magnus Gustavs·
son. Mats Wllander and Stefan
Ed berg will miss the trial because of the Masters at New
York. Kent Car Iss on Is resting
his knee. ... Mats Wllander has
recovered from the flu that
foreed him to miss the Paris
Open and will play in next week's
$642,500 Stockholm Open. .. .
Nicholas P ereira, the top seed
from. Venezuela, beat Kentaro
Masuda of Japan 6-3, 7·5 In the
quarterfinals of the Japan Air
Lines Super Junior Tennis Cham·
plonshlps. Among the girls,
WangShl Tln_qfTalwan upset top
seed Brenda Shultz of Holland
1·6, 6-1.
_;

{TVC Only)
TF;!M
W L
Belpre .... .. ....... .... 8 0
Meigs . .... .,.... .. ... ,.6 2
Nelsonville .... .. .... 6 2
Trlmble . ......... .. ... 4 4
VInton Co ............ 5 3
Wel)ston ..... .... ... .. 3 5
Fed. Hocking ..... .. 2 7
Alexander .... :...... 1 7
Mlller ...... ... ........ .l 7

p

200

203
136
115
80
143
93
33
55

:'l

$10.69

110

88
147
199
167
215

3 1/2" X 5". R-11
88.12 sa. FT.
KRAFT-FACED

OP
47

$10.99

89

81

ROLL .

CASH-N-CARRY

110

CASEY CHASED OUT-OF-BOUNDS- Gallla'sToddCasey (16)
Is chased out of bounds by Jackson'sJohn Morris (40) In this Chuck
Boyd photo during second period action at Jackson Friday. The
Blue Devils won, 23-14.

66
134.
186

211

158

:Cavs
beat Miami in exhibition contest
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!____ ,

,

JACKSON - Gallla Academy,
High School snapped a five-game
losing streak Friday evening by
knocking off host Jackson 23-14 In
the final Southeastern Ohio League
grk! contest of the 1988 campaign
for both teams.
The trtumph left Coach Brent
Saunder's Blue Devils 3-6 overall
and Hlnskle the conference. Coach
Larry Blackstone's lronmen
dr~ped to 2-7 and Q.5. GAHS
concludes Its season at home
against former SEOAL foe Meigs
Friday. Jackson closes out at
Wellston on Nov. 5.
"Our goal all week was to keep
Bachtel (Todd) under 100 )lards,"
Saunders said The GAHS mentor,
when told Bachtel was held below
100 yards for the first time this
season. added "we tried to communicate with our kids all week to
execute on offense and thump No.
38. I'm proud of all cl our boys for
their effort tonight.''
Although tbe Jackson ace scored
two touchdowns, he was held to 75
yards In 29 attempts- his longest
jaunt· from scrimmage .was eight
yards late In the game.
Bachtel caught one pass for 25
yards fr001 freshman QB Mike
¥organ. The latter showed signs cl
becoming one of the league's
all·around signal callers In years to.
come. Morgan connected on seven
of 12 aerials (one Intercepted) for
lll yards.
Saunders thought Jamie Cheval!·
er's 46-yard counter In the third
period which set up the game's
winning score, and Bachtel's dec!·
slon to try and run a kiCkoff out or
the end zone In the first period
which resulled In a safety for the
Blue DevUs, were key factors In the
Galllans victory.
"Casey did a good johrunnlngthe
offense whlle Chris Carman, Scott
Marchi. our linebackers MarUn
Griffin {who was responsible for the
salety) and Brent Simms played
wei~" Saunders continued.
Chris Dillon, Doug Hoke and ·
Allan Garnes were credited with
stopping Bachtel and Morgan
behind the line of scrimmage In the
second half. GAHS scored first alter a series
of punt exchanges following fumble
recovery by Jamie Chevalier. The
Devils marched 41 yards In five
piays with Chris Plymale going
over from the one {3: 32) lett In the
period. Chris Slagle kicked the point
after. Casey's22·yard keeper sat up
the score.
The ensuing kickoff went Into the
endzone. Bachtel tried to run It out
and was smeared hY MarUn G':lffln

0

Sunday Tnnes-Seritinei- Pape- C-3 :

and a host of Blue DevOs to make It -fer the two-point conversion to
3: 29 showing on the clock. noakett 23-8.
·
In the second perlo(l, GAHS
Ja cksoo' slas t score came wlth:Jl! •
marched 50 yards In ellitrt plays. seconds left when Bachtel plowed .
Casey raced In over from the six. over from the one. Thepassfortwo
Slagle' s kick was wide with 7: 38 on points failed.
,
the clock.
Cbrts Bailey returned an "on· ·
Jackson marched 75 yards In 14 sides" kick 'n yards to assurt'! ·
plays to get on the board with 2:57 Gallipolis of the victory.
. .·:
lett In the half. Bachtel scored frtrn
Casey led GAHS rushers with 78
the three, then ran the two-point yards In 11 trips. Chevalier had 74111
~nverslon.
five tries. Freslunan Gene Garneli .
· In the third periOd, after an had 66 yards In 21 carrtes and ChriS ·
exchange of punts, GARS marched Plymale 39 yards In ·nine .trips, ·
65 yards In five plays, set up by Casey hlt three of 12 aerials for 28 .
Chevalier's 46-yard gallop. Casey yards, giving GAHS 287 yardS .
scored from the one with 4:29 on the rushing and passing In 61 play ~
clock, then pasil!d to RDb Skidmore
Continued on C-4
•..
9.() with

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•

The Heat used a pressuring
defense to keep the score close
durlrig the first half. Cleveland
could manage only . a 38·36
halftime lead.
The Cavaliers scored 35 points
In the third quarter to take a 73·52
lead behind Ron Harper's eight
points and was able to keep the
lead throughout the rest of the
game.
Dwayne "Pearl" Washington
was the leading scorer In the
game· as he came off the Heat
bench to score 16 points.

SEOALONLY
{1988 Final)
TEAM
W L P OP
Logan ......... ... .... 5 0 89 42
Warren .............. 4 1 122 72
Athens .. .... ..... .... 3 · 2 96 44
Marietta .. .......... 2 3 77 99
Galllpolis ... .. ...... 1 4 48 89
Jackson .... ...... ... o 5 67 157
TOTALS
U 15 501 501
Friday's results:
Gallipolis 23 Jackson 14
Logall 9 A!hens 0
.
Warren 21 Marietta 7
Pt. Pleasant 28 Huntington East 7
VInton County 14 Wellston 7 ,
Meigs 28 Federal· Hocking 6
Ceredo-Kenova 34 Coal Grove 7
Huntlrigton 30 Barboursville 6
Nov 4 games:
Meigs at Gallipolis
Nelsonville-York at Athens
Ashland at Logan
Oak Glen at Marietta
Belpre at Warren Local
Pt. Pleasant at South Charleston
Huntington High at East
Coal Grove at Fairland
Nov . 5 game:
Jackson at Wellston

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RQLL

CASH-N·CARRY

· ~··

',

Score by quarters
Hannan Trace ... 0 0 8 0- g
Symmes Valley .8 8 14 6-36

ROLL

OP
53
139
126

LARGE SELECTION

'r:J~W\!1

(OPPONENTS, ALL-GAMES)
TEAM
1
WLPOP
Huntington .. ...... 7 2 245 103
Logan:......... ...... 7 2 190 103
Meigs ...... ..... ..... 6 3 213 139
Warren .. .. .... ... ... 6 3 164 104
Athens ....... ........ 5 4 158 79
Pt. Pleasant ...... 5 4 116 138
Gallipolis ... .... .... 3 6 96 150
Marietta ....... ... .. 3 6 124 186
Wellston .. .......... 3 6 152 147
Coal Grove .... .... 3 6 145 156
Jackson .. .. .. ....... 2 7 109 267

Bundle up witH' Attic
Bllnket·•tnluletlon

I

The hosts restored most of , . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
their previous lead when on the
following kickoff, Fred Wilburn
scored on an 85·yard return. The
('f1(.!'- ,, .
t:--;~)'
failed two·point conversion pass
.
.
.
"
, ' ..
attempt kept the score at 22-8.
Da~·lels' ' touchdown carne at
the 1: 20 mark In the third period
on a 16-yard run, which was
follawed by a two·polnt converslon .pass from Hayes to Miller.
Symmes went ahead 30·6.
'
The ·final touchdown was
scored with four minutes left In
the game, when wide receiver
Carl Robinson caught a 10·yard
Aock of Ages offers you a choice of 6 different colored granites .
aerial from Hayes for the score.
Whatever your requirements may be. complete satisfaction is as·
The VIkings rushed for 188
sured with Rock of l'ges.
yards, and Hayes was 9 of 12 for
Houro: Mon., Tues .• Thur. &amp; Fri. 9 :00·4:00; Closed Wed.
132 yards. The Wildcats had 120
yards rushing.
Other Hours by Appointment-446-2327 or 593·6586
Hannan Trace ended the sea·
son at 6-4 overall and 4-3 In the
SVAC, while Symmes Valley
352 third ,.,.,
PH. 'U-2327
GallipOlis, Olt.
(6·3, 6-1) will end the 1988 season
next Saturday at Ironton St. Joe.

g,

SEO standings

6 1/4" X 15". R-19
48.96 sa. FT.
KRAFT-FACED

Friday's results
Meigs 28, Federal H~cklng 6
Mlller 15, Alexander 0
Nelsonvllle·York 28, Trimble 14
Belpre 23, Williamstown 6
VInton County 14, Wellston 7
Nov. 4 games
Nelsonvlli~·York ' at Athens
Meigs at Gallipolis
Belpre at Warren Local
Nov. 5 game
Jackson at Wellston

-'

7

CASH-N-CARRY

Melgs .............................. o 7 7 14- 28
Fed Hocldng.... ...... ......... o o o 6- 6

GE1"1'1NG READY - Melp offensive llnemau
Wea Youq'(U) charges forward lo make a block
. oa an unldeaUfled teammate In lhe pregame

TM I © 191111 Ulli~ Artblw
r\1.1. R!tiHTS R£SEIVED

ATTIC BLANKET

Score by quarter•

TVC STANDINGS .
{All games)
P
TEAM
W .L
Belpre ... . ,. ....... .. .. 9 0 223
Meigs .. ................ 6 3 213
Nelsonville .... .. .. .. 6 3 136
Trimble ... ............ 5 4 121
Vinton Co ............ 5 4 80
Wellston .. ........ .... 3 6 152
Fed. Hocking .... .. .2 8 105
Miller .. ... .... .... .... .2 8 68
Alexander ...... .. ...1 8 39

GABS won, 23-14. Closing In oa rlgbt Is Jackson's
Tommy Yerian (30) while Gallla~ s Chris Plymale
{3~) looks on In background.

GARNES GAINS YARDAGE - Gallipolis
freshmaa tailback Gene Garnes (34), left, eludes
Jackson's Jamie McGrath for a 14 yard gain
durin~~: second period action at Jacksoo Friday.

31.25 SQ. FT, PER ROLL
UNFACED

FH

TVC standings

Pomeroy-Middleport...;.GII!Iipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

make the Triple Crown's middle
jewel comparable to other Mary·
land races such as last weekend' s
Budweiser I nternational , which
had stakes of $750,000.

Horse Racing

8" X 15"

First downs ............................. , l7
10
Yds rushlng ... .. ........... .. ...........212
164
Yds passlng ........ ... ..... ........... ..l39
. 89
253
Total yards ...... ...... ..... .... ........ 351
Pass att&lt;amp. .............. .... ..... 13-9 15-6
IntercepUons ...... .............. ..........l
1
Fumbles-lpst ........... .. ... .... ...... ..2-l
4-1
Penalt 1es ......................... ...... .4·50 5-65
Punts ..... .. ....... ......................t -111 4~134

J

October 30, 1988

brief.___ _ __

Federal Reserve Dlst~lct No. 4
of Gallipolis, Gallla County , In the State ol Ohio at lhe close of business on Septem·
ber 30, 1988.
·
·
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
a. Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coin .................. 4,249,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances . .. ........ .... ....... .. ... .. .............. ............... 1,649,000.00
. ~ Securities ..... .. .......... ........... ...... ... ....... ....... .... ... ..... .................. ....... 49,438,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreem ents
to resell in domestic offices of the bank and of Its
Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and ln IBF 's .................. .... ....... 4,550,00o.oo•
_J..oan~ a'!d lease financing re~elva bl es :
Loans jlnd leases, net of unearned Income .......... 114,491,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............ 1,111,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve ............. .. .... ....... .. ... .. .. .... ............ .... ... ..... 113,386,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) .................. . 1,450,000.00
Other assets ...... ....... .. - ... ........ ...... ... ............... .......... .. .............. ....... 2,385,000.00
Total assets ............. .. .. .............................................. .. ........ .... .. ... 177,107,000.00
LIABILITffiS
Deposits:
a. In domestic offices .......... ...... .. ....... ........................ .. ........... .. . 162;197,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest·bearlng ................ ...... ... .............. 13,132,000.00
(2) Interest·bearlng ............ .. ......... ................... 149,065,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreement
to repurchase In domestic offices of the bank of lis
Edge and Agreement subsldlalres, and ln IBFs .................................\15,000.00
Other liabilities .. .... ............... .......... ....................... .... .... .. ...... ... .. .. ... 2,138,000.00
Total liabilities ... .................................. .. ... ............................ ........ 164,450,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common Stock {No. or shares) a . Authorlzed ...... .. ..417,824
b. Outstandlng ........ 409,329 ............... 4,093,000.00
Surplus ................... .. .. ........... .... .... ........ ..... .......... .. ....... ....... .......... . 5,874.000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .............. ........... .. : ..... ............. 2,690,000.00
Total equity capital .......... .. ... ....... ........... .. ... .... .............................. .12,657,000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock,
·
and equity capltal ......... .. .. ...... .... .... .. ... .. ... .. .. .... .. .. .. ......... ....... .. . 177,107,000.00
I, the undersigned officer, do hereby declare that this Report of Condition has
been prepared In conformance with of!lclal Instructions and ls true to the best or
my knowledge and belief.
Madge E. Boggs
Vice President and Controller
We, the Undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Condl·
tlon and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In conformance with official Instructions and Is true
f
and correct.
Frank H. Mills, Jr.
W. Lowell. Call Directors
James L. Dalley
State of Ohio, County of Gallla, ss :
Sworn to and subscribed be lore me this 25th day of October. 1988 and I hereby
certify that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
Cindy H. Johnston, AKA Cindy L. Harrington, Notary Pubic
My commission expires March 25, 1991.

--·---

.

..;-

.........-

..---·

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

�,....,....

______ __

..
-

'

~-

•
Pon~aoy-:Middleport-Gallipolis,

Page C-'4-Sundlly TIIT'II Sa 11inel

North Gallia defeats K ·

Ohio-Point Pleaunt, W.Va.

TEAM

230
172
170
127
84
45
38

98
146
168
154
203
226
282

Yards rushlng ., .......................280
Lost rushlng ............................. 19
Net rushing ......................... ....261
Pass attempts ... ...................... ... 12

Com pleUons .. .. .... ....................... 3
I ntercepted by ................. : ..........l
Yards passing ,......................... 26
Total Yards .............................287
Plays ....................... -............. ... 61
Ret urn· Yards ........................... 51

F'umbles .....................................3
Lost fumbles ...... .............. ..........0

J
11
110
27

52
42

6
3

P

222
218
146
133

113
39
64
19

OP
44
57
123
125
115 .
145
158
187

conducted ground warfare until
the oHenslve line parted the red
sea of KC defenders long enough
to allow George to sprint In for a
two-yard touchdown run with
8: 43 left In the first half. Mays'
extra-point kick gave North a
14-0 lead.
Kyger's comeback began
about four minutes later, when
Sipple, shifting Into four-wheel
drive and blasting hls way
through North's defensive front.
highlighted the Bobcats' first
scoring drive with a 20-yard
romp that set up his one-yard
touchdown burst. The two-point
conversion run by quarterback
Chad Johnson was stopped short.
freezing the score at 14-6.
The Pirates' woes had just
begun. With 2:55 left before
halftime, Glassburn threw an
Interception to VInson, who was
downed where he caught the ball
at North's 45-yard line. From
there Kyger used seven plays
and 2: 41 to get Sipple Into the end
zone for the second lime from the
Pirate one. The two-point conver·
Continued from C-3

Penalties ............... .. .... .. .... ... .. 7-86

7-55

Punts .. ............. ........ ......... .. :.S-186 .5-121

Sco,e b)' Quarters
&lt;;alltpol!s ........ : ............ ..... .. .. 9 6 8 0-23
Jacksoo.......... ....................... o 8 o 6-14

Next Game- Notr. 4, MelPt Rome.

Kyger Creek's field. ThoiJib Sipple had scored
two touchdowns In the second quarter to tie ·I he .
game al14·14 at halftbne, the Pirates came back
lo prevail %8-14 and record their third straight win.
(Times-Sendnel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

slon run by VInson was successful, creating a 14-14 tle at
halftime.
According to Pirate assistant
coach Ron Twyman, Dee! arid hts
staff told the Vinton squad that
"you thought when you were up
14-0,ltwasgolngtobeeasy. Well,
now you found out that this Is a
North Gallla·Kyger Creek rootball game, and that It's all on the
line here."
Apparently that and whatever
else may have been said tn the
Bucs' locker room must have
taken root, because on the first
offensive series of the third
quarter, the Pirates started at
their own nine-yard line and
alternated their rushing prlmarlly between George and Eleam,
with Beach fighting for the short,
Inside yardage.
George, who had a 47-yard
gallop on a sideline run past the
KC bench that took the Bucs to
the Bobcats' 44, concluded a
10-play driVe that consumed 4: 25
with a two-yard touchdown run
up the middle. Following the
paydlrt run, Mays hesitated for a
second or two before ktcktng the
ball for the extra point. The kick
was deflected by KC' s Frank
Overstreet, holding the Pirates
to a 20-14 lead.
"I think they were keying on
Beach, and that's why George

could get the yards he got and
have such a blg game," said
Peel.
·
"If Vinson comes up (from hls
cornerback spot and makes the
hlt), George d.o esn't break those
runs In the third quarter when we
had them down there," saldCoen
In reference io Vinson's absence,
caused by an ankle Injury suffered shortly before halftime.
The only other thrilling moment for the Pirates In round
three was when Glassburn, a
senior, threw a 17-yard pass In
the third frame to Eleam, also a
senior, on thlrd-and-13 from the

:~~s~~!!;';;~r~-~~r:~t ~~~~ :ce:~~\

-

Harclln Northern 18. I.J berly Center J!
Harrl8on 48. Oa Northweat 0
Hemlock Miller Ui, Alexllll*r 0
HleiUi vHie 28, flU Hop ti
Hillsboro 61 , Clermo.-. N'ul!ltern 6
Howlaad n, Hubbard~
HudMon 13. Greealihul'l Green G
Huron 21, Oak Harbor 1Z
lndepeadetlce te, •ooldra 0 .
lndh.n H11121, nnneJ&amp;ow• 3
rn•an Lake 41, W Ubt!rtySalem o
1a•an Val s, " ' L&amp;l-.yeui iUdpwsod 0

Arc1111wn 31}, Twin Vlllley Srtwth q
'

Ashland C re~~t~ r w 31. So ulh C..ntro.l D
Asbt Edgewood 1%, 1\~ht Harbor 6 (ol J
Ashtabula 21 , Conneaut II
AW'or&amp;. If, Newbury 6
Aulltl.. own Fth:h ft, Boardm lUI 6
Avon Jt, LeraJn Brook!lldt&gt; ll!

Ayeravllle :M, 1lnor. I
Bwber&amp;OII ri, Ken Ill
BullntJle .U. WcJOdslleld 0
Bewercreek 19. Ce nl#&gt;rvtlle 11
Bedlord .27, Mayfield I
Bellaire SC .row lt. Bu.wvllle o
Bellville Cle ar t' ork 4'7, Lu ciJl 8
Belpn! 2S, Wllllamltnwn ("'Va) s
Be•Jamln Loran '!'7, MechiiHIQ!burJt 0
B«e• lol, Lodl Ckl\·erleaf 3
Bethel Tale a1, Wlckllll'ld &amp;
Bii{Wldnu.l 28, Be~._., It
Blulfton U , Lima PPrr)' 11
Bow Una Green 25, M11Umet' o·
Breckartll e %Z. Berea Midpark 1
Brooke {W\' al 1•,· Wlnterntll e 13
BrookvUIHl; Eaton3
Bru•wlck l8, MecUna U
Ball No JWVa) 311, South Point IJ
Cadb: J:l, Edl!loo North 14
Caldwell 20, Shenandoah 6
cam bridle It, Dover 6
Canal Wlnches4er U 1 Millersport o
C&amp;nleld7, l",oland&amp;
•
Canton S.uth 2~..Wes1 Branch 21 ,
CarlllaKf;on MI. Gal\op Northmor 0
carn.ae '!8, Day O•kwood 7
Cedarville It, Madison Ph1ln!1 12
Cell.-.. 18, Deflaru.'t! 17
CenterburA: 48, N Lewlsburr Triad 7
Otamp\ori 19, Le•·lttsbu.r1 LaBrae 14
Ch.-don IIi. Orante 13
Chillicothe 21', HJIIIard !2
Cln Bacon ·b. Cln Sycamore 20
Cln Elder !1 , Cln Oak HUb 14
Cln Hu1hBi 14. Covln&amp;f.on ( Ky J Holmt!ll

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UtUe Mltml Z'J, WllmlnJion 0

Lou.lntlle Aquinas~. Cu:yahop Hill 7
IAcarJVIIIe\lllley :&amp;&amp;, Minford 18
Maund• Malabar :M, Ashland 7
MauDehl!~r S4, Marton Hardln.Jlf ,
MariemoEi t2, Lovel•d 0
Mar loa Elfl• 17, ll.lverdale S
Mar6o• PleUIUit 40, Buckeye Ce nt 6
MarysvUJe S!, lAndon 6
M•llllon Perry st. AIHuee !II
McComb U, Al'(ladla 0
McDonald tl, Mineral Rldre 0
Medina Buc:kf!3e 21, C.&amp;umbla I
Mel pitS, Federal Hoekln1l
Mentor II, Lyndhu111l Brus.bl
Miami &amp;It !8, MUtua Unkln 7
Mlddlenel• Cardinal 4%, Rlchmoad Ht11

'

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Mhkllltawn24 , \\1 Che~ter Lakota 20 ·
Milan Edlua It, Mar preda 21 tot)
Mlllord It, Amelia 0
Mlnena ZJ. MarDaston 7
Mlnp ft, Weirton (\to'"a) MadGnna 21
Mln1ter fl', DelphDll Sl Jo ... 6
Mopdore a , Mant• Creetwood U

CII\Vton Nort.lmont 10, Sidney 1
Cle Kene.d;y ZO, Cle Rhodes U
Cle ~uth H , Cle John Ad&amp;mfl 0
Cle SIIJnatlualf, Cle Benedlci 1rte 0
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Cl1• WMt Te c h 33, Cle Eat 0

MoiU'OeVIIe 18, BJaek IUver •

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Col Academy 12, North Union 6
Col Beechcrott 4t, Musleld Madlsna

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Trimble U
New Bremen ts, MarlonLoull!
NeW Cuooord Glenn,, W Muklnpm 8
New PhlladelpWa 34. "'ooAter !I
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Newton Falls '2, East Palf!lfltlne 1
North Ben• TIQ't.r 17, New Miami 16

Col Centennla17, Col Marlo~t-Frank 8
Col Eul !3, CoiBriJP. 8
CoiiEutmeor 36, Col W,.t !2
Col Hamilton Twp 'lll, Uckln1 Ht1 13
Col Hartle)- 14, Col Read)' 3
Col In dependence 32, Cell Brookhaven

Col
Col
Col
Col

' Falrlln d H. CJtesap eake o

KC
9
140

2.5
Comp.·all. ................................. 2-6 4·12
~nterceptlom; .............................. !
1
Penaltles , ................................. 7-65 6--64
..Punts·yards ............... ,............. 3-92 3·95

Fumbles-lost ,, ....... ,....... ,............ J-0

5-3

Score by quark!n
North Gallla ................... :. 7 7 6 6-26
Kyger Cr&lt;'ek.......... -.......... 0 14 o 0-14

TURNING THE CORNER- Kyger Creek's R.L. Gilmore, with
ball, turns the corner . and chums toward the Bobcat sideline,
"' eluding North Galila defenders Billy Williamson (11) and Don
MI!-YS (75) In the second quarter of Friday night's grudge game In
Cheshire. The Pirates sent the Bobcats to their stxth straight loss
with a 26·14 decision. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

GTE North has announced that
Letart Falls private line
customers will no longer be
intercepted by the. operator
when dialing long
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North Can GkaOak %1, MMe Jackl!lon

"

North Oallla !6: Kyl{er Creek 14

Norioa •· Medina tu(hlaad U
Norwa.l II II, Shelb:r IS

Oak HUI U, G.aJIIa Southwet~k!rnt
otMrM• F1reluu~ !I, Keyll...e 20
Oln.ted Fall• M, Palnlew !8
Ontario~ Muurt fdlead 1

Cory-Rawson 2fl. Pancklra-GIItma 13
Cre11tUne 2!, Fredericktown Zl
Cuyahoga Fall~ ln. Ra\'ea• to ' (ot)
Daltoa 37, \\' Salem NorlhwesM!r n 1)
Danvlle 17, Newc.merfJtown 1:1
Day MeMowdale 10, n.,- Cham--.Jul23
0., Nor1t..lltp :U, PrebleShawr»ee 21
Day Wayne 31, KeUerln1 Falrmonl 7
Del011re 14, Reynoldtlburs: 7 ·
IManMnd 8outhe•t 13, M'oodrtdre 8
Doylewt--n 14, RIUm.u 10
Dublin 34, Buckeye Valley 14
F..alt Cllal•n :&amp;8, S ChaaSoMib8MiernO
Eastwood :IIi, Otsep 34 (ol)
F;l,rrta C.. Ill .'l4t W.vt"tSllvllle 8
Ely rta Wst SA, Oberitn I
-.
~clldst, Maple R111t
,
Evel'lftf!O 13. Mont pellet" I
Fairborn U, Da.y Stebhlflli 14
FalrleldUnlon 14, Amand!ICie!U'(:reek

Continued on C-5

John son, backed up on hls own
three- yard line, threw an errant
pass that found the hand s of
May s, who from his linebacker
position sUpped past the Bobcats
from the KC 16-yard line for the
game 's final score.
The Pirates ended their season
with three straight victories,
while the Bobcats ended the year
with six straigh t defea ts .

North can Hoover 42, can 11m ken 13

Linden :ell, Col Whehtont! !I lloi)
NorthiiUid 21. Col MUllin 1:1
Walnut Rldfl:e :es, Col South 18
Wehrle H. Po11~n~oulh Eailt I!

Columbl•a Crestview 21, Sebrln 1 o
CorUaodLaltevlew U, Grand \Iaiiey U

completion and Eleam's last
prep reception.
The final quarter saw North
overcome several penalties with
some solid running by George,
though the Bobcats would Ioree
them to give up the b~ll. allowing
Johnson to try to get KC closer.

'

' Nel&amp;onvUie-\'ork
.
til,

"

"

I

Morpn ZS, DrMden Tri-VaiiJ
Mou.nl Healthy Sl, Greeulleld 7
Mou" "er110n 35, WhMehall7
NavarrT F11lrleu Sol, CIUial Fu.fton NW

Cllnt0111 Musle H. Gree~~ewtew a

•

28, Heath U

Uma Bath !'1, WapakO~lll It
Uma C&amp;&amp;h 34, Sl&amp;leJ Lehman II

Lopn I, Athf!DI 0
IApn Elm M. Berne Union I
Lorain Cle•vlew 19, Wl;!lllnston 14
LeudonWIIe41, Lexlnaton !8

St aa ~ tl cs

De plll'lment
NG
rlrst downs ........................... .. 5
Rushing yards .......................... 267
Passing yards ............... ............. .17

GTE NORTH/LETART
FALLS CUSTOMERS

Jackson Millon !8, Souihern LocalS
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K.enlOI'I II, Vall Wert II
IUrtland!t', B~on Ber~re Ht
l...ahwoad IS, Par... 8
...kewood st Edward J4, TGI Scolt 6
Lanculer 17, FremoN Rou 0
Leb..-.on 14, Lemon MOnroe 12
Ubefty 11, Brooklteld t
Ubert:r (}enter l!, Bryan II

Cln MoeiiH 49, Day .Ounblll' S
Cln Pr1nc!eton :l!i, HRmUtop12
Cln Pun:ell 34, Norwood 6
Cin ReadlnJ34, Madeira 8
(:In St XIIVkor t , Colentln 8
Cln 1\lrpln 18, Cln Me Nichola&amp; M
Cln \\'a! nut Hills 2(1, ctn Aiken Ill'
Cln Withrow 6, On CAPE 0
Cln Woodward to, Cln T.tl J4

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Parma Nornwutr

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PauldlnJI7, DelpbH J(lflerAOn 0
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P1ekerla~&amp;on lt, Fran kUn Hts 13 (ot 1
Plkflioni8, Unloto Ill

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Padne. Harv~ tl, Pal~a Riverside 2!
Par Way Ill, Speacervllle 'l7

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Fvrflltt I" ark 28, C1n GretnhiiiJ8
F011torla n, Napoleon 0
Fran ldort Adeu. ~.Palmi V-'ley It
Fr.anldln n , Trenton EdJew09d 7
t'remonl St Jollepflll4, Seneca E II!
Gall anna !4, Oro,;e City 21

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Rldcernoal S, DeGraJ'IIUvW.I'-t t

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c lio:alionl.

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Ros.&amp;Nit.eaa&amp;en 21, Zane Trace Ill
SanduliQ' 14, Elyrta I
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staq-lllde tl, Haulbal River 14
Shuldaa 12, MQ"liVlllt I
8herwo.d Fairview a, Edo n t
SmltrvUie U, Hlllallale II
SprlnaSoutb 1:!1, Sprln1North 14
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JUDGE
MEIGS COUNTY
COURT
-Experienced: 11 years as a~orney in Meigs County; 8 years as your
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._ .
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-Committed to make Meigs County a drug free county for not only our
children, but for all citizens of Meigs County.
· .
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families.
-Member -of the Meigs Co. Jaycees. Pomeroy Gun Club, National Rifle
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Brian· Lleving, Conwell, McAv_ena, Billy Wllllamson and others
gave chase. With 1:53 remaining,
the heat was so effective that

Grud\1-lew ts, Jonathan Alder II
GriUlvlle IU, Utk:a HI
Gu.yan \'al (\to'Va.t 2&amp;, f\rankFur Gren

Amtwtl ~ . Awn Lak e 21 (Oi l

Ardahold 21, WMI!H!On 6

Continued from C4
As Johnson was forced to go to
the air to try for blg yardage,
Pirate pass rushers such as

"

AllrGarlleld:J..t, J\lo:rNo11hl!

Alt.r Ken mort! 26, i\llr Eau s
Akr SprtnAfleld S4, Talln..-d.-e u
AJtr Sl Vln 8, Stow Wals h detull a (ot)
Allen Eaa1 3.11 , C::olumbu l Grove I

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C-5

North Gallia defeats ...

GalllpDH&amp; U . da cboo It
Garaway 14, SlruhllrJI
Gene\'ll n. Jeffi!non u
G(fard ll:i, Str ..her s 7
Graftoa MJct.-liew II, Lonln Soulhvtew

Oblo Hl1h Sc hool Foolhan Rellllkl
By Unite d J•roeu bllerrw.Uoml
Frtd"'. Oc:t. 2:8
AJtr Co\·t ntry 17, W'oo!Ht~ r Trlway 1
Akr Flrf!ll lone 11, A.kr Ell d. 10 (:lot )

SATELLITE·

HERE COMES THE CRUNCH! -Kyger Creek
fuDback John Sipple ( fll) looks to tun lbe corner
and create a hole while North GalUa cornerback
Greg Glassbun, left, walls 1o make the hltln the
fourth quarter of Friday night's season finale on

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

Friday's grid scores

·
Frlclay's results
· North Gallla 26, Kyger Creek 14
Symmes Valley, 36, Hanna~
Trace 8
..
Oak Hill 34, Southwestern 0

87
15
8
0
120
207

3
3
4
4
7
7
8

(SVAC only)
TEAM
W L
Oak Hill .. .. ..........7 0
Symmes Valley .. ,5 1
North Gallla ....... .4 3
Hannan Trace ..... 4 3
Southwestern .. ..... 4 3
Southern .. ............ l 5
Kyger Creek ........ 1 6
Eastern .. ....... ..... .0 6

OP

66

Symmes Valley ... 6
North Gallla ........ 6
Hannan Trace .. .. .6
Southwestern ....... S
Kyger Creek ........ 2
Southern ..... .. ....... !
Eastern ............... O

Gallipolis beats...

DEPARTMENT
G
First downs ...........•................. . 14

(All cames)
W L P

Oak Hut .: ............ 8 1 248

30.

fr001 scrimmage. The Galllans had
14 first doWJIS.
Plymale punted stx tlmes for 124
yards . and Casey twice for 62.
Chevalier, Casey and Dillon all
recovered JHS fumbles.
B;es~ Bachtel and Morgan, big
Mike Abrams had two pass receptions for 31 yards while little George
Smalley caught two for 19; John
Gillum had three for 45 yards.
Jackson finished with 207 total
yards In 42 plays frcm scrimmage.
The Ironmen picked up 11 first
downs. Btll Speakman punted five
times for 121 yards.
Jackson lost three or stx fumbles.
GAHS fumbled three times and did
not lose any. Penalties found GAHS
losing 86 yards for seven Infractions. JHS was penalized seven
times for 55 yards.
Statistics:

October 30. 1988

26-141 SVAC standings

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
nm..SenltDel Staff
CHESHIRE - Tailback Steve
George led all rushers with 148
yards and two touchdowns to
pace North Gallia to a 26-14
season-ending victory over rival
Kyger Creek Friday night.
Gregg Dee!' s Pirates finished
the 1988 campaign at 6-3 overall
and 4-3 In the SVAC, while Mel
Coen' s Bobcats ended their gridiron affairs with a 2·8 overall
mark and a_1-6 league record.
Though the Plr ales were penalIzed approximately as many
yards (65) as the Bobcats were
(64) , the falling handkerchief
seemed to play greater havoc
with the Bobcats, even from the
game's first play, when Brad
Colburn's 15-yard return was
wiped out by a clipping penalty.
The Bobcats ended up starting at
their own 15-yard line, when they
could have started at their own
Apparently unfazed by ibis, the
Bobcats put luUback John Sipple,
a 5-9, 210-pound junior to work.
Throughout the game he duttfuUy ran wherever the &lt;play
called for him to run, usually
with several Pirate defenders
being dragged ~ng for the ride.
However, after tailback Joey
Edwards picked up a first down
on a third-and-one pllly, freshman tailback Phil Bradbury
fumbled at the KC 30-yard line,
where Pirate defensive tackle
Richard Haney took possession.
From there It took nine plays,
In which quarterback Greg
Glassburn threw one of his two
oompletlons of the night (to
utllltyman Keith Eleam), before
fuUback Felipe Beach, a 6-0,
180-pound senior, powered hls
way Into the end zone from the
Bobcat one at the ~=54 mark of
lhe first quarter. Theextra·polnt
attempt by Don Mays put the
Sues ahead 7-0.
After a 13-yard kick return by
KC's R.L. Gllmore., the Bobcats
drove 16 yards In six plays before
slotback Brian VInson fumbled
on a reverse on third-and-six.
Pirate linebacker Jeff MeA vena
pounced on the loose ball and
gave the Bucs the ball on KC's
49-yard line.
. The running attacks for both ·
teams were working well In the
first half, as E:'each and Sipple
were able to get the blocking that
allowed them to do battle - and
win - against the linebackers
and the secondary,
After a ' fumble recovery by
Glassburn at the 10:07 mark tn
the second quarter, the Pirates

October 30. 1988 ,

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!&amp;.

•

:lia:'131
l -··· ....

:=r.-

·~mJ:r:r.ltm

'••

�..
Page~C-6- Sunday

Times-Sentinel

October 30, 1988

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

Detroit, Boston, Atlanta top
East in 1989·
choices.in NBA
.
NEW YORK (UP!) - The building depth and we're ex peri·
·Detroit Pis tons may have taken mentlng with different combinathe biggest gamble !n the East- . tiOns," said Rodgers, who has the
er n Conference by sticking with team's first Impressive prospect
the lineup that took them to last !n years In rookie guard Brian
Shaw. "Kevin McHale has said!!
year's NBA finals .
While 50-game winners Boston, asked to come oftthe bench, he' I!
Atlanta and Chicago each made do that and so has Danny A!nge.
majorchanges in the off season, Larry Bird said he'd come off the
the conference champion Pistons bench If that's what I wanted. "
Daly points out the Ce!t!cs have
pretty much stood pat, albeit
with one of the deepest lineups !n a built-In edge by not playing
the league. Detroit, which took with the Pistons, Hawks ' and
the Los Angeles Lakers to seven Bulls !n the Central D!v.lsion,
games ln. the championship ser- where all but one team finished
Ies and almi&gt;st won the East two above .500 last season. Boston
years ago, has made no major can work toward Its usual homeacquisition since slgn!nglorward court advantage !n the playoffs
Adrian Dantley, now 32. two with six games against Its new
years ago. The Pistons have had Atlantic D!vls!on rival, the exno first-round draft choice the pansion Charlotte Hornets.
Atlanta, which won 50 games
past two years.
"We opened a Pandora's Box the last three seasons with a
by making It to the finals last young lineup, made the most
· year," Pistons Coach Chuck s!gn!flcant off season moves.
Daly said. "There are a lot of picking up a pair of veterans with
coaches and .QMs who said 'We · a combined 22 years of NBA ·
handled that team last year, why experience. The Hawks are hopIng workhorse center ·Moses
aren't we there?'"
pack of B!g Blacks as he gets started on a 54-yard
BIG BLACKS ON A ROLL Pleasnt
•ophomore Chuck Wood, with ball, comes out of a
touchdown run Friday night. PPHS won, 28-7.
The main team the Pistons w!JI Malone, a 12-year veteran, can
have to contend with wll! proba- do for them what he d!d for
bly again be the Celt!cs, who Philadelphia six years ago:
return the same core, but with deliver an NBA title !n his first
Jimmy Rodgers replacing K.C. season with the team. He wlll
Jones as head coach. Boston. have help from a forward tanwhich missed the championship dem of Dominique Wilkins and '
series last year after four Kevin W!!l!s and guards Doc
straight appearances, may fl. Rivers and Reggte Theus, a
nally tamper with Its aging 10-year pro who averaged 21.6
one touchdown on the night while buzzer.
starting five and abandon Its points with Sacramento· last
By GLENN McCASLAND
year.
POINT PLEASANT - "We junior quanerback Shawn Fogleson . Huntington began a .drive, pick- halfcourt offense.
Willis, a disappointment last
"Everyone !s committed to
haven't played with th!• kind of three seven air strikes connecting mg up a first down, thetr first of the
intensity all season. I'm not on three of them for 96 yards and night, wilh 10:31 left in the half.
certain what happened, but I'm two touchdowns. one for 52 yards Then with the ball on the Point 48,
to Jeremy Putney and the other for East · quarterback: Brett Herbert
extremely pleased."
38
yards to Casey Hill..
fumbled the ball, recovering it but
Point Pleasant High School
Sophomore
Jamie
Bonecutter
forcing a JH!nt as a result.
coach Steve Safford made the
added
19
yards
on
eight
carries
for
Point Pleasant set up at the 18 afremark as he replayed the just
the
Big
Blacks
to
help
rub
salt
inlO
ter
the punt and eight plays later,
completed Big Blacks-Huntington
the
wounds
suffered
by
East.
Fo
1e
h't Hill 'th
·k
East football game Friday at SanBut the defense had its heroes as
g song 1
Wl
a stn e
ders Stadium.
from 38 yards out and !he second
And Safford had good reason to well as senior Casey Hill was touchdown. Again Wood added the ·
be both extremely pleased as well everywhere and teammate Brian point wi!h 3:31 to play in the half.
as a bit confused - his charges had Greenlee delivered a bone-crushing The score stayed, 14-7, at intermisjust whipped East, 28-7, with a tackle !hat both broke up an East sion.
A couple of 15 yard penalties
thundering offensive cffon and a pass and kayoed the receiver.
The Blacks recovered three of helped East mount a drive in the
defense so stingy that it would
seven E:Jst fumbles and shut down third period, but Dusty Carr got
make Scrooge a spendthrift.
The. victory, coming off a 30-0 Huntington's line back Shawn into the works with 6:03 to pl~y
mud-drubbing at Ripley last week, Hughes with only 25 yards rushing and plucked off a Huntington
fumble at the Point Pleasant 44,
capped an emotion-filled Senior on 12 carries.
"All in all, it was an excellent halting the drive.
Night for the Big Blacks that saw
the 22 senior gridders and !heir night," Safford said after looking at
Two plays later, Wood - crackparents introduced and !he team's the stat chan.
, ing three tacklers as he went d'octor, John M. Grubbs, honored
But it didn't start that way.
broke for his 54 yard touchdown
for 25 years service in pre-game acOliver, S)iearbeading a first gallop with 4:59 to play. He added
quarter offensive drive, coughed up 1 the point and the game was on ice.
tivities.
"We spotted them seven points the ball about the Huntington East
East ran three plays and Herret•
and then beat up on !hem !he rest of 30 and Hughes fielded the pig went into !he air, throwing to juni,,r
the nigl1~:· Safford said. "I guess while it was in the air. Sixty yards Staten reached for the ball he was
that made our guys mad."
later, East was on the bollrds wilh met in the chest by Greenlee, who
Whatever happened, Safford · 9:49 left in the quarter. Paul Ferrell delivered the hit of the night hopes it rubs off next week when added the kick for the 7-0 lead and knocldng the ball from Staten's
the team, now 5-4 and 4-3 in PAC the Point Pleasant crowd sat snm- hands and leaving the youngster
action, travels toJiouth Charleston ned.
out of wind on the ground for a
But that was to be the last major couple of minutes.
for the final game of the season.
"This puts us · right where we gaffe for the Big Blacks,
East punted the ball and the Big
want to be, just at a winning
"Taking the ball at their 30, Point Blacks began !he last scoring drive
season, a lock-in for third in con- Pleasant engineered a 10-play 70 of the night, moving from the East
ference and a lot of confidence for yard campaign - including a well 36 in 10 plays where Oilver on
the team," Safford said. "Our excuted fake punt on a folllth and fourth down and one plunged in
seniors matured tonight and the un- one at the Point 49 -to score wi01 with 9:35 left in the game. Wood
ldcked the final point.
derclassmen didn't do badly 5:39to play.
The touchdown came on the
enher."
STATISTICS
Using a combination of senior second play after the fake punt
when
Foglesong
spotted
Putney
Pt. Pl. Ripley
experience and sophomore willFirst Downs
13
open
and
rifled
a
pass
to
!he
junior
7
ingness, the Big Blacks rolled up
Yards
Rushing
.46-2()1
24-4
1
300 yards total offense and saw that 'covered 52-yards. Wilh the lo- Yards Passing
96
64
sophomore Chuck Wood carry the cal crowd awakened, Woods Total off.
300
105
ball eight limes fo~ 77 yards, one moseyed out and kick the first of Return yds.
60
49
3-7-1) 4·11·0
touchdown and ldck four extra his four extra points to deadlock the Passes
Fwnbles-Lost
2- I
7-3
points. He also tried, but missed, on game 7-7.
East punted late in the quarter Penahiea:-Yds
t-15
3·25
a 43 yard field goal attempt that
2-38
5-28
carried the distance, but was wide and the Big Blacks took over at the Pun IS
Huntington
38,
but
wound
down
Score by Quar~rs .
10 the right.
the
clock
with
Wood's
attempt
for
a
Pt. Pleasant
1986
7 7 . 7 7 28 ·
Senior Jimmy Oliver rushed 17
Hunt.
East
43
yard
field
goal
failing
at
the
7
0
0
0
7
times for. 51 yards and chalked up
CHEVROLET

Point Pleasant Big Blacks
defeat Huntington East, 28-7

season, suffered a stress fra&lt;!!ure
In his right foot and wlll miss the
first two months. He w!IJ be
replaced by Antoine Carr.
Chicago, which tied the Hawks ,
for second In the Central Division
last year at 50-32, obtained
offensive support for MVP Ml- . ·
chael Jordan, trading rebound- ,
!ng specialist Charles Oakley to'
New York for shootingcenterBlll
Cartwright.
Cleveland and Milwaukee finIshed tied for fourth !n the
division last year and each bullt
through the draft. The young
Cavaliers appear on the rise,
with Brad Daugherty emerging
as one of the league's best
centers whlle the Bucks are
looking to rebuild this year.
Indiana came !n last !n the ·
Central !n 1987-88, but w!IJ be
very tough Inside this year with
the addition of Hoot4 rookie R!k ~
Smits to an already powerful
front line. .
'.;
The lnstab!l!ty of the Atlantic:t
D!v!s!on Is best seen on the.""
sidelines, where Rick P!t!no of
NewYorkhasthe!ongestcurrent •
tenure !n just h!s second season •
as coach. Washin~on's Wes·;
Unseld, Philadelphia's J!m Ly-' ~
nam and Willis Reed of New:. Jersey took over their «!anas In •
the middle of last year, while
Rodgers and Charlotte's Dick
Harter begtn their first head •
coaching assignments this
season.

Our
Priees
Are
falling
CHECK OUT THIS
WEEK'S iUYSI

CHEVmE

Top-rated units ·get test on Lake
By ROBERTO DJAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND- Boomer Esla·
son of the Ci ncinnati Bengals !s
the top-rated quarterback in the
AFC and the Cleveland Browns
boast the league's stingiest pass
defense.
The two statistics will collide
Sunday as the Ben gals, a league·
best 7-1, visit the Intrastate and
AFC Central rival Browns, 5·3, at
Cleveland Stadium.
Cincinnati's arsenal Is over·
flowing. Eslason has connected
on 120 of 204 passes fo r 1,985
yards, an AFC·hlgh 17 TDsand 10
Interceptions. Theflve-year vete·
ran has plenty of targets !n
wldeouts Eddie Brown (29
catches lor 708, ·6 TDs) and T!m
McGee (20-421-4) and tight end
R.odney Holman (22·287-1).
"Everybody says I'm more
focused thh year. but I don't play
defense and I do n't play special
teams. There are 44 other guys
who play eac h game fo r the
Bengals," said Esiason.
"'!'his team has been through a
tot of adversity. Of all the
coaches In the league, none has
been more ridiculed or mallgned
than Sam (Wyche) was last year.
It's good that we're fi nally
·winn ing for him."
The Bengals also are second In
. the league In rushing with a
\ 161.4-yard average and seCOnd In
overall offense as we!!. Rookie
running back Ickey Woods has an
AFC·leadlng eight- touchdowns
I

while James Brooks has three
scores.
Cincinnati's defense Is mediocre against the run, while defensive end Jim Skow has 5% sacks
and nose tackle T!m Krumr!e !s
cons!s tent. ·Cornerback Eric Thomas has five Interceptions.
"The Cincinnati Bengals are
1-0. That's !t. We just started over
after (the) upset (a 27-21loss at
New England Oct. 16) ," said
Wyche. "We have to play as
elfect!ve!y against Cleveland as
we d!d last month. It's no
secret. "
The Browns, second to Chicago
!n overall defense, have permlttjld just 134.4 passing yards per
game. Defensive end Charles
Buchanan has 4 \&lt;2 of Cleveland's
15 sacks !n just two games, while
cornerbacks Hanford Dixon and
Frank Minnifield have teamed
with rookie safety Brian Wa·
sh!ngton to provide strong pass
defense. The Browns have per·
mltted just two touchdOifn
passes, both last week at
Phoenix.

nat

'

'

auto. trML

$3488

overall and in the CCHA, and
Ohio State fell to H !n both .
Elsewhere In the CCHA, Michigan edged Lake Superior State
5-4 !n overtime and Bowling
Green trounced Western Michigan 6.1.
4f&gt;

TutoM gray t•n.

4 spttd.

"Cincinnati knows how to
stretch a defense, much the same
way our offense can," said
Minn!fleld. "But we have played
pretty well. We can keep It up and
we have to, no matter who we' re
playing.
•'Having Bernie Kosar means
a lot to all of us. We know he can
make the b!g play."
Kosar (28 of 51 !or 353 yards, •
three touchdowns, three Inter·
cepttons) returned last week•
after mlsSI!Ill s!x games. He Is
likely to look for running ba.ck
Earnest Byner (28 receptions lor
289 yards) and w!deou ts Reggie
Langhorne (26-314, 3 touch·
downs) and Brian Brennan (22·
278-1). Byner may have to handle
ground chores !! a neck and
shoulder Injury keeps Kevin
Mack, the team leader with 351
yards, from playing.
"There's no question that havIng Bernie Kosar back wl!! help
us this second half oft he season,"
says Browns Coach Marty Schottenhe!mer. "This game Isn't
crucial just because It's against
the Bengals.

.

Just tr...d. strart•
car!

2 Dr., dark blue,

Fenis State hockey team lops OSU
By Un lted Pre88 Inter lonal
Rod Schluter's scored the
game-winning goal at 18: 27 of the
first period Friday night as
Ferris State downed Ohio State
3-1 In Central Cplleglate Hockey
~ssoclatlon action at Big Rapids.
The Bulldogs Improved to 1·3·1

1981 PLYMOUTH
CHAMP 2 DR.

I

Qctober 30, 1988

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

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-7

Wahama blanks Ritchie County 28-0 for eighth· grid win
among Class A teams and are expected to advance one notch into
sixth place in next week's
WVSSAC's ratings.
"Our defense played another outstanding game" VanMe!tr said.
"We held them to just 49 yards
rushing and for the second week in
a row we gave up less than 70
yards in total offense agamst two
Class AA opponents. We played all
phases of their (Ritchie County) of·
fense well, even the trick plays, and
that is the type of play we needed
to offset the problems we experienced offensively.
Coach
Cromley (WHS ailsistant coach Ed
Cromley) deserves a lot of credit
for ·our defensive play. Ed has
really helped us to become the type
of team we strive to be."'
Wahama committed six rurnovers on the night by way of live
fumbles and an interception. Three
of the White Falcons fumbles came
on the first three WHS possessions
of the game but the defense bailed

By GARY CLARK
MASON- Rick Kearns ran tor
157 yards Friday night to become
only the third Wahama running
back !n more than 20 years to
rush for l ,OOO yards In a season
but the cov~ted accomplishment
by the 5-11 , 165-pound senior was
overshadowed somewhilt by a
tr~mendous elfort by the defensive unit as the White Falcons
blanked visiting Ritchie County,
28-0.
The contest was the final regular
season home outing for coach Don
V3!1Meter's charges as senior night
was obse!"ed at the Mason !;:ounty
school w1th all eleven WHS senior
gridders playing key roles--in the
.White Falcons victory.
The win imprQves the locals
1988 season record to 8-1 on the
year and strengthens the Bend Area
team's chdleS of a third straight
playoff berth. Wahama entered the
game with a seventh place ranking

the locals out on each occasion. · like-that in the worst way."
Ritchie County managed · · to
Following the ensuing kickoff
penetrate WHS territory only twice Waharna regained possession after
but never advanced the pigskin past Bobby Ash recovered a Rebel
the Wahama 46 yard line. In fact fumble at the Ritchie County 29
three of !he Bend Area teams four yard line. After a 15 yard penalty
. touchdowns on !he evening were was assessed the White Falcons the
either directly or indirectly the locals took to the air on the first
result of outstanding defensive play from scrimmage with Gibbs
play.
tossing a 44-yard touchdown strike
After a scoreless first period the to Billy Purlcey. The PAT run fell
White Falcons ~ot on the board short and Wahama led by a 14-0
with 6:52 remaming in the half. margin as the half carne to a close.
Senior defensive end Bobby KinThe Bend Area team increased
caid broke through to block a
its lead to 22-0 early in the fourlh
Ritchie County punt with Chris
canto with a Dave Sigman punt
Jewell falling on the loose ball in
being the key play which enabled
the end zone for a touchdown. the locals to score. Sigman's boot
Quanerback: Sean Gibbs lofted a
was downed on the Rebel one yard
shon pass to Rick Kearns for the
line and after four plays netted the
two point conversion to give
visitors just three yards the White
Wahama an · 8-0 advantage. '"The
Falcons received excellent field
bloclced punt by Kincaid was the
position following a Ritchie County
big play of the game" Cromley
punt. Gibbs capped a four play 32
said. "It really 'picked us up and
yard drive wilh 8:10 remaining in
the game with a 12 yard touchdown
helped us overcome !hose early
stroll. The senior signal caller hit
turnovers. We needed a big play
Kincaid for the two point conversion to make it 22-0.
.
Wahama completed the scoring
late in the contest followin g a Bill
Zuspan interception of a Brent
Cantwell aerial by marching 47
yards in 12. plays. Kearns capped
the series with a one yard run for
the touchdown to make it 28-0. The
PAT run failed as Wahama claimed
its eighth win of the 1988 campaign.
The White Falcons dominated
the games final' statistics by accumulating a 17-5 edge in first
downs and an overwhelming 25549 advantage in rushing yardage.
WHS added 71 yards through the
airways for a net total of 326 yards
while the Rebels claimed 19 passing yards for a net 68 offensive
yards.
Individually Kearns carried the
pigsldn 35 times for 157 yards wilh
a five yard burst wilh 3:30 left to
play putting hirri over the I 000 yard
plateau. "Its just great that he
afler our third touchdown but when
we got word he ne.eded just 20
more yards we wanted him to

achieve that goal at home on senior
night. He could not have done it
without everyone on the team
doing their job and Rick would be
the first to acknowledge that fact.
He had his list game running the
ball. He ran smoolh inside and out
and kept ~ving for those extra
yards even though he had a number
of would-be tacklers on his back.
Our line also did a tremendous job
for him as they have for most of the
season·. Even their coach commented what outstanding line play we

pose a most torm1dable opponent
for !he Bend Area team and may
even possess !he best team the Fa!- .
cons will face all year. Kickoff ume
nex t week in Williamstown is 7:30
pm.

had toni~ht."

Fum bles -Lost
Penalties-Yds

Wahama will now travel to Williamstown next Friday night to take
on the Yellow Jackets in the regular
season finale with a berth in the
Class A state playoffs at stake. Williamstown, at ?-2 on the year, will

STATISTICS
Wahama Ritchie Co.
17
5
52·255
26-49

First Downs
Yds Rllshing
Yds Passing

71

Total Yds
,Passing
Interceptions Thrown

19
68

326
3-9
I
5-5

6-15
2
2-1

0-0

6-70
2-31.5 .
63

Punts-A..,&amp;
Off Plays
~ cort by Quarters:
Wah ama

7-28.1
48

0 14 0 14 28
0 0 0 0 0

Ritchie Co.

Cons'"and Cons ERX 200'"

CDnv&amp;RSE
REG. S59.00

Now$4688

REG. 69.00
NOW

~$5411

Citnrl'~
shoe store
318

SECO~O

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GALLIPOliS, OHIO

MoR- &amp; Fri. til I P.M.
Tues., Wed, Thrr. ti 7 P.M.
lotunlay tU 5 P.M.

,.

---~ il
,.

~-·

HASKINS TANNER
: STOPPING THE RUN - An unidentified
~ahama player puts block on Ritchie County's

BLACK.
CAT
SPECIALS
FRIDAY .._ SATURDAY - MONDAY

Frank Lambert (35) In Friday's 28-0 victory.

J...ogan claims second

'traight loop
crown·
·
.
•

·Friday's scores
81 Clal.rsvUie U, Co1hodon 6
8t Keary a, Collwater .D
Sl Mar,,es, Flht. 21 (ot)
Stetlltenllle 1'1, Younp Ca.uey 14

UNWASHED

14 OZ. LEVI JEANS

.,..

1'; LOGAN

-

In the SEOAL

~amplonsh!p showdown at Lo- .

yards.
Score by quarters:
Athens .... ............ .. 0 0 0 0-0
Logan ... ................ 7 0 2 0-9

gan Friday night the Chieftains
claimed the 1988 t!t!e with an
e;tc!t!ng 9-0 triumph ov~r the
$u!ldogs of Athens.
Warriors 21 Tigers 7
·: The title Is the second !n a row
MARIETTA - A surprisingly
lcr Coach Clarence Perry's strong Warren Local Warrior
Chieftains, who have recorded 12 team dumped the Marietta T!g·
ra!ght league wins since losing
ers 21-7 Friday night to claim
Gallipolis 16-0 In 1986. It was second place In the SEOAL final
so the second consecutive shu- standings (or 1988.
.
The Warriors' lone Iqss !n
u ~ for Logan over Athens as
(hey posted a 35-0 win last year league play was at Logan on
l\firoute to the league title.
Sept. 30 when the champion
,,. 'I'he !one. TD Friday Night Chieftains eked out a 12-7 victory.
¢'ame on a 28 yard pass from
Friday night it was tailback
~arterback J!mmer Breining to
Heath Eddlelute who stole the
!liot end Nick Maniskas, capping show at Marietta as the 200 pound
&amp; 12 play 80 yard drive by the senior ran for 179 yards and two
~!efs in the first period. J!m touchdowns wh!!e the Warrior
'ltedd kicked the extra point lor a defense shackled the Tigers with
just six first downs and 117 total
'lio lead with 6:43le!t.
. :!! Logan's defense added a two yards. Eddleblute scored on a
point safety In the third quarter four yard run !n the first quarter
\then a bad snap from center on with 9:56 left, but Scott Mititn Athens punt at the 14 rolled chem's kick failed.
Marietta scratched back to
jjtrough the end zone.
.r Athens made It Interesting !n . take a brIef !ea,d in the third .
the fourth quarter when they period when quarterback Matt
(narched from their. own 27 to ~ Warden scored from the two and
Urst and goal at the Chieftain Brian Warden's kick make !t 7=6.
$even yard line, but quarterback
However, Edd!eblute galloped
Randy Hulss was sacked twice 44 yards to payd!r.t and Mitchem
ft&gt;r losses back to the 18. Rob ran the conversion for a 14-7 lead
Parman's 33 yard f!e!d goal at the 1:14 mark.
Quarterback Jason Neptune
f'hme up short as the threat died.
,· Logan dominated the statistics ran In from the s!x and M!t:tilth 16 first downs, 148 yards . chem's kick made !t21-7w!th just
~sh!ng, and hitting four of 16
1:04 remaining !n the contest.
J!B.Sses lor 56 yards. Pat Walsh
ChriS Coler's 15 carries lor 40
~d the LHS attach with 22 carries
yards led the Tigers, who finf¢r 87 yards from h!s fullback
Ished !n 15\.trth place with a 2·3
$lot.
record.
:: Athens finished with eight first
Score by quarters:
dpwns, 23 yards rushing, and Warren ...... .. ...... .. 6 0 8 7-21
qompleting six of 17 passes for 82 Marletta .............. o o 7 0- 7

~

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dealers. Nothing works as hard as a Stthl.
So put one to work.Jor you today at these
. Incredibly low prlles.

CARTEl TRACTOR SALES

2204 EASTON Ill.
..... __,....--

GAWPOUS, OHIO

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

600 E. MAIM St.

POMEROY, OHIO
\

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NATION,U. HOCKEY LEAGUE

Wai•CoaHreace
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PMtbi'JIIai.NY Bupn,nlpt
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flredor •f ml•• Jeape opert.Uo-.

PM:tP..P ~llpl!d for tt•
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Hal Mcllae; miiiGI"-Ie.,_ clliell .. r laltnctor oloe Louett; ml..,..teape Ill-

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b'Am . . . . . . . .b . . . ...

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GeldeD State - Claimed foward .lohd

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San Dlep

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174 IN
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Henlley al Hallfu:
cape Breloa at New mar kl!C
Mondoo al Boch-'er
Maine IU Sherbroolle
New Havea a&amp; SpriDJfleld
INTERNATIONAL HOCKEY LE.\GUE

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SUDIIQ, Od. :10

(frldlt''l KHalt1)

AU&amp;DI.a Ill. Phll. .elpllll. I p.m.
Chi cap M New &amp;lilf;ud, I p.m.
Claeln•tlat Clevef•d, J p.m .

Kabmuoo 5, SaJ{•w 3
F11nt 7, Sak Lake 3
Deaver 8. Peorta 6
Satard~~r'• Gam~

Greet~

F1lni at Fort W'O'ae

kf at Balf ..o, 1 p.m.

LA Rami u New Orleua,l p.m.
MI .... 1.&amp; TUn,a Bay, 1 p.m.
NY GI ....IM Delralll p.m.

Muakepaat lndl ...pol•
SaU Lake City a1 SaJ{aaw
Peoria II:IMnver
111111 lmnlllf'll,.. , ..

Phnllkai:Oallu,l p.M.
Plthba..P st NY .ltta, 1 p.m.
Kara. . Ctt,. al LA Rallh' 4 p.m.

Ml• ... u

lis.. FrudKG, fp.m.
SaD Dlep a18ei&amp;Oe, 4 p.m.
WMWDil&amp;oD&amp;t 8-llea, II p.m.

Transaclions
Buebd

Mo . . . . ,Od.JI

DetroM- Traded pltclller WaUTerrell

.Dnwr at flttl-. ..... I p.m.

Reid undergoes surgery for mjury
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI) North Carolina All America
center and U.S. Olympian J .R.
Reid underwent surgery Friday
to correct a stress fracture of hls
left foot, an operation orthopedic
surgeon Timothy Taft called a
success.
"Everything went well and J .R
is doing fine." Taft said after the
40-mlnute surgery on the 6-foot9,
265,pound junior. "He Is In a
splint right now, and we will
probably put his foot In a cast
Mondav."
.
A screw was Inserted in the
fifth metatarsal bone of Reid's
foot. The stress · fracture had
developed over an unknown
amount of time. Reid was examIned Thursday and the stress
fracture was discovered, sports
Information officials said
Friday.
North carolina Sporls Information Director Rick Brewer
said the lnjuty was not caused by
' Reid's participation ln ...othe

down drive, which covered 53
yards In nine plays, gave the
Oaks a 27-0 lead going Into the
final quarter.
Ward returned to the end 'zone
with a one-yard run to conclude a
series that covered 48 yards on 10
plays. Walls added his fourth
extra-point kick to produce the
final score.
Simpson's two touchdown
passes, which covered 63 yards,
were among his five attempts on
the evening. He also had 46 yards
rushing on four carries. Ward led
ail rushers with 179 yards on 25
carries, wh!le Ruff picked up 88
yards on 15 rushes .
The Highlanders' Kevin Kiser
was 3 of 4 for 35 yards, and
running back Bill Potter completed his only pass for 15 yards .
Quarterback Mike Walker's two
pass attempts fell Incomplete,
and-fullback Josh Halslop's only
pass attempt was Intercepted.
Senior Glen Arrowood caught
two of SW' s four passes, while
Joe Hammond and Kiser had the
other two receptions.

Summer Games In South Korea.

DETROIT (UP!) - The Detroll Tigers traded veteran righthanded pitcher Walt Terrell to
the San Diego Padres on Friday
In exchange for thtrd baseman
Chris Brown and first baseman
Keith Moreland.
· Detroit' also received an undls- closed amount of cash for Ter·
rell, who after suffering an ankle
Injury last winter, failed to reach
double figures In victories with
the Tigers for the first time since
joining them In 1985.
Terrell was 7-16 with a 3. 97
ERA with Detroit and 54-48 since
coming from the New York Mets
for Howard Johnson.
The Tigers also purchased tl!e
contracts of five players from
their minor league system and
Informed veteran Darrell Evans
they would ' not offer him a
contract for next season.
Evans, 41, hit 22 home runs this
season and drove In 64 runs but
batted just .208. He hit .141 with
Detroit, who signed him as a free
agent In 1984. His 34 home runs In
1987 were the most ever by a
40-year-old and he hit 40 In 1985 to
lead the league.
"Darrell Evans has been a
tremendous contributor to the
· Tigers and to this community for
the last five years," Detroit vice
president for baseball Bill Lajoie
said. "He ha~ been~ leader and a
productive player. However, we
feel It Is time to move In another
direction to Improve this club."
Moreland, 34, hit .256 for San

Halslop was limited to 43 yards season finale, wh!le the- High- ·
on 11 carries, while Potter picked landers wm end the 1988 camup 11 rushing yards on . three . palgn with a home date next .
carries. Keith Carter recorded Friday against Portsmouth •
the Highlanders' only other rush· East.
Stollollcl
lng yard.
J)epartmonl
OH
sw •T
Flrstdowns
...........
..
...................
16
.
5
Oak Hill, the league's only
Ruahiq
yafd.s
..........................
330
38
Division IV school, extended Its Puslng yards ............................63 50 ,.
winning streak against the COmp.-att. ............ ., ................... 2-5 4-8
SVAC's Division V schools to 21 Inoerceptlono ................. .,., .......... o 1
Fumbleo-Iost ............................. 2·2 2·1
games with the win, while the Penaltles
............... ...................t -:xl t -30
Highlanders fell to 4-3 In the Scorobyf!Uriero
conference. The Oaks will host Oak HU1 .......................... 7 7 13 7-34
Alexander next Friday In their SWHS.............................. O 0 0 0- 0

RADIANT
10

_

HEALTH

Mon.-Tues.-Wed.-Fri. - 8:30 til 4;30
Thursday &amp; Saturday:- 8:30 til 12 Noon

-:

••

·,

'.•
'•
:·.

10,000 lr1l

SUNSTIEAM-..... S169.95 :

Wit. Mlf.la ...... 1D,Oot 1111.

We can mek• atorm windowa
. _to fit your preaent tn1ck .

•

SJ4995

Over 100 wlc:ka In ltOck to fit

~~.

A('QS14;111ft!

HEATER
WKKS

WILKESVILLE - John A.
Belback and Martin Broderick
recently received promotions at
• Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Raccoon No. 3 rnlne.
Belback, formerly assistant
general mine supervisor, was
promoted to general mine supervisor, whlle Broderick, who was
the longwall coordinator at the
Meigs No . 2 mine, was promoted ·
to general mine supervisor for

PQQNIS

DISK FURNACE
$129' 5

We have a full line of Kerosene
Heater Accessories, ~·

_ _.dO'_

...........

Clllners and Maintenance Kits.

O'DELL :JNte-vallll. LUMBER
~

GALLIPOLIS STORE
VINE ST. AND 3RD AVE .

POMEROY STORE
. 834 E.MAIN ST.

...:.,

814-446-1278

-- - -

ALBANY -Thomas E . Ervin
has been transferred from Southern Ohio Coal ·Company's RaecoonNo.3mlnetotheMelgsNo. l
mine where he has assumed the
duties of general mine
supervisor.
,
Ervin joined Southern Ohio
• • Coal ln 1974 as a laborer at the
• Raccoon No. 3 mine: He was
named safety assiStant In 1975

Sat. 8:00 to 6:00

Sot. 7 om-8:00pm

OPEN SUNDAY
10·4

•

THI: RtMINOTON MODtL670'• r::&lt;rRESS'•
With 28" vent rib barrel

• Features same action as lop·oHhe-tJne

••

SINGLE
REVOLVERS
BOTH
CYLINDERS
E15MGW

$2999.

12, 16,"20
GAUGES

22 MAG.

·

CVA BLACK POWDER GUNS
ST. L-DUIS HAWKEN RIFLES

"5"
COUNT
PACK

50 CAL. PERCUSSION

Gallia County
Sheriff
STRONG, HONEST, EFFICIENT
A Vote For Dennis Salisbury'
Is A Vote. For A
FULL·TIME SHERIFF
VOTE NOVEMBER 8

1 oz. Hollow Point
Rifled Slug Loads
Flat 5-PacK

RIGHT
HAND

)

FINISHED

BOX

RIFLE

MODEL 500 PUMP
SPOR'ING MODELS

25%0FF
"

LUG SOLE
BOOTS

12 GA. BOTH BARRELS

• •&lt;

LEATHER TOP

STRONG
HONEST
ENUGETIC WORKER
RESPONSIVE TO YOUR LAW ENFORCEMENT NEEDS
IMPARTIAL LEADER
f AITHFa DEVOTION TO DUTIES
fiND IER PIOTEmON POSSIBLE FOI YOUR TAX DOLLARS
Paid for by the Committee to Elect Dennla R. Seliabury G11l11 County Sheriff.

Oenlu Shockley, Trueurer, Rt. 3, Box 1211·0, GalUpolia, Ohio 411831 .•

I

99
$159

HUNTING CLOTHING

\

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Tri-County Sport Shor1

?,.... ~--;\...~.-....-- -'-

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--~

•

304-175-21181· Locoled noll to Mooon Counly Folrgroundo

81'4-448-2335 · Spring Volley Ptua

Point Ptt. .nt, WV 25550
STORE HOURS: l!ondoy th111
1:30 o.m..f PJtl.
1:30
Clottd

Gotl'""'' OH 45831

'

STORE HOURS: llondoy th111 F~dly, 8:30 o.m._. p.m.;

8:30 o.m.-5

'

Money Ideas

ofllhe ground because it sits In the flood plltln. The
sidewalks and ramps will provide easy access to
the store.

Iongwall operations at Raccoon
No. 3. Broderick will concentrate
on preparatory work for Installation of a Iongwall operation In
1989.
Bel back, a resident of Jackson,
lives there with his wife Valerie
and their son Jeffrey. Broderick,
a resident of Pomeroy, lives
there with his wife Nancy and
their children Joshua and Holly.
'

and served as a production
supervisor from September 1976
to Aprll1979 when he was named
assistant general mine
supervisor.
In his new position, Ervin wlll
report to Keith Palmer, mine
superintendent In Meigs No. 1.
Ervin Is a resident of Jackson,
OhiO-;'"whl!re he lives with Ills
wife, Nancy, and two chlldren,
Chris and Jill.

rare that two companies mutually absorb one another, one
becoming Indistinguishable from
the other. A merger Is a takeover
- albeit a friendly one; it Is one
company acquiring another.
When a takeover attempt runs
Into serious objections from the
board of directors of the target
company (not just a request for a
higher per-share price), It Is
referred to as a "hostile"
takeover.
The terms of a merger may be
many and complex, and all are
subject to negotiation,_both before and during a merger at·
tempt. The most important
points are usually those concern·
ing the offering price for the
securities and the future of the
target company and tts management. If there Is resiStance to the
initial offering price (called
"sweetened"). In this way, many
initially hostile takeovers have
been t,ransformed Into friendly
mergers.
Opposition by the target company's board ot directors will
have some effect, even If they do
not directly control a large
number of shares. One of the
most common ways to resist a
takeover Is to Insist (true or not)
that the shares of the company
are worth more than the price
b~lng offered. This ls sometimes
effective In reducing the number
of stockholders who will offer
their shares to the takeover
company for purchase.
The amount of stock needed to
gain control of a company is not
always a majorityofthecommon
stock outstsndlng. Sometimes
the stock Is so widely dispersed
that a voting block offar less than
50 percel)t can effectively control
the company. Also, a company's
articles of Incorporation may
define controlling Interest as
more or less than 51 percent.
In recent years, companies
have shown great Ingenuity In
escaping the clutches of un·
wanted suitors. You will see a
number of colorful terms In the
financial news referring to some
of these practices. Ne~t week's
article wlll discuss some of these
methods . .
(Mr. Evens Is an Investment
broker lor The Ohio Company In
Its Gallipolis ofllce)

' \~

JOHN BELBACK

MARTIN BRODERICK

Carmichael honored

Trade deficit still
at disturbing levels

GALLIPOLIS - C. Ronnie
Carmichael bas been awarded
American Electric Power's Con·
structlve Marketing "Jacket of
Honor" for his marketing ac·
compllshments during the second quarter of 1988.
The " Jacket of Honor'' Is
presented each quarter to an
American Electric Power emPl.oyee w_ho ~.as _ll)_ade an outstanding· contribution to the
company 's marketing efforts
during the previous quarter.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) ·The-U.S. trade deficit remains at
disturbing levels despite some
modest improvement earlier this
year.
Norman Rask, agricultural
economist at Ohio State University , says Augu~t data showed a
$2.7 pillion Increase to $12.. 2
billion, despite record exports
that have been fostered by the
lower dollar.
However, t he continued
strength of the U.S. eco nomy has
drawn a record $39.7 billion In
Imports, up $3.5·billion over July.
Many American industries are
at or near full capacity . This Is
reflected In the composition of
the rising Imports. Capital goods .
Imports were up sharply as U.S.
factories expanded long-run productlve capacity.

In the last quarter Carmichael
achieved better than 100 percent
of his marketing goals In zone
resistance heating, off-peak wa·
ter heating, high-pressure sodl·
urn/ metal halide lighting and
commercial cooking equipment
categories.
Carmichael, a senior marketIng and customer services representative at Columbus Southern
P"ciwer Company's Gallipolis offlee, has been with Columbus
Southern since 1971.

•

C. RONNIE CARMICHAEL

I

Longer harvests
are projected
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) October's crop report projected
larger corn and soybean harvests for 1988 than a month ago,
says Dennis Henderson, agrlcul-'
tural economist at Ohio State
University.
Nationally, soybean yields are
now estimated at 26.4 bushels an
acre, up from 25.9 bushels last
month. Harvesting 56.8 million
acres means a crop of about 1.5
billion bushels .
The September estimate was
1.472 bllllon bushels and 1987's
crop was 1.91 billion. Soybean
carryover Is down 30 percent to
300 mllllon bushels and total
1988-89 availability Is 1.678 billion
bushels, nearly 2 percent more
than expected last month and
enough to end the year with about
a month's supply .

MYSTERY FARM - This week's myolery
farm, featured by lhe Melp SoU aad Water
Con8ervallon District, Is located somewhere In
Meip County. Individuals wishing to parllclpate
In the weekly conteSt !'I•Y do so by 1Ue81Jing lhe
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop oil your l"euto
the Gallipolis Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, 45831, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 45769,and you may win

; Sundly Cloood

,,

.

RGC staffer to speak
on ·aids for business

Mergers, takeovers
change stock prices

By STAN EVANS
GALLIPOLIS - Among those
conditions known
situations, few
have the power
•
,
to move the
• · . price of stocks
,
like mergers
'
a nd takeovers.
so dramatic are
the opportunl• ties for sulJst:ant.iaf oronts
~
some traders direct. the major
~
part of their Investment strate''" gles toward the acquisition of the
~ ; stocks of companies that may be
l
(or already are) merger or
;
takeover targets.
~
Mergers and Takeovers
•
Mergers can take many forrns
•
and may be subject ·to many
·:
different req11lrements, depend-_
, • • lng on state regulations and on
' the restrictions and stipulations
·•
of the target company's certifl·
• cate of Incorporation. Generally,
however, a merger requires
ratification by a stated percent of
the shareholders. That percentage may range from 51 to 75
.•
percent, again depending on
state regulations and the certlfl·
cate of !ncorporatlon. If the
•
merger proposition does not
. meet with the objections of the
board of directors;" and If It Is
•
ratified by the shareholders In a
merger vote, there Is obviously
cooperation of the target com·
pany, and the entire process Is
referred to as a merger.
Takeovers, which happen over
1
•
the objection of the board, will eventually require_ a merger
vote, too. If the takeover company has acq ulred enough stock
•
and/ or convinced enough stockholders to accept the takeovers,
perhaps even selling their shares
~
in the process, then the merger
will even1ually be ratified by vote
;
- but lhe entire process Is
• referred to as a takeover.
~
The usual procedure for a
~ · ·· takeover Is through the purchase
"
of stock In the target company.
'
Stock might be acquired through
, , open market purchases, private
transactions or a tender offer.
:
When enough stock Is acquired
• by the takeover company, the
of the board of direc• objections
tors won't make any difference.
The use of the word "merger"
Is somewhat misleading. It Is

•,'
.

99
$199

$3999

......;::..._ ...

Ervin promoted by coal company

114-992-5800

Dpon : Mon. -Fri. 7:00 to 6:30

Open: Mon.-Fri. 7 am-8 :30pm'

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

Two are named to new posts
at Raccoon Number 3 mine

Starting
at 19.95

20,000 ITU

' ...

HARD AT WORK - Construction contractors
on the new Pomeroy Rite Aid buUdlng poured
concrete for sidewalks last week. The store Is high

...
.
••

KEROSENE

105

¥

.••.

•

OMNt

·.••

""

Dennis R. Salisbury

(

•'••
•

IADIANT 36 ••"'''S149.95 .

'

--

•' '

• Equipped with Modif!&amp;d Rem'• Choke lube

JOHN H. SAUNDERS- BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD BAKER SAUNO'ERS- CONNIE HEMPHILL

ELECT

3

• Hardwood stock with solid bull pad
• Made il"! U.S.A.

OADUP

446·0404
COMMERCIAL &amp; PERSONAL

'

,.•

4 X 32MM SCOPE
liFE

0

AND
STORM

DOOR
REPAIR

Hl•n

., • .fARM

0

'

,•' '

r--

--

HOMEOWNERS

••

Wingmastet"

HOWARD BAKER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
"We Manage Your Risk"
•
PJl
Second Avenue, Gallipolis
SINCE
..._, 437Opposite
1951 the Post Office
IUSINESS

.'

WINDOW

I

•

the front runner through the firm, Thursday launched its
By BRIAN J . EGLI
·$90-a -share,' $20.:J blllion tapresidential campaign.
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK - Takeover ma- · " l think the market 's activ ity keover bid for the robatco and
nia co ntinued to fuel the stock has rallied the cages of a lot of food giant. Mean whilt·. a group of
market last week, although the people," said Hugh Johnson. RJR Nabisco executi ves. led by
recent excitement surrounding head of the Investment policy Chief Executi ve Officer F. Ros s
co rporate mergers and acquisi- committee at Fi rst Albany Corp. Johnson, said that Salomon
tions ha s begun ro show stgris of ·'People are beco!Jling more Brothers In c. would join their
aware of the darker side of the other financial l)ackers, Shearfatigue.
son Lehman Hu tton Inc,. in
bus iness. "
acquisition
The Dow Jones Indu strial aver·
developing a proposal to bu y th e
Broad
market
Indica
tors
also
age. which rose 9. 06 Friday,
company
, raising the likelihood
fell
this
week.
The
New
York
clo sed t he week at 2149.89 . For
····-···
of
a
bidding
wa o·.
Exchange
composite
index
Stock
the week, the blue -chip index fell
1h to96Y,.
·
Kraft
followed
,
up4
fell
2.63
to
156.79.
Standard
&amp;
33.61 points.
The biggest day of the week Poor's 500-stock index fell5 .13 to Pinnacle West was thi rd , off 'h to
17\1, .
was Thursday when the Dow fell close the week at 278.53.
AT&amp;T was up '4. to end the
Declines
led
advances1,]95-688
24.35 points.
·
week
at 28. IBM was off 3% to
among
the
2,157
issues
traded.
Analysts at tributed the sharp
120:Y,
.
Big
Board
volume
totaled
drop to ma inly to two things : a
.Among the oth er ac ti ve blue
proposal made Wednesday by 850,126,070 shares, compared
chips
this week , Sea·rs wa s up l to
Fe deral Reserve Chairman Alan with 853,142,590 last week and
43%,
General
Motors was up 6)!8
Greenspan, as king the Senate 1.41 billion a year ago.
to
83:V
and
Genera
I Electr ic was
On the NYSE trading floor thi s
8
Ba nking Committee to change
offl%
to43'h
.
the tax law to discou rage corpo- week, RJR Nabisco was the most
On the American Stock Exrate borrowing: and First Boston active Issue. up 8Y. to 85.
change,
the Amex Market Value
Corp. 's postponement Thursday Kohlberg Kravis Roberts &amp; Co. ,
Continued
on D-8
the private New York investment
of a major junk bond offering.
Greenspan said extensive corporate borrowing could pose
problems for the economy, especially in the event of a recession,
If companies · saw their Incomes
decline ang cou ld no t make their
debt paymen ts.
First Bos ton announced It
would delay pricing the $1.15
Based Training and In teractive
RIO GRANDE - Stephen
billion offering of Federated Bartram, instruc t ional media
Video.'' " Desktop Publishing"
Department Stores junk bonds,
and
"Des ign lng and Managing
specialis t at Rio Grande Col· •
which would provide long-term leges, will present "Visual Aids
Training." It was the concisefunding for Campeau Corp.'s for Business" at the Association
nes s of the Battelle seminars that
inspired
the p reparation of the
acquisition of the company earlor Education Communication
"Visual
Aid s for Business
lier this year.
and Technology National ConThe price delay suggested to vention in Dallas on Feb. 1, 1989. Seminars ."
some ana lysts that First Boston
Bartram has been teaching
The presentation Is based on a
wa's having trouble attracting series of sem lnars offered at Rio
classes in media production and
investors.
. Grande during winter quarter of , utllizat ion as well as admin istering a campu s-w ide audio·visJ.Ial
But by Friday. analysts said the 1987-89 academic year.
center, which is !asked with the
investors' concerns over flnartc·
The-sem lnars were based on
lng had eased.
the Idea that, while the use of production of all campus a-vs,
"(Friday) was very Impres- v isual communications tools is equipmen t distribution and preventative ma intenance, and a -v
sive in that stocks were able to growing in the business setting.
regroup alter Thursday's blood- educators are failing to provide equipment proficiency instmctlon and testing.
bath," said Al Goldman , a
needed instruct ion for students in
Bartram spent hi s summer
market strategist with A.G . t h e area of busin ess
using desktop publ ish ing technolEdwards &amp; Sons in St. Louts.
administration.
"The main thing was the
"Business administration stu- ogy to produce a set of career
aggressive buying of General dents require the same Instruc - briefs for Cambridge Career
Motors based on Impressive tion in visual design, media Products and meeting with conearnings," referring to the auto- utilization and media production sultants to equ ip a new lnstruc·
tiona! Media Cen ler, which inmobile maker's $859 mllllon • as students Jn teacher training, "
cludes a new lTV system
third-quarter ear nings com· Bartram said.
pared with $812.3 mlllioij In
A graduate of Marshall Un !ver- teleconferencing facilities and a
third-quarter 1987.
slty, Bartram holds both an A.B. computer laboratory for teache r
"It was good to see investment
and M.A. He graduated m 1984 trainees .
The Associa tion fo r Educatio n
buying rather than just game and spent several months man·
playing In the takeover stocks,"
aging the art department of a Communication and Te chnology,
Goldman said. "If we saw more book/ office supply store before with a mem bership of 3,000,
of thi s, I would be less concerned accepting the temporary position sponsors research on commu niabout the prospects ofthe market as · the Instructional media spe- cation · theory and learning
theory.
being able to go meaningfully cialist at Rio Grande.
·
While
working
at
Rio
Grande,
higher from here."
For the week, Goldman said
Bartram has had the opportunity
there was a "continuation of a .to expand his education and
nine-week old rally" that should
receive continuing education
slow ly continue as long ,as Vlce
credit through the Battelle SePresident George Bush remains
minars Program in "Computer

,r

9600 ITU

Diego but only had five home
runs and 64 RBI. His 13 gamewinning RBI led the Padres. A
lifetime .279 hitter, Moreland hit
27 home runs for the Chicago
Cubs In 1987.
Brown, 27, often has been
criticized for not playing hurt. He
appeared In just 80 games last
season, batting .235 with two
home runs and 19 RBI. With San
Francisco In 1986, Brown hit .317
with seven home runs and 49 RBI
In 116 games. In 1985, he hit a
career-high 16 home runs with 61
RBI and a .271 battlngaverageln
131 games.
The addition of both righthanded hitters will help Detroit
against left-handed pitchers but
the loss of Evans means the club
will need help from the left side.
Detroit suffered from a lack of
batting punch last season. ·
The moves left the Tigers
roster at 36, four under the winter ·
limit, not Including Ted Power
and Larry Herndon, both of
whom have flied for free agency.
Detroit has Indicated It will not
offer outfielder Herndon a con·
tract but It will &lt;~.ttempt to sign
right-handed pitcher Power.

Takeovers begin to
.show signs of fatigue

·

SALE ENDS:

October 30, 1988

•

..

O'DELLS
-=~~~~~
~~v.
SALE

Section

'

• •

$11995

·Tigers trade Terrell

L T
Pd. PF PA
' t • .8'71 171 ta
4Sl.M3181lh
411.MIIH118
3 I I .1'71 IN IM

•
4

NY Giant•
WMIIIDI(toa ,

Sllerb...ole S, Rer~My I (0TJ
HaJifu: I. Utica I
Satunhr'•Gamea
Sprlaafleldat A•lruadack
New Ravea at Ballmctre
Rochi!Mel' at Blalfwnton

\'fl. s u'"dinp

W

MlomJ
.....
__,.u.
Etlpd

Frldq'sRetldl•
New Ravea 8, . . p..mons
. Adlroathw::ll: t. Maine 2
Newmarlliel 5, Moldon 3
Cape lre(oa 4, Rochster S

l'ir~· lljl

t:eam'• .ale

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE
Amer1e111 Confereaoe

Chlca,. at Bdmollloa, alrhi
UIEIUCAN HOCUY LEAGUE
Nor&amp;ll DlviiiO'rl

New Haven
Slterbrooke
MoDCtea
H&amp;IUU:
C£pe Breton

.._.n• ud ftkWq coaell sene
c.nwr: lllrell Ghll• o\11 .... u rcwlllr

NFL resuhs

Cal pry at Vuconer
ao.aoa at hftalo, .,._

Pfi1

GardniiiN ...
........ tel Orl•• . . . . . . . . a.e_..
(AA.l; ,... . . . . ori...,JibMC•Dulle

NV lalladers - Acred to terml on
muiU-)'Wiar wat.-et• with ceater
LaFontalae, pallell ... Kelb llradef,
lei wta1 Rand:r Woo• and oelrier Bob
. . . .; recalled Bleil Kronvn frem
Sprlll&amp;fleld •• Amerlean Haeller Le.trpl!.

nl~

W•lll•llle•a&amp; IUmolh&amp; Bl&amp;fl'
Tof'OIIIo I&amp; Sl. t.llla. alpt

T

,r.-• ae...ullan••
Bo"a
ptt.cldq CMC. DwlPI

Hocker

New .ler.er at Hardord, nlcht

L
1

(A,;

laJarell reeerw; waived dlll..tve
Rill' 11om.

NY leland!n at Qaebec, aiJIIIt
PlthiMII ...... at Molllreal, Bllll

W

New . . . ud ultber Brl• .... ,., io
l· ,e~ oaolirada; ume4 B&amp;eve UMe
lMIIIIIIII'tfllH . . . ei ....... Lfape

Tampa Bq - Slped aafely 8eiW1b
8roW'11ii pl.odMfei;JII ... II:RoblaMDOD

S•unh8''1 Gamm

a.u.ao at BoN• 1:tl p.m.

Clu'~

Slne ll&amp;rtiiiO.

5, Hartford S

Detroil 4, Mlallll!lloCa 1
lM Allpls 1, Wlalllpell
WMIIIIaatoa2, c.lpryl (Uel
V•couwer $, Ollcq:o t
NY

l&gt;ATRIOT - Oak Hill won Its
third straight SVAC gridiron
championship with a 34-0 win
over Southwestern Friday night.
· The Oaks got things started In
the first frame when quarterback · Tony Simpson dropped
back on fourth-and-14 and fired a
36-yard touchdown pass to exHighlander Josh Ruff. The extrapoint klck by Mike Walls gave the
Oaks a 7-0 lead.
In the seconll quarter senior
fullback Bobby Ward, after pickIng up a first down deep In
Highlander territory, took the
ball and romped 29 yards for the
visitors' second score. Walls'
extra·polnt attempt put the Oaks
ahead 14-0.
The third quarter was no better
for the Highlanders, as the Oaks
wrapped up an eight-play, 78yard drive with a 36-yard touch·
down run by Tony Simpson.
Walls' extra-point attempt extended the Oaks' lead to 21-0.
Later In the quarter the visitors
recorded another end zone visit,
this time by · Ruff, who ran 12
yards for the score. That touch-

h-•Brow•
lUI•
.
Be-tlped lallllller AI

._ • • Dlep,... nr.
M.nlu4,. . .,. b.-em•

·Farm Business

Oaks top SWHS 34-0 for .undisputed crown

Scoreboard ...
Hockey results

October 30, 1988

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

Page C-8-Sunday Tlrnes-Sentinel

(

,I

,,

a S5 cub prize from the Ohio Valle) Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number wltb your card or Jetter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All conrest entries should
be turned In to the newspaper office by4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case ol a tie, lhe winner will be
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
farm will be featured by the G allla SoU and Water
Conservation Dlslrlct.

•

�...

University Medical Center induced her coma to prevent brain
swelling after eight hours of surgery to remove the toy.
"She's sllll!n a coma and how long she Is kept In it depends on
how well she responds to treatment," hospital spokesman Wayne
Wood said. "This Is something that could kill her. She had a lawn
dart sticking Into her brain, so her brain sustained d&lt;tmage. We do
not know how severe the damage Is.''
Lacy described lawn darts as "18 Inch-long proje~tlles with
pointed metal or plastic Ups that are Intended to sUck In the
ground." He said they weigh about 1% pounds.
"Our staff estimated there are about 50,000 sets on the market
now," Lacy said.
Congress passed legislation last week ordering the commission
to ban lawn darts. Sen. Albert Gore Jr. , 0-Tenn., supporte(i the
legislation, calling the toys "lethal weapons." More than 500,000
sets of the toys are sold each year.
.
•
Lacy said there is one domestic manufacturer li&gt;cated In Ohio
and about 14 Importers. Lacy said CPSC Chairman Terrence
Scanlon will Inform Customs officials of Friday's action to prevent
lhe Importation of lawn darts:
Coincidentally, on Oct. 25, Federal Judge Joyce Green ruled In
Sears, Roebuck and Co.'s favor on charges brought by CPSC. The
agency charged a Sears store In Puerto Rico violated a March 1988
consent decree requiring the adults-only warning where darts are
sold.
'-

4 Bedroom home, A•uma loen

Cell 814--448-0148.

HONOLULU tUPl) -The wife him from flying to New York.
of former Philippine ruler FerdiMrs. Marcos, 59, was to fly to
nand Marcos planned to board a · San Francisco aboard a private
private luxury jet and leave her Boeing 737-300 jet loaned by her
Hawaiian exile Saturday for !he frterrd, tobacco heiress Doris
first time ln more than 2 % years D,.ke. She was to be accompanto face arraignment on racket- Ied by a secretary, one or two
eering charges In New York.
aides·, an attendant, some friends
Neither Marcos nor hls wife, and a photographer, Marcos
Imelda, have left the Island of chief aide Arturo aruiza said.
Oahu since they arrived In
In San Francisco, Marcos'
February 1986 from the Philip- daughter, Irene Aran eta, and
pines In the wake of the m1l1tary- attorney John Bartko were to
backed " people power" revolu- joln the party, Arulza said. The .
tion that swept Corazon Aqulho to former first lady was then
power.
·
scheduled to fly to New York for
The 71-year-old former presi- her scheduled appearance In
dent of the Phlllpp!nes was not court Monday.
accompanying his wile. U.S.
The Marcoses are accused In a
District Judge John Keenan In federal racketeering Indictment
New York postponed his court of plundering the Phlllpp!ne
appearance after receiving let- government treasury of $103
ters from Marcos's doctors say- million that. they used to buy
Ing a heart condition prevented prtme real estate In Manhattan.

32 Mobile Homes
'

Home in country with land. Will
contld• land contrtlct with
down payment. Call 1!84-992·

1970 Wlndtor. 12x8fi, waocf.
burner, 'Niither sn d dryer, afr
cond; mutt bemOY«&lt;. 304-B95-

For aale or rent. 3 be*oom
houM, intuleted. g• furnec:e.
No pets. Reference and depotit.
814-992-5479. leaveme1Uga

1979 S.yvl4r.v mobile homu,
, 4:~70 wtth 1x21 e.pando,
phone 304-67!5-8141.

5848.

Houae • Farm for 1ale.
ee. 000.00 down auurnable8%
Per cent loan to qualified buyer,
very low doting C:Oitl. 81 ecr11
with 1 yaM old cedtr conternPOI'Iry home. priced reduced to
t68,000.00. Phone 304-87559615 Gelllpollt Ferrv . W.Va.
3 bedroom home, 1Y.. batt•,
ewpeted, central air-haM, It&gt;
ceted In Point Pl ... tnt, 304875-2702 or 304-87&amp;-214?.

6

3 Announcements

Lost and Found

9

TOP CASH poid

LOST: PPHS clMs ring Point

Plea1ant ar01. Reward kJr ring or
any informetkm plea1e call304--

setrch. Box 5846. Athtfls. OH

Complllle houtlholdl of inn~
ture &amp; •tklu•. Also wood •
coel huters. Sw.ln's Fwnlture
&amp; Auction, Third &amp; Oltve.

4~701 .

Yard Sale

614-446-3159.

tMir annual Deer Slug Gun - - - - - - - - S~oots Sund..-. October 31st at
1 :00 p.m. at their farm, 3%mill!ll
south of Cha~ter on Sheela River
RC:J . Shoots will be f/1/ffl Sundav
at same time untH Nov. ·27th.
Winning prizes wm be baOJn.
turkey. end money. It will be
Bench and Off. hend Shooting.
No scopes or rifled barrett Yard Sale-29 Madison A.,. ..
p•mitted
Nov. 1. 2 , 3 . 9-6. Stereo.
clothes, misc.
We will haul coal for am•gencv
· t1EAP. Meigs Coui'TlV Dept. of 8 Family Yard Sti .. Centenarv
Human Servicell. and HEAP Townhouse. Thurs., Fri. · Nov.
vouchers. We can gflla you 3-4 . 9 AM -8 PM . Clothing.
prompt deliverlat. Exeeltior Salt elbums, cuaettes. home int•
Works, Inc. Pom•O'f· Ohio. riot, deprestlon glaasware, most
814-992-3891 .
pricet und" $1 ,

&amp; Vicinity

No hunting

Of

trespa11lng, ell

""mfts can call &amp;d. Ed Mmox.

4

.

to give ti!Nay. Utt•
tnlined. Call 614-448· 9319. .

3B8-9301

3-black &amp; whltekittent, 1-blaek
kitten, 1-grav 6 white mot~ar
cat. Females, Litter trlined. C.ll
· after 5 PM, 614-446-0962.
9eck of clothes to give 8W'ay.

«!!all 614-388-8449.
1 Red Tick pup. 3 hound pups.
C.11ll 614-388-9812.
Mother cat·\IIIJry good mouser.
Reuon for glvuwav-movlng to
qp.,rilent. N"diJ good eou ntrv
h'ome. Cell814--367·7264.

2486.

In Rutland. First house on Such
Grove Ad. Clpthing. Meigs Ma·
reuder jacket. Nov. 1,2.3. For
rent. Trailer spece In Rutl.nd.

Emplo v111enl

B14-742·2397.

Servi ces

Batement •1•. Mon. Tue~ . 9· 7.
Formerty Jo's Gift Show Harold
and Jo Smrth. Syrac:uu. Ohio.
Nice chlldrans Clothing. almost
new toys cheap, Hotpolnt
microwave.

11

HelpWented

------

.. --·--pfPTeliiiiiiit ------

HOME ASSEMBLY INCOME
A•emble lroductt at home.
Pert.fime. lt.,.l. .ca UMCICeltary. Details. Call 813· 327·

&amp;Vicinity

1:vrs. old sable&amp; whiteCoftie to
give away to good home In
. 4 ·familv yard sale V:t mile out
~untry . C.11ll 614-446-3289.
JerlefloRd. Turn on Barnette Rd.
Babv kittens to good home. Call Clo1hel. furniture. glaaaw.re.
lots of miac. Oct. 28,29.31 .
et4-379-2436.
NoY. 1 thru •th. $· 5.
Small blltCk house doq free to
good home. Pan Chihuahua. B

0896. Ext. D-1149.

Giveaway. 3 kltiens. 2 black
cats . 814-949·23~5 .

pref•red. Strong t.c*found In
addiction recovery ilf tdol ...
cent programming. Hlghtv chelleniJ.Ing and raaponeibla position
IVIIIibta in an adola.cMtt retf.
dentlal progrtm for sober, I'll·
sponllbltlndN idu ... Contlc:t Dr.
Joe Gey, Ph.D .• a.eattt HouH,
P.O. Box 72•• Athent. Ohio

CoU

Rick Pearson Auctioneer, II·
censed Ohio end West VWginia.
Estate, antique, f•m. liquidation ules. 304-nl-5786.

2 unfurnished at 127 Mulberry
Ave. , Pomerov. 4 rooms and
bath. Adutts ontv. no pata.
Deposit referMoe. 814· 992·
2275 after 6 p,m.

9

F-luffy 7 week old gold kitt8nt to
900d home. Call 841 · 843·

We pay cish forlatemodet clean
used ears.
J im Mink Ch~JV .-Oidllne .
Bill Gene Johnson

.

!1445.

.

48701 1814-894-81081 wKh
letter of intent and 3 rt'-:.,.cet
by Novamber 1. 1918. E.D.E .

Wanted To Buy

Bertender for Flre~lda Inn. apply
In person tfter 3 :00PM.

3 Announcemants

trai ned. 300 Cherry and corner
of Condor St. 614--992·3776.
2 w~ttufluffv kh:t!WlS. 304-195-

3013

2

In Memoriam

BEST AUTO IEPAIR

Us8d carpet 304-675- 2408.

Lost and Found

In loving memory of

• LOST:Male tluHy black pup/ tan
A white rnl!ll'kings-Poleclt Rd.

who passed away 6
months ago 4,129/88.

6

w..tod

Exltting DAY CARE 7 d.,.s a

wk .• 24 tw. ad.,. fulll~rttime.
F.. ced yard. EJCCel, r.r• .-.oes.
A••onlble r81•. Call 8 14-44&amp;-

n - . 814-446-7.41
HELP WANTED

0839.

Need a teN good people. good
phytlclll concltion. No • p8·
rience .,ec...ry. Mu.-·be .,.u.
.tile for lmmedl•• emplavmeut
tor aft•noon and ..,.,.lng hourt.
$300 I week. Co. pild V8C.tion
and lnturanDIJ, Call Mon. end
Tu... for penonll lnterv~.

Will e•e for elderly man Dr
woman in our home. Call

814-112·6516.

15

• 14-44&amp;-81•e.

Coin Laundry/Dry Cleanera
, _ . .,..on.. Apply: D'*e
Clean... GaHipola aft• 1 PM,

·schools
Instruction

RE-TRAIN NOW!
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE, 829 Jecl&lt;eon Pika
Cell.48-4~87. Aog. No. 88-1 110IIIIa.

Mondlry dwu - -ATTENTION TRUCKERS
Wanted owner/operllor Tan. . , or INII• to haul atone from
W.terlooCoel Co.IOC.ownCfty

Mint property. Coli olllce 014- 1B Wanted to Do
288-8812
bot_, 8 AM-4;30 . - - - - - - - - PM.
Do2ar a. Backhoe Work-850
Cite ck;lizer. Ra•onllble rat11.
Exp'•i~CI op.-or. C"""'eant

Qovernment Joe. •11.040 ·

059.230 vr. Now hiring. Coli
1-B05-e87-IOOO bt. R-9805

for current ftd .. .t

lut-k TrCOitrtWiio.., Foroigo (or~ f.-m Tr:,o&lt;1o:~ Ufhl
Trurb, AI bpr*L
• • Goto-Petrlot·C.-o

MATT WEAVER

···~IO.•SOirt.lap.

3"·2UI er .....2441

Can k.ep . It he OK7. Call
814-446· 6282 evening•.

FINISHING TOUCH
CARE CARE CENTEI

lost: in Middleport, 9'11V and
white long-haired eel. Cloee to
footHII field. Saturday, Oct. 22.
Answers to Boott. Call 814·

WINTER SPECIAL
NOW THRU NOV. 30th
Complotely pro- the

992·5B48.

1 ,. Card of Thanks

inaide and outaideofyour
Clr from the •now •nd

eon... Cell 114-256-1718.

1~ .

bookll

Tree work wanted·topplng,
pruning, nmovala. bushes
trimmed. Free eatlm .. e. Call

PASE·

N.

614-446-8076 or 304-6754953.

AVON· AI ar-. CIH Merltyn

w..... 304-882-28olll.

Cere fOr tht llde'l¥ in their
horne. O.ya only. C.ll814-44&amp;.

with Morgan Drive-Away,
owner and operator Jim
McGulra •p.tanoed .,.d ln-

CantHI Peraonnal 304-17&amp;·

4340. AAEOE.

ourod, 814--446-2139.

AVON all•eHII Shlrlev Spe.,:1,

304-e?&amp;-1429.

.

Bib, aitting i1 mv home. tga
infant up to Of'le ye•. 304-773-

I

THE FAMILY OF
FRANCES HYMAN
(

Business
Opportunity

• 39,000. Coli 814-388-9042.

INQ CO. reoommendl thM you
do buain. . wtth people you
know. and NOT to Mnd manev
through the mall untn y.ou h.,e
lnve.tlpt:Mf the ofl•lng.

All lllactrlc 14lt70. 2 bedroom,
n~ batha, pertlally fur . . hed.
•tra&amp; good cond. $9, 000.00.
C.ll 304-,176- 191&amp; before 2:00
PM or' anytime Sat:urdayt.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1988 Naw Moon 12Jt60. 2 BR .

6 14-742-272B.

SUNAL-WOLFF T~nnlng Beds.
SlenderQueat Passive Exercit·
en. Call for FA EE Color Ca·
tl.,.,e. 5•• to 50%. 1 · B00-

Box 328. PointPI...,.t, W . V1.

proficient in
medical
terminology,
shorthand and
typing. Excellent
working
. conditions nad
fringe benefits.

pt....,,,

SALES-MOMT CAREER

Opportuntty to e•n •21.000
finlt .,..; old company Is
• pan ding apendont In thl
Point Pl .... nt ., • . No •perlenee necetNry. Excellent

trelnlng .,d fri"9" ber1ollte. Will

be lnterviMing on Wedne.dly
11-2-88. from 10:00am to 7!00
pm It the MatonCountvUbrary.
8th St. and VIand St., Point
P'NIInt.

.

.'

Send Resu1111 to:
Personnel 'Department
PO Box 344
Gallipolis, OH. 45631
Happy Ads
ESA PRODUCT
SPECIFICATIONS
PRODUCT:
frurD-ol-la.lnc. . .
nulll:t ... o co"""""iod En-

Scotchgordlng.

IIOW ONlY

$1 0001

Call for Appoirtl"*'t

446- 191- o•••

Ill.._

•• ..._.. Sy-.IIIOd ~
n1 ho- to tffto.
tlwly Cit .... COlt by 1~50'!1.
llle .,_co.-oil.,., fttol, oll

GALLIPOLIS
FLEA MARKET

ease,

I thank God every day
For the memories.
I know you're in a better
place now,
With a wonderful new
life.
Whether on earth or in
Heaven,
I'll alwaxs be your loving w1fe.

•dllldrl!:coNt~t~P~Ion•dde­
-d far ~I•Wontlll, co--

clllllld IIKUIIrW utn.
AD OIJB:TIVl:
Sttllllllndlptndent bo11i11011
- to act • tllstrillrttr for
d•lnd torrlory In •fllna EnIIIJ Sh.. of Amwlcl compu.
twllld En•e •••11-t

Rts. 35 &amp; 160

Open Sats. &amp; Suns.
9 A.M. till 5 P.M.
Come Shop w~h Us
61111WIIt • n.. &amp;old, furnitull, antiques, !Miry ntw &amp; old, boob, clot1111
ntw &amp; urtd, Fanton allll·
nrt, b111ks, knlws, blltball e~rds, crafts, lifts I
much more.

.

l

··~·

012.600.00.304-773-5963.

33

Farms for Sale

80 e«e f•m. Free g•. Lut
place on H'(MII Run Rd. Lott of
privacy. With or wtthout trBII•.
Call before 9p.m. 814-992·
3B90 or e14-992-6067 .

1015 private acr• wtth lilY
ac:'*s. (JeltipoUI Ferry. New
home alto 2 lots wh:h wall.

.70.000. 304-675-4831 .

19 &amp;a Fleetwood. 12x 64, bottle
goo hoot .. d hot--- 03000.

1-315-733-6064 eKt. G27B8.

Coli 814-11,43-5310 or 814-

lot tor sale in Rutland with
12x65 Mobile Home. 11!:! bath.
l•ge family room. bedroom.
built on back. New septic
tystem. S11,500. Call anytime
except Sund"f. 614-992-64-40.

I

On l•ge Jot. 2 bedroom, In
Middleport. Also 1979 Chavrol•. E.:atlant conuftlon. Cal

Help Wanted

814-992-8515.
2 bedroom 12x50. 11900.
30 4-e75-2722.

large

buHdi"g loft.

mobile homaa J*mltted, public
water, ... o river lots, Ctyde
BoMn. Jr. 304-676-2338.

Be11.1ttful river lots onoecrepluL
public wet•, Ctvde Bowen, Jr.

From Gallipolis, take Rt. 141, turn left onto Rt.
775, turn right onto Patriot Road. Watch for

2&amp;aeraa Broad Aun Road. New
HavM. Owner ftnandng avail•

signs.

304-676-2338.
bla

8

304-882-3394-

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1988 at 7:00 P.M.
DOOR PRIZES
EVERYTHING NEW
Tools, Household, What-Nots, Toys, Jewelry &amp;
much, much more.
MARLIN WEDEMEYER, AUCTIONEER

DALE

614-245-5152
AlP KEITH MOLDEN
u, &amp;
in State of Ohio

JOHNSON
AUCTIONEER

Real Estate General

•FARM
•HOME
•COMMERCIAL

Eslale

Hames for Sala

Very anractlve bride 4 bect-oom,
2 t.'h,. famlty ·room with fir•
place. formal dining. l•ge ltvlng
raom, 30 fl. cuttom oak kitchen
cabinets. oak woodwork. flniah
bMemint, 2 c• 9•19• lwei
l.,dtcaped lot, • mllea from
Holzer Hosphal off At. 3&amp;·
Port•brook Subdivtsion. Cell

114-446-.189.

g•ag~

3 bedroom Randt. 1'h baths,
famllv 100m. dlnin9 room. 1 c•
o•811• atorage buDding. pool·
/ wooden deck. Spring Vaiii!J(
• •· C1ll 814-448-7903.

You're not getting

NO PHONE INQUIRIES PLEASE.
All resumes must be received by November II , 1988.

You're ,.ttina better.

ll1ppy 40t~

Lovt Tammy

and Children
\

Equal Opportunity Employer M/F/HN.'

trunli, dresser

cha.tr, 12 place setting china (Ro man ce), some antlque glassware,
antiQue camphor bottle. some books, desk ink well set, coffee table,
vases, stoneware, barber cha1r., s001e quilts pictures, table linen,
antiQue chairs, lawn lurniture, copper wash boiler. Daisy churn,
ani iQue dress display, Sears l T/ 10 riding mOwer, weedeater, Seigler
fuel 011 stove, dehumidifier, anliQue dress display ~ack, old benches,

k'tch"'

cab~ne~

metal fiower stand

r~l..,y

bed portable sewing

machine, 20' alum. ext laddet, oak secretarv. and many other miS·
cellane&lt;~u s and collectors items.

Terms: Cash
MRS. LILLIAN FAULKNER, OWNER
Lee Johnson
AUCTIONEER

•

Crown City, Ohio
Phone 251&gt;-6740
Not Responsible for Accidents of Loss ol

SATURDAY
NOVEMBER 5
10:00 A.M. 7.~;~~

Located at the Old 1
the
Betlemaad Addition In Point Pleasant, WV.
Watch lor signs.
HOUSEHOLD &amp; MISC, : 2 pc. livlng room suite, qoffee lBble
and end tables, antique table, corn er Birch china cabinet,
dinette set, 2 bedroom suites, modern desk and chair, large
antique flat top desk, 2 cotner whal-not ·Shelves, bathroom
cabinet, file save combination, tile cabinet, lamps, gas
heater, oval rug, 40,000 BTU gas circulaling heater, eleclric
heater, 2 old typewriters.
BUILPING suppLIES: 2 alum. windows. slorm doors. ga-

rage door parts, paints, cabinel hardware, barn hinges, odd
guUering , floor linish, thresholds, brass hardWare, bolls,
platform scales. anlique 1oledo scales, glass cutler. van
seat, electric motors, sheet metal, electric switch bo:c, wood
screws , nails, hinges. storm door, carpet tacks, "SCreens,
electric wire, window jams, sliding closet doors, Taps gas

PUBLIC AUCTION

SATURDAY, NOV.S, 1988
12:00 NOON
Located at 238 Lincoln Hill at the home of the
late Josephine Clark. Watch for sale signs.
"HOUSEHOLD"
Gibson refrigerator, Tappan gas range, couch, recliner, 2 pc.
living room suite, rockers, cedar chest. chest of drawers,
wardrobe, Maytag wringer washer, tubs, electric stove,
stands, pictures, dishes, pots &amp; pans, lot s ol braided r~gs,
and lots, lots more.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS" .
N.Y.C. Little Wizzard lantern, boiler. tub stands, stone ja1s &amp;
crocks, large woOd cheese box, oil lamp, oak chest, walnut
blanket chest, rocker, misc. chairs, large picture lrame,
sleigh fram~ glass stacked bookcase, organ stool. school
des~ Blue Willow dishes, i1on kettle, lard press, small dinner
bell, iron pots, lots ol nice dishes, misc. quit!s &amp; comlort~
COO·COO clock &amp; etc.
"MISC."
5,000 &amp; 11,000 BTU air conditioners. lots Christmas decora·
lions, Sunbeam sweeper, polisher/waxer, k~chen set, dou·
ble bowl sink (yellow), gril l, baby chai1s, bath tub &amp; lavatory,
lawn chairs, misc. hand tools &amp; etc.
OWNER-MARY GRUESER
Positive ID
Cash
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER
Dhio license n57-68-1344
W. Va. #5~5
"Not responsible tor 1ccidents Of toss ol property."

furnace, molding, 2 wood ext. ladders, electric Bareland
heater, old doors, gas cook stave, gas line hose, steel
basement post, angle iron, lloor tile, 2 112• pipe vise, metal
door, frames, 6 heavy duty electric boxes, hanging lighted
sign, commercial door closers, gas tanks. antique gale, 2
pots, truck tires , Homelite chain saw and much more ~partial
listing.
AUJQMOBILE &amp; BOAT SELL AT 12'00 NOON with R~­
ser&gt;~e. 1977 Ford Pinto, aulo .. complele overhaul, 86,000

act. miles, new painliob, ready to go, 15 k. fiberglass bass
boat, 20 HP Mercury molor &amp; elec. slart trolling motor, lrailer
complele.

AUCTIONEER: Rick Pearson 773·5785
OWNERS: Wedge Lumber &amp; Apartment Co.
TERMS: Cash or Check with 10
Not Responsible for acekJenta or Loss of Property
licensed &amp; Bonded In OhiO &amp; WV 66-89

Real Estate General

Happy

••

Halloween

Real Estate General

JUST USTEDI LAND FRONTING ON OHIO RIVER ANO RT. 7.
APPROX. 15 ACRES. LEVEL TO GENTLY SLOPING. All
CLEARED, EXCELLENT BUILDING SITES.
KYGER CREEK AREA- ONE YEAR. OLO VINYL SID EO HOME
ON LARGE LEVEL LOT ONLY 4 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS.
THIS LOCATION IS GREAT! VERY PRETTY HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. GARAGE. DECK. CENTRAL AIR, NICE LANDSCAPING.
$52,000.
BRICK AND FRAME RANCH- LOCATEO Jusr'OFF LOWER
RT. 7: 3 BEDROOMS, FIREPLACE IN LIVING ROOM. WORK·
SAVER KITCHEN IS EQUIPPED WITH RANGE, ~EFRIG , AND
DISHWASHER. NICE DINING AREA, ATTACHED 2 CAR GAR·
AGE. PATIO, ABOVE GROUND POOL GALLIPOLIS CITY
SCHOOLS $55,900.
ON LITTLE BULLSKIN-JUST MINUTES FROM GALLIPOLIS:
1&gt;0 ACRE FARM, SOME TILLABLE LAND. BEAUTIFUL WOODED
AREA. COLONIAL FARM HOME HAS 4 BEDROOMS, FAMILY
ROOM, FORMAL DINING, COUNTRY KITCHEN , CELlAR
HOUSE, CRIB, BARN. HANNAN TRACE SCHOOL DISTRICT.
$60,000.
1:~.{7&lt;~.'
·nt ;#?~.

VERY COZY 2 BEDRODM HAS FIREPlACE IN LIVING ROOM,
EXTRA LARGE KITCHEN, 2 BEDROOMS, BASEMENT, NICE
SIDE PORCH. IN CITY. $35,000.

3 BEDRM. HOME
house with garage.

=·
._ •

~·

,

PROPERTY IN PORTER- Grocery store, 3 bedrm. home,
5-bedrm. home. Call for more Information.

•

• •

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II, edge of •
Gallipolis (18 acres) and Mills Village. Call tor more in formation.
•

e

.~ - r~nWa~o~~UJpAp:r~~~-wm.~~~~~O~rcommercial,
:

:•
~:

.
'•

,....
,.

-

•

BARGAIN! CITY PROPERTY- Appraised for more than askin g price. Owner saysSELL$35,500.00. 3 BR, Ill bath, living
room, formal din in~ 2 lull crty tots, unlinished basement.
NEW LISTING - VACANT ~AND - St. Rt. 35, 6.9 ac1es.
Good location for building spot or could even be used for
commerci~.

REDUCED! REDUCED! REDUCED!
21 ACRE FARI-A must to see! Includes a large barn,
tool shed and cellar. Fences surround these beautiful
acres and cement block home w/2 bed1ooms, l bath, livin g room w/new woodburner. Call office lor appointment, to show. Located near Coal Co.
· ·
1.590 ACRES more or less. 3 bedroom home, 2 baths,
kitchen w/apptiances. F.R. lormal dining, 2 lg covered
patios.
COIMERCI Al GARAGE ON STATE ROUTE -Call for information.
KYGER CREEK- NDRTH GALLIA AREA- Neary new J
bedroom home. 2 baths, L.R., complete kitchen w/microwave &amp; appliances silting on 1.4 acres more or less. Storage building. Give us a call.
GAlllA- Need to settle an estate. Priced only $14,500.
Nice cottage silting on 5 acres. Quiet country setting,
$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$
$
FOR RENT!!!
S
$ 3 BEDROOM HOlE. City schools - Green Eleme~tary. $$
$
$ References, securrty depos~. NO PETS!
$

·$ water &amp; sewage. City schools.

INVESTMENT, OR LIVE-IN. Double house locatsd along •
4th Ave. Good condition. Buy for $32,000.
•

:e
~•

NO STAIRS- Realty nice 3 bed1oom ranch home. Owner is
relocating and is oHeringthis well kept home for sale and or
rent. Ideal lor newlyweds or retired cou pie. living room, eatin k~chen. Fenced in back yard lor small children or pets.
Excellent neighborhood .

$$ A LOT JUST MINUTES FROM TOWN- Contains el~ctric, $$
$

·1&lt;_,. .,

"FIXER-UPPER" HOUSE AND LOT just off 4th Ave. (Wi·
bert's Alley). looking for a lot to build or remodel existing •
structure!! Located along the 100 block. Buy now for
$6,900.00.
•

:e
., •

NEAR THE COLLEGE- Looking for a large room home with
most everytflin~ Brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room w/w.b. fireplace, family room. Complete kitchen w/appliances, also a mlcrowave oven. Formal dining room, stereo
intercom. Very nice home. Almost 3,00D sq. ft.

$$ SANDERS DRIVE - 3 bed1ooms. all appliances and $$
S washer. References, seanity deposn. $275 mo. NO PETS! $

:x'.' r
.. . " !!:-

: •
••
•
.: •

.~

I

tabl~ brass lamp, blanket cho;l, small wood
w/m~rble inlay, dressmg table. wooden rockmg

WE HAVE JUST LISTED APPROX. 15 ACRES ON LOWER RT.
7 WITH RT. 7AND OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE. THIS TYPE PROP·
ERTY IS SCARCE IF YOU ARE INTERESTED, BETTER CALL
SOON!

. •

11£QUIREI00t
I) Pun:IIIN of I!Mtllory !tqu._ for d11 iltd lrtl ot
rllponslbiiHy.
2) Establillllndop•cllnt com- to dlstrillto prt81ct.

stand, marble top

NEW LISTING ON LDWER RT. 7- SMALL FARM HAS3 BED· .
ROOM HOME. LARGE 60X70 BARN, TOOL SHEDS, OTHER
OUTBUILDINGS. GREAT RESIDENTIAL OR COMMERCIALLO·
CATION. $45,000.

:e

~·DlSTIIIUTOR

older,

hall tree w/mlrror, hts .S, hers antique chairs. roll top desk, walnut
mght stand, 4 drawer cherry ches~ 3 pc. bedroom su1te. old wash

NEW LISTING IN CITY- l\1 STORY HOME ON LARGELEVEL
LOT, 3 BEDROOMS, POSSIBLE FOURTH, FORMAL. DINING,
KITCHEN HAS AMPLE CABINETS, SNACK BAR, CONVENIENT·
LOCATION. $29,900.

COME TO MARLBORO COUNTRY

Philip Morns oHers a starting salary of $23,500, a company
vehicle tor business and personal use and comprehensive
benefits. For immediate consideration please forward your
resume to: Philip Morris USA, P.O . Box 613, Milford. OH
45150.
.
'

Located 27 miles south ol Gallipolis and 9 miles north ol
Proctorville on State Route 7 in !Iiiier, Ohio.
Tho followlnc will be sold:
China cabinet w/oval glass fronl, Vermont maple droplealla~e
w/ 6 chairs, beauliful oak ta~e w/marbletop, h1ghbatk m'rblelop

BUILDING LOTS FOR SALE- OHIO TWP., LOTSHAVE BEEN
SURVEYED. PUBLIC WATER AVAILABLE. ON PAVED ROAD.
HANNAN TRACE SCHOOL DISTRICT. JUST LISTED, CALL
SOON FOR FIRST CHOICE!

COME TO WHERE
THE OPPORTUNITIES ARE ...

We're looking tor individuals with eHecti'Je interpersonal and
communication skills, as well as basic math abilily. A driver's
license and a good driving record are essential. Previous
sales experience and a college degree ani plus !actors.
Limited overnight travel is required.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1988
10:00 A.M.

PUBLIC
AUCTION

HARVEST THE SAVINGS - Reduced from $42,000.00 to
$38,000.00. This home features 2 woodburnin~ fireol~ces.
living room and fam1ly room, 2 bedrooms._mce mooern
kitchen wrth knotty pine wood. Full basement. Within a mile
of the crty limijs,

Sales Representatives

At multi-billion dollar Philip Morris USA, you'll find exciting
opportunities to grow, selling world famous brands like
Marlboro, Merit, Virginia Slims, Parliament, and Ben~on &amp;
Hedges. Products backed by dynamic advertising and sales
support. Brands you can count on to sell.

PUBLIC AUCTION

614-757--···....

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL
SECRETARY

R N. Director rJ Nuf'ltng. needed
fat lntermectiate health
flldllty . Experi..-ln long term
c:.e required. Sal..,end benet·
ttl comm.-.te wtth Mpe·
rlenG. Send reiUme to Box P
1 5. ewe of Point Pie...,..
Reglater, 200 MMn St., Point
w.v •. 25&amp;&amp;0.

Ing plut paint IIIII• •nd

The days pass slowly,
But the months co Int.
It seems like aces ago
Since I held you last.
They say "life goes on,"
The pain some day will

Government homM from t1 , 00.
(u- repalr). Also 11x delinquent
and foreclosure propertlea.
Available now. FOf list'"g. c ..l

JACKSON ST, VINTON, OH.

ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
Metal bed, oak drop-leal table, oak parlor table, primrtive table, buHets, Windsor chairs, floor lamps, butcher block on
legs, store cash register (worksl. picture lrames, shadow box,
\\ pint~ pints, quart milk bottles, beam bottles, Coke &amp; Pepsi
and other old bottles, iron train set, green Mason jars, crocks,
carnival depression. cobalt, blown, Blenko, Shirley Templ e
and lots more.
Consi111ments taken 1-6 P.l. on saturdays or call
3ll8-9370 for information.
AUCTIONEER:FINIS ISAAC
APP . ROGER FETTERLY &amp;LESLIE LEMLEY
licensed and Bonded in Ohio &amp; Indiana

814-245-9222.

,971 Elcono.2BR.,r-.vwiring.
1 2x 1111... a •'P- out. • :1000. eon
e14-387-7111 eft• 5 PM.

.

t

25660.

6

1988 Conoord mobile horrw.
, 2x65, 2 BR ., AC.awnlngs. Call

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

Rio Grande College/~mmunity College announces
the opening for an Account Clerk I.
DEPARTMENT/DIVISION: Director of Finance
POSITION: Account Clerk classification, non-exempt standard work week, Monday through Friday,
8:110 a.m.-5:00 p.m .. - (40 hours weekly).
EFFECTIVE: November 14, 1988
Qualifications: Minimum qualifications include a
hich school education or equivalent with related
bacqround in business courses, includinc typinc
and accounting. Previous experience in accounting
preferred . Individual must be bondable.
SCOPE Of POSITION: RepOrtinc directly to the Director
of Finenca or desilnlle, the Accountinc Clerk will be
responsible for computer entry of information lrom a
Vil'iety of business and student records to control records. journal and ledger1: verifyilll details ol transactions for accuracy; developinc special reports Md analysas; routine accounting stal:11111ents and other duties
as assigned by the Director of FinMce.
COMPENSATION : Entry wace is $5.10 per hour. Insured benefits available. Paid leaves after completion of 90 working day probationary period.
APPLICATION PROCEDURE: Send letter of· interest,
resumB, including three letters of reference, before
ths application deadline of November 4, 1988 to:
Ms. Phyllis Mason, Personnel Officer
Rio Grande College/Community College
P.O. Box 969
Rio Grande, OH.45674
Rio Grande Colleca/Communitl Colloaa is an Equel
P.O. 16054 Opportunily/Affirmati_
va cllon Employer

1 1 Help Wantad
11 Help Wanted
,.,.
--:;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::::ft-----'"-~----

...,,.. to Admlnlotroter Cora

Call 614-446-8885.

ACCOUNT CLERK I-FINANCE OFFICE

riance ,.,_red. Commen1urete
Nla'Y tnd benllfht. E .O.E, M1il

Hav• of Point Pl..-rt. At. 1

1 4x 70, 3 SA., 2 b• ht . • 9000.

BR ., LR . DR , new bath. new
kitchen. sun porch. full b••

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

16121888-4228.

4 BR., full bo..mant &amp;

83500. Ceii614-37!1-227B.

Located at the Syracuse Fire House. all new &amp; nice
toys, gifts, for the whole family. Come.help the Fire
Dept. and buy your Christmas now: The ladies will
serve eats. Good - Good.
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER-992-7301

SALE TIME: SATURDAY, 7:00 P.M.

Athton,

1973 New [\4oon, 2 BR., large
front porch &amp; und•plnnlng.

CHRISTMAS AUCTION
SAT., NOV. 5, 7:00 P.M.

..Mobile home 14olc70, m• *'I
on rented lot one year .

2 BR . mobile home. Total alec.
A-iced re•onabla Call 614-

446-0722.

Located in the cafeteria at lleics High School. New
items donated by Pomeroy Businesses for the Cub
Scouts. Come out and help them out!
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER-992-7301

nlahod, 12x80, 304-075-3019.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

843-6408 anytime. Ask for

11

Commorhy, 2 bedroom, fur·

MobHe Home for Sa1a. 12x50.
C11t 814-44&amp;.2003.

o.tny.

Own yourap.,.NI or lhoe store,
c:ha01e from: Jetn-Sportt'N8ar
Ladiea , Men's . children :
mat•nlty. large stret, pethe.
d.,cewaar-aerobic. bfldal. lin9•1• or acc. .ori• ~tore. Add
color 1nety.,., Brand nam• : Liz
Claiborne, Haalthte, Chatt.
Lee. St Mleheta. For~~nza . Bugle
Boy, levL Camp Bevertv Hlllt,
Organlcallv Grown, Lucia. over
~00 othara. or 113.99 one
prloa detigner, rnuttl tier pricing
d.. count or famtv thoe rtore.
Ret:al pricet unbelilwablefortop
qualtty sho• normtlly priced
fl'om 819. to teo. over 250
brMdl2800 ttvl•. 817,900 to
$29.900: lnv ... ory, training.
fbc:turet, lirfere. grwtd opening.
etc. Can open 15 dllfs. Mr.

31

Homes for Sale

1-81 4-eB2-7424.

4 nice ·.modern one floor plan
house -. Owner relocatiog.
Needs quick ..le. Will conalder
l1nd contract. Also take lite
model vehlde •• partial trade.
Asking $54,000. for ell 4.

1000SUN8EOS .
TO NINO TABLES

Real

31

1984 Schultz 14xe6. 2 badrooms, 1'12 baths.. all eleculc:.
nM' air cond unit. Nnge. nrfrlgerator, wat1r bed and covered
porc:ft ln&lt;*rdod. 012,600.00.
Sarlou1 lnqulrea onlr 304-175-

ranch •. famllv 100m wood burnIng firapalce, new- central air,
lerge deck, wooden ttorege
bldg. priced mid 60's, owner
must 18H mike off•. 304-,8757438 after 8:00PM .

•a•. At . 87 near County In e.
860,000.00. 304-895-3428.

3 Bft. LA. oft kitchen. full ment newqa tee .• nawplumb·
b .. ement, 2 cer unattached lng&amp; electriCI....,;ce, N.,., VInyl
9111ge. B li.,Hit Rd. 849,900. siding, l•ge lot. 2 blodts fTom
Coli e14-446-4535.
collage. By appointment only

NOnCE I
THE OIID VALLEY PUBLISHI

IDu~lln

Homes for Sale

1969 Zimmer deluxe 1 ZX80,
wood. end coat ttove, pertiallv
furnlthed. mutt ... to appr•
dote, 1-304-576-2919.

3 bedroom home. 2 bMht, lerae
femfty 100m, 2 c• g. .ge. 1'VJ

Modern 3 BR . home. Vinton. By Owner- 508 R ldge A w •. Rio
Fwnnv room, eal-in kitchen. Grande . GOod 1Urter·
storage b'u ildlng, large lot. Retirement-Income PrQperty. 2

5881.

..u-.od
Soalel - - In , _
long term c•e feclltty. EJCP•

olueh. Campi.,• detailPerhaps you sent a lo·
• vsly card,
,
Or sat quietly in achair.
Perhaps you sent a llo·
ral piece,
.If so we saw it there.
Perhaps you spoke the
• kindest words,
:As any friend could say;
.Perhaps you were not
there at all,
Just thoucht of us that
day.
"
Whatever you did to
console our hearts,
:We thank you so much
' whatever the part.

21

31

228-Un

Eld•tv g.-rtlemm needtleeping
room. Someone to do lamdrv &amp;
cooklrlg. Call 814-446-0103.

c:••

614-446-3e72

Tiger kitten 8 wits . dd. to
gtveaw..,. to good horne. Li'ttll'

Help

Situations
Wanted

Financtal

fully carpeted (some new) .
9006.
AN'S &amp; LPN'S·PH. lull time &amp; 2.27.
Priced to eal. Coli B14-448p . . ttme appllctllons era being
0278 tft• 8 PM, we.kandt
PART-TIME OR FULLTIME accept.:I for Pl. . ent V.e1., · Mobile home moving. laMed .,ytime.
COUNSELOR. MeltW'tOegrM Hotpihll Nunlng Cere Center.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

814-379-2435.

Giveway. Kittens to good home.
Call 614-992-7382 after 5p.m.

8800 w.e~&lt;t¥ pos~ble. A•embllng products. SASE to! Home
Crotta, P.D. Box 9006-GDT.
Hun1ington, W.Va . 21570•·

12

r•

Wanting to Buy Cam .a orTr.,,
AM body. Call614-38&amp;-8e47.

Uaed i.lrnlture bv the piece or
entire household. 814· 742·

f(rfttens

Wtnted ecmeone to join lorAI
Oaspel group. prllfer eomeone
wtth verHtle slngb\g abHily and
d•lre tG promota GoaiMJI Mutic.
.Send ..eume P. 0. Box 791,
Milan, W.V•. 25280.

se~ • .-.on to cell on Mlnlnglndu•trial ·eccountt in · Southuat~Wn Ohio end neiGhboring
W•t Vlrginlll ••· PrJ• aperlencd, •ggre11lve, telfmothllted Individual. Company
furnlllhea t,.,apon:at:lon. All
turntl wRI be CONidwld. Send
to: Box Cle 177, e/ oOelllpola

Telem•keting posfllons open.
Aft•noon &amp; weNng hours. Celt
Mondlv '"d Tu•dlrt and Wed-

Brownie and Jun1or Girl Scout
unifarmt, and other Girl Sc:out
memorabilia. C.ll 814-IU2093. Evenings ontv.

304-384-11188. Equol O,.porl·
ti.lntty Afffrmttlve Action Em·
ploytrMPH.

noqulrod. Coli 814-388-

'

Wanted to buy: Stanclng pine or
log timber. Cell 114-384-5182
after ?p.m.

Braxton County Memort.l Ho•·
pltll il~~eceptlngtppUc.tionsfor
MT OJ M LT. Plrt-full time. Call

SomeonetababrsalnmyharM
nights. Must be relllbl&amp; Ref•·

on-

Help Wanted

MEOICAL T'ECHNOLOOIST
MEDICAL LAB TECHNICIAN

Up to n5HOURPROCE8SINO
MAIL WE~KLY CHECK OUARANTEED. FREE DETAILS.
Wrh: SD, 1057 W. PhNpiN. Suite 239-00. Ont•io.
Coli f. 91782.

Dolly Trlb.lno, 828 Third Aw ..
Oelllpollo, Ohio 4e831.

Wanted to BU¥ ~Uted Mobile
Homae. Call 814-Utl-0176.

Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

11

Help Wanted

Furniture and appliances bv the
place or •tire houaehold. Fair
prices being pal d. C•ll814-441-

3168.

··--·--Pomeroy......... ..
·

Giveaway

•

Junk Cars with or wlt11out
motort. Call Larry Ltv tty. 614-

Garage Sale- 615 Oak Dr.
(Spring Valley). Gallipolil . 9 -6 .
November 1,2, 3.
.

11

9342.

w..,t to buy: Uted furniture 1nd
antiqun. Will buy entire ~"~out•
hold furnilhlng. Martin Wademii!Jfer. 614-245-&amp;162.

·····--Gallipolis······----

ND humlng lflowed on property
~ Thelma Barton Campbell.
S.R. 124, Rutland • •·

'83 model

Ave., Oolllpol~. Coli 814-4462282.

LOST. tenulle Beagle puppy, lolt
vlclntty Sand Hill Road. Geo.rge
Crump, 304·676·•696.

The l.zeak ""'ton Ck.lb wMI start 7

fof

and n-.ver uMCI c••· Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 E11t11m

937-2463.
Lonlineu fndl w"-' you, Heart·
1eerch begins! Select 1ingl11
w.,t to mfMit you . Wrfte Heart-

Wanted ·To Buy

30 4-882-2844 eft• 5:00PM.

31 1711ftw 7:00PM.

02300. Coli 614--448-0390.

Announcements

1988 Brittany 1•x70, ell elect·
ric. lot 78x173 fl. $1&amp;, 000.00.
H.-tford n.- taenia court1.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

PUBLIC AUCTION
SATURDAY..-:NOV. 5, 1988
lO:uO A.M.

3eo2.

Meln. frH 81Cterior, 3 bedroom

3 bedroom home w+th car port,
maintenance free eJtterior. 1
beth, fully oqulppod k~clton,
central air. electric he•. fine
c.. pet. fireplace with Buck
stwe. ..tillite dilh. Gallipollt
Ferry area. e52.500.00. 304-

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

•

8

for Sale

87!5-8033.

junbaJI 1rimts-- ientin.el

Sunday Timee-Sentinei-Page-0·3

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va.

HomBa for Sale

31

Imelda Marcos leaving
Hawaii for arraigrfnent

Toy or danger?Lawn darts called hazard
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - The Consumer Product Safety
Commission banned the sale of lawn darts Friday, saying lhe
product Is not a toy but a dangerous project De that has caused
thousands of Injuries, especially to children.
., The ban, approved on a 2-0 vote with one abste_ntion, will become
; effective In mid-December, making It difficult for parents to buy
lawn darts as last-mlnuie Christmas gifts.
Friday's action is !he final step on theCPSC'sjourney to get lawn
darts out of the hands of children. Previous regulatory action had
required stores to include warnings that the product Is lor
adult-use only . The agency also required stores selling lawn darts
to only sell them in sporting goods departments, not toy
departments.
·
"In the last 10 years, about 7,000 Individuals have required
1
hospital emergency care and a disproportionate number of them
have been children." said CPSC general counsel James V. Lacy .
Lawn darts also have been blamed for tile deaths of at least three
children.
,
The Sporting Goods Manufacturers Association Inc. was not
immediately available l or comment.
In Nashville, Amy Herrin, 11, was kept ln a deep coma Friday by
doctors while her family-maintained watch by her side praying for
her life. Amy's cousin accidentally threw a lawn dart Into her
forehead during a ,backyard game Tuesday. Doctors at Vanderbilt

October 30, 1988

October 30, 1988

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

Page-D-2-Sunday TlflleS-Sentinel

.

loca- •

PICK UP FREE
'
. I
REAL EST ~TE LISTIII8 Ill OUR OFFICE OR.
YOUR B~Jil( .OR GROCERY
_ :

e

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS....
AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY

SSSSS$SSSSSSS$$$$SSSSSSS$SS$

THIS BEAUTIFUL BRICK HOME LOCATED ON SECOND
AVENUE IN GALLIPOLIS IS NOW BEING OFFERED FOR SALE.
VERY NICE FLOOR PIAN, FORMAL DINING, DEN WITH FIRE·
PlACE, 3 BEDROOMS, 2\! BATHS, LARGE PRIVm BACK
YARD WITH POOL PERFECT FOR THEFAMILYWITH SCHOOL
AGE CHILDREN. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONL'i'.

Let us help..,...
you sell
your home!@ !

GREAT BUY FOR THE RIGHT BUYER- Endless opportunies
and great potential for ~unters, lor home builders wrth
ingenurty, for the business minded wrth ingenurty 01 fo1 the
combination. This could be what you've been l oo~ng lor. 25
•r.res. m/1, free ~as for 2 dwellini(S w~h the 2 wells on the
land. Priced in the 20's. OWNER IS A WHEELER DEALER
Curious? Give us a call.
•
·

--

. o,tiUW*'n

Buying or Mlling rMI tltllte1 FCH' flir treetment •nd

good odvict ooll o REALTOAw o1 CANADAY REALTY .

AUDREY F. CANADAY, REALTOR
ROBERT E. GORDON, REALTOR
MARY FLOYD, REALTOR
OFFICE: 2&amp; LOCUST ST.
OHIO

REAL E81'ATE
482 2ND AVE. REAIR

.

ANY I-lOUR

'

(B

Jim and Bonnie Stutes - 446-4208
Tammy Moore- 387-7780
Cryltll Richie- 446·3638
'"'

.

�Page-

42 M obile Homes

Renlals
41

Nicety fu rni1 Md l mlll hou• .
Adutts onl'f. Raf. requ ired. N o
pet • . C.ll814- 446-0338.

3 SA .. AC, c:•p et.' pool o•ege.
2 fir ept~•. f8nc:e. Good lo e•
tio n. Call A -1 Aeal ES1ate
Broker, 304-875- 5'1 04.
Unfurnished hout&amp;, 2 BR .
Neighborhood Rd . S226. Rafer•
en oes 6 depos it requ irld. C a M

44&amp;-44 16 aft er 7 PM.
Plantz Sub.-4 BR .. full b• •
rnant carpet lsome n8W'J, 111nge.
city schools. Adults ontv. No
pets, D•p. &amp; rsl. mquir.t. t 3 50
per mo. Call 814-«6-0278
after 8 PM, ~el!llrends anvti me.
3 BR . ho me ne• Sitver Bri d ge
S hopping C1nter. 8276 P8' mo.
Sec. dep. S. ref. Ca ll 61 4-44&amp;6189 Of 44 8- 18865.

House in chy ,

-t•.
Oobbi• 114-446-1180.

814-4-411-8345.

' 160 t ee. dep. Itt ref. Call

4369.

2 bectoom unfu rnls hid. 12x 80
1n Ch•Ma call 304-&amp;75-9760
or 814-448-4389.

overcall on minimum no--trump-open-

Larg11 tilling room with eKPindo
room, 2 SR ., niM c•p-.t. CA.
Call814-448-1409.

61 4- 2511-6338.

3 bedr oom hou ..·Rutland MM.
S325 includes water. garbage.
heat. 8200 Mo.trity and refer en·
cas. C1tl 6 14- 3 87·1267.

2 becl-oom mobile home on 1

Nicety furni shed 1m111' hou se.
one bedroom . One or two el dertv
people. No pets. Ref. ~uired .
Celt 6 14-448- 2643.
3 SR .. 2 baths. famlty room.
N.G .-8idw ml Sc hooiDitt. A witabl e Nov. tat. Call 81 ... 388-

9695.

3 bedroom ho me in C11nt en.-y.
8325. No p ets. Y:! mit&amp; fTo m
Gre~~n School. Call 614-446-

8566.

Hou ... 1Yt batht. 11U elec. at
Everg~reen. Se c. dep . Call 614446-26 65 aft.- 4 PM.

4 BA . llo me. 7 mH• fromtO"Wn.
· 8450 Pltf mo. plus deposh. Cell
61 4-446-8346.
House with bath. N&amp;.;, Racine.
Nice yerd. g •den splice. Call
81 4- 992-5858.

Hous11 fur l'llrlt. 504 E..t Main.
Pom eroy. Ohio. Call 814-9928144.
For rAnt or Sala nSW"tv lllmod eled 2 bedroom houte, grUI
locat io n nev.~ residential co~
munity. after 8:00 PM eaU

304-675-2359.

42 Mobile Hames
for Rent
In Eureka. 2 BA . Adult s only . No
pets. $225 e mo. Oep. requited.
Call 614-24 5-5863.

275:1-

FtAI 'llrnac• 614-742-

Mobile hom•.

1.4

miteoutS .. d

Hill Rd. 304-675-3834.

3 btutoom aU eh•ctric. 121'1 86.

noo.oo month plu•
phone 304-876-4088.

utlitia~,

2 be..,oom 12xB&amp;mobUohomo.
. Rou
10ho.. od30
• Ch•hira
77oh3-!:'"
828
to.

4-

o

·

Apwtment
for requlrad.
rent. $225
month.
Oepo.,.
814-•

992' 8724· AftM lpm
5 119
·

0'

.

0182. Call 614-992-7787.
EO H.

2 bedroom Apt1 . for rent.
Cerp&amp;l.:l. Nice setting. LMindry
f•cAili• Mrailabla Celt 114-

992-3711. EOH.

N8w'• · Jedeoorlltad .,. . ..,.,.,.-ts
"'
walhble. Ut:IUtl• paid. t225.
pt~month, depa.k required. C.lt

114-992-1724 eft• 1:00 ar
992-15119.

Pom•oy. 2 be*oom lpt, Pwttv

fltrntsh~inNeyloraAun. Seatr·
ity dll)ostt Call afler &amp;p.m.
814-992- 1888.

4411-7444.

VfRa' a Fwnfture
Open dtll);'. Mon.·SIIt.

PROFESSIONAL SERVICEMAKES TH E DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 388·8826

9AM - 8PM

"Sun.". 12 noon - 5 PM

RUTH GOODY. REALTOR, 379·2128

DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTOR , 211-1251
LEESA CLARK, REALTOR. '"45·3031

304-882-2588.

W..l

Nartb.

Eut

Pass

Pus
3+
Pass

2+
Pass
Pass

Soulb
2 NT
3NT

Opening lead: • 9

.

.•

44

:I I 1 I I

Now accspt:ing appNcatlons for
2 bedroom apartment•. fuiiV
o•pMed, appliiW'Ia.. wat• and
tr•h pidwps provided. Maint•
n.nce free living cto•e to aha~
ping, b.,ks and schoolll. For
more infcrmatlon call 304-882-

" What does the spinal ac·
cessory nerve do?" asked the
anatomy professor. The student shook his head and
shrugged his shoulders. The
prolessor affirmed briskly,

5,00. 304-675-3788.

Lu.:urious Tttra Townhouse
ap.tnpnts. Elegant 2 ftoo~W. 2
BR ., full bath u.,.t•ln.. powd•
room downstairs, CA., distr,Nashllr. dlsP«*!I, prfvete entrance. private endoted pM'o.
r,ool plovgrounct Utllltl• not
nct.ded. Stll'tlng at t29 9 per

7738.

mo. Call ~14-367- 7880.

New complttely furnishad
.p.-t:ment 6 mobil• home in
city. Aduh• otttr. Parking. can
81 ._. 44 e- 033

a.·

Fll'nished -c. Ne• HMC.. 1 BA .
t235. Utllttl• pakl. Call 4414418 eft•7 PM .

BEAUnRJLAI'ARTMENTSAT

Apartmants lind hou .... Call

BUDGET PRIC£5 AT JACK- 304-175-5104.

SON ESTATE.$. 538 Jackson
Pike ftom t183 1 mo. Walk to
.._
d
lee. 814-446-

,....,.p lin
2&amp;88.
E.O.H.mew

949-2217.

2 unfurnlllhed at 127 Mulberry
Aw .• Pom•oy-4roomsAibeth.
Adults mfy. ~o pets. Dllp. &amp; ref.
Call 814-992-2276 aft• 5 PM.

Fwnilhed- 3 r00m1 &amp; bMh.
Cl
N
ol Ref &amp; d
tt
ean. op s.
·
epos
r~ulrad. Utilities: furnished.
Adutts onty. Call 81 4- 44 6-

----------------~-=~~==~==~~~:1~1=8=19:.::::::::::::::~
Real Estate General

2 8R . ap1:., llrge rooms. central
air, water paid. A\811~• Nov. 1
or sooner. Call 814-448-2205.
Apwtments for tM Etd..tv.
Galli a M ..or Apertrnentt. 8155
BLI11MortonRaad. Desfr
· ectfor
the Senior Citlrw1 CfJ2 oider)
andHandcappadp...,... Equal
housing opportunity. Appllc•
tionsmavbeplcktdupatSprlng
Vall:i PI••· 629 J•ckson Pike
or c I 814-44~41539.

Modern 1 BA. downtown,. ec,..
plete kltdlen. llr. c•pet. DepOsit. no pets. Cell 814-«80139 evenings, aft.- 5 .
238' First A ..... 1 BR .• kitchen
ltrnlshed. ~petld. No ehJI.

cten/ Pets. 8175 plus utHitl•.
[lop. &amp; •ol- CoH 814-446-4928.
821Y.t Sec. E~eet. oond.. 2BA ..
equipped kttdten. air. Awileble
Npv. 1at. t221i plus dep. Call
814-441-0803 or 448-2168.
2 BR .• aU utllli• paid lit Rio

Grande. Also 1 BR .. totlll elec. at
Rio Qrandlt. Cell 814-2'5-

8223.

Furnished apartment fer ..nt in
town. Call 814-.U&amp;-1423.

Coli 814-317-0274.

3110.

•h••·

Solid Maple 3 pc. t.droom
suh•twfn bed. mlltlr. . A l.:lx
1prings-llke nsw. Call 814-«8-

45 Furnished Rooms

2411.

Furnished roo~919 Second
Ave... Gllllipot.is. t136 1 mo.
Utlllt:las paid. Single mala Sh••
bath. Cai1446-44"11J after 7PM.

2 rust chairs, phone 304-175-

6689.

Rooms for flllrt-'Mek 01 month:
St.n:m_s at t120 a mo. Galli•

53

Hotel-81._4146-9580.

Buy Of SelL Rty•k'le Antjqu ...
1124 E. Main Street. Pom•oy.
Houn: M.T .W 101.m . to 15p.m..

I!

'lHE)It:t

S •.L't'H.L.. 'AI~•!Jq p&amp;WJIII'B JOHijOJd
184.L 'SJ9Pin04S 8!4 pe66m41 PUll
,P'894 114 ~0041 IU8PRIS e4.1 'JOH8j
•-&lt;lJd AWOJ'8U8 841 p8~98 .. I.OP 8AJ91J

Comm•clalspeee. 1400square
feet. cornet Semnd Md Pfne.
Ample p•king In raar. Cell

446-4249. 446-2325 o• 44114425.

:AJosse:&gt;oe IIIU!ds •41seop 184M..

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pom..oy.

' I

.LH9/IJ S•.L 'I'HJ.
H9nOIJH.L
J.Hl!ftf3
J.l:JOS
1'1'.LntJs
A.LSQ/d
IJOt'¥'1'79
S.L:rJ·tv'I'!JOS

2528.

SWAIN
AUCTION a. FURNITURE 12
Olivo St.. Ollllpalll.

Spadous mobile home Iota for
r.n. Famity Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry, W. Ve.

51 Household Goods

30 4-875-3073.

NEW· 8 po. wood group- 1399.
LNing room autt• t181- tl99.
Bunk beds wtl:h bedding- 1249.
Full sin mllltr- &amp; foundatfon
ttartJng-

0000 USED APPUANCES
W•hen. drvlfl. refrigtfetors.

Fi.rnlshed efficienOf. $150. Utll·
hi• paid. 7 Nell. Gellipolll. Call
446-4418 aft• 7 PM .

49

Furnished apllrtment, 1 BR.
•225. Utllfti• J~th1920Fourth.
G•lllpoUI, Cllll 4·8-441 8 aft• 7

Commercial Building for ' - •·
Pt. Ple•ant . Can 304-875-

For

Leese

rangn. Skaggs Appll~~ncas,
Uppw Ai'ltr Rd. belidt Stona
Crest Motet. 814-448-7398.

VIlli_, F~lture
Ntw' end ute&lt;t .. rniture and
applicancH. Call 1814-446·

6104.

PM.

=========~~~~~~~~========

7572. Hours 9·~·

J lo

S FIJRNIJURE

14115 El~•n Aw.
.
4 drBWIIr chest, t48. li dr••
ch•t $14. 91. ' B pc. wooden
dlnnattue11,
a&amp;.

New Listings Needed .. . New

•199.

til. Aaclinert

etartinst 199.
USED- led•. dr....,.., be«oom
lllh:es. D••kt, wringer
·complete line of usad turnitura.
NEW- Weetem boot• f35.
Workboots t18 &amp; up. (Steel •
10ft 1001. C.II814-4-46-310B.

wa'""· •

County Applianoe. Inc. Good
uslld appliances and TV
Open lAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sot. 814-4-411-1899, 827 3•d
Ave. Gallipolis, OH.

••a.

Maple dtnlna room ..., ..., 8
chairs. lghtacl htnch. exc mnd.

304-675-1732.

.

W•t.-n Boots. Red Wino wOf'k
tho•. Hush PUPIJ¥ dr ... aho-.
Quill tty. aeleetlon. oreet prices.
W~• work &amp; wettern. St.-te
At . 141, south of W•ertoo,

projector. Bell and Howell 1llde

·JIINANZA
na:
TMr -IIUU'r1l
MAKIS 111£ DJn'I:IENQ;

Cast iron w .o od bu rn• . UOO.
Call 814-448-4880.

Woo d &amp;

coal burnet". C.U

304-675-5331. .

Se.-s c abinet modal slweo an d
t ~ t al) • • AM -FM .tweo and
record l'laver. Good condition.
Call 304-468- 1997.

814-B43-21&amp;e.

Dakota F•rm Home. Buitt on
your k)t. '12.996 6 up. s .. our
Model. Call 1-814-8811-7311 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

S AI W Mod el 83 22 c al., •226 .
19 n CediU.e. Fie. eer. $3500.
trade. 960x1 8.5. f715. Cllt

8

81 4-4-411-7019.

3 whael bleycle fof

sate. Call

Mixed hard wood i tat... n 2 Ptf
bundfe. Containing approx. 11h
ton. Ohio _Pallet Co .. Pomerov.
Ohio. 81 4- 992· 8481 . _

Firew ood-Herd wood.. Large
pickup lotld. S 35 deUvered. Call

For sale. Building mat•h•s. 14
eigllt Inch chi mna¥ blodl. with
tinw. 84 5. Phone 614-"l92·

e14-445-3868.
614-448-1437.

6006.

Real Estate General

D.C. Metal Sales, Inc.
Cannelbur&amp;, Ind. 47519
Speciilizing in Pole Buiidings. Designed to 111eet
your needs. Any size Choice of 10 colors.
ESTIMATE on post
~~~~~.~:si and pacuge deals.
hundreds, even thousands of dollars.

COMMERCIAL &amp; RESIDENTIAL

Your local Bonanza
bu ilder is rea dy to bu ild
a n attractive and effici-

local Sales
Representative
Donna Crisenbery
E.S.R.. Box 166
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Ph. 614-256-6518

ent buildin g !or atol less
than you ' d thlnk... see
him today for a free esti·
mate!

BURT BUILDING CO.
WAIEirOID, OliO 45716
CALL COLLECT 614-664-300t
TOIL FIE£ 1-100-637 -2046

NOTICE OF SALE

Dlnllltla $101 and up to •4815.
Wood tllbfe w-e dt•irl t211i to
t791. Desk •100 up to $371.
HutCih&amp;l •400 end Ul). llMk
.,_. complele w-mlll:tr-•

e29&amp;ondupto e381.11 .. bedl
$110. Mllttr,..• or box sPring~
full or twin tea. firm t78. end
$88. Queen ..., t250 • up.
King t310. • drMer chelt *89 .
Oun cablnats e gun. BabY'

......_... eu a. ••s.

Bod

hem• t20. $30 6 King frame
t&amp;O. Oood stlectton of be&lt;hom
suit•. metal cablnttt. headbo•ds S30 end up to $86..

Dav•

28&amp;-17eB.

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA, 2 South Court Strtet,
Athens. Ohio 45701 will offer for sale the following
described Items frte and clear of any emcumbr-

Sof• and chllln price(~ from
$395 to *991. T1bl• UO and
up 10 t125. Hldo-1·- e:tBO
to $1591. Ractln.. U25 to
$3715. Lamps •21 lo t125.

ao

cu be pro/act or. Both n.., con&amp;.
tto n. Cal 814-448-7921 .

Rl. 2, lOX 7 t

LAYNE;&amp; FURNITURE

dl1trict. Cell 1514-992-5546 or

AH oak firewood. Good l)idc.up,
uo. Spltt &amp; to.S.d. c.n a14-

54 Misc. Merchandise

7479.

114-949-2217.

Antiques

Sund-v 1 to lp.m. 1514-912·

Rent•l tnilers. Call 614-992-

Office or small busineat spec11
for rent. Locatad at N . Seoond
Aw. in Middleport Busln.-•

Chinof'l SUJ* B mov ie cam•a.

AefTigerMor- $35, ping pong

1386.

46 Space for Rent

870-9811.

••·•too.

•bl• t20, 5 dining room ch•W•
.50. 17.. b • w tv wtth
ltllnd- '26, WISher &amp; dr;trt40Q, mlcrowave-t1&amp;0. All
good
C.ll 814-448-

..--. ..

bedroom apt In Poif\t
Ple•tnt, wry clean and good
cond. no pets. phone 304-87!One

Kendalfwood fir eplace insert.
f50 0. Firm, C.lt 814- 44101 48.

Montgomery Ward Energy
B•v er-el•etronle eo ntrol-etr
condiUon•-UIId one summtr.
pold 18150 wlhotco UliO. Living
I'OOm suke&amp; dlnnMte

: TYLFOS

I

2 BR . epta. 18 closete. kitchenappl. furnished. W•hlw-Drver
hook· ~. wW e•p«. n.,..tv
painted, decft.
From t175.
Senior Cttlrant Welcome.
,
c.ll"'o&lt;0:8'i'i .J
1
OMIC&gt;/. nc. A~ ·
~
6104. or e 6-&amp;388

Christ"* toys now rn .tock:
Chriltm11 lr(eways now being
taken. Plu1 financing evdeble
wlthop.............. lOt. 141 ..
Centenary-IA mile on Uncoln
Pike. 1514-.U$-31&amp;8.

5

3716. E.O.H.

Apartment
for Rent

sate. eliiCellent used appllan..a.

, . LUBART

Furn5shed one bedroorh apt.
aclltta ontv. no peta. eeli after

Aft....ment
· ;;;·Rent

Complete houathold
fUrnishing~· AJ beddtng. ruatic
bunk beds wtth rustle ch•t.
v•letv of aot• • ch-..an on

I

GITSPY

64 Misc . Merchandise 54 Misc . Merchandise

Wh... chelr• f'IIW" or uted. 3
wheeled electric t OOOtWI. Clll
Rav-s Moblty collect, 1-814For tow priCM ·o nQualtty C8rptt
&amp; Fumhure come to Motlohen
Fwnltu,..Upp• River Rd., 014-

u1ilh l• t*d. reference.. Phone

t;;=:::;~'~~:;:-:': :':':r:::=:;=~====T;;;::::;~~~;:==I

llpltllrt unfurfVthed apt, Car~... ·-=-'"•- ld N chltdr
p...... """'"'-"' · 0 1637en.
No pets. Calllt4-.Uf.
·

1 bedroom apt. in Midcleport.
e:uo. per month plus utlltl•.
catt 814-992·5645 or 814-

WORD
GAM I

BMdl Street Mlddlaport. Ohio.
2 bedroomklrnished aplrtmtnt,

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: West

the defenders could not .defeat three
no--trump_

tor

m
Mil.

.~

'64 Miac. Merchandiae

450 2nd AVE.
446-6806

lion. Equ1l
A ppllc.tiont
d-, ttwough
3-p.rn. only, .t

•

S unday limes-Sentinei- Page--0 -5

Ohio- Point Pleasant,. W. Va.
•

111. 114-4-46-8221.

+AQJ73

shown •up with three hearts and presumably bad six spades. In addition,

44

..

October 30, 1988

RESIDE NTIAL . INVEST MENts · COM-..lEOCIAL•· FARM·s

APARTMENTS. mobile ho"*hou.... Pt. Pl . .am lndGellipo-

sbe trusted Ute helpful eight of clubs
as being a true card. So she led the diamond queen from her hand. West followed low wiUtout pause.
Declarer believed that West would
have covered with K-10-z-z and would
have shown some reaction wiUt K-x-x- ·
x. Trusting her judgment, she rose
with dummy's ace, drqpping the singleton king from East. A low diamond
back to her nine gave West a trick, but

Apartment
Rent

Q/md£

~~~

814-992-3055.

••o
7s
tQ91

Pass

C}/~ 9t

Pow. II St., Middleport.

SOUTH
+AQ

Pass

Apartment
for Rent

RtoMWoodl epu.

+K92

ing values. NorUt cue-bid three spades
to look for a poSsible 4--4 heart fit, and
South subsided in three no-trump.
She won 11\e openinc spade lead and
led Ute 10 of hearts. West played low,
and Ute 10 won Ute trick. West won Ute
next heart trick with Ute ace and con·
tinned spades. Edith won and played
another heart, picking up West's
queen. After cashing dummy's fourth
heart, she led a club back toward her
queen. West followed wiUt the eight,
appuently signaling four cards in
clubs. Edith was now disposed to believe that the diamond king was with
West, and she furUter presumed Utat
East had only a singleton, since be had

992· 44

Grtcious hino. 1 and 2 bedroom aplrtments at VIllage
Manor and Riv-.lde Apart·
menta in Mlddiii)Ort. From

tK

+108~1

can champiortships than Utey can
count. But she hasn't stopped counting
the distribution of her opponents'
hands. In today's deal,' after East
opened wiUt a weak two-spade bid,
Edith bid two· no-trump, a natural

w/ d hookup. Y.t mi. p..tHM .C .
on At. 35. Adults onty. CaH
304-67&amp;-9760 or 814-446-

Nice bright MotHie Home In the
Country. Vlclnftv of Flv'e Point•
and s ..han. "duttt. onlv. t1_85
month. 614-949-2969.

.862

.A Q S
+106~ 3

ers who have won more North Ameri-

2 bedroom unfur'*he&lt;t 12160.

log Cabin. S250. 2 BR . Cell
after 6 PM, 8 14-245-9097.

+KJ 1086 2

EdiUt Freilich is one of those play-

614- 245- 9547.

llctt.

+H

By James Jacoby

2 Br. mobile home. NWftOdll.t.
clean. •200 a mo. Rlliquir•

11·11·"

EAST

WEST

The count
goes on

F.or Rent or s .. . 2 BR .. mobile
home. UOO ~ month or
t3800Y)IIII buy . C.ll aft• I PM ,

~lvatalot.

NORTH
+743
•K J 91
+AJ872
+6

James Jacoby

2 Br. unfur"'stMd. Stove •
refr ig«ator fu rn. Fultw' CI!I'Pttedt 200 mo. •150 dep. Pay ..
utiliti• • hllf
Clh

w_.er pe id. Call 4-8 PM.

44

BRIDGE

for Rent

Homes for Rent

October 30, 1988

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

limes-Sentinel

•em• u

c•h

wnh

eppi"'¥'8CC a-.tft. 3 Ml• out
Bul.,lle Rd. Open 9em to Bpm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 114-4411-

0322.

WANTS IT SOLD
our price so here's your chance.
US WHAT YOU'Ll GIVE ·
This is trulv an outstandin&amp; home. 4,000+ sq. feet includes 5 Acs. fronting on the river and leetures a huge
family room with fireplace and wet bar, formal din ina,
equipped kilchen, breakfast area, super large living room
with lirlfllace, formal entrance, 5 '"" bedrooms, 2
baths, central air. 2 car garage plus cuport. Excellent
neilhborhood, fantastic river view. PRICE HAS BEEN RE DUCED TO $119,000 - :Owner will listen to offer. Broker
thinks this will be lhe best buy ol1988.
We can't

WISE11!1AN REAL

EST~TE

M.-h·In 1.-. io- !lt.r\il'tln !WPI• n"ln!l

ances:
DESCRIPTIONS
1979 Baron mobile home - 14x60 - 2 bedroom,
I bath electric heat needs some repair:·
The aforementioned item shall be sold by private
saleat 4:00 P.ll. EST on November 1st, 1988at Bank
One, Athens, NA, 2 South Court, Athens, Ohio 45701
to the highest sealed bid. The item will be sold as is
wit.hout any express or implied warranties. Item may
be stan prior to tha sale at Kanau~ Mobile Home
Sales, State Route 7, Kanaup, Oh1o 45631, or by
callin1 (614) 593-6681 ext. 3111 or 1-800-8246954 ext. 3111.
BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA of Athens, Ohio reserves
the ri1ht to reject any or all bids, the right to withdrawal of any or all items from the sale prior to confirmation.
Terms of sale: Cash, certified or official cheek or ficonfirmation.

Real Estate General ·

WANTED:
HAUNTED HOUSE$ TO SELL!
Not enough closets for your "Skeletons"?
No room in the kitchen for your "Cauldren"7
Are your ''goblins" crawling all over each other and
driving you "Batty"7
DO YOUR HOUSE HAUNTING WRH US
YOU CAN"COUNT" ON THE PROS
AT WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446-3644

Real Estate

...

. 446-6610

'

•
•
•
•
•
••
•

THIS HOUSE WAS MEANT FOR YOUR
FAMILY- localed in a nice neighborhood close loHMC, this homeoffers 3BRs
1 ~ baths, eQ uipped kitchen, LR, FR, dining
rm., gas heat, cent air, woodburning stove
2car garage, stora ge bldg City school. Cali
today.

FIRST AVENUE - RIVER FRONTAGElovely lwo story home offers a formal entry, equipped kitchen, beautfful living
room dh fireplace, family room, 2 baths,
gas heat, basement with brick, fireplace,
summer porch, lovely level area by river.
Shown by appointment only. t

•
•••

PLENTY Of ROOM FOR EVERYONE -Lariat Drive. Brick ranch, 3 or 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, equipped k~chen, den, family room,
LR, sewing room, dining, laundry, 2 fireplaces, gas hea~ cent. air, attached garage
plus carport, patio, ,privacy fence, city
schools. Make an appointment today.

KRISTI DRIVE - BEAUTIFUL B~ICK
RANCH -This home offers several attractive features including a 11x30 fam ily
room, LR, k~chen, 3 bedrooms, l'h baths,
fireplace, cent. air, carpet10g, attached
garage w~h electric door ·opener. Call for
an appointment

SOQTHERN HILLS R. E., INC •
:&amp;52 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio
'

PHYLLIS LOVEDAY
446-2230

JUDY DEWm --BROKER

388-8155

SONNY GARNES
446-2707

CHE~YL

LEI'I'IEY

742-3171

d

·c--

•

z

1
~

SIDE BY SIDE DUPLEX - Eadh side lealures 2
bedrooms, living room, k~chen, ~ath . Nice lawe
and parking facilrties. Priced in lhe$30s wrth both
sides rented al present time.
#2669

z

~

r-

HOME NEAR CLAY SCHOOL- Offers 3
BRs, 11h balhs, k~c hen with refrigeralor,
range, DW, formal dm lng, LR. carpet, het
pump, cent. a1r, utllrty bldg, nice neighborhood. Call today for an appoinlment.

PRICE REDUCED TD $39,900! ~GREAT
BEGINNER HOllE - Th is home offers a
large lR w~h fireplace, kitchen, dining
area, 3 BRs, bath, full basement, car garage, deck, lenced yard ju st minules to
town on Rt. 141. Call for an appointment.

!
$25.000...CITY SCHOOLS...M IN UTES TO

2 ACRE CHURCH CAMP FOR SALE ~
Numerou ~ buildings including dimng hall,
caretaker s trarl er, cabins, pool, church
bu 1ld1ng If interested call lor more detailed informalion.

TOWN. Approx. one-half acre. Home lealures lR, DR, kitchen. bath, FR,1 bedrms.,
lull basemen!, large unattached block garage, gas heat. Call lor an appointment

•

YOU'LL WANT THIS ONE FOR YOURSELF!
-Lovely home just minutes from town on
lower Rt. 7, beauliful river view, 3bedrms.
. 2 baths, LR, eq uipped k~ch en, family rm.,
dinette, 2 fi replaces. game room, laundry
rm., cily schools. Callloda)'.

ONE ACRE 11/l AND A MOBILE HOllE. 2
BRs, bath, LR, kitchen, rear deck, most furniture stav s with mobile home. Call lor an
appoinlment.

Z

'

!

-

PROPERTY

Q,

~

..-

EWINGTON- $19,900- Four ~edr oom
home includes k~chen, living room, dining
room, ~ath. NG school district

LOTS FOR SALE ON DEBBY DRIVE- Ca ll
for location and more details.

11.872 ACRES. HARRISON TWP. on lincoln Pike. All vacant land. $12,000.

-•
.••'

IIOBI LE HOllE LOT close lotown. All utilities availabl ~

29.8ACRES M/ LVACANT LAND- Fronls
on Rt. 160. Build or put a mobie home
here. $16,900.

•
•

29.8 ACRES 11/L VACANT LAND - Fronts
on Rt. 160. Buil d or put a mobile home
here. $16,900
I

•
LOTS FOR SALE - Morgan SistersRd. and
Cheatwood Wagner Rd. Call for details.

'

2.4 ACRE TRACT. COMMERCIAL SITE .
Located on Upper Rt. 7 across lrom nllW
shopping center.

CHAROLAIS HILLS- 3.24 acres more or .
less. Owner financing availabl~ $12,000!

fbl31. SECLUDfD5~ AC, 1/ 1, located on Neighborhood Roed 3bedrooms

$29,90011! VERY NICE STARTER HOllE.
Convenienl to shopping center. 3 BRs,
bath, kitchen, LR, DR, carpet, gas.heal.

tills. Green sclrool
· ·
'
1345. A~l811CK; has 3 or 4 bedrooms, lull basement FR 1 car attached
garakge •drlh d.oor opener, hilS Z4x40 mel at burldmg with 'doo; opener Pri'IBte
bacf.aro pa110. 1 ac. m/ 1. As«ing S65 000
·
iltll . LOCAtEO on Rt, 14 1. 3or 4 i:ltdroo.ms I bath J ac m/1 $31900
W£ HAVE 2 NEW usnNGS ON 1s1 AVE WitH RIVER v1Eiv C"t' r01
·
IPPOINIM£11.
'
- ~

'

'

602 FOURTH
- 2 slorv brick and frame
home. Presently used as renlal property. Can
easily be converted back .lo single family
residen ce.
#2661
VACANT ACR ~GESI - Approx. 40 acres.
$14.900. Rural water available, several feel of
road lrontage, partially wooded.
#2624
IS YOUR COST OF LIVING SOAR ING7 - Th is
lisling offers a fine family home plus 2bedroom
income apartment 2 slory frame homesttuatedat
Second AVenue. 3 bedrooms, familY' room wrth
fireplace spacious living room, fo.rmal dining,
kilchen. 2 baths, impressive entry. 2 car garag~
treed lawn. Call.looay for app o1ntment
#2671
BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTING- Seven room brick
home wrth 2 ~ ~aths . Apartment building used for
caring for elderly and handicapped people. Large
mooern barn used as a feeder pig business,
presently ~as 44 sows, _potenlial for 100. Farm
localed in Guyan Towns1up, 50 acres level boltom
land almost surrounds farm buildings. Call for a
showing today. :
#2602
IN TOWN -Two bedroom one slory vinyl sided
home wtth living room, ~ath, family room ,lormal
dining and k~chen on large fenced-in lol wilh
slorage bulldmg .$38,900.
#
2650
"
·

BUSINESS IN II
a
lounge with 0-5 night club license. restaurant
equipmenl and stock. Upstairs has 2 aartment~
S~uated on street wilh good traffic flow in
Middleport.
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - Block and frame.
Surfaced parking area. Over 3600 sq. ft. Relail
sal es area. Garage. Slorage area 2 bedroom
apartment. Approx. 1 acre of ground. Call for more
details,
#2604
BHEVEL HOME CLOSE TO TOWN- $49,900.00
is the reduced pnce on this 3 bedroom home.
living room, lamily room, 1 car garage, eat-in
kilchen. Fresh paint throughout Call today for
your sh owin~
.
#2610
RIO GRANDE - I story frame w~h 2 bedrooms,
living room, den, unattached garage. Landscaped
large lawn and more. Call for more information.
112607
HOME AND BUSINESS - lovely 3 bedroom
home with HI baths, plus profit making business.
General slore, well established, all inventory and
equipment. Exira lot for mobile home or additional
pnvacv.
*2622
ro

PRICE REDUCED! RIVER FRONTAGE wrth 3
bedroom frame home. Additional building can be
used as dwelling or business. Located on SR 7.
Now $35,000.
·
#2658
PRICE REDUCED! This qual~y buiH home
leatures 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, lormal dining area,
attached garage. S~uated on I acre near Chester.
REDUCED to $70,000.
#2673
$32,000. LIKE NEW CONDITION - 3 bedroom
ranch, 1 car attached garage, living room, bath
and more. located al Rutland.
#2647
LAND - Over 52 acres. Excellenl building srte.
#2646
LITTtE BIT OF COUNTRY BUTCLOSElOTDWNLocated on Rose Hill Ihis property has alittle over
I acre. 2 bedrooms, family room, sunroom and
more. Nice solidly bui~ home.
#2660
NOW THIS IS LIVING! Approx. 125 acres w~h
newer home. 2 slme lireplace, large spacious
equipped k~chen, full basemen! wtth familv room
and drive-in garage. There's also a mobile home
on property with rental income. 5 stocked tanks,
free gas and much more. Rutland area.
•
#2676
NEW LISTING! LOCATED IN SYRACUSE on
approx. 2 acres with river view. 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, lamily room and much more. Call lor appt,
#2659
COMMERCIAL BUILDING -Downstairs used for
business. Upslairsisan •r.artment Presently fully
rented. Will pay lor ilsel . Onlv $22,000.

TENANT lAKE YOUR PAYIIENTS Brick and frame construction. Main level
apartment featu res 1 bedroom, large living room,
..,....,....,....;....,....,....,....,....,....,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ and kttchl!li, balh. No. 2 has 3 bedrooms, kitchen,
living rooni and bath. Garage Situated in city.
C l988
Priced in the $30s.
#2670

' .Nurnb er Q ne.
Put your t rust m

I

'

•'

LOCATED JUST ONE MILE FROM TOWN IN
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 2 bedroom ran ch with
living rorim, bal h, dining area, utilily room, storage
building, covered patio and carport on t.88 acres,
more or less. $39,900.

MEIGS COUNTY

!ami)\! room with lrepiace. lri

73 ACRES, 11/L, PERRY TWP.. .40x60
barn and various other farm buildings.
Very nice home features 3 BRs, 2 paths
kitchen, LR, new carpet. Call for an,appt:

LOCATION - Close lo slores and hospital.
ranch home wrth 4 bedrooms, family room,
eat-In kilchen with appliances, large bath,
patio, 2 car garage, storage building and ~ acr e of
flat lawn. \..
#2665

:I

rc

wants a contract. 3 Of 4 bedroom

82.3 ACRES, M/ L, NEAR MEIGS MINUI
older lwo story home with vinyl sidin&amp;
slorm windows, two small barns.

GREIEN TOWNSHIP is this 3 bedrqom brick
ranch w~h Ill baths, living room wrth firepla ce,
formal dining, 2 car garage, 12'xl2' patio on .41 of
an acre lawn more or less. Call loday for more
inlormation. $49,900.
#2616

"&gt;

PRICE REDUCED . This home has approx. 1.700
sq. ft., 3 bedrooms, 2 balhs, large living room with
fireplace. Equipped k~chen. Evervlhing in extra
good condilion. Situated in Chesler area on
approx. 1 acre. REDUCED TO $48,000.
#2674

RIVERVIEW .:... Situated wilhin 3 miles of cit y. 3
bedrooms, Cap e Cod home. living room with
fireplace. kitchen, dining room, balh, full
basemen!. Approx. li acre lawn. Garage with 2
bedroom apartment for added income. Cily
schools.

OWNER SAYS, MUST SHU! AND REDUCED
PRICE $6,000. This 3 ~edroom ran ch wilh bath,
living
room, one cal garag~ eat-1n kilchen, ulil1tv
2 MOBILE HOMES!! - 1988 FLEMING: 1
bedrooms, bath, livingrm., range, refrigerator and . room, gas heat on .44 ol an acrem/1. BulavilleRd.
draperies, central a1r. 1978 RICHARDSON: 2 area. $19,000. Call for more information and
bedrooms, ~ath, livin g rm., completely furnished, appointment.
#2675
Iron! porch. Both mobile homes areunderpinnedVACANT
LOT
$4,500.
Excellent
hom
e site. ·
.Nicellat over an acre lawn.
#2663 Rural waler avai la~le. Cleared , private. S~ uat ed
1974 SCHULT mo~i le home and over 31 acres off SR 160. North Ga lli~ schools.
#2661
Total electric w~h air. Newer underpinnmg 2
bedrooms, living room, bath, k~c hen , eQuipped
20 ACRES WITH HOMESITE - Partiallv wooded,
wtth rang~ refrigeralor and range wood.
pond, well, electric. Priced lo sell al $10,000.
#2657 Han nan Trace Schools.
COUNTRY SETTING WITHIN THE CITY! - Brick
' #2667
ranch. 1 car garage, full basemen! and all the
extras. The real surprise to this home is lhe $20,000.00 - 2 STORY FRAME HOME wilh 4
acreage that surrounds tt. You can walk to all the bedrooms, vi nyl sidin&amp; 1'h Jots. Call lor more
shops and slill walk through the woods. REDUCED
inlormat1on.
PRICE! NOW $123,000.
#2664.
#2656
PRIME DELVELOPIIENT PROPERTY - S ~uated
THIS BRICK &amp; CEDAR BI-LEVEL hasapanoramic in back and to the sideof Pinecrest Nursin gHome.
view of lheoQhio River. 3 bedrooms, 11&gt; baths, Over 74 acres. Call for more information.
family room, living room, 2 fireplaces, centr&amp;l-air,
#2651
2 car garaae: S~uated on 2.9 acres more/ less.
HOME, ACREAGE AND MORE - 1 slory home
$64,500. Call for more informalion.
with alum. silling 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, eat-in
#2678
kJtchen. Approx. 44.9 acres, ~arn , several
50 ACRES ..,.- ~Lose to ~H J~. Approx. 6 miles lo oul~uildi ngs, 2 silos, some newlen cin~ Land lays
town. Call toda)'.
well.
·'
#2655

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•

Page-D-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

84 Ml1c. Merchendl1e

KIT 'N' CARLYLEII by lArry Wrl&amp;bl

• - •· 12 ft. Jolon boa

Ferm AI Cub triCtor wtth 5 ft.
bell¥ mower, 1 ft. cyd• b•
mower, 2 ft. bun aew, tMW

- ..... 114-112-1810.

bled• IIINH h., r8k6 IDIM

wtth Mtnn KOh 315 motor.

a...

1987 Skylsrk. AC . cruiu.
c•aetta. Grill a• mil.-gt.
easoo. c.11 1114-44&amp;-9330 sf·
t•4PM.

1984Pomlo&lt;8000. AT , PB,PS,

F•mEqulprntnt. ZttorTrectora.
Howard Rot wet are, Blad-.
Fatdtr Rlnga. Bu.,ing old batt•
'•· Morrill EquiDm.m, Aull~nd.

.........hpodt10.0-boby
-"'II 01. 114-742-2158.

AC. v-8. cruile. tift. AM -FM ·
Cau. •&amp;400. · Ctll 814-2648780.·

Ohio 514-742-2455.

loY*Mit. couch l"td chair fOf
..... Priced rigM to ttH. CAl

814-112-2t74.

1987 M•OJry Lyrut GS . BliCk.

1977 M-OitM• combln• 4
raw corn held, 13ft gnNn ta~e.
•c cond, kMp In dry, 11 &amp;o-C
dozer, Winch. good aond.

PS, PB. air, AM -FM, 4 apd.

.Sh .... Coli 3114-575-5331 .

1979 Toy018 Corona, 75.000

30.000. 304-937-2018.

..a..

For
You cleclonntct tnd
haul. Good ldtchen link wtlh
· - t21. ~.ov.... with

63

mle1. GQod work c:•· 11000
080. Coli 514-441-9348.

no.-"""· n5.

a.v

"'"" . - . Co•h., dotho.g.
Smll •mv eccttMorill. Frt,
Sot. Sun. . _ dl 8:00 PM.
Spin•

~._.

B.. dwln 2 k.,. bo•d ehtatronic
org.n. lken.w. 304- n3-&amp;007.

pl~o.

Uaed R·l&amp; D11ch Witch
TrM'Ich«. 114-814-7842 or

304-882-3104.

f .IIIII Siipjiiii~S
&amp; Lr Vt!slut:k

884-5091-

Spo'o .,d -..,.,1 botloubo.

61 Farm Equipment

304-523-8288.

For ui•Recondllioned 15 ft.

foldupbuohho~

4521.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

64 Hay &amp; Grain

John Owe 2010 dl•el tr8ctor,
Nice. wh:h plow, dl.kt, grain
drill. t39&amp;0. John o .. e 2020,
100Qtn.-Sa Sh.-p. rn.~st eeeto

8.

Coll814-215-1251.

1981 Bl.ictt Som•ut: 2 dr.
aoupe. Mtny eKtru. v...., nice.
1151100. See • 841 FounhAw.

h•• of Hav. 7 Hol.teln
IMgo•oo..tboi•oth.,.to.•IL Holf.,..w1ll toohln In Fob.. C.II
120 •ch. Coll814-441-1052. 814-388-8483"' 388-8850.

lppreclll:' '4850. Own• wNI

Corn fof Ill&amp; 304-17&amp;-4228.

11n.,ce. Call 814-28e-8522.

24 ear-. corn for alllllil&amp; Mor·
gan'1 WoodiW'n Fllrm, Rt. 35,

Point.

31 MFtrector, good
good
rubt., nlcawlth KfiPW .,..,.,
•2995. MF Dyn•·bounct

Plll"f, wv•. 304-937-2018.

\WI

lnc:kJdatEF AP
.., d
deliver uwduat. 3 4-773·

mower, •e95. M F rlka 1 19&amp;.

h•l

oorn.

e2s.oo.

Mar~··

Owner is reloc1tin1 and anxious to sell this 3 BR
bungalow on 9 acs. m/1 in the C1nterpoint ar1a and

1979 Tr1n1 AM . E.::el. ahepe.

CompltteiV redone. New !)lint,
1lu m. wheels. f'HWV tire~. Super
sh•P· C1ll 814-246-9480.

WoodMd

Fo""· Rt. 35, PinY. w.vo. 8,oo
tNI 12:00 Mon-511, 304-937-

ciA~~~~~t~Colllege.

GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vehlcl• from e100. Fordl, Mer·

2018.

corn. Allo. win su

- -

cedtl. Corvettes, Chwyt. Surplua . Buyera Guide. 111

805-887·6000. Ext. S-10189.

5332. 8:00 dl 1:00 AM .

REALTY

CONNIE R. WALKER·BRO«ER

Real Estate General

Real Eatate G8neral

[H

·

d.n.

Real Estate General

PS.

PB, air,

1980 Mozdo RX7. 814-9927041.

..

1181 Iuick limited. BeautilJI
car. Fully equipped. New tir•.
VI engine, $2796. 614-992·

8719. .

19" Niaaan Mu:ima Gl. Many

•traalnctuding electricsun roof
lind l.lllaecurtty l'p'rilwn. 80. 000
mila, *8000. CaN 614-992·
3710 after 5:()0p.m.

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1:00· 4:30

1:00-4:30

19"3 Chtvy Mellltl.t station·
wagon. t3.600.00. Phone 304-

875-4410.

.

.

1977 Ford Grenad&amp; v....,. good
conct. llmost new. 351 W
engine. e700.00. 304-882-

PIMtiC letters (hll1 Prlct)
147.10. Off•
Nov. I,

•plr•
WV 1-IID0-142·2434. Ohio 1-

1911 Buidr; Le S.lre. one
owntf. exc cond. t3.&amp;00.00.

MODERN A-FRAIIE on 0.69 acre. 3
balhs, new deck. sunroom. lireplace, spacious krtchen wrth lois of cabinets and
appliances stay. All this sets among lovely hills,
farm land and lrurt &amp; nut trees. Perlect lor be~n­
ners, rel1rees or a weekend retreat. Priced right al
$27.000.
#802
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

NEW LISTING! Are You Tired of Paying Your Hard
Earned Dollars to the Utilrty Company? Well check
out this energy-miser home! 3 large bedrooms 3
full baths, lovely oak krtchen with breakfast bar,
master bedroom and bath on 1st floor, huge living
room. Over sized garage wilh door opener. Quality
built and ready for your inspection. $59,500.
#808
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1:00-4:30

1:00-4 :30

TIRED OF PAYING RENT? Th1s may be the house
lor you!! Attractive 3 bedroom home located in the
city school district. Hou se includes fenced
backyard, covered patio, living room. cozy family
room wrth woodburner, utility room and all appliances are included. priced to sell at $33.500. Call
us today lor an appointment.
#601
OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY

1:00-4:30

;l: .

Htll Aold. Henderaon. W. Va.
Mondr;' Oc:t. 31 thru . Nov 4,
10:00 .,. to 4:00 pm. 12 in
·
blocb.
bod.
usedu,.
locust hoopltol
poet. cenning
miChlne.

76

1..-n

~•. a• ....... hoilt. otd

c... VW and Hondll p ....
m.W ..-*obe. picnic t•bl ..

QUALITY HOME IN TOWN - Unusual lo lind
home in town in classic condrtion. No remodeling
necessary. This 2 story brick is modern in every
way. Includes a formal entry, large living room
wrth fireplace, formal dinin~ equipped krtchen
and breakfast area, 3 bedrooms. I 'h baths plus
commode in basement, den, lull basement, 2car
garage plus carport. Lovely fenced back yard wrth
stainless steel/concrete in~round pool. New insulated windows, new .roof, 15 inch insulation in
attic. Thi s is a very tight, warm. low maintenance
home in an excellent location I block lrom the
par~ 4 or 5 blocks to school (no more taxi-cabbing lor mom). You'll seldom have the opportun~y
lo buy a home like this.
#109
&lt;JfFICE OPEN SUNDAY

8UOOET TRANSMISSION rebuilt 111 tvP" ·
w......,.30 day•. Pricee •9.9 &amp;

Used &amp;

1988 Y•mllha yz eo.

up. Uud &amp; t1lbu Itt torgue
convertera. SUrul•d ctutch81.
pr•sure pi•-. &amp; throw out

•aso.

1976 Honda OoldNing. 1.000

cc. lob af 1111tras, t1,200.00,
•c QJnd. 304-875-4210.

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale ·

be•lng. Werrantv-12 moa. CVC
joints-all typea. C1ll 814-379--

2220"' 304-671-8768.

&amp; B~ Rally· type wheels 1or full

size car. 15 inch. Call 814-949-

2780.

304-175-3030 ....5-4232 . .

55 Building Supplie1

..

end "'"'"od t., Siding

a--•

• DeckMMeriall

Qulllltv
CETIDE, INC .. Athena-814184-3571
Stttlluildlnga;. Mu11..n 2 from
CMaelilllon. brand new, nww
erected. WRI ael 1or balance•
-·
4044.

Colt Don

56

1-BOG-527-

Pats .for Sale

· Groom end SuppJv Shop-Ptt
Grooming. All braeda ... AII
stylel. lems '-! Food Deal•.
June Webb Ph. 1114-. .1-0231 .

Oregonwynd Cattery Ktr1 MI.

CFA P. .l.. lr'ld SiiiTI•t kit·
1ena. AKC Chow pupDi•· Ntw
Himlll't'lll ldtttna. C.ll 814-4.g..3844afi•7PM .

Full blooded PDm•lrtiM pupt. I
wko. dd. t100ooch. Coli oft• 5

PM. &amp;14-379-2103.

Beegl• pvpe. Atao 6 y.. old
iwlale Be.gla C.ll 814-441-

2724.

Am•lcen Elldmolptu puppi•.

B wko. old. 2 fomol•·pu-od.
no ..,... Cllll814a992-2073.

UKC Ch.-npion bred R•dbone
pupl. 12 wka. old. t125 eeeh.
AM mal•. 814-887-1671.
AKC regiiiMftcl Collie. L..sie
type. t '1 00. 0111 Junie Beegle

114-143-5315.

AKC NIQiet•ed Slberl~n HuakeV
........ 4 old, both

.,.,.,.. c•

bt ,...,,

304-175-5800.

ezoo.oo.

AKC regttt.,td t.mlle 8hgle,
11 monthl old. not trained,
tiO.OQ. 30!0-171-8884.

AKC roglot- Codl.. Sponlol
tor ltUd s.vlct (Buff}, call
304-871-1559.

NEW LISTING - Just minutes from town. This
home offers 4 bedr0001s, living room, large eat-in
krtchen plus I bath. Enclosed porch, utility build·
ing on \; acre. more or less for only $42,500. City
schools.
#707
IN TOWN LOCATION - Very nice 3 bedroom
home that has been well maintainoo. lncludes nicely remodeled bath, living room, family room &amp;
nice eat-in kitchen. Fenced back yard lor kids.
Good neighborhood. Mid $40's.
#200

WHO COULD ASK FOR ANYTHING Mnii~
has moved to Florida and desires an iirrlffif!jjiate
sale of this outstanding home and 10 acres. i
12 yr. old qualrty home has 2700 sq. II. olliving
space which 1ndudes 4 bedrooms. family room
with woodburner. huge ground level rec. room,
wife approved kitchen (all appliances stay along
wrth a pool table:and grand p1ano), large inground
pool. Also leatures an outstanding 40160 2 story
garag~ The 10 acres is a flat to gently rolling meadow located in the city school district·near Rio
Grande on a state highway. Not many like this on
today's market. $ll9,500.
·
#101

. ONLY 7 MILES FROM CITY. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths.
2 story home wrthin walking distance to school.
Two large storage buildings, picnic shelter &amp; satellite dish. Nice quiet setting on .606 acre. listed a!
$58.900.
#704
MAINTENANCE FREE RANCH ready for you to
move inlo. 3 bedrooms, I bath, large kitchen and
dining room . Thermopane windows and attched
insulated g arag~ Level lot. nice yard lor Ihe kids.
Your opportunity at $38,000.
#801
19V, ,M/1, BEAUTIFUL ROLLING ACRES near Rio
Grande. natural spring on property. Approximately 640 lbs. tobacco base. Several wooded acres;
septic and county water established on property.
Build or put a mobile home here! ·
#805
OUTSTANDING GENTUMAN'S FARM - Very
well cared lor 3 bedroom home on 10 perfectly
flat acres. Includes 30•60 barn. 24128 2 story
garage, 15xl5 shed wrth tack room . Home offers
1'h baths, liv ing room, nice eat-in krtchen and partial basement. Good fences. Green Township. Call
lor details. ·.
··

#203

SLIMMED DOWN PRICE.. .$4,000 reduction
makes this ran ch lrte on your budget. Mot ivated
owner wants lo sell this 3 bedroom, 2 bath.home
NOW! Fireplace in livingroom. dining room, 2 car
· garage. Heat. pump, new carpet throughout.
$55,500 Interested ?Call todayl
#104
SPRUCE STREET EXTENSION - Jusllisled this
spacious 3-5 bedrQJllll home (including a 10128
unfinished room), 21; baths, living room wrth fireplace and cathedral ceil in~ lots of closets, and a
screened-in porch overlooking a wooded area.
Large lot provides privacy. $65,000.
#405

SPECTACUlAR STONE &amp; CEDAR- Rarely do we
have such a sensational residence to offer for
sale. A dream home priced well under today' s
construction cost. This outstanding 8 yr. old home
is located in city school district on a den sely
wooded picturesque 5 acre tract. When you lour
Ihis 2400 sq. II. of elegant living space, your heart
will skip a beat. Included is is asensatinal kitchen
wrth all quality appliances plus pantry. Family
room with fireplace and wooded view provided by
Andersen lhermopane windows. Formal dining
wilh vaulted ceilings and huge cork stone wal l
wilh see through fireplace. Slep down living room.
formal entry, 3 ~ gleaming bathrooms.The master
bedroom is 1Bxl9 with bath and patio doors to a
private sundeck. You will nol see amore pleasing
party or rec. room . This largearea has solid, select
cedar walls. expensive new. carpet, a built-in bar
wrth h/c water, patio doors to groond level and
back deck. Outside you will fi nd flower beds and
shrubbery gardens of prolessional qualrty which
succeed in helping make lhis the outstanding
property for sale in Gallia County. Owner is anxious to sell and has priced it below rts lair market
value. We want to show you this breathtaking
and are waiting your call! ·

#110

Are you in the dark about what to do when it
comes to buy inc or selling a house? We make
it our business to clear the air and shad some
li&amp;ltt on your rasl estate probl1ms.
QUALITY'BRICK RANCH with lull basement in a
family neighborhood. Tell me more! 4 bedrooms,
I ~ baths, living room and huge lamily room, eatin kitchen with nice cabinets and all appliances
stay. Morel Big indoor workshop for your handyman. More! City schools. Morel 5 year old roof and
central air. Priced to give You MORE at $52,000.
#803
ARE YOU SERIOUS ABOUT BUYING A HOME?
Here is a home that will fill all you1 requirements.
4 bedroom brick and cedar tr&gt;level that includes
formal dining wrth woodburningfireplace, kitchen
wrth all appliances and snack bar, 2'h gleaming
baths, lots closets, large family room with woodburning lireplace with private bar room. Nice carpeting and Bruce hardwood lloors. 2 car garage, 3
level sundeck, large in-ground pool and large
shady landscaped lot. One o! the best locations in
town. Children walk to school yet it's in a low traffic, quiet, peaceful neighborhood. $109,900.
#102

INVESTMENT PROPERTY - Rt. 35 Frontage with a lola I ol27.76 acres, lh1s is the largest tract
of vacant land in the Village of Rio Grande, ideal
for a housing development or olher bu sin ess. All
utilities availabl ~ Property mcludes rental income from 2 established bu sin esses located in
I he 7 room, 2 bath home with an allached addition. Call lor more details.
#403
EXCELLENT RUSIN ESS LOCATION - Its located
in high tralfic area on St. Rt. 7 wrth 80' frontage
and 180' deep. Includes a residence with 2 or 3
bedrooms and 2 mobile homes. Present tenants
are paying $500 a month. Full asking price $29,500.

#113

NEWLYWEDS, SINGLES, RENTERS. RETIREES!
Your Attention Please! Immaculate. top-quality
mobile home with the lurnishin gs included. Beautilul eat-in kitchen with bay window and ALL appliances. Lar ge living room wrth 8ll2 e~pando, 2
bedrooms. large bath; washer and dryer stay too!
2·1arge covered decks. Has central heat/air and
insulated well. Life is lookin g up lor you! $17,000.
buys it ALU

.,

AK C regiet•ed llberi.-. Huak.,.
,.,,..., 2 mila 3 femll•.

#304

~...,.

-114-992·8198

-

PROFITABLE BUSINESS FOR SALE - Tired ol a
dead end job? Do you want to control your own future? This could be a busines s opportunrty lor the
right person. Owner needs to sell this successlul
business in order to e1pand olher bu siness ventures. If you are am bilious, hard working and want
to.be your own bo s~ give us a call today for deta~ls. Owner may cons1 der .2_ome fi nancing lo a
quallhed person.
·
11602

..

LOTS FOR SALE IN SUNKIST SUBDIVISION- 2
lots side by side each 961177. Just off Rt. 35 in
quality neoghborhood. Electric and water on property. $4;000 each.
#202
NICE STARTER HOME- Cheshire area ranch offers 3 bedrooms, I bath, family room, livingroom.
Situated on 2.42 acres. Ow ner anxious to sell.
$20,000.
.
. #702

We Nee4 Listings!

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
B. J. Hairston, 446-4240
Phyllis Miller, 446-8346

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Oafllpob, Ohio
Phone 814-.44$.3888 or 1114--

445-4477

304-578-2919.
J &amp; ·J Wrtuw Servk:e. Swimming
p)Oia. c..t•ns. wella. Ph . 814-

245-9285.

A &amp; R Wri.• s....,lce. Pools,

cisterna, wells . lmmediat•
1.000 or 2,000galonade1Wery.

87

Upholstery

Mowrev'a Uphollt•ing aerv ! 1
tri c:ountvlfea 23ye••· Thet.'t

In furnh:ure upholn:.-ing. C.ll
3 04 - 8715 ~ 41 54 for ., ..

ettlm• • ·

lmprovementl
BASEMENT

WATERPROORNG

UnooncltloMI U-lme ..,..,.,_
tM. Local ,.,• .,.,_ furniahed.
Fret ettlmM•. ,, Cell coiled
1 · 814-237-0488. d-'1 or night.

RogtrtBssemtnt
. •

~'!'•proofing.

SWEEPER .,d IIWing mechine
repP, J*tt. atd •uppll•. Pldt
up and deUv.-y, OliVia Vaa~um
Clt~ner, one hlf mile up

o.o •.,.. c - Rd. Coli 514445-0294.

Canm-ete Septic T1n U · 1000
gill., 1100gll. andJet:Aer.tktn
ayttern. F•ctory trlllned repM

ohop. RON EVANS ENTERPRISES. J.ckson, Ohio. 1-BOG-

637-9628.

RON EVANS ENTERPRISES·
Septic tMk JK'mo&gt;inlt 190 pw
loed. Ca111-800-ll37-91128.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Make-up of

.'

a

19 Continued stories

20 Drinking
establishment

~·
'

$8.000 PRICE CUTI!!
OWNERS WANT IT SOLDI!
SUPER IN TOWN LOCATION!
Very attractive 2 slory home on 3rd Avenue. I! block from
grad eschool and high school &amp; shopping. 3 bedrooms. formal e.ntunce wilh attractive open stairway. Large liv ing
room. din ing room. eat-in kitchen. Off street parking. Pnced
lo·selllast at $61.900.
#
210

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE
Phone 446-7699 or 446-9439

ACTIONS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORD!!
Just reduced $3,000! Immaculate 2 bedroom home offers
large living room, modern krtchen. ut~rty area, extra room.
could be used 1or office. nursery or sewing room . Garage
with 2nd story for storage. Large, II al lot. Unequalled value at
$35,900. Come make the buy of the century!
#IOO

21 Tattered cloth
22 Egg dishes
24 "(loodnight"
girl
25 Ne-yiD
27 Sun god
28 A. E. - . 0 , 29 Therefore
30 Charge 1he
account of

31 Antlenld animal
32 Jog
34 2,000 lbs.
36 Rational
38 SLib11e emana11on
39 Young goat
40 Teu1onlc del1y
. 41 Giving account ol
44 Xenon symbol

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE
446-3644

Real Estate General

46 Cycle prefix
47 ~uplno ID
48 Spanish queen
49 Deface
50 Caviar
51 Sob
53- garde
54 Neon symbol
55 Tissues
surrounding

57
59
60
61
62
64
66

REALTY

tee1h
Actor ~owe
Ordinance
~ease

ShoreiD
~ethargy

Unadorned
Spin

68 In ravor of

LISTING - · Eastern District- Spacious livin~ wrth
. privacy on a Dead End road. Large home wilh 4 bedrooms.
i room.d1mng raom,liiing room with fireplace, nice
krtchen cabinets. Many other ni ce leatures. Call lor an appointment. $38,500.00.
MEW LISTING - Pearl Stell - Middleport - A nice
1Ax65 mob1l e home in beautiful condition. New lronl deck
and screened rear porch. New carpet. vinyl, paneling and
ceiling fans. Storage building and cham link lenced yard.
Nothing to do but move in. $27,000.00.
RIGGS CREST SUBDIVISION- Really nice home! 4-5 bedrooms 1n e1cellent condition. Garage, nice lol. W.B. hook-~p.
Many extras! A must to see. REDUCED TO $47,000.00.
CARPENTER - Nice double wid e sitting on 1.86 acres ma
country sett in~ 1\1 car garaga deck. equipped krtchen.
·fenced yard. ONLY $32,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Really nice older home in town. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. full basement,! car garage and a"'ce big lot.
OWNER WANTS AN OFFER! $45,000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - 2 un it brick apartment bu ildin g in town.
Garage. A/C unrts. good rental mcome. Close to shoppmg.
$28,900.00.
POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED - Beautiful view of the
Ohio River! 2 story home features 3 bedrms. full basement, .
I \I baths. attic area. garage On ly $17,900.00.
RUTlAND- Nice ra nch type home on alevel lot. 3 bdrms..
equ ipped kitchen. close to schools. All in good condition. ASSUMABLE LOAN! Ask lor details. $29.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - PRICE REDUCED - Beautilul colonial
home! Level lot. 2 car garage. has ornate lrim, attic studio
w/ skylighl. Well insulated! Only $57,500.00.

ST. RT 338 - River front property with a 2 bedroom cabin.
Full basement. 'sun porch, metal building approx. 42'x30'.
·ASKING $27,900.00.

'

rat•. volurM disto 4, 000 CIPII&gt;
hy, clatern~, pooll. wells, etc.

counts. 2,000

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PWMBINO
AN 0 HEATING

Watterson' a Waur H1u11ng.

re•o~e

Horne

B1

10 Split - soup .
t3 Tolls

••.

Glll)eral Hauling

Real Estate General

Complete set of louven tor
EICOrt or Lynx, 2 dr. lily I• t75.
Siat h• aide &amp; r ... kJuven. Call
814-448-8332 anytime.

POMEROY- Abeautiful mod ern kitchen compliments lhis 3
bedroom home. Full basement, newer back deck, lot s o! closet spac e. N1ce woodwork! PRICE REDUCED $41,900.00.

E. M., WisemQn, Broker
David Wiseman, 446-3~96
Pat Robie, 379-2288
Rae Bee•ley, 446-8126

'103

HALF THE SIZE, BUT TWICE AS NICE! For the
sma ll lamily that wants something special. Nothing to do but move' in and rela1 . This home p1acti·
cally takes care ol rtself. Located in Rutland Township, Mei gs County, and priced in the $50's.
#503

(614}. 446-3644

Musical

lnltrllments

•I'WIIii&amp;

Hard to Believe? Ideal home
for the particular person. Over 1600 sq. h. olliving space with 3bedrooms. very nicety remodeled
house. TV room &amp; attrnctive living room w~h
woodburning fireplace and bay window. Outstanding oak kitchen any cook would love, and lull
basement. Owner has gone to great lengths to put
th1s home in perfect condition. New wirin&amp; roof.
kitchen, bath ... the list goes on and on. Maintenance free siding, fenced yard lor kids &amp; dogs.
Much more. Give us a call, we really do have a
cream puff' $60's.
.
H218
QUALITY LOCATION- 1st Avenue View! ~xcep­
tlonally good condition. Owner has spent alon o!
money and alot of ris lime making improvements.
I was really surpnsed at how nice it is and it is
much la~ger than I e1pected. To appreciate the
des1rab1lity of th1s home, you must view the inside. This professionally decorated home includes
a very pretty living room, formal dinin&amp; nice
krtchen wrth appliances, family room. den and 3
or 4 bedroom s. Master bedroom has connecting
study. Screened porch with river view. Price has
been reduced to $89,900. Driving by will not do
you must see the inside.
'

85

Auto Parte

NICE HOMELESS THAN 10 MIN. DRIVE TO GALLIPOLIS
APPROX. 2 ACRES
8 Rooms, 4 bedrooms. fenced in yard. Nat. gas for cooking
and heatin~ Nice front porch, modern krtchen with dishwa sher and lois of cabinets. You must see this ~orne before
)'IIU buy. Priced at ONLY '49,900.00.
#674

WISEMAN REAl ESTATE

tZOO.DO - ·Phone 304-578·
2413 ooh fO&lt; J.,nlfo&lt;.

Sn•t drum UOO, TNrnpM
•110. loth «CIIIen. conciUon.

#807

OUT-OF-STATE OWNER IN A BIND!! Mu st let this
3 bedroom brick and frame ranch &amp;o NOW! 2
baths. family room. fireplace, nice flat I acre lot
Possible VA loa_n assumption. $57.600. Pick up
that phone and' call TODAY!!

Be...e pup.. 304-875-2075.

57

5:00p.m .. 814-742-2304

814-.UI-4088 . •

deOOI'Itlng. 25. yra. •perlence.

Serv tce ~

pu bllca11on

'•

Patr1dl'a Wit• Hauling. 2. 000
gal delivery. 304-57&amp;-2311 or

Coli 304-875-8370.

7 Solemn wonder

.

WHI do 11nd bt . . lng. IP"8V
'*ntlng, lnt•ior &amp; lkterior

&amp; Accessories

num. houNhold lttml, some
dot• .,d ahOel. lunk.

' Chennel Ruatlc

1982 Holiday Rambler 31 ft.
cemper trailer for •le· •92110.
1978 H~tllft' law.1..Rid.-. 9000
actual milea. nouo. Call eft•

General Hauling

dolilflfY. Coli 514-992-1275.

82

HP Mwwry motor It trollr

rotodll•. c• '*'I•. trail•
1remH. fertlllztr aprHdar.
clot.... line poth. IICtiP ..., ml-

111 llodl Co.. 123\0 Plno St..
Oolllpolo, Ohio. Coli 114-4452713.
WEITI!RN RED CEDAR

1978 Dodge Motor Home, 22
it., aleeps 8, roof elr. elec.
hook-up, batter;, v•. 3•.ooo
, orginlel mil•. Excel. cond..
U&amp;OO. firm. Call 814-4489421 or 446-7441 .

85

WM• dehverv . 1000 Olilona.
FteMonlbte prioa~. lmmtdae

8344.

304-875-7121.

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers·

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration

Fr• .tm.t:... Cal 814-4411-

RotMy or c.ble tool G-lling."
M011 wtla complelldsame dWf.
PUmp •I" .nd a.-vice. 304-

Removal. Free _..,..... Cal

84

P,8inting: lnt•kw &amp; Exterior.

........1. Coli 304-175-1331.

16 ft. out bo•d. new trill«. 30

76

Horna
lmprovaments

Coli 814-245-8097.

:r

Auto Parts

ttump

Ak•• Tr" Trimrftng .-.d Stump

-

&amp; Accessories

1:0(1·4:30

rol • wey ...., cWumlctffl•.

Corter••
blocks· all alzM- 'P'd
or'daftvery. M•onaend. Oelllpo-

I

74 Motorcycles
614-992·6349.

Feny Trtt Trlml'1ing.

houae caU ..rvk:lng GE. l:iol
Point, Wllhert. dryera and
stuv... 304-878-2398.

"Guilty, Your Honor. And we 1d like a percentage of the
TV rights!"

week.,dl.

2211.

100-533-3413.

IIWing

·n

Chl!llly Surl:lurbwl, 4 wheel
drive, 11,400.00 . . 304-87.58159after 6:00PM a1Vtime on

304-175-2318 .. 814-4452454.

4 b•• aeat•. t 1800. Call
;a MU8tan 9. Nice. • cvt •aoo. motor,
114-387·0261.
304-875-2467.

Signa. portable hlghted
1219.00. F,... IMt. .dtUverv.

)...

_/

RON :S Telwlaion Sendee.
Hou• calla on RCA. Ou•z•r.
GE. llpecl.. ing In Zenit:r,. Call

895-3102
RON'S APPUANC£ SERVICE,

.

AM-FM .

'2400. Call 814-992·2208.

378 E.IIAIN STREET
JACKSON. OHIO 45640
TELE.: (614) 286:5061.

1141.00. Fr• ahippina. WVa

812-3205.
SALE OrlldV t.ma .. 68-1. Jim

1

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

114-992·7328.

ll
I

1982 Cutl•s Cl.-a luury Se -

1---142-2434. Ohio -1 -1100133-3413 ..,......

cu.hlon couch .U O.OO. 30+

•11.000.

1987 &amp;'ronco. Auto.,. 0.0 .
Bench ,..... alfver-blue, lt11
lhM 7500 mil•. like nM

injeeted. 5 speed. Both •cetlent
condition. Cell 814- 742· 2676.

lng .47.50. Fl11hing chMgN- '
ble ltttw window atgn 199.00.
lkNwelk curbtr with tatt. .

"-01n d6nnat tibia. 31ew•lnd
e ch.n. 1100.00. Long thr•

t ntedl trana. 304-8?5-.1269.

81

&amp; Campers

I.
II t.-

1971GMCtruck.4-fwd. ps. pb,
tilt wheel, 400C.I .P. Eng. pW&amp;

1980 Honde Accord LX . 6 apd ..
AC . Oood cond. Call 814-379-

1981iblleZ·28. 305aolo. 1988
Nluan Bt111ze . 4 eyl. , fuet

------------~~~~~--------~--~~~~~~------------~~~===-----------

e.,.n..:VIdeo lrtdQrandOplft-

{

1980 Ford pick up, lflndwd. S
• v1. tul\l good. •1.800.00.
3 0 4-678-2941 .

PS. AC. cruile. Good cond'rtion:

2798.

71 Auto's ·For Sale

100. Premklm Alfllhl •3.00.
Strew e1.50. Round b•l•

c

1978JeepCJ6. New- lop, oth•
ertr~ · .. low mileage. v.-, good
lhape. f28DO. 814-992·2859
or 1514-992· 6888,

73

79 Motors Homes

LAFF-A·DAY

1984 Dodge D· 50 4•C. 1914
Ford v.,. 1988 Toyota PU.
19?9 GMC PU. B &amp; 0 Motor1,
Hwv. 180, 4 m il. n. of Holzer~.
C
Col( 814-445-8886.

1988 BJOnoo 2 XL 4x4. StandWd. PS.' PB. mlflY moretxtrl'a.
9000mlle~. 814·843-5183.

f600. Colll14-445-1328 . ..•.

1ransporlolion

GroUnd shell corn fi.OO per

Trucks for Sale

1978 Chryal.- le8aron. 1987 - - - - - - - - - Ch..-y convertible. Cell 8141988 Ptvmouth vovag• se.
448-9219.
low mil•. AT. AC. Cr\(.lte.
1974CCKVetteStrjngriV, E)Cel. AM ·FM atereo. CUllom atl'fpt1
oond. AC., t-t~p. st.-eo. $7160. and running bo•ds. •99915.
obo. Call 814-448-8300.
c.tt~ 814-. . 8-9421 Of 4487 •• 1.

700

2309.
~

1879 Mtro.try Bobea. Auto .• •
PS, AC. AM -FM tttreo· CIII.
Auns good. Good Cond. •750.

1974 Ford. V-8, LTD, 4 dr., AT

61 Farm Equipment

Hoft.,d 258 boler. IIH.
Coll814-285- Owner wil ffnMce. Call 1142B8-85U

w.-m Morning wood burnn,g
•ove. goodooncl. •210.00. Call

Ktnmor.PGf'lllbledll:hwMh.-. 7
cycl&amp; H.ve.t Gold. • yn Did.
•c ... nd. 111.00. 304-175-

445-9278.

3008.

(Nov. Doc 7 dooo). Som
lonwvtfl1'1. IEMt·RIVIMWood
Junction lndlpMdlna. Road,

oft• 4:00PM. 304-875-1670.

SOmWiet. 1983 MIH'rury Gran
Marquis. 47,000ml. 1986Ch..,
Cit•lon. 1984 Buick t.Sabr e.
1984 POmlae Bonn. 1994 Pontile GP , 30,000 mi. 1985
Pontile Sunbird. 2 df. 1986
Cavill.-. 19788Wdl: SW. 19 76
Ford Mtvrick. 1981 Subaru 4
WD.
D Motora-Hwy. 180, 4
mls. n. ·of Hol.ten, 614-448-

"Could you hijack us to New Zealand
Instead? I only need 12,000 miles for
· a free tjcket. "

II yr. old
Geldino Good
looldng. No bMI htlbftl, Come
•nd ride him. Call 814-992-

Surplul •rmy c.mou,._, ge. ._

oond. 1471. DO. 304-171-748&amp;.

1984 M"'""'l Too• GS . PS,
PB, N . AM -FM. &amp;15. 000 mlee . ...
t2700. C.lt 81"""11-0212 or ""

••I

814-HZ·83Q.

•uc:t Stave. medium u..a. •c

·

8885. .

G~ntey H.. f• tr•...,fng In
10 dl\'1. Wi1h IIICQnd calf.
Oen
dllpotiUon. tNt a IPprox. 1100 n.. Good conflr,...
t5on. e8180. c.II814-24&amp;-MI4.

to 5I h pul. 1 doztn *"OWl
equlpged for tainting. t125.

end ..,••••. Cl" Aq&amp;M Ttch..

C ad . Flettwood
Brougham, nice. 1984 Ch...,
C.,• o. red. 1985 Oldl. cU:
tlaU . 2 dr . 1985 Buick

1500. Coli 114-357-7455.

len Pe.-.on compound bow. 35

buy clrect from mtnUfacturw

K~n .. 911.

Holid8V·Inn.

1983

&lt;

II Chi· A1911 Club cllvH. UB0-

5p.m. 814-112-5188.

lit. 21. 1 - hi( lnoulotod
aov..n. •27.10.
304-273-11155.

billow

72

1977 OodgeChag• fot U5Q.
C.. lll14-446-8467,
•

1981 Dodge tOO. arto.. air.
AM-FM. niW tlret. Cash price.
•4199. John's Auto Sal•·

Real Estate General

H.a .,., ol fwnlce wtth wll
ther........ 11&amp;0. C.ll aft•

old

71 Auto's For Sale

1980 VW Rabbll. Wreehd. C.ll
814-445-0275 oft• 8 PM .

Sunday

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

-·

Liveatock

fiKtU,. f21. commode. t21.
both ....

71 Auto's For Sale

71 Auto's For Sale

,.._. 11500. 514-742·2120.

Jllart ...• lltMr crib with mill·

Hao.-ct .....,.

30. 1988

SNAFUII by Bnce Beattie

61 F.-m Equipment

,.,_..d_,.....,.,.,
tr-. UO.

October 30. 1988

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

: POMEROY - Appro1. 27 acres olvacantground close to Po·
meroy. Beautiful site lor that special home! $16,500.00.
POMEROY - Older 2 story home. gorgeous woodwork, fireplace. nice kitchen cabinets. 3 bdrms.. equipped kitchen.
central air. garage and storage. $39,900.00.

---

JUST RIG Iff FOR THE BIG FAMILY - 4 bedroom homes~­
ting on approx. 6.47 acres of ground. Nice big dining room,
carport. family room and much more! ONLY $29,000.00.
RUTlAND - Cute l"tle 1 story home in town. 3 bedrooms,
utility room, carport. Walking distance to everything! Needs
some work. $19,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Garage apartment. 2 bedrooms. Close to
park and pool. $12,500.00.
•
LONG BOTTOM- Cabin alonglhe riverin a great location. 1
acre of ground, fully furnished. river bank use, TPC water
and much more. ONLY $19,900.00. .
CHESTER AREA - Vacant ~nd. Approx. 20 acres lo bu ildon
or would make great hunting site.ONLY $10,000.00.
POMEROY - Here is a business ready to go. Crans of al l
kinds. stock and equipment and an operating bu siness. Keep
this loc at ion or move to your own! .Call for dela1ls.
TUPPERS PIAl NS- Very neat 3 bedr oom ranch with an atta ched garage. 1 aCie of ground . FMHA approved.
$39.000.00
ROCK SPRINGS RD. - Aprro• . 80 wes of vacant ground.
Appro•. 20 acres tillable. AI minerals. wat!l' and elec. ava1la·
ble. Good hunting land. $29,000.DO.
.
NEW LISTING - PORTlAND - Have you been thinking
about buying a trailer, but don't want the hassel ol setting " ·
up, buying the land and all the other headaches that go wrth
it' Well here is the answer! 20 acres of land w~h a 1981
14x70 trailer. Everything is done lor yoo. Move in, prop your
feet up and turn the kids loose. Sellmg Price $22,900.00.
· NEW LISTING - POMEROY - Frame house with upper and
lower one bedroom apartments. Good rental investment!
$300.00/mo. potential income. REDUCED $12.000.00.
NEW LISTING- Salem Twp.- Appr . 50 acres of vacant
land, immediate possession. Old dug w I. minerals. no coal.
Selling Price $18,000.00.
HENRY E. CLEIAND ....................................... 992-6191
JEAii TRUSSELL... ... ...................................... 94!1-Z660
DOTTIE TURNER ...........................................!992-5692
TRACY RIFFLE ............................................... 949-2807
JO HILL ...... .................................................. 915-4-466
OFFICE ......................................................... 992-2259
NEW LISTINGS NEEDED - We have buyers lor lleip
County Property. list wHh us lor best muks.

70 Walt - Disney
72 Goal
73 Star1
74 Witty remark
77 Ventlla1e
78 Thoughtful
80 Its capital Is
Reykjavik
82 Animal's foQI
83 Young sheep
85 ~awmaking body
86 Harmonizing
87 Choir voice

88

~amprey

90 Always: poellc
91 Those holding
office
. 92 Time gone by
93 Needed
96 Clever
99 Rant
101 Supplicated
104 In music, high
105 lndefinl1e
number

107
108
109
110
111

Expire
Ms. Jlllian
Bird of prey
AC1or Wallach
Born

112 River duck

114 Swll1
116 Small rugs
117 Shade tree

118 Fulflll
120 Real estate map
122 Mire
t 23 Drinks slowly
124 Exists
125 Paid notice
127 French article
129 Fabricators
131 Small fish
133 Word of approval
134 Q-T linkup
136 Again : prefiK
137 Bespatter
139 Scheduled
140 Irritate

141 Take to court
142 McMahon ID
143 Mature
145 Paving substance
147 Wander abOut

Idly: colloq.
151 Ship channel
152 Japanese sash
153 Unruly child
155 Chinese pagoda
157 Sinned
158 Arid
159 Accomplishment
160 - Brea tar pl1s
161 Supposing 1ha1
163 Turkish decree
165 Eagle's nesl
167 Spanish ar11cle
168 Tellurium symbol
169 aoman oHlcial

111 Wooden shoe
172 Motive
173 Domesticates

175 Heraldry: grafted
176 Expunge
177 Choose
178 The sweetsop

84 "You - Your

DOWN
1 Productive
2 Mountain nymph

3 Ar11cle of
jewelry

4 Ac1ress Wes1
5 Baseballleag .
6 Peter or Ivan, e.g .

7 Hebrew month
8 Armed conflict

9 Muse of poetry
10 Publish
11 -

de cologne

12 Sliver symbol
13 Diving bird
14 Early mom
15 Plot of land
16 Genus of olives

17 Contradlc1
18 Mixed
19 Small linch
23 Blemishes
26 Wend1 role on
''Cheers''

29 Wise person

32
33
35
36

S1amps upon
Rip
El1her
- White and the
Seven Dwarfs

37 Exhilarating
40 Habituates

42 Support
43 Tehran's country
45 Messenger 's duty

48 The self
52 Sllll
56 Evening par1y
58 Having one's
interest dulled

59 Boundary
60 Belonging 10
"Crocodile
Dundee" slar

62 Distressed

63 Showered
65 Three-1oed
slo1h
66 Cover Inside

of again
67 W&amp;ge eqrner s

68 Crony: colloq.
69 lnle1
71 Floated In air

73 Favorable
75 Grain
76 Couple
79 Guido's low
note

81 Copper symbol

Life"
87 Mohammedan

11tle
89 Direction

92 Curved lines
93 Pale
94 Tavern stock

95 Profound

97 Evergreen tre(
98 Athletic groups

99 Forays
,00 In addition
101 Cooking vessels
102 Cloth measure

103 Obscure
106 " - Street"

!Douglas/Sheen
film)
109 Transported
wl1h delight
11 3 Buried
1, 5 Plutonium symbol

116 Dairy produc1
119 Ancient
121 Tense

123 Wl1hered
124 DOE
125 Fi1 for plowing
126 Corrupt
128 Dine
130 Altar screen
132 Distribu1e
wrongly

133 Away
134 Refunds
135 Strikes

138 Flying mammal
,41 Declare
144 Babylonian deity
146 Lil1

148 Rugged mountain
crest

149 Nega11ve prefix
150 " War and -"
151 Welcome ·
152 Faroe Islands
wh irlw ind

154 Tip
156 Sandarac tree

158 Phonograph
record

159 ~ eve l
162 Toll
164 Arabian garment

166 Regret
167 Airline inlo.

170 At home
174 Myself

�...

•

~

.. -

-------P.ge-D-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport

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

October 30, 1988

Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Livestock produeers should . choose their feed carefully · ·
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) _
Livestock producers should
.
·

choose their feed carefully this
fall because this year's crops

Farm Flashes .

·cos·tIy
.
8 a d reports
·

could be contaminated by alia·
toxin, specialists at Ohio State
University say .
Aflatoxin is produced by a
mold that grows prlmarlly on
corn. Weather conditions were
right this summer fo r aflatoxin to
be produced, and a few cases
have cropped up In the Midwest.
Dairy specialist Maurice East·
ridge §ays two main concer ns
with aflatoxin are Its effec~ on
animals and the possibility of it
getting Into human food.
-

By Edward M . VoUborn
County Extension Agent,
Acrlcultufe II CNRD
GALLIPOLIS- Bad reporting
In the last live years will cost
Gallla County farmers thousands
of dollars in 1988, The State ASC
committee Statistical Reporting
Service data have established
county yields for mixed hay at.
1.95-tons per acre as normal. The
1.95 tons per acre normal was
calculated by dropping the high
year and low year and averaging
the remaining 3 for the last five
year · period. Each year some
30,000 persons In Ohio receive a
survey that estimates yield for
various crops. Perhaps we
should look at ways to Improve
the accuracy of these reports.
Under present regulations a
farmer whose actual production
of mixed hay per acre is 4 tons In
a normal year would not meet the
4oper centloss requirement to be

These measures are: Repeal of
Helfer TAX; rebate on federal
tax for off·road U!i&lt;' of diesel fuel;
and a change to limit the fastest
methOd of depreciation on 3, 5, 7,
and 10 year property .
Starting In 1989, farmers with
dairy and beef herds will be
allowed to currently deduct ex·
penses of raising dairy and beef
cow replacements and use any
method of depreciation. The rule
is to either capitalize or use the
slowest rate of depreciation for •
1988. A December 31, 19881nven~
tory will be very Important for
future use. .
According to Dr. Duvick, proba bly after December 31, 1988,
farmers will not have to pay the
15.1 cent per gallon federal tax on
future purchases of diesel !ueltor
off-road use. Farmers will need ·
to file Form 4136 with their 1988
tax return to get credit for diesel
fuel tax paid alter March 31, 1988.

production dropped below 1,2
tons or about 30 per cent of hls
actual normal production. If only
%of the Gallla County hay acres
signed up through the EFP
1he d0 llar dlfference
program
between 1.95 established yield
and an actual of around 4 tons
would exceed $1 mllllon In lost
cost-share benefits ·10 Gallla
County a Ione. Sorne 0 I t he other
crops have similar low estab·
llshed yields.
The Technical and MlscellaneOus Revenue Act Of 1988 Was
passed late Friday nile On
October 21. According to Dr.
Richard Duvlck, O.S.U. Exten·
sion Economist, •at least three
measures Of importance to
farmers are Included in this bill.

mark according to the October 24
Ohio Ag. Statistics service re- ·
port. This compared to an 82 per
cent completion for the same
date last year and a five year
average of 47 percent. A week
earlier the national corn harvest
was set at 63 percent complete.
Many of tite reports Indicates
that the Ohio corn crop simply is
not dying down quickly. The
O.D.N.R. Division of Water stili
shows South Central Ohio to be

ren, Sandy Ray Davis Napper,
Dawana Lane Davis Black, Tara
Mele Davis, Delmar Glen Davis,
Jr., Leann Davis Tackett · and
Leanna Jo DaviE. ·
Dallas G. Debord, outside
supervIsor a t th e Me Igs No. 2
mine. Debord resides in Pomeroy with his wife, Janio:e.- and has
two daughters.

about 23 Inches of rainfall short
for the previous 30 months. This
!I gure Is a bo ut equa1 to what 1s
norma I for Ga ill a Count Y dur Ing
"
I" A u o t 0 be
a norma
pr · c
r grow·
ing season. How long will it take
to catch-up with this kind of
s hor t-fa il·

CHARLESTON, W. VA - Key
Centurion
Inc., an. anBancshares,
nounced
agreement in prlnclpie with the board of directors of
Guyan National Bank for a
merger with The First Huntington National Bank, a Key Centurion subsidiary ~
The proposed transaction,
valued at $2.9 million, provides
for the exchange of each of the
$28,500 outstanding Guyan Na·
uonai shares for $1021n cash. The
transaction Is subject to execu·
tton of a definitive merger
agreement and 'approval by
Guyan Nat lonal shareholders
and regulatory agencies.
Guyan National, with assets of
$25 million and shareholders'
equity of $2 million as of June 30,
is located In Barboursvllle,

10

However. high doses of the
aflatoxin can affect any anllr\al;
Eastnd ge says. Loss of appetite,
slower growth. reduced -milk
production and reprod uctive
problems are a few of the effects
of aflatoxin In ruminants.
Swine specialist Gerald Shu r·
son says young pigs have more .
problems with aflatoxin than
mature hogs. If a sow has a high
concentration of aflatoxin in the
diet, It can be passed through the
milk to baby pigs, he says.
"Baby pigs wlil develop liver
lesions if exposed to aflatoxin,
~.,~
.affecting performance as the
reCOe;•~
pigs mature." Shurson says.
Studies a lso show that swine
David W. Edmonds, mechanic suffer a reduction in feed intake
at the Meigs No. 1 mine. and average daily gains when fed
Edmonds resides in Rutland with corn with aflatoxin, he says.
hls wife, Sharon, and sons, Eastridge and Shurson agree
David, Rusty and Phillip.
that all a nimals are more susGeorge L. Hawley, mine office ceptible to disease and Infection
administrator at the Meigs No. 1 when fed contaminated corn.
mine. Hawley resides in MiddlePoultry specialis t Mike Lilport with his wife, Sharon.
burn says . aflatoxin· affects
Edward D. Neece, mainte- mal illy the economical traits Iri
nance supervisor at the Meigs . poultry such as feed intake, feed
No. 2 mine. Neece resides In efficiency and egg production.
Middleport with his wife.
Eastridge says that aflatoxin
Rhonda, and daUghters, Marjorie, Amanda, Michelle, Lynette,

Meigs
• emp}oyees
ALBANY - The following
employees from Meigs County
are being recognized for ihelr
years of service at Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
this month:
U YEARS
David A. Acree, section
supervisior (belt construction)
at the Meigs No. 2 mine. Acree
resides In Middleport with hls
wife, Linda, and children, David,
Stephan and Johnathan.
Delmar G. Davis, mechanic at
the Meigs No. 1 mine. Davis

that isingestedw!llgodirectly t~
the hver to be stored an
metabolized.
"Itcanshowupinmiiklflevels
are high but aflatoxin Is not
stored In meat ," he says. The
contamination of milk and dairy
prod ucts IS the concern for
human health.
.
The Food and Drug Admlmstratlon has set gUidelmes for
aflatoxin. Contamination in feed
grains over 20 parts per billion or
in milk over 0.5 ppb requires that
some action be taken to prevent
human health problems from the
toxin.
If producers know the amount
of toxin in the feed. they can
figure out how much of the grain
to feed their dairy cows without
going over the FDA limits, he
says.
"Approximately 1 percent of
aflatoxin consumed in . feed is
passed along in milk," Eastridge
says. "Therefore, dairy cows on
a 50-percent grain diet that are
fed grain with 20 ppb co ntamina·
tio n, wlil produce milk with onlY
0.1 ppb contamination, That is
well below the FDA guid elines
for milk."

"At this point. we arP not sure
whether we will have a problem
in Ohio but we shou ld be awa re
of the ~mount of aflatoxin lives·
tock can co nsume," Eastridge
says.
The Ohio Department of Agrl·
culture wtll be sampling corn
around the slate to see ·if
aflatoxin Is present.
Cattle and sheep can tolerate
grain contaminated with afla·
toxin better than pigs and other
non-ruminant animals.

.....

~~r!~tnfo~hl:h~ea~~~~~~~~ on~;"~h:ars-e~;nc~:t c~~~~~ ~TI~~e~~~n~~~~v~!~ :~~h~~~~ angl!~r"A~:r~e~.~fn~ral inside Takeovers .. •

·T h'e•e's
sti.II plenty
.a'
the'
garden
•
do
m
to

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPI) Just because the temperaturt"
has dropped toward freezing is
no reason to ignore your garden,
says Jim Utzinger, horticu iture
professor at Oh io State
Un lversity.
There are several things you
should be doing to prepare your
garden for next spring:
·. -Start a compost pile wlth
your leaves instead of sending
them to rapidly filling landfills.
Dead plant tops and other garden
debris can also go into the pile.
Composting turns natural ma te·
rials Into soil organic matter that
benefits the garden.
Locate the pile in an out-of- theway spot. A bin will keep it from
being scattered by wind or
animals. Begin with an 8· . to
12-inch layer ofleaves. Scatter a
cupful of garden fertilizer , an
inch of garden soil and a half-cup
of ground limes tone over lt.
Water lightly . Repeat the pro·
cess with each layer.
Make the top of the pile
bowl-shaped to catch rain. Keep
diseased and insect-infested
materials and weeds with seed
heads out of the pile. Beginning In
spring, turn the pile over at leas t
once a month. The pile you start
this fall should be rich organic
material'by next summer.
-Plant bulbs that will flower
next spring. You can do It until
the ground freezes between
Thanksgiving and Christmas,
but planting them now gives thei r
. roots a chance to produce fall
growth that helps them prepare
for spring.
At planting, mix bone meal Into
the soli below the bulbs. After·
ward, water the area over the
covered bulbs. Plant bulbs at a
depth of 2 Y, times their length
with the root plate down and the
point up.
Tulips form new bulbs In the
ground every year and last three
to four years. Daffodils flower
longer but old bulbs need to be
divided after several years.
' Hyacinth s produce quality
• blooms lor no more than three
years.

-Protect roses with mulch
only alter one or two hard frosts.
Use 8 to 10 inches of garden soil,
peat moss or sawdust to protect
the crown. Be sure to remove the
mulch in mid-March.
Rose cones or collars -can also
protect the plant and are sold at
garden centers. They are fitted
over the plant center and filled
with peat .moss, sawdust or wood
shavings. You may have to prune
the rose to get them to fit.
Otherwise, wait until spring to
prune roses to remove canes that
died during winter.
-Give trees and shrubs, es peclally evergreens, an Inch of
water each week it doesn't rain.
Water them until the ground
freezes. Woody plants that enter
winter in dry soil are subject to
severe in jury from cold , dry
weather.
-Remove and compost the
tops of cannas, dahllas. gladiolus. tuberous begonias and sweet
potatoes that are killed by frost.
Cut the tops off just above the soil
ilne. Remove the underground
parts before the soU freezes .
Place them in dry sand or peat
moss. Keep them at 45 to 50
degrees during winter. Utzinger
suggests a basement corner or an
insulated box in an unheated
garage. Check the stored parts
periodically. Remove any tha t
rot.
-Store unused flower and
vegeta bie seed In a cool, dry
place.
- Keep leaves from plling up
on aily newly re-seeded lawn. A
thick layer of wet leaves can
smother young grass.
- Refrigerate harvested apples as close to freezing as
possible. Try to keep them moist.
-Wail to mulch strawberries
until the ground freezes. Use
high-quality, clean, weed-free
s traw. Mulch keeps the plant
crowns from being Injured. It
also helps maintain an even soil
temperature. This keeps plants
from being heaved from the
ground because of temperature
fluct uat ions.

New standards focus of .math conference
Rio Grande College/ CommunIty College was the site of an Oct.
8 conference on proposed s tand·
ards for the teaching of mathe·
matics that drew 70 elementary,
junior high and high school
teachers.
College officials said 55 inservice and 15 pre-service were
In attepdance for the conference,
sponsored by the Rlo Grande
School of Education and the
School of Math and Science.
The conference centered on the
proposed stan~ards for the teachIng of mathematics drawn·up by
the National Council of Teachers
of Mathematics (NCTM).
Group sessions were con-

ducted for teachers In grade
levels K·4, 5-8 and 9-12. The
proposed standards were out·
lined and teachers were treated
to discussions of curriculum and
sugges lions on how to teacil the
curriculum.
Conference speakers included
Tom Payne and Art Stevenson,
Jackson City Schools; Carla
Shuler, Southern Local Schools,
Racine; Dr. Jan Oprea, Miami
University; Dr. Carl Benner,
Wright State University; and
Kay Meister, Columbus City
Schools.
The conference was planned by
a committee of teachers from
GalUa, Jackson, Meigs and Vln·
ton counties.

Merger appro
_ ved

wv

· a.

laborer at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
Turner 1s a res !dent of
Middleport.
FIVE YEARS
Ronald P. Cpscl, clerk at the
Meigs No. 1 mine. easel Is a
resident of Middleport.

Ohio grain report
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The average closing prices (per
bushel) paid to farmers by gral n
elevators In the principal mar·
ketlng areas of Ohio Friday:
Northeast Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.74, No. 2 shelled corn $2.63, No.
2 oats $2.67, No.1 soybeans $7.49.
Northwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.85, No. 2 shelled corn $2.67, No.
2 oats $2.80, No.1 soybeans$7.59.
Central. Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.78,No. 2shelledcorn$2.65,No.
2 oats $2.92, No. 1 soybeans $7.50.
West Cent~al Ohio: No. 2wheat
$3.77, No.2 shelled corn$2.68, No.
2 oats $3.02, No. 1 soybeans $7.60.
Southwest Ohio: No. 2 wheat
$3.78, No. 2 shelled corn$2.65, No.
2 oats not available, No. 1
soybeans $7.52.
Trends: No. 2 wheat, unchanged; No. 2 shelled corn,
higher; No. 2 oats, unchanged;
No. 1 soybeans, sharply higher.

*

,.., NO TIME SHARE
,.., NO GIMMICKS
JUST FUN I I I

1 Section, 10 Papas

Pomeroy-'Middleport. Ohio, Monday, Octobar 31. 1988

Vot.39, No.123
Copyrighted 1988

_

26 Cents

A Muttlmedialnc. Newspaper .

Ohio Democrats try to
gain control of Senate

:
'

~

•.

~

politics. His campaign emphas· and this year Is no exception.
ized developing the high techno!· Mary Dunning, an attorney and
ogy resources of Wright Patter· Parma councilwoman, Is pu tung
son Air Force Base, which Is in pressure on Suhadoinik.
Suhado)nik has taken heat In
the 6th District.
In general, the Republican the Cleveland media this year for
candidates are running TV com- trying to rewrite a waste disposal
mercials pointing out that they bill to the wishes of waste dump
were in the forefront of repealing owners. Steiner predicted he will
the higher income tax rates that sur\'lve on the basis of his 100
Democrats enacted five years percent record of voting against
By LEE LEONARD
taxes.
ago.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
Also In the Cleveland area,
Democrats are contending that
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Democrats appear to be fighting each of the RepubliCan state Rep. Leroy Peterson of Maple
a Republican tlde in their effort senators Is owned by the special Heights is challenging Repubii·
to take control of the Ohio Senate Interests. "We are letting the can Sen. Grace Drake of Solon In
public know that these guys are normally Democratic territory.
lor the first time since 1984.
Peterson has waged a strong
In the House, it's the other way not representing the voters, but
grass-roots
campaign based on
the
Interests
of
big
contrlbu·
around, as Speaker Vernal Riffe
the
Idea
that
Drake is "a rubber
said
Greg
Haas,
a
consul·
tors,"
Jr.'s utter domination for the last
stamp
for
the
powerful special
14 years seems destined to tan! who is working on the
Interests."
Democratic Senate campaigns.
continue for two more.
But Republicans say that PeIn Columbus, Sen. Eugene
The Republicans, who control
terson
never did antyhing during
·the Senate 1~·15 , and the Demo- Watts, .also a first-term Repubii·
his
six
years in the House and
crats could spend up to $3 million can, is under attack by David
that
Drake
has been out front in
:jplece on the 16 Senate contests Lanclone, 36, an attorney, lor
trying
to
reform the motor
at stake this year. A dozen of the raising taxes.
vehicle
registration
system.
Ironically Watts, an Ohio State
Incumbents running are Republi·
In
southwestern
Ohio, ninecan, while only four are University professor, has a repuyear
Republican
Sen.
Cooper
tation as a conservative who won
Democrats.
Snyder,
a
folksy
hardware
dealer
Thus if the GOP loses· just two the seat four years ago on a
from
Hillsboro,
faces
a
challenge
oi their incumbent races while tax-cutting platform and kept hls
from Mt. Orab funereal director
the Democrats hold all four of promise.
Sen. Gary Suhadoinlk, a sena· · Dan Stevens, a Democrat.
their districts, the Democrats
Once again Snyder, 80, is
will have a 17·16 advantage tor from Parma since 1981,
always
faces
a
tough
challenge
Continued on page 6
again.
·Democrats control the .House,
60-39, and all 99 seats are at
stake. Most . incumbents are
expected to win. In fact, 29
Democrats have either no opponent or only write-In opposition
from the Republicans. Three
Most of those arrested were
Republican . Incumbents are·
ATHENS, Ohio (UPI)
college
students from throughout
unopposed.
What's usually been a wild and
Ohio.
However,
live were high
Senate Democrats are focusraucous Halloween weekend in
school
students
and 37 were
Ing on five districts where they
the streets adjacent to Ohio
perceive the Republican Incum- University seemed pretty mild non-students.
Officials attrlbu ted the In·
bents as weak. "We think we've
this year, officials said.
creased
number of arrests to the
got a cMnce.ln i'tleast two out of
City pollee chief Richard
the ·five races." said Senate Mayer said the crowd was presence of the Ohio Liquor
Democratic Leader Harry Me·
smaller, but noted that the Control enforcement officers.
Arrests ranged from altered
shel of Youngstown.
number of arrests Increased
Identification
·cards, disorderly
"We are reasonably optimistic
from last year.
conduct,
disorderly
conduct
that we will keep our majority,"
Thousands of Ohio University
said Curt Steiner, the press aide
students and other young people while intoxicated, and under age
to the Senate Republican caucus.
traditionally crowd onto Court consumption.
Mayer said there wasn't as
"Fortunately •. we are running in
Street, the main street in this
much
garbage left In the streets
what appears ·to be a better than
southeastern Ohio city, running
and
wasn'
t as much broken
average Republican year."
In and out of the many bars, and
glass,
so
the
street was opened to
The Democrats will narrow
dancing In the streets.
traffic
sooner
than In previous
their heavy financial support to
"The crowds came later and
years.
two or three races this week, but
left earlier, " said Mayer, est!·
This year there was no live
they aren ' t telegraphing their
mating as many as 8,000 to 10,000
entertainment
and Mayer thinks
punches.
were partying In the streets.
that's
why
the
crowd was
The weakest Republican ap·
Crowds dldn' I begin forming
smaller,
or
also
the
lack of an
pears to be Sen. Charles Horn of
until 9 p.m., Mayer said, and by 2
organization
commiltee.
Dayton, a first-termer who is _a.m .. the_ only remnants of a
In years past, merchants had
being challenged by Mark
party In the s.t.reets was the paper
become
accustomed to the party·
Henry, 32, a cily commissioner
work for the 188 arrests - 125
with a strong environmental and
Saturday and 63 Friday night. A lng and had taken precautions to
consumer record.
year ago, 134 students had been protect their businesses. This
Horn, 64, Is' described as a
arrested during the Halloween year no fires nor Injuries were
reported.
"good government" type and an
party.
engineer who does not play

(EDITOR'S NOTE: This Is the
first ' in a series of six articles
prepared by United Press International's Ohio bureaus on the
candidates and Issues Involved In
the Nov. 8 election. Today's
article deals with the hat.l le for
the Oblo Senate and Ohio House
of Representatives.)

.
HALLOWEEN ON THE EHS GRID - The
Eastern Wgh School band members always have
a gOGd time wltb what they do and Saturday nlsht
was uo exception as the band celebrated
Halloween by wear,ns their costumes. Chris Hall,
Jeremy Buckley, and Sarah Barris are among

.

·those shown here, dawning bunny costumes and
aiL Both the EHs band directed by William Ball
and the Southern hand of Roberta Maidens were
excellent.and well-prepared for their perfonnan_ces Saturday.

Philip Morris Companies and
·Kraft, Inc., agr~ to merge
,......,

Buy Any Ne.w Chevrolet, Chevy
Truck, or Oldsmobile and We
Will Give You A•.•.

NIGHTS

~

'
(UPI)

.

' NEW YORK
The
merger of Philip Morris Cos. and
Kraft Inc., at $13.1 billion the
second largest in U.S. history,
would create the world's largest
consumer goods producer to
'compete with huge European
firms, officials and analysts said.
"I'd like to emphasize that this
is not a leveraged buyout situation," said William Murray, vice
chairman of Phlllp Morris, said
In announcing the agreement
Sunday. "It's not a sltuatlon
where the company wlll be
broken up.
"It's not a situation where the
surviving company ·takes on
enourmous amount of backbreaking debt. Our objective is to
grow Kraft," Murray said. "We
bought the business to grow It,
not to shrink it.. "
Kraft and Philip Morris placed
the total value of the transaction
at approximately $13.1 billion.
The deal was made when Philip
Morris sweetened its cash bid to
$106 from $90 per share.
•'We believe the combination of
Philip Morris and Kraft will
create a U.S.·based food company that will compete more
effectively • in world food
markets," Phlllp Morris Chair·

man Hamish Maxwell said.
"Kraft's products provide an
excellent ·complement ·to our
existing product lines and position us to capitalize on marketing
opportunities worldwide."
The re~ulting company of the
merger between the tobacco
giant and nation's No. 1 food
company would be the world's
largest producer of consumer
goods, displacing Unllever, a
British-Dutch company, as well
as the Swiss Nes tie Co., a Philip
Morris spokesman said.
"Our shareholders are receivIng lull value, and thls merger is
the best possible outcm:ne for our
employees, customers, and the
~ommunltles In which we oper·
ate," said John M. Richman,
Kraft's chairman and chief executive officer. "The addition of
Kraft's strong brands and operating units to Philip Morris will
clearly result In the world's
leading food business."
The Kraft board of directors
accepted the sweetened bid by'
recommending t))at shareholders accept the offer, which
expires Nov. 15. Under the deal,
Kraft would become a subsidiary
of Philip Morris. , .
"Kraft is going to help Phlllp

Morris a lot," said James J.
Murren, an analyst with C.J.
Lawrence, Morgan and Grenfell.
•'Through Its existing distribution system and combined goods,
basically they'll have a lock on
the frozen food section and
refrigerated area.
'That will give them a lot of
shelf space in the supermarket,
and shelf space is the name of the
game,'' he said.
· Philip Morris was a partlculary strong company with a high
cash flow, permitting the huge
cash offer, Murren added. "Its
profit margins are so high," he
said. "It throws off a tremendous
amount of cash flow."
The largest merger In history
was Chevron Corp.'S $13.3 billion
purchase of the Gulf Oil Corp. In
1984. But the Chevron-Gulf mar·
rlage could be eclipsed by
Kohlberg, Kravis &amp; Roberts
Co.'s $90-a-share offer last week
to acquire tobacco and food giant
RJR Nabisco Inc. lor $20.3
billion.
Besides creating the world's
largest producer of consumer
goods, the Philip Morris· Kraft
merger would create the natloit's
eighth-largest Industrial company .based on 1987 sales. Philip
Morris alone Is now ranked 12th.

Halloween party not
so large this year

--Local news briefs---. ·Democrat Riffe hires adviser tied to GOP

~Q H1dden
~ Costs!

AKRON, Ohio (UPI) :..... Ohio larly praises the speaker and
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe encourages his possible guberna·.
Jr., who political analysts say torial bid.
will likely seek the Democratic ..• In one newsletter· this year,
nomination lor governor In 1990, Dudgeon wrote: "We've said it
paid more than $75,000 In cam· before and we'll say It again:
palgn funds to a right·wlnrr There Is no one more qualified in
Republican for political advice Ohio polities to be governor of
and to write his biography, the Ohio than House Speake~ Vernal
Akron Beacon Journal reported G. Riffe. It Is our opinion that a
contribution to the speaker Is an
Sunday.
Citing campaign expense re' Investment in good
ports since 1987, the newspaper government."
Dudgeon has never mentioned
said the Riffe Election Commit·
in
his newsletter that he's retee has made 16 payments
ceived
some of the political
'averaging more than $4,500 to
contributions
raised by Riffe, the
Thomas Dudgeon, a former
newspaper
said.
newspaper man with strong ties
to the Ohio Republican Party:
Dudgeon said the book on Riffe
Dudgeon writes the newsletter Is a "political biography" which
Ohio News Service which regu- he. described as "the politics of

Shopping plaza contruction begins

MAKE YOUR BEST DEAL AND RECEIVE A TRIP!
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY.

Rebates! Plus Big Discounts! Plus Florida Vacation!
THIS IS THE DEAL YOU'VE -BEEN WAITING FOR!
•SEE OUR NEW MODELS-NOW ON DISPLAY!• '

-· . - •• ,or.. "-·-.
--•
• • --If

-~ ~-~.~-H'.C...;;
~,# ~ I

-~

.OLDSMOBILE
1616 EASTERN AYE. • GALLIPOLIS, OH. • 446-36 72
WE DON'T TALK ABOUT DEALS,

Chance of precipitation 40
percent. Tuesday, variable
cloudiness, highs In mid 50s.
Chance of rain 40 perceni.

•.

Phone 446-4524

Gi~micks!

'

19-36-28-39-22-37

;

Continued from D-1
Index fell 4.32 to close at 301.75,
while the National Association of
Securities Dealers index fell 5. 79
to end at 382.80.
Declines topped advances 528289 among 1,054 issues Ira ded .on
the Amex. Volume totaled
44,819,680 shares, compared with
45,283,255 traded a week earlier
and 103,240,445 traded in the
same week a year earlier.
d
Amdahl le the Amex actives,
off 1 to-19¥..

FOUR SUN DRENCHED DAYS A'ND THREE SPARKLING NIGHTS WITH
BEAUTIFUL ACCOMMODATIONS . • . ONLY MINUTES AWAY FROM
DISNEY WORLD©, EPCOT CENTER·~ ,, SEA WORLD© AND CYPRESS
GARDENS •.• PLUS SPECIAL BONUS OF TWO ADDITIONAL TROPICAL
NIGHTS AT DAYTONA BEACH, NEW SMYRNA BEACH OR ON. tHE
OCEAN IN MIAMI BEACH.

\\0

Daily Number
573
Pick4
1874

••

VACATION

A LIMITED TIME OFFER.

blanks EHS
Eagles, 30-0

Page 3

Florida ~acationl
FLORIDA~ ANDS

Ohio Lottery

Super Lotto

fttt~

6 DAYS

Southem

"WE MAKE DEALS!"

The deed for the Price property, (old Holzer Airport) located
on SR 7 In Gallla County beside the Blue Fountain Motel, was
handed over to David Gllmcher Co. on Friday. Oct. 21,
according to the Gallia County's Recorder' s office.
.
The deed for the property of James W. Price, Inc., a West
VIrginia corporation. sold lor $500,000, purchased ~Y Ohio River
Plaza Associates Limited Partnership, an uhlo limited
partnership.
.
,
The new shopping pla~a. to feature a Big Bear and Hill s
Department Store, Is under tlle develop~ent of David J.
Gllmcher Co. of Columbus.
,
The deed transfer was flied in the Gallla County Recorder s
,,
office on Tuesday, Oct. 25.
According to Jim Olsen, site su(:!ffi'vlsor· of Robert Darden
Contracting Co. of Cleveland, Big Bear Is eX!l4;Cled to open first
in the spring.
Jim Graham, general manager for Mouis Excavation of
Columbus, said excavation should-begin by the middle of next
week. Top soil is being removed.

the time during which he (Riffe)
has been In the Ohio General
Assembly."
A registered Republican, Dud·
geon worked In the 1964 presidential campaign of former Sen.
Barry Goldwater. He was also a
key campaign adviser . and
speech writer for former Gov .
James Rhodes.
Dudgeon said he has known
and been on good terms with both
Rhodes and Riffe fat years.
"I am a political practitioner,
and I don't have any apology or
need to explain which side of the
political fence I'm on," he said.
"Because I'm always on the
conservative side."
Rit!e has reportedly used his

Four Middleport residents injured
•
•
accident over weekend
ln
car-traln

Meigs County group honored
The Meigs County Pioneer and Historical Society and the
Meigs county Retired Senior Volunteer Program are among 21
· individuals and groups .who will receive statewide recognition
for outstanding achievement at the Ohio Association of
Hi~torlcai Societies and Museums annual meeting.
They will receive an honorable mention award for the youth
·
Frld
d
program Yesteryear.
Award'wlnners will be honored at a reception this
ay an
the awards presentation to be -held Saturday at the Ohio
Historical Society In Columbus.
·continued on page 6

Injured were the driver, Ram·
ona K. Smith, 18, S.R. 7; and
passengers Mark A. McCloud, 22,
of 359 N. First St.; Johnny
Ratliff, 21, S.R. 7; and Charles A.
Knapp, 21, of 300 Hudson St. All
were taken to yeterans Memor-

Four Middleport residents
were Injured in a car-train
accident Saturday at 10:05 p.m.,
at the railroad crossing on C.R.
21, between Middleport and S.R.
7, according to the Gallla·Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.

Ia I Hospital by the Meigs County
EMS except for Knapp, who was
taken there by prlva te car.
Smith was admitted, and at
last report was listed In stable
condition. The passengers were
Continued on page 6

\

•

:""""- -'t--

-

-·-~

-~-~~ --

•..

,--~

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

1\

\;

.

position· to co llect millions of
dollars In campaign contri butions from special-Interest
groups doing business wilh the
Ohio General Assembly.
He has passed much of that
money on to Democratic ·candi·
dates seeking House seats.
Earlier this month the Akron
newspaper published· a series of
articles detailing how Blue Cross
&amp; Blue Shield Mutual of Ohio
spent thousands of dollars on
lobbyists, lawyers an~ lawmakers, including Riffe, to Insure
favorable treatment on a piece of
legislation.
The bill, which has since
become law, was designed to
save the Insurer millions of .
dollars in costs by enabling it to
force Cleveland-area hospitals to
compete against one anrther for
Blue Cross business.
The newspaper said Rille
organized a "pay-to-play" system In Columbus which expected
those seeking favors from Ohio's
government to pay for them with
campaign contributions.
Rlt!e has de-n ied the charges,
saying he has never pressured ·
anyone to give money to his
various campaign funds, which
have raised nearly $6.5 million
since 1980.
·

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