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                  <text>Page- 12-The Daily Sentinel

Po~y-M~d~,~~O~h:~~------------------------~~~~~3~1~1~9:;86
All WDI

/

MANUFACJUIEI'S

DOUBLE COUPONS

.

Sears grant
to Rio Grande
-Page A-8

WITH '10.00 OR MORE PURCHASE

ThiS -your """ufact..od p~s "Cooos Olr' COtlpOOSIII watll dollllfll f~ orilt1110.00 OfiiiOII """'"""· Umitt dto,_.
foc!ond products coupons 110ft~ up to 11d includinc 50e 011. Cou1101111101t11111011 thin 50e
loco Ylluo ollly . liol~ 011
coupoo fo&lt;lldl PI*' Ptldlaod. liloR .,ocofftlcou~. No IIMr, a arctnttt COUIIOIIIIIiil botloubl,_ Not Vlildonflotceapo~~,
F?o=ond
.
"'rlllil foodsl0f1._..1'11111110Unt llfllodod coniiOIIICIIdllltprictofthoR... You -ptRhlstprodood ill
'"" s .
onllltcou~. Thisoffor..,N• only to _,facturMPI*U "Cants orr' cotOpons foritoms .. ..,. To•~~nDIGCIIct
lVII lily fOf all our tustomors, only 1111 coupoo 1101 sf1ot11Mn1 IMI!il'. IIIII bo doubla on 11r1 brand ".., ...i.. lldl stan •lsi!.

.,......,..11

James J. Kilpatrick on the dec!line of 'militant
feminism'- Page A-2
Bob HOeflich dicusses a change in procedure at
the ORES - Page B-8

•
I Salt~

Inside:
Along the Klvcr ...... ....... .. R-1-K
Deaths .~ ... ... .. .. .. ... ... ......... A-5
Edltorlalo ... ....... ...... ... ...... A-2
Sports ............ ...... ...... .. -. (', J-8
Take-One ......... ...... ...... Insert

Weather ................... ........ A-3

Ohio weather:
rain likely
--Page A-3--

•
tmts

BRAND

TOIIIOnGw, Saturday, Flit. I en! lasts ltvu Satmlay, Fob. a, 1986

B-1

Stoneware tells Meigs history

I·
Vol. 20 No. 61

1 1 Soctiona, 88

Pogoo 50 Cenu

~~·~·~:1•::e:::::;:::::::::::::::::::::M;~;;~;:eort;:::P;o;m:~:ro:v:::G:a:ll:ipo:=lis:;;P:o:in:t;P;~;:g~n;t;.S:u;n;da;;y;·;~;;:;mv;;2;·;1:9:8;6;;;;;::;;:;:;:;:;A;M;u":l:-;d;•;'m;·;N;•:w:~;·~;::;

f•••AND ave!

Tougher chlld support laws working in Meigs
By NANCY YOACHAM
'l'tme&amp;Sellllne Slall
POMEROY - Tougher child support enforcement
laws enacted last year In Ohio are apparen!ly
worklng. The Meigs County Bureau !tSupport'stotal
collections In 198j were the largest ever - $626,825.
A portion ct those collections overlap with the Meigs
County Department of Hwnan Resources' total
collections of $1!10,00&gt; for the year, which also Includes
$42,00&gt; In tax otlsets !rom the Internal Revenue
SeiVice.
The law Is clear- child support Is to be paid above
all other financial obligations. It Is the only bill a

PAGE

Paper Towels

person can go to jail for not paybtg.
Because of last year's new law, enacted In April, the
court no longer has to walt unW a parent falls behind
In support payments to garnish wages.
The Initial child support order tha 1 goes to the
parent, also goes to that parent's employer.
Automatic wage wilhholdlng does oot have to be ·
Implemented at that time, explains Jean Vineyard,
director of the county Bureau of Support, but If that
parent falls behind bt payments, a notice from the
court puts the withholding order Immediately Into
effect- without further court action.

GALLIPOLIS - With the razing
of five more bulldbtgs - the old
Superlnlendent's residence, BuildIngs 11, 12. 13 and 7 - the Gallipolis
Developmental Center Is nearing
the final phase of a 1~year
demolition plan.
"Today, G.D.C.Is one oft he most
modern facUlties ·In Ohio for
housing MR -DD (mentaly
retarded-developmentally disabled) residents," Supt. Pamela K.
Matura said Friday. "It becomes
Important now that, whUe G.D.C.
respects Its history, It also should
look fotward to Its future and
continue to Improve Its services to a
s~ant zwmber It GaiDa County
citizens."
.
.
Nllloaal l'hllofiopby
According to Matura, the na -

tiona! philosophy of care continues
to call for smaller, safer, less
restrictive environments. The typical, modern one-Door plan G.D.C.
residence houses 16 Individuals
Instead of the :OO.bed buUdlngs of
the past.
"GD.C. Is able to meet stringent
state and federal Medicaid standards calling for barrier-free environments and specific square footage requirements per btdlvldual,"
Supt. Matura said.
The center currently houses 290
residents. In earlier years, the
census rose to 2,400. The current
staffing level Is 454.
From the opening of the flrsl
three C&lt;Jttage&amp; In 1893 unW the'
passage of various men tal retardation measures bt the 19'/0s, G D .C.

residents were housed In multi story collages.
Cottages were divided Into
wards, with each w~rd housing GO to
70 btdivlduals.
Legislation - such as Ohio
Senate BU1336ln 1975- addressed
the rights of persons with mental
retardation to live In a more
normalized, less restrictive setting
with more access to privacy.
Other legislation during the
period stipulated that Individuals
must Hve bt licensed bulldbtgs.
No Loo&amp;er 'The MaJority

"Our geriatriC, high functioning
population Is no longer the majorIty, b.Jt Is btstead the ~,' ;
MatUre saKI'. "''iir ntwer reS!denfs
are younger, with more Intensive
and more specialized seiVice
needs."

Oatmeal

FILLED MILK ..............tA~J..~v •• 39&lt;
Bi-rite EGG NOODLES ..........lt.q~.et~. 88&lt;
Bi-rite SHORTENING ............\2.Ww.~v. $149
Bi·rite MAC. or SPAGHETTI .....t.II••P.,~... 89&lt;
Bi-rite TOMATO SAUCE ...l).Ww.~a •• 49&lt;

SUGAR ......................UI.IN\. SJ79
Bi-rite BLACK PEPPER ..........u;..~v. SJ99
Bi-rite COFFEE CREAMER .....U.QI.nt~. SJ 58
Bi-rite WHOLE TOMATOES .... 2.W.\z~ SJ oo
Bi-rite GRAHAM CRACKERS ..l,,q~m. 99&lt;
ai-rite NAPKINS ................. m.n.m.. 79&lt;
Bi·rite TRASH BAGS ............ J.QN.tNt $148

Falter's

Bulk Meat Sale

Bi-rite

Bi-rite

CAT fOOD •••••••oooUl-.W.. $169

Bi-rite

DRY ROASTED PEANUTS.~~~ $169

CONTAINS:

2 lb1. WIENEIS
2 lb1. BACON
2 lb1. SAUSAGE

Bologna

69(

WHOLE
STKK LB.
HALf STICK 79' LB.

PU lOX

LB.

Falter's WIENERS"........~.~!~~~ ...... S6 99
Falter's ROLL SAUSAGE •••UUJI¥.. 5499
Falter's BACON ..........t.-..J...... mu•. $899
Falter's
OLD FASHIONED

Little Big Sausage .........If.. $119
Bratwurst ......................LI.. S119
Italian Sausage .............If.. $119

Smoked Ham
WHOlE OR
SHANK ll.

99(·

•We Rooorve the Right to limit QuonChleo • Prieto Good Sot., Feb. 1 thru Set, Fob . 8, 1988

Sl 09

BREAKFAST BOX
CONUINS:

$789

3 lbs. SAUSAGE
3 lbs. BACON
Falter's

Falter's

Falter's Gartic

·Polish Sausage

$7~9

Falter's
DEU STYLE

FABRIC SOFTENER .... ~.PJ.ATJ, S115
Generic BATH TISSUE ........... ~.101~m•• 89&lt;
Bi·rite CORN FLAKES ........... JMlriNI· $119
Bi-rite RAISIN BRAN ........... 1APlrn.r..-$181
Bi-rite CHEESE CORNIES ...... I.PI.».r.. .. 99&lt;
Bi-rite CORN CHIPS ............. JMlrMr... 89(
Glendale Asst. SOFT DRINKS .... .J1t~~~.... 69(
Bi-rite

Falter's
lEG. 01 HOT

BUDGET BOX

links or Frankfurters
LB.

49C

59(

WHOlE
STICK Ll.
HALf STICK 69c Ll.

:o $499
1
:·

~:~E

BEEF FORE QUARJERS ...........~.. s1.19
WHOLE BEEF SIDES~ ..............~•• S1.29
BEEF HIND QUARTERS ........... ~.. s1.69
WHOLE BEEF RIBEYES ........... ~.. S3.99
CUT AND WRAPPED FREE

.

AllOW 6 DAYS FOR ORDERING AND PROCESSING

•USDA Food Stempo Olodly Accepted •Not Reoponolble for Typographical Erroro

BIG BEND FOODLAND
700 WEST MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992·2191
OPEN
I A.M.·10 P.M. MON.-SAT.
SUNDAYS
10 A.M.· ID P.M.

t.

•

t1lE NEW - 'The nlltlonal philo8ophy of care
contDaes to call lor smaller, safer, leas rellltorlctive
envlromneats. 'The typical, modem ooe-lloor G.D.C.

residence houlles 16 ladl\llduals lll8lead ol the ~d

b.Jlldlnp of the Jlll!d. 'The center wmnlly hOU!IC!I! 290
J'ellldents. In earler yean, lhe census roee to !,too.
'The rum!OI sta111n1 level Is 4M.

.?

"Some members ct ttr communIty have commented that G.D.C.'s
older buildings dating back !IJ to 00
years soould not be tom down, but
Instead renovated, " Matura noted.
When the program first started,
she said, there was a feaslblllty
study taken regarding remodelbtg
the existing stuctures. As a result It
that study, It was determined that
new structures could be constructed much cheaper than renovating tre ~d ones.
"There ·Is Irony In the fact that
while the availability of sandstone
was one to the major factors tn
deciding to build ttr Ohio Hospital
lor Eplleptb. ln

C'.afllpni'-,'~ . Miot­

ura said, "sandstone Is the reason
many It the buildings cannot be
saved and nsed for at trr ~11l0Se5· "
Sandstone crumbles progressively with age.
Ollered To Community
"AI the beglnnbtg of tile demolition project other buUdlngs such as
our brick structures were o!fered to
various community groups," she
said.
At one time, consideration was
given to!tfertngoneofthe bJUdbtgs
lor use as a DWI facility, but the
costs were too prohibitive to bring
the bulldtng up to standard.
The loca I historical society had
indicated an btterest In maintaining
and preseiVIng some of the older
buildings - such as the soon-to-be
vacated Administration BuUd!ngbul, again, this was not feasible due
to the maintenance costs.
"G.D.C. has a rich history and as
the older b.Jlldlngs come down. It
brings the end ol an era and many
memories," Matura coocluded.
"But, with the ending of this era
there has been a new beginning !or
the Individual residents."

..

..-

'I1IE OU&gt; - With lhe l'1ldq ol Ove more b.Jidlnp - lbe old
Superlnlendent's n!!MeMe, Bulldlnp ll, 12, 1S ud 7 - lhe G•lllpolle
Developmenlal Center Ill neam,the llaal pbue of a •yeardemolltloa

plan.

Reagan seeking again to revamp nation's welfare system
WASHINGTON (UP!)- President Reagan, again
pressing for welfare revisions he has sought since
1981, will call next week for a new one-yee.r study of
the nation's social safety net by his Domestic Polley
Council, the White House says.
The White House confirmed a report Friday that
Reagan wUI announce the welfare study in his State of

Shuttle
search
•
contmues

McGhee seeks
GOP nod for
representative
GALLIPOLIS -Another hat was
thrown into the race for Jolynn
Boster's seat as the 94th District
Representative bt the Ohio Legislature Friday, wren Gall1a County
Treasurer Myron L. "Bud"
McGhee announced his candidacy
!or the Republican nombtation In
the May 6 primary election.
McGhee joins Athens City Law
Director Garry Hunter as announced candidates for the Republican nomination. Pomeroy attorney Jennifer Sheets, who,m Boster,
a democrat from GaWp6lis, defeated bt the 1984 general election, Is
reportedly stni considering a second run for the seat
McGhee said he would make " the
district's lack It economic development" a key Issue In his campaign.
"Southeastern Ohio has not enJoyed the same economic recovery
enjoyed by the rest!tthestateand I
attrlb.Jte this to a lack It btterest by
the cun-ent admtnt.stratlon and a

administration officials, would draft reconunendatlons to be lncollJOraled Into new legtslatkm for
overhaulbtg the welfare system, the report said.
Welfare, which costs the government rrore than
$8)) billion a year, Includes a number It rederal and
state assistance programs comprising the so-called
social safety net for the poor. Among them are food

the Union address Tuesday night.
Asked about the Washington Times report, WhitP
House spokesman Larry Speakes told reporters he
would withhold any announcement untn the
president's speech Tuesday, but "I would oot veer you
elf It tt."
The Domestic Policy CouocU, made up of top-level

•

Baby Swiss ChHst ........ JI... $249
YeUow American Chllsell,$119
Colby Longhorn Chtll •• JL. $119

FREEZER BEEF SALE

PU lOX

Brauncscheiger

Bacon Ends &amp; Pieces

$169
Pork Liver

LB.

is of prime concern:
Ohio law now requires the court to summons
individuals to court when they are more than 10 days
delbtquent In payments. Court days are being set
aside In Meigs County on a regular basis to do just
that.
Sixteen fathers were in Meigs Count Common
Pleas Court In late December to answer allegafuns of
being tn contempt It court orders to pay child support.
Several more found themselves In court this past
Friday morning to answer the same allegations.
(Continued on page A-3)

Five buildings coming down at G.D.C.
in final phase of demolition program

2Rolls$10

Bi-rite

The law gives the employer the right to deduct a fee
of one dollar, plus an additional amount not to exceed
one percent of the amount withheld, as a charge for
complying with the order.
An employer may be fined up to $3Xl for refusing to
comply.
Vbteyard says that many parents "request" their
child support be withheld from their wages because It
Is "easier" and accurate records are kept.
However. tougher laws are of no value unless
authorttles are wllllng to enforce those laws.
In Meigs County, both bt the Bureau c1 Support and
In the Department of Human SeiVices, enforcement

lack of leadership on the part of the
current representative," said
McGhee.
·
McGhee said his experience In
business as the owner of the Bud
McGhee Realty and Auction Company and tn government as county
treasurer qualify him to "e!!ectlvely and aggressively '' represent
the district.
Those qualities, he said In a
release, wDI help him "provide
concrete, usable proof of responsible leadership and representation."
(Continued on page A3)

CAPE CANAA'ERAL, Fla.
(UP!) - The space agen?' contbtued Its stony silence Satutday on
what might have caused the shuttle
Challenger to explode, oot commenting' on a Ourry of outside
reports blambtg one of the ship's
solid rocket boosters.
Offshore, Coast Guard cutters
and a neet ct recovery ships
scoured the seabed In an area
where sonar detected a "large
object" Friday that could be
Challenger's crew cabin.
'
Early Saturday, more debrts was
unloaded from three ships and
Coast Guard Lt. Cmdr. James
Simpson said an orange, coneshaped 13-foot-dlameter object had
been found off the coast near
Savannah, Ga. , that could be
additional wreckage.
But with thousands of pounds of
debr1S already recovered, NASA
(Continued on page A3)

..·.

stamps, child nutrition benefits and Aid lo Families
with Dependent Children.
·
"We feel therearesomethlngs the White House can
and should support," said Mary Lee Allen of the
Chlldrell'sllefense Fund. "Certainly there are things
that can bedonetoaddress thewel1aresystem and we
applaud e!forts to do that."

Earthquake rattles residents
from Illinois to Washington

CLEVELAND (UPI) - An ployees. The ak'n was ca nC&lt;&gt;ied
earthquake of moderate severity about 2 ~ hours ~fter the quak~ . A
rattled the nation from Illinois to spokesooman said workers found
,.
·"
..,. MI CH
no major structural damage. ·
~~ Washington swaying tall buildings,
In Painesville, tremors broke
""""'"""
frightening residents and forcing
several
windows In dormitories ahd
c.-- L---' several schools to close.
The U.S. Geological Survey In at the exclusive Lake Erie College
Golden, Colo., said the quake forWomm.
Stupents at Madison High SchooL
measured 5.0 on the open-ended
Richter scale and was centered ll about 10 miles east It the tplc~nt&lt;&gt;r ,
PA.
miles ·northeast of Cleveland on were sent home after tile quake
knocked over several drums of
OHIO
Lake Erie's south shore.
IND .
'----r-i It began alll:47 a.m. EST Friday chemicals. Pollee said the drums
and lasted about ll seconds. The did not leak.
At Severance Hallin Cleveland.
only reponed Injury was bt Toledo
the
Cleveland Orchestra was playwhere boXes were knocked off an
Ing
a D~rak symphony when a
office
shelf
and
hit
a
telephone
KENTUCKY
·
repairman. His neck was slightly rumble began.
50
~'Suddenly
the
sllell
began to
Lo!:::'::'"':"'=:'~:::::::~:::::_:__j Injured.
The epicen,ter was within a lew shake and I llx&gt;ught the hall was
MODERATE ~UAKE - A mlles of the Perry nuclear power going to fall down oo us," saki Felix
moderllk! earthquake !!hook u
plant, but nuclear fuel Is oot FreWch, a violinist. "The next thing
area lrol!t llllnolll to Wuhla1·
scheduled to be loaded Into the I knew, everyone, Including the
ton, D.C., lbe U.S. CJeolollcal
reactor of the stlll- unfbtlshed plant conductor, was running orr the
Service In Golden, CGio., restage. When I dared to k&gt;ok back,
for several weeks.
Officials d Cleveland Electric music stands were toppled over,
poned ~- 'The quake meaDlurnlnatlng Co., which operates sheets of music were all over the
IIUred 5onlhe Rlmter IICIIIe and
Its eplceater wu about • mlle8
the plant, declared a precautionary place and roost It the BUdlenCP was
.
site alert and evacuated em- 'gone."
mriheMI of CJevelllld.

�February 2, 1986

Commentary and perspective

r----Weather!.----. Freezing rains glaze northern Plains

The Sunday Times-Sentinel_.
February 2. 1986

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST to 7 AM EST 2-2-86

Page-A-2

.

i1Wq 'Q!itttft - jeutind
A Division Of

Militant feminism

A~

WASHlNGTON - Amodest little
flap developed last week at Catholic
'qj~
University. 1'hf' studf'nl govern·
ment association had invltf'd Elea·
82$ Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
lll Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
nor Smeal, presklf'nt of the Na(6U) 446-2342
(614) 992-21116
tional Organization for Women, to
appear on Its iecturf' series. Then
complaints rolled In that the
ROBERT L. WINGETT
gentlewoman surely would use ber
Publisher
platform to advocate abortion on
df'mand.
On reflection, the assoclaROBART WILSON JR.
PAT WHITEHEAD
- tlon concluded that It would be
Executive Editor
Assistant Publisher-Controller
Improper to pay a $1,000 lecture fee
for the propagation of what the
AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
church regards as beresy, so the
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
Invitation was withdrawn.
LETTERS OF OPINION arf" welcome . They shouki be IE&gt;S-s than :J)() words
This decision set ott a smaU
lona. All letters are subject to editing and mu st bt&gt; signed with name . addres s and
commotion.
John Gilmore, a thirdtelephone number . No unsignEd lettf'rs will tK&gt; published. Letters should be In
. good tastf', addressing lssut&gt;S. not peorsonalltles .
year law student. said that "as
soon-to-be attorneys, we have an
-- obligation to protect the rights of
those whoSf' views we disagree
with." Gilmore roundf'd up $1,500
from three Jaw school organizations, and extended the Invitation
anf'W.

il!!m~

I"T'\...JL--rl r-r&amp;!!C•=

Discover what
went wrong, fix
it and start again

It Is tempting to argue the
proposition that Sm~al has no
"right" whatever to appear under
auspices of tbe studf'nt government
association. Sen. Jesse Helms, to
make the point, has no "right" to
speak at a convention of the
National Organization for Women.
No one has a "right" to have his
letter published in a newspaper. It
would be usefUl - and 5peclally
usefUl to third-year law studf'nts to get straight on this buslrfess of
''rights."'

Let It go. The Interesting thing Is
that the nap over the Invitation to
Smeal Jdckf'd up so little attention.
Hf'r(' she is, the !Ire-breathing,
flame--throwing presldf'nt ot the
country's largest organization ol
mllltant feminists, and oot many
people any kmger give a particular
damn. The stream leaks oot.
Women have gone back to weartng
bras, not burning them .
U this were only my opinion, It

Find out what went wrong. Fix it. Start again.
That. to their credit. Is what rrost who were asked last Tuesday said
shnukl be done about the space shuttle program. It was an encouragingly
adult response to a shocking mishap and. one would like to think, It was
typtcal of the American character.
U only we would apply the samf' "get it right" df'termination to our
current economic and social problems. Obviously, problems rt technology
are different from thOSf' of human behavior, but the American trait of
refusing to acc..pt what Is as what must be never has been limited to things
mechanical.
·Some examples.
-Amf'ricans lnventf'd a successful form &lt;:1 representative government.
but the framers of the Constitution sensed their work was not pertect.
flffhaps the most Innovative ff'ature &lt;:1 tbe Constitution they created was
the mf'aDS to change It peac..fuUy_
-'I'hf' United States was formed by people from S&gt;Cietles where rigid
diviskms of class largely determined at birth the courne of each person's
life. Americans broke that mold with, among other elements &lt;:1
opportunity. universal free education.
. -Americans adoptf'd a lree market economy developed In the Old
World, and with It created wmlth, mass employment and a grmt middle
c\3Ss. But they also recognized abuses lnberent .In the system and had the
wit to d..visf' measured controls that probably saved capitalism at a tlmf'
when others were turning to systems that promised but n..ver df'Uverf'd
~rtection .

-These pecullarly American accomplishments generaUy did not occur in
scime individual flash of inspiration. They were mostly trial and error. a
p~s that continues In SOmf' cases.
·But it Is hard to see how this American characteristic Is addressing such
rontemporary problems as djsappearing jobs. intergeneratlonal poverty
and violent crime and punishment.
We simply do not seem to be findingsuccf'SSfulwaystotralnandemploy
the unskillf'd, to break tbe cycle of welfarlsm or to wean ourselves from the
use rt deadly Ioree, eltber In breaking !be laws or enforcing them.
·'I'hf' "sea change" of ideology that came to the United States six years
age olferf'd not new answers to these problems but a return to the
resj,onses of the past - rf'Storatlon of an unff'ttered f'COnomy In which
st$Jgth or cl..verness Is the primary determinant rt survival. application
of ttadltlonal moral absolutf'S in personal conduc1 and tougher penalties,
bl.r prisons and refurbished electric chairs and gas chambers to deal
wiQtcrlme.
Th~ are based on the central proposition r:J what we call conservatism
- ·fhat our recent troubles are the rf'Sult of abandoning valuf'S and systems
th(t servf'd us well In the past.
The people we callllherais continue toquf'Stion that proposition, posing a
coWJ!ct that may b€o the reason that we remain unable to agree oo tbe
caQses of and tbe solutions to our most intractable problems_
If we arf' loyal to our own standards lor peaceful resolution of
dllferences. we may be able to work through the conflict to a national
CO!JiensUS. U we are also lucky. we max have the time to do it.

Berry's World

~B-

James J. Kilpatrick ;
Elizabeth Ulla, writing In Commight well · be discounted In the.
marketplace of Ideas. Somf' yl,!ai'S mentary, provides an absorbing
ago, Washingtonian magazine Ideo· . account of an etfort to revpmp the
tilled the capital's aJ leading male curriculum of Kenyon College In
chauvinist pigs. Joe Alsop ranked Gaml»er, Ohio, so as to establish a
first; I ranked about No. 12. It was new program of women's studies.
an honor I feld undeservf'd, but no This reform- was not sought by
matter. My observation Is con- activist students; It was oought by
an activist admlnlstr,atlon, catering
firmed at every hand.
Dlnesh D'Souza, writing In Policy to what It perceived to be academic
Review, finds the women's rrove- chic'. Alter llvf' years of conflict,
ment "In decay and despair." Its Involving the htrlng of feminist
leaders are "anxious and df'moral- faculty and the firing of studf'nt
editors, It appears the movement
lzed." She quotes Betty Frledan oo
the "profound paralysis" In femi - has fizzled. The women's studies
nism. Fifteen years ago Germaine course Is not being otfel'l'd In this
G(l!er was wl¥loplng It up for academic year for one compellljtg
free--and-easy sex In "'I'hf' Female reason: Only seven (of 1,400)
Eunuch." Now, In "Sex and studf'nts signed up for It last year,
Destiny," she delivers anl "attack down trom 32 In 1983-84.
Evidence of the movement's
upon the Ideology of sexual freedecline
comes from other quarters.·
dom." Susan Brownmlller. once a
Some
roonths
ago, soclologlsl Ro·
crusader In the field of Sf'xual
beri
Sherwin
announced
t'I'SUits &lt;:1 a
politics, now denounces the doc·
21
-year
study
of
sexual
behavior
at
trine of "comparable worth" as
Miami
University
In
Oxford,
Ohio.
"dumb" and "dopey."
He found that virginity Is making a
comeback among women students.
Between 1978 and 1984, the percen·
t.age of female virgins rose from 38
percent to 43 percent. On a national
level, divorce appears to be losing
some rt the attraction It once beld.
Motherhood once again is being
equated with apple pie and baseball. The doctrine of "comparable
worth" Is getting nowhere In the
courts. 1'hf' Equal Rights Amendment languishes In parliamentary
limbo. What ever becamf' of
Geraldine Ferraro?
What's thf' explanation? My
guess (for what..ver the guess of a
No. 12 male chauvinist pig may be
~rorih) Is that two factors have
played a part. The women's
movement becamf' Identified with
extremism, and Its leaders ran Into
a tldf' of social and biologic forces
too strong to he overwhelmed.
Many persons who were sympatlhetlc to rewriting the Bible. Phyllls
Schially In a drf'Ss seemed more of
a role model than a lesbian In
combat shoes.
The new ordf'r changeth, yielding
place to old. Sic Transit Gloria
Stelnem, and here's to the ladles,
God bless 'em .

•

willing to trade his own llle lor toose
of the enemy, we suggest that there
may not be as many suicidal
crazies out there as the df'termlnedly non-suicidal terrorist leaders would like the world to think.
Examination of highly classified
Intelligence Hies on Shiite Moslem
terrorist activities provides a Jf'Ss
apocalyptic picture of their past
achlevf'ments - and thus of their
likely futurf' operations.
Consider tbe opening attack In
the ShUte terrorists' overt but
undeclal'l'd war on the Western
presence in the Middle East: April
18. 1983, when an explosives·ladf'n
van crashed Into the U.S Embassy
In Beirut, killing 17 Americans_
According to investigators' reconstruction of the incident, the driver
of the van was probably blown to
bits - but not voluntarily. Secret
..vidence Indicates he had been told
he'd have lime to jump out of the

van before Its deadly carg&lt;J was
detonated by rf'!DOte control.
Six months later, twodf'vastating
truck-bomb explosions at the Be!nlt
airport killed 241 U.S Martnes and
58 French paratroopers. Intelligence reports revml that both
kamikaze drivers bad met the night
before "1th a Lebanese Shiite
leadf'r, who blessed them and
assured them that it they were
killed In the attacks they WOilld go to
heaven.
But French Intelligence reports,
later shal'l'd with tiE CIA. added
some fascinating Information.
Though tbe two drivers were Shiite
fanatics. their burning religious
passion was fuelf'd by cold cash:
Each was promised $100,000 for the
dangerous mission. And each was
told he'd have several rnlnutf's to
nee from his truck after Impact
before It explodf'd. Did they opt lor
paradiSf' over worldly wealth, or

..

50
UPI WEA THEA 'OTOCAST

,

Extended Ohio Forecast
MONDAY 11-IROUGH WEDNESDAY:
Monday through Wednf'Sday a chanc.. of rain or snow Monday and
Tuesday. Fair Wednesday. Highs In the lls north to 40s south. Lows
in the 20s north tolls south.

•

State zone forecasts
Northwest
Sa turday night: cloudy with scattered showers. Low near 35.
Southwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday: mostly cloudy. High near 45. Chance of precipitation: 40
Percent Saturday night and 10 percent Sunday.
Northeast
Sunday: mostly cloudy with widely scattered showers lingering.
High near 45. Chance of precipitation: 60 Percent Saturday night and
and 30 percent Sunday.
Central
Saturday night: cloudy with scattered showers. Low near 40.
Southwest wind 10 to 15 mph _
Sunday: mostly cloudy. High near 00. Chance of precipitation: ~
Percent Saturday night and 20 percent Sunday.
East central
Saturday night: cloudy with scattered showers. Low near 40.
Southwf'St wind 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday: mostly cloudy. High near 00. Chance of precipitation 50
Percent Saturday night and 20 percent Sunday_
Southwest, South central
Saturday night: cloudy with scattered showers. Low near 45.
Southwest wind 10 to 15 mph.
Sunday: mostly cloudy with widely scattf'red showers lingering.
High 50 to 55. Chance of precipitation: 50 Percent Saturday night and
aJ percent Sunday.

•
'·

National high, law

.

" WHY DID YOU WAIT UNTIL OIL DROPPED
BE:LOW $20 A BARRH ?"

.

Today in history
Today Is Sunday. Feb. 2. the .13rd day of !9&amp;i with .132 to follow.
l:tle moon Is In its last quartf'r.
The morning stars arf' Mars and Saturn .
Thf' evening stars are Mercury. Venus and .Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
French slatf'Sman Charlf'S de Talleyrand in 1754; psychologist Havelock
Elils In 1859; Irish novelist James Joyce In 1882; Charlf'S CorreU. the
"1\i.dy" of radio's "Amos and Andy" program. In 18!(); National Football
League co- founder George Halas In 1895; gossip columhlst LIZS;nlth in
1923 (age 63); comf'dlan Tom Smothers In Hm lagf' 49) . and ac tt'I'SS
Farrah Fawcf'l t In 1946 (agf' 40) .
On this date In history:
In 1848, Mexico slgned thf' Treaty of Guadaloupe Hidalgo, cf'dlng Texas.
NeW Mexico, Arizona and California to the United States for $15 million.
Ill 1876, the National Baseball League was formed, comprised ol tmms
In Boston, Chicago, Cincinnati, New York, Philadelphia, St. Louis.
LotilsvUie, Ky., and Hari1ord, Conn.
In 1933, two days alter becoming chancellor of Germany, Adolf Hitler
onlel'l'd dissolution of the German Parllament, the Relchstag.
11!1982, Secretary of State Alexandf'r Haig vowed that Uhf' United States
would take any steps necessary to prevent a leftist rebel takeover In El
Salvador.

"I st ill don ' t think he Is far
enough to the right."
"George has hugged Jerry
Falwell. Falwell has embraced
President Marcos. Th e person
will embraces the man who
embr aced Marcos cannot. by any
stretch of the Imagination, be
considered a man or tbe center."
"It all sounds like left-wing
opportunism." Niblock said.
" What I think Is that Bush's
presidential election team dectdf'd the only way to beat Kemp
was to have the V!ce .Presldent
show up at morf' conserva tive
dinners and prayer brea kfasts
than Jack does . They keep
feeding Bush speeches about
Nicaragua, abortion and the
family , In hopes people will
forget what he said about Rea gan' s voodoo economics ...
" When will you be convinced
that Vice President Bush Is truly
a man or the right?"
" When he attacks the gays. I
don't trust any politician who
dof'Sn't harangue homosexuals."
" It 's too early In the campaign
to aaack gays . You have to save
them lor the last week of the
primaries."
Then I asked Niblock , "Will
you grant that even lfBushlsn'ta
100-percent right·wlng activist at
tbe moment , that he's off to a
good star!?"
He replied . " Maybe, but I'd
prefer he wrap himself In the flag
a little more."
"He Is doing the best he can.ln
attacking Gov. Cuomo the VIce
President said, 'He (Cuomo) Is
telling us to be ashamed to stand
up and say we're proud ol this
great land and the freedom and
opportunity It has made possible

for generation after generation.'
If that Isn't wrapping yourself In
the American flag I don't know
what Is."
"All right, let 's say for argu ment's sake that Bush Is as far to
the right as Attlla the Hun. Why
should I give him any money
when I'm already supporting
another Attlla the Hun•"
"Because George ha s a chance

NEW YORK (UP!) - Thf highest temperatu re reported Friday

'

••
•

•I

Doonesbury

of being electro PresldPn t of the
United States, and your Hun
doesn't."
"Three conservative appearances don't make an ultra -right- -- .
wing candidate," Niblock said. ;, .
"I'll believe he's one of us only . ::
after I see him dancing with · "'
Phyllis Schlafly to the 'Darktown ;;
Strutter's Ball. · "
;.l

.
BY GARRY TRUDEAU

I

by the National Weatber Service, excluding Alaska and Hawaii. was

Bush to the right _______A_rt_Bu_ch_t.Va~ld
No mattPr how hard VlcP
President Grorgp Bush works to
convince prople thai In his heart
he Is really right, there are st ill
some Republicans who aren't
buying IL
I thought Niblock would be
co nvinced of Bush's conservative credentials after the Vice
President addressed a dinner for
the late William Loeb In New
Hampshire. the New York Statp
Conservative Party. and Jf'rry
Falwell's Liberty Federation
(the old Moral Majority) In
Washington. D.C. But I was
wrong .
"I don't care what right -wing
groups he addresses- the man 's
a closet mlddle-ol-the -roader ."
Niblock said.
"That' s not fair ." I retorted.
"George Bush Is as much a
conservative as I am. possibly
evpn more. He believes In prayer
In school. overthrowing the go vernment In Angola , and the
sanctity of Jesse Helms' political
fund -raising campaigns."
"Bush only says that to get
votf'S ," Niblock said . "What he
reall y wants to do Is hijack the
conservatives pledged to Jack
Kemp."
"Perhaps he started out with
that goal. But now George Is
convinced the conservativ e way
Is the true way. Have you sef'n
where h e stands on
pornography•"
Niblock sneered, "He's coming
out against pornography awfully
late."
"As Vice President he couldn't
afford to get the pro ·
pornographers mad . But now
that Reagan Is a lame duck, Bush
Is his own man _"

®

WEATHER MAP - Snow will extEnd from Mlnnesola acmss the
Greal Lakes to the central Appalachians wllh raJa scatiered trom the
mld·Mlsslsslppl Valley acl'!IS the Ohio Valley. Ralnshowers will also
reach from the northern and central Pacific Coast through the Plateau
region to the southern Rockies. A few showers wDJ also dot poltloll!l ol
south Texas.IDgh temperatures will be In Uhf' single mmbers and teeM
RCI'088 northern New England with the 00s and 30s edmdlng from the
northern Plains across the Great Lakes region to southern New
England and New Jersey. Temperatures will reach the «lsand'lOsover
much of the southern third of lbe nation. 1be remainder rt tiE rountry .
will have highs lri the «&lt;s_ and 50s.

were they double-crossed? There's
oo way of knowing.
,_ Tl!!&gt;'. nexl Shiites trike was a series
of sumultaneous bombings In Kuwait against U.S., French and
Kuwaiti targets In December 1983.
Seven of the eight vehicle explosions were df'tonatf'd either by
remote control or a timing devicehardly the mark of a kamikaze_
And the only terrorist who died
needn't have. He accldentaUy or
deliberately taUed to use the safety
fuse that would have allowed him to
escape; his bomb exploded on
Impact.
In September 1984, a van with a
homb hurtlf'd into the u_
s_ Em·
bassy annex In Beirut, killing two
Americans and tbe driver. It's not
known whether he wenllo his death
witllngly, because bullets stopped
him before his van reached Its goal:
tbe garage under the annex.

By United Press International
Snow and fref'zlng rain gi8Zf'Ci the
northern Plains Saturday, making
roads slick and hazardous after a
second Pacific storm caused less
damage than expected In sou tllern
California but stU! triggered mudslides In fire. ravaged canyons.
Rain fell along much of the West
Coast early Saturday. and snow
was predicted for parts of Caltlornla and Nevada. Gusty winds and
df'nae fog were forecast for the
southern mountains of California,
with gale warnings postf'd for the
northern and c..ntral Pacific coast.

Shuttle

'Suicidal' terrorists!...--______Ja....:....ck_A_nd_e_rso_n
WASHlNGTON -The specter cl.
fanatical Moslem teiTOrist seeking
one-way tickets to paradisf'through
kamlkaze attacks on Wf'Stern
Infidels has been burned Into the
American consciousness by no less
an authority than President Reagan. Morf' than two years ago he
announced that Iran had trained at
least a thousand of the Sf' pot en tlal
martyrs ready to do the Ayatollah
Khomeinl's Insane bidding_
Terrorist groups themselves
have done their best to encourage
this Image of suicidal children of
Allah eager to die for the cause of
Islamic revolution. Palestinian na tionhood or whatever. "Wf' are the
soldiers of God and we crave
death! ·• was the ringing boast ri the
Islamic Jihad after one munFrous
attack.
Without mlnlmlzlng the ghastly
damage that even a single dedicated fanatic can wreck If he's

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3

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

85 degrees at McAllen, Texas. Today's lowwas 20df'gl't'eSbelowzero
at Plattsburgh, N.Y .

Town warms up for groundhog
PUNXSliTAWNEY, Pa. iUPIJ -Punxsutawney Phtl, napping
insldf' his electrically heated burrow on Gobbler's Knob, Is oblivious
to It all, but this town of ahout 7,10J residents Is ahout to go
groundhog-wild.
Sunday Is Groundhog Day. when as many as 2.:00 people 1&lt;1U be on
hand as Phil. the town's famous weather-forecasting groundhog,
emergf'S from his den to make his annual predictions on the coming
ot spring.
In what a local Groundhog Club member descrihed as "the eighth
wonder of tbe world," Phil will scout around for his shadow and then,
speaking to club officials In "groundhogese," proclaim whether
there wUI be six more weeks of winter.
Thf' way the story goes. ~ hf' sees his shadow II portf'Dds six rrore
weeks of winter weather.
Club members said Punxsutawney Phil, representf'd by a series of
groundhogs during the past 99 years, has faUf'd to see his shadow
only five times.
His followers contend he has never been wrong _
"We believe In the groundhog 100 Pf'rcent," said Punxsutawney
resident Pat Brady, who has watched the event for five years. "He's
always right."
It's also an excuse for a good time.

..•

.....
•

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(Continued from page A1 \
Boster defeated incumbent
Claire "Buzz" Ball Jr .. an Atbens
attorney, In the 1982 general
election for her first term.
Boster Is expected to announce
her plans to seek a third tf'rm In !be
Ohio House In the near future. No
otber Democrat has announced
plans to run for the seat.

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McGhee.••

Albans, W.Va., and Jeffrey Daniels. pf North Canton, also alleged
to be behind In payments.
A' bench warrant was lssuf'd lor
the arrest of Roy Gordon, of Alloy,
W.Va., who failed to show up for
Friday's appearance.
David Jenkins, head of child
support enforcment for the county's
Department of Human Services,
called Fridays' court action
"another success."
Anothf'r groupjf parents will be
in court on April 16 to answer
allegations of faUing to pay support
Jenkins said.

$395°

l...

....-...
-....•

Appearing Friday before Meigs
County Common Pleas Judge
Charles Knight were Donald L.
Dailey, Middleport; Dale Herman,
Middleport; Tommy Lane Sr .
Racinf': Jamf'S E. MUter. Par,;~.•· Vincent J _LaComb, Tuppers
Plains; !-'· •ry Paul Price. Tuppers
Plains; and Stephen 0 . Jenkins.
Racine.
Suspended jail sentences werf'
Imposed by the court lnsomecasf'S,
while others were dismissed when
the lathers were found not to be In
contempt of court. Some cases were
continuf'd until a later date.
Several other fathers were scheduled to appear before the judge on
Friday but they brought their
payments current and were
dismissed.
The court was unable to Sf'rve
notice on Archie Jarrell, of St.

CARAT
DIAMOND
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k

.Child support.. . . . ___(C_o_nt_lnu_ed_fro_m~p~ag;_e_A_-11

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possibly because of a rupture In its
skin.
The rf'Sultlng 6,1XXk!egree flame,
according to the report, may have
severed a liquid oxygen fuel llne
and led to the fiery df'tonation .
Other rf'ports have pointed to
problems with the shuttle's external fuel tank.

BEAUTIFUL SELECTION

...
"'••

M

The first of the two Pacific
storms, which hit early Thursday,
trtggerf'd mud-slldf's In the Matillja ,
Canyon area and forced the ·
evacuation of nearly «J people from :
their homes. One home was : ·
destroyed by a mudslidf' and two ·
others were damaged.
·
Authorities feared an addltlona11 : ·
to 3 Inches of rain predicted for · :
Frida y' s storm would trigger mas- .
sive mudslidf's, but the storm :
dropped only a half Inch to 1% . .
lnchf'S on the saturated htlisidf'S . Friday's rain triggered at least ·
thref' mudslldf's in the Malibu area. :
also blackened In last summer's :
(Continued from page Al l brush firf'S. The slides forced the closure ol a section of Mulholland ·
Under Increasing criticism for Highway, Los Angeles County : ·
refusing to prcvlde any Information Sheriffs Deparnnent officials said. ·:
about the worst disaster In space
There were no injuries reported : ·
flight history, the agency prf'pared and little damage.
·
for a mf'morial Sf'rvice to mourn
Two city buses collided during a
the seven shuttle Diers.
driving rainstorm In South Los
Friday night. tillusands of resi- Angeles Friday afternoon. sending
dents In Br..vard County nf'ar the 15 people to hospitals with minor
Kf'nnf'dy Space Center hnf'd local injuries. Southern California free beachf's bearing candles and flash- ways became obstacle courses · :
lights to honortbe fallen astronauts. littered with stalled cars and minor : :
President lle;jgan earlier Friday crashes.
eulogized space teachf'r Christa
Flooding and more mud closed
McAuliffe and hf'r cnwmatf'S as off a stretch ol Pacific Coast&lt;
"heroes" in an emotional remem - Highway just north of the Los
branoe at the Johnson Spacf'Center Angeles Counry line shortly before. In Houston attendf'd by family noon. The highway was later• '·
members, astronauts. lawmakers reoPf'ned to traffic.
and NASA workers.
Matilija
Canyon
Road
In
Ventura
Thf' NASA ship Liberty Star was
brought back to port to be outfitted County was the only road to remain
with sophisticated sonar gear for closed to traffic late Friday becauSf'
ofthf' mudslidf'S, authorities said.
mlrf' detailed Sf'archf'S.

____________

.__

refuses to say what has been found
or If the crew cabin or personal
effects of the astronauts have been
locatf'd.
The New York Times reported
Saturday the fatal Sf'ries of f'Vents
that led to Challenger's destruction
began when Its right side solid
rocket booster suddenly lost power.

.NOW

......•'

.,•

Snow stretched from North Da- Ventura County Sheriffs Depart kota to Wisconsin early Saturday, ment Lt. Tony Dltzhazy said alter
prompting travelers advisories the storm front had passed through
throughout the area . The North the area.
The .heavy rains and strong gusty
Dakota Highway Patrol said Icecovered roads were like glass winds postponed the second round
between Bismarck and Dickinson, of the PGA's SlOO,COO stop on the
and several accidents were re- Monterf'y Peninsula Friday. The
ported near Minot
National Weather Service said the
A second Pacific Coast rainstorm showers would Jet up this morning,
In as many days caused fears of but woukl return In the ..venlng for
massive mudslides Friday on a two-day stay.
Tournament officials said 1he
hillsides denuded by last autumn's
brushfires, but only half as much ..vent would maintain its 72-ho!e
rain fell as was expectf'd.
format , pushing the final round to
"Looks like we escaped this one." Monday.

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FebruiiV 2, 1986

Ohio-Point P111sant. W. Va.
•We Reserve The Right To Limit QuantltlelfPrlces
Effective Sunday, February 2 Thru Saturday,
February 8, 1988•USDA Food Slllmps Accepted
•Not Responsible For Typographical Or Pictorial Errors.

·'

Reagan at memorial:

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Contal•s:

Family Meal Planning-Freezer Sale
5 Lb. Boneless Chuck Roast, 5 Lbs. Boneless
Stew Beef, 5 Lbs. Assorted Pork Chops,
5·1 Lb. Pkgs. Ole VIrginia Sausage, 5-12 Oz. Pkgs.
Tenderbest Bacon, 5 Lb. 'Ground Beer

99
TOTAL
POUND PKG.

S. CHARLESTON, W.Va.
Rnma Mae Phillips lewis, 73, of
South C11arieston. W.Va., died
Friday at CAMC General Division
In Charleston following a short
Illness.
A member of the First Baptist
C11urch ol South Charleston, she
was born July 17,19121n Huntington
to the late Otle Smith and Z.T.
Phillips.
SuiVIvors Include her husband
Edwin G. lewis; three daughters,
Mrs. Edna Neads, of New Haven,
W.Va., Mrs. Sally Henoon, of
Belpre, and Mrs. Nancy Kessler of
Hun1cane, W.Va.; one stster.Betty
Bell, of South C11arleston; three
brothers, Eugene Phillips of
Haughton. La .. Z.T. Phllllpos, of
Hun1cane, and Joseph Phillips, of
Vancouver, Wash.; one granddaughter, Donna Meads, of New
Haven; eight other grandchildren
and one great·grandson.
Funeral seiVIces wlll he 1 p.m.
Monday at the Snodgrass Funeral
Home In South Charleston with
Rev. Dr. Joseph C11apman and
Rev. Jerry Losh o!llclatlng, Burial
will be In Sunset Memorial Park in
South C11arleston. Friends may ca ll
!rom 7·9 p.m. Sunday at the funeral
mme.

Mildred A. Shoemaker
BIDWEll - Mildred A. Shoemaker, Ill, of Bidwell, died Friday
at her resilence.
A retired employee of Wickline's
Grocery Store in Bidwell and a
member of the VInton Order of the
EastemStar 375, she was born Jan .
4, 1900atVInton lathe late Jolin and
Daisy Deckard Burtile.
Survivors include one daughter,
Mrs. William (Gloria) Smith, of
Columbus; three grandchildren
and three great-grandchlldren.
She was Preceded In death by her
husband, Hal Shoemaker, who died
In 19'70, two brothers and two
sisters.
Funeral seiVIces will be 1 p.m.
Monday at McCoy·Moore Funeral
Home In Vinton with Rev. C.J.
Lemley o!llclatlng. Burial will be in
VInton Memorial Park. Friends

NewEnglandschoolteacherpicked
to be the first ordinary citizen in
space.
"Sometimes, when we reach lo r
may call from 2-4 and 6-9 p.m.
the stars, we fall short, but we must
Sunday at the funeral home.
pick ourselves up again and press
on despite the pain," the president
Ruth M. Wagner
said. "Man will continue his
conquest of space.".
GEORGETOWN - Ruth M.
Ten thousand people gathered
Wagner, 84, Georgetown, Ohio, died ou !side the Avionics Building lor
Friday In Meadowood Nursing the ceremony_ Among them were
Center, following a lengthy illness. 20 members of the dead astronauts'
Sie was bom Aprll 13, 1901 In families, the -other 112 finalists in
Gallla County to the late Henry ·
the competition to select the first
Reeves and Alta Switzer Reeves. teacher In space, the children of
Preceding her In death was her President John F. Kennedy, the
husband Clarence (Pete) Wagner, surviving 97 members of the
Aug. 17, 1!Hi!.
astronaut corps, former astroSurviving are three sons, Jack nauts, specialists, technicians, en·
Wagner, Canal Winchester. Ohio. gineers and secretaries at the space
Edward Wagner, Gainesville, Ga., center and several politicians.
Wllllam Wagner, Phoenix, Ariz.; ll
It was broadcast live to the nation
grandchildren; 6 great grandchild - but it was not the only memorial for
ren ; one brother, Max Reeves, the astronauts Friday. Resnik's
Cincinnati, Ohio; and one sister, parents stayed home in Akron,
Mrs. Thelma Epple, Columb!Js.
Ohio, for a ceremony held there for
She was also preceded In death by their daughter.
a son, Robert and a daughter.
Caroline.
She was a member of the
Georgetown United Methodist
Church, 50-year member Gallipolis
chapter, Order of the EastemStar.
Funeral services will be l p.m.
Tuesday, Waugh -Halley -Wood
Funeral Home with Rev. George
Copus officiating. Burial in Gravel
Hill Cemetery, Chesllire_Pallbear1
ers will be grandsons.
Friends may call at the funeral
mme from noon Tuesday until
service time.
In lelu of flowers, contributions
may be made to the Georgetown
United Methodist Church. Georgetown. Ohio.

In i.JJs Angeles, a million school
children paused In silence exactly
72 murs from the moment the
massive ball of fire enguHed
C11allenger. More than 810 people
gathered at the hu ge Crystal
Cathedral in Gar&lt;&gt;?n Grove, Calif.,
where seven candles flickered on a
table tx&gt;fore seven neatly folded
American flags .
Thousands of mids llipmen
packed the Naval Academy chapel
to pay tribute to Smith, a 1967
academy graduate and Challenger's ro-pilot. McNair was hooored at his alma mater, North
Carolina A&amp;T University in
Greensboro.
At the Space Center, the sun slid
In and out of dull gray clouds and
the 539th Air Force band played
dirges \Vhile President and Mrs.
Reagan met with the famllies
inside the Avionics Lab.
At the outdoor ceremo ny. many
of tte suiVivors wept and held
hands. Erin, Smith's small daughter, clutched a teddy bear.
"Words pale in the shadow of
grief," Reagan said. "They seem
insufficient even to measure the

brave sacrifice of those you bved
and we so admired. Their truest
testimony
"at in the words we
speak, but in the way they led their
lives and In the way they lost those
lives- with dedication, with honor,

""ll

Wilmington, lanmter and More

5305
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Publis hed each Sunday , 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis, Ohio, by Ihe Ohio Valley Pub·

lishtng Company tMultimedla, Inc. SPcond class postagf' paid at Gallipolis.
Ohio 45631. Enlered as second class

malllng matter at Pomeroy, Ohio. Post
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Me mbE&gt;r : Uni!E'd Press lnlernallonal~

Inland Dally Press Association and the
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GROUP TOURS

and an unquenchable desire to
explore this mysterious and beautiful unlverse.
"Today, we prolnise Dick Scobee
and his crew that their dream lives
on; that the future they worked so
hard to bulld wlll become reality ...
Man will contiue his conquest of
space. To reach out lor new goals
and ever greater achievements lothat Is the way we shall commemorate our seven Challenger heroes."

ThC' Su ndav Times- Sentinel will not be
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Half Stick ..... 69 1 lb.

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One Year .. ., ......................... ... $26.80
Six monlh s ........

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DR. SHABBIR DOCTOR D.M.D.

Dally and Sunday
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Ph. 675-2990

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JUNE 11-JUL 7
PACIFK NORTHWESl

51585
AU TIIPS CAlli IE PICKED UP
AT GAWPOLIS IUS STAnOIII.

C&amp;l TOURS

PHONE 30~-744-6981
AFTER 6 P.M. 744-2162

The Farmers Bank &amp;
Savings Company

IRA

...

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FREEZER BEEF SALE
USDA CHOICE

.

BEEF FORE QUARTERS ....................... ~.~·... $ 19 .

1

WHOlE BEEF SIDES .............................L!·... $ 129 ::
BEEF HIND QUARTERS ....................... ~.~~ .. ~ 169 ·:,•
WHOlE BEF RIBEYES ...........................L!·... $399 l~
Cut and Wrapped FrN
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:;
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ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
a. Nonlnterest·bearlng balances and currency and coin ......... ......... 2,631,000.00
b. Jnterest·bearlng balances ...... .... .. ....... ...... ........... ............ .... ... ...... 200,000.00
Securities ... ..... ............... .. .... ... :.................... .. ................................. 20,968,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased
under aagreements to resell ............. .... ........ .... ....... .. .... .. ..... .... ........ 400,000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables :
Loans and leases, net of unearnect Income ......... 19,257 ,000.00
LESS: Allowance lor loan and lease losses .......... ... 91.000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income.
allowance, and reserve .............. ......... ... ........ .... .. .... ..................... 19 ,166,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leasesl .... .. .. .............. n1.000.00
Other assets ..................... ....... ..... .. ........... .............. .... ...... ........... ....... 687,000.00
Total assets .............................................. ..... .. ................. .. ..... ....... 44 ,523,000.00
LIABILITIES
Deposits :
In domestic olllces ........ .... ....... ............ ...... ..... .... .. .... .. .. ..... .
.. .... 40,373,000.00
(I) Nonlnterest-hearlng ...................................... 4,357.QOO.OO
(2) Interest·bearlng .................... ...... ..... ............ J6,016,000.00
Other liabilities ....................... .... ............ ... ........... .... .. ...... ... .... .. ..... .... 397,000.00
Totalllabllltles .... .................... .... .. ...... .... ...... .. .... ................. .. .. .. ... .. 40,770,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock .... .. .................. ...... .................................... ... ...... ..... .. .. 400,000.00
Surplus .... .. ......... .. ..... .................... ...... ...... ........ ............... .......... .... .... 600.000.00
Undivided pro!Its and capital reserves .. ....................... ...... ............ .. . 2,753,000.00
Total equity capital .... .... .. .............. .... ..................... : .. ......... .... ...... ... 3,753,000.00
Total liabilities, limited -life preferred stock, and
equity capital ..................... .................. ..... ... ............. ..... ............ .. 44 ,523,000.00
I, Roger W. Hysell , Cashier, o! the a hove· named bank do hereby declare that
this Report of Condition has been prepared ln conformance with the Instructions Is ·
sued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the StatP BankIng Authority and Is true to the best of my knowledge and belef.
Roger W_Hysell
We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness ot this Report of Condi tion and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In conformance with the Instructions Issued by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the State Banking AuthorIty and Is true and correct.
THEODORE T. REED, JR.
THEREON JOHNSON - DIRECfORS
BEN H. EWING

.

•• 0•
••
"

of Pomeroy, Ohio, and Foretrn and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of business
December $1, 1881, a sta&amp;e banking lnslllulton orcanlzed and operating under the
· banldn1 laws of tblsllia&amp;e 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.

FALTER'S

99(

Roma Mae Phillips

the five men and two women who
died aboard Challenger In the
26-mlnute ceremony at the Johnson
Space Center Friday.
President Reagan eulogized each
of them- Onlzuka, Francis "Dick"
Scobee, Michael Smith, Judith
Resnik, Rnnald McNair, Gregory
. Jarvis and Christa McAuliffe, the

Federal Reserve District No. 4

FALltR'S DELl STYLI

Who it
or !hank

Charles Rnth o!llclatlng. Burial will
follow In Mount Olivet Cemetery_
Friends may call at the funeral
mme from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on
Sunday,

-·

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
State Bank No. 223X

HOLLY FARMS G.RADE A

Smoked Ham

.

PARKERSBURG - Hazel B.
Melrose, ~. Parkersb!Jrg, died
Friday at St. Joseph's Hospital In
Parkersburg,
She was the daughter of the late
Herman and Laura Kester Blair.
She was a retired employee of the
UnJted Slates Postal Service, a
member ct the St. Andrew's United
Methodist Church.
_ Surviving are on daughter, Betty
Hillman ol Tucson, Ariz.; one son,
James Sheehy of Plttsb!Jrgh.
Penn.; twos~hlldren,Mrs. Tom
Fisher and Ted Melrose, both of
Point Pleasant; one sister. Inez
Walker and William Blair, both ct
Parkersburg; seven grandchildren
and four great.grandchlldren.
• _She was preceded In death by her
· ~usband Richard Melrose and
:: (liree brothers.
-· Funeral services will he 11 a .m.
Monday at the Ogdln Funeral
Home in Parkersburg with the Rev_

DIET or REGULAR

. $ausage ................
II.
ItaI1an
. $JI9
· ..............
6lb. box .$699
FIt
a er ,s w1eners

. IRONTON -Claude F_ Lyons
Sr., 65, of Coal Grove, died
Thursday evening at Ironton
Hospital.
A World WariiArmyveteran,he
was born June 28, 1!m In Ashland,
!&lt;Y· to the late WDllam and Elva
Cash Lyons.
He was a retirEd crane qJerator
lor Armco Steel in Ashland, Ky. , a
.member of the Coal Grove Lions
Olub, trustee !or and member of
.Main Street Baptist C11urch.
~- SuiVivors Include hls wile, Anna
1!-u!h Clarke Lyons; three sons,
Claude Lyons Jr., of Coal Grove,
Qlarles Ray Lyons, at home, and
tiary Lee Lyons, of Bidwell; three
daughters, Paula Sue Kingery and
Cathy Sue Lyons, both of Coal
Grove, and Sharon Kay Simpson, of
Cleveland; one brother, Richard
Lee Lyons, ol Portsmouth, Va.; two
$1sters, Otha Belle Blair, of Ironton,
Thelma Katherine Pennington, of
South Point; hls first wile Erma
{.yons, of Gallipolis; and nine
gandchildren.
• Funeral services will be 1 p.m.
Monday at the PhUUps Funeral
Home In Ironton with Rev. Paul
Bartram oH!clatlng. Burial will be
In COOIIJlunlty Cemetery. Friends
rpay call from 6-9 p.m. Sunday at
the funeral home. Graveside mllltary rttes wiD be by VFW Post 2761.

Hazel B. Melro8e

16

the band re-emerged, and the
widow of astronaut Ellison Onlzuka
abruptly b!Jrted her lace In hls
brother's broadchestandcollapsed
In wracking oobs.
On the 28th anniversary of the
day America launched its first
sateiUte, the nation paid trtbute to

.t-ea deaths

~

Claude F. Lyol18

Seven Up

the glass and concrete b!Jlldlngs,
ang when they were above the
pn!Sklent and the vast throng by the
pond, the traDing plane leaped
upward and disappeared Into the
lowering clouds.
In an lns!iiDt, the missing man
!ormation was gone; the strains of

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-A-6

'Words pale in the shadow of grief

r - - - - - - - - - - - : - - - - - _ : ._________.:.____:______,,

LEAN
GROUND CHUCK

FALltR'S OLD FASHIONED

to

playing "God Bless America"
when the sudden scream of jets
erupted aver the mourners.
In a precise diamond shape the
lour white planes swept low over

Boneless
Chuck Roast

LB.
Half Stick •••• 79 1 lb.

Houston

dry the tears and the band was
AT FOODLAND

TENDERBEST U.S.D.A. CHOICE

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(UPI)- The wind was heglnnjng

WITH a1Q _OO OR MOlliE ll'\UICNAI!. LIMIT!D TO MANUFACnJIIti!D ltflOOUCTI COU~NI WOIIITH UP TO AND IN ·
CLUDINO .SOC OFF . C:OUPONI WORTH MO~ETHAN .IOC A.IIER:IDIEMEDAT FACE 'VAlUE ONLY. LIMff ONE COUPON
FOA UCH PRODUCT PURCHASED. LIMIT ONE COFFEE. COUPON. NO HEll, WINE OR CIQAIIImECOUPONiwtLL IE
OOUILIE . NOT VAliD ON FREE COUPONS. FOODlAND COUPONI Ofl IIETAIL FOOD STORE COUPOU. THE AMOUNT
REFUNDED CANNOT E)(CEED THE PRICE QJTHE ITI!M. YOU MUIT ltURCHAIE PIIIOOUCllfrrl IIZU IPEC"IED ON THIE
COUPON . THIS OFFEIII APPt.II!J ONLY 'R) MANUFACni,.ED PIIIODUCTI "CIENTI OFf" COUPONS fOR ITE.MI Wt:
CARRY . TO AllURE PIIIODUCT'' AVAILAIIU1"t FOIII All OUIII 'CUITOMEAI , ONLY ON! COUPON PER SHOPPING FAM ·
ILY WILLIE
IAANDITEM DUAtNO EACH ITORfVIIIT .

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

..••.•
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That's right! $1,000.00 or $99,000.00 you
double your original investment In seven
years and 120 days, earning an annual
percentage rate of 10.00%. We call it our
DOUBLE VALUE IRA CERTIFICATE.
•substantial Penalty for Early Withdrawal

Ohio Valley Bank
Gall ipOliS. Oh 10

Member FDIC

••

•

�Page-A-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant.

w. va.

February 2, 1986

_February 2, 1988

State's age ceiling of 70 upheld for judici~ candidates
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- The
Ohio SUpreme Court has upheld the
constitutionality of the state's age
ceiling of 70 years for judicial
candldates.
Friday's 5-2 ruling ended the
re-election bid of Judge John W.
Keefe of the First District Court of
Appeals In Hamllton County.
: Keefe fUed for re-election, botthe
Hamllton County Board of Eleclions refused to certify his name for
the ballot because he had reached
the mandatory retirement age of
70. Keefe said that violated his
constitutional rights.
A majortty of !lie high court noted

"there is no furxlamental right to
run for public o!flce."
It also noted that "mandatory
retirement Is becoming more popular with both the publiC and private
secton" and retired judge help
relieve the workload of jurists
through part-time assignment."
" ... the citizens of the state have a
right to expect that the process of
removing lnteUectually deficient
jurtsts will not evolve Into the
embarrassing spectacle of having
the aged, Infirm or senile judge
forcibly removed from the bench,"
the majortty wrote.
But Chief JustiCe Frank D.

Ceiebrez.ze d!ssmted, saying the
decision was "a shameful attack on
the mature citizens of our society"
and a "flat, Oagrant and open
violation d. the rtghts guaranteed to
Jodge Keefe by the CollStitutions d.
the United States.
Celebrez.ze said the retirement
provision Is dlscrlmlnatory In that
one judge could be elected at age 69
and serve until age 15, yt&gt;t another's
serviCe would end at '!J.
Celebrezze pointed out the
achievements ot Justices Oliver
Wendell Homes, Louis Brandeis
and Hugu Black. and the vigor of
President Rl'agan at an advanced

••
Source of erroneous Hmt1an
president report a mystery

' WASHINGTON iUPI I -White
House and State Department offi.
clals blame each other lor the
foul-up that led to the president's
spokesman declaring erroneously
that Haitian President -for-life
Jean-Claude Duvaller had been
ousted.
Shortly after Air Force One took
off for Houston and the memorial
ser.ice honoring- victims of the

shuttle explosion, White House
spokesman Larry Speakes !Old
reporten that Duvaller had been
overthrown and had fled his Island
nation.
Reporten aboard Air Force One
were pennltted to use the plane's
radio communications to send a
brief account of Speakes' remarks
to their news agPncies while the
aircraft was In flight.

Kindness trails Glenn in fundraising
WASHINGTON (UP! ) - Ohio
Rep. Tom Kindness trailed Sen.
John Glenn In the early months of
fundralslng for this year 's Senate
race, raising $150,00J by Jan. 1
compared to the $445,00) reported
bv Glenn.
- Kindness, who represents the 8th
House Distrtct In western Ohio, is
expected to be the Republican
nominee against Glenn. a two-term
Democrat. Kindness has said he
expects to Sp&lt;'nd $3.5 million on the
race.
"We're very pleased with hew the
fund-raising has gone. We antici·
pate having no trouble raising a
sufficient amount of money to
finance the campaign." a Kindness
spokesman said.
In a year-&lt;'nd report. Glenn said
he collected $455,00l in the last six
months of .1985 and had $246,00l in
rash on hand at the start of this
year. The Kindness aide said he
raised $150.00l and did not have
figures on how much money
Kindness had in cash Jan . l.

Glenn Is asking bankers to
restructure debts from his 1984
presidential campaign so It Is not
due until March 15,1987. The money
was due this Jan . 15. The senator
stressed he Intends In repay all of
the $2.84 million he wes.
In a statement, Kindness said
"many questions" remain about
Glenn 's plans.
"Both what he proposes and the
implied lock of any loan agreement
wou)d seem to be quite irregular. l
will have further comments as the
facts become known ," Kindness
said.
The National Republican Sena·
tonal Committee has pledged to
make the maximum S715,00lrontli·
button oo t has released mly $15,00)
so far. The Kindness spokesman
said a Washington furxlralser on
Thursday raised $30,000 for
Kindness.
The 8th Hou se distriCt runs north
along the Indiana border from the
Cincinnati suborbs, skirts Dayton
and has Van Wert County as Its
oorthernrnost point.

Veterans Memorial Hospital

"The fact of the president's

overwhelming election trJumph is
con'c!uslve evidence that the Amerlcan people- and Indeed the people
of Ohio- no longer consider smior
citizenship to be a oorxlltion ot
Ineptitude calling for the wholesale
shelving d. the Jreclous resource at
humanity," wrote Celebrezre.
Justice Clltlord F. Brown, who Is
prohibited from seeking re-election
this year by the same state
constitutional bar, supported the
majontyoplnlon,lhoughhesaldlhe
U.S. SUpreme Court has never
ruled oo the exact Issue.
Joining Brown In the majortty

POMEROY - Admissions: None.
Dlcharges: Rlcky McClellan, James Wyatt. Louise Berbrldge,
Gladys Shumway, Maudle Wood.
-

WANT ABIGGER REFUND?

EMS answers two calls

H&amp;R Block could put the two.together for you! .

THE INCOME TAll PEOPLE

:r.;rtJ~~m,~~~~Locho::

-618 E. MAIN ST.

27 SYCAMORE ST.

POMEIOY, OHIO
PHONE 992-3795

GAWPOUS. OHIO
PHONE 4411·0303

Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Weekdays, 9-6 Sat.
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

F~~~·
~wee-ney-jolned--;Celebre7:le~in;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~::::::::;;;;;;;;;;;;---

time fro m day estabished in (I ) above to date .
Failure to receive bill does not avoid penalty and interest. Office hours 8:31) am . to 4 :30
p.m . Phone 992 -2004 .
M1igs C~unty Treasurer

MINNEAPOLIS (UPI) - Mary
Lurxl, the world's first female
ar:tlflctal bear! recipient, experienced her first human heartbeat
In six weeks after docton replaced
her rnlni.Jarvik 7 with tbe heart ci a
14-year-old g!r~
boctors rePlaced Lund's mlniJarillk 7 Friday with the new heart,
whiCh was beating In Lurxl's chest 2
hOun and 56 minutes after It was
removed from the donor In BIUings,
Mont.
Docton said Lund, of Kensington, Minn., was In critical oo t stable

STORE HOURS:
MON .-THURS .

9 am til10 pm
FRI.-SAT.

9 amtil10 pm
SED SUNDAY

I. ._-

OUI TOWN'S FINEST SUrEI MARletT
GO TO CHURCH [V[RV SUNDAY

FRESH LEAN

GROUND BEEF
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Prices good thru Feb . 8. 1986

SUrEIIOI IOIIEIIS

99(

LB.

TAVERN HAM

WHOII
ll.

$169

PORK CHOPS
LOIN END

BONELESS

•MILD •SAGE

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~~LL $169
KAHN'S

$1"

$129

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SUPIIIOI

JUMBO BOLOGNA

FRANKIE$

89&lt;

PEPSI, PEPSI FREE
DIET PEPSI
MT. DEW

8~~Loz.$1 59
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PRE-SICED BACON

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$179

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$149

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LESSER AMOUNTS LB. $119

BOB EVANS

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ll .

IT. YIINOII

2% MILK

$ 49

GAL. .

l

SALAD DRESSING

$119

QT.

YAUIT lEU

11111111 Nil

BUnERMILif

BEEF STEW

11 GAL

1

99 (

lAG

CAN

$149

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POTATOES

10 II.

230Z.

89(

CAULIFLOWER I
HEAD

~129

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Democrats, though most lahar
organizations would prefer to have
no bUJ at all.
Both the House and Senate
reconvene Tuesday at 11 a.m.
House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe
Jr., D-New Boston, said he hopes
for a floor vole this week on the
workers' camp bill to "get something moving."
A special committee consisting of
legislators, labor leaden and business representatives failed late last
year to reach a settlement on the

terms of the reform. Normally,
workers' compensation changes
are worked out ahead of time by the
Interested groups.
Business groups have been es}l&lt;'·
claUy upset with Ohio SUpreme
Court decisions broadening the
Interpretation of an "Intentional
tort" (an act committed by an
employer with the knowledgP that
Injury would occur) and permitting
employees to file lawsuits while
collecting worken' rompensatlon

a ted by a private contractor hired
by the state.
The emissions testing has been
requested by the U.S. Environmental Protectio n Agency, which is
threatening to Withhold federal
tunds from the grea ter Cleveland
and Cincinnati areas unless ozone
levels are red uced.
Legislation pennit ting county
commissioners to ask voters for tax
hikes for ronvention centers In
Cleveland and Columbos is tenta·
lively scheduled lor a floor vote
Wednesday in the Senate.
The proposal. which already
cleared the House. is scheduled to
come out of the Senate Ways and
Means Committee Tuesday.
It permits a one-hali }l&lt;'rcent
The on&lt;:Mefeated bill has been
sales
tax increase to be placed on
revived and Is being fin e- tuned in
the May ballot in Franklin County
Rules Committee to eliminate some
lor the New World Center, and .
qbjections.
As currently written. the bill clgarelte and liquor lax hikes to be •
provides for annual emission in- voted on In Cuyahoga County for a '
spections at lqcal service stations domed stadium.
and mechanics' shops.
Lobbyists for the tobacco. liquor
But Riffe said he would entertain and related lndustrtes are expected
to attempt to remove tlr Cleveland
a motion to chang&lt;&gt; the bill back to
proposal when the bill gets to the
its ortglnal fonn , ronductlng the
Inspections at special centen oper- floor.

benefits.
Organized labor has insisted
employers will do little to ensu~
occupational safety or health unless
threatened by the law or financial
pressure.
. Labor is less than thrllled with the
House version of the bill, and
Republican senators tried to attract
some support last week by amendIng their _plan with state safety
programs, loans to companies
which eliminate safety hazards and
fines lor these that don't.
The House is expected to vote

condition, reQJperatlng Saturday In
the Intensive care unit at Abbott
Northwestern Hospital.
She was awake and responded to
commands, recognizing her husband at her bedside. although she
could not talk because of a tube
Inserted to help her breathe, said
Dr. Robert Van Tassel of the
Minneapolis Heart Institute.
"Her heart Is working very well
and Is beating In a normal rhythm,"
he said.
The dooor heart came from Jyna
Marie Forshee of Billings. Mont ..

who died Thursday after drowning·
In a bathtub, Montana hespltal
officials said.
Lund received tbe mini· Jarvik 7
heart Dec. 18 at Abbott Northwestem after a viral Infection destroyed
her own heart's pumping ability.
The artlflelal heart served as a
bridgP until a human heart was
available, and Van Tassel said tbe
mlni·J arvlk 7 "did not complicate
the transplant procedure."
He said · Lund would probably
remain hospitalized for a longer
p&lt;'rlod of time than other transplant

patients because of the shock to her
system In the past 45 days.
"The post-operative coune will
mt be as short or as smooth as It
would be for a normal transplant
patient," Van Tassel said. "On the
other hand, we are v&lt;!fY optimistic
from what we saw today. The heart
started on Its own and she's
awake."

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Sub!lldlarles)
State Bank No. 130

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Federal Reserve District No. 4

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ASSETS
Cash and balances due fr om depository Institutions :
Nonlnlerest -bearlng balances and currency and coin ...................... 1,671,000.00
Securit ies .... ..... .. ... .. .............. ... .. .. ... .. .. ............. .. ....... ........... ... .. ...... 15,975,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
aagreements to resell in domestic ot!lces of the bank
and of Its Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBFs .............. 3,100,000.00
Loa ns and lease financing receivables:
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ... ...... 28,421,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ............ 296,000.00
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ,
allowan ce, and reserve ...... ............ .. ... ... ............................. ... .......28.125,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ..... .. ... ....... ..... 798.000.00
Ot her a ssets........ ........ ....... ..... ......... ...... . .... .....
. ...... .. ..... 844,000.00
Total assets .........
........... .......... ................... ..................... ..... 50.513.000.00
LIA Bl LITIF.S
Depos it s:
In domestic offices ...... ......... .... ....... .. .. ....... .................... ...... .. ....... .45·,.116,000.00
111 Nonlnterest -bearlng ................... ........ ........... 5,353,000.00
12 1 lnterest·bearlng ... .......... ..... ...... ... ............... .39.963,000.00
Federal funds purchased and securities sold under
agree ment to repurchase In domestic offices of bank

Ot~~~ ?~~ ~~~~~;~-~".d. A~~~~."\'t ~ub~l~l~-~les:. ~~d ·l-~ ~~~s . :: ::::: :: :::::::
~
Total liabilities ................. ............. .. ..................... .............. ............. 45.849,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock !No. of shares ) a. Autherlzed .. ...... .... .... .1,800
b. Outstanding ........... .. .. l,800 ............. .900,000.00
Surplus .. ...................... .. .......... ..... .. ..... .. .. ......... ................. ... ........... 2.850.000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .. ......... ................ ....... ... ............ 914, 000.00
Total equity capit a l .. ....................................... ... ... ....... .......... ....... ... 4,664.000.00
Total li abilities, llmlled ·llfe preferred stock, and
equity capltal ..... .... ........................ .. ........ .. ... ................ .......... ... ..50,5U.OOO.OO

5;:::

1. the undersigned o!flcer, do her eby declare that this Report of Condit ion has
been prepared In conformance with o!flclallnstructlons and true to the bes t of my
knowledge ad belief.
Allee K. Stover
Vice President &amp; Comptroller
We , the undersigned directors. attest the correctness of thi s R~porl of Cond l·
tlon and dec lare that It has been examined by us and to the best of our know ledge
and belief has been pr..,ared In conformance with the Instructions and Is true and
cor rect.
Donald L. Cran ce
Phillip L. Pope Directors
Charles E . Holzer. Jr .

The Senate Ways and Means
Conunittee Is to meet Tuesday at
10:30 a.m. to neport out a venlon
favored by the business communIty. It likely would have little
trouble moving through the
Republican-controlled Senate, perhaps as early as Wednesday.
The House Commerce and Labor
Conunlttee has scheduled a meetIng for 3 p.m. Tuesday to take
amendments to a lahar· oriented
bill drafted by major1ty House

The Ohio Valley Bank Company

of Gallipolis, Galli a County, In the State of Ohio at the close of business on December 31, 198~ .
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GALLll'OLIS - A Meigs County man escaped Injury In a
single-vehicle accident Friday night at the tntenectlon ri. Ohio 7 and
Meigs County 25, according to the Gallia-Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol.

, GALLll'OLIS- A Gallipolis man was sentenced to lJ days in the
Gallla County Jail and was fined $25 and costs Friday In Gallipolis
Municipal Court after pleading no contest to a reduced charge ci
petty theft.
Stanley Eugene Siders, of 1495',S Eastern Ave ., was also placed on
18 months probation In connection with the theft of a lighting kit,
valued at $79, and various tools from Lonnie Wooten on Jan . 24.
Receiving a six month suspended jail term and a $50 line for
assault was Timmy Robinette, of Rt . 2, Bidwell. He was also placed
on 18 months probation In connection with a Ja n. 4 Incident involving
Debbie Kinder, of Rt. 3, Bidwell. Robinette was also found oot guilty
of menacing In a related Incident.
Donald Bruce Spires Jr., 31, ofRt. 3. Bidwell. received a one month
suspended jail term, was fined $17 and was placed on 18 months
probation for disorderly conduct. He was charged in connection wit h
a Thursday Incident. A charge of domestic violence against Spires
was dismlssed at the request of the complaining witness. He was
charged with assaulting Cathy R. Syrus on Jan . 30.
In traffic cases, David W. Putney. J7, oiRt.l. Gallipolis, received a
six month suspended jail term. was fined $12 and was placed on six
months probation for no driver's license.
Howard F. Childers Jr., 32, of 1872 Centerville Rd .. Thunnan, was
lined $50 and costs lor failing to stop for a school bus that was
discharging students. Janette F. Jarrell, 23,of 1318Cenrra1Ave .. was
fined $12 lor failure to disptay valid registration.
For1eiting bond were Melissa D. Bowman. 24. of Rt. 4, Ga llipolis,
$40 for failure to obey a stop sign: $40 for expired registration; and
Daniel H. Whiteley, 45. of Rt. 4. Gallipolis, $45 lor speeding.

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Federal Reserve District No. 4

George M. Collins

Driver cited after accident

Man pleads np contest to petty theft

Lund gets human heart and hope Friday~:f~f~;:~~~~

•Citlline riiiQMng cttdll. Pa~_~)' ~ary oep.ncllng upot1 b&amp;ltnce. ComcMitetYIItm ir'ICiuiM :!S-1000, 26-3211, 25-1004, 25-1005 28-ll78 26-1401 and
2S-11-42 . plt:wrile/TirA Softwlre Publlll\lnQ.
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The Commercial and
Savings Bank

2. On December 1st each year interest is charged against the full unpaid balance of taxes for period of

POMEROY--The Pomeroy Pollee Department reported a
Saturday morning traHic accident on West Main St. near Logan
Monument.
The one car accident occurred at 6: l) a.m. wben a vehicle driven
by John Robert Dill, of Middleport, dropped d.f the rtght side of tbe
road, skidded almost 100 feet along and across the road, and struck
an embankment. The vehicle rolled several times and Dill was
ejected from the vehicle through the passeng&lt;&gt;r window. The light
rear of the car fell on Dill, who was transported to Veterans
Memortal Hospital by Pomeroy EMS after the car was removed .
It was neported that DUI may have fallen asleep at the wheel.
He was cited by Pomeroy poUce for failure to control and at noon
Saturday was listed In critical condition at VMH.
Damage to the vehicle was heavy.

compensating Injured worken Is
being targeted for floor action In the
Obio General Assembly this week.
Separate House and Senate committees are poised to act on
different versions of the legislation,
which Is being sought by leaden on
both sides and Gov. Rlchard F .
Celeste to end complaints by
ooslness that the current system Is
too generous and Is thwarting
lndustrtal expansion.

• Tandy 1000 Computer with 256K Memory
and Two Floppy Disk Drives
• VM-2 Monochrome Monitor for 80x25 Text
• DWP 220 Daisy Wheel Printer for
Electric Typewriter-Quality Originals
• Six-In-One DeakMate®Dlalc Sottwera
• Easy-to-Use pf8:wrlte Word Proceaelng
Program for Letters, Memos and Reports

State Bank No. 983

1. On first day of month following second half closin&amp;. interest is charged on unpaid balance of delin quent tam ftom previous year fat period of time from precedinc December 1st to that day .

POMEROY - A mamage license has been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to Randall Steven Russell, 31, Pomeroy. and
Sherry Lynn Han, 24, Athens.

,COLUMBUS (UPI) - [$1a-

Reg. Separate Items 2362.80
Low As $92 Par Month on Cllllln..

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION
(Including Domestic and Foreign Sub!lldlarles)

Police probe accident

li?Jl altering Ohio's system ot

.t. DIVISION Of TANOI' CORPORATION

first Half Penalty 10°/o unpaid current taxes
Second Half Penalty - 10°/o of total
unpaid current taxes.

Marriage license issued

Charles M. Cleveland, 37, of Rt. I, Racine, was northbound on 7,
when troopers said he allegedly ran through a stop sign at the
intersection, struck a sign post, went through a guardrail and over an
embankment.
Cleveland' s pick-up sustained heavy damage in the 11:53 p.m.
incident and he was charged by the patrol wit h OWl and failure to
control.

l)iffering workers' compensation solutions approach votes

Check Your Phone Book for the Ita lllellaaek Store or Dealer Nearest
'

Divorce petitions filed

POMEROY - Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports
two calls Friday; Middleport at 7:52a.m..to South Third for Pauline
Tayiorwhowas treated ootmttransported; Pomeroyat1:42p.m. to
Darwin for Charlie Cook to Veterans Memortal Hospital.

POMEROY - A foreclOSI!fl' action for properly In Orang&lt;&gt;
Township has been fUed In Meigs County Common Pleas Court by
the Central Trust Co., Middleport, against Jane Lee Brooks,
ReedsvfUe. Requested In the matter Is a judgment of $13,316.75.
An entry has been fUed confirming the sale of properly In
Mlddl;eport In a foreclosure action by Bank One, Pomeroy, against
Richard E . Rathborn, Columoos. et al. The bank was granted a
deficiency j"ctgment of $5404.54.
Southeastern Equ_lpment Co., Inc., of Cambrtdge, has llled suit In
Meigs County against Markel Mining Inc., Pomeroy, requesting
judgment of $8!nl.
Pattin Manufacturing Co., Martella, has flied suit against Markel
Mining requesting judgment of $3395.50.
George Hobstetter, VIrgil Teaford and Henry Cleland Jr. have
been appointed by the court as commissioners to partition property

SAlE!
TANDY1.
WORD
SYSTEM
Saves3aao
00
1999

In Rutland Township In an action by Marie Bishop, eta!, Chardon,
against Bob C. Bishop, Rutland.
In other court action, Joseph Edward King has been dlscharg&lt;&gt;d
from probation.

POMEROY - Filing lor divorces In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court onchargesd gross neglect ct duty are ElettyTyree, Syracuse,
against James Tyree, Syracuse; and Metissa G. Bailey, Davisville,
W.Va., against CllnLon J . Bailey, Long Bottom.
A divorce action by Bonnie Brewer, Middleport, against Terry
Brewer, Portland, has been dismissed.

Foreclosure action filed

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LAST DAY TO PAY REAL ESTATE TAX
WILL BE FEBRUARY 7th, 1986

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-A-7

~---,Localbrie&amp;:------------------------~

age.

glas and J. Craig Wright. JustiCe

But within one hour. State
Department officials said they ·
were unable to confirm a change of
government. and by mld-afternoon
It was clear a mistake had been
made.
"The mix-up would never have
occurred If the White House staff
hadn't been aboard Air Force
One," a State Department official
said.
He explained that while en route
to Hou ston, the White House staff
missed some of the conftictlng and
confusing accounts from the U.S.
Embassy In Haiti.
But Speakes told reporters on the
way back to Washington that his
erroneous statement was based oo
State Department tnlonnation, relayed by the deputychlefolthe U.S.
mission In Port-au-Prince more
than 00 minutes before Air Force
One took off for Houstm.
The Haitian Embassy In Washington Issued a statement at 12:1)
p.m. EST, saying, "Contrary to
earlier U.S. government and news
reports, President Jean-Qaude Du·
valier continues to carry out his
responslbUitles as head of state."
In the Haitian capital of Port·
Au·Prlnre, the governrnent radio
carried a broadcast by Duvaller
saying he was "strong •as a
monkey's tail" and still in control.
At 1: l) p.m. EST, State Depart·
ment spokesman Elernard Kalb
said reports out d. Haiti were
conflicting. but, "Asci late morning
our Information Is that there has
been no chang&lt;&gt; ci government."

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

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of Gallipolis, Gallla County, In the State of Ohio at the close of business on Decem·
her 31, 198~ .
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions :
a. Noninterest-bearlng balances and currency and coln ............ ..... .4,793,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances .................... ...................................... 3.000.000.00
Securities ....... .. .......... ............ ... .................. ............. ........ ....... .. .. .... 39,041.000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under
agreements to resell In domestic offices of the bank
and of Its Edge and Agreement subsidiaries, and In IBFs .. ... ........ .l6,250, 000.00
Loans and lease financing receivables :
Loans ·and leases, net of unearned Income ......... 68,913,000.00
LESS: Allowance lor loan and lease losses ......... 1,246,000.00
,Loans and leas es, net of unearned Income,
allowance, and reserve .. ........ ..... ... ........ .. ............................ ......... 67,667,000.00
Premises and fixed assets (Including capitalized leases ) .......... .. ...... . 1,561,000.00
Other real estate owned ..... ..... ....... ........... .... ... ....... .... ... .... .. ........... ... .. 66,000.00
Other assets .................... ... ..... ...... ......... ................. ........ ....... .......... 1,561,000.00
Total assets ..... .............. .. ......... ... .. ........ ................... .. ... .... .. .. ... .... 133,939,000.00
LIABJUTIF.S
Deposits :
In domestic offices ................. ....... ............. ... ..... .......... ... .......... ... 123,001,000.00
(1) Nonlnterest-bearlng .. ......... .. .... ....... .............12, 7~9,00l.OO
(2) lnterest -bearlng .... ... ................. ... ... ........... 111.102,000.00
Other liabilities ............. .. ........... ........................... ... ........ ................ :.. 805,000.00
Total ![abilities ........ .... ......... ... ...... ... ....... ....... .......... ..................... 124. 706,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
Common stock (No. of shares) a. Auti\Orlzed .. 1........... 2&lt;k .JOO
b. Outstanding .. ....... .. .193,500 ........... 1.935,000.00
Surplus ..... ............. .. ... .... ............. ........ .. ....... ....... ............... .... ......... 3,537,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .. ....... .. ..... ... ... .... .................... 3,761,000.00
Total equity capital ............ ;............. ....... ..... ....... ..... ........................ 9,233,000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life prelerred stock, and
equity capital ... ,............ ....... ............................. ... ....... ............... 133,939,000.00

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DIAMOND
P£NDANTS

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REG. 136 TO 539. 9S

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L!MITD QUANnnES

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Your .

Choice

$2497

I, 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.
Madge E. Boggs
Vice President and Controller

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We, the ynderslgned dlrec tors •.attest the correctness of this Report of Condition and declare that It has been examined by us and to the best ol our knowledge
and belief has been prepared In C&lt;}nformance with olticlallnstructlons and Is true
and correct.
·
James L. Dailey
Keith R. Brandeberry - Directors
Warren F. Sheets

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State of Ohio, County of Gallla, ss :
, Sworn to and subscribed before me this 28th day of January, 1986 and I hereby
certifY that I am not an officer or director of this bank.
. My commission expires March 25, 1986. Cindy L. Harrington. Notary Public.

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Page-A-8The Sunday Times-Sentinel
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. Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

February 2. 1986

Sheriffs association charity
fund senred 250 families
GALLIPOLIS-The charity fund
operated by the Gallla County
Deputy Sherlll'sAssoclatlon served
approximately 250 familles during
the 191!5 Christmas hOUday, accordIng to a statement released Friday.
"The number wass close to 1984
figures," said association president
Sgt. Asa L. Rucker. "But. wlt)l
more funds, we were able to
provide much nicer food baskets

Section[ID
February 2, 1986

and new toys, clothes and shoes to
more children than ever before.
According to Friday's statement,
Income for 191fi consisted of
$4,001.281n donations received from .
private citizens, merchants,
churches and civic groups - plus,
$1,818.33 garnered through fundraising events and money earned
over from 1984.
Expenditures for 191!5 were:

$579.i9 for fund -raising events
(such as supplies, stamps, advertising!; $150 In emergency cash
donatiOns to needY famUies;
$2,739.36 for food for needy faml·
lies; $1,021.56 lor clothing and sbJes
for needy chUdren; $!m.26 for toys
for needy chikiren; and, Sll8.38 for
miscellaneous expenses, such as
kerosene for heating and gas for
hauling foodl, clothes, toys, etc.
"This Income does not Include all
the used clothing and toys donated," Sgt. Rucker - speaking on
behalf of Sheriff James M. Montgomery
-added. "We dO not feel we
own recognizance.
could
put a fair value on these
The !allure of. ESM, which ls
Items,
rut assure everyone that all
based In Fort Lauderdale, Fla., led
the
Items
went to needY families In
to the collapse of Home State, which
our
community
.
had invested heavUy In the securiAll used clothing and toys that
ties firm.
were left over after Christmas were
dbnated to the Community Action
Agency In Cheshire.
All expenditures of the charity
fund are approved bY a majorlty of
the membership of the Gallia
County
Sherltf's Association.
COLUMBUS (UP!) -Ohio State
"We
would like to than the
University announl.'l'd Saturday It
will Institute a selective freshman merchants, citizens and churches
adrr$sl0ns pollcy for its main ri Gall Ia County for their wonderful
campus, eflective In the Autumn rt support of our charity fund again In
191!5," Sgt. Rucker concluded.
1987.

PRESERVING THE PASTSCenclled stoneware was one of
the lltJporiant advertising mediUIJI8 from about 18711 to the I'IU'ly
1900's and Ieday It Is one ol the
very valuable coDedlbles. MIchael G. Roberlll, B Pomeroy
native now resldlns In Heath,
bas an extensive coDectlon ol
stoneware upon which the
names and locations of early
Meigs County merehants have
been stendled Into the glaze. In
time Robel18 plans to doDale his
entire collectkln to the Meigs
Museum so ihal fublre generalions can enjoy and appreciate

S&amp;L extradition fight ends

H.

OSU will admit

students selectively

for heart treatment in Toledo
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPli -

Two

Korean children who may need
open heart surgery have been
accepted lor treatment at the
Medical College of Ohio In Toledo,
.which Is participating for the first
time In a natklnal program sponsored by the Rntary Club. hospital
officials said Friday.
The youngsters, Sung Jun Bae,
11. and Chang An Chun, 2, wlll he
admitted to the college hospital
Sunday, when they wlll be evaluated In preparation for their
!rea tment, hospital spokesman Jim
Richard said.

"They're having heart valve
problems," said Richard.
Charles Schaub of the Toledo
Rotary Club, which Is making the
local arrangements for tlr visit,
said the two may need open heart
surgery.
"We cannot be certain that we
can treat these youngsters," said
Dr. Robert Ehrlich, pediatric cardiologist at MCO.
"Normally the kind of problems
which these youngsters reportedly
have are treated at a much younger
age here," he said.
Eherllch said the hospital would

.Greater powers urged in probe
COLUMBUS, Ohio t UP!\ - The
administration of Gov. Richard F.
Celeste has recommended that the
Ohio Division of Savings and Loan
Associations be given greater
'powers and fiexlblllty to deal with
questionable situations In the thrift
Industry.
The recommendations were contained In a report released late
Friday In response to the collapse
last March of Ohio's privatelyInsured savings and loan Industry.
The report calls lor reorganization of ttr division, st lffer fines and
penalties for refusal to cooperate
wltll siJite regulators, and subpoena
· power to enable the division to
obtain financial Information.
The administration's report fol lowed a legislative committee
report relea sed earlier In the day

saying the collapse of home State
Savings Bank of Cincinnati and
ot her privately-insured thrifts
could have been IJ'evented bY siJite
officials, had they been more
wUling to use their regulatory
powers.
That report contained 55 recommendations for changes In the law.
The · Celeste administration report also called for a legal
prohibition against sell-dealing bY
Insiders. as practiced bY the former
Home State o!ficlals, and enforcement powers for the division to deal
wlth such activities.
"ln. my view, the!(' changes are
critical because they deal with
kinds &lt;1. activity which unfairly rtsk
depositors' funds," O&gt;leste wrote In
a letter accompanying the report to
House and Senate Investigators.

provide whatever treatment ttr
evaluation determines is
appropriate.
The children, participants of tlr
Rotary Club's "Gift of Life"
program, were scheduled to be
flown to the United States wlth ttrir It
adults guardian on Saturday. RDtary Club members wlll provide
housing for them while they
Certified Public
recover,sald Schaub.
Accountant
Although many of the services
are being donated, tlr Rotary Club
Preparing Individual
and the program will have to pay an
and Business
estimated SJ5,(XXl for various ou t-otTax Returns
pocket expenses, he said.
Schaub said tlr children selected
Monday 9 to 9
by the program su!fer serklus heart
Tuesday 9 to 5
illnesses and need open heart
Wednesday 9 to 9
surgery.
Thursday 9 to 5
"U they don't come through on
Friday 9 to 5
the program, their life expectancy
Saturday 9 to 1
Is much shorter, " to.&gt; said.
PHONE 446·8677
The Medical College ri Ohio has
444 Second Ava.
agreed to treat two other youngsGallipolis, Oh.
ters later this year as part of the
Worlcing parents may be eligible
program, Richard said.
for child cart e~q~~nse tax crtdit.
The 11-year-old "Gift of Life"
project D'gan with an appeal to
help a girl from Uganda who
needed open heart surgery. said
Pat D'Auria, assistant admbtlstrator at the program's Manhasset,
N.Y., headquarters. Since that time
approximately 400 children, most
from underdeveloped countries,
have been sent to United States
hospitals for treatment, str said.
Local Rotary clubs pay they air
fares of the children and their adult
escorts and related expenses, she
said.

--;:::::::::::::::::::::;-j

LYNN ANGELL

"I back the h'1o~·'
insuranre I sel
with ~neighbor
serv1ce. Call me."
STATE FARM

Stoneware tells Meigs history,
collection placed. in museum

CAROLL
SNOWDEN
417 second Ave.
Gallipolis, Oh.
Pllont 44'-4290
Homet4HS11

INSURANCE

®

' •:
STONEWARE JARS- Piclured here are pieces of
· ~· slooeware from Mlclulel Roberts ooDecllon, all
: •: stenciled with the names of early Meip County

...

merohanls. Roberts has ldentifted 58 oomhmallons of
stencll and slooeware made for 21 Melp County
establishments using at least :JJ distinct stencils.

•

Open a VISA account and get a
lower APR, and a chance
at FREE Interest for a year!

CIVIC

SAVllNCGS
El

A

N

K

4412ndAvenue. Gallipolis. Ohlo45631. (614) 446-3832

____
FSiJC
._

Hm'ORICAL INTEREST -

The Epple family operated a
business In Meip County lor
many years. Roberts' collection
lncluties (at left) this iarse jar
stenclled "John Epple Grocel'les, Hard Wooden and Stoneware, Uquors, Urne and Ceo
ment, Pmneroy, Ohio." 1be
store was listed In the 1874-ill
Pomeroy-Middleport City Directory. The eallest stenciled stoneware pieces wllh a Melp Counly
merchant's name are believed
to·he the redwanl ale )up of J.
A. Fraaz. AI rllbt. on these
reddl8h pleceo, the stencllng Is
not done In a !Mlparale color,
ralher It was acrompllshed by
llling 11011-glazed areaa to hlghllchl the leiters whlclt are
(~lazed,

By CHARLENE HQEFLICH
11mes-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Michael G. Roberts describes hlnnself as an
"Inveterate collector, taken particularly to Meigs County historical
items and memorabUia."
And he has amassed a substantial
collection of Interesting Items Including stenciled stoneware which
was produced from pre-Civil War
time until after the tum of the
century.
As explained by Roberts- "No
olher category of Items, sold or
given away In Meigs County over
the years, has generated an
equivalent legacy ol attractive,
deslreable, and historically interesting artifacts as have the stenciled sloneware crocks, jars and
pitchers."
While the extensive collection Is
in his "Meigs County" room at the
Roberts home In Heath, he says
that his "interest extends beyond
the passing moments" of his
ownership.
"I plan to donate all of my
collection, with the exception of a
lew ancestral Items, to the Meigs
County Ml~Se~Jm so that future
generations of Meigs Countlans can
enjoy and appreciate it."
Asmall part r1 his stoneware was
on display at tlr . museum for
several months last fall.
The-stoneware in Roberis' collec·
don has the names and locations of
Meigs County merchants stenciled
Into the glaze as opposed to
stenciled pieces bearing the name
of the stoneware manufacturer
·such as the familiar Donagho and
Hamuton.Jones Rleces- He says
that such stenciled ware Is frequently found with additional trrehand decoration also In the glaze.
Roberts notes that the earliest
stenciled pieces with a Meigs
County merchant's name are believed to be the redware ale jugs of
J.A. Franz. On these reddish
pieces, the stenciling Is not done ln a
separate color. but rather was
' accomplished by using non-glazed
areas to highlight the letters which
are glazed."
Roberis explains that since J .A.
Franz Is stlll as9Xiated wlth the
firm a. Franz and Holzmlller In ttr
1874-1875 Pomeroy directory, It

may be assumed that these redware pieces were produced after
that time.
He has a number of the Franz
jugs and jars In hls collection
Including ones marked "J. A.
Franz, groceries and liquors,
Pomeroy, Ohio", "J.A. Franz,
groceries, vegetables. fiour, candles, meats, wines, liquors, tobaccos and cigars, Front St., Pomeroy,
Ohio"; and "J.A. Franz, groceries
and liquors, Head of Steamooat
Landing, Pomeroy, Ohio."
"The majority of ttr pieces
found ," Rnberts explains, "are In
the more familiar gray or grayish
tan glaze with the stenciling done In
cobalt blue. These are believed to
date from about 188) to just after
tlr tum of the century."
The collector says that there Is
one later type which he knows
about, a two-color, usually brown
and white wtth blue stenctllngln tlr
white area, and tre only one Uke
that which to.&gt; knows about is a
half-gaUon jug of ttr White House
on Nye Avenue In Pomeroy.
According to Roreris, that type was
produced from about 1900 unW
prohibition.
Roberis reports that he has
PJSitively identUied 58 romblnations rt stencil and stoneware made
for 21 Meigs County establlshments
using at leastll distinct stencils.
Cmmunltles rtpresented on the
pieces are Pomerey, Middleport,
Rutland, HarriSonville, MlnersvUie, Syracuse, Racine, Letart
Falls, and Long Bottom.
Prominent In Roberts' collection
are a number of pieces from John
Epple's business. Several are
marked "John Epple - dealer In
groceries, hardware and liquors,
Front Street ahove Rolling Mill,
Pomeroy, Ohio."
Others include several stoneware
pieces from "The Buckeye Store,
general merchandise, First Ward,
Pomeroy, Ohio"; "Wald Cross,
Dealer In General Merchandise,
Racine", "Edwards and Co., dealers In dry goods, groceries and gen.
merchandise, Pomeroy, Ohio";
"W.A. Ellis, (fioraldecor) Racine."
Besides the stoneware, Roberis
collects American Historical flasks
made between 1815 and 1870 and a

variety of other Meigs County
historical Items and memorabilia.
He says that his collecting goes
back to age six when he went the
gamut wlth rocks, fossils, Indian
relics, shells, coins, stamps, etc.
"But the first Meigs County Item
I acquired, and one of the most
Important Items in my collection, is
an 1874-75 Pomeroy-Middleport
City Directory. I obtained this in
trade for some comic books In the
late 1~' s from Jim Ebersbach
(now of Pataskala)", Roberts
recalls.
He says his Interest In collecting
Meigs County historical items and
rnemorabU!a has never waned "I'm looking aU the time"- but has
heightened In recent years as to.&gt;
has learned of the role his ancestors, who settled here In ~.
played In the county .
His ancestory, however, Is predated bY that d his wife. thefolmer
Sharon Howell, who shares his
collecting interests.
Besides the stenciled crocks and
jugs, Roberts' collection includes·
from various county mercllarits,
postcards: bottles, mel'('hant tokens, photographs, advertising
items of all kinds, and even bricks
Inscribed with the names of Meigs
Crunty manufacturers.
A favorite In his coUectk&gt;n is a
ragged trade card which Jle
acquired about five years ago
Imprinted "J. Roberis and SQn,
Long Bottom, Ohio." The card was
Issued bY his grm I grea I graridfatlrr, Jehu Roberts, who q&gt;eraQ!d
a store there.
Roberts, the son of No~a.
Roberts and tlr late Bob Robert$,
Meigs Crunty educators, conce4s
that while many of the items In Jlls
collection have little monetary
value, most have conslderatile
historical significance to tile
county.
'

As a surprise tor her husband last
year at Christmas time ShaJ1&gt;n
obtained a Pomeroy corporation
sign to grace Ito.&gt; door to his "Me;g,;
Cou nty" room. She purchased : a·
new sign for ti&gt;' vi llage In ord!&gt;r;to
legally get the one which marked
ttr Union Avenue entrance.
··

�I

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

February 2. 1986

Pleasant, W. Va.

Calendar I
happenings

--~F;ebru;;a;ry;;2;·~19~8~6~;;;;;;;;:=:=::::==:=:=:=:=:~P~o~mero~~y~M~id~d~lepo~rt~~G~a~lli~po~l~is,~O~hio~~P~oi~n~t~PI~ea~sa~nt~,~W~.~V~a~.====~Th~e~S~u~nd~a~y~Ti~tm~e~s~-S~e~n~ti~ne~I~P~ag~e~B~-~3

t

Letting grief show is normal,
nothing wrong in crying: doctor

:;

~

..-..
·-·
·=
...

SUNDAY

MERCERVILLE - Alvis Pollard wUI speak at Mt. Zlon Bapllst
Church, Sunday, 7 p.m.

We Reserve The Ri&amp;hl To
Limit Quantities

·.-...
•t

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

. PORTER - Clark Chapel
Church, special services, Sunday, 6
p.m. With Revelators and Rev. Bill
Price.

~

•

-..
~

•
•

~

LECfA - Rev. Earl Hinkle at
Walnut Rldge 9hurch, Sunday.
GALLIPOLIS -Church of Christ
1n ~tlan Union wUI have Good
News Trio Sunday, 6p.m., preceEds
7 p.m. service.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

·•l

..t

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAl, FEB'. 8, 1986

f•......

-.

MONDAY

.•' GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolls Jun.
; iorWoman'sClubmeetsMonday, 7
: p.m., Woodland Centers.

...
:

-

•

••

~
~
~

GALLIPOLIS - AAUW meets
Monday, 7:15 p.m., First Presby·
terlan Church. Dr. Herb Spencer,
: speaker on dual career couples.

i'
••
!,

; GALLIPOLIS - DAR meets
: Monday, I p.m., home of Mrs.
• George Bush. Dr. Marcella Barton,
: speaker.

~ -]ames Sands

Ground Chuck ••~~. $119

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, meets
Monday, 7 p.m., home of Julia
Hysell.

:
•
:
•
•
-;
'

.

U.S.D.A.CHOICE BONELESS

RIJI'LAND - An anti-abortion
meeting is Monday, 7 p.m .. AA
Crisis Pregnancy Center In the
~ Rutland Civic Center. Officers will
: be elected. All concerned citizens
• are Invited.

,

RIJI'LAND - New of11cers will

~

be elected at the 7 p.m. Monday

Chuck Roast ••••••••
ll.

HOMEMADE

Sausage ...........'!... $119

• evening meeting or supporters or
lhe AA Crisis Pregnancy Center
;.)'hich is located In the Rutland
;::cvic Center. Anyone opposing
:;'.8bortlon is invited to attend the

BATTER DIPPED

:.-:xneettng.
&gt;.

,:•

,

#

•

MIDDLEPORT - A meeting of
~ 1Jle Middleport Garden Club scfle.
~ duled tor Monday evening has been
• J)Ostponed.
~

'
~

~AY

•

•"':: GALLIPOLIS - Big Brothers
: fig Sisters board ot directors meets
.. ~esday, 7 p.m., parish hail. St.
: hter's Episcopal Church.
•

•: GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Ro: -1ary meets Tuesday, 6 p.m., Down

..
•

•..Vnde'r.

:. .. GALLIPOLIS - Galllpolls Uons
i;leet Tuesday. 6:ll p.m., Oscar's.
'

· : GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolls 1Wom:)n·s Aglow meets Tuesday, 6:30
:,P.m., Dales Smorgasbord. JoAnn
..Pangto, speaker. Couples night.
; everyone welcome.
!

---

1

LECTA -Bible study Tuesday.

1

COPING wnU DEA'I,'II - Dr. Ernest StrlckDn ot
Ohio UnlvenitY talked 011- grief and how ' ro deal

..

FRESH PORK BUTT

°

9
Steaks/Roasts'!..•• $1
1't4 por k L01·n •••••••• $149

Fish •••••••••••.•••• !~ ..... 9'9(

oz.
2I
Bacon •••••••••••••••••
12

PKG.

BY JAMES SANDS

:
• 4,354 acres tn Gallia County were
; planted In apple trees. The follow·
; lng year the
~- acreage had in:: creased to 5,177.
~ Another 1000
: acres of Gallla
: land was planted
: In peaches, cher• rles, plums, and
:' other fruit.
::. The leading toWnship In the
: oounty In fruit production during
• the World War I era was Clay wih
::: 625 acres producing 44,122 bushels
: of fruit , almost double the second
!:: township: Harrison.
;:: Some of the larger fruit farms
• along the Ohio River In Clay
:&lt;: Townships In 1916 were run by R.P.
: McCarley , Joe Henry, the
: SummE'rs family, the Riggs family,
- Stanley A. Plymale, and Mrs. J.M.
..
~
~
(::
'"
::;
.,
...
.,

.
GALLIPOLIS _ A beginning
quilting class, sponsored by the
Gallipolis Recreation Dept., will
begin Feb. 13, meeting tor three
weeks, 6:30 to 8:ll p.m. at
Woodland Centers.

~ GALLIPOLIS - Stenciling, app:,;lying design to fabriC or wood for
;:creative decorating, will be ·held
:-- Monday, Feb. 10, 7 p.m. at
;: Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·

1

; RIJI'LAND - Rut land Village
•Council wUI meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday
~ at the Civic Center. Assessment wlll
; be discussed and all lntell'Sted
, residents are Invited to attend.
• GALLD'OLIS - Gailla County
of Health meets Wednesday,
;9a.m., Courthouse basement .
•
:oES to meet
• MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
:Chapter, Order of the Eastern S!Jir,
;.w111 be held Thursday at 7:ll p.m.
~at the Middleport Masonic Temple.
iAU members are to take a
&lt;valentine. Plans wlll be made for
; Inspection on March 15.

:Board

FIRST PRIZE -

$ 49
2°/o Milk •••••••• :!~~~. 1

·lhe Gallla County Retired Teachers
,)\ssociatlon. Call LestE'r Davis for
•-s;eservations at 446-46~. Meeting Is
:'reb. 6.. noon at the Sentor Citizens

BROUGHTON'S

~ter.
~

;Aglow meeting
; TheGalllpollsWoman 'sAglow,a
~wly formed non-denominational
~isllan fellowship group. will
iave a Valentine's banquet Tuesllay, 6:30 p.m. at Dale's Smorgas·
(,ord. Cost Is $4.65 per person.
i'i.Guest speaker will be Rev. and
!IJI'I. Michael Pangia ri Middleport.
lie Js pastor at Rejoicing Lite .
Japuat Church, Middleport.
"" Mn. PanaiO will speak on having
~lliet'el''lil ministry In and out or
~. Rev. PangiowW~ak

vlctOI'Iolll Christian liVIng and
mlliJIIrY. 'Ibey will also speak
fA the C(lllliJIIIment of man1agE'.

• 'J'hemeetJnillopen tothe!llblic.
•

.'

24

ric , Sycamore Street entrance.

For lnforination or registration,
call the Galllpolis Recreation J:)p,
partment, 446-1'00 extension 24,
before Feb. 7. Registration fee is $4.

~:ri:te~~ ~!~ ~~;:z,,~ro~: ::e~~;" :~:~e~:W~~~"%~~

WEAVER

SHURFINE

Bleach •••••••••••••••••••
GALLON

PEPSI, DIET PEPSI

u oz.

Chicken Nuggets •••$199
BANQUET

0
TV
Dinners
.....
~!.
!~ .. 79(
~~su:.~. . . . . . . . a.~:::.!. J. .~.

Awa~y

PAGE

PAPER TOWELS
Lar'"
Rolls

3/Sl

ALPO DOG FOOD
• 14 Oz.
Cans

3/Sl

Limit 3 rer C.ttomtr
Gottl Only AI hwtll's !orpt~malttl
OHtr bpirts S.t. F... I, 1916

.

'

••

FLAVORITE

Macaroni/Spaghetti

SUGAR

16 Oz.

Box

2/Sl

Unlit 2 per cust-r
Gottl Only At rowtlt's S..tmiCirtctt
· • ·Offer Expirts Sat. F... I, 1916

s lb.

lag

$1311

Limit 1 ,., CustoJIItr
Gottl Gilly At hwtll's Soar,....,.,...,
bpirH S.t., feb.

• •••••••

MERCHANDISE
'

ALL ·coATS

CALL 446-3707
Ask for: Paula Kay
Bonny or Brenda

SELECTED GROUP OF SHOES
Buy one pair of shoes atthe regularprice, and get
the second pair of equal or less value

IBRING a FIIENDI

FREE! IBRING YOUR •o•l .

LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM

The
c~Shoe Cafe
.! ·. ,~ ~·

'

300 Serond Ave.

Lafayette Mall
Gallipoli8, Oh.

INVENTORY CLEARANCE

~leN

• AJht""' handle
• Powerful4 .8 Amp. motor
• t qt. dlopooablo bog
• 2 potitlon rug
odjustment

.

Model

S1049

1/3 OFF.

HOOVER.

PORTAPOWERTM
VACUUM CLEANER!

REG. $99.95

• Compact · Portable · Lightweight! 11 Y, " long ,5" wide,
10'h"' hi gh

• Fits on a stair tread
• Full size canister power
• 3-wav filtered air system

• Easy to empty dust bag
• Complete with tools

30d Second Avenue
Lafayette Mall
· Gallipolis

Come to

. eOimension TM 900 - 3.1 Peak H.P. Canister.
· inside tool storage, cord rewind, ck. bag signal,
· quadra flex agitation for deep cleaning .
Reg. $299.95 Now $210.95

1
·

ACROSS
·the
Street

SMALL
WANT ADS ·

mel&lt;
ABKi PUNCH!

Charm Beauty Shop:

2 FOR 1 SALE

.1/2 · PRICE

FURS

Grand Prize- FREE Piua For A yeilr

I

.•,.

2OOO

FA~OUS

1/;2 PRICE

;•
••
•

•

MUEWR'S ELBOW

o,. ro. ·

EYE 111E

•••

OUR

Cleaner

ALL

DRAWING FEBRUARY 28. 1986

.

HIS OR HERS $
PERMS

"

-.~'\.

YEAR'S SUPPLY OF
OUR DEICIOUS PillA

(

Captivate hearts with a fashinable
new hair style that's right for you.

The 50-star flag was raised for the
first time officially at 12:01 a.m. on
July 4. 1960, at Fort McHenry National Monument in Baltimore.

HOOVER.

!Phone .............................................................. .

WANT ADS
FOR GREAT IUYS

'

WINTER CLEA'RANCE SALE

.. ... ...... ........... .............................. Zip ........ '

'•

POMEROY - Feb. 15 is the last
day to request a new farm burley
tabacco base.
To be eligible the producer must
own the land, have no interest In
another farm with an allotment,
have two years experience raising
tobacco and make 50 percent or
more or his Income from farming,
Eligible producers wishing to
request an allotment must do oo at
the Meigs County Agricultural
Stablli1atlon and Conservation Offlee l'n the Farmers Bank Building.
Pomeroy, by the Feb. 15 deadline .

WHEN ONLY THE BEST IS GOOD
ENOUGH I

Name ........................ ...................................... ..
PHONE 1!Address .... ....................... .............. :............... ..
446-TACO ICily ........... ................................ ............. ....... .. .

''
•'·

Tobacco base

Sale Ends 2-9-86.

THREE MONTH'S SUPPLY
OF OUR PillA

~

oz.

The role of a support group for a
short period of time, learning to

few empty lots on Pine Stn&gt;E't In , yearsthechurchwaslntbemldstri
Gallipolis.
a great fruit growing section of the
Seen lis Threat
' county.

r--THEGfteATPizzAGiVEAWAY

Cottqge Cheese .••••$109

...l!nMcllll aid meeting

I'

RE'gtstratlon tor the class may be
made by mailing $14 fee to the
Recreation Department, 518 Second Ave .. Galltpolis, Ohio. by Feb.
7. For detalls, call the department
at 44f&gt;.1WJ extension 2&gt;1 .

Plus many mJre, Enter to win. A list of rules and
prizes posted at Taco Grande,

BROUGHTON

~ galllpolls - Reservations are
~for the Thursday meeting of

'

Gallla ranked lOth In apple produc·
tlon. By 19~Gallia had moved up to
third In the state. In peach
production In UllO Gallia was
seventh in the state.
In 1919 Gallla apples alone

By 1926 the Ohio S!Jite University
School of Agrlculture was touting
the Gallla Beauty as a "threat to the
market held by the Rome". The
Gallla was hardier and seemed to
oolor up better. The Gallla was also
making Inroads on the market of
the Mcintosh apple In Indiana and
In some of the New York markets.
In the 19Ws the nursery for the
propagation of the Gallla Beauty
seedlings was located just north of
the former Gallla County Children's Home on SR 160whereGailla
Beauty twigs were grafted on to
French crabapples. From here the
trees-were sold by the thousands all
over routhern Ohio. Mr. Riggs who
helped develop the variety had 15
ac res of nothing but Gallla Beaut.les
by 1919 and the variety was popular
w1th other fruit growers In Clay
township.
Doesn't Calch Up
Obviously for some reason the
Gallta Beauty did not do as
forecasted by horticultural experts: overtaketheRomeBeauty.
Likewise Gallla County's prom!nence as a frultgrowtngcounty also
declined .
The building we feature today Ls
the old sanctuaJY of Christ United
Methodist Church and once known
as Ohio Chapel Method,ist Church.
This buDding erected In the 1850s

~~~FALL: &amp;· WINTER·~..~tr

GRAND PRIZE -

.••Jieoervailons needed

~

.

Of the 88 counties In Ohio 1n 1900,

rae

WEDNIE&gt;AY

.... ·GALLIPOLIS - Financial aid
4rlcers of Rio Grande College wlll
lie at Gallla Acadrney Hlgh School
;Jbrary, Tuesday, 7 p.m. Meeting is
(or seniors going to attend any
tollege, juniors and their parents
inay also attend.
;· 11 planning to atttend, call the
~!dance otflce, 44&amp;-3250 and tell the
px!nselor how many In your tamlly
will be attending.

In

Great Pizza Gi.ve

•

:

variety.
Gallla CoulltY apples were
shipped largely to Pennsy lvania
with some going to Florida, Virgl nla, North Carolina, and West
VIrginia. Other popular varieties
grown in the county In the boom
period of the fruit Industry for
GaUia were; Grimes, Jonathans,
and Ensee.
THE ENSEE dates tn ·ll!82 when
a seedUng (related tn the Rome
Beauty tree) carne up In the yard of
~ii:L:ox near ProctorvDie. 'lbe
gets Its name from Cox's

brought In to the bcal economy
over $500,00l which was no small
amount in a day and age when veal
calves sold for 13 cents a ffiUnd.
In 1915 the headline of the
Gallipolis Bulletin JV&gt;wspaperread:
"Wealth of the County Wrapped Up
In Fruit Soil" . The paper urged
others to get Involved in the boom
business in fruit.
Gallia County even had a fruit
tree that bore It s name· the Gailla
Beauty. It seems that In 1859
William Coon, a Eureka . area
farmer, set out some Rome tEauty
trees but took little care of'them.
The hogs rooted out many ol tbem
and damaged the orchard beyond
repair.
Earlier, and Better Flavor
In 1862 Coon noticed that one tree
that had practically been uprooted
had a sprout sticking up. Coon
permitted the sprout to grow. He
found that when the tree began to
produce fruit, It did so earlier than
theRomeappleandwhatls more lt
hadabetter navor and acteeper red
color. The seedling was known as
the Coon seedling until 1900 when
orchardist Ernest Riggs got the
Coon seedling and began to make a
series of grafts.
In 1914 the Gailla BE'auty apple
was unvei1ed by Riggs at the Ohio
State Horticultural Society's annual

THE

: 7:30 p.m., Walnut Ridge Church,
~ with Rev. Earl Hinkle .

''

Plymale. McCarley specialized In
the Rome Beauty. The Summers
farm was knows or its Ben Davies

:;·' Stenciling offered b11J Rec. Dept.

$

Friday afternoon's Famlly

mw1age pain and grief without
medication . dolngsomethtngsigr)lf·
!cant for another person, allowing
the feeling of relief to surtace,
particularly in cases where the
person has died from a serlops
illness, were discussed by the
speaker.
·
He cautioned against running
away fro m grief, and advised
hitting it headon, facing the nega·
tive things, and then putting them
aside and getting on with lile.
Nex t week's class wUI he Qn
rehabilitative exercises and ho!lll'
health ca re techniques.
·

here?."

Apple trees numerous in Gallia in J913

Special Correspondent
GALLIPOLIS - In 1913 some

::

at

Support Network session held at U1e Senior atizens
Center.

=-,.'

GRADE A WHOLE

COLUMBIA SLICED

~

with It

• Quiltmg
• C1ass p1anned 10r
£
area

LB.

Turkeys •••.•••••• !~ .....

-

.eff~ely

recognize that death is a part of
living.
Worldng thru grief, the role of
faith, the acceptance &lt;1 what really
happened -"he died of cancer, he
committed suiCide, using the term
death, not 'passed away' or rome·
thing elsE' vague helps In going
through the grief process," the
speaker said.
"We find II difficult to respond to
grieving people," Stricklin Ia
mented. He talked about ways to
deal with grief through thought and
reflection, not Immediately "get·
tlng busy," as friends tl'!ld to
recommend, and through moving
Into the future rather than reliving
the past, and by facing up to the
question of "Where do 1 go from

By CHARLENE BOEFUCH
Tktle&amp;Seollnel stall
POMEROY - When someone
you love dies, It hurts, and there's
nothing wrong with crying, letting
your grief show.
That was the message of Dr.
Ernest Slrickltn, an Ohio Untver·
slty teacher In !amtly studies, who
talked to the Faml!Y Support
Network enrollees at the Senkn
Citizens Center Friday afternoon.
Stricklin stressed the Importance
of' communication with the bereaved through touching and talk·
lng, while allowing that person to
express their grief with tears and
words. He said that society seems
to dictate that the bereaved be
"strong", even unemotional, be·
cause what others are really
saying, "If you let your grief show, It
tends to be embarasslng to us."
He talked about being sheltered
from death, "funerals are no place
for childrE!l", with such statements
ccinveying the feeling that "death is
strange", when everyone needs to

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Reg. $99.96 Now $79.95
•HOOVER QUIK BROOM ·
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"Get A New "'"Look~' Ow Your bid Hair".
.

446-9510 ,

• TEIII • SUE •

• CATHY

426

REM EMIHI
VACUIJII
IMISI
BUY 2OfT I

FREE

�. Page- B-4-The Sunday limes-&amp;lntinel

February 2, 1986

'

CINCINNATI (UPI) -A restau-

rant that llrl'd a cook lor missing
work the day after his wife gave
blrth to triplets admits the fll1ng
was a public retatlol)S blunder. The
cook was re-hlrl'd Frklay and given
.an Immediate three-week paid
leave of absence.
. "We were ~ncerned about the
fate of the family and, yes, publlc
·relati ms also was a factor.' • said
Frisch's resfllurant marketlng vice

. Fired father
.:of triplets
.gets job back

president Karen Maler. "We under·
stood there could have been some
public protests and loss of customers becaUBe of the flrlng."
The cook, Douglas Elxllng, ~.of
nearby Covington, Ky., had been
· fired Thun;day for mlsslng work
Wednesday, the day alter his wife,
Susan, 19, gave birth to triplets.
On Frklay, after the firing
became front page news, the
restaurant offered Ebdlng his job

.

back, plus the Immediate threeweek paid vacation. He accepted
the offer.
"He wUI not miss any pay, he has
the opportunity to be with his family
full· time the next three weeks and
he reflllns his job," said Maler. "We
hope we have corrected the
situation."
Ebdlng had been !Ired by the
manager of the res~&lt;~urant where
he was a night short-order cook, but

the decision to re-hire hlm was
made at the corporate level.
Frisch's, which operates numerous
resfllurants In the area, has Its
corportate headq uarters In

who Is recovering at University
Hospital. "I'm oot having any
more."

ClnclnnaU.

The Ebdlng's triplets- aU girls
- gives the fam ily five children
under one year of age. Ten months
ago, Mrs. Ebdlng gave birth to twin
boys.
"This Is it," said Mrs. Elxling,

Hospital officials said the odds of
having twins Is 8)-to-1 and the odds
of having trtplets Is S,!XD-to-1 .
Officials didn't know what the odds
were for triplets following twins.
Vuri A Gargarin of the Sov1et
Union was the first man to orbit the
earth: on April 12, 1961.

3 BIG DAYS

.
.

The Sunday limes-Sentinei-Page- B-6

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

Saturday, Monday, Tuecday
February 1·5·4

'

HOURS: 9:00A.M. TO 6:00P.M.

Chuck Ro·ast
~
'f 3'9 lh.

.

DINING ROOM SUITES

lEU CITY, OAK

81bl.
or more

.
.

$1 7Q0
SAL£

Table, 4 Chair~ &amp; China
REG . 1 3458.00

BROYHIL OAK,

!

$1600
$875
SAL£

Table, 6 Chairs &amp; Ch ina
REG. ' 3240.00

SAL£
VIR. HOUSE, OAK, CLAWFOOT

Table &amp; 4 Chairs
REG. ' 1561 .00

Tavern Hams
W~ole $ 49
Ih.

CRISPY SER~E

Bacon

7

tlb.
pkg.
...

frankies
~

12oz.
pkg.

5 lb.
bu

Sib.
roll

·

Sausage
Patties $929
hll
FRESH MADE

Chicken

Sausage

Drumsticks
$299

Lunch eat
~~:: $109

Fish
$549

$ 49

61~ .

Superior

Batter Dltted

..

8 +

Polish Sausage

BALLARD's
Llnku.~"$1 089

~~~·

Sl&amp;.
bolt

MISCELLANEOUS
WINGBACK CHAIRS
SALE $11 0 &amp;UP
RIG. '299.95-'350.00

$ 99

•

A

TRUCKLOAD SALE LOCATION

Sold In

DELl TRUCK LOAD SALE

Po•d• Boiled Ha111 ........ ,1).
011ly

••••Ill H1111 • Sala1111 $

.

•

Loaf

Breakfa•t Loll ,.
Honey Loaf LB 'f
791&amp;. P•~•" Loaf .·

30- COLORED &amp; LEADED GLASS MIRRORS

229

AT COST
S-HALL TREES
, .., Typo w/ Mirrors, Clocks, Unob,. lla Holdors

SALE

REG. ' 450.00

2-HALL TREES w/Mirror

RIG . ' 336.00

aoo
519

SAil

$ 125 &amp;

$175

SMALL ROLL TOP DESK
REg. 1370.00

SALE

$12
500
·

ssooo

. 6- PAIRS OF LAMPS

PAIR

&amp; UP

MICROWAVE STANDS

ONLY I FEW

.

6-SWIVEL ROCKERS
QUANTITY

5

SMALL
PILLSBURY
BISCUITS
KRAFT
MAR CARINE
CARDINAL
MARGARINE

~

DOZ.

CTN

FULL

HALF

CASE

FULL

CASE

CASE

$189

6

Sll.

IAt

FLORIDA
ORANGES

4PK

CAliS

Ill.

IAt

24

24

16 oz.

1-LB.

~~~·

TUIS

t4

CARROTS

IS OZ.

CAliS
24

YELLOW
ONIONS

16 oz.

CAliS

m

THOROFARE

KIDNEY BEANS

99J.y

oz.

.

"~

';.

99

"""'
TIIOROfARE

PINEAPPLE

24
20 oz.
CAliS

24

16 oz.

CAliS
24

IS OZ.

CAliS

THOROFARE

"oz.
taoo t4oo SLICED ·
CAliS
CARROTS

TUIS

SOLI.

$299

24

6

HI.

tOLl.
IAt

$199

GREEN
LIMA BEANS

24

"oz.
CAliS

THOROFARE

1200 *600 COOKING
ooo tsoo
tsoo

OIL

HALF

CASE

LI-Z·BOY qnd BERKUNE
REG. ' 299.9's TO ' 350.00

SALE

AT WHOLESALE .

$1 75• $2 00

ODD BOX SPRINGS &amp; MATTRESS

24

AT COST

uoz.
ITLS.

THOROFARE ·

SCALLOPED
&amp; AUORATIII
POTATOES

CABINETS
6- GUN CABINETS, 12 Guns
REG. 1499.95

24

aoo

16

oz.

2- BROHHILL GUN CABINETS

CAliS

taoo $400

TIIOROFARE
PCS. &amp; STMS.

MUSHROOMS

taoo t4oo TIIOROFARI
POTATOES

•an THOROFARE
SPINACH

24

4 oz.
CAliS
24
IS OZ.
~liS

24

16

oz.

CAliS

24
t6 oz.

OAIIS

SALE

•

$600 PINK

•

SALMON

tsoo

TIIOROFARE

BROWNIE
$600 MIX .
THOROFARE

$600 TOMATO

SAUCE ·

II

21/o OZ.
IOKES

That Turns Into I Dark Pine Curio
REG. 1599.95

SALE

S300°0

ALL THE MERCHANDISE IN THIS AD WILL BE . SOLD AT COST, WHOLESALE OR INVOICE
.
AND WILL BE SOLD AS IS.

EA.

�Febnlary 2, .1 986

Ohio-P&lt;ijnt Pleasn. W.Va.

Lincta

POMEROY

Stewart,

Kathy

The bride elect Is a graduate d
Southem High School and Is
attending the Soutbeastem BustlESS College.
Kimes, a graduate of Wahama
High School, Is pJ.annlna to go blto
the U.S. Air Force.
•
A Valmtlne' s Day weddtna Is
belna planned.

Wrilhl

Lori Lyan Slewut
Scull DoucW Kimes

Wright - Hoffman

Steele
Black
,• GALUPOLIS - Jim St~le of
:· Gallipolis and Ms. Barbara Steele
Virginia are announcing the
..•f ofE!lgagement
and fort hcoming mar
': rtage of their daughter. JuliP Anna.
• to Jeffrey Black. son of Mr. and
• Mrs. Roger Black of Bidwell.
She Is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and attends
Rio Grande College.
Black Is a graduate of North
·. Gallla High School and is in the U.S.
Navy stationed in Norfolk, Va.

~ Workshop
. GALUPOLIS - The Gallipolis
- Developmental Center, In coopera: tion with the Consortium for Health
: Education In Appalachia Ohio
· (CHEAO}. will be presenting a
: series of programs designed for
: professionals and future profession·
. als working in health, mental
· health , ·mental retardation and

MASON , WV.A-Mr. andMrs .
Ols ton Wright of Mason are
announcing the engagement of
the ir daughter , Kathy , to David
Hoffman , so n of Mr. and Mrs .
Fred L. Hoffm an of Middleport.
Miss Wright Is a graduate of
Wa hama Hig h Sc hool and at·

tends Marshall University.
Hoffman Is a graduate of Meigs
High School and will graduate
from Ohio University In March
with a degree In eleetrtcal
engi neering.
Wedding plans are Incomplete.

Burchett - Palmer
GALU POLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
O.M. Burchett , Route 3, Gallipolis,
announce the engagement of their
daughter, Connie, to David Lee
Palmer. son of Mr. and Mrs. Wayne
Pa lmer. Route 1. Cheshire.

.BoyesMcKinney
MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Oiarles W. Boyles of MDI Street,
Middleport, are announctna the
eni!Jiiemml ad approachblg marriage of tbe!r daughter, Victoria
Sue, lo SEcond Class Petty Otflcer
Christopher Todd McKinney, son d
Mr. and Mrs. WUiam M. McKln·
ney, North Fourth St., Middleport.

NEW PASTOR - 'lbe Rev. Li1toD Halley Jr., Clrdevlle, IIIIa ~
called to pulor lbe Fll'lll Bapllti O..rdlti Pmneroy.llalley has beeia
ptlllorlaJ%8 years. Be l'llCfllved a B.S. u llloG,...deCollep •d M.F4·
at Oldo Valverly. He aU ended puton• lldJooltl at GarreU !lemiDir,f.
lllb&amp;o. m. 111s w1e 11 Jellle.

She Is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School and Is an
employ~ of The Ohio Valley Bank.
He Is a graduate of Kyger Crrek
High School and ls self employed.
Weddblg plans are blcomplete.

Monday - Tuna loaf , rtce, green
beans, wheat bread, pear half.
GALUPOLIS - Activities and
Tues day - Fried chlcken, brae·
menus for the week of Feb. 3 coli , com, wheat bread. fruit
· through Feb. 7 at the Senior Citizens cocktail.
: Center, ~ Jackson Pike, are ,as
Wednesday - Sausage PJIJY.
· follows :
scalloped potatoes, kale. corn
Monday, Feb. 3 - Ceramics bread, lemon pudding with min!
: OassJ 9:30-noon: Chorus. 1·3 p.m. marshmallows.
Tuesday, Feb. 4 - S.T.O.P·
Thursday - Roast heel with
./Physical Fitness, lO:ll a.m.
gravy, mashed potatoes, cooked
Wednesday, Feb. 5- Crown City ca bbage with carrots, hot rolls,
Blood Pressure Check. 1 p.m. : cherry crisp.
• Vinton Bible Study. I p.m.: Card
Friday - Spaghetti with meat
·: Games. 1-3 p.m.
sauce, salad, French bread, orange
Thursday. Feb. 6 - Bible Study. jeUo with topping.
. 11-noon.
Choice of beverage served with
Frida y, Feb. 7 - Art Class, 1-3 each meaL
p.m.; Craft Mini-Course, 1·3·p.m.;
Open Activities, 7-10 p.m.
Menus consist of:
POMEROY - The Meigs County

PNir{lt'l(

Ean.ood, Volunteer Coordinator,
at 416-1642, Ext. 317 and 310,
respecUvely.
Sanders said all people employed
or blterestetl In these fields to
attend Awllcatlon has bee!! made
for QuaiJfled Mental Retarcta:tion
Prolesslonal (QMRP) and Contblublg Education Units (CEU).

I' [' 1-.

GALLIPOLIS - The senior
citizens Job Bank. 220 Jackson
Pike. Is open five days a week fro m
Ba.m. to 4 p.m. to serve applicants
50 years of age or older seeking
empioyment.
The Job Bank counselors have
: openings and are seeking a ppli:

cants to stay wlth the elderly on a
live-in basis.
Those interested should tele·
phone 146-7001 to put in a job order
or to make an appointment to fill
oo t an application for employment.
The se" ·ice is free of charge to
tnth employer and employ~ .

Friday -Pepper steak on rice,
lx'occoll, banana graham cracker
Ice box pudding.
Otolce d beverage available
with meals. ·

l

'

OffiCI HOlliS IY AI'I'OII18T AT PlEASANT V.lliY HOSPITiliEDIWGffiCEMD.1 P.M.104PJL:HILC·Sf~LCIIIIC.MOfl,
1HaU FIL 1·5 P.M. Alii VQIWIS IIIIOIW HOSPITAL lOll.&amp; Will.,
10 U.10 12 NOON. . . .
..

446·0011

or 991-210.

LARGE SELECnON

Mr. and Mrs. Garrett Watson

Watson anniversary to be noted

-- -

---

-

--·-·-·
.
Rock of Ages offers you a choice of I dlllerent colored
IP'anltes. Whatever your requlremeals may be, complete
satisfaction Is auured with Rock of qes,
Winter Hours: Tues. 1-4 and Thurs. 1·4
Other hours by eppt. by calling 693·1465

OBSTETIICS/GY~COLOGY AND INFERDUTY

Offi" Hours 10:00 AM.-5:00 P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-1:00 P.M. Tuesday ond Thursday Evenings
lOCATED; S.ito tu Modicol OHia luiWint, at ,...,., Yllloy Hoopitot

. causing acne, particu lar ly those pro· some researc hers say .

330 Second Alenue

..
. . . .. .

.

NOW!

.

..

A Mes.sage From The Bible...
CHEAPENING THE CHURCH
William B. K ughn
+
The Cbu..h, Chrllt'o Brldot
''This is u Rrear mystery: bul I speak corectnring CltriJt and tlr( ·
church "( Eph . 5:32).
The ''gn•at

is the intimate relation5hip

brou~ht

about by the

union of hu sband and wife that was established by God m the beginning
(Eph . 5:31 ; Gen. 2:24). and is descriptive of the oneness between Christ,
the groom. and the church . tlie bride (Mt. 22:2; 2 Cor. 11:2; Eph. 5:25-27;
Rev. 22: 17). Th e Divine will of God is for Christ to be "the head of rht
church .. (Eph . 5:23 ). having the authority to direct her and ""!Uire of her
all things according to God's will. The Divine purpose of God for the
church is that she he "su~;ec t unto Christ .. (Eph . 5:24); that is , in submis·
sion to His direc1ion s and requirements , obeying the paramount will of .
God . Christ so "{o,~d the churrh " that He ''gave himJe/f for it" (Eph.
5:251. The happiness and welfare of the thun:h; His desire for heroompan· .
iunship; His longing for her affection: and she being dea,..r to Him than
His own life enabled Him to pass this true test of genuine love. When one
teaches there arc many churches. he makes Christ a polygamist, having
many brides. H Christ be the head of all denominations. He abuses His
authority by establishing di!lerent doctrines which create confusion, and ·.
destroys the peace that reisns in the church (I Cor. 14:33). Making Christ ·
a polygami-'1 and an abuser of Divine authority, is to cheapen Christ as the
groom and the church as the bride!
•
The Chaldl And Chrlot'o Namet
"Suft~rc•

All Winter Merchandise

mystt~ty ··

ont' unorhvr with "" holy kiss. The

churrh~s

o.f Christ suJute

you" (Rm . tb:!6).
"Church., of Christ " did not embrace all denominations , for they did
not exist then . but to all the "church es of Chris( ' throughout the area

visited by Paul. "Churches of Christ. " in the possessive case, shows the
church belongs to Chri st. The church, by spiritual union. is Christ's wife, ·
and rightfull y wea" the name chosen by God and designated in the scrip· ·

50°/o to 75°/o Off!

tures. Hi s name is the only name by which we are saved: to which every ·

knee should bow: and the wonhy name by which we arc called: "Th.re is

nom~

other name 1111der heave" given among men. wh,•reby we must hc~
sawd ... WhPrrfure God hath highly ualted him. rmd R!'-'" " him a twm••

(NO LAYAWAYS ON SALE ITEMS)

---Etc. o

come Hear.

There's never been a better
time to pick up a pair of
Nur.;e Mates.' During
February when you
buy a pair, you'll get
,·
an attractive Nur.;e
·.
Mates umbrella
&lt;absolutely

Nurse Mates, America's #I
professional shoe, come in
many attractive styles and
a wide range of sizes. And
with a free umbreUa,
they're more attractive
than ever. Offer ~
while supplies last.

free.

which i.s ubov.• ew•ry name: Thar at the nume of Jt'SIIJ' •~wry

bow... do th ey

1wt

lc.~rt!e

shuuld

blusphemt that worthy name bl which yr are cuJI,•d ?"

(A cts 4:12: Phil. l :q,IO; Jms. 2:7). Christ is not divtded. His name does not
divide. The church wearing the name of Christ does not divide her in to a · ·
denomination. The names of men divide , dc,ignating parties, denom ina· ·
tions, sectarianism. separatins believen by peculiar names of human
origin . There were some in the apostolit days who felt It just and right tu
wear the names of Paul, Apollos. and Cephas (I Cor. 1:12). Paul con·
demned this practice becaust it-brought about divi sion (I Cor. I :1·15), and
division cheapens the church. For one to say there is nothing in a name.
and justify the wearing of men's names, cheapens the church with
division!- Cm1tit1ueJ.
For F'" Biblr Corrnpo•drne&lt; Colrrsr, Wrir....

Chapel Hill Church of Chri.1·.
Bula•llle Road • P. 0 . Bo• :108
Gallipolis, Ohio 4:16:11
~•II•J M.w.ta~~: :

!'lurMiaJ Enaln1:

\' ••dn ....d :.J:

llblfo !"tiiiiJ 1: .

" 'onlltp 1:"

Hlhlr ~utl y
1: llp.m.

WerMt.ll:.

Kadln
" \tl"l''l'ill ll' (o'rtllh

Jane Ann Karr, M.A.
Audiologist, CCC-A

the&gt; llltllt"

603 W . Union

ATHENS

592-2883

366 Second Avenue
Gallipolil, OH.

N~eM

MatesT

Alnnan Brent E. George, son of
Spec. 4 Gacy R. Swain , son of
Harold
0. George ct. Rural Route t.
Romia L. Swain of Rural Route 2,
Bidwell,
and Shirley Reynolds of
Gallipolis, and Bobby J . Swain of
4!KI
Gran!
St., Middleport, has been
Point Pleasant, W.Va., has comassigned
to Sheppard Air Force
pleted a U.S. Army primary
Base,
Texas,
after completblg Air
leadership course with the 25th
Force
basic
tralnblg.
Infantry Division, Scholleld Bar·
During tbe six weeks at Lackland
racks, Hawaii.
Air
Force Base, Texas, the airman
Students received training In
studied
tbe Air Force mission,
supervisory skills , leadership
organization
and customs and
principles and small unit train·
received
special
training In human
lng techniques essential to a
relations.
first-line supervisor In a technl·
In addition, airmen who romplete
cal or a dmln!strat lve
basic
training earn credits toward
environment .
an
associate
degree In applled
Swain Is a medical specialist at
science
through
the Community
Tripier Army Medical Center ,
College
of
the
Air
Force.
Honolulu .
The airman will now receive
He Is a 1977 gr actuate of Galli a
specialized
Instruction In the medl·
Academy High School , Gallipo cal
services
field.
lis.
He ls a 1984 graduate of Meigs
High School, Pomeroy.

Tirpak

Airman Elaine V. Tirpak. daugh·
ter of Joseph B. and Dorothy L.
Tirpak of Rural Route 3, Gall!polls,
has graduated from the U.S. Air
Force Tadlo ~rator maintenance
and driver course at Keesler Air
Force Base, Miss.
Graduates of the eight-week
course studied basic electronics
and learned to mabltaln and
operate communications equip·
ment and tactical alrcommandand
control systems. They also earned
credits toward an associate degree
in applied science through the
Community College of the Air
Force.
Tirpak ls scheduled to serve with
the 1957th Information Systems
Group at Hickam Air Force Base,
Hawaii.
She Is a 1985 graduate of Gall!a
Academy . Galllpolls.

GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs .
; Garrett Watson, Galllpolls, will
• celebrate their 50th wectdblg anni·
: versary Sarurday, Feb. 8.
: They were married at Rapps, burg, Ohio, and are the parents of
: five children: Mr. and Mrs. Charles
: (Bill) Watson, Bidwell: Mr. and
· Mrs. Clinton (Palsy) Stanley,
: Bidwell; Mr. and Mrs. Eddie
• !Barbara) Clble. Crown City: Mr.
· and Mrs. NeU (Dan ) Watson,
: Northup and Roger Watson, Crown
• City.

They have eleven granoc hlldren
and five great granochlldren. They
are retired custodians at Hannan
Trace High School and attend Kings
Chapel Church.
Open House will be observed
Sunday, Feb. 9, 2-4 p.m. at their
home.

Holter

Roberts

Mark A. Holter, spouse of Melissa
M. Holter of Bermen, Ohio, has
mllsted In the U.S. Air Force's
Delayed Enlistment Program, ac·
cording to TSGT Ronald Dinges,
Air Faroe Recruiter bl Lancaster.
Holter Is a 1983 graduate of
Eastern IDgh School.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six-week basic milltacy
training course at Lackland AFB.
Texas, be wlll receive training in
tiE Mechanical Aptitude specla II ty.
He wlll be earning credits
towards an associate degree
through the Community College of
the Air Force while attending basic
training and other Air Force
technical training schools .
Holter Is scheduled for enlistment
bl the Regular Air Force In April
1986.

Airman J ames L. Roberts, son of
Harold E. and Eleanor J . Dalley of
122 Second Ave., Gallipolis, has
been assigned to Ch anute Air Force
Base, Ill., after completlnl; Air
Force basic training.
During the six w~ks at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission,
organization and customs and
received special training in human
relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward
an associate degr~ through the
Community College of the Air
f orce.
The air m an 'A'iJ I no w receivE'

specialized instruction in the air·
craft maintenance field.
He is a 1982 graduate of Gallla
Academy High School, Gallipolis.

Oark

Steven A. Holmes. son of Mrs.
Mary Holmes of Route 2, Gallipolis,
and Aubrey Holmes of :m9\l,
Scraggs Dr., Charleston, W.Va.,
has enlisted in the U.S. Air Force's
Delayed enlistment Program, ac·
rording to SSgt John McGuire, Air
Force Recruiter in Galllpolls.
Holmes ls a 1981 graduate of
Gallla Academy High School.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six-week basic mllltacy
trabllng course at Lackland AFB,
Texas, he will receive training In
.tiE General Purpose Vehicle Me·
chanlc speclallty.
He will be earnblg credits
towards an associate degree
through the Community College of
the Air Force while attendblg basic
lrabllng and other Air Foree
technical tralnblg schools.
Holmes Is scheduled for enlist·
ment In the Regular Air Force In
May.

Airman Scott D. Clark, son of
Robert D. Clark of 93 W. Main St.,
Jeromesville, Ohio, and Macy V.
Clark of Rural Route 4, Gallipolis,
has been assigned to Chanute Air
Force Base, m., after completblg
Air Force basic training.
During the six weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission.
organization and customs and
received special tralnblg In human
relations.
In addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward
as associate degree through the
Community College of the Air
Force.
The airman will now receive
specialized blstructlon In the air·
craft maintenance field.
He Is a 1984 graduate of Gall!a
Academy, GaiUpolis.

'i

britannia Bygones International

I 'll

.:8

Fea/uring European Furnishings
and Co/leclibles
Specializing in Victorian/ Edwardian Eras
Open Daily 10-6

Rt. 7 North of Gallipolis , Ohio 45631
Phone (614) 446-4084

Ratcliff
Army Private Charles A. Rat·
cliff, whose wife, Kimberly, Is the

daughter of Ralph D. Adkins of
East Lansblg, Mich., and Kay R.
Anderson of Rural Route, 1 Chesa·
peake, has completed a tracked
vehicle mechanic course at the U.S.
Army Armor School, Fort Knox,
Ky .
Durblg tbe course, students were
trained to repair engbles, transm!s·
slons, and the fuel, electrical and air
!'(ydraullc systems of the Army's
tracked vehicles. They also learned
to perform recovecy operations for
abandoned , damaged, disabled or
mired vehicles.

A TIMELESS TRIBUTE

•Bookmobile
routes set

PH. 446·2327

•Epidural Deiveries
•Tubal Repairs

George ·

Holmes

MEDICARE ASSIGNMENTS ACCEPTED.,

JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

· horm ones known to be mvoh·t·rl in levels and thus treat a ca use of acne.

•

·

•'

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

675-6700

by

\urqr wl
,',r'~' nf

\

J».

duced
adrena
turn s timuthe
l au~s
oil glal gland.
nds which in l~===~::~=I'Ho~·':"~::="~·~·=V=o.=J~U=5~0~-~~~~~~~J
problems. appea r to make thc1r acne
Since stress ac ti vates the ad re nal
.· worse
gla nd . resea rchers fo und it more ac·
New stud1cs 1ndiratc they m•y be t1vc m producing hormones. Medica·
. r ight. Researchers have focused on uon cou ld r educe adrenal hormone
st r ess, such as schoo l. JOb or home

,• \.,

'y' \' • 'I I•

llrnlr •y "l(ltJ!'ilr )(l Oi'(•1lr) ")
r lr) f, • t' •II''. U1t,,,, 1 t ,

fliiONI675-S1

~r

• Stress and acne are related
Acne sufferers clatm that per iods of

.~.rlL 1 1

!'-'.

cabbage, buttered peas, biscuit,
applesauce.
Tuesday - Ham Loaf, creamed
corn, spinach, Danish coffee cake.
Wednesday - Chill, grlUed
cheese sandwich, Ume gelatin with
fruit, cookle.
'
Thursday - Uver, mashed
potatoes, green beans, pumpkin

Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy has the following
activities scheduled lor the week ct.
Feb. 3-7:
Monday - Square Dance 1·3.
Tuesday - Otorus Practice 1·2.
Wednesday - Social Security
Field Representative will be at the
Center from 10 to noon: Bingo 1·2.
Thursday - Ceramics 1.().2. · ·
Friday - Bowling 1: ll.
The Senior Nutrition Program
menu for the week Is:
Monday - Pork steak, baked

·Job Bank has semor openmgs

'

. lOAD CEmFIED II UIOLOGY
Tlt Olll •'11f

ment" by Dr. Richard M. Sanders,
Is designed to acquaint persons with
the current techniques and ldeolo·
gles used to evaluate and admlnls·
ter effective behavioral manage.
ment programs.
For more Information regarding
tiE workshop, contact Jeffrey
Bane, Business Manager, or Lucy

Meigs County

.

SA Scott L. Walton
Operations Command, Ft. Bragg,
N.C.
HtSw!fe, lheformerGertBowllng
of Galllpolis, and son. Sean, and his
parents, Kermit and Jane Walton,
reside at Pomeroy.
His address is SA Scott L. Walton.
209th MI Co., APO San Francisco,
96.ll1.

P. Simon, M.D., f .A.C.~

:Senior Citizen Centers announce activities
Gallia Counry

•· Walton Is a 1982 graduate o!Ohio
University, College of E~rlng,
and Is currently assigned as the
Assistant Northern Area Counter
' bitelUgence Special Agent In
charge with the :lmth MIUtary
Intelligence Company In Seoul,
Korea. He ls a graduate of the
.Army's Intelligence Center and
·Schools M!Utary Intelllgence Of.
fleer Basic and Counter Intelll·
gence Officers courses and the
Intantcy Officer basic course.
Previous assignments blclude
Korea, Fort Benning, Ga., Vint Hill
:· F;arms Station, Va., Ohio Universl·
. · ty's Army R&lt;YI'C Dept., Athens,
' ahd Ft. Huachuca, A:z.
; ;·; He received his commission as an
: Atmy officer from Ohio University
R&lt;YI'C Program In 1981. After hls
asslgnement In Korea, he has been
aSsigned to the First Special

The Federal Bu~u of lnvestlsa·
John Rutledge of South Carolina
tion has 51 field offices in principal was the second chief justice of :the
United States. John Jay was the first.
The bride-elect and McKinney cities In the United States.
•
are graduates of ·Meigs High
School. He Is oow stationed with the
U.S. Navy at Norfolk, Va.
Wedding plans are blcomplete.

set for mental health employees
developmental disabilities programs or other related fields.
The first class will he offered
Wednesday, Feb. 5. from 9 a.m. to
12: ll p.m. There ls a registration
fee of s:; payable on the day of the
works hlp from 8: ll to 9 a.m. The
initial presentation, "C urrent
Strategies of Behavior Manage-

Swain

.Army.

mpgement and approachtna llii81'·
rtage d their daughter, Lori Lynn.
to Scott I)w,glas Kimes, son r1 Mr.
and Mrs. WWlam Kimes, Racine.

David Holfrnau

In the service

POMEROY - Special Agent
Scott L. Walton has been promoted
to First Lieutenant In the U.S.

-Mlnenvllle, and Rdllle Stewart.
J;'clne.toy, are 81111Wnctna .the

The Sunday limes-Sentinei- Page-B-7

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

Walton
·promoted

Stewart
Kimes

Julie Ann Sleele
Jeffrey Black

. · February 2, 1986

Uall, • " 'olt':tl
I: .U li.m .

. GaUia County
GALLIPOLIS - The Dr. Sa ·
: muel L. Bossard Memorial Ll·
· brary announces Its Bookmobile
schedule for the week a! Feb. 3 to
Feb. 8.
Mond ay: Rodney Village 3: ll·
4: 15: Galli a Metro E states 4: 30·
5: 15: Kerr 5: 30·5: 55; Bidwell
· 6:10-6:30: Harrisburg 6: 40· 7: 00;
. Rio Grande Estat es 7: 10-8: 10.
: Tuesday : Gallla Christi a n
·School l: 45·2: 30; Roush Lane
2:45-3:15: Addison 4: 00·4: 30: Ad·
davllle El. 4:40-5: 05: Bulavllle
· Tr. Ct . 5: 15·5: 45; Georges Creek
6:00-6: 30; Kanauga 5th Ave.
6:35-7:00: Foster Mobile Home
Pk . 7:10-7: 30: K&amp;K Trlaler Ct.
7:35-8.00.
Wednesd ay: No rout e Thursday: . C. R.T.C. 12 :00Maintenance
12: 15; Children's Home 12: 15·
12: 30: Scenic Hills 12: 40·12 :55:
Sun Valley 1: 00·1: 35: Pinecrest
1:40·2: 10: Raccoon Trailer Ct.
3: 40-4: OO: Partial 4: 10-4: 40: Cad·

"NEMBER OF INSTilUTE OF COMMORAnYE ARI'S"
GRANITE FROM QUARRY OWNED BY ROCK OF AGES

LOGAN MONUMENT
POMEROY, OHIO

W. Main StrHI ·
Ph. 381-8603

Pomeroy-Mason lritlge

PH. 992-2581

t-r~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~;;;:;;;;;;~~=,~
GIVE YOUR HEART
TO POMEROY ...

Gl"ve Your Sweetheart
Some Sunshine

mus 4:50-5: 15;6:.15-6:
Gall Ia
Centerpoint
30:5:30-6:00:
Cent er·
ville 6: 45·7: 15.
· Friday: Senior Citizens Large
Print Day.
saturday : LeGrande 10: 00·
10:3o: McGulrelo: 35-n :oo; Nor·
thup 11: 10-11:30; Rodney 12 : 00·
12 : 30; Ewlngton 1:30-1: 50; Allee
2: 00·2: 30; VInton 2: 45-3:30: Mor. gan Center 3: 50·4: 20: Cheshire
. 4:45 -5: 30.

G1• f f ( 'e rfl•t•ICGfes

AVAILABLE FOR TANNING
OR OTHER SERVICES•••

Meigs County
POMEROY- Bookmobile ser·
vice tn Meigs County Is brought
by the Meigs County Public
Library under contract with the
Ohio Valley Area Libraries.
Bookmobile Schedule lor Mon·
·day Feb. 3. Burlingham (County
~oblle Home Park), 3:35-4:05:
·iJarrlsonvllle (Church ), 4: 35·
·S: 05; New Lima· Road (1 mi.
south of Fort Meigs), 5:15-6:00:
.Rutland (Depot St.), 6: 40-7:10.
. Bookmobile Schedule for Wed·
nesday, Feb. 5. Tuppers Plains
(•Lodwick's), 7: 25-8: 10: Rlggsc·
rest Addition, 8: 25 -8: 55.

VINTON, OHIO

OP

WHY JJST
EAT.
lOU CAN EAT AI RAX
1503 EASTERN AVENUE

It-----------~-----------~
I
99C
I
99&lt;
I
ANY BAKED POTATO
I ANY BAKED POTATO I
1I IHClUDNl
NEW c... 'N otEESf lAUD POTATO 1 JNCliiiiNG NEW cHill 'N CHEESE amo POTATO 1
I

I

111

w. 2nd St.

992-6720
Pomtror. OH.
HOURS:'MON.-SAT 9:00 TO 9:00
CALl FOR AN APPOINTMENT
Trudy Marshall, Mery PoW.II, L•urie RIICI, Liz Luc:a1
Sheila Powell· T•mlngl '

~will1anr~RudWOIIttQOOdll

PII~I'IQ flu Resluns IMitl No ~iiS IIIOWIG
~wlwl,.,lbillld CIM~tiUV.:O.

Oflel upim 2fl6116

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CO!Ttt~tll&gt;flfl11flafi'I'OII'e'flilottet OHergooaar

!*bf.IDIIu"llj] Rl• R!SiillfW~Is oot1 tto ~ococ-ts 'llo-.tO
Yili~wn!reptotuo ileG Cas~rec)e!r.p!IQI1Yalilt!IQ0r

~

Offer aood 219116 thru 2116186 PtU 9 t

•

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I

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

I
"full seroice salon" ·

f'IIMt 1Q11n1 COI(JOfl t1efart orOerlno. 0'11 cQICXII'I I* Qef$011, pet '11:111 Not YJIJ!I 111

I
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.

REGULAR RAX

,...IJIWII~IIIkncnll'inG.Cft~,_ pmon, l* ¥isl1 Motvahchll

c:cmoinliofi'IIIIIIIJ•'-*·OII.rJOOdll
-~~~~.
onfJfrD~IIIOWIO.
I«Jid...,.jiroN:IItld Cllh~vak.t\'lOJ.

IIt Olfw..,.,.. 21111•

PIU .It

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I
I
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99C

ANY HOT DOG
AND IEGULAI FRIES

Or1et~PI!f!lt'SOO pen1511 NDivlli4 1fl

PlasefJfeselliC/IUPI)IIbeiOfeOf&lt;lellnt;l
oorrb_naltonwllhil!)'olr-ttR.ll~t Olleri)OOdal

pritltetp.lhii!IR.a~ResllurinlslJ11yNOJp0010CopteS III~

..OidwhereptQI\IbdeG Casnreoertc:~~IOilvalueii2QI

• J II Olflr oxplros 2116116

PLU 37·39

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

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�Plge-8·8-The Sunday THT18s·Sentinel

~·rv 2.1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-GIIIIipolil, Ohio-Point Plaaaant. W. Va.

Procedure changes ·

Beat of ehe bend
II)' BOB ROEIIUCH
TlmM 8 r el !lllllf
9ftlclals advl!e that the application tor wort!
procedure at the

GRANT RECEIVED - Belly Krasc2yn, head
teacher at lhe Carleton School mSyracuse, left, Is
pictured recelvln1 a$1,000 grant by represmlatives ol
lhe Ladies Auxiliary ol Aerie 2171, Fnlemily Order
o1 Eqies, Pomeroy, oo f'rkla3i. Making lhe
presentation were Dehl Hensley, center, president,

and BeUy Smith, IMtee, rigta, "nlep-anl Is from the
Jimmy Durante adldren's Fund ollhe Eagles. The
grant will be uaed to purdwe a computer and
software tor leachlllg reading, mathematics and
language sld&amp;.
·

. wlor class
set for area

School menu announced

Pomeroy, I$ having a good senklr
year at Musldngwn College.
· Tamrey woo was such a haton
whlz In childhood not only made a
perfl!ct tour point l:lr the last
semester but she also has the mnor
ct being assistant to tile lratesaor In
SOCiaklKY and assistant In , the
business, ecnomlc and accounting
department.
She has also been selected to be
on the National Dean's List, an
honor alforded to only about
one-half ct one percent ot all ct the
nation's coUege student.

Pomeroy omce
ot the Ohio Bu·
, reau ol Emp)Qy·
ment Services
will change as cl
tomorrow.
Persons placing a new appUca·
tton tor wort&lt; will be scheduled by
Whlle the Chrlsbnas bills m&amp;Y be
appointment under the new procehanging over, at least you have the
dure so that a new group process
January blahs out ct the way. Mer
can be established. The new
all, wmever ))eard of the February
process was deYeloped to assist
Some of the staff at the Holzer blahs? Realizing that we're getting
applicants by Improving their job Medical Center may think they closer tll spring every day, sl)ould
seeking skllls.
have a tiger by the taU. They don't help yoo il keep smiling.
Anyooe . wishing tll place an
appllcatlon tor work In the area ..-------------------~-....:...
shwld call 992-fi611 to schedule an
appointment. Those already regis·
tered at the local otttce do not need
to place a new appUcatton on tile ·
unless they are Interested In .
receiving the new lntonnatton and
Instruction being provided In the
group process.
All applicants, those placing new
appllcatlons and those woo are
presently registered, will be considered for lob orders received by the
office.
Effective tomorrow, all appUca·
lions will be taken by appointment
only and you can make an
appointment by phone or In person
between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.,
Mondays through Fridays.

198·4 PLYMOUTH RELIANT

Am I that bad In economics or
Involved in the ··games that people
play"?
No SlOIIer had It been announced
that coffee prices would be rising
due a drought that they did rise like
crazy. People were dashing about
buying up coffee before lrwent any
higher. A few days later I noted that
a couple ot major coffee oompanles
were decreasing their woolesale
prlces. I didn't detect any drop In
the quickly Increased prices. Oh
well. pass me the tea bag, Myrtle.

POMEROY - Menus for the beans, and mUle
GALLIPOLIS - The SECOnd
Wednesday: Spaghetti with
Meigs Local School District lun·
session
of Color, a color awareness
cole
slaw,
oot
roUs
and
sauce,
cheons next week have been
class
for
women, will meet Satur·
jello
and
mille
butter.
announced. In accordance 11ith the
day.
Feb.
15. noon. or Monday, Feb.
Thursday:
pizza
burgers,
tater
uniform school luncheon program.
17.
7
p.m.,
at the home of instructor
mUk.
tots.
fruit
and
the same menu will be served in all
Vivian
Klrkel.
64 Halliday Heights.
Friday:
Cooks'
choice.
schools,
Registration
fee of $12 must be
Monday: Toasted cheese sand·
paid
to
the
GalllpoUs
Recreation
wich, peas, fruit, peanut butter
l)&gt;partment,
518
Second
Ave..
cookie and mille
Despite
the
use
of
hand
cream
and
Gallipolis.
Ohi[l.
45631
by
the
class
Tuesday: Ham pattie sandwich,
-•
date.
Call
446-1789
extension
24
tor
candled sweet potatoes. green gloves. nar Is ne&lt;-u extra attention i11
Tammy Elchin""r, daughter of
·
more details.
.,wrnter.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Eichinger,
Assemble a kit of emery boards. or· ; - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - L

Winter nails

angewood stick, cuticle cream. nail
buffer and colorless polish. Once a

Trustees to meet
POMEROY - Salisbury Township Trustees will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the township building.

actually. It's just Jeff Dorst, active
Mlck!Jeport Fire Chief woo Is a
patient there. Jeff has been baYIDI
some health problems ·and the
cause has finally been determlned.
Now he's contlned to the Illspital
tor treabnent. Jell Is used to being
constantly on the moye and I have a
feeling he's not going to enthusticaUy receive having to be confined.
You can send cards tll ro!im ~-

4 door sedan, beige metallic with tan &amp; brown cloth interior, 2.21itre
eng., auto. trans., PS, PB, air cond., AM-FM stereo with digital clock,
tilt llileel, cruise C!I!trol, relay wipe~ &amp; Just 24,(D) miles.

'5 80000
,f

Open Dally 10·10; Sun 12·7

week, use cuticle cream to remove excess cuticle. then push back cuticles
gently with slanted end of orangewood
stick.

ON SALE SUN., FEB. 2
THRU TUES., FEB. 4

Shape nails into an oval with emery,

REEDSVILLE - A meeting of
Olive Township Trustee meeting
will be held at6: lJ p.m. Wednesday
at the first station In Reedsville.

use pointed end of stick dipped rnto
cold cream to clean under nails.
Colorless polish can be applied
quick ly and repaired easrly , without
constant removal .

Legion to meet

Sorority to meet

POMEROY - Drew Webster
Post 39, American Legion, will have
a dinner meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at the post home.

POMEROY - XJ Gamma Mu
Chapt er of Beta Sigma Phi Sororlty
meet s Tuesday, 7:ll p.m .. home ri
Mrs. Evelyn Knight with a white
elephan t sale to be a feature.

s
M
TU
ON

3.98
••hhtOr

Our 7.97 Gal.
latex flat paint
for a smooth finish. WhHe and colo:s.
0.. 9.97, .... lw a.m1111oa, Gat., .... 603

-·

25°/o

r=-r~
i ll'
I ~'li

.OFF
ALL

HEATERS

Acuddly bouquet
for Valentine's Day.

IN STOCK

~

1.79

Sale Prtc.lox.
Bounce Iabrie soft.
-•hMIIhelp
prevent slaflc cling
in vour family's loun·
dry. 40, 9x11" sheets.

The Teleflora Cupid Bear '" Bouquet.
A deiachable plush bear th at hugs
a b1g red heart ftll ed with flowers
11 ~~~ and says . "I love you" on
1\j
Va lentine's Day .. and forever
We can wire 1t anywhere tn
the U.SA and Canada
Or deliver it anywhere
1n town '

llflll2 ~..

Ill loUT MAIN

Prestone
De-ker .

13''•x11'\;' size

.

I'OMIItOV. OHIO ··~II'

lloi&amp;/112-ZIIo!&amp;oi&amp;
t
TeleliOia•s a ~ISILMed lrademaril and Sf!n.-tee m111~ ol TeleiiOra Inc. Cl1985 felelloralnc

•

11

Sale Price

Napkins in

:.~. FL.ORIS T
v,_..
OWm f1o;UI

.

99Prlco

1.37

'"•· 250, 1·

•

19.88
Hugga

89C
ply Luncheon

3'Wlooi'
llhifo &lt;AM~y'•

...

Sale
Ea. Cloanor
32-oz.• Fantostlk with

Valentine's Day is
Friday. February 14.

T-31

Electrk ...... 011111
lila ten

RtRIOVIS

Frost and
let Easy.

97&lt;

~

Facial Tissu11
10.12 purse packs.

2.25 E)

H....y loastld
PICIIIVh, 16 oz.

lunch
Dolls
Lovable
dolls.

22 long llfll
Cartridgls250 count.

Sports

~imeJ- tentiaatt Section

' February 2. 1986

-.-

Virginia Tech upsets unbeaten Memphis State
BLACKSBURG, Va. (UPI)- Virginia Tech, led by
Dell CUrry's 28 points, handed Memphis State Its first
Joss of the season Saturday, topping the secondranked Tigers, 76-72, In a Metro Conference game.
The 19th-ranked Hokies, 184 overall and 4-2 In the
conference, also got 16 points from Keith Colbert and
10 points and 13 rebounds from Bobby BeEcher In
handing Memphis State Its first klss In 21 games.
Tech shook off the same full· court press Memphis
State used Monday tll blast the Hokles 83- 61 and hold
Curry to a season- low 12 points.
The Tigers were paced by senior guard Andre
Turner with 21 points and WUIJam Bedford with lB.
Baskerville Holmes added 13 and Dwight Boyd
chipped In 12.
Memphis State had a clear shot at the No. 1 spot In
next week's ranklrigs after Virginia's ll&gt;-73 upset over

Syracuse hit 10 ti-ee throws during a 2: 15 stretch late
in the game Saturday to defeat seventh-rankEd St.
John's ~ In a nationally- televised Big East
Conference contest.
Alkllson scored 15 points In the second half and the
Orangemen held off a late surge by the visitors to gain
sole posoession of first place In the Big East
Conference with an 8-1 record and a 17-2overallmark
before 32,165 fans In the Cartier Dome. The Redmen
fell to 7-2 In the conference and 20-3 overall.
Greg Monroe. Rony Selkaly and WendeU Alexis
scored 12 points each to join Addison In double figures
for the Orangernen. Walter Berry, woo grabbed a
game-high 11 rebounds, and Willie Glass led St.
John's with 15 points each, whUe MarkJacksonadded
14.
The Orangemen built a 10. point lead on t.hr'-"'

top-ranked North Carolina Thursday and the Tigers
led at halftime 36-35.
Tech puUed ahead 65-55 at the 6:36 mark, but
Memphis State cut It to 65-63 on an 8-0 run capped by a
Bedford free throw with 4:03 left.
Tech puUed away 00-63 at the 2: 58 mark on a Curry
jumper, but Boyd hit the first of two free throws with
43 seconds len to get tile Tigers within folur points at
74-70. Bedford scored on a layup with 32 seconds tD
play to close the gap to two at74-72 and, after Colbert
missed a soot at the line, Boyd missed a soort jumper
with three seconds tll play.
Tech cemented the vlctorywltha Colbert jumper at
the buzzer.
Syracuse triumphs
SYRACUSE, N.Y. (UPI)- Senior Rafael Addison
scored a game-high 23 pointS and lOth- ranked

Bucks beaten

Marshall in romp;
Dayton, Miami win
HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UP!) Skip Henderson poured In lJ points
tll spark Marshall tll a 96-76 romp
over East Tennessee Saturday In a
Southern Conference game.
Henderson, a sophomore guard
who notched only four points In a
12-polnt loss at East Tennessee,
helped Marshall lift Its records tll
l&amp;&lt;i overall and 7- 2 In the
conlerence,
East Tennessee, 10-9 and 7-3, was
led by Wes StaiUngs with 22 points,
Calvin Cannaday with 20 and Scott
Daniel U. The Buccaneers played
their first game wltoout regular
guard James Tandy and two
reserves, who are being held out of
action during an NCAA investigation of them.
Jell Guthrie scored 15 points for
Marshall, and Rodney Holden and
Tom Curry had 1~ apiece,
Dayton dumps DePaul
DAYTON, Ohio tUPI) -Dave
Colbert scored a career high 28
points, 21 of them In the first half. to
lead Dayton to a 77-64 victory over
DePaul Saturday afternoon.
The Flyers, now 12-8, grabbed the
lead for good at 16-15 after five,lead
changES thetlrstninemlnutesilfthe
game and held a 37-33 margin at the
intermission.
Dayton. which had four fewer
field goals than DePaul, but
outscored the Blue Demons 29-8 at
the free throw line, scored 8
unanswered points midway
through the second half to up go
5841 with 12 minutes to play. The
Flyers' biggest lead was 7249 with
5: 49 left In the game.
DePaul, which fell to 12-6 with the
1055, was led In scoring by Rod
Strickland with 16 points, Dallas
Comegys with 14 and Lernone
Lampley with 13.
Ed Young added 16, Negele
Knight 13 and Anthony Grant 12 for
Dayton.
Red8ldns win again
OXFORD, Ohio (UPil - Mia·
ml's Ron Harper, on the verge ri
breaking the alhtlme Mid American Conference scoring record, tossee in 27 points Saturday,
pulled down 13 rebounds and had 8
assists In powering the Redsklns to
a 102- 68 MAC drubbing of Eastern

IOWA CITY, Iowa (UP!)- Roy
Marble, Andre Banks and BUI
Jones scored 14 points each Satur·
day to help Iowa overcome a
28-polnl perfonnance by Ohio
State's Brad Sellers with an ll&gt;-75
Big Ten win over the Buckeyes.
Gerry Wright added 12 points and
AI Lorenzen 11 for the Hawkeyes,
who boosted their conference record to 6-3, l&amp;&lt;i overall. Ohio State
fell to 4-5. 10-9 overall.
Sellers, the nation's leading
rebounder with a 13.8 average,
grabbed 14 boards in the lOsing
effort. He scored 20 points In the
second half. the sixth co!IS€Cutlve
game he has cleared the 20-point
mark.

Michigan.
Harper, who Saturday sparkEd
his team tD a 49-25 halftime lead,
needs 21 points next Wednesday
night at Toledo to crack the record
ri Bali State's Ray McCollum
(2,109, set In 1983).
Eric Newsome scored 22 points
Saturday. Ron Hunter 16 and TO&lt;kl
Staker 12 In helping the Skins
Improve their record to 164 ""era! I
and 9-lln the league.
The jiurons, now 6-12 for all
games and · 3-7 against MAC
opponents, were led by Rlcky
Buttram with 13 points, Mike
McCaskill and Oluck King with 11
each and Lewis Scott with 10,
McCasklll and Buttrom hauled In
6 rebounds apiece, and teammate
Percy Cooper had 3 assists.

Ohio State trailed by only 32· 28 at
the half, but Iowa scored 11
unanswered points early in the
second period and went ahead 51-34

Wolvermes breeze

refxwnylt,

:~

,.

s.

John's guard Mark Jackson keeps his
eye on the ball as Syracuee guard Dwa,yne (Pearl) Waolllngton directs
the.S)IJ"IICIMe at1aek IJMurday. UPJ, ,.. '
DIREct'S OFFENSE - St.

Grant, who suffered a sprained
left ankle Thursday and was not
ex peeled to play, limited Wisconsin's leading scorer to just tour
•
SOUTII BEND, Ind. tUPi i
p)ints while he was In the game.
Grant scored 10 points and had Notre Dame reserve center Jim
four assists whUe Olsen wound up . Dolan came off the bench and
with 12 points. Mike Heineman Jed scored a career-high 22 points
Wisconsin with 16 points and Rod Saturday, sparking the 18th- ranked
lrlsh to a 72·70 triumph over
Ripley had 10.
Michigan _is now 19-2 overall and Marquette.
Notre Dame senior center Tim
ooids the Big Ten lead with a 7·2
Kempton
and sophqmore guard
record while Wisconsin, 10.9 overDavid
Rivers
combined for four
ali, Is now 2·7 in cooterenre play.
points
from
the
free throw Une In
The Badgers worked a 46-22
the
last
1:
ff7
of
overtime
to put the
halftime deficit down ID 57-38 with
game
out
of
reach.
11: 36 left but Antoine Joobert
Dolan hit the tying basket at the
scored. then Grant picked the ball
buzzer
to Ue the score at 00 after
from Olsen and drove In for a dunk.
~W~Iatlon .
.
Grant followed with a teed so
The Warriors, woo trailed bylOat
Tarpley could drill In a dunk and the half, went ahead of the Irish at
Michigan held a 6340 advantage 60-58 with 25 seconds to go In
with 9:21 to play.
·
regulation on a basl&lt;et by senior

Irish s"top Marquette

Rose, DeMars given credit
for Oester's hitting resurge
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -It's
no mystery tll Ron Oester why his
1~ season as the Cincinnati Reds'
second baseman was drastically
Improved over the previous year.
"There were two things, " Oester
said at a recent stop of the Reds"
press caravan. "Pete Rose was ooe
ot them. He told me In spring
tra!nlng. 'Hey, just do the things
you're c_apable of doing, Don't try to
do things you're not capable of
Qo!ng. You just get In trouble.'
"The other was (hitting Instrucror) Billy DeMars," added Oester,
"explaining his phUosophy of hitling to me. ! understand hitting a lot
more now than I ever have.''
·
Under Vern Rapp, Rose's predecessor as manager. Oester said he
was urged to puU the hall for more
power but, he said, "I'm not
capable of hitting a lot of home
runs. I'm at my best when I'm
hitting the baU to all fields."
Oester went hitless his first 15
times at bat last season, but ended
up hit_tlng .295 (.303 after the 0-15
slartl and continued tobeoneotthe
finest fielding second basemen in
the National League,
"I think be (Rose) wanted me to
hit .300 more than I wanted to hit
.lXJ," said Oester, who grew up In
Cincinnati with Rose as his Idol.
But, It's just a number to shoot at."
Oester was hitting over ,;ro going
Into the final two series of the
season at San Diego and Los
Angeles. But, even trough the Reds
were out of the pennant race and
had second place locked up, he
declined Rose's offer to sit out the

remaining games to protect his
average,
" I told him there was no way I
wanted to sit out the remaining
games,'' said Oester. "Pete knows I
would have been mad If he would
have set me down."
The Reds finished behind the
I&gt;oclgers In · the National League
West last season, but moved ID
strengthen an alrea(!y capable
[:itching staff with the addition of
John Denny from the Philadelphia
Phlllies and Bill Gullickson from
the Montreal Expos.
"Now, we have four pitchers
capable of winning !Jl games," said
Oester, also Including Marlo Soto
and Tom Browning along with
Denny and Gullickson. "Not that
they're all going tll win :ll games.
but we have a lot of prospects. The
~ershaveagreatpitchlngstaff,

but I wouldn't trade It for ours."
Browning (20-9) was the first
rookie In the major leagueS tll win
20 games since 1954 and the ftrst
Reds' pitcher this century to turn
the trick.
Oester also made a strong pitch
for the Cincinnati reUef oorps,
headed by Ietty John Franco and
rlghty Ted Power.
· "I'd pUt oor pitching stall up
against anybody' s." he said,
or\e ol the Reds' lig question
marl&lt;s going lniD the oomlngsllliSOII
Is shol'lstop Dave Concepcion, who
struggled both at hat and in the lleid
In 1985. There are some who l!el the
veteran shortstop could lose his
starting job to 20-year-old rookie
Kurt Stillwell,
"Having Kurt StlllweU on the

oo LorettZI'!l's rebound and basket
with 14: 15 remaining.
Sellers retaliated with 8 points In
a 3-mlnute span, but Iowa opened
its biggest lead, 69-48, on a pair of
free throws by Banks at 6:57.
The Haw keyes' trapping defense
forced 19 Ohio State turnovers to ,
help Iowa hold !I! to a tie for second
place midway through the confer-

ence season.
Marble, a freshman. shared
team scoring honors despite sitting
oot more than 15 minutes In foul
trouble.
Dennis Hopson scored 16 points
and freshman Jay Burson added 10
points off the bench for the
Buckeyes. Freshman reserve Ed
Horton scored 8 points and grabbed
13 rebounds for Iowa.
The loss kept Ohio State Coach
Eldon MIller five wins short of his
410th career victory.

OU posts league win

ANN ARBOR, Mich. (UPI) Center Roy Tarpley scored 27

points and guard Gary Grant, who
wasn't even supposed to play, put·
the clamps on Rlck Olsen Saturday
to help No. 8 Michigan breeze to a
91-64 Big Ten viCtory over
Wisconsin.
Tarpley, averaging five points
and two rebounds per game less
than he did whUe being named the
Big Ten's MVP last season, dominated In both halves to hit his
season's point high. He also had five

occasions In the second half, the final time at 47-37on a
basket by Howard Triche with 14: 26Iett In the game.
But St. John's scored 14 of the next 19 points to tie the
game at 52-52·on a shot by John Hempel at 6:06.
Syracuse went back on tllp 54- 52 on a pair of free
throws by Selkaly, but a basket by St. John's reserve
Marco Baldi knotted the contest be tore two more free
throws by Seikaly gave the Orangemen a 56-51 lead
they never relinquished.
The Redmen had a chance to tie the score after
Jackson scored four straight points to bring his team
within one at 65- 64 with : 27 seconds left, but Glass
missed a soort turnaround jumper with five seconds
len and Addison grabbed the rebound.
Syracuse shot 00 percent from the finortoSt. John's
42 percent and outrebounded the Redmen 34-29.

club, whether he starls or backs up.
has tll be a definite help to Davey,''
said Oester. "He's never had a guy
Uke Kurt Stillwell pushing him.
"In the early 19tlls, Davey
Concepcion was the big man on our
club. He was counted on to do
everything and It hlnk he got a little
tired of it. I think even Davey will
tell you his work habits' just went
down. Having a guy like SIU!well on
the club will do nothing but give
Davey Incentive."
There is another reason Oester
expects Concepcion, even trough
pushing 38 years of age, to regain
some of his old zest.
"Davey can play as well as
anyone when he wants to play,"
said ()ester, "and he can play as
bad as anyooe when he doesn't
want to play. This also Is the last
year of Dovey's contract. If wants
to stay In basehaU, he's going tll
have tll have a heck of a year.
Davey needs Incentive."
()ester was booed often during the
1984 seasOn and was the object of
anti-Oester caUs oo local sports talk
shows. But the boos turned to
cheers last season.
"Fans are tans,'' said Oester,
now able to laugh about what then
was a very unpleasant experience
for him. "I don't care where you ·
play, tans love winners. If you're
doing weu, they're going to cheer
you. U you're not doing welL.:
"Joluu\Y Bench even got booed In
Cincinnati. Pete Rose even got
booed in Cincinnati. I had a terrible
first half ct a year: My wtte booed
me. Everyone booed me. I Wlll.lid
even have booed myaelf."

forward Kevin Trotter and a
turn-around jumper from senklr
center Walter Downing, woo had 19
points for the Warriors, 12-7.
With 15 seconds on the clock,
Rivers passed the ball right Into the
hands of Marquette's junior for·
ward David Boone, woo was fouled
by lrlsh senior forward Ken
Barlow.
Boone missed the free throw and
Rlvers took the ball down court,
passing oil w freshman forward
Sean Connor, woo missed the
18-foot jumper. As the clocked
ticked down, Notre Dame, 14-3, had
three tries to get the hasl&lt;et with
Dolan finally tipping It In with no
time left on the clocl&lt;.
Dolan hit the first basket of the
overtime and Notre Dame and
Marquette traded scores untU
Warrior senior guard Benny Moore
stripped Connor and went aU the
way for the basket, for two ri his 15
points.

Ron Oesler

ATHENS, Ohio (UP!) - Ohio
University had 11 players In the
scoring column, led by Dave
Jamerson with 15 points, enroute to
a 79-57 Mid- American Conference
victory over nu-rlddled Central
Michigan Saturday afternoon.
The Bobcats began puUing away
midway through the first half and
held a 34-241ead at the lntennlsslon.
OU, now 13-6 overall and 6-4 In the
MAC, was never threatened In the
second half and held Its biggest

margin, 71· 40, with 5: 28 left In the
contest.
Central, which dropped to 6- 13
and 2·8, played without Its top two
scorers - Dan Majerle and Ervin
Leavy, both hit by the the nu.
Majerle, who was averaging !Jl.2
points per game, didn't even make
the trlp to Athens because of the
IUness. Leavy. with a 19.2 points per
game average. got sick enroute to
the game.

Rose feels Bell
will bounce back
from bad season
CINCINNATI (UP[) - Buckly
Bell had such a bad season for the
Cincinnati Reds last year that
there's almost no way todlsgutseit.
A club employee, faced recently
with the taskoflntroduclngBellata
gathering, resorted to gallows
humor.
"Bud(!yhlt .236forTexastheflrst
half of last year and to prove It was
no nuke, he came over to Cincinnati
and hit .219," went the Introduction.
Even Bell has to grin and bear It.
His candid appraisal of last year: "I
just didn't play well,"
But going into 198&gt;, Bell has one
very Important supponer- Reds'
manager Pete Rose, who brashly
predicts Bell wUI be the best third
baseman In the National League
this year.
That's what the Reds hoped they
were getting last Juty 19 when they
traded Duane Walker and Jeff
Russell to the Texas Rangers for
Bell.
The son of fonner Reds' star Gus
Bell (Buckly's real name Is David
Gus Bell), Bell, 34, had been one ct
the American League's top third
basemen for 13 seasons. With the
Cleveland lndlans frtm 1972
through 1978 before joining Texas In
1979, Bell was a five-time AmeriCan
League All-Star and slx·tlrne Gold
Glove winner.
A career .286 hitter through llf!ol,
Bell had hatted .329 In l!Bl and .315
In 1984.
So why did he only hit .236theflrst
half of last year with Texas? About
the only excuse anyone could think
of was that he might have been oo
edge because It was publiC knowledge he wanted to be traded and It
took an agunlzlngly long time tor
the Reds" deal to be worl&lt;ed out.
OK, so why did he hit a pathetic
.219 tor Cincinnati after he arrived?
About the only excuse anyone could
think of was the old cliChe about
how difficult Ills to change leagues.
Altoough Rose Insisted It was a
legitimate excuse, Bell didn't.
"I don't think there's that muchol
a dlfterence between leagues," said
Bell. 'Theplayersaredltlerent, but
the game Is the same."
What happened, says Bell. Is that
he sorneoow lost the confidence he
had gained after 13 major league
seasons.

"Somewhere along the line I lost
some confidence. which really
soouldn"t have happened because
I've been In this game too long to let
It happen. But, after I got through
the first month or month and a half
here, I staned tD regain some of
that confidence."
in the last three weeks of last
season, Bell finally became an
asset, instead of a liability, at the
plate. getting hits In 14 ri his flnal47
at-bats for a .298 average In that
span.
Rose figures Bell will ring true In
"8&gt; because he will know a lot more
about the league's pitchers.
"Buddy may not admit II because
tl' doesn't want tn make excuses,
but It is rough to change leagues,"
contended Rose. "The pitchers are
ditterent here. They do [:itch hitters
dlfferrntly.
"I think Buddy has a tremendous
chance of bein~ the AU·Star third
baseman in the National League
this year. Anybody who works ·as ·
hard as Buddy will have success.
When you put tog»ther the talent he
has with tl.- work habits he has.' ·
you're going to wind up on toir
eventually.
"He's no .219 hitter. we all know
that. It's just one of those things.
We're not worried about Buddy Bell
because he 's been an AU-Star .
pelfonner in the past and j:rObabty
will be In the future."
Rose also expects Bell to fE'&lt;'l a lot
more comfortable with ttl' Reds
than he did with either of the t"o
American League teams he was
with.
.
.
"It's not like when he was at
Texas or Cleveland. where he was
suAJOSed to carry the whole load,"
said Rose. "He doesn't have to
carry the wook&gt; klad now cause
we've got other players that will
tl'lp him carry the load."
The Reds are expected to be a
pennant contender this season and
that prospect excites Bell, who for
many years labored tor doonnat
clubs.
"Tm basically an optimistic ,
person," he said. "I was optimistic
before with Cleveland and Texas,
but It turned out tll be unrealistic .
optimism because we never did '··
very well. But I'm excited now. I
. don't see why the Reds can't win
this thing."

�..

-{

-· .

C-2-Jha Sunday

Pomeroy-Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

w. Va.

2. 1986

'

.

:; • ONEON.()NE - Loga~~'s CUff CiunpbeU (00) houJidll GARS pard
·; Todd Miller (13) lnFrlday'sSEOAL hardwood action a&amp; Galllpnl!s 'l1le
.; leape-cbampkln Chiefs rallied tAJ edge Gallla Academy, 51-lfO.

I

SEO standings
(ALL GAMES)
.':f'EAM
W L Pts Opp
. Greenfield ... .. ...... 16 0 964 664
·Logan .. ......... .. .... .l7 I 1147 1041
:f&gt;outhern ........ .. ... 15 2 1133 835
: ChesapeakP ....... .. 11 4 1024 885
· Gallipolis ... .... ...... 1o 6 001 760
:Portsmouth ......... 10 6 1015 969
:Marl&gt;tta ........... 9 6 918 877
·;Jackron ... ........ 9 6 894 ~
: Northwest .. . . .. . 9 8 971 !*12
:Wa verly ....... . ... 6 9 881 915
·f'l. Pleasant.
5 7 706 '. 7C'fl
;Wheelersburg ...... 7 9 917 948
.?. !hens " " " " ' " " 6 11 9:n 1ffi9
:South Point.. ........ 6 10 003 705
;f\ock HUI ............. 1 13 709 913

;: ;

SEOAL VARSrrv
; ~AM
W L Pts Opp
. ~n ... .... .... ... ..... 7

0
3
4
4
5
16

:J.!iutetta ....... .. ....3
•c;.pJlpolls .... . .. .. .. . 3

:Albens .. .. .. .. .. .. ..2
; J!ckron .. .. .. ...... .1
:1"rfALS............... I6
• .

411
323
376
312
3.JJ
1742

332
350
336
344
390
1742

SEOAL RESERVES

:pAM
W
J,.ogan .................. 7
·S1arletta . .. ... ......... .3
:.,.Athens .. . .. .. . .... .3
:GaUlpolls ......... ..... .3
Jack!lln ........ .. .. .. ..0
!OfALS ........ ....... 16

L
0
3
3

Pts Opp
337 259

259
226
4 249
6 175
16 1246

256
218
247
266
1246

mark to 17·1 and7-0. GAllS dropped
to 1~ and 34.
GAHS ptayed at Portsmouth
Satunlay night. Friday, the Devils
are at Jackron and Saturday at
Southern for a makei.lp game.
Logan plays at Nelsonvi!JlLYork (II
Feb. 8.
Imps Drop Hearibreaker
In Friday's reserve game, the
GAHSBluelmps, up29-22wlth4 :37·
left to play, were victims of a
five-point lJ&gt;gan play, as Logan
rallied to win, 38-37.
Sam Eggleston's two free throws
with sevens seconds left proved to
be the game's winning points.
David Todd paced the Imps, now%
and 34 with 11 points. Tim Neville
added nine. Cluis Van Voorhis and
Sean Spatar had 10 aptece for the
champion Papooses, now 104 and
7-0.
Box SCO!t'S:

(\'....,.,

· LOG~ fill- M:m-s,l~~: Wild u.t; Conrad,
MHO; Walll, w-3: Cllmpbell. 1-2-i: St lvt&gt;mn. !).().(),

-

Gw.tl"'UI 1•1 - BHiddl, :144; MIL)(&gt;r, l -2-ti;
Howard. 142: Harrbon. 13.4-3); Cassady, 2.(1.4;
Spt&gt;ntw, 1.{).2; Saui'Jkon. 1.0.2. TOTAUJ. ti-NI.

Lnt~an ... . .... . . .. . .
. .... 10 U If, 16-Sl
Galll;db ..... ............. : ... ........ 18 12 10 10- !10

LOGAN (.) -

u•••-11.&amp;-l: Toml*fns, 1.o.4;

su~.~n .

M~a. 1-l..J; VanVoortdi, ~10: Spatar, J.f-l!i;

Et;gleston. 2-2-'; Gatnl GJ.3. 'I'OI'AIB 11-1..._ '
GALUI"'~ (171 - Nt'\'lllt, .J.J-9; Klmtllt.IW;O:
SUJ\O't'I"S. (1.{).(): Mllk'r 0-00. Tl'k:lmas, :1 -J.S: Evans,
H -ti: Hauldren, 2-2--6: Todd. ~1-11 . TOI'ALS 14-NT.

a,,...wn:

. ..... 13

7 2 16-38
.. . .. 8 l2 9 8 - ]7

l..t::lpl ..... .. . .

Galllpmls ...

Pomeroy

Friday's scores
Plllt&gt;lorl 61 . Zane Trice 62 f:tlt)
Piqua 75 , Gl1!M1\'Uif' n
Poland oL'J, Girard tl
R)rtsr'r'IOUth 71, lrontoo6l

Pon ruaron n , Ttmn Calwrt 5t
Ractne S t?, Hannan TraY 45
RP,'ooU.Wra 5&amp;. GJ'O\Ie City 46
RXII;'fd* i\, Rl\!enl~ 21 ~
RJdctmont 18. Ben J..opn 66
Rldgtdale SE 'l), WestfaD fiB
~M.~ro~n~
~~ ~.

Whiteoak ,
RJY VIE'w 79 , Nev.· COJ'ID'd 73
RJverdlUP «1, R~ :II
R.Jvt&gt;t VIew '19, John GJeM 7J
Rou 62. llanchrster 61
RoM1c:n1 ~. AnthonY Waynt 56

By S00Tr WOLFE
Thnes Senllnel Slalf
RACINE - After having three
COR$eeutlve contests end with the
same n&gt;Sult , Todd Adams and the
Southern Tornadoes have made the
Hannan Trace Wildcats ltrrn he·
llevers In "dejavu " as the hosl
Tornadoes again pulled a lategame victory out of the llat at 4745,
guaranteein g Southern of at least a
snare of the 1986 SVAC crown.
. All rough rot quite as dramatic as
lhe previous two encounters
(game-winning baskets by Adams
. at the buzzer), the victory was
never·the·less a true thriller as
' Adams drilled a 15 foot jumpt.&gt;r with
( :58. seconds left to give Southern a
. 4645 lead. Following a Hannan
; Trace charging foul alon~ the
· baseline with : 38 seconds remain: lng, SHS regained possession,

setting the stage for a one-point
Insurance policy by senior Scott
WickUne wtthonly four seconds left .
Wickline sank tbe !lrst of a
one-and-one, HT got the rebound
and Immediately caUed time l&gt;ith
three seconds slrlwlng. With the
game n&gt;Stlng on one last slJJt,
Coach Mike Jenkins and company
went Into their huddle l&gt;ith tlJJughis
of breaking the Southern Jinx In the
same fashion that the Tornadoes
delivered the previous two defeats.
The third time was not a charm,
however, as ace guard Deke
Barnes' lJ loot desperation jumper
rimmed-out at the bliZZE'r, handing
SHS the the 47 45 triumph.
Altmugh difficult to find a
consistent star In the Southern
Une-up, many Thrnadoes twinkled
at various times In Friday's
important SVAC victory. Overall,

ror.u.Sa.w. .. .

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Frlda,v's results:

..

Chesapeake 64 Fairland 61
Wheelersburg 66 Waverly 65
Greenlle~d 57 Hillsboro 43
Portsmouth 711ronton 61
Point. Pleasant 69 Wahama 50
Northwest 81 Minford 65
South Point 52 Coal Grove 48
Jackron 74 Athens 66 (Oil
Logan 51 Gallipolis 50
Southern 47 Hannan Trace 45
Feb. 4 games:
Wellston at Jackson
Northwest at Peebles
Oak Hill at Rock Hill
Warren Local at Marietta
Point Pleasant at Hunicane
Feb. 7 games:
Gallipolis at Jack!lln
Athens at Marietta
Southern at Southwestern
West at Northwest
South Point at Fairland
Rock Hill at Chesapt.&gt;ake
Huntington at Point Pleasant
Minford at Waverly
Wllmington at Greenfield
Wheelersburg at Valley
Feb. 8 games:
Gallipolis at Southern (makeup )
Logan at Nelsonville-York
Portsmouth at Wllmington
Waverly at Circleville

•,

Jay Bostick carried tile hest
credentials, scoring 14 points and
grabbing 12 rebound to lead the
Tornadoes.
Also playing an Important role In
his best career clutch performance
was junior Matt Harris, wlJJ added
10 points, and carried the Tornadoes through the !lrst hall. Sopbo·
more Dave Amburgey added 10 to
break Into double figures and spark
Southern's second half scoring
slump.
Throughou t the contest Hannan
Trace played heads-up basketball
and overaU aggressive play, led by
an eleven point effort by junior Sean
Colley. Guards Deke Barnes and
Phil Bailey each tossed In ten
markers, and Scott Rankin added 8.
First HaH
The Wildcats grabbed the qJen ·
lng tip and raced In !Dr the initial
score with 1: 23 showing on the clock
as Deke Barne canned the jumper. ·
Southern quickly turned up the
l&gt;ick on its run·and·gunollense, but
faUed to put any ollln the bumersas
SHS ran Into an ().for-8 dry spell in
the first three minutes.
Meanwhile, Hannan Trace built
a solid 6-0 advantage on goals by
Scott Rankin and Phil Bailey,
before Southern's Matt Harris
flnaUy broke the ire with a driving
lay-up at the 4: 45 mark the score
now 6-2.
Southern finally awoke and
puUed within one as Hanis netted a
comer jumper at the buzzer, the
score 11-10 H'annan Trace.
Southern took Its biggest lead In
the opening two minutes of the
second round as Jay Bostick got hot
and took charge oft he SHS offense.
Bostick canned two jumpers and
Amburgey another, giving the
.rusts a 16·11 advantge .
A see-saw battle ensued as
Barnes sparked his club within one
point, Southern leading 20-19 at the

_....

TI'IU18actions
Q\lcago IAL l - Slgtl('d lctl· handt'd rrlld

pitchers Juan AaQsto and Jem· Don
G~aton , OUtfil'tdl'r RlJdy Law and lnfk&gt;ldl'r
DBvt&gt; Cucllntl'll• to or.:'" y.•ar tuntrar ts
C\el.•eii!Jid- AI&gt;'Xllnted Duane Kulpt"r a! a
spt"Cial m!ro"·ll&gt;ag!it" instructor
l)fol:rolt -Signed plt r ht&gt;r Hill Campbell to

a 1·Vf"8J' CO!lfratl.
.

Baalletball

Pftllad&lt;&gt;lp~ a - S\J(nt&gt;d ln.'t' itk''fl l for.t·ard

Bob McAdoo.

Hoc....
Aalulrtd IPft wt ngrr Kml
Carl1on from Montmll fCI' rnlnor-leaguP
St. Lo!Js -

PAESTONE·I
Anll FIH.&amp;e I Coallnl

The Sunday limes-Sentinei- Page-C-3

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

•

:Southern gains at ·least share of title with 4 7-45 triumph

Logan edges Gallipolis at buzzer, 51
...
GALLIPOLIS - ''We played to make It 5047. It appt.&gt;ared the
the best of our ~billty, and stW got Chlefs' school-record 16-game win·
beat. They (Logan) did wllat · nlng streak was over.
champions must do. They made
Then came a chain of events
their breaks, capitalized on them, which almost caused a tree-for-aU.
and never . let up untO the final Logan's D.J. Conrad dribbled up
buz2er."
court for a layup (0:07) to make it
That's how Gatllpolls hardwood 5049. A foul was called on a GAHS
coach Jim Osborne summed up player.
Logan's 51·50 come-from-behind
Official clearly Dick Hyland
VICtory over host Gallipolis before a signaled a !-shot foul. Harrtson,
packed Parents Night Crowd here Coach Osborne and other Blue
Devils called lor a timeout, but
Friday night.
Galllanll Up By 13
were ignored. The ball was put In
The Blue Devils bad taken an play by Myers as he grabbed a
J8.10 first period lead, and In· missed free throw attempt by
creased tllat advantage to 13 points Conrad l&gt;ith five seconds left. The
on three occasions- 30-17- with Bluellevllsstoodby (becauseofthe
2:051eft In thellalf; 34·21atthe6:43 two shot signal) as Myers dumped
mark In the third quarter and 36-23 It ln. Time expired.
with 5:42 lett In the third..
The o!ficials were assisted from
Coach Kirk Hardman's Sou· the arena by pollee. Spectators
theastem Ohio League cllamplons, from both schools flooded the gym
however, kept chipping away at the floor. Order was quickly restored
deDclt, puUlng within five, 40-35, at by olflclals.
the third period buzzer on a steal by
Myers Paces Chiefs
Eric Walll.
·
··
Logan placed two In double
GAllS maintained the upper flgun&gt;S, led by Myers 25 points.
hand untO Keith Myers sUpped Conrad added 10. The Chiefs hit 22
Inside for a layup with 4:45 left In of 38 from the field for 57 percent.
the game. That gave LHS Its first TheCbiefsweresevenotnlneatthe
lead of the night.
line, had 13 pel'Slnals, 15 rebounds,
From that point on, the lead 10 by Myers, and conunltted eight
exchanged hands seven times and turnovers.
the score was tied twice - 4242 at
Harrtson led the Galllans' attack
the 4:02 mark and 4747 with 1:36 with ll. The Blue Devils were 22 &lt;1
left.
43 for 51 percent. GAHS was six of
Harmon Puts GAllS Ahead
eight at theUne, had13pel'Slnals,17
Gary Harrison's two charity rebounds, seven by Mark Berklcb,
tosses put GAHS on top 4847 with and committed nine turnovers.

.February 2, 1986

~ll3E.'ITW\ Craham H"n1ng and a ~ II ·

.......

ra110 &lt;"nll'Y drafl !*'k.

:: 11Gtm.Y GUARDm -Todd Adams (:U) Is sllown above llglldy
: ·IIWU'ded lhe Hannan Trace gull'll Deke Barnes (13) . Adams was held to
• tour pom1s for lhe nlghl while Bames had 10. Southern clinched as hare
~, .'ol the SVAC IItle with a 4745 victory.

half.
AltlJJugh Southern led 27-241n the
third frame, neither team could
gain much advantage. Sean Colley
hecame Hannan Trace's worklrlrse wtth nlne third quarter points
and a good Inside game.
Southern's Richard Gilbride
gra bhed three stea Is and Produred
six rebounds to untrack the South·
ern defense as well as toss in a
couple badly needed SHS goals .
Bostick and Amburgey carried
Todd
got his clout,
first goal
at the
most Adams
of Southern's
although

bu~ ~~gs~n~e!;·~;~a~~ht
1ead changes and seven ttes. havtng
all the indications of a barnburner.
right down to the wire and setting
thestagelorSouthern'sherolcs,the
score 4745.
Southernhit21-54for38.8percent,
hitting 11 of 22 the second half. SHS
hit a frigid 10 of 32 In the first half,
hitting 5 of ten at the foul circles.
HT hit 19 of 44 for 43.1 percent
Including 12 of 22 the second half
and 7 of 14 at the line.
Bostick had 12 of Southern's 30
rebounds,
followed
and
Turley's
5. HT by
hadGilbride's
31, led by6
Colley with 11, Rankin 8, and Bailey

Hannan Trace played exception·
aUy well and never got dlscour·
aged . They shot really well tonight,
especially the second half."
Southern won the reserve contest
quite handily after breaking away
from a· 20-19 halllime lead. SHS
claimed a 41-34 win as Shannon
Rlflle canned seven f'leld goals for
14 points and Rick Sellers added 7.
Chris Petro had 15 for HT, while
Grady Johnson added 6, and
Richard Stitt 7.

-.

' '
'• '
'

'·

Southern Is 15·2 both at the
varsity and reserve leveL
:
Southern travels to Southwestet!l
next Friday where It could wrap up
the league.
:'
IWo'NAN TMCE '" ' - o.keaa.......u w:"""
"'""'· ,.,.w,s,., Colley .&gt;·! II.""'" Riokln,, ...:
Ricltard Stitt , 0.0.0: Sl("'l;&gt; Jart&gt;ll, 0-0-0; Rick Swala,
2·2&lt;. ror.u.s 1n«&gt;.

·

SOUtHERN H1 1 - Todd t\d&lt;llllli. Z~ : Ja)'.
Bos!lrk. 7.&lt;nl ; SEan Grut'St'r. (1.0.{1: Kf&gt;Uy crul'tl!t,

'"'

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5.

SHS had 10 turnovers, 9 steals,
one assist and 12 personals. HT had
13 turnovers, 4 steals, and 15
personals.
Winning Coach Hol&gt;ie Caldwell
reflected, "I'm very happy that we
won tonight, but I'm very disappointed with the way we played. It
seems like we played hard , but
never got anything accomplished."

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HIJrkf":&gt;'t' \'al .C . L..onOOn 4 1
Buck!";"' Cm1 n . E!p1 &lt;lfl

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81k1' M Ill. Uppror S&amp;nchls~· fJ
Caldwell 'l1!. 8falls,1Jir 61
Cai\Jll ry Chr Ml , You~ Cl\r ~
Campl:l!&gt;l l Mf'm0r1al 53. Sak&gt;rn +I

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An: anum 6.'\. l''ranld!n Monror 6D
AJThtDid ~ . WaU!l'On &amp;II
Arllnglon ~ M3('()mtl -14
1\ !itl f'n'!.tviP.I' r.. Maplfolm 411
,\urora 71. Stlf'f't:!blrn lill

Canil Wtnrllt'liPr 51 ,

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C'ln f or PMk 58. Walnut Hills 55
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C'lrr!P.'IJII' 64. ll.' utun~on Cli 61

Blrl Rhn 71 . Pl)m:lllth If!
Eloom-CarroU 5.'1 . l.ojl:iln Elm ..S
La~r

~

Cln Wooctv. ard 96, Cln Alkrn ~
Cln La Salk' fili. n n MCX'IIff ~
l in Madlf'!'a il . &lt;1n \\'ymtln,~t 60
n n Syr.vnon&gt; iU. C'\n T\lrpin 57
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A.UIIintcr.-·n filc h Rl. Y(Rlret l'rsull rll•
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�Pllge-C·4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
t I
· ·

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

••

,.••

;: CHESHIRE - Jolm Sheppard
i:amJ Sylvester Bloomfield combined

~'~~;=~
~~~b~~
a close game and coasted to a
·~

~&lt;6443 SVAC win over Kyger Creek

1:ttere Friday.

,: The two seniors each connected
1 4 of 6 field goal attempts and
,:SCOred eight points in the period as
•'the Vikings stretched a 27-21
margin to47-33. As a team,
:~ Valley connected on alo1li0St 61 percent of Its field goal
!:attempts (17 of 28) in the second
•;half, while the Bobcats only made
:~ percent of their attempts (8 of

t-on

::.u.utbne

•.27) .
:; The win ups Symmes Valley's
' ·rECOrd to 6-9 overall and 5-7 in the
·:SV'AC. while Kyger Creek drops to

1-11.
Kyger Creek's Tim Gordon
•~~':~the game's first basket, the
~·
·scored 13 consecutive
::t~oE.open a 13-2 lead with four
left in the quarter. Jolm
, a 6-foot .J senior, scored
during the run and
::Jintlsh&lt;!d the quarter with nine. and

~

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

'

{Sytmnes Valley pulls away
~~in second half for 64-43 win
,.••
By JOHN FRIEDMAN
'lbnes-Senllnel Slalf

:

February 2. 1986

the Vlklngs led 15-8.
Symmes Valley led 19-8 with six
minutes left in the half before
Kyger Creek scored on baskets by
Richie Gilmore, Kevin Jolley and
Bill Loveday in Jess than a minute
to cut the lead to 19-14. Two baskets
by Mike Bradbury and a Loveday
free throw cut the margin to 25-21
with 1: 29 left in the half, before
Galle Patterson scored the half's
final basket.
A Gilmore basket with 4: 47 left in
the third quarter cut the Viking lead
to four, 33-29, but Symmes Valley
reeled off a 25-7 run over the next
8:30 for a 58.J6 lead with four
minutes left in the game. Patterson
scored 12 of his game-high 20 points
and Bloomfield six of his 12 during
the decisive stretch.
Kevin Jolley was the only Bobcal
in double figures, with 10. Bradbury
and Loveday each added seven.
Both teams shot poorly in the first
half, Kyger Creek connecting on
H7 percent of its attempts and
Symmes Valley, 34.4 percent.
"I don't like a fast tempo," Viking
Coach Ed Fry said. "When we run,
we take bad shots and In the first
half. we needed to get back into our
offense. In the second half, we did a

'letter job of knowing when to run
and when to slow it down."
Kyger Creek Coach Scott Stemple agreed tempo was a key.
"We don't have a strong bench,"
he said, "and when we play
transition, it takes it out of us. But
we just didn't execute on offense
and when you have an off night, this
is what happens. Our goal Is to
make the kids mentally tough and
we've gotten a lot tougher than we

Friday's cage scores
l:lii~·

E

Bo\

!lt'OI't':
SYMM~ \ 'AJ..J..E.:\'

Jil) - Sl'tH &gt;slt'l' Blwmfll'kl
ii-fl.12 C.:•t•• Pa r u ·r~)fl i 19. Sh·.t111, M••,l(k:JI.t S ].(J.'!
John q.,'PJll rd !'-:.! JJ. John Thomp10n ~ -~ll. SJi'\o'

F('rm Hl-1. Srou WIIUirnS 1-6-2. Mall Gat!'S
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L ! 10, Mlkf' Bradl:lln• l 1-0, BtU L1l''M&lt;t1· J.H
Tim -GmOOn .l-().6, TOO!! H.n 1.0.2. Rirk Hudsoo
0.1 I. Cllad IR;~rh M2. Mila• ~ 14'1. TOTALS

~~~~~~~ II:

Jo ~·

,.,...,_

Scott&gt;~· ~
K~·l'({'rCT'('('I

~7

Moga!brP F'1eld 71. Rf\'f'!'t' GO
Mo~an !17. Nf'\11.' ~JdlltfOn 47
N Call HooVN' 7-1, Mass Jackson 6b

MaUITl'f' 56. Sy,l !'o.Jtbv"'· ~ .

Kl'GER CREIX 1Q)

Sylt\t'l'l('!&lt; \'alk-.

Val 75.. Ansonia

VISA

'•
•

r.t.Jplim&gt; 76. Rootstown S8

Marbl Cat h Tl, f'n&gt;ck&gt;rt'klown SJ
."dastm !tl, Sprlngtoro 43.

SW Gallt-1 6J

•

•

Mid Fen11.Yk 79. W Clrrollton 6J
Mlttlll'lov.·n
Cln· Lakota til
Midland 64, f"'n1«nm 48
MIIM EdiSOI'l 61, Collliu \\'t'Stern Rl .;

Elid&lt;t 62. 51 Mary~ 48
Emmonl.k'l Bapt lit. Bap1 Park iMk'hl

were."

For the game. Symmes Valley
made 28 of 00 from the field (46. 7
perceno and 8 of 9 from the fou l
line. Kyger Creek only made !Sol 51
field goal attempts (35.3 pe~entl
and a mlsearble 7 of 20 (35 percent 1
from the foul line.
The Vikings pulled down 33
rebounds (Sheppard 10, Bloomfield
7 and Thompson 7) and Kyger
Creek 29 1Loveday 11 and Bradbul)·
6) . The Bobcats turned the ball over
23 times while Symmes Valley
committed 19 miscues.
1n the reserve game. Thl llas
Tibbs S&lt;.'Ored 10 point s and Chris
Carswell 8 to lead Symmes Valley
to a 30-27 victory. Chad Leach
scored 9 ro lead Kyger Creek.
Kyger Creek played at Cross
Lanes (W.Va.) last night while
Symmes Valley is idle untU Friday,
when the Viklngs will enter·tain
Eastern.

u.·....-p:oJ89.

E. Mt&gt;lg::s

MPdlna BIK'k¥)'(' 2 . Lu1heran fJ

Miamisburg ffi Edgt'WOIXI ~7

Mark&gt;rl Loclll 49, Mlnst'r J.l

.

)

"

Madlsoo 61, Ashland t9
MBllsftl'ld Sr iii, Mlll•bil.r 63
MMslleld Sl 11-tf"r !'!&amp;, M;~ nsfleld C'hr J6
Mapn.·ood 61. LDrdstow n J9
•
Marpi'PIIa

~

~

MI:Chank'StJul"li 54, Way..-slk&gt;ld-Goshl.'!!

Macon Ea.sttrn 16. w Union 6J
Mad Pllll!!i 61, CE'darvU.- ro

Db:lt- Ill. Mld' !fM·n M&lt;idl&lt;.on .'16
Dublin 50. Ba Walnut .ll
E Cllr~r on T.l, S Cl\ark':s SE &amp;I
E Cumon 7l Southrostrrn 64

E Knox DI. Dll nvtnt&gt; 00

McDonald 41, Lowf'llvtUe

.:r.

Da y Stl'l:lhil\li t.1 . F'll.lrlxlrn 42
Dil ~ · Dunbar 87. 1)1)· Bflroont 112
Da }· Pa tter~ &amp;1. Mt&gt;adowdalf&gt; fi.1
I~) Col wr.ur n . D61)' 0\am.Jul 46
ll.:ol Sr John 62. ~'lt&gt;ndon· ll nlon ~
l)(olawan• 7l Mt Verr'(ln 71 12()'1'\
OelpM Jf'lfo'f!IOII fll, Ada 6C

•

•

Mc.Qennlt NW BL Mlllford

Lor Oeer\.W '!0, N RldgPo1 .. !i
Lcraln Sr EB. F'rtom:l n1 Ross Qi
Loraln Kine ~ . Mar Han:llna
LI.IC!aS T1. Centerb.lt'l ~
Lyrrrii:IUra: Clay Sl:, Gei:Jr'JI('town ~

Wayl'l' i ii, Fairmont 62

Da ~ Chr ':WI. Cal\•ary Chr ot6

w1'i:t It;

·-...
i

4123 37n

• Til 5lldt C...

15 I! !I 1; - b4
~ 13 12 J[I-~J

1226

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Carroll Norris Dodge, Inc.
Phone 446-0142

300 Third Avo.

Gallipolis

h. , ......

I

'

!uuum

,- ·!'o!"•

446-1276

SHORT JUMPER - Symmes VaHey's Jolm Sheppard goes up over
• K,yaer Creek's Bill Loveday lor two points in the !lecOnd haH ol the
~ Vlldnp' 64-13 win at Kyger Creek Friday night. Sheppard srored 211
: points to lead the Vikings. Also going lor the block is the Bobcats' Mike
• Bradbury ( 15) . Symmes Valley's John Thompson (&lt;13) looks on .

·•

off

•

SALE ENDS

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I.

�Page-C-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

February 2. 1986.

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

February 2, 1986
I

Marauders drop rirSt court encounter of season, 73-55
By KEITH WJSECUP
Thnes&amp;ntmel Stall

mental in keEping the fired-up
Warriors on keel. Til£' quick WHS
playmaker topped au scorers with
VINCENT - For the second time 18, the same amount he scored
In three months, Warren Local has when Meigs won the !Lrst meeting,
knocked a Meigs team from the 70-59.
unbeaten ranks, the latest here .
Warren, now 12-4 overall and 12-3
Friday as the Warrior cagers in the lf'agll(', led from the opening
shocked the state's 12th ranked tip, taking advantageofMeigs'cokl
Class AA Marauders, 73-55.
shooting from the fioor. After a 14-6
The Marauder loss not only first period, Warren wklened the
skidded to a halt a 17-gamewinning gap to 33-22 bY halftime.
streak plus an undefeated regular
The Marauders made one serious
~ason , it revived bitter memories
run late in the third quarter, scoring
of Meigs' ·football loss here last three straight baskets to come
October, which also ruined chances within nine at 42-3.3. Trailing 46-33
for an undefeated season.
going into the final period, Meigs
Warren's upset win delayed the was forced to foul and Warren
Marauders from clinching their answered by making 19 of 28 in the
second straight TVC crown period.
outright.
'The kids are awfully disapNeed One More Win
pointed, but It's not the end ol the
With two games remaining, world. We played hard but became
Meigs needs but one win for the frustrated when the ball just
titl£'. A Warren loss would also giv£' wouldn't go in, and the harder we
Mf'igs the championship.
tried, the worse it got,' sald Meigs
As he did as a scrambling coach Greg Drummer.
quarterback in October. Warren's
'We came out as cold as can be.
guard Doug Huffman was insuu- We made 11 ol34 shots the first half.

We just didn't play well enough to
win and I thOught Warren played a
really good game,' added
Drummer.
Oft NlcW
Uncharacteristic Maraud er
shooting was evidenced by 10 of 34
shooting from Meigs' top two
scorers, Rick Wise and Mike
Chancey. Wise, who led Meigs with
16 points, was seven of 20 and
Chancey, who was held to a season
low of six points, was three d. 14.
Following Huffman's 18, Brian
Rauch had 15, KE:-nny Alkire 14, and
Joe Ander!lln 12 in Warren 's
balanced scoring attack.
J. R. Kitchen cwne off the bench
to score a career-high 13 for the
Marauders and was singled out bY
Coach Drummer for having an
excellent all-around game.
Meigs made25 of69from the field
for 36 per cent while Warren made
25 of 57 for 44 per cent. Warren won
the game at the foul line where they
dropped 23 of 35 (66 per cent) to
Meigs' fi ve of 11 (45 per cent) . The
Marauders had 18 tu movers and

Eastern's foul shooting gives

Eagles 66-63 league triumph
By SCOTT WOLFE
Times Sentinel Staff
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern
Eagles qeld off a late game
charge by the Southwestern
Highl anders to even their record
at 8-8 here Friday evening,
edging the Highlanders 66 -63.
The SVAC triumph hoosted East ern's record to 6-6, whil e SWHS
dropped to 2-14 a nd 1-11.

TVC standings
TVC CAGE STANDINGS
ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Meigs .
. .... 17 1 1285 996
Warren LocaL .. . 12 4 10ffi 964
Belpre..
...... ll 6 1126 1006
Trimble .
..... IJ 6 1140 1101
Federal-Hocking.. 7 9 97'2 973
Alexander .. .. .. .. . 7 10 110'2 l 125
Vinton County ... . 5 II 98i 1055
Wellston ..
l 12 955 1103
Nelsonville-York .. . 4 11 928 10'26
Miller .. .. ..
3 13 871 1054
TVC GAMES ONLY
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Meigs......
.. ..... 15 I 1124 885
Warren Local... .... 12 3 1031 903
Betpre .... .......... 11 4 1000 !r&gt;3
Trimble .. .. .. ..... 10 5 9!KJ 961
Alexander .. .. .. .. . .. 7 9 1041 1()13
Federal-Hocking ... 6 9 001 !m
Vint on County .. .. .. 5 lO 928 992
Wellston ...
4 11 90'2 10'!/
Nelsom·UJe-York.. 4 11 8SI 955
Miller .. .. .. . .. .. .. 1 13 793 976

rort\L\l. ' .... .. ...76 76 9Q) Friday's ,....uks
Warn&gt;n Local 73 Meigs 55
Belpn&gt; 67 Vinton County 58 "
Trimble 64 Alexander 61
Federal-Hocking 66 M il l~r 47
Nelsonville-York 00 Wellston 59
Tuesday's games
Eastern ll'M igsl at FederalHocking
Wellston at Jackson
Friday's games
Wellston at Meigs
Alexander at Belpre
Federal -Hocking a! i\'l'iso m·ilJeYork
Miller a! Vin ton Count y
Warren Local at Trimble
Feb. 8 game
Vinton County a! Lorain Catholic
TVC RESERVES
TEAM
W L PTS OPP
Melgs-x .. ....... l5 I 841 642
Belpre . . .... ...... .. 11 4 741 618
Federal,Hocking.. 9 6 581 576
Nelsonville-York .. 8 i 635 663
Miller .
7 8 638 673
Warren Local
7 8 696 685
Alexander

Eastern placed three men In
double figures . paced by swing
guard Eddie Colllns who tossed
In 16 points, Greg Leachman with
14, an d Kevin Barber with 11 . Jeff
Ca ldwell added 8. and Bryan
Durst 6.
Sout hwestern also placed three
men In double dlgures led by
'Andy Halslopwho notched gamehigh honors with 23 points. Benny
Boyd added 12, Jim Jeffers 11 .
and Dan Patrick 8.
A sluggish first period by both
clubs and a deliberate SWHS
offen se left the score deadlocked
at 12-12. A strong EHS offensive
effort in the second fram e
boosted the Eagles to a 32-26
adva nta ge at the half.
Both teams ripped the cords In
the third fr ame as a defensive
struggle kept the game close,
however. Eastern carried a
slight upper ha nd into the final
round , 51-44 .
On several occasions Eastern
led by 10 points, but a late game battle at the foul line and a
creditable effort by the Highlande rs In the waning moment s
made the game close at the end,
66 -63 .
Eas tern hit 25-49 for 51 pe rcent ,
as Its Improved shot selection
again proved to be of great
Impor tance as well as co ntrol of
the offens ive boards.

Southwestern hit 25 of 66 for 39
percent , canning 13 of 23 at the
foul cir cles.
Eastern hit 15 of 21 at the line,
grabbed 44 rebounds. had 16
assists, two steals. 13 turnovers.
and 23 fouls . Wade Leachman
controlled the boards with 13
caroms, while Collins grabbed 9
from his guard position.
The Highlanders had 39 rebounds, led by Woolum 's 10 and
Jeffers' 7. SWHS had 8 assists, 5
stea ls , 11 turnovers, and 20
personal fouls.
Eastern coasted to a 52-28
victory in the reserve contest.
Tony Hendrix paced the winners
with 13 points . Mike Martin had
10, and Allen Tripp 9 for the
winners .
Rob McCarty , Brad Hlnley,
and Steve Tarbe ll had 7, 7, and
six points respectively for the
Highlanders.
Eastern travels to Symmes
Valley Friday .
Score by quarters :
EASTERN (Iii ) - Kevin Barbt&gt;r S. l-11 ;
Edd ie Collins 5-6-16: Gr(&gt;g U:&gt;achman
7-0.14 ; Bryan Durst 3-0-6: Jeff Caldw pll

2-4·8: Tone Chapman 1·0-2: J immy Cald·
Wf'll 1-3-5: Brent Nor ton J-2-4. TOTALS
1$-11-11.
SWIIS (Q J - J im Jetlt&gt;r~ S- 1-11 ; Benny
Boyd 6-0.12 ; JOhn Woolum 1-1-J: Rick

WLHS 15 while the Waniors won
the rebounding battle, 40-38.
Chancey led Meigs with 13 whlle
Shawn Baker and Kitchen each had
five.
Reserve Claim TMie
Coach Mlck Childs' Meigs reserves clinched the f1rst reserve
title in the school's history with a
rome-trom-behlnd 47-44 win over
the Warren reserves.
Down 44-40 with 1:39 lett, the
Lit tie Marauders scored the
game's final seven points. Chris
Smith's basket and pair of free
throws knotted it at44-44 and with 40
seconds lett, Mike Bartrurn put in
two free throws to give Meigs the
lead. Following a Warren turnover,
·Bartrum canned another free

throw with one second lett.
Meigs Is now 17-1 overall and Th-1
in the league. Warren dropped to7-8
in league play. BUI Brot~rs led
Meigs with 17 and Bret Rauch
topped Warren with 18.
Meigs can clinch the TVC title at
home Friday when the Marauders

Snydn l·M. &lt;Mk Pu.liW 1).{)-0, Stew~ ~.
'IVJ'.-\IJj 11-IH'l'.
" 'AUPI LOCAL (t4)- Brt'l Rauch1-4-18. Olllit
PIUJl11Jlt"!' .. 1-9. [\lug BIMngrr ~ 10. lbb H118!Y

l-6-1..

. .... , 6 16 II Z.J

Warreni..clcal . . . . . . ....... 14

. .. ... u 11 8 16-.7
9 9 16 lO- it

f§~~§§C~§~~~~

\\e're dr\ving
downprte~

D1rk Km!'f'd)· ~1 -1. Donnlt&gt; P«kf&gt;r ~ . Sl("'.'('
Muw-r ~- TOTALS !Ha.
WAR&amp;EN WC.U. (111 - Krn A1kln' 6-2-H, Brian
Retch S-3-~. Jer~· Pa!IT'Il'r 1).2-2, JDP And!!n0n~2- U .
Otrtl OJwptJ ].1.7, Douii Hu:tman 3-ll--18, JoM
Fortnt')' 0-1-1. Curry Rran 2-64 . TOTALS llo0-11.

Mr\JI ........ ......

Clm tH I. TOTALS lN-K

Mflgs ..
Warft'll Local.

2-()..f., Rick WilE&gt; 1.2-16, Shlwn BaltK ll-1 J. R.
Kltclwrl S-1-'Q. Mlki&gt; 01.11Clt')' 3-6-6. Hllf)' E.um 142.

.,,-.

~· h,

1,-,..wra

!\'anly)
MEI08 (II) - I..N.' Powfll 1-0-2. ft'ld Robln!illln

COOPER
Chrysler-Plymouth

-5~

19 ll '17- '1 3

Quality at

Rain forces postponement of golf event
PEBBLE BEACH, Calli. (UP! l that the CroSbY name is not on the
- Heavy rains and strong gusty tournament masthead.
winds forced postponement Friday
It was removed at the request of
of the second round of the PGA's Bing's widow, Katl\Ym, in a dls(Xlte
$600,(0) stop on t~ Monterey with the local organizers. In the
Peninsula.
absence of. the Crosbys, AT&amp;T
Tournament officials said t~ CommunicatiOns Is sponsoring this
event would maintain its 72-hole year's event.
format, pushing the final round
The tournament has grown into
back until Monday.
the premier Pro-Am event' in the
Singer Bing Crosby started the United States. This year. 180
event as a gathering of friends at professionals and amateurs have
Rancho Santa Fe near San Diego in entered the event. Til£' tournament
1937.
has also given rtse to conditions now
known as "Crosby weat~r." The
This year marks t~ first time battering winds confound even the
since those Rancho Santa Fe da.vs best of golfers.

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PHONE 4U-C066

Offer expires March 31, 1986 Single-lamily hame awners ooly

Haislop 1·2-4; Dan Partlck 3-2-8: Andy
Haislop 9-5-2.1; Dave Meors han 0-2-2:
Robfrl McCa rty 0-0-0; Steve Tarbett 0-G-0;
[){'an Mc Neal 0-0-0. TOTALS 15-lS-13.
Ea stern .... ..... .. ..... ...... 12 20 19 15--66
SWffl ........... ... ... ........ 12 14 18 19-6.1

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111d 0111 PI''"'" of lllsol•t• uhslld•oll.
Call lor • •o·obhpliott IHOilt._ wfttl Ott lift·
0101111 We tn't •M '"' to 111iSJ lilt • . , _. If lift.

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Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614)446 -7619 or (614)992·6601
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 46631

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Friday •s results
Meigs 47 Warren Local 44
Alexander :~ Trimble 33
Nelsonville- York l7 Wellston 43
~!pre 55 Vinton County 22
Federal-Hocking 33 Miller 31

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VINTON -North Gallla jumped
out to an eight poillt first quarter
lead and was never headed In
posting a 7%9 SVAC victory ol Oak
Hill here Friday.
The Pirates, 15-2 overall and 10-2
in the conference, led 22-14 at the
end of the f1rst period and 42-34 at
the half. North Gallla stretched the
. margin to 60-48 after three quar:· iers, before the Oakl; rallied in the
, Jourth quarter.
• :The kl&amp;s, Oak Hill's fourth in a
·i-ow, drops the Oaks to 7-9 overall
11nd 5-7 in the leagu~.
Oak Hill's Mike Hale, a 6-foot-3
sophomore, led all scorers with 24
· points. Brenton Brown was the only
other Oak in double ligures, with 11
· ~lnts.
The Pirates Mike Kemper, a
6-!oot-2 junior, led four North Gallla

School .
The Big Blacks received doublefigure scoring !rom Kelly Rltfle
with 14 points, Darrell Mitchell
with 13, Jetr Porter, Clifford
Simpkins and Jolut Pelfrey with 10
apiece to lead Point Pleasant to
their second victory over the White
Faloons thls season. PPHS defeated Wahama 66-52 on Jan. 21st
atWahanla.
Mike Wolle led the Waharna
attack with 12 points, follo~ by
Todd Gress with eight.
Both roaches agreed Point Pleasant's height advantage over the
smaller White Falcons was the key
to the game as «l ol Point
Pleasant's 60 points game !r(lll
inside the key.
· "Their inside game Is what hurt
us," saldWaharnaheadooachLew
Han, adding, "We played hard and
we played well, we just couldn't
oontend with their helghl" "This
Is a good rtvalry for the county and
when it can be played with the good
~11Smanship that was shown
.~ OO!ght it makes for a good
~allgame," Hall added.
Point Pleasant ooach Larry'
Marlcham commmted that his
Inside game worked well and also
noted the excellmt sportsmanship
that was shown durtng the game.
"We dld a good job keeping them
ott the boards tonight," Markham
said. "We concentrated in practice
on boxing out and keEping them ott
the boards. For the first L1mtnut,.
I \km't think they bad anyotlenslve
reboums," added Markham.
"The. sportsmanship slxlwn out
there tdnlght was just wonderllll. It
is a pleasure to be Involved in a
rivalry when this type of sportsmanship and good will Is shown.
~ey are a good ball team. They
are a good shooting ball team and
Th(lllpson does a heck of a job
inside. 1 wish them the best of luck
In their sectional," Markham
rommmted.
· The Big Blacks jumped to an ~ 7
lead after the first eight minutes of
play before stretching the advantage to 14-9 eart.Y in the second
.quarter on a baseUne layup by
Porter.
Following a pair of foul shots by
Wolfe t~ Big Blacks reeled off six
straight points !or a 20-11 margin
with 4:20 lett to play in the half. A
pair of lou! shots by Gress at the

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675-1160

l

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Point Pleasant
Store Hours: Monday thru Friday 8:00a.m. to 5:00p.m.; Saturday 8 a.m . to 12 noon

turned the ball over 11 times and
Oak Hill e1gbt.
In the reserve game, Rusty
Denney and Keith Burnett each
scored 16 points to lead North Gallia
to a 47-25 win. Jedd Rollins led Oak
HUI with six points.

001 tou. 1•1 -

L
2
2
6
8
9
9
14
16

l.J.0.2'l.

for Valentine's Day.
The leteflora C.Jpid Bear·· Bouquel
A aetacflable plusn oear ma t hug s
a 01g red heart lil•ed w•lh flowers

ana says "I love you" Oil
Valent.nes Day and forever
We can wife 11anywhere 1n
the US.\ and Canada

T-31

3:01 mark brought the White
Falcons to within 22-15, ho\\1!\'er,
the Big Blacks went on another run
soortng ·stx of the next eight points
to take a ~17 lead that was cut to
:ll-20 by Intermission.
WAIIAMA (511) - WolfP. ~2 - 11; Crt'SS , l-2-8;
Thomp!iOn. 1·~7: BumgarttlPr. .l-0-6: Ra rnltz. 2-1-5;
Marshall, 2·1-5: Je'&gt;l't&gt;ll. 1 -3-~; Clark. 1 - ~2. mTAlli
.

I'OJIYI' PLEA.!IA.IIfT !. ) - Rltfk:o, lt-:Z-14; Mitc-nPII,

Make your Win
heart 'n' soul.
feelings
·crys_
tal
clear.

With the FTO®
Crystal Hearts'"
Bouquet.
Valentine's Week
starts February 9,
so send early.

fi-1 -13: Por1{'1', 3-4-KI; Sim!Jidns, :'1-0-10: PM trey .3-4-10:
Kaufft'r. 3-2-8; Eio&lt;A.'f'n. 2-11-4: Rlntes. O.M: Hcnon.

3Thleflota"

POMEROY
FLOWER
SHOP
106 BurTERNUT AVE.

With the FTD"
Hearts 'n' Flowers '"
Bouquet.
Valentine's Week starts
February 9. so send
early. Call or v_isit us
today.

IJ 17 1J - 50

POMEROY, OHIO
PHONE 992-2039
PHONE 992·5721

Point Pll'asa nt ... ...... ...... ... ... 8 22 1J If! - 69
Rt.enoe !iUII'1!- Wahama ~ Po mt Pll'asant :II

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for most Ford applications

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Ice King ·
Antifreeze

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Reg. 3. 77

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Savage 72 Month Batteries
with e11chenge
650 cold cranking amps Reg, 59.88

for most GM applications

Motorcraft

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t .00 ott, A•g.lrom 2.69

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59• Antifreeze Tester
Delmet Custom
Wheel Covers

22.88
Silver Star,

u , •• · •• 15inch

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39.88
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Windshield
Washer Solvent

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Fairland at Hannan Trace
:'lqrth Gallla at Ashland Ho\Y
F"amUy
\Vaharna at Southwestern
Eastern at Federal Hocking
Oak Hill at Rock Hill
Fl'lda,y'a pmee
North Gallia at Hannan Trace
Kyger Creek at Oak HUI
Southern at Southwestern
Eltstern at Synunes Valley

..

l&lt;l'm ~r

Reg. 29.95 per tet ot 4

SVAC
Team
W L Pel.
Southern ................ .. 12 0 l .OOJ
North Gallla .. ........ ... 10 2 .833
Hannan Trace .......... . 8 4 .667
Eastern .... .... .......... .. 6 6 .500
Oak Hill ............... .... 5 7 .417
Symmes Valley ....... .. 5 7 .417
Southwestern ............ I 11 .&lt;llJ
Kyger Creek ........... .. I 11 .&lt;llJ
Friday's resuls
Southern 47 Hannan Trace 45 .
North Gallla 79 Oak Hill 69
Symmes Valley 64 Kyger Creek 43
Eastern 66 Southwestern 63

'l'ueflda¥'• rames

Mlkt•

Acuddly bouquet

SV
. AC standings

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W
North Gallla ...... ... ..... 15
Southern .. .... .... ........ 15
Hannan Trace ....... ..... 10
Eastern .. .. ......... .... .... 8
OakHIU ...... .. ........ .... 7
Symmes Valley .. .. ...... 6
Southwestern ............. 2
Kyger Creek .. ....... ..... 1

GAUlA (itl) -

,._,_ P" l I"'· 2·"· Sh""· c""''"" ,., ,, ""'
Thaxtoo (~2 - 2 TOTI\.I.b :12-l ~'ll.
"""' ., '"""'"'
N ')1 ~4 21 -69
::.':~"''
t2 'll lR 19 --m

M' "" "'" , ,.,,_ """''""
·' · , . , .,,, 1" · Todl

able to get out of the gate early,' '
Pirate Coach Bruce Wilson said.
"The players are finally ~
to believe they can win no matter
whether !hey' re ahead or not."
The Pirates made 32 of 51 field
goal attempts (62.7 percent) and 15
of 20 free throws (75percent) . Oak

.. .... .. ;

- NORnt

Todd 0....1 i&lt;-ll\ Todd " """" • 1·11. w'Y"' rnddi&lt;'

"""'"l-~ll , "'" "''" "

" It was thf first time we've been

lHHJ. 'IUTALS !&amp;Is-M.
ly.I.IUtlft:
Wahama .

hll

YY a Y
ay, w e
Oak Hill will be at Rock Hill. ·
,.,, ""''

t~· night.

18-IWI.

c,..,
'"'· Bclon """"" ,_,._ c"'" c,, ,... ,_..,,
En&lt; Ke m 2&lt;4 TOT.U.S tl-1&gt;01.

North Gallia wlll visit Ashland

(K I H0 1 F mil Tuesd

•t9113S,tt1t•S,,9115S

Kyger Creek at Cross Lanes

COLORS
MADE
TO
.

'Hill shot.43.6 percent from the fioor
('!/ of 621 and 75
,percen t fran the
charity strtpe (also 15 of 20).
Kemper grabbed U rebounds to
lead North Gallla to a 29-24 margin
on the boards. Hale (Xllled down 10
to eace the Oaks. North Gallia

,~·

...

CAROLINA LUMBER·

players In double figures with 22
points.
Seniors Todd Dee!, Todd Holstein
and Wayne Diddle added 18, 17 and
12 points rspecttvely for North
Gallla.
'
Dee! and Holstein combined for
14 of the Pirates' 22 first quarler
points as North Gallla used a
pressing defense to jump out to a
quick 10 point lead. From then on,
the teams traded baskets the rest rt

:Jloint Pleasant trips
·wahama five, 69..50

Salurclaf'• pme

3 TO CHOOSE FROM

The Sunday Times-Sentinet- Page-C-7

North Gallia rolls over
. . Oak Hill for 15th hardwood win

By Deaolt! Slmnate
The Point Pleasant Big Blacks
had ttve players reach· double
. !lgures and used their inside height
advantage to take the season
series !rail a gutsy Waharna
White Falcon squad el-50 Frtday
night at Point Pleasant High

4-qllncllr

7 9 696 726

CINCINNATI (UP))- The Reds
arc asking all players signing a
onP-year contract for the 1986
season to agree to a random drug
testing clause and several have.
club General Manager Bill Bergesch sald Friday.
"We are asking all our players
signing contracts to do this,"
~rgesch sald. "But this voluntary
testin g Is for one- year contracts
oruy. u a playfl' fs signing a
.rt)ultl-year deal, which I don't
foresee us facing this. year, we
would be much more strict and
insist on testing. "
~rgesch sald he could not reveal
who had agreed to testing, but It Is
known thai Tony Perez recentty
signed a one-year pact.

64-(1:

host Wellston
Warren
travelsonto"Parents
Trimble.Night" .

Wellston .
; II 657 664
Vinton County..
; 11 534 716
Trimble
4 ll 569 625
x - denot!'S clinched Iitle

Reds ask players
to agree to drug
testing clause

MEIG8t47) - BJll Brotlv&gt;nfi-~1 7. Mlkl' Blrtrum
2-~9 Otr• Smith 2-l -G. Srot1 WlWamsJ-1-7. DonDont
PMII Melton 1-2--t, Robb H.anW:ln 1-0-2, .Jo@

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Pleasant,
W. Va.
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79¢

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For motl Ford •ppliution5

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GALLIPOLIS, OH.
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t:OO e.m. to e:oo.-.,.... Saturday and t 0:00a.m. to 5:00p.m. Sunday.
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�Page-C-8-The Sunday nmes-Sentilial

{Boston Celtics down Washington Bullets
•
B:r MillE WEn.
coach Mike Fratello earn bls lOOtb
•
UPI SpOlia Writer
NBA vlctory. Jon Koncak scored~
• B&lt;wton forward Kevin McHale, !lllnts for the Hawks wljle Joe
who usually upsets opposing teams . Dumars led the Pistons with 22.
with bls ol!enslve reboww:llng and
Pacers 101, Super6o*s 111
lllslde shooting, ruined Wasblngton
At lndlanapolls Herb Wllllams
coach Gene Slme's night by sitting scored 11 points .;,_d Vern Fleming
,o ul
added 18 to lead the Pacers. Indiana
"We're better off with McHale In took a 14·13 lead early In the ftrst
.there," Shue said after B&lt;wton quarter when Williams dunked and
_defeated the Bullets 97-88. "We had led the rest of the way. Wood scored
.a real problem with their small ~ points for Seattle and Xavier
lineup."
McDaniel added 18.
Scott Wedrnan, startlng bls
Mavericlai 10'7, Cavaliers t1
lourtb straight game In place of
At Dallas, James Donaldson
. McHale who has a sore heel, scored scored 17 pOlnts to lead the
·.a seasoo-blgh 24 polnts on 11-of-17 Maver~ks to their fifth straight
,shooting. The Celtles posted their victory. The Cavs, who have lost six
lOth straight victory.
In a row, were led by RDy Hlnson
· "Wedman puttlng tbe ball in the with 17 !llints.
.basket the way be did really
Lakers 134 Slxen 100
helped," Boston coach KC. Jones
At Inglewood.' Calif., Mlcbael
said.
.
Cooper scored l8 polnts and dished
The Celtles, with a league- best df 13 assists to powa- Loo Angeles.
3:H! record, led by as many as 21 Byron Scott came off the bench to
polnts In the final quarter.
scored 24 !lllnts for the Lakers and
Wedman hit his first five shots James Worthy added 22. Pblladeland bad 17 polnts In the first half to phla, which had won l8 of us last 22
: help the Celtlcs take a 5146 lead at games, was led by Charles Barkley
lntermlsslon.
with 17 !llints.
The Bullets, who were limited to
Kalcb 117, Suns 112
18 polnts In both tbe first and third
At Phoenix, Ariz., James Bailey
quarters, were led by Leon Wood scored 25 points and Gerald Wllklns
with 2l!llints.
added 24 to pace New York. The
. RDbert Parish added 16 points Kntcks look advantage &lt;:J 10
, and 14 rebounds for B&lt;wton, while Phoenix turnovers In the third
. Bird scored 14.
quarter to overcome a 2-polnt
Elsewhere, Atlanta downed De- dellctt at halftime. James Edwards
· troll 116-103, Indiana defeated led the Suns with 22 points and
Seattle 101-94, Dallas routed Cleve- . rookie Ed Pinckney added 19.
land 107-91, the Los Angeles Lakers
J - U:l, JUoplOl
dumped PbUadelphla 134-100, New
At Salt LakeCtty,Adrlan Dantley
York topped Phoenix 117-l12, and scored 33 points and Pace Mannion
Utah defeated Sacramento llJ. 101 came of! the bench to add a
Rawb 116, ~ 103
season-high 19 to lead Utah. Reggie
At AUanta, Dominique Wllklns Theus paced the Kings with :n
scored 36 points to help Hawks points and Mike Woodson added 24.

play of foul shooting as be hit a one
and one with 1: 20 left, added
another one and one with 38 seconds
showing, and two roore at the 24
second mark. The score was n.Qi
with 24 s.ronds left after P.J. Lyons
hit a tree throw for the Bulldogs.
In the final 15 seconds Allan
Dickerson canned a free throw and
Shayne Poe hit a fielder at the
bu=r for the ftnal!lllnts .
Poe led four lronmen In double
figures ~&lt;1th 24 !llints, Including
eight of nine free throws and
Hammond finished with 17
markers, capped with a nine of 10
night at the line.
Matt Jordan's 15 points topped
Athens and Tim Adams added 14.
Athens ootgoaled the lronmen
31-25 but Jackson swished 24 of 29
1m&gt; throws while tbe Bulldogs were
just lour of eight.

.Western Michigan scores 7-5 victory
KALAMAZOO. Mich. !UP! l Troy Thrun and Chrls MacDonald
teamed up for three goals and four
assists, leading Western Michigan
to a 7-5 Central Collegiate Hockey
Association victory over Bowling
Green Friday.
The Broncos Improved their
l'l'COrd to 21-10 overall and 16-9 in the
CCHA, while Bowllng Green
sUpped to 22·9 and :!&gt;-5.

Bowling Green led J.2 after the
first ,perb!. but Western came back
and grabbed a 6-5 lead on tbe
strength of a fou r- goal second
period. The Broncos picked up their
final goal in the third frame.
Thrun. a senior center, had two
goal,s and one assist. Senior defenseman Chris MacDonald had one goal
and three assists.

Savoy 5-2-12; Lesa Rucker 2-0-4: Arlene
Rttchlel-0-6; Bev Wtga l l -0-2; Patty Durst
Q.O.O;

Melanie

Mankin

T~

111-Mt.

Score h)' qu&amp;rtet'l:
Ea5fern ... . ......

. .. 7 6

14

1~42

Southwestern ............... 10 6 11 17-44

5/6000 Warranty.

The box score:
.1.\CKSON (i4) - Mark Hammond
4-9·17: Bret t.:arroll 2·0·t : Allan Dickerson
~ 5 · 1 ~ : Shayn{' Compsron S.2·12 ; Shayne
P~ 8-8-24. 'I'(YfAI..S U-M-'74.
·
ATHENS (18) - Jim Stricklin :1-0-6: P.J

Col Llr"odl&gt;n 5i, Col Whl'!sloJF 56
Col Sr Chas !!!. Col Wattenon
Col Wl.'hrlt&gt; i8, Col Ready fi1
ColdwatE'f !1!, New Kno:l\1111' 51
COlone l CrawfOrd -n, Pleasant Kl
COibrriJBna 60, Mtr'Jllral Rldat' ~
Ca-y-R.twson :.2, Vllnlut- t6
Country Dly 72. Srml Hllb; fZ
Ca.l~n 54. Spr Cath 5(] tot l
rc:wtngton .51, Spr C.th Cmt !ll 1o1 1
~ '10, Ustxm 86
C'Tf·~h1Pw Tr . Mipletofl 48

Lyons :n-7: Baden Bryant HH; Matt
Jordan 7·1-15; Ttm Adams 7-0-14; StPVe
Maccombs ~0 - 10 ; Gt&gt;Otf Dabelko 4-2-10.
TOTALS 11-4-tf.
Score by lfllarters:
Jackson ................. l7 16 14 16 11-74
Arhens .................. 19 1~ 14 12 3--66
RHfn·f' score: Alhens 39, Jackson n.

FPb. 2 noon-3 p.m. Opl'n Rf(' .. .
6-8 p.m. CoUege Rff-.... .
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Feb

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Feb. 8QC&amp;'d•Bask£&gt;tba!l ......... ...... .

7:)) p.m. Rf'dmm vs. Urbana
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Feb. 9 MOn -3 p.m . Open Rec ...... ....... ..... ...... .
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KISSIMMEE. FLA. - Deborah A. Kuhn, of Bidwell. has been
employed by Airtlk, of Orlando, Fla ., as a passenger service agent ,
following her graduation from Southeastern Academy.
The academy Is located In Klsstmrnee and offers specialized
career training In travel-tourism.

GALLIPOLIS - Sharon Russell has Joined the staff of Michael
and Friends.
A graduate of the Huntington School of Beauty Culture, she has
also attended advanced hair cutting classes and several seminars.
She specializes In seulptl!red nails and hair cutting.

Howard new Foodland director
GALLIPOLIS - Larry Howard has been named Director of
Operations for Ohio Valley Supennarkets, Inc., which qJerates area
. Foodland stores, according to Robert H. Eastman, company
president.
Howard joins Foodland with ~years of experience In the grocery
business. He began In the late 1900s with Big Bear Supennarkets in
Waverly. He became an assistant manager In 1972 and accepted the
manager's posltton In Bear's Huntington, W.Va., store lri 1975.
Hls duties wllllnclude overseeing the romplete store operations of
Eastman's six area Foodland stores.

. However, with a 15- year loan, the

principal portion paid is greater in
the first five years of the loan.
"That same person could have
had a 15-year·loan, paid about $100
more In payments each month and
had his loan completely paid off
after 15 years," he said.
"Looking at the monetary savings, If the same monthly payments
were put into an Interest hearing
account for the remalnlng 15 years,
a borrower could potentially earn
$22.'\,000."
The potential savings are espe
clally encouraging to both ho·
meowners and new homebuyers
now that Interest rates have taken a
oosedive.
A survey released In August by
the Mortgage Bankers Association,
based In Washington, D.C., showed
one In seven, or about 14 percent, of
the home mortgages wrttten for the
previous 12 months were 15- year
fixed-rate loans.

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higher transaction fees. No matter
bow much they want your rooney,
someone must pay the higher costs
of keeping tt,
"The person woo will be hit
hardest will he the llttle guy who
maintains a small checking bal·
ance and writes a lot of checks or
uses an ATM (automated teller
machine) frequently~" Heady said.
"Banks will nickel and dime
charges higher. Perhaps if small
depositors have been paying 15
cents a check they will pay~ or 25
cents." Heady said, additional
charges that can add up io $100 a
year or rrore.
But banks either wUI he trying to
keep your rooney or woo It away
from other lnstltuti:ms and consumers can expect a bewildering
array of accounts and rates to
choose from.
Here a checkllst that will help
with a choice:
-What is the base rate and
annua l effective yield after
compoonding?
-Is the account tiered; are there
differen t rates for higher balances?
-What are fees and charges if
account balance drops below a
minimum?

-What are the roontbly malntenance fees?
-What are transaction fees?
How many checks can be written at
no charge·r What ls the cost per
check beyond a certain number. a
month? Is there a charge for uslng
the ATM?
-Is there a penalty for closing
the account early? Al some banks
you can be bit with a charge It you
close a new account before~ days .
-How is the account Insured?
FDIC or FSllC Insurance provides
$100,000 per person includlngjrlncl·
pal and Interest
-Ask about a low-cost "lifeline"
account if you are eligible.
Talk only with a knowledgeable·
officer because some bank person-·
nel may oot undersland the new ·
and confusing fees, rates and
charges.
And consumers who sland to be
hit with high fees can save by
changing their habits. Paying cash
for small purchases, limiting the
number of credit cards you use
since each payment will require a
check, finding out if your bank's
bill- paying service Is cheaper'lilan·
checks, are just a few of the ways to
do so.

RIO GRANDE - A six hour seminar to Introduce Lotus 1-2·3
software on the IBM Personal Computer will be offered at Rio
Grande College from h.m. to J:.D p.m. on Feb. 5.
.
The seminar Is open to those Interested In business, government
and home compJter use.
.
"Hands-on" actlvltles wllllnclude moving the spread sheet, saving
and restoring Illes and an Introduction to developing an accounting
program. P~Ipalits wlll .recelve a certificate for 0.6 Continuing
EducatiOn Units.
•
Enrollment for the class will he ltmlted to 14 and the cost Is $125,
Including instrucllon and equipment use. Instructors will be Larry
Hlggllls and BeVerlY Wllklns.
For more Intotmatlon, contact :MS-5353 of 1$282·7'.!)1, ext. 325,
before Tuesday, Feb. 4.

"That figure is really substantial
when you consider just 18 roonths
ago the percentage of 15-year loans
across the country was practically
zero," said Tom Morder, an MBA
S!llkesman .
Morder said 1:&gt;-year mortgages
began increasing In popularity
about two years ago when the
interest rates dropped below 13
percent. The survey was taken
among the 20 largest MBA
members across tile country.
Heinlein said homeowners who
bought their homes in the early
19!lls when Interest rates were
around 15 percent should consider
refinancing with a 15- year fixed
rate rrortgage.
"If your Interest rates can he
lowered by 2 percent, it certainly
merits looking Into," he said.
Heinlein advises homeowners to
compare their present monthly
payment with what their new
payment would be, then look at the
transaction cost and decide how

long they plan to stay In their
present home.
"If it costs $2,000 to refinance and
you can save that over a two-or
three-year pertod, It makes sense to
refinance," he said.
While the 15-year loan is growing
In populartty, there are some
drawbacks .
Since the 15·year loan tncreaij!S
the aroounl of monthly payments,
Heinlein pointed out that It limits
the price range of a prospective
bomebuyer.
"Thls loan Is not lor everyOI)e
because It definitely ltmlts the
amount of home you can buy," he
said. "The typical person applylltg
for a 15-year loan Is someone who's
owned a home before - someone
who has a little dlseretlonafll
Income.
"It 's not a lOan for a newly
married couple buying their flr:st'
home. But It's a great loan and Y.OU
buUd up equity fast It just limits the
amount of home you can buy."

Newark ·Savings branches renamed Transohio
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The lisbes Transohlo's named In the
Transohlo Financial Corp., in Its greater Columbus market, and
continued expansion across the allows us to offer a more extensive
state, said Thursday that Newark product line to oor customers In the
Savings was renamed Transohio Newark area," said Myron FJ.
larskl, president of chief executive
Savings Bank.
officer
of Transohlo Savings Bank.
The name change took effective
"We
keep looking for new
Immediately for the three Newark
avenues
to
Increase our visibility In
Savings branches, headquartered
the
Columbus
area, and we Intend
In Newark In Licking Coonty.
"The transition further estab- to continue buDding a comprehen·

slve financial network throughout
Ohio," he said.
Last December, Transohlo's pur·
chase of Oakmont Savings Bank ol
Cincinnati was approved by the
Federal Home lnan Bank Board
and renamed Transobio Savings
Bank, as were four other ofnces of
Cincinnati Savings, a Transohlo's
affiliate since 1973.
The Tran!DbiO Financial Corp. Is

Ohio's largest savings bank holding
company, with rrore than $3 bllllon
In assets and more than 70 offices
throughout the state.
Through Its other afnllates, Cen·
tralfed Mortgage and OMNI Mort·
gage companies, Transohlo Finan·
clal Corp. has 36 roortgaf:e
origination offices across lite
country.

Glass containers boost Owens-Illinois' earnings.~
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP[) -Higher
sales In Its glass container opera·
lions led to increased ea rnings for
both the fourth quarter and for the
year 1985, Owens-llllnols Inc. reported Thursday.
The Toledo company had net
earnings of $41.3 million , or $1.38
per share on sales 'of $891.3 mllllon

during the fourth quarter. Last
year's fourth quarter earnings
totaled$37.5mllllon,or$l26ashare
on sales of $!liS million.
For the year, Owens-Dllnols
reported a 15 percent increase to
$151.1 milllon , or$5.23per share and
sales of $3.7 billion.
In 1984, It had sales r1 $3.5 million

U.S Merchandise
Trade Deficit
- All figures in bil.lions of dollars.
'78

'76

1974

'80

'82

for earnlngs of $135.8 million. or
$4.70 per share.
"Glass container shipments to
the beer, beverage, and wine
lndustties Improved," RDhert J .
Lanigan, chairman and chief executlve officer, said.
"Our strong position with these
lndustties also resulted In higher
sales of plastic containers, closures,
labels and multlpak bottle carr!·
ers," he said .

0-1' s other plastic ruslnesses alio ·
Improved, while the com(ltldy
contjnues to experience dl!ftcultles
wtth Its forest products and teleulston products operations, he said:
"We made considerable J:rOgre&amp;S
last year In Improving the financial
performance and outlook for the
company," said Lanigan.
. •
Lanigan said the IJ'Ogress mealtt
a ll percent Increase In the rrice d
tbe company's common shares.

Kaiser reports net quarter loss
'84

$0

RAVENSWOOD, W.VA. -The Kalser Aluminum &amp; Chemical ,
Corporation has announced a net toss of $107.8 million, or $2.46 per :
common share, for the fourth quarter of 1985.
The loss includes a revised after-tax charge d $119.2 million In
asset write-downs. The figure Is lower than the $160 million
previously reported because a greater-than-expected tax benefits
resulting from the wtite-downs. In the fourth quarter &lt;:J 1984, Kaiser
Aluminum had a net income of $3.9 million, or seven cents per share.
The company did report a pre-tax ~rating Income ol $23.5 million ·
in tbe fourth quarter, compared with a $16.1 mllllon loss in the same .
period of 1984.
Sales in the fourth quarter of 1985 were $512.5 million, compared
with sales of $520.8 million in the 1984 fourth quarter. For all a 1'185,
Kaiser Aluminum had a pre-tax operating loss of $104 million,
compared with a loss of $152.1 million in 1984.
Full-year 1985 sales were $2 bllllon, compared with 1984's $2.2
billion.

Kentucky bank acquired

-$80

Software seminar scheduled

2-GREEN 14 CU. n.

742·2211

LANCASTER- GaleR Rhodes, port engineer for the American
Electric Power River Transportation Division at Lakin, W.Va., has
been named the division's manager, effective Feb. L
Rhodes succeeds George W. Shamblin, who has accepted a
position outside the AEP system.
Rhodes Joined the AEP system In 1973, when it took over the
barging operations of O.F. Shearer and Sons, Inc. He had begun
work with the Shearer firm In 1961, starting as an otler or "strtker."
He progressed through a number of posts and was named chief
engineer In 1973.
_Rhodes became assistant port engipeer in 1974 after the takeover
by AEP. He was promoted to the post of port engineer at the
division 's Lakin headqquarters in Aprll1977.
A native of Powellton, W.Va., Rhodes served from 1900 to 1964 in
the U.S. Navy, where he studied mechanical subJects Including
diesel engln~ operation and malntenanre.

By JANICE KALMAR

ST. LOUIS (UP!) - Declining
Interest rates are prompting homeowners ·to consider a 15-year
fixed-rate mortgage rather than the
conventional 30- year mortgage.
industry experts say.
Besides allowtngsomeone toown
his home in half the time, a 15-year
mortgage can save a homeowner
thousands in Interest costs over the
life of the loan .
"People think their payments
will double with the 15-year loan.
But what they don't realize is most
of their payments in the beginning
of a loan go to pay interest and very
litt le actually goes toward the
principal," said Karl Heinlein,
senior vice ptesldent and regional
manager of GMAC Mortgage Corp.
in St. Louis.
Relnleln said a homeowner who
borrows $8),000 over 30 years at
12% percent Interest still owes
almost $70,000 after 15 years.
.

MCKEESPORT, PA. - Restructuring of the G.C. Murphy
Company's headquarters management group In McKeesport, Pa.,
along with realignment of the company's variety store dlstrlcls, has
been completed for the start of fiscal J9&amp;j, according to Murphy
President Charles H. Lytle.
The local G.C. Murphy store at 348 Second Ave., Is ooe d 144 G. C.
Murphy Company variety stores and 60 restaurnats which wDI
continue to operate under management direction from McKees!llrt,
as a wholly-owned subsidiary of Ames Department Stores, Inc., of
RDck HUI, Conn.
Ames acquired the 381-store Murphy Company In 1985 and Is
operating Murphy's Mart discount stores, along with their Ames
Department Stores, !rom their Rook Hill headquarters.

$48
S39

BASE CABINET
NEW STEREO STAND

~- nfl'ln CDMnbian 47
Skb')i li1. Nol"ttlmonl 61
~VIE' til, Me.oowtlrooll ~

Sht'IO;·

But the biggest change wUI he

G.C. Murphy realignment finished

30 IN. WHITE

·"

lArry Howard

Russell new hairstylist

llike NEwl

ELECTRIC RANGE

F\&gt;rktn5 58, Sand Sf M.a ry "
s.triniC H. Spr1Jii ..ll&gt;tk&gt;rw:Jn ~
SfotrlnR Mct&lt;lnlPy 74. Berrtnb: Sprtna

Sharon Russell

•

'

30 IN. WHITE

Lt. Gror/Whitt

•

fanfare that surrounded their
Introduction.
Heady says banks are gearing up
for the big one - the AprU 1
passbook date ~ and Indications
are the small depositor, as usual,
will pay.
Some institutions have lowered
or removed minimums for money
market deposit accoonts, certain
time deposits, and super-NOW
checking accounts, but Heady said
at mid- January two-thtrdsd banks
and thrifts had not declared a policy
on these accounts.
"They are waiting for their
competitors and resisting it ,"
Heady said. "Banks don't want
these lower minimums because
they have less moitey to work with"
for the sa me processing costs.
Banks probably will rombine
regular checking accounts,
interest·bearing NOW accounts,
and perhaps MMDA accounts Into
one "master savings account," on
which depositors will be able to
wrtte checks, Heady said.
Deposit rates wlll be tiered, with
larger balances receiving a higher
rate.

Saving potential greater for 15-year mortgages

Kuhn joins Airtik

RANGE IAimondl

BG. PIICE

•

'

2 GOLD SIDE·IY ·SIDE

' 30 IN. GIBSON ELEmiC

~nd

N-"

!Good Shapel ·

COLOR TV

S.llflf'\l!llt&gt; ~- Silli!IOn ~

v...,. v"" "'·

••
.,
,,••

.·

S99

LIVING ROOM SUITE

POITABLE 19 IN. HITACHI

S4Q80

'

••
.•

3 PIECE

FILING CABINET
OFFICE DESK

Less 10.20

.' ;

I

LIVING
ROOM SUITE
With Paul Bunyon Look llike New)

Na.,/Whitt
lkldf rod I rtd
Carolina lluo
Whitt &amp; Silver

·...

ssoo..

BlSSm 3 PIECE

ss 1.00

.·.·

AEP announces new division head

HEADBOARD

Reg.

''

LOVESEAT

......... .. ......... nooo.J p.m. Open Swim
.. .... .... .. ............ 6-8 p.m. College Swim
........ 7 1~ : t5 a.m. Early a..t Swim
11: ll-12: 30 Fitness Swim
&amp;8 pm. CoUego Swim
.. ........ ...... .. ' ll: ll-12: 30 Fitness Swim
&amp;8 p.m. CoUege Swim
. . . . . . ... . 7: 1 ~ : 15 a.m. Early Bard SWtm
ll: ll-12:30 Fitness Swim

Ft&gt;b. i 6-8 p.m. OpE&gt;n Ref:' ,

::·'

I'IDDLEPORT
992-6421

With Night Stand llike newl

Fro. 6 6-8 p.m. Co i ~P R« ...

i~

,.'

'• 'f
.,.' '

CHRYSLER
PL YMOUTH·DODGE

BEDROOM SUITE

Ll'NE CEili'DI SCRDlULE
Week ol February 2. 1181

Dl010--Gym1111hun

''

..

COOPER

HOUIS: 1-7 Mon.• frJ.
9-4 S.tur•y

Ul'l Business Wrller
NEW YORK (UPI) - Deposit.
deregulation will be complete April
1, when banks wJtl he permitted to
pay whatever Interest they want on
that cornerstone of American
banking, the pa;;sbook savings
account.
A lot of money Is at stake. Trusty
passbook accounts hold ~ bllllon
and, even though the 5% percent
they pay Is well below other
available Instruments, have been
growing - by $17 btlllon In the last
year alone.
Banks wUI give up this source of
low-cost funds reluctantly.
"A lot of people are saying the
final deregulatory dates are a
non-event, but I dlsagree,"_said
RDbert Heady, publlsher of the
Bank Rate Monitor which tracks
deposit and lending rates at banks
and iavlngs and loan associatons.
"We look for · a pitched battle lor
market share of consumer money
as Aprtl 1 approaches."
The response to llttlng of minimums on money market deposit
accounts, super-NOW accounts and
short-term deposits on Jan. 1 has
been muted when compared to the

'i

OPEN MON.-fll. 1:00-7:00
SA1UIDAY 1:00-6:00
FULL SilVIa - GAIAGI 1·5 MON.-FII.
RNANCING AYAIAilE

C'OI Eastrroor 81. Col Wal Rl~ 00

Col CI"'\\f' 59. AUm E.,
Col Hartlfoy 1:1. cor Dr&gt;Salrs fll im1
Col lnd '10. Col Mar-Frank~

:

GMC Pickup ..................S3995i
Dodge Van .....................s995:·
Dodge Van •••••••••••••••••••S2995.
Ford Conv. Van ••••••••••••$2195

Ckr.tt&gt;rlf'at 51, Mld(Mrk 48
Col Aca!Pmy M, Olmtangy !I
Col 8eoPchcrolt '19, Col Cmtmnlal 66
Col Br1&amp;g5 Ill, Col West 70
Col Brookba\'fll ~ . Q)l NorUUand 44
Col East ll, Cbl Mtmln m

S Wrhsk'r R\, Nt&gt;w Ebton f9

Van Wen~. Klrlton M
Vandalia &amp;lttr :11. ~ f11ZJI'I

'

By MARY TOBIN

~

·.
.•'' ••

'

80 Ford Mustang...............S2995:

S Lora! SB. Stanlm 56
S Rani" St. Wtsi!rn Rt-serw t.'\

~p

j

I

briefs.·-- Banks gear for passbook deregulation

"'•'

80 Horizon 2 Dr................$2095 ;
79 Chev. Caprke Cassie ....S3295:
83 Cadillac Eldorado ......S12,995!

Friday's scores

~

~ ..---Business

'.

BATD.E FOR REBOUND- Dan lloundDeld (5) oflbe WIL'Ihtngton
Bulleta bMUes llo8lon's BID Wallm for rebound In NBA game at
Landover, Md., Friday atpt. (UPI).

D

Section

~

•

81
77
79
76

~imes- itntintl

~ -----------~----------------------~----------~----------------------------------------~f~~
- ~ary~2~.~19~8~~

5/6000 Warranty.

Friday's scores

1"41P City 71, Mlamle E 6J
Tol Bow*"" fl. Tot Cl'n CaT II s~
Tol DtVIIbbs 63, CArd SU'I'"h 52
Tol Macombfr 64. Tol st. F'rand.,

Business

5/5000Wi'r;anty.

0.0-0; Trlsha

SpenC£&gt;r 1-0-2. TOI'ALS 17-1--4.1.
SOUTHWESTERN: Sandy Patrick ~515: Dlana .Nlda 8-2-18: J . Carrn 3-0-6: T.
Lewis 1-0-2: VIcki Hammond 1-1-.l ro-

.

79 Dodge Aspen Wgn........S1895 .
79 Chrysler Coroba ...........S2195 ·
82 DM. 400 ..................S4895 .

Eastern played Federal Hocking
Saturday In a oon-league contest.
EASTERN: Amy Young 5-6-1 6: Tonya

Warrefl Loc 7l. ~ Melli !I
W.1tf'l'tlnl til. Fl'Ofldf't Loc 59
Wt~tervll.le S !II. We.ur.nd f9
~ N S!, &lt;hlllt'ot~ 5l
~11 IIi. W.1vetiY Ill
Wllltela. Park (W.V.11 61 , Col S54

I

Southwestern girls upset Eastern five
PATRIOT - The Soothwestem
Lady Highlanders of Coach Keith
Carter posted a stunning 4442 upset
victory over the league-leading
Eastern Eaglettes here Thursday
evening, handing updlsputed
league leadership to Oak Hill.
Eastern and Oak Hill were
previously tled at 10-1 in the league.
EllS drops to 10-21n the league and
11-6 overall. Southwestern Is row
11-8 overall.
Eastern was playing wttoout the
services ot two players, thrEP year
letterman Marga ret Homer and
!lev Wigal, both of which were
InJured.
Behind four point efforts by
Diana Nlda and J . Carter, SWHS
swept to a 10-7 first period lead . A
slow s.rond frame allowed SWIIS
to maintain Its lead at the hall, 16·13.
Amy Young had nlneofEastem 's
13 points at the halt, while SWIIS
had a balanced attack.
Junior Tonya Savoy added 8 third
period points to pJll the Eaglettes to
a 11-V third period tie, oowever, a
late game surge gave Sou thwestem
the win, 44-42.
Diana Nlda led all scorers with 18
points, twelve of which came
during the last halt. Sandy Patrick
added 15, J. Carter six, T. Lewis 2,
and VIcki Hammond 3.
Amy Young paced EllS with 16
markers, hitting 6 ot 8 at the line.
Tonya Savoy had 12 points behind a
great second half eftort, Arlene
Ritchie bad 6, Lesa Rucker 4, !lev
• Wigal 2, and Trlsha Spencer 2.
Eastern hit 17 ot .Ji for 47 perrent
and bit 8 of 15 at the Une for 53
percent. SWHS bit 18 of .Ji for 50
percent and hit 8 of 15 at the line.
EHS had 33 rebounds, led by
Young's 12 and Spencer's 6.
Spencer, only a freshman had a
good game In her first vatslty start.

Friday's scores
Vf'fSIIln S, SidnPy Lehman ti
W HoiJnos S. Canal Fulton NW 41
W MualdniUm !D, Shendln 62
WllUNorth !1, Green 51 01
Wamn JFK 11, Canfteld U
Wan\'tl HardiiiC 32. Howland 31

81~E US TRY
WE WANT T DEAL II

Jackson surprises Athens in
_overtime game Friday, 74-66
ATHENS - Senior guard Mark
Ha111100nd's six free throws in
overtime Friday night Wted the
Jackson lronmen to a 74-Qi SEOAL
trtumph over the host Athens
. Bulldogs.
The victory marked only the
· fourth time in 50 years that Jackson
had won at Athens, the Iasttrlumph
coming ln 19'7J.
· Friday's contest was a nail-biter
'all the way as the score was tied 17
times and the lead shtfted in three
'· and four point leads for both team;.
AHS bad taken a ti3-6llead with
one minute remaining In regulation
play before Jackson's Allan Comp·
ston was fouled at the 11 s.rond
·mark. He converted both attempts
of the me and one to send the game
Into overtime.
Following a 65-65 lle in the ar
Hammond began his deadly dis-

Febnuuy 2. 1986

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

·$100

.• Exports

.::

$17.0

Trade Deficit
$17.4

Uf'l C".r;\plnc 1 C BfoacJway

TKADE DEfJClf - 'lbe U.S. lrade clellcll his record levels of tl7 .f
blllloa Ill December lllld Slf8.5 blDion lor all 111985, aoooiodlng lo the
Comrneree Departmen~

CINCINNATI - The Central Bancorporatlon Inc., the largest
bank holding company headquartered In Cinclnna tl, "1th assets of
S3.9 billion, has reached an agreement to acquire the $73 million
Citizen's National Bank of Kenton Coonty, Ky .
The transaction will Involve an exchanged Central Bancorporatlon common stock for all ootstandlng shares of Citizen's National
Bank. Further tenns of the agreement were not anoounced .
Upon completion mthe acqulsltlon, Citizen's National wlll become
a subsidiary of The Central Bancorporation. The corporation
currently has nine afflliales: six regional Oltio banks, a mortgage
company, a real estate lnsuranre company and a reinsurance
company.
Citizen's National Bank ls the fourth largest bank In Kenton
County. Established In 1800, lt operates offices In Covington, Fort
Wright, Cresent Springs and Crestview Hills.
The Citizen's National Bank agreement Is Central Bancorporatlon's first Interstate acquisition since the passage of Ohio Interstate
banking legislation In 1985. However, it Is the corporation's fourth
acquisition In less than a yea r.
'
The proposed acqulsllion has been approved by the boards of the
two financial Institutions and Is subject to federal regulatory
approvals.
Locally, Ceptral Bancorporatton ls t'EPresatted by The Central ·'
Trust Canpany with ol!lces In GaiUpolls and Middleport,__ __
_:

�· Paga D-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
.':&lt;

•

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&lt;

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MEMORIAL SERVICES -

Wolilers and their 1am11Jes at the

·Kennedy Space Center !h'eam past a Saturn 5 reoclu~ II! their way to a

'

Satunlay's deadline. "simply because we made It clear we don't
really accept I'('Sponsibility" after
that.
"That's one of the reasons for
gettirig them out ci there, to make it
clear the United States does not any
longer feel responsible for them, "
he said. "One of the reasons we got
our citizens out is to free our hand if
we feel the need to take further
action."
Deputy Secretary of State John
Whitehead said last Monday if
peaceful measures do not succeed
in forcing Libyan leader Moammar
Khadafy to end his support for
international terrorism, militat)'
means wUJ be considered.
Whitehead, accompanied by Oakley, wound up a 1!Hiay trip to
Europe Ja n. 2~ to enlist European
support tor Reagan's erooomtc
sanctions against Libya .

-

memorial service Saturday lor the seven 88ll"oolaut8 that were ldlled
aboard the shuUie Challenger last Tuesday. The rockeU!III pmnanenl
dlspl&amp;y a1 the center. UPI.

Reagan anoounced the measures the outset not to have the fleet enter
against the Khadaty regime Jan. 6 the Gulf !1 Sidra, which extends :ro
In retaliation lor alleged Libyan
tnlles cit Libya's Mediterranean
support of a Palestinian group that roast, altblugh "that could have
attacked the Rome and VIenna changed."
airports Dec. '!1. The attacks killed
Khadaty claims the gu~ as
19 people Including five Americans . Libyan territory, but the United
The sanctions Included an order States considers It International
tor all Americans. most of whom ten1tory.
are employed In I he Libyan oil
"It's au a question of trying to
Industry, to depart and for U.S. balance out the various messages
!inns to end all trade and erooomic you're sending and lor the moment
exchanges.
we didn't want to play into
Just as the two otflclals rerurned l&lt;hadaty's hands," Oakley said.
to the United States, the Navy's "He had gotten so much publicity
Sixth Fleet began weeklong ma- already saying the United States Is
neuvers off tlle Libyan coast . The being provocative, I'm going to be
manuE'\Iers ended Thursday with- attacked. We didn't want to do
out incident.
that."
Oakley said the maneuvers sent
Oakley estimated about half the
the message that "there are other estimated 1,500 Americans In Libya
measures possible if what we're would have left by Frtday and "a lot
doing doesn't work."
more" would be leaving Sarurday.
He said the decision was made at

.Reagan orders Gramm-Rudman cuts
WASHINGTON tUPII- Declar
ing that "zero hour is upon us ."
Presklent Reagan orderul ft&gt;dera l
agencies Saturday to cut $11 .7
billion from their current budgets to
comply with the new GrammRudman-Hollings balanced-budget
law.
The cuts for fiscal year 1986 were
required under the law to be
ordered by Feb. 1. They will take
·eftect March 1 unless Congress
proposes and Reagan signs an
alternative deficit - cutting program. which is considered highly
unlil&lt;ely.
Reagan's order merely ratified
the cuts - 4.9 percent of milltat)'
·spending and 0 percent of domes
lie spending - listed last monthby
t)le Congressional Budget Office
and the General Accounting Office
• The cuts exempt Social Sf'Curity
and some welfare programs, as
;,'well as mllltary pay Increases for
. -thIs year.

But the arrc.;s-theboard trim
mings gave Reagan a chance to
reaffinn in his weekly Saturday
radio address !rum Camp Da,·id,
Md .. his political blueprint for
returning many federal programs
to state or local governments or for
selling somr outright to private
enterprise.
The budget for 1987 will he
released Wednesday.
Reagan opened hi s address with
another salute to the seven Challenger astronauts. whom he lauded
Friday at a memorial service at the
Johnson Space Center in Houston.
"America has suffered a great
national loss and wr mourn as one

people Uili ted in oor grief." he said.
"The Challenger crew was pulling
us into the fu ru rr. and we'll continue
to follow them . l'othi ng ends here.
Our hopes and journr)'S continue .
Great challenges demand heroic
struggles."

Noting, "Progress often does not
rome witblut great cost or daunt·
ing risks," Reagan said, "Nowhere
Is tllat lesson clearer than here in
Washington, D.C.," referring to the
new law that requires sharp and
steadily decreasing deficits until
the federal budget is balanced in
1991.
"Recent passaged the Gramm·
Rudman-Hollings amendment was
an admission by Congress thaI zero
oour Is upon us, that America must
make decisions we've never been
willlng to make before." he said.
"Today I have ordered federal
agencies to carry out the first round
of across-the· board cuts required
under tlle law," Reagan said.
"I'm confident we can achJeve
these reductions while maintaining
government services. Nevertheless. tllese budget savings make oo
distinction hetween high-priority
pmgrams and tooseo!llttlemerlt."
The 1987 budget would be differ-

enl, he said. because It would
reform or eliminate ~ograms
"that are too big or sbluldn't exist
at all" and transfer many federal
programs to state or local agencies
or to prtvate enterprise.
"At the same time, we'll keep
faith with the fundamental rommlt·
ments we made to the American
people," he said. "First, wewUJ not
cut the essential JKUgl'ams to
anyooe woo needs such assistance.
Nor wlll we cut any Social Security
payments to toose who paid their
dues to society."
He also said the administration
would Insist on "modest but steady
growth" for defense spending,
declaring, "The Soviets want · nothing more than to see America
flinch and forsake the rebuilding
program we worked so hard to get
started ... . We must not permit this
vital work to he undone In the
second term."

..:Study

shows more single women becoming
~~involved in relationships with married men

: COLUMBUS. Ohio t UPI I More single women are becoming
tnvolved In relationships with mar men. a trend that could chance
':the way society looks at those
·women, an Ohio State University
'sociology professor says.
· Laurel Richardson spent eight
years Interviewing more than 50
single women who were dating
marrted men, trying to discover
:why those women entered into
·relationships that are criticized by
most of society.
· Her results are contained · in a
)look ''The New Other Woman," a
descriptive account of the experienCes of those women.
- What she learned was that single
\vomen found relationships with
married men fit Into their lives.
,;ntey told her they did not want to
·get married, that they had other
:Jhlngs they wanted to do, such as
bUild careers, complete educations,
get through divorces or raise
J:hlldren she sa Jd.
·• "They are not husband stea lers,' ·
:Richardson says. "Because regular
;reJattonshlps with men take a great
' deal of time and energy, many of
women avoided them while
~ !hey pursued personal goals.

:rted

:lllese

•

"Mas! of the women get involved
married men somrwhar
naively. ThE')' want men to be their
friends. They want to he successful
in their jobs. to believe that the man
is really int erested in them because
of their jobs." shr said . "They don't
want to look for ulterior mot ives."
She also fo und that hu sba nds
were often equa lly naive. suddenly
finding themselves tom between
the two women. Richardson said
it' s estimatL'&lt;l th&lt;t t between 50
percent and 70 iJ&lt;'rccnt of married
men in this count ry will have such
affairs.
"I thJnk in the majortty of these
situa tions. Ihe womrn are being
taken advantangl' of," she said.
"But I don 't see the men as bad or
evil. I tlllnk many are taken by
surprise by their feelings."
In a sense, Richardson suggests
that the accompllshments of tlle
women's movem e n t have had
some unexpected consequences for
the "other woman."
In ·normal relationships, the
man's prerogative has been somewhat eroded. No longer can he
simply have his way just because
he's the man.
But in relationships between
with

t

maiTied men and single women,
the control of the relalionshlp
continues to rest with the man. This
is largely due to the man trying to
juggle the clandestine relationship
with the sanctioned one - his
marriage.
Richardson 's study Is filled with
examples where single women
reschedu Jed their Hves around the
limited availability oft heir married
lovers, often destroying the worn·
an's independence in the process.
Such experiences may be having
their effect on single, often careerminded women. Some are balling
oot of all relationships \11th men
entirely . Some are turning to
celibacy, relatlonshJps with other
women or simply their work lor
sustenance.
"Women are taking these other
kJnds of options but none of them
are fully satisfying," she said. "The
male coocept of immersing oneself
In a cart~r. lor example, will not
work for most women.'' - - One result Is that the chances !1 a
single woman finding an eligible
man are decreasing. For very five
single women, there are four single
men. Every divorced woman Is a
potential "other woman," she said,

The Sunday

W.Va.

Ohio-Point

2. 1986

.

Libyan sanctions nOw in effect
WASHINGTON (UP!) - U.S.
!1811ctlons against Libya took effect
Satunlay and a top !1~tal warned
the government Is not responsible
lor Americans who remain Illegally
and will prosecute them If they stay
In the North African nation.
· "Those who say that they have a
lilJOd paying job and we don't have
ene at home so we're not going
: h:Jme, wen. you're better olf not
coming home," said Robert Oak·
ley, director of the State Depart.
rilent's Office for Counterterrorism
and Emergency Planning.
"U they come home, they're
subject to up to 10 years in jail and
S&amp;),OOJ fine, " he said.
Oakley, In an Interview with
l)nlted Press Intema tiona! on
Friday, said Americans who reinaln stay In Libya, In violation of
IJ.S. law, shoukl be much less
wlnerable to hostage-takings after

February

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

sim ply because there are so few
available men.
"What you have then Is a coterie
of women 25 and above who are
simply growing older and more
educated and. therefore, less desirable to men," Richardson said.
"Men stlll prefer women woo are
not their equals."
Richardson said that she wanted
to end her book on a positive note,
but the best she rould do, however,
was to suggest that many of tlle
women woo had experienced one or
these relationships have become
stronger through it.
Women who get Involved with
mentors or colleagues at work, lor
example, oftm gain access to
knowledge they would never have
had otherwise, she said. Some
women Ond their'sexual reprt'SSion
Is lessened because they feel freer
In a relationship that has no future
orienta tion.
Richardson said the initial Idea
for her study came after a friend 's
long-term relationship with a married , man ended. Society provides
oo support mechanisms lor people
In such situations, altblugh divorced people have many such
mechanisms on which to rely .

The 'Shultz Doctrine'
Stljte Department, telling them that
the administration may seek to
quadruple the amount of aid they
are now getting Including, for the
first time, open mDitary asslstanre,
such as antl·alrcratt mlssUes to
knock down Nicaraguan helicopter
gunships.
The message to Managua was
clear: Negotiate now &lt;ir face a
pressure.''
much wider war.
The deputy, Chester Crocker,
-The Phlllpplnes. The White
assistant secretary for African House Issued a statem~t saying
affairs, said the pressure does not ' that the United States was ~epared
represent a solution In Itself, but to step up drastically tlle amount !1
there can be no solution In some economiC asslstanre the Phutpplne
situations unless there Is a prtce to government gets If It made propay for not coming to agreement gress In human rights and deii)O'
In other words , pressure.
crat!c reforms.
In almost every use of the link
It was a direct way of telling
betwt'en U.S. pressure and nego- Phtllpplne President Ferdinand
tiating progress, the direct or
Marcos that the United States was
Indirect target Is the Soviet Union. making a link between reform and
Partly as a coincidence created U.S. support. In the current desper·
by the congressional calendar, last ate economic situation tn the
week produced several examples of Philippines, thai Is another way 'or
what might be called the Shultz saying: "Cooperate or dlsappea~."
Doctrine In act lon around the
-Afghanistan. After years of
world:
stalling and hints , the Soviets
-Angola. With the Angolans and promised at tlle November sullll'1)1t
the Sou tll Africans stalllng on an to get seJious about producing a
agreement that would Involve timetable tor the withdrawal of
withdrawal . of Cuban and South their 130,0ll troops from Afghanis·
Atr~an troops !rom Angola arid
tan after six years of an escalating
Namibia. the frustrated admlnls· war.
tratlon brought the Angolan rebel
In · December, just prior to a
leader Jonas Savimbl to Washing- Geneva meeting to discuss the
ton lor an elaborate shadow play.
withdrawal, Shultz' deputy, John
The purpose was to demonstrate Whitehead, said the Soviets "must
to the Angolans that If they did oot pay a price" If they choose to
go along \11th U.S. mediation, the continue the war In Afghanstan.
alternative was a stepped-up war in
The Geneva meeting produced
their country, this time with the nothing. The administration letlt be
participation of the United States as known that It was prepared to step
military suppller.
up covert military assistance to the
-Nicaragua. Shultz held a·much· Afghan rebels, Including more
heralded meeting Tuesday with the modern anti-aircraft weapons.
leadership of the anti-Sandintsta
The message was another form
Contras and praised their program of the Shultz Doctrine: The United
for bringing democracy back to States cannot make the Soviets
Nicaragua if tlle Sandlnlstas leave Afghalnstan but it can make
disappear .
them wish they had agreed to · a
negotiated solution, by Increasing
After the meeting, the Contra their costs, including human casuleaders talked with reporters at the alties.

Tribune - 44&amp;-2342

Sentinel .-. 992·2156
Reaist&amp;r - ~1333

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Although the new brand rl. American
forelgo policy has not been given a
formal name, It might some day be
called the Shultz DoCtrine.
The new strategy Is based on the
Idea - as a top deputy to Secretary
rl. State George Shultz put it last
week- that, "Diplomacy, In order
to be e!!ectlve, requires a degree of

County Agent's Corner

Phil, may oversleep
By JOHN C. JUCE
County Extension Alent,
AgJicullure

Change In Meeting Dates .... Due
to bad wea !her this past Monday a
couple of meetings have been
rescheduled. the Design Your 4-H
Steer meeting will be held on
February 10 at 7:30 at our oU!ce.
The 4-H Committee will also be oo
Monday, FebruarylO at 7: :ll at our
office.
•
Two pesticide meetings have
been scheduled for February lor
people needing to renew their
license and for toose wishing to
obtain a license lor the first tlme.
The first meeting _Is set lor
Thursda y, February 6 and will be
for those people who already have a
license which will expire In !9a6 or
1987. Two sessions are planned from 1 to 4 or from 7 to 10. The
meetings will be held at the
Extension Office and reservations
are needed. Please call 992-6696 If
you wish to attend.
The second meeting Is set lor
Thursday, February 20 and will be
for tblse persons woo wish to obtain
a license for the first time. Again,
two sessions are planned - from
1:00 to 4: 00 or from 7:00 to 10:00. A
person from the Ohio Department
of Agriculture will be present at
both times to give the examinations
at the end of the sessions. Reservations are needed so please call us at
992-6696 If you plan to attend.
One last ltem .... A Sale Committee meeting Is scheduled lor
Wednesday, February 5, at 7:30
p.m. at th~ Extension Office. This
meeting Is open 10 all members,
parents, and advisors who plan to
sell market animals (steers.lamoo,
or hogs ! at the 1986 Meigs County
Fair.
Free bulletin Now Avalla ble ....'Ibe Ohio Corn P!'rfonnance
Test-1985 bulletin Is now available
from our office free ol charge. We
have a very limited supply, so If you
wish a ropy, please give us a call
and we will mall one to you.
Wake Up! It's Groundhog Day! .... This could he the year Punxsutawney Phil oversleeps. U some
late fall carousing by tlie Pennsylvania groundhog's Ohio cousins Is
any Indication, the infamous
weather prognosticator won't get a
chan&lt;r to €'\len look for this shadow.

The fact Is, local groundhogs may

skip the hoopla surrounding their
"day" and spend a Sunday morning
in bed.
"I saw groundhogs along the road
as late as early December last
year," says Thomas M. Stockdale,
Ohio State University wlklllfe spedallst. "If they didn't go Into
hibernation until after then and If,
as I theorize, It is a ·waste buildup or
hormonat thing that wakes them up
after a certain amount of sleep,
then their time clock Is shoved back
this year and they'll sleep right
through February 2".
American legend says that the
groundhog wakes up February 2,
cUmbs oul of his burrow and looks
lor his shadow. If he sees It, it's back
to bed lor six more weeks !1 winter.
If he doesn\ It's spring and time to
snack rut In the local fa rmer's field
or maybe dig another hole or two to
share with the mate he'll find soo~.
Groundhogs, also called woodchucks or whistleplgs, are unique In
that they are one of a very few
North American mammals that
hlbernate. For three-quarters !1 the
year the little vegetarian Is an
agricultural nuisance, eating wha·
lever tt can nnd In the line !1 field
and garden crops or wlld greens.
But whenever winter winds start .
blowing through groundhog coun:
try tn Canada and the Eastern ·
United State, the now overweight
critter crawls off to bed.
During hibernation the animal's
metabolism slows down aiJ1lost
unbelievably. Body temperatures
decllne from the normal 95-101
degrees to a range of 40-57 degrees .
While a groundhog normally
breathes about -262 cubic centimeters !1 oxygen per kilogram of oody
weight each blur. respiration drops
to around 14 cc during hibernation.
When he emerges In the spring,
Punxsutawney Phll will be a svelte
5%-6 pounds In comparison tot he 10
pound bundle of blubher tllat went
Into hibernation.
No scientific evidence supports
the Groundhog's Day legend, Stockdale says. Biologists believe hlber·
natlng animals wake up because
rrietabollsm builds up waste in their
oodles and oome hormone triggers
the mating Instin ct. He says this
bloklglcal clock, not the calendar,
tells PhU and his friends when to
crawl hack oot of bed.

Two security guards killed

.
tlves said. Claytor was armed witlf ·
a .45- caUber automatic pistol when
he was arrested.

BRECKSVILLE, Ohio (UP!)Homicide charges were to be filed
Monday against Justin Claytor Jr.,
38, who allegedly shot and kUled two
Brecksville Mayor Jack Hruby
security guards at the Brecksville
Veterans Administration Hospital said there was no apparent motive
in the shootings that occured aoout
Friday night.
Officials said the shootings oc- 7: ll p.m. Frida y
The victims were ldentlfed as
curred shortly before the suspect
held a hospital patient as a hostage Mark Decker, :xl, of Strongsville.
at gunpoint for ahout two hours. and Leonard Wilcox . :J; , of
Claytor, described by detectives as Twinsburg.
A nursing supervisor at Parma
a "floater." Is wanted fora shooting
last week at a Cleveland conven- Community Hospital said Wilcox
died of gunshot wounds to the head
Ience store.
He was held during the weekend at 8:25 p.m. Decker died at
under a homicide complaint in Marymounl Hospital In Gartlckl
BrecksvUie, pending the olflclal Heights at 8: .'1.~ p.m. , hospital
filing of charges Monday, detec· · tiflclals said.

Annou nt:t! 1111!111 s

GET SOME BREAD
WITH AWANT AD

11 Help Wanted
Potltion Open · Nutritlonltt .
Contreet. pert-time . eq,.,lence
al RD prefltTid . For furth"

1 Card of Thankl

2

In Memoriam

energy ettiQent, ranchtl" on on1
&amp;Cf&amp; . Priced on lnap.ctkHI only.

ln loving memory of Arthur Orr

wtto Plllld eway fib . 2, 1882.

nme tak• awtv the edge of
grief, but mamor111 tum btck
IYiry luf. Wife. Ethet Orr and
ftmlfy.

3 Announcemenll
SWEEPER and aewing machine
repair, parts, tnd suppl.... Pick
up and daltvery. Devlt Vec:uum
Cl11nar , one h11f mila up
Georg• CriH Rd . C1ll 814~
Pngn1ncy T"ting; Birth control
...-vleet. YO 111Hng; confidiR·
tltl; llidlng fH ICIIe; Plenned
Ptrtnthood of S.E.O., for IPCit.
Call 814·441·0188 or . , • •
992-6912.

Eety Auambly World •eoo.oo
per 100. Guerenteed payment.
No Expltrienc:e·No 81111. Detallt
IIRd teH· tdd,..Hd ltlmped
anvalope: EIIIR Vltll -1847 3418
Ent..-prile Rd, Ft. Pl~tt~ . FL

V1lentlne D1v. H11rt ltlaped
ctkea. Frea delivery . 304-e78·
8937 or 676·2884.

,.
VICE PRE'51DE'n' George Bush talks with
' Angolan rebel leader Jonas Savbnbl, left, at the
Conservallve Pollltcal Action Conlerenoe dbmer In

Washington Friday. Bwllt promised the United Stales
would continue to help .the Contras In El Salvador as
wen as tlte Afghan and Angelan rebels. (UPI ).

South African government launches
media campaign for racial refonns
By BRENDAN BOYLE
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa
(UP! 1 - The South African
government has launched an un·
precedented media campaign for
black support of limited racial
reforms, but a key critic Saturday
dismissed the proposals as
lnsu!ficlent.
' Also Saturday, authorities re·
ported two blacks were kllled by
pollee. No details were imme·
diately released.
In an address to Parliament
Friday, President Pleter W. Botha
announced plans to create a
multi-racial council to advise him
on how to grant blacks unspecified
new polltlcal rights. He said blacks
would also be allowed to own their
blmes and be glven greater
freedom to travel. work and llve
where they chQl?Sf.
Advertisements promoting the
reforms will appear Sunday In all of
South Africa's major newspapers,
Information Minister Louis Nel
said In a radio Interview.
"We plan to market the President's speech In a big way," he said.
''We will adjust our campaign to the
reaction to his announcements.''
But dissident leader the Rev .
Allan Boesak said Saturday that
Botha "failed to address the basic
demands of people In South
Africa."
Boesak, president of the Geneva·

based World Alliance of Refonned ate blacks to join negotiations on
ChurChes, said the government "Is ways to change apartheid, the
Incapable of making changes In this government 's system of racial
country .. . cannot do what history segregation.
demands of it."
Radicals demand a commitment
The white minority government's to the abolition of apart heid before
radio, television and newspaper they will en ter Into discussions with
campaign IS the first major public the government, and havP attacked
relations exercise by a Bureau of and killed moderates thE&gt;y regard
Information created last year. The · as "stooges" of the government .
media blitz began Friday night
On Sarurday, t\\U blacks threw
when Botha appeared over black gasoline bombs In to a crowded
radio and television to explain his department store 35 miles west of
plans and appeal to blacks to join Johannesburg. One blmb smashed
him In negotiating the structures through a display · window and
"everyone desires.''
another set a blaze a clothing
In a two-page ad that was department.
scheduled to appear in many
A white man who tackled the
sUnday newspapers, Botha con- blmbers was stabbed in the leg and
tended "my government and I are tack , but no other Injuries wej'e
committed to power sharing.''
reported.
"We are committed to equal
At least 1,177 people have died in
opportunities lor aU, equal treat- a 17-month-long black uprising
ment and equal justice for all. I said against white rule. but attacks In
oo South Africans wUI be excluded white areas have been rare.
Pollee said earner Saturday that
from fuD political rtghts, that they
sbluld negotiate In the future of this a black man was shot and killed
country through elected leaders. Friday when officers fired into a
This Is now reallty," the ad stated. crowd throwing stones at Jouber"I do oot intend to stop here. ton, west !1 Johannesburg. Anot.her
Progress Is ongoing. The wheel of nine rioters were wounded in the
refonn Is turning," said the ad, pollee 5\lootlng.
In another Incident Friday. officwhich closed with the words,
"From my heart I ask you to share ers killed a man in the Johannes·
in the future. To share In a new burg township d Soweto when they
South Africa."
!Ired shotguns into another stone·
Until now. the government has throwing crowd. Three people were
had difficulty In persuading moder· wounded .

Pope begins pilgrimage across
ByJONATHANS.LANDAY
NEW DELHI, India (UPIJ -A
tightly guarded Pope John Paul II
began a whirlwind 1(}. day pilgrimage across predomlnan tly Hindu
India Saturday as hundreds ol
Hindus burned h_9n In effigy and
shouted "Pope go home.''
"I come to pay a pastoral visit to
the Catholics of India and I come In
friendship, with a deep desire to pay
honor to all your people and to your
dltferent cultures," John Paul said
at a subdued airport arrival
ceremony attended by Prime Min·
tster Rajlv Gandhi and only :axJ
selected officials, diplomats and
clergy.
The pontl!f later said his first
mass o! the trtp at New Delhi's
Sacred Hea11 Cathedral, then
stopped at a memorial to-Mohandas
"Mahatma" Gandhi, who won
India's Independence from Britain.
"Mahatma Gandhi taught that If
all men and women, whatE'\Ier the
di!ferences between them, cling to
the truth. with respect for the

unique dignity of every human
helng, a new world order - a
civilization of love - can be
achieved," John Paul said.
Pollee, moving quickly to prevent
disrupti:lns of .the visit by lunda·
mentalist Hindu protesters, said
some :m people were arrested as
they massed for demonstrations
against the pope.
Before they were taken Into
custody, the Hindu hardllners
burned John Paulin effigy, shout·
lng, "Pope go home."
The Polish-born pontl!f, wearing
a white cassock and gold· trimmed
sash, smiled broadly as he des·
cended the stairs of his Alltalia jet
and then stooped to kiss the ground
- a oow- traditional gesture
marking the start of his visits in
foreign lands.
,
John Paul was welcomed by
Gandhi, President Zail Singh and a
booming 21-gun salute. Two children presented him with garlands d
Dowers and scented sandalwood
heads.

Securtty was tight for the pontiff's
first papal state visit to India, with
submachlne gun- toting paramUi·
tary troops ringing the airport and
pollee anned with rifles stationed
along the pope's motorcade routes.
Pope Paul II visited Indi a in 1964.
AU events on John Paul's itlner·
ary were closed to tlle public and
there was no sign of tlle jubilant
crowds that have mobbed the
pontl!f during most of the 28
previous foreign tours he has made
since his 1978 selection as head of
the world 's 000 million Catholics.
Vatican officials said the reception was low-key partly because
ooly 50,1XXl Catholics Jive in New
Deihl, a city or more than 6 mllllon
people. Only 12 million of India's 750
million people are Catholics. About
&amp;I percent are Hindus.
In his airport speech, the pope
tried to assuage Hindu tears lhat he
will use his 12,500- mile trip to
convert poor, Illiterate low-caste
Hindus.

4

Giveaway

Giveaway to good home, houM'
brollan cat1. 2 bt.ck. 1 grat. 1
c~lco . Call &amp;14·44&amp;-0399 Ilk
for Lorettl.
Bl1ck female c:et, mitten paw .
Good hou.. cat to good home .
Call 614 -992·60 88 .
Black kitten 3 monthe old.

304-876-2835.

6 Lost and Found
LOST Oaaler tag No. 7292. lost
in city. Rewtrd. Call 814-448 -

7017.

LOST: In Pomeroy area, colfl In
hard back boo II on life of QuMn
Victoril . Reward . Cal\814 ·892·

30e1 or 614-992·&amp;641 .

7

Yard Sale

.......GiiiiTpoliii"·-·······
&amp; Vicinity
Oeraga S1la Fed . 3 &amp; •· 101
Mablellne Dr. Childrens-tdult
clothing. new 12 IPd. blkt.
odds • enda.

ot.,.,

9

Wanted To Buv

Wei)IY cu., for late model cl•n

uaed cara,
Jim Mink Cttew.-Oidt Inc .
Bill Gene John100

614-+18-34172

WANTED TO BUY uHd wood.
coel heatan. SWAIN'S FURNITURE. 3rd . • Oliva St. Glllipolla. Clll814-446 ·31&amp;9 .
TOP CASH paid for '83 modll
and newer uaed cart. Smlth
Bulck· Pontllc. 1911 E1atem
Ava.. OaiUpolla. C1l 814-446-

2282.

Buying d1Uy gold. allver colna.
rlnga, jew1lry. etertlng Wlt'l , okl
colna. larga currency. Top pric•. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ava . Mlddlaport, Oh. 614992-3471 .

f tii!IIIIVIIII' til
Snvt r:t! '

11 Help Wanted

Italian peninsula, sparking record
rains In Rome antl massive
amounts ofsoow In the Italian Alps.
In Venice, water engulfed St.
Mark's Square and shops, restaurants and homes In low- lying
districts. Garbage fUied the smaller
canals.
'
Army troops In amphibious
vehicles ferried !amUies to safety
from several lagoon Islands, and
labored frantically to sblre up the
walls shielding the lagoon from the
stormy Adriatic Sea. No drownlngs
were reported.

At an emergency session, the city
council allocated $.ll3,!XXl lor rescue
work and repairs to damaged
property. It also sent an appeal to
the Interior Ministry In Rome for
financial help to cope with the
emergency.
Venice Is slowly sinking Into the
lagoon tllat protected it from
enemies in the days wht&lt;n the city
headed a maritime republic. It
frequently suffers from flooding In
the spring and late autW1lll, when
tides are strongest.

Eaay

•eoo.

1tumbtv wortcl
per
100. Gua,.,tald p.aymant. No
••parlen~-no talll . Datall1
1111d Mlf· eddrullld 1t1mped
envalopt:Eitn Vital ·71 6 3418
En&amp;erpriH Ad ., Ft. Pierce, F.L.
33482.
Now tecepting tppllcationt or

raaumu for CJJIIiflld mect.anlcs
or ltne medl.,lca. Apply in
person . SH Jack Collin• 1t
Simmons Olda .• Cad ., end
Chevy, or tend rasumetto : P.O.
Box 111. Pomeroy. O.,to, .

Part 11rrie potitlort 1VIil1ble.
Administrative it¥11. Education
n MR-00 and flekl upa'rianct.
adult education experience,
grant writing c•pabiUty and
knowledge of educltiontl·
•rvlce reaources in Athant ar~
required . EOE. RIIUIM must b'e
recatved by CHEAO. P.O. Boll
825, Athena, Oh . 45701 no later
thtn Feb . 12th, 1988.
Rec:aptloniat-typilt nllded to
worllln the 1ervice dep1rtment.
Appty It Slmmona Olda ., Cad.,
Chevy. See C1rolyn In the
..me. dapartment .
LPN or RN 10 COt1111ete moblla
inautanc:ee1111m1. EJtCIIIent part·
time poattfon. Send ,..uma to :
P.M.I. . P.O.Box2217, Hunting·
ton. W. Va. 26723.

Oapandeble Plrt time help lnte·
rHtd in hon11. little experience
wi'lh hor111 nte~~ury , pick up
tppllc:ation et Oraanbfiw Stt·
bl81, 304-676·8799 , :00· 6 :00
dally.
Loctl bul.,•a dell,.l epplica·
tlons for Heretarill poaltlont.
Wa offer ·coff1)atltlve 11l1rin,
••callant inanance benefltt and
tdvancarrw1t opportunitiea. Rt·
apond with r..umeto, BoxS -31.
Clft Poinl PtMIInt Regllttr,
200 Meln St .. Point Pla111nt,
w.v•. 255110 .

12

21

32 Mobile Home•
for Sale

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBUSH ·
lNG CO. recommend• 1hlt you
do butin•• with people vou
know . and NOT to tend money
through the mail until you have
lnvntlgated the oHaring .

Vecancy for lilderty penon r. my
..-Nna ho.,.. . 24 hr . care, hot
m1111. JPecill dllta, III'Gt room,
lV , rtltonMie, Crown City,
e14-25e-1609 .
Y1cancy for tha aklerty in our
holM. Trtinld tnd fifteen years
IIIIPtrience . Call 814-992 ·
7314.
Vacancy for 1n aldarfy min or
woman in pdv1te home for
1mbuletory or non- embulttory
p1tlenta. 114-992 · 7563 or
e14-992-&amp;el'

3 Announcements

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALUPOLIS. RT 31 .
PHONE 614 -448-7274.
1982 etayton, t•X615 . fulty
turn .. waaher. dryer. AC. under·
pinning &amp; porch . Eltc . cond.,
Make en Offer . C1ll 814-2H ·
1621 or 614 -266 -6316 .
1978 Bey"iew 14x8fi. total
elect ., 2 bdr .. 2 porchM, under·
pinning, exc. cond. C1ll 814·
246 -5816 .

HOME OWNERS -Refinance to
low fiJted rete. Uae equity toranv
purpoae. Laader Mortg1ge Co.,

1968 Shultz mobile home,
10x1i5. 2 bedroom, good cond.
Call 814-446-8148.

23

1980 Liberty 14x54, 2 bed·
ro om. unfurnished. vinyl und.,.
pinning included . Mut1 11(1. C.al
304-773 -6873.

614·&amp;92·3051 .

Professional
Services

Fairpoint 14.1t70 with
t»:pendo. Totllllectric, 3
bedroom. 2 full bathl, fectoryfire place, equipped kitchen,
central .11oir. Located :Rt .143,
Pomero~ . on rented lot. C1ll
61 4 · 992 · 225 1 or 614 -992·
3859.
1979

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR ,
rediscover your piano's bl!autif ul
tona. call today, Ward's Kev·
board , 304 -876 -6600 or 676·

3824.

.

Want Ads

Newt 1lle a Vacation
Year!

7J~24

19 75 C.11omeron Mobile Home.
12x60 ft . For further info. ct!l
614 -992 -6624.

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
sured , reasonable r1t11. Cell
304 -576 -2336
'
1973 Cameron treilll', In ~
H11ven , all alec , partl1illy hi(;.
nished. new underpenrNng.
selL $6 ,500 . 00 . 304·111.
2688 .
..

"'*

12x60 . 1988 Grel trailar.

s3.aoo.oo. 304-882-2e8e.
Real

Estate
35 lots &amp; Acreage

31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom house for sell,
flrapltce, 3 mi . south of Gallipo·
lit, 132.500 . Call days 614 446 -1615 Of' nights 614-446 -

•,

Lot tor . sale Addlaon, OtUo.
r ive rfront view , prio$1
$2,200 .00. 304-896 -3831 .,.
te r 5:00.
..

1244.

Rental s

6 rooms, bath. utility , attached
g1r1g1. baament. F.A. furnace.
built -In kitchen. clo ae to
S .O,C.C,O. minu. More infor·
mation on requast. Call 614-

388-8343.
- - - - : - - - - -lc-

Remodelled 3 bedroom hou$8
on Rt. 33. New F.A. furnaca,
lergelot. 119 ,000. Call Clel.~~ond
Re1lty 814-992-2259 ..
-lcSutely. 3 bedroom house 11 10
E11t . $t. in Pomeroy. 5 wooded
acres, family room. dining room .
F.A. hea1. 2 baths. baaement.
gar1ge. 828 ,000 . Call Cleland
Realty 814-992 -2259 .
A ni ce home on a beautiful lot .
Very convenient, in best pert of
Pomeroy, Ohio . Mulberry
Heightt. Call 614-992 -6323.
Price reduced. Must 1ell. Nice 3
bedroom home in village of
Cheater. On on a tenth acre lot.
Will aeU on land contra cl.
11 e.ooo. down· rest on pay·
menta for 6 years . 7.9 percent
inttrtlt. Call &amp;14 -985· 3571.
3 ~room hou11. 2 car gerage,
2 acrn, city water. free gu, 10
mil11 from Kaiser . For 11/e or
long term rent. 304-273-2848.

Situations
Wanted

3 Announcements

41

'·
Houses for Ren1.,

5 ro oms &amp; blth, newly decorated . Inquire It 918 Seconll
Ave., Gallipolis .
3 bdr . B1h mil• p11t Hollar OA

Rt . 160. 1300 mo.. •1 50 dap...
no peft. Call 814-388·8713.,
House 4 rooms a. beth furnilhMf
735-R Third Av1 . • , :Z6 mo . ·~
dep. 'Call 446 -3870 or 44f·
1340 .
Nke duplu house , 6 rooms &amp;
bath. completely fur~ Main St.
Cheahire, 1200 mo . no lnlift
peta. Cell 61 4-2415 -5811.

l-y.~~ord,

it

3 bdr.
t260 1 mo .
3rd . St .. Kanauga. Clll &amp;14446·7473.
-

3 bdr ., all kitch.n eppliancn,
carp eted, CA. ett1ched g .....
located Sandara Or .. Galtipolif.
S300 mo., HC . dep., li J'lt.
required . Call 614-441·0214:""

3 Annou nee menta :

Readings
Bl

I

• JCIIf'.(](IM.

v

'RE~li'I(~Tat

USTIN(';.S

Nortl'l C'.-olinl Coast
Conclos - Cot!agu- MCilflb
Ran~M: Gall lor a I1SI o l d eliltls an:! cnces of rentals that,
fl'lfM!I your specified needs

Ownon

Get on OUI ltSI now•
Call 1· 800·528.8521
In NC call 1·800·682·6420

Tammy
Tellt fOI.I' past,
,
turt, gin1 od•ict on toft
INiinrn and morriegt. tf ~:.:.--::.:-1
unhappy and don't laMw
way to twrn, cam1 in.hf t~bict .
One • i'lit will corrrinu yw titan ,
is o btttrr war.
NEW IO!AIION
2-4 Cruttt Ava.. GaMi,olis, Ott.
Nuf door to Jim Mill• (J.tuot.t
4'46·U71

10 A.M.· 10,.M.

BLUEGRASS MUSIC COUNTRY MUSIC SHOW
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
STARTING
FRIDAY I FEBRUARY 7
7:30·11:00 P.M.

8tbysltttr needed for, 2 mo . okl
child. CoM e14-3e7-0510.

2

FtllilJJCiill

Secratary - Boollkeapar ·
Immediate opening . Expe·
riencad or College trained. Mutt
be fut typist. know thorth1nd,
booldl.eepi\g. Send full AIIUme
and If you arelnternted in full or
part-time wortt. Alto how toon
aveilabie . Tc · Applicent :Bo x
428. Pomiroy. Oh. 45769.

W1nted Dockmaller. lmmedllte
opening tor MIIOnal potitlon.
To menta• • maintain am1rina.
Excellent PlY ul1ry biNd on
8xperienca. Bo11ing IIIPiritnce
.,llpful, but not MCIIIIfY. land
resume to Box T8080 In~,. of
the G1llloollt D1lly Tribune. 825
Third Ave ., Gtlllpolla. Oh
45531 .

In Memoriam

In loving memory of
Paul Leonard Ralnev
who died Fobruary 1,
1986 .

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN -:

Wherever we go , what-

FEATURING
FEB. 7-THE MONROE HOLLOW BO~S
FEB. 14-RI~ER JUNCTION BLUEGRASS
FEB. 21-WEST ~IRGINIA MOUNTAIN BO~S
FEB. 28-MOUNTAINEER BLUEGRASS BO~S -

evir we do,
locked in our he1rt1 ere
memorH11 of you .
ere 1rMIUrea

no -one can stMI,
Dooth lo o hoortoche
nothing can heal.

tt'o only 1 grovotho111111
need• ctre,

VENICE, Italy (UP!) - The
third-worst Oood tide of the century
swamped venice Saturday on the
eve o! the opening of the city's
famous carnival.
· A raging desert wind combined
With three days of torrential rains
whipped venice's waters to more
than flvefeetabovesea level at high
tide. Only In the great Oood year of
1$1i6 and In 1919 has the water been
higher this century, ofllclals said.
The weather in Venice was part
of a stonn system that covered the

33082 .

100111 Annlvetllry, Avon, to 1111
cott304-e75-1429.

Memor~a

Venice swamped by severe flooding

w.-

EJCPtritnotd blby.nter 10 witch
8
old ftlf~nt Mon., W..:t .,
Fri .. BAM 10 5PM. Coli 6,.·
448-9&amp;40 ta 1rr1nge lnterviiiW.

44e-o294.

Singl• introductiona, write for
appUcation , PtrtOnll Touch In·
troductlons, P. 0 . 80111 8138,
Charleaton, W. Y1 . 215302 .

3 br . bath , living. dining. faml~
roomt . Be1ement. Vinyl aiding.
Me lot in town . 304-e7t5-8711 .

Oppor1unl1y £01jlloyor.

AVON - Still Sell! Meke •&amp;% .
C1ll1!11 4-446-33158.

R1cine GUn S.,oot aponeotld by
Racine Gun Club. EVIIYSunday,
bagtnning 1t 1:00 p.m. Factory
Cholle 12 UUIOfl shotguna.

304-675-2981 .

........ 12. ut. 292. Equal

led,- to Uve-ln wi'lh aldet1V ladv.
Cooking end llgh1 houook"Ping.
Mutt be 1 non1ainolltw and have
own trlniPOrfttlon . Call 614___
388-·flli-10_._ _ _ _ __
1
1·
Help Wen1«1· part time position
tvllllble. ldmlnla1ratlve leval.
Ectucotion In MR-DD end field
e~ce, edult ech~utlon ex·
Deritnce, gran1-writlng etpabltity, and llnowladga ot
.aucatlonll-llnlca ruoun:es In
Athena ,,.. required . An Equal
Opportunity Employtf'. Aeauma
mun be OO&lt;:Oivod by CHEAO.
P.O. Box 8215, Athena , Oh
415701 no titer than FebNII'V
12 .

Exterior complet•. lnt•ior rudy

to co mplete. ThrH bMrooma.

lnfonnadon , Clll tt11 GaUlt
County H•lth Departm.nt at
Thankl 10 much for all the
prayen, carda, flowtrt, calla •
vlahors while I wea in the
hOapltal. Fritndl IM . . .t. Aleo
1hlnkl to my Docton: Holzar.
Strafford, Htrdtt• NurHI. Mn.
J01nn Sttwart.

Homes for Sale

31

But the one we love Ia

olooping thoro.

PATRIOT, OHIO

••••ssloN: 13,00 12 YRS. &amp; OLDER
11.50
YRS.
FlEE UNDER 6 YRS.

The polo of porting
whhout goodbye,

·-12

Will ,.moln wl1h us un\M
we die .

Some moy forgo1 thel
you are gone. ....
But we will remember no
mener how long.
Loved ond mlond by
wllo. Olono: ch!ldrM.
Koro. Kotlo • Adorn; P•·
onto Noncy l Loonord;
grondporenll HIUII l

Nollie Ruuoll .

SQUARE DANCERS &amp; CLOGGERS WELCOME

"FAMILV ENTERTAINMENT"
CONCESSION STAND -

NO ALCOHOUC BEVERAGES

DIRECnONS: FROM GALLIPOLIS. TAKE RT. 141 ; TURN LEFT
ONTO RT. 776, TURN RIGHT ONTO CADMUS-PATRIOT RD . SIGNS.

..

'
• ••

..

�'

..

'

~ .

.. . ..

..

.... .

..

'

.

..

.

•

'

•

~

•

•

&gt;.

February 2, 1986

Remodeled 2 bdr.. betwMn
Thurman • 0111 Hll, •111 mo.,
plu•
dep. Cell 114-241·

•eo

931&amp;.

3 bdr. home l•rg• yerd, gttrd111
apot, KC achool dlttrict. Me.
dep. req . C•ll 11 4 -441-0&amp;48.

4 bedroom house. woodburning
flrepiiCI. No peta. C.ell 814·

949-22&amp;3.

Six roomfermhoutt. 1 mUtn . of
Chitter, Ohio. Otpoth Nquirtd.
No pett. Phone 814·911 -3538.
P1ul Karr.
Handyman Specltll Reduced
,_., tor houM In Ch....r, Ohio
needing remodeling. llttson ec·
ctttttd wilt provldl llbor In
11tch~nge for reduced rent . PrltM
c.rpentry, bkx:k ltYfng, riii'AOdellng uperience NQUINd . Ref·
..,c. required . Wrftt to AI·
chard Froat, 12015 Edgewthir
Drive No. 15. L.kewood. Ohio
U107 or call 1 · 218·228·111 &amp;,
7 :30 til 9:30p.m . dt~ .
For r.nt with option to buy. 3
bedroon'll. bull1 WI kltchWI, 2 Cll'
Cler'lfll, U20 .00 month, dtpolit, New Htv.n, 304-882-

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS (Equol H0t1olng Oppor.
tunltyl monthly rent ltlrtt It
11 n for 1 bedroom end u 12
tor Z bedroom. df,pNit •200.
locotod ..., Spring Volor Plozo
end Foodlllld, pooltnd Cable TV
IYIIIab ... office hours 11 poulble 10 .m to 4 pm end 7 pm to I
pm Mondoy-Frldoy. Coli 114441 -2741 or teeve meauge.

Nlotfy fumilhld mobUe homt,
Iff. ept., 1*1(ql etr end he• In
city, ldulta only. c.n 814·441·
033&amp;.

C uti cottlge for tingle penon,
fum lahtd. utlllti• peld. 1155.00
Wllk. 304·175· 3100 Or 175·

&amp;&amp;09.

2 bedroom houH newly decort~tect exc cond, no Pill. 304·

871-21&amp;1 .

Hou• for rent. 2327Y.. Unooln
Avo. 304-&amp;7&amp;-3819.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr. fu lly fum iahed . 12xll5.
conv . loc1tion. Upper Rlvtr Rd ..
w1t., peid, aec. d.., . required .
Cell 11&lt;1· 448· B!55B or 114·

1172

52 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment

l

St... .o •v•tem with e~tMtte
deck. tumllblt, riCIIVIf. 2
apMktra 1nd edjustlble atand,
304-1715-3158 1ft..- 4:00PM .

~

I

mo ..

Second AVe. 3bdt' .. •190

Call a14.... I .

dep. ,..ulrorl.

448·4222 -

Furnlthld ..,.,, 4 roornt• bath,
no p1t1. Mtult1. C1ll 814 -441-

1&amp;19.
Fu'". opt. 939 2nd. Avo. GoMIpolla. 1 bdr .. 1225 mo .. utllti•

pold . Call-·441&amp;

olto&lt;7pm.

Gelllpalil. 2 bdr., Uvingroom.
Oup._
for r.,t,
Ill Third
Ave.,,
dlnin;,oom
. new
kitchen
fenced btcll yerd, -refrig . •
range, 1280 plut utllti-. •
Meuriry depollt. Clll 114 -441·

~-

64 Misc. Merchandise

Newty IMMHI•ed 5 room up1t1i11 ept.. 238 Flnt Aw.
·~
•·-1o•or1
K """"'
'"'" n
• no PltL
t221,"';·• ploltu• YriCati~• • T::"a'
~~2t . 100 ·
·
·

11

Furn. •pt. 919 2nd. Ave.. G111i·
pollt. th1re blth, alngl• mele,
1175 mO .. utiHti• p.id. Cal

448·4-'11 1htt 7pm.

lg

Cool Co. Cl!la14-448-1401.
1. · •

~ Al\4..1,_~

"The cost Of living beyond
0Uf meanS h as gone Up
• "
agam.

r~~§§§~~§~~~~~~~~~~n
46 Fumiahed Room•
Housekeeping room, 919 2nd.

1100. Call441-4411•ftlf7pm.

46 Space for Rant
Mobile home lot, 12 ' x60 ' or
~m~~ll•. 1715 w•t« peNt 4th &amp;
Nell. Gelllpolia. Call . .8·4416
after BPM.
Downtown office ~p.ce. Excellent kiC81ion on Second Ave.
CloH IO coun 1tou11 ptrfect for
attom~ ·· · CPA 't Of othlf prof•slonelt.
udful h1rdwood
floon &amp; trim. All u111iti• p•ld.
CellltHt WMemen Ag. .c:v. 114·

e..

••a-la••·

Lllrgelotl. C.\1 814-992-7479.
fril lier IPICII. lrnl. Childt'ln

1Ctep1M. Rt. 1, Locun Aold,
bade ot K. K, 304-876·1078.

2 bdr. mobil• home tor rent.
11150 mo . plua dep . Call 814379-2435.
Double wida 1flillf, AC . 3
bedroom. 2 full b1tha, nioe
loca1 io n, Gtllipollt Ferry ,

0325.00. 304-676-3087.

2 bedroom•, 1150 .00 month
plua utiliti11. Aah land Upton
Road. 304-6715-4088 .

Apartment
for Rent

Two 2 bedroom eptl. lot renl in
Pom.~roy . 1 in town and other
above Krog.,.. Call 61 " ·992 ·
8216 or 814 -992 -7314.
The Vill~ e Gr&amp;~n Apta. are
accepting •pptic•tio nl for occu·
pency. Unit t are two bedroom.
all electric. For m011 inforrN·
tion. call 814-992·1174 wen·
i ng l . Equll OpportuniiV
Housing.
APARTMENTS . mobilt homn ,

nou .... Pt. Pl e... nt and Gallipo·
lia . 814 -446 -8221.

GOOD USED 4PPL14NCES
Wutlera, drytrl, rlfriglf1tor1,
r1ngu . Skligg1 Appll1ncu ,
Upper Rtv11 A:d . betide Stone
Cmt Mottl. 114· 441·7398.

BAM·IPM .

In Middleport , 2 bedroom •pt.
wtttl yerd. I 1 75. plua utHiti•
plut depolit. C1ll 114-992·

71n.

8&amp;2-21&amp;&amp;.

In Racine, nice 2 bedroom
apertment. Aefrig. and stov•.

I 176. p..- month ~ut dtpotit .
No pets. C1U IU.g.t9-2801 .

3 rooma •nd beth on S. Second
in Middl..,art . Call 114-992 5212 . K•v Cedi.

46 Furnished Rooms
For rent Sl~~ping Aoom1 1nd
light tloo11 keeping rooms . P•rk
Central Hotel Cali 81• -ua.
0758 .

Merch~nrlise

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62
ON~~t~ St .. Qellipolia. New • uted
wood ·co•latovea, 6 pc wood LR
auite •399. bunk bed• •199.
antron reclin•• t99 . nM &amp;
u..t bedroom suitet., r1nge1.
wringer wul'lera, !a tho•. New
livingroom euitu 1199 -1599,
11mpa. 1110 buying cotl • wood
llov•. Ctll 614·446 ·31 59 .
Auto w11her •n. Whirlpool
wastier 176 . Hotpoint tle•vy
duty w•lher 89&amp;, GE dryer
avoc.do 195. gu rang• 30 in.
165 . tlectrk: r1ng1 awc.do 30
ln . 1915. Am1n1 refriglfator
IVOCNO 11 50, rlfrigtrltOr COp·
penont t1&amp; , g11 dry" 11 25.
lide b'i tidl reffiglfllor 1160 .
Skeggt Applian c11 Uppet' Rivlr
Ad , 614 ·•·ll· 7398 .

1 1 Help Wanted

8-6

2 bedroom unfurnilhld apt ,
rtfrencn and depo1it requirecl .
New Haven . W . Va 304 -882·
3267 or 304-773 ·15024.

OUTSTANDING SAlES OPPORTUNITY
FULL OR PART·TIME

One of lt1e larpst companies in the indus~~} has unique
opportuity for enthiiSiastic. welklrpnill!d individmls to
repment the most ucilirw f111d raisit1 procram milable today. Sales ellllerience is helpful but not essential.
Prior experience wor\if1 willt ci.,;c, school or ch11th or·
ganizalions may be a pillS. Part time eami~ of
$10.000-$20.000 per year, Full time $35.000 and up. H
r.JU are intereted. please serd a letter listit1 )OUr qualifications or a resume (~ available) to: Nick Mast. 1981
Breed Hill Ct. lancaster. Ohio 43130.

Laurel•nd aph . equ1l housing
opportu nity. 2 bedroom• . car·
pet.MI . all alec , apta, for more
i nfor~t io n 304 -BB2·3716 .
Two bftdroom apt f205 .00
month . good cond , loc1tld in
.- Point Plea11nt area . 304·173·
.. 5 143.
... 3 room• and bath , partly fur ·
niahed , depoait r1qu~red ,
t 160 .00 mo nttl plut elect ric.
304-675 -59 11

Equal Oppor1uruty Employer

•

&amp; Auction

•

•

.

. ...:

·.·.•.

•

-1

Sit. 614·441 -1189, 627 3rd.
Ave . G1llipoll1, OH .

V•llev Fumlturt, new • u1td .
Uf9e MCtton of quality tumi ·
tura . 1218 Entern Av-. .,
G•llipoll1.
Molloh1n Fum . 6 Appl , Saln
Gib10n &amp; Mayttg. St. Rt. 7 N.,

Gellipolia. CaU 61 4 -448 · 74« .

44

__

_______.

R,.,...,.

66 B ulldlng S upp IIas

Onty Mulrteloldtng Shop in
lrtl. Blade powd... a.ee CCI.
RWS caps2.00. Hwe ICCHS to
Ill your n..t1 with lownt
pdOM. kotbef'1 Ounaa Rep1ir,

-

- Homollto 1&amp;0 onglno

ltlrter a gu tlnk f&amp;O . Cell
614 -448-4530 evenin"l 814· '
441·9141.
·
•
..

s..,.

Ulld

304·875·1429.

Bunk ' btdl complete with
1Prln91 end mtttr111. good
cond, 304· n3-B107 .

MF. 1-t t_. gtrden Irector, hydro
ltltic tm11miNion . 48 indl
:mowtr. grtder bllldt, hydreullc

l11.. 1.&amp;00.00. 304-&amp;7&amp;-2845.

MGM

wormed , 304·882 ·3672

68

67

Pets for Sale

FMgitttred minature Schnauzer
· P..,ppi... S•h· Pepper femal es.
Champion bloodlin11 . Cash
o nly . No checka. 614 -992 ·

Farm City, Inc.

little Kyger Rd.

CAR ·- ANTIQUES
AT 10:30 A.M.

LOCATION: 4 miles west of Jackson, Ohio on the Appalachian Highway. Turn left on C.R. 20, go I mile to
Mustard's Auction Bam .
ITEMS TO SELL: P11m1t"e deacon·s ben e~ . 2 ~d cupboards.
mce cond.: round oak pedestal table w/two lea'es elrtra
nice do'e latl blanket chest ch eny dropleal primillvefable
w/ gatelegs. poplar dropleal table, sel of oak p1essback
chairs. sel of cane bottomchairs, set of plank bottom chaus.
set ol ladder back ch a~rs. oak droplealtable. carpenler'sbo•
w/ old blu e pa~nl . pressback high cha11. se'eral n~ce wi cke1
c ~atrs, old denltst c~a11 , wa lnut bed and dresser w/ marble
oak commode. oak k1tc~ en cab1ne1 w/ pa~nt. old tlatwall cup:
board. pam led do' eIail ~anket chest Jerome we1ght clock,
manlel clock. oak lowboy dresser. 12 quilts. some over 100
years old, never been washed : blue &amp; while am1lel old
trunks. o~ porcelamdoll. several nice old baskels. ca,;~age
lamps. many niCe wooden k~ch en rtems, mce coffee mill.
casl 110n sllillel and lid signro Geotz Hamden. Ohio, Kenlucky muzzle loading nile. exc. cood .: 2 powder horns. D1.
Woback's stomac~ bitters bottle (Cm .• Oh 10). many stone
1ars, rugs. and crocks. Blue &amp;grey Slonep1tther. green &amp;yellow stone p1tche1, set of Englis~ castles ch tna, Jo~n so n Bros ..
England: o'er 7 large boxes of glasswa re lound in attic
packed away, Oil lamps. semal old gold nngs and jewelry.
many old wood boxes, nice six boa•d box. Boston 10cke1.
casto1set exc cood . old postcards, ti n ~ints , one of Abra·
ham Lincoln ; store advertisements, n~ce brass kettle and
bucket old fool s. p1clures &amp; frames. old stands. lid clothing,
school slales and McGu«e, Readers. Little Seoul 22 rile.
plu s more.
NOTE: These items hove b111n locked up in an utatalor
several ,em and were passed down lhrou&amp;h several pn·
tratlons. Many boltS 111 still not unpacked yet. since we
are movincthe items from the house to the 111ction barn
because of •inter weather.
CAR: 1974 Gold Duster. A.T. 318 encin•.aood cond . Call
sells at 12 ·Noon.
TERMS: Call or Loc.l Check. No out of s1111 checks .
Lunch Served.

MUSTARD'S AUCTION SERVICE
JACKSON, OHI0-216·5868 or 1229
Licensed and Bonded State of Ohio

'
HOMES. FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAL PROPERTtlS
25 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS . OHIO 45621

CUSTOM BUILT ALTA LOG HOME ON APPROX . 48 ACRES BUILDER WANTS A LARriR HOt.l WITH LESS ACREAGE
AND HAS PLACED THIS PROPERTY ON THE MARKET WELL
BELOW REPLACEMENT VALUE l.ffiO SQUARE FT. LIVING
AREA PLUS BASE MENT 3 BEDROOMS. l h BATHS. SUPER
SIZELIVING ROOM. KITCHEN / OI NING AREA. IS NICE OPEN
ARRANGE MEN! SPECTACU lAR VIEW fROM DECK OR SUR·
ROUNDING FARMLAN D AND OHIO RIVER. PROPERTY HA S
OHIO RIVER FRONTAGE. $110.000 NEW ONTHE MARKET'

Yamaha eletronic pl1no good
quit•r wit h h•rdahell cue !350
Alvarez 12 atring quitar with
plulh cate 1300 . Ba th in good
condition. Cell614 ·446 -4525 .
l owery piano . good cond Call
614 -367 -7689

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

AKC Ooberm•n pups tor ule.
Red 1nd Nit . 875 . each. C11 11

614-992-7670.

ROUTE 218 - OVER AN ACRE WITH 2 BEDROOM HOME.
FULLY CARPETED EXCEPT KITCH EN. JU ST RIGHT FOR
SMALL FAMILY $20.000 NEW ON THE MARKET'

2 .,

Kinnibec: pou1oes fo r s-ale. Call
614 -388 ·872 1 .
Fre!h loed Rome Buutv Apptea,
$4 .00 bu1h el, ell fruiu and
produce. Open 7 d1y1 a week .
J11cli:S Fru it Mkt. Rt. 35, Hender ·
so n. W. Va .

448·4922.

••
••
•••
••

Real Estate General

STUTES REAL ESTATE
80\.'IIESTtTES - BR OKER
J/\ol STITES - REALTO R

.

446-4206
BRANCH OtTtCE

64 CHl RCH STRE ET - ]4 CKSO I. OH.
ED HILL · .·I LICE HI LL - OFFICE \IA .\ At;t.rf~

Gallipolis,Oh.

286-4496

i\lf

&lt;

.

$35.000 JUST REDUCED! FINISffD BAS MENT MAKES THIS
A4"BEDROOMHOME WITH 2 KIT~ENS , 2 BAHlS. RECREA·
liON ROOM, SPACIOUS BACK YARD . (;1\SHEAT. CENTRALAIR
COND. CONVENIENT LOCA liON JUST OUTSIDE CITY.

U.S.
• HUD
PROPERTY DISPOSIIION-81
200 N. HIGH ntm
COLUMBUS, OHIO 43215

1981 ChOYrol01 PU. body ruff.
runt good, f300. AIIO 1100
Remington 12 g1uge, like new.
with dHI btrrtl, 1325. Clil
814·379·2&amp;07.

1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS
,N1ce home. cenlral ail, rural water syslem,large family room.
26'x22 ' garage, ~orage bu1lding, storm windows and doors.·
N1ce ~orne close to Holzer Hospital. Nowon ly $34,900. SEe it
now .
H570

AFFORDABLE

New lhtingroom au ite, 8.117 gerdoor witt! 111 hudw111.
bedroom lliite . c.n 514· 388·

•g•

COURT STREET - COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 3 STORY
BRICK. 3.480 SQ fl EACH FLOOR PLU S I STORY CONCRETE BLOCK AREA JUST LISTED' $85.000

•

Fi~ood

for llle 130.00 PU
lold , HEAP 1ccepttd. Ctll 11··
318 -9341 . Rog1r M1ad1.

LOOKING FOR A RETREAT - CLUB HOUSE ON BU ll DING
TOREMODEL FOR AHOME. THI SONE IS PERFE CT GAS FUR·
NACE. CENTRAL AIR CONO.. PAN ELED WALLS. CLAY CHAPEL
ROAD $1 2.500 NEW ON THE MARKET'

MODIFIED 3-BEDRM. MOBILE HOME - located withm •
the VIllage of Vin ton Excellent conditiOn Buy now lor •
$30,00000
•

I

,.

Betutiful baby blue form1l 1111
7, worn onoe. t?S. C•ll 814-

LIVING

8244.

SINGLE FAMILY ACQUIRED PROPERTIES

2- wheel utility trtlllf. good
condition, mttll fr1m1, ovlf1old
1Pring1. If intete~ttd call 814-

•s .CEMD 11111 2112/16 4:15 P.M. 200 NOI11t IIGif ST. 7111 R

992-6689

•s Of'EI8 2/13116 10.00 u. PflOililn IUOSI110N 16141 46•-6

Ml•ed herdwood 1ilb1 . 112 . per
bundle. cont1ining IPiUOll . 1 Yt
ton . fob. Ohio P•llet Co., Pome·
roy , Oh. &amp;1-t-992-1481 .

..Excellent Business Locations"

"HUD pnliiOitits n - l o r salt to Ill pmons rtpdlos$ ~'""· color. roliajon, IU. mariUI
slltus. llationll ~&amp;in- HU D..-. tho rWM to ro;oct In!' or II bids, to -In!' infonnality or
ime11aritY in lilY bids. Bids will bo ~~~~from II inlnltod portioS. indutlioa- oa:upoocy.
indM- ..S i-111." HIGH liDS wtU tiii!ERIIINID MSID ON THE HIGHEST N£1110 lO
Ill D. PROPERTIES ARE SUBJECT TO PI11JR SML BUYER IIUST OBTAIN OWN ANMCIIIG.
USIING
AREA DRS
PRICE DEPOSIT
CASE~
ADDRESS

«

Price Wtr l Fluhlng •rmw ligna.
1289 . complete! Were 1499.
lighted , non -errow 12191 Non ·
lighted 12,91 Free lett1ral 811

locolly. 1 (800) 023·0183,
1nytime.

JEFFERSON AVENUE - Heart of Town. Cmta1ns
approximately 1.5 acres with 210' roil! fl1lfltage.
Real Estate cons1sts of an office. 3 bOO room
apartment garage and greenhouse. Owner reb ring,
must sell - Shown by apJX)intmenl

lOCATED AT THE CORNER OF JACKSON AVENUE
&amp; 22ND Slllm. Contains 4 ooits. Store building,
office building, resdential arxl garaie apartment

ATHENS. CO.
ll9538·203
144342-203

Rt. I. 8o1 109BB (Nelsonville)
Rt. 5. Twp. Rd. H64 (Athens

3 BRS

$19.000 $950
$30,000 $1500

2 BRS

Silti~ on one-quarter acre land arxl in the heart of
the business districL This p~rtv must be iild.

GALLIA CO.

Myrtle Beach. near 1 8 beautiful golf courses,
calabash and ··Restaurant Row" . 2 bedrooms,
sleeps 6 with king size beds. jacuzzi in master
bath, outside swimming pool. 826 .00 diocount
if bookings made prior to March 31st. 60% of
rental fee required at time of scheduling with remainder due prior to occupation.
For details and rental fees. colt:
The Medical Shoppe. Inc.
665 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. Ohio 46&amp;31
At 614-446· 2206.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

446-3636cA~

54 Misc. Merchandise

Apa"ment
for Rent

Brookside Aportments
Phone 416·3003-«6·1599
416-3474
One bedmom ...-11Nt1ts wi1l1
1-. COIIItiJY litctt.i. 111'0 IPIIfi...... ~~ity 100m. Wlltr.lid IIISh SIIVices fi'U'idotl.
Quiet Aru

Canaday Realty

con d. 8400 . Ovation cle11ic

LlnLE'S IEFIIGEUTION
&amp; APPLIANCE SERVICE

Soy... 304·4&amp;1-1 071.

Real Estate General

Real Estate Gener al

Musical
Instruments

' 2807.

AKC Regiatered eprico1 Toy
Poodle for .. le. 6 weeks old
t150. Clll614·949· 2272.

"Serving Gallla· Meiga Countiea

Kenmore rtfrig .•

02&amp;0. Coli &amp;14-448-7399.

Block, bt'idt, MOI11f and m•·
.onry aupplln . Mounltin State
llock, At . 33, New H1ven . W.

·7PM ..

Auto. Washers ........ '136 .00·'160.00
Clothes Dryer : ...... .. .. '90.00·'116.00
Portable Dishwasher ........ .... •126.00
Under Counter Dishwasher ... 0 126.00
Wringer Washer ....... ..... .. .. ... •1 00.00
Refrigerators ......... ... '30.00-'160.00

FeW •II. lig dllcoun1 on 1"
ven.tl.., blln.,•• venical blndl,
cuatom drtp.-i•. lnltelled. P .A.

:--:-::-::-~--~--,----2 AK C male PUPI wi'ttl shotaand

Ortgonwynd C•nery Kennal .
CFA Hlmellyen, Per1i an and
SllmiH tclnens . AKC Chow
puppi11. Call 446 ·3844 after

IE.CONDITIONED APPUANaS

•

colloct.

9790.

814-44a-2713.

100 AnniverMry Avon to Mil.

f ull blooded Germ.n Stleptlerd
pup1. 6 fem• lea, 1 male. 135
etc:h. Call 614·949 · 2977 or
614 -949· 2138 .

Kennell Ali-bree&lt;l
grooming. Adult• S. puppiea .
Ei'lgllah Coelter Sptniela. 388·

Only 17 52
All Ktnd5 of p,,:
SuppliES
We ,1lsc ~ave CJna~, &amp;
G.dnf'a P1g fred

Kentucky Lump. Ohio · Lump •
Ohio Staklf. Yerd or delivery,
cement blockt end building
materiel , Gallipolis Block Co.,
Pint St., G11Upoli1, Ohio CIM

Utility Bldg. Spl.: 30 '•40 ' .119 ',
Etvt W· 15 '.dl ' allding door &amp;
HN. door · 152155 .,cted. Iron
HorH Bldgt . 614 ·332-9745

Pets for Sale

Britrpltch

25/1 Cat Food

Bulkting M•teri1lt J
Block, brick, .-w• ptp.. win·
dow1. lintels. ete. Cleudt w;n.
tera, Rio Grand•. 0 . C1ll 114·
2'5· 5121.

56

Vo 304·882 -2222.

50tt Dog Nuggets
Only 19.50

304-87&amp;-3334.

56 Building Supplies

138234-203

Nf"N' Li.• tin, - \-lodrrn :l11 w~· homr. 4 h1•dm u nl• .
FR . modnn kitrlu•n , 2 Jirf'IJ ian·~ \lnHl.•· all cac1r"''' d
. 6 acrt&gt;~. morP or l Pu. Good rrop/and. LarflP
a~ora~f' sht&gt;d. Jlrtme ry. ,arafle, robcm ·o ll ou.H&gt;,
ho t.UP ond rellor. 000 lbt. robocro ba.• f'. Ou.·nf'r tmu

MO&lt;Iem 3 Bf'dmom Hom !' - :Jfu/1 borh .~.Jrmn ol tR .
r11om w/ bu i /r . ln ch irw ,·ohi ru•f . FH lt•(ttli nJl I n "" l'r idr
lJl . patio . mmfPrn lcir t hf'n. nnorlle r IJl. c-cm•red
.a•,p.roNI polio. Siuin,- on 1.59 tiC"' ·' mort&gt; or leu.
Prirt•d only $38,000.

JAKE SOMERVILLE
REAL ESTATE

New condominium overlooking ocean in N.

DATE: SAT., FEB. 8th, 1986

AUCTIONEER: OTTIE OPPERMAN
614)
385·7195 or 394-2296
;;.;;.;.:...;.;..;.....;...

g,oo to&amp;'OO"'bv...,.lnt,...t.

H1evy Oenim· Ctrhtrt · Army
Clothing etltiiN ell wtnt.. lem
Somerville'• • E••t •
wood Junction lndependance
Road · Old AI . 21. {Frlevenintl)
Itt. Sun 1 :00· 7 :00 P.M. UUdl
Camoufllge h•vy· jtcktta ·
pantt.J.Discount _.,llticalldv•·
daint .-cllltiM, unk&gt;" mlde,

RENTAL SPECIAL

Hocking Valley Motor Inn . Nelsonvile. Ohio. Nelson·
ville is located between Athens &amp; Logan, Ohio on U.
S. 33. Turn off U.S. Rt. 33 at South edge of ~elson vile onto S.R. 691 , travel less than %mile to long
lane lea ding to the inn .

We have been commissioned by Mrs. C. Jane Joens
of Athens Co. &amp; a fairfield Co. couple to sell Antiques/ Collector &amp; Modern Items. Very brief list fol lows:
COUNTRY. PRIMITIVE. OAK. WALNUT. VICTORIAN
&amp; OTHER FURNITURE!
Walnut 1el ly cupboard; 3- punc~ed 110 pie sales: corner cupboard. Early lm mtgranl"s !run&lt; dovetailed w/ some 011g
patnl dec01a!tons (as IS) : !men p1 ess tall walnut slat10nmast
er 's des k. oa&lt; h t g~ c~ esls w/ mirrors. malc~ed pair ol oak
roc kers w/ pressed center ~ead s. oak Serp Sideboard
w1m1rr01 &amp; head s. oak dough ratstng cab~nel : severa l oak
was ~ stand s re,ersed oak Serp. dresser w/ mirror: 2-oak
llalwall cupboards: oa &lt;slant front desk. c h~nacabmet: set 4wan ul Vtcl. ltnger cmed hoop back ch airs: good Eary yarn
wtnder: 2···clarks·· S!JOOI cab ~nets. c ~erry long drop gale-leg
table walnul secretary bookcase: n1ce walnut marble tnsert
dresser w/ mirlor: cherry empire ch esl. niCe Dvll. gramed
cottage wash sland. chesls. labes. chairsan d much lurnrlure
nol hsted Very good 1920 4-pc. waterfall sal1n wood bed room su1te.
LOT OF GOOD COLLECTOR ITEMS. STONEWARE. GLASS.
CHINA AND MORE: N1ce lnl. l1me Recording Co. regulator
clock 1n oak case: 45 "x36·· slamed ~ass window: sevml
20"x20" stamed glass wmdows: Reppert. G1eensboro. Pa. 1·
gal. tar: Donag~ h o wax sealers; sponse ··Peacock" Pilcher;
m1lk p1tchers, (ugs. tars: old l1n &amp; ~ass Otl slreet lamp: small
··Grow·· 4-slrmg ban1o: suga~ bucket: baskets: 4- ln d~an oils
on canvas: cui glass ilems: good selection of ~ass &amp; ch1na
Degenhart Carnival sllppe1: figural candy containers: lot of
collector 1tems1
GUNS: 2-Stmps .22 rilles; 4-single shot shotg~~nsl
MUCH. MUCH MORE TO SELL! Note: Most of furniture
rtllll to usa. somo will be sold "as-found" ar :as is'·. More
items in all catecorles . Very 100d ale.
TERMS: Cash Day of Sale or Check with Positive ID. Food
Available! Plenty of p.~rkinl &amp; saatin1. Heatlll. comfort•·
ble 1uction rooms!

Picktnl Ulld Fumiture. good
qUIIIty uMCf fumltu,., hours

Why Pay More l or
l our Pet food. When
MGM Farm Ctty, IrK ..
~.Jml:"ro~· Of11t·
F.l4 IJ~Z 218~
Is Lower Pmed wtth
A Brttrr Produ"cl

Coil a14-8t2·&amp;&amp;21 .

Special Spring end Fall Rates Available'

PUBLIC AUCTION

SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1986
AT 12:30 P.M.

; ._

8

County AppH~nee. Inc. Good
ulld IPPiitnoa 1nd TV Mta.
Open BAM 10 &amp;PM . Mon thru

PUBLIC AUCTION

ANTIQUES &amp; COLLECTOR ITEMS
-·

fl-oodforoolo.Colla14-2&amp;81121.

Firewood · ml111ed 1111oned
UO .OO a pidlup loed , you heul
it. c.n au -.t4&amp;·4&amp;99.

Two bldroom lplrl"*'t down·
town . 1210 wfthOU1 utllitl•;
t330 with utlllti• . Oepoelt
'*IUirtd . c111 au ..•·te·21Z9

882-31&amp;2.

r.. ha\'. Contact 304-a11·1413 Of a7&amp;-14&amp;0.

For tale fll dirt

Uaed Furniture -- DrHNr, l beet
metal office delka. 3 milts out
Bullville Rd . Open 9em 10 15pm,
Mon . thru Sat.

mett,..••·

Slriout ebout lo""g wlight1
Contact Gloril Orat•. At, 2. "'8o•
282. Letlrt. WV. 215253 . 304·

W1rm Momlng 111 hNtef for
Alt. 40,000 BTU 'a. 1 p1r old

Bruco Davioan. 11&lt;·2&amp;&amp;·1427.

2311 .
--------Firewood 140 ptr lo.t deli·

814-448-0322

Ni ce 1 an d 2 br apertmenu
downtown . 304 ·6 75 -2218 .

CoMm·2&amp;1-8211 .

up to t12&amp; . Hlde-•·beds,t390.
•nd up to 1550., eof1 bedl
1145 , Recliners . 1228 . to
'376 .. ~
•·mpo from e2•.
• fo
l125. pc. dinettee from 1109 ..
to435 . 7pc. l188~ndup. Wood
llblt with lix chalrt: 1285 to
1745. 0..11 •110 up to 12215.
Hutch II, UIO . Bunk bed comploto with motb 111 •211
'
·
tnd up 10 t391 . Blby bedt,
I 1 1 0 . Mtttrtuet or boll
1pringa, full or twifl , tl3., firm,
173. 1 nd •13. Queen .....
1225. 4 dr. ch•ts, 141 . 15 dr.
c h11h , 159. ltd fnmet,
120.end 125., 10 gun • Oun
c•blneta. 1350. 0• or ltltctrlc
r•nu• 1375. Bilby
135 &amp; 1415, bed tr•m• uo.
121. a no. kino treme no.
Good Mltction ot bedroo.-.
lllit•. rockers. metat a.bln'ett.
hudboardt 138 • up lo 1815 .

c.u

15 room unfum lthlcl 1Pif1mtnt.
Cell 114-912-15434 or 304·

44

LAYNE ' S FURNfTURE

Catt.t..,·a Und Tire Shop. Owr
1,000ti,..,s11•12,13,14, 11.
11. 11.15 . I mlltl out Rt. 218.

-~~
~--~~-~~~~-M~
prwt1 rr.t, .utllhl•
pd. 1215. to t891 . Teblll, 150 and
5·8PM. Set. 1-5 . Call 114-441·

COUNTRY MOilLE Horne P1rll,
Route 33 , North of Pomlf'Oy.

448-2430.

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS. hot dip
rib luling. ell typtl of gun1mlth
work. f•t 11Mce, 304·171-

•&amp;31.

rn.t1

Fum. efficiency •110 utllfti•
pold 120 4th Go~' s
.
··
...-II: . lrtgle. C.l144t-4411 .tt. 7pm.
Fum. tfflci.,cy •110 utlhi•
pold S • . . •-h 8072nd A
· "
.,.. •
· ""··
G•llr.lll. Slngl1. Call Ul4.t1 etur 7pm.

s..,. Kenmore wllhw and
d,.,... fvr mobile !tome. Walhll'
niWef'ulld, '*verulldVIfY ltttlt.
11 ecra with 12•10 mobUt
home on coumry roed tn M....•
County. Call 114-949 · 2179 .
-;:---:--:--:--.,.--- ·lcMechan!QI trenlplanttr In vt'IV
fOOd condition. 114·191· 124t.
Coil814·1t2-31ta.

Hou11 coaJ.Lumo 6atoktr. Zinn

1~\o'l

12•&amp;0 Olympic 110ilof.

8 inCih tlbfeuw end lltlnd. tiSO.
Solid m•ot"'Y lruftot. e76.

Rorl"""'orl opt., 2 bch.. e1eo
to 1210. Cell :kM-1715·1 1M Of
304·171· 5311 or 304-171·
7891.

2818 .
For r•t or Nil, prlcel'l'duced. 2
b.droom, unfurnithtd , with
batement in Hendeuon .
1180.00 month 175.00 deposit. 304·17&amp;· 1 1 lB.

FINwood for Nit. Split •nd
deltv.red. t35 .. C1tl 114-985·
3112.

Ohio-Point Plea5ant, W. Va .

1918 Chatham Ave. (Gallipolis) 3 BRS

$13.300

$665

l"illa, r• - t ttiJ of fltut·r r~. Jhrub~. larJCr pin
a 1w~· u•ell d esiptt'd home. F t&gt;a lurf'l a fo rm.
fa mil_\' roo m, 3.i# Wroonu. / (~ barhs. cunopl•re

ki rc·no•n w/ diJ hii·OJ her,

212 5TH STREET. POINT PlEASANT, W. VA.

·'TO SEE AND / OR BID ON ANY OF THE ABOVE PROPERTIES YQU MUST
CONTACT A REAL ESTATE BR()I(ER OR REAL ESTATE SALES AGENT
OF OUR CHOICE .

OFFICI:
676-3030

'D/PAPPLIES ONLY TO INSURED PROPERTIES.

JEAN CASTO
675-:M31

t hH 'f'

mtd r Pjri/(f'rnlo r . Fi nioh,,d

"""" " ' "'tJ.u Nlrp PI, 2 m r guraflt' •:::·~~·;,''"~~:;,~:::~;~
lar,P rotwr'tl bach pnrrh. fltl·'
Elemrn tor)··

RESIDENCE
676-4232

••
••
••
••

P_
RICE REDUCED on this 3 bedrm. homeloca ted along
F1rst Ave., owlook1ng the Ohio River. Downslairs balh •
and bedroom. Pnce now : $39 .~0. 00
•

CO liME RCIAL PROPERTY localed at come~ ol Second •
Ave . and Sycamore Sl. Call lor more mlo1ma11on.
•

BULAVILLE ROAD - BRICK AND FRAME RANCH ON APPROX . I ACRE. 3 BEDROOMS. ATIACHED GARAGE. YOUR
BANKBOOK WON "! BLINK AN EYE. $37.000

•
•

COMMERCIAL BUILDING localed alon gCourt Sl. mGalli·
polis. 3,500 sq. H. plus 1,200 SQ . It apartment. Call lor
more intormalion. PRICE REDUCE D.

$25.000- NICE 2 STORYFRAME. 3BEDROOMS.LEVELLOT
HAS NICE GARDEN SPACE. CONVENIENT LOCATION INCITY
BETTER TAK E A QUICK LOOK. IT"S PRICED TO SELL FAST1

•
•

NEW LISTING - Compact collage located m Kan auga
Buy a ba~gai n lor $22,500.00.
FOR RENT: Two 2-bed lm. apls., 2nd floor neal golf
course. $175 and $200 plus deposii., ADULTS ONLYII
SEUINC,.-YOOR REAL En ATE IS BIG BtiSINES~ ....
CAU AN EXPERIENCED WOOD REAlTY IALESPEIION
· Cnll Wnfld Rt&gt; .tlty Inc
32 LOC l hl St G.Jliip(Jil',
44 6 1 06G

FOR ADDITONAL INFO .
CONTACT: MR . JIM MISSOURI

••
••
••
••

LAND - APPRO X. 160 ACRESGUY AN TWP.SOME Till ABLE
ROAD F110NTAGE. $50.000. OWNER WILL SPLITLANDAND SB.L
77 ACRESFIY~ $20 rxxl OR 83 ACRE TRACT FOR S:Jl.OOO.
FARM - ROUTE 2L 8 - APPROX . 82 ACRES. 2 BEDROOM
FRAME HOME PLUS MOBILEHOME HOOKUP. BARN. OTHER
BUILDINGS, TOBACCO SASE. $39.000

m
LIJ

AUDRY F. CANADAY. REALTOR
MARY FLOYD. REALTOR. 4-46·3383
25 LOCUST STREET, GALLIPOLIS. OHIO """""'

614 / 469-2232
'

54 Misc. Merchandise

OVERS .OCKED
I

MUST 001

MUST 001
Sectional
28x48, 3 BR, 2 full baths. 6"
walls, utility room, double insulation.

ly Holly Porlc

14x70 2 BR, 1 dlx. bath, sep.
shower, Tip-A-Bay, 6" side·
walls, double insulation .

WAS 126,900

NOW

IY HOlLY PA.

14x70 3 II
I\\ bath , 6'. sidewalls, chapel ceilin&amp;s. furnished.
WAS '16,900

Now

$16,500

1916 Columbia
14x60 2 IR
Front kitchen, bay window
furnished.
'
WAS ' 12,600

Now

$11,300
NEW SECnONAL

Forest Parle Custom
by Holly Parte 21x52
3 BR, 2 full baths, dbl.
insulation, 6" walls.

JUST IMI

1985 Overland Park ·
14x70 2 Br, 1 deluxe batli.
6" sidewalls. dbl. insula:.
tion. glass dinette.
•
WAS $18,995

WAS S19,995

$25,900

1916 Forest Pork

MUST 001

198 5 0¥eiiand Park

1986 Holly Park

NOW

518,700

14x72 3 BR, 2 Boths

. 14r72 3 IR
2 lull bitlis. chapel ceil·
inas, 6.' sidewalls, double
insulation, rumished .
WAS $19.500

Now

$18,995

$17,700·

NOW

1916 Broadmore

1916 O.brd Park

·I
I

REDIJCTION
SALE

Ullity room, chapel ceil·
lnp. dbl. insulation. furnished.
WAS 0 16,900

1916 Holly Park
14x72 2 BR

Dl1. bath, dbl. insulation.
deluxe dinina. 5·· widewalls. furnished.

- JUST 1111

$16,300

Now

$22,900

1916 Columbia

1916 Columbia

1986 Forest Pork

14x70 2 II

14170 3 IR

Footer
•
3 BR. 21ull blths, llf&amp;tlivinc •m.. 6.. sidewalls, lui·
nished.

2 lull blths. stereo, chapel
cellinc. 2 dbl. insulation,
furnished .
WAS '14,600

Now

$)3,995

Now

Gas. Good Condition

$3700
1969 Vindalt 12x60

.523,900

Good Condition
Good &amp; Clean

.

$19,500 ·;;

DOWN WILL "
PUT YOU IN ANY OF OUR"
NEW SINGL£WIDES OR ::
SECnONAl HOfiS. ;:

".

LOCAL FINANCING FOR
GAWA, JACKSON AND :
•
.IGS COUNIIES.

"WHERE QUALITY MAKES THE DIFFERENCE"
547 JACKSON PilE

(6141 446· 72 74

YOU CAN OWN ALITTLE
5acres M/1 on St. Rt 141. """ u""""'Y
has a family 1oom wrt~
lull
basemen(. heat pump, cent air. cGtern. well
and coonty water. Green ~hoot. Call 101 an
appOOirr&gt;!OI.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL- HAS REDUCED
THE PRICE BY $10.000 - 132.9acres m/1. ~
Wa~ul Twp., I \1 &amp;&lt;tY home has 3 Br. bath.
42&gt;94 barn. brge tobacco base Call lor an
appo~trr'&lt;!Ot.

QUALITY IN EVERY DETAIL - 3or 4BR br~k
lllrne offers a 20x«J lam11)' room, 3 baths,
kilchen wilh !'IN; displ.. mcrooave and trash
compactor, d~~g room, intercom system,
central air. 2 car garage, deck and a 20x40
pool. Over $100,000. Call lor appo~tment
loda,.
NICE 8£GINNERS HOME - $22.000 - 3BR
nmch, kitchen, liv~g room. bat~ natural IllS
heal city schoo5. Call toc an appor1tment.
NlW USTING - NEAR NlRTHGALLIA HS Tri~ev~ rome oflers 3 BRs, LR. beth, 24x21
lam i~ room. carpetn&amp; electr~ heal. nicedeck.
altachro garage. Call lor an ap))Oinlment

• .., lUI

•

.
•

THE PRICE ON THIS HOME IN CENTENARY
HAS BEEN REDUCED - Horne lealures 3
BRs. I \1 balhs. equipped kichen.d~elte.cenl.
an. nalu1al gas ~eat co'erd patio. ooattac~ed
garage. Call lor an appontrnenl.
DANVILLE AREA - Close toMei&amp;s Mines
- 67 ac~e s. m/1, n~ce home otlm 3BRs. 2
baths, k1 1c~en w/ DW. d1spl.. double o'en,
1elng., WB sto,e. 22x l2 LR. diningroom.
elec. fu rnace. carpeting. Barn on properly
24x ll w1lh loft Call today tor more mlormation .
LOOK AT THIS!! 10 ACRES M/L ONE YEAR
OLD RANCH - $39.t:!O! - This tome ofters
1584 SQ. tt., 4 BRs. 2 baths. k~choo , tam 1~
1oom. 12x24 LR, dnng1oom. carpeln&amp; e~
BB ~eat, Ande~Sen ther~ropanes. oounty waler.
SW sc~ool d•tri:t. Call today and make an
appoinlmenl to see th5 111e. _

more

YOU'LL LIKE
-3
i
mlmtes hom town on Rt. 141.011-6 fealures
nclude krtc~"' Yoilh range. rel11g., r:tr'l . d• ~and oven. LR wrth lir~lace. bath, lull
basemen!. deck. fenced backyard. gas ~eat.
ceniTal " · clly sc~ool dSr~l.
BRAND NEW DUPLEX - G1al mestmenl klr
lhe buyer located on Graham School Rd.Each
unrt offers2BR. IN~g room. bath. krtchen With
~!1'1~ relr~ . OW and d•PL. laund~ . o1ge
carport, central an and storage area.
GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 35 .:res m/1roost~
lilbb~. 3 miles nort~ ol Rodney. Sprn~ well
and coonl)' water. lenced and cn•s ~n eed.
tobacco base Vel)' mce3 01 4 redroom ranch
sty~ rome wrth krtchro. LR. balh, breezeway,
woodburnmg ftreplace Cal l lor an
appor1trr'&lt;!OI.

ATTENTION FIRST TillE HOME OWNERSr
Th is horne has a lot lo offer for onli
$29.900. frame wtt~ bnck lron t 3 BR s
bat~ . k1lchen .LR. elect heal carpeltng
tached garage Callloday lor an appo'~nr menI
HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED ABUSINESS OF
lOUR OWN?- Th• may be yoor opportumly
Hardware, plu mbing and supply. auto repalf
and gas station 1n &lt;Jle. Garage ~as room for
cars. Ti~ block but~" ~ on comer lol. Call oc
slop by our ltt~e tor mme dela~~ .

i

200 ACRES Mi l . FRONTS ON RACCOON
CREEK - Awrox 65 acres trllab~ and 135
acres woods Comtortabl&gt; two ~ory rome
otletS 4 BRs. balh. krtchro. l••g room.
room, two l•epbces. barn, 2 L!rge screened,
porc~es. love~ qutet settm&amp;

VACANT FARM LAND - MJrgan Twp 84
acres ~roce or less. le,el and r~lmg land.
18.000 - ll ACRES - CHESHIRET'M'. App1o&gt;. 33 acres ti~b~. remander v.oods
NORTH GALLIA ESTATES - Mlrgan Twp.
Vacant land. Sepbc lank on fY~- Cal tor ·
IOOxllO lot. Askng $3.~0 Owner \lilt
mDfe inlof.-.t~n .
ATTENTION INVESTORS!! RENTAL INCOME consKier lnancng
Of $485 PER _,NTH - ASKING PRICE
103 ACRES MIL SPRINGFIELD 111'. - $29.900!- 1.5 oc1es m/1. 5roomsand baih COMMERCIAL - INOUSTRIAL - RESIIDEN·
Appro&gt;. 96 A. tiloble. oldei hollle has 5 BRs, home. 12x65 mobile horre and mob1~ rome TTAL - 50 acres. 100re 01 k5s.
balh, LR, krtchen. counl)' water, 40x00 po~ pad. Call lor more detatls today
Kleal tor irwestrnent or any type,_~11ek1(&gt;111e'nl
bid&amp;. 40x60 tobacco barn. "'~us otl-6
Road frontage oo U. S 35 and
oulbUIIdn~.

PERRY 1WP. - 21.8 acres, m~. ader hollll
ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93 offers 2_8Rs. LR, kilchen, bath, lull basemeot.
""'"""ml\ all woods. Old barn on ll~- ~~m WI~!lei~ rural water ava1~ble. Call

STARriNG

KESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOMES

1 Milt Wtst of Hol•r Hospita~ lt. 3S

.·

JUST ARRIVED :.

$14.995
•

.~...~: 1963 Hill Crest 1Ox60

~·

80

1\\ bath. fireplace. dbl. in·
sulation. chlflal cailinp.
fumished.
WAS '16,600

IN Tow:~US ~!
oome oHers bol~
on Second Ave. I'"
"'
horne has 3 or 4 bedroollli. LR. din~g room.
large kitc~en wrt h panll)' off k~che11, s.-.11
back porch. large lroot porch. lull ~I wrth
plenl)' O[ 100m for garden !nd kills, gas heal
lt1is one today.
unatt.ached one ca1garage. Call today lor an
GREEN TOWNSHIP - 150 acres m/1. approx. appo1n1men1.
40 acres lilbb~. tobacco l:llrn,drNe-lhru shed, MOBILE HOllE FOR SALE - 14x70 Flretwood
metal catt~ barn. Appro&gt;. ~ acre lake oo Broadmore, 2 BR. 2 balt1s. kitchen w/range
propetly.
and rein&amp;. ca1peting 10.11 metal storage,
•
btd&amp; Call lor more details.
THE FAMILY WILL LOVE IT HERE! - Th5
horne oHers 1728 sq. ft .. 3BRs. 1'h bat~s. ~us RESIDENTIAL - COMMERCIAL - OR BOTH!
shower 10 basement, galley krtchen 5 - Very n~e Ink horne located atl25 Thrd
completely equipped. LR. family 100m, dining Ave. has had excellenl careand offetS 1424sq.
room carpeting cenlral alf/heal pump ~ear ft. oiiNing area wrth a lull part•l~ I~Gred
deck · overlooks Raccoon Cleek. Call ~r an basemml. Also features a carport. woclo;lllp
appointment today.
anc a 28x38 concrele bklck commerc•l type
bid&amp; Wllh 3 bays lormerly usro as an
automotive repalf shop. Call ill more
M/L HARRISON TWP .• CLAY UCK nlormatim.
- Rolling land, w~l on ~operty, barn
ADDISON TWP. - 'Aprox 7 miles from
tobacco base. Call lor more delai~.
Gallipolis, 39\\ acres mDfe or k5s. fron~ 111
township road. All woods and brush. $8,900.
COMI~£RCIIALBU ILDING - PERRY 1WP.- 600JSQ. H.steel b~&amp; . deal lor CENIAALLY LOCATED - GR((N 1WP. in truckng dlillingor m n~g bl5~ess. 22.11 ACM/L w~h frontage on St. Rl. 141 and
.-.y conside1leasmg or l~a1cl1&amp; Call Neighbolhood Rd. Also adpins Sanders H1ll
more inlo1mation.
Subdo. O..ner fnancng avaioble. Call llr
nlOfe delai~.

REDUCED 10 $55.000 - O..ner
lo Iarm. ucel~nl~ klcalro 3 BR brick
Mills Vil~ge. Oll'&lt;!r lealures mc~de
. equipped krtc~en. 1~ balhs, full
lbasen181t, 10x20 co'eroo patio. vel)' m:e fbi
fenced backya~d. Make an app01nlrnenl losee

CLOSE TO lOWN - Nice one sillY home
lealuring k~chen. m LR, family room, d~ ng
1oom, luU basernmt. carpeti1&amp; gas heal ct;
water, 2 car unattached bbcll Jlra&amp;t

.
RACCOON CRE£K l«lM£SITE - OOe!S I
wimmi1&amp; OO.Iing and f5~n&amp; Lo1 s~e ~ BRING YOUR HAMMER &amp;NAIISI -I ~ &amp;&lt;tj
OOx600 and has etectr~. water tapand s~lk home located at 62 Lmcoln reeds some work.
Full basemool. clly water, ct; schoo~.
In~ Call lor more dela15.
$13,000.

�"

...

.. . ,.

'

'

. "' ...

Page-0-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
61

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 315 Wilt Jackson, Ohio .
814·288-1461 .
·
MnMy Ferguson, "New Holland,
Bulh Hog Sal• &amp; S•rvice . Over
- 40 Ulld tractonto choou from
• complet• Una of new I 1.11~
;

. 1l'j11)Mffi'i1
~ ~

B

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

ijl THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

·~ ~

by Henri Arnold and

Gllhl grinder ml._.r, New Holland

Unscramble these four Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to lorm
four ordinal) words.

7 ft . 1'18Vblnd. Allll Chalmers, H
1M crop pul type oomb~lt- All

uc cond. 304·273-4.l11.·

Ir--::-..,..,,.,...---,

lnternatton• 544 O...trKtor,
' exc: cond, 304-273 -4211.

equlp!Nflt. lltgllt selection In

HE HADTO
l..lt&lt;:E

WO~K

A H0 ~:5E I!I!.CA U ~S
HIS 1!10~ WA~
lA(.II/A~~ POING TH 15.

Real Estate General

HOUSE FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE

Now arrange the circled letlers to
form the surprise answtf. as s~.~g­
gested by the above cartoon

Answerhere:"[

Answer: The wit ch ended up here after she did thia FLEW OFF THE HANDLE

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

1·(61 4) -992 -3325

WHY
TliE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TEll THE
WHOLE WORLD?
Ask Younelf this Question-'lhln Ust With lh
•Willis T. Leadingham. Realtor . Ph. Home 446-9539

PH. OFFICE 446-7699

MINI -FARM -Appro&gt; 36
acres. 3 bedroom home. 2
car garage. pond. and pasture $4 5.000 00
POMEROY - N•ce level lot
wrth a large 2 story home
Has 8 room s. 3 bedrooms.
huge lam•lv room . donong
room and a lull ba sement
$27.900 00
LONG BOTTOM - II vou
need lots of space lor a
growrn g lam rlv lh1 s 7 room .
4 bedroom homers lor you
S1tuated on a 1 acre lot, 1!
has a lu ll basement den.
and l1 replace Own er needs
to sell and wrll consrder any
reason able offer
POMEROY - No straon on
you r buget to hea t thrs wmter' Th rs mobrle home wrth
e&lt; pando has a woodburner
to warm all'3 bedrooms Gar age w1th workshop Large
fenced lot Frurt trees, garden space $1 8.000 00
FIVE POINTS AREA - A 3
bed room ranch home on approxrmately \\ acre lot. Includes drshwasher. range,
hood Electric B.B. heat.
Garage. Give us a call.
$31 ,90_!1.00
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.
992-6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Turner 992-5691

AlB
IUIIOR

Chevnaltt AHdiiOIM worll. CaU

SPLIT LEVEL HOUSE wit•.

1e7e Chevy PU oe10. 1811-4

11. . Chew Ble . No Sundl¥
.-... 114·•1·1124.

114-317-0141 .

Dodga Cha'll• Sholby 1980 Chevy Citation V· l .
100 lo'l!Orounrl-ofhoy 020 11113
Edkion. tm-tm OIIIIM. rtdlo. 1&amp;,000
mi.... auto .. good tlrH.
• .,... Of voeu ... ,.... At.o
14,000 mlloo. 04.1110. Colt Call 114-441-M82.
63
Livestock
1quar-. ..... 11 .21 11. Call 114-441-7307- uo.
114-:ltll-1411afterl.orolldoy
1171 Monte Carto. 1uto.. air
wwkendl.
1171 Font LTD 2, high mllaaga, cond
., vinyl top. Good tlrn 1nd
Guill ted , polltd, Buffalo· Miktld hay 1 .
Nit, Euy
Sl,_t thepe. 1100. Cell 114- body. Call441-8037.
1
00
1
Htrefo«&lt; bul. Appro•. 11&amp;00 lba. - a. Calll14-371-2171 .
441-1183 boloro12 noon.
G.-.tlt. 1745 . AIIO, fi'HIIf bHf.
114-742-3114.
1t71 PlymoUih YoiiMI Sc. .p 2 1871 VW IHttt need• motor.
ChNp hay wtM trtdt for ctttle. dr., 311 motor. r.dlal tk'M. AC, n5o. Coli 814-441-8580.
Coli -IPM. I14-448-10U. Pl. grwn color, V·8 . c-11
Mult Mll-1113 Chevy Chevettt.
814-241-111188.
64 Hay&amp; Grein
4 op .. dark blua, dntad
Ear com for- - C.ORI14 -143windows, good condition .
5211.
1181 0ttt1 88 Royalt Brough· prlc..:l low. CtiiJimtt 81 4 -992·
::--:---:--:--:-~ - le­
men 2 dr., AT, PS. P door lockl.
Hey tor Mit. 814·992·5388.
For ult:good mil lid conditioned A¥. maroon lnsld•out, AM ·FM 7172.
hoy. N.__ - -014-742- CMMtt•. b.c:ett.nt condition. - - - - - - - --lc~----:----:----:-----,--:- -lc1978 Chwy lmptlll. 400 entl··
Hay for ute. Square HI• of 2331 .
High mltaaga. 03,985. Call
good coftdltion. •eoo. 81 4 ·
mix«f hay. 81 4 -98!·3901.
114-441 -1010.
881·42H alt. I p.m.

3 bedrooms. 2 co,ltlt·

b1th1, dlnin1 room, viii•
room Mid 11111 rtcrNiioit
room. Loe~ted on lacrn:
Lar~t firm pond. Rlclnt
1111.

2 STORY HOUSE In Racine.
nur Eltmtniii'Y School:·
HOUSE with 3 be~
rooms on corner lot in 5'1riCust.

HOr.l NATIONAL
BANK
949-2210

m
::.
IJ1 .,

w

REALTOR"

NEW ON THE MARKET
Ideal home lor lamrly: 7rooms. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. modern·
krtchen N1ce landsca ped lot. County water an d sewer. Crty
school dtslrtcl Call lor mo1e mformat1on N1ce home
#630

26'x22' garage. storage bu1ldrng. storm wrndows and doors.
Nrce home close to Hotze• Hosp1tal . Now ooly $34,900. See rt
now
#570
BRI CK HOME - 25 ACRES
In country 7 rooms, 4 bathrooms. 2 baths. heat fl'Jmp . Steel
doors. double glass roll wrndows. countr y krtchen wrth lots
and lots of cab•nets Full basement. lonrshed. Out srde burld·
rngs one 8'i xl8 '. one 9'1!2'. one 9'112'. 18 assorted hurt
trees Many of her leatures See rt no w Only S59 .900.
11642
RAN CH STYLE- 3 BEDROOMS - 1\\ ACRES
On Sta te Hrghway 160. 3 ga rages to garage 4 ca rs I\\ ac res
MI L. rural water. wrndow arr conditroner. lull basemen t,
Iron! porch . storm doors and thermopane wrndows. Home
less than 10 yrs old Prrced to sell qurck. Only $29,900.
H647
COUNTRY STYLE HOME
In very good condrt1on Corner lot. appro&gt; I ~ acres level
land Metal barn 45 &lt;45 '. Broom home. J bedrooms. 2 bat hrooms. appro&lt; 1750 sq It ollrvrngs pace. mod krtchen. lireplace. basement. rural water system Fam1fy type home
close to wade sc hool Phone now lor apporntment
#633
SWIMMING POOL IN GROUND
Block ba sement started - mobrle ho me p~d - 2 sep hc tanks.
Rural water system Colu mb us and Southern Ohro flectnc .
large level lot Would you lrke to burld your own home' Basemen I already blocked up See l hrs propert y now'
11639
OWNER FINAN CING - HANDYMAN SPECIAL
Make us an offer 8 room home rn Heatley Add rtron to Bid well 4 bedrooms. burlt-m cabrn ets, dbl. s/s srnk. shrngle
roo f. wood or coal hea ter. appletrees. srde porch. rural water
system Call us now

#621
GREAT LOCATION FOR A NEW HOME
Sprrng Valley Subdrvision Two large lots. Each lot IS 101.8 by
17 1.2. Crty water . crty sewer and natural gas are available.
Specral lhrs week Call now.
~56

LUXURIOUS
Country estate wrth J lndiana stone fireplaces. rn clu dingone
rn a master surte. 4 BR total. 21\ baths. 11 2 acres more or
less. Just short drstance from Gallipolis. Thrs custom buill log
home fea tures nearly 2700 SQ . ft . of beautifully decorated
and well planned living. Stunning li vrng and dining area w~h
beautrlul hardwood floor s. The lovely kitchen is fully
equrpped and desrgned lor conven rence. Central heating
and air. Attached garage. Includes 5 room caretaker

,

·lc-

•eao.

114-742-2178

aftor

5:00 .

c•••

446-6610 .

CUSTOII SLAUGHTER HOUSE - Approx. 2 years
old. Buitt according to state code, state mspected.
Includes all eQuipmant, mobtle home space.
Owner financing pos~ble. Call today!
.. .
81.... REDUCED! - $34,000 - OWNER READY TO
DEAL - Well maintained large family room with
woodbumer, living room , 2 bedrooms, bath, deck,
alum. siding, concrete dri~e.

OWNERS SAID SELL!! - l4'x1o' mobile home
extra nice. Situated at a state highway'

CARRY OUT- OWNER WANTS ADEAL- Equipment and inventory included in sale.
I
N985
COIIIIERCIAL - INVESTMENT - Commercial
building and 40 acres more or less, located SR 35
and SR 7.

WELL CARED FOR- Si~ roomi and bath built-rn
krtchen, includes appliances. Drvrded ba'sement.
Price reduced . )29,900.
N984

24U.

: 1177 CadiUtc Stville. make 1n

- offer; 304-17&amp;-6H1 .

POSSIBLE LOAN ASSUMPTION - lO yr old
brick and frame br- level. 3 bedroom. I ~ bath,
lamrly room, garage. 5 acres. Only $48,000.00.
H$1039
NEAR TOWN - ONLY $45,000 - Attractivebrick
&amp;~in yl ranch. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 fireplaces.
linrshed basement, 2 car garage. central air and
more.
Wl012

WAITING FOR YOU - IMIIEDIATE POSSESSION
- Five rooms, bath. enclosed sunporch .lull base·
ment, ooe car garage. located upper Second Ave.
$36.500
U067
UNMATCHED VIEW - lovely ~ew r:A the rrver. 3
bedrooms. 21o bath s, aHractive oak ftoors, 2WB fireplaces. central air. $69.500.
*1043
31 ACRES - 4bedroom remodeled home, mobrle
home space, road frontage Owner will consider
trad ing lor smaller home.
*1058
HUNTER'SHEAVEN - 54 acres of land located rn
Huntington Twp. 42 acres wooded and 12 acres
bottom land. Pnced to sell at $16,000.

11918

304-176-1146.

'

Services

Trucks for Sate

•·"73

81

Homo
Improvements

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

BASEMENT

"' 196$ ' Church but for Hie, 51
'~" ·PPttng..-, UOO . CaU 814· 441·
: !M71 or 814-448· 1080. Maybe
.: uen M Rodney Church of God.

• 'ized insldt end out, wiU consider
~ 'trad•. Asking U ,OOO.OO out: right. 304·882 ·3796.

: 1976 Dodge vtn , 318 engine,
.;. n..ts body wort , runs good .
• ,Will trade for truck. 304·773-

• 5873.

: 74

WATERPROOFINO

Unconditional lifetime guaran -

'Locel r.tnnoes fumlthtd .
Fr• estimates. C1U collect
1·614·237-0UB. day or night .
RGgtrt Btsement
tH.

Wtterproofing .

Home Improvements, finishes
Clrptntry. Call 61 4·446·3231

or B14 -44B -a683.

J .and L lnatalhrtion . Roofing ,
vinyl siding, storm doors and
w indowt. Free estimates . Call

614-992-2772.

Following the habits of a bridge lifetime, South called for dummy's 10 of
hearts after the opening_ l~ad of the
nine. East covered with the queen and
declarer won the ace. Now a diamond
was led to the 10, won by East's king.
East played the 10 of spades. Declarer
won the king. played to dummy's ace
of diamonds and tried the jack of
clubs. When declarer finessed, West
gathered in the club king and continued with the heart eight. There was
now no way to avoid losing three heart
tricks. These, added to the two minor
suit kings, resulted iii down one.
The right play involves suppressing
your natural bridge instincts. At Irick
one you must play low from dummy.
The play will then go just as before,
but the difference becomes apparent
when West wins his club king. Now
continuing. the eight of hearts only
provides partial success. East can win
one heart trick when the jack or I 0 is
played from dummy, but there is no
way to take two more tricks in the suit
right away. Declarer will score two diamond tricks, one heart, three clubs
and three spades to make his contract.
You'll be successful in these situations if you use the "what if" rule.
First ask yourself, " What if I play the

.. Harley D1vid10n 79 Clusic. full
,. dfHS, ti,OOO . Cell 614·643·
.
: -2503.

WEST

EAST

U&amp;52
.9 8 3
t8643

+10 9 7
.KQ1B

fit H .

2464.

FeHy Tree Trimming, stump
removtl. Clll304 -876-1331.

SOUTH
+A KQa

NEED FOUR BEDROOMS - I ll story home,
located on St. Rt. 160. $34,900.

~1000

OWIIERS !lOVING OUT OF STATE - Lovely 3or 4
bedroom tri-levvel on 4.7 acres near Bob Evans
Farms. Has fireplace, woodburner, 2 baths, family
room. 2 car garage.
81086
NEW LISTING -A GOOD QUIET PLACE TO LIVE
- A-frame, wooded setting, 3 bedrooms, I ~
baths, woodburner. Priced lf $24,900.

#1085

CAN1 BEAT THE PRICE - 3 bedrooms, living
room, dining, family room with-fireplace, \\ mrle
from city. $39,900.
N987
ON THE RIVER - Nice big farm house, 7 acres
more or less of river bottom, lots of road fron tage
on SR 7.
81087

ACREAGE - 72 ac res more or less. Approx. 60
acres pasture and woods, some tillable. Located l
mile off SR 7. $28,000.

+A Q&amp; 5
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

Nortb Eut

PUI
Pass

3+

U038

LOTS- Nice 100' lots lor $3,500 each, 13 miles
from Holzer Hospital. Owner will land contract.

Paos

NElli LISTING - ATOUCH OF CLASS -like new
brick and frame ranch, 1527 sq. ft ground level,
wooded lot, approx. 10 acres, 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, ca rpet througltout. Call lor more details to-

day'
FARM - 147.5 acres, solid 2 story frame house,
3 barn s, lots of pasture land. )5 acres timber.
some machinery rncluded . Owner wants an offer.
#1076
$26.000.00 - 14'x75' llobile Homa - I \\
baths 2 bedrooms, formal dining area, complete
with kitchen appliances. Private location.

Stlrks Tree and L1wn SeMc• .
landsc1ping. 304-576·201 0.

OWNER HAS LEFT AREA - Mu st sell th rs i ~
story 4 bedroom, I \\ bath home. Good garden
area. Large lawn. $29.500.00.
*888

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine

875-2080 or 875 -7318.

Molt wells completed same day.
Pump sales and 1ervica . 304·

896 -3802

Phone 814-446·3888 or 114446 -4477

bperlenced ctfPenter and gener•l holM repairs, Ptull&lt;nisley.
304-895 -3992 No Sunday

Roofing, til kind• ilutalled or
repaired . lnlurlld , fret esti ·

veers experience. un11op dr1ins.

matu. Phone 304 ·523-351 7 or

304-582 -6200.

Real Estate Ganeral

New -remodeling -raptir work .
Phone 304-882-2012 .

NEW LISTING- VINYL SIDING RANCH - I yr.
old . 3 bedrooms, l \\ baths, kitchen with eating
area, living room, utility room . FA elec. heat. storage building. Nice lot
N2004
NEW LISTING - HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL - 4
bedrooms, la_rge garage, I ~ acre. Located at
Mitchell Rd. $29,700.

Nl095
55 ACRE FARM. SR 141 AREA - Ooublewrde
home wrth 3 .bedrooms, 2 baths. lrvrng room,
krtchl!l wrth drntng area, co~ered patio. Bam, 2
sheds, land mostly pasture. Includes range, refrig.,
WKldow arr unrt.
#1096

Judy DeWitt
J. Merrill Carter
Becky Lane
Jim Cochran

Virginia Smith
Phyllia Loveday

Liz Long
!0 llm.1 Ct'ntul')' 21 Real EstaU.' Corporation IS lMJ!it.ef rur tht M.f.

Broker
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor

®and' - tradtmark&lt;or Century 21R!•' Estate Corporation. Equal HoosiorgOpporlunil f til
EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPHIATEil

388-8166
379-2184
446-0468
446-7881
388-8826
446-2230
876-3968

;:',~;f·aft~~h~~a~;e ~~rr~:; tull basement,
#1015
GEORGES CREEK ROAD - For salt Of rent - 3
bedroom ranch on o~er ll acre, less than I mile
off Rt. 7. Garage, electric heal, Kyger Creek
Schools. $32,500.
·
*1028
NEW LISTING - EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO .
START HOUSEKEEPING - Well cared for 60xl2
mobile home, 2 or 3 bed rooms, large living roont:
new refrigerator, 2 ceilrng fans, stove. washer and ·
dryer, plus lots more. Priced for quick sale at :
$7,250.00.
#2005

work £.lOr vou ,. ':=
Put lllr..T..
·-her
1
to
J.-,Wll
J
• :
,

84

84 Central American

ACROSS

22 Afrtcan river

STAY FOIIVII

I!U

NICI CIIOP 1AitD &amp;WOODED ARIA
90 ac m/l mal! Raccoon Creetlto
l~e

south, State Route to the north.
good larm I W~ d ml and west. No
blllldinas. Good IOU IIOn to bwld All
mntrals 1ncluded. Pnced a1

i!48

SUPIR lOCAIIOff TO START

Yoo woll'l go wrong w~h this 3 BR

AuthentiC old·brld ranch located 1n
lown Wtlh I -ing"s ~leW Ol ltle Ctly
and Ol11o Ri~er Va lley. Has llrte
buulllut FR wrth fir!pllct, 21ull ce·
ramt baths 8eau11lully decorated
and melleru care 2 ~:~ r garage.

hom! wtlh maint enance f r~ sidmg.
Great loCatiOn tl ~ou ti~e the co~Jntry
bul sil l want a fefll ne~~bofS. Nice
krtchen I ur garage. Ntte fli t rsrd.
S40's

1107

!66 C. Mi l. FARI
WeH located on Rodney-Htrnsburg

169.500.

MIDDlEPORT RENTAl PIOPEIIT

Will USII~ OIY l011tsell. ThiS tle ln 2
8R '1 stor~ home tin pos~1ve ush
fklw Mrttell II over rt. lotlltd on
Beech Street. 1!15 very convent!!nllo
mryth1nc. Cal us, you'll see what
At mean . PriCed at $18,900.
I !II

1206

Road. l a r ~ older bri ck and lrame
home. lhree la rge barns tor hlr tnd
IOI&gt;ICCO lbase of WI lbs-1- Very
good water su pp~ o( s pr~ngs , stream
and l))nd~ Rural wal!r an ilab!e.
Good crop 1rea. pastu re. wooded
area. Ca ll lor more inklrmatllln. Re-

duced lo $100.000.

•HIGHER MORTGAGE RATES

23 Card suit : pl.
24 Relation of
harmony
26 Hailed
28 Runs easily
29 Maturo
30 Painful spot
32 Around
33 Separate
34 Chrnese pagoda
35 Warbled
37 Exhausted
39 Illuminated
40 Father
41 Negate
42 Redact
44 Figures of speech
46 Worthless
47 Pulverized rock
48 Plow th rough
mud
50 Preached
52 Declared
53 Football pos.
55 Shakespearian
king
57 Lithium symbol
58 Keen
59 Great bustard
60 Perform
62 Part of circle
.64 Narrow opening
66 Babylonian deity
68 Latin conjunclion

WHAT HAVE YOU GOT TO LOSE IY WAinNG nLL SI'IIJIG??

69 Semi-precious

* HIGHER PRICES * PAYING THE LANDLORD

slone

70 Church bench
71 German tiUe

73
75
77
78
80

Terrified
Zero
Spoken
Beef mug
Hurry

81 River in Germany
82 Harvesters

and bath. Recel'll.-, rehnrshed 1n·
!Ide. l mmed~ate posStssron Holdmg

II $49.900.

0309

lVIII EEl UNWANTIO!
ThiS house does. 3 BA vm,l sided
home I'* m 1 1e~ west o! town. IllelUdes DR, eal·m krlchen . r\11 41s
ne1t, bl sement, larte room upstairS.
2 l))tchu. plus ~ ac. yl!d. lmmedrate posses,sllln. Etsrly allordabk!! at
$34.900
•221
IYCOOIIAIE

24•48 block bu ~dlng on Oll! · lh lt~
n re lot by the title. Good locat+On
for bart/ladle shop lnckldts diS ·
pl1y cases. some tackle and fiShrnJ
111!11. OWNER W!IHS IT SOlrn !!I·

ing$20,000.

•m

II ACIIS OF ~!CAll LAID
Jusl 2 n'ilfs north ot Rto Gramie 1usl

off PleaSIIll Valley Rd. Mostly tree

.,

covered,Good r01d lron11Jfl.Count~
water mHiblf. As•inl SJ5.000.

STANDING TIMBER

SUNDAY PUZZLER

19 Rumor

NO-WIS THE Tl ETO BUY

HISIOI!Cil BIICI Hlllll
Con~enll!nllcCI!Ion to sc hOols and
downlcwn aret. On 65c l25 lot. 5
rooms dow11 and blth. l roomsup

Bidwell , Ohio
ALSO BUYING

814 -441-8840.

21 Antlered animal

LOWEST Interest Rates Since1979

mo

Bidwell Rodney Rd .

A-1 Refrigerttion &amp; Appli1net
Repair, washer &amp; dryer. Ctll

14 Thicket

139.500.

! ~ stor~ ~tome . U:celent starter
llomt Includes remodeled ~li c hen
and INmg room, 3 tedroom s, bJth
and tun basemerlt located rn Cente
nary on a mc eflat lot. 't'oo"d be sur
pr iSed 11 how easy 111s tobuy Puced
~ ·~' ,, $33.000

Gary &amp; Delores Mi1chell

A &amp; M Furniture "Manufacturing.
St. At. 7, Crown City , Oh. Cell
814· 268· 1470, call Eve. 614448 - 3438 . Old I new
Uphonered.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Real Estate General

LOTS - l acre lots located in Addison Twp.
Situated in a wooded area with restrictions.Hurry!
#1049

$18,500 - Starter Home or Investment property_
1~ story frame. 3 bedrooms. bath , natural gas.
N989
NEAT RANCH - 2 bedrooms. large livin groom , li-

1833.

Jr. owner.

affect ion

o4 DRs. J lull b1ths 1hiS SPRING VAllEY hOme 1ms1s Mom will love the

little

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1 l e3 Sec. Ave.. Gallipolis.
814-448-7833 Of 614 -446 -

footart, drilltWIVI. ltptic tankt,
ltndiCtplng . CtU tnytlmt 114IWI -4637, Jam• L. Davison,

1 Winged
6 Grate
10 ObJect of

e1y l1m ~, m~ber to enl(ly. ut look
no further Evtr)body w1H efi!OY the

Va ~ntrne's Day wrth !Ills

367-7560

LARGEST FIREWOOD
PRODUCER IN GALLIA
COUNTY
WE ACCEPT HEAP VOUCHERS
And Communitr Ad ion Orders
$25.00-U-Pick-up
135.00-Pick-up (Del,.ered)
1 100.00-Dump Truck
(Oolivered)
1200.00-0ump Truck
1Delivered I
125 .00-per ton
(Commercial Sales!
GOOD HARD WOOD - Cut at
any lencth needed
Phone: 388-9031

Cltrk Plumbing tnd Hut ing, 18

C. WALKER

~

lh"

VIDEO PICTURES
TAKEN OF
WEDDINGS' AND
SPECIAL EVENTS.

MITCHEU'S FIREWOOD
PROCESSOR

Gallipolis. Ohio

#1064

#1025

Yin1on, Oh.
Houro: Mon.-Sat .
a o.m.-5 p.m.
Wed.: Noon-5 p.m.
PH. 245-5161 -311-9370

Good· 1 Excl'leting. ba..mentl.

muon. Plinter. roofing Unclud·
tng hot ttr application) 304-

TAlE a IIIUTE AND YOU'll

COMMERCIAL - RESTAURANT - Seat•ng lor
54, repeat customers. mobrle home space included .

It I. 32 5 ond 160

•ltu NEWSPAPER INTIJU'Ra .usN.

Nt~ILI.IIIII ...... "'-·

home would make a good starter home. Large
lamily-livrng room combination, new fireplaces,
lots of pri ~acy. located off Georges Creek Rd. Call
today and make an offer.
#1044

ISAAC'S FEED STOlE

jack, covered by the queen, and West
later gains the lead and comes tbrough
with the heart eight'" U the answer to
that question doesn't please you, then
ask, "What ill don't play the jack?" U
you like the aMwer to the second
"what if" better, you will probably
play low and make your contract.

BROK~R

W201

11

Opening lead: • 9

Aot1ry or cable tool drilling .

liS HAlO TO FINO
Ahouse tht offers sornethllll tor e~ ­

#960

Sorollo
2NT
3.
Pass

Pw
Pw

SNT

WE ARE
IN HOME SALES IN GALLIA CO.

attuct1ve ut-mkrtchen and tormal
dmmg room : dad 1 1 1 rll en,::.y building
a heart warm1ne life m the 2 Ire·
pl~ee s mlilt lamrly room and lrvm g
room and the kl:l s 1 1 11H make lots of
M llll lrrends etch summer •llh tilt
rn pourld ~w rmm1ng pool SfOP look·
rn 1 and slarl pleasrne $87.500

Upholstery

tQ95

THIS PRICE II SIGHT-- Nice formal ranch, f '
bedrooms, ath, large krtchen,li~ing room. Close to .
town, city schools. $22,000.
Nl06.

FARM LAND - 62 acres of line clean land. 2
ponds.
UOL6

87

.AZ

ri.nced carpenter. 1lectrician,

Real Estate General

'

Dump trucking . Coal end
limeetone . Deli..,ery Service .
304-875·3190 .·

+au

+Kz

&amp; Heating

Improvements

cant.

E. M. WISEMAN,

K 7%

Sc•n i •·• •s

~::;::;::::;:;;:;;:;;::;;::~r--------­

It-:========::-r-;;::~~~~~~~.,.~~7.==;:=---~~1
82
Plumbing
83 Excavating
304-57&amp;-2398 or 8t4-448 - 81
Home

RINGLES 'S SERVICE, e~~:plt"

Motorcycles

ICen' s W1ter Service. Wells.
cisterna. pools filled . Phone
814 -367 -0823 Of 614 -367 ·
1741 night Of day.

Wtugh ' a Water Service. Wall a.
cisttml, pools. F111 , reliable
HMce. Call 614 -256 -1240 or
8,. ·256· 1130 . Reuonable

t

Rusi rw s!"!

House
on RCA,Servic
Ou111r,
RON ' Scalls
Television
e.
GE. Sooclali"g ;, zen~h . Call

IIS1008 ·

#1065

m26

17ft. 1969 DeCamp cemper,
1i.ep1 6, 811C COnd, S1, 100 .00 .

&amp;·1·11

• J 10 54
t A J 10
• J 10 9 7

VACANT LAND- 97 acres more or less. $25,ooo.·i.,

FAMILY ORIENTED - $69,900 - 4 or 5 bedroom In-level. approx. 8 years ~d . 3 baths, 2 car
garage, lamrly room. forma l drning room. Situated
on 4\\ acres
PRICED TO SELL - Bnck illd vrnyl , 3 bedroom
ranch. Southwestern area.

&amp; Campers

446-3644
. _,. .

REDUC:ED TO
new inside and out
home. All at a prrce you

SAFE NEIGHBORHOOD - Brick and frame trilevel, 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, 2 car garage, famil y
room . $59,900.
*1057

79 MotDrs Homes

. ana. 304 -875-1295.

be-

NORTH

+o

By James Jacoby

: 1971 Buick Eleetr• 225, 466
, engin•. body txc. runt good.

: 72

7&amp;1 t -

REAL ESTATE
SCENIC VIEW- 2.8 acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
family room wnh fireplace. full finished basement, deck. scenic view.
UOIO

IN TOWN LOCATION - 2 story home, 3 bed·
rooms. l \\ baths, family room, natural gas heat.
Pnced rn the 40s.
•
#1073

814 -388-9884.

Stop to ask
"what if"

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-7

General Hauling

Jam11 Boy• Weter Service. Alao
pools filled . Cell 614 -258 -1141
or 614·446 -1175 or 614 -446 -

WISEMAN

S21.500 - 3 bedroom frame and aluminum
sided ranch. l ~ car garage. city schools.
Nl019

PRIVATE LOCATION - 10 yr. old mu~i- level
home, 4 bedrooms. 92 acres, barn, cellar, tobacco
base. $48.500
#1078

1976 ChrJy C-30· 1 -ton dual
WhMI truck, 3&amp;0 ,.spd. 19861H
1 tOn dUll whQI 8 cyt.. 4tpHd .
Both run good. OU\Itr 150 trtctot.
2 new Urn, new blt1. Call

. ...... 14,210 00. 304-875 ·

COMMERCIAL PROPEIITY- State approved metal building, concr~te floor, heated. water. restroom, lot ~ze 55'xll0'. Located in city limrts .
Presently used as garage and wrecker service, · ;
extra lot optional.
U003

DWIIERS BEIIIG TIANSFERREO -Must
immaculate modular home. 3 bedrooms with walk-in closet, 2 large baths, kitchen complete with
dishwasher, family room, li~ing room, formal dining area, central air, large deck, 18'x:Jj' ~ - ground
pool, pond, approx. 3 acres. Call 101' more details.
81066

86

AutD Parts
&amp; Accessories

1979 T·lird. 57.000 mll11. One
• owntr, aar.;tlcept. show room
• copditlon. All ICCIIIGfill , tht

: '1979 Ford Super Van, cunom·

SOUTHERN- HILLS R.E .. _INC.

76

' 1971 l'tnto, run• good. NMda
• paint.
or Hl1 oH.,.

.. .AC, cruiae. PS. PB, 12.200.00.
~ -304· 882 · 3237after 6 :00.

#1002

WANTS YOtll HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT rr TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOr.IONE. CAll US!!

Ca11114-182-2179.

: ·:=n· =.-::s-cou-t-::4,-:4-.A-:-M-::·-::F-:-M---:8-t-ra-ck,

$30,500.00 -Owners need larger home. 2 bedrooms, lg. kitchen, dinrng or family room. located
rn crty. Make offer.
Nl013

~19

SOMEO~

' 11.71 Ford F250, 4x•. 4 inch lift
: ldt 1h38. aroundhwg tires.

' .1976 Oodga Van , AM -FM
' -cusette, c1rpet, ice bo~~: , new
:-paint. 1'8Ctilll, 81.000.00. 304·
•'882-3237 alttr 5:00.

U080

NEAR SHOPPING CENTER - 3 bedroom frame
home with an extra lot. Priced in the 20s.
Nl040

3.2 ACRES WITHIN II MI. OF GALLIPOLIS
Also 8 room home. up Ia 4 bedrooms 11needed, whrte vrnyl
srdrng ino upkeep). nat gas forced arr furnace. c1 ty water,
large block oaraoe luo to 4 carsl . noce heated large greenhouse. all of thrs plus apples. pears. chernes. plums and
peach trees In Galhpol•s and Green Twp Be the lrrst to see
all ollhrs
#644

: Broughem. tuto .. Y· B. pt. pb,
lir, Cl\lilt. VQC. 114·992·&amp;085
1ft. I p.m .

otftr. Call 114-448-9219
_to~ 8PM.

EXCELLENT LOCATION- Brick ranch wrth 1.25
acre lawn. 3 bedrooms. large bath, t car attached
garage_
11072

REDUCED $5,000
FREE NATURAL GAS
42 ACRES IN COUNTRY
140 ACRES
5 rooms. remodeled home. Approx. 10 miles from Galliooe floor . bath. lront porch . polrs - lots of Raccoon
Drrlled well wrth electrrc Cree k frontage - approx
pump. Pan ~ed walls, car pet- Ill acres trllab le and torngand llno. Hurl'j Nowooly bacco base. Nrce 40'x60'
prrced at $21.900
barn 6 rooms. 3 BR'home
#635 wrth free natu rat gas to heat
~our ho me r~ w1n ter and
coo k your food . l ots ot lrurt
trees. Nrce cou ntry setting.
See thiS one.

·n · Autos for Sale
.
' 1982 Cutl111 Supremt

' -1914 GMC truck, t300 or bttl

11999

Ntce home centrl atr , ru ral wate r system, large lam1ly ro om,

POMEROY,O .
992·2259
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy
- Secluded and pmate. I ~
story. 3 bedroom home on
large lot. GasGA heat also In sulated. Patro. $29.000.00

02.110. Col 114·:111 ·1131.

n.sao.

1177 FOfdWindowvan

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

..

REAL ESTATF ·
FOR SALE

SUPER BUY! - 2 story, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, upstarrs could be a possible rental.

1.57 ACRES - 7 ROOMS

E. Mcun

For .... hey ,...,., Wit rtd dover

RNI Ettale General

\

Real Estate 1111ro• ·

Reel Estate General

Concord DL wogon. 1118. AT.
m~ny "traa. MW d,.., mutt
0111. ClriiU-448-7804.

• or"'ord , .... mllced. Clrll 71
Autos for Sele
304-411S-11 7.
--------AH.tf•-ordlft gqn tt.y. ht,
2nd .. !rd . cun6nr.. 11 .10·

Aulot for Sale

the
golden touch.

TEAFORD[H

Housing
Headquarters

71

I I .111 '- 11 111 1.111111 1

1Yesre•·Oay·s I Jumbles AGONY FLAME DELUXE WHALER

Real Estate General

We listen To Your Real
Estate Problems.

Hey lo G111ln

(Answ9fs Mondayl

Real Estate General

NEW LISTING - One II.
older home next to Pomeroy
Elem. School. 3 BRs, I ''
baths, ran ge. refrigerator.
nat. gas fA lurnace, two l ear garages &amp; workshop
$32,000.
SALEM CENTER AREA - 5
Acres. modern 4 BR home. 2
baths. woodbu rmn g lireplace. elec. B.B heat with a
wonderlul country VIew
RUSTIC HILLS - Rea l mce
3 BR ran ch. lg_front porch.
garage. woodburnmg umt.
ublily rm., carpetmg &amp; lg
lot.
POMEROY - Modernrzed 3
BR home at a reasonable
pnce &amp; low heat brll. Insulated, 1'7baths, range. relngerator, basement &amp; tg
lot.
BUILDING OT - Overlook mg Ihe beaut rful Oh ro Valley
RUSTIC HILLS - 7 rm.
ranch . lg. famrly rm wrth
woodburnmg fireplace. 11;
bat hs. dmrng, dbl. pane wm dows &amp; h•gh lot.
RACINE - 3 BR lrame, au tomatrc coal stoker. carpet
rng, 8 rms.. for fam1l y and
extra lot.
HANDYMAN - Chance ol2
rentals m thrs one Just
$6.000.
MIDDLEPORT - Want an1ce
o~er home near schools &amp;
stores? 6 rms, d1mng. gas fur nace. lg. lot and garage
MIDDLEPORT - 2 BRs
near stores. one floor small
home. Gas heat, etc.

64

X JX X I]" ( X X )

Call 985-4294.

--

Farm Equipment

Bob lee

. S.E. Ohio.

Reduced price,
three-bedroom house
on 4.4 acres. private
and shady, central air,
wood-burning stove,
low fuel bils, double
car garage.
\\ mile from Chester on
Route 248.

61

.•February 2, 1986

COiiiNIENI10CAIION

CIOSI TO IIIGS IllES

An oldtr, w ~ t ketll. 2 s1ory. 3 BR
home on 18 woodtd ter!S. Has a
laree wcrkshop , 'llllllodburnma slon .
ow n water suppty loa !~ near
hu l)'ay Church . N. ol 325. Salem
Tow11shrp, MeiiS Count~. Pr iCe re -

du ced lo $29.500.

Older 2 story home on urper Rt 1

l h1s enerry effic!nt home 1s well
located nur em~o~rnent and SIIOP·
P'!ll center. J to 4 12drooms, ROOd
cklsetand stoug~ spta. Gts hut.
Wa ~ pr1eed at $29.500, owne rs •ant

5rder teasonable offer . 139.900

128.SOO.

lot Good 101d

ror~tage . W~!

con-

woodburner, e11o~n litc~en . hvrng

room snd I e~r pr~&amp;e. la rge wel l
cued lor yard. QL11et MChbcrtiOO&lt;I
Pr iCed to sell at $49,900

Jll!

!NVISTMENT GrPORTUN!ll

Three rentl! lKirts 11'1 cily. Two
houses plus 1mee apartment. Twc
story on 2'nd -ve. heme !'las 5BRs, 2
bl ths. Coold be dlvi(Jed. Sin ale s!Ofy
lsi Aw. holM rs rrodf!rn 2 8R. lireplace FR tnd DR. Gu llelt. Gar11e
jplrtlnenl tla~ (2 ta1)24ll4"down
With 8•2~ ' SIOtllle tnd ut~ ity l ttl .
Upptt 1re1 hu ~ r n k ~c h en w1th
lilnae 111d retr cerator. I BR. ll r'e
LR. A!l&amp;ts forced ar with cenllllllr
Cal! lor ShoWIIIIIOd addlbOnal i fl!Of ·
m1t1on.

1143

INDA!tGUID SPICIESt
10.85 acres ol v1unt croond mcry
school distiiCt. Several uce 1 ~11t
burldltll sii.M lhJI provide trem end·
M valley view. All utilfttrs IVItla·
ble. Almost 9lO It lr011t11t.
$22.000. Win sen M1 2 parcetst..

9

a QIIK:k sale. ha~e

160 Lock of hair

72 Sti ff
74 Equally

DOWN

76 Postscript : abbr .

ornament
87 Give a right to

89
92
95
98
99
101
103
704
105
106

River Island
Item of property
Projecting teeth
Act
Noises
Dried grape
Portico
Bitter vetch
Stupefy
Los Angelos
abbr.
107 Near
108 Sound a horn

77 Unlocks
79 Word ol negation
83 Beast ol burden

t Tapestry
2 Confederacy

3 Affixes

85 Long. loose
overcoat

4 Cover

86 Trial

5 God of love
6 Road : abbr.

87 Paradise
88 Roman tyrant

7 Roman bronze
8 Bristle

9 Dillicully
tO Food lor

9 1 Former Russi an
rulers

computer

11 Food program
12 An cient

110 Corrode

13 French ar1icle

111 Japanese drama
112 Proceeds
11 3 Flock
115 Sun god
117 Claw
119 Tellurium symbol
120 Decant

14 Penny
15 Grain
16 Sham

121 Parish house

124 Pile
126 Snare
127 Transfl&gt;es
128 Frolics
t3D Titles o1 respect
132 Courage
133 Musical
organization

134 Unit of Siamese
currency

t 35 Break suddenly
137 Toothed
instrument

139 Ethiopian title
140 Gasp lor breath
141 Food fish
143 Soh mud
145 Wire measure

146 Worshipping
148 Scorched
150 Hermit
152 Doctrines
153 Fish of carp family
t54 Landed
156 Wipes out
157 Worms
158 Unmarried
woman

159 Alight

89 Article
90 Wasters
of time

92 Macaw
93 Petty ruler
94 Yes: Sp.
96 Capricorn symbol

97 Surfei t
100 Wo rld org .
102 Ark builder

17 Run aground
18 Composnion

105 Dinner course

20 To bel ieve:

109 Cravats

archaic

11 2 Horned animal
113 Workman

23 Rabbit
25 Jog
27 Venom
28 Solicitude
31 Sins
33 Heap

114 Physician
116 Matures
118 Per tai ning to lhe

36 Liquid measure
38 Christmas carol
40 Dimensions

41 Platform
43 Pedal digits
45 Clergyman

laity
120 Jails
72 1 Equal to 112qt.
122 Innate
123 Sea eagles
125 Pledge
126 Barters
127 Sharp pa1n

46 One injured

129 Transac tion

47 Go by water

131 Strikes
132 Rasp

49 Festive

51 Female relative

52 LOOkS fixedly
53 Cheers
54 Allowance for
waste

56 Upright
59 Method of
functioning
60Lovedone
61 Night birds
63 Invents
65 Siamese native
67 Devoured
69 Exclamation
70 Church dignitary

133 Prohibits
134 Desert dwellers

136 Study
138 Consecrate
140 Fruit seeds
141 ln th is manner

142 Tissue
144 Sa ucy
147 Female ruf1

T48 Greek teller
149 Noise
751 Deface
153 Centimeter : abbr.

155 Foo tball score:
abbr.

LOCATION

oHers 4 BRs. J up a1d OOwn. 2
baths, tR, OR, T~ room, 1\JI D!st·
~nt. New llflllng, 3 yr old j.U fu rna ce J Cll garafe 1nd edra.cotne r

•m

OWNER lOVED 70 I!CltiGAit
Must sd nus attrUIIVe 3 BR butk
home 1mmediildy Very tood lea ·
tron m Green sOoo iS. th iS home otters comtoltablf fam ily room w1th

CON~ENIEJIT

rodent
86 Pendant

red ~d

pn:e to

1!40

LIVESTOCI BOIA!t!A

PRODUCTIVE FARI UNIT
147 ac res located 1n good f11m1nR
com mu t"ll ly on Gaje-Pt triol Road.
MOOern If yr old 4DR. 2 bllhhome.
4,000 sq. ft. barn aru tor tobacco.
traw ar~d hmtock. Pond. 511r in cs.
srm R met Qxld deep • d hJr
mme an tl count)' water ava~able .
!ll acr&amp;S lays well lo r crops(22 ac.
lll'll 1n ex cellent 1U1h st1nd), 40

.::. •mpmved Ptslure, 50 IC. MJods.
(Jiod cross fence 1rour.:l pastt.rre
11111 most Ime tence new 1round PIS·

lure. 16 25 lb. tcbmo bue. Good
home , eood hlrn, p- odu ctr~e land.
All welllocsted. AUtor SIIB.OOO

lm

2111l to none. 380 .:res m/ 1of jOOd
balance ol crop, IIUMe and
wooded area . Good water supply in
spnnes. Jllnds, creek llld tllralwl·
ter avsilable. 6500' m/tol roldlronflte on S.R. 325 and Twp. Road whPI
co untt wat!F m ibbie. Nurty ~
mrles of,ecentt, bUilt tine and cross
fence s Crop •re• ol approx. 100
.:res: 150 acres of pasture whh bal·
ance 1n woods ltld nne. bceltenl
hill top viewfrom present lsrm home
an~ tNny Ideal srtes lor new home
loCIII)nS both lA woodeel areas 1nd
Clelr IIIII crests. Alllccated !US! off S.
R. 325, ~ miles S. olltio Grande end
R10 G11nde Collellf!. Also near South·
M!Siern H.S. and new rr•de sc hool.

C\luld easily be dl'lided rn t~ree or
trllre under ~n~s. TcUI 1s~ing tor
Mitre u n~ $2'94.000.

ms

UClUDEO WOODED SHI!NG

Overbolllna 01!10 Rl¥tr. T ~ere 's
plenty ~ livrnc space rn !h1s 2800
sq. II. home whiCh includes l1 rge IN·
1n1 room and dllll'll room w~h
•csthedrsl ceilina. cten wnh l1repllce,
f~m•~ room wilh 1.-epiJCe, ]lull ce·
rMIHC balM, 3·• BRs. lully equ~ped
kitchen tnd 2Clr clrport. Very rood
biJy

at 159.900.

1401

RISIAURAIT IUS IN ISS FOR SAil
Owlllr IS selrnc lind. building,

1nd everythinl elst ssWllh 1his business. Super
!oation on At. 7. AU IQuipmenltnd
u ~!rties 1n new coodition. l ~r~t~lot
WI~ &amp;God rQid ffOntJge. U:CIIIenl
ooportu~ ., be your own boss,
Ca ll lor more lnkmnatkln. $50,000.
l(!~ipment

~C!Ited

t!D4

It's Time _To. Seii"We Have Buyers'_'

® 1986 United Feature Syndicate

�'

.

Page-D-B-The Sunday limes-Sentinel

February 2. 1986

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

UAW strik~ Champion Spark Plug plants
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - The
United Auto Workers union has
caJJed a strike at five Q\amplOn
Spark Plug Co. plants In a dispute
affecting the jobs d. more than 2,00l
workers In three states and

Canada.

Champion Spark Plug officials

Friday said the company had made

what it considers an equitable offer

for a new contract with the UAW, negotiating for a new contract since
but said union leaders rejected it Nov. 1, 1911i, and talks broke down
and ordered a walkout for one Friday afternoon when the UAW
minute after the . previous tllree- · turned down 0\ampion's latest
year labor agreei'TI€!lt expired.
proposal.
The plants are located In Toledo
"We're not sure If or when talks
and Cambrtdge, Ohio; Detroit; will resume," said company SJX&gt;Burlington, Iowa; and Windsor, kesman R.J . Mougey.
Ont., Canada.
The Issues in dispute are ecoThe company and union had been

nomic, he said, adding that the employees.
Toledo-based company's position In
. VAW Secretary-Treasurer Ray
contract talks Is based upon an . Majerus said tbe strike was ilrced
unfavorable business climate In the by management demands for
automotive replacement parts ..takeaways.'•
Industry.
0\amplon's fln81 ctfer conlalned
0\ampion officials said some no wage Increases and no pension
adjustments to reflect these condi· Improvements and faDed to match
tlons are necessary In any new the economic provisions conlalned
labor agreement with 2,250 hourty

CLEVELAND (UPI ) -Q\arges
the United Auto Workers union
against Honda of Arnertca Manu facturtng lnc. were dismissed
Friday by the National Labor
Relations Board.
The charges were !Ued Dec. 13,
six days before a board- supervised
representation election was to be
held among 2,!0! production
workers at Honda plants in MarysvOle and Anna. The election was
postponed pending the outcome of
the charges.
The union said It would appeal.

"Our attorneys tell us that the
NLRB regional director's decision
flies directly In the face of
established board poUcy," . UAW
Region 2B director Joseph Tomasi
said.
Tomasi, who said the UAW will
appeal the decision to Rosemary
Collyer, the general counsel or the
NLRB In Washington, saki the
Japanese carmaker violaled fed·
eral Ia w when It conducted an ~
ballot poll of Its employees in late
October.
He said It is unlawful for an
employer tD question employees In

a poll when supervtsors are
present.
On Oct. 29, Honda of Amertca
C!&gt;nducted an anOII,YITlOUs poll ct its
associates, asking whether the
company should comply with the
UAW request for recognition. Results showed that 75.4 percent of
associates wanted the company to
reject the request, which It did.
A day later, on Oct.ll, the UAW
petitioned the NLRB to hold a
representation election at Honda.
The election subsequently was set
for Dec. 19.
The UAW claimed that rn Oct. 28

and 29, Honda trted to forestall
UAW representation by cttertng
Increased benefits and promoting
an employee controlled labor
organization.
UAWspokesman Dick Olson said
when the charges were filed he
believed Honda was violating labor
laws, but he could not be specific on
what laws the carmaker was
breaking.

"All we want Is lor Honda to obey
labor laws," Olson said at the time.
"We expect Ill win."
ln MarysvUie, Honda vice presl·
dent AI Kinzer said the NLRB

Court approves price-fixing ~ettlement
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) -Montgomery County Common Pleas
Judgt! Robert M. Brown Friday
approved a settlement 11oth five
Cincinnati and Dayton electrtcal
suwly firms charged with pricefixing In the sale of wire and
conduit.
The settlement requires the firms
to pay the state a total of$ll,575and

enjoins them from entertng Into any
agreement that results in the fixing,
raising or maintaining of the prtce
or markup for electrtcal conduit
and wire.
Richards Electrtc Supply Co. Inc.
of Cincinnati was ordered to pay the
state $1,500, the Page Electric
Supply Corp. of Dayton Sl,IXXl, the
Lyons Electrtcal Supply Co. of

Dayton $500, the John A. Becker Co.
of Dayton $4,575 and the Duellman
Electrtc Supply Co. of Dayton

pion's competitors, said Majerus. ·
who directs the UAW's Q\ampion
lntra.COrporallon CouocU.
The offer was unanimOusly rejected by the elected UAW· Q\am·
pion Bargaining Committee and
negotiations were recessed whUe
committee members returned to
their plants to conduct an orderly
shutdown, the union said.
"For the second contract In a
row, Q\amplon bas forced the UA W
to Strtke Its U.S. and Canadian
locations r:Ner management demands !or ecooomlc takeaways
with respect to wages, the cost-of·
living formula , health-care programs and paid IIJUdays," Majerus
said.
"The company pursued Its takea·
way demands In spite d Its
continued prosperity extending
rNer many years and Including the
recent reeession pertods when most
manufacturing companies rt'ported losses."
The UAW has represented 0\am·
pion workers for 45 years. The only
previous strikes were In 1962 and

$4,(XX),

The firms were Indicted by a
federal grand jury for violating
antitrust laws In thesaleofwireand
conduit to two counties, three state
universities and five local school
dlstrtcts.

Governor urges strike settlement
AUSI1N , Minn. (U PII - Gov.
Rudy Perpich has urged strtklng
mea.tpackers to settle their dispute
with Geo. A. Hormel &amp; Co., and the
company planned to reopen Its
flagship plant after a rally by union
members forced its closure for a
day.
The governor met with leaders of
the United Food and Commercial
Workers local Friday night but
neither he nor tbe leaders .would
comment afterwards. Advisers
said the governor went to the
meeting to ask union leaders to
strtve for a settlement In the
five-month battle.
Hormel ofDcials. forced to close
the plant Friday because ria mass
rally by union members from
around the Midwest. said they
would try to open again Saturday.
A union meeting scheduled for
tonight was planned to consider the
recommendation of Perpich's factfinder that the meatpackers vote
again on the company's last offer.
A union spokesman said late
Friday that the fact -finder's repor1
Issued last Sunday, would be

discussed but that was all.
"We're going to review it but we
are not going to vote," he said.
Jim Guyette, Local P-9presldent,
has criticized the fact-finder for not
addressing touchy issues such as
seniority and grievance procedures . The union struck over these
issues and a cut in pay and benefits.

Dernonstators Friday closed the
Austin flagship plant for the second
time in 11 days with an auto
blockade durtng a soUdartty rally.
Local law enforcement authortties were upset with Perpich for
keeping the National Guard in the
armory durtng the r ally . . The
governor sen! the Guard to Austin
last week to keep the peace, butt his

Guyette Insisted the union's
strategy of sending pickets to other
plants around the country would
close the giant meatpacker and
force the company back to the
bargaining table.
Loca l P-9 board member Karl
Pontiu s said loca l members wUI
meet Sunday with representatives
of Hormel's l,m workers from
Dubuque. Iowa . He said the strikers
also hope for support from the 800
Hormel workers in Fremont, Neb.
The strikers have twice rejected
a mediator's proposal for a $10
lllurly wage In a three-year
contract. Many strikers say they
would accept the wage offer but
oppose new work rules, changes in
seniority and reduced·benefits.

week he ordered the guardsmen
away from the plant as tensions

e~tius said If workers from
other planls join the Austin walkout, "Hormel will have ro choice
but to bargain with us."
Company officials said terminalion notices have been sent to about
line strtkers
Monday at
Hormel's
500
who
honoredOttumwa,
a picket
Iowa, plant. There have also been
been pickets at the Fremont plant.
" AU I can say is I lllpe the other
locals are a bit wiser than P -9 and
431 (Ottumwa)." Austin plant
manager Deryl Arnold said. "I
don't think they'U go along with it
based on what their national
leaders said."

decision sllluld clear the way for
the representation election.
"The dismissal means that the
NLRB found rothlng wrong with
Honda ct Amertca policies or
actions, and that the UAW charges
have no mertt," Kinzer said. "We
have believed from the beginning
that the UAW charges were
baseless and that they were ·Died
only for the j:llrpose ct delaying the
scheduled Dec. 19 election."
But Tomasi said that support for
the UAW has· been growing since
Honda resumed production "at
breakneck speed" after model
changeovers.

Richards Electric Supply
pleaded guUty and the other four
firms no contest.
The charges Involve (rice- fixing
beginning as early as 1972 for
suppUes sold to Montgomery and
Greene counties, Dayim, Sprtng·
field, Centerville, Kettering and
Beavercreek schools and Miami,
Central State and Wright State
universities.
According to the Indictments,
officers ct tbe companies met
monthly rl discuss markups on the
resale of oondult and wire and
mailed ee.ch otber their ~K.'esheels
on the J»''((ucts.
Grand jurors also said company
officers enforced their agreement
by requiring employees to follow
the agreed- upon _prices and
r1m din sal
ho Iced
rep an g esmen w ~
products below what was pin ted on
the prK:e sheets.
Ohio 'Atttrney General Antlllny
J . Celebrexl.e Jr. said the conspl·
racy hljd the eflect ol suppressing
and eliminating competition In the
sale of electrical wire and conduit in
the Dayton area, and fixing and
raising prices paid by the state for
electrical supplies at artificial and
roocompetltlve levels.

'

1~.

FEBRUARY 9, 1986

CHlNESE NEW YEAR
To celebrate Chinese New Year
The Far East Restaurant will have a
drawing for a free dinner on
February 9, 1986.
Stop by anytime this week for Chinese
New Year special lunches or dinners
and to register for a free dinner.

ll, f~!.~..F j~
Upper Rl•er Road, Galllpolto (Next to Km•rt•

!;;;;;;~=;::;::::;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~~
·MORE WAYS TO

The prtce of oil would have to fall development this year.
substantially fur1her than its recent
"The questln is, a! what level r1
tumbl~ in spot and futures markets
prtce In 1992 do you start worrying
to force the company to stop some about thOse projects up there?"
of its projects, including its high- asked Bray.
cost Alaskan operations.
He said Endicott, with 350 million
Bray said Sohio still Is developing barre is of recoverable Ill, of which
its Edicotl, Lisburne and west end Sohio wns ST percent. continues to
of Prudhoe Bay projects on Alas- make sense even with crude ~Ices
ka's North Slope and will continue staying at $18 per barrel (expressed
In current doUars 1.

HOW TO BUY AND HAVE
MORE FUN DOING IT.

ooDGEOMNl

7.90UPsYo
sarJPTb -n

A.INII" .:.NIM!

ssoo

RCA 26 " diagonal Color TV
with Electronic Tuning

And with prospect

lual fttturM include:

•18 -potition tuning •v•tem p~Hmitl Mlectio n
of en 12 VHF tnd up to li11 UHF chlnnel•
with one eonweni«tt control . lllumin1ted
dl•nn .. numbers.
•Autometle color eonnol.nd flettltone eorree.
don .
•
•Autometic contrllt / eok:tr trackirlg
MSup., AccuFilter black m1tri11 picture tube .
•Unttired Xtendedlift dla .. it.
•Autom~tic Fine Tun ing (AFT)

Depending on the opr
package and mOd I iOn
choosa Sa .
e You
mOdels are~~~ on Selected

I drive claSSIC.
W'lh get up and go.
room tor a tam•ly. '
•

The tront-whee .

""" on list p ·
Of P&lt;tckage items
'f
rrces

""nnil Ml\1 PROT£Cll011 PI!II

5lHR/w-

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Brilliant coklr perlormence fe1turing the con.
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story on Page 9

H!~~~~~~::.::::...L.-====-=-_j_---=-------- --·- --

Vol.36, No.202

NASA studies
flame from
booster rocket

$49900

r Purchasea

ffiONTON - State Sen. Oakley
C. Collins (R-Ironton) has formally
announced his plans to run for
re-election to the 17th District Ohio
Senate Seat .
Collins, chairman ol the Senate
Education and Retirement Committee, said he would continue to
work for an improved economy and
excellence In education if he Is
rt'-elected to another four-year
term.
"State government must do
everything possible to develop the
proper climate for economic
growth and the creation of jobs,"
Collins said.' "A major par1 of this

separately

5 YEARI50.1UJ

.

QUAUTY SERVICE

~·~
fo ·
0

~

FREE DELIVERY

• Which ever comes first. Limited warranty. Restrictions apply. Excludes imports and non-Gold Key leases.
See copy at dealer.
tFinancing is for qualified buyers through Chrysler Credit Corp. Dealer contribution may affect fi nal price.
Must take delivery from stock. Asl&lt; for,detalls.

S YR. EXTENDED PICTUIE
TUBE WAIIANTY

.ELBERFELDS
POMEIOY- 992-3671

Carroll Norris Dodge, Inc.
Phone 446-0842
f-.U· t·

=·-=
·--

--......l

1 Section, 10 Pagel 25 Centl
A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

New Focus on .;u~~ · · : Reagan g~ars up
of Challenger Tragedy · salesmanship for
New film footage suggests that there
was a major defect in Challenger's
solid rocket booster.

legislative agenda

CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(UP!) - Pulling together the
threads of disaster, NASA invest!·
gators have focused on a deadly jet
of flame from one of Challenger's
solid r~ket boosters that appar·
ently trtgger€d the spaceship's
tragic destruction.
NASA officials will not say how
long the official investigation into
the disaster wUI last, but sources
say If the cause of Challenger's
explosion can be firmly pinned
down and corrected, the shuttle
program could be back in the air by
June.
Industry sources, however, lndi·
cate that may be an overly
optimistic forecast at thls early
stage of the Investigation.
A Oeet of ships continued search·
lng today for debris !rom the shuttle
wreck, including detailed looks at
three large objects that could be
major pieces of the destroyed
spaceship.
Challenger's reinforced crew
cabin has not been found , assuming
It was not obliterated by the
explosion, and neither has the ship's
beefed·up engine compartment.
NASA refUses to comment on
whether any bodies or crew
personal effects have been
recovered.
Two robot submersibles are
being used to Investigate the
objects, two In shallow water 16
mUes offshore and another at
depths at upto1,200feet 40mtlesout
to sea.

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 3, 1986

Copyrighted 1 988

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discuss In greater detail In a
message to Congress two days
later.
Among the initiatives he will
announce, officials said, is a
top-lo-bottom review of federal,
state and local welfare programs.
The aim - a s)Veeping overhaul
to reduce the dependency of poor
Americans on government programs- has been a cause celebre
to ·Reagan in :.lJ years of conservative activism. On the other side·d.
the coin. Reagan also Intends to
propose extending Medicare to
cover the costs of catastrophic
Illness.
The budget, designed to hold the
fiscal 1987 deficit to $144 tilllon·
through almost $40 blUion in
spending cuts, wlll be unveiled
Wednesda y morning and Reagan
wUI waste no time campaigning for
its acceptance by Congress.

His schedule calls for pep talks
Wednesday to employees at the
Treasury Department and the
Department of Health and Human
Services, a charge to political
appointees at a birthday gathertng
Thursday and a visit Friday to a
suburban VIrginia high schooL
Aides said two themes wlll
dominate the budget pitches Reagan delivers In the corning weeks:
the importance of signaling no
retreat from the arms buUdup
Reagan credits with bringing the
Soviets to the arms negotiating
table and a firm presidential
refusal to reduce the deficit with
higher taxes.

300 Third Ave.

was charged by the patrol with faUure to control.
Two other Meigs County residents were cited by the
patrol following separate weekend accidents.
Robert R. Crump. of Minersville, was northbound
on Meigs Coun,ty 403 Sunday evening, about
four-tenths of a mile nonh of Ohio 124, when he
allegedly went of !the righl side of the road and struck
a small tree. Crump's car sustained light damage In
the 7:00 p.m. accident. He was cited for OWl and no
driver's license.
Troopers said Lois Lawrence was stopped In
eastbound traffic on Ohio 124Saturday evenlng, about
eight-tenths of a mile west of Meigs County 34, when a
car driven by Denise A. Mlller, 28, of 56240 Ohio 124,
Portland, allegedly could not stop in time and struck
Lawrence's vehicle from behind.
Both cars sustained light damage In the 6:00p.m.

colUslon. Miller was charged with failure to stop in an
assured clear distance.
No lnjurtes were reported and five citations were
issued by the Gallla -Meigs post of the State Hlghway
Patrol following three weekend accidents in Gallia
County .
Troopers said a car driven by Lisa A. Hager, :.!J, of
Rt. 2, Vinlon. was southbound on Gallla County 18
(Koontz-Sallor Road! , about seven-tenths of a mile
nonh of Ohio 325, when a car driven by Rueben L.
Wilson, 18, alsoofRt. 2, VInton, allegedly came over a
hillcrest left of center and struck Hager.
Both cars sustained moderate damage In the 1: 25
p.m. Sunday accident. WUson was charged with no
driver's license and failure to yield one-half of the
roadway .
Later Sunday, troopers said Darrell E. Shaw, 22. of

Senator Collins
seeks re-election

OR

PECAN FINISH

·..Phil sees early spring

Two Meigs County teenagers were treated and
released at Veterans Memorial Hospital Sunday
afternoon following a slnglHar accident on Union
Avenue, about thret'-tenths of a mUe west of
Pomeroy.
Hospital officials said Rodney D. Roush . 18, of 122
Union Ave., and a passenger In his vehicle. Cardos
Rober! Geyer, also 18, of Rutland, were treated for
multiple scrapes and bruises following the 12: 57 p.m.
incident.
The Ga\Ua-Meigs post of the State Highway Patrol
said Roush was eastbound on Union Avenue, when he
allegedly went off the light side at the road. came
hack across the highway, went off the len side of the
road, struck an embankment, came back onto the
highway and overturned.
Roush's vehicle sustained heavy damage and he

RCII~
CONSOLE
TELEVISIONS

photos 011 Page II

Two Meigs teenagers treated for injuries after accident

Sohio's exploration budget chopped
Q.EVELAND (UPI I - The
Standard Oll Co. 1Ohio!, faced with
declining revenues. is cuttin g Its
exploration budget this year by $150
milllon-$200 million from 1985
levels.
Sohlo' s 1~ exploration budget
will be $700 mlllion·$750 million.
said Richard Bray, an executi\'e
vice president for the firm .

S~ry,

In UAW agreements with ChAm· ·.

NLRB throws out union charges against Honda
of un!air labor practices brought by

Presidential .guard

GaUipolis

UBEJm·l··
t88&lt;1 ·-

··

Ollldey c. CoDins

effort is providing the best education possible for our children, as
well as job-related education and
training for adults."
.
WhUe Collins served as Educatlon Committee Q\airman, the
Senate last year adopted record·
high levels ct state support for local
school distrtcts, joint vocational
school distrtcts and statt'-tunded
coUeges and universities as part of
the current two-year state budget.
"Even with the two-year 15
percent Income tax cut Included,
we .set the right prtorttles and
Increased state aid to education by
more than 21 percent," CoUins
added.
Collins also said he would push
for highway Improvements !n
southeastern Ohio "which would
help attract new business Into thls
area ct Ohio."
A veteran of 28 years In the Ohio
Senate and four years in the Ohio
House of Representatives, Collins IIi
a graduate of Ohio University.
His Senate committee assignments Include Finance; Energy,
Natural Resources &amp; Environment
and Highways &amp; Transportation.
He has also been appointed ID a
Senate Finance Subcommittee
which Is drafting legislation to
implement the stale's new $100
mUUon bond program for research
and development ri Ohio coal
approved by VQters last November.
Col&amp;bled on Page 9

J ''

1-i
' .
mxlND PlACE HONORS - 'lbe Melp .Junior fll&amp;b School
~ 1f1U1111 abQve CII(Mured lfJOOIId place ltoaon at the recenl
Rio Gnnde cbeerlo"'inl compedloll. ~ben ollhll aquad 11town
wtt1t their award are, 01111oor, left 1o nahl. Kelly Doul!l-. Amy Epple,

,

Ohio 160, Gallipolis. was eastbound on Ohio !ii4, about
three-tenths of a mile west of 160, when troopers said
he allegedly lost control of his car In a curve, went df
the left side of the road and overturned Into a field.
Shaw's car sustained moderate damage in the 3 p.m.
accident and he was charged with !allure to control.
On Saturday afternoon, troo~rs said Kenneth T.
Donahoe, 20, of Rt. 1, Wlllow Wood , was eastbound on
Gallipolis Twp 1003, when he apparently bsl control of
his motorcycle while attempting a left tum onto
Gallipolis Twp 1004, went cif the right side ct the road
and struck a parked car owned by Ellzabeth A.
Cheney, of 520 Sprtng Valley Or.
Q\eney's vehicle sustained llghtdamage in the
12: ll p.m. Incident and Donahoe was charged with
!allure to control and no motorcylce endorsement.

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