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Page-1~-The Daiiv Sentinel

.. ..

~

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

.... .

Friday, June 13, 1986

Sund ay

r---Local briefs--- Reagan clears up
Heritage weekend auction canceled
cloudy SALT 2 ·issue
The County Stoll' auction originally planned for !Jerltage Weekend
has bel&gt;n canc!'led by the Pomeroy Chamber or Comrne=. due to a
lack of public intcmt In the auction.
HOW('Ver, many other actlvltk&gt;s wlll be laking place in POmeroy
duting Heritage Weekend, Ju!K' ~-22. The chamber w111 sponsor a
craft show on Court St. to be held Friday and Saturday from 10 a .rn .
to 4 p.m. each day. Many talented Meigs County craft people have
signed up to ex hibit , sell and IX&gt;monstrate thelr work.
An antique car show for Meigs Countlans will be held Saturday
·morning fmrn 9 a.m. to 12 noon. Trophies will he awarded in various
categories and Heritage Weekend visitors are !l'mind(&gt;d that the
cars will be on display only on ·Saturday.
·
Additional attractions will be AEP's last working st!'fnwheeler,
"Juanita." The boat will be docked at the Pomeroy levy .and wUI be
available for touring. Southern Ohio Coal Co. wilt' have a mining
display, and antique steam engines will be exlblted, courJesy of
George Francis. Myron Duffield will again bring hls calliope to
Pomeroy and dancing by the Shady Rlver Shufflers clogging group
wUJ be featured. Well-known Denver Rice 'wUI IX&gt;monstrate his
homemade instruments and the musical group "Sweet Mountain
Sounds" will also petiorm.
Additional in!OJmation on the scheduled even ts is available from
the Pornemy Chamber office at 002-!Wn\.
Anyone lnte!l'Sted In participating or entertalningdurtng Heritage
Weekend should contact the chamber office as soon as possible for
schedullng.

Announce flag design contest
Design a flag for Pomeroy and you may win a $50 savings bond.
The Pomeroy Merchants Association is sponsoring the contest
which will end Wednesday with tbe prize to be awar&lt;lpd in special
ce!l'rnonies on Heritage Weekend .
Designs should be llnnlted to three robrs plus the background and
should be uncompllca ted since the plan Is tD have the design made
into flags for businesses to purchase.
Designs should be left with Mary Powell at The Top of the Stairs,
Sandi Ianne!l'lli at Chateau, or the Pomeroy Chamber or Commerce
Olflce In the Cou rt House.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - President Reagan says the SALT 2
nuclear arms treaty Is dead and has
Indicated that any restraints put on
the U.S. weapons buildup wUJ
depend on Soviet actions. .
Reporters asked Reagan pointed
questions Thursday about his
stance on SALT 2, after a series of
ambiguous statements froin administration offlclals ;md Reagan's
owti !l'marks at his Wednesday
night news conference confused the
lssile.
R:eagan may be asked to explain
·-his reasons for ·scrapping the
unratified 1979 treaty when he hosts
a luncheon for regional reporters
today.
Thursday he endorsed !l'rnarks
by chief White House spokesman
Larry Speakes, who said the
agree_ment is finished as a founda ·
tion for arms control.
"The SALT t!l'aty llrnlts no
longer exist," Speakes announced.
"ll we take future actions in the
area of arms control, It would be for
!l'asons other than the SALT
agreement."
Reagan later told reporters. "I
think you can trust what Larry
Speakes told you. "
However, Reagan hedged when
asked whether the United States
would SUillaSS the SALT 2 limits
later this year.
"Anyone going into negotiations,
I think, has a right to !l'maln silent,

Fire 3 commerce officials

Eulah Hoffman
Eulah Marie Hoffman, 69, N!?W
Haven. died Thursday at Veterans
Memorial Hospital, Pomeroy.
She was born June 2,1917 in Red
House to the latf&gt;Jesse H. and LUJan
Elizabeth Bass Hargraves.
She was preceded In IX&gt;ath by her
husband Dallas R. Hoffman In 1972
and one son Rlchard Nelson
Hoffman.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Elizabeth Mae Reynolds of
i\kron, and Mrs. Susan K. Rainey a
Ll&gt;taFt; one son, James Raymond
Hoffman of New Haven; one
brother, For!l'St Hargraves a West
Columbia; two sisters, Mammle
Volz of Mansfield, and Betty
Vaughn of Tucson. Ariz.: 18
grandchildren and 11 great·
grandchildren.
Funeral services wm be Sunday
at 1: :II p.m. at the West Columbia
United Methodist Church with the
Rev. Charles Hargraves officiatIng. Burtal will follow In tile
Kirkland Memorial Gardens.
Friends may call at the residence
of the deceased on Saturday from
'~4 and 7-9 p.m. for visitation. The
body 12:J0.1:ll
wUJ lie In state
at Sunday.
the church· ·
from
p.m. on

clalrned a pattern of Soviet viola tions fol'CPd him to d(&gt;clare the
treaty finished as a foundation for
arms control.
The pact was signed In VIenna by
P!l'Sident Jlrnmy Carter and the
late Soviet leader. Leo nid
BI'E'Zhnev.
Speakes said 1that, regardless of
U.S. actiQns later this year- when
Reagan can act to exceed SALT 2
limits, actual compliance Is no
longer a coneern.
"The United States 5 mdlcatlng
that we wUJ no longer be bound by
the numerlcalllrnlts of It," he said.
"We have not violated It yet. We
may not go over It In the fall."
Speakes said his statement was
Intended to dispel "confusion."
Following Reagan's news conference, administration officials were
concerned Thursday that the )resi·
dent seemed to soften his stand and
to be leaving room for
maneuvering.
Another White House spokes·
man, Edward Djerejlan, told repor·
ters that although SALT 2 Is
finished, "restraint Is not dead, and
we hope that mutual restraint Is not
dead . That will depend on what
Soviet actions all'."

The renewed d(&gt;clarations that
SALT 2 Is IX&gt;ad came as the
CLEVELAND (UPII - Thurs- administration expmsed Interest
day' s winning Ohio Lottery In a pair of new Soviet arms
llrnitation proposals and hinted the
numbers:
overtures might have been !I'Omp·
Dally Nwnber
ted by the tough line Reagan took In
142.
1)cket sales t o t a I e d his May 27 announcement.
$1.165,T71.50, with a payoff due of
$686,093.50.
PICK-4
8715.
PICK4 ticket sales totaled
$176,331.50, with a payoff due of
$79,479.
P!CK4 $1 straight bet pays
The Meigs County Litter Control
$5,784. PICK4 $1 box bet pays$241.
Program Is now ln,futl swing. Law

ties, and public
enforcement
andawareness
collectionaspects
actlvlof tt&gt;e program all' now operating.
Since April I, 24 illegal dump sites
have been reported and invesugated: nlneoftbose slteshavebeen
cleaned up with the cooperation of
the property owners: 13 of the sites
are under surveillance; and two

HEATH UNR'ED METHODIST CHURCH

Says Steve Powell, program
supervisor, "the magnltu&lt;lp of
activity which we havp been abJe to
engage In during the past weeks
would not have been possible

I

South Third at •In St.
Mldcllepart, Ohia

~31

JACI&lt;SON PIKE · RT.3!1 WEST

- -·452o4
SAT - SUN I
WEDNESOAV • All SEATS $2.50
.IOOJSStON EYER! TUESDAY $2.50

The closing program for the
Rlverview Community Vacation
Bible School wlll be held at 8 p.m.
Sunday at the Rlvervtew School,
Reedsville. The public is Invited.

Veterans Memorial
Admitted - Dale Ord, Mason
City, W. Va.; John Hunnell,
Pomeroy.
Discharged - E unice Christy.

without cooperation and donations"
fmm a number of people and

IPICIAL WIDNIIMY

MATINID'

flo~r~ga~n~iza~tl~on~s~.~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~TIIIS~~~~~-~T~R~II~II~I~~~
THE PERFECT PLACE TO
SHOP FOR DAD'S DAY
IS THE LaSALLE GALLERY
WE HAVE A WIDE SELEcnON
OF Gm FOR DADS, BOTH
YOUNG AND OLD

•Collectables

•Mugs

•Wine Stts
•Desk Accessories
•Balloon Bouquets

Etc.·Etc.·Etc.

FREE DELIVERY
MANY OF THE ABOVE OEMS ON SALE

LaSALLE GALLERY
MIDDLEPOIT

137 N. 2ND

"The Demands of Fatherhood"
FATHER'S DAY JUNE 1S, 1986

9:30 A.M.-Church ·School For All Ages
10:30 A.M.-Morning Worship
"We Love Because God Loves Us"

~-~~;;;;;;;::;::~=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:~~

. 992-7521

ELBERFELDS
OF

Arrangements are being handled
by the Foglesong Funeral Horne.

Ereil Sleeth
Erell LewiS "Hap" Sleeth, 75,
Mason, died Thursday at Pleasant
Valley Hospital.
He was born Ju!K' 13, 1910, In
HWidred to the late Rev. John
Sleeth and Pearl Klrkpatrtck
Sleeth.
A !l'tired truck driver and a
vPteran ct World Warn, In the u.s.
Navy, he was a member of the
VFW Stewart-Johnson Post 9926 a
Mason.
Surviving are his wUe Betty G.
Sleeth of Mason: seven daughters,
Mrs. John (Shirley I J . Glover of
Elyrta; Mrs. Anita K. Travis a
Huron: Mrs. Roy (Rebecca) J.
Scarberry of Ripley; Mrs. Carol L.
McCoy of Rlpley; Mrs. Ralph
(Janet) Edwards of Cottageville;
Mrs. Richard (Cheryll Lake of
Mason and Mrs. Bruce (Reta)
Hendrickson a Mason; one son and
daughter-In-law, WUllam E. and .
Sherry SlEeth of Mason; two
sisters, Iris Wade of Inglewood,
Fla. and Inez Davis of Kings Port,
Tenn.: one brother, John Sleeth a
Denver, Colo.; 23 grandchildren ·
and six great-grandchlldren.
Funeral se.vlces wlll bP Satllr-

__s~.~9.~Y
. · is
fath6\f'
On Sunday,
All Fathers Will ·
Receive ,A

a

FREE SUNDAE
FROM

ADOLP.H'S DAIRY VALLEY
"At the Foot of the Ponieroy·Mason Bridge"
POIIEIOY, OH.
992·2556

-

•

_

~

-

,·· ·r

FATHER'S DAYGIFTS
'

MAKE ELBERFELDS YOUR
SHOPPING CENTER FOR FATHER'S DAY GinS
•Sale prices on our big selection of gifts for your Dad Sunday, June 15th.
•Oren shirts, westerns and knit shirts, sport shirts - ell excellent quality.
•Select dren slacks from our big selection of sizes and colors - or shorts tor
summer wear. You'll save on Hanes underwear for Dad.
•Big selection of qualitv leather belts sali priced and neckties.
•Save 30% off Buxton billfolds in many ltyles and colors.
•If work clothes are on your list you'll find special prices on shirts. work uniforms, jeans, bib overalls.
·

STOP IN OUR MEN'S DEPARTMENT, LOOK AROUND, SELECT YOUR
.
FATHER'S DAY·GIFTS AND. SAVE.
.
'
.
VISIT THE FURNmRE DEPARTMENT 3rd FLOOR - SAU PRICES ON
LAWN CHAIIS, All CONDmONERS, RCA TV SETS ND EASY CHAIRS.
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR SPECIAL FATHER'S DAY GIFT SALE

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TIL 8

ELBERFELDS

,

.~ ....
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' r '~£

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SOC

Page B-1
Inside:

Along the Rlver .......... A-7-12
lluslnP.118 ....................... C-1
Classllleds ....... C-2·34-~7-8
Dealhs ......................... A-4
E.dltorlal ...................... A-2
Sports ...... ....... .... ....... B-1-5

Ohio weather:
Partly cloudy
-Page A-3

tmts 8 Sections, 76 Pages 50 Cent•

1986

A Muhimedia lne . New1paper

Meigs commissioners table fire alarm bid
$115,000. The munty will trade In its old distributor
truck, valued at $31,500, leaving a net mst to the
county of $83,500.
A three- to four-year financing program for the
tl,'Uck will be set up with the Farmers Bank and
Savings Co., Pomeroy. The commissioners wlllln the
near futu re pass a molution to borrow the money.
The truck is to be delivered within ll days.
Until then, the county will continue to use the ad
distributor truck In the application of dust control and

aspha lt for sealing.
The commisSion tabled a bid of $14,120 from
Security Electronics Inc., Lowell, to in stall an
au toma tic fill' alarm gystern and a manual flre alarm
gystem, to be interconnected andconformtostateand
loca l fire cod(&gt;s, at the Meigs County Jail. Included in
the bid price was the Installation of Illuminated exit
signs over the doorways on the first and second floors
of the ja il.
The commission wlll confer with District Flre

Safety Inspector Richard Dutton, Marietta, to make
SU!l' the bid package meets specl!ications. before
making a decision in the matter.
In other business, the commission confirmed the
hiring of Michael Custer, Pomeroy, as Meigs County
dog warden, to !l'place Andrea Batey, who resigned
the position effective Wednesday. Custer will assume
his official duties Monday with Batey assisting him
through Wednesday. New telephone numbers i&gt;r the
dog warden will be announced as soon as possible.

.. ,.")',!..•

Showplace's treasures
put on auction block

Hospital news

•Bar-B-Que Sets

. - ,.

• , •&lt;

o

•

By NANCY YOi\CIIAM
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - A bid for a distributor truck for the
Meigs County Highway Garage was accepted, and a
bid for Installation or fire alarm systems at the Meigs
County Jail was tabled, wt.en tt.e Meigs County
CommisSioners met Friday In recessed session.
Accepted by the commission, upon recornrnenda ·
tjon of Cou nty Engineer Phil Roberts, was a bid from
Southeastern Equipment Co. for a 1911&gt; International
with bituminous distributor. Total cost of tt&gt;e truck is

Program Sunday

0

j

Comlrs-TV ............... lll'lel't

Pleasant

PH. 992-3039

REV. (. SONNY ZUNIGA WILl PREACH ON

Art Buchwald offers fU'8t·hand though18
on the role of fathers - Page A-2

·weather report
South Centrat Ohio
Mostly sunny today, with highs
near Ell. Clear tonight, with a low In
the upper 50s. Sunny Saturday, with
highs In the low 80s.
The probability of precipitation Is
near zem through Saturday.
Winds wlll be from the west to
northwest at 10 to :11lrnph today and
light and variable tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast - Sunday through Tuesday: Generally
falr thmugh the period, with highs
ranging from the 70s to the low !Mls
each day. Overnight lows will range
from the 50s to tt.e low 60s.

·

•....
- ~•• 1i. ,,•• • .J;,, • ,1 •
.1i.

U.S. Open continues

uae.

==~~ :;:d:~= ::,ve
Collection activity began on May
27. Through June 1, 31 rnles of
county roadways have been
cleaned up, !l'Sulting In 30 dump
truck loads of trash being removed
from these roadways. In addition to
the number of truck loads being
hauled, 154 bags of litter were
collected.
The roads that have bel&gt;n cleaned
by the collection crew are C·38
between Pomeroy and Mlddleport
under tile Pomeroy-Mason bridge,
C-21, C-.3 and C-5.

oO

Bob Hoeflich repOrts some deer caused
turmoil for village employees - Page A-3

ClASSIFICATION CHANGED - 'The , ~Urduuie by Buluul
Volumeer ~ Dep.ntnent ~ thl8 ~·quick re&amp;plllle vehicle," or "ll'ulh
truck," hu reaulted In a chan&amp;e fl cla81111catlon lor the Bashan VFD
Dtstrlct. 'The aewcla8!tlllcatlonwllresuUaadecnuelnllrelnsuranoo
rates lor many ln!iured properties wiiiU the district. The new
classlftcatloll goei! Into effect July I. • - rates wDI decreBSe from
seven to 30 pen:ent, depending on the type flstrudure Involved, ood Its

Meigs litter control
program in full swing

A men's U trtple S.A. Class D
world quall!ler softball tournament
, will be held at Buckeyes Park and
' and Hadley Field In Marietta on
June 28 and 29. The winning team
day at 1:ll p.m . at the Foglesong will receive a berth In the world
Funeral Home with the Rev. Terry tournament to be played Labor Day
Alvam officiating.
weekend and the second and third
Burial wlll follow In tile Blaine
place teams ~UJ win berths In tt.e
Memorial Cemetery In state
tournament to be played In
Cottageville.
August. Entry fee Is sa&gt; and two
Friends may call at the funeral steel balls. Teams Interested should
home on Friday from 2-4 and 7-9 contacf Ken Offen berger at 374-2943
p.m.
or Jerry Huck at 678-28ffi.

Area deaths

-Page A-7

deal."
In the past several weeks, he has

Lottery winners

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Three
The three employees worked In
Commerce Department employees the Bureau of Economic Analysts,
will be fired and security of which Is !l'SpoDS!ble for preparing
sensitive economic data wDI be reports on the GNP, the leading
tightened following an inqulry that financial Indicators and other sensicould lead to tbe outlawing of leaks tive data, Baldrige said.
of potentially valuable information.
They were not Jdpntlfled because
The dismissals, announced
the
fe!X&gt;ral employee cod(&gt; specifies
Thursday by Commerce Sec!l'tary
they
be given ll days to respond to
Malcolm Baldrige, COIK' I u d e d a
"charging
letters," which will be
nine-month inVPStlgation by the
IX&gt;IIvered
to
them Thursday.
!X&gt;partment's Inspector general,
Baldrige
said
analysis bureau
the FBI and the Securitk&gt;s and
employees
had
taken
lie IX&gt;tector
Exchange Commission Into a leak
tests
In
the
investigation
that
In September 1915 of gross national
determineq
·rwo
had
used
.data
for
product figu!l's for the second
Squads gel one call
personal
gain
and
.
a
third
had
quarter of 1985.
passed data to another person for
·Only one call was answered by
that
person's gain.
·'Theil' all' various kinds d leaks
the
Meigs County Emergency
that permeate this town," Baldrige
·
Medical
Services on Thursday.
said at a p!l'SS conlerenee. "But
But the lnvest~ation did not Middleport took l:.inda Mohler from
leaks ct sensitive economic data
determine how the· GNP data 238 Walnut St .. to Veterans Memor·
rank right up tt.ere with national
reached the q.!cago futures trad· lal Hospital.
securtty, In my opinion.
ing markl't and New York Stock
"Fortunes can be won and lost" Exchangt', where the data became
on !hi- basis ol such advance known about 18 hours before Its
Plan tournament
knowledge, he said.
formal release.

Choosing
a career

so that nothing could be used
against him," he said. "We're
trying to replace It with a better

,

..

By BOB HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - There are auc·
tlons and there are auctions In
Meigs County. Nothing unusual
about that.
However, one .of the biggest of
this type sale In quite a few years
was held Frlday and Saturday at
Reedsville when the esta te of the
late Violet M. Smith was sold by
Mike C'rum and his crew from the
Thornville area. The group In·
eluded four auctioneers who some·
times sold in different areas on the
grounds plus a crew of clerks and
helpers.
The weekend auction was adver·
Used ex tensively throughout the
area and In tbe Tri-State Trader
magazine. On Friday, there was a
sizable crowd from far and near on
hand and sales appearo:J to go well.
The Violet M. Smith property Is
well known in Meigs County, as the
otiglnal property of the late AHred
and Edna. W. Kibble Stewart of the
Stewart-Warner speedometer bus!·
ness. The business apparently
provided quite an Income for Mrs.
St£'1\'art . who IJlOVed back to
Reedsville follo,.1ng the death of
her husband.
The property consists of a
13-mom, thrfl'·Story house owr·

looking the Ohio River. On tt&gt;e 40
acres are a ca!l'taker's cottage, a
g!l'&lt;'Dhouse and an attractive l,llXJ·
Square-foot recreation hall with
hardwood floors and a balcony. The
late Mrs. Stewari had tt.e recreation hall constructed and permitted
gmups of the Reedsville community use of the facility.
At Mrs. Stewart's death, the
property went to her brother,
Anderson Kibble, who at his death
established In his will the Kibble
college scholarship program which
henefits many Meigs County students going on to higher e&lt;1uca tlon
each year. At his death the original
Stewart homeplace went to a
nephew, David Smith. and his wife,
Violet, and, of course, became
Vlok&gt;t M. Smith's property when
her husband died a few short years
after tt&gt;ey Inherit ed the showplace.
Mrs. Smith died last Dec. ll. Her
son, David G. Smit h, is executor of
tt.e estate.
The Smiths' ad!X&gt;d thelr personal
touch to the property. adding many
lawn decorations and a consldera·
ble amount of brass and mpper
acct'SSOrles as well as ether Items to
tt&gt;e well furnished Sti?Wart·Kibbte
residence.
The rntire accumulation was so ld
at the we&lt;'kend auct ion and tl&gt;e

OUI'DOORS- Buyers made themlelvescomfortable on the lawn~
the late VIolet M. Smith' In Reedsville Friday as Mike Crum and his
crew from the Thomvllle area - !lOme lour auctmneen1 plus helpers
and clerks - look bids on box after bo•Jf brass, copper and ceramic

ware.

home, land and ott.er buildings are
for sale, SUillrlsingly at a flgu ll'
under $100.000.
Small wonder that tt&gt;e auction
took two days. Friends of the tate
Mrs. Smith, In fact. wondered if all
of the contents of the home could be

sold In that amount of tlrne. There
were well over 200 pieces of lawn
figures and ornaments, over 700
pieces of repro cower ware and
some 600 brass Items. AU these
things without touching cast iron
lawn furniture. the furnishings of

RECREATION HALL- This 1,~uare-foot, attractive reeeallon
buDding, compelte with halcony, was the srene of a part of the auction
held in ReedsvWe F'rklay and Saturday to settle the estate of the !ale
VIolet M. Smith.

the 13 rooms in the house and all of
the accessories in the horne.
Friday, a 1750 grandfather clock
brought in (1oler $1.700 on the auction
block; a massive turn of the
century. ornately-carved walnut
nine-piece dining room suite with

the origlnal portrait needlepOint on
tt&gt;e six chalrs sold for $1,790. A tum
of the century carved wa lnut
b!l'aklront with wrought iron panel
inserts sold for $370. A three-piece
wrought leon featuring winged
1Cant inued on A.J 1

Ohio's largest labor group backs Celeste's re-election bid
By RICH EXNER
CLEVELAND (UPI I -Gov. Richard Crteste has
won the support of the starr's largest labor
ol')!anlzatlon, tbe Ohio AFL-C IO.
The executive board of the !OO,()()().mernber union
un animously recommended the rodorsernent of
Celeste for a th ird-consecu tive election, and 1,000
delegates to the biennial convention gave overwhelm·
ing approva l Friday with a voice vote.
"I don't think this should be any surprise to the
delegates that we will endorse Dick Celeste for
go~ernor," President Milan Marsh.
"Dick Celeste has been a good governor for Ohio

and its workers. Dick Celeste has also been a good
governor for business.·· Marsh said. "This Is what we
need ."

The governor angered some union leaders by
signing a bill that makes It more difficult for
ernployN'S to collect civil liability damages In cases
where they al!l'ady are !l'Celvlng workers' compensa tion benefits. There was some speculatiOn that he
would not !l'Ceive the AFL-CIO endorsement.
He was not sc heduled to make a major speech
during the opening of the convention for tt&gt;e first tlrne
in eight vears. but only beca use of a conflict with his

vacation. Marsh said.
All the controversY appeared to be behind a sm iling
Celeste as he entered Cleveland Public Hall to a
standing ovation.
He received severa l ott.er standing ova tionsdurtng
an emotional speech, which was followed by Marsh's
announcement that the executive board unanlrnously
supported the endorsement .
Celeste told the 1.000 delegates that their concerns
with tt.e new workers'cornpensatlon law would not be
forgotten.
"I kPow that some of you are upset and fru strated

Family planning goal
of new health service
vaginal sperrnicides, condoms and
By CHARlENE HOEFUCH
Information on the rhytlun system
Times-Sentinel StaH
POMEROY - The high rate of arc aU avai lable fmm the health
teenage pregr.ancles, wllh one department .
They are dispensed monthly
Meigs County sehool dlst rtct report ·
ing a pfl'gnancy rate during the through the Health Depart ment.
1985-86 sehool year of one In S('Ven again with payment based on the
teenage girls, grades nine through slldlng fee sca le, or no payment ~
12, is one of S('Veral !l'asons why the there is Uttle oc no Income.
In dlsrusslng the hlgh rate of
Meigs County Health Department
has initiated a family planning teenage pregnancies. Blackwell
serv ice as an l'XIension of its said that statistics show that most
girls are sexually acllve for a year
pll'nata l clinic.
The new service. open to women befall' seeking birth control, or that
of all ages, begins Monday and will they have had a "sea re" with a
be staffed by Ann Blackwell, !X&gt;Iayed period. While she said
registered nu rsP and cert ified nurse parrnts of sexually active teenag·
practitioner In obstf&gt;trics and gynr- ers are encouraged to become
co logy, and Phyllis Bearhs, Involved In seeking birth oontrol for
thelr daughters, parental consent Is
women's heallh care technician.
Services are available on an mt requlred and the visit s to tt.e
appoi ntment basis, Monday t.ealthdepartment areconlldentlal.
As an exa mple of the sliding fee
through Friday from Sa.m to4 p.m.
seale, a woman in a family of four
AU cases are confidential.
Charges are based on a silding fee with an Income under $10,650
seale, with those unable to pay to rocelves all servlee5 free,tnctudlng
receive birth control services with- monthly supplies for her birth
out charge.
control method.
A worriim In the same size family
As explained by Blackwell , If a
sexually active teenager has no with an Income of under $17,118 ·
Income of her own and does not would pay ID percent, or $6 for the
havf&gt; family Income available to Initial visit and $1 a month for oor
her, then pregnancy prevention supply of birth rontrol plls Hthat Is
services are free. The Jaw does not the method she selects, wtlte a
require that parents · be mtifled woman In the samf&gt; family of four
before birth oontrol inilrmatlon with an Income of S:!l, 787 wCJJld pay
40 percent ol the eharge on the
and supplies are dispensed.
Oral contraceptives, better slldlng lee scale, or $12 fort he initial
known as the pill, the diaphragm,
(Continued on A-.3)

with the bill the legislatu!l' passed and I signed," he
said.
"It is my expectation that people will intelll!l't and
apply these regulations In a flrm and falr manner.
while understanding the concerns of working people
In this state. We will not turn the dock back to the dark
ages of unrornpensa ted lnju ties In work places across
Ohio. We can't go back to those days."
He defended his record on other labor issues.
" We made the difference when we said the steel
workers were locked o"t at Wheeling-Pittsburgh, and
they were entitled to their benefits. "

Tax refonn backers
foresee no problems
By JOSEPH MIANOWi\NY
WASHINGTON (UPi l - Senate
Republican leaders predict no
serious repercussions from the first
· change in their previously una!·
tered tax ll'forrn bill and expect
overwhelming approval next week
without major alterationS.
The first twist to the radical tax
plan ·ca rne Friday when the Senate
appmved an amendment by Sen.
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo. to
strip the bill of a special $50 million
tax break for Unocal, a California based oil company.
The provision was kllled by voice
vote after It lost a test vote 60-33.
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole of Kansas and Finance
Committee Chalrman Bob Pack·
wood, R-Ore., have campaigned
.hard •o keep the tax plan free of
major changes and have been
successful on all key votes.

NEW FAMB.l' PlANNING - TomoJTOW tbe Meigs Couaty Heallh
Dep1111men&amp; wll add lutlizy planmog aeMces lo Its JII'OII'IUII· 'The
services wm Include Initial eumlnatlot11 and ....,......., blrlll conlrol
8Upplles, with the chargeranglnglrom mtiUgtoaperoon~ baaed on
available Income Ulklg a sliding fee seale. Here, PIQ'IIs Bearili,
women's heallh care technician, left, and Ann BltiCkwell, reglatered
nune and cerillled IIUI'IIe pl'lllllloaer In ohsleirlea and pnecolop, look
over the supplies to he used Ill the Jll'llll'lllll· Theile laclude blrib oonlrol
pOls, vaginal spennlcldes, creams and fiiiOnps and di!IPJn&amp;m8·

Both senators agreed on the
Unocal change and Packwood
rejected suggesUons that lie al ·
lowed his supporters to vote against
the tax break as retribution against
California's two senators. Democrat Alan Cranston and Republican
Pete Wilson, who 'opposed him on
the Issue of Individual retlrernent
accounts.
Packwood said the amendment
did not violate tt.e "basic tenets" of
the bill be scu~ted In rommlttee

and said he had no fear any major
changt' would get by, Including a
sweeping proposal to altl'f the
measure's laX rat e struct ure.
" We are clearly a.&gt;er the hump on
the major ones and I don't think
these transitions will mea n much."
he said, predicting final Senate
passage of the bill by tbe middle ol
next week.
The loophole for Unocal. for·
merly the U~ ion Oil Company of
California. was one of 174 "transition rules" sprinkled throughout tt&gt;e
measure designrv' to help specific
companies or projects that senators
are concerned abou t.
The provisions are estimated to
cost about $5.5 billion In five years.
Metzrnbaurn has singled out 19 of
the Items he believes all' particularly unfair. "Such provisions are
not transition rules: they're gt'('ed
rules," he chargl'd.
The Unoca l provisio n, he sa id ,
was offensive because It not only
gave the company a break under
terms of the bill. bot also would
have provided It with an exception
from current law. His amendment
dlrocts the money from the tax
break to go toward helping farmers
Income average.
Metzenbaurn said oo Would try
Monday to ellrnlnate more transition rules, but st!l'Ssed he would not
push any amendment that could
defeat the entire blll.

�June 16, 1986

.Commentary and perspective
ittnb~ ~imtJ- itntiutl
A Division Of

~lb

~~

............. ._..,...,n-.=poo=o

8%5 Third Ave., Gallipolis, Ohio
(614) 446-23f2

U I Court Sl., Pomeroy, Ohio
(614) 992-215'6

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
HOBART WILSON JR.
ExPcutivP Edit or
.,.

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of T he Uniled Press Inte-rnational , Inland Dally Press

Association and the Amf'rican Nt'wspaper Publishers Association.
l E'M'ERS OF OP JNION art' wf'lcome. They should bE&gt; less t han.))(} words
long. /\ II letters arPs ubje&lt;'t to Editing and mu st be Signed with namf&gt;. 'addrt&gt;Ss and
lelrph one numbl'r. No un signed leiters wll l be published. Letlers should be In
KOod tast&lt;'. addressinJ.! lssu(&gt;S, not personalities.

Letters to the Editor
Lesson in sportsmanship
My husband has been a roach for
three years now in rhe Rio Grande
Baseball Association. Through the
years, I have watched our girls
grow from a losing team to the 1985
Qiamps of the County League and
the County Tournament.
For three years, basicaUy the
same girls have shown up to play.
1lrls will be most of the girls last
year in this division.
What really upsets me is the girls
can get along fine, but it's the
parents who int erfere and cause
commotion between the girls.
We had a game the other night
that was letter perfect. Each girl
was told her position and played it
so well it was almost a shutout. The
main thing is, they played as a
team , they encouraged each other
and by doing so, they won.
After the girls ~~ home, the
· parents disagreed with the line up.
Now everyone is going to quit if
their wants and desires aren't met.
What it bells down to Is some parent
doesn't like another parent and
because of this the child Is urged to
dislike the other. If ooe parent helps
run thE' team. another's child will
quit. But in the same respect if
another' s parents can't run it their
way thi s chUd will quit. What it
comes do~rn to is one parent wins
and the girls Jose.
?ARENTS, I ask you, what are
we doing to help our children have

d!&gt;cent morals? Do we teach our
kids to be stubborn and if she
doesn 't like what's going on for any
reason , she throws up her hands
and quits?
Is it right to ~ behind one
parent's back and talk about them
and encourageyourchild rot to like
them because of our differences?
Do we put our coach on tbe line and
teU him, "J'U pull my kid If you don't
do it my way" and put hlm in a
no-win situation because we don:t
have the gaD to speak uprurselves?
How can ooe roach choose between
one child and another being scorned
so another can have its way? How
much can a roach do to be fair to all
parties and not hurt either child?
U there Is any example r1 what
my daughter must contend with as
she grows, I see sports as totaUy rut
of the question because of its bad
Influences. It's coming clear to me
that sports Is almost as bad a
watching a violent, wlgar sex
show.
I hope that I can raise my·chlld to
be a good sportsperson. To try and
he fair , not judgmental, to cope, not
kick and scream If something goes
wrong and to enjoy sports, not
make It a violent contact sport.
I pray that God will have pity on
the children being raised . In this
generation. If parents can't act Uke
adults, how do they expect their
children to?
Judy Hall
Thurman

Seat belt law. unnecessary
I see by the Sentinel the mayor of
Jackson, Ohio, is nor in favor of
enforcing the seat belt taw. I don't
blame him or any other mayor for
ttyin to enforce a law that is
unconstitut lona I.
I also see where the D&gt;partrnent
d Highways wants $002.600, threequartprs of a million dollars. to
spend on educatlon for the seat belt
l;tw. I think the state patrol would
have enouelJ to do totakecareofthe
speed law. I got this from a senator
in, Washington where the 50 milp
law is only obeyed by 30 percent of

the people. Not only that but just 15
states out of the U.S. have a seat
belt law. If it Is oo good. why don 't
the other states have it?
I will give the Congress and
Washington credit, they have cut
the money off for this kind of state
patrol laws. They are even thinking
of raising the speed limit law. I have
been a D&gt;mocrat all my Ute, but all
James Rhooos has to say is he Is
against the state patrol seat belt
law. he will have my vote.
Ben Batey
Middleport

The Sunday Times-Sentinel
June 15, 1986
Page-A-2

Shame on shamL________Ja_m_es_J~·-K_i_lpa_t_ric_k
WASHINGTON- Back In April. . non-construction workers Into the
the House of Representatives terms of unloncontrac.ts. Non-union
passed a biU ostensibly Intended to workers could be compelled to seek
prevent sham on the part of work through union hiring halls.
construction companies. Some The measure would rewrite the
companies doubtless have been established definition of a .wsll\'ltlt'~
guilty · of sham practices, and employer" to the great advantage
shame on them . But for palpable of construction unions. In the name
' sham, nothing done by a builder of closing loopholes, It would create
could surpass the sham perpe- disaster within the industty.
trated by the sponsors of this bill.
Though Its sponsors deny It, the
WiiiJam Clay of Missouri said the plain language of the bill would
bill "merely states that 'construe· authorize the "common situs"
lion workers 'deserve the same picketing that Congress rejected In
protection undpr the law as other 1977.
workers." Major Owens of New
Nothing about this biU Is "sim. York thought It a "slmple piece r1 ple." The legislation is rooted In the
legislation." Gus Hawkins of Cali- desperation of the leaders of the
fornia found it "very simple." To building trades unions. Thirty years
Les AuCoin of Oregon It seemed a ago, more than hall of all construc"very modest proposal."
tion workers were union members.
,Hokum! • Under the guise of Roughly 25 percent are members
slmpliclty and fairness, the authors today. Under this bill, the unions
of this bill ha;ve put together a smau could reap a windfall In the merced
masterpiece' of deception. The bill lees of non-union craftsmen who
would have the effect r1 dragooning would become abruptly subject to

collective bargaining agreements
they had ro part whatever In
reaching.
On the surface, the House bUJ·
seeks to prohibit what Is known in
the Jndustty as "double breastlng."
This Is a scheme by which a
con! rae tor who has signed a union
agreement creates a sham company and delivers a job to non -union
workers. But such schemes already
are unlawful: they ronstitute an
unfair labor practice. The National
Labor Relations Board many times
has said no, but the board also has
acknowledged that rot evety In stance d oommon management or
wnership constitutes illegal double
breastlng.
This bill would provide that In the
constructbn !ndtistty, "any two or
more business entitles perlorming... or supervising the same or
similar work, In the same or in
different geographic areas, and
having, directly, or lndlrecily, lal

substantial common ownership,
(b) rommori man&lt;gemenl or (cl
common control, shall be deemed a
single employer. " Mark all the
"ors" in that sentence.
Notice what this would do the
employees of subcontractors. On a
given job, suppose that ABC
Plumbing Co. Is unionized and the
XVZ Plastering Co. is not unionized. Both lllslness a~tltles In
some degree are under the supervlsbn, management or control of the
prime contractor. Under this bill
the terms of ABC's union contract
would be . applied "to all other
business entities comprising the
single employer within the geographical area covered by the
agreement. "
Notice, too , that In thi s bill the
adjective "substantial" applies
only to the noun "ownership." It
does not modify " man&lt;\:ement" or
"control. " Look agai n at that Utile
conjunction "or." It Is employed
with meticulous care. During floor
debat e, Clay was asla&gt;d about these
semantic niceties. A House committee report had said the three
factors were to be viewed "In the
aggregate." Oay said he would
leave II to the courts to say what
was meant by the language ci his
own bill.
This sweeping piece ci. legls lation
swept through the House on Aprll17
on a largely party-tine vote. Two
hundred D&gt;mocrats and !I Republicans supported It: 134 Republicans and ll Democrats opposed It.
Now Senate Minority Leader Ro·
bert Byrd has used a parliamentary
device to put the House till d!Tectly
on the Senal&lt;' calendar. No Senatp
committee hearings will be held.
The Reagan administration
"strongly opposes" the bill and
Utah's Orrin Hatch willllgbt it with
100 amendments whenever Byrd
tries to caU IT up . A thousand
amendments would rot improve
this miserable measure.It would be
utterly destructive oft he liberties ri.
non-union construction workers.
Ironically, this bill could boomerang and drlv~. JJI&gt;re.ronstruclion
companies Into the ranks of nonunion t'll)p!oyers. Tho only wise
thing to do with this bill is to kill it .

Sinister forces, ______J_ac_k_A_n_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_aLe_v;_a_n_A_tta
WASHINGTON -Soviet special
forces - the Spetsnaz - ha ve a
rough similarity to oor Green
Berets and other countries' elite
commando units. But the significant difference Is tbat, unlike their
international rtvals, the trained
killers of the Spetsnaz have always
operated under the sinister direc tion of the military secret pollee,
row known by the initials GRU.
It's a crucial differena'. The
political orientation of the Spetsnaz
has oftrn led to assignments that
ar~ far ·removed from Western
Ideas o(what military units should
be doing in peacetime: from
assassinations in Afghanistan to
sabetage In El salvador. The
Spetsnaz - or politically reliable
unlts like them - have a history
dating back to the first chaotic
years following the Bolshevik
Revolution.
Assassination, deception, disruption and surprise attacks In rear

areas were used by the fledging
Red Army's "special assignment"
cavalry in the ct.vll war against the
Whites from 1917 to 19llJ. Other
precursors were Lenin's dreaded
secret pollee units, the Cheka,
which discouraged any tlnught of
retreat by the regular army troops
by the simple expedient of machinegunning anyone wln ra,n.
. Stalin used special pollee units to
enforce the ruinous collectivization
of 19!1-ll that led to the starvation
of millions !1 peasants In the
Ukraine alone. And in the early,
disastrous stages of the Nazi
Invasion of 1941, It was the
summary executiOn of field commanders by special forces that Ja&gt;pt
Soviet coii)Jllanders from retreatIng - and miUlons of Its finest
troops were killed or captured In til!
German blitzkrieg.
It was also during World Wa r II
that , the modern heritage of the

Spetsnaz took shape. Soviet partisans carried rut a wide variety of
guerrilla attacks, espionage, sabotage and assassination behind the
Nazi lines In conjunction with
special counter-lnteUlgence offensive units known as "SMERSH ."
Such successes. as "Operation
Railway War" In July 1943 were the
model for Spetsnaz planning today.
Soviet guerrUias derailed Kl6 German military trains and blew up 184
railway bridges and 556 road
bridges atthe height of the mttle tor
Kursh- the greatest tank battle In
history, which broke the back of
Hitler's panzers.
Since the glory days of World War
II, however, Sovie t Spetsnaz forces
have written a less bloody and far
less honorable record - from the
brutal suppression of revolt In
Bulgaria In the mid-1900s to the
ex tinction of the "Praguespring" In
Czechoslovakia In 19GI and the
Invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

The primary Spetsnaz mission In
Afghanistan was to assassinate the
American-educated Soviet puppet
president , Haflzullah Amin, to
make way for someone even more
subservient to Moscow. Amln had
survived subtler attempts by the
KGB rJ polson him, SJ the Spetsnaz
action In December 1979 was a
full-sca le military assault.
Amln was holed up on the top
floor d the high-walled Darulaman
Palace southwest of Kabul. The
palace guard, most of them
memtrrs of his own tribe, fought
desperately against the Spetsnaz
commandos for more than three
hours·; but we re finall y
overwhelmed.
The Spetsnaz klllers found their
quarry drinking at a bar with a
trautlful courtesan at his side.
They killed everyone, so that no
~tnesses could attest that this was
anything but an indigenous Afghan
uprising agalnst Amin.

Thoughts on Father's Day_______;A:..:. .:. :rt=-=B==uc:..:.:.:hwa.:::.:. ::ld

"'oda
. h.18t ory
'I
y In
, Today is Sunday, June 15, the 166th day of 1986 with 199 to'!nllow.
, The moon Is In Its fir-St quarter.
·; The morning stars are Mars and Jupiter.
• The evening stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini They include
Prince Edward of Britain, the "Black Prince," in 1JOO; Norwegian ·
composer Edvard Grleg in 1843; silent film comedian Han-y Langdon in
1884; orchestra leader David Rose In 1910 (&lt;ge 76 ), a rUst saul Steinberg ln.
1914 (age 721, and New York Gov. Mario Cuomo 1n 1932 (age 54) .
On this date In history:
In 1215, under pressure from rebeUious barons, England's King John
signed the Magna Carta, a crucial first step toward creating Britain's
constitutional monarchy.
In 1752, Benjamin Franklin demonstrated Ina dangerousex~riment the
relationship between lightning and electricity by fiy!ng a kite durtng a
stonn In Philadelphia. An Iron key suspended from the string attracted a
· . lightning belt.

Today Is father's day. Unless I
missed someone, everyone has had
a father. Some of them were very
gOOd fathers like . tile ones In
Norman Rockwell's Saturday Evening Post covers, and some of
them were very bad fathers like
Joseph Stalin.
What designates a father Is his
ability to give his seed to a woman,
which will fertilize an egg, which
wUI produce a baby in the stomach
of the female, while everyone
stands around and shakes hands
with the father.
· When the woman loves the
father, she says to him, "!) locks
just like you."
When she doesn'tlove the father,
she says, " There has to be a better
way to spend Saturday night."
Fathers are rot very gOOd when It
comes to communicating with little
babies, except to wiggle their
fingers and make laces. But as the
child grows older the father begins
to talk to it. The fatlter's first words
are, "Don't do lbat." U the child
doesn't obey he says, "! told you Ill!
todothat,a ndlf youdo u oncemore
you're going to be sorry." And
flnaUy, "Okay, that's til! last time.
Now you're going to get It If you
don't quit," and so on ad Infinitum.
Mothers are constantly talking to
·or about fathers. "You'rehlsfathor.
You straighten him out." Or to the
,child, "WaituntUyourlatherromes
berne," or, "Don't tell your father.
He'U hit the celllng."
Where fathers are the best Is
· when they are talking about. sports
- any sports. "I'D buy yoo a new
bike if you make the Little League
basebaU team." "You're robody
until yoo can make a dunk shot."
"You may be a girl butyoucan ~ay
touoh•lnotbaU."

Most fathers are bewildered by
female offspring, Early In life girls
disrover they are not going to get
much out of the ir mothers , but
fat~rs are a cinch to manipulate.
Ani! so the battle begins between
mothers and daughters lnr the
heart and mind of the only mal~
grown-up In the house. Loyalties
are tested . "You're always taking
her side." "She has you wrapped
around her finger." "You can
choose between her or me."
Just because a perscn Is a lather
doesn't mean that he Is anything
special. There are fathers who don't
deserve a Father's Day. Many cut
out when the go ing got tough .
Others didn 't want the job in the
first place. And still 01 ll:&gt;rs forgot to
come home. If you see such people
relebrat!ng, tell them they are not
supposed to.
Here are certain things that one
should keep In mind when It comes
to fathers.
- Just because the father sits at
the head of Ihe table dO&lt;S not mean
he's in charge !1 anything.
-At some point in a marriage11SUally when the first child arrtves
- the mother captures control of
the household and the lather never
gels tt back again.
-When both the mother and the
father are working, tho thing that
makes the famUy the most happy Is
a. large bucket of Kentucky Fried
Chicken.
-Fathers . who have had spent
youths are far tougher oo their oons
and daughters than lathers who
have never l&gt;oled around at aU.
-When It comes to television
sitcoms fathers arenotto be trusted
In the (a) kitchen , (b) living room,
lcl outOO&lt;Jrs, (d) all r1 the above.
- If you were in doubt about what

to buy yrur father lnr Father's Day,
remember, most grown males can
never get enough Ice cream.
How do I happen toknowso much
about fathers? I am one. l can't
claim to be a perfect father, though
It would be very hardforme to think
r1 any situation where my children
were right and I was wrong.
Kids remember things about
about tii!IT fathers that we tend to

forget. I reca ll ooce In a living room
stating that I had never hit my
daughter and she said, " Yes , you
did . It was on June aJ, 1972, at 4: 06
p.m. In my room, and yru hil me
with your hand , and it hurt for three
days.''
"What about ail the tim es I didn't
hit you and you deserved It ?" All
she oould reply to that was "I don 't
romemtrr."

.---......__.__Local Briefs:-.....,

Deer visit village hall

NEW HAVEN- Representatives from the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers and lhe West VIrginia and OhiO Departments of Natural
Resources wUI!nstruct a boating safety and Information class June
27 at the New Haven Volunteer Fire Deparbnent In New Haven.
The class Is slated for 7-9 p.m. and is open to any residents of Ohio'
and West Virginia .
"Proper knowledge of boating safety can help keep tragedy from
striking a pleasant boat outing," Jeffrey Sweeney, conservation
officer for lhe West VIrginia DNR, said.
·
"Between the months ot April and . November, recreational
boaters enjoy boatlns on the Ohio River nearly 45,(XX) times. With t hi$
many people out on the river, proper boating procedures need to be
followed to prevent accidents and to make boating more
pleasurable," Sweeney said.
For more information, contact Sweeney at :1)4.675-4380 or
304-675-7556.

Choir, which is being formed to
By BOB HOEF1..1CH
perform at the Racine July 4th
Times-Sentinel Staff
celebrat
ion , wil l be In rehea rsal
It ha s befon a tough year or so for
severa
l
times
beginning1'uesday to
Clayton Wi se,
prepare
for
the
presentation.
ClrclovUie, son of
Under
the
direct
ion of Bruce
the Rev. and Mrs.
Wotle
,
the
group
will
me&lt;•t at 6 p.m.
C. J . Wi se ,
on1'ucsda
y:
1:30p.m.
onSaturday ,
Rutland.
June
21:
G
p.m.
on
Tuesday,
June24,
Last May 21J,
and
6
p.m.
on
July
1.
All
of the
his wife. Donna,
will
be
at
the
Southern
rehearsals
died after a bout
with cancer and just before that. Junior Hl g ~ with June 24 and July I
Clayton had two mass!VP heart sessions to be wtdoors.
attacks and underwent two balloon · Young people who want to join
procedu res at Mount CarmeiHospi· rhc group can do so anytim e before
tal in Columbus. This month, on July l and can contact Wolle of
June 4, Clayton's son, Terry, was 949-2404 after 2 p.m. each day for
Information or to register . lnciden·
killed in an automobile accident.
Clayton's parents feet that pray- tally, all of the rehearsals will be
ers, letters and cards would be quil r about one hou r and a half long. The
beneficial ar this tim e. You can performanre will be at 9: 30a .m. on
·
send mail to him at lin W. WatPr July4 th .
St., Circleville 43113.
Mrs . .John tGracct Hawkins is
Not only does the Pomeroy confined to Mount Ca rmel West
Village Hall have ducks visit ing Hospital In Columbus and L'
regu larly but now there are dl'l•r scheduled to undergo double byFriday morning, two fawn s created pass heart surg(~ry there on Mona bit of excitement as they day . Cards may be sent to room 779.
wondered int o the area behind city
If 11 hadn 't dawned on me to lock
hall and got Involved with equip·
at
a quickly joned rotc on the back
men! which was located on the tot
of
a shorthand pad taken ar the
Finally, the two deer beca me
Eastern
High School commencefrightened and took off int o th"
ment,
I
wouldn
't haverememtrred
wOOds - soml' city haU employes
to
tell
you
that
Richard Coleman
hope they' ll stay there.
markt&gt;d a blrtl-da y anniversary on
Color photos of Sout hern High Flag Day, June 14. and that
School seniors receiv in g their diplo- daught er Mrllssa chalked up
mas arc ready for distribut ion and another birthda y one week earlier
may be pi cked up at the hi gh school on June 7.
office, Tuesday through Frida y.
I can't prove it, but they tell me if
next week from 8 to II a.m. and
from noon ro 4 p.m. SrcrPtary Lori vou want ro mak e footprin ts on lhl'
sand' Of time. yOUgO Ita Wl'at' WOrk
Brlnagor will be In charge.
boots. Sou nds rca sonabl ~. Do keep
The new Gr~a t ·Bend Youth smil ing .

Recreation advisory panel to meet
GALLIPOLIS- The regular meeting of the Gallipolis Recreation
Advisory Board will be held Tuesday at6 p.m. ln the City Recreation
Offlcp, 518 Second Ave.

Meigs couples file for marriage
POMEROY - Marriage Ucenses have been Issued In Meigs
County Probate Court to James Robert Osborne, 24, Reedsville, and
Connie Latlcia Oark, 19, Long Bottom: Edwin Andrew Cross, 75,
Pomeroy, and Arvilla Duff, 63, Pomeroy; Milford Scott Frederick,
22, and Kimberly Magdelena Roush, 19, both of Racine: Duane Lee
Jones, 22, and Bernice Roland Searls, 23, both of Langsville.

Free enterprise workshop set
RIO GRANDE - "Free Enterprise in America," an an nual
workshop for high school juniors, senbrs and teachers, will be
conducted at Rio Grande College and Community CoUege Monday
through Friday.
The workshop centers around activities designed to provide
Insight into the free enterprise system. Parilclpants will becomt•
involved In the roles of producer, consumer and marketer as they
establish a business, produce a product, sot prtces and compete with
other buslnessses for sales.
Participants will analyze the American economic system.
Including it s opportlJn!ttes, the need lor profit withi n the system,
lnDation and its effect on productivity.
A variety of speakers wiU address participan ts. This year's
keynote speaker is H.!. "Sonny" Bloch, host of the na tionallysyndicated Actlonllne televislon program and an expert n tho field of
real estate and building.
More than 160 students participated In the prow-am last year. A
greater number is expected this year, according to Rio Grande
officials. Recreational activities at the workshop will includP a
mixer, a cookout at Bob Evans Farm, a talent show andafuli-length
featurl' movie. The cost dlnstructlon, meals, lodging. materials and
use of Rio Grande facilities are !reP to aUparticipants.

Alligator creeps into American menus
BATON ROUGE. La . iUPI I - In
Louisiana, where everything that
flies . crawls. hops. swim s or
slithers can be turned into haul~
cuisine through rhe zrsry magic of
Cajun cookery. the alligator is
becoming the latest food fad 10 go
national.
from the land of blacken!'d
redfish, turtle soup, fr i!'d frog!eg s
and crawfish bisqul'. th~ demand

Gallipolis police cite two men
GALLIPOLIS- Cited by city pollee Friday were Kevin D. Smith ,
18, Point Pleasant, for open container, and Marty Pinkerman, 25,
Patriot , for failure stop for a red traffic light.

New pool opening set July 26

Family
1Contlnu!'d

from A- I t
visit and S2 a month for th.' birth
control pills.
The progra m is being funded with
loca l tax dollars and is gcan:-d to
decrease the num ber of unwant!'d
pregnancies by makin g birth con·
trol supplies availabtc ar an
affordable charge or no c h ar~'l' at
all bas!'d on available inco me.

GALLIPOLIS- The new municipal swimming pool for Gallipolis
will be dedicated on 10 a. m. Saturday, July 26, according to city
· officia ls.
'
It will mark the official opening of the pool oo Ohio Avenue off Mill
Crrek Road . It wa s a project funded in Augu st 1985 and iniliat!'d
March 19lJi.

Gallipolis merchants to meet

Ohio weather

GALLIPOLIS - A meeting of the GaU!polis Retail Merchants
Association wiU be held at the Down U~der Restaurant at noon
1'uesday.
The agenda Includes promotion reminders, about the city sign on
U.S. 35 and the Fourth of July fire works, and a representative from
P.i\. Denny to discuss details on a proposed stop In Gallipolis.

Receives divorce

Thomas N. Kindness
University in 1!6-l From 1954 to
1957, he practiced law in Washing
ton, D.C., and was assistant il'gal
counsel lor ChampiOn Corp . lrom
1957 until 1973.

POMEROY - Granted a dissolution of marriagP In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court were JoAnn
Gard and Michael Gard.
· Filing for a disso lution were
Sand ra Susan Roberts , Reedsville.
and Richard Lee Roberts,
Reedsville.
Filing for a divorce is Paul N.
Smith, ShadP. from Peggy Lee
Smith. The Plain s. charging gross
neglect of duty and extreme
cruelty.

Ohio Lottery

. for alligator as a source of fa ncy
footwear and luggage rs bemg
balanced by the creeprng popularIT~ of tis meat.
When the Chicago B;~rs _ prepared for rhr!r Super Bo" t mvasron
of New Orleans they had a banquet
featuring 250 pounds of Lourstana
alligator meat. After lh&lt;'y trounced
t\ew England46-10 forthr litle they
cel!'brated wt th another 300-ptus
pound s at

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JEWELERS
422 SECOND
GALLIPOLIS. OH

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300 SECOND AYE.
GAUl POLIS

Regents OK associate program
RIO GRANDE- An associate of technical study ar Rio Grande
Community College was approved Friday by tiK' Ohio Board of
Regents.
Th&lt;' action was one of S!'Vera t taken by the regents, who also
. approved a lease agreement between the Ohio University Co Urge of
Ostropathic Medicine and Grandvil'w Hospital of Da .v ton for
teaching facllitll'S.

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PUNCH LIN&amp;.
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GALLIPOLIS - U.S. Rep. Tho·
mas N. Kindness , R-Ohio, candidate for the U.S. Senate , will be
guest speaker at the Galtia County
Republican Club Candidates' Nighi
Monday at 6:30 p.m. at the Bob
Evans Shelterhouse.at Rio Grande.
There will be a potluck meal
served and spec ial music provided,
according to a club spokesperson.
Kindness, second ranking Republica n on the House Government
Operations Committee, was a state
represen tative from 1971 to 1974 and
had previously served as mayor
and city council member In Hamilton from 1964 until 19ffi.
Anative of Knoxville, Tenn., he is
a 1951 graduate of the University of
Maryland with a bachelor's degree
In political science. He rec~ived hi s
L.L.B. from C.eorgc Washington

CLEVE LAND iUPII- Friday's
winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
Dally Number
195
Ticket sa les total!'d $1,368,726.50,
with a payoff dul' of $531.855.
! Cont in ued from A-l l
Showplace's
PJCK-4
6268
Storpents sold for $4711. \\'hill' with l r s l b\· thP hi ghest bidder. The
Violl•i
M.
Srruth
sate
Friday
and
I'
P!CK-4
ticker
&lt;;a ll'S to!al!'d
F riday's crowd may not ha,·c been
up to expectations in size, those on Sa turday brought these same $188,745.:i0, with a payoff dur of
Pmor ions for soml•. On the other $85.005 .
hand did buy.
PICK-4 $1 straight tx-r pays
And with most ~tu ct ion.;;, lhf'rr arf' hand - kn own as ba stO rmlity tinges of sadnr'" and final it~ as onr occumu la llort&lt; ofrm become " $4.932. PICK-1 $1 box bet pays $411.
reflects on the paS! and t tr forml'r problem for which the only pracll
owners of items that arc gra bllPd up ca l answer L~ the auction .

I NAME
f ADDRESS

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Drawing to

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C~th~m DR:

Galhpohs, Ohro, \\

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OUR PRICES

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Dinner

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Lunch

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June 30

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fl ---4
Winner of
f
Color TV

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GIVE-A~AY

I [J()N'T KNOll/,

Candidate set
to visit area

Beai of the Bend

Boating safety class offered

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

fJ(JT NOW I 'VE'
ffJf161.1TTCN MY

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3

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

Smith

�Page- A-4- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

L, .

Frank Waslington

Frank Washington
GALL!POLL'&gt;- Frank Washing·
ton. 93, 51 Pine St.. Gallipolis. died
at JO: 15 a.m. Fr iday in Holzer
Medical Center. having been in
failing l&gt;:&gt;allh for the past three
years.
Bom March 23, 1893, in Gallipolis,
son of 1he IHte George and Ma!Uda
Victoria Qualls Washington, he was
an employee of tt.&gt; Gallipolis City
Schools system. retiring in 1973
after more than 30 years of scn•ice.
In his earlier years, he carried
wa ter on Lock and Dam 26, shined
shoes for .John Vaughn and at Tom
Hill's Barber Shop, wa s a hellhopal
the Park Central Hotel. delivered
the Ci ncinnati Times and was a
second steward on the riverooats
General Wood and Kanawha.
He was a 5().year member of
Ancient York Lodge No. 33, F&amp;AM,
a World War I A1111y veter an and a
member of American Legion La·
fayette Post 'll. A member o!Paint
Creek Baptist C11urch, he became a
trustee of the chu rch in 1929 and
was later a deacon. a posit ion he
held until his death.
"I believe in trea ting people the
way you want to be treated and
being oonest," he said of his
personal ~hilosophy .
He married Minnie Mosby on
Dec. 29. 19:!!. in Gallipolis, and she
preceded him in death in January
1983. He was also preceded by 11
brott.&gt; rs and sisters.
He had no children and is
survived ~ two close fr iends,
Roderick Gordon and Charles
Williams, both of Gallipolis.
Services wlll he 2 p.m. Monday in

Paint Creek Baptist Church, with petroleum engineering. He had
the' Rev . Growr Turner and the been employed lor the past Jl years
Re\'. Gillx'l1 Craig J r. officiating. with C11evron 011 Co. He was a
Burial will be in Pine Street lo1111er member 0f the First
Cemetery Frk'nds may ca ll at Presbyt('rian C11urch d Ma rietta.
Wau g h·Halley Wood F unera l
Also surviving are his wife,
Hom ~ from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m . today. JoAnne C:.pra Sherlock, and two
The oody will lir In sta te In the daughters. Stacey Sherlock and
chu rch one hour prior to the Samantha Sherlock.
serviCf'.
A memorial service will he held
Masonic serviCI's will be held In at 10:30 a .m. June 20 in the First
tho funeral home tonight a t R:30 by Presbyterian C11u rch of Marietta.
Ancient York Lodge No. 3..1. F&amp;AM. ArTangements were by McClure·
Militat)' graves ide r ites will he Schafer Funeral Home. Ma rietta.
conducted by America n Lafayelle
Altie M. Varney
Post Ti .
Pa ll bearers wil l be Rod Gordon,'
GALL IPOLIS - Allie Mac
Charles Will iams. Jesse Sau nders.
Wayne Robi nson , Gillx'r t Craig Sr. (Granny) Varney, 92, Rt. 1, Nor·
thup, died May 29 1n Holzer Medical
and J im Hogan.
Center.
She was a lonner resident
Honorary pa ll bearers will be
of
Columbus
and a long-time
Donald Keels. Ted Stoney and
resident
of
Oelbarton,
W.Va.
Forrf'SI Borden.
Born Dec. 16, 1893, in Wayne
County, W.Va .. she was the daugh·
Paul W. Lewis
fer of the late James H. and Mary
ZE LDA. K\'. - Paul William E lizabeth Pratt Paroons.
Lewis. 40. fo;m r rly of SyracuSI'.
She married William B. Varney
dro11nrr Thut'Sday in the Big Sandy and be preceded her in death on
Ri vf'r at Zelda . Kv.
Oct. 15, 1970. She was also preceded
Relatives said · that Mr. Lew is
Ora Marie
Varney
was apparently wading in the river by
and daughters
Helen Reams;
by a brother,
when he stopped int o a deep hole C11arlie Pa rsons: an d by a sister,
and drowned .
Ella Snnith .
Surviving are a brother, J ames
Born Sept. 21 . 1945. a t London.
Ohio. he was a son of Humphrus Parsons of Waterlr;&gt;o: three sisters,
U:&gt;wis. Sand)• Hook. Ky .. and the lJJna Marcum of Louisa, Ky., Allie
late Lennie Lewis.
Spurlock of Cadmus, and Maude
Bfos\dr s his Faf}l:lr, hC' is SU" 'iVE'd Hampton of Gallipolis; four daugh·
~ h i s wife, Ba rbara Wolfe Lewis of
ters, Mrs. Goffrey (Pea rl ! Crews of
Syracuse: two daughters. Linda Patriot, Mrs. Orval (Virginia )
Ga il and Alice Marie, at home in Ward and Mrs. John !Claudine)
Syrac use: two sons. Pa ul William Dillon, ooth of Columrus, and Mrs.
Jr.. and Jerr~\' John , oot h al home· Rohe r1 (Mary) Polfenba rgPr of
two stepchildren. Cynlhi" Arlene Pataskala; two sons, William C.
Wolle and Brian Euwne Wolle. Varney or Johnstown , and Caffrey
ooth of Sy racuse: thnx· brolt.&gt;rs. Gene Varney of Rt. l. Northup; two
Cli fford. Arnold and Rick, and a daughters·ln·law, Bea and Sue
sister. Mrs. Woodie t.Jeanl!&gt;t Varney; and 22 grandchildren. ~ 2
Flan nrQ·. all of Sandv Hook. grea t-grandchildren, five great·
Scvr ml nieces and nephews also great -grandchildren and many
su rvivr.
fr iends.
Services will be I p.m. today in
Loca l arrangements were by
Lewis &amp; Fe rguson Funera l Home, Willis Funeral Home, where prayer
Sa nd)o Hook, and burial will be in was read by the Rev. Ray Parsons
Union Ga rdens. Sandy Hook.
at the close of visiting hours.
Services were ·held June 2 In
Stephen L Sherlock
Weir-Arend Funeral Home, Colum·
bus. with burial in Union Cemetery.
MARIEITA
stephen
Sher·8
lock,
43, Wa lnut-Creek.
diedL.June
following a lengt hy illness.
Born May 23. 1943. at Gallipolis.
son of C11arles and Virgi nia Fulton
Sherlock. who ooth survive in
Marietta , he was a 1966 gra duate of
Martella College with a degree in

Famed jazz musician
NEW YORK !UP! ) - Benny
Goodman, the "King of Swing" who
introduced American jazz to Carne·
gie Hall and the Soviet Union and
the first musician to bring blacks
into a whil e orchestra, died Friday
of a heart attack. He was 77.
The tx&gt;dy of the fa med clarinetist
was found in his East Side
apartment at 2:35 p.m. E DT. said
Lloyd Rausch. Goodman's personal
assistant. The ca uSI' of death was
ca rdiac aiTI'SI, Rausch said.
Goodman was at home with his
housekeeper when he died. Rausch

GALLIPOLIS - Two area men
were fi ned on assaull charges by
lhr Gallipolis Municipal Cou rt
Friday.
Tadd Walters, 19, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, a nd Chris Halley, 18, Rl. 3,
Gallipolis, were each lined $50 plu s
court costs and received 18 months
probation.
Paula M. Collins, 31. Williamson,
W.Va. , was lined cour1s costs lor
two separate charges of driving
without a n opera tor's license and
failu re to di splay a va lid
registration.
Fined $12 plu s costs wa s Wayne
Grimes , 26, Vinton, for driving wit h
an expired registration.
Terry R. Rothgeb, 24, Cheshire,
fo rfeited a $43 oond for lillerlng on
priva te property. Forfeiting a $40
oond for failure to y1eld the right of
way was George W. Logan, 82,
Vinton. Robert L. Poore, 18, Point
Pleasant, forfeited a S35 bond lor
driv ing a motorcycle without eye
prot ection.
Forfeiting oonds for ~ee dlng
were Rocco Maleroo Jr .. 31, North
Versailles, Pa., ~ : Keith Bradley.
23, Stonev ille, N.C. , $48; Mark

McQueen. 25, Weslland , Mich., $.18;
Bradley K. Evans, 23. Slonevllle,
N.C.; $.18; Frank J. Mudd, 31 , Glen
Rock, Pa ., $.1!; Mark R. Roush, 35,
Albany, Ind., $42; Franklin E.
Beach, 47, Winfield, $40; Patricia A.
Moore, 41, Rutland , $40; Kevin A.
Murphy, 31, Scott Depot, W.Va ..
$45; Dorothy J . Opp, 47, SheJTIIIs
Fotd. N.C., $42; and Lloyd E.
Durst, 30, Po int Pleasant, $46.

A Westerville man was fined $25
plus cour1 costs and deducted lour
points from his opera tor's license in
Gallipolis Munclpal Court Thursday alter pleading guilty to a
reduced charge of reckless opera·
lion of a motor vehicle.
Gary L. George, Jl, originally
was charged with willfully fleeing .-- - -- - -- - - - or eluding a pollee offi rer. For a
separate charge of speeding,
George was fined Sill plus costs.
Jody L. Viars, 18, 1157 Second
tUSP 52$-800 1
Ave., was fined $12 plus costs lor
failing to dls pl ay a va lid
Publis h('(! each SUnd11y, 825 Thir d Ave.,
registration.
Gallipolis, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub ·
llshln g C() mpany/ Mullimedla , Inc. Se·
A domestic vio lenre charge on
co nd class posta~t:' paid at Gallipolis ,
Otarlie Cline, P!lint Pleasant. was
Ohio 45631. Entpred as S(&gt;('()Rd cla!IS
mal llnR m atter at PoiTlt"roy, Ohio, Post
dismissed at the req uest of lhe
O!tlce.

rt=======================ti

MPmber : Unllf'd Press International.
Inla nd Dally Press Associa tion and the
Ohio Newspaper Associ ation . National
Advert is ing llep rest&gt;nta ll ve, Branha m
Newspa pt&gt;r SalPS, 733 Third Avenue.
New York , Nt&gt;w York 10017.

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Mon. &amp; Fri. 9-6; Tues. &amp; Thurs. 9· 7:30; Sat. 9· 3: Closed Wed.

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David V. Wright

ROOert L. Kodl '

'

·Southern Ohio Coal
promotes 2 engineers
ALBANY- Two Southern Ohio
Coal Co. Pmployees, David V.
Wright and Robert L. Koch, have
been promoted to new positions at
the Meigs Dl~lslon office.
Wright . a Gallipolis resident, has
been n a m e d s uper vis or ·
environment and land, and Koch , of
Alhe ns, has bee n named
supervisor-mine pla nning and
systems.
Originally from the Point Plea·
san! area. Wright is responsible for
overseeing the land management
and environmental programs lor
the divis ion's three underground
coa l mines.

Wright began working for South·
em Ohio Coal as a dv il engineer In
1971. He was named environmental
enifneer In 1972 and construction
engineer In 1976. Two years later he
was proiY\(lted to seniOr construe·
don engineer and In 19&amp;1 he became
seniOr environmental engineer.
Prior to working for Southern
Ohio Coal, Wright worked &amp;:&gt;r the
Leading Creek Conservancy Dis·
trtct, wherP he wa s tt.&gt; district
engineer. Hem rned dPgrees In d vll
engineering and In drafting and
dPslgn engineering from the West
Virginia Institute of Technology in

19'JO.
Originally from Phlladelphla,
Pa., Koch Is responsible lor coordl·
natlng the development of the
long-rangl' mining plans lor the
thrEe·mlne complex.
P OME ROY - Four calls were
Koch joined the Meigs Division as
answered by loca l units Friday, the a student engineer In 1976. He
Meigs County E mergency Medical gained pennanenl employment at
Services repor1 s.
the Meigs Dlvislo no!flce in 1977 as a
At 1: 43 a.m.. Mlddleport took mining engineer.
Cledith King from ll93S. Third Ave.,
Jn 1979, Koch moved to the
to Veteran s Memorial Hospital ; division 's Raccoon No. 3 minP as a
Racine at 9:16 a.m. took Ben sec tion supervisor lor aoout a year.
Stoba rt from Pearl Street to Slnct&gt; then. he has heen resident
Pleasan t Va ll ey Hospital; Racine engineer t&gt;r the Meigs No. 2 rrilne.
at 1:41 p.m., went to Ohio 3J8 ill
He earned a bachelor's degree In
Antiquity for Matt.&gt;w Milliron wl)o mining engineering from the Colo·
was lrea ted rut oot transported, rado Scbool of Mines In 1977. Koch is
and at 10:57 p.m., the Rutland unit also founder of the Athens High
went to Meigs Mine 2 lor Leo School hockey team. which he
Aroogust who was treated but not coached for eight years. He Uves In
transported .
the Athens area with his wife, Cllris.

Emergency runs

SALE STARTS SUN., JUNE 15 THRU TUES., JUNE 17, 1986 .

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it

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GALLIPOLIS - A Gallipolis
woman was cited for improp!' r
backing on the 300 block of First
Avenue early Saturday morn in g by
city po lice.
Accord ing to lhr· repo11 . Kim·
berly S. Ra thburn, 18. 1068 Second
Ave., reversed out of a diagonal
parking space next to the Gallipolis
City Park at 12:17 a.m. She backed
across First into a 1982 Ponti ac,
owned by Lewis N. J ohnson of
Bidwell , which was pa rallel
parked. The parked vehic le was
da maged modcra lely wit h light
da mage done to Rathburn 's.
On F riday, Frank Gocl:l ard , fll . 69
Gartield Ave., was cit ed for fail ure
to stop in an assured clmr di stant'('
in a two-ca r accide nt on Easrern
Avenue.

Goddard was non hoound on
Eastern at JO: 45 p.m. trailing a
vrohicle driven by Virgi nia L.
Gardner. 4.1. Rt. I , Gallipolis.
According to the report, Gardner
,;1opped for traffic in fr ont ri ca rter
Tractor Sales and Godd ard was
una ble to stop in time st riking the
rear of Go cl:lard' s car. Bot h car'
wer e liglitly damaged .
Ricky Sa unders. 27, Patriot Star
RDule, was cited for failure lo yield
the right of way while mak ing a
lcfl -hand turn on First Avenu e.
Acco rdin g to tt.&gt; repol1, Sa unders was northoound on First at
12: 17 p.m.. allempbng a left turn
onto Stale Stra' t and struck the
right side of a sou thbound vehicle
driven by Pa m S. Ba rr. 16. 312
Bulav illc Road, damaging ooth
ca rs heavily

Birtbs - Mr. an d Mrs. Timothy ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
Denny, daughter. Wellston; Mr. 1
and Mrs. Gregory F risby, daugh ·
fer, Oak Hill: Mr. and Mrs: Dennis
Hall, daughter, Thunnan; Mr. and
Mrs. William Meredith , dau ght er,
Jackson.

rr::==:::::::::::::::::::;;:::::::::::;~

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For th ose times that you can't fo resee
the futu re ...

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HOLZER CLINI
LOCATED AT OUR MAIN CLINIC
ON RT. 35 IN GALLIPOLIS
MONDAY THR U FRIDAY 5:00P .M. TO 9:00P.M.
WEEKENDS AN D HOLIDAYS 1:00 P. M. to 9:00P.M.

Jewelers

404 Second Avenue
446·1647
Gellipolis. Ohio

446-5287

NO APPOINTM ENT N ECESSARY

STORE HOURS 9 A.M.-1 0 P.M. MON. THRU SAT.
LOCALLY OWNED AND OPERATED BY
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WE ACCEPT FOOD STAMPS AND WIC COUPONS
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES

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rhrough rheforbearanct of•in " (Rm . J:25).
"Propitiatior~ " (hilasterion) stands ror the covering or lid of the a.rk ,
Which is the mercy·seat and the atonement tha t appeases God. makmg
man fa vo rable in His sight . The mercy-seat signifies aw nement where the
blood of the sacrifice was sprink led (Lev. 16:14 .15). and where God com·
muned with Mo&gt;es (Ex. 25:22).
It was man who offended God when he si nned. Sin broke the union and
harmony with God. separating man from God. Man had to pay the penalty
of sin by giving up his life in deat h. It is man who needs the propitiation or
atonement to bring him back into union and harmony with God.
God. being displeased with man in sin, demanded t nd provided his
aronemenr. The holy and righ teous God provided the way back to Him and
eternal life through Jesus, our propitiation or atonement, so that He could
extend mercy to th e believer by re mit1ing his sins.
The "propiriarion .. (atonement) is in "Ch riu ·, blood " II Pet. I: 19·21).
C hrist la~ted the divi.ne iud~menl o!G od that was due l h~ sinner by_volun·
tanly ~wtng up H1s smless hfe. offen·ng the atomng sacnhce for all smners .
sheddmg His blood in death . Christ has become ou: Mercy·sear
(atonement) and High Priest by the sacnflce of Htmself (He b.
9:5.11 .24.251. communing and interceding for us (Heb. 7:25).
By f aith. we have access to the "propitiauon ," His atoning blood.
which pleases God . Through fa ith. we are brought to our "propitiation .."
His blood. which is the result of God's grace and where God shows HIS
mercv. When we. bv fa irh. are bopriud into the death of Christ and
clean.sed by His bloOd. we arc sarisfying God . and are in a position to re·
ccive His justifying and saving grace.
Propitiation And The Fo11ht11011 Of Sl111
"And he is the propitiationfo r our sins: and not ours only. bur also fo r
the sins ofthe ~·holt! world... Herein is love. not that we loved God, but that
he loved IJ.J . and sent his Son to be the propitiation for our sins" (I Jno.
2:2: 4: 10).
"Propitiation" (hilasmos) means the covering and remission of sins.
Divine love is manifested toward sinful m a n in the atoning sacrifice of
Christ. God so loved the world that He sent and gave His Son to be the
Saviour of the world (lno. 3:16: I lno. 4:9,14). Chrisfs love for mankind
was manifested by His laying down His life lor all (l no. IS: IJ). Christ, the
propitiation (atonement}, propitiates (satisfies) God's demand s for man's
sins. The gosp&lt;l declares Christ as the propiriarion for the sins of the whole
world being made available to all mankind . but extended to those who
believe and obey!
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Worahlp 6t(l0

HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges June II - Edward
Borden, Wellman Bowen, Mal1ha
canter, Peggy Canter , Thomas
Daniels. Wendell Evans, Dorothy
Faires, Mrs. Gary Fellure and son.
William Ferguson, Sherri Grady,
Alicia Henry, Donald Henry , Minda
Kerns, Bernard Mannon, Brenda
Moore, Wilson Mullins , James
Napier. Ta rnika Pleasant, Homer
Riffle, Gregory Roberts. Pa tricia
Stout, Misty Summers, Mrs. Ray·
monel WlUord.
Birtbs - Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey
Colley, daughter, Vin ton: Mr. and
Mrs. Michael McNeal, daughter.
Oak Hill; and Mr. and Mrs. John
Stapleton , daughter, Crown City.
Discharges June 12 - Shirley
Adkins, Shawn Caudil l. Alis ha
Cremeans, Robin J agers, Kristin
McMannon, Timothy McWilliams ,
Dan P alton, Corlne Prall, Mrs.
Mark Sanders and s:m, Ru th
Sawyers. Mrs. James Simms and
son, Mrs. John Stapleton a nd
daughter. Dottie Trapp, Ka thy
Watson, Tia While, Mrs. Matthew
Wlllls and daughter, Marsha II
Wren . .

Co. aga inst Thomas E.

Sro ilh .

G8J)'lpo)'IS po)'ICe pro be l hree 8CCI'dents

I

Hospital news

~rr

blood. to decJare his righteousness fo r th e remission of sins that are past

''

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In s urant~

Energy Co .. Inc .. againsl Robe l1
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SUPERIOR

A Message From The Bible...
THE MEANING OF "PROPITIATION"
William B. Kughn
"Prapiiiation " appears three times in the New Testament . It is trans·
lated from two Greek words, ''hi/asterion " in Rm . 3:25. and ''hilasmos '' in
llno. 2:2 and ll no. 4: to.
Pnipltlation And Atonomenl
"Whom God hath sec fo rth w be a propitiatior1 through f aith in hi.s

Ch~pel

.roy; Albert Goegleln , Pomeroy;
and C11arles and Maxine Goeg leln,
Pomeroy, against Dark Diamond
Coal Corp., Colum rus, and Markel
Mining Inc., Pomeroy.
Bank One of Pomeroy ha s flied
an action against George Stitt,
doing business as T&amp;G Auto Sales,
and George StItt, Pomeroy, indlvid·
ually, requesting judgmen t of
$5,280.40 .
An action to qu iet ti tle has been
fi led by Grorge D. Lemley, Che·
shire, i\fld Helen M. Lemley,
C11eshire, aga inst Ruth Pauline
Thompson, Cheshire; Lora Maxine
Lill ie, Middleport : Wilma L.
Parker. Long Bottom: Karen S.
Austin, Inverness, Fla.: and Peggy
A. Thomas, Cheshire.
cases set tled and dismissed in
common pleas coul1 are Dll&lt;ie

POMEROY - Philip Michael
Shoemaker. 30, of Burlingham, has
been lndlcled hy the Meigs County
grand jury on charges of complicity
to commit grand theft a nd obstruct·
log justice.
The charges stem from a recent
incident at Fisher's Big Wheel.
Shoema,l&lt;er was released F r iday
from the Meigs County J ail on a
S1,00l recognizance oond from
common pleas cour1.
Following an inspecllon of the
Meigs County Ja il, the grand jury
recommended U11provernen ts In
the shower and restroom facilities
and tha t the rear outside steps tot he
jail be covered against the wea ther.
An act ion requesting cancellation
of a coal lease an d judf'llllent of
$42 ,1J71.91 has heen filed in Meigs
Cou nty Common Pleas Court ~
Avery and Helene Goeg lein. Pome·

di~

"You could spell jazz 'B-E N·N·Y
G·O·O·D·M·A·N.' He was the most
well known figu re in jazz. He
popularized the music. That was his
role." ja22 trumpeter Dizzy GUles·
pie said.
"Worki~g with Benny Goodman
a

Meigs County grand jurors return I indictment

complaining. witness.
Forfeiting $40 booos were Ray·
mood G. Trout Jr., 38, Nortlrup, lor
drlv lng an unsafe vehicle; Jeffrey
T. Davis, 20, Jackson, !allure to stop
In an assured clear distance ; and
Ronald A. Johnson, 43, Fayette·
ville, expired tractor and trailer
license.
John A. Clonch, 71, Patrtot,
lorfe)ted a $45 bond for dlsortt&gt;rly
conduct.
Forfeiting bonds for speeding
were Ca rol L. Clarkson , 25, Well·
ston, $47; DavidS. Gainer.l9, Point
Pleasant, $47; David M. Shafer, 3!;
Crown Clly. $44 ; Gail M. Spence{,
21, South Charleston , W.Va., $40;
and Slepl&gt;:&gt;n C. Hall , 17, Belpre, $38.

r------------~======================~r:':::w::"':k:s
·•

said. No services were imme·
diately announced.

wasn' t

,.,....

Court fines area men for assault

Area deaths

I

The Sunday nmes-Sentinei- Page- A-5

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

June 15, 1986

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

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A-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy

Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

OXFORD. Ohio !UP! 1 - Miami
University officials have enactf&lt;l a
stronger minority recruitment program to help increaS€ th(' school's
io"' p('rCf'nlage of blacks.
President Paul Pearson Frida)·
announced a mmprehmsive program to attract and retain more
blacks at the southwestern Ohio
college whet&lt;' only 2.4 p('rcenr of the
student bodv L• black .
, At a boafd of trust&lt;es m&lt;~? ting
Fliday, Pearson said Miami has
been unsuc&lt;'essfu I in at u·acting
tiacks through rrgular rt'l'mitment
policies. Despite a national trend in
the declin(' in blacks att&lt;:'nding
COil('!(C, he said hP lxlpes lhr
program will double the
perC1'ntagc.
The minority JT('I'Uitment programs. drawn from the recommcndaJion of f o u r campus ·commit ·
recs. would tar~t bl&lt;rks in Ohio
and St'lectf&lt;l cities elsewhere. "·ith
a prima!J' goal of atu·acking
"highly qualifif&lt;l blacks who scored
21 and above on the ACI college
E"!1tran('(' examination.'' Pearson

said.
ln other t:miness. the trustff's
appproved 5-1 contracts for the
razing of \"an Vocrtus HaU a nd the
steam tunnel work associated with
the project .
Gerardo Brown -Manrique . associate professor of architecture. and
architecture studenl Scott D&lt;&gt;Vrrr
made UJ\Suceessfu l last minute
pleas to rhf' trustff'S to save rhr
~-yea r-old building.

Crash disrupts
•
water service
GALLIPOLIS- A break in a tee
to a six-inch water main owned by
the Gallipolis Water Department at
the intersect ion of Ohio 160 and
BulaviUe Road caused many rt'Si ·
dents living on the two roads to do
without water Friday night.
According to City Sup('rintendcnl
of Slrcets Mack McCormick. the
break occurred after a car accident
at the intersection earlier that
evening.
According Jo the state highway
patrol, a vehicle driven by Dale
Ratliff, 45. Union. was unable to
stop for traffic and went off the road
stliking a utility sign at 5 p.m.
The sign. according to McCormick , was moved undergrouod and
chipped a section out of the top of
the concrete water main about one
toot long. McCormick and three
other city ga rage employees were
sent to repair the leak at 8:30p.m.
Until then, residents had water.
but only at a low pressure.
McCormick said. When · they arIived at the scene. the crew turned
of! the wa ter to replacP the tee.
At approximately 12: :xJ a.m.
Saturday the tee was replaced and
the water was turned back on.
McCormick said he was not sure
exactly how many residents on lfiO
were without water but all on
Bulaville were affected .
The water line and pole were the
only objects seriously damaged by
the accident. Ratliff's car was
moderately damaged. with three
passcng&lt;&gt;rs. Caroly n RatU!f. 41.
Steven Ratliff. 16. and Ronald
Ratil!l. 14, taken to Holzer Medical
Center for minor Injuries. They
were later h'C'ated and releaSI'd .
Ratll!f, cited by the patrol for
assured ciPar distanC&lt;', wa s nor
in jured .

•

License tax funds
POMEROY- Sta te Motor Vehl·
cle Registrar Michael J . McCullion
rPported that the bureau of motor
vehicles has the May,l986 distlibution of license lax revenues totaling
$58,265.497.88 ready lor distribution
10 local governments. Meigs
County wUI receive $191,819.99 or
the total.

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - With Reagan last Monday- Congress Is
lhl&gt; Rogers Commission report jusl gelling started with Its own
finally complete, NASA already Is probes of NASA .
laying the groundwork lor Ihe first
post-Challenger shuttle mission. a
flight lhl&gt; program chief Insists will
not be "just lor show."
Rear Adm. Richard Truly, associa te administrator lor space fiight, '
said In an interview NASA will hit
the deck running when shuttles
resume !lying with redesigned
rocket boosters.

HERITAGE DA \"S VISITOR - The Juanka, the
smallest vt'Ssel and the ooly Yernwheeler itt he fleet
of modem towboats oper-..tf&lt;l by ihe American

me

Electric Power System: will be
of tbe featured
exhibits at the upcoming Heritage Days celebration.

AEP sternwheeler to visit festival
POMEROY - The Her itage
Da,·s will offer a gl tmpS&lt;' of
America's past wi th an old·
fas hioned sternwhe&lt;'ier included in
this years festival acti,·ities on the
wrck"nd of June :ID-22.
Ttw J uanita. lhP sternwheclcr
thai will ix' showcased. is the
sma llest vpssel and onl) stern·
whcrler in the fleer of modern
towboats oprrn tC'd by th£' AmC'riran
Electlic Power System on the Ohio

Page- A-7
June 15, 1986

Srudents learn to make 'fair' career choice
•

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tbnes-Sentlnel Stall
BIDWELL - There are many
types of lairs- book fairs. schqol
lairs, county and state fairs - tiut
none can be as important' as the
career fair. Proving you are never
too young to look toward the future,
Bidwell-Porter Elementary School
had a career fair just before the end
of classes. Students from Vinton,
Kyger Creek and Hannan Trace
were also able to attend th(' event .
Attracting 45 different career
representatives, students learned
there is more to choosing a ll!ellme
job than just "wanting to help
people."
Coordlnaled by Jan Coc•n. guidance counSI'lor, the eighth grade
students at Bidwell-Porter undertook a month -long study of career

choices, and were able to talk to
various people about their voca tions - why lhl&gt;y picked that field
and the advantages, or disadvan tages of each.
More than the carcer itself.
students were educated as to areas
of career inlerest, attitudes. skills
and values. The young people were
encouraged lo think about their
goals and interests, and investigated the choice Jhat might suit
them.
····- ·'
Classroom teacher Mrs. Corliss
Miller worked closely with Ms
Cocn on the project , and various
speakers were invited to the school
to discuss the various aspects oi
their career.
Elaine Armstrong, job training
placement supervisor presenled
concepts of choosing and sceking

employment .
Peg Thomas, di rt'Ctor or tht· Rio
Grande College placement ct•nt&lt;•r,
addressed lh&lt;• futuristic carecr
world - telling students to be
creative in th inking on a JOb choice.
"CUmbi ng t he steps to success
can enable you to reachyourcarwr
goals," sll' told the studenl s.
"Prepare yourself to be lhP best you
can be in whatf'l!cr Oa'upation you
choose."
On the job rrainill g 2an be goorl
d&lt;perience at a career, according
Jo Susan Hudson , man ager of
Kroger 's ill the Si lver Bridg&lt;' Plaza .
Reminding students of tasks thr-y
had learned aln•ady, she nolerl that
will ca rry ov&lt;'r into their future
oo:·upatlon and Jhe value of Jhc
I raining in the adult world . She also
addressed the "personal qualities"

employers lock lor when interviewing til&lt;' JXltentlal worker.
A field trip was inlcuded for the
eighth graders. who vb ilru Buckeye Hills Career Center.
"Allowing studen ts to see what
voca 1ionai opportunities are available to them at this age fives lhl&gt;m
more Iinne to think aboul what they
want to do, and more lime Jo take
the appropriale classes in high
school," Ms. Coen noted.
Carff'rs in cluded In the day-long
fair, were floral design er, taxi·
drrmy. modelin g. dentist !J', betcri nary science. fune r director, x-ray
Jechnic ian. mt'!lical laboratory
ll'Chnician. cxtlm sion ag ent. game
protector. ix'ef producl lon. jail
administration, crimP prevention,
min e swvryor, bak&lt;'r. qua lity
control. printing. au cti onPer.
travPl, hotel managrment, hair

dresSC'r, IT'S laurant man agrment .
ministry , nu rsing. child care, li ·
brary science. employ ment interviewpr, lC&gt;go l ser..'iCPS, staff' sena -

Jor, banking, parks and recreal ion,
radio and tel evision broadcasl lng,
mechanical engincNing. coac hillg,

IN 'l1IE FUTURE - Peg Thomas, Rio Gran.., College and
Community College Counseling Direci&lt;Jr, tell• students of the "futurl•tlc
careers" available to them if they are prepared.

rro l estate sa les, social srn ·ice and

and it s tlibu tar }{&gt;s.

voeational

It " ill be one of thP featured
ex hi bit s- docked at the Pomeroy
par king lol lev('(' - from noon to 5
p.m . Frida_,. and from 10 a.m . to 5
p.m. Saturday.
"11w Juanita 's appearanC1' at
Heritage 0a)'S should give visitors
a chanet• to reru m to the past, " Gale
R . Rhodes. general manager of ttl.•
AEP River TransJXlnation Division. said. "She st ill has her
original stcrnwhecl and s)l(• still has

pl ac&lt;:'tn('n I.

co un s£'\ing

and

Photo r mmt e.ry
Callta County Schoolr

two coal buming s tO\'C'S - onr in the

engine rocm and one in the
pilolhouSI' - to keep the pilot an d
deckhand wa rm in cold weal her."
Unlike most of AEP's flecl of 24
towboats and nearly 500 barges. th••
Juanita dof'S not primarily move
coal to the mmpany's power plants
up and down the ·nver. The .Juanita
spends most of its rime as a harbor
boat for the three-quarter-mile-long
fleet facility at Lakin. W.Va .
The Juanita can occasio nally bE'
seen along the river moving coal
from a coalloadout nerar Pomero)·
Jo the giant Gavin power plant just
across the 1iver on the Ohio soorr.
The harbor boat has a 135horsepower General Motors diesel

CAREER IN MIN1!111W - Rev. Jbn Lusher,
pastor of Faith llaptW Churdl bt Galllpolbi, explains

why he chose the ministry as a career ID Yudenl• at
the Bidwell-Porter Career Fair.

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DUAL SPEAKER - .Joseph Cain, prosecutin g
attomt•y, infonns sttodcnts to academically prepare

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DENTIST OR MODEL?- David Smith, DDS, t111d
Oakley Collins chat as !lludents from Hannan TroiCe

lhemselves lor lhe career of law. Cain was also there
to speak abouiLaw Day, whichwasatthesametime.

Jearn about modeling from Kay Hardway and Usa
Smith of Proliles.

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malntalng employment ID students during a
classroom unH on choosing a career.

FOOD SERVICES - Bidwell-Porter !tudents talk
IAl Randy \l'cyant, quality conlrol meat cutler from

Bob Evans Fanns, and \\'aher Vordl from Donut
Delicious as part of the Career Fair held al till•school.

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We put the whole world in your hand.·

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

VE'IERANs 1\fEMORL\L
Friday admls8lorw - Leonard
Fields, New Haven; Lewfl! Harlis,
Pomeroy.
FridaY discharges - Etollla
Cassell.

•

NASA eyes future nuss1on

Police ticket two
POMEROY - Pomerov Police
inmtigatc'!l two accidents and two
drivers were cited Friday evening.
Police said at 7: ()) p.m. on U.S. 33
inside the CO'lJOration limits, a
motorcycl&lt;' dr iven by .Jcr!J' L.
Markin·, Albany, struck the rear of
a car driven by Thomas E. While.
Shade, who was atlempting a tum
off the route.
There were lig ht damages to the
Whit e vehicle and moderate to the
motorcycle. There were no injuries.
Markin was cited on assured clear
distance and driving while intoxicated charges. JXllice report.
At 7:51 p.m. JXlliC&lt;' said a ca r
driven by Brad A. Young. P omP·
roy. hit the rear of a car dnvrn b ) ·
Jay Clark D. Ruliand. which. m
turn, hit the r&lt;'ar of a car dr iven by
Kim Fife. Pom&lt;:'roy, who was
attemptin g a turn off WE-st Mam
Street.
There were moderate damages
10 Ihe Young and Clar k vrhiclrs and
light to the File vehicle . You.ng was
cited 011 an assured clear diSianC1'
char~. police said.

June 15, 1986

Point Pleasant, W. Va .

Miami enacts
new program

.

\

UPPER AT. 7 • P.O. BOX 342
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
• S~hl &lt;1'

l

'''l'~ll''tt:

P•r:t~ ~U~ A

.,

11tm:~r • ~:&lt;'

.,,...

j~C~'

Phone 446·4517
9•oc•1 J'' "'i (Y:&lt;

~

."'G,c

'"t···--&lt;.f

SAL£ ENDS 7/31/86

I JORDAN'S HARDWARE &amp; AUTO CENTER
· MAIN STREET, VINTON, OHIO
614/311·9961

AUCfJONEERING - Studenla from K)'lel' Creek
hand at auclloneemr .. Lonnie Nul,

tl)' their

auctioneer, often ln!!lrucllon. He was at the school as
pari of a special caner fair held In May.

FLORAL DESIGNING - Jerry Reynolds, Ooral
delllgner !rom JR Florist, shares her knowledge wHh
1111

Interested student at the Bldweli-Porier Career

}' air. Stale Sen. Q-.\kley Collins l~ k1 tbe background
: talking to a student about a career it politics.

�Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio

Page A-8 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 15, 1986

Point Peasr1, W.Va.

Community calendar/ area happenings
SUNDAV
GALLIPOLIS - Mina Chapel
services Sunday, 7:30p.m., Mark
Sanders speaking.
ADDISON - Curtis Muncy
speaks at Addison Freewill Baptist
Church, Sunday, 7:30p.m.
LEITA - Rev. Earl Hinkle at
Walnut Ridge Church, Sunday.
KANAUGA- Homecoming Sun·
day, Silver Memorial Church,
Sunday, 10 a.m. , Joe Stewart Trio
singing.
GALLIPOLIS - Gallla County
Historical Society. board meeting
Sunday. 1 p.m.; general member·
ship at 2:30 p.m .. St. Peter's
Episcopal Church. program b)'
History Day winners from Gallia
Academy High School.
GALLIPOLIS - Fellowship
Day, Bulaville Christian Church,
Sunday. 9:30 a.m. Basket dinner
noon. Special singing begins 1 p.m.
Evangelist Bill Price.
EWINGTON - Bernard Shoek·
ley, general superintendent Bible
Holiness Churrhl's. will be at Pine
Gmve Holiness Church. Sunday.

Job's Daughter
receives honor

Kristina Kim Adams
POMEROY ~ Kristina Kim
Adams, daughter of Carol Jean and
Jim Adams, Syracuse, was in·
stalled as honored queen of Bette!
62. International Order of Job's
Daughters, In ceremonies held
Silturday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
· Other elected officers installed
Lisa Miller, senior princess;
Shannon Coates, junior princess;
t-ori Redman. guIde; and Carol
~ndrix, marshall.
· Appointed officers installed were
Greta Riffle, chaplain; Amy Luckeydoo. recorder; Emily Bum·
a-ardnt"r, musician; Sarah Wiles.
~rst messenger; Melanie Arnold.
SECOnd messenger; Rebecca Wiles.
third messenger; Kristen Pape,
fdurth messenger; Dreama Bentz,
filth messenger; Candice Moore,
senior custodian; and Mary Beth
Stein, choir member.
· The installing officer was Me·
lanie Arnold, assisted by Zandra
Well, guide; Carol Smith, marshal;
Julie Eyer, chaplain; Sherri Sisson.
senior custodian; Beth Mayer,
junior custodian ; Debbie Finlaw,
recorder; Kathy Johnson, musi ·
~ian; and Dreama Bentz. flag
bearer.
Guardian Council m('fllbers in·
troduced were Merri Arnsbary,
guardian : Mike Buskirk, associate
'guardian ; Kathy Johnson, guard·
ian secretary; JoyCl' Sisson. guard·
Jan treasurer; and Julie Byer.
'directress of music. The associate
guardian council is composed of
Bonnie Smith. promoter c1 soclabil·
lty, _who rcg i s t~red the guests; Bev
llishop, custodian of parapherna·
lia; Paula Eichinger. director of
linan Cl'; and Michael Walker,
director of fraternal relat ions . .
The honored quecn 's colors of
pink and 1urquol s~ were ca rrled out
1n the decorations. H~r flower, the
rose. and her emblem. the cross
were also used in the installat io n ·
and reception which followed In the
Temple socia l room.
The new honored queen is a
senklr at Southli'rn High School,
belongs to the Nationa l Honor
Society, is a varsity cheerleader,
sings in the show choir, a nd attends
St. Paul Lutheran Church In
Pomeroy.

were

GALLIPOUS - Buckeye Shoe·
benders Pony Pull, Sunday, noon
sing, Gallla County Coon Hunters
Club. Adnnlsslon $1.50 adults, child·
ren under 12 free.
GALLI PO US- The Pathfinders
will be at Christ United Methodist
Church, Sunday, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Church
of Christ wUI hold Vacation Bible
School beginning Sunday and con·
tinulng through Thursday at 6:30
each E"'enlng. Dosing program will
bE&gt; 7:30p.m. Friday.

MONDAV
GALLIPOLIS -Gallipolis Busi·
ness and Professional Women meet
I'jlonday, 6:30p.m., Down Under.
GALLIPOUS - Bible School
begins Monday, 6 to 8 p.m .. First
Church d the Nazarene, Gallipolis.
KANAUGA -

Neighborhood Watch meets Monday, 7:30p.m. Holiday Inn.
ROONEY - Bible School begins
Monday, 9 a.m. to ooon, Rodney
United Metlr:&gt;dlst Church.
RAONE - Vacation Bible
School at Antiquity BaptiSt Church,
Route3'l8, Racine, Monday through
Friday, 10 a .m-noon dally.
SYRACUSE ~ Rick Weaver,
Cottageville, W.Va .. wilt be evange·
list at a revival at Syracuse
Mission, Monday through Saturday, 7 each evening.
MIDDLEPORT - A Men's
Fellowship meeting has been set for
Monday, 7:30 p.m., at Middleport
Church d Christ.
TUESDAY
GALLI PO US- Lafayette White
Shrine meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m.

GALLIPOLlS - Galltpolls RDtary meets '1\Jesday, 6 p.m., Down
Under.
OAK mLL - Cardiff Club meets
Thesday, 6:30p.m., Lewis Family
Restaurant, Oak Hill.
GALLIPOLlS - Right To Life
meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m., Buckeye
Rural Electrtc BuDding.
KYGER - Cheshire Township
Trustees meet '1\Jesday, 6 p.m.. In
the township building.
MIDDLEPORT - Group 2 of
Middleport Presbyterian Church
will meet '1\Jesday at the home of
Mrs. Carl Horky, wtth Mrs. Tom
Rue as co-hostess. Mrs. Eddie
Burkett wtU have the &amp;iudy from
tiE Concern book. Mrs. Frances
Anderson will have the devotkm. A
thanks offering wUI be taken,
LONG BOTI'OM -t-ong Bottom

Kanauga Area

Home of the future does the cooking
By RU'm YOUNGBLOOD
United Press lntematlonal
Husbands and wives In the 19!lls
will be asking the house, not the
spouse, to start the coffee, finish the
laundry and make the dinner.
Commuters will be able to tum
off the air conditioner or tum on the
security system by telephone from
mUes away. Children who stick
their fingers in an ou tlet won't be
electroculrd.
Ideas that were the stuff of
science fiction are now emOOdied.ln
a roving "Smart House," a proto·
type of the sophisticated and safe
electronics technology envisioned
lor new homes within a lew years.
The National Association of
Home Builders predicts more than
500,00) new houses will incorporate
electronic marvels by 1991. and
more than 1 mUlion homes with
these features will be constructed
annually in 1995.
Demonstration homes are
planned lor construction in several
markets throughout the country In
19ffi. Meanwhile, trailers carrying
Smart House models are appearing
at home builders conventions and
other major trade shows nation·
wide, with appearances in Atlanta,
San Francisco, Denver and Wa·
shington. D.C. scheduled this year.
"There's nothing pie-in-the- sky
about this," said Ken Geremia,
Information director for the
NAHB's research foundation In
Rockville, Md. "We're not trying to
reinvent the wheel. We're making It
mll more smoothly."
Under the foundation's direction ,
30 of America's leading manufac·
turers are Involved In an ambitious
venture: the development of a new
l'iring system tying all of a home's
electmilic components Into one
computer-controlled operation.
Proponents of the system say
coffee pots. furnaces. telephones,
lamps, stereo speakers- anything
tha I consumes energy - could be
programmed to operate at set
schedules and cont rolled at one
location.
"Universa l" outlets will be able to
take plugs from any appliance. No
voltage would be present at an
outlet until an appliance or light
calls for It, and circuit breaker
panels would be replaced by
elect ronic sensors.
Appliances which cease to tunc·
lion normally would have the power
cu t off automatically. Electrica l
fires and accidental electrocutions
would be virtually eliminated, say
researcher's. Burglar and !Ire
protection will be an
of

the technology .
For example, a deaf person
The wiring system wUI also canoot hear the sound of running
receive and carry out telephone water that signals a water leak. But
instructions from outside, so that a continual rmnltortng system at
res idents can phone ahead to tum the Smart House would nash a
on the house lights.
warning on a televiSion screen or
Altoough many existing homes trigger a display on a home
contain some automated features, maintenance device.
most require separate wiring
For the blind or visually lm·
schemes for video. audio, light, paired, a braille-encoded control
electric and other power distribu· panel could be used to turn anything
tlon. Genemia said tiE Smart House en or off and confirm the
will ellmina te the mazes of wiring instructions.
transmission by consolidating all
tasks In to a single cable.
r;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;=~
"The existing electrical systems I '
in today's homes were designed
anywhere from 60 to 100 years
ago," said Hank Levine, NAHB
marketing director. "This project
will bring housing up to date with
the space age."-The Smart House Idea has
received widespread support from
the housing industry, rnanulactur·
ers and such federal agencies as the
U.S. Department of Commerce, the
Consumer P r o d u c t Safety
Commission and the National
Institute of Building ScienCl's.
The project grew out of a 1984
NAHB conferenCl' attended by
manufacturing firms, trade associ·
SPRING
PUll
allons and government agencies.
Shortly thereafter, It received a
sbot ·in-the-ann when Congress
passed the National Cooperative
Research Act, permitting greater
Highly QUIIIifW T•chtr
Inter-firm collaboratlon.
from T"in Fills, h..ho.
Compatibility Is essential to the
project since all the myriad devices
Sa..... of'lw; worlls will bl
have to work off the same
on dl•lar at Dis.
electronic network. At presf!Dt,
••• 213•

F1ame Fello~llip Chapter. Tues·
day, 7:30p.m.• Mount Olive Com·
munity Church. Speakers wlll be
Adrienne Buckley of Cleveland and
Helen Hunt of Ashland, Ohio.

Foster, W.Va. wiii!JE&gt;speakeratt he
Red Brush Church of Christ located
on Bashan !load . lor Su nday
services;•I 9:30a. m. and li p.m. The
IJJblic is invited to attend.

fteaenralloiB '*lied
GALLIPOUS - Cardiff Club
members should make reservations lor the Thesday dinner at
Lewis Family Restaruant bySatur·
day. Call Lucille Rees, 446-7667.

Bible school
SHADE ~ The Sh ad~ United
Methodist C \ t u r~·h will \)('sponsor· ·
ing a week-long Bibl_e school,
Monday lhrough Friday, from 9
a.rr1. to 11 :45 a.m . each clay.
Cliildren, age] and older, will bE&gt;
taught ttu·ou gh stories. songs and ,
crafts. In terested adu lts wUI be
offered Bible st11dy. Director is ~
Beverly l&lt;ubachka woo can be '
reachrd at 69G·1148 for additional

Gbi Scout pro,tilcts
GALLIPOUS - Cards for Girl
Scout projects for the Gallia County
Junior Fair must be picked up
eithrr by tiE scout or her troop
leader, Sarurday,10a.m. to 5 p.m ,
at thr Dr. Samuel L. Bossard
Memorial Library. It the card is oot
picked up, the elrl cannot enter her
project In the fair.

Reu'*-n let
OAK Hll.L - David J enldns
Tynant famUy rl'l!nlon wUI be June
:!l, Welsh American Heritage Mu·
seum, Oak Hill.
Special !len'lces
BASHAN - Denver Hill of

!Whln Ann Buffington and Richanl
Mauri ce Payne

Buffington, Payne
make wedding plans

infmm ation.

Chlldren's flhn'
POMEROY - Starting Friday,:
children 's film' wil l be soown every ·
Friday and Saturday at the Pome-:
roy and Middleport libraries. Films ·
will bE&gt; at Pomcro)', Friday, 2 p.m.:
Middlc~ rt. Saturday at 2 p.m.
Films for .June• an~ as follows: June ·
13 anci 14 , Thrf\~ Musketeers and
Mr. Magoo: Jun&lt;· 20 and 21. Star
Trek - Da ggpr of th(• Mind ; June '
Zl and 2K The Ll&lt;•&lt;'rsia.l&lt;'r.

Teresa ·Ann Shuler

Tabbatha Clonch becomes bride
of Nathan Ray ~Cl~gg May 25
RACINE - Kellee Jo Burdette
and Daniel Alan Nease exchanged
wedding vows at the Forest Run
United Methodist Church at 2:30
p.m on May 17. The Rev. Steve
Nelson performed the double ring
Cl'remony.
The br ide Is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. E. N. Burdette, LaVine,
Calif. Nease Is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick S. Nease, Racine .
Rose Ann Jenkins was organist for
the wedding with special music by
Jeannie Nease. soloist, Roy .Jenkins
and Rick Hauber, and the Rev.
Sonny Zuniga of Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport , who
sang "The Lord's Prayer."
John T. Blake of Middleport
escorted his niece to the altar. She
wore a form al whit e gown of bridal
satin with lace overlay. The bodice
lea tuned a V neckline and long lace
sleeves with wide culls. She carried
a colonial bouquet of mixed flowers
with pink and rose ribbon accent.
Tracy Burdette was her sister's
maid of honor, and thP bridesmaids
were June Wickersham , and
Teresa Tyson-Drummer. Abby
Blake, cousin of the bride, was the
flower girl. The maid of honor wore
a pink gown wtth low ~kline and
short lace sleeves, while the

·Suits •••••••JwW..~L\.. Mlfl•••••• 40°/o OFF
Bathing Suits ••.•••...... 2S0/o OFF
Summer Sportswear .. 20°/o OFF
Spring Sportswear ...•. 1I 3 OFF
GIOUP .OF

Dresses •.••••••.•.••••• 2 S•S0°/o OFF

SAT., JUNE 21

TAUGHT IY ·JAN. ,(l(lE

ric Co. are
working
on washing
Whirlpool
Corp.
and General
Elect·
machines and other appllanres that
dial a repair shop when trey break
oown. Carrier Corp. is devising a
system to cool different sections c1 a
home at different times.
Otter firms cooperating In the
venture are are Apple Comput er
Inc .. Bell Nortll!rn Research,
Honeywell Corp. National Semicon·
ductor Corp.. Shell Development
Co .. Scott Instruments Corp.. Du·
pont Connector Systems and the
Federal Pacific Electric Co.
This coordination should result" in
an affordable system, advocates
contend. They also note that
homeowners will save rmney by
buying only as much power as they
need.-The Smart House will be of
particular benefit to the handi ·
capped, Geremia pointed out,
because the system can lncorpo·
rate special features at relatively
little expense.

Shuler, Powell plan
2 wedding

Kellee Jo Burdette, Daniel Nease
marry in double-ring ceremony

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Alan Nease

All Day Painting
Seminar

bridesmaids were in rose colored
gowns of identical design. They all
carried colonial bouquet s of mixed
flowers In pink and rose.
The bride 's gown and all of the
attendants' dresses were made by
the mothe r of the groom.
Stephe n Nease of Por1land
served as his brother's bes t man ,
and the ushers were Rogl'r Nease,
Racine, and Roger Michad.
Syracuse.
A reception honoring the couple
was held in the church social roor1.
The groom's sister, Lee Ann Smith,
New Matamoras, made and deco·
rated the wedding cake. Lisa
Ashley registered the guests.

Roush, Bailey to wed
in August .ceremony

GALL !POLLS - Tabbatha Gay.
iene Clonch and Nathan Ray Clagg
were united In marriage May 25, In
a double-ring .ceremony at the
Church of Christ and Christian
Union, The Rev. Leland Allman
o!ficiated.
The bride is the daught er of Katie
Clonch of Route 1 Upper River
Road. The groom is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Turle:y L. Clagg Sr., of
Rou te 3 Gall ipolis.
Matron of honor was Barbra .J.
Tilley of Wellston , sister of the
bride. Bridesmaids were Robyn L.
Vea:&amp;y of Columbu s. sister of the
bride, and Paula J . Knox of
Gallipolis.
The bride wore a long white gown
with a sweetheart neckline, pearltrimmed sleeves and a long lace
train . Her veil was three-tiered and
had a headpiece covered with seed
pearls. The matron of honor wore a
long lacy pink gown. and the
bridesmaids wore long blue gowns
trimmed with ruffles .

Probert, Vosler vows
to be spoken in July

The best man was Billy J . Clagg
of Gallipolis, brother of the groom.
Ushers were Turley L. Clagg Jr. of
Wellston, also a brother of the
groom, and Mark Burton of
Gallipolis.
Two nieces of the bride, Dianna
Tilley and Melissa Tilley of Well ·
ston, attended the guest book. The
carpet was rolled out by Matt
Va ughn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Vaughn, Gallipolis.
The church was decorated with
unity candles and vases of gladloU
mixed wtth daisies and and pink
and blu e carnations.
Guests included Tara Veazey of
Columbus, niece of the bride;
Mr.and Mrs. Summers Ashworth of
Marion , aunl anduocleofthe bride;
Pam Loudermllk of Wellston;
Christy Luooy of Oak HUI; Rhon~a
Worrix of Vinton County; Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Spears of_Columbus, aunt
and uncle ci the groom; Virgie Rist
ot Columws, aunt of the groom;
. and Vivian Schultz of Florida.
cousin of the groom.
The bride is a graduate of Kyger
Crff'k High School and Buckeye
Hills Career Center. She Is employed at Ponderosa Steak_ House
The groom graduated--from
Ga il Ia Academy and Buckeye HUis .
He Is employed at Elliot's Ap·
pliance, Gallipolis.
They reslde at Route 2, Patriot.

Holzer nurses reunite
A reunion of the Holzer School of
Nursing Class of 1966 has been
planrl&lt;'d for June 2S at the Down
Under Restaurant In Gallipolis.The
activities tbenewlll begtnat !Oa.m.
The afternoon will be left open for
visiting around Gallipolis or tours of
local historical places, and in the
evening a social hour will begtn at
6:30 preceding a dinner.
Members ot otter classes or
associates of the class duriing their
years of training are Invited to join
. the group and may contact Karen :
Dally Roberts in Gallipolis. 379- 1
2:00, or Carol Jean Sights Adams, ·
Meigs County 992-2311 for further
inlonnatlon.

When they·tell you
Abortion is a
Woman's decisionThey are forgetting
Someone - FATHER!

HOURS:.
MON . &amp; FRI.
9,30 -1:00
TUES., WID .. THURS., SAT. 9:30·5

~

--"

WED IN APRIL - DeAnne
Lee Ehrich aad Jack Ray Minor
were l118l'lied April 28 at Holy
Cro88 Lutheran Chureh in WIchita, Kansas. The Re". ,Jeftrey
Crane ofllclated. The bride Is the
daughter of Jeanne Huri and
PhD D. Ehrlich, Wichita. Tbe
groom Is lhe son of Jack and
Nancy Minor, Cheshire, The
couple resides In Tyler, Texas,
where she Is human l'e!IOUrre
secretary for Sanger llarrls
Corp. and be Is a ceramic
leflmlclan for Ferro c o.,..

POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Bailey, Pomeroy, are an · ·
nounclng the engagement and
approching marriage of their
daughter, Kristin . to Ro dnc~y
Roush, son of Beverly Roush and
the late Lee Roush.
Both are graduates cf Meigs High
School. The bride-elect is employed
at Kay's Beauty Sa lon, and her
fiance Is employed at tlx' Blue
Streak Cab Co.
The wedding is being planned for
Aug. 23.

_&gt;. . .

-

Y'

_{:&lt;;'

)~;p;

-.~:
.§.ix/lVi.
.,.,.~f}
Karen Elizabeth Probert

POMEROY - Mr . and Mrs.
William Probt&gt;rt of St. Clairsvllle,
are announcing the engagement
and approaching marriage of their
da ughter, Karen Eltzab&lt;'th. 50955 S.
R. 248, Long Bottom, to Jeffrey
Scott Vosler. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Charles iSkipl Vosler. Athens .
The wedding wil l be held on July
27 In Athens.

THREE OPPORTUNITIES
to celebrate the
GOEBEL COLLECTORS' CLUB'S
TENTH BIRTHDAY
exclusively for members

PHARMACY

AREHOUSE
I•
EVERYTHINC

OFF

Jeanine Bea"er and Alan Tenoy
GALUPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
David L. Beaver of GallipoliS ,
announce the engagement and
forthComin g marriage of their
daughter, Jeanine, ·to Alan L.
Tenoy, son of Mr. and Mrs . Charles
F . Terry of Jackson.
The bride-elect Is a graduate of
Gallia Academy High School. She Is
employed by the' Central Trust
Bank in Galltpolls.
Terry Is a graduate of Jackson 1
High School, and received a '
bachelor's degree in accounting
and Business Administration at Rio
Grande College. He Is employed by
Oak HOI Banks, In Jackson.
An October wedding Is ~lng
planned.

Rt. 4, Box 2o1
Gallipolis, Oh. 45631

NAME .................... ,............ .......... .... ....... ... .... ...... .... PljONE ........... .. .

HOUIS 10:00 A.M. TO 6:00 P.M.

SlCJOO

'~~

Kristin Bailey

Happy
Father's
Day!
Join Gallla County;
Right To life

56 STA11 STREET-GAUIPOLJS

MADE IN U.B.A.
WHITE &amp; BROWN

SUNDAY, JUNE 15TH, 11 A.M. TO 8 P.M.

SHOW

614-446-7441

QUAUTY FOOO'WEAII

~;:===·=·=·==·===~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Let' s celebrate the Clu b's tenth birthday toget her'
Come in and see our three extra-special birthday offerin gs.
available only to Club members. If you' re not a member, ask us how
easy and rewarding it is to join . Join the fun and celebrate the Club's
tenth birthd ay three different ways!

AS ADVERTISED
ON THE
PHIL DONAHUE

LETART FALL&lt;; ~ Mr and
Mrs. Em:jt M. Shuler, Letart Falls
announce the engagement ad ap·
pmaching marriage of their daugh ·
ter, Teresa Ann, to Dougl as Dean
Powell , Racine. Hr is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. David A. PoW('\ \
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Soutll!rn High School and plans to
artend Ohio University this fa ll to
study r lementaly eduation. Her
fiance , also a graduate of Southern .
is also planning to attend Ohio
University where he will study
electro nics engineering.
An ~rn church wedding is lX'ing
plannrd lor 7: 30p.m. on Aug . 2 at
the Leta r1 Falls United Met hodist
Church . A reception will fo llow at
the Racine Methodist Church .

MIDDLEPORT - Announce·
ment is being made of the
engagement and approaching mar·
riage of Robin Ann Buffington,
Riverside Apartments, Middleport ,
to Rich ard Mauri ce Pay ne .
Bidwell.
The bride -elect is tlle daugh ter of
Sharon Kay Buff ington. Nyc
Avenue, Pomeroy , and Payne is the
son of Marjonc Payne and the late
Maurice tDickiet Payne, Bidwell.
The wedding will ta kr pl ace Ju ty
19, at 6:30p.m. at the MI. Ca rmel
Baptist Chu rch, Bidwell.
Miss Buffington graduated from
Meigs High School and is employed
as a secretary wih the Gallia·Mr\gs
Communit y Action Agency-JTPA .
Payne is a graduate of Nor1 h
Calha High School and Rio Grande
College. He is employed as a contml
technici an ilr Phillip S[lOrn Power
Plant.

300 Second Ave., Lafayette Mall, Gallipolis

Beaver, Terry plan
wedding in October

Get your
Living Room
Dining Room and
Hall Carpet

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-9

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

June 15, 1986

ADDRESS ............... .............. ........... ... ............ .................... ......... :...... .
Enclosed Is my donation ................... :............ ........ .. ............ $.............. ..

Goebel
A tradition in handcraftsmanship since\871

13 COURT
POftiROY, OH.
992-2054

c(Ql~@je·~·

342 2ND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH . .
446-2691

FORMER THALER FORD BUILDING
ROUTE 35 WEST WEST, GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

FINAL DAY
EVERYTHING MUST CO SUNDAY!

"Your Proje.1s iorral Jeweler

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�June 15, 1986

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

Page-A-10-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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Earlier we menlioned I hal Crisco
and Family Circle Magazine are
having a contest to select state pies
and from them a nallonal pie. To
determine lhe category of competiton for each stale contest (what
kind, tha t Is ) food editors were
as ked to vote for the kind of pie best
represenling their home slates.
That was a month or so ago.
We're now advised that in Ohio
the vole resulled in a lie between
apple pie and strawberry pie, and
the Ohio Stale Fair ctficials stepjX'd
in with an imparlla l tie breakersour cherry - another bOuntiful
frull crop grown throughoul the
stale.
So:.... can you bake a cherry pie?
Judging will lake place al lhe

State Falr. The crllerla of judging Is
crus! , (muSI be made with Crisco \
Oavor, texture, and color, 30 ,olnls;
lUling, flavor, consistency, and
appearance. 30 points; overall
appearance and altractlveness, 15
poinls, and originality which means
creallve preparation and use of
Ingredients to reflect the stale, 25
,olnls.
Flrst priU' Is a blue ribbon and an
expense paid lr!p to the national
finals which wUI be hosted by
Loretta Lym in early November.
Entry fonns are available from
th&lt;&gt; American Pie Celebrallon. Ohio
Stale Falr, 632 E. lith Ave.,
Columnts, 43211, or ca ll 614 -294-

5441.
June has been a month of
graduations for Opel ElchingPr.
Her granddaugtller, Michelle Wilson gradualed from Eastern High
School las! weekend, and yesterday
her daughter graduated from Ohio
State University, and her oon,
Dennis got his mas ler's from Ohio
University.
Needless 10 say, sbe rouldn'l
altend morning graduations al bOth
OSU and OU, oo she wen! to Laura's
since It was her first time through a
college commencement.
After graduation at OU Dennis
and his wHe, Gail, and daughler.
Michelle, joined the family al the
home of Charles Henry Eichinger,
Sue and Susan, Columoos. Also
there were Mrs. Eich inger' sisler,
Mae Knight, another son, Donald
and his wHe, Jan, and thelr
children, Tiffany and JuS! ln.
For Mrs. Eichinger, this makes
three OSU graduates In the faml:y
- Dennis, Charles and Laura and one Rio Grande graduate,
Donald. And then Dennis with a
ma ster's from OU.

Walter IUid Vlrginla Wears

Pomeroy couple celebrate
50th weddjng anniversary
POMEROY - Wall er and Virgi
nia Wears will observe !heir 50th
wedding anniversary on June 22 at
the Rock Springs Grange Hall with

Activities offered

GALLIPOLIS - Acllvilles and
menus for the week of June 16
through June 20 al lhe Senior
Clllzens Center, 220 Jackson Pike,
are as bllows:
Monday - Ceramics Class,
9:30-ooon; Choru s, 1-3 p.m.
Tuesday - S.T.O.P. /Physica l
Fitness, 10:30 a. m.
Wednesday - Vinton Bible
Study, 1 p.m.; Card Games, 1-3
p.m.
Thursday- Bible Study, 11 -ooon .
Friday - Art Class, 1-3 p.m.;
Craft Mini -Course, 1-3 p.m.; Open
Have a nice week and save some Activities, HO p.m.
Menus consist of:
energy for next weekend when Ill&lt;'
Monday - Salmon loaf, scal!own wUI be alive with Heritage
loped
rotatoes, sliced butt ered
Weekend activities.
carrots, wt&gt;eat bread. pear haif.
Tuesday - Pork roasl, sweel
ro taloes, spin ach. rolls, Ice cream.
Wednesda y - Ham and beans.
POMEROY - Bookmobile ser· cottage cheese. sa lad , cornbread.
vice in Meigs County Is brought by jello with fruit.
the Meigs County Public Ubrary
Thursday - Beef liver and
under contract with the Ohio Valley mlons, mashed potatoes. peas.
Area Libraries.
wt&gt;eat bread, peaches.
Bookmobile Schedule for MonFtiday - Macaroni and cheese,
day, June 16; Carpenter (Laura's stewed tomatoes, green beans.
Store), 3: 10.3: 40; Dexter (Church ), wheat bread, peanut butter cookies.
4: 10-4:40; DanvUle !Church ). 5: 15Choice of beverage served with
5:45; Ruliand !Civic Center }, 6: 30· each meal.
7:30.
Bookmobile Schedule for Tues·
J\JnniUI Jerry L. Rucker
GALLIPOLIS _ Findin g emday, June 17: Portland (Post
Office), 2:10-2: 40; Letart Falls
ploymenl
as Employers
an older person
is
(E ffie's Restaurant), 3:05-3: 50; seldom
easy.
like older
Racine (Bank !. 4:35-5: 35; Syracuse workers because they are reliable,
(Pool), 5:50-7:20.
easy to gel along with, and
Bookmobile Schedule for Wed· committed to giving eight oours
Airman Jerry L. Rucker. son of nesday, June !B; Baum Addllion, work for eight hours pay.
Mr. and Mrs. James S. Rucker of 2:10-2: 40: Keno (No. side of Keno
Uyoo are 50 years of age or older
Rural Route I, Reedsville, has Bridge), 3:00-3:30: Success Road and looking for part -lime or
J(raduated from Air f orce basic . (near 39000), 3:454: 15; Long Bol· full -time employment co ntact the
training at Lackland Air Force "16lt! '(Post0fflce), 4:254:55; Reeds · Job Bank al 446-1!100 and discuss
Base, Texas.
ville (Reed's Store I, 5:(li-6: (li; your employment needs "1th our
Dw-in g the six weeks of training Tupper's Plains (Lodwick's), 7:(li- Job Coonselors.
the airman studied the Air Force 7:50; Chester (Fire Slaliont. S:(liThe Job Bank Is open Monday
missio n. organl?.ation and customs 8:35.
through Friday.
and received special !raining in
human relations.
In add II ion. airmen who complete
basic training earn credits toward
an associate degree through the
Communi ty College of the Air
force .
QUAUTY FOOTWEAII
!le Is a 19&amp;1 gradu ate of Eastern
High School, Reedsville.

0

!"

Missouri dads get
cards from state

JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (UPI I
- AbOut 15,001 Missouri men will

Bookmobile schedule

Job Bank gives help

Reedsville airman
completes training

receive
falhefrom
r's Day
greet
ing an- unusual
a reminder
the
stalE· to pay I heir child suppoli .
Michael Hen ry. the director of
the Division of Child Support, said
the 15.000 ca rds mailed last week to
father s who have had problems
paying child suppo11 are just a
reminder.
"We like to remind the parents
who owe 1ha t we know where they
are," Henry said. "Our thinking is
then they 'll be a tittle more likely to
makP I heir payments volcotarily."
The green cards are decorated
wilh a yellow light bulb printed with
the words" pay your child support. "
" We don 't like to orrend anyone
bul it's less drast ie for I hem to gel a
card then some sort of legal
document orcouli papers," he said.
The cards were sent only 1o
fathers who have had court orders
placed against them for child
support payments. The idea came
from state officials who heard

0

C~r:'iour-week

couse conducted
at the Marine Cof1)s Reserve
Center, Kansas City, Kan ., Is

designed
to correctthai
the exist
admlnlstra·
live deficiencies
In the
Reserve establishment.
During the course, Silverthorn
studied the terms and methods used
In Reserve Admbtlstratlon and the
Reserve Manpower Management
and Pay system.
A 1981 graduate of Tuscarawas
Valley High School. Zoarville, he
joined th&lt;&gt; Marine Corps In August
1981.

P"CII

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Army Spec. 4 Jeffrey D. Saunders, oon of Larry and Marry
Saunders ct Rural!Wute 4, Galllpo·
lis .. has arrived for duty with the
92nd Fi eld Artillery, We st
Germany.
Saunders Is a motor trans,ort
operator.
His wife, Tresha, is the daughter
of Roy Wray ct Gallipolis, and Chrts
Wray of 540 Buckrlge Road ,
BidwelL

0

...
0

(acorss from Veterans Hospital)

*Birth Control Services
•Pregnancy tests and counseling
•Cancer Screening:
Pap Smear and Breast Exam

All Services are CONFIDENTIAL
Sliding fee scale. No one is refused services
because of inability to pay.
f

OPEN DAILY MONDAY THIU FRIDAY
A •
or An pp01ntment Call 614·992-5912

.-~Tmas
~ex~a;;s~
h~ad~
se~n~l~ou~ti_s~im~iGl
~r~C~hr~is~t-.J~======::::::~E:O:E/~E:S:P=========~
card
reminders
lasl aypar.

~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;~;;;;;;;;~~

94

Each
Cassette or LP

.

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Bible School slated
RUTI.AND - Vacallon Bible
School wUI be held JulY' 23-27, 9:30
to 11:30 a.m., at the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church on Salem
Street. Classes for nursery age
lhrough leenagers. Everyone
welcome.

Four For The Show
PolyGram

)()
)()
I
Strengtn In Numbel s
A&amp;M

SALE GOOD
JUNE 16th
thru ·JUNE 20th

700 NORTH
SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT

brazle~

f SOU fh eOS f ern Oh'10

MEIGS MEDICAL BUILDING

HOUIS:
Mon. &amp; Fri. 9:30-8
Tues. Wed, Thws., Sot. 9:30-S

ONLY

known 10 choose wocks wa-th •
sreing and to treat them with :
respect."
·
Traubner says OW's rombina·
tion of professional perlormers,
extensive operetta repertoire and
full orchestra is unique · in the
United States.
0!.0 , which began In 1979 with
plano accompaniment, now s,orts
a 26-plece orchestra; dlrected by J.
Lynn Thompson, dlrector ct arches·
tras at Atlanta's Morthslde School
of the Arts.
The Ohio Light Opera Company,
which recl'\llts nationally, rotates
ils selections and that all shows are
presented the final week .
Johann Strauss' "Die Fledermaus" opens the schedule June 10.
In order of openings are "Patlenre," "Pirates of Penzance"
''The Desert Song," "The G~y
Princess," "Yeomen of the
Guard," "La Belle Helene," "Tria l
by Jury" and "The Sorcerer."
"The Gypsy Princess" Is written
by Errunerich Kalman, woo also
wrote "Countess Mar!lza" last
year's favorit e. All others are
Gilbert and Sullivan works, with
"Trial by Jury" and " The Sorcerer" being presented on one
program.
OLD workers also package operetta weekends , combining lodging
and dinner with theatre tickets.
They also promote plays performed al the adjacent Stage Right
Rep Co., now in Its fift h year. Those
offerings are "Look Back In Anger"
by John Osborne, "Hay Fever" by
Noel Coward: "Crimes of the
Heart" by Bet h Henley and "The
Dining Room " by AR. Gurney.
Th ai season runs June 2.1 tllrough
J uly 19.

D PLANNED PARENTHOOD

Marine Cpl. Michael A. Silverthorn , son of Frederick J . and
Eliza beth J . Silverthorn of Rio
Grande, recently completed the
lndependenl Duty Admlnislratlon

Specialist arrives

......

an open receplion from 2 to 4 p.m.
They are the parents of four
ch ildren. Paul Wears, Mrs. James
(Ann I Eva ns. Mrs. Benton (Jan I
Eblin, and Reta Eblin.
They have 13 grandchil dren and
five greal-grandchildren.
Friends and family are mrdially
lnviled to attend I he n&gt;eeption. Th&lt;&gt;
couple request that those attending
ml bring gift s.

WOOSTER, Ohio (UPI) - A
leading authority on operetta wU I
use his own translation when he
dl~ts one of !be offerin gs on the
Ohio Llghl Opera Company program which Includes live Gilbert
and Sullivan shows.
Richard Traubner, American 's
foremost aulhority on operetta , wU I
use his own translation when he
directs Jacques Offenbach's "La
Belle Helene."
Officials says ticket sales are
brisk for this summer' s program,
with Sigmund !Wmberg's "Desert
Song," being the leading seller.
They say ticket sales are running
far ahead of last year' s pace and
feel they could have a nearcapaclty ccowd for each of tbe 68
perlonnances between J une 10and
Aug.10.
Pertonnances are given In
Freedlander Theatre on the College
of Wooster ca mpus, a facility that
seats 394.
Box office manager Mimi Lewellen said 1986 licket sales are
!'\Inning 22 percent head of 1985
when 85 percent of the seats were
sold.
"If this keeps up, we have a
chance of selling 90 percent this
summer," she said.
OLD Artisic Direc tor James
Stuart, professor of music al Kent
Slate University and a recognized
authority on Gilbert and Sullivan,
attributes the success tolheway the
works are perlormed .
"Professional productions of live, ·
unamplified musical theat er are
r&lt;&gt;latively rare," Stuart said. "Over
the years, our audience ha s lea rned
Ia trust us . New works in the
repertolre - even unknown onesalways oo well because we are

Gallipolis seaman
in Team Spirit

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By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Tlmes&amp;ntlnel Staff
The return of Myron Duffield and
his calliope
Me!gs Co~tllty
Heritage
kend (thai's
21 and
sponsored
Farmers
alld Savings Co.,
officials of the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society now
advise.
Tentative plans call for Duffield
to not only entertain at the Museum
but also to perlorm down town on
Sa;lurday afternoon, about 2 p.m.
Music on Sunday afternoon will
be- provided by Duffield and "The
Su'nshlners" of Albany, allernatlng
durtng the afternoon.
Incidentally, all the demonstra·
lions and displays al the Museum
are free to enjoy. Donations will be
accepled but there Is no set chargP.

The Sunday Times-Sentinel Page A-11

Ohio opera season begins ,.:

Calliope returns

.

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

Community Corner

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June 15, 1986

Vanous Arl1 sts
Priority

�Page:-A-12 - The Sunday runes-Sentinel

June 15, 1986

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.
Michael S. Prall, son of Julia
Pratt of 5J() W. 41st St.,Ashta bula,
and brolther of Dona J . Hern of 2406
Lincoln Ave., Point Pleasant, has
• been promoted In the U.S. Air Force
to the rank of master sergeant.
Pratt Is an air traltlc control
teclmlclan k1 Spain with the 2l88th

Rural Route 2, ProctorvUie, and
Marlin D. Nichols ol Rural Route 1,
Crown City, has arrtved for duly
wtth the 'T7Ut Field Artillery, West
Gennany.
Nichols, a supply specialls~ Is a
1985 graduate of Fairland Hlgh
School, ProctorvUie.

lnformaUon Systems Squadron. He
Is a 1982 graduate of Southern
llltnols University, Carbondale, Ill.

Nichols
Army Pvt. Mickey L. Nichols,
son of VIrginia R. Dougherty of

Sport

'lim.. - Jenlirul

June 15, 1986

Nonnan leads by one
going into rmal round
By MIKE RABUN
UPI Spotts Wrller.
SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (UPI )Greg Norman overcame a double
bogey and the boisterous fans
cheering for his cloSl'St pursurer
Saturday to shoot a 1- over-par 71
and take a one stroke lead over Lee
Trevino and Hal Sutton with one
round to play In the 86th U.S. Open.
With the sun drenching the outer
reaches of Long Island and wltll the
feared winds at a mlnlnnum, one
famous golfing name after another
turned in sub-par scores at Shlnnecock Hills to set up the chance for a
sensallonal Sunday.
Norman was not among those
who broke par on the almost
century-old course, but he was the

MlUanl and Elva Grube

10°/o

Grube couple observe 60th anniversary
PATRIOT- Millard E. and E lva
Grube celebrated their 60th wed ding anniversary Saturday. June 14
a t their home in Patriot.
They were married June 19. 19~
at Ironton.
He Is Ute son of the late Carl F.

Grube and Perrnelia Jane Stralght
Grube. Mrs. Grube Is the daughter
ct. the late John Martin and Ethe l
Towns Martin.
The Gruhes ar the parents of
Marcus Grube, Columbus, MerrUI
Grube, Anacortes, Wash., Kenneth

O V .~R

Grube, Scottown, Ohio, Tom Grube,
Gallipolis and Wanda Fellinger of
Patriot. .

70 ()lJJSIVf()J{ILES

FRI.-THURS.

..., llllpiM . . . .

EXCLUDES CIERA COUPE, CUTLASS 442, 98's &amp; CORVEnES

JIM COBB

PIEmiN Pill
1'113

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Rc)!ular S6'1.511tu $51111. Nnw S48.SO to SJSO
Drtss. WOI'k and spon. All authoriml models .;th one year
m ~o rr wananly.

APIIJl Rlfl:l Dll
R

NOW THRU JUNE 21, 1986

TAWNEY JEWLERS

DOUBLE PlAY - Charlie Moore, left, MUwaukee, and Rey Quinones, B&lt;llton, were Involved in

"FORMERLY SIMMONS OLDS.·CAD.·CHEV."
30 8 E. MAIN ST. PH (
POMEROY, OH.
• 614) 992-6614

ATLANTA I UPI) - Eric Davis
stole third and scored on third
baSl'man Rafael Ra mir£'Z'serror in
the ninth inning Sa turday to give
the Cincinnati Reds a 2-1 victory
over Ute Atlanta Braves.
Davis, who ca me in to play left in
the sixth Inning, started the ninth by
singling to left . After Buddy Bell
sacrificed, Davis stole third and
scorro when the ball kicked off
Ramirez's glove lnlo short left field.
Ron Robinson, 4-0, picked up the
victory, pitching 2 J.J scoreless
relief innings John Franco got two
outs for his lOth save. Paul
Assenmacher fell to 2-2, allowing
only one unearned run In two
Innings of relief.
Atlanta took a 1·0 lead in the
fou n h. Omar Moreno led off with a
double. wrnt to third on Ken
Oherkfcll' s sacrifiCP and scored oo
Dale Murphy's single.
Cincinnati tied the score 1·1 in the
fifth . Bo Dlaz walked , went to third

HOUIS:
Mon., Wed., Fri. 1:30-I:OG
Tues. &amp; Thurs. 1:30-5:30

Sat. 1:30-•:oo; Sun. 1:00-S:OG

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You'll save cold cash!

FROM

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REG. $16.95 NOW

GENE MICHAEL
(New Cubs Manager)

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WHY NOT GET AN UP·TO·DATE FAMILY PORTRAIT?

Something you'll cherlah forever.
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MONDAY, JUNE 16-NOON-7:00
GALLIPOLIS FOODLAND-lrd lYE.
TUESDAY, JUNE 17-11:00-7:00
Pl. PLEASANT FOODLlND-JlCISON ~VE.
•

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 18-11:00-7:00
OHIO VALLEY FOODLlND-JlCISON PilE
THURSDAY, JUNE 19-11:00-7:00
RIPLEY FOODLAND-RIPLEY, WV.
FRIDAY, JUNE 20-10:00·7:00
BIG BEND FOODLAND-POMEIOY
SATURDAY, .111• 21-10:00·5:00
TWIN RIVEI FOODUND

•

lEG.

ncn
snuo

on Ron Oester' s double to right and
scored on Mario Solo's groundout.
Soto. making only his second
start after spending time on the
15-day disabled list , pitched six
strong Innings, allowing one run on
five hit s and strtking out five.
Mets 5, Pirates I
NEW YORK iUPII - Sid
Fernand('Z fired a three-hiller and
Len Dykstra and Keith Hernancrz
singled home runs in a five- run fifth
inning Saturday, leading the New
York Mets to their fourth straight
victory. a 5-l decision over the
Pillsburgh Pirates.
Fcrnancrz, 7-2, struck out eigh t.
walked one, and lost a chanCl' for
his first shutout of t IF year when the
Pirates scored in the first on Mike
Brown 's sacrifiCl' Dy.
New York has won 10 of it s lastl3
games and 16 of its last 21. With 41
vict01ies, 1he Mets have more
vict01ies than they did in their

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ELBERFEL.DS
POMEROY - '192-3671

enUre 1962 season.
Cards I, Cubs 0
CHJCAGO iUPI ) - Ray Burris
and Todd Worrell combined on a
five-hitter and Tom Herr hit a home
run Saturday to give the St. Louis
Cardinals a 1-0 victory over Chicago In Gene Michael's crbut as
Cubs' manager.
Michael was ejected along wilh
starting pitcher Scott Sancrrson by
lx&gt;me plate umpirl' Ertc Gr£&gt;gg
after an exchange of brus hback
pitches.
Twins 9, Indians 3
CLEVELAND (UPII - Mel
Hall 's error Ignited a three-run
eighth inning and Greg Gagne
delivered a two-run double Satur·
day , helping tbe Minnesota Twins
snap a three· game losing streak
wi th a 9-3 victory over the
Cleveland Indians.
Reliever Keith Atherton, 4·3.

similar to me in that he's had front
By RANDY MJNJIOFF
CHICAGO iUPI l - Chicago office experk'nce as well as ma nagCubs president Dallas Green, 5('- ing on the field ."
Michael. who had two tours of
lecting a man he considers a mirror
Image of himself, Friday named duty as Yankee manager in 1981
former Yankee skipper Gene Ml· and 1982, will inheril a club that
chael manager of the st ruggli ng never got untracked this season.
"Hopefully. he can turn it around
club.
Michael made his debu t wit h here," said Cubs' outfielder Jerry
Chicago Saturday. The Cubs are 10 Mumphrey. who played for Mi·
ga mes be low .:xx&gt; in fifth place. 17 chae l In 1981 and 1982. "He's a low
ga mes behind the National League kl'y guy but he ca n he a d scipllnarEast leading New York Met s. He . ian when he needs lo he."
Gree n said tbe remai ning
signed a two-year co nt ract to
become Ute team· s 38t h manager coaches, including interlnn man and third full-time manager hired ager John Vukovich, would stay on
fort be I'('St of the season. Green had
since Green took over in 1982.
Michael succeeds Jlnn Frey who fired third base roac h Don Zimmer
was fired Thursday. The new along with Frey.
"I'm disappointed but I'm glad to
manager sa id he was "ecstatic" to
have the opponunity to manage the he he!('," said Vukovich. who split
Friday's doubleheader agalnst St.
Cubs.
" I consider hlmSl'lf to he a lot lik e Louis In his one-day stint as
rne." Grcen said. "He's quite manager. " I started the year as a

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'

entered the game in the seventh and
pitched three innings of SCQI'('Iess
relief after Mark Ponugal developed a blister oo his throwing hand.
Neal Heaton, 3-6, took the loss.

•

Brewers 2, Red Sox 0
BOSTON !UP!) - Tim Leary
and Dan Plesac combined on a
seven-hi ller Saturday to lead the
Milwaukee Brewers to a 2-0 victory
over Ute Boston Red Sox.
Leary, 5-5, went 7 1-3 innings,
giving up seven hits, wa lking one
and striking out ooe. It was his
second victory against tbe Red Sox
within a week.
Yanl&lt;ees 4, Orioles 2
BALTIMORE &lt;UPI) -Rickey
Henderson, Dave Winfield and
Mike Easler smashed home runs
Saturday to power the New York
Yankees to their third st raighl
victory, a 4-2 crclsion over the
Ba ltlnnore Orioles.

coach and I'll end the year as a
coach."
Michael, 48, nicknamed "Stick"
because o~ his lean body, le ft
Ba itlnnore where the Yanks were
playing this weekend and beaded
lx&gt;me to New York Friday. He will
arrive in Chicago In tirnefortoday' s
game against St. Louis.
Frey's lack of aggressiveness
reportedly led to his firing . Michael,
woo was third base coach with !he
Yankees this year, convinced
Green he was able to get the club
going again this year.
In 1981, Michael managed the
Yanks to a 48-34 rocord, guiding
them to the first half title before he
was fired Sept. 6 and replaced by
Bob Lemon. He replaced Lemon
Apr il ~. 1982, managing I he Yanks
unt U Aug. 3 when he was f!1Jiaced
by Clyde King. New Yorkwas44-42
under Michael that smson.

THIRD ROUND LEADER- Greg Nonnan held the U. S. Open lead
for the third consecutive day Saturday alter shooting a one oover·par 71
at Southampton. He has a 210 total going Into today's finall8 holes, one
stroke better than Lee Trevino. 'lbe latter shot a one-under-par 00
Saturday after trailing Norman by three at the halfway point. (U I'I I

Oldest player in majors \tutoring newcomer in 'special art'

•Aut o. ctor co ntrol a11d ftes htone
comtct ion .
•Au to me tic contrast/ color tracking
•Sup er AccuFiltM black matrht picture tu be

GROUP PICTURE S S1 00 PE R SUBJECT PAY Wr4EN TAKEN

...

Michael makes Chicago debut Saturday

CLOSEOUT OF 1986 RCA COLOR TELEVISIONS

Imagine how delighted you ' tl be when you see your very own
child's face on our loving woodplaque.

double play Saturday when this UPJ action plllto was
taken at Fenway Park, Boston. The Brewers woo, 2-0.

LONDON (UPI,) - Jinnmy Con nors moved to Ute Utreshold of hL~
first tournament title in 20 montbs
saturday wben he defeated Roher!
Seguoo, G-3, ft. 4, In the semifinals of
the Queen's Club competition.
Huge-serving Tlnn Mayotte wUI
he tbe surprtse opponent for the top
seed following his second big upset
in as many days, stopping third
Sl'ed Stefan Edberg, 7-6 18-61. 6-1.
On Friday, Mayotte ousted de·
fending champion and No. 2 Sl'ed
Boris Becker, and he said he was
excited about the opponunity to
make it a clean sweep of the top
Sl'eds in Sunday 's fina l.

Cincinnati nine snaps losing streak, 2-l

CHEVROLET·OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

Fora II

only one to manage an even-par tune -up for wha t slx&gt; uld he a
total ci 210 for three rounds over I he sensational Sunday - one that will
once again find J ack Nicklaus
trouble-plagued layout.
The day, however, was not lurking back in the pack.
Nicklaus soot a br Saturday and
without problems. He missed an
moved
to within six shots of the lead
18-lnch putt at the 13th hole and
two
further
behind than he was
exchanged harsh words with
beginning
the
final round at Au members of the ga llery at the 14th
gusta
two
montbs
ago when he
IDle.
recorded hi s 20th m ajor
"I thought I was at a rockey championship.
match or football ma tch," said
Between Nicklaus and the top,
Norman. "The minority always however, were a host of stars .
screws it up for the majority . I
')'revino, woo began the day three
always enjoy playing with Lee. But strokes be hind Norman. climbed to
maybe it s good I'm not playing wi th wit hin oor at I -over 211 - tied with
Lee tomorrow (Norman wtll be fo rmer PGA champion Sutton.
paired with Sutton) . Maybe Lee will
Trevino soot 69 and was tled for
the lead for much of the back nine,
get all tbe rowdies."
Saturday's round wa s simply a but bogeyed the final lx&gt; le after
putting his second soot in to a
greenside bunker.
Sutton posted ooe of two 66s fired
at Shlnnecock HUis Saturday.
First-round leader Bob Tway
"Jimmy's going to he very shot 00 to stand alone in founh place
hungry because be hasn't won a at 212 while Raymond Floyd, Den is
tournament in a long time.'' said Watson, Payne Stewan. Mark
Mayotte, the eighth Sl'ed. "I'm as McCumber and Mike F!Pid were all
a t 213.
hungry as I've ever been."
An aU-star crew at 214 included
Alt rough he has won more
tournaments tha n any man during Ben Crenshaw. who eagled the
the Open era with 105, Connors has par4 14t h. Bernhard Lan~r . Tom
been shutout sinee winning in WatsOn. Lennie Clements and Scott
Tokyo Oct. 21, 1984. Mayone. in Verplank - makin g his first
contrast, has won only once. taking professional apperance.
Nicklaus was joined by Seve
the inaugural Lipton International
Ballesteros. David Graham and the
In February 1985. In two days.
though, he has scalped the Wim· Wadkins brothers - Lanny and
Bobby - a1 216.
blcdon and Australian champions.

Connors in semifinals

OFF
ll

"

Section [g~

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SS89

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.

COMPARE KNUCKLERS - PhD Nlekro, left, and
Tom Candlottl compare their hold oo a knucldebaD.
'lbere are only lour pltclters In the majors who throw
lhe erratic pitch, and Nlekm and Candlottl are oo the
19841 Cleyeland Indians sial!. (UI'I)

By ROBERTO DJAS
UPI Spotts Writer
CLEVELAND !UPI\ - The two pitchers have a
special relationship, like being the only ones In the
neighborhood who speak Esperanto or use Packards
as their daily transportation.
Perhaps throwing knuckleballs creates oddballs.
"That may be true," says Phil Nlekro. who at 47 is
the oldest player in the major leagues. "You tend to
wonder 'Would It have been easier III just had a really
good slider and changeu p? Maybe I'm just a nut.'
"On the other hand, I feel Tom Candlotl l and I are
practitioners of what Is iruly a dying art.''
With Nlekro and Candlottl, the Cleveland Indians
have half of the knuckleballers In the majors.
Nlekro's younger brother Joe, with the New York
Yankees, and Texas' Charlie Hough are the others.
"It's dll,!lnltely a pitch that younger players should
he wUIIng to learn, but you have to he especially
dedicated," said Candlottl, 28, signed as a free agent
last December. "You can't just learn about tbe
knuckleball In a month or two.
"ll's a lot of work, but It' s worth II as far as I' m
concerned. Phil has been much more than a
teammate to me in this regard. He's a teachl'r, he
points the way."
The two players have talked a bout the pitch to a
grea t extent. They have compared grips, deliveries,

wrist motions and fingernails.
Fingernails?
" It can he a real problem," said Nlekro, who is 3-5
with a 4.46 ERA Utls yearand303-255 Uletlme. "A split
or cracked nail Is a disaster .
"I've practically had my nalls varnished through·
out the years, btit my fingertips can stU! get sore."
Candlottl experienced a torn nail oo his right incrx
finger In March, and the problem lingers. He ha s tried
varilus cosmetic products and USl'd gelatin prepara tions in an attempt to strengthen the nail.
During spring training, Candiottl vislled a
manicurist In Tucson, Ariz., who glued and fUed a
false nail to fit the finger.
"That lasted about six weeks," said CandiotU, 3-6
wtth a 4.33 ERA so far this year and 9-12 Uletlme,
Including brief stints with Milwaukee. "I'm going to
get another one, though.
..
"Phil tells me It may he a coupleolyearsbefore the
nails get real hard. I guess I'd better eat more Jelio.''
Nlekro has rontinually advised Candiotli, a
situation that pleases Cleveland manager Pat
Corrales.
" Phil's almost like a player· coach," he said. "He's
helped Tom a hell of a lot. But there's more to It than
their relatlonshlp.ll's an Inspiration to all our pitchers
to have a future Hall of Farner around."
Despite their obvious link, Niekro and Candlotti

..

employ the knuckleball differ('ntly. The veteran
throws tbe pitch between 90 and 100 percent while
Candiolll only is a "40 percent knucklcballer."
"I've gollen to the point where my fastball wouldn't
be ticketed for speeding, " Niekro said. "The knuckler
is my meal llckel now. I rely on it. But despit e my
ex perience, I have days when it just doesn't work.''
Candiotll uses fastba lls and curves to set up the
knuckleba ll .
"I had felt I can get people out wit h myt otber
pitches. and the knuckleball was just a bonus." he
said. "But I'm Utlnklng differently now.
"I still have a long way to go before I really figure it
out. I've only been Utrowtng the knuckler about a
year, and Phil's been doing It 20 years. I'm very lucky
to he on the same team wilh him at this stage of my

career."
Who Utrows the knuckler hellrr ?
"Tom does," Nlekro sa id. "He throws it much
harder than I do, a nd It has more motiln."
Candiolli shook his head.
"Phil has slow, slower and slowest spel'ds to his,"
he ~aid . "His Is much more baffling because a baner
doesn't know where It 's going. "
Nlekro laughed .
"What do you expect Tom to say•" he said. "He
throws the knuckleball, right ? He mu st he a kook."

�~

Page-B-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point

Pleasant. W.

Reds drop fourth one-run game in row
ATLANTA (UPit - Genp
Garber and Rick Mahler have a
strong mutual admiration society
going in the Atlanta Braves bullpen .

Garber notched his fifth save and
Mahler went 8 1-3 Innings for the
win as the Braves pefeated the
Cinci nnati Reds 3·2 Friday night.

Golf outing slated June 21
by Mason Rescue Squad
POINT PLEASANT - The
Second Annual Mason Rescue
Squad Scramble will be held at the
Riverside Golf Course in Mason on
Saturday . June 21, with a 10 a.m.
shQtgun start. The tournament is
open to the public and will be
limited to the first 144 people who
enter.
There will be a "Meet The Team
Party" a t 7 p.m. on Firday, June20.
at the Riverside Clubhouse Shelter.
There will be food and refresh·
ments ava ilable for the contestants
whQ attend the party. There wUI
also be snacks and refreshment s
available on the cou~e the day of
thr- tournament.

The m try fee will be $40.00 which
will cover all snacks. refres hments.
green fees. and a rtdlng cart plus
the opportunity to win numerous
prizes duting the C'Ompetiti:m. All
players will be placed in A·B-C·D
categories according to their han·
dicaps. with all teams lFing by
blmd draw at the Friday "MeetThP
Tea m Party."
The ptuceeds from llle . touma ·
men! after pr izes are paid will go to

OU represented
ROCK SPRINGS - The Ohio
University Bobcats " ill have a
major delegation at the 8th an nual
Dave Diles golf event .
Headed up by athletic director
Mack McE lhaney and football
coach Cleve Bryant. the group will
include sports media director
Glenn Coble. sports information
director Frank Morgan, baseball
coach Jerry France. assistant
football coach Tom Holiman, as·
slstant football coach Max Laine,
assistant athletic director Greg
Ianni, assistant football coach Bob
Wylie, assistant athletic director
and head trainer Skip Vosley,
athletic relations coord inator Joe
Dean, and assistant baseball coach
. Wayne King.

the betterment ollhe ~son rescue
squad.
The entry tee is tax deductable.
The ,;quad Is still in need of tee
and hell&gt; 'sporMrs or prizes to be
given away.
For further information aboullhe
scramble call Mlldd Young at
773·5240 or Ann Blake 773·577&gt;.

Softball tournament
to be .h·eld Ju Iv 12

•
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis
Recreation Department will spon·
sor a girls sottbaU tournament on
the weekend ot July 12.
The two-day tourney will be for
13-15·year-old girls with a $45 entry
fe&lt;- plus two official Amatuer
Softball Association softballs for
each team. The tournament will
follow A.S.A. rules and guidelines
with shirts being awarded to the
fi rst · and S€COnd:place teams.
For moll' information call 614·
446·441 2 from 6: 30· 10 p.m.
We&lt;'kdays.

Marietta to host
tournament
MARIETTA - A mens United
States Slow·pitch Softball Associa·
lion Class D World Qualifying
Tournament will be held at Buck·
eye Parkin Marietta June28and29.
The winner of the tourney will
receive an automic bid 10 the
Co-Eastern Division World Touma·
ment In Cincinnati Lalllr Day
We&lt;'kend. Second· and lhird·place
finishers will qualify for the stale
tournament two weeks before the
world tournament.
To enter a team must be USSA
sanctioned and pay a $00 tee plus
two Steele brand softballs. For
more information or to enter, call
Ken Ollenberger at 374·2943 or
Jerry Huck li78-2!0!.

After the game, Mahler was full
of praise tor his reliever.
"Geno (Garber) Is really dotng
the job right now," said Mahler.
"He's taken over tor !BruceI Sutter
and they're not glvlng up on hlm
llke IIley seemed to in the past. 1
can'tlmaglne anyonedotng a better
job than he has lllls year. "
Sutter. the Braves' ace reliever.
is out of actiOn with an ailing arm.
"I felt very comfortable and that
made me more consistent." said
Mahler, 7·5. " f threw a lot of last
balls. which I wasabletosetupwell
with the curve ball."
Garber was happy with the
chance to prove that he can still
save ball games.
"I alway s look forward to
pitching in game situaUons," sa id
Garber. "I've really miSSed them
the past couple of years. Now It's
just a matter of being mentally
prepared to go Into those spots and
do the job.'

With the game tied 2·2. Bob
Horner singled lllmeOmar Moreno
with the tle·breaking run In the fifth
Inning.
The Braves played before llleir
largest lllme crowd ~ the year :Jl,280.
Moreno drew a walk from John
Denny. 4-6, and advanced on a
sacrifice by Rafael Ramirez. After
Dale Murphy walked, Homer
grounded a single to left for his
seventh gamt&gt;-wlnning hit ol the
season.
Atlanta took a 2·0 lead In the
second inning on solo home runs by
Gerald Perry, his first homer ott he
year, and Oale Virgil, his lOth.
Cincinnati lied the score at 2· 2 in
the third when Rose Uiled atmJ-oot,
two· run single up the middle tor his
4,225th career hit. II scored Denny,
woo had reached on a fielder's
choice after a failed sacrifice
attempt, and Eddie Milner, who
doubled. ·

June 15, 1986

Va.

Announce Pee Wee League results
GALLIPOLIS -In Gallla County
Pee-Wee League baseball action
this past week, the Hannan Trace
A·Team won twice while Bidwell
and Green won once. The Hannan
Trace B·leam won three times,
Addavllie twiee and Vinton and
Green one apiece.
The Hannan Trace A·Team
' . ' up wins over Vinton. !9-1,

Pool
June IS--Closed . . . . . . . . . . . .. _. . . . .. . . . . . . .
. . . .. .. .. . . . . .. .. . . .. .. . .. . ............ .. ............. Closed
June 16--Cklsed ................. .... .............. ......................................................Closed
Junf 17-Ciosed .. .. .. ... .. . .. ..... .. . ..
. ........ .............. 3: ~-5: 00 P~En~~

r:c

......... .. .......... .... ,... .. 3: l).~ 00 p~. p~~~

.lun£&gt; 18-Ciosed

.. .. .. .... 3: .J).5: lJ p.m. Pree ~nterprtsE6-8 p m. CW&gt; 9-vtm
June :ll-3:3().~00 p.m. Open Rec........................ .. ....... :.J::IM: OO p.m. ew&gt; 9-vtm
6-9 p.m. Open Rcr. ...... ...........
.. .. . .......... 6-8 p.m. ew&gt; Swim
June2l-12-4 p.m. 0~ Rec .. .. ..... ... ....... .. .... .. ..... . ........ ........... 1-4 p.m. Open Swlm
June 22-{;!0S&lt;'d ............ .....
.. .................. ...... 1-4 p.m. ew&gt; Swtm
6-8 p.m. CoUege Swtm
NOTES
Ill No Early Bird SY.·lm this summer ....
121 The pool schedule for tt'.E&gt; week of Juf)(' 15-22 Is TENTATIVE: because of construction
w&lt;rk In the 1))01. The pool carmot be ~W until constructJon work Is COIT{lleted.
JWX' 19--Ciosed

15, 1986

ON ALL SEASON
METAL DOORS
ttUOI

l!]f&amp;IEJ

fJf]!Q!

DO
OD

Dlm0

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Sl1995

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Offer new vehicles
for Diles 'hole-in-one'
ROCK SPRINGS -There are six the 145·yard fourth hole. Closest to
par three holes on the Riverside the hole on the 114·yard seventh
Golf Club course and there wlll be hole wlll win a $2i0beef loin. cut and
prizes aw!ll'ded on each one at llle sliced to your liking, from Powell 's
8th Annual Dave Diles·A(lPIIIachla Super Valu in I'll meroy.
golf tournament on June 26. •
Clark Jewelers of Fllmeroy and
In fact. some lucky golfer could Gallipolis will donate a
Selko
· w;n two au tomobiles. Smith·Nelson watch on the 179·yard ninth hole.
: Motors of Pomeroy, .will award a
Closest to llle pin oo the 220·yard
·brand new GMC truck to any golfer eleventh hole wins a man's Bulova
, who makes a holt&gt;-ln-one on the watch from K &amp; C Jewelers ot
i78-yard ninth hole. "We've been a Fllmeroy.
part of the tournament each year, ..
Jim (Moose! Barton. former
said Nona Nelson. "and we think football great. wlll play in the
. It 's a tine tradition. And of course, tournament and is donating a set of
what rea lly appeals to us as a local clubs tor closest to the hole at the
business is the fact that all the 156·yard twelfth.
proceedl; go to charily."
Rusty Martin of Gallipolis Vault
And should a golfer make a Is awarding a nice golf bag and
hQie-in·one on the 220-yard eleventh · head covers on the llO.yard
hQJe, he'll drive away In a brand fourteenth. ·
new Dodge car from Carroll Norris
And Jim Frecker of J &amp; R Sports
Chrysler·Dodgt&gt;-Plymouth tn Galll· Shop told the golf committee he'd
polls. "I've played in every louma· award a new Harley· Davidson golf
ment," said Carroll Norris, "and cart for the golfer who gets a
this year I thought I'd gel even lllle·ln&lt;&gt;ne on the lourth hole.
more involved. It's a great oudng
"This Is the most Involvement
and it does a lot of good tor people." Wt''Vt' had from llle business
The outing kicks off with the community," said Bob Freed.
annual hillbilly supper on Wednes- "Larry Powell just Informed me
day evening at Meigs High School. tbat Pepsi Cola Is donating all Uw
Larry Powell and George Harris soft drinks , and each day it seems
are keeping the menu secret but someone t'lse gets on board. It lets
they promise no one will go away us know thallhe tournament wll) he
hungry.
a success and It's a good feeling to
A limited number of tickets are know we're going to be able to open
stlll available through local golf up our pocketbooks to worthwhJle
shops at $150, which entl!les a g~&gt;lfer charity causes again this yea r."

•'

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1
GNir!ON

·: Worsham Is one of the great
: riames In the annals ri. golf. and won
: the United States Open title In 1947
at the St. Louis Country Club. It's
. jalown as one ct IInse tournaments
: lllat Sam Sne~d "lost" because
Snead tailed to make a
inch
. pull on the 18th lnle and Worsham
:made one an Inch slllrter. They had
th d at the end ri. regulation 72-ltole
· play with soores of 782. Worsham
went on to win the head·lo·head
pJ ayoff the following day. slllottng
69 to Snead's 70.
Worsham was never a r~lar
touring pro. In fact, In atly me year
did he play the summer tour and
"'nerally confined his tournament
activities to the winter tour. Among
his vJctories were championships at
the Denver Open, Phoenix Open,
Jacksonvllle Open, Atlanta Open.
the Seminole. and the International
Four Ball Championship with Ted
Kroll . He won the Tam O'Shanter
tournament with the tamed "slllt
heard around the world."
Worsham will be accompanied
by his lovely wife Ginny. They
reside in Poquoson. Virginia.
Al; announced earlier, the 1986
Diles tournament Is tFing dedi·
caled to Otto Graham. the legend·
ary quarterback of the Cleveland
Browns. It also will feature Dick
(Nile Train) Lane of pro football
fa me, and Delvin Miller cl harness
·racing fame.
- · Two· tim e Helsman Trophy
-winner Archie Griffin will be on
'hand. along with former football
star Moose Barton, ont&gt;-time Gallla
and Miami University coach
.Wayne Gibson, OSU alllletic official
Steve Snapp. ont&gt;-lime OU athledc
director BUI Rohr, OU football
.coach Cleve Bryant, and famed
writer·humorlsl Fritz Howell.

:J)*

AE&amp;UE

1984 .RENAULT
ENCORE. L.S.

The versatile
5-in-1 Lawn-Boy.

ROCK SPRINGS - Add ll ional
support has been provided to Insure
th at the 1986 Dave Diles·
Awatachla golf charity will be able
tocontlnueitscharltyworkthrough
the calenda r yea r.
A dozen contribut ors have
pit ched In and Tom Wolfe. presi·
dent of the Racine Home National
Bank and cpairman of the touma·
men!' s finan ce co mmittee. says he
Is hopefu l the event can match its
$10,000 contributions ol 1985.
"We need more support.'' said
Wolfe, "but we're very excited
about what we may be able to do.
Just now. we're preparing to give
out fou r $750 schola ~hi ps at Ohio
University to young people In the
Meigs·Athcns ·Ga llta·Maso n area
who want to studY in the field of
communication. And over tlv.•
yea~. we've given a lot of
scholarshJps and each student will
has been a recipient has accornp·
llshed fine work at the uni versity.''
The tournament will be ttcld June

1

·Worsham
joins Diles
celebrity field

ROCK SPRINGS - The Dave
DUes golf tournament has added a
. former United States Open golf
champion to Its celebrity field.
The tournament, which a lew
years ago had former B. G. A.
champion Dave Marr in the lleld,
· how has Lew Worsham in the told

the ea rl y taties, is coming to the
Melgs·Mason area for the hitlbllly
supper and tou rnament.
" It's al most llke being home,"
said Oliver. ''I'm no golfer. but I'll
look forward to being thl•re and
vJslting so many people that l
remember b·om years gone by."
Oliver hi mself was a majo r
basketball star and scoring cham ·

pion at Rio Grande, lF!ore return·
lng there as coach and leading the
school to athletic prominence. He.
Bevo and the Redmen are still
discussed wherever basketball fans
gather and recently were featured
in a major article in the Los Angeles
Times.
Since leaving basketball- Newt

an d Bevo toured for several
seasons with the Harlem Globctrot·
ters after leaving Rio Grande Oliver has been a successfu l
businessman in Springfield, Ohio.
And In recent yea rs he has been
more In volved wi th things at the
C'O IIege, which now has an rnrol·
lment si.xteen times what it, was In
the New t·an d·Bevo days .

Wolfe hopeful Appalachia event can match '85

to tee it up in the event. and tor him rr:=:;:;:;:;:;:;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;:::::::::::::::::;~
and his wife or friend to attend the
Wednesday night functions.
Area businesses have pitched In
to insure that prizes wUI be
awarded at each par three hole
SINCE 1933
even If no one gets a hQit&gt;-in·one.
Each hQie will feature a nice prize·
for the golfer wlllse she! comes
closest to the pin.
446-2362
In"' is Furniture of Middleport is
SALES:
awarding an AM·F'M clock radio at
Industrial V- Belts
Bearings
Lawn Mower V- Baits
Pump Seals
Automotive V- Belts
Capacitors
Electric Motors
Brushes
Fan Blades
Couplings
Fuses
Pulleys
Regulators

; tori~.

'

ROCK SPRINGS- The ce lebrtty
field for the 8th annual Dave Diles
charity golf tournament has added
the man who helped put little Rto
Grande College on the map - and
made certain tha t no one would
ever caUthe college "little" again.
Newt Oliver, who coached the
Redmen to nationa l pmmlnencc
with Bevo Francis as their star In

GALLIPOLIS ELECTRIC SERVICE

The place for car fanatics.

The Sunday Times-Santinei- Page- B-3

Rio's Newt. Oliver Diles celebrity guest

JIM BILL'S

A

~

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

m

SPECIAL

LVNE CENTDI SCIIEDUIE
Wo&lt;l ol J'""' Ill, 1181

Dale-G}'IYIIlaflium

and Cheshire, 13-1. Bldwelllatocked
oft Cheshire 9-3 and Green crushed
Southwestern 21·7:
The Hannan Trace B-Team
recorded vJctortes against Bidwell
B·l 21·7. Green 24·7 and AddavUie
12-10. Addaville defeated Rio
Grande 11·2 and Vinton 13·5. Vinton
downed Rio Grande 12·1 and Green
collected a fort'ell from Bidwell B-2.

June

..... ...

ELECTRICAL REPAIRS:
Electric Motors
Water Pumps
Aireators

~at

Riverside Goi!Club andwill be
preceded by llle hJllbilly &gt;&lt;~pper the
evening prior at Melg~ High Schoo l.
It l• a t the supper lllal llle coveted
Good Guy awards and other
citations are given.
Clark Jewelers. whese owner,
Joe Clark. serves on the golf
committ ll' and plays in the touma·
ment , contributed a total of $300 in
order to sponsor a second go lfer.
Ben Ewin gofEwingFunera! Home
did the same thing.
Central Trust of Middl eport and
Kremer Exploration of Delaware
ch ipped in to sponsor a Cl' lebrity In

event. and been the recipient of the
Good Guy Award. sent along a note
saying he could not tee it up this

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the annu al event .

Bob Evans of Bob Evans Farms,
who ha s played in llle event, sent
"long a check as did fou r of the
tournament host's fr iends from
Mi c hi ga n. Eddie Rosen berg,
Mickey FL'hman. Avery Shapiro
and Sam Hartman.
Bowling hall of farner Dick
Wetx-r has played in ti&gt;2 DUes

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AUTOMOTIVE ELEC. REPAIR:
Alternators
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SPRING
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For the spec1f1 ed mrle s Sears
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mrles used

Linescores

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PW.t ~ MQll;, ~ dlld dr-pt"fiWhil· llo ~ill' l

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BUILD A BEAUTIFUL HOME-ATTEND THE CHURCH OF
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675-1160

HOURS

CHESTEI

RIDENOUR SUPPLY915-3301

Mon. thru Fri. a to a
Saturday I to 6
s...da, 9 to 5

DAY~

MICHAEL
II.ANAGO ·

312, Sixth Street
(t&gt;lehr,llln!o( ( )ur

N l'\\' ( l' lliW\

'C• Se•rs . RoeDucA' 1nd Co., f9S6

,

..

'

Point Pleasant, W. Va. ...

Store Hours : Monda~-Friday 8:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m., Saturday 8:00 a.m. · 12 noon

�.....

- 1 . -···. .

-· . r

'

l'otJ __ .

.·rtn'-:.. _
Maprs
NAntNAL L~Gl 'l[
II)' Ut1W PftM ~.wmaat.nal

Nrw York ...
Mon trf'al. .

.... w

Philadelphia ..
Pittsburgh ..

.·Jl,.'

Chicago ..

24
24

St. Lou is ...

23

H ouston ......

San Francisco .
Alla n Ia

Los

An~ e lr s

San Diego ..
Cincin nat i. .

Prl

L
16

.7H

25
29

.5:14 9
.482 lJ

40

GB

31 A31i 15..,
.14 .414 17
34 .41).1 17 I •'

\\'iPSt
.14 2:1

.576 -

l' 'li
30 2~

~-~ 2

•)

.517

31,

30
2R

31

:n

. -~ ~~
-~~ ~\

2:!

5
ti

34

393

1(11 .'

Frlduy·~ Rfosult!i

St. Louis l. ChicagoO. l st. lOinnin gs
Chicago 3. Sl. Louis 2. 2nd . 11
innings

Atlanta 3. Ci ncinnat i 2
Phllad r lphia 2. Montrral 1
New Yorl&lt; 6. Pilt sburgh 5
Sa n Fran cisco:\, Hou ston 1

Los Angr Irs 6. San Dlrgo 2
Sund ay's Gamfs
Pi t t sburgh atr\ew York , 2
St. Louis at Chicaj!o
Montrf'al at Phil ad&lt;'lphia
Cincinnati ar Atlanta
Sa n Fran cisco at Houston
Los Angr&gt;lf's at San DiC'go

AIIIERICAS LEAGl'E
Easl

Bos10n . .
N('w York .
Ba !timorf' ..
Mllwaukr&lt;' ..
Clr\'C•land ..
Toronto . .
[)('! ro II

W L Pl'l
40 19 .67R
36 24 .600
34 24 .586
30

3ll
29
~i

2R
2R
32

:ro

Wrsl
34 25

T &lt;'xas ..

30

.10

.10

30

Chicago

2~

Oak land .
Minnesota ....
S&lt;&gt;at tlr .

25

.14
36

23
2.1

37
39

California
Kansas City ... .

GB
4' '

) l~

9&lt;
~p ·.

.517
.517
Ai 1

1~

4~4

12

..i 76
.500

.p :!

500 -11 2
.424 9
.410 111
.3R3 1JI '
..171 121;

Friday's Results

Clrvrlan d 11. Minnrsol a '1
Detro it 10. Toronto 5
Boston 5, Mllwauk&lt;•f' 3
f'pw Y o r~ 3, Ba lt im or&lt;' 1

Tt:&gt;:"'as 2. Oak land l
l&lt;ansas City 10. Cali forn ia '1

S&lt;&gt;al! lc 11 . Ch t ca~o 10

Sund ay 's Games
MilwaukPr a l Boston

l)('troit &lt;lt Toronto
Minnl'sor a at CI('VC'Ia nd
Nr\o\· York at BaIt imorr

Kan sas Cit v a t California
Texas a l oakland

Chicago at Seattle

Transaclions
Base hall
C'IC'V&lt;'Iand - Signed catchNs Lr wi s Ke nt , Thoma s Lampkin , KC'l!h
Seifert and Vernon Wilson: third

basemen Thoma s Ga mba and Krrn

Richardson t~nd pitchers Jose-ph
Skalsk i an d KE'vin Wicka nder to
l ·y('ar contract s wit h Batavia of thE'
New York ·Penn League ~ A 1: s ignC'd

ml n&lt;'l and assigned fh('ffi to L!tr! ~
Fa ll:- of !Ill:&gt; Nrw York Penn LraguP
! A I.
Sen Diego - 5£-nt oulfif'ldc&gt;r .John
J.\ruk to Las V£&gt;g as of ltlf' Pacific
l'oast Lc- t~g u(' 1AAA1 .
Ho('kl'J'
\t•" Jl• n.;py - SignPd ]('(1 wing
/'\nd \' Rrirkll' Y and def('n srmari
Ja mi&lt;' Husc r oft . SoL·u r
r\ ISA - Awaradrd rxpa ns ion to
For t \\' a~· nr. lnd : :mnoun('('d sch&lt;'·
du It'd ro liPgr dr&lt;1ft July 1~. Memphis ,
Trn n.
For t \\';:n·ne 1 A !SA 1 - Namt'CI Bob
I3ritt vrrsfdrnL PPlrr Mahlock grn·

Saves
1'\&lt;1 !iont~l Lragur- Smith. Hou 16:
H~;udo n . Mil 1-:1: Orosco. NY 11 ;
\\ orrell. Stl 10 : Fran c"O, C'ln and
Gos ~&lt;JgP, SD 9.
i\ml' r ican LC'aJ;:Uf'- Aasr. &amp;11 17:

Nrw York tN L ! -

SlgnE'd out

fiPid&lt;-r Bill Robinson UL pitcher
Mark F•ldlrr. Infielder Cedric Haw ·
first oosrman Alrlandro Ji ·

Leadel'!l

New Vans Converted By Starcrulser:
1986 CHEVROLET ASTR0 .......1 16,80000

llruks

0%
OFF

~

S:J.\ l. ,\

'•~ '! 1~

Hrm1(1J . \
!ld\ l'in
~milh. "tl.

".j

Brov•n SF
l.o~mn1.

SF'

:u~

.1.1 i O Ul

2fr. 1'i 66 .:n9

\1 '.Ji..l

2~ ti~

Jl!l

""' r;;

20 Jti Jlli
~~ 1~1 '!l ~ \ .1\:l
'¥ .!11 .n AA ..W

Guzman . Harris 181 and MC'fcado,
Pr t ralli: Young. Ri jo 1B1. Ontivr ros
tR1 and Bat hr . Will ard. W-Gu zman
rG-6!. L - You ng 14·31

fu ll size van
COMPIEI'E SliMMER CAMP - Fifty area fourth, fifth and sixth
grade boys and c1r1s eoo~pleted a weeldong haAketbaD camp at GaiUa
Academy IUgh School Friday afterlloon. G~ head basketbal ooach

Wildlife notes

OFF

By Tom BelvOie
Spe&lt;!lal Correspondent
, · . GALUPOLIS - ""Wow! That's
: ooe big bear. " Our guideexclalmro
• as he lookro over the downro black
; bear. The faUen bear was now the
: jroperty d. proud hunter, Cody
: lloothe of Crown City,
; Boothe and Tom Williams of
• Waterloo , both fellow teachers at
' Hannan Trace, and mySE'II ven·
: tured off to Ontario, Canada
. iollowlng school dismissal for a
wrek of black bear hunting and
: 1lshlng.
• Cody's big bear came tromping
, Into his bait on the second evening
~ of wr hunt . With quite a nottcable
wind blowing the bear cracked
; enough brush on the way In to make
. lils presence ialown. Cody was
· ready and as the bear l'!'achro the
, bait barreL one weU placed shot In
· tne lett tront snou tatr put nlm down
;for keeps. Woundro bear.; are not to

'Jo. ~'l'i

Y oun t . ~ ~~ ~

... 171 :\.1 li.l
til :!l-1 :D 9.1
'I! :!l.1 ~;;
'8 z~ :t'i
J lff, ~ '&gt;4
lill Z"i2 oJ11'12
~ nl' J9 6!1

l'f' kll . Mnn
Bo •ll. Tu1
H1f1'. tb

¥1 fl'l}SH
:Ji:.!
.1'4

n

L\ rm . 1-liill
Mn n~o:l)

Hrl*. . Mnn
t:ask-1 1\Y
&amp;oll'li'~ f'll1

.1..'!1

.:tr.

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.Tfl

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(614) 446·2335
Shapplng Plaza ·Gallipolis, Ohla

~a.llay

Slore Hours: Monday-Fnday 9:30 , 7:00 • Salurd•J 9:30 · 5:00 • SlndiJ 9:30 . 5:00

KC tiD 311 000 - 10 10 0
Calif _ooo 1100 110 - - 2_ 9 2
Sabc rhagen, Black 181, Farr t91
and Sundlx&gt;rg: Slaton, Finley 141 ,
F'isch&lt;'f

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hIf ! •

Also

ljliCial liVIngs on single lire purtham.
CIIIIDI details.

li' taken likely however and Cody
put a finishin g shot on the bear a
couple of minutes later.
It was Boothe's first bear hunl
and he took a bear of a lifetime. We
squared oot the hide after skinning
and II measured 61eet 21nches from
R&gt;SE' to tall.
Thai m&gt;ans the bear would have
stood over 7 feet tall when on It's
hind legs. Our guide, Walt Foster.
estlmated the bear 10 weigh
ret ween~ and 500 lXJUnds. That Is
one big bear In any body's book and
especially big for a spring bear- By ·
comparison Ihe average black bear
taken usually tips the scales al 200
lXJUnds or less, ,
Tom WUIIams orlglnaUy we11t
along to make a video of my hunt
and learn a little about bear hunting
for tutu!'!' trips. However. alter
Boothe brought In his monster. Tom
was ready for some action. AltiDugh he hea rd bears arou nd hi s

ssoo
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1984 FORD
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EXAMPlE
73-86
(htv. Pick·up

(I tar

INSTAUED
#W8t 3 shaded ... '89.95

All WINDSHIELDS ARE SDLD AT
bU OFF LIST · INSTALLED

I

I

$4~.~~

RADIATOR SHOP
•New radiators
•Radiators re&lt;orded
•New heater tares •Heater &lt;ores repaired

FROM

EXAMPLE:
Radiator Retored
I
.I Parts &amp; labor

Moil·ln • \
Rebatt

limit 1- 12 qt. cost

$4995

I

#01143

~------ ·CO UPON·-- •exp. 6/18/86· 1

l

LAWN MOWER
SPARK PLUGS

I

SMALL ENGINE SHOP
&amp; WARRANTY STATION

• DEPENDABLE STARTS

We repair all types: lawn
mowers, garden trcxtors, and
tillers.

EQUIPMENT
•Homelile -

ENGINES:

SALE PRICE ......... 89C
AFTER

•Ja,obsen
•Murray

•Te,umseh
•Kohler

64 $

REBAT;JIJLM
LIMIT 3 WITH COUPON

•WiSlansin

eBriggs &amp; StraHon

CS86·024

PRICES GOOD THill 6/11/U

PT. PLEASANT

PArEROY

MASON

Route 33
240 Thir Au. 1704 Eastern Ave. SIS Main St. 261 I Jadtson An 11 :2nd Ave,
992-2139
773·5511
446-1113
446·4204
675-1520
675 -2731
8:00
a,m,
till
5:30
p.m,
Doily 8:00 a.m. till 7:00 p,m.
a a.m. till 5:00 p.m,
HOUII
..., lrli:I0-1.00
f •, &amp;' n.n. l tSI·S:30

lit. 1&gt;10·4:01: -

---

nn

11'if11 f1 ll'idf• nrrif' tY

reign and domestic, arrive in 24
hours.

NowS339S

-

GAlLIPOliS

I JWHt'

l'all

thousands in stock, we 'll order 11

Soturdayo 8:00 a,m. till 4:00 p.m.
101 I. IIIII It

n

rlf'll '

'" Parts Plus E•press. ·· Most parts fo.

1911 CHEVY
CITATION

JIM C

SPRAGUE

YOUR CHRYSLER-DODGE-PLYMOUTH DEALER

1 •

ortion .~ . (wru • .~l'f' II.~

in ~l_l.ipol is .

AND MANY MORE
USED CAR VALUES

CARROLL NORRIS DODGE inc.
300 THIRD AVE.

t·uMnrH nrd l'r

lOWJO or 10W40

~t:95,0o NOW 51 99 5 ~~uo

ROTUND
RIO TIRE
~ TIRE SALES EXCHANGE

t 'flr l

AVAIIABIUJY ••• If the part you need isn't one of the

~~~uo NowS499S

·~~~5.oo NOW 5179 5 ~~S,Oo

DALLAS
WEBER

If t•

have whet you nee d and it 's in

1912 OLDS.
CUTLASS

1981 FORD
ESCORT

MIKE
NORTHUP

loaded, our own rental van

stock now!

Spectoculor sole pri(es plus

1979 DODGE
OMNI

.

PRODUCT ••• We

~~~s.oo NOW$2 395

::::,s.oo Now.S199 5

'9,900 00

YOUR (HOICE

1913 CHEVY
CHEVmE

1080 MAIDA
GLC -

CARROLL
NORRIS

1983 CHEVROLEf. ... ,.,... ,... ........

CAR SALE

: ~~~5.oo

BACK

loaded &amp; jus t 22,COO miles

THE TRI-STATE'S MOST
COMPLETE AUTO PARTS STORE

PRE-OWNED USED

1982 FOlD
414 PICKUP

4X4's or
2-WHEEL DRIVES

Used Vans:
00
1983 CHEVROLEf .. , ..... ,., ....... , .~,12,900

Alllxlugh !hal bear left a blood
tra
il for nearly 5 miles, we never
never got the chance lo score on
found
him. He made his way into a
one..
where he was impossible to
swamp
AI; for me . I had my chance but
track.
1
would have never believed
had opted to try for my bruin with a
an
animal
could go that far losing
muzzleloader. A decision thai was
tha
t
much
blood. It just goes Io
ool real lXJpular with Walter, our
soow
how
tough
bears really are.
guide, !rom the beginning.
(
my
bullet hil high in
W
e
assume
On Thesday a good sized bear
ltF
chest,
considering
the lXJsltion
ca me in to my bait and just plopped
of
tli'
bea
r
when
1
fired
, a nd slruck
d&gt;wn on his rear end in front of the
oo
vi
tals.
He
would
have
been easy
bait barrel and looked 1oward my
prey
for
my
ll-06
but
having
three
hiding place. I had thesighls on him
to
my
credit
wllh
it
I
just
had
bears
and Jet fty. The bear fell over like a
to
try
the
muzzle
loader.
1
think
next
ton of bricks and lay still lor an
Instant then began to thrash around yea r I'll leave the smokepote al
home.
and made his way In to the brush.

ooil station on several occasions. he

PRICE······

TRUCKS
OR

1986 FORD.,..... .... ......... ........... 1 18,90000

Canada trip successful

•
: In summer diamond action Fri- behind t hf&gt; hitting ofCtM-Stnut, three
; day night, the Braves won In Pony singles, and O'Brien. two singles.
In T-Ball, the Stars edged the
•League, the Red Sox a nd White Sox
Rangers
25-23 al Spruce Street
:Jn Little League. lhe Stars and Field supported
by tJt&lt;&gt; hitting of J .
: 1\Stms in T·Ball a nd the Sluggers
McGuire
and
B.
Sheard
. TheAstros
;a nd Green II in Girls Softball
downed
th~
Comels
23-17
lx&gt;hind
'·Leagu e.
leading
hitters
E
.
Maley
,
L
Long
,: Behind lhe pilching of Mike
and
c
Smllh
: McQuaid and the hilling of Angel, a
The Slu ggf'rs beat the Phillies S4
hom~ run and doubll', thf&gt; BravE'S
In
girls softball as M, Davis
ou Uasted Bidwell 9-5 at Memorial
smacked
a double and sin gle and L.
field .
Combs !aero two singles at thf&gt;
'- The Red Sox scord six NilS In the Water Treatment Plant. Green II
[op of the seven th Inning to deleat breezed bv the Kool Kals 174 as D.
the SE&gt;nators 8·3 as Sox hurler Grf'!'ne hil a triple and three
Skidmorr stru ck will as did losing slngels, D. Alha a triple and one
pitcher Young at Memorial Field . single, and J . Young three singles.
'The While Sox pounded thf&gt; A's 144

FINANCING
ON FULL
SIZE DODGE

full size van . fuJlv loaded!

full size van · full.v loaded!

:Summer league baseball results

.:m

1986 GMC .,.,.,., ..... , ... ,.............!18,90000

,Jim Osborne presented individuals camp T·shirls and basketballs
following the five-day session. The GAllS mentor WIIS IIS8isted by
members of the varsity baskethaD squad.

Alm•ril 'iUl '"'U«&lt;Il'
Hu~ ~ . l 1t"'

AL Friday Linescores
Teus _100 000 010 - ~ 8 0
Oakland 000 010 000- I 12

20'!0

25%

u 61. ! !2

2Hi :!1 ;n

~

Boxes

SetS '· ,

00 llh-1 .:w
2ll" 'JH i ll .3.11

H.tofl~ ~11 1

Tackle

d&amp;Ree

1986 CHEVROLET ...... , ........ .....1 16,90000

I

ALL

Complete Selection Of
Pre-Packaged
Combination

pl..lyr-d •

4~ ~~

~11 1

fu lly loaded

.Rods ,&amp;
Reels

l"'h rhpi1 .

r;,"' nn. sn

VANS-V ANS·V ANS

•Sale Prim In Ellect While Quantities List.

\'JI I()na l LNI-'IJ&lt;'
~I

MOTOR CAR BROKERS

Dr, Armando Colombo of Par,
kersbUrg sent a "bonus" &amp;Iolli With
his entiy fee In criEr to contribute
more toward thf&gt; charttles.

JUST IN TIME FOR FATHER'S DAYI

IWI1n,;

hflll!h! ,\ ')'

-~

SUMMER CLEAN·UP SALE

, &amp;! -«1 on 11 pll.I U' apr.f' &lt;mlnC"'f"- x no nf
;:.m1f'!o, f'Jfl'l l r ,UTI ll.a ~

Bowlers' Tour,

•.us year"s ('Vent. so I'm sending
alo ..g a check thai 11111 help a btl
toward your charitable work."
And Ihf&gt; same thing was done by
Eddie Elias rl. Akron, wiD Is
credlled with founding thf&gt; Pro

...

The Sunday

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

June 16. 1988

WE HAVE A GOOD SELECTION OF NEW &amp; USED
CONVERSION VANS IN STOCK &amp; READY TO GO.

RIJ;?:hC' Tl i. I'Y 15: Harris. TN: 12;
SH! nlrv. Bo~ 11 : HN nanci"7, Dr t 10 .

Mart inn catcher Jrffrry Sl mmr llnk

Appalach ian League {Al .

u~~ by 3

8·4.

pitchers Ja mC's Hln dulak and Kr,·in
Kuykendal l. first baseman Luis

and outrlelder Brad Woltrn to 1· yea r
contracts with Burli ngton or the&gt;

Contlnuro hum B-3
In his lener: '"I've had such great
fun down thf&gt;re l wan I to be apart r1

SOUTIJAM!'TON. N.Y. iUPIIGreg Nmman was confident but
caut ious ent ering Ihe third round of
Ihe U.S. Open golf championship.
Norman. nicknamed the ""Great
White Shark"' for his penchant for
shark hunting. enterro· today's
lhlrd round with a thl'e(&gt;·Stroke
lead, The Australian sharpshooter
says his play has given hlm the
confidence to maintain the lead.
Pral managt&gt;r.
'Tm dlsaplXJlnted my lead Isn't
Memphis tAISAI - Hired Gary bigRer than It Is," Norman said
Hinc11ry hra d rooc h anrt dirrct er Ot
after lXJSttng a 2- under·par a! for a
pi a~ r r pNSO nnrl .
IWO·round total d. I- UJ-.:Ier 139. "The
fo ll&lt;g•
LT I.:\- \' &lt;1mt:'d DPan \\'ur.d:X'rgf' r
way I was playing, that a! was the
&lt;ISSiSl ilnt SOCT Pr COaC h.
worst S('()re I could have shol
today."
Norman was rated the favorite
L&gt;adel'!l
coming Into thf&gt; Open . HE''s the
leading money winner on lhls
Hotnl' Runs
year's PGATourwlth$447,109; won
\utiona l L&lt;' ~l g u r- !'vlorshall. Lt\
1:): Brooks. :v!1113and Parkrr. l in 13:
the Las Vl'gas Invitational in early
DOI\'is. Hou . Dnw so n. Mil . and
Ma y and the Kemper tm:J weeks
Gctl'\ T \', SJJ 12
ago: and lied for second in bolh thf&gt;
Amt:rican Lrague - Joynf'r , Cal
Mast!'rs and Ihf&gt; Herllag!' In April.
l F.: A.u·fidd . Tor and Can~ro . Oak
ttl ; RJ\ lor. Bos ;·m d Puckrll, Minn 15.
Two-timE' 11968, 19711 Open
·
Runs Rartrd In
champion Lee Trevino also had a68
\ Jl lona I L&lt;'ag uP- C. DaY is . SF 44 :
Friday and , at 2-over 142 , was tied
Broo h. 1\111 4:\: ~1arsh a ll, LA H :
for second place with Rhodesian
Parkrr . l'i n &lt;~n d Schm idt , Phi\4 1.
Arrwri&lt;"an LPaguf'- C'ansPCo, Oa k
DE'nis Watson, woo had to SE'tlle for
.~i ; iVt.lllingly . :\' \' :&gt;~: .J oynN , Ca l H;
an even·par 10 whf&gt;n he lx&gt;geyed lhf&gt;
.\·l urrn~ . Balr 4-1 : F i\'&lt;' pln;&gt;&lt;'I' S lird
final hole.
wllh ~.l
Watson, who finished in a tie for
Sto len Bases
\Jt iona! LragUL'- C'olt&gt;man. S!L
second , one shot behind Andy
:16; Dun can. LA 2~ : R&lt;~inrs. Mtl 26;
North, in lasl year's Open after a
D(Jrdn. Hou 18: Oa,·is, C'ln and
two-shot
penalty In the opening
Samurl. Phil Hi
round, was happy with his lXJSitbn.
~\mrrir a n Lf' Bgur Hf'ndNso n.
.\Y ·HI: Ca ng(·losi. Chi :lb; Wigg in s.
The original field of 156was cutto
Brdt l'l : MosC'b\·. Tor an d Wilson. h:C
71
a1 the e11d d.lhe second round . lt
10.
.
took
a 10-over L'iO to stick arourd for
Pil t hin~ \ 'h•torlc&gt;s
\ation&lt;Jl Lragu{'- Kn(•ppPr. Hou thf&gt; last two days. Two-time Open
10·3; Ha w le~. Phi l &lt;lnd Vnl rn zurla . champion Hale I rwin missed that
LA 9·1. Cooden . ~\' 8· ~: Krukow . SF mark by one stroke.
:\mrriran Lf'ag uf'- Clemf' ns. Bos
11 ·11: Uoddicker. Bait. 8-1: Boyd, Bos
8·4: Higuc•ra . .\1 i l 8·5: Haas. Oak 7· 2:
\' ie kr u, :'\Y 7 .:~: Ba iles. CIC' and Witt .
Cal i ·4
Earn&lt;'d Run rh •••ragt•
1R t~ srd on 1 inn ing x number of
ga mpo; each tPJ m has pl ayrd 1
i\ational LP;.~gur - Goodrn . 1\'Y
2.21: J..:n Ppp{'r. Hou 2.26: Tudor. Stl
2.:l1; OjC'da. :\Y :!.53 : Smith . All2 .57.
Amrr ican Lragur- llrmf'ns. Bos
2.2Fi: Hig-urra . Mi12.30: Leona rd. KC
:? .btl ; Hu rst. Bos 2.79; Correa. Tc'x
2 AA .
Strlkeouls
.' \ &lt;.Hional L f' agur- ScotT . Hou 122:
\ '&lt;J I(' OZUPI H. Li\ lO.'l; Goodr n. NY 84;
Wf' lch. LA 79 : PalmC'r Atl'ii .
,\mNican LP&lt;tgur - C'lr mC' ns , Bos
10~. Higu&lt;'ra . Mil!() ; Hurst. Bos 89:
\\'ill. Cal 83: Rijo, Oa k &amp;1.

June 16, 198&amp;

, .... .

-----L--- · ---~ ~~··· · ·

'

EASTERN AVE. STORE OPEN SUNDAY 11 :00 A.M. TILL 4:00 P.M.

�Page-B-6-The Sunday Times-Sentmel

June 16, 1988

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

33

Building has architectural interest
By JMIE&gt; SA.."'DS
Special Correspoodetlt
G ~UPOLIS- Ont&gt;ol the more
lnterestmg bulldmgs Ill Gallipolis
from an architectural stan~int

BUILT 11'1 188t FOR Olauncey \1 Holcomb "as this small
slnJcture In whal has been known as "laW)ers' ro"' ' in Gallipolis
Holcomb practiced law In Gallipolis from 187i
death In 1895 At
one time Holcomb was "' partnership wllh C " \\blte In the year of
Holcomb's dtath 08951. a !llrangl' will came to tight

to.._.

Broadway lyricist Alan Jay Lerner dies
NEW YORK I UPI 1- Broad\\ a\
lyriciSt Alan Jay U,mer 11ho11ro1e
the 11 0rds forthe mus1cal M' fa iT
Lady" died Saturda' of lung
cancer at Mcmonal Sloa n
Kettcrmg Cancer Center He " as

U&gt;mer s 9:ln \lJchael sa1 d his

falhe r died at 10 15 a m He had
been hospltalizro for aoout a
momh
He also wrote the words for thf&gt;
mu srcals Pam! Your 1'. agon
Bngadoon and ~1\ f a1r Lad\

67

No doubt his unort!xxh ,,..,. 5 011
111&lt;&gt; subjeCt caused ~~postponement of publication
IV 1 J bs " When
he
d '::,e . aco , ~- ·~rei
an
w man " a.s "' "
would be the
leave for others to guess as I am
small buildmg at
torcf'd to do But from the credence
25 Locust Street
given to all the P\1dence hefore me I
that has housed
am forcf'd to gi\•e the Dano1n
Canada) Realt)
process the preference As 1
The struct ure
roncelve the earth and all therein, It
"as put up m IB81
has been a progressive "ork, and IS
by Chaunce\ M
going oo this day )ust as much as
Holcomb as a law office The ever It did In anv one dav that
ne~ghbormg two buildings that are 11 eceded this day. and man m his
of abou t the same dunenslons also creation was breed Into this world
datp to the rorl) 188lsand were also 111thout his consent
erected as Ia w offices
ALSO HE WAS forced to DC&lt;'UP'
TilE building at 2'i Locust has a finite position which constituted
seT\ ed as a Ia\\ office rea It) off&gt;ce
all the faU that Adam fell His
and bank through Its htstor;
knowledgl' being flntte, made his
Holcomb "as oorn at VInton m JUdgment fallible, and ail men ba\ e
lJI.l8 and at Z3 years a age, came to rome mto the world under the same
Gailtpolls in 1871 10 work for the conditiOn," hlch was the act of God
Gall rpolrs Journal Holcomb and not 111&lt;&gt; act of Adam U Adam
worked for the Journal from 1871 to sinned, God punished him for 11and
JSTI "hUe at the same time not us for hun. for that would be
stud) In!: law ln the late 1870s unJUst i:Jr one !)E'rson to answer for
Holcomb entered mto a partnership the crune of another '
v.oth C II' While m !he pracnce a
!\ccording ro Jacobs hell could
lav. Holcomb had also taught not exist tx&gt;cause God would not
school pnorto 1B71 after romptenng execute an lnftmte puniShment for a
tea c h&gt;ng tra1 n 1ng a t Oh io flnne crune Heaven to Jacobs
Lm\ ersll\
came when persons obe;ed God s
At !he t1meof hisdeath1n IB95,at natural law
the age of ~7 Holcomb had Wilt up
"Then I sa; 0 beautiful SCience
a large law pracuce He was also a teach me the laws or God. natural
notable rontnbutor m every rro ve
laws that I mav obey them and he
ment m GallipoliS to belter the dl\
happy both here and hereafter
Dt.:RlNG TilE month of Chaun
"I AM LED to believe wrote
ce\ Holcomb s death a ra ther Jacobs, that man Is no" as God
strange will came to hght that was first created hlm exCI'pt hrs
to he executed by one of the progress In art sc!l'nce philosophy,
Holcomb lawyers It was a Jllece of and general knowledge, which has
philo9:&gt;phy wntten by Rufus Jacobs tEen tar greater m the last decade
Sr and was to be prmted b\ the than i:Jr many decades PTP\'ious to
la" y er m the newspaper after tt that "e have any account of
Jacobs death Strangely the law-,
Ju~mg the future by the past, we
ers died before the document could may expect mcreasmg progress m
be published and a daugh ter of one the future. but for aggrandizement
of the la"yers lt h:Jugh herself not a and emolument of the priest the
lavo')er, prmted the letler ro futiill orth:Jdox faith 11ould cease to
the prorruse made
ex LSt
The letter co ntained Jaco bs
Jacobs \oews were not anginal
beliefs m regard to ongmal sm
as they were typrcal of many

Public Notice

4

PUBLIC NOTICE
1978 Dodgo pu:lc up 11\Jclc
10 be sokt 1t 21 Lowst Street

Gallipolis Ohro, by Produc·
tiOn Crecht AuoaatiOn of the
Fourth Dil'ti'ICt Silled bids to
bo ocooptod '"''' Ju.,. 23
1986 0112 30 p m wrthpul&gt;lic ule to foMow btgi'IMI'IQ
with the hrghel1 bid Tntclc
WIM
811Mdetor l'lip8Cti0n
only 11 Shtnn 1 Trctor Sa._

e. ..,

1nd

Servtee

UppfH'

RIYI!It

Ro.. Golhpolio Oh Produc
wn Crodrt A-a•tJon of til!

G1veaway

2 10/td blaclo: kitten&amp; mala h«et
D'llnlld 10weeklold 304 67.5

3962

One year old female H1malavtn
cat declewed , phone 304 676
5781
Black grey white with sp ots
304 875 7242
2 black mala klnWls litter
tutned 10 wk• old 304 675
3962

~::;===::;::;:::=::;:=
,
6 lost and Found

Fourth Otltnct reaerves the
nght to accept or

re,~~tct

•nv
LOll Bon clau nng from
Eutem HIQh School wrth •n•t11!1
GR H rn1k:le If tound Cl ll
814 949 2152 Of 614 949
2960 Rew"d

bido
Juno 11 15 18. 22

Announcements
1

9

Card of Thanks

We 'w11h 10 convey our many
tl'l~kl

Wanted To Buy

We PlY ctth for latei1Yldel cl&amp;an
used C41rt
J1m M.nk Chev Olds In c
Btll Gene Johnson

sa 4o46

to pdl .,...d everyone of
our mlfly ne~ghborl and lnends

3872

who w11n1 10 kin d and tttenttve
to our Mother Jtneahe Johnton
durii'IO tier 1lln•• and detth
OtuQh1ers Jean1111 Johnton
Bendult and Huel A John110n

TOP CASH paid tor 83 model
1nd new'ef uled cars Smith
Bu•ck Pontile 1911 E81tl!tm
Ave Gall1po111 Can 614 446

3 Announcements

WANTED TO BUY u1ed wood&amp;
coal heaters SWAINS FURNI
TUAE Jrd &amp; Olrva St Galhpo
111 Call614 446 3159

NOAH S ARK ANIMAL PARK
Schools churctt •• oo rr., .,Y'

ptcntcs

birthday JN~"'" .,d

f8ffl•l¥ reun10n1 Call 81' 384
2108 or 1 900 282 2187

ltluegr .., and country mu11c at
Potton Lake New England Oh10
on Juna 14th tt1rt1ng at 1 00
pm Bandt are Larry Spark• .,d
The loni!I!IOme Ramblert The
Ilion Rt;•bv B.,d The Har1s
Brothers and othtrl OtrectiOn t
Rt 60 fest to GuyJ111Ita OhiO
and follow the stgn1 Adm~aston
t10 00 Chlldr., und., 12 tree
Brlf'IQ your own 1.-wn dlws

2282

Wanted JUnk autos Call 614

388 9303

Small motor cvcle preferably an
80 01 go cert or 3 wheeler C•ll
614 367 0613
Buying dally gold Sliver COinS
rmgs ,ewelrv 11erllng wsre old
com• large o.mency Top pr1
ce1 Ed Bu rken 8~rber Shop
2nd Ave Middlepo rt Oh 614

992 3476

Swrng aet 111nd good cand can

304 876 3788

Smglee Meet Wnt \lugruant
All *Qitl Oates compentOnt
mamage Oon t be lOnely
H H C 8o• 81 l81VIIY WV

Employment
Se rme s

2&amp;676

SWEEPER 11nd 1evvtng m.ch1ne
repair partl and IUPPIIH P1ck
up 1nd dltNery DIVII Vtcuum
Cielner one h11f m1l1 up
Georges Creek Ad Cell 614

«&amp; 0294

4

Giveaway

9 krnena mo1tly male yallow
bltck &amp; blacl! &amp; white Ca ll
81.2511156
• month old male puppy l~ra
dor l Spamal t;hort h111 good
with cats &amp; chlldran C1ll

614 ..... 8080

1 ferule 2 yr old Beaoleto fmd a
good home Call 614 448

0098

2 biiU1tfully 11rlped female
Jlfnenl A good hom~ 11 a ,..,st

Coli &amp;14·4&gt;46 4922

Nrc. l!mena Alto used b•·
duoom outftt Call 814 418
0997
IUtt•• to ' a good hom1

eu 4&gt;4&amp; 231f

Can

7 WHk old kitten• to glv•ew•y
LOnCI hllred, Itt• triWIC Call

&amp;14·91e 3814

11

Help Wanted

1- - - - - - - - - - In nln now? Keep pre1ent JOb
Make more •• Part t1me thM'I
you are now LOCI! lead• we
mlka the eppo1r11ment t Conf•
dent~a l 1nterv1ew1
ahemoon
call a14 446 3615
locel Rusin e., wrll be 1M need of
•everal Mnployrtes bflgrnn~ng
A ugutt September and Oc
tober Cooks 1mu11 be able to
PfCICIIrll ro fill tood l W11
tretlet or wanert (mutt be 21
yaaJI of 1111111e ~ ma blr tanding
.tultt1• prefened) 1 part tune
tmokkeeper 'G rrl f'=t~day Send
~ntorm.at10n das1red to P 0 Bo•
421 Pt Pletllflt WV 25560
G1llla Chntt lan School " 16ek
lng a dad 1clled C hrlst1an teecher
for • conDi-latl cl111 of gradu
1 3 Bachelor 1 der;,rM •equtrad
Send reeu,. to PO Box 279
Olllhlfe OH or Call 614 446

ae••

HELl' WANTED
LOCIII CO"t:: tnY nead1 etght good
people Onty fulltlme nlld
apply Salary plus bonuMI Call
Monday onty 9em 1pm 114

ue 31187

11

31

Ol rld CareWorktt Housekeeper
wanted to ll'lle'" With t1mrly •n
1m1N vrllage on oommuter tra1n
l•nenoo,ofNewYorkC rty Care
for 2 ril~ 4' "''" old d'lrldren
Household dut1e1 end 11mple
meat preparatron 5 diV week
w•th Wednnday and OCCIIIOnal
other evw11n g IJ weekend bab
y~t111'1g Own room bath cabte
TV and $110 week ulary Prrrler
coi i$Qe age Summer OK but
longer co mrruttment preferred
Send name addreu teJept'lone
Av11labrlity date e~~;peuence
reierenots to Mn Engllnd 67
Sunnysrde Aven ue Pleuant
vtlle NY 10570
Hard ~rkrng dependabl tt md1
vtdu•l tor general office work
Must have good handwrftmg
plusent phon&amp; vo•ce &amp; accu
rate typ1n~ alull1 S&amp;nd rHUrne
'&gt; Box T&amp;OOO n CllnJ of the
Galllpoht Dally Tnb une 825
ThtrdAve Gall•pohs OH45631
Oell\lery person Must have own
tranaportl!ttton &amp; 1111 .Appt.,. tn
person Oonelh s Spn ng \lallev
Plaza
Easy .Auembly Work' $714 00
per 100 Gu aranteed Pavmenl
No S.ht1 Oetallt
Sen d
S1amped envelope Elan 5847
34.18 Enurpr~se Ft Prerce Fl

33482

EASY ASSEMBLY WORK !
1714 00 per 100 Guaranteed
payment No salt~ Oet11l1 Send
stamped envelope Elan 715
3418 Enterpr~se ft P1e1ce Fl
33482
GovBrnmflnt Joba S16 040
S59 230 vr Now hrnng Call
805 687 6000 E•t A 9805 tor
current federal lis!
Med'lan1c dnver to work part
11me fo r a local co ~ any Wr~te
The D&amp;•tv Senttnel P 0 Bolt
129M Po meroy Oh10 46769
Needed TelephO ne operator
cash1e1 See Jack Collins J1m
Cobb Chevrolet 308 E Ma1n St
Pomaroy
Son.one to stay w1th elderly
couple even1ng from 7 00
11 00 In Middl eport Call 614
992 2J71 or 614 992 2363
World Boo~ Chlld crat1 repte
llllfltat•ves needed P1rtt1me full
11me gueroWltee• ava~labta 304
882 2485
RAWLEIGH Saluman earn
S5 00 10 SlO 00 per hour apare
t•me for l'lformatlon call 304

675 1090

PATIENT ACCOUNT$ MAN
AG ER Jec~aon General Hotpl
tal Rrplev WV 11 accepting
IIPPIIcatJOnl tor the polltlon of
Plllartt account manager Ouah
fted apphcanu w111 htva 4 year~
of tvup1t•l bulfnftl off1ceexp~
riiiHlce m1n1mu m of a 2 year
collage degree 1n the bu t rneu
fi ..d &amp; 1 va1t knowledge of
tnauun ee billi ng c redit
collectron• &amp; bu11neu off1ca
procedure Submit ratumr!t to
Jackaon Genwtt Hotp rttl Per
10nnel Oept Plnn.tl Str~et.
RIPley WV2627t byJune26th

19a8

W1n1ed IOrM ont to mow l.wn ,
call 304 f75 2015

·,

MAr.£ DAD FEEL UKf. A Kl'IG
SHOP FOR HIM IN THE CLA5SIFIEDS

at Tt'lurman Ohto JUit otf 35
Clyde
W.. llar
land on thr•
WHt from
G1lhpol11
Ot'ltO 1ide1
Call

614 24&amp; &amp;1 05

Now Htrlf'lg 'l ldealtob for moth
ers former teadlatl pany plan
d11lers House of lloyd Inc
hlflflQ suparvrsors
.:lver111e
hlfe man~ge people In ho~M
c.araer Greet pay eem H.wen
triP Tra.tlg prov1dld Call Col
leet tor det1111 304 744 0924

Fmanc1al

Chrt1ttn111round the world e
new party plan • htnnv area
aupent•IOrl No rnvMtment no
cnUec!~ng no dal1very Prfi'VIOUI
~rty pleo helpful C1ll collect

304 485 6733

12

Setuations
Wanted

home cere tor aeruor
Cllltens TLC and reference•
C. II 614 992 3695
Pr~vate

1 il Wanted to Do
W1U baby111., my home Have
fenced 1n backyard &amp; ton etc
Day !Jme preferred Call 61 4

21

Busmess
Opportun&gt;ty

I NOTICE I
Ttl: OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommend• t h1t vou
do busm•• w1ttl people you
know 1nd NOT to ,..,d money
throuV. the m11l unt1l voo h1ve
wt'o'Mitgata:i the otfenng
lnlemal.onal Met1!8utld1ng Ma
nufacturer ulectmg burlder
de1ltr •n some open areal H1gh
potent11 l prof1t n our growth
l'ldultry (3031 759 3200 axt
2403
E111bhth8d buarneaa for nle
Indoor rTIRtltura golt cou11e
Downtown Galltpollt CaH 614

448 8222

Tavern for ule m M•ddleport
01 02 031u:ttnlll Rauon1ble
Call dav 114 992 9975 even
rt\QI 614 992 2873
Uud car bus~n•• 1n Matgl
County lnqu~re Monday June
111 from 11 am 6pm 614 992
7711

446 3935

Tr&amp;e work wanted prunn •ng
topptng removal~ hedges &amp;.
Wlha. tnmmed Fru .. hmatea
Cell 61 4 446 1832
Bab';'11t1!ng lOb Wlnted for
aJmi'Tll'r Prsferlbly weMtdevs
Cll! ~nyt • me 614 258 6707
W1!1 do mowtnv &amp; odd ,10b1
eleanrng gar~gu f1rm work
Call 614 44 8 6261
Want_. Someone to clear land
2 acres clo•• to town on At
58 B Reply to Bo:~~ T700 1n e~re
o1 the Galhpol11 D11ly Tr~bune
825 Th~rd Ava Gallipolis Oh
45631

wm 1ak• c.,. of I hut

lf'll In thtlr
to ~• 20 year up Call 614
256 2fi90
Will do mow1ng INOrkmg m hey
or tobacco Haul~ng 1unk or II'IY
odd job C1ll 814 218 14155
Would hke to do hout~cleanlng
br honw or offtce 814 t49

2125

Will 0o any yard work m1nor
repalrt par1tlng rnaide or out
Ha\11 r•t•renc.. 304 675

7991

Will bllbytrt In my home, fen'*'
yard hav•reterenc.s 30• 175.

2784

~2.,3.---;:;P:::ro.,..,.fe:-ss
,.,-:i-,:
o-,n"'a"'l--

ly ownw small 2 bedroom
wtth 1IJ 1creh1lllidelot and
outblllkhng 5 m•l• south of
GalltpOht Kriner Ridge Rd f1rtt
hOUH on right fro, At 218
114000 ttayMOOOdownand
owner will help ftnence bllll"'ee
Call au 448 2917

Sen11ces

5 roo,.. &amp; beth 2 Iota Cat!
,, 4 311 11110
3 bdr home clo1e to town 2
bathl partfv furnished G11
halt ~w ut lhtl" Cll1614 245

9248

3 bedroom newly red.corattd
alummum Mdtng l•g• cerport
garege on ,,_ acrtlot 1n Chester
One founh mile on 24B off Rt

7 .,. il6 43&amp;1

3 bedroom lg kttchen h..t
I)U"1' 11r cond carpeted gar
age Syracun 814 992 3402
aft.,. 5 pm
Quahty home newly remodeled
choice location on College Rd
Syrec:u•e new' complata kttchan
and laundry "' cond1t10ned
large lot 114 9!2 5324
2 bedroom Duple• houae par
t1ally furntthtd low U1rht1e1 1n
Pom.roy Ctll days a14 992
2381 or 114 992 2509 even
1ngs
2 bedroom hou•• 1n Pomarov
$200 furn11hed 8185 untur
n11hed Pay own uttht1n wood
burner large ysrd Call di\11
&amp;14 992 2381 of eu 992
2509 evenrngs
Goverment home• from S1 (U

Delinquent talC property
-- - - - - - - - -- I repe~rJ
Repots"IIOnt Ctll 105 887

W1ter weUs terv•ced •nd drilled
Free Mtlmttea C11t 814 992
500a 01' 814 742 3147

8000 ht H 9106 for current
repo ltn

PIANO TUNING AND REPAIR
red•mver your pl1n0's beautiful
ton 1 call tDday Werd• Kay
botrd 304 &amp;75 5600 Or &amp;75

R81torad home \11na St Ra
clne Kitchen new o.k c•lunett
Irving room d1n1ng room 3
bedrOOrrtl beth lnetudn all
eurulnt Price *36 000
Phone 114 949 2540

3824

Reo l Eslate
31

Homes for Sale

4 bedroom noutt, firepltc• 3
ml aouth ofGalltpollt 129 900
C-'1 days 1114 448-1815 or
everunga 114 441·8222
Government horntl from 11
(U repair) OeiiCIIUtnt tiJt orop
arty Aepoa•ttana C1ll 801
117-1000 M( R 4182 for wr
m.t rapo 1111
Walk to town •chooh
churdiH Wbfary one ttory 2
attrtetivt b1th. formal
bdt
d•ntngroon, IJOOd c•rpetlng,
larg• kitchen. good g11 furnace,
ttorm windows Cell 814·441

0830

Stale University wllh a bac~
lor's degree In lllf'lcuMure, be
will attend the Methodi&lt;lt S.mi
nary In Delaware, Ohio. Cline
and hl• famlly, wHe Ubby 111d
children Shane, 10, Sllawna, 7,
and ,Joshua, I, bepn services
loday

The agreement represents a
landmark m the state's laoor
rei at tons ' said Russell G Murray
OCSEA cxecuttve director and
ch1ef negotia tor
The rontract
!J'gms to correct the well known
underpa)ment of state workers and
provides fair and £quitable solu
110ns to the on the job problems
they face dally '
Co 11ectron.~ officers, food serv 1ce
workers mamtrnnce and trade
emplo)ees are oovered by the
conrrac t Nearly 20,())) are profes
s•:mal 1rchmcal and clerical
employees

By Jameo Jacoby

e790

70• 100 lot 1 'h story houl8 3 to
• bedroome drthWilther dOuble
ranga stove fully Clrpltld
wood tnd coal burning ttove
Clolt to tchool tnd hotpltal
Call 114 H2 1080 Any rtiiO
nlbla offer mey be contidered
7 room hoUaa 100 x 100 lot
t11 000 SyriiCU I8 C•ll 614

992 2239

Old Tobacco w~~rahou1a
Walking diatanc• ro down
town Gallipolis Ohio with
conCJttt floor. IIPirate re11
siding, truck docb, 240 amp
MrVIca, and moiem 3 500 tQ f1
offlc»t
lda•l for whol ... le vrooery
durable gooda ltOr*Qe Indoor
fiN IT'IIrket etc
Ott•ce .,.a e~roducmg noo a
month Income
C1H 814 373 1147 ext 75
P0111ble 100% f1nandng
Comm•clel at'ld r•lct.ntal ren
tal prop arty located on Vi end St
Newly rtmodeltd and tully
ftntad 3o• en 3797

35 lota &amp; Acreage
W1ll do mow1ng work1ng In hay
or tobacco H11uhng JUnk or any
odd JOb Clllll14 256 1465

1 to I ecrea Plrtlally wooded
tota Tupper Plaint and Cheater
wat• and approved roriJ 10 IKtl
lot A..sonlbty priced wtll
tm1111c1 10 percerrl down CBII
614 98!5 3594
35 acr• for aalt Hor~e cave
Rac•ne All mtntrala wotkrng
g&amp;l well 113 000 814 15a7
7 acr•s With complete mobrle
hom111 hookup Barn 1n Che~tar
trea A1k1ng 110 000 Call

&amp;14 985 3926

Athton bu1ldmg lou with public
wet• mobile homes perm«ted

304 676 233e

By own• 4 ecrtl exc locatton
nJtr Sand Hilt Road and Rolhno
Ac:r• , 304 175 1191
lurid ng srta on At 2 Galhpohs
Farry 30• 571 20211
F11htng l... e w1th 2 to 5 •crH
elec and approved 1tw1r ayttMn
onBatllendofCrtbCr~ttk

41

See

Houses for Rent

Rent ..a•e land contract. 3br' ..
Rodney Vtlleg•ll 2 bt't EurMa
3br Evan• Hetghta. Oepoait &amp;
reteranc• required Blackburn
R11ltv 114 448 0001
2 bdr home 1n axc.tlant n.~gh
borhood. ni!W' well to walt
carpeting 6 curtltnl provided
ll'lue many tatrts low utility b1ll1
• glrden epot C1ll 114 281
&amp;110 for furth• d1111111

2

SaleS

S.le of Coun trv
Tl'ltl''ll~l ~nd Antlqu•
Mon
Thurs
G 11 00 a 00 Tah 325 .,
R10 rande to caut.on ligl-tt tum
rt on Cherry Ridga 1 m•le to
firat road on ngM 1 ~use 1r1
ltt1

Pomeroy
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
2 fam•ly yard ule cou.. , Ave
Ptut!end Juna1a and 17 Pte.,
or ah~ne

~-=======~~=j~;;.:;;::;;:::::::~
Homes for Sale

32 Mobrle Hom..
for Sale

3 bedroom all elec central llf
athched guaga Oelllpoht
Fefi"Y 304 675 2932
laue purctlue agreement po1
atble Vary n1ct home with 3
bedrooms lrv1ngroom wnh liftplace 2 b~th1 large country
l!ttchen hobby room leundry
room lull baument 2 car
garage cent ral v1cuum system
'" cond deck 5 wooded acrn

304 896 3363

Sal• or tred1 NWI' Haven 3
badroomt 2 ba1h1 frreplac•
garaga tJB 600 OOorllOOOO
monttl plut depo11t 304 273
2471
3 ~room house eat In kitchen
elec:: heat c •ty watltr varden csr

pon 304 e75 3020

197&amp; 14x70 K~rlcwood 3 br 2
full batht some remodalmg

1982 Schul1z 2 bedroom 2 btth
mobile honw UndMptnnrng Un
fu rn11hed Must be mtaved c.,
be lten t».twun 4 00 and 7 00
pm Call 614 985 4389
112 000
Two bedroom trailer wtth ell
pando hv~ng room on ntee la~~o~al
lot m Mtddllf)Ort Near IChooll
and 1torea Call a14 992 2101
or 614 992 2311
!=Of' " ' ' or rent 2 bedroom
extra nrc• R•rdytoroccuptncy
C 1n be moved Mu It • • to
appiiCIIfl *8000 or rent t115
814 992 7•79

304 n3 5068

N•ce3or4blldroomhouae lsrge
krtchen half b11am~t acre
land w1ll talle mobile home or
camper 11 down p11yrnent suu
mable loan 304 175 3030 or

35 53 ~ere• on St At 7 141110
mobilt home furnrdrad Fr•
gea T P Chnter water Pt~ca
negotiable a1 4 617 31&amp;1

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Tratler for 1111 1978 3 bedroom
12 x70 t6000 814 742 2232
MOBILE HOMES MOVED 1n
sured reason.t.le ratn C•ll

30• 576 2336

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL S QUALITY
M081LE HOME SALES 4 Ml
WEST GALLIPOLIS AT 36

PHONE 814 «6 7274

1 2d0 ShultJ: COVIfed porch
rural w1ter met1 l storage bldg
w1th lol Cro~n C1ty Call
814 258 1U4 or &amp;14 256

1389 0&lt; 304 675 1328

Pr•ownld mob1lt hom• We
have m
We finance m Cell
verad 111d s.t up 1t no charge
Elt., Home Cll'ltars 1 100

82e 0782

1978 14.t70 featlvel 2 bclr 2
blltht, Iota o1 clolttl a~~;c cond

Houses for Rent

'Nrce 2 bdr ap1rtmenh., duple~~:
house Mam St CMHtllte Ohto
Furnrahed &amp; water p1rd Call
814 245 681B
Be th• f1rstto hve1n th11adoreble
completely refurbished 2 bed
room home 1n excellent n•gh
borhood Alto h .. gar•g• nice
yard 1nd g~rd~ tpot Phone
Oamu It Colon111l PropertiH
614 281 6110 fot further de
ta•l• So fedtamp bdr carpeted rafng &amp;. stova
free 911 kyger Creek arM
Retertncaa Ia depoatt Call614
367 0440 or 614 4415 3710
7 room houte 3 miiM touth of
Gathpoh• For rnformatton C•ll

t A K6
43

Mayer. Sons, Paul,
Jr. and Ray

near
God took from us 1 ray of
h&amp;ht
That made our lives so
brl&amp;ht
And pve us &amp;nef and sorrow
11/e questron, wh1ch rs n&amp;ht
We know down dnp rt's a
batter way
Than lo suffer here 1n parn
So Happy father's Day, Dad
Ttll we meet w1th you 1111n
Sadly mrmd by
Dau&amp;hter Della &amp; flm11y

Ashton Road ll'ee 14•70 mo
b1le home 2 bedrooms 2 tu~
bat hi 1 'h acrt land concret
drrv• 2 I tory building '"'""
131 000 will tell t27 000
take house 01 land • trlde rn
Owner w•ll help w1th flnanctng
P0111bly no down payment,
1 662 5840
1983 Knoolwood 3 bedroom
trailer IIIUrrtl loan With • loW
down payment 304 875 5201
Of 675 6&amp;00

Coll614 «6 1241

12xl0 2 bdr good cond nevv
carpal n.w furnKI partly
turnllhtd undarp1nntng lr'l
ctudod. ••
Cell &amp;14 25&amp;
1704 or e1• 268 1139

1982 14d8 Commodore ,.
su me loan at • 152 00 month
furn!lhed , e~ee cond 30• 875
8782 or 676 7842

~

00

1976 Elcona mobllt home ,
1 ••85 e•c cond 304 178

814 171 2113

7 room houta 1 'h beth 4
bedroom g.,ag• 770 A•h St
Middleport Ohto 114 992

1981 Commodore 14•44 e•
cond Ill 500 Call 814 388·
8528

72 Nashue 14x10, 2 bt , tot.t
elec 0 C underpann'"l MCUt·
rty light 304 875 15212

1980 Liberty 14d4, 2 bed
room unfumllhed: v1nyl under
plnn1ng lnefudMI MUll aMI C1ll

1978 23 Ster C11f1 c:erllfrM
,ewn1ng axe: cond , tully ear
patad 30• 812 2478 or 112

8870

12~~:a5 trtrltr wlttl land mike
offer, 304 175 1511

3&amp;&amp;2

EAST
• 53
'J9 532

SOUTH
• AJ64

Vulnerable Both
Dealer North
North
1+
2•
4•

"'es1
Pass
Pass

3 NT
Pass

Openmg lead t J

In cases when the trumps split bad
ly South rs not enttrely lost II he can
determme that one parltcular oppo
nent has a doubleton club honor (K x
or Q x) he has a play avariable tha t
wrll lim&gt;t h1s club losers to only one
Watch for that play thiS commg
Monday

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

44

Rsccoon Fld Furn•shad 1160&amp;
dep .. ref
814 44&amp; 9346

2 bedroom, tolll alec apt rn
Pomeroy Acro11 from r:.,e
Stet10n 614 992 6216 or 614

c.n

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
fulty furnlthed, AC 111 ut1ttl•
p•d ldUitl only Call 14 448
4110 or 114· . . 6 2003

e

2 &amp; 3 bdr mobtle ~mM AC
cable TV BulaviUe Rd C•ll
114 441 0527
3pm

•f1•

2 bdr total alectnc Call 614

«e·0722

Upp• Arver Rd

allo double
Ctll 114 448 0608 or

114 «&amp; 2430

2 bdr fum Of unturn conv•
m..-.t locadon Uppet' Rfwr Rd
all ut•tit1t1 pe1d except electric
Sac IMp req Call 11 4 441

ene

992 7314

2 be::lroom lurn11hed 3 m1let
10uth ol Glllhpolll For K'lforma
t1on Cal/814 4415 0143

6886

2 bdr 1 2J60 Hollry Park
washer dryer hook up •;, m1
p•atHolaerMed•caiCent• Ref
&amp;. dep required Call a14 446
4389 Of 304 175 9780
Nu:e 2 bedroom mob1le home on
Aoulh Lane in Ch11hue Ohro
On ntc• kJt C•ll304 773 6828

44

In IoVIn&amp; memory of
Gene and Sherry Janey,
who drill 10 years a&amp;o
June 12-14 1976
ft s been 10 yoars ! &gt;nee you
wont IWIY
Somtt1mes 11 seems like yes
terday
11/e th&gt;ni about you a lot 111d
our m1nd
11/e m1ss you and wo c.1n ho
nestly Sly
11/e II &amp;el to see you In
another life someday
The hm1fy

IN MEMORY OF

JOHN T WAUGH
On thiS flther s Dor we und

you our ton

We know you 111 tlappy wtlh
Jesus tn Huven lbovt
We knew that you loved us
God IIVI IOU li6 yurs

Apartment
for Rent

V111om you loved so dear
And husbond to Mother
It s beon so lonely Dad
As we !I} to comfort •ch other
Sadly m1sstd by Wtfe, Ch1l ·
dren and Grandchtldren

In memory of Oris Gaul who
passed away June 15, 1966
These last twent1 years have passed swtftly away,
Fond memones of our f~ty years
Of JOY and happtness are hert to stay,
Surely, we had our heartaches and drsappointments,
But shannc them to1et11erthey became so much easter,
I wes th1nk1n1 today of the days and the weeks,
That I sat by hfs stde, as he lay on hes hospilll bed,
He was so pat11nt, and he came through rt all wrth a
smtle,
For our last devotrons I rtad, "St. Lute chapters 4
and 5"
Those chapters art lengthy, and I sard ,"Should I
read another?"
He sa1d, ''Wt Wtll pt that one tomorrow night."
Aller rettnn&amp; u usual, in the early' momma hours
The Lord called hem away,
Now lam loncln&amp; for that city,
Whert lovtd ones meetapin to part no more,
Whert Jesus re11ns supreme, lorewer and forevtr.

Sadly missed more and more as the years ao
by, Wife Lucy and F1mily

Eff1Ciftf\C'V apt SUitable tor 1 or2
people 1 On Rou sh lane 1n
Cheshlfll OhiO C11l 304 773

2 bedroom apt .n downtown
M1ddlepo rt All ulllrllllt pard
8210 per month Call 61 4 992
6611 or 614 992 6783
Syracuu 2 blldroom t 195 per
month plus ut1ht1es Depo11t
requ~red
Call 514 992 5587
after 5 00 614 992 7671 or

eu 992 5732

APARTMENTS mob• le homM
houses Pt Pluun t and Gelhpo
lit 814 446 8221

Unfurn111-ted apt ~tard end ba••
ment 1160 00 month 304
675 7641 II'VflftlnQ

JACKSON ESTATES APART
MENTS (Equal Hou11nv Oppor
tunitv) monthly rent starts 11
S171 for 1 bedroom and f212
tor 2 bMroom depo11t *200
located near Spring VIII IV Plu:a
end Foodland poolandCableTV
averllbla, oHtce tlour• •• po111
ble 10 1m to • pm and 7 pm to 9
pm Monday Fr1day Call 614
448 2n5 or l.. vt m•11ge
Ntc.ly furnlthtld mobile home
.tf apt central ,., and heat '"
crty adults only Call 61 • U&amp;

033e

3 bt' apt elec hest ava1lable 1
lo cated on Crab Creek Ad
References Requ~red C11ll b•
twrten 8 30 &amp; 6 pm 304 675
w~~ek

6609

45 Furmshed Rooms
For rent Sleep•ng Room• and
hght house keep~ng rooms Pari!
Central Hotel Call 614 448
0756

46 Space for Rant

114 «e 0390

2 bdr tP1 downtown t190
without u11httes U95 wrth
utiUtl• Oeposrt requtrad Call
114 '"8 2129 8 OO•m 5pm
Completely furn1th.cl all elect
fiC 2 bdr apartment 1226 mo
1 bdr 1200 mo Adults referen
ce1 , tee dapo11t 468 Second
Ava Call IU ••a 2236 or

&amp;14 4&gt;4&amp; 2681

furn11had room 1135 Util1t1M
919 2nd G•lhpoht Share
bath S1ngel m1le Call 614
448 4416
pd

Furntthed IPt 2 bdr t175
131 '1, 4th Galhpol11 Water pd
Call614 446 4'*16 after 8pm
Furntshed 1pt 1 bdr 920 4th
Galhpol11 1250 Uttl1t• .. pd
Call614 448 4416 after 8pm
1 bedroom apt for rent Bu1c
rant startt 1216 a month that
mcludn sll ut• lrt1n Depotrt
r4qtured of UOO Contkt \11l
I*QI Manor Apt Middleport
61. 992 n87 Equll Houtrng
Opportuntty

1

Card of Thanks

t- ~AN'Kvou -I
I rho fanufy of Alt10 Mao I
(Granny! Varney Wishes to I
lsom and Mall. 11/alktJ
I thank
other doctors and nurses of I
I Holzer Med&gt;cal Center
Chapl11n Ita Lund Rev
I
I 11/ilham
Connode lll&gt;lhs
Home and all otheJS 1
I Funeral
that contributed flowers

I food or words of wmfort
-~~~~~

...

3 Announcements

NOnCE II
NONDISCRIMINATORY
POLICY AS TO
StuDENTS
The French Art Colony admets students of any race ,
color n11tonal and elhn 1c
or&gt;&amp;tn to I lithe n&amp;flts pnvileces, procr~ms, and ac
tivttliS Ctntrally ICCOidtd
or made ava1llble to studl11ts at tht French Art Co
lony. It does not dllcnmrnata 011 the basrs of race,
color, natlon11 1nd llhn"
oncrn tn admtntslrllton !I
its lllucatronll polrcrts,
1dmessron s poltcres, scholarship procr~ms 1nd other
french Art Colony admrnrsterad pro&amp;rams

I

Antique Doll•
Shirley Temple 27 compo11hon
1930 S a ll orgmal Kutner No
257· 26' 5pc comp baby body
Kiev &amp; Hahn walkurt27 B J 8
Blond L curl wig
K11tnsr No 192 T1' B J 8
alnp eyn •nd bklnd w.g
Dolls lfl exce'l-'1 cond dre11
nrcely Call Ironton OhiO 1
614 63J 2886

SATURDAY, JUNE 21, 1986
10:00 A.M.

Located bes1de Hannrng Hall, across from the Post
Offrce on State Route 325 rn Rto Grande. Oh10 To
settle the Edna Wrcklrne estate (Probate Case No
18321) The followtng wtll be sold

RCA 25' console color TV Ken more roe by ~ de refngertor
wash stand telephone stand sq uare oak stand anl&gt;que tpewn
ter w~re clip cann1ng 1aJS ~ooeware kraut cutter canmngJaiS
cre.m can, metal wardrobe Hotp01nl ~ectnc Jange Adm~ral re
lngertor blanket chest portable d ~ hwasoo 1 p1e safe small Sig
nature chesl type deep freeze automat&gt;c washer &amp; dryet 2
wnnlill' wash&gt;ng machines bug ligh t b&gt;cyr.le ~roo safe Fng&gt;
da~re relngerat01 bed krtchen chalfs llower ools treadle sew
1ng machlfte 2 coffee tables ut&gt;l&gt;ty cablftel 2 small ant&gt;Que
rourll tables dressers ~ ereo one lot of glassware m&gt;scellane
ou s Tupperware flowe1 stand Tom mower hand bra~ed wool
rug copper brOiler piCniC lable porch furn&gt;lure card table &amp;
chalfs sl&gt;de " ewe&gt; &amp; p!OJeclor Presto canner hang10g011 fount
a&gt;n lamp telly sale large lnlern al&gt;onal deep lree~e b1rd cages
apple boner keMie w/stlfrer anhque scales ~r on s ~&gt;llels Med1
lerranean ooHee table w/ 1nla~d glass lamps 3 fJ; cui velvet IIV
&gt;ng room su1te upholstere&lt;J chairs maple tables table
wl chairs &amp; buffet, wash &amp;rme tubs Chr~lmas decorauons
hne11s &amp; beddln&amp;llower ~anters anl1que bath tub I~repl ace an
d~roo &amp; loots w&gt;cker baskets ceram&gt;cs crochetoo 1tems anl1que
~ve seat pillows gas room heater accord&gt;on fans h&gt;de a bed
ant&gt;que poslcards &amp; pctu~es 3 drawer metal f&gt;le cablft et elec
Inc sew1n~mac h me Amana microwave a ntiQue p1ctu1e frames
maple lurn&gt;tuJe small appl&gt;ances couch Warm MOJnlftg slave
wooden h1gh chalf window shutters record /ste11&gt;1 stand ad
d1ng mach1ne curta1ns &amp; drapes and many other collectors
ant&gt;que and miScellaneous &gt;lems
Terms Cash 01 Check w/ Posthve ID Concess ion Stand

MARGARET WOTHE, EXECUTRIX
Lee Johnson

AUCTIONEER
Crown Crly, Ohro
Phone 256·6740
Nol Respon sib le for ACCidents or Loss of Property

ANTIQUE AUCTION

RAILROAD HALL, JACKSON. OH
THURSDAY.JUNE19,1986

TIME 10 30 AM .

FURNITURE SelectiOn of oa k to nclude &gt;ou nd !a ble dtop I" I
table charrs hall tree etc mah ch rnacab ~net marb le top dres
se1 Bent•ood baby cradle ea h1gh cha&gt;r 2 slant Iron! desks
mah s lver cabmet muchmore
CHINA AND GLASSWARE Er&gt;ckson Fenton Cand lew rc k Atl
Gla ss patte&gt;n glass depress &gt;on lp&gt;nk green blue! I lfm Iton

stone l eal eal

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park
Route 33 North of Pomeroy
lsrge lot s Call 614 992 7H9
Tra1ler spaces Sand H11l Road
conven1ent to schools store and
ho1p1tal C• tv sewer avelleb\11
lnqulfa Aoulae 304 675 4600
between 9 00 and 4 00 weell
days

AUCTION
SAT., JUNE 21-9 A.M.
CONSIGNMENT SALE

Keith Adkins Equipment
(FORMERlY McCAUlY TRACTOR SALES)
SANDYVILLE, W. VA •

lr onstone Gee Japan En gl sh Blu e W111ow Flow

Blue ART POTTERY Weller 2nd ltne Oomby &amp; Son 10'" vase
Hudson low elsa Frgurals Ros ev11!e Roza ne 36 Jard &amp; Ped
w1th Jonqutls 2 Rozan e vases umbtella holder many pattern s

Owens Utop~an Mu ~ Hull Art Avon McCoy P&amp;R mUt e
COUNTRY THINGS 2 yarn wnders dougll bowls m&gt;IK stool
severa l quality baskets tomclude 5 early basketsfrom Gallla Co

2 bdr uttllttn "art1elty turn
1176 mo Call 304 175 &amp;104
New 1 bedroom apartm.-.1 Call

Ant1ques

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctron

5828

ee2 2566

To be With your flm tly

You were such 110od father

Pomerov 2 bdr Navlors Run
1175 mo 1100 deposn ysrd
patto Cell after 6pm 614 992

In Mrddleport 2 bedroom fur
n11hed apartment also 2 room
furnr~hed apartment
1 304

2 bdr uptta1r1 apt extra nrce
central .. r Call614 448 2158

In Memonam

Apartment
for Rent

uxeo 2 bclr private lot wflh
playground &amp; g•rden spot a ml
fromGalhpolltonRt 218 , 1200
1 mo Call 81il 2&amp;8 1393

876 3868

992 3010

2

,.

South

Pass

Two bedroom 1r1ilar on J•rnco
Road UOO 00 month 304

wtde

East
Pass
Pass
Pass

The Sunday Times-Sentlnei- PaQe- B-7

ESTATE AUCTION

'KQB
• Q 53
• A 10 5

2 bedroom furnlshlld ~~~ m
Middleport Call 814 992

Newly dac:orated 2 bedroom
houa• Fully carpeted Unfur
nl•hed Slorm doors and w1n
dow 1. Will accept 1 or 2
children 01p0trt rtqU ired 814

8

t H 2

2 bedroom mob1lehomt tor rent
Near A1c1ne 614 992 &amp;858

6304

fOf taleGen•el Eh~ctrrcw•sher
dryer usadoneyaer Ooodcond
Wtll Mil r11110nlble 304 876
2448

.Q 9 2

Coil 614 «6 394&amp;

have •ood memones tn

In Memory ol
Ralph (Tod11) Kerwood
on Father's Day
Ttday 11 Father's Day
~lthou&amp;h he rsn't here
To us he's strll so precrous
~nd t feel hrs prmnce

WEST

• K 76

53

Knchtn table 4 chllfl for 1111
*20 304 896 3076

• KQ7
'!0 6 4
• J 10 9 8

5 room Muse 9211 F1ret Ave

1982 Cleyton 12~~:60 111 elec
S9 500 304 &amp;71 248&amp;

1978 12x80 Oovenor arr cond
front porch With awn1ng exc
cond 304 89&amp; 341U5 •tt•r

eoo

Thert ts no partrnc from
tliose we low,
No drstance can dtY1de ,
For today rn memones
~ a:uden
We strll walk srde by
srde
Each dawnrnc day a
thou&amp;ht of hrm
At evtnllde a prayer ,
In the hearts that loved
hrm
He always wtll be thert
Dauehter, Ltnda

1974 12•68 eltcttlc 2 bedroom
mobilt home A C und.,ln
nrng partially fum1tt'led Alkinl
1!16500 Callll14 915 3925

675 3431

In Memorram

In Memory of
Paul Darnell, Sr.

Basement

304 n3 el73

.JB

ettte NI!W5P"P!R ENTERPRISE ASSN

3470

Runtdls

8 room houae 1 2 •cr• Double
cer garage Located on Roll Hill
larteln Pfietd UO 000 Call

2"A .,.., old tlome 1 room• and
btth on 1 I ac:re. G•lhpohs
hrry W \Ia 304 875· 2214

41

I II 81

'A 7

one more tr1ck

eu 4&gt;4e 0143

1978 Mansion 141170 10•20
porch • IIW'nlf'lg undltfJ)Inn.ng
2 bdr beth 'II INtngroom
cetltng fan krtchen atov• refrlg
dan, fireplace, AC, w•thtr
dryer Call 814 318 1110

5714

NORTH

• 10 9 B 2

Declarer won dummy s krng of dra
monds and passed the tO of spades
West won the krng and conttnued d&gt;a·
moods Declarer then took another
spade fmesse, losrng to the queen Lat
er, when South had to play the club
smt hrmself, he could not avord losmg
two club tricks and hrs contract
South was unlucky to ftnd West With
both trump honors, but he drd have a
better play avarlable He was abso·
lutely rrght to take an mltJal hnesse m
the trump surt However after losmg
the hrst hnesse, he should have recon
srdered before takmg the frnesse
agarn If the spades are now reason ·
ably drvrded he can make h1s contract
wrth absolute certarnty by laymg
down the ace That leaves one of the
opponents wrth the outstandmg top
trump (We need not be concerned
wrth the play If the second trump hon
or drops under the ace, srnce there wrll
then be 10 easy tncks ) Declarer now
goes about hrs busrness, cashmg the
thrrd htgh dramond and the A·K-Q of
hearts Only now does he g1ve up the
second trump trrck Because the de
fenders are now forced to lead the club
smt lor declarer they can lake only

Buslnesa
8uildmg1

D1dt Au111n 304 678 2028

Gallipolis
&amp; Vicintty

31

Pllfkenl Used Furnrture Good
qualityuud furniture Op111 9to
8 or caM for appo intment
304 675 6483 or 675 1450

118 ac:rM In let•rt lttl• home
2 blma. own•r ftnenclng 30•

251

Homes for Sale

hom~~

Help Wanted

pastor of the Cheshire CJwae,
which Includes Fair Haven In
Kanauga, Addison. Cheshire
and Kyger United Methodl.t
church.,._ A graduale of Ohio

State employees ratify pact

4 1-7 acr11 wrtM rold frontage on
county roed 1 Tick Ridge llload
hatf l.-.d lwei g•den land good
tre•l• Site or hou•e arte Joma

11

NEW PASTOR - 11le Rev.
Kwi' Cline has been nuned

bv Unned Press Internatronal
lllsbop Desmood Tutu, callmg
agam for full scale \\estern sane
nons againSt South Afnca afte1 the
white-ruled government declared a
natlon,.1de state of emergenC\'
I want to know what the world rs
warting for
are thf'\ llailmg fm
thts drama of ours to pia' Itself ou1
10 a ' E"rv tragiC wa \ "

H1ndyman • Sp.c1al duplp ran
t1l In need of rtp11r Vtnton
Otuo ll'r~ced ch-.p! 110 000
C1ll 114 248 8111

James Jacoby

245·8248

34

Quote of the day

Muat Mil l four bedroom res1
dence on appro• 146 ac:ra.
w1thtn easy drrvii\Q dlttance of
Galhpoht Own• tinanctng wrth
no down JMyment to quahfled
buyer Propfll1y tS fenced and
hu &amp;0 acrM of a.U bottom
Pnced et 175 000 Call 614
373 1147 Ut 7&amp;

Wetat treetment pfant opetatc t
Puf11)1ng 1 2 to 1 5 milliOn
gallons per day !on uchanga
Pant Clau II hcente 1 mu1t
El cellent hftatth &amp; retirement
benefits Salary neg ot •ab le
Send resume ~ Galha Rural
WatM At 1 Bo• 184 Gall1poh1
OH45631 Call614 446 9221

51 Household Goods

ne 34eo

state representanve for Gailla
Cwntv In JBg; the year this will was
made known Whether the fathers
views were held agamst the son we
do not know

val'd

BRIDGE
It's better than •
two finesses

Colt et 4

142ecraf•l'mwith3bdr house
large bam 2 ponds Call 814

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

Help Wanted

Farma for Sale

~quip

for a time at RJo Grande College,
;:;.h!~~tll!~~time "as a Free IV ill
~ufus Jacobs Jr was also 111&lt;&gt;

COLUMBUS Oh10 !UP! 1 Members of the Oh10 C1vd Servrce
Emplo&gt;ees Assocratxm ratified a
contract that gi\es each a $450
oonus and a 7 percent pay raiS&lt;'
starung July I
Aoout 35 OOJ statPemplo)eesheld
meettngs across 111&lt;&gt; state between
May 22 and Thursda1 to vote on the
contract which grves them the1r
frrst pay rarses m three vears
Local 11 ol the OCSEA an
affrliate of the Amencan f'edera
uon of State. Count y and Muruc1pal
Employees appro\ ed the comrac1
b) a margin of nearlv 1&gt;-to I a
un10n spokesman sa &gt;d

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

o40 acr• with nice 2 atory home
4 bdr • 2 b•tha tompl.. eJv
rltnOdllld toblcco bue farm

"llheral" thinkers ol the llms
While there Wl'!'l' many \arietles In
this school o1 thought most did
agrtP In the una~tabllltv off the
doCil'II!P ot original sin and on
maintaining an optimistiC view in
the
f
rr~~dto rote that
Rul'us Jacobs. son was a professor

------

junbaJl ~imts- ientintl

June 16, 1986

2 ol wh iC h areegg baskets 2 ea Mame baskets Cape Cod cran
berry box red pam! J e r se ~ co fj ee lm ea F1rk n tare lollypop
butter press sugar maple molds choc molds corn dryer 3ca st
11on door slops Torch OH fXJSI oii&gt;Ce wood s&gt;gn 41lll ly Teddy
Bears S1e1fl Olown e toys 1ugs and crocks hooked lUgs
qu1lls 1 red and wh1le and 1 blueand wh1te cast 1ron heart wal

lie 11on Pol&gt; hcal and Rartroad •terns Imp slot machlfte COINS
s1I Yer dollars flymg eagle penn 1es lnd•an head penmes et c
mrsc sterlrn g sil vet tew ehy and llatw are JEWELRY 14K dra
mond cluster nng cameo nng more 19 Sl AMC Con corn OL sta
!1on "Na gon w1lh 56 019 m1tes
Plan to attend for a well d&gt;vm&gt;fled much more than
listed sale
RAILROAD HALl1s located on Rt 35 at 51 E Broadway 1n
Ja ckson Oh w1th 5 flat acres of pari&gt;ng The DINING CAR
w&gt; ll be open
Terms Cash or go od check WJ!h pr&gt;or approval
AUCTIONEER- MIKE CLUM INC
THORNVILLE. OH - 614 246-6851

TRUCKS &amp; TRAILERS
FARM EQUIPMENT
MISCELLANEOUS
Turn

Surplus Equipment Into Cash!
AUCTONEER: Edwin Winters
Over

L&lt;. #334-811

Phone (304) 273-3700 or (304) 372-3779

ESTATE AUCTION

THURSDAY, JUNE 26, 1986
5:30 P.M.
The followrng perso nal property from the rslate of
Ruth Crrcle formerly Ruth K1esltng , Probate Case
#18376 wtll be offered for sale at publtc aut:hon
located at !he Gal ita Co Junror Fairgrounds on St
Rt 35 at Gall1pohs Oht o
HOUSEHOLD
Hammond organ seclion al couch occ asmnal cha1rs match
rng coffee Iable lamp Iable and end table w&gt;th leal her 10 la1d
easy c ha~r portab le Broad more B&amp;W TV tamps piC tur es
clocks large mlfroJ rugs I full s&gt;ze bed w&gt;lh canopy and
matchmg dresser wdh m1rror. and chest of drawers 2 full
s11e beds ? chest ol drawers 2 drm eJ s Hoover conv
upnghl swePper Bro &gt;l &amp; Qu&gt;k Chef rot&gt;sser&gt;e bJo&gt; ler fryer
small applian ces skillets pots pans ca n&gt;ster set d&gt;s hes
glasses 3 wooden bar stools GeneJal Etectr&gt;c 2 speed
was he&gt; Kenmor e he&lt;vy dul) dry er dmene setw1th 4 cha ~rs
case w1t h complete I ne al butche rmg kn&gt;ves .,d toots Much
more tn k tchen 1tems too nuf'T'e rous to men110n l awn and
garden tool s oamt&gt;ng loots wr enches other hand tools
electnc fans extens1on cord s small space heaters Kerosene
heater electriC lrtmmer s metal lawn chtms whee lbarrows
AUTO
1971 Cadrll ac Fleetwood Br ou!llam very good cond&gt;l&gt;on
ANTIQUES '
Oa~ Circular glass cupboard w1th l1 on s claw ~et Dunca n
Ph)le table w&gt;th malch~ng»deboar d V&gt;clor&gt;an walnut oval
table • 1th marble top V• clonan walnullad&gt;esSide chalf, VIC
tonan oak couch heav1 ly ornate 6 V1Ctor1an oak d1n1n g room
cha irS 2 he aVIlY orn ate candel abras oval P&gt;Cture frame
brass sc hool be ll otnale beveled glass m11ror sma ll we&gt;gh
scale USA 22 Kgold pa~nted cups &amp; sauce rs Japan salt and
peppPr sha&lt;ers op alescent candy diS h mu stard tar an d re i
ISh diSh FlowBlue cup and saucer RS Pru ss&gt;a d&gt;Sh presse&lt;J
glass green bowl green depre ssiOn glass bowl w&gt;th handle
' COLLECTIBLES '
3 p&gt;ece oarto1 set fern stand telephone sland magazm e ta
ble mght sta nd 2 large ornate vases match&gt;ng Gone w&gt;lh
the W1nd lamps celluto rd hand m~rrors lloral JUg colfee
serve r m1sc ltgunnes d1shes cups saurers crea m and su
gar bowls salt and peppe r sets chocola te pot and old Santa
Claus
ThiS&gt;Sonly a part&gt;al listmg of outstandmgpersonal prop
erty w1th all &gt;lems 1n very good - excellent condJtton
TERMS Cash or Pmonal Cneck w1th PoSihve I D
Announcements day of sale Will take prcedence over any
or all advertiSements
- FOOD AVAILABLE -

RUTH CIRCLE ESTATE
CHARLES KIESLING-EXECUTOR
WARREN F SHEETS CO. LP A
GEORGE E WOODWARD JR -AUCTIONEER
Atf tltated wttll the Wtseman Real Estate Agency
446 -9466 - 446 -8130
Nol responSible for ac crdents or loss of property

Tra1lftr space 3 mrles fro m town
JUS! abo ve o ld Y on Rt 2 larRe
lot 304 676 3248

47 Wanted to Rent
Wanted l11!e to rant 3 bdr hou1e
prefer buemllf'lt 1n or around
Galhpolll Need bV July 15th
C1ll 614 446 4448

fc~l~F~ID[1v]' Al1~ ·ltrill()l'~

E~Af-~ID~~

Merchandise

FIION GALLIPOLiS, TAXIS NOU2E 1; 1 , TURNiNG LKYT ONTO
NOUTK 77 5 ; TUNN RIGHT OfTO CADNU S PATRiOT RO AD.
IIATC8 FOR SIGNS.

51 Household Goods

ltl~.1~ illOU E ~~:1\lJf;

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Ohve St G~tllrpoha New &amp; used
wood COIII IIOV85 6 pc wood lR
SUite S399 bunk beds S199
entron recliners $99 new &amp;
used bedro om SUites rang es
wnnger wash11r1 &amp; shoes N8W
lrv 1ngroom SU ites 1 199 8599
l11mps 1110 buymg coal &amp; wodd
stoves Call614 446 3159

~SttT liF~IDttlC

,J t1t~ ~. 2:.m~)

GOOD USED .APPLIAN CES
Washers dryers refngeratotl
ranges Skaggs Applian ces
Upper R1ver Ad bes1de Stone
Crest M otel 614 446 7398
Countv Appl•ancA Inc Good
used appl1an ces and TV seta
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sal 614 446 16 99 627 Jrd
Ava G~tlhpol • l OH
Valley Furn1ture new &amp; used
large aect1on of qual1ty furnt
lure 1216 Eutern Ave
Galhpoha
For ule H~trl~~q uK'I Romence
boob 270 tor 175 white
wooden table t25 yellow krt
chen ctlrna cabmet 150 all 1n
good condit ion See at 256 So
r=ourth Ave Middleport Oh
Refngerator h•rv•t gold t 126
refnger•to r wh1te S125 tefrlg
arator avoclldo 8126 refngera
tor coppertone 8125 refr~gera
tor tide by 11de 8196 weaher
Kenmore •1 50 electuc range
30 1'1 white top and bottom
oven S1150, eleC1rlc range 36 In
175 gu range h1rvnt gold 30
'" l1ke new S150 etr con d
11 000 &amp; 8 000 BTU 1 S95 81
bedroom 1ult11 895 che~t of
drawers 120 Skaggs Applrance
UpperRrverRd 614 446 7398
Utad refrigerator bfau btd
complet• occ chaw Call e14

44e·11 71

King 1111 waterbed light wood

Coli &amp;14 367 7237

n

Fancy
RCA Color Conaole
25 Inch TV welnut wood
cabln.t Atklng t300 Like naw'
Call 11•· 992 3809

'1: ()llJ

m~~~ ~~:15

Jlflillvm

1873

GRANDFAfHER CLOCK FROM INGLAND (WIHf ORIGINAL FACE),
GERMAN GRANDFATHER CLOCK, MAIIBLE TOP PI E SAFE, OAK DRES SERS,
OAK TABLES WITH CLAW LEGS, CltAIRS OLD ROCKING CHA IRS,
KEROSENE LAMPS, DEPRES SION GLASS tGR EE N &amp; PINK), PICTURE
FRAMES, ANDIRONS, IRON S, CUCr.DO CLOCK, REED ROCKING CHAIR,
STONE JARS, FOOT STOOL WITH ; RON LEGS, TRUNKS, LIBRARY DESK,
SLEIGH BEDS WITH DRES SERS &amp;MIRROR S, CHURN, COPP ER KETTLES,
LANTERNS, IRON KETTLES, BRASf. BED, COPPER TE A KETTLE, ROUND
OAK TABLE WITH CLAW LEG S, 2 lEAVES, 6 CHAIRS AND SIDEBOARD
(GOOD CONDITION), SPRINGHILL DAIRY MI LK BOTTLES, CHERRY
TABLES, OAK HIGH BOARD BED, IIISC. DISHES, MI SC. BOTTLES,
MAYTAG WASHER, OLD SINGER TRIPLE SE WING MACHINE, 6 GAL, STONE
JARS, MARBLE TOP DRES~ERS, 17qf BENNINGTON PITCHERS, OAK
GLASS TOP TABLE WITH CLAW LEt.S, HI SC, PEWTE R, WA SH BOARD S,
SHOE LAST, BRASS SPITTOON, AVON BOTTLE COLLECTION, AND
MUCH MUCH MORE ,

FROM THE C. E. CURTIS ESTATE
MARliN WEDEMEYER, AUCUONEER-614-245-5152
ARVIN COLEGROVE, APPRENTICE

�The Sunday nmas-Sentinel
54 Misc. Merchandise 56

59 For Sele or Trade

Pets for Sale

61

83

Farm Equipment
_,

C1U1h11'1 '1 Used Tire Shop . Over
1,00()tlret,ll.tet12 , 13 , 14 , 15 ,
16, 16.5 . 8 mil• out At. 218.

Coll614-251-1!251 .

-

Plastic cittem state epprowed ,
plastic sephc tanks. pllltic
culwertl. metal culvtfta. AON

EVANS ENTERPRISES .

son. Oh. e14-286-5930.

$88 . 7&amp;

1980 3 wheel- 70 uri• . 197'!11
J wheeler 70 teriet . Clll 61 4·

992-2428 .

58

retsonltlle Drice

color TV's I good vor;ory. Coli

614-446 -,149.

4- P235 -70 R 15 Dtvtona RWL
like new 1175. Call 614-3670167.

1'. Lrvr:s tud

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

•

61

Strewbeni• pidl ~our own. Ctll
Claude Winters , 514 - 245 -

CROSS.

5121 .

w..l .

U.S. 35

McCautllnd F~rm and
Frt~h

SO~S

Jackaon, Ohio.

114-28e-8451 .
Gttden. MIIHy
Fwgu10n, NIIW Holland.

lrocofi, 2 MMlt 75 cents,
tnap pees, !winging bllltets.

Bush Hog Sal• A S~t~Vice . Owr
40. -..td trtctors to chooat from

fk)wert. US mil• South, US At.
315, Soutl'lskle, w. Va.

69

Farm Equipment

• OOrY1Jiete line ot new &amp; utld

Llfllllt •lection in

~or Sele or Trade

1t7&amp; Oodge motor homa
31. 000 milet, extra ct11n,

14.1&amp;0. Col11 -&amp;14-28e-6522.

fTont ltiC •
warranty o~ 71 uaed
1000 tools
. Up

,._,.N

......

Gibson 10,000 BTU air cond ..
$160. Ctll614 -446 -2647.

1977 Olds Cuttau -serial no.

3G29R7M15103 Call 614446-41,3.

NH brolor 12.11&amp;. uoo orrdiMtl widetronr cream puff
U .MO. AC 4rowno-1illplanttr.
clean 1880. Call 1-114-21t-

m..-e wlrtt AOHA Aegllt.-ed Quart:• horae
ttud aervlct. Olrtct ouc of
Olddlo UOO. 8 '""' old Pal,. "Chrullo
Polha". Co1111•·441·
"'lno .. ldlllg wl111 Olddla ..oo.
4 ,..r .w hall Ar•r., pldlng t371.
t300 w1111 olddlo. Col onytlmo
114-JI7- lt03.
Oahld riding hon1, 304-111· 84 Hay &amp; Grain
2&lt;M3.

Huffy Stu Thompson with m.g
wheels , $60. Call 614 -446 -

3199

White's me1al detectors. latest
models, lowest pr ices . Cell

614 -446 -0548 .
Air rompreuor , Binkl gun , cup ,
pot , 22 galton tank. $375 ($600
vtlue) . Ca ll 614-742-2951 .
8 HP riding mowet •400 , l'h HP
Seart outboard motor $160 . 8
tt . insulated truck topper 1200.
8 h . truck racks 160, telephone

S light paint dam&amp;ge. Flashing
arrow sign S299! Lighted, non ·
arrow 12791 Noolighted 82491
Free leneral Few left. See
lo cally . 1 - 800 -423 - 0 163 ,
anvtime.
Sole witt! new slipco11er 860.

Antique organ t85 . 6 piece
dinene S25. 614 -992 -5597.
TONY 'S GUN REPAIRS , scope
bore sighting. factory reblueing,
hours 9 :00 till dark, call 304·

675-4631 '

Williamson Meet Market,
U.S.D.A. Prima Beef Sale, Sides
81 .29. Front qts. $1 .09 , Hind
Qts. S1.70. U.S.O.A . Choice
Beef Stle. Sidn 11 .25 , Fronts
$1 .06 , Hinds $1.62 . Prie~t in·
eludes cutting, wrapping end
freezing . Whole Primal Cuts.
Whole Ribeves 12 -14 lb average
83.90 lb . Whole Naw York
Strips 12 -,4 lb average $4.06
lb. Choice Tenderlion 15. 99 lb.
Short Loin $3 ,5, lb . Full Loin
13.25 lb . Price includel cutting .
Deposit required . Guaranteed
tender. Call 304 -675 - 5363 .
Point Pleasant. W. Va .

Tobacco lractor. Maasill Harris
Pteer with hydraulic cultiYatort.

Coli 614-448-7310.

8-N Ford Tractor .. NIW paint.
rlbullt. NMS IJ)Od . • 1310. 11491&amp;-4222 ohor I pm.

New Holt.nd, 1 ft rMr mower.

304-815-3410 .

62 Wanted to Buy

FOR RENT
N. Myrtle Bt1ch, new
condo, overlookinl
ocun. Accommodates
6, fully furnished.
Dills Availlblt Wltk of:

AUGUST 2-9
AUGUST 16-23
AUGUST 23-30

The Down Under is
now accepting
applications for a
Professional
Bartender
Apply in person at the Down
Under Restaurant. 300 Second
Avenue, Gallipolis, OH.

614 -256· 6417

c••·
C.ll814-3117-0157.

•U-3231 .
1180 Malibu Clas1ic landau
llookl 13,000. tint 82,600
..._.. lt. Call 814·448-0362 .

1871 Chevy Nova runs well

1100. Coli

paint. new tlr•. 360 auto ..
t2.100. Call 814-448 -8201 or
61·-~6- 8113 .

Flbarglan Nove 327-326 HP,
dlrornt anyirle. m-22 transmisalon Cell 6 4-992 -6941 .

n

Prefer Master's Degree in Social Work, Counseling or Counseling Phsychology or related
field. Two years professional experience in
field desired .
Send resume and three letters of recommendation by June 30, 1986 to:
Personnel Committee
Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Meigs,
Gallia, Jackson and Mason Counties
P.O. Box 1030

OH. 45631

Buy Rawletgh Products whol·
sa le. Cale and Wilma Wood.

304-675-1090.

614-388-8118.

1971 Chevro~ Monze. 2 dr.
w~gon, auto, one owner, t999.
John's Auto Sal•. Bulnille Rd .,

Clark, llysttr, Cat., Case; ford CL-40
Skill Stt« l . . .r; UOO ford w/ mb, P.S.; 4000
ft~, tht~ P.S.; 5000 ftnl, 4111., P.S.; 5600 Ford, dsl,
P.S.; Cw~ w/sidt tlrass &amp; cult.; Allis Chalmer G
w/cult~ far11111f A w/cult.
ftttllifts -

lailtrs: N.H. 273, Otiftr 620, !D. 24T; 2-IN lbSO
launcl llliltrs Uikt new).
P1111 SO Tn;c .. n I 1,000

m

Buitdtng Mtteritlt
Blodl.. Drick, .ewer pip•. win dows, lintels, etc . Claude Wtn lers. Rio Grtnde, 0 . Ctll &amp;14-

246 -6121.

Building mtteritls , c•ment .
blocks tllt izu , yard or delivery .
Gallipolis Block Co .. 123'h ltin1
St.. Gallipolit, Ohio Call &amp;14-

446-2763.

Block, briclt , mortar tnd ma sonry 10pplin. Mountain Stale
Block. Rt . 33, New Haven. W.
\Ia. 304 -882 -2222

Pets for Sale

Canerv Kennlll.
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Siamese kittflfls . AKC Chow
puppies. New puppies &amp; kittens.
Call _446 -3844 tfter 7PM

Dragonwynd

Reg . Oob11man pups •• - pldi·
gree. good temptrment . t150

ea. Call614·256-6403.

AKC Reg . Beagle puppies for
sale. Call 304 -372 -4620 .
Chihulhut, 9 w~eks old. Non registered. tinv . Call 614-441 4576 .
Greet Dane. Farm owners only.
Good ground hog dog &amp;75.

614 -742 -3118.

SOUT.IN HIU.S I. L, INC.

SAlES

This is a twelve-month-, administrative conlractwith
appointment to be effectiw on or about July I.
1986. 5.111ry ra11e Sl2,000·$14,000. Responsibilities include the day-to-day operation of the pro gram.
Minimum qualifications include arant and proposal
writin&amp;. implementation and manaeement experience and experience workin&amp; with older ptrsons.
Bacqround in community development and social
service delivery procrams are desirable .
Applicants should send a tetter of interest, resu me ,
education transcripts and the names of tllree references by the deadline of Monday, June 23. 1986 to:
Personnel Officer
Rio Grande College
P.O. Box 969
Attn: RSVP Director
Rio Grande, OH. 45674
Rio Grande Colle&amp;e/ Community Collece is an Equal
Opportunityi Affirlllltive Action Employer
P.O. NO. 1213

......... M1oooo•••-'"'' ----~-------,

RAX R..c.ur•nt• •••

GROWTH

IXCII'110NAL
O.IIOIItUNIT111
1N
REITAURANT
IUIIADIIIINT

" Wh&amp;fiW •III be 1nttwh1t willb1
n~ '"

111\'1 2 IIIII POIIIIO n l 11'1 IIIII

''"to fiMwhich can de-.-elop into

mlfllljltmtnt lor the •..ght perton .

EARN A LARGE
WEEKLY INCOME
•.t.Mend 1 1pecilllred ~reining
u:nool. bptnu plid
.Oueunteed oncomt to 111rt
•8• gi\otn 1n OSIPortuntrv to ldvlnce•IIPidt'l into fNAIVMTia"ll .

TO QUALIFY -

t.. mttull 121 Ot oldetj .
hiYI depflfldtbl• lreneponllion.
1t11bl1ioLj1 1nd dependlblt, IJCIOd
educetlonet end chetecter t.ckground. •nd bt bondeble.
Mu1t

l ih•-

•pointm•nt now .

1-800-621 -0218
Monday &amp; Tuesday
12 Noon-8 P.M.

ARQUTECT DESIGNED - Qual!y burtt 3 bedroom
brl:k and cedar home. Excellent des~n,11cludes INilg
room, equipped kitchen. formal dnn&amp; he.t pump and
overs~ garage. There~ much rmre to see .. $79,!Xl0.
W2061

NEW USTlNG - SPRING VALLEY - The
neighbor rood speaks krr ilself. This dlanring one lklor
r~an very well kept rome offers alot ,j livilgsiJI(:e. 3
~rge bedrooms, 2 baths. equrpped ktchen, spaccus
well manl:ured lot.
N2120

1980 G. Plymouth Fury, AMFM. air. 1980 Ottaon 210. 6
tPitd . Call 814 - 992 - 7076
8:00em.· 7:00 pm .
1984 Sil11er Thunderbird .

28.000 mlloo. V8. Coli 814992-11172 1ft.. 5:00pm.

1976 Dodge Dan 1450. 304 -

·a1

Mrythil~

SKINNY DIP .... ~you da~t- The privacy~ lhere 1n
the 16'&gt;32'in-ground pool, ~rvacy fence, ~rge patil. 3
bedrooms. heal jlJmp. 2 car garage.
N2077

tra in new managers for RA X locations across the country, including
locations in this area
You don't have to have restaurant
experience; we'll give you the training you need. But you must have

at leaat2 years of college or2 years
of management experience and
the potential to move Into unit management and distrtct management
opportunities. For those seeking
growl~

RAX is1he place. Gel o1art·

ed by sending your resume to:

#2037

1945 TRIUIFH II - 14x70 luxur~us custom made
mo~~ home oo 9.6 acres, wooded and secluded.
located at SR 325, 13x22' INing room, beautrtul
klcherr. garden tub.
#2015

soH, 3

INVESTIIENT PROPERTY - tDflt(ING FOR EXTRA
INCOIIET - Nice duplex local~ at Ne~hborhood Rd.
Ap1rtmer11s have IM11g room, knchen, I l:lllh and 2
IE rooms each. This coukl be tusl for yoo. Call flY an
appoinlment tooay.

N2122

OWNER TRANSFERRED - Anxrous lo sell this m~~
remodeloo 3 bedroom ho'"" w1lh a lull baS811enl
hrep~ce, drnmg room. plus ove1 I acre.
#1055

19n Cordoba. very nice. 6144'8· 2766 till 6 :30. 304· 67685515 lfttr 7:00.

•w.

1982 Ford Escort.
ac. new
rldial tir•. very clean . wl'lite

12850. 304-882-3200.

1972 Pontiec Catallne. runs
good. n....., tir11,

304-895-3828.1

72

AVIEW UKE NO OTHER' - O&gt;oar star-shaped ranch .

Great room , calhedral wlings, stone l~rep~ce, lui~
equipped krtchen. lorrrnl d rn~~ lorrrnl entry. 2\1
balhs. Satellrte d5h and tree gas I'Eal mclurrd. Can IE
purchased w1th 2 or 22 ;cres WHAT A IlEA~
#2028

PU .. ING GAS WEll - 2 wet~ in JI'OOUct~n 26
acres. Addison Twp.

n062

WELL MAINTAINED- 21Eroom rand!, ~rge liiing
room, firep~ce. alt.ached garage, wport, lull
oosemmt. cenlral arr. 2 baths.

SPACIOUS SPUT LEVEL - Very nice home. 3
bedrooms, I ~ baths, klts ol cebilets and counter
space in kncherr. Home has been weft mainliWIIII.
extra nice lawn.

H2060

112072

COUNTRY UVING - 25 acres more or less. Tobacco
oose. barn. Plus 3 bedroom home vmh large INng
room. d~1ng room
H20SI

IN TOWN LIVING - REDUClO- $49.9JO- Wrthin
walkilg d5tance toslllppin~ The s~e ofth5 ho~ew111
surprise your 3 bedrooms, huge oockyard. Call, come
see now'
Nl089

4.5ACRES MORE OR l£SS - SmaiiiBrn. a llt il~b~.
rural water avai~b~. mneral r~hts ~cklded.
N2094

RBIWOOD FIWIIE- 3 bedroom 1anch, 2lull oolhs,
nl:e kitchen,IMns room vmh fireplace. l~tlot . located
al Bulaville Rd. Qly school system.
H2007

SPACIOUS QUALITY BUILT lilliE - Galipolis
schools, Green Twp. Horne leatures 3 IJ!d1ooms, 3\1
baths, divided basement. heat puf111 , lirep~ce. 9~:res
more or less all landscaped. P~nt area, I!Nn pri.late
stocked lake. Call nowl!
H2065

WNIT 10 GO FISHING 011 HUIITING7- liB acres
more cr less wooded 11and. B'xB' huntllg buildng.
Slocked iXI"ds. several lee1 d road !rontage. Drilled
well.
N2027

HOllE PWS 20.4 ACRES- Owner h!s movlll out ol
state and rs an~o~ to sell this very ni:e 3 bedroom
ranch. Features large knchen and drrng_contrrlll.
Fu~ oil furnace pkls worxlburner, cenlral ar. Very nK:e
30•36 garage plus lois more.
W2062

GOOD INVESTMENT - 2 homes sluated on 4.3acres.
Garag~ storage building, shed, root oolar. Both homes
in &amp;fiOd conditoo. I rome has all newer inlemr. Good
renta~. or l~e in one and rent the otl'er.

112097

COMMERCIAL METAL BUILDING - 1 .~ 0 Sl - ft.
Electrl: in buikling rural water avai~b~. Located on
lwo lois. Rl 7, Crown ()ty.
H20 II

WANTA RIVERVIEW AND SUPER IDC.\TION - Two

trlcts d vscanlland. 5 ~r:res in each. Purchase one or
bolh. Surveylll. Owner lilancilg possble. llllhil 3
rliles 11 Galli~is City schools system.
·
N2019

·

~

-

-

....

-

-

-

~

.

.

______________

.

_...:.,

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

1979 Convertkm van. 1966
Chevy truck, nice. 1978 Chevy
Luv . Call tfter 6 . 614-446 -

nea.

1980 cnevv window van, B
paaa.-.gtr. dual heat-air. tilt .
cn.tile, ,6,986. Ctll 614·3792341 . No Sunday ce lls.
1982 Chevy 4x4 305 V-8. auto,
lit. short bed. ull thlt wHk

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1978 Jeep CJ 6 . Sof1 tOJ), good
oondition. Call 614·992-7020 .
1984 Cllevy S-10, 4 wheeJ
drive. price reduced. 304-676 -

8383.

1964 Rambler l'tation wagen.
good cond . 74 Chelty pickup.
fair cond ., 6'h HP ou tbO ard
motor, countertop, stoll'e &amp;
oven . Can be seen 2024 'h N.
M•in. Ask tor Jim. 304 -676 -

6439.

1984 Dodge window 111n fully
loaded t10.600 . 304 · 675 -

2938.

74

Motorcycles

~9 82 Hondt C8760 loaded.
exc. cond . Cell 614 -446 -0122
ef1at 4PM .

1981 Yamaha 760 runs great ,
looks good. asking $900. Call

74

l\llotorcycles

Murry X 24 recing bike. New
hand le ~~ tnd speedometer.
All chrome. Good · condition.

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

'84 KLR 600 Kawaaakl. eac
cond. low mll11ge, 304 -882·
2&amp;18 after 8:00PM.

78

Camping
Equipment

Star""'ater 8 camper. ltove. ice
bolt, 111.c . cond . 1979 Diesel
Rabbit. 304-875-3077.

400 cubic engine &amp; othet parta
tor General Motors vehicle. 1
Reen hltch. Call 114 -379-

2692.

1980 Datsun pickup customized . 1978 Wildem•• tra11et
trliler, self contained. sleeps
8-10. both good condition. Ctll
614· 318·8437 .,ytlme.

TEAFORD

A.M-FM. n.w ~int, exc . cond.,
13.9&amp;0. Alao Mvers hydraulic
snow plow f9&amp;0 . trtd•• ·
ctmptir, or belt otter. Cell

114-446-2745

1982 Mtlda. 5 speed . AM -FM .
$2499 Johns's Auto Seln,
Bulavllle Rd . Gtlltpolis, OH .

EARLY AMERICAN DREAM - fh 5beauhlulloghome
" resiled 1n 6 acres olwood&gt;nd f ealures lw1ng room
wrth Impressive Calhedral Cell·~ 2 ()' 3 OOdrOOmS,lott
OV!!OOkiOg l.rng room. [QUipped k~Chen Compare
p r~e. compare qual!y, lhen oorne S«' us aboul lh5
beautrtul home. $&lt;17.900

Real Estate General

HOBSTEnER
REALTY

Goo. S, Hobl1etter, Jr ..
Broker
NEW USTING- 5.75 acres
v.;th beautiful brick rome. lea·
tur~g spacious l~in~ room,
dinilg room. knchen wrth bur~­
rn · slove, d~hwasl'er. three
bedrooms. 2 lull baths, uhl!y
room lull basemmt 111th room
lor citnned &amp;fiOds. garage, tree
gas. asking $64.!Xl0.00.

SECOND AVENUE - $39.900 -love~ a~r lome
with spacf
· us rooms, I l~or ~an , 3 bedroorm. 1~
baths. has en re10valo:l. Alllh5 wrlh conven~nceol
town INin
#1051

EXECUTIVE HOME - 3
acres with lovely cedar
home. Four large bedrooms,
2'h balhs, large living room
wilh lireplace. lor mal drmng
room , equipped krtchen, recreation room. lull basemen!, approx. 5,000 SQ . It
total PRICE DRASTICALLY
REDUCED' Call lor details.

HOME WITH A HEART' - Well constructE.'d lam~y
home with f~rep~ ce, eal-m k~rh cn, attached 2 car
garage. Covered deck hear pump, cenlral ar. flal lawn,
conven•nl ~calro n W1lh1n 2 m11rs ol hosprtal.
$54.!Xl0.
#1031
REDUCED - VACANT lAN O- S39.900- Owners
have reduced li-E piCe and aro an"ous lo sell 95
acres vacant lartd m Grr&gt;f!fl rm•.- ff. lltD Call tor more

LANGSVILLE - Three bed·
room home silu ated on approx. one-th11d acre ground
on St. Rt. 124. PRICE RE·
OUCED to $12.000 00.
Velma Nicinsky. Asssoc.
Phone (614)742·ll92

#1035
ATIENTION COUNTRY GENTlEMEN -Country'"'"~
at Its best mlh1sbr(k ranch l~rnr wrlh 3 lEd rooms. 2
lull baths, 2 car garage, 18 arr.,srnore or less. part ~ally
fenced. Poods. barn and cloravr h.11ld11gs
#1085
VACANT IAN D - $6AOO 9 '"''" lrom Gallipolis.
Southwesrern school s~lem
#1096

75

Boats and
Motors for Sale

614-448-7530.

81 Hon da 660 in good condi·
tion . $960 Call 614-992 -6U4
83 Honda Sh..:tow 760 CC . 6
IPied 1hatt drive. low mileage
$1860. Call 614 · 985-4163 .

1984 Beu boat 16ft. 60 hrt .,
Mercury alec. start, drille on
trailer, 2 batteriea, 2 - 8 gallon
tanh . foot con trolled trolling
motor. 1 graph recorder, B.IIC .
cond. Ce ll 814-388 -9718
- - - - - -- - -It Pontoon boat. Used 1 time, end
1 wood lethfl . Cell 614 -992 -

6017.

~

ENO GENERAL STORE
FOR SALE - BY OWNER
Store, upstairs apartment and adjacent
1 acre lot, located on State Route 554 .

31

~

NEW USTING - 5 ACRES more Ql less vacant land
1al

EASTERN - 9 acres wrth 3
BR home. Full basement,
furnace, '!OOdburner, trees,
garden spaces. outbuild rngs, on blacktop rooo but
private.
RIVERVIEW- 6 rooms.lub
bath, basement, some rnsu·
lat1on . All on ooe floor for
fU SI $12.000
TRAILER PARK - 22 spaces
plus several acres on Stale
Route with crty wafer &amp; sewer
system .
MINERSVILLE - N1ce 3BR
home overlook1ng lhe IEaublul Ohio River. New gaslurnace. range , relngerator.
carpeling &amp; 2 porches.
BAUIIS OIV. - Modern 4
BR b1 -leve1. Central air &amp;
heal, fo1mal dm1ng, su n
deck. copper plumbing, altached garage and lg, lol.
JUST IT -I_!. 2story jew~ of
a horne. ~_!. lol, trees, shrubbery, basement. 3 proches.
crty, sewer. water, gas &amp; ~ec ·
tric.
RT. 7 BY-PASS- This me
lloor, 3 bedroomer IS fils!
right for you lead1ng Creek
water, carpetrng, panelrng &amp;
near WMPO.
REAl NEAT - Everylhrng
enclosed in the basement
Has lg. lireplace in lhe famIly room, wei bar, 2 baths,
dbl. ga rage wilh a genre and
2.47 acres. Lovey , lovely
place.
MIDDLEPORT - One floor
3 BR lram e home. New gas
furnace. full basement. 2
porches &amp; nverview with
shade.
SElliNG PROBLEMS
CAll 992-33 25

Housing
!Headquarters

#2113.

POMEROY

NEW LISTING -TU PPERS PLAINS - Lo~ home lor rustrc
liVIn g with modern convenrence'21Jedrooms. lull basemen';
Nestled 'n th e lrees wrlh approx 13 acres Ba rn. Call to see.
$27 ,000 00
OWNER WANTS OFfERI- LONG BOTIOM - Aneat 3 bed ·

6 ACRES-56,000

room ran ch with spaciOU Sfam ily room, ~li chen Wllh butlt -m

range and oven units. separaledlnmgarea Gas I a heal plu s
wood burner. 2 car garage. appro&gt; I ;r: re Wllh garden space
and oulbu1ld1ng Ma ny features
At the end of the long concrete
drive, is a place like no other place.
A place that's not commonptace ..Spacious 2~00 sq. ft. split-level professionally decorated wrth coordrnatrng lrghtrng fl_xtures. 4 bedrooms , 3 baths,
living room and dining room wrth cathedllll cerhng. famly room wrth retax1ng
fireplace. 2car garage. 32x40heated ~to rage building. The ultimate for grand
entertaining or cozy famrty IrVIn&amp;. Pnce reduced $5,000. Now $134,900.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY - 446-3644

OWNER WANTS OFFER! _ RACINE - Have you been lookrng lor ac rea ge w1th a n1ce house' Th1s 3-4 tedroomranch 1s
r~gh tlor you and your fam il y room , nrce • orkshop elec triC
88 heal.
HENRY E CLELAND JR
. . ... ... . ..992-6191
JEAN TRUSSELL ....... ... ...... ........... .......... 94 ~-~~~
DOTTIE TURNER .... .. ... ...... ..... ............... 99 •
Real Estate General

THIS HOME HAS ALL THE THINGS YOU
WANT'! 4 BRs. equrpfll"(( ~tch en . 2 baths
tmaster balh has a whrrlpool). LR. carpetln ~
heat pump. cent a ~r. attached garage, above
ground pool Just m1nu1es lrom liMn al
Centenary
COMMERCIAL OR RESIDENTIAL- Th~ one
room lwo story horne featur es rwo lllths.drn ng
room . krtchen 1\lth new cabnets. d~hwasi'Er .
carpetrn&amp; iirep~ce . luD basement. gas heat.
block 3 ca r garage, vrnyl sdn g level lot v.1th
hrghway lront.lge on Upper Rl. 7.

.•
HERE'S A GOLDEII OPPORTUNITY to live in town, have
plenly of privacy and still hava alarge lot lor the children lo
play and have room left over lor agarden and pool. This older
maintenance free 2 story dfers a modern kitcllen and balh,
3 bedrooms and a family room. It has had good care and Is
priced at $48,000.
jjll6

PRICE REDU'c£0 , TO $85.000! 200 ACRES
MI L FRONTS ON RACCOON CREEK Awrox 65 acres t1l~ b~ and 135 acres 'Mlods.
Comlort.lble lwoslory home offers 4BRs.bath.
k~chen. IMng room . lamjy room. two
hreplaces, barn, 2 large scr«'ned porches.
lovely qu&lt;l sett1ng.
STARTER HOME OR RENTAL INCO!l $19,9JO - 3 BR home offer; LR, kdcherr.
bath. 2 car unattached garage. lenced yard
Call lor 1nlorrrntion

OWNER FINANCIN1l AVAilABLE! - 29.8
acres more or less. Morgan Twp frontage on
St. Rt. 160. Call lor more mlorrrnl~n .

ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93
acres m/1. all woods. Old barn on ~roperty
$21.900

BE THE FIRST FAMILY IN THIS NEW HOME!
- Srtualed oo lwo wooded l o~ thE bve~
lome offers 3BRs. 2 ooths. krtchen.LR. fam1~
room. full basement. deck, garage, gas !-Eat illd
cent. a~r . Call tooay.

COMMERCIAL BU ILOING - PERRY TWP.NEAR CORA -6000 SQ. H.sl«'l b~g., deal for
anyone rn lruckn&amp; drrllmg ()' mrn~ g
bus~esss Owner rrny consider fas1ng or
l~an c~ng Call lor more i nlorrrnt~n

$8,000-11 ACRES - CHESHIRE TII'P.Vacant land. Sept&lt; tan~ on ~roperty . Call lor
more rnforma110n

14 ACRES MIL. HARRISON TWP. - ClAY
LICK ROAD - Rollmg land. well on ~roperty ,
barn and tobacco base. Call lor 1oore
1 nlormar~n .

U.VNER WANTS AN OFFER'II - Th5 brck
ranch 1s localed lUSt &lt;if Rt . 35 1n M1l~ V1llage
and offers an outstanding 100xll6' kll 1\llh a
nee garden area Backyard rs ~need lor the
ch~ren and pels and sportsa IOxLIJ oovered
patio. Other attrachve lealures o llh~ horne
mdu~ 3 BRs. I r; balhs. fam1ly room Gweus a
call tooay and let us show )&lt;IU lh5 horre

GENTLEMAN'S FARM - 35 ;r:res M'/l, most~ ,
lil~b~ . 3 miles north of Rodney. Spr~ng well
and counlry water. lenced and cross lenced,
lobacco base. Very nee 3or 4 lEd room ranch
sty~ home w1lh krtchen. LR, bath, breezeway,
woodburnrng irreplace Ca ll lor an
appo1n1rnent

lDG HOME WITH 11.04 ACRES - Th • hlnE
offers 1,080 sq ij_ basement, 2 stone
lirep~ces. lront.Jge oo St. Rt . 233.
Southwestern School Olstncl. Call lor more
inforrrntM&gt;n.

NEW LISTING - .6 mrle off Rt. 35, '.\ acres
m/1. 36x35 concrete b~ck bldg. presen t~
llie:l as paint and body shop, 1TJ1b1le home
hookup on property.

SPRING VALLEY ESTATES - Tnlevel home
offers 3 BRs. 2 balhs. nrce eQUipped k~chen.
l-shaped IR, d10mg area. 24•12 1amily room
wnh woocfburn10glirep~ce, gas !'Eat. cent a1r .
2 car garage. Call today.

WANT TO DO A UTILE FARMING THIS
SPRING?- We have a new list~g with 11.4
acres m/1,small tobacco oose, ~ce rillch s ty~
home offers 3 bedrooms. 2 baths, la rge IR.
klchen, full baseme&lt;lt, hardwood fklors, frool
Jll!Ch and rear patio. J~t off Rt. 35, near
Rodney.

••
•'

•r
,,r
•
•••
•

MAIN

'

VINYL SIDED 3 bedroom ranch on Rt 7 rear Cr""n
Crty. Fam1~ room. d1n1ng 100111. ld l b~ slorage bur~~~
Home in good condrtron $42.!KIO

w~h loisof woodsncar Eureka Ae10h1c sepl1c"
water mcludE.'d. Good vmv ~ 'IV~r On~ P.~U .

EAST

MIDDLEPORT - A real steal on a 2 story home Wllh 3 b€d·
rooms, garage, kitchen wrlh bar. and orr a good street
$14,500 00

SPRING STREET

614-385-7419
Coiled Calls Ampled

608

lAND CONTRACT - I 4 acres With a 3 bedroom mo bile
'home thai ISfurni shed Ha s a set up lor woo dburner. 2 oul·
bulldmgs. small pond N1ce at $11.!'11 0.00

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
S4,000 CASH

MONTGOPtiRY
REALTY

CLELAND REALTY INC.
NEW LISTING - You should see lhr s house' RIVer vrew ,
co mpletely remodeled InSide and ~JI 3- 4 bedrooms. 2
baths. deck. central a~r. !Od more . $36 .900.00

Huge Dutch style barn,
excellent lake side and
farmland pasture and
woods. Aski119 $400 per
am. For quick sale. Adjacent PDmeroy.

IS acres wooded land,
hugo poplars, excellent
limber, scenic. Wright
St., Pomeroy.

OR
YOUR lUND OF FOLK!
Y'AU COME SEE US, YA HEAR?

NEW LISTING _ CHESTER - Really a n1ce 3 bedroom
home Wllh lull basem en t and lar ge level ) ard. Carpo rt &amp; a,
greal locatwn 1n town . $34 . ~0 00

130 ACRES

VINTON AREA - I ACRE MI L- Attractrve
ranch rome fealures 1104 SQ . ft .. 14x26 IR.
eat-in krtchen.bath. attached garage, addrtllnal
let can be purchased.

•
r
•r

,,CLELAND CLAN"

216 E 2nd St.
Phone
1-1614)-992-3325

Real Estate General

•

SEE ONE OF THE

Real Estate

REDUCEO TO $46,500 - OWNERS MOVING SOUTH
AND WANT 90LO - Lovely 3 IJedworn ranch. lull
lin5hed basement larmly room "'lh Buck Slove fully
II!Uipped knchen Call lor an appomiiTW'nllodi!y'
#1049

$50,000- 2 story home, 2 w fjl rage. 3 IEdrooms.
den, lormal d1n1n&amp; ulilily room pavo:l dnvc. Silualed
on 10 acres more or less.
#1076

Real Estate General

1979 Scotty cempftf. 19 h long.
aetf contained. axe cond. 9 ft
II ide in c.mptf, 304 -676 -2918.

Real Estate General

2. LOVELY HOME plus 106
ACRES located at Long Bot·
tom. Ohio. 45 acres ol bol·
tom land. Land borders
For~ed Run State Park at
rea r ol propert)!

1976 Starcrah foldout camper.
sleeps 8 , complete with stove.
ice l)ox . lights&amp; sink, e~tc . con d ..
lika · nttw. Call $14-388 -97615
after 6PM

Wanted · cycle front whHI
carrier end tow for ca r hitch.
bolts or ball, 304· 676-2942.

1990 Hooda 200 Twinstar, low
miles, VGC . $660. Call 614446 -1326.

L DRASTIC PRICE REDUCTION on thrs 140 acre larm
localed '" Portland, Ohro' Ap·
proxrmately 'h of acreage 1s
pasture, balance woods' All
mineral nghts go wrth property' - Good spmg lor cattle.
Excellent hunt1ng area' Only
$37,500.00. Call tooay'

15 ft . Scottie Self-contained.
ra1rigetetor, ttove with ,O~"!n.
furnace . Good condittoll .
•1000. 080 . Call 814 -2474122 .

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1981 KX126 Kaweaki, good
oond. t600 . 304· n3-6128.

1968 Wrecker 440 Helms
wen c h with swing booma.

24741 Hill Road, Racine, Ohio
Virginia D. Carroll, Broker
Ohio: Tel. 147-6644
W. Va.: Tel. 173-9383
THE FINEST NAME IN
REAL ESTATE
OUR 21st YEAR

&amp; Campers

3662.

16 fl. Johnson boet &amp; treiler, 75
HP . Cell 614 -246 -9432 .

GORRELL
REALTY

79

1984 Honda Nigt1t Hawk (Bikt
with windshield. exc . cond.
tl600 . 304 -882 -2476 or 882 -

1983 Honda ATC 200 3
wheeler , good cond . Call 614 446-7015.

Real Estate General

The

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Camper&amp;

614-992-6663.

19815 Chevy Conversion vtn
ralltd roof. tow mileage , loaded.

1980, 14 pusenger Ptvmouth
Van for ule. Bid• accep ted until
June 20. Will not accept bid•
l•a than two-thirds loan value.
Call Wenda Vining, 514-9922,81 for more information .

12 ft . tk.lninum fishing boat -3
1-P motor tnd Trolling motor.
New- 11ats. $600. 814-992-

~975 Honda ~T 260 Elsinore.
On -oH road . 2200 miles . Very
good condition . t400 . Ca ll

15 '!1 ft . fibergiiSI 7% HP
Mercurv motor &amp; trai ler 81 ,600 .
Ca ll 614 -446 -2393.

12.000. Coli 614·256·1393.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

3465

614-446 -0760 .

C.ll614-3117-0857.

76

no. 614 ·986-3&amp;95.

1982 Yemaha 125 t600 . Call

Real Estate Generel

1878 Dodge 4M.t 8 ft. Met.
18.000 mil• on r.bulh 360
engine, lutomatic, PS. PI ,

•

•

73

7800.

9738 .. 114-388-9813.

C&gt; 198&amp;Century 21 Rta l EState Corpcm tion il! trusiH for the NAF. ® and'"-tradtmartsof Century 21 Re1l Est .tie Corporation Punted in US A E&lt;j lld l ll uu " nt-: Op purtumt y lir
EACii OFFICE 15 INOEPEND.ENTLYOWNED AND orERATED.

Trucks for Sale

1975 GMC \1-8. eulo ., good
cond., t950 . Call 814· 388-

de1ai~.

WIMT CAN WE SAY? - Owner wants rt sold and w1ll
cons~er any reasonable offer. They !!in even carry the
balance. Ooublewide trai~r on a lar&amp;e lot 'Asking
$18.1XXl.

8300.

1982 Chevy Sltverado pickup 1
ton duel wheels. dual tenkl, new
tir•. orgrlal miiN 81 ,000. Cell
eveninva 814-246· 6666.

PRIVATE LOCATION- 10 'fl. old mufti&lt;evel rome, 4
bedrooms. 92 acres, bam, cellar, tobacco base.
#1078

1983 Dodge Pow., Ram, automatic, 4114, low mile~e. eJtctll.,t oondltion. te500. 6~4 986 -4222 .tter I pm.

73

good shape. Call 114-387-

mot

OWNERS ARE MAKING TWO HOUSE PAYIIENlS Double Wlde trailer, locallll on a large lit 11 a pmd
road. Ask1ng $18,000, but Mltl~ conskler any ttter.
N2092

benerv

1980 4•4 Datsun long bad plus
fib•glass tOPP•· Nt'N tires,

GO AHEAD AKO FALLIN IDVE - Th5 l1me you can
afford ft. RestiY~ country rome, jius approx. 5.:res.
Spacious living is .trat this Ill me oWers Owners hive
lru~ sacrrticed to sell at $42,9JO.

$48,400.

304·675-4831

1983 Camero Z28. 20,000
m1l11, local own~r , loaded .
Gh..-cotl Gray, muat '"" 304 676-6363 lfter 8:00 PM.

PARI·liKE smtNG- ()J 15.8acres more or lesson
SR 14l.l!As of woods.Property borders Ylith Mclntrye
Pan. 4 yr. old 3 bedroom ranch vmh Bud&lt; stove. I \1
bath, plls more. Pnclll to sell al $45,000

the doctor crderlll.
on a corner lj, Oak
entry, and lots I!Jire too

~p..t.

'81 Chevl1te, euto, PS, PB, Air.
cl••n. good cond, d•v :JO.t-676 5717 eveningt 1575-6184.

THIS WUTY- Owners gave I his ooe lte IJ)kien
toochl 3 bedrooms, 2\1 baths. lamly room, formal
~~~g and din•g room, plus eal·rn klchen . 1-klrne has
alii te extras.
112014

#2112

Chtvette. AC. AM·FM cas-

after 6:30.

SUNICIST - locatxm plus charm plus value. 3
bedrooms, I~ bath. formal dllng room. 2 mr garage.
Ranll!, refrigerator, d~hwasher, washer and dryer
ncljded, Mom \trill love IJ!~g conveni!nl lo

An Equal Oppof1unity Employer MtF/ H

M/ F

388-8155
379-2184
446-2230
446-0458
446 -7881
675-3968

BRICK RMCH - 73 acre lot locatlll in AddEoo
Township, 31Erooms, bath, I car attached garage, full
ooserr.:Jlt 24x3J unattachlll garage, central air.
Prl:ed in the 50s.
#1099

.

0ppor1 ~n1tr (~ID~rr

To keep pace we must hire and

P. Dolan
Rax Restaurants
1503 Eastern Avenue
Gallipolis, OH 45631

Ron lauttamus

1976 G. Plymouth Fury. 1976
Mercu ry Monerch . Both 4 door,
air. Call 814-992 -7076 . 8 :00
am .· 7 :00pm.

5 ACRES MORE 011 LESS - 1969 Schu~ mobi~
home. well, gar~ge, small barn. all in Kyger Creek
school system.
U040

.

For thol right ptriOn thil""

tlme c•...- opponuMy wtlh en ntprnelionel corponlon. Cell lor

From 35 restaurants In 1978. RAX
has grown into a network of ove r
500 compa ny-owned and lran-chlsed restaurants in 40 slates.
Our past growt h has been dramatic; our plans for the future are just
as lmpressi11e.

1100. Colll14-388-9832.

d..,,

rome with 3 ~Erooms, 2 ooths, livrrg room. knchen
pal~. Bam, 2 sheds, ~ nd
mostly pasture. Includes range, refrig,, Vrindow air unt
Hl096

COMMERCIAL PROPERTY- Nearly la:re on SR 7
near SiNer Bndge. Includes 2rental houses and r~er
lrontage. $70.000.
H2083

STOP!
ASK YOURSELF
6 yeen !r om tod1v t11 con·

OPPIITUII11l

mileage. 614-742-2197.

1886 ChiVY conversion van. low
miiNge, AT, AC . AM·FM exc.
cond . Ctlll14-446 -4141 after
8 &amp; on weekends.

448-7322.

55 ACRE FARII IN S.R. 141 AREA - Ooubk!wo:le

Rio Grande Collece. the project sponsor of tile multi -county (Gattia, Jackson, and Vinton) Retired Senior Volunteer Program is accepting applications
for I he position of Director of RSVP.

tar

--------1,

IQUAI.IIQIIIIU

FOf Sale: 1982 Chevy 1/a ton 6. 2

Ol"ettruck. AM ·FM radio , PB.,
PS., auto, over drive, low

81 Buick 4 dr.• air, auto, black.
sharp! t2,795; 82 Chevene
1uto. 4 dr.. t1.49S; 83 Ply.
K·Cor S.W. 13,095; 78 Chry. 4
dr.. *885 ; 82 Dettun 4x4 PU

89e-31138.

DIRECTOR OF RETIRED SENIOR
VOLUNTEER PROGRAM

the place

Help Wanted

Gl

BROKER
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor
Realtor

1973 :lAton Chevy pick-up. 360

4 ~p..t . 13&amp;0. 814-742,3086.

14,800. Coll614-441·7019.

nice t4,2115; 81 Chevy 1 ton
w-Jer-Den roll beck bed . 8 &amp; 0
Moton, Hwy. 1t0. Cell 614-

446-6610
JUDY DEWin
J. Merrill Carter
Phyllis Loveday
Becky Lane
JilT) Cochran
Liz Long

Trucks for Sale

GllllpOIII.

1978 Buick Electra fair condi-

(ISVP)
55 Building Supplies

'Morna Carlo, 1111. cond . new-

dra &amp; ptlnt. Must sell . CaM

Sl 35 West, Gallipolis, OH.

/EALTOA '

72

1170 Chwella oonv1rtiblt new

11,100. Call 114-379 -2728.

Search Reopened

Position involves program administration and
casework. Some fiscal management, personnel
and public relations required.

eu-~e - 3870.

84 Chryaltf Laur automaticAC.
18,000 mile~ , PS, PB, niCf!l,

PART-TIME EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Meigs, Gallia,
Jackson and Mason Counties. Salary: Commensurate with education and experience.

'11130.

71 Or~~mln 6 cyl. , 3 tpd ..
AM·FM
good tir•. 14150.

Jim's Farm Equipment Center
I'll. 4U-9777

Autos for Sate

e14-~e-

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Pomeroy-

1171 Mon1afactorv V-8, 4spd ..
atd .. niW pllint • tlr• . 20 11,4PG.
Run• grM.1 liking t1 .300. Call

with dinilg area, covered

304-675-5912.

Equsl

2

CALL 446-2734

Snrs Go-Can $140 .00 . Strato lou nger brown $80.00. Western
Flyer 24 " blk BMX bike tao.oo.

WI

1979 Ford Mustang 4 cyl. , new
1ebuilt motor. low mileage. Cal1

64 Misc. Merchandise

150 HP Johnson motor $5,000.

tinull whll I •m doing

- - -- - -

1879 Rabbitt . Call 614 -3881421 or lifter 6 614-388 -8823 .

1522.

Ce11614-696-1227 lifter 4PM .

do~g

71

1111 Marda RX -7. 5 apd .. low
miiMgl. exc. con d. Call 61 4 -

Apertment
for Rent

answering 875. 17 ft. ban boat

11

Autos for Sale

',

6 ft . x 6 ft . 8 in . patto door
comp lete, 2- 36 in . • 48
insulated windows. 36 in . 11. 36
in insulat.t window . Call tn.t 446 -0098.

56

71

June 15. 1986

.,.·24&amp;-81109 ..

H.., avaoilab.. on sherll. In
DIIWin . , ., 614-llt2-1073.

44

Autos for Sale

1117 Chevy Impala 396-326
HP , rad , bltck interior, PS , PD. 2
dr., t.ld1r skirts, exc . cond,
good Jhow car. t3 ,000. C111ll

8 Yllf okl MOraan

Special Discount last
weeks of Au1ust.

14,000 BTU Air conditioner.
$100 Call 614-388-9776
2 piece living room suit. 1 wall
shelf unit, oek gfun cabinet

100 Ford trec:tor, 1,200 hourt
with plow1, cultivator mower.
boom pole *2.891. 24ft. 4ul•
gooseneck ualltr t1.1tiS. l40
IH tuctor with ptown. mower. IH
hly condhiontt. hay wegons, II

71

Llveatock

.

Good Ulld

fdrnr Su pplr l's

··- - ; ; , - - - ; . - ; , - - - -

10

New &amp; usld. all miMI•. Chikltm
Saw Supply, Koontz ·Stitor Rd .•
Vinton, Oh . Ctii&amp;U -388· 858.&amp;.

1-&amp;14 -281-8122 . .

304-675-3451.

- - -- - -

83

.

trimmers

$299 .95 . Huaqnrn• nws.
Ectlo uws, Y1rdm., mowen.

AC tractor with plows t480.
New Idea pull · type mower
t2215 . 3 p1 . rake nwer uud
13115. JD UT biller t89S . Call

AKC rt;lttwld Cochr Span fell ,
born Apr. 25, biiiCk mall, buff &amp;
white female. mother rtd • bUff
1YJ y111n. 114·192 -1021 or

Llvettock

_

Echo

Jock·

June 15, 1986

Ohio-Point Plaa1111t. W.Va.

THE KIND YOU HAVE IN MIND! - Bnck
ranch wilh1n walk10g d5tance of schoo~ and
downlown shoppm&amp; 3 BRs, bath, LR, klchen.
drning room w/ burH-rn chna cabllel. family
room 1n basement. gas teat lirepace, attached
garage.
103 ACRES MI L, SPRINGFIELD TWP. Appro•. 96 A. til lab~. older home has 5 BRs.
balh IR, klchen. county water. 40x00 po~
bldg·, 40x60 tobacco barn, varous otl'er
outbuiding;.
ADDISON TWP. - Approx . 7 mies lrom
Gallipolrs. 39~ acres more or less. Fronts m
township road. All woods and brush. $8,!ll0.

BRICK HOME - ROUSH IAN E-ThE love~
horne offe~ 1378 SQ. ft. plus alull wsemiJII
Three bedrooms.LR ISl -shaped w~h lrep~ce
and d1ntng area . woodburntnQ stove 1n
basement. I'' baths, garage. Call lor more
1nformat10n

DANVILLE AREA - CLOSETO MEIGS MINES
- 67 ac res mil. n&lt;e home offer; 3 BRs. 2
balhs, krtchen w/DW. d ~pl . double oven. elec
lurnace, carpet. Barn on property 2413() •.rh
loft. Calllooay for rnlorma110n
NORTH GALLIA ESTATES - lo'organ Twp
100x3JO lot. Ask~g $3.!Xl0. Owner \\Ill

consider tmncmg.
PERFECT CONDITION - Th• horre offer; 3
BRs. krtchen wrth OW. d~pl. range and re1rrg .
d rn~g room. hvrng room w1th liOOdburn~ g
frrep~ce. lamr~ room. woocl burner, two oolhs,
foyer. gas heat. almffil new roof. rmmed ~le
p osses s~n

OWNER HAS REOUCEO THE PRICE Ofj THIS
LOVELY HOME lo $59.000 wh&lt;h mcludes 2
acres. m/1 Home offer; 4 BRs, 2 balhs. LR.
krtchen. dfi1ng area wrlh pal ~ doors and
woocfburner. carpetln ~ heat pump, cent a~r.
lull basmenl. 2 car fjlrage Lo~ d trees and
!lowers. Addrt10nalland e&lt;n te purclraso:l wrth
house
DUPLEX 4 SALE - Great onvestment for 100
buyer. Located on Graham School Roro. Each
uml offers2BRs. hvrngroom .bath. krtchen and
slove. relng.. OW, and d•pl.. laundry. ~ rge
carport. central arr. and storage area.
CHAROlAIS HillS - 3. 24 acres. rro:Jre or
less. owner loanc1ng ava~~b~ .
HARRISON TWP. -CR EMEENS RD. -53
ACRES MIL -4 BR home offer; ~lchen . LR ,
bath, electflc BB heal. ca rpelo g, 3Jx42 sleel
bkJg. w1lh wro:fbur01ng ~ove. barn and 3
s~ e:l s. Cal l for more mlormal10n

RACCOON CREEK l«l ME SITE - Offer;
boating and l5h10~ Lol ~ze rs
IOOx600 and has electr~c!y , wafer lap and
septrc lank. Call lor more dela1~

6100 SQ. FT. BUILDING - Sol1d ooncrete
walks, 200ft. frontage on SR 7 rn CrOIVn C1ty
Forrne1ly used as lurmlw e laclory Ideal lor

THIS HOMEDEMANDS ATIENTION1- t86
acres. mi l, 2,024 SQ. H. of INU1gspace. Otll!r
outslanding lealures rnclude FR wrth br~k
hreplace. lR wrth l &lt;ep~ce. 3 BRs. 2 balhs ..
lormal d1ning rewly remodeled krtchen,carpet
throughout. electriC lurnace. cenlral a~r. 2 an
attached garage wrth opener&gt; satellrte d5h.
fenced backyard, nee garden space lei LS
show ~u lh5 home loday.

THE FAMILY Will LOVE IT H!REI - fh•
home offer; 1728 SQ. II . 3BRs. I''' balhs. !ius
shower 1n basement galley IJJtchen IS
comp&lt;lely eQuipped. LR. tamr~ room. dong
room. carpeting cenuar a~r /heal pump, rear
deck overooks Raccoon Creek. Call lor an
appo10tment.

sw1mm~ g

COUNTRY CHARM- N1ce okler home o~er; 3
BRs. balh, IR. d1n~ g 100m and krtchen
S1tualed on 21ot on Rt. 160 10 Vrnlon. Call lor
an appo10tment.
NEW HOME - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Lotsol room lor Ihe kiJ sand an ~e garden. Th5
attrachve home offe~; 3 BRs. LR. k~chen . 2
ooths. formal dimng sundeck, full basem~t
Call lor more detart .

reta1 l sales or manulacturtng bus1ness

PRIDE OFOWNERSHIP - Love~ horre ofle~
3 BRs. 3bat hs,equ1pped krtchen. 14•44 fam1ly
room . dmette. l ~rep~ce . 2 car attache:l garage.
20140 pool and 5aiPIIIIC dGh Call lor an
appo10tment.
OWNER ANXIOUS TO SELL- HAS REDUCED
THE PRICE BY $10.000 - 132 9;cres m/ l1 n
Walnut Twp.. I '' ~~~ horne has 3 BR. balh.
42194 barn &gt;rb'€ lobacco base. Call lor an
appo10tmen1.

PRICE REDUClL $10,000 - OfjE OF THE
lARGEST RESIDENTIAl LOTS Ofj SB:ONO
AVE. - Okler home offers 3-4 BRs. lR,
knchen, OR, FR, bath. unattached garage. Call
lor more details loday.

PRICE REDUCED TO $39.9J0 11 GREAT
BEGINNER HOME - fh Glv rreoHe~ alarge
LR w~h f~repoce. knchen. d1n~g area. 3 BRs.
balh, lull basement I car garage. deck. lenced
yard tusl m10ules to I~Mnon Rt. 141 Call loran
appootment.

GUY AN TOWNSHIP - 108 acres miYeor less
Klcaled sooth of Mercervil~ . Approx. Ill Acres
nllab~. balance woods, tobacco base. Owrer
will help finance.

COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL - RESIDEN TIAL - 50 acres more or less, vacant land.
Road frontage on U. S. 35 and Michell Rooo .

�June 15. 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant W.Va.
81
81

Home
I mprovamants

Home
Improvements

81

E~e1erlor &amp; interior stucco . Pies·

ter &amp; pllltlf repai". Low rates.
Call614-266 -1182.

Unconditiontl lifetime guarantH. Local ret•enc.. furnished.
Fr• •tlmM81. Call collect
1· 614·237-o..aas, day or night
Rogara Basement
W.t:IIProoflng.

Rotary or cable toot drMiing.
MQJt w.ll• ~mplll:ed semtday.
PumQ ul• and s.vlc.. 304-

896-3802

Call 814 -256 -1182 .

C. AND 0 . Contractor, remodel·
ing and new frame work end any
kind of odd jobl. Cell304-n3·
5284.

removal. Call 304-675-1331 ,

repair insid11or out1 Callut
at 614 -992-6556 or 614 -992·
2934 . 20 veers experier1ce.

RINGLES ' S SERVICE , expe·
rien&lt;*l carpenttr, el.ctricien.
. m..on. painlltt, rooting (includ·
lng hOt tar applicttionl 304-

RON ' S Tele~o~is i on Sefvice .
House call• on RCA . Ouezar.
GE . Specialing in Zenith. Call
304·1576· 2398 or 614·44$-

stump

Starks Tree and llwn Service,
lendacaplng. 304·578-2010.

E11terior &amp; interior stucco. Pial•
ter &amp; plaster repain. low fates .
Ne~

Trimming,

82

83

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

85

Excavating

Ganaral Hauling

Jam• Boys W11er Service. Also

Bt.SEMENT
WATERPROOFING

F.-tty Tree

Home
Improvements

pools filled . Call 814. 2&amp;8· 1 141

CARTER'&amp; PWMBING
AND HEATING

or 614-448 -1175 or 814-446 ·

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Galllpolit. Ohio
Phone 114-448-3888 or 114Trenching Service: wat•. g 11,
••8· 4&lt;477
and el.ctrlc. Free ettlm8taa.

304-n3·5B39.

7911 .

85

General Hauling

Ken ' • Weter Ser\llce . Wells ,
Cilttrnl, pooll and waterbedt
filled . Ctll 014-387-0623 Of
814-367-7741 or 304-676 ·
12.7.

Haul anvthlng! 2 ton -8 ton. Call
81•-••8·4811 Mon., Wed ..
Thurs . 8am-10PM. Sat. B-12 .
Auaonlble delivery pric81.

87

Cotl, llm•tone. gre\lel, etc.
Dellv.-ed 1 ton and up. Jim
Lenier. 304-875 -1247 or 6767397.

trl countveru 21 veara. The beat
In furniture upholstering. Cell
304 - 876 - 41&amp;4 lor fr11e

87

June 15. 1986

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Upholstery

\1j)l)h\tll fi&gt;il

11stimat.. .

Call SPECIAL TOUCH Cleaning
Services for all your cleaning jobs No job too big or too smell.

R &amp; M Furniture Menutacturing. :
St . Rt. 7 , Crown City, Oh. Call ·
814-266 -1470, call EVIl. 814 ·
446 - 3438 . Old &amp; new
Uphoalered .

(614) 446-8016 24 Hour Answering

Real Estate General .

(X I J I I

ISEMAN

Real Estate General

REAL ESTATE
vllf}UIIU

c---0
GOING BANANAS?
Trying to flod an affordab~ 3BR starter lome
that's not a matchtxox?Here it 5' Comtortab~
livin&amp; even for the beginner can te had in this
ranch home in city schools. Large ~~~groom .
equipped krtchen, full basem l!rll, 2 baths and
apprO&gt;&lt;. 2 acres of ground. Easy to maintain
vinyl sidn~ $48.300.
#238

E. M. WISEMAN, BROKER
DAVID WISEMAN, 446·9656
B. J. HAIRSTON, 446·4240
CLYDE B. WALKER. 246·6276
LORETTA McDADE. 446·7729

RIO GRANDI- S..ms like living In the crunUy but with all the
cooveniences with Uvlng nea r town. Spacious 4 bedroom
home, 2 full baths, lovely equlppro kltchrn , fotmal Jiving
room. formal dining, hu~ f!:lmily, Il'C. room, 2 flr~la ces , 2
car garage. workshop . All this ~ituated on a vpry nice lands&lt;"aped lot. Can you bellr\1t' 1his brick home with all these
exlras for $62.500.
~1066

PHELERj
I

446-3644

CENTURY 21

leaning S."kts
Commtrdal
&amp; lttldtntial

I HAFFC

2464 .

875-2088 .. 875· 7388.

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Uns.crarf\ble 1hese tour Jumbles,
one letter to each square, to lorm
lour ordinary words.

UPHOLSTERY SHOP

1183 Sec. A\lt ., QallipoUt.
614 -446· 7833 or 614-446- ·
1833.

Upholstery

Mowrey's Upholstering nrvlng

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WDRD OAME

~ ~ ~~·

TAl STATE

EXCEPTIONAL 2.8 ACRES
Includes a6 year okl ranch perlect~ ~aced on
aknoll, long sloped front lawn andtdealgarden
area in rear-scenic country ~ew 1 localed on
a hardtop road , close lo HMC, home has 3
bedrooms, liVIng room. bath, lg. ~!chen, dlllog
area and garage. $45.000.

#413

Inc.

£ 8nu.dt

KI

II

Pr1ntanswarhere: "(

ANOTHER: FOR:M

OF

VE~5AL..

ABUSE.
Now arrange the circled letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gesled by tne abo~e car1oon.

II ] ( I I X)"
(Answers Monday)

REAL ESTATE

Yesterday 's

I J umbles: CRAFT

RE :;I O F Nri.I.L . I N V£~T M ENTt; . CO MMUIC IA L

Answe&lt;:

388-8826

LIMBO SINGLE BRIDLE
Whal a CQUllorf- lumod poli1ldan mighl be
txpoc10d to pou-BAO BILLS

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

FOR RENT: MINT CONDITION-2 bedroom .;th new carpet and
paint insKleand out. large yard,space tor garden.Garage. ln·town.
ATIENTION VALUE SEEKERS-{;hoce home and locat~n in town.
3BR, 21ull baths,lormaldllngrm.,basemmt and garage.Walking
distance to everythil&amp; Something spec~llor a low 11K:e.
ONE ACRE IWODED.l.OT- 10 miles lrorn town. $5.500.
HOME &amp; BIG OPPORTUNITY-Very attractive remodeled 3
bedrm., Z\7 baths and garden tub. !7'x25' kitchen , new ootid
oak cabtnel~. pa,nlry, laundry room, lg. screened PQrch. NEW
GARAGE: 28 x40 . heal, water, 200 winng, 12'xl4' door. II you
are looktnJtlor a bustness !4&gt;Portunil'l. th~ is it Mid $50s.
·TOWN .&amp;C.OUNTRY-81 GARFIHD AVE.-4 acres overlooktng
the O~to Rtver. 7 rms lovely liv. rm., sittingrm., lormal dining, 3
BR, I baths, full basement, 2 outbldgs., l car garage. Excellent

TUTES REAL ESTA

JUST OFF LOWER RIVER lOAD you11 fitd thii
very peaceful ne~borhood along \lith this
.very comfortable ranch il:&gt;me. Only 6 yrs. (jd,
thii 3 BR oome ~ very easy mheal Also
includes 2 full baths, beautiful kitchm, full
equipped. Large 2\i car garage and 24 ft.
swmmng pool. Nice level lot l'ilh opliln on 2
ad~cent to~. Owner moving from area anxious
to sell. $59,500.

#248

BEAUTIFU.IL CEDAR HOllE
Thii styksh chalet home on a tar~ mce~
landscaped lot offers contemporary 1!/~gon 3
levels. Includes 3 BRs, w"e designed kdchl!rl
wrth dinette, living room, family room and roc
room arid a bath on each level. Extra features
such as woodburner, wet bar, &lt;trap-around
deck overlooking private 16x32 in·ground pool.
Very comfortab~ and livab~ oome Pr~ed at
$84.500
#245

THREE YEAR Olli energy effbent. QIJality buil
6 oom home. 2baths, I car garage wrth a!moot
an acre ol tree shaded lawn. More land is
avai~b~. Quiet location tusl ill st. Rt. 218 oo
private drtve near gradeschool and h~ h schcol
at Mercervil~. Electr ~ heal pu ffll dualluel unl
wrth central ar. /&gt;Jmool newelectrt ran ~ and
refngeratrn a ~ng wtl h newer bedroom
furnrture pr~ed wtlh home. /&gt;JI for $54.000.

TWO ACRES OF lAND along with 4 yr. okl
mooern home. Part~! basement wrth wood
stove, 3 BR, extra nee klchen, lklts of storage
space). Front and sde porch leone. floor) paoo.
Two storage buildings. aay grade school, city·
htgh school. Just c1n't be beat for the prte of
$36.900.
#338

#301

!iN:~:
'i~

•
•

FOR SALE OR RENT- 3 bedrm. home overlooking the
Ohio River, wtth tn·cily. Rtver frontage.Call for more tnfor·
matton.

wrnng,~ vmyl

sidtng, 1 car garage.

10 ACRE LOT-$9500 - Wooded , ~ream, new aeralioo, water
and eleclnc avatlable. 30 tons ot gravel m drive.
i~~LIWGT-WONeOtDIEAve. Gas, water, sewer available. Priced to s~ l.
·
D33 ACRES MIL-Hunters havl!rl. frontage
; on 2 roads . Stream. Super buy. $15,000.
. YOUR OWN PRIVATE PARK-Ciav Two. 3 acres m/ 1. Gracious
country ltVtng and neal as apin. 28'xro· modular ii:Jme. 31g. bed·
rooms. 1. Datns, faroen tub, kltcnen, range, oven OUtll mana mshwashe[- Forma dmtng rm., f11eplace in liv. rm . Cozy den a/ wet
bar. 30 x36' bam 3 doors and to«.
80 AC. FARM-Guyan Twp, Off 218-Stylish 3 BR, ranch . £v.
ery room decorated mgood taste. Tobacco baseand remarkably
good barn. fronts on 2 rojl(fs. You'll be impressed. Mineral
nghts. $48.500. Poss ib~ land Contract.

0000 3 BEDROOM,

e

EXISTING COTTM:E, however.lhere are 27 acres tobuild your
dream home and have acreage le« to sell someone else Ohio •
River view. Call for more tnlormalxln.
•

I ~ bath

home on I acie,
m/1, of land located in Aatwoods area of Meigl
Courrty. Only 4.5 miles lrom Pomeroy and 2
mtles off Rt. 7~om Five Ill~~. Nice hou~ngin
area, qu~l locat~n . Eastern School DistrK:t.
County water lmmed~te lll5se5SK&gt;n. Asklog

$44.000.

#300

••
••
••
••
•••
•.i
•
••

446-4514

BONNIE STUTES - BROKER
JIM STUTES - REALTOR

446-4206
PAUL SANDERS - 379·2152

AND S

Plumbing - Heating

HERFS A BEAUTY IN THE WOODS - Just
what the doctcr ordered if you're lookngfor a
lilt~! peace and quiet whm you come home in
the eventng. You11 find thii handsome 4
bedroom \lith an Engish Tudor accent tuckoo
back at the end of the drive surrounded by
huge trees on the 5 ac. ~t. This one offer; an
unusually ~rge fami~ room, 3 baths, and a
very n~e klchm. City school dislr~t. See it and
make an offer. lmmed~le possession.

FAMILY ORIENTED NEMlHBORHOOD
Great location for everyone Convenient m
s hopp~ g and hosprlal. 6 yr. a~ ranch \lith 3
bedrooms, l 'h baths, li v~g room and large
eat·iY kichen the wile will love. Excel~nt
condrt~n . 2 ca r garage. exceUent beginner
horrM!. $54.900.
#211

• NEW LISTING - LOCATED ALONG LOW TRAFFIC STREET.
·-This 3 bedrm. home, famtly room and fenced yard IS anx i·
.ously awaitmg your viSit. Price $36.000.
•
•
•
•

•
•

FOR RENT - Two 2 bedrm. apls. 2nd fl oa t near golf •
course. $175 and $200 plu s depostl. ADU LTS ONLY!
•

•
•

FARM- 2BZ ACRES- Locale on blacktop road. Remo· •
deled house, 8 outbu ildin gs, 100 acres bottom land.
OCCUPY NOW FOR $130,000.00

IDEAL SEniNG of 6 roommodern home on 1
ac. ot most~ f~t land very su~ab~ for garden
and lawn. Nice shade trees. \'.bod stove in
basement along w~h fuel 011 forced air turnace.
Clay Grade School an d Gal lipoliS htgll school.
11341

REDUCED FROM $72,000 TO SSU!O!!! Thii ~ an older 2 ~cry home that has been
comp~tely rl!rlovated. Home offers 3 ~rge
bedrooms, I ~ baths, livtngroom wrth ftrep~ce.
dtnm ~ eat·tn krtchen ..,d full d~Kied
basemmt. Sttuated on 3acres .,lha very good
localiln near Buckeye Htlls.

Hll4 '

Canaday Realty
446-3636v4~

NEWtiSnNG - KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS
Terrn[ smal~r home llith outstand~g r~er
vte«. 3 bedroom horrM! inc~des l~ing room
wllh attract~e fireplaCe wrth insert, eat-tn
k~chl!rl and large covered slle porch and2 car
garage. Well 11)8nK:ured 0.9 acre ~wn .
$37.500. ExcelleM starter tJ vacaoon home.

#119

#206

I ,'

! , ( , 1 .1

'&gt;I

( 1

•1tlb 1 {)i)h

til q

&gt;II

Alilt~ work- aI

money, and atill~ love,

.;11 get you into this home.llon1 wart,do rt oow .
FAMILY PlANNED
On Debby Dr~e. 3 BR bi-level offers 3BRs, 2
baths, large eat in Uchen with dMg area and
lR upstairs HUGE FR dowmtairs tor the klls.
Uttlily room, I car garage and wood deck in
back tor coolouts. $55,!Xl0.
BEAUTIFUL BUILDING IDT
Hills lake Estates offer peaceful
surroundilfl! and scene landscapes. 1.5 ~~:re
·wooded lot wllh small meadow. Very ~ce SPill
for your bui~ing plans. $12,000.

Call to sre. Reduced to $20,000,

#221

SCENIC HillS &amp; VALLEY AREA
158 ac. m/ 1of most~ pasture land. Lots of road
frontage along rllge area with several good
butkl•g srtes. Has 12x60 mobi~ home wrth
12x37 addoon r~vng 1 ~ bath, 4 B Rs. n~e
fami~ room \lith wood stove and almool new
krtchl!rl cabinets. Has barn and two other
buildings includtng o~ ~g house. Asklog
$70.000.

#306
ATTENTION MOBILE HOME (MNERSI - I
acre vacant ground a~ng Route 7. Includes
river frontage. Locatoo ~ st bebw ELreka.

$10.000.
#224

11'.113

•
'
I

"A PICTURE IS WORTH ATHOUSAND WORDS" - So we
won't even tell you about the 3 BR, 1'1. bath s, custom
kitchl!rl, fireplace, woooburner and all the extras ri afine
home. Nor wou~ we menl ton the wrap ·arou nd sundeck ,
garage, breezeway or th eincred tb le vtew ri the valley be·
low th ~ hou se. So, just look at theptelureand call ustooay!

lANDMARK
The home that has everythin&amp; Character.
charm and prest~e. Th ~ 2 story country home
is tust perlect tort helarge fami~ . 4 51ar~ 8Rs.
2 bat~. FR. den. OR. and parttal basem ent.
Enclosed swtmmtng PQOI, large garage and
wockshop. 15 ac. for garden. sma ll crop and
can~. Qu~l. scent locatxm. $139.000.
#2411

LISTING - PSSSSTl
Are you ... an anx~u s ' owner·lob·be"? Come
see the home you thought you coukln 'l aHord.
LIVIng room. famt~ 100m wrth woorlburner, 3
bedrooms, bath. full basernl!rll and 2 ca r
garage. Located ac ross ~om AddaVtlle Grade
School on a nee lot. A~ I ot home of $49.910.

11447

KERR-HARRISBURG ROAD - BRICK Rm(}j , HAS 3
BEDROOMS, 3 BATHS, FUU BASEMENT, FAMILY troM. EAT·IN
KITQiEN EQUIPPED WITH TAPPm SBJ.CLEANING RANGE,
AMmA REFRIGERATOR. KIT(}jEN AND DISifi'IASffR, 417'x6W
HlTTUBSPA. 2CAR ATTACHED GARIGE.ON 'HCRE AVALUEAT
$79,500.

22 Those who cure

24 Cylinders
25 Negalive pref tx
27 Babylonian deity
28 Ol!'s opposite
29 Behold'
30 RepulSe
31 Emmets

LOW 40's - Owners haveoutwown lil!ir lome and
new one.
I painted, 3 bedrooms, lg.
w/atPP I~t'ces I
wth woodburner:

HOMES , FARMS &amp; COMMERCIAl PROPERTIES
25 LOCUST STREET. GALLIPOLIS. OHIO 46821

BEAUnFUL CAPE COD HOME AT CHESHIRE - EAT-IN
KITOiEN. FORMAL lltNIN" VINYL SIDING FOR EASY
MAINTENmCE, FRONT PQR(}j, L·SHAPED CECK !NERLOOKING
POOL AREA. 16X36 POOL WILL BE GREAT FUN THIS 9J"'-1ER.
NICE LEVEl LAWN. $43.500.

20 Yale man
21 Fish eggs

32 Cicatr ix
34 Wire mea ~ ure

36 Drinks slowly
38 Papa's partner

UnuSUII wa!IIWIY property. 2 /tRES. more oc llss. cj
wood~nd wrth 600ft. of RACCOON CREEK fl!ONTAGE &amp;boat
docks. TOTAL PRIVACY. Modern 3 ted room home features a
brealhlak~ g view, overooking the creek from acontemporary
glass florida room. 14x16 ilrmal liJing room. 2 lllths, den,
modem krtchen comp~te wih stove. ref, utility . room
w/freezer, washer, dryer. Can also be purchasal 1111h an
1Kidilllnal2 acres on 200 «. more creek frontagewdh a28x48
. Th~ ~ a very un!lue and sec 1oced property.lf yoo like
and boating this ~ a must to see. Reaoonab~ Pr~ed!

39 Prefi:.: for wrong
40 Near

41 Excite
pleasurably
44 Father
46 Illuminated

47 Hebrew tetter
48 Collection of fact s
49 La rge bird
50 Span ish plural

rft'""'"

SUB. - Excellent klcation. Love~ br'ck home,
back yard w/16x32 PQOI and """ deck. Livng room,
nodern kitchen w/appl ~n'ii..t(.\th.in mi:rowave. 3
tedrooms. master teatul,~.!:' lllb. lamill room w/ wb.
lirep~ ce, basement, 2 mttes from haspital. Be Ihe first to sre
!h~ lovely home.

article

51 Hail
53 Telluriu m s~mb o l
54 Steamshtp: abbf

55 Poses for portrait
57 Vessel 's curved
plankin g
59 Ind efinite number

60 Cook slowly
61 Nicknam e for

Edward
62 Vitiates

64 Uncanny
66 Sea bird
68 Article

NEW LISTING - 1 acre m/1, tJI Rt. 7, 328 h. road frontage.
'

LOCAL TAVERN FOR SAlE
If you've alWays wanted to own a bar, here's
your chance. Good locatim ttlwntown.
Respect.b~ reput.ation. Includes equ~ment.
beautlul bar, back bor and more. Call for more
information.

t
t

Rt· ,dt v I rH

1 Two-wheeled
carriage
·7 Noah's second
son
10 Couple
13 Fold
19 One guilty of

~5.500.

Charo~~

•• PRICE REDUCED on thts beaultful Colontal Dutch ho me ••
located across from the new cou rthouse. Cen tral AC,
• wbfp , part linished basement. $73 .000.
•

• '~VorHl
(',~II

SUNDAY PUZZLER

WHEN THIS FARM WAS BUILT,« had
. .
mind. This house boasts9 rooms, new carpet. wood burner
and vinyl siding. It is engulfed by 32 acres, equipped wrth a
2 car garage and has 3 more outbu ild ings. Add toall thisa
state route and Gallipoli sschools, and thisbecomes a bar·
gain pnced in th e fi h~s .

BEAUTIFUL RUSTIC 3 BORII. HOME wdh handbuil ca bnets,
woodburner, wrap-around surxleck, garage and
brrezeway located on 1.15 ac. Pr~ed in Ire 50's

Nll6

NEW LISTING - 3 bed room ho me on Kathy Onv e, near •
Holzer Hosp. Low lrafltc area, large back ya rd WBFP. •
Gallipolis City School Disl. Pnce $45.000.00.
•

SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS.....
ED WOOD REALTY SALESPERSON

PH. 4U· •37

firep~ce.

other~

••

Air Conditioning
300 fourth An.

NEW LISTING - look~g for a f•ed·up home. Th ii home
needs a lilt~ T.LC. 3 bedroom ranch, lg. krtchen, diningroom
w/sking doors. Priced low ll's. Soutl!liestem schoo~ .

2 BDRM. HOME with wor kshop, garage, ca rport and
.outbuilding Cherry paneled family room . Prtce red uced. Call • •
etor more informalton.
,
•

•

SCHIDUlfiG NOW FOI:

*Roofing *Siding
*Continuous
Guttering
'Fencing
'Remodeling

treason

OWNERS SAY SELL!- THEY HAVE REDUCEDH£ PRICE OFT HIS
PROPERTY FROM $32.000 TO $25.000. PROPERTY flCLUD£S2
HlMES. J)NE HAS BEEN RECENTLY RE"'ID£LED, HAS
BEAUTIFIJ[ CARPETIN G, KIT(}jEN, BATH. SECOND HJt.t: NEEDS
S&lt;M REPAIRS. BETIER CALLIS ~ON AS YOU READ THIS AD1

RED BRICK HOME - Located tn GalltpOIIS full base·
ment. Cent. AC, nat. gas lu ran ce . ftreplace House IS tn
excellent condition. so ju ~ "mov e tn " . Pnce $49.'Xl0.

s,tltrg $ptelll

BRICK AND FRAME CLOSE TO HOllER-Desirable home and
locatton . Ask lo see tns~e I his beautiful ranch . 3 br, country
kttchen, famtly rm . w/hreplace . Carport. I acre m/1 Low $50s
OLD FASHIONED CHARM- SR 554--4 acres, feneed. Subur:
. ban h"ng wtll be great in this "'cept~nally smart 4 bedrm. All
Ig. room s lor antiQues, country kilchl!rl , baseml!rlt. Recently re·
modeled and PQssesSton no P&lt;Oblem
LIKE FINDING 115.000-2 ACRES.:_SR 160 north 4 BR, liv.
. rm ., dm tng rm ., ktt.chen and full basement. New gas furnace,
new

BIG PRICE RWUCTIOIII!
62.8 acres, Green Towmh~, 1400 feet of st.te
highway frontage. Was $40,000, now $33.000.
GREAT FOR lARGE LOT DEVEWPMENllf yw
don't l~e my pri:e. make ill clfer.

26 ACRES OF BEAUnFUL ROWNG lAND
plus tour IOOx~O lots ill Rt. 160. Owner .;11

divide 26 acres and sell ~is separate~ . Call for
nlormatiln oo prices.

#205

FROM THE PAGES OF HOUSE BEAUTIFULTru ~ a near jErlect homethai IIi II sat~fy Ihe
· ~ard to p~ase". Gorgeous liv~g room wrth
marble laced f irep~ce. deeppileca rpetingand
glass pat~ doors lo a large screened iX)rch.
You'll breathe asigh of r el~f when you see til!
s~e of the 3 large bed rooms and 2 g\lam•g
cerami: baths. Krtchen tncludes range, oven ,
d~hwashe r and large ealng area wrth lots ri
windows and Vf!W of a wooded ravtne. The
fami~ room includes butl tn bookcases and
wrner windows. Check tre quality light
fixtures, drapes and shades. 2 car garageand
basement Located tn loon on a large shady,
well landscaped lot at the end of the street
Price reduced from $93,000 to $89,000.
Owner haspurchased another oome out of the
area and MUST SELL Look atlhs ou~tand~g
oome and if you don't like rr. new 11K:e. make
us an iller.
#141
THE BUY Of A LIFETIME
look at all the rest and you'll agree ths is the
fnest home onthfmarket for theprK:e. 2,700
sq.«. finished hvtngspace located on awooded
~t 4 blocks from schools. The h~hest
standards were used tn bui~n g this custom
homa lltncludes solid cherry k~chen cab loets
cherry cetling tn lam ily room, 41arge bed rooms:
2.\7 baths•. 2 woodburningfireplaces, 2 rentral
atr condrtcners, a natural gas heating system
and 2 car garage. Full basement \lith floisll!d
roc. room . This IS not a fluke. Th 5 horrM! is tn
exc el~nl condl~n and req uires very htt~
matntenance. Prt ed at $79.000.
#lOB

NO IMPROVEMENTS NEEDED!
The young owners have done tl all' You'll see
what we mean as you stroii iiJough ·rh~ t~e
1,575 sq. h. brt k ranch !On 1.16 acres) thai
features 3 bedrooms, l 1h baths. liv~g room
wrth ftreplace, 12x26 lam tly room wrth
firep~ce. Hardwood fklors. large ga rage, full
basernl!rlt and storage bUilding wt h ldt. HAS
TO BE one ol the best buys cj 'lli. $59,910 .
#400

A VERY PLEASANT PLACE TO LIVE - NEW
LISTING- Peacefulsetlfig overlooktng River.
Large 4 BR ranch "'lh formal entrance, large
lR pkJs den. OR, 3 bedroo:ns an d 2 baths on
matn lklor. Ol!rl tn cludes ooltd wood paneltng
and woodburning fireplace. Upstairs has ooe
large bedroom and a huge fklcred att~ tor
stocaga 2 car garage mcludes alargeworkslop
area. /&gt;JI on a beautrtul I \7 ac. setttng all he
edge of town overkloktngIll! rtver.
#100

We're Selling
Homes And We Can
Sell Yours!

GET READY FOR SUMMER! - THIS Hlltl HAS A llAUTIFUL
16x32 IN-GROUMJ POOL NICE FENCED BACK YARD. 3
BEDROOMS, FAMILY RCOM, 2 ~ CAR c.IRI(;E 10' llfSH
SATELLITE SYSTEM. GREAT LOCATVN KYGER CREEK AREA.
$58,000

$42,000 A WINNER! - CENTRAL lOR COND., FORCED AIR GAS ·
,. FURNACE. PRETTY WALLPAPER AND CARPET, PICTURE WINOOW
IN LIVING froM. EAT·IN KIT(}jEN, 3 BEOtroMS, NEW REAR
· D£CK, BEAUTIFUL LAWN. JUST A FEW MINUltS FROM CITY.

70 Corners
72 Swi ss r iver

VERY MODERN RAHCH HOME - Features LR. wrth stone
fireplace across one wall. large lami~ room 22xll

73 Root edges
74 Electrified
particle

w/woodburner. 3 bedrooms, I ~ baths, comp ~le krtchen.Very
well landscaped lot. Large covered pabo. Zlx 17. City schools.
· in 50's.

77 Lubricate

78 One who pries
OR OOUBLEWIDES- hereare.2 homes aready
up w/ sorne small

sneakily
80 Genuine

82
83
85
86

WE JUST USTEO A VERY NICE BRICK RAHCH ON MITCHELL
ROAD - 4 BEDROOMS, EQUIPPW KIIOiEN WITH R~GE.
REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER. FAMILY RlOM, GAR!(;[ NICE LEVEL
LOT. BETIER CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT ~ON!
BEAUTIFUL HOME SIT£1 JUST Iff RT. $4 BETWEEN PORTER &amp;
CHESHIRE APPROX. 1 ACRE LEVEL LOT WITH FRUIT TREES AND
LOTS OF GARDEN SPACE. ALSO tNO.UDES NICE OOUBI.EWIDE
WITH 3 BRs BATH KITOiEN WITH APPLIANCES AND RURAL
WATER. OWNERS ARE BUYING f()USE ANO HAVE PRICED TO
·SELL QUICK AT $25,000.
·' LOCATION - LOCATION- LOCATION! CLOSE TO TOWN ,
. GROCERY , SCHOOL &amp; HOSPITAL ON RT. 588. VERY NICE
LARGE LEVEL LOT WITH FRAME RANCH . 3 BRS, l'h BATHS,
BIG FR WITH FP. POSSIBLE OWNER ANAN CING DON'TWAIT
- CALL NOW' ASKING $42,000
LOOKATTHIS GREAT BUY NEAR RIO GRANDE . NICE 3 BED· ·
ROOM RANCH HAS EAT·IN KITCHEN, ATTACHED GARAGE.
ABOVE GROUND POOL. PRIVACY FENCE, AN ABSOLUTE
STEAL AT $30,000
WE NEED All OFFER! - FRMlE RANQi 1'11TH FUU AN!Sf£0
BASEMENT AND BIG BACKYARD. 4 BRS, LR, FR, 2 KITOiENS, 2
BATHS, I CAR GARAGE AND C/ A. ASKING $35,000.
SMAll FARM WITH RACCOON CREIK FRONTMlE - R~·
DElW 2 BEDROOM f()lt£, BARN ,yj0 OTHER WTBLDG.
NFARLY 20 ACRES, IDBACCO BASE. GAI.LIPOUS SOIOOL
SYSTEM. $45,000.
'
IDTS OF LANDt- AP~OX. 121 ACRES IN WALHUTTWP. WITH
OLDER I\\ STORY FRAME HlUSi liTH 4 BRS. AP!'ROX. 50
/tRES nLLABLE mD 30 ACRES ~MBER PWS lOBACCO

• BASE. OWNERS HAVE REDUCf:D PRICE 10 ONLY $9l,OOO.

m,

AUDREY F. CANADAY, RlAITOR '
MARY FLOYD, IIEAlTOR, 446·3313 ~
2S IO&lt;UST STIEET, GAlliPOLIS, OHIO IWTQII

SPECIAL DEAL THIS WEEK ONLY
Are you looking for a 2 bedroom overlooking I he Oh to River
wtlh linle maintenance. Beginner lome orrelirem enl home.
Can be purch ased on land contract. Call us today.
#260

CH.ISTIAN'S
CONSTRUCTION

Real Estate General
SPECIAL NOnCE-WE NEED AN OFFER!!
Here's your chance to cash in on a GOOD
HlME BUY. Very nice 4 oodroom ranch, huge
famtly room, formal d~il&amp; 2 firep~ces. 2
baths. Nice krtchen . Natural gas fumac~
cl!rltrnl air. Walk to school. Altract~e wooded
neighborhood. You won't fitd a better buy.
#128

•
•
•
•
•

SERVICES INCLUDE:
*FREE ESTIMATES ' •
•woodwork
*Ceilings
*Walls
*Maid Service
*Carpet Cleaning
*Windows
10% Discount for the Month of June
SPECIAL TOUCH
ADivision of Guinther-Kiser Enterprises

Call today....

garden.

•

The Sunday Times-Sentinel ~Page-B-11

ANICE HOME in Ihe Hannan Trace
i
mll 20's ?How about 31Drm., I
lllths, carpet. woodbumer &amp; much more all oo one ace :
NEXT TO HOSPITAL - Lots of ftwlers, shrubs. lg.
very well designed home. Features atormalltiV' ingrcom,
room, J.4 bedrooms, I ~ baths, comp~e
ldr~:~~~er stove and retrigerator. Fnished. basemooq
I•
car garage and separate woodsoop.
porch, gas heat Washngton Eleml!rltary.

I

2

IANO CONTRACT - 4 bedroom, IR, FR. modem
Mostly all carpetoo floors, 6acres, more or
Large bam, storage shed, grannery,
, IDbacco house, smoke house and oel~r. 800 lbs.
base.
ACRES MORE OR LESS- Vacant land. located in ely
district
.
GRANDE AREA - Mostly til~b~ lilld 2 story country
Just like Grandmotrer use to have. Lg. shade trees 111
Home has been term~e inspected. Horse or tllttfe born.
schoo~. Priced in so·~
A56\1 ACREFARM llitf1 alarge wtrk garage, IIJbacco
swmm~g pool and a 3 illdrm. carpeted house
· Uchen &amp; alui baSIIIII!lt.

Cry of goat
Unwanted plant
Extras
Striped animals

87 Gull-like bird
88 Temporary bird
90 Crahy
91 Federal agcy.
92 Title of respect
93 Changes
96 Bristle
99 Conta iners
10 I Rends

104 Hawaiian wreath

105 Southwestern
Indian

. 171 Having dull fini sh
H2 Make amends
173 Pope's scarf
175 Server
176 Newspapers,
colleclively
177 Tears

178 Fondles
DOWN
1 Intimate
companions

107 Land measure

2 Stops

108 Female rut!
109 Pedal digit
110 Greek letter

3 ls in poor hea!1h
4 Possessive
pronoun

111 Lion

5 Therefore

11 2 Lampreys

6 Man's name
7 Helium Symbol

114 More unu sual
116 Frame of mind

8 Sudsy brew

71 More agile

73Motor
75 Paddle
76 Nickname for
Nancy

79 College deg.
81 Roman two
84 Female deer
87 Sesame
89 Exact
92 Hurried
93 Everyone
94 Confederate

'

genera!

95 Walk
97 Also
98 Snake
99 Lock ot hair

100 Comparative
ending

t 17 Range of
knowledge

9 City in Florida
10 Fish from moving

101 Promp11y

11 B Japanese dram a

boat
11 Emerged

103 Transgress
106 Lamb's pen name ·
109 Civil inju•) '
113 Bristle
115 Fultlll
116 Debatable
119 Choose

120 Baker's product s
122 Dawn goddess
123 Musical
instrument

124 Equally
125 Myself
127 Liquid meas.
129 Essence
131 Darl
133 Jumble
134 Selen ium symbol
136 Spanish article
137 Flap
139 Swiss rive r

140 Decay
141 Deily
142 American
soldiers: abbr.

143 Playing card
145 Footlike part
147 Entwined
logether
151 Crimson
152 Before
153 Mohammedan
noble

155 Airline into .
157 City in Germany
158 Suitable
159 Mix
160 French article
161 Horsepower:
abbr.
163 Fantastically silly
165 Foundat ion
167 As far as
168 Silver sym bol
169 Scolt

victorious
12 Faeroe Islands
whirlwind

13 Cui up
14 Concerning
15 Audience

16 Turkish flag
17 Part olflower
18 Hermit
19 Hoboes
23 Designated
26 Evaluat e
29 Falsehoods
32 Posts
33 Edges
35 Negative pl eflx
36 Store away
37 Sprinkles around
40 Negat ive ions

42 Melody
43 Toward shelter

45 Reluctant
48 Snake
52 Female sheep
56 Sailing vessels
58 Periods of time
59 Initial

60 Cuts
62 Choice
63 Drinking toasts

65 Sun god
66 Kinds of race
horses

67 Five·llne
nonsense poems

68 Haul
69 Hasten

102 Article

12 1 Pierce

123 Monk's cowl
124 Succor
t 25 Substances
126 Ingredient
128 Hit lightly
t 30 Apprehends
132 Having scalloped
edge
133 Seed container
134 Continued stories ·
135 Come into view

138 Spelling contest
141 Obtain
144 Nickel symbol
146 Brand
148 Residue
t49 Exlsls
150 Preclude from
t51 Ascends
152 Latin conjunction

.

154 American ostrich •
156 Armadillo
158 Locale
t59 Painful spot
162 lift with lever
164 Suffix for follower
of
t66 Offspring
t67 Cover
170 Teutonic deity
t74 Near

�.
Page-B-12-The Sunday Times-Sentinel
~-· .

--__,.

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

June 15, 1986

...

.

Business

Are 'rbu In This Picture?•

'limes- jentinti

Section

c~

?

· June 15, 1986

•

Program fights competition
between states for business
a chance lo promote their goods.
The ca talog, 10 be available In
July , " Is nol a commercial book;
we're just trying logivelbe artisans
a belter market," she said.
An idea Wade ca Ued "Import
substitution" Is anotber aspect of
non-convenlional economic
deveiopmen t.
lnslead ci Importing alfalfa from
olber states 10 fl'ed Missouri caltle,
ttr state should become self·
sufficient and grow Us own, Wade
said.
He stressed, oowever. that al·
most any project can be adjusted to
fit dlfferenl states a nd
communities.
"None ci the ldeas applies rnly to
Missouri; they can all be applied 10
any state or community lhat's
looking for a ,.,wway 10 Improve Its
economy," Wade said.
Communities ca n detennlnc
wtrlher !he val ue of producls
alrea dy produced loca lly could be
increased. Jnslead of shipping out
cattle lo prepare Ihem br markl't,
for exa mple, lhe animals could be
finished locally to keep !be eco·
nomil' benefits In the a reo .
While the all ernative projects
sound feasible, the problem is in
how to promote Ihe new definition
ct economic development to the
entire country, Wade said.
The solution, he sa id. is ttr "too'
kit'' dcvdoped ·to help markcl
"AIIer nalives for the '8ls."
1\ J7.minule videotape, two com·

IJJter disc presentations and a
newsletter are part of the kit to help
communities plan their own allernative met hods of eco nomic
development . "
"The computer programs offer
case exa mples of lhe thrre basic
Ideas In a variety of fields," hP said.
"We tried to Find exa mples that
relate to food and rrstaurants,
IOurlsm, energy, educalion - all'
different fields ."
The kit is to be available by
subscription this year.
Wade said lhe il's maln benefit
will be lo help community and
economic leaders "brains10nn" 1o
S€E' oow dlf!erenl ideas could lx'
applied 10 lheir own area .
"The examples in the compu1er
discs and the videolape are not
necessarily the only way til:'
allernalives could be used," he
said. "W~'re just writ ing the
recipes; it's up lo Ihe rommunilies
to do lhe cooking."
AU of lhe projects developed by
the alternailves teamareevaluated
every six months. said Rl'x Ca mp·
bell. executive director of lhe
project. Theyeilherarecompleted.
co nllnued or tennlnated. " No one
likes lo lenninale a proj ec l. but we
oo have the right to fall.
"There's a world of ways people
can chan ge their conditions, and
we're trying to find ttvem."

---Business Briefs:-.....

GALLIPOLIS - Raymond L.
"Doc" Payne, Ohio Bell Telephone

By MANDY MUElLER
COLUMBIA, Mo. (UP!\ - In·
lense compelllion for projects on
Ihe scale of General Motors' Sa tum
planl resutts In pitched battles
among states and cities for the new
jobs and the weatth they provide.
Only one state or city wins each
such contest.
A new program all he University
of Missouri Is designed to make
every community a winner.
"Thr tradillonal economic devel ·
opmenl effort s, like· the Saturn
pfanl or a new Wai·Marl store.
provoke Incredible rompetitlon
wllh only a few successes," said
.Jerry Wade, an assistant professor
of community developmenl at
Missouri. "Mostly, there wUI be
failures."
The "AIIrrnallves for tbe '&amp;ls"
proj!'CI al Mi ssouri and Lincoln
Univers ity in .Jefferson Cily is a
dra stic revision of conwnlional
economtc devrlopmenl practices,
Wade said.
"The proj!'Ct Isa t the rulllngedge
of !'COnomlc d('Velopmenl nation·
wide," he sa id. "We're working to
gt'l a different orlentalion for
economic development."
Crea llng new markets for exist·
ing producls is one method. and !be
"Besl of Mis souri Hands" catalog is
an example.
Belly F&lt;•alher, an assistant pro·
lessor In clothing and lexliles al
Missouri. said the catalog offers

artisans and craft smen in the staff'

OU names new journalism chief
ATHENS !UP! I -Rill ph Izard, a member of the Ohio Universily
journalism farulty since 1966, has bwn named director of1he E.W.
Scripps School of Journalism.
Paul Nelson. ihc IJcoan of Ohio University' s College of
Communicalions an nounced earlier this week thai Izard will
succeed Cort land Anderson who died in Deccmtl'r.
Izard began his journalism career at til&lt;&gt; Charleston (W.Va .I Daily
Ma il and laler worked for the Associated Press.

l'lea.;ant; Volley Hospital Emet1Jerry Care Center- Coloring Contest
(!&gt;Orne not pictrm:d)
&amp;YEAR OLDS
Misty Oldsk8f
Bethany Dingess
Julie King
Jeremy Browning

Roger Wood
Jann~er Brumfield
Brian Millw
Nil-Smith
Seth H.,_d
Carrie lynn Roush
Nicholas Recclli
Jennifer Bum~rd
Shawn Bernene
S..oie Pier&gt;on
Dsn iel Mat hiOly

Christopher Sayre
l&gt;.my C.ll1o
Wade DeW....
Mlcoh Dale Shinn
Etlwl Groene
Karo Merkam
Jell Gerlach
Bloke Gould
Jamin~e

Trenton Joe Devil
Karl-Dwayne Angell
Torry Mark Browll'
Kristina McCoy
Michelle Lea B,.ns
Sean Gordon
Kelly Newbeny

6 YEAR OLDS

Jeremy Whfnington

7 YEAR DLDS
Micheel Shew
JonethanSmkh
Christophlw Moore
Rusty Teylor
Stophlnie Hurtow
Cry.,.! Donohew
B.J . Grady
Aimee Webb

7 YEAR OLDS

1st Ethan Greene
2nd Jennifer BLIZzard
ltd Keri Bed&lt;ne.

Bradlev C.111o

Emily FowtO&lt;
Self\ Brown
Pat M01h
Jason Enoch
Olano Downing
lan Barton

1st HlnN Stewar1
2nd Sare Broyloo
3rd t&gt;.my Dawn Heib

Rachel Peoples
Stoph.., Thomas
Travis lee Brunty
Joev Cline
Vid&lt;yGroflV
st_..G....,e
Kevin Scott Rayburn
Eddie Nehus
Rod&lt;y J . Hupp
Wrrtne S...net1
AmvDownHeib
Amy Marie Rizer
Hannah Stewart
Kimberly O..,to Grey
Mervin M.. h

Carrie A. BarOJs
Sttwen Stinson
Jennifer Rose

Sara Broyles
Amos Benjamen

Kedron Diddl e
Ashloe Saunders
Michael Barton
Mele Genoah
9 YEAR OLDS

8 YEAR OLDS
ShawnWeet"'"'
Dare Lllwronce
Dana Zerkle

Kenna Rainev
Kelliann C. King
Melissa Smith
Stacy Talisha Davis

Timothy Matheny

B YEAR OLDS
1st Kelly King
2nd Danns Zerkle
3rd Jennifer Bak8f

Jennif8f Baket"

GRAND PRIZE
ANDREA CALLIGAN

Kristv Gould
Faith Grey
Crystal Harmon
Angie Bonec:utter
Melody Beth
Heather We111er
Aos~n Bauer
Courtney Markkam
Mind\' Sm~h
Ewrett Hunter

w.,.,.,

Melissa Clifford
Beth Vinson
Rev Rusoell
Jamie Pennington
car "v Keel..
Eric Lee Crump
Sarah D. Shuler
Micllael Bailev
Erika Pullin
Amy Templeton
Ryan Bec:imor
David l. Co11:
Heather Stinson
Parry Casto
Donna Downing
Seroh Newberry
Daniel Fowler

9 YEAR OLDS

10 YEAR OLDS

1s1 Cathy Keefer
2nd Matthew Grube
3rd Amy Templeton

1S1 Rebecca Ritenger
2nd Jocie Wheeler
Jtd John 1\rchar

GRAND PRIZE WINNER

Matthew Grube
Allison Sproose
10YEAR OLDS
Willie Cossin
Jonothan Arther
Pout Dovld Sturgill
Elisha Watkins
christina Hayden
Michelle Sh""'
Treo Shew
Christine Hovden
Howard Matthew Brewer
Janotte Bell
Rebecca Reitmire
Nooh Jay Smith
Joel Hobbs

11 YEAR OLDS
1111 Wenci Turly

2nd Erin McKinney

Kristy Rizor
Androo C.lligen
HowordWood
Marvin C Lud&lt;O'fdoo Jr.
JodieWhoot•
Roben Seil•dll
Robin Leigh
Sh..,non Codner

Dixie Downing
11 YEAR OLDS
Tam• Hayman
Kelly Horroh
Angel Cunningham

Wenci Turlev
t&gt;.my Grube
Summer leann1 81•

Brenda Hunt
Su- C!Apopper
Angle Duro:en

This information ts printed to the belt of our
kno'Niedge. We sinoerety apologize for any lftnten·
tk&gt;nal errors a omission!! .

ltd Angie Duncan

E~ERGENCY

On Sunday, June 1 at 2 p.m., the
BWII'ds were given tot he wi~ners of the
Pleasant Valley Hospital Emergency
Care Center Coloring Contest. The
judges were: Mike Lewis from PM
Magazine, Bill Barller. Superintendent
of Mason County Schools, John Reibel.
Superintendent of Meigs County
Schools and Judy Morgan from the
Point Pleasant Register.
The Grand Prize Winner, Andrea
Calligan was invi1ed to cut the ribbon at
the grand opening ceremony of the
Ellllll'gency Care Center wtlich fol lowed. Also present for the ribbon
cutting were Michael G. Sellards,
Executive Director of Pleasant Valley
Hospital, Young I. Choi, M.D.. Chief of
Staff and Samuel McNeill, M.D.,
Director of Emergency Services.
Many participants then toured the
nawly remodeled . Emergency Care
Center. They viewed tHe remodeled
lobby, the pediatric specialty room, the
new exam room #5 , and the new private
waiting room .
Then on to the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Medical Office Building where evBfYone
received a free Emergency Care Center
T-shirt and wandered throu Itt the many
booths at the hospital's Health Fair. The
children received free balloons and all
received valuable Information and gifts
from the different hospital departments.
Refreshments wera served to the
delight of all and pictures were taken of
the coloring contest participants and
winners.

B~lv Plonts
Rhondl S..e Roltmlre
Jonds Morio Monoly
D1nny eo.
CinflV Stinson
Chris ThqJNO
Erica McKinnev
Scott A. Brown

CARE CENTER

Insurance agent joins club
GALLIPOLIS - Carol! K. Snowden, an agent for Stale Fann
Insurance Companies In the Gallipolis al'l'll, has earned membership
In the firm 's Millionaire Club.
The sales oonor Is based on the quallly and quantit y of life
Insurance sold and serviced by tbe agent. Snowden joined State
Farm In 1964 and has bwn a rnerntl'r of 1be MiUionaire's Club nine
limes.
In addition, Snowden has been named to StatE' Fann's Legion of
Honor, a designallon earned by only Oil(' of every four Slate Fann
agent s. To qualify, the agent must achieve high standards In all
aspects of ihe insurance business, especia lly in lhe quality of lhe
bu siness.

Kaiser Aluminum results to slip
RAVENSWOOD. W.Va . - Second quarter resulls from Kaiser
Aluminum &amp; Chemical Corp.'s aluminum operalionsareexpected to
slip due to a mill fire al Its Ravenswood fabricalion plant. officials
said.
The fit'C sU1lck 1hc plant's wide sheet. cold rolling mill In April ,
reducing the plant's lol ai production and shipment of semi -finished
aluminum products during Aprll and May.
June's product ion and shipments will ix' considerably lessaff!'Cted
and wUI have no Imparl on the third quarter, officials said.
Based on antlclpialed improv&lt;"tnmt in prices and productivity,
and lhe avalia bll11 y of more primary aluminum from Us
cosl-cfficlcnl Ghana smel1cr, Ihe company ex pects thP aluminum
division oj:K'ratlng resull s in the lhlrd quart er to be significantly
beltl'r than lhose of either 1hc first or second quarter.

William J .
McCwre, left, . chalnnan of the ooard, and I.
DISPlAYING THE PRODUCf -

McAlll&lt;;ter Booth, right, chief executive officer of
Polaroid Corp., hold the new Spectra Instant Camera

the compiiJ!Y recently unveiled as they stand In front
of a 24-foot high model. The electronically-controlled
auto-focus camera uses a new rretangular Polaroid
film and has a suggested list price ~ $225. (UP!)

Ohio Bell manager for region retires
Co.'s Installation and repair man·
ager for the Gaiilpolls and Ironton
areas has retired from the com·
pany ~Iter 35 years of service.
Payne was also Ohio Bell's main
spokesperson for the two
A native of Ironton,. Payne spent
communities.
hls entire telecommunication~ career In the area and saw sweeping
teclmologlcal changes in the indus·
try - from direct dialin g across
town in the 19:ils to directly calling
anywhere In the world.
Payne started with Ohio Bell as a
lineman on Dec. 12, 1900. In May
1951 be temporarily lett the com- ·
pany to serve with lhe U.S. Army
Signal Corps. He returrX'd to
Ironton two years and resumed his
career with Ohio Bell as a local
lnstaliation·repalr teclmlclan.
Payne held I hat job for five years
before becoming a PBX repair
teclmlclan. In 1971 he was promoted
to Installation and repair foreman.
Two years laler, he was promoled
to manager on Ohio Bell's division
staff and returned to Ironton In 1974.
In 1977 he assumed responsibility
for all Installation and repair
functions In Ironton, along with the
oompany's rosiness office there.
Five years later, Payne took over
Installation and repair services for
Gallipolis customers as well.

(.Ms lde Ihe workplace, Payne is a
member o! Ironton City Council, a
trustee of the Lawrenae County
Economic Developmenl Board, a
diroctor of the Ironton Chamber of
Commera&gt; and a .,...,mtl'r of the

r]jllllliiiliiii

Central Ohio Valley Industrial
Council.
He Is also an honorary Kentucky
Colonel and Is aclrve m the Masomc
orgamzation.
Payne and his wife, Mazlle,

reside at :ai:!J S. 12th St .. Ironton.
His role as company SJXlki'Sper·
son for Gallipolis and Ironton has
tl'en assumed by Dave Dean, Ohio
Bell community relations manager
for southeast Ohio.

PAT HILL FORDI
·

c
IN
•

1986 F-250 4X4 PICKUP
FINANCING UP
TO 60 MONTHS

1986 F-150 414
$300000
DISCOUNT ON
ALL F-250
414'S IN
STOCK

TV station shifts sales personnel

PVH Emergency Care

Center

HUNTINGTON. W.Va . - Michael J . Ferko has bwn named
w nera l sa les manager and nalional sales manager at WOWK·TV
and J. Bryon Shumaker has been appolnled the stallon's local salE'S
manager, sial ion 111anagement said.
Ferko was named local sales manager at WOWK in February
1985. Shumaker Is currenliy Ihe assistant loca l sales manager a t
WL.YH -TV In Lancaster. Pa. Both stalions are operated by Gateway
Communica1ions Inc.
In his new position, Ferko will direct the sa les 1eam for WOWK In
lhe s1ation's Huntington and Charleston sales offices. He joined
WOWK from WLYH wherP he served as the Galeway station's
gpneral manager. A native of Hlghspler. Pa., he is a 1973gradualeof
TPmple Universl1y in Philadelphia. He began his broadcastin g
career inl974 a t WLBR Radio on Lebanon, Pa .. and jolnedWLYH in
1976.
Shumaker holds an associale degree from Pace University In New
York. He has worked In retailing as the manager cl Good's Furnllure
Slore in Dowr, Pa. He joined WLYH In 198Jas an accounl executive
and was recenliy named Ihal stallon'sassistanllocal sales manager.

Physician works out VMH

New EJ(cm" Room *5

POMEROY -Dr. John D. Credico has started offering services In
obslelrlcs and gynecology al VPterans Memorial Hospl1al every
Wednesday from 6-8 p.m.
Cert ~led by the National Board of Medical Examiners and eligible
for the American Board of Obstetrics and Gytll'COiogy, Credico came
to Point Pleasant from Charleston, Ill., wlx're he had tl'en in private
praclice since 1982.
Credico is a gradualeof the University of Kansas MedicalScboolln
Kansas City, Kan ., and completed his In ternsl)lp at Bernalllo County
Hospital, an affiliate of the University of 'New Mexico, In
Albuquerque, N.M. In obstetrics and gyiiE!Cology, he completed this
residency at St. Francis Hospital, Evanston, IU ., In 1982. Whlle in
rPSidency he received addlilonal training in fertility at the New York
Fertllity Founlalion in New York and In microsurgery In Loyola
Medical Center, Chicago, Ill.
He Is a member of the American Medical Assoclatk&gt;n and the
Mason County Medical Society. Appointments may be made to 1\lm
by calling 992-3632. For further Information outside these o!l'lce
hours, call ~.j)75-&lt;i700.

...

BIC SA~INOS
NEW OPERATOR - The
staff at "For the Both of You
Styling and Tanning Salon" Is
announcing Kathy Clonch as ooe
of the salon's new operators.
Clonch Is a graduate of Meigs
Hlgh School where she received
her training in penning, e111s.
color'atld artificial nail application. She recently attended an
on-hands workshop for applying
makeup. She Is available for
appointment at Ute salon Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. Ill 5
p.m. with evening appolnlmenls
on Thursday by calllng 992-3982.

To allend cl888es
RUTLAND- For Kevin Hudson,
24, and cousin Steve Hudson, 18,
sclloolls not out for the summer.
Employees of Ru Uand Tire Co. on
Main Street (Ohio 124) In Rutland,
the cousins wtll attend automotive
sa-vice classes Monday through
Friday at Hunter Service Centers
- Division r1 Hunters Engineering
Co., In Stow, Ohio.
The cousins are helng Salt to the
classes ll help In upgrade Rutland
Tire's serviCe departments, sald
Rutland Tire owner Earl Fields.
Rutland Tite Is a member 11
Metro :!1 Car Care Centers, a ,
fast·erowlng car care network .

S250ooo DISCOUNT ON
ALL F-150 414'$ IN STOCK

1986 RANGER 4X4
PICKUP

S2 soooo DISCOUNT
ON All RANGER 414'5
IN STOCK

On The Spot
Bank financing

FINANCING
AVAILABLE

SEE OR CALL
RICK TOLLIVER, KEN RICHARDSON, J.R. PIERCE
OR PAT HILL

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.

461 S. THIRD AVE.

.

PHONE 992-2196

MIDDLEPORT

�Paga-C-2- The

Pomeroy-

Times-Sentinel

Page-C-3

The

June 15, 1986

•

quiet
revolution

We Reserve The Right To
l imit Quantities

By Palty Dyer
DWrlct Conse!'l'atlonls&amp;

GALLIPOLIS - A revolution Is
going on in America's farmland.
Fortunately for all of us, It is a quiet
revolution. That revolution is th&gt;
switch to conservation tillage.
Conservation tillage is a farming
practice that allows farmers the
alternative ofplantlngthelr crops in
fields that have oot been powed.lt
makes use of crop !l'sidue or ~her
forms of land cover to reduce
erosion and saves moisture for
crops being grown.
According to the definition by the
U.S. Department .of Agriculture's
Soil O:mse!'l'ation Service, conser·
vation tlllage is any crop planting
system whell' ~percent or roore of
crop residue remains on the surface
aft~r planting. Many tillage forms
and options are available to
farmers.
The use of conservation tlllage
saves farmers time. money, and
fuel; and can reduce erosion by up
to 00 percent. In many parts of the
country. conservation tillage in one
form or another is a household
word, but in some areas ~ Is just
getting started. In some areas
conservation tUiage has been used
. for over two decades. It Is rapidly
•, gaining converts. The U.S. Depart/
ment of Agriculture predicts that
by tbe year ml, moll' than &amp;l
percent of America's farmers wtll
be using some form ol conservation
tillage.
According to an article in the
May-June 1985 issued the Journal
of Soil and Water Consel'l'atlon,
farmers in the Corn Belt and the
Uike States lead the nation with
conservation tillage. In fact, 42
percent of America's farmers using
conservation tUiage are In the Corn
Belt, 16 percent in the Lake States,
15 percenl in the Northern Plains,
and 8 percent in the Appalochlait
region. Surprisingly, only 1% In the
Delta.
Based on findings of the USDA's
Farm Production Expenditure Survey (FPES), about one-fifth of the
nation's farmers have adopted
conservation Wlage. This practice
Is used primarily to grow corn,
soybeans, and small grain. 0!
America's crops grown under
conservation Wlage, 50 percent of
the average were com, and 35
percent soybeans. Researchers are
stucty!ng the use of consel'l'atlon
tillage on many other crops !nclud·
ing potatoes, peanuts, cotton, even
tomatoes, and other truck croos.
SoU and water conservation is the
prime reason farmers adopt con·
servation tUiage , but cost and time
savings were equally important. In
addition, the adoption of conservation tillage since 1983 has been
occomplished pr¥narll¥•..without
the aid of any govemm~ntal
cost-sharing.
Systems range from the top of
conservation practices, no-lUI, to
various forms of minimum or
reduced tUiage. The type of conser·
vatlon tillage used depends largely
upon knowledge of local technology
and customs, soils, weed control,
and needs of Individual farms. The
tottom line for most farmers to
know Is that a conservation system
suitable for their type of operation Is
al(ailable. Farmers can learn more
about conservation tillage from
seileral sources, Including contactIng the USDA's Soil Conservation
Service or the local office of the ·
Cooperative Extensive Service.
· Many land grant colleges offer
farmers an opportunity to view
conservation tUiage systems at
field days, field trials, and other
outreach activities. In recent years,
farm magazines have been Inundated with articles about the pros
and cons of conservation tillage.
Agrlbus!nesses such as equipment
and chemical dealers also have
materials available.
)VIany farmers have learned a
great deal about conservation
tlllage by asking neighbors who
have made it work on their farm.
Many organiza tions sponsor
wurs, demonstrations, and field
trials Including the Armual FarmCUy Field Day sponsored by the
Gallia Soil and Water Conservation
District.
A big help to growers interested
in seeking information is the
Cooservat!on Tillage Information
Center (CTIC) located in Fort
Wayne, IN. CfJC Is a joint project
of- the National Association of
COnservation Districts, agrlbuslne)ses, governmental agencies,
priyate organi2ations, and indlv!d·
ual farmers. The Center provides
newsletters, information materials,
and resource re!e!l'nces.
In the May J.9&amp;'i issue c1 "No-TUI
Fanner", Editor Frank Less!ter
commented that the most llmlt!ng
factor holding back mvre wide
spreading adoption r1 oonservation
tillage Is simply an altitude problem. Regardless of the current '
financial environment in agricul· ·
ture, once people are tully sold on
the benefits c1 conservation tillage, ,
especially no-till, they wUI change 1
and adopt the system.
•
Yes, American agriculture has
Continued on pagl' C-3

Federally guaranteed farm loans
are popular, Reagan officials say
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Admin·
!stratton officials say federal guarantees of farm !pans ar£&gt; gaining In
popularity , but thf' Increase falls to
cover a decl ine in tbe number of
farmers gettin g direct loans this
year.
The Farmers Home Administration said Thursday It has guaran teed 11,024 operating loan s for $1
bUUon this year, as of last week. The
Agricultu!l' Department agency
ha s $700 million left in guarantee
authority.
That's nearly twice as much as
last year's pace of 5,951 guarant ees
for $675 million by early June. For
all of last year, the agency
guaranteed 9,7!J! loans for about $1
billion.
Officials said they were pleased
with the faster pace of loan
gu arantees, which they have been
pushing for years, with limited

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

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFFECTIVE THRU SATURDU, JUNE 21, 1986

success.

T-Bone

59
Steak •.~.$3

BUCKET

Cubed Steak •.••~•••

KAH~'S REGULAR or BEEF

W1eners .•••••••••••~•••

$199
$1 59

SOUTH BEND, Ind. tUPl t DriP wc~.'k aftl'r it hatcht'(\. a rJrr
i\numn fl•mail' eondo r chick i;
~a in:ng Wl'ight and doi ng wrll at Ihe•
Pol awatomi 7.oo. officials say.
Tipping lhr scall's at 262 grams.
C'a rlutt&lt;t thP Condor is "" 1ing wrll at
the h c111d~ . of a surro~atr mvth&lt;·r. a

The quiet...

1 LB. ROLL

LB.

"The federal government can no
longer afford to meet -a ll the
demand for operating funds from
farmers," sa id Administrator
Vance Clark . "From oowon , that' s
a sharro !l'sponsibility of both the
privale and public sectors. "
Whl?n gu a,antees are counted
with direct loans, Farmers Home
ha s provided loans or guaranlees to
about ~.OOJ farmers this y~ar.

Rare condor chick doing well

Sausage •••••••••••

Chuck Roast •••••••••
Ground Beef •••• ~••••
TURKEY
Drumsticks ••••.•. ~•..•
GRADE A 10-12 LB. AVG.
·rurkeys .••••••.••.•~••••

Individuals wishin~ to participate in the weekly
c-ontest may do,., h.v ~'Ut•ssing the farm'sowner. Just
mail, or drop off yonr ~'lll'SS to the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., romeroy , Ohio, 15769, or the GaUipolb
Tribull&lt;!, N~ Thin! 1\ vc., Gallipolb, Ohio, 15631. and
you may win a $5 ca.'h prize lf\Jrn tht• Ohio Valil'Y
l'ubli•hing Co. Lellvt• your narne, addn..o;s and

telephone calls wUI be accepted. ,\11 contest mtrles
should be turned In to the newspaper olfice by 4 p.m.
each Wt'Cinesday. In caseofatle, the indlvldunl whose
letter has the earliest postmarl&lt; wUI be declared the
wl!nner. Next week, a Gallia Coonty !ann wiU be
featured by the GaiUn SoU and Water Conse!'l'ation
Dl'!lrict. The June 8 GaiUa picture In the Sunday
'I'irnes-Sentinel was the Ruth Srowers farm , Rt. liM, In
Raccoon Twp. Contest winner wa~ Betty M. IlaUey,
Rt. 2, llox ro1, GaiUpoUs.

telephont· ncmhcr wilh your card or lt...otter. No

BALLARD
U.S.D.A. CHOICE

MYSTERY Fi\RM - Thl~ wt&gt;ck's my~ery !ann,
featun'd hy the Ml'il:li Soil and Wnter CorLo;crvatkm
District, l' loclll&lt;'ll ., ornewhere in Meigs County .

( ·nn llnUNJ from pagf' t ·l
und&lt;'rgonr many revolutions. hu t
many rxpr rt s agn'f' that eonsrrY i.l ·

lion tilla g~ is thr mos t rapidly
spreadin g pract ice since Ihe adop"
tion of hybrid s~ed corn. Conserva "
tion tiHagc may hc a quiet
r~volut lon lhmughout America, bu t
it Is growing, and II is here Ia stay.

condor puppet, 7.00CurutorCarolyn
Good lin said Friday.
C&lt;tr lolta. one of lhc fewrr lhan
2.00l Andean condors !ell in the
wor ld, swallows ffi grams of meat
and mea t b.v ·products a day.
Within two weeks, Carlotta is
rxp&lt;•ctro 10 ltip lr her wright and tn
six mont hs she wUI sland 1 ~ f('('t
tall. At matutity, the Sout h Ameri ·
can \'U iturr is expected to weigh 2i
pound s, stand 2 )1 f('('t tall and have
a wingspan of 10 f('('t .
Carlotla's rgg was discovered
April 10 and placed In an Incubator
unti l the hatching Jul1&lt;' 6" Zoo
officials had txoen surptised Carklt·
ta 's parents, Juan and .Juanita,
pr'Oduccd an offspring th!syear.

eompari'&lt;l with ahoul 86,&lt;XXl last
year.
Many farmers could not qualify
for direct loans. and the adminlstra"
tion provided less rmney this year.
Having used up $2.2 billion in
funds available for direct loans, lhc
agency had provided direcl federal
operating loans to 48.~ farmers as
of lasl week.
Last year at I his time, the agency
had lent $3 billion to 00,615 farmers.
And when all of last year's $3,7
billion in direct operating loans was
spenl, the agency had provided
direct loans 76,00J farmers.
When the agency ran rut ct dlrccl
loan fund s this year, Clark offered
to help farmers who qualified for
agency loans to get guarant«'S
under an effort he caUed "operation
assist." In the first thr('(' weeks. he
said 232 fanners have received
guarantees for $17.9 million.
A program to buy down inl erest
rates, enacted In the Ul85 farm law.
has provided 8Ul loans tor $83
million. The program requires !he
government to reduce Interest by 2

percent and a bank to reducr it by
another 2 percent .

Probe suspicious fire
LIMA, Ohio tUPJ I - Arson
investigators in Lima were looking
for the cauSI' of a S500,00l firt' late
last week in a vacant. sil&lt;· story
building, and officials say its origins
all' suspicious.

Why do so
·many of your
neighbors insure
their cars with

State Farm?
JOHN CREDICO, M.D.

Ask one of them. then give me a call.
y

OBSTETRICS/GYNECOLOGY AND INFERTILITY

CAROLL SNOWDEN
4 t7 Second Ave.
Gallipoli,, Oh.
Phone 446·4lt0
Home446-4!11

•Epidural Deliveries
•Tubal Repairs
Office Hours 10:00 A.M.-5:00P.M. Mon., Wed., Fri.
2:00 P.M.-8:00 P.M. Tuesday and Thursday benings

675-6700

LOCATED: Suitt 114 Modica! Offico luildlng, al Pltasant Volley Hospilol
Point Pltasant, W. Vo. 25SSO

tun r•••

A

Stale F..-m Mu!Ual
Automobile Insurance COrnc*IV
Home Office: EUoomington. lllnoiS

• Temperature Mon1tor
warns you of warm
lreezer temperatur e.

• t5 .7 cu II no-tros t
lreezer.
• Four cabinet she lves .

• Slide-out storage
basket .
• Built-in lock with

Tomatoes ••••••••• ~•••• 4-9(
BROUGHTON
$1 49
2°/o Milk •••••••••• ~~••

sell-ejecting key
• Five door shelves.
• 32" w1de. 61 'h" high .
• Te xtured door and

cabinet.

$ 49
Amer. Cheese ••• ~2.~; .1

KRAFT SINGLES

ZEST A

BANQUET

Saltines •••••••••••••
LB. BOX

2
I
$1
.Pineapple ••••••~o.~;.

$2
39
Fried Chicken ••• !~~;
.

THREE DIAMOND
SLI~ED, CHUNK, CRUSHED

TENDERLEAF

TEA BAGS
00 CT.

$199

Limit 1 Pot Customer
Good Only AI Powell's Supormariool
Offor bpiros Sat. Juno 21, 1986

BANQUET

•·····~~~~·······
' ' ' ' \J\AJ C\11.1 ' ' ' ' ' ,. lr

Jt t t t t t 1"'1\lf~

:

•

PRICE SAVER

:

• • • t • ·~
• ·' ' ' ' ' \AAJ C\111 ' ' ' ' • l-

•

~

•
0

7 oz.

5f$1

limit 1 Ptr Cuslomor
0
Good Only AI Powell's Suptrmorioot S1S o
OHor Expires Sat., Juno 21, 1986
•

·····~········· ·~·····

0

CASnEIERRY

o

•.•••• ··
• • ·c·oo:pm•·
• • •••••
••••

•

•

10 oz.
CAN

4/Sl

.
limit 1 Per Customer
: Good Only At Powell's S..,ermarioot
• Ofttr Expires Sat. Juno 21 , 1986
~

o

MAXWELL HOUSE

t 1 1 I I I .I

e

I I I I I

COFFEE
• 3LB.
' CAN

I.
•

• Temperatu re Monit or
warns you of warm
freezer temperature.

• Countert op height and
just 42'/o" wid e.
• Built-in lock .

• Interior light.
• Lift-out storage basket.
• AdJuStable temperature
contr ol.
• Tex tured lid; won't
show fing erp rints .

EARL AND DALLAS
ARE WAinNG TO SELL TO YOU

0

HOTDOG SAUCE

: MAC./ CHEESE
0

oz.

TV -Dinners ••••••••••••
11

I

•

$899

limit 1 Por Customor
Good
Only
At Powell's S...Ormarioot
1
0- Offor bpiros Sat., Juno 21' 1916
. - .I I

:

0

•
1

m ,'o

I I I I I I I I . I I I I I I 'I

•·-...--.... .. -'

FINANCING AVAILABLE - DELIVERY AVAILABLE (But

Extra).

BRING YOUR TRUCK TODAY WHILE THEY LAST.

�Page-C-4-The Sunday rmes-Sentinel

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

June 16. 1986

Early warnings went unheeded on grain st8ndard i~sue
By SONJA JIILI.GREN
UPI Fann Editor

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Congressionalinvestigalors warned In 19'19 - when U.S. exports were
climbing to their peak -lballax U.S. grain standards
could hurt American exports.
Congress's General Accounllng Office. revisiting
the issue, bas concluded lbal elevators handling !ll
percent of American wheal exports take advantage of
Ihe lax system and S&lt;"ll dirty wheal at full price.
II has taken a bust in American grain exports lor
the U.S. agricuii\Jral Industry to heed early warnings
about grain quality. Exports hilt heir peak in 1981, but
have fa llen by :r7 pereenl since then.
The GAO. In lis new look at the issue. noted that

recognition of U.S. grain quality problems Is 1'1"11re
open than he!ore.
It said the mood has changed In the last year, and
government and Industry WorkshOps have openly
discussed grain quality problems and solutions.
"Just a short time ago, there seemed to be some
reluctance on the part or Ihe U.S. grain industry and
the government to openly acknowledge thai there
may be a problem with the quality of grain heing
exported from the United Slates," lile GAO said.
Finally, last month the Agriculture Department
proposed the same lightening of wheal standards
recorrunended by congressional investigators seven
years ago. Thai change is expected to go Into effec t
next year.
II would tl,ghtcn measurement of each wheat

shipment's doCkage- chaff, large foreign particles,
dust and broken wheat particles.
Current rules permll understatement r1 rockage by
rounding 11 down to lile nearest half percent The
proposed change would require rounding to the
nearest one-tenth or one percent
The GAO analyzed dockage at 22 elevators
responstbieforlrlpercent ct American wheat expo rts.
All of them sold dockage for wheat prices, but the
amount of dockage in a shipment varied among
elevators, from 0.43 percent to 0.13 percent. Current
rules permll designating shipments with up to 0.49
percent as dockag~free.
The GAO said officials at two firms were pleased to
learn average dockage from their elevators was
toward the upper end of the range.

Meigs County agent's corner

Elimination of trees draws criticism

Vegetable tour set June 17
on Pickens farm in Meigs

PENINSULA, Ohio (UPI ) - The
decision by lhe Cuyahoga Valley
National Recreation Area in Summil County to uproot evergreen
trees to restore the area Iii It s
original stale is drawing criticism.
"Those spruces were planted
abou( ~years ago, and some were
as high as 25 fe&lt;&gt;l," said Rnbert G.
Gioia. "Now, the contractor hired
by the park service is taking them
rut, throwing them into a truck and
dumping them onto a landfill."
Gioia lives across the street from
where 40 evergreen trees were
uprooted this week, leaving a
muddy area.

By John

c. Rice

County Enmsloa Agent
Agriculure
POMEROY - A Southeastern
Ohio Vegetable Tour will be reid at
the Warren and Lillian Pickens
Farms on Tuesday evening, June
17. start ing al6: lJ p.m. The !arm Is
located 1mile south of Reedsville on
State Route 124.
Tour highlights will Include 100
acres ct early fresh market vegeta·
bles, Including tomatoes, cabbage,
melons and sweet corn. See effects
of freeze on sweet corn as It relates
to planting dates and vartetles;
check out a tomato variety plot;
visit with growers. ag-business and
O.S.U. speclaUsls.
Bring the entire family. EverYOne Is welcome and refreshments
.i111
th&lt;'re.be served . Hope to sa&gt; you
The Hocking County Extension
Office is hosting a Southern Ohio
Forage Tour on Wednesday, June
18, start ing at 5: 45 p.m. at the
Hocking County Fairgrounds (150
N. Homer Avenue, Logan, Ohio) .
The tour will include slops at lour
farms plus a light snack. If you
would like more Information about
lilts tour, please give us a caU.
And So It Grows - Garden roses
reach their peak In June, rewarding
the gardener with a wealth r1
blossoms. Roses are plants that
demand ca re but give beautllul
dividends for your investment of
lime and energy.
Roses grow from very early
spring untO the Orsl heavy frost,
and they need proper care fertilizing, watering, disease and
insect control - all season long.
Locate roses in Cll€fl beds, preferably facing east, and where they will
get at least a half day r1 full
sunlight Plants shaded by trees,
buildings or waDs will be weak and
spindly. Roses do better In beds by
themselves where they don't com·
pete with other plants lor fertilizer
and moisture. Apply fertilizer
regularly, at least monthly, and
particularly after a heavy flush of
blossoms. Use rose fertillzers or
other types Ibat contain an analysis
similar 10 a 10.10.10 or 12-12·12 or
10-64 applied at about two pounds
per 100 square feet. If using rose
specialty fertilizers, apply at the
rate listed on the container.
Roses even respond to good care
when they are "harvested" or
picked. Cut roS&lt;"S early In the
morning when they are turgid ;
Dowers picked later in the day have

already lost some moisture and
may he sUghUy wilted. Use a sharp
knHe to cut roses and don't cui too
long a stem. If possible, harvest the
flower just above the first fiv e
leaflet leal. This keeps needed
foliage on the plant and the rose will
produce new flower shoots at llds
point.
Place the cut roses in warm
water - 100 to no degrees - lor
about half an hour. Then pour of!
this warm water and arrange the
flowers as desired using cooler
water. Most rose buds will open
wllh this treatment.
If you allow roses to mature on
the bush, remove spent Dowers as
soon as the petals start to tau. Cut
away these spent blossoms at a
point just above the first five leaflet

"I pleaded with (Park Supertnlendenl Lewis) Alhert to slop the
damage that was heing donr. He
said 'no' thre&lt;&gt; limes, behaved like a
complete dictator and seems to
think he's God almighty. He said
the trees were aUen to Ihe park and
then hung up on me," Gioia said.

menl Thursday.
The destruction of the trees Is
pari of the National Park Service's
plan to return Ill&lt;' area toltsoriglnal
state.
"Our demolition contract calls
for taking out exotic shrubs and
trees such as spruces and Scotch
pines that are not native to this
area," acting park superintendent
Einar L. Johnson said. "AI this
location, we have removed 4l ro 45
blue spruces, some Scotch pines
and a couple of ornamental hard·
wood Jrees.
"This is not an unusual case. We
have taken out 450 residential or
commercial buildings oo p-opert ies
we have purchased ~nee 1976, and
when there was non-native growth
on any of them, we removed it,"
Johnson said.
Alexander J. Karla. a lx&gt;lanist
from Covent ry Township near
Akron, is cataloging Ihe plants
under a two-year grant from the

"They see a company's or cooperative's abUIIy to
blend wheat to th&lt;' upper reaches of the dockage
tolerance as a virtue, and they credlled their ablllty to
do so to the large storage capacities that th&lt;'y have at
some locations," the report said. . •
__
Extensive storage allows them to store whe&lt;lt
according to Its actual dockage and blend 11 to their
advantage. They suggested elevators with low
dockage were run Inefficiently or had limited storage
capacity.
The GAO said buyers of American whea l consider
that pracllce a deception.
Canadians remove all such foreign material from
their wheat Europeans are more particular about
· their equivalent of dockage. They Include more
materiaL

NEED ANEW

MOBILE HOME?
VISIT

KINGSBURY HOME SALES
NEW LOT AT PARKERSBURG, W. VA.
(dba PAll VILLA HOMES)

WE HAVE A BRAND NEW SELECnON OF 14' WIDE
HOI'tiS AVAWlf FOR YOUR JNSPECnON.
1987 MODELS HAVE ARRIVED
Directions from Ohio: Crou the Washington St. Bridge,
stay in the right lane. Rt. 68 South. follow 68 south past
the Marrtown Rd. intersection, get in the left lane and turn
left and the first road . Come down into South Park Villa
Mobile Homa Park. Lot ia vialble from Rt. 68.

304·863·8817
OPEN l 0• DAILY,• SUN. •
6
15

r~le~af~to~e~n~co:u:rg~e~m:o:re:_:flo~w:e:rln:::g·-~AJ:be::.rt~w==as~u:na::'·a:il:a:bl~e~!o~r~co=m~-:_~De=pa:r~tm:e:·n~l:o!~l~n~lc~rlo:r_._ _ _J~::::::::::::::::::::::::~~::::~~~~=-

A~vacare.

•

ere

___
roa_
our "-"'Loctor
•
sees IS octor
That's entirely possible, you know. Already,
over 45 doctors are participating in Advacare,
the health maintenance organization that
your employer can offer to provide just about
every medical and surgical benefit you'll ever
need-for a single monthly premium And
doctors know the advantage of seeing a good
doctor occasionally.
What does that mean to you? That
AdvaCare has some important advantages to

June 16, 1986

Farm flashes"

Rains delay haymaking on
Gallia farms past week
By EDWARD M. VOLLBORN
GaUia Coomy E.tension Agent
. Agriculture
GALLIPOLIS - Frequent rain s
delayed haymaklng again this
we&lt;&gt;k In Gallla County.
Most farmers got the wePk·old
soaked hay baled on Monday In
lime Ia mow more for this we&lt;&gt;k ·s
rain. That was enough time to cui .
and cure a lot of hay. The Ohio Crop
Rep~n1 rated Ohio corn "good" with
98 pereent of the acreage emerged.
The average stage of development
was almost six leaves unfurled.
Something lor the Shepherds!
Mark your calendar to attend Ihe
39th Annual Ohio She&lt;&gt;p Day and'
Performance-Trsled Ram Sale.
This year's acllvity is scheduled al
9:30 a.m. a t the Eastern Ohio
Research Branch In Caldwell, Ohio.
The per!ormance-lesled ram sale
will hegin al 2 p.m. Some of th&lt;•
program highlights include demon·
slralions. research l'l'Sulls, management ri&gt;commendallons and
exhibits.
Herbicide Drift . Pesticide appli·
cators should keep in mind thai
drHI of herbicide spray may result
in crop injury or damage to
non-largrl plant s. Banvel and
certain 2,4,0 fo rmulations volalil·
izc and drill when the lcmprratu re
Is grea ter than 85 degrees. Avoid
using volatile !ormulallons near
S&lt;"nslt ivr plants when hot tempera·
1\J res are forecast. Senslllvc crops
include tobacco. tomatoes and
grapes.
"Command. " a new product
labeld as a soil-appliPd herbicide on
soybeans may vola Illizl:&gt; and drHI to
non-target drift s. Command is a
chlorphyll inhibitor, turning plan t
!oliagr white. Although lll&lt;'S&lt;" ef·
frets arc usually considered lem·
porary. the product has caused a lot
of concern in those arras.
Fa •m pond management is oft en
a big job lor area lan&lt;bwners. Onr
frcqucnlly-asked question al Ill&lt;'
county extension office concerns
how to control vegetation in a pond.
Such vegetation is ususally cla.Ssi·
!lrd as Doaling, submerged or
emergent.
Most fl oa ting wred species can
vbe co ni roUrd with very low
concrntralions of cowr sulfatL',

Farmwife talks about hard times
married, the farm economy- year is messed up when farmers only get they pu 1 In and the pride they take
By RIGK VAN SANT
by year - has gotten worS&lt;" .
WJLMINGTON, Ohio (UPII
$3 or $4 a bushel for their corn."
In their work .
"ll's just a mess, " she says.
Roherta To!Uver figures a Ronald
Kirby reeled in shock when he
"You could work twice as hard as
Kirby just finished plan ling 1600 heard that price estimate.
Reagan saw how hard her hu sband
the guy next door, but what good
"What?" he asked his wile. "I does It do you? Sometimes I wonder
works and how Utile he gels paid, acres of corn and 400 acres of
there might not be an American soybeans. He sometimes worked wish. I wish."
why I didn't marry somebody woo
from morning unUI midnight to do II
"You're only 40 percent too works 9to 5. I think !l'sgolng to get
farm crisis.
"There's many times when I'd right.
high," Roberta was told by Kirby's worse before it gets better."
The weather has heen coopera- lather, Jack, who farm s with his
like to sll down and writ!' Ihe
Kirby disagreed.
pi'€Sidenl and say, 'Hey, what are tive. The crops are growing great. son.
"I don't know where you get
"Yeah," agreed Kirby. "We can thai," he said. "I'm an eternal
you doing?'" says the :ll-year-old Still, Kirby knows his harvest pro!ll
will be less than his produclloncost. sell next year 's corn lor about optimist. Most fai'TI)ers are.
!armwi!e.
The
government controls his crop $1.50."
Roberta, her husband, Kirby, 33,
"Take this year, for Instance.
subsidy
program and his profit
and lilelr two children, Andrea, 6,
Roberta shook her head.
We've got everything planted and
and Whitney, 2, depend on farming margin.
"To me. lilat's almost unhelieva · everything's growing. ll's going to
"I don 't know what the problem ble," she said. "Especially when I take a real disaster to krep us from
for a living. But Roherta says that
In the eighl years they've heen is, " says Roberta, "but !nmething see everything they do . the hours
Continued on C-6
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COMPUTER EQUIPMENT

PHONES &amp;ACCESSORIES

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SCANNERS/WALKIE TALKIES

CALCULATORS

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services beginning

Wednesday, July 11 at

VETERANS
MEMORIAL
HOSPITAL

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va are"'

MEDICAL OFFICE
COMPLEX

. The health care plan
that helps keep you healthy.

available every

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The servill will be

Wednesday

'Art of It All'

From 6-8 p.m.

culture theme
C9LUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Natalie Ann Terry has quite an
imagination lor a 10-year-old and
i1' s paid off.
A play she wrote as a S&lt;"CCnd
grader will be preS&lt;"nted as part of
lile cultural program for IM'xt
week's 25th annual Midwest Governor's Conference.
Natalie, who will enter fifth grade
this fall , Is tlte author of "The Tree
and lile Pig," a play chosen to be
preS&lt;"nled for "Ohio... the Art of It
All," a performing salute to the
cultural richness of Ohio.
Gov . and Mrs. Richard Celeste
wDI host governors from the
Midwest states and their guesls at
the June 17 cullural performance.
Three Columbus children, cur·
renUy appearing in the Players
Youth Theatre production of "Evita" were picked as the main actors
!or the play written by the Solon girl
wh&lt;'n she was 7.
"A pig wahos up one day and
finds a tree in his mud," Natalie
expl ained. "The pig asks wey the
tree is there and the tree says the
farmer planted It there. The pig
goes to the Iarmer to see ~ he'll
move if. but the Iarmer says It Is a
living thing and he can't rmve it.
The pig returns to the mud and all
three learn to get along together."
NataliP's work was firs! produred by Dobama Theatre in
Cleveland lor the 1984 Marilyn
Bianchi Kids' Playwriting Festival.
She said she learned about the
theatre and Its works wh&lt;'n she was
In school.
"Wilen I was In the second grade
tbe teach&lt;'r asked If anyone wanted
to wrtte a play and I volunteered,"
she said.
Natalie also said she was sur·
prised tba t her work was chosEn to
be presented lor this conltrenoe.

which Is available In a buffered
form thai Is sold under various
trade names. Submerged and
emergent weeds such as pond·
wreds &lt;r ca ll ails require a stronger
chemical such as Aquazlne or
Dlquat. Applications mad e early in
the growing season usually will give
heller results and will reduce the
hazard of oxygen depletion and fish
kilL Always read the product label
before using and observl' all
1'€Sirlcllons. Rememher thr label Is
the "Jaw."
Fescue Toxicosis . Rl'c ent
reearch has discovered an endo·
phytlc fUngus within tall fescue.
Local livestock producers have
noted poor animal performance on
call le who grazed some !aU fescue
fields. Animal sy mptoms associated wltlh toxicosis may include
reduced rale of ga in, poor milk
production, rough hair coal, pantin g, elevated temperatures and
excrss lve salivation. A recent
survey found a 56 percent average
infection level wit hin a group of
fields across soulh&lt;'rn Ohio.
Plant breeders have developed
severa l tall fescue varieties Ihal are
now being offered as l:lw-endophyte
or rndophyle--free . These Include
Falcon. Fawn, Forage, Johnstone
and l&lt;l'nby. Farmer !nlutions to the
problem vary from destroying the
infected fields 10 providing at least
part of lhr animal's nutr111onal
needs from a non-fescue source.
From early sympt oms, I would
suggesllhallhis year will be one of
the worst for Fescue Toxicosis
problrms.
Call the County Extension Office
lor !nme of the details on this
problem. To dale, there are no easy
answers or sure CUI'€5 lor the
problem, just a weallh of knowJ .
edge about the symptoms.

JOHN D. CREDICO

you in getting the finest medical care available in
the region.
To take advantage of the Advacare advantages, call your doctor- ask if he or she is participating. Then talk to your employer or AdvaCare
at 446-5283. Advacare
• •
headquarters is at Holzer
~ ~
clinic, 385 Jackson PikeAd 1'
Gall!_p_o~is, Ohio.

The Sunday Times-Santinei- Page- C-6

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

For Appointments Call

(6141 992-3632

We purchase 1st
&amp; 2nd mortgages
and land contracts

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outside of the11 offill ·hours
call (3041 675-6700

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Are you coUecting payments on a real estate mort·
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us show you how to conven all or pan of your
mortgage into cash. Out of state mortgages are also
considered, as we are a direct national mortgage
lender from coast to coast; plus no broker fees. For
detalls, call today.

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Valerie Reutlnger, Manager
1312 Eastern Avenue .. . ................ . . . .. 446•.U3

Reg.139.95

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Each
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Each
Buy all you need-n·o limill
High outpul and wide response at normal bias set·
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2495 2 199
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For Desk or Well
Switchable Touch-Tone/pulse'
dialing. In white , almond or
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17995
Reg. 259.95

lo" A• 120 ,.., Month on Cftll~M•

Programmable t5-selection
memory, tri·spot laser pickup
system. #42·5001

rSWlTCHABLE.TOUCH·TONEIPULSE phones work on both tone artd pulse •nes. Therefore,

in areas navlnQ only pulse (rotary Oial)lines. ~ou can still use services requirlll(l tones. •ke me new
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�Page- C-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

June 15, 1986

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

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- C-7

June 15, 1986

Jessica Roach named winner of Gallia Soil poster contest
By Constwu"' S. White
Pmgram t\dmlnlslrawr

Ms. Roach focused on the word
Dracons and devised the slogan
Ga!UaSWCD
"Doing Resea rch and Conserving
Our
Natural Substances."
GALLIPOLIS - The Ga l\ia So il
Second
place went to Stephanie
and Water Consrt,•atlon District
recently Sl'iectcd the County Con- Loveday of Cheshlre·Kyger Elementa ry and third place to Jason
SP"'ation Post&lt;'r Contl'S1 winners.
Fh·st pl ace wen t to .Jessica Roach Lu cas of Clay Elementary.
First place sL,th grade winners
of Southweswrn El rm rnt a r~' ·
The theme this )'car was. "Drac - are judged for the top county
ons Visit Earth to Study Food and pl aces. Each year the nrst place
winners' posters are displayed at
The Land."

the SWCD fair booth.
Top winners were:
Addavllle- First, Marc Vlllanu·
eva, second, Brian Coleman and
third, Danny Cox.
Cheshlre-Kyger - First, Ste·
phanle Loveday, second, Heatrer
Hudson and third, Susan
Culpepper.
Clay - First, Jason Lucas,
second, Jim Baughman and third,
Brtan Roberts.

Hannan Trace - First, Kim
Triplett , second, Tanya Short and
third, Tract Brannen.
Southwestern - First, Jessica
Roach, second. Keith Ashworth and
third, ReneE&gt; Hale.
Washington - First, Jennl Dovryak, second, David Evans and ·
third . .Joe Rodents.
Vinton - First, Julie Lynn
Stapleton. second . Scott Hunt and
third, Greg Foocc.

Farmwife tells of hard times ... _____:.:co=nttn:::'ued=fro::!..m::.:::C-5~----

"

...

the rest of his lite, he says he is

I'll do my thing and there's things
he can do."
In the meantime, the Tollivers
continue to battle lhe day· to-day
farm problems. Times may be
stormy, but at least the weather's
hot.
"The weather was rea l coopera·
live In May," noted Kirby. "We
finished planting the com and
jumped right on the soybeans_. "

willing to chang~e careers- rather
than jeopardize his family -It total
dlsas ter appears on the farm
hortzon.
"I think that's very smart," said
Roberta. "Why go down until
you're drug under? U It's that bad,
g~et out while you can still survive,
Instead of trying to do It until
everything's gone.
"Sure, It would be devastating,
when farming Is all you've done
your whole life, but we'd survive.

There was a little concern when a
dry spell lingered Into mid-May, but
rain came just at the tight time.
Kirby's brother. Kelly, 29, the
junior member of the ToiUver farm
family, was the most concerned. By .
far .
''Crop failure was my Immediate
thought," sa id Kelly. "You don't
have rain, It ain't going to grow,
that's all there Is to it. "
Jack Tolliver, 58, shnigg€'&lt;l.

"Right now, I work part·tlrneas a
secretary and baby·slltl'r. And, I've
just started M&gt;rklng at a restaurant. I'm a bartender and cocktail
waitress Friday and Saturday
nights. Just to make some extra
money and still be with IllY kids the
majortty of the time."
Although Kirby wants to farm for

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special order
we
· 01.1r cus&gt;t01111ers looldng
for that hard-to-find car part or accessory.IUhe part you need is not in our store, you can order from over 70,000 parts through
PARTS EXPRESS and it willnormally be delivered within one week!

Oran g~e .

fOW30 Motor Oil

I H( MO TO R OI L WIIH/

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Designed specifically tor

applications such as
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lights, and RV's
Reg. 59.88, #6-24 oc

Marine Batteries

The battery designed to

fOW40 Motor Oil

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start your boat Instantly ...
no matter what size

Reg. 1.09, llmli 12

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automobile unless it
is on a good jack
stand, ramps or
hydraulic hoi st.

49.88
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Reg . 29.95, #UtL

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Can't afford to pass up!

Reg. 54.88. #6· 2411

44.88
Armor·AII
Protectant

1.99

8399

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After mtr's 1.00 rebate

32 oz. refill
Sale6.88

Super Blue Wash

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16oz

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complete

Liauid Wax,

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SALES AND
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FOR

4.00011

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Reg. 99f;, limit 12

\1 \II((

Central Trust Co. of S.E. Ohio,
N.A.. to Carroll Johnson, Mildred
Jolmson. Lot, Porn . VU!.
Mary Baker, Dec., Ullie Baker,
Affid .. Olive.
Maude Erwin, Dec., to Everett
Erwin. Helen Hood, Garnet Brown,
Maxine Brow11 , Irene Hendricks ,
Julia Da vidson, Dexter 0 . Erwin,
Mike Erwin, Don Erwin, Affid.,
Mldd. VIII.
Everen Ern1n , Helen Hood ,
Melvin Hood, Irene Hendricks,
Harley Hendrtcks, Julia Davidson.
Roy Davidson , Maxine Brown,
Richard Brown to Ronnie ll:&gt;iley,
Elva Holley, Pt. bts Zl &amp; 22, Midd .
VIII.

Challenger
Batteries

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JESSICA ROACH

Michael Roush, Bcverl.v S. Roush
to Michael R. Ryan. Linda K. Ryan .
.57A, Sutton.
·
Hazel A. Johnson and Jeanett e C.
13endula, Ease. Sa lisburv.
Charles C. Hortman.' Mat1ha F.
Hoffman to Frl'derick J . Blaettnar,
Ja mie Lynn Blael! nar. lot Sffi.
Pom. Vii i.
Arnold E. Snowden. J r.. Florence
L. Snowden to Theodore R. Woods,
' Be tt y J a ne Woo ds. 49 .01 A,
Sa lisbury.
John Fisher Jr. , Sarah Sue Fisher
to MarkS. Moore, Diana L. Moore.
l..llA, Chester.
J ane Lee Brooks , eta!, to Cent ral
Trust Co., N.A., Sherllf's Deed .

they money Isn't good. I'd like It a
lot better tt the money was better .
Every year it's gotten harder and
harder on us. We make the same
amount of money now that we did
eight years ago.
"I always thought that every
year you'd make more money .
You'd get raises. But In farming,
It 's not like that. That's kind of baed
for me. I'd like to see us a lot better
off. But, eight years later, things
are the same. Or, worse."
Even with two young children,
Roberta reels obliged to work
part-time. And sre ooesn't think
that' s enough .
" ! rea lly should be out working
full-time," she said. "But with tM&gt;
children. I can't afford to because
lhe amount of money I'd have to
pay a baby· sltll'r. But maybe next
year, when Andrea's In school full·
lime, I can work more.

fatmlng another year now."
But the thought of farming on a
year to yea r basis fr ightens
Roll'11a.
"I think the next few years are
crucial to us," she said. "Whether
we'll be able to continue doing it
scares me. When your future is
uncertain, it 's pretty scary."
Although Roberta wasn't rea roo
on a farm, sl'e had made childhood
visits to relallves who farmed.
"I knew what kind of life I was
g~ettlng Into when I married Kirby,"
she said. "It' s just that when we got
married, farming was good. I
mean, rea lly good .
"Now, I fffl so bad for Kirby. He
works so hard and so many hom-s.
He spends· a lot of time away from
us. The girls miss him. In the spring
and fall, they can go days or weeks
without scelng very much of him.
"He puts In all these hours, but

lfAS'968
Sale3.88, Reg. 5.79.

T"" &lt;&gt;.wer n1\tll slard is
Q!liiCMial. . . $79 00

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ICloseout Prices on 1.,86 Models I

Ridenour
CHE,STER

985-3307

WHENEVER A MONUMENT FITS
INTO YOUR PICTURE

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Gibson$
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• 2·DO: ot.an lu I w.dth h !Cwr 1hQII
• Qp! .onatou' L 'To'1 1 ~: rCC ma ker

• ·su:x:r ~1 ·/Cr l•n.ng·· room
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I ulhtdl, hou an calfhofiud logan Monumtnt Co.
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I POMEIIOY, OHIO-MEIGS COUNTY

llouo~ .... 1

DISPlAY YUD NEAR
I will10ut obligor~n .
I
POMEIOY ·MASON IIIDGE
I
I
lEO l. YAI!GHAN, MGR.
I Nomo ............. ......- ................................................ 1
PHONE 992-2511
I
I VINTON,Ift!O-GAUIA COUNTY
,.,d "" dooloil• oboUI

1 !u001 " Roulo ........................................................ ,

I

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rhtn• _______........................................................... I
Town ..........................................................

---------------·

DISPlAY YAID
JAMES 0. lUSH
MANAGER
PHONE
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Super Sabre

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Grbson
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port~es

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olher svmfTieftrme
gel·log&amp;lhe!1

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aller mtr's 5.00 rebate

Sale 37.88,Reg

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19.46

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Sale from 44.95.

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1979·86

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With Trade

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From

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• } Tv" . .,. C IIHlr: ·J·,'?L •' \1 ·:&gt;'-()IJI
CDO'Y -&lt;:OOIL.., ~I ee l ~K! I VC~

.-~..., OR

18.95
27.95
31.95
34.95
37.95
42.95
46.95

SuperStar

1

I •-

#7t ·0150
Reg. 5.95

From

from23 .95

Trailer Balls

3.95

5.00 off Superior Wheels

, 'j ·V./Olronr(
G.b:.on \ft y,~'J• l•m•lc.&gt;d Golden

.-----------c.._,,.,.". ---·

"'A·t
Reg. l9.95

Reg 2949 •C P 806J

PINE VALLEY

•

We invite you to look at our selection of granite monuments of distinctive
design and dignity. Memorials are meant to serve as perpetual records of
loved ones who have lived before us. Let us, then- wilh our understnad·
ing and sympathetic methods - help you in the choice of an appropriate
monumenllhat wil Iii your picture lo perfection.

Helmets
Open Face Aeg.24.95
Full Face Reg. 39.95
·and ATV Helmets

Dwell Tach, lf&amp;t2
Compression
Tester,

Oil and Temperature
Gauge

12 95

f oom

Sale prices valid with exchange

lfL100

Reg 26 49. •CP 8062

brass finish trim and drawer
pulls and colorfui floral
decals. Dresser and chest atl
dust proofed with full center
guided drawers.

GAS &amp; ELECTRIC RANGES

Timing Lite,

24 49 . •CP 806t

Water Temperature Gauge~~~~

A rich pine finish In Ashley's

exclusive 21 step deep-Ius lie
accented by denttl moulding,

Everyday Low Price From 9.95
12 volt attermtr's 3.00mail in rebate
Sale from 15.95
2.00 offregutar from 17.95

Equipment

Oil Pressure Gauge
Reg

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

Actron rest

Sun Gauges

REFRIGERA.TORS &amp; RANGES
WASHERS &amp; DRYERS

Batteries
6 volt aller mtr's 2.00 mall in rebate

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh.

For Import or
domestic cars

Reg. l5.95,
,..7575. 1sn

OPEN 7 'DAYS A WEEK
Store hou,. 8:30a.m. 10 8:00p.m. Monday throu~ Friday.
8:30a.m. IX&gt; 6:00p.m. Saturday and 10:00 a.m. tD 5:00p.m. Sunday

�'
Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Plealll'lt. W.Va.

Inside:
By the Bend ............ Page 5

Classllleds ........... Pages 7-8
Cornia!-TV .............. Page 9
Deallti ...................Page 10
Editorial ................. Page 2
Sports ................. Pages 3-4

NAME BRANDS
lASSEn
FLEXSTEEL
RIVDSIDE
KINCAID

BENCHCRAFT
KEMP
SPRINGAIRE
ASHLEY

OYER 100 LIVING ROOM SUITES
·ovER 50 .BEDROOM SUITES
OYER 50 DINING ROOM SUITES
&amp; DINmES
OVER 200 RECLINERS &amp; CHAIRS
OVER 100 OCCASIONAL T
OYER 25 SLEEP SOFAS
UNLIMITED MA
1
&amp;

ENGLAND
CHARISMA
·CORSAIR
HARRIS

DESKS, BOOKCASES, WALL
UNITS, CHESTS, CEDAR
CHESTS, SOFA TABLES,
CREDENZAS, HUTCHES

e
Vo1.36, No.30
Copyrighted 1986

•

at y

en tine
1 Section. 10 Pag01 26 Conu
A Multimedia Inc. Newap1per

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Monday, June 16, 1986

e

•

ltlll

Arson may have been
•
cause; estnnate
costs
$400,000 to $500,000
By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel NeW!I Staff
Arson is believed tot~e• tbe cause of a ftrewhlch ravaged the Meigs1nnknown historically In Pomeroy as Remington House at Ule corner of E.
Main St. and Lynn St. - early Sunday morning with damages set at
between $400,001 and $500,())).
Area firefighters worked like a well-oiled machine as they attacked the
ea rly morning blaze which threatrned the middle block ri the Pomeroy
business section. They were under the direction of Pomeroy Fire Chief
Charles Leg~r who said that the Pomeroy Fire Departmrnt had worked
out a plan which would be followed li the Inn l'\lercaught fire. The plan was
followed Sunday morning and Legar had great praise for the area
fireflg!lters who brought the blaze under control and kept tt contained.
OwD;!rs of the Inn and the public also were high In Ulelr praise of the
firemen' s work since the blaze was r1 such magnitude and buildings along
E. Main St., are all old and probably very susceptible to Ore hazards.

COFFEE TABLES
END TABLES

CLOSE
OUTS

Starting At

$888~

RECLINERS
Starting At

$1 98 88
l VING ROOM SUITES
Starting At

Startindt

$18888
CASH &amp; CARRY

BEDROOM SUITES
Starting At

OCCASIONAL
CHAIRS
Starting At

$9888

SPRING AIR

MATTRESS &amp;
BOXSPRINGS

0°/o INOFF
sns

Summit in
GOr'bac-hev' S
court

FIREFIGHTERS ON SCENE - Firelighters from
several area fire departments were oo hand to batUe
the blaze lhal gutted the Meigs Inn complex on East

Main Street In Pomeroy, Flreflghlen; were on the
scene UDIII 6:30 a.m. Sunday and the stale lire
marshal's office Is Investigating the cause oflhe lire.

$588 88

0°/o OFF
All PICTURES

weiJ.olled machine to attack Sunday momlng'sllre which oilslroyed the
Melp 1rut In downtown Pomeroy.

ON
WHITE OPEN STOCK
BEDROOMS
DISCOUNTINUED STYLES
ON COVERS
AS IS &amp;
ONE OF· A KIND

$2 8888

WATER BEDS

FIRE FIGHTERS FROM 10 ·area departments worlred like a

UPTO

.Empire60~·
OFF
Furniture hat to elaar
- at the laaat - Itt antlra
taoon• floor to •rop the
calling ••• ra•o•al. Yet, 1/3
of E~nplra't thowrooM •••••
olean•• out. So wa'va got the
· prleet to •o Iff

ntl'&gt; SENTINEL PHOTO was takm at the peak of

n.e

•

Sunday momlng's fire which destroyed I he Meigs Inn
In downtown Pomeroy.

WASHINGTON (UP! ) - A new
overture from President Reagan
has left prospects lor another
superpower summit in the hands ri
Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev at
a time of contention and possible
opportunity in U.S.·Soviet relations.
The White House confirmed
during the wwkend that Reagan
sent Gorbachev a lettPr proposing
tha t Secretary or State Georg£"
Shultz and Soviet Fore ign Minister
Eduard Shrvardnadze meet soon,
possibly In Europe, to develop an
agenda lor a summit late this year.
The letter. delivered In Moscow
last week by U.S. Ambassador
Arthur Hartman. wa s described by
administration off!icials as concili·
atory in tone.
When asl«•d about the lettN
Sunday as he ret urned lo the White
HouSE" from the pl1'siden t ial rPtreat
at Camp David, Md., Reagan
refu sed to discuss its content or say
whet her a response had been
rereived.
" We just con·espond." h0 to ld
reporters.
Shultz and Shevardnadl(' wpre
scheduled for a summit planning
session In Washlngton last month.
but the Soviets canceled til2 session
In r esponse to the U.S. bombing
attack oo Ubya in April.
~agan' s letter coincided with a
sw irl of confusion and con troversy
over his renunciation of the SALT 2
arms lirnitat ion treaty and a new
Soviet offer at the Geneva arms
talks on reductions in long· range
nuclear missiles.
The Soviets, denounc ing any plan
by the United States to exceed
SALT 2 Umits, suggested tension
over that issue could rndanger
plans fort he second summit agreed
upon by Reagan and Gorbachev at
their first I'Tl£'('1lng in Geneva last
November.
(Continued on page 101

Pomeroy Sunday morning to help
with the investigation of the fire
which had seriously threatened the
middle business block. He gathered
up materials from Inside the
structure for testing and, Chief
Legar said, Indicated that ai'Sln Is
suspected. The New York Clothing
Housee which Is on the ground ll'llel
as a part of the Inn complex had
extensive water damage as the
water put onto the fire at the lop
II'Vels of the building ran down Into
the store. Kemnlt Walton, manager
of the store which Is owned by
Thomas Oothiers of Gallipolis, and
Bill Otilds, president of the Meigs
Investment Corporation, which
owns the Inn complex, entered the
clot hing store about 12: I5 a.m.
There was heavy smoke inside the
store, however, and they were
unable to remove any thing except a
few business papers, from the
establishment. The New York
Clothing House had been Joca ted oo
the ground level of the ~mlngton
House (or Meigs Inn) since about
1897. Walton said that It is unknown
at this time what the store wlll do.
However, H the business continues
It wUI have to be relocated at least
untU the complex Is studied and
recommendations are made on
what can be done about redoing
parts of the structure. Insurance
adjusters for the clothing store
were expected to be In Pomeroy
Monday to examine the situation.
Walton said that the tremendous
amount of water pouring Into the
store from overhead was strong
enough to sweep gamnents of! of
coat hangers.
Bill Childs, president of the
Investment corporation, reported
that the corporation's board of
directors had spent $35,00l In
having plans drawn for the com·
plete renovation r1 the Inn and that
directors were this week expecting
to receive word that their appllca·
lion lor a block grant lor about
mJ.OOJ had been approved. The
board had planned to Invest some
$1.5 million in the revamping oft he
Inn. Now the plans are no longer or
any use and the hoard will have to
ca ll In an architect to determine
what can be done with the structure
and Its accessory buildings which
Include not only the N('W York
Clothing HOUS(' but the pizza facility
and another ground floor building
which housed City Loan.
The third floor of thr Inn was
demolished by Sunday moming's
fire. Otllds said, but the second
floor looks as though it might be
sa lvaged . An architect will be
called In to stud;· the safety of the
structure and to make recommen·
dations on what can be done to the
rema ins of the building if it is found
ContinuC'd on page 10

History of Meigs Inn: It all began in ·1847
(Editor's Note) Following Is the
history of the Remington House bt
Pomeroy, today !mown as the
Meigs lim, as prepared by Bob
'I1twl, Pomeroy, a great·great·
granc1son of the hotel's founders.
hotel in the heart!#. Pomeroy's
business section was raveged by
fire early Sunday momlng.

FURN-1TURE C0

Tying in with the flre were
several telephone calls, by a male,
to the Pomeroy Village Hall
dispatchers - Ellen Rought and
Kelly Snyder. The first of the
several calls reached the vlllage
hall at 11:31. The caller spoke r1 a
telescope on the second floor of a
building next to the Uberty Restau·
rant and threatened that It was
going to be shot out. The caller also
spoke of a bomb In a car on the
parking lot and there was also a
threat on the llfe of Pollee Chief
Jerry Rought. according toreporis.
After a couple of calls, no further
word was heard from the caller
untllabout2:30a.m. whenheaga!n
phoned and said, "I told you there
would be some excitement, you
..... ". By the time firemen were wel l
into fighting the blaze at the Inn.
Fire Chief Legar said the lire
started at the stairway between the
second and third floors or the Inn
near the loca tion of two large
windows on the Lynn St. side or the
building. And It was In this spot that
observers lire saw the lire. Pome·
roy received a ca ll to the scene at
11: 59 p.m. Saturday and the call
had come from Terry Gardner who
was working w1th the Pomeroy
Pollee Department. Leear said.
When Pomeroy fi remen arrived
at the Inn, men went Inside the
structure in an attempt to light the
fire. However, Chief Legar said the
blaze had gotten too big or a start
and they had to back off and l ight
the !Ire from outside the building.
There was equipment on the scene
In no time !rom Middleport, Mason,
Ga llipolis and Sy racuse plus man·
power from the lire department s of
Racine, Rutland , Orange Town ship, Coolville and Ravenswood,
Chief Legar reported . 0 1 unquestionable value to the efforts r1
firemen were the ladder trucks one from Gallipolis, used at the
front of the bu ild ing, and the Meigs
County vehicle, used at the rear of
the structure .
IJ'he nearby Ohio River provided
a great supply or water and good
pressure came from the lire
hydrants, firemen said. Four pieces
of equipment were able to pour
3,())) gallons or water a minute Into
the bu ilding while smaller hose
made it possible to put an additional
200 gallons of wat er onto the lire and
still even smaller hoSI' allowed an
additional 125 gallons each mlnut0
lor fighting the lire. Most of the
equipment was removed from the
scene by 6:30 a. m. which meant
that firefighters had put In a long.
hard night and that thousands upon
thousands or gallons of water had
been used to contain the blaze to the
Inn complex .
Frank EiSI'naugle of thP State
Fire Marshal's O!llce was In

Hls!Alry of the
Remington House
It Is not possible to rela te the

history of the Remington House
(dba Meigs Inn) without teillng
some d. the story of the WUUam H.
~mlngton family, who first developed the site, beginning In 1847.
Wllllam Holdredge Remington
was hom April 15,1810 at Warwick ,
Rhode Island. His parents, William
and Martha, were residents of Kent
County, Rhode Island. 'I'wo other
sons were born to this union,
Edward and Henry .
E~lsabeth Palmer Randall, the

wile of William H. Remington. was
born April 6. 1819 at Pawtucket.
Rhode Island. Her parents were
Job and Ann Cella Randa ll.
members of a well·known mer·
chant. shipping family,
W.H, Remington and his wife
were married on November 3, lB.%
in Cranston by the Rev. Abla I
Fisher. In 1838 they moved to
Athens, Ohio where Mr. Remington
established himesH In business. His
business Interests carried him to

Cuba where he remai ned for three
or four years.
Came Here In 1843
The ~mington family came to
Pomeroy In 1843, and set up a dry
goods and grocery store near the
Dour mlll at the upper end of town.
At that time, almost all of the town 's
business and residential areas were
located In the Kerr's Run vicinity.
In the spring of 1847 the Remlng·
ton store was moved to the comer or
Lynn and Front Streets, where It

has remained !'Ver si nce.
The Remington store In those
days was a three-slOt)' frame
pain ted to imitate brick. An 18Sl
advertisement placed in the Meigs
County Telegraph listed the followIng Items for sale at Remington' s
store: "Dry Goods, Groceries.
Hardware. Iron Ware, Stone Ware.
Queens Ware, Hats, Caps. Boots,
Shoes, Window Glass. Looking
Glasses, Clocks, Watches, Iron,
Nalls, Steel, Leather. Manila

Ropes, Oils, Fish. Provisions, Cot·
ton Yarns, Carpet Yarns, Carpets,
Mill Saws, V.'hite Lime, Plaster
Paris, MolasSE's and Sugar direct
from New Orleans, by the hoghead,
barrel. half·barrel. or retail."
The Remington store was a
casualty of the 1856 lire which
struck downtown Pomeroy . How·
ever, by August of 1857 W.H.
~mlngton was advertising a hotel
lor rent by October 1st, calling It
Continued on page 6

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