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Pomeroy

Page 1 0 The Daily Sentinel

Friday, July 19. 1986

•

Middleport, Ohio

---Local briefs:----.Dole feels Reagan's help on budget 'ess~ntial'
WIc pickup card announced

I

WASHINGTON (UP!) - 'Senate
Republican leader Robert Dole
predlded today COngress wiD come

"We did a lot of things we didn 't
want to do," Dole sald of Republl·
cans' attempt to map out an
acceptable budget. "The White
House may have to do some things
they doo't want to do. This is tough
business. It's not easy business. We
want to work with thep~ident. We
know we can't do It without Ronald
Reagan. We could probai!IY dO It
without Don Regah.

Dole was referring to comments
made by ~an at d breakfast
meeting of the U.S. Chamber of
Commerce. Regan, In a podium·
j)oundlngappearance, shouted, "No
budget has been passed by tbe
Congress."
"They're afraid to come to grips
with that, and I challenge them to do
It, " he S&lt;!id.
.
Dole said the Senate was looking ·

'The schedule lor the pickup of coupons for participants In the WIC
program at the Meigs County Health Department In August iS
announced. It iS: those with last names starting with the letters A
through G, Thursday, Aug. 1; those with the letters H through P,
Friday. Aug. 2. and those witb letters Q through Z, Monday, Aug. 5.
Pickup hours on a ll three days are 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m.
Thilse who cannot make their appointment day can pickup coupons
from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. and 1 to 3 p.m . on Aug. 12, and Aug. 29. Those
picking up coupons are to take their ID folers to the department.

budgetdeticitwithouttlnkerlngwith
Social Security, but said President
Reagan's help 1s essential.
Dole, appearing on ABC's "Good
Morning America " program, said
lawmakers probal)ly wtU meet with
Reagan next · week after · he is

Meigs EMS .crews fws 11 calLs

~~~= tt;~~etth:~,:~:: to·;;::~~:!~~~~~:~:~ ~~~~~:~s::~:'~~:::~~;;

upwith"some~ldea"totrlmthe

chief of staff Donald Regan and
national security adviser Robert
McFarlane.
Speakes said Reagan's road to,
recovel)' is "unimpeded" and Is
going "extremely well" .
In mid-afternOOn, the president
and his wife Nancy appeared at
separate windows of the hospital
and waved to photpgraphers. The
president stuck his head out tbe
• window, gave the "OK" sign and
lndicatedhefelttlne.Askedwhenhe
would return home, Mrs. Reagan
replied, "As soon as-we can."
It was the first time Reagan
appeared publicly since the opera·
lion, although the White House has
released photographs of him In his
hospital room.
A medical report Thursday said
that he ' read news magazmes,
tended to routine paperwork and •
read many ofthegetweUcards. HiS
suite was filled with flowers from
weD-wiShers.
Reagan moved from Intravenous
feeding and a liquid diet to solid food
tor the first ttme In a week with a
meal of soup. bread, crackers and
pudding.
For dinner, Reagan ate baked
chicken and rice, lndicatingareturn
of bowel functions after the removal
of the cancerous growth and 2 feet of

In Meigs County Common Pleas Court, Judge Lyle W. Castle has
awarded a $IDl.!XXl civil penalty to the State of 0\lio, as requested l!y
Anthony J . Celebreeze, Jr., Attorney General, from Stanley 0. Hunt
and Larry Hunt, ln careofDarkDiamondCoaiCorp. , Pomeroy; Dark
Diamond Coal Corp., In care of Donald H. Eacret, Esq., Columbus;
and Abundant Life Coal Corp., In care of Patrick H. O'Brien, Esq.,
Pomeroy.
The sum shall be paid to the Office of the Attorney General for
placement into the state treaSUI)'.
In other court matters, Judge Charles Knight has awarded
Equitable Federal Savings and Loan, Alliance. a judgment of
$11,213.85 from Steven L. and Penny E. Cremeans, Tilppers Plains,
tor money due and owing on a contract for a motor vehicle. .

. '

Hysell bond to be set today
Bond for Tracy Franklin Hysell, charged with murder In Meigs
County in connection with the death of Douglas A. Rc,&gt;senbaum, Is to
be set Friday afternoon In Meigs County Court by Judge Patrick
O'Brien.
Donna Boyd, County Court clerk,' said the bond hearing is
,tenatively scheduled for 1 p.m. as requested by Paul Gerard,
investigator for Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow.
Hysell has been In custody at the Meigs County Jail without bond
since his arrest Tilesday by Meigs County authorities .

Ohio weather

By United Press International
Mostly sunny today, with highs
between 85 and 90. Partly cloudy
·Lucy Rood and Martha Buchanan, tonight. with a low between 65 and
both of Hocklngpon; and several 70. Partly cloudy and , humid
nieces and nephews .
Saturday, with a chance of sbowers
In addition to his parents, he was and thunderstorms.and highs In the
preceded in death by three brothers upper8ls.
and five sisters.
Theprohablllty of precipitation iS
Services will be 1 p.m. ~unday at 10 percent today, W percent tonight
Eden United Brethren Church with and 30 percent Saturday.
. · .
Rev. Carl Gillilan and Rev. Roy
Winds will be from the southwest
Deeter both officiating. Burial wlll at 10m ph or less today and light and ·
be ln Eden Cemetery. Friends may . variable tonight.
can at White Funeral Home In
Ohio Extended Forecast - Sun·
Coolvllle from 2·4 p.m. and 7·9 p.m. day through Tilesday: A chance of
Saturday.
showers and thunderstorms Sunday, with fair weather Monday and
Tilesday. Highs will range from the
Marriage licenses
mld70stothemid8lseachday,with

Area deaths
Carl F. Logan, 66, of Anniston.
Ala., a native of Pomeroy, died
Wednesday at Noble Army Hospital
In Fort McClellan, Ala.
. Born Aug. 29,191Jlin Pomeroy, he
was a son oft he late William F . and
Helen Hamm Logan.
A retired security guard at.
Anniston Army Depot after lOyears
of service, he was a U.S. Army
veteran of World War II and a U.S.
Air Force veteran of the Berlin
CriSiS with 30years total actlveduty.
He attended McMoy United Metho·
dist Church in Anniston.
SuiVivors include his wife, Helen
Wade Logan, Anniston: a daughter,
Sheryl L. Cotton, Anniston; a
brother. Howard P. Logan, Pome·
roy; a granddaughter, Pam Con on,
Anniston: and several nieces and
nephews.
Services will be lla.m. Saturday
atChape! HiliFuneraiHomeChapel
In Anniston with Drs. Brantley
Motes and Ray Shubert officiating.
Burial will be in Anniston Memorial
Gardens.

EmestRood
Ernest (ErnieJ Rood, 3), of
Reedsville, died Thursday evening
at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
A farmer all his lite, Mr. Rood was
born in Reedsville, a son of David H.
and Sara Trippett Rood. He was a
member of Eden United Brethren
Church.
Survivors Include two sisters,

A marriage license has been
issued In ~ elgs County Probate
Court to Herman Lee Shane, 26,
Racine, and PatriciaAnn Boyles, 25,
Middleport .

Lotery winners
CLEVELAND (UPJ) :_: ThUrs·
day's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers: Daily Number

m.

Ticket sales totaled $1,114,969,
with a payoff dueof$518,856. PICK-4

38XJ.

•

PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$174,159, with a payoff due of$78, 7f!l.
PICK-4$1 straight bet pays$8, 700.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays $725.

upper ."lls tolows
the upper
60s.from the
overnight
ranging

The U.S. is offering a rewanl for infmmation on
ten'Orist activity - Page A·2 .

Veterans memorial
Admissions Carol Diddle,
Pomeroy; Claire Dorst , Shade;
Paul Michael, Pomeroy; Mabel
Miller, Pomeroy; Mae Brewer,
Racine; William Richmond, Mid·
dleport;
Florence Nelson,
Pomeroy.
· Discharges - Amy Metzger,
Rhonda Jewell, Betty Monson,
Carrie Easier. Carol Diddle, Bea·
trice Blake.

Divorce actions have been filed in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
by Darla J. Hawley , Pomeroy,
against Randall Gene Hawley,
Middleport, charging gross neglect
of duty; and Sandra Brown, Racine,
against Gerald Brown', Mason,
charging gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.

y.,,

Pomeroy

f~$1~0~1,~!m~.84~-;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

See To Believe
One Owner Used /Cars

Middleport, OH.

PHONE: 992·7711

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK

1984 BUICK CENTURY

1983 OLDSMOBILE

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door locks, wire wheel-eovers. Very clean!

2 door, V-8 motor, air, AM/FM stereo. tilt
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4 door Limited. 2.5 litre molor, auto.; air,

Hutk-Finn Self-Contained Camper .. ;.... $795

Stove. sink, ice bo!, sleeps B.

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1983 DODGE PICKUP TRUCK ................ 5599 5

6 cyl., 3 speed plus overdrive, P.S., P.B.

1980 DODGE PICKUP ............................ '399 S

6 cyl. auto., P.S., P.B., A.C.

1980 CUTLASS SUPREME ...............:....... 5549 S
1981 OLDS. CUTLASS ••;.......................;. '469 5

T-Top, v-6, auto.

1979' PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ••••••••••••••••• S2995
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1978 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX ................ S229S
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·

198l RENAULT LeCAR ...........................$1495
1978 FORD MUSTANG COBRA ..............$1695
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1972 CHEVROLET CHEVELLE.................... S695
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1982 BUICK SKYLARK ........................... S389S

4 door 4

. air cond

)

·-

..

.

wife. The grand jury session began Wednesday
morning and continued untO Friday morning.
HyseU was arrested on themurdercharge'I'uesday
noon by the Meigs County Sheriffs Department. He
was held without bond In the Meigs County Jail until
Friday afternoon when a bond of $50,00&gt; was set In
Meigs County Cqurt by Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Carson Crow, assi~tant Meigs County prosecutlng
attorney, had requested a bond of $200,00l. Of the
$50,00l bond set, the court requires 10 percent of that
amount In cash, or the full amount In property value
before Hysell can be released from custody at the
Meigs County Jail. Hysell had not posted bond as of
Saturday morning.

1 1 Section1. 72 Pag•• 50 Cenu
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

.

According to Judge O'Brien, the charge against
HyseU carries with It a maximum P.,nalty of15 years
to life Imprisonment and a possible fine of $15,!1Xl.
Hysell, who appeared In court without his attorney,
William Conley, Gallipolis, was advised of his tights
l!y the judge.
A charge of aggravated assault pending against
Hysell in the same case was dismissed in county court
as requested by Crow.
The grand JulY .Indictment will .cancel a
prelirillnary hearing ln county court, Gerard said.
Hysell wlll now go before Judge Charles Knight in
Meigs County Common Pleas Court where Gerard
expects he will be arraigned on the aggravated
murder charge either Monday or Tilesday morning.

Also Indicted by the Meigs County Grand Jury was
Thomas C. Porter, Sr.. 45, of Middleport. The grand ·
jury returned an Indictment against Porter for
aggravated assault In connection with the alleged
July 3 stabbing of Matthew Dillard, '!:/, also of
Middleport.
The Indictment charges DUllard was stabbed In the
stomach by Porter during a fight outside a Middleport
bar.
.
• Porter Is free on a $1.1XXl bond from Meigs County ·
Court. Porter, represented by attorney. Jennifer
Sheets, Pomeroy, llj sheduled to appear 9:30a.m.,
Tilesday morning, in Meigs County Common Pleas
Court for arraignmen~ before Judge Knight.

"

Union, utility
schedule talks
for Tuesday
COLUMBUS IUPI)- Represen·
t.atlves of the International Brother· ·
hood of Electrical Workers and the
Columbus and Southern Ohio Elect·
ric Co. will gel together Tuesday for
their first round of talks since the ·
union went on strike Monday.
Neither side Is vel)' optimistic
ahout .the success of the talks
arranged by a federal mediator.
"You've got to start somewhere,"
said Harold. Miller, president of
Local141i6 of the IBEW. "We're not
CM!riy opUmlaUc. We wllliiO lhel'e

By NANcY YOACHAM
TlmerSentlnel Staff
POMEROY- A dog's life Is a
dl)g'Sllfe, butahomelessdog'sllfein
Meigs County is getting better
thanks to Improved facUlties and
changes In attitndes
The Meigs County Dog Pound,
located on the Meigs County
fairgrounds, has for years been the
subject of criticism. Recently the
facilltycameu'*r!lrewhenactsof
cannlbBllsm wer;erepqrted t:Jotcause
small pupe ~ caged lh the same
ruM'WtthlarJ!et, more vicious dogs.
The Metp Counjy Humane Society
and loctl resJ4ents brought the
matter before the Meigs County
Boar!J or C01l1111\SSloners, and since

that time, Improvements have "many people have felt II was better
slowly, but steadUy, been made.
to drop Rover oft down the road and
'The most viSible Improvements at hope he finds hiS way to Rainbow
the facUlty include freshpalntanda Ridge where he can live happlty
new sign changing the na:me of the ever after." McKinney points out
facility to the Meigs County J;)og tbat homes just can't be found tor
Shelter. Bill McKinney, Humane every unwanted dog.
Society officer and .acting dog
Improvements alsb Include a
warden, hopes the namechangewill scheduling of daily hours when dogs
help change attitudes about the may be dropped off or picked up
facility and renew contldence In whlle the dog warden iS on duty at
Meigs' residents that unwanted the facility. Cleaning and.:tislnfect·
dogs and strays wUI'be ll&lt;&gt;med, fed
lng procedures at the facility have
and cared f&lt;rtherelnanacceptable,
been beefed up and MtMrmey Is
humane manner.
now drivida;. jill ·ai!!t;'.l' tr.uck,
"For too long," said McKinney,
purchased frtm Ross County by the
· "residents have looked upon this _Meigs County Conunlssloners at a
,facWty as a place of SUffering for the coot of$1400.
anlmals." BecaUBeofthls,headded,
The 1978 GMC is equipped with a
fiberglass topper with six air·
conditioned compartments In which
to haul dogs. 'The topper can be
removed and placed on another
truck body If needed. The cab of tbe
truck Is not air-conditioned.
Also, McKinney says, the Meigs
County fairboard has given per!l)is·
slon for the Installation of a 10ft. by
30ft. building In front oftheshelterto
be used as office and storage space
and as a place to euthanlze
unwanted animals. Plans are to
enclose the side walls of the facility
and leave a 4ft, walkwaywlth a door
between the shelter and the
building.
This walkway would be used for
viewing dogs and McKinney is
optimistic that that these changes
will "put an end to vandalism" at tbe
facility. McKinney is hopeful that
ITS A DOG'S LIFE -Even lhoulh coodltloll8 at the Melp County
Installation of the building and
Dog Pound are bnprovlng, llle exPreesion on the lace of tNs sad-eyed,
subsequent Improvements will take
Ooppy~ared Bassetl stUl gives the bnpreoslon that H's a dog's Ufe.
(Continued on page A3)

..
1982 DATSUN

Auto., power windows, power door locks,
cruise, AM/FM cassette. This car shows
excellent care with 22.390 actual miles.
SAVE!

$11

By The Tlm~-Sentlnel Staff
• ' GALLIPOLIS - The Tobacco Refom'l Act of 19!5,
· which has been Introduced in the U.S. Senate, If
adopted, wiD bind growers and tobacco companies
· together as working partners with the manufadur·
ers, according to Larry Forgey, counsel to the Burley
Tobacco Growers Cooperative Association. The act,
he Said, will force both sides to accept some of the
·nnanciaf burdens of the tobacco program;
· · The federal tobacco support program, Forgey said,
is in "l*'rious danger" of either being legislated out of
-existence or of becoming so burdensome to farmers
that they wUJ be forced to vote It out ln a statutol)'
'referendum.
"'The tobacco program is troubled by Immense

Inventories of unsold tobacco, a 'no net cost'
assessment level which can become ruinous to
farmers, a pricing structure which excludes
American tobacco from world markets and has
created a sudden Influx of Imports," Forgey said.
When the 1983 burley tobacco market closed ,
Forgey said the farmer-held pool contained almoot
390 million pounds of unsold tobacco, worth almost
$800 million, Farmers were paying nine cents per
pound of tobacco sold for the "no net cost" obligations
of the pool aqd the 1934 crop added another 210 million
pounds of burley to the pool.
Currently, he said tbe total burley debt owed by the
farmer 's pool to the U.S. Commodity Credit
Corporation is over $1.5 billion, and the "no net cost"

Dole warns against
·'passion' of ~udget

350 V-8, air cond.

2 door, loaded.

. --PageA-3-

Weattaer·............................ A-3

and tneet."

.

'

C&amp;SOE spokesman Marshall Ju·
lien says the oompanydoesn't know

•'

"' .

..

-.
•· .
•'·

ADOPriON -Thursday oftemoon, from !be briefcase oo !be hood of
hts traveUng olllee, Bill McKinney, left, Meigs County's acting dog
ww:den, ftlls out the necessary fonns allowing Rhonda Smllh and Rick
MCKnlghl,bothofPomeroy,loadoptapuppyfromlheMelgsCountyDog
Pound. Dogs may be pleked up or deposited dally at the facwty between
the hours of 9-IOa.m. and 4-5 p.m.

wbat to expect.
"We've been asked to be there, so
we'll be there," he said."There
really isn'tanythlngelsewecan say
except that."
A few Incidences of vandaUsm
were reported Friday that left about
2.11Xl customers on the west side of
columbus and about 3,!1XJ customers · around WeUston witbout
power tor a while.
A conveyor belt carrying coal 'to
the u!Uity's ConesviUe generating
plant was cut and diSabled, but the
plant will continue to operate on
existing supplies of coal.
Tires on a sheriff's cruiser were
punctured when sheriffs deputies
arrived lor an Investigation;
Several acts of vandalism and
violence have been reported at
Conesville and the company has
offered a$25,!1Xlreward for lnforina·
lion leading to the arrest and
conviction of the culprits.
Some 1,440 workers struck the ·
company that has47ll,IXXlcustomers
In central and southern Ohio.

Tobacco reform act seeks to unite growers, manufacturers

- T&amp;G AUTO SALES
605 General Hartinger Pkwy.

.................... ~Insert

'It's ·a dog's life'
but it's
:g etting better.in Meigs County

~ds • Bird Seods . Oyster 'Shells. · Grit · Fertiliurs · Li~o '
Cement and M'artar • Stock !olt - Water Softener · Remod!os
Salt . litters • Va«inr • Roofing · Paints · Red Brand fonctng
later and Binder Twine • Sprays -Gates · Hay • Straw
"125
~~ Butinm"

992·2119

'

'

•

SUGAR RUN MILLS

.

By Tllfi ~I Staff
POMEROY - Tracy Franklin HyseU, 21, of
SyraCUse, has been Indicted tiy aMelgsCountyGrand
Jury on a charge o! aggravated murder In connecUon
with the death o! 26-year-old Douglas A. Rosenbaum,
from near Rutland.
Rosenbaum died Monday afternoon at Grant
Hospital In Columbus 'f rom head injuries sustained In
the early morning hours of Sunday, July 1, when
Hysell allegedly struck him In the )lead with a ball bat.
According to Paul Gerard, Investigator' for Meigs
County Prosecuting Attorney Rick Crow, the grand
jury returned the Indictment about 5:30p.m., Friday
evening, after l\!!arlni! two days of testimony from
approximately 30 witnesses - lncl!lding the victim's

The Meigs County Pioneer and
Historical Society will host the July
meeting of the Southern Central
Oblo Preservation Society at 'the
Meigs County Museum at 2 p.m.
Sunday. The public Is invited.

Mulberry A_ve.

Tak~

Hysell indicted on aggravated murder charge

Host july session

The 19!5 diStribution of license tax
revenues for June In Ohio, totaled
$2.';,478,01Jl.29, Regisirar Michael J.
McCullion reports and Is ready for
disbursement to local governments.
Meigs County will receive

l&gt;eatb&amp; .. ........................... A-7
Editorials ..•..•.................·.. A-4

Showers in
Sunday forecast

•

'

The 51st wedding anniversary of
Don and Wilma Eynon will be
celebrated with an open house from
_2 to 4 p.m. Sunday at their home on
Silver Ridge·. The event wlll be
hosted by their son and daughter-In·
Jaw, James and Ruby Eynon.
Friends and family are invited.

Funds distributed

Along !be River ............... B-1·8
llu!ilness ........................... A-6

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant Sunday, July 21, 1985

SEED AND MILLING
HEADQUARTERS

Ceremony Sunday

wea1ther:

Inside:

tmts

can from his brother, J. Nell
Intestine.
Speakes, who earlier clamped a Reagan, who had just learned he
news btacl!out on specific details of had colon cancer.
the president's condition and doc· . Dr. Walter Karney, a member of
tors' advice In the past, answered the earlier medical team at Be-thesda, told The New York Times
some ofthe questions Thursday.
Speakes told reporters the pres!· the colonosoopy bad been "strongly
dent'sdoctorsdldnotrecommenda urged" aHer the March
thorough intestinal examination in examination.
May 1984 after the discovefY of a
benign polyp In his colon.
Some medical experts have
suggested discovery of that polyp ·
should have prompted a fuU
conoloscopy, which In turn would
have diSclosed the larger growthpossibly at an earlier. l!!SS danger·
ous stageofcancer.
The colonoscopy conducted last
'w eek was recommended as "good,
aggressive medicine" after discov·
eryofasecondpolypthlsMarchbut
not "with any urgency," Speakes
said.
The Washington Post reported
today thai Reagan flnaDydeclded to
undergo the exam thattumedupthe
cancerous growth after receiving a

Hospital news

Divorce actions filed

Study...
.Continued fmm page 1
"The Administration's position on
acid rain control has been to do more
research before we Invest millions
in an acid rain control effort, "
Mitchell said.
.
"But the more we study It, the
more apparent it becomes that acid
rain is already exacting · a
multimillion-dollar cost - except
that the cost is being pai\1 exclu·
slvely by those who bear the effects,
not by, those who cause Jhe
problem," he added.
Mitchell has again this session
introduced his acid rain control bill,
which has been endorsed by the
Senate Environment Committee.

-PageB-1

Bob Hoeflich discusses taxi service in Meigs
County - Page B-8

President's... _______....:eo::::.:nlln::::u:z:l!d:.:.tro:.:m:::.!::pa~ge~1'-------

Judge rules in favor of state

Carll.ogan

Sculpting for
collectors

D-1

this back on the track. Wedon'twant
less than 5().50 Congress will pass a
to quarrei&gt;V!th thE, White House. We budget by the start of the Congress
don't think they ought to quarrel . recess Aug. 3.
with Congress. 1bat'snot the way to
"We're going to come up to some ~~~ fliA.G~~~is;~iSuiit-'
get this done."
new Idea," Dole said. "We don't

cancer surgel)'. He said Reagan
may hold ,the key to settUng ~
deadlock over a new budget but
hinted that chief of sWf Donald
Regan may be part of the problem.

· Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports 11 calls
·Thursday; Middleport at 12:42 a.m. to Mill St ·for Sherry Freema~to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland atl: 25 a.m. to Meigs Mlne 0 ·
2 for Randy Faulk to Veterans Memorial Hoopital; Racine at 9a.m. to
Portland for Pearl Rayburn to ~leasant Valley Hoopital; Middleport
at 10:13 a.m. to North Second ·Ave. for Mae Brewer to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 12: :r7 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care
Center for Mabel MiUer to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at
12:44 p.m . to E;_astMaln St. for Virginia McCiungwbo was treated but
not transported; Rutland at 2: 35 p.m. to WeDs Rd. for Howard
Richman to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:00 p.m. to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for Florence Nelson to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Tilppers Plains at 6:03 p.m. to Reedsville for
Ernie Rood to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 7: ill P·m·
transported Gal)' Lee Cooper from a bicycle accident on Rt: 124 to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 7: 56 p.m. to the ba!U park
for Daniel Nease to Veterans Memorial Hoopital.

know what It lsyet. We'relooklngf~r
tbat new Idea, something no ones
talked about and put on the table."
ButDolelnslstedthenewpackage
will not Include a tax Increase nor
revisions of the Social Security cost
of llvlngralses.

1984 PONTIAC
GRAND PRIX LE

Small V-8 1!1Dtor, AM/FM cassette, tilt ·
steering, cruise. Mileage on this extra
sharp car is only 14,600.

Jlmmg Dum, Ed IUtts/1 ot· J. D. St01g

SMITH -NELSON MOTORS
PH. 992-217 4

assessment, set at .30 cents a pound for 1985, "Is
expected to go out of slght' ' without some change in
the program , he said. Additionally, Forgey added, a
third consecutive 10 percent cut In the annual burley
production quota has been announced for this year.
In the legislation before the Senate, Forgey said
that in a return for a roll back .in support prices for
burley from $1.78 to$1.45, the companies are agreeing
to support legislation that would require them to split
In half all future no net cost assessments. The
legislation also calls for manufacturers to buy out
existing pool stocks of both burley and flue--cured
tobacCo, therel!y eliminating the 30 cent per pond
assessment for 19!5 anc;l future years.
Quotas for tbe future are to be based on the

manufacturer's projecied usage plus the average of
imports over the preceedlng three years, Forgey
added. A monetary penalty will be assessed to
companies which do not purchaSe their projections.
"The bill's safeguards," Forgey said, "to keep the
no net cost assessment at reasonable levels, together
with the market-orientation of the pian, shnuldenable
our legislators to argue effectively that tobacco is
going to a free rriarket system somewhat slmUar to
that being Imposed by Congress on other
commodities.
Forgey said the legislation sl)ould be passed
because "It it does not work, the law can be amended
later. But if the program dies, that Is final . A corpse
cannot be healed."

Reagan oit his .release from
naval hospital: _'I feel great'

"Obviously, we h&lt;!ve .some re. WASHINGTON (UPI) - Senate
sponslbillty (to get a bJdget) ,"Dole
Repul!llcan leader Robert Dole,
said. ''We can't let passion overtake
contending this is not a time to let
our responsibility." '
"passion overtake our responslbll·
Dole was refeirlng to heated
ity," saldFrldaylheSenatewiUseek
comments made on aU sides this
President Reagan's help In drawing
up a new plan to trim the budget .week, Including Regan's fist·
poull!llng ~peech Thursday against
deficit.
.
'
'
Congress
for not having the intesti·
But Senate Budfjet Convnlttee
srun:es sald the new outline would nal fortitude to cut spending.
TIIUMI18 UP - Pa I ' ai
Senators responded Thursday
probably 1101 dlll!a- vastly from
Respn ...... _.w,'
with equally vociferous remarks.
previouS orrera, an of wlllch have
a ·~ up" lip before
"We did a lot of things WI' didn't
been rejected by Houae neaottators.
ckpw 1 IWI • Naval H.,.
want to do," Dole said of Republl· ' pllal .......,. fte=pe left lhe
The Houae-Senate budget talks
cans' attempt to map out an
have been at a virtual stalemate for
1•1 1 hi week to lhe t!ay
abwl llx weeks and recessed acceptable budget. "The White . after 1111 lill'pl)', .......
House may have to do some things
W""-'ay In acrtmonlous dis·
1D1 very hoane, Ill&amp; lia)'IDI "I
they don't want to do."
&amp;gJeement over a House proposal.
feel p-eat." (UPI).

••wllh

II

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Presi·
dent Reagan left Bethesda Naval
Hospital Saturday one week to the
day after his cancer surgery ,
sounding vel)' hoarse but saying "I
feel great."
Reagan walked with his wife
Nancy outside tbe hospital, where a
Navy band played "Anchors
Aweigh" and hundreds of Navy
officers and sallors cheered their
coounander·in-chief as the pres!·
dential limousine puUed away to a ·
walling helicopter for the shon trip
back to the White House.
The president wore an open-coDar ,
checkered shirt. blue slacks and was
given a Jblue and gold Navy cap,

which he wore.
Earlier, he said In hiS weekly
radio address that he was "eager to
get back to work. "
In his flvemlnute speech dell·
vered from what he caUed "a little
makeshift studio" oft his suite at
Bethesda Naval Hospital, Reagan
told Americans "It's llllportant to
have a checkup If you think
something iSn't right."
He said they should pick up · the
telephone, make a call and say "Dr.
Reagan sent you."
Before departing tbe hoopltal, the
president had breakfast, reviewed
his radio speech and did some
paperwork, aides reported.

Reagan also directed that the
flowers In the presidential suite be
distributed to "other patJents in the
cancer ward ," they said.
. "I'm feeling great , but I'm getting
a little restless," he said. "I just ~an't
walt to get out ... I'm eager to get
back to work.
Reagan took severa Icracks at the
inability of CongreS$ to reach a
compromise on a 1!1!6 budget and
also made joking references to his
surgel)' last Saturday in which a
canoerous tumor was removed
from his Intestines.
lie said the House version of the
budget was iU, adding "I hopeltgets
(Continued on page A3)

.,

'

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plee18nt, W. Va.

Page-A-2- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21, 1985

July21,19H.

U.S. offers reward .for terrorist
infonnation
.
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
UnltE'd States Friday began usltlg a
new weapon against terrorism large cash rewards for people who
provide confidential Inform a lion
leading to the arrest and conviction
of terrorists.
The State Department announcE'!!
that up to SlOO,&lt;XXl wW be given for

Information leading to the prosecution and punishment of the gunmen
responsible for tbe k!Ulng of four
U.S. Marines and two American
clvUians in an outdoor restaurant In
San Salvador, El Salvador, on June
19.
.
The secretary of state Is authorlred to give up to$500,&lt;XXlln rewards

under an anti-terrorism law passE'd
by Congress in 1!1!4. The reward
announcE'!! Friday was the first
offered under the law, although
officials have considered offering a
reward for conviction or the
hl]a.c kers who k111E'd Robert Ste-them , a pasSenger aboard 'IWA
Olght 847.

The Stal\ Depariment said
Although lett-wing guerrUia
.
anyone
with tntormation about the
groups justliiE'd the k1lllng of the
killers
should
notify authoritlestnEI
Americans In El Salvador as an act
Salvador.
Anyone
In the UnttE'd
of war In a combat zone, no specltlc
States
with
Information
was asked
group was singled out as being
to
notify
the
Omce
of
Security
of
responsible for the kUling. The
gunmen. were dressE'd in Salvado- State Department In Washington. In
·ran mUttary uniforms and carttE'd any other countzy, the U.S. embassy
. should be contacted.
automatic weawns.

NOW ACCEPTING

NATIONAL WEATHER .SERVICE FORECAST to'7 ~M EST 7-21-85

The State Department sald the
Information wW be handled con11-

dentlaUy and the Identities ~
Informants wUl be protected . U.S.
government employees are not
eUgible for the reward If !heyfurnish
Information they recetvE'd while
~rformlng their official duties. . ·

,..,~,u~STOn

IIDEIM lOIII MANWAOUIIIIS -IY·SAVING COUPONS AY JCMI.
SON'S AIIO IICIM DO'*I Till WAI,_- YOU rut&lt;IU!fllt( Sft(l.
FlED 111M. ONI COUPON ~ tTDI. NO IINID COUI'OIIS ACCimD. DO·
IIIli OIFD DotS NOT Am I TO "mE . .OONDISI"
COUPOIS Dl COUPONS OVII 50&lt; IN FACE VALUE. NO CASH IIFUNDS
- · DOUII! COUPON VAtU! IICUDI I'IIICI Of RIM. CIGAIIRm AND
CIITAII OIIIIIIITIMS At! UClUDID IYIAW. 10 INSUIII'IODUCIIO All
OUI CUll-~ WI olll UMIIIIG 0U1 "DOUIII COUPON" Oflll TO
OIOE JAI Of I!ISIANI COFFEl AND 0111 CAN OF GIOIIIID COfflll'll
. SHOPPING FA•lr.

J

111'1 WE~THEil FOTOCAIT ®

DOUBLE COUPON OFFER GOOD JULY 2$, 1985

USDA CHOICE

KAHN'S

BONELESS
ROUND STEAK

DELUXE CLUB
BOLOGNA

LB.

By Unlled Press lnlemaitonal
A stolin system that fueled flood waters andspawnE'd tornadoes in
the West, brought welcome rain to drought-stricken Iowa and
Nebraska, answering the prayers of corn and soybean farmers.
TWenty peoplewf'l'e trapped overnight on a peak In the San Jacinto
; · Mountains near Palm Springs after a wall of water, boulders and
· mud careenE'ddowna canyon and cut olpowertoanaerial tram that
serves the 8,500-foot peak.
Two tieUcopters battled high winds and rain to pluck 125 people off
the ,mountaln Friday before darkness haltE'd the operation.
A thunderstorm was also believE'!! to have caused the crash of a
smau plane that k111E'd a famUy or three in a ruggE'd mountain area
near Cajon Pass, Call!.
F)oodlng was reportE'd at Colorado Springs County, Zion National
Park In Utah, and the desert communities of Yucca Valley and
Twentynine Palms, about.I35 miles northeast or Los Angeles.
''I've UvE'd in town for a very long time, and I've never, never seen ·
It '!lk.e this/' Twentynine Palms Fire Chief Mike Weston said. Many
"toads are Impassable with three to four feet of water," he said.
· A tornado-like windstorm lashE'd a mohUe home park near the
Callfornla·Artzona border injuring six people and destroying four
traDers and damaging 14 others.
"One trailer Is turnE'd compeletly upside-down," said Pat Bzyant,
manager of the Green Mansion Trailer Park.
Tornadoes were reportE'd In Colorado In Penrose County and lh
Canon City. Dodge City, Kan. was buffeted by 70 mph winds.
In the Denver area, a tunnel Cloud on Interstate 25 diunaged the
roofs or several homes In a nearby subdivision, flipped over one car
and damaged several others.
. Heavy rain swept across the Denver area, overpowering storm
sewers and 's tacking up traffic during the rush hour. Planes were
grounded at Stapleton International Airport during the heaviest part
of the slolJll and air traffic was dlvertE'd to other areas.
·;

.

KAHN'S

BEEF CUBED
STEAK

$189

The nation's weather

Sl. 39

USDA CHOICE

All MEAT OR
BEEF WIENERS

LB.

POUND
PIC G.

$·179

USDA CHOICE

BONELESS
NEW YORK STRIP
STEAK

$399

3
$1
00
PORK-N-BEANS ~!Noz. ~
69(
SALTINES
CAMPBELL'S

KAHN'S # 1

SLICED SLAB
BACON

$139

LB.

SUPERIOR

LB.

CHUNK BOLOGNA
SUPERIOR

ARMOUR

3

POTTED MEAT
ARMOUR

oz.

CAN

S OZ. CAN

VIENNA SAUSAGE
BETTY CROCKER

4~$1 00
3~
22.5

BROWNIE MIX

BOX

oz.

PLOCHMAN

SQUEEZE MUSTARD

190Z.
BOTTlE

KLEENEX SOFTIQUE .

FACIAL TISSUE

ISO CT.
BOX

89(
$149

69(
79(

&amp; WIENER :

BUNS

8 CT. PK.

SNOW WHITE

CAULIFLOWER
CALIFORNIA

CELERY

STALK .

CALIFORNIA

NECTARINES

LB.

CALIFORNIA

RED PLUMS

LB.

WHITE

SEEDLESS GRAPES

2 ~ $1 QQ
R

LB.

SUPERIOR

POLISH SAUSAGE

LB.
"

$1 09

49(·
49(
69(
89(

MORTON

DINNERS

11

OZARK VALLEY

a oz.

POT PIES
FOOD TREND

oz.

·POTATOES
FOLGER'S

COFFEE
ALL GRINDS

$

89(

4 ~$1 00

na. CAN

Reagan

'

·•

..
' .
'

/

. r

FIX UP, PAINT UP- Harold Grate of Langsville, supervisor ofGR
workers fCX"IheMelpCounty Department of Human Services, takes his
tum paiDiing the walls Ill the Meigs County Dog Pound. Several local ;
hanlware slores, Including Star Supply, Ace Hardward, Ebersbaeh :

llanlw.-e, Waaner flardloare, Valley Lumber (;o., King BuDders, :
Ridenour Supply, MGM Fann City and Bawn Lumber have donated :
paint and relaletl suppUes to fix up the pound. A hot water tank is being •
suJIIIIIed at ~ by Caner's Plumbing and Healing. Several privatA! , .
citizen&amp; have made m""etary donations to the cause but more donationS .
are needed says BID McKinney, acting dog warden.
;

____ __

(ContinuE'!! from....:....;:___:
page AI)
_..:._

CANCER WILL STRIKE

ol a 2-lnch Intestinal tumor, pro- men, I think I'll ask you to ma.r ry
fRO'lECT YOUII FAIIAY FIOM THE
Reagan spokeofhlssurgeonsand nouncedhlm "goodasnew"Frlday. me," the president was quoted as
JIGH
OF CANCER TR£ATMENTS.
said "ll Congress can't make cuts, That meant, Speakes said, the saying.
DETAILS: PHONE 614-446-0577
I'm going to send hlm up to the hili to pre;ldent "can resllll\l' a tun and
HERMAN LYNCH,
do the cutting.
Ute once he has completed r r = = = = = = = = = = : : ! : = =·=A=M=ER=IC=A=N=F=AM=IL
HealsothankE'dworldleadersand active
recuperation."
aU his well wishers, Including
ReaganwUihavetohavefrequent
. J,
Democrats, and pralsE'd his wife as
checkups and anotber rolonoscopy
Price~
a "hero." telling her "Thank you,
In six months to examine his
pariner."
·
tntesttne.wherebentgnpotypshave
Wh! te House spokesman Larry
been discovered before.
..
, AllY SIZE , ANY SHAPE •
FIBERGLAS
Speakes said the 74-year-old presl·
''The president or !hi! Unitro
POOLS
dent w!U have an abbreviated
States wUl sleep In the White HOU!e
Buy I kit for $100.00
schedule during his first days back
tomOITOW night," Speake; told
libcm dealers cost
on the job and wUI pace .himself,
reporters: "His doctors gaw the
and saw. or we will
........
"taking it day by day. t'
=~t
the green light to go
ofthrc":let~~
Reagan wW not be put on
medication when he returns home,
Speakrs said Reagan was In a
Ill IIID'IIble Tiles.
and Speakes said he does 1101
jovial mood Friday and even teased
lick fill wit• sand ond all plumb·
"anUctpate any change In his
his wife about beT dayloni trip
in&amp; 1\\". Schedule 40 PVC
lifestyle."
.'
Wednesday aboard the USS Amer·
C.AU 441o-04U
But the first lady has made it plain · lea. an aircraft' cari'ler located oil
EVENINGS
• '"EE ESTIIAAT~·:t
shewUI see that he gets 1005 of rest.
the i::oast of Maryland.
The doctors, who were esctatic
"Sinceyouspeotthedaywlth5,(XX)
over his quick recovery from ..-~---------...L.---------.-------------...;,.

com

Y=Ll=FE=~

Lowest
Around On
In Ground Pools

=:.

~-_

__

WESCO POOLS

.. .
•

•
•
•

.
'•

•.

Why shuuld you consider

FOR INFORMATION
LEADING TO ARREST AND CONVICTION.

RCRreerRSR

VALLEY BELL

2°/o MILK

GALLON

12

The lmprovemmts at the dog
sho!Her are highly visible but other,
less visible Improvements are
needed. McKinney believes many
problems can be solvE'!! by educat·
lng the pubUc In humane treatment
of animals and pet responsibility.
It's not unusual he says to hear
ccmrnents like, "I didn't know a
11&lt;&gt;use dog·had to be licell!ed," or "I
tnought a dog could go 72 hours
without water."
McKinney believes that by raisIng present fees and lnnplemeriting
new fees, as , allowed by law, the
Meigs County facUlty "w!U eventu·
aUy be Rif·SUStalntng." UntU that
time ~ adds, "ll everyone who's
ever lod&amp;td a complaint against the
facUlty would just give $1, that
money WOUld go a · long way In
making needed Improvements."

..'·....

.

•

KRAFT

McKinney, who has ~wd
training from the Humane Society
or the United States' Animal Control
Academy In Ann Arbor, Mich., Is
certlflE'd to adrnlntster euthanasia
procedures. In carrying out his
dulles as acting dog warden, he also
has authortty to .Issue three-day
warnings to dog owners round In
violation of laws such as allowing
dogs to run loose. Citations may be
Issued by McKinney If warnings are·
not compUE'd with In three days.
Cited dog owners would then be
required to appear In county court
where tbey could be fined not less
than $10 nor more than $25.

··~---...,...._.

well soon."

·.••

•

$1 .99.

9

.•.••

:Ohio Lottery
:winning numbers:
:Oaily: 324
:Pick-4: 4777

U.S. NO. 1
10 LB.
BAG

Page-A-3

; CLEVELAND (UPI)- Friday's
;winning Ohio Lottery numbers:
· Dally Number: 324.
; Ticket ·sales tot.aiE'd $1,250,276,
:with a payoff due of $617,315.
; PICK-4: 4W.
· PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
.p76,990, with a payo1Idueof$'16,69J.
: PICK-4$1straight betpays$4,616.
·i&gt;ICK-4$1 boxbetpays$1,154.

~~- $129

FRENCH FRIES

The Sunday Times-Sentinel

action was taken.

r-~------~~~----~~;;~~~;;;;;;::::~~s~urgery~~las~tSa~hrrd~a:y~!~oc~fffiro:::v:a~l
•

$129

HEAD

IDAHO BAKING

BAKERY=I:llUil
s~FTY SANDWICH

BROCCOLI

LB.
12 oz.
PKG.

FRANKIES

69(

FRESH CALIFORNIA

79(
89.&lt;

SUPERIOR

'

POUND
' PKG:

$169

3 LB. BOX

BACON END PIECES

F

PRIDE

•

FORECAST .,.. During early Sunday momlng, showers are
forecast for portions of lhe 001ttral Plains and middle ·MIMisslppl
Valley re&amp;to1111. Elaewhere, weather wOI be fair In generaL Minimum
lemperaluret! Include (maxlmwn lemperalu""' In parentheses):
41Janta 73 (90), Jloetoa 1'/. (84), Chicago 11111(113), Cleveland M (82),
Dallas 75 (95), Denver Sl (81), Duluth 52 (78), Houston 7% (11),
JacbomDe 73 (811), Kanaaa Clly 811 (118), LIUle Rock 74 (93), Los
Alll*s 1!3 ('lO), Miami 75 (811), ~Its 82 (M), New OrleaDo 74
(ttJ.), N""' York 71 (81), Phoenix 78 (1!1), St. Louis 71 (88), S.O
~loco M (83), Seattle 118 (811), Wulllngton 75 (91). (UPI).

SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JULY 27, 1985

$169

(Continued from page AI )
place before this year's county lair .
The county's dog and kennel fund
provides operating money for the
shelter and a good porilon or this
fund comvs from dog and kennel
license fees . Complaints thatllcens·
lng Is ni&gt;t enforcE'!! thereby Umlting
operaf!!lg funds, led the commls·
siopers to okay a dog Ucenstrtg
survey In the county. The survey
was conducted in June by area
teenagers under the supervision of
Carl HyseU, county officer.
County auditor's records indicate
an Increase In dog licensep\D'Chases
during the survey and throughout
this year and as of July 15, $13,51l'l
worih of dog licenses had been sold
in the county. This Is more than ·
twice the total sold In au or 11*!4 •
which was $6:Di.
The goal lor au tnvolvE'd with the
shelter Is for the pound to become ·
'self-sufficient. AlthOugh the com·
missioners and the humane society
are coopera.tlng in this 1 effort.
McKinney says that reallzlng t)lls ·
goal wUI be a slow process. Because
money Is limited, McKinney Is
accepting donations to help lund
some lnnprovements at the facility.
At this time, the commissioners
are considering a raise In dog and
kennel license fees. They are also
considering lnnplementaUon of
adoption, reclalnning and boarding
fees. These matters were brought
up by Commissioner David Ke&gt;
blentz in Wednesday's regular
commissioner's meeting but no

CEIITS OFF

UP TO

'

Weather:-------. Dogs' ljves getting better.in Meigs

VALUE. Ulo Dovble
Adworti,..,.S.,..looiL llo -lors Pltcnell

DOUBLE
COUPONS
soc
12 oz.
PICG.

Pomeioy-Middleport..:..Gallipolit, 9f!io-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

oz.

AMERICAN SINGLES

$169
$159

"STOCK BR.OKBR»?
If your present job is no longer cballenging • . . if you see
limited opportunities for high income ••• and if you arc interested in ·a sat.. oriented career, considtt this opportunity:
The Ohio Company Is one of the country's strongest in-·
ment bankina fimu, dealing in all types of S«Urid... We haYe
""ceDent faclTities and a strong commitment to ~e personal
success of our broken.
We ...., looking for .individuals with a "'Wcessfill recont in a
sales-oriented lield. We ""' not intaested in people who ·" "'
satisfied with a $50,000 per yar income. We want indi-.lduab
whose long-range potmtial Is saoera1 times th• amount.
Our company spends a great deal of time, effort and money to
&lt;lcwelop the skilla of our people. Our sales repriCIICiltaDvcs go
through an ci:kJ;lSi"'!! four-inonth training program, during
which they are on $11ary. This training provides the· knowledae
ahd responsibility necessary to conduct bwlneu with individu;als, as wdl as institutional clients,
· .
We have en joyed steady and continuous growth in the
II,CCuriti.. industry for CMr 60 years. One of the ways M haYe
achlmd this is by selecting only the top people for our training
program. We do not make hasty decisions; therd'Oft, If,- Wllllt
tO be considered for our ncrt program, we urge you to contlld

us'/

.

1/,.
-··,...
.., 'fl ,;,y,.,... bml
J I fJ.forJ ,., ...
I

fl.fMtu._ ),.,, If

w.Ufor• ~

Me : ri.-

CONTACT:
Larry Haye8

'

Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Company offers to reward any
person or persons furnishing to the Comp~y, or to any law enforcement agencies ofthe State ofOhio or of the Federal Government, or to
the Sheriffofany county or to the Police of any municipality, infonha·
tion leading directly to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons
raponsiblc for the injuries to guards and/or destruction of pr&lt;;~perty at
the Conesville Power Plant that occurred on the morning of July 15, 1985.
The Company fiuther offers to reward persons furnishin g information leading directly to the arrest and conviction of any person or persons
for willfully or tnlliciously injuring or destroying any of the Company's
electrical opcntin&amp; equipment or facilities or for threatening bodily
·
harm to or- unlawfully injwing any non-striking Company employee or
the employee of a Company contractor or maliciously damaging the
propcity of any sud! employee or any member of his inunediate family
where sud! injury or damage js r~ted to the strike which began ·
July 15, 1985.
Any such IICh will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. ·
The ma:imum reward payable in each instance described above' is
S25,000 and the totalllliOUilU of the rewards payable for all instances
shall not aceed $100,000.

INFORMATION SHOULD BE REPORTED TO ANY LAW .
ENFORCEMmiT AGENCY OR Am' C&amp;SOE OFFICE.
The Company reserves the right to determine the person or persons

· emitlcd. to the mnrd and the proportionate amount of such reward to
which ach is entitled in each conviction. Claims or applications for the
reward IDIIIt be presented in writing to the Company by no later than
Nowmbtr 10, 11185 .

Sale8 Training Director

•

'

•

••
•

·..
•

155 Eaot Broad Street
Columbua, Ohio 43215

(614) 464-68ll

•

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AMERICAN ELEC'l'IUCPOWER SYSTEM

'

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�-

-

·. .-_h

---·- --'-------.
I
I

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'0

••

Commentary and perspectiv-e
i"ttnb~
.

'limes - itutitttl
.

A Divis ion of

. 8':! Thin! Ave., Galllpolls, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

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

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

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

L ETTE HS OF OPINION arP WC'I comed. t hr,Y should !)(&gt; IC'ss tha n 300 words
lOnJ!! . All if'lll"rs ~rE' subj€'Ct to t'd lt lng and mu st tx&gt; s lgnPd with namf' . addrrss and
!Plrphonr numbf'rs . No Uns igned INt &lt;'rs wlll lx' publl s hf'd . L('ll('rs s h ould bt•ln
good !;~sty, addrt&gt;s slng I ssue:'.~. nor pPrson &lt;t lit\('!\.

The Reagan White
·House will never
be the same again

undisputed international celebrities
of the wprld are tbe rock stars.
2. If this Is so, then: why is It that
they do not .appeal - well, to me?
My other appetites are normal.
Could It be that there Is a dirty little
secret no one Is prepared publicly to_
discuss, namely that that kind of
thing does not appeal to a whole lot
of people who are not willing to
conte~ their a lienation from the
oveiWhelmlng majority of the
young?
3. "That kind of thing," come on
now, Buckley, "what exatly do you

mean?"

·

Fair enough. Bob Dylan comes
on stage, and on e)ther side of him
are two famous guitarists from the
RoiUng Stones. He last shaved, oh,
three days before. (WhY?) He Is
wearing blue jeans and a scruffy
T-shlrt a rrangement of sorts
(Why? Trademark? Change trademarks?). The two guitarists arrive
smoking cigarettes, which dangle
from their Ups for the llrst minute

•

The White House has hung out a "business as usual" sign since PresldPnt
· Reagan undeiWent colon cancer surgery. ·
But nothing will quite ever be the same. That has bef'n true of other
presidential ll!nesses'in the past.
New considerations come Into play and it is a whole new ballgame.
The 74-year-old president has bEen the epitomy of health and vigor,
coming through a chest wound from a would-be assassin with flying colors.
And nothing Is expected to get him down now because of his innate
optimistic outlook on llfe and his personal courage.
His doctors have run out lntHollywood superlatives to describe his
post-operative condition.
His s!J)kesman Larry Speakes says he is "champing at the bit" and
"ready to be up and a t 'em". undaunted by the news that a tumor removed
from his intestine was cancerous.
Nevertheless, it will take time for Reagan to ease back into the Ova l
office, anq his doctors'are prescribing r&lt;;&gt;st, which he will get a·t the White

House when he leaves the hospital and at his California mountaintop ranch
where he will spend most of August.
It is doubtful that hewillbeable to indulge in his favorite rugged chores of
chopping wood and clearing brush. His chief surgeon, Dr. Dale Oller, at
Bethesda Naval Hospital. predicted he would be back on a horse in
mid-August.
Nevertheless, Reagan will be watched more carefully from now on,
mainly for any signs of a recurrence of cancer. He has always bef'n the
picture of good health. Sc much so that White House physicians have
looked aghast when a reporter has asked about the health of the president.
The president did go for 2\12 years without a physical examination in his
first term.
Dr. Steven Rosenberg, chief of surgery at the National Cancer Institut e,
said thai he will have to undergo freque nt checkups and blood Jests.
:it Reagan's brother Neil Reagan is typical of the family att itude, the
president will indeect be back in stride soon. The elder Reagan underwent a
slinilar operation two weeks ago and si nce then has bEen going to
r~taurants , giving interviews and living life to the fullest . He had a oout
with throat cancer several years ago. 'Reagan's style of operation makes il easy for White House aides to carry
"on. He delegates duties, rarely mixes into implementation. and has only
concerned himself with the big decisions. That will continue with White
House chief of staff Donald Regan running the show by virtue o! his access
to the president when even Vice ·President George Bush a nd cabinet
m~mbers have to clear their ap!J)intments through Regan.
·Bush has taken a back seat, hoping not to · a!Jpear pushy while the
president is ill.
He has to walk a tight line, particularly since he aspires to be president
one day, so as to now arouse the hostility of top White house aides who are
jealous of !heir role as the gatekeepers of the Oval office.
Sc far, he has followed their orders. He flew to his Maine ·s ummer home
last Friday, even though he knew Reagan was to undergo s urgery the
following day. And he flew back Saturday morning when the president
tem!J)rarily relinquished his !J)Wers to Bush while he was in the operating

room.
Reagan's schedule has bef'n cleared of a ny travel prior to his Ca li(ornia
vacation. But he -is making plans to go ahead with plans to meet Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev in Geneva, Switzerland in late November when
he hopes to break the stalemate in the arms control talks .
On the domestic front, there Is a question of the "sympathy factor" which
may break tbe deadlock over the 1986 fiscal year budget . Certai nly there
will be a let up in criticism of Reagan from Capitol Hill. They don't believe
iii hitting a man when he is down.
·
_How long it lasts depends on the prt'Sident himself. If he returns to hi s
usual combative mood a nd 'tarts laying the blame on Congress again for
blocking his pro!J)sals, tht• truce will SOQn be over. As for the country, the
cancer institute is being bombarded with ca lls for pamphlet s and
Information and the phones of gastro enterologists areringingoffthe hooks
11&gt;' virtue of the ex!J)sure the president has givon to the problem Of colon
cancer.

{~

'~~Y. iff?l::rl=i(-MAJ&lt;jNG Eooi&lt;.ON MY ~vtfY C~-l'u.. I-IA~.SOMfOfn.lAr? '

U.S. :reneges

..

" Did you pick up some dirty words in the movie,
too, Grandpa?"

.

_:_:

...

____ --,

. • . •· • . t

The Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page-A-S

.·.,.' .•...
;:

or so of the first song. (Why?) Their
arms are entirely bare, and they
otherwise wear what looks like a
stripped-down dark-CQlored T-shlrt
(Why? Heat?). Then Intense concentration on Dylan, and neither I
nor spouse can pick up a s_ingle
ji'Ord he has sung, and we frankly
doubt tha t . anyone else coulp.
(Why?) The songs were without
discernible melody, the voice was
whiny, with enough gravel In It to
slop Jean-Claude Kllly · In midslope, the guitarists were hard to
listen to (why? why? why?). But we
were engaged ln transcending
history.
Of one thing I am absolutely
convinced, and that Is that there !s
no doubtjng the slncertty of the ,
rock-worshipers . I know one or two
who are without affectation, and ·
they wUI, in stretches of solitude,
clap on their Walkmen and listen to
Bob Dylan before they wutlisten to
VIvaldi, or Verdi, or Strauss, or
Cole Porter. Obviously. there Is a
generational Imbalance , and that
shou!Jl not surprise, whether one
asks about relative young-old enthusiasm for the RoUlng Stones, or :.
relative young-old enthusiasm for
"Raiders of the Lost Ark. "
.. But the totality of the mobilization of the young appears to have
swept with It the not-young, and one
wonders whether the capitulation of
the mlddle-•ged suggests a cultural
Insecurity? If all the world thinks
Picasso's double-jawed, cockeyed
dames are masterpieces, ought one
to defer to universal sentiment? If
one does not master rock and roll, Is
one closing the door on a transformative experience? Is It the
equivalent of inviting color blindness? Deafness? lm!J)tence?
Well, I have said it, and In
payment for exercising the privi lege_of skipping the first two and
one-half hours of tape, I'll make a
contrtbution to Live Aid, reviving
the movement of sUcking a dime In
the nlckeludeon to buy five minutes
of silence.

I

Johnson&amp;Johnsonsa!dThursday
voluntacy recall of certain lots of
that some containers of children's
children's TYlenol Elixir from
TYlenol Ellxlr had been recalled • wholesale distribution," said Rofrom wholesalers because they
bert Kn!ff!n, director of publlc
contained commonoyeas! or mold.
relations lor Johnson &amp; Johnson.
'"Three weeks ago McNeil Consu"McNeil recalled those lots of the
mer Products Co. instituted a
from warehouse lnvento-

Publls hPd each Sunday, 825 T hi r d AvP.•

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603 w. Union
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Phone, 16141 592-2863

We'll Help You Listen In On Life

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Bank board certifies
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REG.
REG.
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"RUSTLE"

Advert ising Representative , Branham
Newspaper Sal~. 733 Third A venuf'.
New York. New York 10017.

S!J)nsored by the university' s
summer lecture series.
The ban, ln affect from 1977 until
1981, prohibited Randall from
publishing, teaching, contacting
any newspaper, school or publishing
house, and prevented hlm from
speaking with more than one person
at a time.
He said in the last three years,
censorship has declined due to
pressure on the government from
black and white Scuth {\frtcans and
from the United States and others. A
division of opinion within the
government has also reduced the
amount of cellsorship, he said.
. ~'The censorship systein has bEen
significantly liberalized," he said.
"We are S!"'lng films and reading
auditors of the Federal Home Loan
books that would have bEen unthinBank and we passed their test with
kable three years ago, but I don't
no substantial changes to our
want to present an overly optimistic
books," Lazelle sa.ld.

•

''
•

{USP OU-800)

.
A'!'HENS, Ohio (UPI) - A oppressed.
prominent anti-apartheid Scuth
"We're in transition now toward
Afrtcan publisher who was once something new in South Africa,"
banned by the South African RandaU said. "In optimistic mogovernment, said less strict censor- ments I like to believe, yes, we are
ship laws may be a sign that closer to freedom."
apartheid wUl change without "a
Randall Is co-founder of the
final bloody battle."
Raven Press, known for publishing
Peter Randall, lecturing Frtday matertals opposing the Scuth Afriat Ohio University, sa!ditseemsl!ke can government's policy of aparthe country is in a new phase and the theid. Randall's lecture, on the topic
people are becoming less . of publishing in Scuth Africa, was

'
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
Federal Home Loan Bank Board
certified Charter Oak Savings
Association Friday as a federally
Insured savings and loan. The
certification was granted after
Charter Oak met stipulations of the
board's conditional approval announced June 7.
Charter Oak had resumed full
operations June 8 followingll weeks
of limited services under a state
directive resulting from the crtsls at
Home State Savings and Loan of
Cincinnati.
With approximately $300 million
in assets, the 1!5-year-old Charter
Oak Is the largest.among the former
Ohio Deposit Guarantee Fund
savings and loans to r""''ive Federal
Savings a nd Loan Insurance Corp.
approva I. Charter Oak qualified for
FSLIC membership without a
change in local ownership and
operating management.
"Those thousands of customers
who supported us continuously over
the last three months deserve m~;ch
of the credit for this FSLIC
certificate," said Thomas H. Mongan, chairman of Charter Oak.
"Their enrouragement and loyalty cemented our determination to
get federal insurance for their
deposits while retainlng the basic
form and services of the company."
Mongan said.
Laird L. Lazelle, executive vice
president and managing officer,
said the practices of managers has
enabled Charter Oak to offer
depositors very high rates.
"Those Investment practice have
bef'n examined thoroughly by the

rles after consulting with tbe Food
and Drilg Administration and
detelTnin!ng that there was no public health hazard sufficient to
necessitate a consumer-level
recall."

LISTENIN ON LIFE

Anti-apartheid ·p ublisher
speaks ~t Ohio University

\

lor shelter programs In 1983 and an
additional $40 million in 1984. Its job
Is to allocate the fuods to various
federal and state agencies.
CCNV hired an,architect, Conrad
Levensen, to develop plans for the
renovation of the three-story shelter. He obtained an emergency
grant of $17,500 from the National
Endowment for the Arts .
With the help of five students
from the City College Agricultural
Center of New York, Levenson
pre pa red detailed designs for the
new shelter. Depending on the
options sel&lt;:&lt;:ted, Levenson esti mated the final bill would be
anywhere from $5 million to twice
that a m ount .

Sbe said she was surprised that
she had pUrchased u ; even after
checklngwlththestoretoseelflthad
been removed from theshelves. The
woman said !be store personnel told
her they had checked their records
and apparently didn't reaUze lt was
on the shelves .
The woman said her ·daughter
showed no signa of illness.
The Johnson &amp; Johnson spokesman said the lot numbers tor the
damaged containers were SIA300,
SIA321, SP4462, SSF.l28, SSF229~d
SSF"m.

oz.
NOW
14

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HONDA

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DISCOUNTS
REG. $2,000

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Now$1

550

OPEN
Monday &amp; Friday

~­

~

Til 8 P.M.

Money' madness, murder_____:_Ja_m_es__:J_.K_iL,_lp-=at:.._:_ric=-k
SCRABBLE, Va . -"Hey!" said
my wife. She was knee-deep in
grandchildren. four of whom are
under the tender age of three, and I

was not being sup!J)rtive. "For two
days you've had your nose in that
book."
"Ah," I sa id. "but what a book ."
And Shana Alexander, my old
sparling partner on "60 Minutes."
has it1deed writt('n' a stunning,
smashing, absorbing, wholly mesmerizing hook. It is called "Nutcracker." It Is the story of a murder
that occurred In Utah seven years
ago and of the trials that followed
long after the crime. Yet she
provides much more than a
retelli ng of a news story. This is

Berry's World

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. (UP!) may be on retail shelves but
- Some contaJners of children's maintained that It cOuld not hurt
Tylenol Elixir which contain com- anyone-lnclud!ngpersonsallerg!c ·
mon yeast or mold may be on stqre to yeast.
The spokesman saldthecompany
shelves despite a recall order Issued
had
received no reports of Ulnesses
to wholesalers, a S!J)kesman for
caused
by the common yeast or
Johnson &amp; Johoson Co. said.
. An Arkansas sta~ health off!clal . mold in the containers.
In Springfield, Ohio, Bonnie
said earlier this week that the
damaged elixir could cause wells on Brandle purchased the TYlenol
the skin and nausea, but that. no Elixir to use to soothe teething pain
forhertwo-year-olddaughter. After
Illnesses had been reported.
A Johnson &amp; Johnson S!l)kesman she got It home, she discovered It
said late Frtday some of the was among the lot numbers In
damaged children' s TYlenol Elixir question.

Jack Anderson &amp; Dale VanAtta

WASHINGTON - It's rar~ when Uvlng in ~ dilapidated, verminSnyder's political judgment was
a politician makes a written, Infested shelter in Washlnglon ,
right. On the 51st day of his fast,
explicit campaign promise, signs It · D.C., run by Snyder's organization,
Health and Human Services Secreand sends it to the beneficiary of the the Committee for Creative Nontary Margaret Heckler announced
pledge. But that's what President Violence.
that Reagan had ordered that the
Reagan dl~ last November, and the
Snyder vowed to starve himself
government-owned building the
recipient of the presidential prom- until the Reagan administration
CCNV occupied be renovated as
Ise understandably thought he acknowledged the seriousness of
soon as possible. Snyder received a
could take It to the bank.
letter from the president promising
the problem ol the homeless by
Unfortunately, the bureaucrats providing funds to make a decent
that the building would be transwho were ordered to redeem shelter out or the committee's
formed into a " model physical
Reagan's pledge reneged on It rundown building a few blocks from
shelter."
instead.
the U.S. Capitol. He figured a
Snyder called off his fast and
Last !all, social actiVIst Mitch presidential campaign was the best
immediately set to work on the
Snyder went on a hunger strike to ·time to get action from an
plans for the bulldifig. The money
publicize the plight of the homeless administration - especially an
was to come primarily from the
In America. In particular, Snyder administration that had been ac- · F'ederal Emergency Management
wanted to call attention to the cused of lnsenslt!vlty to 'the suf!er- Agency, the civil defense and
miserable conditions in which 800 l,ng of the poor.
disaster organization. FEMA had
homeless men and women were
been given $100 million. by Congress

__ -------___.,...., ...---- ------- - - - -

Despite recall, children's Tylenol Elixir may ·be in stores

Page.:..A-4
July 21. 1985

Live Aid: I confess_____W_il_lw_m_F_.B_uc_k_ley_]r.
Impulse. The show-biz ,..p€ct of the
Two nlghts before the affair, I
had not known it would take place. . great Live Ald spectaqilar was not
what erigages the attention. It Is,
The woman on my rtght at dinner,
· . whose husband Is professionally rather, a plight one · needs to
engaged in the production of rock explore. Not a purely prlvale
problem. I would not Mite a
· music, told me she had not been
disposed to go to Philadelphia for column to explore the difficulties I
expertence In virtue, say. of having
" the convert," but now she toought
a sixth toe. I have become a
that if she did not go, sbe might in
truth-seeker In the matter of the
fact be passing by a historic event.
rock culture, and · my problems
With that prompting, before going
aren't, I think, unique.
out for dinner on Saturday, I hooked
1. More people tuned in on Live
up my VHS to catch the three-hour
abbreviation of the 16-hour mara- Aid, we are told, than tuned fn on
the Summer Olympics. This datum
thon. an&lt;l when I got back, sat down
Is absolutely extraordinary, given
with my wife and watched the last
20 minutes, which began with Jack that sporls have bef'n the lingua
franca of Internationalism through
Nicholson Introducing Bob Dylan
much of recorded history, and that
and his two accompanists. Jack
there
Is an Instantly communicable
Nicholson said that, for the finale ,
excitement
to a sports event, the
they had saved someone who
excitement of which comes In
"transcended history," no less.
Here was a n event, philalthroplc through a different sensory apparatus. What Is being used for rock
in design (all proceeds would go to
music, in effect. Is that the entire
Africans being syste matlc~lly
world is at Its feet. That . the
starved by the implementation of
Marxist doctrine in Ethiopia) and

. .
·-.__, _.,

.. ~·

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

July 21. 1985

. TJ:te Sunday Times-Sentinel

·- ~~

'

biography of the. very first chop .
Shana's subjects ate the Brad shaw family of Salt Lake City, a
M ormon famlly, an industrious and

outwardly convent ional family. Behind a facade of uninteresting
respectability was a crumbling
st ructure. Berenice Jewett Brad·
shaw was a neglected wife, Franklin James Bradshaw a workaholic
husband. Marrted In 1924, they
would achieve substantial wealth;
he would make millions through a
chain of auto pa ris stores and
through shrewd Investments in oiL
They would live a penurious life,
a nd theY would have three
daughters.
One oi tbe three daughters,
Frances, figures In this story as the
Lady Macbeth of the drama. Born
In 1938, Frances began In the cradle
to establish a reputation as a
demanding, Imperious, tempestu·
ous child. No one ~auld ever say no
to Frances. Married In 1959, she
gave birth to two sons. Larry and
Marc. They were born 10 months
a part In 1960. Larry would wind up
for evaluation at a Pennsylvania
hospital for the crtmlnally Insane;
Marc would wind up In prison for
murder.

The prtnclpal figure Is the Minutes" was out of her element in
demented Frances. She had much TV. Shana Is a writer. She Is the
in common not only with Lady best court reporter In the country ,
Macbeth, but also with Medea. As the best anywhere since Rebecca
Euripides told the tale, Medea West covered the Nuremburg
began her career by killing her trialS. Her previous hooks on the
brother. She fell In with Jason. To Patty Hearst case and the trial of
hold his love. she tricked the Jean Harris are classics In their
daughters of King Pelias lntq . field.
murdering their father. Sent Into
"Nutcracker" Is the best of the
ex ile In Corinth, she winds up by three. Her narra tive buUds to a
hating J ason. In revenge for hi s shattering clima x with the mu rder .
deserting he·r, she poisons Jason 's Then It subsides, regains a driving
daughter by his new wife and !J)Wer, and builds to a final few
completes the horror by murdering · pages with the certainty of the
their own two sons.
Erolca's last measures. The book is
Frances Bradshaw, living a
dissolute life in New York, was
possessed by the same demons. She
alternately babied and abused her
children; she bouod son Marc to her
side In a barbed,wire embrace. She
commissioned the boys to steal
from their grandfather; she forged
checks; she raved pathetically that
her sisters were conspiring to
disinherit her. Fearing that her
father might tnaliea wUI that would
cut her off, she ordered Marc to
murder him . The obedient ooy, 17,
flew from New York to Texas,
where he bought a handgun, thence
to Salt Lake City. There he
committed murder most foil!.
Nine years before . this act of
patricide, Frances had taken a
second husband , Freder!k
Schreuder. She was known as the
wealthy Mrs. Schreuder, benefactor of the New York City Ballet, at
the time of her arrest and trial. I
suppOse the Schreuder case was big
news in New York, and certainly
big news in Utah, but the story
never reached the boondocks in
Vtrglnla. I will not . s!J)U the
suspense for equally uninformed
readers by revealing how the trial
•
of Frances turned out
I have said It a good many times
publicly, aod remark It again here,
that my beloved adVersary or "60

ornam ented with Shana 's insights .
and with Shana's beautiful verbs. :
"In rna tters of family blamesman-: ·ship, " she wrttes, " there Is no such:-·
thing as a statute of limitations." -,
She speaks of Frances, who seldom; :
went out "except tograzethealsles·· :

CR125R

Now$21 00

JulY 21.

of expensive department stores.'' ... :

This !sa super hook. Iwritoabout :
il because at the moment I am ':
weary of writing or thinking aoout '·
taxes, budgets, deficits, terrorists
and Supreme Court opinions.! have '
been loafing over Shana's superlative yarn , and having finished it,
will not see why a granddaught er is
howling.

. E '-'asldns
Morns . n
congratulations

BY GARRY TRUDEAU

one #1 1

•

•

Gallipolis Golf

Club 7-18-85
CR500R

Staff of

·

Th~ "alleY san\(
OhiO

•

0

REG.$2600

SAVE SSOO

REG. $2300

SAVE S400

Now$21 00

.
.'
0

•

0

CR250R

IJH .. IJ6HT
TA/11&lt;5.

\

,.

HONDA

•

UPPER ROUTE 7
KANAUGA, ·OHIO
NEXT TO BOB'S ElECTlONKS

I

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.

�.-

July 21. 1985

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

Page A-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21. 1985

·LTV offers to sell subsidiary
will entertain discussions with any
serious and prospective buyer."
In the past, LTV officials have
indicated they might entertain joint
ventures with foreign countries,
especially those whose cheap steel
exports to the United Slates have
been t~ main cause oiLTV Steel's
financial woes..
Tomasch said he did not ;mtlclpaie the sale or the subsidiary to
result in additional layffos:
"The decision to sell theLTV Steel
Specialty Products Co. is consistent
with LTV's earlier announcement to
seek opportunities ror joint ventures
and divestitures to generate about
$500 mUllon in cash over the next 18
months," said the announcement
from the glarit conglomerate whose .
other Interests include aerospacedefense and energy products.
"The LTV Corp. plans to issue an
informational brochure describing
the LTV Steel Sjxocialty Products
Co. within the next month,". the
announcement said.
The subsidiacy produces contlu - ·
ously
cast stainless steel slabs at its
GALLIPOLIS - · Southeastern .
Midland
facUlty and also operates
Business College (formerly Gallipofinishing
facUlties
for the production
lis Business College), 529 Jackson
Pike, GaUipoiis, announces its of hot and cold-rolled sheet and strip
student of the quarter award for in Louisville, Ohio and Detroit.

CHECK PRESENTED - Jolw Hudson, vicepresident of the.Galllpolis Jaycees presents a check to
members of the Blue Angeb track team to help with

•

their trip to Africa.l'lcturOO are (Jeft 1o right): Jolaine
Bartlmus, Kim Janey and Jody Adams. Looking on is
GAllS track coach Keith McGuire.

spring quarter 19!6 goes to Paul
Stephens. Leon, W.Va.
Stephens is a senior graduating
this stimmer quarter with an
Associate Degree in· MicroComputers. The business col]ege
reports he has consistently taken
three classes a quarter, had few
absences and has maintained a 3.6,
or better, grade point average.

Rio alumni
gets Evans
farms award

• TV WINNER - Six-year-old Te!Ty~Swlllber 1J of
!!'oint Pleasant was the rectlnt winner of a promotion at
, 'tnrnpike of Gallipolis. The prize was a 12-lnch colorttJevlslon. Pictured are (front row): winner, Ten-y

S-herlland~SWioher, (back row):--·

sales manager; JoiMI Sang, general manager;
parents, Terry andPoUySwisher; and,RudyGibnore, .
general sales mMager.
.

GM .has reportedly picked plant site
•

lANSING, Mich. tUPli -The
Lansing State Journal reported
·E riday that the General Motors
~orp. tentatively has selected a site
lot its first Saturn automobile plant,
.:;..

j

'

...

..

but the location is stili a secretto the
"We have a goodldeainourminds
public.
. where wewant it to go," Hall told the
The newspaper based the report paper.
on comments of GlVI spokesman
Hall would not divulge the
Stan Hall.
location, or say when GM will make
a formal announcement.

.....

.-

...

~

RIO GRANDE- Garvan "Chip"
Smith, Fort Thomas, was recently
named a RestaurantManagerofthe
Year for Bob Evans Farms, Inc.
According to Robert S. Wood,
executive vice president and chief
operating officer for the restaurant
division, Smith manages the Flor·
ence Bob Evans Farms Restaurant
at U.S. 42 and I-74.
Smith, 24, was selected from
among the more than ·25 restaurant
manall"rs within the company's
southern area of operations. The
award lsll'presented ' to the most
outstanding restaurant manager in ·
business operaUons, employee
management and community
involvement.
Originally from Pickerington, 0 .,
Smi!h s·t arted with the company in
1980 as a manager trainee and was
promoted to manager in 1982. He
holds · a degree in speech and
communication from Rio Grande
College. Smith and his wife,
Kathryn, reside at 8006 Nob HUI.

'

v.·.,. .~ .'.~--·'·' ':.

. TIIREEWHEELERWINNER-DebraSmlth(seatedonbike),Rte.
·~ ·GaUipoUs, was the recent wirmerof aMounlatn Dew '"Three Wheeler"

from the AthensBottUngCo. 'Theawanlwas .,._..oo by local retoilers
and W.JEH radio. Pictured with SnMth are Wanda Eobenaur or WJEH
and Henry Thrnpp, building mana&amp;"r lor Athens BoUIIng Co.

BEAUTY
fOR AL L SE ASO\JS'

like yours are needed now
for European students arriving In
your community in mid-August.

catt

To"y
from Norway

Educ•tlon•l Found•tion for Fo,.lgn Study

BIG APPLIANCE

DAYS

GALLIPOLIS - A GiiUia County man received an 18 day
su8peded jail term, was fined $40 and placed on 18 months probation
' Friday in GaUipolis Municipal Court on charges of criminal
damaging and disorderly conduct.
WiWam R. Lewis, of Eureka Star Route, was sentenced to nine
. days and was fined $20 on each of the charges. He was accused of
destroying a food tray in theGaWa County Jail and resisting officers.
A vandalism charge against Lewis was dismissed at the request of
the CQmplalnlng witness. He was charged with damaging a structure
bY Audree Belville, of Eureka Stat
Route:
·
.. occuPied
I
.
,
In another case, Terry N. Waugh, 27, of ~I. 2, Crown City, forfeited
$1!0 bOnd lor an open container.
In traffic cases, Judy Byus, 31. of Rt. 4, Gallipolis, was fined $15
after pleading guilty to speeding. She was found not gnilty on a
cllargt&gt; of no driver's license.
Forleiting $40 bond for traffic violations were Carter Sandlin, 71, of
Rt. 2, Patriot, ned light violation; and Georl!" A. Wofte, 42; of Rio
Grande, improper passing on the right.
Misty M. McGraw, 18, of Rt. 4, Gallipolis, forfeited $45 bond for
speeding.

Man sentenced on drug abuse chargf.
A GaUia County man received a 30 day suspended jail terin and
was placed 011 one year probation Friday in Galiia County Common
Pleas Court after pleading guilty in June to a reduced charge of
attempted drug abuse.
Brian R. Jones, 24, of Rt. 1, Thurman, had been indicted by the
Gallla County Grand Jury on a charge or drug abuse.

Savings to Beat the
Qand on a Golden
Edition Refrigerator

\

Girl 'satisfactory' after accident

• Patented Frost' Clear
System
• Total Energy Saving
System
• Optional ice Maker
Capability
• Three Adjustable
Cantilever Shelves
• "Super Silver Lining"
Foam Insulation
• Convertible-Reversible
Doors
• See-Thru Crispers, Meat
Keeper and Dairy Doors
• Woodgrain Door kcent
Trim
• 2-Position Full-Width
Freezer Shelf
• Energy Saver Switch
• Textured Steel Doors
• "Quality Mile" Testing
• Exclusive 10'iear
Golden Warrantv

GAlLIPOLIS- A Gallipolis girl Is listed in satlsfactocy condition
at Holzer Medical Center, where she is being treated lor injuries
suf!ered when she was struck by a car on Fourth Avenue Friday
afternoon.
Christina Wells, 5, or 1818 Chatham Ave., is undergoing treatment
for fractures to 'both l"'!s, hospital officials said.
City pollee said a car driven by Brenda K. Cremeens, 36, or Eureka .
Star Route, was southbound on Fourth, when Wells apparently ran in
·front or her car.
Cremeens vehicle sustained light damage in the 4: 11 p.m.
accident. No citations were issued, officers said.
No Injuries were reported in a twlH:ar accident Friday afternoon
on Ohio 7, just north of the Gallipolis city Unnits.
Officers said
car driven by Judith Ann Wood, 34, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., was stopped in southbound traffic, when a car
operated by Clyde R. Brown, 35, of 556 Fourth Ave.. Gallipolis,
a~liy could not stop in time and struck Wood's car from behind .
Light damage was reported to Wood's vehicle in the 5:22 p.m.
accident, police said. No citations were issued, officers added

a

County receives license tax funds

Wl

GALLIPOLIS- Gallia County will receive $117,871.42 in tbe June .
distribution of license tax revenues, according to Ohio Bureau or
Motor Vehicles Registrar Michael J. McCullion.
The June distribution of $25.4 million wiU bring the total of vehicle
~a lion fees collected and returned to0hio's1002taxing districts
slce Jan. 1 to over $159 mlllion. The money is used for brldl!" and road
maintenance and repair and Is the primary source of revenue for
local road improvement projects.

ONE DAY
ONLY
.TUESDAY,
JULY 30TH

BIG
VALUE

WT.

992-3684

NEW YORK (UPI) -Claus von
Bulow was named in a $56 million
federal civil court suit Friday
charging him with trying to kUl his
heiress wife with insulin and asking
' that he be cut off rro,n herestlmated
$75 nnilllon fortune.
the legal action represents the
third time von Bulow has faced
charges alleging he caused Marttw
"Sunny" von Bulow's 1979 and 1~
comas. The suit, IDedin U.S. District
Court in Manhattan, was brought by
Mrs. von Bulow's two children,
Alexander von Auersperg and
Ann!,.. Laurie Kneissi.
Von Auetsperg and Kneissl, Mrs.
von Bulow's children bY a previous

WAS '699.95

William Grosvenor
WEST JEFFERSON - Wllllam
(Red) Grosvenor, 54, of Rt. 1,

Gallipolis, died Thursday in Holzer
Medical Center following a lengthy
illness.

t;:lectric Rang .
ONLY

$44995 WT.
BIG VALUE

•'

•

.•
••

HewasbomAug: 22,19~.

•

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:n

A World War II veteran, he was a
member or the Sheet Metal Workers
intef118lionalAssn. Local Union No.
12.
Funeral services will be 2 p.m.
Monday at Raiders Funeral Home
in West Jefferson. Burial wUi be in
Grand Rest Cemetecy in Reynoldsburg. Friends may call at the
funeraihometrom2to4p.m.and7to
9 p.m. Sunday. Pallbearers wUl be
membersofSMWIANo. l2.
'

....,

"'

ifJII

eabtt spt•. llllr;;iG;;··t'...,
you to ""' it, btcllti
ontr RJ they M to tWit JOI fof
U:. lJifonuftlttfy. tills 1111...rt is
fr0111

5 PC. DINEnE

lOt
"·-·
,...,. ....
,.
liOMwttllott
of AlltriCIII
.......
, "'"

TRESTLE TABLE AND
4 CHAIIS

Aod lloo't M. . polll&lt; Ill
dotllrs IIH:h :Inola pill tlllllttiiMe

$1790°

Her vehicle sustained heavy
damage in the 1: l8 a.m. accltll!nt,
troopers said.
A. Gallipolis man was cited by the
patld following a two-veblcle accidont Friday aflemloa dn Ohio 7.
Tloopei s said a pick-up operated
by Larry D. 'lborninn, 28, of Letart,
W.va., ws southbound on the exit
I'IIIIP from U.S. 35, when he stopplid
for tr.atflc. A car driven bY James A.
Clark, 23, of 701 Fourth Ave.,

)

Gallipolis, also southbound, apparenUy could not stop in tfme and
struck · the rear of Thornton's
vehicle.
No injuries were reported in the
4:32 p .m. accideht, which caused
moderate damage to Clark's car
and light damall" to Thornton's
pick-up, troopers said. Clark was
charged with failure to stop in an
assured clear distance and no child
~ints.
•

Rt. 4, Gallipolis, from Paul Camden,
ofRt. 4,Galllpolls; VicldeL.Pickett,
of Rt 2, Crown City, from LluTy 0.
Plckett,ofXenla; MacyM.Jones,of
Rt. 4, Gallipolis, from Larry Jones,
or M~. Mich.; Patricia Kay
·Bates, of GaUlpolls, from Harry
Lewis Bates, of Gallipolis.
William Friend, of Oak HUl, from
Donna Friend, of Rt. 2, Vinton;
Robert T. Castr;&gt;, of Rt. 2, Bidwell,
from Pa trlcla Casto, or Rt. 2,
Bidwell; Benny Bowen, of Vinton,
from Carolyn Jean YoungBowen, of

Deiqueen, Ark.; Bobble Jo J . Hill, of Rt. 3, Gallipolis, arid
McQuaid, of Rt.' 1, Gallipolis, from , Steven M. Hill, of Rt. 3, Gallipolis '
Lola A. McKinney, of Rt.1, Bidwell;
David G. McQuaid, of Rt. 1,
and Don A. McKinney, of Rt. 3,
Gallipolis; and Rldiard L Mayo,
Rt. 8, Gallipolis, tiQm Slilrley J . GalliPous.
Ewa M. Adkins, ofRt 1, ~klwell,
Mayo, from Rt. 3, Galllpolls.
The foilowlng marriages have and Douglas E . Adkins, of Middle;
been dissolved In Ga111a County port; Carol Workman, of Rt. 1,
Bidwell, and Dale Workman, ofRt.
Conurton Pleas Court:
David W. Ba.rke!', of Upper River 1, Bidwell: Eugene Wright, o!
Road, and Sheni D. Barker, of Gallipolis, and Neomla Wright, of
Upper River Road; Lissa MicheUe Gallipolis; and David W. North, of
Hlll, or Rt. 1, Gallipolis, and Jerry GaWpolis, and Barbara J. North, of
Allen Hill, of Rt.l, Gallipolis; Betty
Rt. 1, Gallipolis.

marriage, are· suing on behalf of
their comatose mother ·and asking
thatanypi11lltlveandcompensatory
· damages be directed back to ller
estate, of which· they are
beneficiaries.
The suit asks for "damages not
yet ascertainable but believed to
exceed $8 mUllon in medical and
hospital expenseS and additional
damages of $15 million and punitive
damages in an amount to be
determined at trial" for withholding
medical attention and allowing her
to slip into a coma.
,··
It seeks at least $3 million tn
puniUve damages for engaging in a
fraudulent scheme to obtain her

removed fi'om his wife's trust fUnd
and asks for restitution or any
money he has !'Eceived from her
estate since 1979.
The suit alleges that von Bulow
assaulted his wife by trying to
murder ber in 1979 and J.91ll. It is also
aimed at severing von Bulow's
financial ties tohiswife's·$'75milllon
esiate.
"The suit. asks that he not be
cpntinuaUy §upported by his wife's
money," said Michael Armstrong,
an attorney for Mrs. von Bulow's
children.
Von Bulow could not be reached

for comment.
Von Bulow has already wea- .
thered two highly publicized ctiml~
nal trials in Rhode Island, tbesecond
one ended June 10 with the
international financier's acquittal
on two counts of assault with Intent
to murder his multlnnilllonalre wife
with insulin injectiOIIs.
Unlike the criminal trials, v'on
Bulow would be forced to discuss his
involvement in the case. He did not
testify at either or his trials, but has
always mainlined that he would
have liked to ..

yet determined but believed be
more than $10 million - to be
"trebled as provided by taw" -for
injurtes to ber business and Jll'Oill!!'·
Ues, being unjustly enriched !nim a
$2mUIIontrustfundandaschemeto
defraud and murder Sunny.
It seeks to have von Bulow

Veterans Memorial

Survivors Include hls wlfe of
years, tbe fonner 'Betty Walters;
POMEROY Adml!ildoll!l:
one son, Tercy Grosvenor of Alma May WOOds, Racine; James
Cohimbt,ls; two daughters, Mrs. LeMaster, Athens; Francis An·
Russell (Sbelly) Gothard or Texas drew, LongBottom.
and BUlle Jo Hays or Galllpolis; one
Dl&amp;charges: Annette Boyd, Golda
brother, Roll"rGrosvenorofColum- Smith, Grace Welker, Joseph Allen.
bus; one sister, Mary Jane Morr----:,_________..._____..,.._,...;..;....;;;.;;-...-..._..;......;._..;.....;.'"-land; andelghtgrandchlldren.

WEBER LIVING ROOM SUITES
STARTING AT $15995
UP TO $54900

Highway Patrol said Hill was
northbound on 325, around eighttenths of a mlle north of Ohio 141,
when her car appat'E!IUy mopped
off the right side or the highway.Her
car then reportedly went acrou the
highway, oft the left side aada~
a.tree.
HUl was transported to I'...zet
M!!dicai Center byiheGalllaCounty
EMS. before being transfen'l!d to St.
Mary's . .

to
I Area death 1 a~.sultaisoasksfordarna&amp;esnot

System
• Total Energy Saving
System
• Optional Ice Maker

REGULAR $599.95

).

Claus ~v.on Bulow· named in civil suit

acens to a cUtt .,._lot ..,.. to
any tt•iltoa, II _ . 611tual),

. _.k_ - ,
--·

""fin!

At 10J m.. ""-"' h u tar u '-DIY h
iM. IIIII·
1"1 tl II llGAll •lo IH Ill

\6--··TUPPEIS PWNS. OHIO
tlooWt 11M '"' Offlctl

IUSINES$ HOlliS:
Mon.-Fri. 2-6; s.t. 11·5

.371-6151
•

~-...;.-·------...,-...------------

The foUowlng divorces have been
granted in Gallia County Common
Pleas Court:
Coitnie Lear, of Upper River
Road, from RusseU Lear, o! Rt. 1,
GaUipolls; Nancy Hicks, of Rt. 2,
Crown City, from Freddie Lee
Hicks, ofRt. 2, CniwitCity; Roberta
Lively, of Eureka, from Ronald
JosephLivety, of Gallipolis; Haskell
Spurlock, orRt. 2, Patriot, from Lisa
Spurlock, ofMacysvllle.
· Leonard Ranasinglle, of Gallipolis, from Prema Ranasinghe, of
Woodbridie, Va.; Hazel Camden, or

• Patented Frost'Ciear

Model CE30S5WM

A· 7

Gallia court grants divorces, dissolution~

• Three Adjustable GlideOut Shelves
1 "Super Silver Lining"
Foam Insulation
•Convertible-Reversible
Doors
• See-Thru Crispers and
Dairy Doors
• Woodgrain Door Accent
Trim
1 2-Position Full-Width
Freezer Shelf
• Energy Saver Switch
• Textured Steel Doors
• "Quality Mile" Testing
• Exclusive 10'iear
Golden Warranty

Garvan 'Chip' Smith

CALL TO REGISTER FOR CLINIC OR MAKE
APPOINTMENT FOR COLOR .ANALYSIS.

soo-243·5400

GALLIPOLIS -A GaUta County
teenager is listed in satl.sfactocy
c6nditlon in thelntenslvecareunltat
St. Mary's Halpltalln Huntington,
W.Va., where sbe II being treated
for injuries suffered in a singl~ar
accident early Saturday mornlnii:on
Ohlo325.
Cynthia Hill, , 17, o! Rt. 3,
Gallipolis, Is undergclng treatment
for head injuries; anunlngsupervisorsald.
The Gallla-Metgs post of the State

Capabil~y

·WILL BE HELD 2:.30 P.M.

a non-profft organization
235 Greenwich Ave. Greenwich, CT 08830

·--

'

Man sentenced in city court

'

iiiiii~ii;;;iim

SKIN CARE CLINIC

Carol and James Svoboda at (614) 446-6318

.-

POMEROY - Pomeroy Vlllage Council will meet in special
session Monday evening, 7: 00 p.m., at vUlage hall.
'

Colors slightly higher

WILMA lUCAS, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
WILL BE WORKING WITH PAT AT
DAN'S IN MIDDlEPORT.

Fami~es

studen~

council 'to~meet

REGULAR '999

spend a high school year with an
American family.

To select your

Pomeroy

•

Natalia and Torry are coming to

Nat•Ua
from Spain

·

POMEROY -Meigs County Emergency Medical Service reports ·
five calls on Friday; Pomeroy at 6: 42 a.m. to St. Rt. 681 for Janice
Scllall to O'Bienness Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 4: 59 p.m. to
the marina for James Braley to Veterans Memorial HoSpital;
Middleport at 7:00 p.m. to Cemetecy Rd .. in Cheshire lor Charles
Wellm81) to Holzer Medica.l Center; Tuppers Plains at 9: l6 p.m. to
Lone Bottom lor Francis Andrews to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at10:39 p.m. to Beech St. lor Margaret Nunn to Pleasant
Valley' Hospi~.

RUTLAND FURNITURE

HOMES NEEDED NOW

These ,students speak English. carry
tMlr own spending money, and are
covered by Insurance.

·

Meigs EMS reports calls

WAS
95
$699
$899.95
VALUE
ngs to ·Beat the
Band on a Golden _j~
ilion Refrigerator.

Michigan, Tennessee and Kentucky are said to be the leading
contenders in the highly publicized
Saturn'contest.
Michigan officials told the Journal
the longer GM delays, the better the
state's chances are.
"The longer the delay, the more
we win," said Rick Cole, a
spokesman for Gov. James J.
Blanchard.

Boyd, county court clerk.

r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

BIG

Ha ll said It appears an 'agreement
with · the UAW on the pioneering
labor contract, a key feature of the
Saturn project , is near.
"It lookslikewe'regettingcloseto
the end of our work," he said.

/ ..____

POMEROY - A jury trial set for Monday in Meigs County Court ,

haa been cancelled. Jurors need not appear for duty reporis Donna

usw

H e said lhP automaker wants to

work out details concerning the site
and finalize a labor agreement with
the United Auto Workers union
before announcing its decision.

Jury trial cancelled

WASHINGTON (U'PI) Wheeiirig·Pittsburgh Steel Corp.
and the United Steelworkers Friday
agreed to allow a federal mediator
help negotiate a setllement and Sen.
Jay ROCkefeller. 0-W.Va .. called on
the two sides to settle their contract
differences.
.
The
is set to strike at 12: 01
a .m. Sunday if the remaining issues
cannot be ironed out. "Both sides have been working
hard lor a settlement for months,
under the special pressure created
by. Wheeling-Pitt's financial problems, " said Rockefeller.

~ALUE

Th8 Sunday T.mes-Sentinei-Paga

. . _...briefs:.----.·Gallia teen satisfactory after accident

Steel finn, union
agree to mediator

Business
college names
student of
the quarter

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

In May, LTV Corp. which has
suffered hull" losses in recent years,
anounced that LTV Steel Co. of
Cleveland would undergo restructuring that included theidllngofone
plant and the loss of some 1,300 jobs
and tbe divestiture of the steel
specialty products company.
The entire plan was designed to
improve thecompany's cash flow by
about $700 mUlion in \he next two
years.

DALI.AS (UPI ) - TheLTVCorp.
Friday offered to sell its subsidlacy
LTV Steel Specialty Products Co. of
Midland, Pa. -the nation's second
largest producer or stainless steel
sheet, strip and plate- as part of a
restructuring plan to generate $500
mUIIon.
The divestiture or sale of the plant
had been announced in May at .t he
company's annual meeting.
Company officials did not say·
when the sale would be completed
nor would they say if a buyer had
been found.
Asked if an overseas buyer would
be sought, company spokesman
Mark Tomasch would only say, "We

•

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�-----,..-- -----,---- - .
,.

July 21, 1985

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

•

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long.the ri

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Section~

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July 21, 1986
!

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'J;.~~t

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..0

,,

i;It:! a:--~- .

.... 0

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:

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11

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0

P~fi

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

oil

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Simplicity

First Moments

Amanda

·.A real doll
••

Sculpting for collectors

l

ByatUUJ!:NE HOEFLICH
'I'll-.- Se::t~oel Staff

signed by the artist numbered and
dated, and shipped with certificates
•
COOL~-Adrivethrough
of authenticity.
the sleepy Uttle town of Coolville in
Firm In theb· belief that au good
, the hills ol Southern Ohio gives no
things come from God, every doll
hint that here Is a place where the
leaving the factory hears a Christian
orl8lnal dolJI of artist and sculptor
witness. Miniature Bibles of seLee Mlek,lle!on are being
lected scripture verses are attached
:;nanutactured and marjceted
to the wnsts of Lee's dolls. When
work~Ma
asked about that, she repUes that
"without the Lord's · blessing, we
That·this small COll!munlty
more tllln110 \R porcelain and vinyl
never could have done this. That's
are nlallutactufed and shipped
. where all the credit goes."
) everyday.
While only "First Moments" Is
That here lives an artist whose nearby.
being produced In vinyl now, plans
• doll, "Firlt Mcxnents." a sleeping
Plans are already belhg made to
aretoputaseconddoll, "LittleAngel .
•...
a tuff expand the vinyl business. CUr- Face," a 14-lnch baby doll with blue
rer.tly t..c Mlddletons are paying to
-~.11-.made
eyes and blond hair, Into production
cne of the live 1!11\ . have the pieces lnvlnyllllll((elnNew In vinyl WI~ the next few months.
york !rep molds the:yC1'811l'd. Soon Already the company' has 1,500
~tor thai doll..
they wW .bave the "CCt'\ : • "
snake eveythlna froni the Jjquld
Proclljctlon of the vinyl dolls
t The
co., owned vinyl, eU:nlnatlng the lhlpmentJ evolved naturally from tbe proceand 11 I d by Uoyd and Lee trom New York, and providing ' ' IAIIn business. As explained by
, MlddJeittll, ~ ~ of the
jobs for local people.
Lloyd, the porcelain takes so long to
big i:oalplnles, Hasbro, Bradley,
At the first or. the year, Mr. and
com~Iete the firm can ship only
Matte!, !dill to get the nomination.
Mrs. Middleton had 20 emplayes.
aboul40 a week.
:4 S1u priWta? Not at au when one That number bas Increased to 35,
"You see, no doll in porcelain giles
sees the newbotn .with its Ufellke With many stiU working from their out of here without Lee personally
•featun!s !lrulptured and llnlshed In homes. AU of the clothes lor both the
finishing the lace. Others may lay on
every~ by the talented artist
porcelain and vinyl dolls are
the base color, the blush, but the eye
Thedolls- and "First Moments" designed by the artist wtth the brows, the lower lashes, the accents
' Is just ..e ol a dozen In procelaln
and highlights on every Head are
assistance of a local seamstress and
with •'flir&amp;et-me-not" laces aU
done by Lee, so It makes a slow
then sent off for prOduction.
created lnm phptographs of chtldproduction."
Among the famUy members
ren -ate not Lee Middleton's first
During the Ove-years the couple'
Involved In the operation Is Mrs.
claim tofaine In the art field.
worked only In porcelain, many
Middleton's 90-year-old I1IInd grand·
She 1111 been painting lor over 00 . · mother who stuffs about~ bodies a outstanding faces were -sculptured
years, lllllng to large department
by the doll artist.
day for the vinyl dolls. "Siie does'a
stores Including Lazarus, Is a poet great job,". Mrs. Middleton comUnusual and· unique Is
having publlshed her own Poetry
"Amanda," a black dolL "Most
ments, "doing It all by 'feel' and It's
Qua:ierjy for seven years In given her a whole new le&amp;Seonllfe."
black dolls you see today," Lloyd
Columllua besides free lancing, and
points out, "areslrnplydollsthatare
Currently The Middleton Doll Co.
was the author of some of the
poured with black porcelain. This
has 00 dealers around the country
· soft-touch books marketed by major
one Is sculptured and looks Uke a
for the dozen or so porcelain dolls
greeting card companies.
created by Lee, and nearly 1,CXXI black child."
' Her paintings have sold around
Then ·there's "Prince William"
dealers for the vinyl dolls. Pa:iofthe
• : the country and one hangs In the
which was made from a photograph
reason lor the popularity or the vinyl
•famed collection oiVIncent Prl~.
dolls Is that they are less expensive,
of the Prince at one year. After
· • ButdollmaklngisLee'sflrstlove,
selling for less than haH the price of sculpturing . the doll, the artist
. and witb her husband, the couple • the porcelain ones which are made
Inscribed the first original "To the
~· have developed a flouruhlng bus!·
the "old-world way, as If t&gt;ach were Little Prince with Love from the
ness which Is. expanding almost
one-or-a-kind.''
People of America" and sent It to
-dally.
Prtncess Diana at Buckingham
All oi the dolls are collector Items,
Up until about six months ago only
porcelain dolls were made and
marketed by the Mlddleto::s. But In
January, after·nearlythreeyearsof
planning and research to develop
the right molds, they began produc- ·
lng "First Moments" In vinyl, and
business started booming.
Uniu then the dollmaklng facUl-ties were contained In a brick,
three-story antique bank. They row ·
bave a second building, an assembly
plant In the village, and have under
construction a factory on their farm

:~o:::

more

THE ARTIST'S T()UCH - Every pdrcelaln doll,
. and more lhan a dozen different ones.sculpled hy Lee
Middleton are being shipped worldwide, Is personally
ftnlshed by the a:tlst. WhUe ooother has been trained
Palace.
There are other dolls- "Scottie''
the clown; "Simplicity'' who wears
glasses, "Britt," "Missy,'' an open·
eyed newborn, and another designed but not yet in production,
"Bubba chubs."
Mr. and Mrs. Middleton, former
private Investigators, have been-in
Southeastern Ohio for the past nine
years having come here from
Columbus soon after thelrmaniage
to work at the Coffee House, a
Christian refuge, In Athens. They
lived In cabins, he preached and she

to lay on the 1.- color lind blush, Lee does aD the "
details, hlghllghUng and accents before signing,
numbering, and attaching rerllllcales ol anthentlclty.

worked on her new hobby of portrait
dolls. For a time they were" In
Chicago where Lloyd was an
evangelist for a large Christ ian
fellowship.
Returning to Athens they began
selling Lee's porcelain dolls at
shows. In the early 19!1l's, they
discovered the empty bank building
In Coolville. ··t thought It would he a
good place for me to do all m y mold
work since it had a basement, so we
mOfed In," Lloyd recalls. He admits
that at first progress was slow, but
says in the past year or so "things
have really gone. crazy. a real nice
·
kind of crazy."
"It I left her alone Lee would

sculpt a new doll every day," he
quips. "Anytime you start your own
business, you are an artist and you
want to do artful things, but you Wind
up being a secretary, a bookkeeper,
a purchasing agent, running the
personnel department , whatever. ....so the thing that she wants to
do is not what she is able to do

anymore."
And although Lee is not able to
devote all of the time she'd like to
new creativitv , you can he sure that
she and husband. Lloyd, are doing
all they can to change a sometimes
dull world into a lovely doll world for
hundreds and hundreds of children
and collectors.

I!
...
...
,... .
:.: -v.; 0 ~
. .. .
...::· ~ "'• s:"..
....
••
;

;

;

:~·

m . . ,..

~

~·

~

I'"'•

....;

I. •

... .. ...... ..
_

~

,. ...
~• ······-·
._ ..._.,,_._
,
ll• •. u. ,

. . ::

V!llflaDPORCBIAINIIEAII8 Moistp p h•IIIAeMII I ':r p Ni lnloflhe'-da,feel::ndiiMdorDiheartlllt's!OOidlltakesplaceand
I a
II ., lillie llxplna aeNbM:, "Pinl Mull I "Tile Ia ' I neal~ lhe flrlal. Here Natl:la 'D:ompeoa lliZlOOUB out tbe
pc D 1 ::larta In li!" IJMetnmt of lhe aid '-II ........_ wll:re lhe -porcelain.._.. 1:: prepanllon for llrlac In the 1:qe ldlns.

pw

'

7

•

7

NOMINATED DOU. OF THE YEAR- "F'Ii-st Moments," dllsplay00: ·
here by Uoyd Middleton, lw been iiGi1llnaled for doD of the Y"l' In 1111. ·
calegory, manufacturer's doD-artist doll hy tbe lnlematlonal DoD·
Acadomy DoU ol the Yev coMe8t In conJunction with Dell Reade~:
M~~.

.

�•

Times-Sentinel

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

Julv 21. 1986

Smarr money

Don't believe everything you reacf:.

File
back

STORt HOIJRSMon.-Sat. 8 AM-10' PM
Sunday 10 AM-1.0 P.M ·

298 SECOND ST. .
POMEROY, OH.
Susanna Wise

PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH SAT., JULY 27, 19~5

GRADE A

'
4
9(
Wh.ole Fryer.s •••••••
Lunch Meats ...~~ .. -$129
.

SUPERIOR FRANKIE
oz.
Wl.eners ••••••••••••••••
12

' By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
·Times-Sentinel Staff
'Toey Kennedy is riding again.
· ·· ' A skilled eqtlest(ian with dozens
of trophies and
rjbbons to prove
it, Tony left !he
Tuppers Plains
stables where he
trained the
hbrses he I'OCle in shows around the
cyuntry to join the Marines a year

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

Round Steak .•• ~:-••• $1 79

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

famoos colony of Devll's
~land inFrenchGulana was phased
out by France between 19.1l and

1!151.

POMEROY - Mrs. Mary Hood,
34401 Crew Rood. Pomeroy, is·
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of her
· daughter, VIcki Lynn, to John Craig
Nicinsky, son of Mr. and Mr. John
Nicinsky Jr., Route 1, Rutland.
Vicki is the daughter of the la te
Wilbur Hood.
The bride-elect is a graduate of

resulting f('Om her weakened condi·
•tlon and is still on IV therapy which
her husband , Rodney, has been
trained to handle.
The past weeks have been
difficvJt for this young mother. The
over 500 cards she received during
her hospitalization have brtghtened
her days.
· By the way, Violet Smith of
. Reedsville remains a patient at
University Hospital. She has under-

gone surgery there and expects to
be confined for a week or so yet.
Cards may be sent. to her at the
hospital; Stone Hall1037.
They're ~ving in at The Maples.
Evelyn Clark has been named
resident mimager of the senior
citizens, low income, housing complex on Mulberry Heights, and
several of the 45 apartments are
already occupied.
AppllcaUon's are still being taken

'

Beef ••••••• $109

Ground

Bananas ••••••••••L:••••
GRADE A EXTRA LARGE

,,
.
E.ggs •••••••••••••••••••••
DOZ.

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••
GAL.

'BANQUET

HAWAIIAN PUNCH

TV
Dinners
......
~.~~
••
.
6
9
&lt;
.
9
9
(
Fruit Drink ••••••••••
VALLEY BELL PREMIUM
Pork &amp; Beans 4/$1 Ice Cream ••••. :::L$1 59
.• ......··coo~·······•

\Bring Your Husband I
•Bass
•Frye
•9 West
•Trotter
•Sporto

•

VELVET

•

PAPER TOWELS
Jumbo

Rolls

o

•

3f$1

Umil 3 Por Cuslomtr
Good Only At Powtll's
Cqupon lxpim July 27, 1915

••
•
••
••
0

:
o

nDE

BRIGHT EYES

DETERGENT
10 Ll.,
1

oz.

CAT FOOD
6.5 oz.

$629

4/S1

linolt 1 ... , , , _
o..d Ooly At .....,••
, . _ bpim Jvly 27, 1915

Lllllit 4 Por Custo_,
Good Only At Piwoll's
Coupon lxpiros Mr 27, 1915

·~··· ·················

'

. ..

\

UNSWiiEEtEiD_:IIIIAKEi 2 QT.

KOOL-AID

10/S1

The ·:\110
Lafayette
Shoe Cafe

Second ,\vc.

. -·-··-

'

.,_

'

•

• • I

$1 0,40000

Register

Call 446-2134

•

BANQUET ROOM FACILITIES AVAILABLE

DALE'S LOVES KIDS

KIDS EAT FREE
,.--------RULES·---------.
FOR EACH PAID ADULT DINNER

ONE CHILD (UNDER AGE 10 ns. OLDJ' EATS

FREE

OFFER GOOD MON .. TUES. WED., THUR., JULY 22 THRU 2'5 ONLY

LUNCH

10°/o Off

$3.25

45 STATE ST., GALLIPOLIS

*Rainbow
*Eiectrolux *Hoover
*Eureka
*Kirby

M-F 10-6, SAT. 10·2

ANAN&lt;tNG AVAILAILE

*Compact

PH.' 446-7441

PER ROOM

~IT H.IVI ( - l

COMPLETE WITH DRINKS, SALADS, DESSERTS 11:00 A.M.-3:30 P.M.

REGULAR 129.95

•

I1

$99 5
AND HALL CLEANED
·-------J--------------·

I
1 I

.I
•

~,."~

1-----------------------l

VACUUM CLEANERS

WITH KOT&lt;HGUAID

1-

Loaded &amp; Sharp!

~Jail

CHURCHES

I'1 Sl 59 5

cond., am·fm cassette stereo, tilt wheel, cruise control,
delay wipers. rear defogger, power windows, power
door locks, quartz clock, all gauges. locking wire wheel
covers &amp; just 19,700 miles!

Gallipolis. 0.

r-----------------~---,
I
COUPON
Exp. 9-30-85 I rE.~;;~s-~~~;0~~--~~;~00~-i
I
9
HAVE ANY 5 ROOMS

limit 10 hr Cutlomtr
Good Only At Powtll's
co.,... bpiros
27, 191S

terior, tactorv t·tops, floor shift automatic trans., air

SPRING VAllEY PLAIA
To

NEW &amp; USED

Carpet Cleaning
Thru July

#1EGA5-36+08 .

-

DJ's CRAFT SHOP

25 YEARS
EXPERIENCE.
'

C\111' ' • • • '

~~~~~~~~ -

\Bring Your _ Kids!

Summer
Price

1

•

300 Second Avenue
Lafayette Mall
Gallipolis, Ohio

Beautiful two-tone blue with contrasting blue cloth in-

6 Weeks KNinJNG ClASS
Starts Tues, Aug. 13, 6:30 PM
Taught by Debbie Kopley

Sup~r

:::·

1/3 to 1 /2·oFF

1984 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX L.E.

STENCIL CLASS

64 Oz. Bottle

SHOWBOAT

Court records show Mazzela
contacted Universal in 1\llgust 1982.
requesting a catalogue.
An undercover OEA agent told
Mazella ca talogu'es were not availa ·
ble. An agent later telephoned
Mazzela and told ·him he coul&lt;j buy •
"oor very popular kit for $700" that •
included all the .chemicals and
equipment necessary to make a
certain illegal drug.
An offie&lt;&gt;r, disguised as a United
,
Parcel Service driver. delivered · .' '
Mazzei a's shipment to his residence . ·
in Little Rock. Mazella paid the ·,
agent $850 in cash, signed a receipt,
and was arrested a short lime later.

Clearance Sale
Continues

Knitting &amp; Croft Classes

• Thon, July 2 S. 6:30 PM

Today Charlotte (Shorty) Wright
is home with her husband and
children after 15 weeks In University Hospital. Shorty Is suffering
from acute lymphatic leukemia
which is now in remission.
. She will be returning to the
'hospital next week to continue her
chemotherapy, and after that will
he home a week and In the hospital
a week for several months untll the
treatment is completed.
' Shorty has had a severe infection

VALLEY BELl

:·
,.

and those interested may contact
the Senior Citizens Center for
general guidelines to qualify. Everything, including the laudramat, is
complete, except some furnishings
·
for the day rooms.
An open house is being planned
but it looks like another month or so
for that.

lues., July 23, lu30 PM

--.congratulations

, Our
to Daisy
Blakeslee'
She was the recipient Thursday of
the "Outstanding Gardener"
award for Region 11 presented at
the annual meeting of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs at
Lima. Her husband. Chuck, was on
hand tor the presentation.
Daisy, and what beautiful
.gardens she has, was nominated for
the award in July, 1984 by the
Middleport Amateur Gardeners
Club of which she Is member. A
Committee representing Region 11
which includes Meigs, Athens,
Washington, Vinton, Gallia and
llocking, judged all the gardens
nominated and selected Daisy's as
the best.
Points for judging were design,
!;OIOr and continuous bloom, .varl,ety, condition of plants, lawn area,
mulching and tagging.
~ Incidentally, Janet Bolin was
~!lected vice president of the OAGC
lind next year will move into the
presidency of the state organlzaj)on. Janet is a member of the
Rutland Friendly Gardeners and
has been active with the OAGC for a
long time.

LB.

Meigs High School and attended
Ohio Univerity and Hocking Technical College.
Nicinsky iS also a graduate of
Meigs and attended Ohio University
and the Muskingum Technical
College. He is employed by Herald
Oil and Gas Co., Middlepori.
Wedding plans are incomplete. .

MARKET BASKET CLASS

1 Now stationed in California, he's
fqund an outlet for all that skill.
Tony, son of J.R. and Judy
Kennedy, is ridiQg rodeo.

Chuck Roast ••••••••

conviction.

••
••
;

Aug. 24 at 2 p.m. at the Syracuse . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - • .
Church of the Nazarene. A recepton
will follow in thechurchsocialroom.
The bride-elect is a graduate of
Meigs High School.
Cundiff is a graduate of Rio
Grande College.

Hood - Nicinsky

a~o.

LB.

.

:The

POMEROY- Karen R. Molden,
daught'er of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
E. Molden, and David B. Cundiff,
son of MJ:. and Mrs. James R.
Cundiff Sr., are announcing their
engagement and approaching
marriage.
The couple will be married on

Wednesday.
The placement of the ad "can in no
way he considered to violate the
principles of fundamental fairness," thecouri said in uphoidingt he

Outstanding gardener a Daisy

c_ommunity corner

Pkg.

~hatever.

: pope John Paul II became the
fltst pope ever to visit Candada.
when, on Sept. 9, 19&amp;.1, he started a
:12-day tour of the country which has
ll mUll on Catholics. John Paul's trip
tQOI&lt; him to almost every major
Genal! ian city. Including Quebec
Clty, Montreatl , Ottawa, Toronto,
\flnnipeg, Edmonton and
Vancouver.

i

Louise Nickels of
Mfss Booth is a graduate of
.'-:lnton announces the forthcoffilng . Buckeye Hills Career Center and
marriage of her daughter, Paula H.
North Gallla High School. She is
· Booth, to Terry S. Hlll, son of Ethel employed by Dr. Dan Notter.
and Homer Hill of Bidwell.
Hill is a graduate of Buckeye
The open-church wedding will Hills Career Center and North
take place at Vinton Baptist Church Gallia High School. He is self·
July 'n at 5 p.m. The Rev. Donald employed.
Saxon will officiate.

•

SUPERIOR

Molden Cundiff

Booth - Hill

.· VINTON

LB.

Qrdinarlly, receipts from swaps~ops contain a disclaimer something saying that they aren't
responsible for fire, theft or

~ope in Canada

David B. CundUf

reception"l&gt;lill be held immediately
following in the church dining room.
Th~ bride·elect Is a graduate of
Mel~ High School and the Marshall
University School of Nursing. She Is'
employed by Liberty Memorial
Hospital, Hinesville, Ga.
Alleman is a graduate of Point
Pleasant High School and Marshall
University. He is employed by the
Liberty County Board of Education,
·Hinesville, Ga.

MIDDLEPORT - Mr. and Mrs.
Roscoe W. Wi5f, Middleport. are
announcing the engagement and
.approaching marriage of their
daughter, Susanna. to J . Jeffrey
Alleman, son of Mr. and Mrs. James
J ; Alleman, Point Pleasant, W.Va.
· ',The open church wedding wlll
take place on Saturday, Aug.17, at
7:30 p.m. at ·the Heath United
Methodist Church, Middleport. A

Vicki Ly1m Hood
Jolm Craig Nlclnsky

Karen R. Molden

Paula H. Booth
TerryS.HW

Wise - Alleman

have no such homeowner's.}X)licy.

· In the absence of such a
disclaimer, it's difficult to ascertain
\i!hether or not they're respnsibie.
The matter probably would have to
~ adjudicated. Since the stereo is
probably worth less than the
s!Jlall-claims threshold, small
claims would be the logical court in
Whlch to settle the matter.
: Fi~Jt. however, I'd discuss it with
the sliop owner. Tell him that you
are willing to negotiate. If you
Yianted the shop to sell your stereo
for SJ:XJ, for exampl£', you would
IM.ve netted $225. Tell the shop
&lt;ivner that you will take $150, and
stare tile loss.
'· - I! he isn't amenable to this, take
him to small-claims cou r1, and let
tne judge dec·ide where the responslbllity Ues.
:Write to Bruce Williams in care of
tbis newspaper. Volume of mall
Jl)'ohibits persona! responses. Questions of general interest wiU he
ai.swered in this column .
: (Newspaper Enlerprise Allsn.)

ST. LOlpS (UPii -An appeals
court has strengthened the Drug
Enforcement Administration's support of advertising, upholding the
prison sentence of a man who
responded to an ad for chemical
supplies placed by the federal
agency.
The DEA set up Universal
Sol\tents of America as an undercover chemical and supply company to identity and prosecute
manufacturers of Uiegai drugs.
Carlo Mazella ofLittle Rock, Ark.,
responded! to the ad and was
arrested, convicted and sentenced
to 18 months in prison for attempting
to
manufacture
methamphetamine.
Mazzeia contended the DEA ploy
amounted to "outrageous government conduct," but the 8th U.S.
Circuit Couri o.f Appeals disagreed

We Reselve The Right To
li111it Quantities

those
returns
By Bruce WIDlams
DEAR BRUCE - I have a
problem that I'm afraid to discuss
with anyone. For the past nine
years I haven't paid any taxes. Or
rather, I should say that I've paid
taxes, but I l!aven't fUed a rturn.
I'm reaching a point where every
time the phone rings, I jump.
What should I do? - (NAME
WITHHELD)
DEAR FRIEND - You didn't
say how much money you've
earned or how much money was
""thheld from your pay.
I assume you're an employee. H
that's the case, things probably
aren't as bad as you fear. Chances
are the proper amount was with·
held from your pay.
But if you had earnings from
which nothing was withheld tor
taxes - dividends or commissions,
for example - you could owe a
small fortune.
In any event, the IRS will treat
you much more ~indly if you go to
them, rather than waiting·for them
to find you.
Your first step should be to find a
tax accountant who Is also an
attorney. He or she will help you
prepare the back returns, file them
and calculate the penalties you 'II
have to pay for filing late.
Don't put this off another day.
The IRS eventually will catch up
with you. The complex computer
environment in which we Uve
makes that a vtrtuill certainty. And
the COnsequences could be much
more serious if you wait for their
computers to track you down.
Get going and good luCk.
DEAR BRUCE -Several weeks
ago I did some housecleaning and
decided that I didn't need my stereo
and wasn't using some of a ny
clothes, so I took them to our local
second-hand shop.
I have sold things through that
shop before and never had any
problem. They take 25 percent of
whatever the sales price Is, and
they pay promptly.
Today, however, I got a very
upsetting telephone call. They said
that the store was broken into, the
stereo , was stolen and there's
nothing they can do about it. They
said they're sorry, but insisted that
!hey have no responsibility.
I took my receipt out and looked
at it. It doesn't say anything about ·
their ·responsibllitles or mine. lt just
says it's a receipt for !he merchandise, and they agree· to take 25
percent.
. What shall I do? - R.H.,
A'TI.ANTA, GA.
: DEAR R.H. - You didn't say
· ~ether you have a homeowner's
!"surilnce policy. If so, would the
form that you're carrying cover a
loss of this kind?
: That's the first thing to check.
• I'll assume, however, that you

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-B-3

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

WITH KOTCHGUARD

REGULAR '199.00

I

EYERTHING!

DINNER PRICES START AT 3:30 TO 8:00P.M.

.

SUNDAYS • HOLIDAYS 11:00 A.M. TO 8:00P.M ,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

..

�Page-B-4-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

July 21, 1985

-~--In the service----1
Thomas

McDonald

Barbara J. Thomas, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard 0. Thomas of
Cheshire, has been commissioned a
second lieutenant through the Air
Force ROTC program, and earned
a bachelor's degree at Ohio University in Athens.
Thomas is scheduled to se..Ve ai
Lowry Air Force Base, Colo.

Charles V. McDonald Jr .. son of
Mrs. Jo Ann Putney of Route 2.·
Cheshire, has entered into active
duty with the United States Air
Force according to S. Sgt. John
McGuire, Air Force Recruiter In
Gallipoils.
lie is a 1985 graduate of Kyger
Creek High School.
Upon graduation from tht&gt; Air
Force's sl~-week basic mllitary
course at Lackland AFB, Texas, ·
Mark A. Kimes, son of Mr. and McDonald will receive training in
Mrs. William A. Kimes, son of Mr . . the Mechanical Career Field.
and Mrs. William T. Kimes of Box
He wlll be earning crroits
146, Racine, has enlisted In the {J.S. towards an associate degree
Air Force's Delayed Enlistment through the Community College of
Program, according to S.Sgt. John the Air Force while attending basic
McGuire, Air Force Recruiter, In training and other Air Force
Gallipolis. ··
technical training schools.
Kimes is , a 1984 graduate of
Southern High SchooL
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six-week ~sic mllltary
training course at Lackland AFB,
Texas, he will receive training in
the Security speciality,
Kimes will · be earning credits
towards an associate degree
through the .Corhmunlty College of
the Air Force while attending basic
training and other Air Force
technical training schools.
He Is scheduled for enlistment in
the Regular Air Force In January.

Kimes

entered into active duty with the
United States Air Force according
to S. Sgt. John McGu(re, Air Force
Recruiter in Gallipolis.
Jacobs Is a 1985 graduate of
Meigs High Sch_ool.
Upon graduation from the Air
Force's six-week basic military
course at Lackland AFB, Texas, he
, will receive training In the Mechanl·
cal Career Field.
·Jacobs wUI be ·earning credits
towards an asoclate degree through
the Community College of the Air
Force while attending basic train· .
ing and other Air Force technical
training schools.

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolil. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. ya.
, STORE HOURS:
MON.-THURS.
9 am til 10 pr
FRI.-SAT
9 amtil10 pm
CJ.OSED SUNDAY

STAMPS
AND WJC
COUPONS

..,._..,.;.,OIJRlOWN'SJINEst SUPII ·MAIICU - - '
· Ne Aeser,.,e The

LOIN END

BONE-IN

PORK
CHOPS ·

Round ·Steak

I

~~~~O~N Tl~a. $269 .
CORN

3/S.l

.

LB.

$569

u.

$149

ANNIVERSARY OBSERVANCE - Mr. and Mrs. Robert S.
Marelnko of Tuppers Plakis wiD observe their 40th anniversary on July
!8. Married at the Sacred Heart Church In Pomeroy, they are the
parents of 12 chUdren and have 24 grandchildren.

Your health

He Understands Your Cares
Expert Medical Services
At

Rees
:Donald T. Rees, son of Donald E.
and Janet Rees of Gallipolis, has
received the silver wings of a n
ArmY aviator and was appointed a
warrant officer upon completion of
the rotary wing aviator course at
the U.S. Army Aviation School,
Fort Rucker, Ala .
The course provided training In
leadership and helicopter flying

·r

OPEN DAILY 9 A,M , · S P .M .
?9711

J ac k ~o n

Avenue

.,.,.,__q,..,....___....,.675-6971
__

LB.

$129

PRINGLES

TREATING PEDIATRIC, OBSTETRICAL, MEDICAL AND

flying.
He is a 198l graduate of Galiia
Academy, Gallipolis.

ARMOUR

REG., LIGHT
OR RIPPLED
FIRESIDE

Poil"'t Plra!&gt;&lt;ll ·

oo\1

b&gt;~&gt;$&gt;&gt;Q·.q.q.o.Q»Q&gt;&lt;Qo&lt;""""......

SALTINE
CRACKERS ~o~·

Treet

89(

120Z.$1 09
CAN

JENO'S

PI~ZA

VALLEY BELL

ROLLS

2°/o Milk

CHEF'S PANTRY TURKEY

Ohio residents in their first two years of studies can
take advantage of public community college tuition rates
at Rio Grande College and Community College. For many
students, this arrangement has opened the doorto higher-·
education and provided career opportunities previously
unavailable. But at Rio Grande, the merger between a
public com munity college and private college offers
much more than a low tuition .
Rio Grande College and Community College offers
greater freedom to tailor personal academic programs.
Students in community college programs have the
opportunity to take liberal arts courses in a 109 year-old
private college with a history of academic excellence .
Students in the private college can take a variety of
caree r education
courses in the 10
year-old community
coll ege. All will
benefit from the
Col!ege's faculty and
staff who have
achieved an excellent
placement record for
their students.

$199

Chicken Breast

THE OATH OF
HIPPOCRATES"

DERMATOLOGICAL PROBLEMS

LB.

FRESH SPLIT

11

.techniques as well as Instrument

LB.

99'(

NUGGETS
OR STEAKS
CRISCO
OIL

· ......._

_____

ASSORTED
DRINKS GAL.

89(

Beef Stew

240Z.$149

LIPTON

TEA
BAGS

100(1.

TOMATO
JUICE ~!"oz.
POST

SUGAR
CRISPS

12

Bathroom Tissue

79 (
oz. $1 s

4ROLL
PACK

BOX

STAR CROSS

TOMATO
SAUCE a

oz.4 / l

NORTHERN

TABLE 140 CT.
NAPKINS

B-16

79

.ITlS.

REP OR YELLOW
DELICIOUS

.9 9 (

POTATOES' APPLES

~1·.$149 :.~; 99~

away."
Now only between 10 and 15
percent patients operated on for

118 E. MAIN ST.

ENTIRE

oz$1 45

STOC

Plus Deposit

PASCAL

HOMEGROWN

PH. 992·3233

POMEROY,

s9(

ll.

OH.

HURRY! Offer runs

July 21 through Aug. 10
See how good your prints
can really be ... Ask for
quality processing by Kodak!

~
~

TAWNEY STUDIOS
Gallipolis, Ohio

424 Second Avenue

.

·.; ''·
~'

•

~

SUMMER MERCHANDISE

/

.jl,_

Hospital... weJre open
all day and
all night.

Summer brings out the kid in all of us. And with the
warm weather many peoplt find themselves involved in a
number of warm weather activities. The house needs
some handy-dandy repair work ... w~kend outings and picnics
with the family .. . or maybe it's time to try out that new bike.
However, with all this fun and excitement also comes the not
so fun accidents and mishaps. They do happen. And when they do,
whether major or minor. get the quality emergency medical attention you need at
Pleasant Valley Hospital. Pleasant Valley Hospital's emergency services
department is staffed with highly trained physicians and medical personnel 24·
hours a day ... every day.
Pleasant Valley Hospital's emergency services department , .. we·re ope~ all
day and all night.

•
•

SORR1. ~LL S~LES FIN~L - MO LA~~·~~S

-1.

i I

'•

49 (

/' /

OJ 0
At Pleasant -v:c;//ey - ~- ~ J--

CELERY TOMATOES
STALK

Just bring tn your Kodak color
shde or pr int ft lm for qualtiJI
procesw1g by Koda~ ·s own
tabs When you ptck up your
color prrnfs or Shdes we·u prve )lOu 11' certthcate gOOd for one tre.5 11 1 color enlargement See us lor defat IS

*Perms *Frostings
*Highlighting *Nails
*Manicures *Ear Piercing

'

GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE
EASTERN

by Kodak

"Spteltllzlng In Cuts for
The E•tlre Ftmllr."

TO. PREPARE FOR OUR FAMOUS
112 PRICE SALE. COME EARLY
FOR THE BEST SELECTION

RC-RClOO
REG. OR DIET •
. DIET RITE

$

FREE enlargement
when yqu receive
processmg

GALLERY HAIR ARTS

JULY 22 UNTIL 4 P.M.

WALDORF

STAR CROSS

NEW YORK (UP!) - The
discovery that President Reagan
hadcancEroftbecolonlsexpectedto
greatly increase awareness of a
disease that was largely overlooked
!Jy the public.
"it used to be the cancer that
110body talked about," said Dr.
LaSalle Leffall Jr .. chief of surgery
at Howard University Coilege of
Medicine In Washington.
CollS€Quently, many people did
nor realize that this cancer 1s so
common, according to pr. Sidney
Wlnawer, chief of gastroenterology
ai Memorial Sloan-Kettering
Cancer Center In New York.
Dr. Arthur Holleb, senior vice
president of the American Cancer
Society, praised Reagan for a Uowlnghlscasetobedlscussedpublicly.
He said !he resultant publicity Is
likely to save many lives by
pmmptlng people to seek tests for
colon and rectal cancer.
Winawer said IJE.fore Reagan's
case was reported many people
thought thedlseasewasalways!a tal
and that the treatment always
Involved surgery that meant loss ol
controlofbowdmovcmentssothat
the end of the Intestine would be
attached to an external pouch _a
fate many deemed worse than the.
disease itself.
·
A 1982 cancer society survey
showed that many women believed
this was a disease for men , when
actually this cancer strikes both
sexes in equal numbers.
Cancers of the colon and of the
rectum, lumped as colorectal
cancer, are the second leading
cause of cancer deaths for Amerl -

people In 1985, according to the , . The American Cancer Society the tumor cells are removed
American Cancer Society. OVerall, recommends that anyone over 40 surgtcaUy.
only aboufhalfofsurvlve!lveyears. have .a their doctor check them for
Dr. Michael Hanna, of the Litton
The prognosis depends to a great this cancer and that alter age 50, Institute of Applied Biotechnology in
extent on whether the tumor Is annual blood stool tests be given, as Rockville, Ma .• and Dr. Herber!
caught before its malignant cells weil as an visual examination. Hoover at the State University of
have a chance to spread to other Anyone who has had polyps or bowel New YorkatStony Brook are testing
parts of the body. This is why early cancer is at ·Increased risk.
the effectiveness of administering a
• testing is so important.
A home-testing ldt recently be- bacterium In combination with the
But family doctors and patients In came avalla ble to the public and, patient's own ldUed cancer ceils to
the past shied away from testing for when done correctly, also detects patients afier the tumors have been
the cancer because the procedure the presence of blood in stools. Not removed .
for looldng in lowermost intestine all colorectal cancers bleed, conseThe bacteria activate the immune
for tiny growths called polyps was quently visual checks are also system and the killed cancer cells
· uncomfortablelmdembarrasslng.
important, said Wlnawer.
direct the immuneresponseagalnst
"These advances have come· any cancer cells alivP In the body.
Technology has changed that. ·
Instead of a stiffprohe, physicians together in the past 10 years," he
Researchers have also ldenllfied
said.
"It's
getting
Into
the
communmonoclonal aptibodies, substan:Jl
can use a slender, Oexible!iberoptlc
. ces that recognize specific proteins
tube to check the inside of the colon Ity, butlt takes time."
for polyps, the kind of growth that
The effort against colorectal on thesurlaceofceils, that can home
led to the cancer removed from cancer also is making pmgress in in on colorectal cancer cells. These
substances may o11e day be able to
the laboratory.
Reagan's large Intestine.
Even If these these growths iJl'E'
Some researchers are lnvesllgat- carry cancer-killing medication to
not cancerous, If they are allowed to lng a possible vaccine to combat the tumor.
ctevelop they may become cancer· recurrence o! disease when not all
ous years later. Whereas polyp
removal once entaUed abdominal
surgery, often physicians can snip
off th~ growth with a scalpel
attached to the endof,the flberoptlc
tube.
Treatment may still Involve
removing the diseased part of the
colon , as was the case for Reagan,
but surgical staples have greatly
lessened the need fo r colostomy,
creation of another bowel exit, said
Leffall.
"Without the stapling device, the
OWNER - DONNA FlANK
pelvis was too narrow, so you
couldn't get your hands in to join the
OPERATORS-CATHY LIPSCOMB .
ends," he explained, "Now you just
AMY SISSON
stick it (the stapler) in and fire

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

CAN

$299

UPI SCience Writer

..'

t1fl ---Accidents
c~~~
~
l\t
'EARLy
Happen.
WE WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY.

.,

ARMOUR

VALLEY BELL

"

Carla Moore Mulvaney

I~ca;n;s;a;n;d;m;·;n;ru~n;ic;t;a;bo;u;t;1;~;.~;;;;c;o~lo;rre~ta~l~ca;n;ce~r~n~eed~a~co~l~~t~om~y~,~;;;;~~;:~~;;;;~~~~~==========~~~~~========~================================~::
r-------------------------------------------------~------------_,·

$169

GAL.

ASHLAND, Ky. -Calvary Epls· of tbe bridegroom, and Steven L.
copal Church at Ashland, Ky. was Pelphrey, Lexington.
the setting tor the recent wedding of
The wedd)ng party also Included
Carla Ann Moore. daughter of Mr. Benjamin A. Bowman or Sissonand Mrs. Wllll3m Nelson Moore, ville, W.Va., cousin of the bride, rtng
Ashland, and Johi!BrentMulvaney, bearer, and Stephen Ware of
son of Mr. and Mrs. NeU Anthony Ashland, acOlyte.
.
Mulvaney Sr., also o! Ashland,
• A recepton at the El Hasa Temple
The bride Is the granddaughter or followed the ceremony,
.
Mrs.' Harry S. MO!)re of Middleport,
Th!' brjde Is a graduateofPaulG,
who attended tlie .wedding along Blazer High School and Eastern ·
with Mrs. Fennan Moore, J&gt;ome. Kentucky University with a bacheroy, and Miss Kathryn HyseU, lor's degree In elementary.
Middleport.
kindergarten education and a
The Rev. John W.T. Weise read master's degree In elementarythe double-ring vows. Music was by early childhood educatlon, She is a .
Betty Orndorff, organist, and Carl member of Kappa Alpha Theta
D. Taylor, soloist.
sorority and Phi Kappa Phi Na Catherine Jayne Moore of Ash· tional Honor Society. She Is a
. land served her sister as maid of kindergarten teacher with the
honor. Bridesmaids were Susan D. Woodford County Board of
Cornpson,AJexandraS.Dallas,and Education.
Linda K. Wilson, Atlanta, Ga., and
The groom is also a graduate of
Kathryn S. Farmer of Louisville.
the Paul G, Bli!Zer High School,
Spencer L. Simons o! Brookline, attended Ashland Community ColMass., was best inan. Ushers were lege and Is a senior at the University
Anthony and Ashley Mulvaney, of Kentucky majoring in metaUurginephews of the bridegroom. cal engineering, He Is employed by
Groomsmen were Bryan J. Korros Semlcon-Varlan Associates In
of Marina Del Ray, Calif.; DanielE. Lexington.
Mulvaney of Ashland, and Nell A.
The couple resides at 739 Spring
Mulvaney Jr., Lexington, brothers Meadow Drive, Lexington.

Technology improves cancer outlook

BYELJZABETHPE~I

Navy Lt. J.g. Brian S, Buston, son
of Dr. and Mrs. Jack A. Buxton of
767 Lewis Lane, Point Pleasant.
W.Va., was designated a naval
Aviator. Presentation of the "Wings
of Gold" marked culmination of 18
months of flight training,
Buxton's .curriculum Included
basic studies In engineering and
navigation, training flights in simu·
lators, aircraft familiarizations,
basic and advanced instrument
training, extended navigation
flights and landings aboard an
aircraft carrier.
A 1974 graduate ·of Point Pleasant
High School, Point Pleasant, he
joined the Navy In October 1982.

••

LB,$119 :.

$169

Buxton

/

...

Prices

GO T O CH 0JRCtt [V[RY StlNDI\Y

Bush

' . \,.

Carla Ann Moore becomes bride
of]ohn Brent Mulvaney recently

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

'

Valley Drive, Point Pleasant. West Virginia 25550

•,

•

•

�•

~P~a~ge~~B~-G~~Th~e~S~u~nd~a~y~TI~I~m~e~~~S~e~m~in~~~=====·~J=·==~P~o~~~e~ro~y~M~i~~d~le~po~rt~G~al~tipo~l~is~,O~h~io~P~o~in~t~P~I~ea~sa~nt~,~~VV~.V;a;· ==••==========================J=u=ly=2=1~,=1=9=8=5 ·,;;.
•1

SUNDAY
LECTA- Rev. Ea rl Hinkle will
be at Walnut Ridge Church, Sunday,

in morning services.
GALLIPOLIS ~ Dennis and
Brenda Weaver will be at the
Ga llipolis Church of Christ ln
Christian Union, Sunday, 9: :W a. m.
" CHESHIRE - Descendants of
Hilas and Caroline J ohnson wtll
have a reunion, Sunday, Kyger
Creek Clubhouse.

Charles and Alma Hinzman Snyder
will meet Sunday lor t be annual
Snyder reunion at the Portland
Park . All descendants are invited to
take a covered dish for lunch and
participate In recreational activities
after lunch.

MONDAY
RIO GRANDE - Rio Grande
Garden Club meels Monday for
picnic at hom e of Fannie Jones, 6: 30
p.m . Bring table service, covered
dish.

POMEROY- The Ken Amsbary
Chapter, Izaak Walton League of
America . will hold a family picnic at
the farm a t 7 p.m. Monday. Those
attending are to take a covered &lt;!Jsh.
GALLIPOLIS M.J . Clary The m eat will be provided py the
family reunio n, Sunday, 0. 0 . Mcin- club.
tyre Park.

GALLIPOLIS - J .H. Sheets
family reu nion. Sunday, Sale m
Baptist Church. Basket dinner ,
12: 30 p.m .

TUESDAY

GALLIPOLIS - There will be
homecoming se!"'ices Sunday a t
Macedonia Church, beginning lO
a. m . Speica l singing by the Ted
Collins Singers. Rev. O.B. Malloy
speaking in afternoon. Basketlunch
noon, public invited.
LE CTA - Rev. Bob Nunley,
Haitian missionary, w ill speak at
Lecta Tabernacle, Sunday7: 30p.m .
Public invited.

RIO GRANDE - Open Gate
Garden Club meets Tuesday for a
tour of Mrs. Alfred Gabrielli's
garden on' Falffi~ct-Centenary
Road. Meet at OVB in Rio Grande 6
p.m .

---

GALLIPOLIS - T he Old Tyme
Chorus will be at Ba iley Chapel
Church. Sunday, 7 p.m.
CROWN CITY - Rev. Ernest
Baker will be a t Good Hope Uhlted
Baptist Church Sunday' 7 p.m .
CENTENARY- Centenary United Methodist Church will have Rev.
J ack Grimes, Milton, W.Va., Sunday, 7::Wp.m .
PORTLAND - Descendant s of

c~rnmsnmnron

Jellers nllllllon
EUREKA Descendant of
James and Elizabeth Whit aker
Jeffers will have a reunion Aug. ll,
Clay Elementary School, ll: 30 to
3: 30, dinner at 12: 30 p.m. ·

• •'

..

·.

COME IN AND SEE OUR DISPLAY OF

. SATELLITE SYSTEMS
SATELITE SYSTEMS AVAILABLE ARE
*DRAKE
*UNID~N

*WILSON

RIDENOURS

985-3307

$8,400
MOTOR CAR BROKERS
Just

446-6592

Mr. and Mrs. }ames Thomas Clark

00
'

'

.,

Gallipolis, 0.

• -"- .. _~c -' "-'--

"-- __ ._, -- ~- -'

t. 160 Nmth

staes Due To tocci cw~

Open Daily 10 .9 Sunday 12-6

•.

' .'

'- '

Monday thru Friday
9 AM to9 PM
Saturday 9 AM to 5 PM

,...r
r
J -\tt

WAlK lh OR t AH fOR
"'N APPOrN JNI NT

~ p ...

l

446-9510

Sale Price lox. Pam·
pent® dlspotabM!

diapers. Choose small.

A NEW DIRECTION IN HAIR DfSIGN "

medium super, Iorge reg. ular or large super.

Sale Price. Glad
Wrap®. Plastic ;
12"x200' rolL

A Message From The Bible ...
IS OI'I'E SAVED BEFORE BEING BAPTIZED?
WiUiam B. Kughn
1 never cease to he o;urp rised as to what some teach and declare it to

W;itW=,.t\1 :

Sale Price.

Our
3.98 Bath Towel

16oo

32x42"

'•

2 Pt&lt;gs. ~~-

. . ,1'i:r··-_. • ·

P•

I

sag

1.77~

1.19

Heavy Weight

9"plates. 80 ct.

Planters
Dry

Sale Price. Portable gas grill has 2
stainless steel burners, 20-lb. LP tank*,
more.

Peanuts

Roastec1.16 oz.

'fuel not lncludea

!

a

S\1N )\ON..

~f\1\iS. oNlS

-~

.

~:~!.. 1.99

!ln. Butter
c:ooldes. Delicious.

........

Sale Price. Our 2.47 .

conaa c,...mar,
' Ne lwt

lliKuits "' 3/99•

-

79¢

24.97

Sale Prict 42 qt,
Coleman ,Caaltr
Great for picnics or

Chapel flill Church of Christ
Rulavllle Road • P. !). Box M8
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

!'l un d11~· \lo rnln~t:

Munday t :" enlnJt :

8 lhl1• Stud y If: 110
w or!411 p It: 3fl

Wonhlp 41:00

R'ed neod11y:
Rlhle Study
i :UO p.m .

Ra.dlo

" M•••.,e t' rom
· the llible"
Dally • W.JEH
1: IS a.m.

· 78¢~
Sale Price. Ivory®
lOOP· 9-oz.• in
handy pump.
-A. ar.

·roN·

Sold in
Sporting
Goods Dept.

Defense secretary

69e88

Sale Price Qt.

Quaker State
motor oil. 1 Ox30

or IDwoiO

1.19~

...

.:.

.

' '

Salt Price
Toshiba loom

Salt PrXt Electronic
AMIFM Digital Clock

Box. IT·SXI

!ladiol""-.

The Department of Defense wu
created on Sept. 18, 19!17, and Is
headed by the secretary ot deleMe,
who Is a member of the president's
Cabinet. Tbe present Secretary,
Caspar W. Weinberger, 13 the !Sth
man to hold that position.

:

----

OYeta Culp Hobby, who wu
appointed In 1!113, was the nation's
llrs! secretary of health, education
aitdweHare.

F-·~or
Canditi-.
318 oz.

•

.. .' .' ... .' .

29.88~

The Jewish year of 5746 hellnS on
SePt· 14, !Je_

Ow ... 1.67 Swill

~

,

•I

or

DEAR READER - None that
your body will ever recognize. ·
Consumer Reports' editors say
that, molecule for molecule, natural and synthetic forms of a vitamin
are identical. So is their biological
effect. However, you may notice a
difference In tbe amount you pay
for vitamins . Those promoted as
"natural" are often prtced higher
than their synthetic twins.
DEAR CONSUMER REPORTS
- I have a regular savings account
at a bank. Can tbe bank change the
lerms oflhe account without notice, .
such as by adding charges for a low
balance?
DEAR READER - When you
opened tbe account at the bank, you
signed a signature card. If It wsllke

fi&amp;J EMERSON QUIET KOOC I

' -

'\

Mr. a11d Mn. Ke1111eth Clark Brewer III
self-employed at Kenny's Auto
Service, Columbus .

The groom is a graduate oiBishop
Watterson High School and is

Bills yqu shouldn't pay

typical bank signature cards, It
contatned the terms of your agreement with tbe bank. Consumer
Reports' editors say that such
agreements frequently include
wording to the effect thai the bank
can change the terms whenever It
wishes (although the bank may
notily you of tbe change.) However,
It is possible that the bank could
change the agreement without .
notice.
DEAR CONSOMER'·REPORTS
- I am concerned about sodium
and want to reduce my intake. Is
there any hazard In restricting
sodium sharply over a long period?
DEAR READER - If you have
healthy kidneys, ihere's no known
danger. Consumer Reports' editors
say that normal kidney !unctions
enable the body !0 retain adequate
stores of sodium even If your

less than 500 milligrams of sodium
per day tend to be unpalatable for
m any people.
(For a special reprint of Consumers Unon 's evaluatin of pens ion
pl ans, send $1 for each copy to
CONSUMERS, P .O. Box 461, Radio
City St ation. New Yor k, NY 10019.
Be sure to ask for the reprint "Will
you ever collect a pension?" )

sodium int ake is very low for
prolonged periods.
Everyone needs some sodium in
the diet to replace routine losses.
About 200 milligrams a day is
considered essential for surviva l.
Since ma ny foods contain sodium
natu rally, however, that minimum
amount ts easy to obtain without
conscious effort. Diets containing

r-----------_;__:____________

A TINY
HEARING AID
FOR WHEN
YOU NEED IT.

SAVINGS OF OVER

40°/o

DEAR CONSUMER REPORTS
- Is there any dHference between
vitamins advertised as corning
from "natural sources" and synthetic ones?

Economy Line
Room Air Conditioner .

1/c

CT.

ONLY

!f you are !ike IJIOSt peQple with hearing loss you hear well
10 s~me ~1tuat1ons and have difficulty in others. A new
heanng atd has been dev~loped that can give you the help
you .need, .wh~n you ne~d 1t. The Argosy CCA Canal hearing
a.Jd 1s so t1ny 1t can be mserted in a matter of seconds. It
~1ts comfortably within the ear canal and is barely visible.
Help is finally here for those "part time" hearing problems.

$159

Gtlll,•ll•"

·

'·

.RENTAL OFFER-For a limited time, rent the canal aid (or
hearing aid) for 6 weeks for only $50.00.
TRY BEFORE YOU BUY!
See us at Holzer Clinic Each Wedpesday, 1:00 P.M.

DILES
HEARING AID
CENTER

ONLY

422 Stconcl An.
Gallipolis
"Ytrl Dl••"~ HU~fllltlll I•

•

~ any

$249
TAWNEY JEWLERS

1/c CT.

•

•

HElPING PEOPLE HfAR
WILLIAM S. DILES
326, W. Ut.lon Str11t

Athens.

Ohio 45701

1614) 594-357'

SU\\'lo.uGa Sua.S\ls\UU
''A mBtica '1 leading Manulacfufel'
oiiJVA Tanning Equipmenf 11

MODEL 5LJ7J
• 4,800 Btu/hr

•
•
•
•

7.0 EEA
6.3 amp 115 V (no rewiring)
Do-it-yourself installation
Mounts flush with window sill
Easy-clean , slide-out. washable filt•" I
Embossed aluminum cabinet
Rotary compressor
Fits windows. up to 36" wide

l4i EMERSON QUIET KOOC I
Compact Custom Series Air Conditioner
-

MODI!L5W7W
• 5,000 Btvlhr
• 7.5 EEA
• e.2 amp t t5 V (no rawiring•
e C»-lt-your.tf, "inatant installation"
e Mounts tluth with window sill
e Eaay-cleln, alide-out, washable filter
e Adjustable, 1~osltion therrnoetat
e Em~ aluminum ubtn·e t

&lt;

Commercial T'anning Unit

TRADE
CENTER
UNAUGA, OHIO
PHONE 446·74 . .

•
• ·•••·•• • • !• ·• •
'

DEAR READER - Unsolicited
merchandise received by matl Is
conslctered a gilt. Consumer Reports' editors saythatyoudon'towe
any money for lt, nor do you have to
return lt. Write the collection
agency and state that the amount
bllled Is neither due nor oWing.
Point out that the agency is
prohibited from collecting the
money because lt is for unsolicited
merchandise. Under the Fair Debt
Collection Practices Act, an agency
must stop trying to collect the
money onee you've given written
notification.

1ravel!
,
If you could see the letters I get
from wives of retired husbands who
do nothing but sit around the house
and complalf\, you'd know how
lucky you really are. I sa y go for lt.
And if you find you don't like
adventuring into the past, finding
'relics of former civilizations and
meeting new people, well, there's
always that cabin at the lake.

•

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

By the Editors .
ol Conswner Reports
DEAR CONSUMER REPORTS
- Some time ago, I was sent
hosiery I hadn't ordered. I didn't
pay the bill. Now a collection
agency Is dunning me. Was I rtght ,
and what should I do?

Dear Meg

DEAR MEG - My husband and
I have been marrted 31 years.
We've raised our children and last
year Don retired from his job In an
insurance company. I looked forward to our ,retirement because I
thought we were going to do aU the
things we'd planned and saved lor,
llke traveling, finishing our cabin at
the lake, or just taking life eagy. But
no. Don . has always been an
archeOlogy nut and now he's
decided he's going back to college.
I admire his ambition, but let'sbe
realistic. When he gets his M.S.,
what's he going to do with It? He
says lie'd like to go on digs, but that
would mean going back to work.
And who would hlre .a 61-year-old
archeologist who's never even dug
In a garden? (1 do all that .)
We both need advice. I don't want
to s!t by and . watch Don knock
hlm!II'H out for nothing. -SARAH,
ROCHESTER. MINN. .
DEAR SARAH- You're the one
who needs advice to understand
Don's need for Improving his mlnd
and his desire to venture Into a new
field. Talk about an exciting
retirement! Going on digs doesn't
mean going back to work luU time.
There are organizations that take
on part-time novice archeologists In
South America, Africa and tbe
Middle East for two or three
months at a time - and age doesn't
matter a whit. So there's your

Matron of bomr was Bonita
Hoosier wbo wore a formal gown of
frost rose jersey with spaghetti ·
straps and a long sleeved lace
jacket. Bridesmaids were Teresa
Wocid, sister of the groom, Kim
Smith, sister of the bride, Cindy
Gramelt and Cheryll Lepeda. They
wore Identical tonnallength gowns
suede rose taffeta, and carried
.bouquets of pink carnations, sweetheart roses arid baby's breath.
Michelle Hoosier was !lower girl
and wore a f!oor length gown of
white chantilly lace and carried a
white lace parasol. Shawn Tipton,
ring bearer, wore a white tuxedo
and. carrted a white satin and
chant!Hy lace pillow.
Mike Vatter was best man, and
the groomsmen were Shawn Smith,
brother of the bride, Michael Wood,
brother-In-law of the groom, Don
Hill and Darrell Hoosier. Thegroom
wore a white tuxedo while the other
attendants were in grey tuxedos
with pink rosebud boutonnieres.
A recepton was beld at ,the VFW
han with the pink and white color
scheme of the weddln1: being
carried out In the bride's table
decorations . The lountaln wedding
cake was four-tiered and trimmed
with pink and white roses. A crystal
heart and doves topped the cake.

From Consumer Reports

GALLIPOLIS - Annette Kay sleeves and a V-dropped hack with
Sisson and Jan\es Thomas Clark cross straps. They wore pink
traded vows. In a double-ring picture hats and ·carrted nosegays
ceremony at Grace United Metho- ol white stik stephanotis with pink
dlst Church, June 1. She Is the rosebuds.
daughter of Mr. and Ml"!l. Richard
Scott D. Clark of Galllpolls was
Sisson, Rt. 1, Box 68, Gallipolis. He best man, and ushers weie Paul
ts the son of Mary Skinner Clark, Skinner, Gallipolis and Tom
Gallipolis and Robert Clark, Jero- Skinner, Bidwell. Tbey wore gray
mesvUle, Ohio.
tuxedos. The groom wore a white
The Rev. Bruce W. Harrts tuxedo with taUs.
performed the ceremony. Music
!be mother of the bride wore a
was provided by Edith Ross, noor-lmgth, rooe gown with a pink
organist and Stephanie Purcell, carnation coruge. The mother of
soloiSt.
1M groom wore a floor-length, blue
Glven in~rrlagebyherparents gown, also with a pink carnation
an&lt;t &lt;"SCCrted to the altar by her corsage.
fatber, the bride wore a white
Ringbearer was Jacob Blazer,
taffeta gown with schlttJJ, embroi- nephew of the. bride, who wore a
del'¢ high neck and yoke. The gray tuxedo. F1ower girl was Amy
melon sleeves, skirt and semi- . Casto who wore a pink satin dress
cathedral train were trimmed with · with a fiower halo In her hair.
ruffles of chantllly-type lacP,
A reception was held following
caught at the sides with satin bows.
the ceremony ln the church dining
The bride wore a Vlctortan wedroom. Assisting at the reception
ding hat and carried a cascade of
were Carla Meyer, Ronda Hales
white silk roses, accented with pink
and Beth Wentworth, sisters of the
rosebuds and baby's breath. Tbe groom. Attending the guest regisbrtde also wore a fhreEo.strand
ter was Mary Hill.
pearl necklace belonging to the
The brtde Is a graduate of Kyger
groom's grandmother, antique
Creek High School and Southeastpearl earrtngs of the groom's .em Business College. She Is an
mother and a gold chain, gUt of tbe
olllcer manager and financial aid
groom,
olll&lt;:er at Southeastern Business
Matron ol honor was Kristy
College.
Woodall, sister of the bride. Brides11te groom is a graduate of
maids were Lisa Riehle, Gallipolis
HlllSdaie High School and Is an
and Chris Beebe, Cheshire. They
admissions representative at Souwore pink !affets gowns with
theastern Business College.
asymmetrical skirts. The gowns
The couple resides at 89%
were accented with pleated puff
Chlllleothe Rd., Gallipolis.

By Me&amp; Whitcomb

rt:!'&gt;urrf'&lt;:tio n. You a re buried with .Christ (immersed · comple~ely
coHr•d m wate r) ll\; THE LIKENESS of His death, and you are msed
"'ith Christ I t' TH E LI KE NE SS of His resurrection (Rm. 6:4,5). Why?
To walk in newness of life. So be baptized . It is a joyous experience and
une that will bring mu(.:h joy to your heart . J oy ean come to you a.s a
re..,ult of obedience."
'
Examining This Doc:trine
L&lt;'t us take this doctrine t hat has been slipped in by this teacher
and place it by the side of God 's word. The truth must be the stand~rd
hy wh ich 1 exarnme or test such teachmg, not the honesty and smcer1ty
of t he teacher.
, '
Accordi ng to this doctrine: 11)-Baptism is th~ fi rst step of fa1th and
obedienee: {2)-a public confession of who~e s1de you are . on; {3)-an
outward sig n-of an inward change : 14 )-a bur1al an~ resurrection: 151·t~e
likeness of Christ 's death: 16)-the hk en~ss of HIS ;esurrect1on:. (7)-lt
lPrmits you l'? wa lk in ne wness of hfe ; · (8)·a JOYOJ_.IS experience ,
Jringi ng much JOY to your heart ; and (9)- ~ result of obed1e~ce .
,
Now. [ ask, can a person be sa~ed w1thout the foll?wmg: (1)-Falth
and obedie nce· 12)-a public confesston: 13)-an outward s1gn of an mward
change; 141- th'e bur1al and resurrection: (5)-the likene~s of Christ's
death: 161- the like ness of His resurrection: (7) -wallung m .newness of
life: 181-n joyous e~perie n ce ; and(9)-obedlence? You ~adtly answ~r.
"N o!" Yet , according t o this teachin~. you can, for if .one IS &amp;I.Yed befo~
baptism and baptism is all t hat wh1ch we .are told 1t to be , then he IS
most definitely saved without t hese esse ntials.
What The Scriptures Te.. b
The script ures declare the following; lli ·Salvation follows faith and
ba ptism IMk. 16: 15); 121-bapt is m is a confession of whose side you are
on, for you are baptized into His body , the church 11 Cor. 12:13) :
l:.ll·baptism is an outward sign of 'an inward change , ~he ~nswermg of
good conscience toward God (l Pet. 3:21); (4)-bapttsm 1s the. form of
rl ~ctrine. which is t he· death, burial. and resurrection of Chnst ~Rm .
6:17: 1 Co r . 15:1 -4: Rm. 6:3,4): (51- baptism is the .outward sign of dying
with Christ IRm . 6:41: 16)-baptism is the likeness of His resurrection
fRm. 6:4.51: 17)-by baptism, we are raised to walk in newness of life
(Rm . 6:4): 18)- joy comes after one has bee n baptized into Christ (Acts
8:39: 16:34); and (9)- baptism is obedience to the word (Acts 2:41).
The state ment, "You are not baptized to get saved , but be&lt;ause you
are saved'' ls unins pired and not supported by the scriptures . It is of
man and not of God!
• For Free Bible Correspondence Course. Write ...

'

Annette Kay Sisson becomes
·bride of ]ames Thomas Clark

Retirement fun, not work

I

~ the gospel. It is more bewildering to know that there are countless
~oul., ""ho an: hon est and s incere in believing such teaehing. For
in~tanu:-. f read the followin~ statement entitled, "Now That You .A re
Sa\'l!d: · ''Th€ fir.,t ,te p of fa1t h and obedience after you are sav¢ 15 to
be bapuz..ed. You are Dot baptized to ~et saved, bu~ because You are
\a'•~:d Your baptism is a public confess1on of Whose s1de you are.on and
1 ~ an 'Jut ward sign of an inward change. ·Baptism is a bunal and

,,

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'

Light Canyon red, with contrasting cloth interior, V-6
engine, automatic transmission, power steering &amp;
brakes, a-c, am-fm stereo, power windows, quartz clock
and just 24,500 miles .
-

Re&lt;Pa Pltces May Vaty /&gt;J Some

Sale Starts Sun., July 21
Sale Ends Tues., July 23

..,'

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$AVE ON THIS ONE

CHESTER

I W. MAIN

'

'

Come In or Call For Details
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
GAS SERVICE

•

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1984 FORD THUNDERBIRD .....
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Dance
RACINE- A fifties-through-theeighties dance will be held a t the

·r·IF
r_

or

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Reunion planned
POMEROY -Descendantsofthe
late Thomas Gtikey and Mllda Jane
Hudnall will hold their annual
reunion ·on July 28 at tbe Route 33
southbound roadside park with a
basket dinner at noon. Those
attending bring folding chairs.

J.\CROSS

POMEROY -The Maize Manor
United Methodist Church Columbus was the setting tor theJune22
wedding of Mlcbelle Smith, daugb·
ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Smith, ano;l
Kenneth Clark Brewer, m son of
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Brewer,
Colwnbus, formerly of Meigs
County.
, ·
The grooin is the grandso!l of
Audrey Brewer and the late Allen
Brewer, Portland, andLucllleCiay,
Pomeroy. ,
Tbe Rev. Lowell Nelson perlonned the double-ring ceremony
beforeanaltardecoratedwithseven
branch candelabra, theimitycandle
arangement, and two vases of pink ·
sweetheart rosebUds and baby's
breath.
The bride wore a silk organza
gown with reent&gt;roldrered chan·
tilly lace, a demurestandup collar,
yoke of illusion with schlttJJ ernbroidery and seed pearls, and blshlp'
sleeves. The skirt featured chantUly
lace ruffles which cascaded into a
semi-cathedral train. Her fingertip
veil fell from a handeau style crown
of seed pearls and sweetheart
rosebuds.
Tbe bride carried a bouquet of
pink and white sweetbeart rosebuds
and haby's breath, pink and white
lace and ribbon streamers.

... -

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.,.-·.'.,

St., Middleport, will have vacation
Bible school, Aug, 5-11, from 6: 30 to
8: :xi p.m . There willbeclassesforali
ages including adults .

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

FORKED RUN - The descendants of James and Bertha Cremeans
will hold~ family reunion Saturday,
Aug.10,at ForkedRunStatePark.
Dinner will be served at 12: :W p.m.

•

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,.
Wble school
•."""
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•
MIDDLEPORT - The Hope , . •
'
Baptist Chapel, located at570Grant
• ••

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GALLIPOLIS - Gallipolis Rotary m eets Tuesday, 6 p.m. a t
Oscar's.

CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chapter
OES meets for family picnic at
LETART, W.Va. - The Grubb Kyger Creek Shelter house, TuesFamily Singers will be at Davis day, 6 p.m . Slloan Lodge members
Grove Baptist Church, Saturday, 7 · and families will be guests. Being
food and table service.
. p.m .
GALLIPOLIS - Lambert Trio
will be at Faith Valley Church of
Christ in Cluistian Union, Bulaville
Road, Sunday 9:30a.m. and 7 p .m .
Pu blic invited.

Racine American Legion hall, Seeking classmates
Racine, Wednesday from 7p.m. to 1
VINTON - The 1965 class of
a:m . Cost is $1.50 for singles and $2
North Gallla is seeking Jnfonnation
lor couples. Relreshments will be on class members Patty Stutler,
sold . No alcoholic beverages · Rosem ary Chapman, Gary Figpertnitted.
gins, Wanda . Drummond; Wllma
Hatfield, Curt Smith and Carolyn
Knox, for a reunion Aug. 17 at 0 .0 .
Aerobil!S cla!6. ·
· GALLIPOLJS - Ther e wil) be Mcintyre Park. Call Deb Polcyn a t
morning aerobics Classes ·at Grace 446-2875; Jane Colley, 388-8745; Jim
United methodist Church, begin- Skidmore at 446-W6 or Brenda
ning July 29. Time is 9:15a. m . on Kincaid, 669-7531.
Monday, Wednesday and Fridays .
Register before that day by calling Reunion set
Instructor Debbie Davis at 379-2741.
PT. PLEASAINT, W.Va. - The
Class runs slx weeks. Babysitting Martin Sayre reunion ts Aug. 4, ·
availa ble at $1 per hour. There is a Krodel P a rkin Pt. Pleasant, W.Va.
r
fee for classes.

Michelle . .Smith exchanges vows
with
Kenneth Clark Brewer
III
.
..

···U....

Community calendar I area happenings

The Sunday Times·Sentinei- Page-8·7

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

OPEN
MONDAY THIU SATUIAY
9 A.M. til 6 P.M.

$3995

RATLIFF'S POOL CENTER
1313 EASTEIN AVENUE, GALUPOUS

446-6579

•

�Page-B-8-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21, 1881.

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

Stop cracks
about -his , ·
knuckles

Taxi service returns
By BOB HOEFUCJI
11Jnes.Sentlnel Staff
If you are a potential candidate
for a school board
position in Ohio
this !all, do be
aware that the
. information dis·
trtbuted recently
by the Ohio
School Boards
Association Indicates that the can·
didate petition filing deadline is
Aug, 25.
Not so - the Meigs Board of
ElectionS repotts the dead line is 4
p.m. on Aug. 22.

The new Blue Stl'eak. Cabs will
begin service in Meigs County on
July 29.
The cab service is being operated
by Wiiliam E. Snouffer and his son,
Gary E; Snouffer and will have
ofiices at 107 Sycamore St. in
Pomeroy.
Hours at first are just experimcn·
tal until the Snouf!ers can deter·
mine demand. For the time being,
the cabs will run from 7 a.m. to 7
p.m., Monday .through r rlday, a nd
from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays.
Incidentally, the cabs are air.
conditioned.
Senior citizens. the elderly and
handicapped persons. may purchase tokens at 50 cents each to tide
the cabs at C&amp;K Supermarket,
Vlllage Pharmacy, Fruth, Phar·
macy, Swlsher-Loh~ Drug Store
and at the Senior Citizens Center in
Pomeroy.
It's b€en a while since cab service
existed in the county.
The Pomeroy Arca Chamber of
Commerce is sponsoring a twominute shopping spree at the
Kroger Store in Pomeroy.
You can buy your parllcipation
ticket at the Kroger Store or the
Pornerpy Chamber Office with the
shopper to be selected on Aug. 8.
You can get additional info at the
chaml:!er of1ice, 992-500;.
Bill Young of the Meigs Jaycees
advises that the second distribution
of the Pomeroy·Middieport Jaycee
Game is. underway.
'

Sport

Dr. Gott

&amp;at of the bend
The game is similar to Monopoly
but features local businesses on the
playing board. Cost is$11-nosaies .
tax - and the games can be
purchased at Locker 219, LaSalle
Ga.Uery, Empire Furniture, Cha·
teau Beauty Salon, Four Seasons
Tanning, Vaughan:s Cardinal, El·
berfeid's and Hartley Shoes.
There were 250 games on sale
originally and the second order is
also for that number.

You might want to rememher ...
Krlsti Richmond, Middleport,
.underwent surgery Tuesday at
University Hospital in Columbus.
Her room number is 1079. Krist! will
be in the hospital for about a week
and would just be delighted to hear
from Meigs Countians.

STATE FAIR BOUND - Doruta Lambert, Rock
Sptings, righ&amp;, and Nikki and EHse Meier ·;,r
MiddleportwereselectedtorepresentMeigsCountyat

the Ohio state 4-H Horse Show during the qualifying
sbow held Thursday night at the · Rook Sprlnp
Fairgrounds.

Meigs representatives to fair chosen
ROCK SPRINGS -Three young
Nikki Meier. Middleport, daughters
of Mr. and Mrs. Robet1 Meier. The
equestrians to represent Meigs
three scored the most points In
County 4-H horse clubs ~t the Ohio
showm;mship and riding t9 win the
State Fair were selected Thursday
eveing at the qualifying horse show · Ohio State Fair slots.
Judge for the show was Jody
held at the Rock Springs
Sullivan,
LowellvlUe, with BUI
Fairgrounds.
Downie,
local,
serving as rlngman.
Selected for participation at the
Awards
were
provided
by the Meigs
state fair from the 10 participants
County 4-H Horse Clubs.
were Donna Lambert, daughter of
Participants in the show were
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Lambert,
Rock Springs Road, and Elise and

Donna Lambert on Dippity Dell;
Patrece Circle OR Sunday Brownlg;
Elise Meier on Restless E Z Bar;
bmica Jones on Kay's .Grey Hawk;
Nikki Meier on Major's Cadette;
Donny May on Sugar; AmyMe~er
on ChipsRoyalFiower; DeeCitrleon
Bill; Paru Ash on Babe, and Krts
Ash on Bailey.
Mica Jones on Kay's Grey Hawk
sbowed for exhibition only. She was
a 1981 state4-H show representative
and therefore, was Ineligible this
year.
Novice showmen included Amy
MetzgeronChipsRoyatFlowerand
Dee Kllne on.BID.
Coniestants participated in show·
manship · and horsemanship
classes.

Senior Citizen Centers
plan weekly activities
Gallia Coumy

Join hanJs with
.::

Tall test for this tomato

The flag of Belau in the MarshaU
Islands is blue with a yellow ball in
the middle.

NOW

200/o

Graham knows what . he must
,not do if he is to retain title
By MARTIN lADER
UPI Sports Writer
· SANDWICH, England (UPI)- If
David Graham is to have any hopeof
winning the British Open Sunday,
there Is one thing he knows he must
avoid.
Under no circumsstances is he to
'eat Ben Crenshaw's cooking.
The two are sharing a bouse this
, week, and on Friday night it was
Crenshaw's turn to prepare dinner.
As far as Graham is concerned, it
also will be the last time.
"His spaghetti looks like a
deflated' football," Graham said

LOGAN - Meigs high school and
Belpre high school have received ·
letters of interest from tbe Southeastern Ohio Alhletlc League and
administrators of tbe SEOAL also
took the first steps toward setting
up an aU-star basketball game
between players from the SEOAL
arid the Tri·Valley Conference.
At the recent summer meeting of
. SEOAL officials Logan Wgh school
principal Dave McAllister was
elected president with Logan's
· athletic director, Kelley Stilwell to

OFF

WHY PAY MORE?

.. ·::::

1 I 3 Court St.

Pomeroy
992·20S4

c(b~

··..

serve as secretary·treasurer. ·

342 !11ond An1
Gallipolis
446·2"1

r JewPlt&gt;r

Your

Delegates voted to send letters of
interest to both Meigs and Belpre
regarding membership in the
· 60-year old league.
· If both schools were to join, the
league would have eight members
again for the first time since 19&amp;1.

Meigs, which recently 'departed each league.
from the SEOAL to join the
Until last season, the SEOAL has ·,
Tri-Valiey Conference, was a played an annual cage all-star
member of the league from 1967 game with the Ohio Valley Conferthrough 1983. Belpre has been a enceall·stars, but the newcomposl'
member of the TVC since It was tion of the league (Ironton leaving,
Martella joining) make the new
organized.
When the SEOAL begins play this arrangement more feasible.
fall the member schools wiD be
In other action, SEOAL memhers
Athens, Gallipolis, Jackson, Logan, discussed admission prices for
teague games, recognized league
and Manetta.
Warren Local is !;Cbeduied to champions In spring sports and
become the sixth league member Logan as the league's all-sports
for the 1986-87 scbooi year, foiiowing trophy winner.
a successful membership In tbe
There was also a discussion on
the selection of all league players
TVC.
,
Members gave Athens high and arrived at a consensus that this
school principal David Leggett process needs some uniformity a~d
permission to enter into a contract guidelines. A three-man committee
between the SEOAL and TVC for an was appointed to make necessary
aU-star basketball game between recommendations at the next meetthe aU-league girls and boys from tng on Aug. 7 in Logan.

·Today's sport parade:

SUPER SALE

• By MJLTON RICHMAN
UPI Senior Editor-Sports
I.

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\

SUPER SAVINGS SUPER STYLES,
Cross Your Heart ·serected •'Y'••
Thank Goodness it Fits ··•-•d •. , ••

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No Body~s Perfect' ..i-••~-otvl••

Living·br••

ELBERFELDS
POMEIOY

Sparky Anderson, always tbe gentleman no matter

•

sbower.
Or words to that effect.
What we have here Is the beginning of a new feud.
In a. way, it's welcome.' Everyone's getting a little
tired of the old one between the players and the owners.
This latest one revolves around that Big Bore that
passed for an Ali-Star Game in Minneapolis last
Tuesday night. Martin's mad because Anderson, who
managed the losing American Leaguers, played
Yankees center fielder Rickey Henderson six Innings
despite sore legs, after Martin wrote a note asking
Henderson be let oft early,.
~ Martin thinks he s mells a rat.
~
.
.
The Yankees had a six-game winning string before
losing to the Twins in Minneapolis Thursday. They had
passed the Tigers in the AL East, and Martin isn't so
sure Anderson wasn't trying to help the American
League AU-Stars and the Tigers a I the same time by
using Henderson as )ong as he did,
Anderson doesn'tgo for Martin's thinking a tall. He's
beginning to get the Idea Martin is trying to give him
lessonS on bow to manage.

•
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started as Oliver grounded to sbort,
but the throw eluded the first
baseman and Oliver raced to
second. Hendticks then drilled the
first pitch jnto centerfield for the
game-winning rbi.
Lancaster hurler Jeff Porter also
went the distance, Ianning 11 and
walking three.
Other Meigs h!tters included
Hendrtcks, with a second single,
Bailey a (louble and single, Donnie
Becker two singles, Chrts Kennedy
a double and Barnes and Carpenter
each a single.
Meigs advanced Into the winner's
bracket with a 3 p.m. game
Saturday against Athens. Meigs is
now 20-8, while Lancaster, the
six-time defending champion,
dropped to 24-11. Lancaster plays in
the loser's bracket at 11 a:m.
Sunday against the Logan McArthur loser.
In Friday's action, McArthur
drilled Wellston 28-6 and Logan
surprise&lt;!_Giouster. 17-3.

BALTIMORE (UPI) - George
Brett drove in four runs with a
homer and bases-loaded double
Saturday, powering'the Kansas City
Royals to a 7·5 victory over the
Baltimore Orioles.
Hal McRae and Willie Wilson also
homered for the Royals to back the
combined 10-hitter of Danny Jackson, S.6, . and Dan Quisenberry ..

Quisenberry hurled 2 2-3 innings for
his 18th save.
Brett's three-run double in the
third erased a 2-0 deficit as Kansas
City spoiled the return of Mike
Flanagan, 0.1, to the Orioles'
rotation. The lefl·handerunderwent
five months of rehabllltalion follow·
ing an Achilles~ tendon tear in
January.

Singles by Buddy Biancaiana,
Wilson and Lonnie Smith preceded
Brett's line-drive double of1 the
rtght·fieid wail.
The Orioles took advantage ol
three walks by Jackson in the first to
take the early lead on Eddie
Murray's double and Fred Lynn's
sacrifice fly.

Angels
post .5-3
•
VICtory
BOSTON (UP!) - Mike Witt
celebrated his 25th birthday by
scattering five hits over 81-31nnbtgs
;md Rulino Linares hit a two-run
homer Saturday to Iead the Calllornla Angels to a 5·3 victory over the
Boston Red Sole
The trtumph was-Gene Mauch's
1, 700th as a major-league manager.
The California pilot is ninth on the
ali-time list.
Boston third baseman Wade
Boggs extended his hitting streak to
23games -amajor-leaguehigh this
season - with a sixth-Inning double.
Witt, S.6, struck out seven and
walked three before Mike Easier
tripled in a run in the ninth to make II
· 5-2. Pat Clements relieved but
surrendered an RBI single to Rich
Gedman. Donnie Moore then came
on to record his 19th save.
The Angels, who had just five hits,
took a 2.0 lead in the second when
Bobby Grlch walked and Linaresrecently recalled from the minorshit his first homer of the season, a
drive into the center-field bleachers
o.ffBobOjeda, 4-6.
-'File Angels chased Ojeda in the
third with three more runs. After
singles by Rod Carew and Juan
Beniquez and a walk to Brian
Downing loaded the bases, Mike
Brown singled to score Carew. Mike
Trujillo relieved and Grieb
grounded out to score Beniquez.
·After a walk to Dcug DeCinces
re-loaded the bases. Trujillo walked
Reggie Jackson to make It 5-0.

MAKE&gt; DEBUT - Baltbnore pitcher Mike Flanagan made his
season debut for the Orioles against the Kansas City Royals Satunlay,
but lasted only four innings. The Royals won, 7·5. Flanagan suHered a
non-baseball related lfllury in the off·seaoon. (UP!).

.

:Martin's mad at Sparky; What else is new?

Mementos gain woman's arrest

' •
•

Saturday after he sbot an even-par relaxed after finishing a long round
70 to share the third-round lead with late Saturday evening. His working
day had been increased an bour by a
Bernhard Langer at 1-under 209.
"It was overcooked spaghetti and lightning storm, causing a suspenundercooked bacon, so you can say. sion of play, and although hungry
we had a problem with dinner. and weary, he was in good humor.
Tonight it's going to be fish and
In addition to Crenshaw's cookchipS, takeout Chinese or eggs on
ing, Graham also took a dig at
toast. But as far as Crenshaw is
concerned, I'm going to lock the cricket, a sport he appreciated more
as a youngster bt Australia before
door to the kitchen. He can't even
moving to Texas.
'
boUwater."
Despite tbe fact he squandered a
"If you ever want to go to sleep,
just watch cricket," he said, adding
three-shot lead ove~ the linal six
he had done just that Saturday
holes, including a missed 2-foot putt
for bogey on No. 16, Graham was morning when he needed a nap.

! how bot he gets, says Billy Martin should go take a cold

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - City Studio City neighborhood for sev·
officials hauled ofl20yearsworthol .era! years.
what they said was trash piled tolhe
A lawyer the woman called
ceilings of a house In a neighborhood
Wednesday night, Joanne Frank,
with $400,!XIl homes .
sa id the city did not h'ave the right to
But the "pack rat" whO lives in the haul off a lifetime of "mementos."
house apparently escaped out the
" There's nothing illegal about
back door before au thorJties could
being a messy homekeeper," she
·
arrest her Thursday. A fjre official sa id.
on the scene, where bag after bag of
"Yes there is," countered fire
paper, trash, furniture and misccl·
inspector Michael Theule. "That
!any was !brown into t~e dump
bouse is a jungle. This lady has been
trucks, said he had never seen
a pack rat for 20 years in this
neighborhood ."
anything like it.
"If's piled tot he ceilings," he said .
Neighbors sa id the woman spent
bours typing and walking around
"It's a jungle."
An arrest warrant was Issued for . the neighborhood at night, taking
Ottilie Tobin, also known as Natalie
photographs by flash light of
· L. White, whose house has b€en surrounding homes.
described as an eyesore in the neat

hole ,..ling the third rollll! of the 1985 Brlllsh Open
Saturday. Lanrer started ffte day with a one-over-par
141. (UPI)

SEOAI., TVC to play all-star
bas~etball contest next spring

Meigs County

Playtex"

SINKS A PUTf - West Germany's Bemhard
lanjlel' watches as he sinks a putt to blrdlet!K! second

OFF

lOK • 14K PLAIN BANDS

singled home Ryan Oliver with the
game-winning run in the eighth
inning as Meigs upset Lancaster,
3-2, in first-round action of the
eighth dlstrtct American Legion
Tournament here Saturday.
Kevin Eastman kept the powerful Lancaster hitters off sttide most
of the day, allowing only six hits and
only one after the sixth inning.
Lancaster had the tying run on
third base with no outs in the ninth,
but Eastman fanned tbe next two
batters and induced a ·game ending
grounder to first. The. ·GAHS
left-bander fanned six and walked
four.
.
Down 2.0 in the third, Meigs tied
the game when Phil Bailey doubled
leading off the third and went to
third on Deke Barnes' infield single.
Bailey scored as Barnes stole
second and the catcher's !brow
went into centet11eld, Barnes taking
third. He scored on Jay Carpenter's
fielder's choice.
The winning tally in the eighth

Brett· paces Kansas City win

Belpre, Meigs 'receive letters'

PEGASUS - Usa Casto of Gallipolis created this papler-mache
Pegasus lor an art education class at Rio Grande College Wid
Community CoUege. The nearly We-size horse ha.• been on display at the
coUege's Fine and Performing Arts Center.

The tomato was put on display for
severa l days before heingcut up and
restaurateurs calculated the fruit
had enough flesh for 13 salads.
The Guinness Book of World
Records lists the largest koown
tomato as one weighing 6 pounds, 8
ounces, grown by Clarence Bailey of
Monora, Wis., in August 1976.

By KEITH WISECUP
'11rne&amp;&amp;ntlnel Staff
ATHENS - Dave Hendrl,cks

·:

NOW

VIENNA (UP! ) - Bulgarian
fatmer Todor Birnikov was unim·
pressed when restaurateurs told
him they could make 13saiadsfrom
one of his tomatoes.
The .jumbo fruit weighed in at
about 3\ol pounds, the size of an
average watermelon and the sea·
son's record for Bulgaria, the
offi~lal Bulgarian news agency BTA
reported Wednesday. ,
However, Birnikov said all his •
backyard tomatoes weighed over 1
pound.

ATHENS __:Meigs' Legion baseball team defeated Athens lO-t here
Saturday allemoon In second round
play of the 1985 doubl~
district baseball tournament.
lbeMelgsenbyscoredelghlruns
on seven hits In the ftrsl inning and
never looked back.
Gordon Splete hurled a seven•hltter lor the winners. He went all
· the way (nine innings). Splete He
tanned siK and walked four.
Top~ were PhD Bailey, four
slllgles; Deke Barnes, a double,
triple and four RBJ.s; Jay Carpenter, a 'three-ntn homer and Ryan
Oliver two singles.
Meigs, now 21-3, wUJ play Logan
SuDday at 3 p.m. on the Trautwein
Field for a spot bt the district finals.
Logan, 13-11, beat McArthur, 3-2,
In Saturday afterD!IOn' s other opm·
ing round game.

Uld·:
get'INIII@ :

What did we do hefore we got all
of this air conditioning? Well- we
got vety hot. Do keep smiling.

dancing.
Tuesday - Physical Fitness,
GALLIPOLIS - Activities and 11:45 a .m.; Chorus, 1-2 p.m.
Wednesday - Physical Fitness,
menus for the week of July 22
a.m.; Bingo, 1-2 p.m.; Bo·
11:45
through July 26 at lhe Senior
wling.
1:30 p.m.; Painting Class,
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
1:
15
p.m.
are as follows:
Thursday -Ceramics, 10 a.m. ·2
Monday, July 22 - Chorus, 1·3
p.m .: Picnic attheCenter-games
p.m .
.
Tuesday, ,July 23 - S.T.O.P. before dinner - bring a covered
Class, 10:30 a.m.; Physical Fitness, dish and your own table service,
meat a nd beverage will he fur11:15 a.m.
Wednesday, July 24 - Vinton nished by the Senior Nutrition
Program- there will be no regular
Bible Study, 11 a.m. ·noon : Card
eat served at the Center that day .
m
Games, 1-3 p.m.; American Litera rriday - Quilting, Cards, pool
ture Class, I p.m .
table.
Thursday, July 25- Bible Study, ·
The Center has available senior
11 a.m.-noon; Vinton Blood Prescitizen tickets for lhe Ohio State
sure Check.
Friday, July 26 - Visit Meigs Fair "t a reduced rate of $2 per
ticket good for admission a ny day
County Senior Citizens Center: Art
a t the fair. If you arc planning on
Class. 1·3 p.m.: Craft Mini-Course.
1·3 p.m.: Open Activities, 7-10 p.m . going to the State Fair, stop by the
Cent er a nd purchase a ticket ahead
Menus consist of:
Monday - Swiss steak, mashed of time.
The Center will he 5ponsoring a
potatoes. green beans. rolls. fruit .
trip
to the State Fair on Friday,
Tuesday -Sausage, applesauce.
Aug.
9, the cost will be $7 lor
kale, wheat bread . cookies .
transportation pius the $2 gate
Wednesday- Fish. cottage fries.
achnission. Reservations and paystewed tomatoes, wheat bread,
ment for the trip need to be made by
butterscotch pudding.
Friday, Aug. 2.
Thursday - Spaghetti, garden
The Senior Nutrition Program
salad, Italian bread. peaches.
menu
for the week is:
Ftiday - Sloppy Joe. cole slaw.
Monday
- Hamburger, oven
bu.ttered corn, bun, pears.
browned
potatoes,
tossed salad,
Choice ol ·beverage served with
cake.
each meal.
Tuesday- Ham, spinach, sweet
potat()(&gt;S, applesauce.
' · WCctnesday -:: Clll~!l and noo-'
dies, carrots. !t)ree-bean salad,
POMEROY- The Meigs County
ora nge and .bananas. ..
·
Senior Citizens Center, Mulberry
Thursday - Picnic with potluck
Height s, Pomeroy, has the followdinner .
ing schedu le for the week of July
r riday - Roast beef in gravy,
22-26:
mashed
potatoes, lime gelatin
Monday - Physical Jo'itneg, ,
salad.
rice
pudding with raisins.
11 :45 a .rn,.: Square Dance, 1-3 p.m. :
Choice of milk, coffee, tea, or fruit
Francis Andrews, Bill and Dcrot hy
jyice available with ail meals.
Thurston will be playing for

Meigs Legion.upsets
favored ·Lancaster ·3-2

.-e

yau

Section

July 21. 1985

keep_...

And another high school reunion.
This. will he the Chester High
School class of 1931 with a picnic
being planned lor July 28 at the
Chester Fire Station. Teachers and
schoolmates of the class are
cordially invited to attend as well as
the class and the event will get
underway at 12:30 p.m .
The Meigs ·County Museum is
featuring the ir)laldwood pictures of
Denzil Blair of Palestine, W.Va., for ·
the 'rest of July.
Regular hours at the museum are
1 to 4 p.m., Tuesdays, Frtdays and
Saturdays.
For those interested in genealogy. the museum library has
census records on microfilm for
Meigs County from 1820 to 1910 and
from several surrounding counties
from 1810 to 1850. Several of the
area newspapers from the mid·
1800's to the . early 1~' s are also
available in addition of many
research books o~ Meigs C:::ounty
and famlly histories.
Incidentally, the latest word from
Walsworth Publishing Co. on the
History of Tuppers Plains, wrttten
by Agnes Hill, is that the book
should be finished sometime in
August.

By Peter H. GGU, M.D.
.
DEAR DR. GaiT- MX -11u:·
a bablt of cracking his Jmuclllel,
ftnaer by tlnger. I
blm
he's gi&gt;inll to have l)lg uglyiUI\Iildel.
11 he contlllues this, but he iays
that's a11 old wives' tale. II
aJIY(hlng wrong with cracldiii)II)W' .
laluckles, asl!le from tbe ~­
ance factor?
. DEAR RE,U&gt;ER- I am.certain ·
that your corru,nents ref1let the •
concerns of generations d. women
whose sons cracked their kll~. ·
As far as I know; knuckle-craeldq •
does not cause any long-term hann.
The major problem is the peroeption your son may havethatyouare ·
nagging him. I have yet to meet a :
young man who is the slightst bit .
concef1l!!d about having bill kDuck· ;
les, and nothing you - or I - say · ·
will make the slightest dlllerftl&lt;.'e. I :
suggest
drop the subject
concentrate on more
Issues. If you·are going to go down'
in history as a "knuckle-naggef," •
you will probably better expend
your energy emphasizing more
important issues. Your credibility
can be put to better use. For
example, how's he doing in school?
DEAR DR. GO'IT- My nepbl'w
came down with severe intestinal
pain when he was 13 and It was
diagnosect as Crohn's disease . .He ,
ahd three attacks since then and
long pertodiot remission. He' a now :
18 and healthy in every respect,
except that he's held steady at 5 feet
6 for the past two years. (His
younger brother is 6 feet 2.) Is this
the end-of his growth?
DEAR READER - By 18, most
adolescents have reached their
adult height; the bone-KJ'Owth
plates have closed. Your nephew is
unlikely to exceed his present 5 feet
6. Although he may wish to be
taller, he Is goln'g to have to accept
his present stature. I am sure that
you and his family appreciate the
blessing of his good health

emimts·.itntintt

•

"I respect Billy Martin very much. but ltltinklknow
how to handle ball clubs," said the Tigers' manager
before their ball game with the Rangers in Detroit
Thursday night. "I think I've been around the block a
few times. Long enough to know a little bit about
managing."
Anderson pointS outMartindid.notsend him his note, .
he sent It toAtnetican LeaguepresldentBobbyBrown.
Bob Fishel, .the league's Executive vice president,
relayed the contents to Anderson.
"After I was toidaboutthenote, I said 'Lemme check
this out for myself,' and that's what I did during the
workout we had at the Metrodome Monday the day
before the game," Anderson goes on.
"Rickey was shagging some bails in centerfield, and
I walked out to him and asked him how he felt. He said
he felt good. I sa.id to him 'You have no signs, you do
whatever you want.
'You let me know how you feel, and whatever you
wanna do is·all tight with me. You're your own bosS.
There's noway I want you hurt.'
"He shook his head and that was it. I took him out
after stx. "
.
Naturally, the Tigers' pilot isn't blind to the way the
Yankees were coming on before the All-Star break.
They had won 10 of their last 11, so Instead of having
. only one club, the Blue Jays. to beat, the Tigers had
two. But Anderson says that had nothirt)( to do with the

way he was managing in the All-Star garn,e. and I
believe him.
I can understand where Martin Is coming from, too.
In climbing on someone like Anderson 'for using
Henderson too long, he's conveniently using the
Detroit manager to get a message across to
Henderson. He's telling his mercurial high-priced
•center fielder he doesn't appreciate him playing six
Innings in the All-Stat game, a cont~t that doesn't
count, after he purposely took him out of the lineup for
last Sunday's game with the Rangers so he could rest
his legs.
Martin was also employing baseball's ancient
roundabout message system in taking a shO! at
Holl~ton's Nolan Ryan for getting a couple ol his
pitches too close to Henderson and Dave Winfield in t)le
AU-Star meeting.
·The Yankees manager is simply letting Ryan krlow
he isn't forgetting that Ryan rejected his tate invitation
to become pan of the 1977 All-Star game when ,the
38-year-old strikout specialist still was with the Angels.
At the same time , Martin Is showing his players how
much he's supporting them.
What I find a little difficult to comprehend in all this is
the almost 3Q).degree turnaround In Martin's attitude
within a matter of five days.
Here he's getting so worked up about "protecting"

Henderson's legs, and only five days before the
All-Star Game, he ·shocked P\'PJyone by the
uncommon restraint ·he showed over the way Joe
Cowley's nose was broken by TOby Harral) in the
.. Yankees-Rangers game of July 11.
Cowley was bleeding like a lamb at the slaughter.
The video replay showed Harrah clearly going out of
the base lin~ to try to knock the ball out of the Yankee
pitcher's hand, but the way Martin saw the whole
thing, it was "a clean play."
Sometimes, It's tough figuring out Billy Martin.
E~en if he isn't too happy with Anderson, he seems to
have forgiven Henderson for playing so long in the
AU-Star Game wltbout asking out.
Henderson was thrown out at the plate in the fiflh
innlngofThursday's841oss to the Twins when he tried
to score !rom second base on Don Mattingl~, ·s long
drive that iefllielder Dave Meier picked off right atthe
fence.
.
Meier !brew the ball to shorlstop Roy Smalley who
fired to catcher Mark Salas, and Salas made the tag on
Henderson.
Martin took it pretty well.
"Give the Twins credit," he said. "We played
aggressively and they executed."
But that was it. He didn't take back anything he said
about Sparky Anderson .

'
I

�•
The

Times-Sentinel

July

W.Va.

"Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point

21, 1986

.July

21. 1986

POI'I'leroy""'- Middleport- Gallipolil,

ronsecutive seasons and was the
lirst player selected In the 1976 NFL
draft- the inaugural season tor the

Amid the customary jolts of
training camp iackllng dummies Buccanee~s.
carne two unexpected ones from the
Meanwhile, Sims, who Injured his
offices of the Tampa Bay Bucca- . right knee last October, missed the
neers and Detroit Lions.
linal eight games of the regular
Defensive end Lee Rny Selmon of season. He underwent surgery to
the Bucs -and running back Billy repair ligaments and cartllage, a nd
Sims of the Lions, two veteran NFL rehabllltatlon has been slow.
stars, roay miss a substant ia l
"I can run straight ahead, " he
portion of the 19g; season, It was
said.
"But I can't runeastandwest.
announced Friday.
Selmon, a six-time All-Pro and I'm optimistic that I 'U he back this
Tampa Bay' s cornerstone s ince its year. It'sjust a question of when."
Sims, the lirst p layer taken in the
incept ion In 1976, said he is suffering
from a back problem that threatens 19!1ldraft, has rushed for5,106yards
In his career, including687 1astyear .
his career.
The Buccaneers ofOc!ally opened
"I'Ve been told the problem
wouldn't go away If! played football camp Saturday and the Lions hegln
and surgery has been mentioned.'' Sunday.
In other NFL news: ·
he said. "I have a herniated disc In
- Chuck Muncie, whose sparmy lower back. Football is atough
sport and it requiresastrongback to kling talents have often pl ayed a
secondary role in his drug-plagued
play."
Selmon, 30, has earned an NFC career, wasgraht!?&lt;J another chance
berth in the Pro Bowl for six when he was reinstated as an active

player by Commissioner Pete
Rozelle, then dealt by the Chargers
to the VIkings for an undisclosed
draft choice.
Rnzelle suspended Muncie last
Sept.14 aftertherunnfngbackfalled
a urtne test administered by the
Dolphins, who had traded for him.
The deal was negated and Muncie
was suspended atter appearing In
just &lt;ile game.
"Whe!l you havc;o an qJportunlty to
get a player ri his a bility, you do it,"
Minnesota roach Bud Grant said.
"We have had the data on his
progress and are sa tisfied wlthlt. He
has shown he is capable of
maintaining a straight rourse."
- Rmming back J oe Cribbs has
paid $m,IXXl to escape from hts
contract with the U.S. Football
League's Birmingham Stallions
and plans to return to the NFL by
Thursday.
·
"We all make mistakes," said
Cribbs' agent, Lou ts BurrelL "We

Time~-Sentinei - Page- C-3

Seaver notches 298th victory ~

NFL teams begin drills for '85 season \
By MIKE BARNE!
UPI Sports Writer

- The Sunday

Ohio-Point P1111ent. W. Ve.

CJUCAGO (UPI ) - A sincere
ettort wtU be m.de to have Tom
Seaver get hls:mthcareervletory In
front of Chlcqo White Sox fans. but
Sesver aays there Is one Item to be
dealt with before he can think about
. tllat posalblllty.
"I can't do It untll l win 299,"
· . Seaver said Fl;day night a1fer
winning a terrific pttchinll duel with .
BertBlylt'venofCJeveland1.()fo;hls
29llth career win. Of plans for the
· :mth to take place In Chlcaao, he
said. "I'd love it to. It would be
great."
For the record, Seaver's next two
starts would be Wednesday against
Detroit and Sunday against Baltimore, both in Cb!cago.
Elsewhere, California nipped
&amp;.ton 3-2, Toronto tcppecl Oakland
5-L Teus qro Detroit 2-1, KaJiSas
City pwnded Baltimore 10-3, Mil·
waukee defeated Seattle g.7 and·
New York beat M!nnesota 6-4.
Qllcago manager Tony LaRussa
prorn1sed to do what he could to

consider the deal with the Stalllonsa
learning experlence. Hopefully,

we'll put together a deal with an
NFL club In a lew days."
Burrell said he has been talking to
the Bills about eltherslgningCrlbiJs,
a three-time 1,~yard rusher with
.Buffalo, or trading his rights.
· - Roy ,Green,
has the most
catches in the NFL over the last two
seasons, wants to renegotiate the
renaalningtwo years of his contract
with the Cardinals. He reportedly
will mm $llll,IXXlthls year, substantially less than the league's average
of $215,&lt;m for wlcje receivers.

wm

- Strong safety Mark ·Haynes,
George Martin and Casey Men111
were missing when the Giants
required veterans to report. All fou r
are IDISlgned, a s Is llrst-round draft
choice George Adams.
"I talked to Mlark yesterday,"
Giants linebacker Harry Ca=n
said. "He:s not very c looe to being
here...

allow lot that dramatic moment to
take place at Comiskey Park. But he

was more!nlemlted in talking about
the elfort Seaver has put out all
season for the oft-Injured White Sox
along the way toward .»J.
"1 don't think there Is any
dll!erencee In the last two games
than wbat he dld the rest of the
season," LaRussa said of the 10-7
SeaVft". "Just because the last two
have beenklnd of dramatic ·(he heat
Baltimore 5-3Sundaybystriklngout
11) , that's the way he's pitched all

year.''
"What pumps him up 1$ the
opportunity to pitch," he said. "He
really likes to compete."
He eot a sensational opportunity
to compete Frldlay night. Seaver
gave up four hits and allowed no
base runner past seco'id, while
Blyleven gave up five hits, Including
. Carlton Fisk's ma jor league leading
24th home run In t he second inning.
Blyleven pitched his ninth consec·
utlve complete ga me, but dropped

to 8-10 for the season. Other than
Fisk's homer , there was only one
other serious scoring opportunity
for the White Sox . ,
" It was justa matter ofwho m ade
a mistake," Cleveland manager Pat
Corrales said. "Our guy got it up a
little bit and Fisk hit it out."

""AS fa r as pure st uff, I think
Bly leven had · better," LaRussa
said. "But wha tever Tom lacked, he
made it up with his courage and he
showed how grea t a vetera n h~
really is."
Seaver pitched his 61st career
shutout and 230th ca reer complete
ga me in his 19th major league
season. Blyleven pitched his !70th
career complete game In his 16th

season.
"'Tommy is a tittle bit older than

Bert, but they will a lways be
ni ne-inning pit chers ," Corrales
sai~ . "Not only are they great
pitchers, bui lney give you a chan('e
to rest your bullpen/ '

.,

M&amp;S1er®
SATELLITE
. . RECEPTION EQUIPMENT:
-

ALLSMDEII- Miami Dolpldn I'UIIIIIag back Lore1110 llamptoe Ill
alllllllleo d.-11 his 111'11&amp; day of lrabdng camp Friday alter I!IIIDIDI a
,_yeer -8&lt;1 wlllllhe Dolpldnli. (UPI).

OUR NEW 6 FOOT DISH

.•. ·-·· .

.REMARKABLE PICTURE

BOARD .CERTIFIED' .

/

FAMILY PRACTICE &amp;
PAIN CONTROL .
OFFICE HOUIS

G·FOOT
-PERFORATED

•
.I

MONDAY THRU FRIDAY I 9 A.M,-5 P.M.
SATURDAY-9 A.M.-2 P.M.
MONDAY &amp; THURSDAY EVENINGS-6:30-8:30 P.M.

•

BRE'IT FORCED - Oriole Cal Rlpken fort.-es
Georae Brett a1 oecond base and 1umo the double play

on Jorge Oria al lint to end the ftrst lnniDg Friday.
Kanoas aty heal Baltimore, 111-3. (UPI).

AAROM BOONSUE, M.D.

Rahal sets

POINT PLEASANT NEDICAL CENTER '

25th I, JEFFERSON AVE.

PHONE 675-167$

'

.,
;

•
f.' '

with top-unloading

Ribstone Silos
Chargers: no comment
on Muncie trade

•

NEW YORK tUPl) - Chuck
Muncie was reinstated as an active
player by NFL commissioner Pete
Rnzelle Friday, then was dealt by
the San Diego Chargers · to the
Minnesota Vikings.
The Chargers received a n undisclosed draft c hoice for Muncie,
whose career bas been plauged by
drug problems.
"We have no comment on why we
tr aded him," Chargers spokesman
Bill Johnston sa id.
Muncie was reinstated as an
active NFL player, subject to his
compliance with a strict dnlg
m onit or ing a nd trea tme n t
program .
Rozelle sus pended Munc ie Sept.
14, 1!ll4, after therunningbackfa lled
a urine test administered by the
Miami Dolphins. The test was
designed to detect drugs. After the
examintaion. the deal feUthrough.
"We me t recently with Chuck
Muncie ahd reviewed a il the factors
In his case, " Rozelle said. "We a lso
reviewed the medical views of
physicians involved in his reha bil1ta1on and alter-care program .
"According toin!orrnatlon avalla ble to me, Chuck has made
substanUa i progress in working out
his problems a nd esta blishing his
true priorities while remaining drug
free. He fully understa nds the
consequences of fu rther drug use,
non-compliance with this program
or a ny other conduct detr ime ntal to
the integrity of NFL football ."
Minnesota coach Bud Grant
believes Muncie can help the
Vikings.
"Although we are ha ppy with our
running back sltua tion,'' Grant said,
" when you have a n opportunity to
get a player of hls ability, you do it.
We have had thedataon his progress
and are satisfied with it. We don't
expect tohaveany probierns.He has

shown he iscapableof mainta ining a
straight course."
The &amp;-foot -3, 230 pound Muncle is a
nine-year NFL veteran. He was a
first-round draft c hoice of the New
Orleans Saints in 1976 and was
traded to SanDlego in1!8l. Through
1!&amp;, Muncie had rushed 1,546 tlroes
for6,651 yards and 71 touchdowns.
Twice in his career he has rushed
for more than l ,&lt;Xll yards. In 1979
while with New Orleans, Muncie
rushed for 1,198. yards. In 1981 he
collected 1,144 ya rds with the
Chargers.
Last year, he rushed 14 times for
51 yards in the season opener
against the Vikings before he was
suspended by Rozelle.

'••
••
•

&amp;ryl'Do I.J.f@ aTJtat.:mz
British
Isles
Thebm
otem.~n

first day of rookie practice. (UPI).

••

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Before you purchase storage ....examine
all the advantages of a top-unloading Ribstone system .

DAN THOMAS
&amp; SON
SHOE STORE

•••
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&gt;
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'

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ROiri:E 2

BOX
BIQWELL, OH. 45614

••

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PHONE 614-446-2412

DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

SEPTEMBER
13-27, 1985

r

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"Across from the Park"

111ut Itt~.,..,,

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F.scorted tour
England, Wales
Ireland, Scotland

'
•••
•

Gallipolis Racquet Cluh

•••

CLOSES IN ON NO. :110 -Tom Seaver of lhe While Sox whips his

JULY 29, 30," 31 ·&amp; August 2
{JUNIOR)

•••
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(ADULTS)

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INSTRUCTORS:
Jim Osborne &amp; Rick Cloak

·~

·O'DEUS· LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER
16 hp Sears ••~...............!~.'-·.P,E.~~ .... S750 .
11 ' hp Sears ....... ~ .........}.t1!t·.P.E.~~ .... $500"
•'
8 hp .Sears ....... ~.......... }.tlft-.P.E.~~ .... S325
,. t hp ~~lens .................}.tl!t-.P,E.~~ .... S29 5
...' 11 hp Lawn- Chief........!}.t1!i·.P!.~t. .. S550
."'••
10 hp Dynamar~ .......... Ml!i·.P,E.~~.... S450

Two tone br ite copper &amp; tan exterior, brown &amp; tan plush
v e lour interior, 302 V-8 engine, ove¥drive automatic
transmission, dual a ir front &amp; r ear, am -fm cassette
stereo, cb radio, ac·dc television, ice box, sink, fold
down r ear couch , lilt wheel, cruise control, power windows, power door locks, running boards, continental
spare lire kit, rear ladder, curtains &amp; blinds, snack tray
and table, 6 bay windows , plus much more!

Just

$171 90000

COST:

Juniors

$5000

Adults -

One Session $1 5
Both Sessions $25

Registration for this tennis clinic closes on Friday, July 26 at 12:00 P · t:T'·
(noon). To register you may call the Gallipolis Racquet Club .
A $10.00 PRE-REGISTRATION. NON-REFUNDABLE. FEE IS REQUIRED
Please"indicate T-ahirt size: (circle)

CHILD'S: S

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ADULTS :

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XL

1

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, Address: ....... ............... ....................................... .............................,.,

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JUNIOR

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5 - 10 Yr. Old ....... .......... ...................

One Session .. .............

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11 - 14 Yr. Old ...... ............... .. ......

Both Sessions .. ........ ........ ... ...........

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• Steel Monopole Mouftl '
• Quadre-Pocl (4-Ltt) Feed Support
• Blends Into Environment
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IT"~ stHI monopole mount Insures the dish is

PRieES START AT

held securely in position. It is designed to
b•ith1SU1nd adverse weather and envirof)mental

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$1095

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UPPER ROUTE 7
KANAUGA, OHIO
NEXT TO BETI HONDA

MODEL lOS
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LAWN &amp; GARDEN CENTER

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2COO IAmiN

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end High Accuracy

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12 hp Cub Cadet ..........J.tJH·.P1.~~ .... S79 5
8 hp Gravely Walk Behind ........ S29 5
AnACHMENT
John Deere Rotota'JI er ....~'UII.a:~
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TAKE TRADE-INS

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$179500

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REGISTRAnON FEE INCLUDES: 1. Instruction; 2. T-Shirt; 3. Fair Pass (for Juniors)
•

ANTENNA

•ac6CntH.C· ·

all the way in the sixth race,
finish ing a length and threequarters ahead of Mitzi Almahurst,
while 0 J Spring was third: Swipe
paced the mile In 2: 00 2-5.

"

PH. 446-7677
"'

COLUMBUS (UP! ) -Swipe and
Glnny's P rldewonthe tv;odivisonof
the Courtney J. Pacing Series
Friday night a t Scioto DoWns.
Don Irvine J r . had Swlpeout front

~

I

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. Scioto Downs results

~

·71 0 FIRST AVE., GALLIPOLIS

..
'
NEW 1985 FORD RAISED ROOF
CONVERSION VAN

of lhe year. His record now lA 111-7. Chicago heal aeveland Indians, 1-0.
(UPI) .

~

SEE·THRU

.&lt;lthCadef

ann toward Ihe plale Friday to eam his 61sl career ohutout and the first

AUGUST 5 &amp; 6

Loaded &amp; Sharp!
HOUSE O'tiERFLOWING?
CLEAN UP Wllll
CLASSifiED ADS

l

Our top·unloading silage systems can
unload forages at twice the rate of some
bottom-unloading .. . that means you will ,
have . ... lower utility bills, less wear on
conveyors and feeders and more time for
other activities.

MAKES END RUN- Vlnoonl
Hall (31) of Middle Termessee
makes an end run at the Washington Redsklns' summer training
camp Friday at Carlisle, Pa., the

BROOKLYN, Mich, (UP!)
Bobby Rahal set a track record
Frtdlay at Michigan lnternatlonal
Speedway to grab the pole position
in the first round of quallfylng for
Sunday's CART Michigan 500
Indy-car race.
Driving a March-Cosworth, Rahal bounced back from a practice
round accident to eclipse Johnny
Rutherford's year-old mark of
215.189 wlth a time of 215.202.
Rounding out the front row are
Rick Mears in his March-Cosworth
(213.720mph) and l!ll5lnd1anapoUs
500 winner, Danny Sullivan In his
March-Cosworth (211.758).
Rahal hit the wall on turn No.2 of
the two-mile oval speedway with his
pr!mary race car In the morning
practice session, but came back In
his backup T-ear · during the
afternoon qualifying round to earn
his second consecutive top pole
position.
Two weeks ago, Rahal was the
pole setter at the Cleveland Grand
Prtx, but mechan ical problems
forced hlm out of the race early and
he finished 28th .
"I was getting the car running a
little bit smoother a nd quicker ,"
Rahal said. "And It weront lnue to do
tha t, we'Dbe out In front. "

•

SAVE ENERGY. &amp; MONEY $

-·

track mark ·

ALUMINUM

2400 IASTIIJIAYE. •

OPIJI

fiOIII·MAnl

P"ONE 44fi·78U

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"

•

•

�21, 1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

Nihilator ·follows sire
in winning tradition

NL West leaders in 5-2 win
By MIKE TULLY
UPI Natlonal8aseball Writer
• A healthy Bob Welch can do more
[or Los Angeles than a smog·free
!,l.ay.
Welch, roming off arm problems.
Friday night helped the Dodgers
conttnuethelrsurgelntheNLWest,
raising his record to 4·1 with a
five-hit, 5-2 victory friday night
pver the St. Louis Cardinals.
"Welch has always pitched good
against us;" said St. Louis manager
Whitey Herzog.
Elsewhere, Cincinnati downed
Philadelphia 3-2, Montreal shut out
Houston 4-0, Atlanta blanked New
:York 1~. San Diego whitewashed
·Pittsburgh 6-0. and Chicago edged
San Francisco 4·3.
It was Welch's third consecutive
triumph. He struck out nine In his
second complete game of the'

season. Danny Cox. 11·5, failed to
finish the third Inning. giving up six
hits and four runs. Ken I..andreaux
doubledhome!Worunstohighilghia
four· run third inning.
"I just wanted to be aggressive
and make them swing their. bats."
said Welch. "It was. a tough game
· from the start. Those guys can
really run you. ).'oil get Jnto trouble
when you get too fine. but anytime
you· throw the ball over the plate,
you'reg&lt;iingtogetafewstrikeouts.''
In the third, Welch reached on a
fielder's choice. Dave Anderson
singled and Welch was thrown out at
the plate tryjng to score on Mariano
Duncan's single. Landreaux then
doubled in two runners and scored
on Greg Brock's single, his second of
threehitsonthenight.Brockscored
on Mike Marshall's double to make
· thescore4-l.

The Dodgers added a run in the
fifth when Duncan walked, took
second on Ricky Horton's wUd pitch
and third on catcher Tom 1'/leto's
throwing error. He then scored on
Landreaux's sacrifice fly to make
the score 5-2.
The Cardinals had taken a brief
lead In the second on Jack Clark's
solo homer to left, his 18tli homer of
the season.
The Cardtnals added their serond
run In the fourth when WUIIe McGee
singled, took second on a sacrifice
and third on Welch's error on an
attempted pickoff. He scored on
Clark's single.
·
"Something is going on II I go nine
innings," said Weich. " I cost us
some scoring opportunities by
getting picked off first and getting
thrown rut at the plate."

OVER THE
MAGIC OF
WALLCOVERINGS

'•

FORCED AT SECOND - Braves' Terry
Harper, left. and Mets' Kelvin Chapman look to first
base alter Harper was forced at second base and
Chapmali lbrew to Hernandez at first to complete the

Bell makes debut with Reds · Jackson

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Phlldel. phla Phillie pitcher Kent Tekulve
:;aid the odds of Cincinnati's Gary
Redus duplicating his gamewinning hit are slim.
So slim, Tekulve said, if Redus
y;as given a bucket of baseballs he
could not throw a half-dozen of them
In the spot where he dumped his
double, let alone hit a few there.
Redus's double made the Phlllles
and Tekulve 3-2losers to the Reds.
"There was . no way you could
defense that hall," Tekulve, 4-5, said
of Redus' hit with one out In the
bottom of the ninth that scored Ron
O€ster.
The ball landed near the right field

line, just out of the reach of right
fielder Glenn Wilson, second baseman Juan Samuel and first baseman Mike Sclunidt.
"They all count," Redus sal(! his
lilt. "My stroke hasn't been good
lately and I've been working on it."
In his first game as a Red. Buddy .
Bell slnlged once in four a t·bats a nd
had two fielding chances at third
base. He was also thrown out trying
to sleal.
" II felt good out there," Bell said.
'' I don't think I've ever had so much
fun."
Bell, who grew up In Cincinnati
and lived hereevenwhenplaylngfor
Cleveland and Texas, l~ft 16 tickets

for friends and relatives.
''I'm glad to gel this one overwith .
I had a few extra butterflies," Bell
said.
Oester opened the ninth with a
bunt single and moved to second on
Dann Bilardello's sacrifce bunt.
setting the stage for Redus' fourth
game-winning RBI.

Reliever · John Franco, 7·1,
worked the final two Innings to pick
upthewln.
"I've been in the right place at the
right time," Franco said of his
record. ''I'm enjoying it. Pete
(player-manager fete Rose) calls
me his 'Lucky Man."'

double play In the seventh 1nn1n1 Ill Shea SledJy"'
Friday. Howle Johnson made a greal otop of lUck
Cerone's ground baU to slart the double play. The
Braves beat the Mels, 1-0. {UPI).

seeking
new cage
mentor

~

JACKSON - Jeff Hodson, head
basketball coach of the Jackson
Jronmen for the past five years, has
resigned that position and Norm
Persln, former assistant coaeh at
Ga!Ua Academy high school, has
been appointed head basketball
coach at Chesapeake high school.
Hodson coached the Ironmen to a
16-8 record last season hnd produced several very' competitive
· teams against SEOAL competition.
He will remain at the school as a
teacher.
Also, It was announced that
former GAHS assistant coach
Norm Persln has been hired · at
Chesapeake high school as head
boys' basketball coach.
Persln, a protege 01 GAHS coach
Jim Osborne, had enjoyed success
as coach at Oak Hill high school and
most recently at Wilmington high
school.

,
PREPARES CAR FOR SUNDAY"S RACE- Brazillan Fonnula
' ; one driver Nelson Piquet watches mechaolcs prepare h1s Brabham car
, • before practice Saturday .lor the British Grand Prix to be held here on
·: Swtday. Piquet was lllh laslestln tbe 11rst quaD!ying rouud with a lime
of one minute, 8.933 seconds. (UPI). ·

&gt;,
...'

FORD F-250 4X4 TRUCK

matching interior, knitted vinyl seat, 351 high
output V-8, automatic trans., power steering &amp; brakes,
dual gas tanks, lock·out hubs, 10 ply radial tires, swingout mirrors, rear step bumper &amp; just 9,600 miles. Still
under factory warranty!

Was 'II ,9000'
Now Save Even More!

~"~10,900

Motor Car Brokers
446-6592

Gallipolis, 0.

1 mile North of Holzer Hospital on State Rt 160

1985 T-BIRD
"TURBO COUPE"

. (UPI).

DEMO

Nurtll

Friday's linescores
Nadon.al LA'ape
Hou,o;too

jOI 011

001 - 0 6 I
Mon~m eoo 002 !lh - 4 eo
Kmw••. Hl&gt;aThruck 181 and

Clll.ll

000 100 - 3 I 0
iwcon ...200 «MMlD - 26 0
Romanick, Moorl' 191 and Boont.'; ~d
;~nd
C.Mmnn . W- Romanlck !lHI.

A.~hbv;

B.
Smil h a11d FI!ZJZ('f'ald. W-8. Sml!h ill ~\ 1.
L- Knr,prr r!oH L IIHs-Mon!wal.

.·

1985 FORD
CROWN VICTORIA 4 DR.

l.a~A·

t5 1, Wu llowh •Ill.

171: BOston, Buckfl{'r 1101 .
Ck·lnd 000 001 0011- ... 0

•

i4· ~ 1.

•

JlOO rm 100 - I 'l' 0
Nt..,.. \ ' rli 000 0011 000 - J4 0

•
•

T•••ao~

and

Kl'nn~'.

W- llowkJns

Ho010n. R07.l'rTUl 171 and PctraUI; ~tn.,

Srhf'nn· 111. LOI)C'"l r9! and CastUio, MPh'ln .
W-Hoo10n
1~ · 41.
HR- T&lt;'xas. O'Brlrn

$12,900

$13,295

Savings of More Than '$3,000.00

Savings of 52f11 fi.OO

ROOF .SHINGLES

20 YEAR PRQ.RATE WARRANTY

'21

44

·4

'!:'1~~~r

Sq.

X

1985 MUSTANG
LX 2 DR. SED.

•• ••Ja:t. ·

,

$749

No. 15 or No. 30

Roll

WHITE VINYL SIDING
•
•
•
•

Do-it-yourself, easy to install
Beautify and modernize your bath
Five pre-cut formed panels
Four molded-in roomy shelves
· ~ Covers existing me
• Cleans effortlessly
• Waterproof resists mold and mildew
o Fits tub areas up to 32" x 64" x 58" high

'3495

Double 4 or Double 5

'44

00 Sq.

ANDERSEN WINDOWS

25

0/
/0

DISCOUNT OFF
Andersen List

r &amp; Supply Co.

Caro Ina Lu

675·1160

Point Pleasant
8 a.m.·S p-.m., · Saturday 8 a.m.·l2 noon

312 Sixth Street
Store Hours:

•
'

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:~

.. ; ..... ... , .. .

·

{

,\nk't"it~.~n Lruau~&gt;

Oakl1111d fUIIDt IIlli - IIIII
ToronW 010 Ia:! lfh. - S!t II

4 spd.

trans., body side mldg., speed control,
pow,r locks, AM/FM stereo, pre. sound system.

window, P. brakes, P.S leering, white sport
wheels, headliner, rear step bumper. protection
group western mirrors.

$7295

S8459

Savings of 5950.00

Savings of $1941.00

•

.

•

GASOLINE-POWERED .
STRING TRIMMER
ST-200

Featunng hght we1ght (13

1
14

tbs 1. a

;20.. cuUrng swath an~ powerful

31

•'

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP I) -Fly Bye
Jonathan, driven by Mike Wells,
won Friday night's featured pace at
Toledo Rac!'Way Park, one length
ahead of Big Buster.
Fly Bye Jonathan was third at the
top of the stretch. winning theracein
2:01. ArrnbroCapltal was third.
Exul Touress won the fourth race
whUe Ferons Patch and Betty
Scram finished in a dead heat for
second, thus creating two combina·
lions on the trifecta. The 5'6-9
combination returned $939.20 while
lhe 5-9-6 combination returned

tee Homeltte

engtne . tne

ST·200

• 20" cu111nQ swa!l'l · 1
• Ltght we•ght-only 13 ~ lbs
• Automatte srr•ng advanctng
system
• AdJUSiabte harness and handle_
• Opltonal bladed orushculter
anachmenl
· • 2-year warranly

Get a great deal on a great Ford from

The crowd of 2,196 wagered
$194,385.

O'DEL
•

20" REAR BAGGING
PUSH MOWER

19" PUSH MOWER WITH
TOP·OF-THE-LINE FEATURES

•4 Hp Engine daoigned
to last 50% lo"jler.
•High performance blade

•Engine designed to last
60% longer.
•Light and sturdy alum . deck.

tor even mowing .

$239

95

•2 Year warranty.

•Light and sturdy alum. deck
•Easy emptying rear catcher

•Engine designed to last
60% Longer

21 ·~ELECTRIC SELF-START
PROPELLING MOWER
•Easy emptying grass catcher
•Light and sturdy alum . deck
•2 Year Warranty
•Engine designed to last

50% Longer

$32995
4-YEAR
WARRANTY

·

$499 9 5
HEAVY-DUTY TAIMMIA ~ND

AI , ahmrun · · deck
lawn-Boy mowen sold
Hometrle • ST •200
string lrimmtr

with 20" cultlng
swath .

SUPPLY

between July 18, 191~
lnl October 31, 1985
will carry a 4 Year

GAS TRIMMER
MODEL1400
•Powerful 31CC engine
•"Bump 'Head" Line FHd
•Two-Pc. ,Boom Swivel trimming
hMd for edGing or trimmin9

•

PAT HILL FORD, Inc·.

GRANO PRIX LE

Small Y·8 motor, AM/FM cassette. tilt
steering, cruise. Mileage on this extra
sharp car is only 14,600.

$1,109.00.

.

. • Top.mounled eng•ne

'.

1984 PONTIAC

See Jimmy Deem, Ed Ba,fell o, J. D. Sfo,g

bladed brushcu1ter
· • Solid state •gnrllOn

"Vour Transportation Headquarters"

•

&lt;1&gt; ';;· .

Auto., power windows, power door locks.
cruise, AM/FM cassette. This car shows
excellent care with 22,390 actual miles.
SAVE!

Opuonal accessortes turn tt1t
•ST-200 1010 a powerlul blower or a

SEE: PAT HILL, GEORGE HARRIS or JAY l:fiLL

2 door. V·8 motor. air. AM/FM stereo, tilt
steering, cruise control. This car shows excellent care!

1982 DATSUN 280 ZX

~
·

easily handles tall grass and wee~s

TAX &amp; TITLE NOT INCLUDED

·, MIDDLEPORT, OH.

.
SF 200

CUTLAS SUPREME

4.door Limited. 2.51itre motor, auto., air.
AM/FM stereo, tilt steering, cruise, power
door locks. wire wheel covers. Very clean!

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP)) Medalist Michael Bradley of Val·
rico, Fla, took on Don Edwards of
White Plains, N.Y .. Saturday in one
semifinal match of the Western
Junior Golf Championship, the
oldest junior championship.
·
Bradley is a member of the
Oklahoma State Untveristy golf
team .

20
V-6 eng., auto. trahs. w/overdrive. sliding rear

1983 OLDSMOBILE

1984 BUICK CENTURY

Western Junior
golf. play resumes

~·

HRs-r\{'V.· York. Pa~llarulo 171 . Il1lylor
1lli1: MlnnC'!iOla, Bush tRI. Cat•lt! tll t, ~1111s
1.11.

1A1 and Ti"tllt'IOn: 1\r:r. CWJtJ!II 1~1 und

1985 RANGER
PICKUP·

--'

Nl' " r.!WI!Ol - 8121
MIMii.a 001 IO'l Ml - .&amp; II 2
C'O\Io' l ~·. llordl IIi!, RIAhl-111 r!h and
Ha s...;('~· : ButchC'r. FII.&lt;:On 1 ~1. Da\·1.!;. 191 uml
Salus W-Cowlr~. 1IU1. 1.-Bulchf't• li-9 1.

Sheet

ROOFING PAPER
$

100 NO !D - Lll I

l'in f'rM ~12 OOt IIIII - :110 I
Font&lt;'OOI, SOI'I'r1st'll lti l, erusslar l'il,
Smith rliJ and Da\'15. L&lt;lkf': Coll,Cun·c•\1.~
171. Minion tRl und l11~ ·n l\' . W-So1\'IISOI'I
t~ ·2t . L-GQI1 1 ~· 11.

eighth.
Eichelberger had aced the 195yard 17th In the first round.
Upper had a chance to tie the
course record. At the 18th hole,
Upper needed a birdie to reach an
S.under62. However, he bogeyed the
par4 hole.
"It was a good bogey," Upper
said .. "Sometimes when you hit a
bad shot you have to take yO\if
medicine and go on."

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2.3 Turbo charged eng., 5·sp. trans., handling-

Steve Jones were In fourth at 134.
Jones' and Tway shared the
first.round lead at &amp;under 64
Thursday on the 6,514·yard Oak·
wood Country Oub course.
The brisk winds, which some
golfers had coml?lalned about
Thursday, were less of a factor
Friday. Rain throughout the mornIng Friday softened the greens.
"I don't think I ever played here
when It was so c0nduclve to a good
score," Hoch said.
Hoch, who won the tournament
last year and in 1980, sank seven
birdies for a 65 Friday while Upper
holed eight birdies for a 64.
Jack Nicklaus II, follOwing his
father's failure to makethecutatlhe
British Open Friday, missed the cut
In his debllt ·as a competing
amateur. Veteran Chi Chi Rodri·
guez also failed to make the'l41 cut.
The tournament featured Its
second hole-In-one Friday as John
Adams aced the par.J, 17l·yard

~~

.·. 5,

"'•

' . COAL VALLEY,Ill. (UPI)-Bob.
&gt;'fway plans on making the best of his
opportunity.
:; Tway, who joined the PGA toor
.'p.ls year, started the third round of
· the $300,1XXJ Quad Cities Open as the
~ole possessor of first place Satur·
: ilay, a poSition he has never enjoyed
·. before in his career.
: The26-year-old forrnerOklahoma
· State University standout shot a
: tunder,par 67 Friday to lead by one
; l,troke after the first two rounds at
• !he 6,514·yard Oakwood ' Country
Club.
•· Tway says he must play aggres·
slvely to stay on top.
"A win is too Important here. It
,opens too many doors," he said.
Tway, who carded five birdies and
• two bogeys Friday, completed the
• JI"COnd round at9-underl3l,onesbot
• '!lhead of Brent Upper and two-time
champion Scott Hoch.
: JayDelslngwasatl33whlleJohn
: Mahaffey, Dave Eichelberger and ·

•

T

the backstretch, driver Wllllam
O'Donnell hustled Nlhilator to the
lead. Approaching the half, Car·
mine Abbatiello tipped Anxious
Robby to the outside to mount a ·
determined ch~llenge. From the

:rway:
Must
play
hard
to
stay
in
first
plac.e
.

".M.ORE lJALUE(
FOR YO.UR MONE.Y"

Fontenet In the second Inning of their game at
Candlestick Park Friday Night. First base umpire
Fred Frucklander makes the call. Chicago won, 4-3.

CENTRAL SUPPLY CO.

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PAT ·HILL FORD
DURHAM Ti\GGED OUT -Chicago Cub lirst
baseman Leon Durham puts the tag on San Francisco
Giants' Jeff Leonard diving back to ,first base.
: Leonard was picked off by Chicago pitcher Ray

EAST RUTIIERFORD, N.J.. hall to the Jhree.quart.e r pole,
(UP!)-.. Nlhllator, following in the Nlhllator and Anxious Robby raced
tradition of his Ulustrious sire as a team.
Nlatross, powered to a 7%·1ength
Justpastthethrel!-quartermark,
victory Friday night In the$1,018,001 Anx)ous Robby pulled to a half·
Meadowlands Pace.
length advantrage, but Nlhilator
Nlatross and now Nlhllator, rrom had pl~nty In reserve and began to
his fiTs! crop, are the only horses to draw away as the field entered the
.
sweep both the Woodrow Wilson ·stretch.
Pace as 2-year-olds and return
With the race In hand, O'Donnell
Getting tired of that same old "l ook" at
Vlctort.ous In the Meadowlands Pace urged Nlhllator on as he realized a
your house? Discover 'the magic c•
as 3-year-olds.
•
record time was wlthln reach.
wallcoverings . For less than you'.d think
Nlhilator's clocking of 1:50 :l-5
"I don't know if he could've gone
you can turn those drab areas into r'nagical
wonderlands of living color.
·
equalled the world record for a mile much faster tonight even with a
set by Colt Fortyslx last Aug. 16 at raster half," O'Donnell said. "Ithink
The trick is to visit our wallcoverings
Springfield, Ill.
tonight he hadallthathewanted, but
department where you ·u find a wide
variety of styles and colorways to choose
Nthllator headed a five-horse Lou he had plenty."
from .
Entrymate Chalrmanoftheboard
Gulda·Bob Bonl owned entry that
Ask our sales magicians to show you how
was bet down to Ho-5 by a crowd finished second while Dlgnatarian
easy it is to do it yourself. Dr help you
estimated at 33,roJ. The $1,168,010 rallied to finish third. Anxious
find professional insta ll ers .
wagered est~bllshed a mark for a Robby faded to seventh.
single harness race.
The entry returned$2.20,$2.10and
The Wall Street Stable purchased $2.10. Dignatarian paid $2.10 for
Nlhilator for $100,1XXl as a yearling show.
Fractional limes forthemllewere
and have alre:idy completed a stud
PHONE 446-2374
0: 23 4·5 for the quarter, 0: 56 3-5 for
syndicate worth $19.2 mUllen.
MAROWAR£
17
COURT
ST.
GALLIPOLIS
TheracedevelopedwlthPersh!ng the half and '1: 23 3·5 at three·
Square, one of the five-horse entry, quarters. With the victory, worth
cutting the first quarter with $500,roJ, Nihllator Improved his
Nihilator
sitting third on the rail.
career earnings·to
thefleldstralghtenedoutdown
.---'---;;_
_$2,060,954.
_ _ _ _ __.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•PowerfUl 31 cc:: engiril

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PHONE 446-1276

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,,

•
I

.,

�Page C-6 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21, 1985

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

Ohio-Point PleaSII!nt. W.Va.

lloyd triumphs Friday hi Slims to~~ey
NEWPORT, R.I. (Ufl)- Glgl
Fernandez was in top form the last
time sbe played Chris Evert Lloyd,
taking her to three sets. Friday
Fernandez, still feeling theetfectsof
a leg injury, presented no threat to
Evert Lloyd
·
The top-~ed Evert Lloyd
breezed through her quarterllnal
round match . with Fernandez,
disposing of her in straight sets, 6-1,
&amp;2:
·
Evert Lloy!l of Fort Lauderdale,
Fla., met West German Eva Pfaff
.Saturday in the semifinals of the
$150 (XXJ VIrginia Slims women's
tour'nament. Thewlnnermovedlnto

Sunday'sfinaloftbelonegrasscoort
tournament on the women's Amelican tour.
Pfaff ousted quaUfler . Belinda
Cordwell of New Zealand, 6-4, 6-3, to
advance. Cordwellhadupsetfourth·
seeded Kathy Jordan In the second
round.
Second-SEEded Pam Shriver of
Lutherville, Md., will meet Austral·
lan Wendy Turnbull, who Is SEEded
third, In the other semifinal.
Shrtver defeated Leah Antonoplls
of Glendora, CaUl., fHJ, 6-2, while
:nlrnbull rallied to beat fellow
Austrauan and seventh-seed Ellzabeth Smylie, 6-7 (6-5), 6-2.

Fernandez of Largo. Fla .. had
extended Evert Lloyd to three sets
this winter In their only previous
meeting. Hllwever, she could ov~~
little resistance to the winner 0
Grand Slam singles titles. Fernan·
dez, recovering from a tom muscle
bt her left thigh, Is playing ber first
tournament In five weeks.
"l've·been a step slow all week," ·
said Fernandez, who reached the
finals here last year before lasing to
Martina Navratllova.
."! haven't been able to ooncen·
trate that well. You can get away ,
with that In practice but not In a
match . Theqnlywaytogetbacklsto

playalot~~masaklshecouldsense

F ~ertdez'i1rustration.
~:;: was having a bad day,"
Evert Uoyd said. "When she was
in the second set she threw
~ 2
so to speak. knew she
· e1•
baCk She

%w

i

:s we '

::-~:.~=~::e~1 wbe~

That's a real
played last winter. .
e ..
Important part of tbe gam ·

Plan loumamenl
EAST MEIGS - A doublee limination Class C&amp;D USSSA
Softball Tournament wlll he held
Aug. 34at Eastern HighSchool. The
tourney Is limited to 12 teams and

Kang claims Ohio amateur golf title ~;=!~~n~~~~a~':uU:i
LANCASTER, Ohio (UP!) Jane Kang of Elyria defeated
Sharon Kline of Warren Friday, 4
and3, to win theWomen'sOhloState
Golf Amateur Championship
played at Lancaster Country Club.
Kang, a member of the Spring
Valley Country , Club, left for
Chicago Saturday where she will
· trted toquallfyfortheU.S. Women's
Amateur tournament.
After birdies on the 13th and 14th
holes took ber to four up, thefinaHsts
tied on the 15th hole, ending the
match.
In the consolation flights, Mar.v

Anh Ambler of Akron defeated
NancyGrovesofColumbus,6and4;
Georgann Engle of Logan defeated
Kay Blossom of Cleveland, 3 and I:
Jennifer Aucott of Akron defeated
Rose Ann Schwartz of East Liverpool, 4 and 3; Theresa Czaruk of
Wintersville defeated Patrice Gld·
dings of Warren, 3 and 2; Debbie
Schwartz of East Liverpool defea ted Jeanne Flockenzler of Mans·
fleld, 2 and 1; Connie Zielinski of
Toledo defeated Cathl Greebe of
Toledo, 4 and 3; Karen Swinehart of
Lancaster defeated Margie
Hatcher of Lancaster, 3 and 2.

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FRIDAY'S VIRGINIA SLIMS ACTION -Top Sl'ed Chris Evert
Uoyd slams bock a voUey In acjlon against Glgl Femandez at Virginia
Slims of Newport Tournament at Newport Casino, R.I. Friday. (UPI).

Majors
~
•
c: ,~
,•

.....

Natklnal Leagu£' - COk'man. SfL 64:
MC(;e(&gt;, SIL 37: L.opc'S. Chi :n: Samuf:'l, Phil

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5..1 3ti .fai -

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47 .t2 - ~
41 42 .512

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Kans.&lt;; C'ty

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f'ridily' II llftid.'l

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Toronto S. Oakland I
Kansas City 10. Bal11morc 3
Olcagn 1. CII'W!Iand 0
Ne-· \'Cf'k 6. Mlnn('S()Ia 4
MUwauk~ 9, SPattiP 7
SUnday's Gllmf:ll
Nt&gt;w York~~ Mlnnrsnra

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Kan.o;;as Clrv ar Ball lmOt'f'
Calllomla at Hoston
NATIONAL LEAGUE

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St .' LouL~
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York'

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San

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ol.'l 42 .517

Cinc'l nnat
Houston
All all! a

11

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Friday's llelulbi

•

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17'1

Clnc-1tlna11 .1. PhU a drlpnl ~ 2
Atlanla 1. Nrw York 0
~ ~~ Dlt,_., 6, Plttsbwxh 0
Los ,\Jl0'1c-: :l, Sl. Lools '2
C'hica,;:o 1. san Franrtsro .1
"-ndii,Y',. r.a.n.e.
HOU.'iiOO at MOOIN'al
Atlanta 111 N.-.w York

•
•
•

Phllad'-lphla "' flndnnall
Sf . I..OUL\ at Los An).'('!(&gt;&lt;.
Pitrsbur~h al san Di('£(1

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Hl'f'l', Sfl.
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j j ~ 71 100 .$2
It! .l 19 19 119 .:1-11

Brrll . KC
Hndr~r1. I"

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tt\ .T~ 49 1 11 . ~11

Bnodk\ . S
Vi'hltkl . Dt
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Kl-117 ..., 1{!\ .:112
IC .ni &lt;~ 1 J (}I .:n1

M!!nRI~ .

lro .ll4 41 Jill .:U:I

&amp;Hif'r. \h•
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IIJI .N !W lfl'i' .:llrl
K\ .nx M un :.!'i'.l

~&gt;J : mli JJ IH .:ul

ll(lllll• ltu...,

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Muq~' , All 21:

Gu.:•n\'I'O, L.A :ll , ('I;JI'k. ~ 1. lM. ParMc-r , Cln
and H()m('l'. All lb.
Amc:&gt;l'lran lL'~t~lUt'

- f ll!k. ("ht ~ :
Oak and i''rf"'ill'). ~ ·:1 21.
Brunanl'ky , ,\1\nn \!1; F.\·an&lt; "nd C':iboi&lt;lll Dt •t
and &amp;II . T&lt;J 111.
ltllll'! Haltnlln
Na11of\illl.J'ilRU"'- Mllrph\ i\!1. i!ll io •nr
Sl l. 1)9: Clat·k. StL, If'•; P ~rlwr, Cln Hn!i

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Minn~ta Acqulrl.&gt;d runnlnR Mrk
ChU&lt;'k Mufi('Jl' frQm San Dh-.,:u ·1(Jr an
undl,llC]OSl'd draft &lt;'hOICl'.
N ~&gt;V.· F:n~o:land ._ Slfli'H'd .1 dr11n plrk.s:
~;~~·kiP Tom TOih. ddt'flsl\'l' IIK'k.lf' Milford
HOdJ!f' and ruMinl! back To!'{\ Mumfor'd :
~~~00 h('{' o~nr tacklr Fran1 k:IIP!V'I
Ph.i1adt•ljihla - SIRJJrU 111nnbl~ bao'-k
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Konrr, runnlnR '&amp;at•ks Robb Rlddldl: and
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klns. offl.'nSI\'! ' lltll"fflnn Tim Vogi('J· and
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Mnglpgs or 10 dralt chOI('('S: Uncbackct-s HaL.
GariX"r and .Jaml"S ~~~~~.Tight: wid(' f(('('IV·
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runnlnR back Jacq\1(' Robln!OI'\: ddmsl\'1'
back Glt.fl JOJI('!; and k]C'k('r PouJ Woodskk:':
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walw&gt;d jZUard Tnm Lyndf and &lt;l'I&lt;:OSI\'f' md
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MIJwaukt"'' - Rl'actlva led catcht&gt;r Bill
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lnfiC'IU.•r Brian Gllf'S to Vanrouvc r ol the&gt;
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Mtnn(&gt;!;()fa- Numt-d fl.nd\' Ma cPhail vlt''
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POMEROY

;l~s!sta m

Montr~;&gt;ill 4 . Hou.~ 1 on (l

mloolng a birdie on tbe 16th hole
during the 1100011d nJWJd of the
British Open Friday. Bean
. flnl8bed tile twu rolllllf!i with a
total of Ia~ over par, IH. (UPI).

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BEAN UPSET -

Ancb- Beall bolds his head after

• For Nicklaus: It's a
reverse grand slam

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Ryan, Hou 1.11; Sotu, C'ln 129; ValmzUII'Ia. LA
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BaylOr. NY and Gibson. Dl.&gt;f 62: Murra,v and
Rlpkm, Balt6l .

A.'WERICAN

By MARK BURTON
looking ahead to his third round
UPI SporiB Writer
alongside Lyle.
SANDWICH, England (UP!) If Graham slips. the "new
When many of the top A!nerlcan
names" arewaltlngtosteplli.Lyle,
playets opted to forego the British
at27.hasbeenaroundlongenoughto
Open Golf Championship, lt opened
be known, and alsO to have
up possibilities for some lesser
frwitrated !be British fans. His
,~ known- golfers
to · ~teal the
would certainly be a new name on
to\li'Tl8JJienf.
the Ust of majors winners- a name
"There have to be new names
that many think should have been
cmn1ng through," said joint second·
added sane years ago.
round leader Sandy Lyle Friday · The same goes for Christy
regarding the absence of preO'Connor Jr., the man who has had
tournament favorites from the
to carry the famous name of his
leader board.
uncle with him througoout his
From the moment 12 of the top 20 career.
players on the U.S. money list opted
Zimbabwe's Tony Johnst.&lt;me,
out of the windswept, rain-drenched
alongside O'Connor at 140, cannot be
event, there was a good chance that
fault&lt;'~! for his determination and
some unlikely players would reach commlbnent, but It Is only bt the last
unaccustomed heights on the awk- year ~hilt he has shed theeccentrlcl·
..
Second row, left to right: Don~ Cra~Ao, Kelly Jo
CAPTURE TITLE .,- The Sport About Tornaward RoyalS(. George's Links.
ties of his game.
Shamblin. Rachel Polcyn, Christopher Crace, Matt
does llnlshed ftr8t bt tbe seven to n1n&lt;i year olds
The "new names" who have
Wamsley, Michael DonnaUy, Paul Ctwey, Third row,
dhlllan of tbe 1985 Countywide Youth Soccer League
emerged so far may not be so new.
left to right: ((loch Dan Polcyn, .4"&amp;fenl Coach Bob
w111t a team record of~. Pictured front row, left to
Australian David Graham, -long
right: Paul PoleY,., James Burgess, Terry Snede«ar,
Donnally.
· time American resident, already
• C1uo1 'llpton, Chlrag Shah, Amy Morm, Eric Porter.
has theU.S.Open tohlscredlt (1!m),
and has been prominent on the golf
scene tor many years.
•'
• So he Is not "new", but rejuvenated might be the best way to
describe him.
· "Really, I haven't played all that
well since l won the Houston Ope~ in
However, this latest disappoint·
By MARTIN lADER
'&amp;3," Graham said after his second
ment
comes only a month after the ·
·
UPI Spm1s WrUer
round one-over-par 71 had given him
Grand Master, winner of 19 major a share of the lead with Lyle at
SANDWICH, England (UP!) Jack Nicklaus has added another chlunplonshlps, also missed the cut
one-under 139.
at the U.S. Open tor the first time in
Grand Slam to his record, one that
But now things are looking better
22 years. Inevitably, be was pressed
doesnt particularly please him.
tor.
the Texas resident, and Graham
By failing to sunolve the 36-hole · to the wall to explain how dlscour· Is sensing a victory.
cut In the British Open Frldayforthe ~ he was, whether he still was
"When you're on a roll, you never
capable of winning at 45, and If he
first time, Nicklaus completed a
think about nerves. But I'm getting
reirerse slam. He now has missed ever consideJ:ed retirement.
excited again. I'm enjoying playing
"I'm disappointed I didn't do
the cut at least once In all four major
well. I'm confident," he added,
better
because I was feeling up
championships.
"I've missed them all once now, so coming into the tournament,"
Nicklaus said as he sat be.fore his KC gridders lobe
I can stop," Nicklaus said after a
5-over-par75 in heavy wind and rain locker in the clubhouse. "Butl'mnot fitted for helmets
put him atl2-over152fortworounds. · 'going to let this tournament
"IU try not to make Ita double Grand Interfere with the way I'm feeling or
CHESHIRE- Kyger Creek High
thewayl'm playing now.
Slam."
School football Coach Mel Coen
"I felt like I could win here. I went announced Saturday alll!IIIS KCHS
The fact that Nicklaus, who Is far
out
yesterday with a positive grid prospecbl (grades &amp;-12) are to
more
proUd
of
the
record
three
NICKLAUS ELIMINATED
attitude,
but I made a couple of report to the high school on Friday,
Grand
Slams
he
has
won,
can
joke
-.Jack Nicklaus walks down tbe
dumb mistakes and shot 77." .
about
his
!allure
Is
attributed
to
his
July 26; at 10 a.m. for helmet
Rural st: George COIII'8e with a
· NlckhiW. has won 70 tournaments measurements.
generally
optimistic
outlook,
and
a
look ol dejection oo his foce after
strong belle! !hat his game Is ~ter since Joining the PGA Tour In 1962,
mllllfng lbe ·British Open cutoff
than it showed at Royal St. Georges . but only two of th&lt;&gt;le titles have
Friday. (UPI).
come since 1!111. ·

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�21 1985

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. V•.

Times-Sentinel

e/ ational

.i x teanis post first round wins iit Pony toomey
MIDDLEPORT- Rutland, New
Haven, Eastern, Mason I, Pt.

Pleasant Town and Country, and
Alexander aU posted !lrst round

Wildlife notes...

~ight

fishing, fun and frolic.

By TOM BELVILLE

Special eo......,pindent ·
GALLIPOUS - With the hot
summer days of July upon us arid
August yet to come, many fishermen switch to to the roolness of
night lor their fishing adventures,
with good reason too. Most llsh are
more active at night during these
hot months. Choosing to do iheir
feeding then, they come up from
their dayttmt depths to cruise the
darkened shallows In search of
some tasty morsel.
· Thinking of night llshlng brings to
mind some of my humorous nightly
experiences.
About three summers ago on a
hot August night I decided to take
my son, T. J., on hls first night
fishing expedition on the Ohio
River. T. J. was 11 years old at the
time and as with most boys that age
was more Interested .In throwing
rocks, dlgglng around in the sand,
and getting along the edge of the
water just enough to get his feet

wet.
I kept telling him to· stay close to
his rod and keep an eye on 11. I told
him how a fish could just jerk his
rod and reel right into the river, I
sat ihere with my two rods right at
my feet all the time I was lelllng
him to watch his. Then, without
warning, my rod files .off Us holder
and into the river. I jumped In and
splashed alter lt on all fours, finally
catching up to It about 15 feet from
shore. When I grabbed li I could feel
the weight and power of a large fish
lor an Instant before my line
snapped.
, T. J. thought my frog jumps
through the water alter my rod
were ahout the funniest thing he'd
seen. There's no better lesson than
first-hand experlen~.
My good friend, Rod Rankin, 6f ·
Crown City and I had manv

enjoyable moments fishing at night
a few years abck when the bass in a
local pond wouldn't cooperate
·
during the daylight hours.·
One of the first things ·Rod and I
(especially me) ·round out ·about
fishing at night · was to make
accurate'casts. The only trouble Is,
you can't see where you're casting.
You just have to try and gauge the
•distance in what Ught Is available
and let her fly; then listen for the
"ker-plump" of the lure striking the
water. It seems about half the 11me
I never heard " ker-plump." I kept
busy retrieving my lures from the
trees that lined the bank. Rod kept
telllng me I couldn't catch any llsh
In the trees.
Finally it was Rod's turn. He got
his lure hung on the bank and we.
rowed over to retrieve it. With his
right loot on the bank and his left
foot stUIIn the boat, he began doing
a perfect split. Unfortunately, good
things don't last forever and soon he
was In the water, but not before
some mighty fancy gymnastic

wins In the 15-team MldclleportMason Pony League Tournament
which began here this past week.
Second round play resumed
Saturday as Eastern played Rutland. New Haven went against
Mason ll, Mason I took on
Alexander, and Pt. Pleasant Town
and Country played the winner ol
Hartford-Athens Pizza Express.
The semi-finals are to be played
today at \'dason at 2 and 4 p.m. The
champillllShip game Is scheduled
for Monday night at Middleport at 8
p.m. with the consolation game
starting earlier at 5:45 p.m.
New Haven 5, Racine 1
New Haven's Grimm pitched a
three-hitter as New Haveri edged
Racine 5-1. Shannon Rlflle . of
Racine took the loss. Weaver and
Roush led· New Haven with two
singles each while Shawn Gibbs had
a double. Racine•hitters Included
David McMillan with a trtple and
Pete Roush and John MOC!Intock
~ach singled once.
Mason I IS, Pt. Pie""""' 0
Mason I scored 10 runs In the
sixth Inning to break open a close
game and went on to shutout Pt.
Pleasant Lions 13-0.
Mason I hitters Included Chris

N9ble with a grand slam borne run
8IJiales and a triple, Bren.t BisSell
and a stngJe, Billy Marshall had a
hlll;l a single and triple, Eddie
double and home run, Rick Keaml
Collins doubled, while Scott Fitch
doubled, and Jeff Henry, Brian aDd Jeff Caldwell each had a single.
Decker, Troy ~dows. aDd BUly Marc Corbett led Pomeroy at the
ZUSpan each singled once. WoodaU plate with a single and trtple while
had a single for the Lions' only hll
Teny Fields had two singles.
Decker hurled the one-hitter lor Corbett was charged with the loss.
Mason I to pick up the win while
Pt. Ple-t ToWD and
Jones was the loser.
QMmtry 3, Mlcklleport 0
RullaucJ 8, Syracuoe 4.
Pt. Pleasant'sP, Anthony fanned
19
batters In pitching a two-hitter.to
Rutland buUt an 8-11ead bY the
lifth Inning and coasted ro an8-4 win best Middleport's Jett Nelson who
fanlll!d :Ia and also allowed but two
over Syracuse. Rutland hitters
Included Chuck Pullins and Mt· hill In Town ahd Country's 3-0 win
chaej Bartrum with a single and In a real pltcher's.dual.
Middleport hits Included Nelson
double each, Kevin Oller had a
double and James Norman, Jolll WIIJt a single and trlple while R.
Sisson and Scott Hanning each half . 'Ralab of Pt. Pleasant had two
a single. For Syracuse, Shawn Singles.
Arnott led with a single and triple
Alexander IJ,
whUe Todd Lisle, Chris Stout and
Harrlooovllle u
.
Alexander rAllied back from a 9-0
Mike Hill each singled mce.
Bartrum was the wlnnlag pitcher ftrlt Inning deficit to score a 13-11
and · Shawn Cunningham took the ·will over Hatr!sonvUie.
loss.
Alexander hitters were Dicken
Eestem 1,· Pomeroy S
with a sbigle and c:Jouble: Chapman
Brian burst banl!"d out two 11a4 a single and triple, 111111 Roy~
singles and a home run whUe allo s1Daled once. For Harlso'11vUie, Blll
picking up the. win on the moulld u
Olll had a single arid double,
Eastern rolled by Pomeroy 9-3. ·· .....,_ Cullums double' and Wes
Other hitters for · EaStern ~ iLtJUI'd singled. Cox~ tbeloser
eluded Jell Johnson with ~ . , u1.at! D. Warren picked up the win.

SYMBOL
of heartfelt love

A Barre Guild Monument is a beautiful
permanent symb&lt;ll. It preserves forewer
memor'l of those held dear. Made
Select Barre Granite, it holds' its
beauty unaffected by time ~-.,.
and the elements..- backed
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VINTON, OHIO
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POMEIOY, OliO

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PH. 9it2-2511

.1,

.•; FIAIII n.ooo - Raldeots and rescue workers are
:~, oa a bJ1d&amp;e .,verlooldng a hup chasm cut by
:. 250,lllf mille meters of water that escaped from an

arilflclallake near StaVII, ltab', when a dam broke
upl!ltream. As many aa 200 are feared dead.

...

ifEtch A Sketch marks 25th anniversary
.

~

•
•

By 3Im Slellcld
BRYAN, Ohio (UP!)- When the
: Ohio Art Co. marked the silver
;· anniversary of Its EtchASketchthls
, : week, Its commemorative models
-; received white glove treatment.
;. "It's an exceptional milestone for
; us," said WOllam KUigallon, pres!' dent ofthe77-year'Oidclimpanythat
•., manut8CihreSoverr200othertoys In

'

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1977 CHEVROLET CORVETTE

1983 BUICK LeSABRE

For once in your life you need to own a Corvette.
This is it! Only 45,522 actual miles, one local owner.
The ultimate in drivin&amp; pleasure and persorial satisfaction. Tilt. 4 spd., aluminum wheels.

lite and death cycle.
Tomarktheannlversary,productlon of the red plastic models was
Interrupted Thursday to asSemble
chrome-pl~ted versions the com(J8ny gave Its employees. The toys
required special attention to detail
and soft gloves during assembly to
prevent fingerprints and smudges.
But the crown jewel of the
production, a sterling sliver "Exec~1 1ts Bryan factory.The 50 muuon Etch A Sketches utive Etch A Sketch" anniversary
produced during the past 25 years model with sapphires, canies a
\1 have rema~ essentially the $3,750 price tag.
•
' same, with m6st changes occurring
The chUd's verslonofthedrawll!l:
1 In the 'manufacturing process, toy Is compact, portable, and
!j company officjals say.
virtually lndestructable, and "It
·
Etch A Sketch, a product of The lasts and iasts aDd lasts,'· says Ohio Art Co., Is unusual In the toy · Joseph Sito, Ohio Arts vice president
Industry, characterized by a rapid of man~acturlng.

·1

1984 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY

1984 OLD CUTLASS 4 DR.
Dark Briar Brown with contrasting 60-40 seating,
air, tilt wheel, AM~FM stereo and rallye wheels. Only
24,580 low miles.

4 DR.

Extra, extra, extra nice. Two-tone paint. V-6, air.
tilt. cruise, AM-FM stereo and only7,774 miles. One
local owner.

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TEAaDCK SELECI'ED - Sharon amsta McAulllfe (light), a soda!

studies leacher from Conmrd, N.H., smlletO 1111 VIce Prerddent George
!!I Buill
1 moed Friday that she will be~ flrsl ordinary cltben Ia Dy In
·.·j·
I

1

.DON'T FOR8ETI,
,_

8.8°/o ·AJ'•· Financing.
.

ENDS ..., 31 98-5
.

40+ F_ull Size Pickups in stock
MOST HAVE Aft CONDITIONING
FINANCING ON THI SPOT TO QUALIFIED APPLICANTS .

"We Want To Be Your Car Dealer!"

.
Ohio Art's advertising director.
"Its nice to know you're making
something chtldren will enjoy," said
Marllyn Fry, a one of four 25-year
veterans on the Etch A Sketch
assembly line.
Eight thousand uni!S roD off the
production area, which occupies
only ~ percent of Ohio Art's entire
complex. The company OCCUI?les
more than twoc!tyblocksontheeast
side otthe Williams County :;eat.
In 1984 Ohio Art posted $34.4
mlllion In sales, although company
officials declined to say how much
Its Etch A Sketch line contributed.
"It's been the No. 1 product for
almoot all of those25years,'' he said.
"That's an outstanding accomplishment in the toy industry."
.

"It's the magic. When a new
generadon gets the toy they don't
know how It works,'' Klllgallon said
ollts stayingpqwer In the toy boxes
for three generationS.
'IbeEtchASketchwasinventedln
Franee In the late 10005. It's
"magic" Is accomplished liy ametal stylus operated by links of
morolliamentllneconnectedtotwo
knobs ·governing horlzonal and
·vertlc;U movement. The stylus
removes the powdered aluminum
~m the glass window.
·
During lis first year ofproduGtton
in 1960, Ohio Art sold a mllllonotthe
devices and at least that many are
still sold each year. A special
advertising pnmotlon one year
boosted production to seven times
that Ogure, said Patrtck Grandy,

Teaeher .chosen for
'ultiJ":ale field trip'

..

1
•
••

apace.Lnldngonare,fromlelt,NASAAdmlniMn&amp;orJomesBegpand
kaehenPeggyLathlaenofFriendswood, Texa.sandDavldManp~artol
BoW; Idaho.

By IRA K. ALLEN
·'·' WASHINGTON
(UP!) -James
:: C. MllleT ill, President Reagan's

:; choice to head the Office of
•; Management and Budget, may
:• have more of an Impact on the
•: manageiJ$Jt part of his title than
••
-' the 1Judlllil part.
; : Friday'a announcement that
~~ Miller, ,«!, would replace the
:~ mercui'W David Stockman was no
· : surprl•, but It may have marked a
;: changelndlrectlonfortheagency..
:
Miller, whQ wears a. tle bearing
· thellkelessofAdamSmlth, the lath
, Centwy father of "freeenterppse,"
; · ran ~Federal Trade Commission
. •; during Reagan's first term 'as a

~'

' I

ByiRAit.'ALLEN
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Social
studies teacher Sharon, Christa
McAuliffe says she tries to foster
International understanding in her
Concord, N.H .. classroom, and now
as the !Irs! prlvatec!tlzentotravelln
space she Is anxious to "see Earth
with no boundaries."
Calling her selection to fly aboard
the space shuttle Challenger next
January "the ultimate field trip,"
McAuliffe, 36, was the winner of an
Intense competition ·among more
than 11,000 Instructors who took up
President Re~gan's Invitation last
year to become the first teacher In
space.
Vice President George Bush
made the announcement at a White
House ceremony Friday with the
other nine llnaUsts standing by and
some offering support to McAuliffe
as "!felt my knees giving way."
Her backup, !I needed, Is Barbara
Morgan, 33, a·second grade teacher
from McCall, ·ldaho.
1
' 0Qeoflhewondertul thlngsasan
historian would be to see Ell\"fh with
oo boundaries - to see Spaceship

. E'ICH A SKEI'CII - Cluune plated EU!h A Sketch drawing toys
aosembled lor dlstrlbulloo tO Ohio Art Co., employees 1o mark the
sUver anniversary. 1be Ewh A. Sketch has sold more Ulan 50
copies since ils lhlroductlon in 19110.

miD.;=

Museum to comply with EP

By STEVEN GINSBURG
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Smithsonian Institution will begin
cleaning up the deadly PCBs federal
Earth," she said In an lnteTview.
McAuliffe - who goes by the inspectors found leaking from the
museurn·s · high -vo1tage trans·
name Christa - will report to the
formers,
officials say.
Johnson Space Center in Houston In
Protection
An
Environmental
September to begin training for the
engineer
Friday
ordered
Agency
Jan. 22 mission. The main purpose
Smithsonian
officials
to
start
repair:
of tbe mission Is to launch data
lng
the
transformers
and
begin
the
relay sateiUte and a small satellite
48
hours.
cleanup
within
called Spartan to study Halley's
The engineer, who toured lhreeof
comet.
the most popular museums In the
.Her role will he to write a journal
of her experiences to reflect "an . nation's capital, also cited vlolatlons
In the PCB storage areas in each of
ordlhary person's perspec~ve tpto
the ·buildings. Contaminated rags
space travel. "
and
other solid matelial were not
Space agency sources said a
properly
contained , the EPA said.
journalist Is expected to get the next
•
citizen's seat aboard a shutue.
PCBs , or polychlorinated biphen"It's not often that a teacher !sat a
yls, are used in transformers as
loss for words," McAuliffe said
electrical insulating fluids or coohaltingly as she fought to hold back
lants. In case of lire, they produce
tears after Bush announced her
cancer-causing chemicals
deadly
name.
Including dioxin , one of the most
"I feel great," she added. "I'm
toxic substances known.
still pinching myself. I still don't
"The Smithsonian will follow up
quite belleve it."
McAuliffe. who teaches a course ·
called ''The American Woman ,"
said she will write a detailed
personal journal of events before
and during the six-day filght.
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. rUPIJ The FBI has launched a nationwide
manhunt for a lanky drltter suspected of stealing the car of a U.S .
marshal who was round shot to
bags or other passive restraints in death in what may have been a
revenge kiUing. ·
their cars.
TheJustlceDepartment Issued an
Congressional critics alleged his
arrest
warrant Friday for Lewis
office served as a back-room
whohasbeenknown
JamesCole,18,
"conduit" for industries anxious to
to
wander
throughout
the United
escape federal regulations.
States,
seeking
temporary
work,
Miller, however, responded that
FBI
spokesman
Ed
McGrath
said.
he properly redqced the FTC's
·
"He
has
traveled
throughout
"excessively adversarlal relationship" with bUsiness and that he much of the United States, most
Increased the agency's efficiency to recently in Indiana, Tennessee,
give "taxpayers more bang for the Alabama and Kentucky," McGrath
said. "He usually stays In rescue
huck."
A conservative economist, Miller missions and looks lor Itinerant or
also served as assistant director of temporary work. He was known to
OMB for several months before he be In Florida asIa te as this month, in
. was named FTC chairman In late Daytona Beach::
1!&amp;.

a

vigorous and combative loe of
regula lion and consumer
protection.
·
Stockman, by contrast, liad
perhaps Washington's best graspol
the numbers that go Into making a
budget.
Senate Republican leader Robert
Dole said Miller would do wen at
OMB but · predicted the jQI) "will
change. I don't know how It will
change; but David Stockmali convincedushekneweveryprogram."
"The president Is particularly
pleased to make the appointment of
Jim Miller to this job, caillng him an
outstanding lndlvldual with consld·

erable experience and background
that wlll be a tremendous asset to the
administration," White House spokesman Larry Speakes said In a
brief announcement.
Miller's name had circulated on
Capitol Hill lor three days before
White House chief of staff called him
with the promotion from a phone in
his car. Miller must stlll be
confirmed by the Senate.
As FTC chalrtnan, Miller was
repeatedly accused of turning back
the clock on consumer protection.
Miller was Involved In the admlnts!ration decision to delay a requirement that automakers Install air-

:~~J?r!~i~

promptly
on allin the ·
and
findings
report, and we will Initiate

actlon on all ~a~~~~e~s ~:~~
leaks of any kind ," a
spokesman said.
The affected transformers a rei~
the Museum of Amelican Htst~~
the Museum of Natural History
lhe NatJonal Portrait Gallery.
"The EPA Inspector did not
any situation in which the put&gt;li£!
would come in contact with
the agency said. "The violatl~
were in.' he storage area , aod thooCI
violations were caused by lack'b(,
proper PCB containment.
;~

''Several transformerswere-le~

ing. One leak was 2 feet by2!eet. 'IJ!i
rest of the leaks were a drop to~
drops . Each of the buildings had'
leasI one leak."
.. : ~
The engineer Is expected~

.!I

continue his inspecUon of

museums where leaks were ·
poried by the Smithsonian and
District of Columbia Flt"'
Department.
"' :

.

FBI looks for drifter in killin~

Conservative economist to headOMB

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~AAFERRAB,O'
~RIA, Va .. (tJtl)

. tropefttUllatl.aoe'plans to excavate
crash site wiD finally
; • uncover the fate of their loved ones.
·: , They are also encoural!"d bY Vice
· , President Georae Bush's vow that !I
:: the 1.llillld States aets "hard
, • evldftd tllat Amei1Cans are st!U
•. held In VIetnamese prisons, we're '

•, anOtMI-'O.S.

pledged to do whatever's necessary
to gt"t thef!t out."
Bush uttered the strong words
Friday National POW-MIA
Recognition Day - during 811
address before the National League
of Families of American Prisoners
and Missing In Southeaat Asia.
Drawing sustained applause,
Bush said the Laotian aovemment •.
which found 13 sets ol remains In
February at Pakae, "has agreed to

excavation of a second crash site in
thecomlngdryseason."
Nearly 2,500 U.S. servicemen are
st!U Ustecl as missing in Vleinarn.
Although the U.S. government has
decljtred all but one as presumed
dead, It says 11 cannot rule out the .
posslbllltyscrnemaybe POWs.
Bush balled the promise by Laoo
to excavate another crash site as
further evidence of J1'08lt'SS In the
administration's efforts to deter-

mine the fate of the missing.
The VIetnamese government recently . promised to return the
remains or 26 Americans and
provide Information on six others. It
wOUidbetheblggestreturnofbodles
since the end of the war a decade

ago.
In addressing the league whose
tour-day conVI!Ittlon ends Sunday,
Bush also praiSed the ocganlzatlon
tor keeping the MIA issue alive

during several years of what he
described as government
dlsmterest.
"At last America has a president
-and, may I say, a vice presidentwhohaspledgedthat,ofthlswar,we
will write no laSt chapter: we will
close no books, we will pul away no
final memories unt.ll all your
questions about the missing and
about possible prisoners of war are
answered," Bush said.

,·

.

McGrath declined to say !I C~
was a suspect In the death of Ch~
Deputy U.S. Marshal Jack ~·
Moore, 45, of Jacksonville woo
vanished last Saturday.
r~
"'Right now, we are not sure Hire
(Cole) is the one that killed Mooft,
but we're nol ruling out tllat
possibility," McGrath said.
• Moore's Chevrolet Blazer llias
found in Anderson.lnd., and special
Agent Gary Schoon said age~ls
watched the car for two days toseelf
Cole would try to '"lrieve It, but :lie
did not.
"·'
Moore had served as a. dep\liY
sheriff in Marion County, Ind., fljr
four years before joining the u't!i.
Marshal's Service. He was unmM-rled but had relatives In Indiana . ·~
McGrath said Cole, about 6-f~2
and weighing 165 pounds, lEtt
ldentltlcation in the slain marsh~

car.

Laos
excavation of crash .site may uncover MIAs fate
.

I Famllilll 01 American servicemen
, rnlslllllllil V~tnam are anxious and

•

rains in thepastfewdays had eroded
By BILLSCO'IT
all were Italians.
STAVA, Italy (UPI) -Workers
An 'ambulance rushed Assuntil , the 33-feet high dam of beaten earth
dlgglng through a sea of mud lor described as ~ritlcally Injured , to a on Monte del Blvlo, about a haltmUe ·
victims of a burst dam in the Italian hospital In the nearby Alpine resort above Stava In the Dolomite
Alps Saturday rescued a woman town of Cavalese and a helicopter Mountain region.
Local authorities said the darb .
. burleduptohermouthlntherulnsof stood by to fly her south to a hospital
ban1cadlng
an artificial pond used
a hotel. Oflldals said 99 bodies had at Verona or north to one In
to
purify
minerals
from a nearby
been recovered.
Innsbruck, Austria .
mine
was
bullt'22
years ago
fluorite
· National ClvU Defense director
She was theseventhsurvlvortobe
and
considered
so
secure
that
Elveno Pastorello said about 100 pulled out alive from the mass of
mining trucks used It as a road. ·,
people sliD were missing and mud and rubble. ·
The officP of the state pra;ecutor
estimated the death toll would reach
Thousands of Alpine guides,
200. Other officials feared the count rescue workers and troops, flrefigh- · in nearby Trento ordered lnvestlgal •
i"
could rise to 300.
ters, pollee, parachutists, army lions into the fluride mine.
Cara Marla Assunta, SO, was engineers and volunteers continued · Survivors reported they heard "~
found at dawn Saturday burled in their search fOr bodies throughout great roar" at the time of the dam
burst and then the water and muil
muduptohermouthin therulnsofa the night.
were
upon them.
hoteldestroyedbYacascadeofmud
Using picks, shovels, earthThe
torrent swept away four
and water spawned by the collapse moving equipment under powerful
hotels
and
a pastry shop, 25 huts,
Friday of an earthen dam contain- • arc lights and dogs trailll!d to sniff
farmhouses
and sawmills as ~
out avalanche victims, the rescue
lng water from a fluorite mine.
raced
through
the Flemme Valley.'
By early Saturday rescue workersdugthroughthetonsolmud
It cut through Stava and gushed
workers said they had recovered 99 and debris.
bodies from the mass of mud and
"It's a terrible thing. We found another2% rnileslntoTesero, where
rubble In the town of Stava and Its dismembered bodies," one teen- It destroyed the town soccer lleld
and tennis courlS before· flnally ·
environs. Officials said about half aged Alpine rescue worker said.
the victims have been ldentltled and
CivU defense officials said heavy emptying into another only partially
lull dam.
·

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••

Light blue metallic exterior with matching custom inte·
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JulY 21, 198&amp;•

,,

j

There are other creatures that
venture out at night besides
fishermen·. 'These include bats
which are constantly swooping past
your h~ad and dipping at your rod.
TUrtles are often mistaken for a big
llsh on the end of a line at night untll
you get him ln. Then the real tup
begins. Snakes can often be spotted
also. Then there are all the
mosquitoes and other bugs. U the
!Ish aren't biting - they will be. Be
sure to take along plenty of Insect
repellent.
Nighttime fishermen usually
have better luck during the hot
months than their daytime counterparts. But, one thing Is for sure, !I
you don't catch more !Ish, I'm sure
you'll have more fun.

LIVING ROOM SUITES

-

. I

moves.

STOP IN AND SAVE ON QUALITY

~imts- i'tntirttJ Section D·
.•'
Italy death toll rises_;
·woman rescued

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"In the area of diplomacy:~ It
means that all parties unders~d
the Importance of the POWaod
Issue to the American people,'~ e
said.
·~
And, again drawing applli~Se.
Bush added, "Top priority mftth$
thatwedonot ruleoutthepossilllnty
that Americans are sUD alive
held captive In Indochina."
::

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Pega 0-2 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

'll\ltween the Druze militia and Its ShUte counterpart,
Paramilltacy police and troops from a Sp!Clal army
strike Ioree contained the Incident, however, ln the
first major test of a Syrian-backed pian tn bring
securtty .to Beirut since It took effect Tuesday.
1n central Beirut, Christian and Moslem gunners
blasted shells over the Green Line of wrecked
buildings dlvldlnj: malnly Moslem west Belrut from
the rnalnly Christian east late Friday, security
sourcr:s said.
One shell hit a Peugeot car In the Hazrnleh
neighborhood, killing one perron and Injuring two
others, the Christian-run Voice pi Lebanon rad!Psald.

Shelilng also l!nlpled between Christian and

American MIAs.
LaPs said it will also continue Its
acrountlng of American servicemen missing in action during the
Vietnam War and will help excavate
a "new" jet crashslted~ringthedry

.---National briefs:-Palm Sunday killer convicted
NEW YORK (UP!) - A jury ronvlcted Christopher Thomas on
manslaughter In last year' s Palm Sunday Massacre of 10 people,
Including eight children, in a verdict prosecutors say was based on
the klller's "extreme emotional disturbance. "
The slaughter, ~id by prosecutors to have heen prompted by
jealousy, was the worst mass kllllng In New York City history.
Friday's conviCtion on the lesser charges - first-degree
manslaughter -was a victory for Thomas, who would have faced
much stltfer sentences had he been convicted on, multiple counts of
murder.
Assistant Distrtct Attorney Christopher Ulrich said afterwards, "I
think jusUce was done. The right person was convicted of kllllng 10
people. The jury believed he acted with Intent to kill but under
extreme emotional disturbance."
Thomas rould he sentenced to 12'h to 25 years for each of 10
manslaughter rounts at sentencing Sept. 10.
"I'm not shocked by the verdict," state Supreme Court Justice
Ronald Aiello said after the two-week trtal ended, but added, "I think
Christopher Thomas belongs In jail for the rest of his llte."
Thomas' lawyer, Martin Schmucklersald he was "quite gratified"
at Friday's verdict, but stHJ planned to appeal the verdict on the
ground that some material presented at trial had heen illegally
obtained.

Sunol MOSiem-Nn Voice of the Nation radio said .
• There were no Immediate reports of casualties.
Pollee from, the~lnternal Security Forces set up
roadblocks on Hamra Street, a mafn shopplngmery ,
Friday night to enA:lrce a ban on clvlllans carrying
weapons.
In a related Incident, a patrol chased a carload of
militiamen to !lie Verdun nelghborhoocf, arresting
two while twP otherS escaped.
Earner Friday, the press attache of the North
YemenEmbassywasbeatenashetriedtojumpaline
of cars waiting to C!'OS!I the Green Line.

Government closes cancer clinic
NASSAU, Bahamas (UP!) ·- The goverrunent has closed a
controversial cancer clinic accused of infecting some of its patients
wtth a blood serum tainted with the deadly virus that causes AIDS.
: A govenunent romrnunlque Issued Friday said, " The Immunol·
ogy Researching Centre In Freeport, Bahamas, has heen ordered to
cease operations on Wednesday."
An Investigation revealed that the center's operations posed "a
serious health hazard, " acrording to Minister of Health Norman
Gay.
Gay said the Investigation followed a report aoout unsatisfactory
. conditions at the center from the Pan American Health Organization
and the United States Center for Disease Control.
The clinic Is run by experimental zoologist Lawrence Burton, Who
clalms to have developed a secret blood serum that can combat
cancer. The serum relies on "Immunotherapy," using components
of blood that naturally combat disease, according to Burton.
The Miami Herald reported that tests have shown at least two
cancer patients treated at the Freeport clinic were given serum
infected wtth IITLV·III, the virus that causes AIDS.
"It's horiible," Dr. Gregory Curt, deputy director of cancer
treatment at the National Cancer Institute In Bethesda, Md .. told the
newspaper. "Not only Is the (cancer treatment) theory unproven ...
but IIIIW patients are paying thousands for a contaminated blood
product."

Death videos big sellers
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Two movies featuring actual
bebeadlngs, electrocutl!lns and anlmal slaughter have zoome&lt;j to the
top of Southern Calltomla's video cassette rental list, prompting
warnings from area psychologists.
Owners of video outlets throughout Los Angeles said m·a story
publlsbed Friday In the Herald Examiner that "Faces of Deal h" and
"Faces of Death II" are the most consistently rented movies in the
area despite a lack of advertising and no movie theater distrlbu lion.
The films, made by an American rompany for distribution In
Japan, are especially popular among teenagers and college-age
youths, they said.
· "I think the reason for the creation of this program is that it is an
' extension of the nightly news. Americans have become hardened to
death and murder," said Waleed B. All, whose Mal jack Productions
In Oak Forest Ill., began distributing the films after hearing of the ir
success In Japan.
Ali said the films feature actual scen·es from a cattle
slaughterhouse, the decapitation of a chicken and a baby seal hunt.
. Other scenes Include a human suicide, autopsy, beheadings m\d
· electrocutiOns - but Ali said he didn 't know if they were staged or
real.
Thomas Radecki,.a clinical psychiatrist and head of the American
Coalition on Television Violence, said he Is worried aoout the ·
popularity of'the films .
"This Is really frightening," he said. " In all likelihood , some people
will not get a charge out of watching these films but will start
slaughtering animals and even human beings to get a rushh. "

Suit against Soviets advances
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A California exporter who says the
Soviet UniOn falsely accused hlm of being .a spy has won an initial
ruling In his $400mlllion libel suit against the communist superpower
and Its government newspaper Izvestia.
Gerald Kroll, attorney for Raphael Gregorian, 55, sa id the refusal
Friday of U.S. District Judge David V. Kenyon lo throw out the suit
obligates the Soviets to either answer the rom plaint by July 31 or be
found in default. .
.
Armed with a default ruling, Kroll said he could seize Soviet assets.
"We're looking at grain (purchased In the United States) and we
knoW (the Soviet airline) AeroOot lands In Montreal. Canada," Kroll
said.
.
"This could be historic. There's never been a suit ol such
stgnl!lcance or magnitude" filed against the Soviets, Kroll said .
Gregortail' s company, California International Trade Cfrp.' of
Palo Alto, exported medical and laboratory equipment to the Soviet
Union and, according to Kroll, was the largest non-manufacturing
U.S. exporter to the USSR.
The buslne9s relationship, however, ended after a November 1984
article In Izvestia that said Gregortan's firm was a front for U.S.
Intelligence activity.

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TEL AVIV, Israel (UP!)- The
foreign ministers of the Soviet Union
·and Israel wtll·meet In SePtember In
the flr.;t high-level contact between
Israel and the new Soviet leadership, Israel's state-run television
. reported . •
The announcement Friday followed a meeting In Paris In which
the Soviet ambassador to Israel
reportedly tokl.hls Israeli rounterpart Moscow wants to solve the ·
problem of Jewish emigration to
Israel and renew diplomatic ties.
The Soviet Union downplayed the
·report Friday aoout renewing ~
·diplomatic relations with Israel, ,
saying relations could only he :
normalized If Israel ends its •
..
''aggressive policies."
Moscow voted In the United ~
Nations In 1947for,theestabllshment •
of a Jewish state but broke off ties
after the 1967 Arab-Israeli war. In ~
the war, Israel seized the Golan .•
Heights from Syrla as well as the •
West Bank from Jordan and the •
Gaza ·strtp from Egypt. Israel
~
annexed the Golan Heights In 1~1.
Israel Television· reported that •
Foreign Minister Yltzhak Shamlr .:;
will meet 'with Soviet Foreign t~
Minister Eduard Shevardnadze In
New York during the U.N. General •~
Assembly in September.
•
It will be the first direct rontacl
between an Israell official and a
memher of the new Soviet leader- ·:
ship, the report said. ·
1n Washlngton, a State Department spokesman said the United
States was not opposed to resump- 1
tlon of diplomatic ties between i
Moscow and Jerusalem.
· '
Such an action rould propel the 'i:
Soviet Union Into the Middle East .!.
peace process. Prlme Minister
Shlmon Peres says Israel would •
agree to Soviet participation In the
peace process if the Soviets would
re-establish diplomatic relations.
•
The Soviet overture to Israei was ..'
the main topic of a lwo-hourmeeting
Tuesday In Paris between Israeli
Ambassador Ovadla Soffer and his '
Soviet counterpart, Yull Vronlt50V, ...,.
Israel radio satd.

BUSH ON M.I.A.S- VIce President George Bush addresses the 16th
anma1 ronventlon ollhe National League of American Pn;oners and
MlsslnglnSouthe. . AslaFriday. BushsaldtbeLaotlangovenunenthas
agreed to excavate another crash site in search of American servicemen
still mlsslnr and UIUIOOlllnted lor In Southeast Asia. UPI

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The areas affected by the state of
emergency cover most of Eastern
Cape Province, including Port
Elizabeth's black suburbs as well as
Johannesburg and ' surrounding
townships such as Soweto.
The security forces were given the
power to ronduct random searches.
A maximum sentence of 10 years in
prison or a $10,00J line may be
imposed on violators.
Details of state ol emergency
were published at midnight ip a
special issue of the government
gazette.
.
Gen. Johan Coetzee, commis·
sioner of police. said police officers
planned to meet next week with
local and foreign journalists to
discuss ' news roverage from the
areas affected by the state of
emergency.
Percy Qoooza . South Alrica' s
most respected black newspaper
editor, said tile govemment "hes
finally legitimized the awesome
powers that.have been put Into the
hands of the police." He said the
rights to control tbeflowofncwswas
"horrendous apd draronlan ."
"We expect (many) blacks to be
rounded up after midnight tonight,"
he said.

saying that," Walesa said as four
plainclothes security policemen
lislened Impassively, sitting In the
grass a few yards away.
The policemen. In two Flats,
tailed Walesa's Volkswagen van to
the river and checked the Identities
of the United Press International
,reporter and translator.
Walesa Is under Investigation on
charges that could render him a
maximum five-year term If trted
and convicted. He ts suspected of
helping organize a strike In Febru·
ary that never toPk place but f~r

--

The projects, by school:
-The University of Akron wHI
focus on the areas ct quality control
and productivity, In particular the
application of techniques used
extenslvelylnJapan.
-The Ohlo State Oniverslty
project will integrate mlcroromputers Into the finance andacrounting
cu.rrlculums.
-Cleveland's Case Western Reserve University wlll focus on
collaboration between two aca,
demlc dlsclpllnes, the Weatherhead
School of Management and tbeCase
Institute of 'l'echnology. Student
te&amp;rns will work to design new
products and to develop strategies
for bringing the products Into the
market place.
.

long distance rosts and Is more
flexible.
John Ltp~. the finn's senior vice
president, said the ew service
features all-digital fiber optics
between on-net, or ronnectlngcltes;
six-second billing; ' accounting
codes; authorization codes; time-ofday disrounts; and 14 cents per
minute billing for calls placed In
those areas on LlTel's network.
Lipps said LlghtXpress bas no
mlntrrium useage requirements.
UTe! is one of seven partners of
the National Teleromrnunications
Network.
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-Youngstown State University
wUI sponsor a conference this
August on managment Information
systemsanddecislon-maklng.
--Cleveland State University wm
mount a project designed to
Integrate decision support appllcalions of computer tecllnology In the
MBA cuniculum at CSU's James J .
Nance · (:ollege of Business
Administration.
-Ohio Wesleyan University will
use its grant to fund activities
related to the establishment of a
Center lor EronomlcsandBusiness.
The center will provide opportuni.
ties for the school to expand the
Interaction of Its students with the
business rommunity.
-Ashland College will Integrate
.
.

NASA 'debates shuttle trouble

By WILLIAM HARWOOD
UPI Sclenoo Wrllf:r
CAPECANt\VERAL,Fla. (UP!)
-Engineers faced a buSY, weekend
to find out why a key experiment
computer aboard the shutlle Chal·
Ienger broke down, but officials
predicted the ship's serond launch
attempt this month will go ahead.
"! haven't gotten a lonna!
position, I won't untH Monday when
we have our flight readiness review.
but based on the inputs I've had It
.Jooks like we're going to fly," said
Jesse Moore, NASA's associate

•administrator for space flight.
Challenger's launch July 12 was
aborted when the ship's three
poweroouse rnaln engines shut
down just 1.58 seconds from liftoff
because a rocket engine valve
. assembly failed to work properly.
Since then, launch teams have
worked furiously to ready Challenger for a second attempt. An
official launch date has not been set,
but engineers are working toward
blastoff on July 29.
Challenger's seven-man crew
plans to spend a week In orbit to

operate a Sr.! million array of
experiments designed to probe the
sun, the structure of the universe
and how solar radiation affects
Earth's upper atmosphere.
Most of the delicate instruments,
located in Challenger's 60-lpot-long
cargo bay , are controlled by
romputers in a cylindrical. pressurIzed bou singea Ued a n " igloo."
The experiment comput er is on
the blink, Ball said.

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Merchandise

An nou ncr.nwn ts
1-Card of Thanks )paid in advance)
2·ln Memory
I paid in advance)

3-Announcamants
4-Giveaway
6-Happy Ads
li-Lost and Found
7-Yard Sale (paid In advance)
8·Publlc Sale &amp; Auction
9-Wantad to Buy
tlliiJIIlV'Ill'til

21·But~ineas

Opportunity
22-Money to Loan
23-Professionat Services

Real Estate
31 -Homet for S ala
32-Mobile Homes for Sale
33-Farma for Sale
34-Buaineaa Buildings
36-Lott &amp; Acreage
36-Real Estate Wanted

Farm Sunplies
&amp;

42-Mobile Homes for Rent
43-Farms for Rent
44-Apartment for Rent
45-Furnished Rooms
46-Space for Rent
47-Wanted to Rent
.48-Equipment for Rent

18-Wanted To Do

Card of Thanks

family of Karen
L.(Prudyl Johnson wishee to
express their thanks end
eppreciation to all who
helped in eny wey during the
recent illnell and death of
our beloved wife, mother.
daughter and sister. A apecial thanks to Southern
local School Diltricl, ltpe·
cielly kindergarten. end Fo·
gleaong Funeral Home, Rev.
Ptul MaGuire, all churches
for their prayers ar'ld frfende
who Mrved the meal on the
day oUhe fu·neral- we will be
forever grateful. The Femil\t
of Karen L. "Mits Karen"
Johnaon.

The

3 Announcements
SWEEPER and sewing ma-

and
and

In M~moriam

In memory of OTIS F.
CHAPMAN, who departed
this life one year 110 today, July 21, 1984.
Otis will always be remem·
btrtd,
The way he spoke and
smiled.
The little things he said
. and did. ·
.
Art with us all the while.
Our htarts stilhche, we often cry. ~
Otis had to leave, without 1
last goodbye.
For soma rtason, God ttpk
Otis away,
And we still miss him overy
day.
Sadly missed by his wife,
Kathryn: Children and
Grandchildren

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Giveaway

Rd.

hrl.

wire. Call 614-2&amp;6-1436.

SEMI-DRIVER TRAINING
•ooT Certification
*Nalo'anai/La&lt;alt'-L place
'"'
•
mtnt assistance
•Home/resident
•(ligiblt institution for
F.. .ral Aid
•GuarantHd student
loans
1-100-1!1-1233, ht. 131
UNITED TRUCK MASTERS
COLUMBUS. OH.
Offkt: (ltarwattr, fla.

Ho~n~

C.W.A. Local 4504
Annual

Family Dinrrer
Dale's Restaurant
FORMERLY DUFFS

Tuesday, July 23
1 P.M.-6 P.M.
Members and Family
Prizes Given Away
Every Hour

Small

amount

of barbed

Gallia coGnty
Area Code 614

Meigs County
Area Code 614

Mason Co .• wv
Area Code 304

446 - Gallipolis
367-Cheshira
388-Vinton
245-Rio Grande

992-Middleport

675- Pt. Pleasant
458-·leon
576-Apple Grove
773-Mason
882-New Haven
895- Letart
937- Buffalo

83-Exca\lating
84-Eiectrical &amp; Refrigeration

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·· ····Gaiifiioifs ....... .

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RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER SERVICE. Est.te.
farm, antique, liquidation
seles. Licensed Ohio and
West Virginia. 304·773·
6786 Of 304-773-5430.

Sale-Emptying Barn. Combination of used and antique
turn.. (lOIIectibles. Hossier
cab, oak. linens. jewelry.
Fri .- Sun. 9-7 Russells Antiques, Upper River Rd.,
Gallipolis .

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

----~';:;::::&lt;

clean used can .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc .

11

Yard Sale July 22-23. 9-5.
Baby clothes, furniture .
clothes. ceramics, ceramic
bisque, table &amp; chairs. fa .
bric, misc. Y, mile out of
Centerville. Rt. 279, 2nd.
house tight, 3 families.

Help Wanted

10' PEOPLE NEEDED
81 ,200 PER MONTH
New company needs to
train, must · be dependable
and honest. For personal
interview call 614- 4467441, Mon . or Tues . 10AM
to 4PM .
Wanted reliable person with
referancei to live on 40 acre
farm. Rent free·!pay own
utilities) to care for cattle. If
Interested come to Fredrick
Ad (first rd . west of 160)
between Glenn Summit and
Floyd Clark Rd. First house
off Glen Summit on Fredrick
Rd. July, 21-22 .
Experienced part· time LPN .
Apply in person between 9 &amp;
4 to: 203 Jackson Pike .
Gallipolis. Dh.
Extra Extra . Need mOney lor
school?
special starting
fee . Avon. Start today,
814-446-2168 or614-446·
3368.

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Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

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Dew S\.(off Grant St.) Mid- ~

dlepor,t. 10 speed bicycle, '
double; sink with plumbing, •
mens and boys jeans and ·1
shirts. gas heating stove, t.
and lots of misc. July '22nd \
;
and 23rd. 9:00 til 4:00 .

Help Wanted

Experienced cooks AM &amp;
PM st.ilts . Apply in pe_r$on at
Holiday Inn , Gallipolis .
Monday-Friday·. No phone
calls please.
Wanted Mature white ladv
to live in nice home neighborhood . To do light
household chores and help
care for elderly lady . Reply
with phone no. and wages
expected to: Heber D .
McClaskey. 107 Westview
Ave .. Columbus. Oh43214.
Wanted : Two positions
available at intermediate
care facilities lor develop·
mentally disable edults in
Gallia County:
!1) Housemanager . full·
time, liva-in lhours .are
mornings and evenings, 6
days-week). Bidwell, Ohio .
Salary: $4.17 hr. plus, de·
pending on qualifications .
Excellent benefit package.
!2) Relief Housamanager ,
34 hours-week (weekends
and holidays) . Gallipolis ,
Ohio. Salary: $4 .1 7 hr .
Both positiOns require a
current Driver's license and
a high school degree. Expe· ·
rience in working with de&gt;Jelopmentally disabled person
is preferred . Send resume
with cover letter indicating
which position applying for
to Robin Eby, B1uckeye Com·
munity Servic9s, P.O. Box
804, Jackson , 'Ohio 45640.
Deadline for applicants : 7·

Fun Job. Setyouro.w nhours
a toy party demonttrator,
free training. free kit, no
collecting or delivery. Call ~~~~·~E:q:u•:'~·O:pp=o~rt=u~n:ity
814·388-8794.
1:

11

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...... F,.cimerov.. ...... ;

Bill Gene Johnson

11

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Yard Sale Donations needed
resale for needy children.
Centenary Townhouse . July
30-31 or call 61 4· 446·
3171 .

Public Sale
&amp; A1.4clion

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~~fMI~-~'li ~~~-'Ol~ll'&lt;.'iiWW/, Vl/!o'O'IP'W".U

..... ... ... ~ ..........·.. ..... .

614-446-3672
full blooded German She- ! __...:._______
pherd just over 1 yr. Qld. To a Dodrill's Auto Parts. Now
good home. Call 614-446· · buying salvage end iuck 11 Help Wanted
1-7 0_2_5_._______ can. Mon. -Fri. 8 -6:30. Call 1---~------'614 -388-9616.
Own your own JeanKittens to good home. All
Sportswear, Ladies Apparel.
colors. Call 614·367·0293. COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS Childrens. Large Size. ComFURNITURE. Beds. iron, bination Store, Accessories,
4 cute kittens 'to giveaway wood, cupboards, chairs , Jordache, Chic, lee, Levi,
to a good homtt. 614-985- chests. baskets. dishes. Easy Street. lzod, Esprit.
4117.
stone jars, antiques, gold Tomboy. Calvir'l Klein, Serond oilver. Writo·M · D. gio Valenta, Evan Picone. liz
Pitbull puppy. 2"At months Miller, Rt .2, Pomeroy, Ohio ·claibbrne, Members Only.
old. Free lb a good home. 46769 or call 614~ 992 G
G
Organical1y rown. asoCall614-992·3666.
7760.
fino. Holthto•. Ovo• 1.000
others. $7,900 to S24,900
3 kittens to give away. 'Buying daily gold. silver inventory. Training, fixtures,
614 · 986 -3944 ·
coins, rings.jewelry,sterling grand opening, etc. Can
ware, old coins, large cur- open 16 davs. Mr. Keenan
Apricot male poodle. 2¥2 rency. Top prices. Ed . Bur- 13 06)67B 3839
yean old. Has excellent kett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.
·
·
disposition. Call 614· 742- Middleport. Qh. 614-992.
Own your own Jean 2103 or 614-742·2178.
3476 '
Sportswear. Ladies Apparel,
AKC Cocker Spaniol. 2V. Aluminum serap. Sell 'your Childrens, large Size. Com·
year&amp; old. Male. Buff color. aluminum scrap direct to the bination Store, Accessories,
614-949-2198 after , smelt6r.
Chic, Lee. Levi,
Buying all grad«ts of Jordeche.
Easy Street, ltod, Esprit,
4:30pm .
aluminum . Premium paid for Tomboy, Cal'llin Klein, Serlarge loada. Call for quote.
One tingle bed. springa and Scipio Energy, located Pia gio Valente, Ev1n Picone, Liz
mattre... Orqter. All good milet east of Pagetown on Cieiborna, Members Only,
Organically Grown, Gato·
cond. 304·676·7531 .
Township Road 141 . MBigs line,
Helthtex. Over 1.000
County. 614·992 ·3466.
others. 87.900 to 824.900
Pteciout black and white
Terrier, had •II shota. excel- FOJd pick up truck wrecked inventory. Training, fixturee,
lent w•tch dog end compan - or junk 1973 thtu 1979. 304 gr~nd opening, etc . Can
oper\ 15 dayt. Mr. Keen.an
ion for elderly. 304·675· 675-3574
(306)678 -3639.
6645.
11 Help Wanted
FoOd SerVIce supervisor f~r
progreesive healt care facd·
6 Lost and Found
BIG BUCK$1 Your prior ity . Qualifications: mutt
MNice it · wonh 1 lot of have 90 hour epproved
FOUND Block &amp; White mala money. Monthly paycheck· coune man1gemer'lt 1kill1,
Bird dog on Rio Grtnde- •35,000 Life Insurance ~ e~~.pe)ience In food Mrvict.
ContOJpolnt Rd. Colt 614· Now training. Coli 304·675· Apply at Scenic Hilla Nurs3960 or 1·800·642·3619. Ing Center. 8-4:30.
246-9508 .

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.c. . ... . -~;. ~ .

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They'll Do It Every Time

Wanted To Buy

'

Up to 15 Words ... One day insortion ........... $4.00
Up to 15 Words ... Threa day insertion .. ... .... $5 .00
Up to 15 Words ... Six day insertion ............ $8.00

Found 2 Beagles ~n Sand
Hili Rd. Must identify and
pay lor ad. 304-682-3346.

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lost: Blue Tick Coon Hound.
male, in laurel Cliff area.
Has chain and collar on.
Oscar Smith. 614 ·9925694.

1-------We pay cash for late model

985-Cheste•
343 - Portland
247-Letart Falls
949- Racine
742 - Rutland
'667- Coolville

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85·Gen•al ·Hauling
86-Mobile Home Repair
87-Upholstery

6 Lost and Found

8

Pomeroy

643-Arabia District
379- Walnut

.

New Credit Cardlt No one
refused. Visa-Muercard.
Call 1-619-565-1522. 24

1----------

Spacial thru July 31tt. Presont this ad &amp; got 12tonnlng
sallions fOr $36. Sunslllt'oonol Tanning S•lon. Silver
Bridgo Plaza. Call 814-446·
3&amp;88.

4

Classified pages cover the
following telephone exchanges ....

2&amp;8-Guyan Cistrict

81-Homelmproveinents

62-Wonted to Buy
,
63-Livostock
64-Hay &amp; Grain ,
66-Seed &amp; Fertili~er

You can slim up for summer. 3 kltter'ls . litter trained to
All Natural Weight-loll pro· good home. Call 614-446gram can help yo~ lote . 8264.
10-29 plut pounds 1n your 1--- - - - - - flrat month or your money Handmade sturdv bed side
back. Call now 614-742- com!!lode. Call 614-446 2328.
1-3~9~1~8_
. _____________
The 0 cl111 softball toume· Black &amp; white 2 yr. old male,
ment 1 ponsored by the 3 vr. old spaved female . Part
Racine Fire Dept. takes Border Collie, Germar'l Sheplace Julv 20th &amp; 21st. Fee: pherd female puppy. Cell
$60 plus 2 Red Dot balls. 614-246-9608.
For more Information call
614-949-3073.
Y2 grown cata. litter trained
1_::.::_.:.:_::_::.::.:_::____
&amp;: lriendlv. Call 614-446·
Vacancy evailable for adult 2171.
female. Harpers Adult Care
Contor. 304·676·1293.
Puppies part Pit Bull &amp;
Australian Blue Heeler. Call
R &amp; J Mobile Home Mo&gt;Jers. 614-386·8876 or 614·446Reasonable rates. complete 7022
line of service. 304-372·
4654, 273·5297. Answer· 2 puppies part Cocker Spaing service til 6 pm.
niel bobtails. Call anytime.
614-446-0770 Butavillo

delivery. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up 4
Giveaway
Goorgoo CrHk Rd. Cell
114-446·0294.
Materic stove 4 parts. Call
114-446-1149.
Balloons forGatWaii.,Annl·l.,:__:__:_:___ _ _ _ _
verurvs. Birthdays. pertlea. I-:--:------Singing Gorrilla. Call Bel- 3 Announcem
. ants
loons&amp;Co. 614-448-4313.

2

~IV 1::, l!Jt'k

49-F.or Lease

3 Announcements

.An noun r.r.nt P. n1 ~

Officials of the United Democratic Front, which with about 1.5
mllllon members of all races is the 1
biggest goverrunent opposition ·
group, said an est !mated 40,11Xllo .
50,00) people attended the funerals . •
No Incidents \\:ere reported.

79-C&amp;mpers 8L Motor Home$

82-Piumbing 8o Heating

.1 7-Miscellaneoua

circumstances.

71 -Autoo for Sale
72- Trucks for Sale
73-Vans 8o 4 WD
74-Motorcyctes
75-Boats ll Motors
76- Auto Parts &amp; Aceassorias
77-Auto Repair
78-Camping Equipment

Servir.es

81 -Form Equipmrrnt

41 -Houses for Ra nt

1 1-Help Wanted
1 2·Situatlon Wanted
1 3-ln•urance
14-Buainea Training
15-Schoolo
18-Radlo, TV ll CB Repair

chine repair, parts.
1upplie1.
Pick up

Transnortation

51-Household Goods
52·CB. T'{ &amp; Radio Equipment
53-Antiques
54-Misc. Merchandise
56-Building Supplies
56-Pets lor Sale
57-Muslcallnstruments
58-Fruill &amp; Vegetables
59FSieTd

Sr·r VIC I':

He predicted the United Democratic Front - the goverrunent's
major black opposltl!ln group would be banned.
Afler a funeral forthreevictlmsof
racial unrest in Duduza, a black
township 25 miles east of Johannesburg, a young black woman accused
of being a pollee lnfonner was
kicked and beaten to death by a
crowd who later mutilated and
burned her body.
Immediately after Botha's announcement. television reports .
showed scenes d the woman on her
knees having her clothes strtppedol!
her back. She was kicked In the head
by a man and fell over and her body
was set afire.
In Cradock,130milesmrthofPort
Elizabeth, thousands of blacks ..
packed a sportB stadium to attend
the funeral of four leaders of the •
United ·Democratic Front killed last :'
month
In unexplained

which three other union leaders
were sent lo prison June 14.
The ooyrot t call came earlier this
week from Solidarity's secret Temporary Coordinating Committee
(TKK). accusing the government of
"four years of repression, unlawful·
ness and arrogance."
"The leadership of 'Solidarity
works two ways," saldWalesa, who
was on vacation with his family. "I
act within legal limits. It does not
mean that someday! would not join
TKK In the underground."

The Sunday Times-Sentinei~Page.:.._D-3 .,

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

Walesa gives tacit OK to election ·boycott;

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clan, a symool of Polish worker
protests, sald he and underground
leaders had "agreedonadlvlslonof
tasks" In which he acts within legal
llmlts.
·
Warned by pi'O!IeCutors last
month to stop making antlgoverrunent statements, Walesa
gave tacit lipprov~ of a . call by
undergrwnd unlpn leaders' on
volers to boyrott the Oct. 13
parliamentary election.
"All I can say' Is that I, Lech
Walesa, am not &amp;Olng to vote.
Nobody can do anything to me for

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Botha declaresr emergency inS. Africa.

SOKOLOW PODLASKI, Poland
(UP!) - Solidarity founder Lech
Walesa, mindful of provoklng
autoorttles, would not openly endorse a call by leaders of the
underground union to boycott fall
parUamentacy elections but said he
wtll not vote himself..
Walesa, Interviewed while fishing
on a riverbank Friday outside the
toWn of Sokolow Podlaskl, 75 mlles
east of Warsaw, did not rule out
'joining the underground Solidarity
opposition one day.
But the Gdansk shipyard electrt-

_.

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

WORTHINGTON, Ohio (UP!)The LITe! Teleromrnunlcatlons
Corp. has announced a new out·
bound telephone transmission ser·
vice which allows business customers to make long distance calls
and be bllledonlyforthe length of the
call, not length plus distance.
The new service, caned ; 'LightXpress" allows customers to call
anywhere In the United States
wtthout WATS handing, to.achleve
lower rosts per minute. urrel
officials said · the service Is an
excellent alternative to the traditional WATS service, since It cuts

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coverage "or romrnent In connection with the regulations or the
conduct of security force members
acting under the regulations."
The last tlme astateofemergency
was declared was on March :IJ,l!lffi,
ninedaysafter69blackswereshot to
death by police lnSharpevllleduring
anti-goverrunent demon~trations .
Eight days after that emergency.
the black nationalist organizatl!lns
AfriCan National Concress and the
Pan Afrleantst Council were
banned. During the 5-month state of
emergency, 11,279 blacks were
arrested.
"The life and property of all
people must be protected and law
and order must be maintained,"
Botha said.
"I wish to Issue a warning that
strict action wlll be taken against
those persons and Institutions that
cause or propagate disruption,"
Botha said. "Thlsstateolaffatrscan
no longer be toleniled.
"These acts of violence and
thuggery are mainly directed at lhe
property and person r1law-abldlng
black people and take the fonn of
incitement, lntlnnldatlon, arron,
inhuman forms of assault and even
murder," Botba said.

_... ................

New senrice bills for phone call length

1

JOHANNE;SBURG, South Africa
(UP!) - President Pleter Botha
declqr~ the first ~tate of emergency In white-ruled South Africa In
25 years Saturday. expanding police
powers and suspending legal rights
in black areas to combat racial
violence.
At the same tlme, thousands of
black mourners gathered peacefully In a stadium at Cradock,ln the
Eastern Cape province, for one of
the biggest funeral services ever
held In South Africa.
Botha announced the state of
emergency In a news conference
with selected South AfriCan journal·
ists and later told the nation of the
restrictive measures in a broadcast
address read in bOth English and
Afrikaans.
He said that, effective at midnight
Saturday, pollee were given wide
powers to deal wtth violence In black
townships In 36 magisterial
districts.
The stale or emergency gives
pollee and army officers the right to
detain people Indefinitely without
trial, to Impose curfews on selected
areas and control access to them.
Authorities also were given the
power to manage or prohibit news

•.

CLEVELAND (UP!). - The third largest rommunlty trust. It
Akron, $42,00J; Ashland College.
Cleveland Foundatk&gt;n had awarded normally Jlmlts Its grant -making to
$35,000; Bowllng Green State Unl·
10 OhiP Institutions of higher organizations located within the verslty, $37,000; Case Wester"
learning grants totalling $467.850 greater Cleveland area.
Reserve University, $77,700; Clevethrough Its Statewide Prograni for ·
Several of the projects bei.n g land State University, S&amp;l.&lt;XXl;
Business and Management Educa- funded Involve collaboration beMarietta College, $37,500: Ohio
tion (PBME).
tween educatl!ln programs and the
State University, $74,250; Ohio
The awards were made from a business community, and also
Wesleyan University· $43,300;
special multl-iniWon dollar fund explo~ the lmpllcations of new
Wright State University, $46,600:
established In 1977 by Findlay technologies for the way ~slriess Is
and Youngstown State U!!iverslty,
businessman L. Dale Dory toenable taught.
.
Ohio schools to respond creatively to
The 10 Ohlo rolleges and universi- $22,500.
- Several of the projects wUI
the needs of the changing business ties receiving PBME grants were
thtitlate extensive Interaction bescene.
selected, wtth the help of a team of
tween the academic rommunlty
ThePBMEgrants-whlchrange natlqnal consultants,lromamong33
and the business community, with
Ohio scoots which submitted proposin size from $22,500 to $77,700 mark only the second time"Institu- als last ' winter. They Include ooth the goal of revising curriculum
materials to reflect urrent business
tions across the state have been
plibllc and prtvate Institutions.
prl)Ctlces and· Important recent
eligible for funding from the
The school's named as 1985
developments, foundation officials
grantees are: The University of
~eveland FoundatiOn, the nation'
said.
t

Soviet, Israeli ··:
ministers to •
hold session

season, which begins ln November,
according to the official Lao news
agency, KPL.
In February, Laos andthe United
States conducted a joint excavation
at thecrashslteof a.C-lJOpianeshot
down In 197.!. The remains of 13
American alnnen were recovered
In what was the first such joint
project In communist Indochina.
U.S. officials In Bangkok who
ronflnned theflrstplannedvtslt by a
Lao delegation said the Laos
Foreign Mlrilstry adVised the AmerIcan Consulate In Vientiane of the
decision on Thursday.
"A delegatioll of the Lao govern·
ment . wlll visit the JCRC (Joint
Casualty · Resolution Center) In
Honolulu at the end of 1985 In
response to the U.S. goverrunenl's
invitation," the memorandum said,
according to KPL and the U.S.
officials.
No date or romposltion of the
visiting group was mentioned. A
U.S. Embassy ol!lclal said a
brteflng on the center's operations
and a tour of the forensic laboratories probably will be In the Itinerary.
The United States has iongwanted
Laos to send a group to the Honolulu
center, which leads the Investigation in the 2,4£4 MIA cases
aSS'lciated with the Indochina War.
Some 500 of loose MIA cases are
aSS'lCiated wtth Laos.
The memorandum confirming
the vtslt appeared to be an attempt
at removing any U.S. doubts about
Laos' cooperation on the MIA issue.
It alro may have represented a pitch
for more aid from Washlngton,
which den I e s all but humanitarian
supplies to what Is one of the world's
poorest countries.
The Lao goverrunent hopes Wa·
shington "will take concrete, constructive and reasonable steps
responding to this hu,m anltarlan
and goodwill attitude," said the
memorandum released by KPL.
Infonnation on MIAs Is regularly
exchanged between the Lao government and the U.S. Consulate In
Vientiane, the only American diplomatic mission In communist
Indochina.

~-

Cleveland Foundation awards grants

The securicy plan's coordination rommlttee, which
groups army and militia representatives wtth five
Syrian observers, Intends to narrow the Green Line on
its western slde by removing Moslem mHitlamen
from the area, the Independent newspaper An Nahar
said.
The leftist dally As Saflr said Gemayel had ••
propoSed a "rommlltee lor national dialogue" to be
• made up of Christian and Moslem members of Prime
Minister Rashid Karaml's Cabinet.
·
· .•
But Moslem leaders rejected the Idea because a ,
committee suggested . by the Christian Maronlte _
leader did not Include a represen~?! the
Christian Lebanese Force rnHitla, As -:sanr ~

Laos agrees ·to send group
to MIA center in Hawaii
BANGKOK, Thailand (UP!) Laos,ln a further sign of cooperatkm
wtth the United States, said Saturday It wtll send a delegation to
Hawaii to visit the U.S. military
center that investtilates evidence of

... ,.

July 21 •. 1986

Moslem flebters stationed in hills east of Beirut, the

Amal.

-

July 21. 1986

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

Violence overshadows ~Gemayel's peace hid
BEffiUT. .Lebanon (UP!) - President Amin
Gemayel tried to arrange talks to consolidate a
Syrtan-brokered peace plan lor Beirut as gurunen
ambushed a Druze Moslem leader and shells crasheC
· across the Green Line dividing the city.
The unidentltied assallants anned with au tomat!c
weapons fired from a speeding car at Druze
Prog!esslve Socialist Party ol!tclal lmad Nawfal
Friday as he left his horne near west Beirut's
tl&gt;levlsion station.
Nawfal was released from the American University Hospital after treatment lor a minor hand wound.
The Incident brought Progressive Socialist Party
· gurunen out on the streets and fueled fears of clashes

........

Help Wanted

11

.
•
~'

Easy Assembly work. $600.
per 100. Guaiar'lteed payment . No experience ~ no . "
sales. Details ' send self ·
addressed st1Jmped enve. {
lope ; Elan Vital-176, 3418
Enterprise Rd .• Ft . Pierce. Fl I
33482.
I

Free toys and free :·
gifts. Hnve a Friendly Home
Party nOw and wrap up your
Christmas shopping list
early , Gifts lor all o,pcaslons.
Someth ing for everyone. i~
Also looking for women who ~
would like to earn extra
money in their spare tir-ne. 4
For more Information call ...
614· 992 -356t '
~
Wow-

Wanted : live-in lady for "
elderly lady in Pomeroy, ,
Ohio . Cull 6t 4-992 -2805.

f

Break into the Finenciol
Industry part time . lnsu ·
ranee agents need•d imme ·
diately. Earn 300 to 600
monthly and keep your
present job. Preparation and
training for licence provided . For interview. call
1-614-667-6921 between
2·5 pm daily .

WANT ADS GET

t

"
'

~

..
.,
,
~f.
~~

•
~

~.: I ~RESULTS ~
· ~ ?~ . ··: -; - LIKE . :

'-:: I : •.

~ c ' ,YJ .-' DIAMONDS ;

�...

..

~.

. ........

. .....

~

~

.. ...

,..

........

.

'

·-

. Page-0-4-The Sundlly Times-Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

15

School•
Instruction

Wltkint 081lert.-Mm 26-10
per cern profit Also booktng

Watkin• Pllrtiea. Call I 1 4·

949-3027

2

day

21

ground

.chool. Private. commercial.

Part ttme HCN"tary Mature
person wtth good typtng
-.ills and general office
experience. Sand ra1ume
with references to Box. P- 18.

care of the Pomt PleaNnl
Plagltter

3 open Avon territones
ava•lable· in Pomt Pleasant
area 304-676-1429.

12

HIER 'AV

Situations
Wanted

F.male compamon. would
contider marri1ge. Charles
Rlchordt. Coil 814· 448·
3.419
Will carefortheeldaNy 1n our

h..Ome 16 years expenence
Openings for male and femolo 814-IS2·7314.

F1nanml

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

SPECIAL SALE •

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
FRIDAY, JULY 26, 1915 at 7:00 P.M.
TRUCKLOAD OF NEW CARPET
ALL TYPES, SIZES &amp; COLORS

Truckload of new furniture: Basselt &amp; Broyhill. New
bedroom su1ts. dmm&amp; room surtes, ltvrn&amp; room
• suites. recliners, rockers. lamps. fans, stereos,
. wood swincs. mattress sets. many new misc. items.

MARLIN WEDEMEYER -AUCTIONEER

245-5152- 388-1249

PATRIOT AUCTION BARN
ns.

• From Gallipolis take lit. 141. turn left onto Rt.
• turn right onlo Patnoi-Cadmus Road. Watch for
s1gns.

Sale Every Saturday Nicht at 7 P.M.
Door pmes Given Every Salt
Somethrne for everyone. Antrques .. Used. New &amp; Collet·
tors Items
• Have somotloone you want to sell! Brtnclt to the Patnot
• Auction Bam and we'll sell rt for you . Consrenments ac·
upted from 1:00 P.M. to 5 00 P.M. on Saturday Arrane•·
ments for prckup servrce avarlable
Restdent and Business Auction Servrce Available.

MARLIN WEDEMEYER-AUCTIONEER
245-5152 -- 388-8249

•s.oo

Homes for Sale.

Government Homes from
$1 . (u repatr) Also delin-

quent te:ac

Squeezing out
a small slam

NORTH

•Ass

7-10·8$

• AKQ4
tKQS

By Jamet Jacoby
One of the shortcomongs of standard bidding methods JB that ot rs very
dilfrcult to describe a slam-rnvotatronal hand wrth 1 long mmor suot
when your partner has opened with
two no-trump. Today's South took the

.J

WEST

EAST

IOH 2
.98
t9876

8K7 65
• J 10 6 5

.,. 7

••••
.QI0983

SOUTH
.Q

bull by the horns, asked for aces with

the Gerber four·dub bid, and gambled woth a six-dramond bod when he
dtseovered h1s side was not off two
aces. Rash, but rn thiB rnstance effec·
t1ve
West opened the ace of clubs an~
next switched to the jack of spades
Declarer won the ace, drew four
rounds of diamonds drscardm&amp; a club
from dummy, and now made the key
play He played a club to the kong. Of
course that made the club queen m
the East hand a winner, but the play
was necessary to the successful concluSion of tbe deal Now a spade was
ruffed by declarer and he played the
last diamond, discardmg dummy's
spade Everyone had to come down to
four cards Poor East had to hold
enough hearts to prev•nt the little
m dummy from becommg good, so he
shed the club queen, hopmg that his
partner had the Jack.. South cashed

•Ks2

• 73 2

t A J 10 54 2

.J64
Vulnerable. East-West
Dealer· North

property

Oall

1·805-887-8000, ut GH·

10189 for information

Nice 3 bdr home. lg
hvingroom, nice k1tchen,
utility rm . plenty of cloaet
space. electriC range, disposal, well msulated, newly
carpeted Face• tha golf
course Can help finance
Cali 814·446·2573 or 1114·
446-1171.
3 bdr deluxe good location.

$89.500 3 bdr. $29.500
Coi1304· 876·5104
3 bdr

THURSDAY EVENING, JULY 25, 1985

HELP WANTED

DEPARTMENT HEADS

,CONSTRUCTION
ABOVE UNION SCALE

1985 24x40 Clayton sec tional 3 bdr , 2 full baths,
complete set $19. 900
French City Mobile Homes.
269 Upper River Rd . 614446·9340

No seasonal layoffs, carpeters need for
custom .window installation.

54 Misc . Merchandise

Westview An., MarieHa, Ohio
DON HAn, Jl., . . r.

OWNER:-Mr. &amp; Mrs. Archie Starcher .

to

9

P.M.

Tuesday &amp; Saturay A.M.
Trucking servrce available
Over 30 years in soma location

MAIImA UYESTOCK SALE CO.
· Office 614-373-0887
Home 304-421-5304
AUCTIONEERS
Dan Hert, Jr. and lud S ires

PUBLIC AUCTION

Saturday, July 27, 1985, at 10:00 A.M.

AUCTIONEER: Fims Isaac
CLERK: Marilyn Isaac
lrcensed and Bonded rn Favor of the State of Oh1o
Not responsible for acctdents or lost 1tems.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE If owner""' house by sale date.
there wrll be more household Items and ontrquos

LARGE EST ATE AUCTION

SATURDAY, JULY 2l. 1985

SAT., JULY 27, 1985-10:00 A.M.

10:00 A.M.

All quality antiques, heirlooms, and
chattels from the estate of the late
Ruth Tipton Gillingham will be sold et
the lg . home located at 11 00 &amp;econd
Avenue in Gallipolis, Ohio.
ANTIQUES 1810 Ohoo cherry bonnel top corner cpbd
w/ shell &amp; loger maple rosettes. 4dr wal teilycpbd. 3cherry
&amp; 1m notestands, cherry cannonball bed . lg cherry g I Ia·
ble, 2 cherry d I !abies yarn wrnder Boston rockers, Voct
rockers m t stand rose crvd armchau &amp; rocker, 2 wal
corner whatnot stands, wal teaca rt. many chairs 2 wal J l
spool beds. wal dresser w/wlshbone morror, other fone wai
stands &amp; chesls, lg dome lop trunk, chold 's roc~ er and
hobby horse. pt twrn poster beds, cedar chest and war·
drobe. oak wall cpbd , quoits lrnens &amp; fancywork, 5 Onentai
rugs huge collecloon of an toque doshes many lone cut t l Pts.
cran berry il , art gl , Nippon PtS , many f1ne v~es, lg omt
pa~ern gi . pressed gi tumbo spoon rack. set of12 blue flo
rai chon a. Fenl on gi, oron stone, caslor sel, plu s much more, 2
f1n e ml hn g lamps w/pnsms. ig cranberry hall hght, good
mono ool la mps, olher oil &amp; GWTW lamps, 10" Rose O'Neol
Kewp~e doll. 2 rare btsQue head dolls, anloQue toys lc o
Jaeger ce ment mom, 55 yr old lionel Standard gauge
traons, etc I many f1ne poctures. paperwetihls, drugstore
rlems bells baskets, crocks books, solver rtems, plus
hu ndred s of other antoque otems
FULl LINE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS: Fllitdarre applrances
(lg rei11g ·freezer, auto washer, dryer), GE range, Amana ra
dar range Zenllh color TV, many lone l R pes 12 sofas. 6
armchaors and recliners. etc.l, 2 arr cond, fme lamps, clocks,
ig ami krtchen rtems. rugs, tools, plus much more
TM iote Mr. ond Mra. Glllinghom were prominent
people on tM Gtlllt&gt;ollt commuolty. Mrs. Gillin·
gMm tautht achool for 30 yro an4 Mr. Glllio•hopereted 1 drugttore for over 10 yn. Fine k•11111in
excellent condition

Located north of Point Pleasant W. VA .• first road
south of Saddlebrook Inn &amp;Resort off of S. R 62 on
Fatrvoew Drrve.
Thts is the personal property. boucht and collected
by the late Irene Brewer.
"HOUSEHOLD
2 pc hvmg room su1te, sm electnc dryer. radro &amp; record
plajer portable TV, gas heater color TV. rocking ch a11, bed.
sew1ng mach~ne hall lree, linens, tab les sm lamps botlle
gas stove hot plale. drapes. mosc doshes and mor e lois of

mce new matenal

"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
3 chold s 101 cradles. gateleg table dog &amp; horse fro m carnrval oval prcture lra mes, carnr11al butter drs h &amp; vases. brown
potcher. chold s ro cker luhp glass, comb case, comb case
w/ m11ror. oil lamps Teddi Bear sewong baskel green Cabb
bage Rose doshes cherry potler, hen on nesl , quoil lops, old
butlons blue &amp; brown crocks, brown poe plates, 11on pot, old
metal toys 11on skillet w/ hd, alum scoop &amp; spoon , 100 year·
old Schoenhut choid's poano. appro• 75 dolls, 8 ch~na dolls.
wrcker doli baby buggy, Dock &amp; Sally marronetle dol ls (rn
boKesl. game Iable, Toffany lamp QUilling frames, kraut cut
ter, coal mrner's d~nner bucket &amp; cap, apple peeler. p1e cup
board . doll hou se, toy hogh chaor &amp; baby bed, 11on bed solver
ware, showcase 8 ij , appro• 100 78 1 p m records An·
chor clothes w11nger, mosc doshes, m1sc lrn &amp; granrte Items.
7 complete place senongs pius 3 edra poeces of Siratlord
Ntla desogner collectoon chrna and more
"MISC."
Cat house, lots ol books, lots of 1ewehy, mtsc kotchen Items,
wooden cha11s, pressure cooker, tapes, push mower. lounre.
brass f11eplace set. mrsc. tools, fertrhzer cart toys cannone
jars, locks, swong &amp; stand ond more

OWNER - WILLIAM S. BREWER
£111
POSIIIvt I.D.
DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER
W.VA. LICENSE NO. 51516
PHONE 992-7301 OR 949-2D33
Not responsible for ac:crdonts or loss of property.

41

1979 Schult 14x70 3 bdr.
1Y2 bath. exc cond French
City Brokerage. French City
Mobllrol Homta. 218 Uppar
Rivor Rd • 814·448·9340.
USED MOBILE HOMES
CLEARANCE
1979 Fl-wood 14x85 2
bdr. t10,900.
1978 Schult 14•70 2 bdr.
f10,900
1977 Victorian 14x70 2
bdr. t 10,600.
1975 Elcono 14x70 2 bdr
f7,995
1973 Floolwood t 4x66 2
bdr 86,995
1973 Ladonli 14x65 2 bdr
t7.996
1973 Schult 14x60 2 bdr.
t8,495
1973 Shamrock 14K66 2
bdr. $7.895.
1980 Ciovton 12x66 2
bdr. f7.495.
1975 Namuo 12x52 2 bdr.
$8,795
1976 Nomuo12x60 2 bdr.
te.995.
1971 Buddy 12x60 2 bdr
t3,995
1974 Korkwood 12x80 2
bdt t6.495
1969 New Moon 12x60 2
bdr. $3.996.
1973 Horitoge 14x70·
tllplndo 2 bdr. e9,600.
1971 Schult 12x60·
exp1ndo 2 bdr $7,496
1974 Schult 12x80 ·
expando 2 bdr. $7.496
french Cttv Mobile Home&amp;,
Inc, Upper R1ver RQ ,
Gallipolis, Oh Call 614·
448 -9340
14x70 82 model moboio
home. 3 bdr .. 1'h bath, total
electric, 8x10 storage build·
lng, 8x1 0 wood deck porch.
underp1nn1ng Call 614446 -6231
74 14x70 3 bdr moboie
home on 10 1cr11 of land
S1 I. 500 V10ton area Call
614·388· 9949

PUBLIC AUCTION

Equal Opportumty Employer

Eve. 6

1973 1 2x&amp;O allgaa Hillcrelt
new carpet , axcellent cond .•
quick sele ••onlv •3.960 C11l
614-448-0176

WAREHOUSE

From Gallipolis lake Route 588 to Texas Rd • turn
ncht. frfth house on left put the Bob Evans Plant.
TOOLS &amp; EQUIPMENT
Gravely tractor wrlh bru sh cutler, Quock Holch garden tractor
wolh mower, acetylene tank and 01ygen lank wrth Voctor
gauges and 0• weld lorches, loncoln arch welder W' ompact
wrench. W' 1mpac1 wrench, eleclnc motors, sledge hammer.
posl hole doggers, 6' pope vose, 36' p1pe wrench, large steel
looi b"' 2 gaivanozed tool boxes, Reese tra1ler h1tch 1ack,
tack slands, lawn mowers, vehrcle wheels
MISC
3 b1cycies, bocycle earner, ca r aor condotooner paris, spare
lore earner lor camper, 3 whee ler body frame. 2 VWengmes,
e~haust tan s house doors. cu pboard naols. bolts. lots of
scrap 1ron parts, numerous miSCellaneou s 1tems
ANTIQUES
Kllchen cupboard, sec retary and wood stove
1975 Honda CBSOO motorcycle
TERMS: Cash or approved check with posiltve 1.0.
Lunch Avarlable.

Livestock Auepted Mon.

All electric, 2 bdr garden
tub. asking f14.600. Coil
614-388-9746or 814·311·
8689.

on•

Vemco mobile homes Add•·
t•on 'Doublew1de your pres ent SJnglew1de' Freneh Crty
Mob1le Homes. 269 Upper
Rovor Rd . 614-446-9340

Starting 1:00 P.M. each Tuesday &amp; Saturday
Always a good place to market livestock of
all kinds . Your check over the counter or in
the marl the following day. Licensed and
bonded for your protectron.

1981 Nashua Goverf'or:
14x60 w1th 7x21 expando

frame house.
cion to town, untral air, Approx acre on Greer A old.~ .
woodburning ' fueplace . mobile home. 14x8S, 2
Well
Norlh Eut
Soulb
large livingroom. full baae· bedrooms, 8x10 building
ment. aundeck, one car Many extru. 304· 875 2 NT Pass 4.
gerage, chain link fenced 6044
Pass
••
Pass 6•
yard. Green School dlat.
Pass
Pass
Pass
S45.000 Coil 614 862 · 1970 Ljborty moiMio homo,.
13715 after 6
14~t60. w1th garden tub,
Opening lead +A
total electriC, 86.600 00
Jay Dr., 6 yr old, 3 bdrt . 304-876-6855
1'h bath. large k1tchen &amp;. 1- - - - - - - - HOME OWN EAS·Aefrnance
eatmg
area, FR or DR LA . 2 1411.70, 3 bedroom mob1l1
to low f1xed rete. Uae equity
car garage. gas heat, CA home. 1 acre lot, with
for any purpo1e Le'"ader
the Jack and made 12 trrcks
Call 814-446-3427
electnc. well end teptrc
l\olortgago Co. 614· 592·
You
can
see
what
happens
rf
system. 813.000 00. 3043051
declarer fails to get th~ club ktng out
For sale or lene 2 bed· 675· 5855.
of the way East can then throw a
rooms. double car garage.
1 2 acral, Rose Hdl. Pome- 1974 1 4• 70 Cham po"on 2
club Even though playrng the kong
23 Professional
roy.
Reduced $26,000 1argo •-drooms
woll
drop
the
queen.
declarer
woll
· noodcond1
•
·
Services
614-678-2513
t 1on. stove. refrig .• w-drylr,
have no way to get back to h1s hand
new hot water tank. dre.,-rfor the good Jack
In Pomeroy 2 or 3 bedroom 181 , bUIIdmg ak•rting. tet up
Bookkeeptngandncretenal
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
A1k1ng $8,000 Call 814- atOuail Creek , $7,000 Call
work·all
Yourtoo
off1ce
~:::::::::::::::::1~========::-t~~;:~~~~~=1 tractl
992-6937. No land con - 614·245-9246
m1ne, notype
account
b1g or
or (.
small Coli Bortot814-446· 23 Professional
31 Homes for $ale
- - -- -- - -1976 Fostovai 14x70. 2 ,
2123 or 814-446-1081
Services
7 room house. 1% bath, 4 bltha. laundry room, loti of 1
Mutt sell. One bedroom, bedrooms , garage. On closets C1ll 614-441 PIANO TUNING AND RE·
cerport,aundeck, basement. Gravel Hill, Middleport. 3 120
PAIR, Summer r1tea m Water wells dr~lled 1nd Mr31 Homes for Sale
furnace. $28.600 64 Mill Ohio. C•ll 614-992-5714 1 --------- lc ~
efleet -free estimates Vlt:ed Pnceaonr~uelt Call
Creek St., CJalhpolla C1ll
1979 14x70 mobile home '
Ward's Keybo1rd, 304-876
&amp;14-742-3147 or814 992614-446· 2539
3 bedroom home. 8% per on 1 acre lot Ex:celltnt
5600 or 4575-3824
6006.
eentat~umebleloan, garden condition Double cer -.lnvestment-Sheltar no has·
spot Reduced down to 20 11 24 garage 81 8,&amp;00 •
oola Multo- un~ aportmenl 1 1 Help Wanted
$49.000. 304·676-5047
Call 614-992-5509
8
Public Sale
complex. ell 1 bedroom.
aom• tum11hed. re11dent
&amp; Auction
1972 Champ1on tra1ler m '.
manager Renters pay all
Log home, 3 acres. 2 m1 out Portland 1Ox60 Partly fur·,
Jerr~co Rd . 8% assumable
udlitiea. I••• than 6% v•mahed, new Coleman g11
cancv. Ap~trox $1,400 mo.
loan. Call 304-876 6622
furnace . $2 400 814·843mcome, terioua mqu1re1
only Doyo 614·592·1189
Full and part time Eleanor House w1th or 5310 or 614 843-5401
01111n 114-594-2874
without ex.tra lot,s Rt 62
1971 Belmont 12x60 2
workers needed.
304-586·3672
bedroom, part1ally fur- ~
n11hed $5 000 In long
ly owner remodeled 3 bdr
5:30 P.M.
3 bedroom home. Gallipohe Bottom . Call collect 814- .
SEND RESUME TO:
ranch, near town FamilyFerry, W Ve , fmencing 247-7332. Oon Stolhnga
Located at D.J.'s Tradmc Post. 923 S. 3rd Ave., llrd·
room, dtnmgroom, ecrutPped
eve1lable 1f you quehfy after 4pm
I.E.S.
dleport. Ohio. The Smith family from Bashan are
kttchen, 1 'h bath, natural
304-676-6129
gas heat, new root-carpetmovmg so wtll sell the followin1rtems.
DEPT.
E-86
MOBILE HOMES MOVED
kotchon. •41 .600 Realtor·
'HOUSEHOLD",
6 room hou•e. basement Insured. 20 years expeP.O.BOX
140122
owner
cell
6'14·446-7881
screened in porch. breeze- rience 304 576 -21166 or
Harvesl Gold Sunray gas range, La Z Boy rocker, hvong room
or 114-441·8610 Ilk fQr
way, double garage, b1g 578-2998
surle, couch. bookcase desk, shelves lor books, pictures,
ST.
LOUIS,
MO
Jim.
yard. garden 12 64 acres,
mosc doshes &amp; ilmware, lonens &amp; clothes, bedside table and
63114-0122
beauttful v•ew 2 miles out
mo re
1974 Town and Country,
Jericho Ad
'ANTIQUE OR COLLECTOR ITEMS"
spht level, 3 bedrooms 2
MUST RECEIVE BY:
1 1 Help Wanted
Wood washong machrne Dazey churn, piCture frames, stone
PRICED TO SELL 3 bod· boihsm 304·675 -1858.
July 29th
tars and other 1tems
room house. Pelest•n• Rd
"MISC.'
Ashton M acre, central heat
54 Mise Merchandise
$29.500 304-762 2567
Weoght b•nch, aadong machine, chtld's rockong cha11, metal
locker, loys PICRIC table, u n~c ycie, buzz saw, saw horses,
Reduced to $25.000.00.
m1sc hand tools w1re and m1sc hardware 1tems
6Yl acres, 2 houses. 2 car
Ab~olulely the
OWNERS - MR. &amp; MRS. ROBERT SMITH
garage, pond. several bUild·
Cash
PositiVI I.D.
1ngs phone 304-576 2320
Best Altqnmrnt
DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER
Minimum 4 to 6 years Supermarket
992-7301 OR 949-2033
Mun In th1' ~"'"
32 Mobile Homes
experience.
Not responsrble for accrdents or loss of property.
Complete Car
for Sale
Apply at Point Pleasant, West Virginia
Servtce, lube Jobs.

Job Service Office, 225 Sixth St.

STARTING JULY 27
THERE WILL IE TWO SALES HELD EACH
WEEK IN ORDER TO lETTER SERVE
OUR PATRONS

Mobile
for Sale

NEW ANO USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
tTY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 Ml \NEST, GALLIPOLIS.
RT 35. PHONE 1114-4467274.

Wm. P. Cherrington, Atty. &amp; Exec.
Sal• by Order of Jam1s M. Gillingham
Auctionur-MIKE CLUM INC.

FOODLAND

Send resume to
IES
DEPT. E- 86
P.O. Box 140122
St Louis. MO 63114-0122
MUST RECEIVE BY: July 29th

HELP

WA~TED

Licensed Practica'l Nurse
IMMEDIATE OPENING
Full and Part Time Licensed Practical
Nurse with Pharmacology to work in
skilled nursing facility. Excellent benefits. Salary commensuratre with experience.
· PLEASE CONTACT
RHONDA DAILY, IN
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 5 EAn MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
1-614-992-2104
Equal Employment Dpportun~ly

ASSISTANT PROFESSOR PHYSICAL EDUCATIO
Rio Grande College and Commumly College, a
umque colle1e that compnses a commumty college
withrn a privale baccalaureate collect. announces a
position available as Assistant Professor of P~yst­
cal Education
This is a full time contlnuinl appomtment. Respon·
sibiltties would include both teachm&amp; of physical
educatron courses and coachtnl cross country and
track for men.
Qualifications include a Master's degree, doctorate
preferred , w1th axpenence in coachtnl cross country and track.
Salary commensurale wtlh education and expenenct. Deadline for application is Au&amp;. 7, 1985.
S.bmit letter of appllcalion. credentials and names
tf thrtt ltftrtOCII to:
,PtrMftnal Officer
Attn: Physical Education
Rio Grande Collage
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674
Roo Grande Colleie/Communlty College rs an Equal Opporlu·
nity/ Affrrmatove Actoon Employer
, .0. No. 4517

Oil Chanqe.

34

Business
Buildings

Large 2 bay garage w1th
compra11or room for office;
3 bedroom home con -,
noctod 304· 676-2265.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage

...
Lots or acreage 16 mrnutes
aouth of town Cell 8142511·1413
For ale· One acre lot w1th'
n1ce large m-ground pqof.
partiaJ beaement. aome
bees. For more 1nformat10rJ1
I&gt; hone 602·683·1044
1 acre building or tr..ler lots

for oolo. Call814-992·7"!,81
or 614·992·2386 or 61lt·
992·3543
;

do

rt bettPr

MGM
FARM CITY

2 bdr. furn11hed. all utllttes
pd , except elect • conllement tocet1on , security deposit reuq1red. Call614-446·
8558
2 bdr. 2 mi from HMC at
Evergreen. Partially fur nished, children accepted
Coli 61&gt;1-446-3697 or 614·
246 5223
2 bdr. trailer for rent on
Petrlot Gage Rd Call 614446 -4253

2 bdr fully furnished AC,
ut1hties pa1d. adults only.
Coli 614-446-4110
For rent mobtle home for 1
or 2 adults, work1ng people
Coli 514-446-0608
3 bedroom, furnished . AC. 1
child, no pets large lot 4
m1iea above New Haven. Rt
33 Coli 304-882· 2466

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equoi
Housing Opportunity)
monthly rent tterta at *1 89
for 1 bedroom and e204 for
2 bedroom. depoait t200.
located near Spring Valley
Pla:r:a and Foodland, pool
and Cable TV avalleble,
hours as poaaible1 0 am to 4
pmand7pmto9pm
Monday-Fr~day, Clll 614·
441 - 2745 or leave
me11ege

40 GOOD USED TRACTORS
HAY TEDDERS
HAY RAKES
KING KUTTERS 4, 5, 6, 7 ft.
3/P AND PULL TYPE
KING KUnER FINISHING MOWERS 5 ft.
PHONE: 446-9777 - 446-2414
Business
Opportunity

CHALLENGING BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY WITH
·LIMITED INVESTMENT
IN GALLIPOLIS
Montgomery Ward rs lookrng for Sales Agents .'
couples or co-owner teams who would hketo ,~
work for themselves We may have what
lookmg for As a Montgomery Ward Sales
Agent, you woll work for yourself and own
your own busmess The mvestment ts a
moderate $15,000 to $25 ,000. per locatiOn

If you would hke a responSible future m
your own busmess , wnte or phone today
Ward

l'lo Bill Martin, Dl~tric·l Sa l•·s Mana~t·r

210 I E. Kemp,.. Rou1l
Sharonvolle, Ohio &lt;l52fl5
Phone 513-782-5~-

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnlthed opt. 2 bdr . t195
water petd, 131 'h 4th Ave
Coli 446·4416 oltor 8pm

Apartment
for Rent

Renlals

41

.,

2 bdr. duplo. new kitch~m,

bath, new carpet, fenced
backyard. 668 Third Ave.
Collll14-448-0690.
"

1'h bdr apt., ut1ht1es pa1d,
part1ally turntahed an Rro
Grande Coil 814-448·2054
or 814-446-1323

2 bedroom apartments
NeW Haven, WVa. Newlv
remodeled In town 614992-7481

2 bdr. house $176 mq .
references requ1red Call
614· 379·2700

eroom houte tor rent next to

S-1n-1 Organ for Ale and S.
truck camper top Call
614-992·:A36
' -- - - - - - : : -·lc.1 bedroom. partially ' f.ur·,
nished 2 blocks from Maih
It . Pomeroy 10 mont~
J•••e Security depollt..
Must be employed. 61 4.. . 3·5445
~ft

•.-edecorated five room
..ou• In Middleport !Gravel
N1ll areal la11men1 and
t•rage Carpet and drapes
furmshed Adults No pets.
l'hono 814-992-3384.

t bedroom houM for rent
.tove and retngereter. furlli•hed. AC References and
fePoslt requwed No petl'
toll 814·992-2012.

&amp;! bedroom house. depoatt
nd reference required, 601
urdottt St. 304·676 207

f

•s Space for Rent
UILET - Retoil spoce
cttttl at 42 C81rt StrHI ,
ftyolto Mill. Gltlhpohs.
h10. Squirt footqt of
-1.157 selima spKe and
227 $41UIIt fHI Of SIOIIP
sptet on th• soeond floor
of tht lataytltl Mtll.
Cfll &amp;14-44&amp;-7653
1- 9:30 'til 1·00
M doy thru Satu rdoy

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom furnished apt m
Middleport. All ut•htlea pa•d
Coil 814·992· 6084.

Partly tumiahed apt. ground ••
level. 2 bedroom a. •eo 00 ..
week, utrht ..l paid, 304·-. ~
675·3100 altor 5 30 PM .
6 76-5509 if no anawer call :
Furmahed upper duplex tor 676 3000
one. $180 00 month. dep- 1-::::::::::=::=:::::==
011t, 2 utilities paid, 304 1675·21151 .
45 Furnished Rooms .. ·

APARTMENTS, mobtle
homes, houtat. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis 614·448·
8221

For rent In Pomt Pleaenl,
efftctency cottage Ideal tor
1 or 2 p8o ple 304 -6764024.

1 bedroom apt. for rent.
Nicely located. Contact VII·

lege Menor in Middleport

614 - 992 - 7787 Equol
Housntg Opponuntty.

1-:------ - --

3 room unfurmshed apt, ref.
r:ange and air cond, 8200 00
month, utilltlea paid, 304671!-3030 or 676·3431 .

For rent Sleeping Room•
and light house keeping .
rooms, Park Central Hotel
Call 614-448-0756

SOUTHERN HILLS R.E., INC.

4 4 6•6 6 1o

Olferong CENGUARO•• in surance Serv1m

Put Nn•nber 1 to work for
•

LOCATED IN S'IRACUSE- Beautiful modular home
with 3 bedrooms, 2 full balhs fam1iy room, hvongroo m,
noce kitchen, formal drmng 2 car garag~ fenced lawn
Close to pox; tennos court bank Owner w1i11ng to help
With part offlnai!Cin&amp;
#855

COMMERCIAL BUILDING woi h double lot Metal
buoidmg 30'•40' Roule 7, Crown C~ immectwlo
possessoon Cali for more detaols
#935

••
l
I

'
,

...........
Real Estate General

STUTES

REAL ESTATE
446-~206
51 0 BUHL-MORTON RD.
BONNIE L. STUTES SONNY GARNES CATHY CLARK
R.altor
Realtor
BURDEnE
446·4206

446-2707

388-=:~l~o(r,..ningJ

''
OREAl NO MORE - SEE NOW! - Thrs atlracbve
brick trr level Wllh 3 bedrooms famdy room wolh
foreplace or woodburner hool&lt;up, 2 bath~ 2 1~ car
garage thermopane wondows woth marble Sills, heal
pump, central a1r, 2lh acres, more Of less Pnced m
upper 50s

1#836
COUNTRY LIVING - Noce 3

NEW LISTING' bedroom home on I acre, e~lra large carport
Workshop and storage buoldon&amp; Especoally well
constructed, heavoiy onsulated

#936

RESTING
panarom1c voew of St. Rt 35 and'""""""'~;,
ranch desrgned wrth a large lam~y 1n o 4 to 6 bedrooms,
huge formal '"'"g room - 30x30 spac1ous d1nong room.
modern complete built m kitchen 2 wb hreplace, 2 baths, lull
basement 2 ~ car garage Can buy w1th 14 acres Pr~ed m70s

2 bdr. unfurmshed houae
w1th storage building ~•
garage. ret lit dapoait re·
quired Coll614· 448·9888

4 bdr beth S. "h. lower river
rd .. UOO mo .. dop roq Cali
1114-448·4222 botwoon
tAM ·5PM

44

Judy DeWitt - Realtor- 388- 81 66
J. Merrill Carter - Realtor- 379· 2184
Becky Lane-Realtor - 446- 0458
Jim Cochran- Realtor - 446· 7881
Vrrginoa Smith- Realtor- 388·8826
Phyllis Loveday- Realtor- 446· 2230

Nicely turntshed apt, central
heat, air, parking, next door
to library One proteu1onal
adult only Cali 614 -4460338

R1vers1de Apts. Middleport
Spec1al rates for Seruor
C1t1zens $130 Equal HousIng Opportunities 614 992 7721.

Apartment
for Rent

•

Furn11hed eff1c11ncy $146,
utilt1ea pe~d, share bath, 607
2nd. Ava Gallipolis, adutta
Call 446-44_16 oltor 8PM

2 bdr apt • ut11i118S partly
pa1d -mce $149 mo Call
304-675·5104 or 304·676·
5386

44

Real

Furnished eff1ciency 701
4th Ave . Galhpoha e1 60.
utilhlea pa1d, •hera beth,
adults. Cali 446-4418 oftor
8PM.

Houses for Rent

3 bdr houae, 2 baths Call
304·675-6104or304 675··
6388

Apartment
for Rent

N1cely furnllhtd mobile
home. eff apt , central atr
and heat in crty. adults onlv
Cali 614· 446 -0338

•

Smoll 3 bclr houoo. 2 bilhtJ
moatlv furnllhed, 2 workin8
•duttt. acro11 from K-Mart.
t 300 mo. ranier pays elect.
roc. Coll614·448-1822

44

Apartment for rent Call
614·441·9244. 9AM·6PM . Furniahod opt., 920 4th
Ave. 1 bdr, $225, utillllea
Apartment•. Wedg• Apt, no pd • adults Call 448-441 S
choidron or peto. 304-876· oltor Bpm
2072
1 - - - -- - - Furnishedefficiency.aduht.
Furmshed epertment Point 920 4th Ave., *185 utilrtiet
PleeNnt Utilities pard. 304- pd. Coil 446-4416 altor
895-3450
8pm.

large Atttc apt , turn11hed
$176, Ut11it1es pd . 919
Mobde home for rent. 2 Second Gallipolis, mate pre·
bedroom on n1ce lot. 3 room tarred. share bath Call
eff1C11ncy apt. Utihttes pa1d. 446~44 16 after Bpm
Cali 614· 992-9903 or 614·
992-6949
Furn upsta~rs. 3 rooms Ia
bath. clean. adults only. No
2 bedroom furntshed. At 2. pet•. references requ1red
8 mllea North Pt Pl. $200. Cali 614·446 -1519
month plus $100 Oepo11t. 1- - - -- - -- - 304-675-5051
New effic1ency apt with
garage Nonhup area. private yard. d11posal, small
deck. Leaae requ1rad, water
44
Apartment
mcluded. washer &amp; dryer
for Rent
hookup Cali 814-446·
7209 or 614 -446 3287.

.

44

NEW LISTING - 4 NICE LOTS - Appro! I acre
each Woll sell 1 or all located on Addosvn Townstr1p
Owner wrll have surveyed No restllctrons

Interested 1n reasonably
priced 5 to 30 acres. son\e•
wooded area preferred.
available for trader hoop up
or accea11ble, w1th plans to.
butld 1n near future. New
Haven or VICinity 304·882 2429

992 9932

GAlliPOliS, OH.

RT. 3S WEST

------.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Apanment
for Rent

Jobs,

SUPER SALE THIS VIEEK AT
Jim's Farm Equipment Center

Mont~onwry

Small cottage, 2 rooms and
bath, e56 00 week, utihbes
poid. 304-675-3100 oltor
6 30 PM 675-6509 If no
onowor 304·675-3000.

44

Reel Estate
Wanted

SERVICE )T ATION

21

Houses for Rent

11905

36

Tune-Ups. Broke
Muffler'
Try us, wr con

o-s:

Ohio- Point Pleasant, W . Va.

32 Mobile Hornea
for Sale

br~ck

PUBLIC AUCTION

LIVESTOCK AUCTION

Cllh

31

Avon-- For limited time only .
Start your Avon carMr for

1- - - - - - - - -

21
Business
Td-State Semi Driver Tram Opportunity
1ng. Enioy 2 weeks of 1- - - - - - - - -Ttactor-TraderTram•ng con1 NOTICE 1
du&lt;ted 20 moiot touth of THE OHIO VALLEY PUI·
Deyton tor past 1S years
LISHING CO. recommend•
fteal placement service em· that you do bus1neu wtth
pha11zed For complete wnt· people you know, and NOT
t8n detailS call Fnendly to aend money through th•
Travia at (613)424-4693 ma1l until you have •nvestitC?dey
gated the offer1ng
8

Business
0 pportunity

For more tnform•·
Cfl. July 27 • 28, Sout~ tlon, coli 1114·898· 7111
P.omt, Oh•o Call collect collect.
1-814-532-01177
BE VOUR OWN BOSS, lott
growning, mutt1-blllion dol18 Wanted to Do
lar induatry wh1ch unsus
figures show part-time earn·
•nga average up to
Need carpet tnstalled Call 820,000 00 p,r year No
Mark Gnftln. 114-446- telhng-sarv1ce acoounta aet
up by company. Aequires
3212 work gua,ranteed.
$15,000.00 cosh for equip·
Maintenance serv1cea ment No spec1al akillt or
ava1lable-grounds mainte- veh1cle needa(l. Excellent
nance custodial sarv1caa. tax advantages Exp•n•ion
and clearmg Call anytime of financing available to those
day or mght Multiplex, qualified Write Mr M..on.
Bo" 360247, B~rm1ngham .
1·800-232-0600 oxt 204. AI
36238, rncludll name,
Outs•de Ohio call 1-800- addreu
and phone number
265·9500 ext. 204.
or cell toll-free 1-800-621 ·
COLEMAN WATER WELL 4849 between 9 00 AM •
4.30 PM Central T•me Zone
DRILLING
Pump sales. service Reg••
tared 1n Oh1o. All work 22 Money to Loan
guaranteed. Call 304-2732811 Reventwood, w Va

Schools
Instruction

July 21, 1986

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

.

OWNER WANTS OFFER' - Oesorable ranc ~ home
localed on lown Thos gem. cannot last long
Ch·.rmong iovmg room noce carpel. donong room, 3
bedroom s, beaulrful toled bath Workshop m
garage Central aor. treed lawn You must see on s1de
to apprecoate
11900
YOU CAN1 BEAT THE PRICE - $59,900 wtll buy th1s
very attrachve 4 bedroom slooe ranch overlookong lhe
rov'er near lown Over 2800 SQ H 1ncludrng 3 balhs, Z
car garage, hreplace, natural gas, central a11 Much
more
#861

$38.500 -House and 2 3 acres krcall!'l 100 yards off
Neighborhood Road ThiS home has nearly 1500 sq ft
of iovrng area 3 BR, large hv1ngroom, d1nong room, h/w
heat pius noce garden area and Woods Pnvale iocabon
#832
$85.000 - TARA
~;\l.~l:,~;;3,iement
room breakfast,.~~ ... ~.u~
wrlh dosposal and ret.·''""''"'
lege
REDUCED $35.000 - 3 bed room . ulohty room, hvong
roo m eal on kitchen slove ref , 2 car garage, above
grou~d pool new satell1te dosh , large oulbu idmg tri lot w1th
water and septrc l ol os large enough to burld several
houses on Th e pnce call Owners wtllrng to help wrth
the financrng
RIO GRANDE AREA -Only $21,500 lm th5 edra noce j
bedroom ranch Lrvong room, famrly room, domng room and
n1ce kotchen Hall basemen! lor storage thiS home would be
eKCeilent for a sta~er home Noce large lol woth gx&gt;d garden
space
MODERN 3 BEDROOM 81-LEVEL - Featu res ig. kotchen
ol quality handmade cabonels 111 baths. hvmg room I&amp;
room w/ Buck stove Backyard IS large wrth a ig
and an on lop of ground pool to en1oy ~Is of su mmer pocmcs
Wash1ngton School Oostncl

ENJOY THE CLOSENESS OF TOWN AND THE BEAUTY
OF NATURE when you ownthiS stately older home. Oak
woodwork, large hvong room, lamoly room or formal
d1 mng. 2 bedrooms, plus more 2 acres of land and
withon the rorporalion hm1ls of lown Don't wal~ gove a
call on thiS ooe
#903

15 ACRES more or less'" Spoongf~eld TownshiP Wooded M1·
neral 11ghts wi the property Only $7200

OVERLO()l(ING THE RIVER - Remodeled 1~ story
home near ADd1son Includes 4 bedrooms. l 'h baths,
large krtchen, skyhghls on the upstarrs bedrooms large
deck plus ~ acre yard $36 900

135 ACRE FARM w1th 2 story home 3 4 bedrooms. DR Ia moiy
room ulohly rm , bath, part pasture land, part wooded ara, good
lor huntong. Garden spce oulbuoldongs Call us, we wrll be glad to
selllhos home to you
4TH AVL - Convenoence of town bulon aquoet neoghbor
""""'""" LA FR ea11n kolchen, bath wrth old lash~n
1!1 room. large lot w1th room lor a garden Ask1ng

JUST LISTED - WANT LOTS OF PRIVACY? Would you love to be io vmg on peace and quoel on
lhe moddle of a 20 acre wooded setting woth a
modern 3 bedroom home l ois of elbow room,
abundan t woidiole sprr ng led waler system. no
close neoghbors If lhrs sounds hke you. please call
now P11ced 1n the upper 30s
#898
MAKE OFFER - lmmedoale possessK&gt;n 3 bedroom
frameranch srtuated on appr"' l 'h acres Garage C~
schools. Appro• 5 moles from lown Pnced on mod
ihuties

#844

#895

CEDAR AND BRICK RANCH - $49,900 Only 4
years old and looks hke brand new 3 bedrooms
pantry a~d oak cab1nets on kotchen, 1\\ baths
attached garage Appro• I acre lawn Concrete
drove storage butldong Garden area Alii he e~lras
you could want1:all - we h'ave the detaols
/
#885
COMMERCIAL LAND- 6.94 ACRES, more or less, at
State Route 35 City water and sewer avaolable Super
localion

#917

35 ACRES M/L - Add1son twp Pumpmg gas well
Wooded wrth old homestead Located at Moore-Jencho
Road and Sw~her Holl Rd Owner wants QUICk sale

#862

LOOI(ING FOR ASIIALL FARM! -Ideal for the hobby
farmer 16 acros rompletely ienced wrth tpld iencong.
Bam LOCIIed oo state route 1II story frame home wlh
4 bedrooms. spocrous kitchen and dmrng area, carpet
recently repilced m liVIng room Good garden area
Priced on 30&lt; Hurry and !I'll a call today!
O

Ce

l91i4 noury

-

LOVELY SETIING - A
enhances tho s anractrve energy emoc:oem
bedroom home Includes 2 baths, sunken iovon g
room, t1replace, full basement, central atr [)(tra
acreage avaolable SW schools
#853
PRIVATE AND CLOSE TO TOWN - 27 acres
Remodeled 2 story, 5 bedroo m home Barn lenced
fillabie acreage, partially wooded Super krcat1on
Appro• 2 moles from town

CALL THIS HOME - Th os 3 bedroom ranch can be
you rs. loving room. krtchen wolh range refvrogerator and
bar bath utility room, garage lhermopane wondows
Proced al $37,000 If you are looking on thos proce range
call for more detarls

$11 500 NEW LISTING - W~l kept and lotaiiy
remodeled 2 bedroom mo~ie home near Racooon
Creek Includes all furn1tu re &amp;. appliances, roof recent!~
replaced thermal wmdows, newer furnace, large pat10
'h acre shaded yard

NEW LISTING - 14'x70 MOBILE HOME wrth
aluminum ~dong shongle rool lronl porch back porch.
carport 3 bedrooms. 2full balhs all electrrc, cenlral au,
rural water seploc system. storage bur ldon~ mce 1acre
lot Located St Ill 160

FARM COUNTRY - 419 acres of good pasture,
botto m~nd garden area some woods 2 story frame
remodeled home good condition 4 bedrooms hvong
room d1mn~ roo m krtchen Barn garage, worksOOp,
cellar tobacco base

NEW LISTING ON DEENI E DRIVE - ThiS IS an
attractove brock ranch located iUS! oil Sl Rt 35
Includes 3 bedroo ms, l 'h balhs equipped krtchen, full
basement electnc heal 2 car garage, central aor Very
mce landscaped yard Good lamoiy neoghborhood
$55000

NEW LISTING INVESTORS INTERESTED IN
MOVING A HOUSEl -We have a 20 year old 3
bedroom home thai os on a slippage iol on town
Hou se has bro ck Irani and appro&lt; 1250 sq H ,
hardwood floors som e carpel Natural gas furnace
Cali lor detaois
#901
12 EVANS HEIGHTS - Truly adeiighdui ranch home
3 bedrooms krtchen donong room lull divoded
basement w1th fam1ly room and f1replace Range.
relng&amp;ralor, d5hwasheo Coty schools waler and sewer
Affordable pnce $31 000
#789

'

#937

PROPERTY REDUCED - A real buy at $29.900 4
bedrooms, living room••lh fireplace k1lchen bath full
basemen! w1th garage 117 story frame on good
cond1lcn Appro• 2\7 moles from town A good renlai
1nvestment
#848
THIS l ·SHAPEO may be 1 u~ what you are iookong Iori
3 bedrooms 2 full balhs family room w1lh hreplace,
heat pu mp, central au 2car garage, fiallawn $51 ,900
Call for appornlmenlloday
#80
5
22 ACRES - $11 DOO l ovely wood homesite
Water and sepl1c system already on slalled Ma only
wooded
#906
PRICE DROPPED TO $29,500 - Ow ner has
dropped the proce over $10,000 and must sell now
Moved out of slale The home os a 10 yr old
modulao home sotuated on over 3'h acres includes
3 bedrooms, 2 balhs lam1iy room, donm g room
pius large barn and lruol cellar 1 year buyer
protection
#899
$48 900 FARM - 65 acres more or less, krcated
appro"maleiy 12 moles from Gaihpohs Frame house
wrth natural gas heal, drolled well, barn, corn c11b,
stc.age buddrn ~ tobacco base Appro• 20 lo 25 acres
1dlable 30 acres moxed lrmber
#817
MOSTLY WOODED LAND has 9n e&lt;ceiient homesote on
paved road Septoc tank on iol, rural water os avarlable
Proced at $10 500 SW schools
.
#851
BEAUTIFUL LOCATION - Clear Voew Eslales One
floor pian bnck and frame ranch LIVIng room wrth
frreplace, ~lc hen has pantry and eatmg bar fotmai
donong area, 3bedrooms. 2 full bath~ uloioty room, 2car
garage. 2 ellra lots optronai

#904
FARM - Approx 60 acres wrth barn. 2sheds ch~ken
hOuse, garage Oouble wode home with 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, INOngroom, eat m k~chen wrlh refngeralor and
range Property krcated on St Ill 141 Owneran•~u$
to sell
m8

nm

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ENJOY THE CONVENIENCE OF THIS HAPPY
RANCH - Wolhon 2'' mo les at lown 3 bedroom s
family room appli ances, large patio Mantcured
lawn Proced on the 4Ds
#891
AFFORDABlE - Excepbonalli well cared lor 3 or 4
bedroom home nestled on a corner lot Spac1ous
krtchen, mce carpet throughout low uloioty boils, vmyi
srdon&amp; large co•ered pal1o in town iocatoon Proced
$29,500

#887
REDUCED TO $24,000 - OWNER MUST SELLII
Pnvale I acre settong 1n Green Township 3 bed&lt;oom
remodeled ranch Includes new wmng, new k1lchen
Andersen wondows. 2 cao garage barn
#866
QUALITY REIGNS lo lhe bonomcomlort 1n lhos brock
ranch Vtew of nver w1th over oneacre lawn 21.; baths
3 bedrooms, lormai iovong&lt;oom kotchen complete woth
appliances fam1IV room rec room 2 f1replaces,
garage on ground pool wolh large paloo area Over 2700
sq ft. of i1vmg space Cali lor more delaois
#867
BRICK &amp; FRAME RANCH - Owner ret ~r~ng hcellent
buy Close to town Cool on pool and entoy a1r
condrtoonong onsKJe Super ~ce 3bedrooms 1~ balhs,
aHached garage l ovely carpel woodburnong fireplace,
lots of ~orage Heat pump recenliy planted strrubs
Rarden lol approx 85'1300

ims

OUTSTANPING 2 STORY BRICK - ThiS dosloncliy
designed home lealures a 15&lt;30 iovong room, space
saver krtchen, lormal drn1ng room 4 BR. sunroom, 2
balhs lull basement great voe• ol rover Has 2nd house
onciuded - 5 rm lrame Woii seRseparate
#852
BRAND NEW - $42.!100 - Be the forst 1o make lhos 3
bedroom, I ~ bath beauty your home Charm1ng and
affordable Srtualed on one acre wooded iol

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#912

21 Real Estate ~rporatlon as truscee.forthe NAF. ~ and '•-trademarkli urCeuturv 21 Real Estal~ CtlrJHiralu•n Pnnlkd ml S -\ Eo~jll.li lit U'&gt;lllii,I IJll»&lt; trtunll\ G)

EACH OFFICE IS INDEPENDENTLY OWNED ANDOPEIIATED.

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#884
MODERN RANCH - Owner ~avon g area Woihng to
h5ten tooffer Amenoloes are 3 bedrooms noce kotchen
wolh donong area, iovong room balh attached garage lol
lays flat woth back lawn lenced New sash wondows
added Located 1n Green Townsh1p

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#934

LITTLE BUT MIGHTY descrobes thos neat and clean 1
bedroom home Alum Sldm&amp; slorm doors and.
w1ndows, mce storage bulldong. large backyard Would
be great lor young coup~ tust gettong started or good
rental property Pnced at only $13,900
#834

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80 ACRE FNIM JUST CUE 011 TilE IIARitET Border.; Racroon Cree"' Road. frontage on mam state
route E&lt;eellenl buddong siles several feel oi road
frontage Al most ali produclrve tillable acreage
Partoal~ wooded Cali today lor more detaois
#875 .

HOBdY/MINI FARM- Not really a farm, Just 5acres,
most all fenced wooded pasture land Modern 2 story
homa Barn, well buoll, stalls lor lovestock or pels Good
iocabon. slate hrgh way Owners are berng transferred
let me show you lh• one today'
. #902

#911

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LAFF-A-DAY

Furnished Booms

Furnished room. r•nge, refrig . $125, share bath . sin gle male. 919 2nd . AVe ..
Gallipo lis. Call 446 -441 6

111\CCUi) (l"'ltiUt

after BPM .

,Captains

telephone

bench, bed, cheap mat-

tresses, hot plate. uphol·
stered rocker . Call 61 4-4463918.

Mobile home lot. 12'1150' or
smaller. $75water paid, 4th
&amp; Neil, Gallipolis Call 4464416 after 8PM ·

Dinette set 880. Car seat
$30. Call 614·446· 8239.
1973 Argosy 26' S6,500.
Call614-388 -8154.

Green Terrae&amp; Mobile Home

Perk now has lots available.
Ca11614-446-3643 or 614446·0254 .

Air co nd . 15, 000 BTU
$175. 18.000 S160. Call
614-446-8333 .

COUNTRY MOBILE Home
Park, Route 33. North of
Pomeroy . large lots. Call
614-992· 7479.

Re~t

2 wheel utility trailer with
springs . Call 614 - 266 ·
6413.
upholstered

4 6 Sp ace for Rent

47 Wanted to

54 Misc. Merchandise

Vanity, cheat of drawers,

. ~''"'-\'' '" '·•r,,

Trailer spaces. Small child·
ren accepted . 30 4 - 675 ·
1Q76.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Large new dog houstf. Call
614-446-2780 .

"From now on, you've got to
eat less, drink less, and be
merry less."

Sweda mechanical registers
$100 ea .• good working
condition . One documentor
register ma ster 8660, good
working condition. Cull
614- 446 - 1065 ask for
Gary.

~~~::::::::;:~==1:;~~::::::~~:::::::11h1976
acre lot for sale or trade .
Chevy van 350 auto .
Wanted to rent or lease farm I ·

hous o ,,.;th barn p, acreage.
good reference. Cell 614~
446· 0468 or 614 ·446 ·
0665 . ·

Merchandise
51 Household Gqods
Country Oak tables. chairs,
cu pboards, desks, ice boxes.
Conkles, Tuppers Plains . Rt .
7 . Hand crafted and
finished .
Two air conditioners. 6,000
BTU . $125 . 8.000 BTU .
$135 . Call 614-992· 2602 .
Maytag washer and dryer.
S 150. Kenmore washer and
dryer. $125 . 40 inch electric
range, $65. 40 inch gas
range. $45. Self-defrost reft~gerator . S 100. R efrigera ~
tor. $50 . Call 614 ·7422352 .
Floral queen -size sofa bed.
new mattress. $50 . Nice
walnut dining room table, 2
pedestal type legs , $40.
Maple student desk, $75.
Maple bed and chest of
drawers. ·like new, 886.
Older type three piece book·
case bedroom suite1 good
condition , $80. Call 614·
992-7401 .
Queen size water bed . Excel·
lent condition. With heater,
Call 614-992·3161 .
Valley Furniture. new &amp;
used . large section of quality furniture . 1216 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis .
Ed's Appliance Sef\ling air
conditioners, refrigera to rs,
washers, dryers. In Gallia.
Meigs &amp; Mason Co. Call
614·446· 7444 or 614 · 367·
71 87.
Fine oak &amp; mahogany furni ture from England some
antiq ues: clocks , dining
c hairs, carver, occass1onBI
ta bles, drop leaf &amp; draw leaf
tables , pictures. mirrors .
ma rble top wash stand,
c hest of drawers, side board .
nest of three tebles , and
mo re. All at a fair price . Call
6 14·446· 8558.

51 Househol~ Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE
62 Olive St., Gallipolil. New
&amp; used wood-coal stoves, 6
PC wood LR suite $399.
bunk beds $199, ant ron
recliners S 99. new &amp; used
bedroom suites, ranges.
wringer wa•hers. &amp; shoes.
New livingroom suites
$199-8599, lamps , also
buying coal &amp; wood stoves.
Call 614· 446· 3159.
LAYNE' S FURNITURE
Sofas and Chairs priced from
S2B6, to S895. Tables. $50
and up to $125. Hide·•·
beds ,$ 390. and up to
$550 .. sofa beds $146 .
Recliners, $225 . lo S375 ..
lamps from S28 . to $125.
pc. dinettes from &amp;1 09 ., to
435 . 7 pc. $189 and up.
Wood table with six chairs
&amp;285 to S745 . Desk $110
up to S225. Hutches. S550 .
Bunk bed complete with
mattresses, S275 . and up to
8395. Baby beds, S110.
Mat:resses or box springs,
full or twin. S58 .. firm. &amp;68 .
and S78 . Queen sets. S226 .
4 dr. chests, $49. 5 dr .
chests, $59. Bed frames
S20.and $26 .. 10 gun · Gu~
ca binets. $350. Gas or
electric ranges S375. Baby
mattresses. 625 &amp; S35, bed
frames $20 , $26, &amp; S30,
king frame $50. Good selection of bedroom suites,
rockers . metal cabinets,
headboards $38' &amp; up to
$ 65.
Used Furniture .. Refrigera·
tors, ranges, metal , office
desks, electric range. 3 miles
out Bulaville Rd . Open 9am
to 5pm, Mon . thru Sat.
614·446-0322

51 Household Goods

Used furniture : bedroom
suite, student deak &amp; chair,
2 pc . livingroom auite. loveseat, 5 pc . wood dinette.
recliner. Corbin 8t Snyder
Furniture, 965 Second Ave.,
Gallipolis , 61•· 446· 1171.
10,000 BTU window air
conditioner 120 volt. Call
614-446-2780.
Moving must selllivingroom
suite. dinette set, mattress·
box springs, chandelier,
rocker . Call614-446: 4073.

1.,-.,.--....,---:----53
Antiques
1--------~­
Andirons made with bombs,
brass doornobs and horse
shoes . Antique brass bed
full. Crotcheted bed spread
full . 2 tub chairs. bown
te11tured vinyl. 2 anlique
mantels, 304-675-6858 .
54 Misc. Merchandise
Knauff Firewood Summer
rates· big loads. May 1stJuly 31st. Doesn't apply to
HEAP. 614-256· 6245 .
SPECIAL cut slobs 6 PU
loads delivered -- in dump
truck S.1 00, or 21oads $ 180.
~You pickup $15. Call 614·
246· 5804.
Pool People Special:
Polaris auto pool vaccuum
$625 . Middlepon614-9925724 or Gallipolis 61 4 · 4463051 .

call 61 4 . 4 4 6 . 3 2 4 3
evenings .

1----=------Three mounted tires, fair
cond., 5 hole wheels size
678-14. $10 aach . Call
614-446-3013.

75 tt. K4ft. high Sears chain
link fence, post &amp; gat
$137.50. Wooden table &amp;
chairs $117. Regular size
new box springs, mattress &amp;
frame &amp;197. New queensiz:e
bed solid wood headboard &amp;
dresser $377. 60. Regular
box springs, mattress 8t
lrame $65. Call 614-388·
. 8158 after 5 .
1978 Gravely with mower
$1 .200. 1976 Honda XL
260 1200. 6sheots 9x14 fir
siding $12 .00 each . Go cart
$50. Chemcial feed pump
825. 10 speed bicycle
s15 .00 . Call 814-245 ·
8503.
Tomato juicer. 7 qt. pressure
canner. colander, seal-a·
meal. $65 buys all (must gO
together) . Call 614-446·
2494.
Have king size waterbed.
Need to sell. Will take S 300.
Call614·992-6140.
Amana air conditioner.
10,000 BTU, $200 . Call
614·843·5244.
Firewood $20.00 pickup
load , $30 .00 del[vered. Call
304-675-6762 or 675 ·
2991 .
TONY'S GUN REPAIRS.
hot dip reblueing, all types of
gunsmith work, fast service,
304-675-4631 .

One Karat ladies diamond PHOTO KEY CHAIN free
ring Tiflany mounted, yel- with roll of color print film
low gold. Call 614 ·266 - processing. Now thru July
27. Limit one kev chain per
GOOO USED APPLIANCES 6413.
customer while supplies
Washers, dryers, refrigerators, ranges. Skaggs Ap* 2 wheel utility trailer with last . Hockenberry Pharmacy
pljances , Upper River Rd . springs . Call 614 ·2 56 · North .
beside Stone Crest Motel . 6413 .
8 ft spun alumn satellite
614·446· 7399 .
Used office furniture chains disc. Orake receiver and
Co unty Appliance. Inc . &amp; desk. Cell6 t 4· 446·1167. rotor, 9 months old, must
sell $1,900.00. 304·675·
Good used appliances and
TV sets. Open BAM 10 6PM
South Behd bench lathe 9in . 6737.
Mon thru Sat. 614-446- swing, 116 volt motor.
1699, 627 3rd. Ave. Galli - tooled &amp; ready. $800. Call Singer Stylist sewing ma:..
chine cabinet model, upright
·
polis, OH .
614· 245-5671 .
Hoover sweeper, Bissell
Couch , chair, coffe e table , 6 ft. ·Rollyson slidrng door. sweeper, 3 cu h wheelbar$75. Call614· 256 ·6808.
$125 . Call614· 378· 2835. row. 304 -675· 3730.

Real Estate General

bed

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by L•rry Wright

61

,

8100 .00 .

Couch 866.00. Phone 304675-6221 .

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Building Materials

Block. brick, sewer pipes.
windowt . linlels , etc .

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Penn's Warehouse
Wellston. Ohio
614·384·3645
brick. mortar and
masonry aUpplies. Mountain
State Block, Rt. 33, New
Haven, W. Va . 304·882·
2222.
~lock,

56

Pets for Sale

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
indoor- ouldoor facilities .
AKC· Doberman puppies:
Stud Service. Call614-446 7795 .
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Pets for Sale

Briarpatch KennelS Professional All-breed grooming .
Indoor-outdoor boerding Ia ·
cilitieo . English Cocker Spa ·
niol puppies. Call 614· 388·
9790.
Oragonwynd Cattery Ken nat CFA Himalayan. Persian
and Siamese kittens. AKC
Chow puppies. Call 4463944 aher 7PM .
AKC Reg. Chow Chow
puppies, all colors, 2 litters.
taking deposits now. Cell
614-268· 1271 .

Half-runner beans for sale.
Pick your own . $6.00 per
bushel. Call614· 949·2084.

Farm Suppl;es
&amp; Livestock

AKC Yorkie pups. 9 wks.
old . Call 614-379-2206.
AKC Reg .' Beagle pups,
males and females available.
If interested call1 · 304-684·
7094.
Collie puppies 3 male AKC
Registered , shots &amp;
wormed. Champion pedigrees, 8 weeks. Call 614 ~
698· 4179 Albany, Oh.
AKC Reg . German Shepherd pups. female ~0
each . Call 614· 446· 037!! .
Registered AKC Cocker
Spaniel puppies. Cham pagne and buff in color. Call
614· 992-7102 alter 4pm .
AKC Bassett puppies. 2
litters to choose from . $100.
apiece. Call614-667·6957.

63

Farm Equipment

Livestock

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Goats, two faa en nanny with
one billy kid. one Alpine
nanny. Call 614-245-9167.
Pigs for sale. $30. aPiece.
Call614·949-2017.
Wanted to buy, good . genlkl
pony. 304-675· 3287. ·
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CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S , 35 Wesl. Jackson.
Ohio. 614·286·6451.
Massey Ferguson, New
Holland. Bush Hog Sales &amp;
Service. Over 40 used
tractors to choose from 8a
complete line of new &amp;
~sed equipment. Large1t
selection in S.E . Ohio.
Gravely traclor 8t brush hog .
Call 614-379 -2115.

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64

Hay &amp; Grain

Hay tor sale. Mixed and • . ·
clover. Call 61 4 · 742~2692 .

-

Orchard Grass . Timothy
Hay. 80 cenls a bale. County •
Rd. 19 and U.S. At. 33. Call
614·985·4295.

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Hay for sale, pick up or
delivered . 304·896-3450.

Real Estate General
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Fish Tank and Pet Shop,
2413 Jackson Avenue.
Point Pleasanl, 304-6752063. Fish, birds and more.

Bundy trumpet exc . cond.,
used very little. Call 614·
446· 3044.
Marshall S1ack, rack mount
digital delav. Peavey Spl's,
EV monitors. Also. other
items. 304-982· 3244.

Real Estate General

QUIET COUNTRY LIVING only 3 blocks from town?
Secluded at the end of a drive, this 5BR ranch offers
something lor everyone. Family room, large living
room •. formal dining room, 3 full balhs, large deck, 2
fireplaces &amp; 2 car prage. Very nice neighborhood,
excellent place to raise a family. Approximately 5
acres of woods surrounding house included. Gas
heat. central air. $72,900.
.
#218

THIS HOME HAS A LOT TO OFFER! - Bnck '
and stone Cape God style home leatures I"'"&amp;
room w1lh beamed ce1hngs, woodburner,
bulit·m bookcases. kitchen w1th eYe·level oven,
dmette. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. storm w1ndows,
double garage, c1ty school diStnc\ mce
ne~ghoorhoorl. Call for an appomlmenl

BRAND NEW DUPLEX - Great investment for
lhe buye1. Located onGraham School Rd. Each
unrt offers 2 BRs, living room, balh, krtchen
With slove. refri~. DWand displ., lau ndry, ~ rge
carport, central a1r and storage area.

VINTON AREA - 5 IR. OLD MODUlAR 1152 sq. ~ . 3 BRs. 2 baths. kitchen, liVIng
room, dtrllng, C&lt;Jrpetmg. ce11tral a1r NG school
d1slrict. .

103 ACRES M'.\. SPRINGFIELD TWP. Approx. 96 A lillable, older home has 5BRs.
bath. LR, kitchen, county water, 40x60 f'lle
bldg, 40x60 tobacco barn, various olher
oulbUildings.

CONVENfENl DOWNlOWN LIVING ASSUMABLE lOAN - Very atlractivce two
st01y home.ofters 3 BRs, 2 baths, 16x16lR,
fmmal d1n1ng room, k1tchen. enc losed porch.
new carpet. gas heat. W1lh1n walkmg diStance
ot ston" and schools. Callloday.

WHITE HOLLOW ROAD - WALNUT TWP. _
23 A. m/ 1, all paslure. 2story home has3 BRs
bath. LR. k1lchen, lull basement well waler
school distncl
.

DONl LET THIS ONE GET AWAY - 3 BR
ranch on 1.2 acres. m/1, w1th lots of pme ~""­
ThiS home has LR With fire~ace, kitchen, bath,
lcan'll'hrlo. 2 car garage w1th openers, elec. B8 ·
plus a new heat pump, new 12&lt;20
rear deck and a 12x16 utility bldg. Call
an appomtment.

THIS 3 BEDROOM HOME CAN BE YOURS For ;ust $2.300 down and $374 per monlh'
Other atlracbve features in this home includea
fam1ly room with lots of wmdows and a
woodburmng fireplace, krtchen , dining, l~mg
room, bath, unattached ~orage bid&amp;, carport,
nice Shade&lt;! baCkyard. Call for an appomlment

sw

311.65 A,CRES, M/ L MORGAN TWP.
Frontage oo .SL Rt. 160 near North Gall1a HS.
1250 tobaCco base. 2 BR home wrth kitchen,
LRI bath and lull basement. Call lor more
details.
·

RESIDENTIAL- COMMERCIAL - OR BOTH!
- Very nice brick home located at 225 Third
Ave has had excellent care an~ offers 1424 SQ.
ft. of living area v.ith a full partially lin1shed
basement. Also features a carport, .workshop
and a 28x38 ronCiete bkJck com merc~altype
bldg w1th 3 bays formerly used as an
automotive repair shop. Call for more
Information
VACANT FARM lANO - Morgan Twp. 84
acres more or less, level and rolling land.
ADDISON TWP. - .Approx. 7 m1les !rom Approx . 33 acres llllable, remainder woods.
Gallipolis. 39\7 ac res more or less. Fron~ on
township road: I&gt;JI woods and brush. $&amp;900.
RACCOON CREEK HOMESITE - Offers
swimmmg, boal1ng and f~ hi ng l ot ~ze is
• 100x600 and has electric, waler tap and sepl1c
lank. Call lor more geta1ls.
OAK HILL AREA - COMMERCIAL &amp;
RESlDENTIAL-3.62 acres m/1Wllh appmx.
2/5 H frontage on SR 93 approx. I m1. N. bl
Oak H1ll. 2 story home offer&gt; 4 BRs, lR, kitchen
with range and refri&amp;. bath, carpelin ~ nat gas
heat and city water. Commercial steel bUIIdmg
(Stumbo's Garage} measures 40x96 and has
concrete f~O&lt;in ~ Motile home hookup on
property. Owner financing at 10%. Call tor
appointment.

1877 forti
outo ..
olr. •1,)11. Jolln'a Auto
laloo. lulovlllo lid, Golllpollo, Oh 114·441·4712.

1979 Chov. S .W. V-8, outo,
PS, PB. AC, niee car. t200.
und lake over. Call 114·
992·6896.

1971 C.,.vy 4x4 now body
pan1, no motor, *1.700.
Coll814-2111.1302 or 114118-1011.
.

1980 Cutlaas Sup(ema.
70,000 mNH. Tilt wheel, olr
condition.AM·FM c ....u.
ployor. 14,600. 61 4·9412833.

19718-1100 -lo• lntomotlonal air bratlea, 1ir cond.,
very
oh1111. Coli 114387· 133.
.

1977 Ford Munang Cobr•~
2. Good condition. phone
614-992·5523.

1985 Chevy Dlluxe 10
truck ..... 1 .• fJ.I. , 1utom11ie.
ve . f9.200 . 814-841 2650.

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Real Estate General

WALNUT TOWNSHIP - 30 acres more or
lress, near Mudsock. I ~ story home, large barn
and tobacco base. $27,900.

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JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR ln ·town convenience. extra nice lot measures
PRICE REDUCED TO .$24:5001 - Lovely 87 by 174. 3 pr 4 BRs, large kitchen, LR, DR,
24x65 modular on Green Terrace llfive in bath, la1ge fronl porch and small screened
Centenary Home features a 15x241iving room, back porch, gas heal, unattached one car
galley type k1tchen IS tully equipped, dining garage. Call for an appointment.
room has a built-in china cabinet 3 bedrooms
2 bathS, carpeting, cent air, efec. heat storm
COMMERCIAL BUILDING - 62x80 all steel
windows and doors and an 8x8 utility ~dg,
construction wrth lireprool msulation, has
overhead crane, off1ce and baths. Formerty
ADDISON TWP. - Possom Trot Rd. - 93 used for boat sales and repair. located across
acres m/1, all eoods. Old barn on properly fromS1lver Bndge Plaza w1th access to the Ohio
$21,900.
. R1ver. Potenl1~ unlimited.

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CENTRALlY LOCATED - GREEN TWP. 22.11 Ac. M/~ with lrontage on Sl Rl 141 and
Neighborhood Rd. Also adiOins Sanders Hill
Subchv•100. Ownei lmancing available. Call for
more details.

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APROXIMATELY 3 MILES FROM ROONEY 4 ~ acres, m/ 1. all tillable. Older homehas been
remodeled, 3 BRs. LR, k1tchen, bath, gas and
wood stove, carpeting, county wate1and small
pond
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FRIENDLY RIDGE ROAD - 25'1 A m/1
approx. 5 acres tillable. 900 lb lob base Older
2 story home has LR k1tchen din1ng room
balh. Barn on propertY.
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76

Auto Pens

&amp; Accessories

Wanted 10 buy, power ateer·
lng gu;r box (MCtor gear
box) for 1978 Dodge 150
Power wa.,n, 4 wheel
drlvo. Phono 304- 8754874.

Dodrill's Aulo Pertt . Vinton.
Ohio. large ~ection of
partl• tires . Welnttall whal
we tell. Mon.- Fri . 8-6:30.
Sot. 9 -1. Coli 614-3889815.

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dow~ equipped krtchen, 2
·porches and 2 baths. Walk to
the stores. Asking $29,501100,
an offer wanted.

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1977 P1ymouth Volare. I '
cyl .• auto. looks and rune
good . 1500. Call 614·992·
7403.

Wiseman Real Estate Agency

BRING YOUR HAMMER &amp; NAILS! - l 'hslory
CADMUS AREA·- 26.5 ac res. l 'h story home home located al62 Lincoln, needs some work.
oHers 3 BRs, kitchen, livmg room, dining room, Full basement. aty water. crty schools.
balh, carpetln!i. and ~uminu m siding Call lor $13,000.
an apf'Jinlment.

Colll14·317-7501.

Auto Pans

&amp; Acceuoriea

rebuilt,

For- ,U, I CVI .. $ntlord.
•1 .000 "' offw. Cell
814-311-1303.

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GENTLEMAN'S FARM- 35 acres m/1 mostly
tillable. 3 miles north of Rodney. Spn;g, w.ell ONE OF THIS AREA'SBETTER FARMS- 101
acres. m/1, lots of fertile oottom land pond
and county water , fenced and cross fenced
new
lences, large barn. modern 3 BR home
tobacco base. Very nice 3 or 4 bedroom ranch
'
style home with kitchen. lR, bath , breezeway. • baths. Call fm more information.
woodburn 1ng firepl ac e. {;all for an
appo1ntmenl.
COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL - INDUS.
TRIAL! - 50 acres more or less with lronlage
WALNUT TOWNSHIP - 102 acres, more or on SR 141 and Neighborhood Rd. Also ad1oins
leis, mostly clean ·hdl pasture, lrontson 3 roads Sanders Hill SubdiVISIOn. Owner financmg
available. Call tor more det81ls.
near Mudsock

1979 XR 1811, -

e~tcMiant condition.

n

,, .
QUALITY IN EVERY DflAIL'- 3 or 4 BR brick
home offers a 20x40 lam1ly room, 2 baths,
k~chen v.ith OW, displ ,· m1
crowave and trash
compactor, dining room. intercom system,
central "" 2 car garage, deck and a 20x40
·pool. Over $100,000. Call lor appointment
today.
•

The Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- 0 -7

Shop holst. 31on. Continental 400 . Brand new, never
boon UHd. $.400. 8 14-843·
6310 or 614· 84a-5406 .

1---------

3 AKC female Poodle pups.
304·882· 3672 .
Musical
Instruments

1114 Ford Aanger ohonbed,
two-tone pelnt. 4 cyl.. 4
apd .. A(I!· FMtope,allderoor
window. running board •
ciNn, 15.400. Call 114441-1711 or 114 _388 _
1811 otter &amp;PM.

76

Motorcycles

TOP CASH peld for '80
model and newer uaed Clln. mUu. A-1 condition. Call
19
Smith Buk:k-Pontloc, 1911 114-742-3114 for more
70760Norton-doloft
hond cr...- coM. Flm ••oo
Eutern Ave.• Gallipolis. Call Information.
toi&lt;M it. 814-441·3918 .
614-441-2282.
1879 two door horcltop
74 Ford 2 ,dr. hordtop. f310. Oldomobllo Cutlooa Su· 1971 CIO Chovrolel 2 ton 12 Kawauko $poctn 710 Wont to buy. Ford ongino, 6
truck with 14ft. cargo van . fullfairing.fldiow~cenettll, cyl. 300. Phone 304-876c_o_ll_6_1_4_·3_1_1_-_9_3_0_3_
. - - - I promo: e-m OVIr mot ollie •3100. 1976 Chevrolet 1 uddle...,go. bockrHt(ldj.). 2320. ·
brown. Air power ltMring
1878DodgoColt2dr.• outo ond bfokoo: AM-FM .,_ _ ton dump truak. •2100. 8,000 mlloo, lhoft drlvo, olr 1-:----~"---·
1hoc:b. new rear tire, new Forpartaordu~ebuggy, '72
on floor, exc. cond. Calt enow ttrea. Exaellent concll- 114·912·3194.
614· 2118·8518. •
~on: untMr 21.000 mlloo.
j
Chevrolet
Slvoroda.
10ft grlpo. 1'2 .100. Coli ott.. ~r,.-, . l&amp;o.oo. 304- 67&amp;.
19 8
•4100.Hotftkm,tl2-1212 Short
bod, PS, Pl. AM-FM 6 :00 ·614·1193-1317 or
814-448-8163, boforo 4
1883 Comoro Z-28 whlto. oher 5:00 wHkdoyo; onv·
rodlo. 310 ongino. 61,000 coll814-982-1925.
t-top, loMted with optiont. time weekends.
mil11. EKcellent condition.
Call 304-875-41181.
11ii8iic.~i~ooo.;;;;, C.lll14-986·3333.
1978. 650 KIWIIIkl, 304·
11
10.000 mil11,
7 1
now, phono 304· 1882 Chevy Citotlon 2 dr. juot
1171 Ford F 110. Four
hotchbock. V-8, 4 IPd.. 875-4314.
whMI
drive.
Uft
kit,
alumi~
~ 74 Honda CB 380, runa
AM -FM . aata. Crulu con- 1~::-::-:::--:----­
good, price negotleble, call
trol. Coli 114-448-8217 1980ChovyMon••· 71,000 num alotl. 814-912-7847.
afler 6PM .
mil... very good cond, '71 DeiiUn truck, needs ofter 4 :00 PM 304·171t2.2oo.oo . 304 - 898 · llltht llodywortt, nina good. 7749.
1972 Codilloc Coupe Do- 3013.
t371.00. 304-871 -3734.
villa. loaded, full powet', new 1-:-::-:-:--::--:-~--­
tiret, very good condition, 1913 Dodt• Ch,rger 1177 Chevy Bpnonzo pick 1·= :---:::-- -ts-a-n"'d_ __
216 E. 2nd St.
801
must oee. Coli 814-448- Shelby,
1 _.t. up, half ton, PS. PB, Air 76
Phone
0677.
· - .. · ••·
blue, tllver with aport c~nd. tilt whoel, now"tirao. ·
Motors for Sale·
otrlpoo. AC. 304-812-2281. 304-171-4193. •
1-1614)-992-3325
1982 Pontiac T-1000 outa.
air. AM-FM t2.999. 1912 1980 Chov Chhottw, 4
NEW LISTING- 9 acres in
Sears Gameflsher Boat Mo~
AMC Spirit 4 opd .. AM·FM door. AC. AM· FM,• rodlo, 73
Vans
&amp;
4
W.O.
the
country. One lloor, 3
tor;
1:Vz
hp.
AuK
Tank.
tape . sunroof. $2,799 . 304-875-4384.
bedroom home. Full base·
$326.00. Phor\o 304·882John' t Auto SeiH,'Bulaville
ment, pond, trees, some tur·
Rd. Gollipollo •.Oh 814-448· 1973 Dodge Cu-o 1'11· 1971 Chevy van in greal 2592.
niture and anxious owner.
4782.
lar, n.w tiree. new ttlck•. co"" ·· •1.000. Coli ·8141971 MFG. tri hull. 80 hp
441-2292.
Starting at $30,000.
304-178-11ft.
Johneon.
stalnltJI ttMie
78 Ford Gronada Ghla body,
1814 Ch..y 4••· 8 cyl., 4 prop, tundry lop ,
now point. Coli 614-379· '79 Chevy manzo, V-' AC,
OUT- Nice 7 room Ira me, 6
.1.300.00, 304-871-8363
2115.
,s, ouvo1 bo. t18.oo.oo. _.... Coil 814-112·1278. ,after
closets. lurnace wrth added
5:00.
304-171-3113.
woodburner. Carpel down,oak
'1t84 Ford E 160 Dloploy
1989 Chovello Malibu outotloor up. Stov~ retngerator,
matic 327 2 barrel, lor lllo "''.W1-·,.0I0.fto4
Van. AC, 8 cyl. ,. transmialull basement and double car·
or trado. Call 814-211· 11n Cutloao lolon. AC. aian c_oo_lar,,f1••vv·duty aua- 17 ft. Craatlir\er , 1 SIS
port lor only $29,000.
~532.
V·l 350·- ine, •1.100.00. · penllon , low mileage . inboard ~ outberd,power trim
•1700 . Coli 114· 992- prop, power trim t1b1, lrl
good · 304-171-1131. 7813.
hull. 304-875-. 286.
1880 Oldomobllo Omego no
SWIM POOL - A lew yrs.
rust. new rubber, 4 dr., lw08010 i
old ranch. 3 bedrooms, lull
cruise, PS, PB, 4 cyl. FrOnt; '71 CAMEIIO, bAll It ILUE, 1171 CJ 500. I cvl. 3 15112 ft. Invader Bowrider.
basement, modern kitchen
12&amp;
hp
Johnson.
beautifUl
wheel drive. C•lll14· 2151- T to~. 1UtC1 310, AC, ruiN, •PHd. good SIAl mUe•a• .
with range and woodburner.
cond,
•2.950.00.
304-875·
8532.
AM·FM ......... lirM, 111ume loan, 304-875- 2617.
••• cond. t3.JOO.OO. 304· 2250.
FIREPLACE - Dming room,
82 Chevette auto, 4 dr .• PS, 81bo;7-ul
breaklasl nook, large front
PB. t2,600. Call 114-378· 1913 lubur•. 2 t!loer, sun
porch, elevator, turnace and
2682.
roof. •uto. A.C, rHio . .eo.
extra lot with 2 car garage.
exc contl. one OWJWI', 304·
81 Chevette aulo, air. 176-1103.
12. 200. Coli 614-371·
HOT WATER HEAT - Fme
2682.
older home wrth storm win·
76 Pinto 72,000 mi. AM·FM
cassette, t.1.300. 73 CofM'I
· 40.000 mi. t1 .400. loth
V.G. Colll14-448-8131.

Lab. pUps, black. AKC Registered . 6 weeks old July
26th . Call614-992· 5181 .

57

Am.

74

~~~w

Pigs tor sate. 304-896· • " ." ·
3683.

61

Tral'lla

Trucks for Salt

z -·

FertBush
&amp; Seed
5'
hogspreeder
$360 .;860.;
26' '
58
Fruit
tobacco pipe trailors $600.;
52" tobacco sticks 1 &amp;c
&amp; Vegetables
each; tobacco baiera 850.
each . 304· 736-23.42 or
675 1286
Sweet corn yellow &amp; white. - -· - -·- - - - - II d No. 451
Call614-256-1584or614· 7 h · Now Hoan
304
576
256·6571 ,
mower.
·
· 2623 .
Silver Queen sweet corn.
$1 .50 dozen . 1Yt mi. from
Holzer on Rt. 160. Call
614·446 · 7299 .

Turbo

72 ·

'

I-:::':-:6:----::-6_8_4 ·--:=---JJ[!.!~[!!!!!@~~![

..

~~==~=======~~==~=~====~
56

S•le

j

Homelite water pump
$200.; Solo 5 gal . back Ptk
spraver $70.; A model ln18f.
with cult t1800. ; Homelila
EZ chain saw $100.: 3 pt. • •.

1

li)tii!5"!' NEA In&lt;

BUILDERS
Surplus-Salvage-Closeouts
1. Interior hollow core doors
300 .
81
2. Steel embossed insulated
6 panel exterior door' a pre·
hung $79.95
. h .
3 . Intenor
ollow core pre·d
h ung door •s $1995
·
an
$29 ·95 ·
4 . 9 ft. steel insulated
entrance door's with side
light $275 .00.
5. Wood door panels
1 314J1:341178 with full glass 11•
plate &amp;39.95.
6 . New shipment of Keller
whiter thermal break sliders
an singlehung windows at
~low wholeaale prices.
7 . EmboJSed wood grain
twin ·4.. and 8" panarn,
aluminum siding with foam
back. colors and white
$39.95 sq .
8 . Whil' twin rib. chanel
,drain siding or roofing
$41 .96 sq. or galvanized
$28 .00 sq .
9 . OeluKe 1 pc. fiberglass
bath ta.i'b's wilh grab bar.
Color or while $199.95 .
10. 17x19 white &amp; gold
vaniiV with top fiberglass
$29.95 merbla top $38 .96 .
11 . Plastic counter top .
Solid paltern wood grain's
30" by 8'· 10'- 12' 50 cents
sq. ft.
12. Picture windows lhermanl pane 6' high by s·- 1 0 ' ~
12' wood an clad 8199 .00$299 .00-$399.00 . .
13. 5 gal. aluminum mobile
home roof coating $21.95
ea. 6 and up S19.95 ea.
14. O'rive way tile
( 12"x72" - $19.951
11 O"x60" - $12 . 951
(8"x60"· $8. 95) .
15. 4"x10' PUC sewer and
drain pipe (1 pc. $3.49 ea.)
125 pc..$3 .25 ea.) 1100
pc.·$3 .00 ea .)

1980

Pole Buildings Constructed
for commercial, g•reget,
farm , stores·. etc. Any sire.
'
free estimates. Call 304· • .
675·3981 .

55 l;luilding Supplies

Autos for

lndlane~tolia ltaae Car .
Loodod . 11,000~octuol

1962 hrmall Tractor, 5 ft . •
biBde . .5 ft. bush hog. 18
inch single plow. All for
82000 . Call 614 - 669 · .',
6424.

16 hp Roper Lawn tractor,
turn plow I railer, snow
blade. 42 irl mower deck,
dual wheels, chains. wheel
weights $1,996.00. 304882· 3421.

71

Autos for S•le

with attachmentl, $1,560.:
Used lets than 20 hours. Call
614· 446-1570.

0

.

....

Ohio-Point

Tr-lllSIIIIrLIII I II

1985 Troybilt tillar 8HP.
Kolar engine. Horn model

Wood stove. cast Iron. good
cond. $75.00 or trade.
304·675-7241 .

Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
0 . Call 614-24&amp;-5121 .

Farm Equipment •

Farmatl F· 20 tractor doUble
14' pull type low. runs good,
&amp;Ktra parts - manifold ,
•1.500 . Call 614 · 3677184 .

Breakfast aet butcher boy
top, 4 chalrl, call 304-6761438.

.

July 21, 1986

July 21. 1986

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

Page- 0 -6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

~

A
-- "' ' . .
~

BUILDING LOT - 2 acres
on edge of Pomeroy.
RANCH ·- Five Points, 3
bedrooms, elec. B.B heal, T.
P. water, garage and large
llat lot.
CERTIFIED APPRAISALS
ITS NOT WHAT YOU PAY.
ITS WHAT YOU GET.
WEEK ONLY
Are you lookini for • 2 bedroom overlookmg lhe Ohio R1~er
with li~le moinlenance.·Beginner home or retire!l.lenl ho'me.
Can be purchesed on land contract. Call us today .

8260

s.. .;.rpliy, ~,o.;To.rih
H•n. Virgil •nd
• .... , ..1.....

Housing
Headquarters

e.MoinL

,0.

POMER

. 992·2259
NEW LISTING - Pomeroy III story frame on 1wo ~ts. 3
bedrooms. luMy instJated,
ric b.b. heat, &amp; patio.
$17,90000.
'

PRICE REDUCED - Middleport - Recently remodeled
I\\ ~ory home with a new
kitchen. large living room, 3
bedrooms, nice dinmg room
with b1g bay window. storage
building or garage. Neat and
n-i ce . MAKE OFFER
$23.50000
PRICE REDUCED - Middlt-

port - On a ~ street, th1s3
bedroom two story remodcled
home is priced to sell, It kloks
nice and has a wood burner for
cheap heat this winter. Owner
really wants lo sell. MAKE
OFfER $23,900.00

lANGSVILLE - Large .two
strty frame home w~h 4
bedrooms, d1ning room, and
huge living room. Also a small
apartmenl and astore building
Has $200 a monlh inrome ·
besides lhe house. Good 1ental
inveslment. $29,900.00.
HARRISONVILLE - 28 acres
of vacant ground. Severall!'od
home sites. Owner willtinance
with. a $500 down payment at
13% Interest and paymenl of
$120.21 a monlh for 15 year&gt;.
$10,000.00.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland Jr.
992·6191
Dottie Turner 992-5691
Jean Trussel 949-1660

i"'"l]
~
. REAlTOR

•

4 BEDROOM. 1 STORY HOME located near city schools. Nice .

•

backyard with 2 slorage buildings. Foyer with open stairway.

•

PURCHASE A TWO BEDRM. 1wo bath home 1n Eureka before the.
new projecl beg1ns at GallipoliS Dam. Pnce reduced now toe
$21,500.00
• .

••

•

•

.

•

INVESTMENT PROPERTY located along 4th Ave., 2 rentals. Fo•
$32,500.00. .
•

•

RELAX IN THIS conveniently located 3 bed1m. home along Fir&gt;. ·
Ave. in Galhpolis. Easy mainla1ned ~t. nver honlage. Fir&gt;t floor. ·
bedrm. and bath. Basement &amp; carport Pnce $45,000.00.

•

•
•
•

•
SELUNG YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS.... . ••
• . CAU AN 'EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY SAL£SPERSON
·
C&lt;dl Wood HP,\Itv lnr
~:? l ! H u•,t St
Gdllq)( ,, ~

446 1066

.,
&gt;

�.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel
76

Ohio-Point

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

84

VW IHtt. Trann.. le. re-

SEWING Machine repairs.

built, gueranteed, 1J,50.00.
304-675-7241 .

Nrvic::l. Authorized Slngar

' 81

Seles

I........KJ
XJ
.._
"-·----

Ford pick up truck partl
1973 thru 1979. 304· 676·
3574.

304-89~-3838

after ·4 :00.

79 Motors Homes

a. Campers

Fully aelf contained truck .

camper. ale&amp;PI 6. range,
oven. gaa &amp; electric, 110
volt or 12 volt furnace , axe .
cond .• must sell. Call 614·

448-2109.
36 ft. Bonanza travel trailer,
extra nice. Call 614-446-

3848.

~04-576 - 2673 .

85

I .I

A 51ft.L. WEAR:5 A
Gl ~DlE 10 TAI&lt;E lo\E !It
IN . 50 THAT A MAN
WILL. 170 THIS.

Home
Improvements

Sale, July 27th,
must go in
one day . NO TRADE . See
dlaplay ad July 26th . Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
Seltzer's World of Camping. rem ova l. Call 304- 675·
Barboursville. W. Va ., 304· 1331.
736· 5287; Charleston , W. 1- - - - - - - - --

Va .. 304-346-CAMP.

Services
81

FUDGE PIGPEN

Home
Improvements

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . ••·
perienced carpenter, electrician, mason, painter, roof ing (including hot tar

application) 304·675-2088
or 675· 7368 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed same
day . P~mp sales and servi-

83

Excavating

Dozer Work land clearing.
landscaping, etc. Free eati-

matos. Coli 614-446-8038
or 614-992 -7119 anytime.

J .A.R . Construction CO ..
Rutland. Oh .· 814· 742 2903. Basements. FOoters,
Concrete work , Backhoe's,
Dozer S. Ditcher. Dump
trucks, &amp; water-gaa-sewar·
electrical linea.

1- - - - - - - - - -

Ken's Water Service. Walla.

.ciaterna, pools filled . Phone
614-367·0623 or614·367Waugh's Water Service .
Walla, cisterna. pools. Fast.
reliable service. Calt 814·

258 - 1240 or 814 - 2581130. Rea.anable rates.
Haul limestone, nnd, gravel. dirt, bulk or bag fenilirer

and
Excelsior
Work•lime.
Inc. 638
E. Main Salt
St ..
Pomeroy. 614· 992-3891·.

87

CARTER'S PLUMBING

ANO HEATING

0488 .' day or night . Rogers
Basement Waterproofing .

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446· 3888 or

D .and M . Contractors. Vinyl 1 _
6 _14_-_4_4_6-_4_4_7_7_ _ __
aiding. replacement win - 1dows. ina~,tlating, roofing,
JIM 'S PLUMBING &amp; HEATnew and remodeling, con - lNG . Rt. 1, Box 355, Gam-

crete. Call304-773-5131 .
J .and -L. lilatallation . Roofing, vinyl siding. storm doorS
and windows.· Free esti-

polis . Cell614-367-0578.

83

RON'S Television Service.
House calla on RCA. Quazar.
GE . Specialing in Zenith.

Call 304-578-2398 or 614448-2454.

City, Oh. Call 614-266- •
1470, call Eve. 614-446- ·
3438. Old &amp; now

Broker-Auctioneer
Call 446-0551 Anytime
Beth Null 1H-9507
Steve McGhee
446-1155

BMR 444 - OWNER ANXIOUS 10 SEll! - 3 BR ranch • lualed llfl l~5
acre lot m/1. Possrble 8% loan assumption to quahfted buyer lncludeslg.
eat·m krtchen, separa te utrlity room. famrly room wrth wb fneplae. Call lor

an

appo~nlment

today.

WHY SmLE FOR TELliNG 1'HE WHOLE
COUNTY, WHEN YOU CAN TELL THE
WHOLE WORLD?

BMR 448 - Excellent oppurtumty to buy a liveable home al the fight
pr1ce. ThiS 1s a very clean home ready lor a new owner, The pnce IS
fight 113.500
'

COMPLETE AUCTION SER111CE
MEIGS COUNTY LISTINGS
MMR 561 - E~ra large 130'1180' levellal i)Jiomal bnck hon~ W1U• 3

bedrooms, 217 haths, fam1ly room , study, large Ul1l 1~ lOOm and co untry
k1tchen Many shelves throughout. Must see lh1s lovely homeJn M1ddleJX)rt

MMR 560 - Owner w1ll cons1der olier on th1s neat as can be star1er
home. 2 bedrooms. new AnctersP.n wmOOws, new v1nyl Sld1ng. Owner
wants an otter

IMR 558- 2 acres w1th gas well J bedroom r3ll ch home w1th wood·
burner. Country setting with lar ge pme trees and !rUII trees Rutland
aea. Sells lor $47.500.

MMR 561 - VA assumable loan al8 1?1it mterest wtlh down

pa~ment 5

bedrooms1 d1n.ng room, 21ots w1th l'fater and sewage on both located 111
Middleport A pnce ol only $22.000
IIIIR 554 - Owner 1\111 linance. Reduced pr1ce al $28,500 A ~~ of
house to work w1th. 3 bedrooms, !~m1l~ 100m, Sltlmg room, dmm~ room,
116 baths. On Wehe Terrace, Pomeroy.
MMR 567 -

OWNER FINANCING POSSIBlE - Beaulilul slone

ranch on 4.73 acres. IV, acres IS stocked lake r,mshed basement w1th

f1replace plus furmture 111 basement stays. Call for deta11s,
MMR 569 - NEW USIING - 1 acres, 2 story house, 4 BRs lami~
room, 2 enclosed porches. located m Syracuse RNer v1ew. $39,500.
MIR 570 - FARII - 124 acres m/1 EqUipmenl shed rnder house
off 124. Coal gone bul olher minerals are there. Pr~ced al $61,500.

PRODUCTS
4" Sewer ........- ..$3.70
4" Ell ................... $l.OO
1" 160# Water .... ~ 19•
I" Gas Pipe ......... ~~ll•

"Ftt• Dr/lwr"

--......

......

~--

~

IEAlTOI

Home

Phone '

PRICE REDUCED $39,900This 3 bedroom home located
close
town offers 2 baths.
large liVing room, conven~nt.
k«chen, den, sunJXlrch, dec~
central air.

SUNDAY PUZZLER
ACROSS
1 Scatter

COUNTRY SEn I NG
Nice and solid 2 bedroom
home located on state highway ~ith no real close neighbors. · Rural water syste m
plus drilled and dug well.
Extra wa ter tap for a mobile
home hookup. Nice restlul
area after a day's wor k.
Priced at $21 .900.
#574

FREE NAtURAL GAS
140 ACRES
Approx. 10 miles from Gallipolis - lots of Raccoon
Creek frontage - approx .
60 acres tillable and tobacco base. Nice 40'x60'
barn. 6 rooms, 3 BR home
wit h free nat~ra l gas to heat

your home in winter and
cook your food . lots of fruit
trees. Nice country setting.
See this one.
#419

BEAUTIFUL HOME
30 acres - 15 ti llable - approx . 3b0 sq. ft: living space.
Br~ar H1ll ~one and cedar out~de covering. 10 rooms, 4 bedroom s. 3 baths, modern and fully equipped kitchen, real
beam ceihng (lrom Union Central, Col umbus). 2 car garage,
large sc reened in back porch with barbecue. loca ted in
Green Twp. close to Gallipolis. l ots more. Must see. Call now
for appointme nt.
#629

SOMEONE WANTS ' YOUR HOME
AND WE HAVE WHAT IT TAKES TO
FIND THAT SOMEONE. CALL US!!
HOME IN THE COUNTRY
7 room house with 3 or possibly 4 bedrooms, kitchen with
bu•lt-i n ca b~nets, storm windows and doors. located on state
highway. Pr~ced at $39,000. Will co nSide r trade. Call for an

VACANT LOT- CITY OF GALLIPOLIS
40 'xl30' lot #651o cated on Madison Ave., Gallipolis. All city
utilities. Only $5,900.
·
#620

lg. hvmg roorn. kit chen w1th drnmg area, 3 BRs and
bath. Full base!Jlfnl w1lh lam1ly room, bedroom and bath Plenty ol
storage. Screened·m patio. central a1r. Kyger Cr eek School D1stnct. Call
for an appo~nt m e nt.

PUSTIC""

*Willis i . Leadingham. Realtor. Ph . Home 446-9539

#364

SMR 447 - FIRS! liM£ ON MARKET - Ranch slyle home on I~

$SAVE$

mUltary uniform, the impassioned
speaker roars hatred ·of Jews and
blackS and exhorts hls listeners to
llgh1 for a white society.
His · comrades shout support,
punctuating \heir chants with stiff·
ann salutes.
This could be a history lesson out
of Germany In thel!ms, bujlt' snot.
It's a study ln current affairs.
1be year Is 1985, the scene Is
Canton, Ga., and the speaker Is
Glenn Miller, leader of the White
Patriot Par1Y, a · paramlll1ary
extension of the Ku Klux Klan .

Ask Yourself lhis OuestiCMt-lhen List With Us

appo1ntment now.

landscaped flat lot

Real

· Linda L Riffle

6 Jumps
11 Law: official proof

Real Estate General

4

wide, particularly In the South, with
a frequency lhat concerns many
citizens. But It alsomakes1hem take
a hard look at 1he message being
sent by thls group th at for m ore than
a century has terrorized minorities .
"The alarming trend for us ts 1he
Klan leadership and membership
becoming more ~rld more Na~t- ·
oriented," sald Lyn Wells, natlonal
coordinator for the Atlanta-based
Anti-Klan Network. "The philosophy of 1he old-style Klan groups
was a return to racial segrega tlon.
an American aparlheld sys1em.
" Bul these Nazi-oriented Klan
groups believe a white republlc

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owner . .•

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992-3535

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HOME NATIONAL BANK

~ime- ie~mntt Section,
Ju~t · 2' , 1 as

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'

'

By BilL LOHMANN
. 1JPJ Feature Writer
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Features

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.
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In very good cond1tion. Corner lot, approx. l 1h acres level
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8573
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N622

66Fio67 Expels
69 Musical study

129 LeV&lt;II
131 Shallow vessels
132 Epic sea tale

71 Forerunner of NRC

133 French for

' •surTvner ' •
73 Cut
134
New
Oeal agency:
7
4
Catch
sight
o1
18 Blemish
Init.
76 Newspaper
19 Arllsl' a sland
138 Fr-of
execu11ve
20 Dwelt
137 Overly precise ..
79 Choice part
21 AbundAnce
person
81 Guido's high note
231n$8CI
138 Brimless cap
82 Female run
24 Anger
84 Babylonian hero • 139 Compass point
26WIId plum
140 Allllude
85 One behind
27 Symbol for
141 Spanish cheer
another
tellurium
142 Pare
87
Actual
being
29 Climbing plant
143
Sarcllsm
90
Neuec
30 Sagacious
144 Roof of moulh: pl.
92 Church bench
31 High cards
146 Monsters
93 Erases: printing
32 High mounlain
148 Hindu queen
95 Wise persons
33 Foot like part
149 Antecate
97 Solo
34 Competent
I 50 Prophets
98 WriHen order:
35 Twistec
151 Escapes
abbr.
36 One who eats to
99 H~lfan em
losewelghl
101 Stalks
DOWN
38 Accumulates
103 Flap
40 Affirmative
104 Girl's name
1 Takes unlawfully
41 Pitcher's lau:c pas
2
Velvet like fabric
105
Adhesive
42 Wanders about idly
3
Aclress Hayworth
substance
43 Trammel
4 One, no matter
108 Catch: colloq .
45 Malice
which
110 Benl over
46 Teutonic deity
5 Symbol for yttrium
112 Expires
47 Hall
6 Smallest number
113 Aeriform fluid
48 Ripped
7 Comfort
114 Forenoon
49 Origin
115 Lelfall
8 Snake
51 Arabian seaport
9 Hebrew letter
117 Mixes
52 Sun god
10 Slivers
118 Young salmon
53 Appendage
11 Gifts
119 Native of Turkey
54 Jog
12 Concerning
120 Greek letter
55 Breathe
121 Forces onward
13 Greek peak
57 Before
14 Invoices
123 Yale man
58 Writing lablel
124 Light, pink wine
15 Takes as one's
60 Ralsec
125 Large cistern
own
61 Inlet
16 Golf mound
126 White House
62 Small plug
17 Revised: abbr.
64 Sleamslllp: abbr.
nickname
21 Conteslanls
65 Trterefore
127 Showerec

•

Klan '85: shouting hatred, pUshing violence

REFERENCES NECESSARY AND .
ONE MONTH RENTAL DEPOSIT REQUIRED
For Rant or lease With Option to Buy $580 mo.

(6141 315-6740

.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE

3 bedrooms. 2'12 ceramic baths, lg. living room,
dining room, family room, new kitchen, patio
with cas crill.

MONTGOMERY
REALTY

Excavoting

Real Estate General

Senices

LARGE AIRY CALFORNIA BRICK RANCH

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lots on Wright St. Water &amp;
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6ACRES - $6,000 on Spr·
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With Option To Buy

·'

1 183 Sec. Ava., Gallipolis .

Plumbing
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Coli collect 1-614· 237-

FOR RENT OR LEASE

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

676-2010.

Unconditional lifetime gua·
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furnithed . Free estimates.

Busin~s

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82

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PH. 304-295-7145

Coll814· 388-9857 .
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

41

Real Estate General

130 ACRES I mile ~om Ohio
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crop land, pature and woods.
Owner says"MAKE OFFER ON
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a farm. Possible excellent
terms available.
ATENTION BUILDERS
Th~ proper!)' has been subdf
vided into 1 acre - 10 acre
sites, can be sold individual~.
l eax water obtainable, priced
low, possible excellent termS.
This is an excellent buy ftr
~ther farm or development.

•

Upholstery

Real Estate General

ces. 304·895·3802.
Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
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MORTAR

1-------:.;;.;.;;.;~.;;;,.;.;;.~;;.;.------j

•soo.ooo.oo

Also pools filled . Call 614.
256-1141 . or 614- 448 l-17.5 or 614-448·1911 .

7741 night or day.
Now arrange the cl rc::led letters to
form the surj)fi$8 answer, as SUO·
gested by the abcwe cartoon.

Yesterday '!i ·I Jumbles: TARRY

Uqul~ation

General· Hauling

Jamaa Boys Water Service.

I J K
Answer: KI I I JK I I]( I I J

81

Service Sharpen

Pomeroy. 614-992-2284.

Answer: Th:,:o~;~;};~::;~~~.
~;~:
~~

' 73 Traveler ._28 ft camper.
many extras, good cond, see
to appreciate •. liVeable year

round.

r
tLETTEKj
:J I [
tCHECITj

a

Sclason . Fabric Shop.

Olds trantmisaion

•85.00. old diesel angina
pana. Monte Carlo radiator.

Electrical
&amp; Refrjgeration

W.Va.

22 Generous
23 Blink
25 Soak, as llax
27s-awt
28 Anclllnt Hebrew
ascetiCS

30 Source of water
31 A118iatant
33 Self-eetoern
35 Aromatic olnl(nent
36 Arrow
37 Harvesls
39 New Deal agency:
Init.
41 Reveal
42 Considerable
44 Worthless matter:
Colloq.
47 Roman slalesman
48 En&lt;:roach
49 Chairs
50 Commonplace
54 Thr-base hit
55 Flourlsll
56 Avoided
59 Upsurge
60 Kind of cheese
61 Symbol for

90 Symbol for ceoium
91 Babylonian deity
94 Struck
!IE Symbol for erbium
98 lie In the ...,
99 Laats

100 Tell
102 Olrtle8
104 Counlry of Europe

105 Recreation 106 Colorful bird
107 Rival
109 British railway
truck
111 Showy fl~
112 Sprint
113 Weapons
116 Writing implement
118 Vessels
119 Zesl
122 Pertaining to old
age
124 Cowboy
competition&amp;
125 Shadow
126-Tooth decay
128 Fear
r.uthenium
130 lubricate
63 Prepare lor print
66 With regard to
131Sq49BZ"
67 Hypothetical force 132 Mediterranean
68 Butler knife
vessel
70 Public slorehouses 135 Pilasler
71 Perform
137 Equal
72 Period of lime
• 136 Poison
73 Smallllsh: pl.
140.0eface
75 Longs for
142 PreHx: before
77 Dollar b111
143 Sodium chloride
78 uncookec
144 Pianissimo: abbr.
80 Summer coolers
145 Latin conJiillellon
83 Silkworm
147 Earth godcllls
86 Encounters
148 Baseball poaltlon:
88 Surfalls
abbr.
89 Mild expletive '

should he instlluted and this will
happen lhroug h a race war ... when
the white forces w iD take over and
J ews and blacks w ilt be
annlhllaled."
Klan leaders, such as Miller,
bristle at being described as Na~ls
and explain their goals in a
somewhal salter lighl.
"We are not Nazis," Miller said
from his office ln Angier, N .C. " We
believe in the U.S. ConstUulion and
f ree enterprise. Weare patriots . The
Jewish-controlled news medfa labels us neo-N azi to turn white people
ag ainst us."
As for the .'camouflage mllilary
fatigues and black berets members
of his group w ear. Miller says people
should not ge1 the "wrong Idea ."
" If they gel the wrong idea about
us, should they get I he same idea
about the Boy SCouts or any oil he.
hundreds of ol herorga ni7.a t ions th aI,
wear uniforms?' ' he asked.
The Ku Klu x Klan emerged in I he
post-Civil War South as a "social •·
Club" for ex -Conledera te soldiers. It
preyetl on the brill.le emotions of
,downtrodden whites, attempiing lo
win support by convmcing them
other races caused 1heir pllghl .
Noled for while robe• and hoods
that secured lhe anonymity of Its
m embers, the Klan soon began
opera1ing as a terrorist group thai
hoped 10 re-eslablish whi te supremacy and black servilude In lhe
region and batlle " carpetbaggers"
from the North.
Federal anli-Kian Jaws helped
squelch the racial violence. In facl.
the U .S. government prosecuted
nearly ·4,000 cases against the Klan
between 1870 and 1877. .
Except for sporadic violence , lhe
Klan was relalively quiet until after
World War I when lt ret urned to
power. Wilh I he war fresh in lheir
minds. lhe rejuvenaled Kl an addNI
Jews and Catholic immigranls Ia ils
hate list.
White mob lynchings and kidnappings of blacks characterized lhe
1920s. The Klan also wa s a powe1iul
political presence. claiming success
In electing several southe .-n governors and local officials before the
public sickened of ,ils ,behavior and
group down. ·
• •
'
The Kla,n remained down unllllhe
· J!Bls when II
ageln as I he most
violent resistance to I he civil rights
movement. There w ere more lynch·
lngs, cross-burnings, church bombIngs and mart·hes on court -ordered
lnlegraled st;hools.

rose

AWAY FlWM VIOLENCE- Some fadlo,.. ollhe Ku Klux Klan say
lheyve leaning towani Nazism and lhevloleottendencleslhatgowlthlt.
In this fDe'l98'7 me photo, an armed member ofthe American Nazi Party
stands guard In front of party headquarters In Arlington, Va. UPI

•

Most Activity
f:::;::.J Some Activity
~Little Activity

'•

klan-related activity has been reported In recent
month§, as weD as where there is only some activity
and where there Is Utile activity. '!JPI

KlAN AC1'1VJTY - Klanwatch, a project of the
Southern Poverty Law Center In Montgomery, Ala.,
has broken down the nation Into states where the most
Bloodshed followed t he Klan.
which peaked at about 40,(XXlactive
m embers nationwide in the · '00s
before public opinion and federa l
legislation turned strongly against

it .
Membershi p dw indled but lhe
Kl an persevered and rnade anolher
comeback in the mld-1970s, selli ng
the tone that domin ates it 1odayheavily anli-Semel ic , anti-black and

entering a dangerous gray a1·ra 1hat
many consider neo-Nazi.
Anli -Kl an watchdog groups say
the Klan 's active m ember ship has
been less I han 12,000 in the 1980s.
Bu1 those groups caulion lhat
white the numbers are nol staggerIng•. the ze~l LS a·s dangt&gt;mus than

ever.
"Whal's lefl ln thai nu1111X'r an'
lhe real hai-d-core, commilted kind
of fanatics ," said Randall Williams.
a spokesman for the Klanwalch
projecl of the Southern Poverty Law
Cen1er''in Monlgomer~·. A la. "The)'

are not any da nger to lhe nalional
s!'Curity. bullhev area blgdangrrlo
individuals in places whel '&lt;' they're

rights groups fmr the Klan m ight
folio~ their lead.
The Klan always has been liltle
more than a b'&lt;'neric term{orgroups

active.
"It sounds like a conH·acjic tion Ia
call a Klansman a mode1·a t&lt;&gt; Bul
wilhin I he Klan I here an' some who
arC' m01 ·r modera tc than others .ilnd
many of 1he older ones have los I
in terrsl and have gol\&lt;on ou l. When

1hose kind of pc·oplt•lPLIVC'. wha trver
dampening ('[feet they wou ld havf'
on the mo1'C' cxtremP meml::lfors is
gonC'.''
Much attent ion ha s been focused
Groups such
Aryan Nalionand it s
splint er orga nizat ion . Th&lt;' Order,
wh\cQ, al\egroly has been \nvo\ved \n
a1med robberies and has lhreal ened · judges and m em1X'1 ·s of
Congress. The Orderacluall y Issued
a "Declaration of War" on lhP

a5

organized to oppose minorities.
M uch of lhe Klan atl ac k loday Is
focused on a m assive .Jewish
conspiracy il perceives in 1he U niled
Sl ales. There is slill severe antibla ck ·sent imenl, bul mosl Klan
leaders cons ider blacks as " lools,
pawns and puppets of the Jews. "
There are dozens of sm all , loosely
affiliated gr oups- somrassm allas
two or three membe-rs- that carry
Ihe Kl an label or its ambitions. Most
·provide nothing more than hateful
1

rhe1or\c;

olhe-rs

art'

more

I reacl101"0US .
The lnv i sj~le Knighls of lhe Ku

Klux Klan. Uniled Kl ails of America, Nalional S1a 1es Rights Party
and WhH&lt;' Pal riol Pa11Y are among

''mongl·(•l hordC's. ''

Aryan Nati on and Th&lt;' Order arc
further 1ighl lhan the Klan, bul Jaw
en forcement officials and civil

lhf• mt&gt;re ' 'isibiP.
All are basNI in the Soulh, all
!Continued on page E-2)

U.S. fears·-Canada. as staging area for terrorist attacks
\

roRONTO (UP I J -U.S. Immigration officials are concerned
about !'C'Cenl terrorist acts launched
from Canada and the polenllal of
America' s northern neighbor as a
slaglng area for allacks on lhe
· United States.
At 5,300 miles, lhe U.S-Canada
line Is the longcsl undefended tnrder
in the world - and an easy one to
cross undetrcled.
" We readily admit that we can 't
seal thai border off," said Duke
Austin of 1he U.S. lrrunigrallon and
Naturallzalion Service. "We are
dt&gt;flnltel¥ _concerned. W e're doing
the best we can bu1 we know we're
vulnerable. "
FBI Special Agent Lane Bonner

sa id his organization has had a long
and .good relationship wilh Cana ·
d ian authorities. but there is a " long,
open border ." Couple that wilh
recent terrorist acts, and "we have
1o IX' concerned," liesaid.
World alieni ion l urned to Canada
on June 23 w)len lwo ail· incidenls
killed :m people.
A n A i r-Indi a j umbo jet carrying
329 people wen I down in theAIIantir
Ocean off the ~·ish coasl on a flight
f rom Toronlo and Montreal . lo
London. Bombay and NPW Delhi.
Aulhorilles suspccl a bomb caused
the crash .
L ess than an hour earlier, a l:xlmb
killed two baggage handler s al
Tokyo' s Narit a airporl when II

exploded In a luggage corilainer
unloaded from a Ca nadian Pacific
Airways fllghl f roJ]'I Vancouv&lt;&gt;r.
Japanese police suspect lh~
luggage bomb was meanl for
another Air-India flight lhal Jell
Narlla two hours after 1heCanadian

jet anived.
Some Pxpl'rts say Canada is a soli
targel for terrorLsts.
One political science profeS!jor
sa id there were now 10 terrorlsl
groups ln Canada. Lasl year ,
fmmer SolicitOr-General Robcrl
Kaplan sa id he believed cve1'Y
major InI ern a tiona! terrorist group
was opera t lng in 1he country.
Inspector Ron Prior, head of the
Toronto pollee force's minority

Potomac tunnel: officials see
a disaster 'waiting to happen'
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
busy subway tunnel beneath the
Potomac River ·is a "catastrophe
waiting to happen" - an under water tube where firefighters say
scores could perish lf flames strike
Washington's da zzling metro
system.
,
But, says Metro Safety Dlreclor
John Flynn, " It's a! safe as we can
make lt·. If something did occur.
we're ready lor It."
The firefighters cite emergoooles
In other subway systems across the
United States, and despite the
transit authority's meticulous
satety planning, they erltlrlze
built-In conditions thai create serious flaw's, Including:
' -Limited access to the 1.5-mlle
Potomac tube;
-Lack of sulrlcent self-pmtalned
breathing tanks carried by !lreflgh·
ters and paramedics plodding down
a tunnel to reach a !1li!Ze;
-Poor ventllatlon against

smoke;

-The danger of the electric third
rail,

which Is supposed to be
de-energized In an emergency;
-The potentlal lor a communlca. lions foul-up between neighboring
tire departments:

blaze with minimal loss. ·
-CongestNI -stret&gt;ts hampering
Flynn sald the tunnels are
fl re companies speeding to stations
equipped
with bi-directional venttla ·
at either end of the tunnPI;
tlon fans to suck smoke away from a
-The potential for panic to sweep
fire, and t.ha1 sophisticated radio
as many ·as 1.400 commuters
syslems llnkllre department s In the
trapped In the tunnel, whose near est
district and Virginia, Which handle
exits are ladders ascending into
lhelr-day-to-day actlvllles on differ·
na rrow shoreline ventilation shafts.
ent channels.
·
"A fire ln lhe Metro today, II It
But the firefighters base their
were to happen tod ay In rush hour,
fears on often lraglc lessons learned
we would most ; cerfa!nly lose
from other fires ln underwater
hundreds of people and dozens of
firefighters,"' Tom Tippett, lhe
sutr.Nay tunnel s.
" Anything that can go wrong,
president of the District ofColumb.ia
does go wrong, " sald San Francisco
firefighter's union, told Congress.
DeputyFireChleiEdwardMurphy. ·
"God forbid thai a major fire
who vividly remembers a January
occur In a Metro tunnel because we
1979 subway fire benea th San
don't have the proper breathing
Francisco Bay that killed one
apparatus to handle lt."
firefighter and injured 50 people.
In a later inteiVIew, Tippett called
- Corrununicatlons failed: The
'the situation "a catastrophe waiting
neighboring Oakland Fire Depart·
to happen."
ment did not notify San Francisco
But Flynn and the Washington
Metropolitan Area Transit Authorfor 35 minutes.
, -VentUatlon failed: The bl·
Ity say the tunnelllnklngthenatlon's
dlrecllonal tans malfunctioned and
capltalandArllngtonCounty, Va.,ls
thick smoke bleW directly In the
equipped with state-of-the-art
faces ol the llre!!ghters.
,
safety instruments:
-Evacuation was delayed: The
The transit authority .a lso says
only way out ot the tunnel was
regui!V', large-scale disaster driUs
and extensive planning prove fire · through a lacked door · Into an
adjolnlng "safety tunnel," while
departmenls in the region Cllll
combine forces to handle a tunnel
(Contlnucl on pag\' E-2)

J

'

group ·rela tions departm~nt. said
police knew I hat Sikhs from Can ad;~
received military trai ning at a
commando ca mp in Alabam a.
"We know I hat ther~ ar cmcrcPn ·
a1y camps that a 1·e bel.ng run I hal

ill egal in ils doings.
l .a l Singh. wanled by th(' FBI on
charges of conspiracy in connC'&lt;·IIon
wilh. 1he Ga ndhi ,·isil, rcporledlv
l mined al th~ camp oulslde £1ir·

tra in in guf•rril la tactics, l'Xplosi\'PS

Indian officials suspecl Lal Singh
and Ammand Singh, wanled b~· lhr'

handling and heavy · weapon handling," Prim· said.
H e said his deparlm~nl loki lh&lt;'
FBl aboul 1hu A lai&gt;&lt;1ma mmp
bl'fore U.S. authorit irs uncovPn'll n
conspiJ·ac~'· Ia ussassin&lt;:~IC'

Prime

Minister

Indian

Ra.Hv

Ga ndhi
. during his visil to the Uni led Slalcs
in May.
U.S. officials have ackno'Yiedged
lhe exislcncc of l hc camp, bu1
app~renlly have found nothing

Earlier I his month. Cha rl e' Ng. a
susp&lt;'Cied accomplice in up 10 21

sex-torture'

mingham. R&lt;'port s also ha\'r said

on similar ch argf's. wPn'

FBI

connCCtC'd

to

incidf'nt s.
Aus1in sa id

lht·

two

offieiai ~

.sla~r ! ngs

in Ca lifornia ,

was ancsl&lt;od in Calga1y , Alb{&gt;rta.
Po lk'f' in Toronto tx%~vc he ca tne
&lt;Jrros~ tht• bordf'r at Detroit in Parlv
:JunC' . hid in Toronto and thpn mow,(j ,
wo.sl 10 Ca lga 1y, w hPre h&lt;' is lx&gt;lng
hold on Ca nadian charges .
Las! year . 1\'ai Chui Ng. unr&lt;'laled
10 Cha rles i\g bul wa nled ln lhc
mu rd~r.s of 13 people in Sea tile. was
&lt;J iso arrcsled in Ca lga 1y. It was
believed he had h id in lhe ci ty for
mm·c I han 20 monlhs before being
ca ptured. He was depol'led in late

ail :li nP

his
depal'lment heliev« i some of lhc
Sikhs involved in lhe Ga ndhi plol
cmered 1he Unilcd Stai&lt;'S from
Canada and olh~rs from Mexico. •
Similarl~• , Amei'icans wan led b~·
U .S. au lhorilies appear 10 ha1·c
f'asily crossed int o Canada .

in

l$1
'l'f'JTorist ucts inside Canada have
(ConlinuNI on page E -2)

Fire Hazard in _Potomac Tunnel
The busy subway tunnel beneath the Polomac River is a "catastrophe
waiting to happen" -an underwater tube where firefighters say scores of
people could perish in a blaze.

Limited Access to Tunnels
Entry into t .s-mile tunnel is only possible from
stations at either en d. plus limited access lor
rescuers through three ventilation shaftS.

· Poor Ventilation
A llhough the tunnels are equipped with bi•
direCtional venlilation fans to suck smoke away
from lire, similar fans malfunction ed in a 1919
San Francisc o subway lire. blowing smoke directly
at firefighters.

Congested Streets
Vehicular traffic cou ld hinder lire compan ies
re sponding to an emergency at stations at either
end of the tunne l.
·

2·foot
walkway

Flreflghting Equipment
There is a lack ol sufficient sell-contained
60-minute breath ing tanks carried by rescuers
plodd ing down a tunn el to . reach a blaze. More
tanks are on order.

~~---""'Nerltilallion shaft
·,

'

......_

---·-

.

..

.

/

Rosslyn station,
Arling1on, Va.

'.\'

...-·.

;

POTENTIAL DISASTER - "A lire In the Metro
today, U II were to l!appen In rush hour, we would IIHllil
cerialnly loRe hundreds of people ·and dozens of

"'

'•
,_ ~~,.,...,
, I

.'

.

--

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. Foggy Bottom station, .
Washington, D.C.
UPI Graph1c I K.Guae

firelighters,' ' Top 11ppeCt, the pm;ldem 01 me~~
of Colmnbla'sllrellgl*r's unlm, told Coogress, UPI

•

�-==-"'""..•

Klan

July 21, 1986

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

Page-E-2-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21, 1985

'85~---~~---

believe God is on their sidt&gt;. a Utry to
com•ey the image of being nothing
more than white versions of the
NAACP. a nd aU - in one way or
another - have a ttempted to
change their images In recent years
to strengthen support through more
sophisticated means.
They use their own crude news·
papers and other llte!"ature tostay In
touch with members and supporters
- the White Patriot Party distrib·
utp,; :;o.OOJ copies of its newspaper
e ach month. Miller says- and some
members . are tied into national
computer networks to reach even
more supporters.
Klansmen can befoundrecrultlng
on street corners In many southern
towns on any weekend. They will
recruit anyone- many have a Klan
Youth Corps - but are most
intere:sted in people under 30. Klan
leaders say more women and young
' professionals with college educa ·
lions are joining. However, the base
of Klan supp011 rema ins In rural
areas among residt&gt;nts with .high
'
school educations or less.
While watchdog groups say there
are no more than IO.OOJ active Klan
members today, Klan leaders say
membership is booming- butt hey
don't give specifics.
"Membership Is ootgrowlng lead·
er~hip," says Jim Blair, Imperial
Wt:Brd oft be Invisible Knights. "We
keepoor membership secret ... but I
will tell you we've shipped out all the
literature we have and we're
running about four weeks behind in
get1 ing robes done."
:Blair says he is trying to rebuild
tl!esecrecythat was lost as the Klan
became more visible, particularly
under Blair's predecessor, Bill
Wilkinson, who resigned last vear
after being one of the m ore
high-profile Klan leaders.
"We want the identities of our

members to remain secret." Blair
said from his office in FivP Points,
Ala . "This was very important in the
olden days. Wehavesecrecytodraw
a higher clientele of people into the
ranks. We're att!"acting many,
many professional people, more
than I ever would have thought.
"We' re finding people want !lhe
, Klan! . There' sa rumble out there."
But there is inte rnal rumbling as
well.
While the Whit e Patriot Party,

(Contlnued from page E·1)

blacks with ax handles , throwing
grapefruits at them, slashing car
tires and firing pellet guns at the
windows of a fast -food restaurant
that employs blacks.
Miller said he has "a great deal of
admiration" and "wiD never critic·
lze" members of The Order. That
sort of alliance Is a dangerous sign,
says Klanwatch's Williams.
"The danger is not so much
they're gning to go through with
these threats' of political terrorism,
given thl! very tenuous grasp
but
support ing Naziism. But there's no
they
!)ave on reality there is a
way you can be Klan and support
continuing
risk we're going to see
Naziism. Naziism is against the
more violence," Williams said.
Cons titution and lawandorderin the
That threat has prompted some
United States. Tht' Klan is to
states to keep a closer watch on the
preserve those things.
Klan. In Georxta. one of the most
"Nazi is a dirty ·word in many
prominent Klan states, tile Legislais
what
That
different
approach
people's eyes. In ordt&gt;r to degradt&gt;
ture
has mandated the Georgia
has
the
attentlonoflawenforcement
the Klan, some people put Nazis and
agencies
and
civil
rights
groups.
Bureau
of Investigation's anti·
Klansmen together in one b\!nch,"
terrorist "'JUad to monitor Klan
Besides
the
military
garb,
the
said Blair, 47.
White Patriot Party and others like act ivlt les.
But while Blair says his group is
1roniea lly, Klan groups welcome
rion-viOlent, criti cs say th8t is empty it undergo firearms training at
police.
·
secret
camps.
·
Miller
minces
few
rhetoric.
"If they feel a little bit apprehen·
in
expla
ining
the
message
of
words
"We find these to be mostly
the WP,P: blacks and Jews have sive about a situation. they'll can us
fictional changes," said Klanwatch
"declared
war" on whites with' arid Jet us knowwherethey'regolng
spokesman Williams. "What they
crime
and legislation such as to be," said Bill Padgett, GBI squad
street
say does not hold up under scrutiny
affirmative action. He says his commandt&gt;r. "We've developed
.... They stili have a total disregard
sort of a rapport with the
group is ready to battle back.
for the fundamen tal principles of
leadership."
"We
don't
deny
that
we're
a
what this country stands for ."
Padgett said constant monitoring
militia,"
Miller
said.
"We
wan•
to
Although the numbers are far
by the GBI has kept Klan rallies
that
image.
We
arm
.
project
below levels of the 1950s and 1960s.
ourselves for two reasons ..:. to relatively peaceful- but he admits
the Anti-Klan Network in Atlanta
lawmen remain wary of the Klan's
defend ourselves and our families In
receives reports. of 40 racially or
philoSophical changes.
this
crime-ridden
society
that
we
religiously motivated incident s
"The Klan has always been a
live,
in
a
nd
to
ensure
our
country
Is
each month. Police agencies believe
symbol of some form of racial
never
turned
over
to
Communism.''
many are simply teenage pranks,
Miller claims to have more than hatred or been involved in some type
but civil rights groups disagree.
of extremist activity, but with the
Wells said the incidents range 2,00J members - most of them
move to tbe right and the paramili·
under 30 a nd 22 percent of them
from cross-burnings to firebombing
tary and neo-Nazi types, it's a little
women
in
five
southern
st
ates.
of black or racia lly mixed homes.
bit of a concern," he said.
Most rallies attract only a few dozen
And some incidents are more grim.
Despite what is perceived as a
m
embers
and
curious
onlookers.
As recently as 1 ~1. five black
serious Klan threat, Klanwatch
"Very
soon,
we're
going
to
belike
women standing on a streer corner
says they are making · progress.
a snowball roUing down the hill."
in Chattanooga. Tenn., we re gunned
Although most states experience at
Miller
said.
"When
we
produce
I
,(OJ
down by members of a Klan splinter
leaS! isOlated racial indiccnts,
members in uniform marching in
group. In Mobile, Ala. , a black man
spokesman Williams sa id his list of
the
street
standing
up
for
the
rights
was lync hed in 1!111.
" most active" Klan stutes has
Wells says lor every one Incident , of white people, lOO,OOJ wUI follow
dropped
from 24, in 1980 to four today
reported, five others go unreported . wil hin six months."
Millet· takes pride In saying none - North Carolina. Georgia, Ala·
Klanwatch and the Anti-Klan
bama a nd Maryland.
of
his members have ever been
network are most feilrful of grouiJli
Part of it is cost!&gt;• litigation
convicted
of
"a
violent
crime
such as the Whit&lt;• Patriot Party.
brought by Klanwatch a nd Similar
against
a
minority."
But
some
of
his
Miller's group has underl'(o~e two
naml? changf's - i1 started as the members now fare such criminal outfits. Part of it is, as Williams
S1ys, more and more prosecutors
Caroli na Knights of the Ku Klux charges, including seven suspec ted
are willing to press cases against
mf'mbcrs
who
were
arreSted
in
Klan and went to the Confederate
Klan members and supporters
Florida
in
early
July
o_
n
charges
of
Knights of the Ku Klux Klan before
charged
in racially and t:Cligiou sly
assaulting
blacks
in
Belle
_
Glade.
settling on White Patriot Party - in
motivated
crimes. But. he cautions,
They are accused of assaulting
based in :"orth Carolina under
Milk•r's IPOdership, has taken a
paramilitat~· approach , old-style
Klan groups such as the Invisible
Knights have tried to dista nce
themselves - at least in public from
the more radica l
organizations.
...
" We dt&gt;finitely should not be
lumped togethet·, " said Blair, whose
group is considered the most
prominent of the old-style groups.
"Some of these other groups are

'

Terrorist...

The remains of Stapley were
found wrapped in a sleeping bag la st
week in a shallow grave not far from
Lake's home on a wooded two-acre
property near Wilseyville.
The body of Lonoie Bond, 27,
Lake's neighbor was found near
Stapley's grave also wrapped in a
sleeping bag. Bond's body was
Identified Tuesday.
Lake had Stapley's identification
cards on him when he w as arrested,
de puties said.
Bond, his common-la w wife,
Brenda O'Connor, their infant son.
Lonole J r., a nd Sta pley all vanished
In May. They had been llvlng next
door to Lake in Wilseyville for about
six months.
Friends sa id Bond, a handyman
with a passion for guns, had argued
with Lake frequently and com·
plained that Lake was making
sexual advances towards O'Conoor.
In a videotape seized at Lake's
property. O'Connor, 20, is shown
pleading for h~r baby. Lake
eventually te lls the mother tha t her
son Is dead, police said.
Coroner Terry Parker said Sta·
pley was identified through finger- ,
pri nt s a nd Is the third of at l ~ast 11
victims found in or near Lake's
property to be identified in the
bizarre caSe. The first was Randy
J acobson, 35, San Francisco.
Lake commit ted suicide a few
days after his an·est for shoplifting
in South San Francisco last month
and investigators found evidence
that led therri to the remote foothill
site where a secret bondage
chamber was found a long with
bodies and human bone chips
scattered down a hillside.

. (Continued from page E ·1 )
been largely aimed a t Tu r kish
targets by Armenians stilllx'nt on
revenge for the 191!i massacre ofl.5
milliOn Annenians b)· Turks .
On March 12, 19&amp;'i, tJu·ee m en who
'
claimed they wpre
.m embers of the
Armenian Revolutionary Army
siormed the Turki sh emhassy in
Ottawa , blasting their wa)' inside
a nd killing a .11-year-olq Pinke rton
security gu ard, Claude Brunelle.
1\l'ei,·e host ages were held fo r
more than four hours and Turkish
Ambassador Coskun Kirka was
Injured jumping from a second-floor
window to escape. Three Arrncni3ns Jiving in Canada are awai li ng
., tria l.
·
While U.S. immigrat ion authori ·
ties · are concerned aboul recent
(etrorist acts in Ca nada, the re is no
plan to increase manpower on lh&lt;·
nortlx'rn border. Austin sa id from
Washinwon .
Including Alaska. that border
runs !i,:l34 miles. The m a inla nd
border is 3,&amp;&lt;JII miles with 170
principal American border sta tions.
Austin sa id 2.700 of its ~.200 US.
(Continued from page E·ll
jlgen ts arr on the much s horter
trapped commuters were waiting
Me~lcan borde r. a case of " putting
for the only firefighter with a key.
your resources where your major
-And the blaze presented a
problems are." U.S. authorities
logistical nightmare: Firefighters
arrested only 13,001 illega l aliens carrying heavy breathing appara·
:along the border wit h Canada last
tus, and lugging their other equip·
:year, but more than I million on the ment. trUdged a mUe into the
;southern border.
·
· underwater tunnel to reach the
· Canadian citizens do not need flames and deadly smoke.
·visas to enter the United States. but
"After the BART fire, all transit
border agents take a closer look at authorities became very concerned
people whose origins are in areas of by subway underwater tunnels,"
known terrorist operations. such as said Richard Kelly, general superinthe Middle East a nd India .
te ndent of the New York-New
" We're concerned about the Jersey Port Authority Trans·
; potential .of terrorists entering the Hudson - PATii -system. "It's ·
· United States from everywhere very risky If you don't know what
: and Canada is part of It," he said.
you're doing."

Tunnel...

/

I

\'. .:

The Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- E-3 •

Extension notes

Meigs County agent's corner
By JOHN C. RICE
Eneoolon Ageal

pasture field . After finding one of
the animals dead and others in
trouble, he thought back to whal
Agriculture &amp;lid CNRD
could have happenoo. Several oftbe
Melp~
POMEROY - Dairy Tour
other heifers showed nervousness
'
Tuesday, July 23, at 7:30 p.m . at trembling, and Incoordination. He
Green Hills Farm &lt;ll!"ase FamUy then called the veterinarian . An
Farm).'
·
antidote was administered to the
Dairy Day - Friday, July 26, at rest of the herd. After this ws done,
the animals Improve except lor
Wooster.
on!!. This heifer also died. Yews are
Prevent Livestock Deaths Recently I talk!ld to a person woo some olthe most toxic plants. Yews
lost two heifers for poisoning. The . are toclx the entire year but most
story goes something like this. He cases of polsorung occur In the
trimmed some landscape plants, spring and summer.The point I am tryjng to make is:
which happenEd to be yews and
threw the trimmings Into the we must he careful what we feed

an a ttempt to bolster its rolls and
present a m ore savory image.
"The main reason we changed our
name was because therp werr so
many people who agreed with us
and wanted to become active but
were terrified of losing tbeir jobs If
!hey joined an organization with the
· Klan name," Sllid Miller, 44. a
Vietnam VJ!teran and former Green
Beret."'Our beliefs are basically Ure
same. We're still working for the
rights of white people and for the
surviva l of the white race.
"There are many different Klan
groups in tbe country. They're
trying to do has lcally the same thing
we are. We're just trying a different
approach."

.

our livestock. There are also some
materials we must keep away from
cattle. Urea ·· fertlllzers and all
1nsectlcldes shou,ld be protected not
only from llvestock but humans as
well.
Now, back to the plants. I would
like to mention some of the more
common plants that at one time or
another' depending on the season
and growing condltlo!lli, are toxic to
livestock . I will break these down
Into places they are usually found .
Pastures: cocklebur, Star-of·
Bethlehem . Wooded pastu res:
black locust, Indian turnip, night ·
shade, oaks, buckeye and wild

•

cherry. Odd areas such as road'·
sides, barnyards, and waste areas: .
hemp or marijuana. jimsonweed,
pigweed , pokebery and potato. This
Is not a complete Ust, nor are all of,
these plants poisonous at all times .
Corn Rootworm - A Problem or
Not - Recently I was asked to
check on com rootworm damage In : ·
corn. It wsa 'not. a question oL
whether com rootworm was pres •. .
'
ent but should he spray. As com .
sllks begin to develop, adults of the
rootworm and Japanese bettie may
be present In such numbers tha t
they clip silks to a level that .
Conllnued on E-4

.

Lowest Price Ever1 ..64K Mo~el4 Dual-Disk Comp~ter
PART OF TJUS house'on First Avenue In Gallipolis ntay date loUie
I"I!IOs when Qr. Anlolne Saug~"aln !lved here. It Is Hkely that the main
body ol the muse dales to 1866, when Charles Welbert, aa tmmll!l"ant
from Bavaria, held tbe properly. In 1794 a 111-year-&lt;lld - Henry
Brackenridge- visited Dr. Sauvaln. ~rll&lt;!kenrldge's recoUectlons of
early Gallipolis are a valu.ble edition to Gallipolis' hlstorlcalllterature. ·

CROSSBURNING-AionememberoftheKKKslandsguarddurlng.
the traditional cross-burning ceremony In Stone Mountain, Ga.; In 1973.
Some factions of the klan iiay they !ll'e turning away from tbe violence
that characterized the group In the past. UPJ
there remains a !iJ·ass-root sa pathy.
"A lot of times we see a problem
with Insensitive law enforcement
and insensitive prosecutors," Willi·
ams said. "They will investigate a
cross-burning, see nobody wa s hu rt,
say it's probably just a prank and
saJi there's nothing they can do.
"To me, 1hat's a very se1ious
mistake IJeCausc it sends message
to the vic tim that they havt• no one to
turn to and it sends a message to the
thugs th a t they can gel away with
it ."
•
While thr Klan likes being
perceived as a menace. Kl an
leaders- at least the old-style ones
- say they do not necessarily seek

a

By JAMES SANDS
Special C&lt;)rrespondent

answer.''
Despite such moderate com·
mmts, the wateh and worry by !aw
eilforCC'ment ag£&gt;ncics and civil

rights g roups goes on .
Says the GBJ's Padgett , " It 's a
part of our society that won't go

away.··

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House on First Avenue dates
to 1790s, in Sands opinion

total control.
"If all the right-wing groups
should by some grea t ruling merge
tomorTow and if all ofusweregiven
a free rein and had the power to
overthrow the gove mment of ' the
Unit ed States," says the Invisible
Knights ' Blair, "I'd be scared to
death. That's definitely not the

Guardian Angel
leader -a victim in
California killings
WILSEYVILLE, Calif. (UP I 1 The third victim of a killer who may
have claimed as many as 25 lives in
the Sierra Nevada foothills , includ·
blg former Reynoldsburg resldt&gt;nt
Paul Cosner, has been identified by
authorities investigating the case.
The victim, Robin Scott Staply,
the foundt&gt;r o.f the San Diegochapter
of the G\Jardlan Angels, had been
living with neighbors of slaying
suspect Leonard Lake. He was
Identified through fingerpriqts, the
Calaveras County coroner's office
said late last week.

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

Pomeroy-Midd

•

BY JANEIL

beating. "
Henry Brackenridge In 171!4 was
10 years old and pad beeri placed at
Dr. Saugrain's by Henry's lather
when Henry took ill on a boat hip
down river. The father continued on
his business venture further down
the river sending for his son later .
Young Henry's recollections of
Gallipolis are significa nt for soow·
lng what the town lookeQ like In
1794.
"Gallipolis, with the exception of
a lew straggling log-houses, of
Continued on E-4

GALLIPOLIS - The house we
feature today ai 23ll First Avenue
was b!'lleved to date to the 1790s
the people who
In preparation lor
GaUipolls' sesquicentennial. According to tbe
committee, Dr.
Saugrain (one of
tlie French 500)
had the house
years after Galllpoll•
llshed. For sure, later owners
added to the house, the most
notll'eable ·· being the work or
Charles Welbert In !866. '
In 1794 Henry Brackenridge
visited with Dr. Saugraln and later
wrote about his experience:
" Behold me once more In port,
a nd domiciliated at the house, or
inn. of Monsieur, or rather Dr.
Saugrain, a cheerful little Fl'f'nCh·
man, four feet six English measure,
and a chemist, natural philosopher,
.and physician, both In the English
and French signification ol the
word.
"I was delighted with my present
liberation from the irksome thral·
dom of the canoe, and with the
possession of the free use of my
limbs. After wrapping m y blanket
round me. which was my only
bedding, I threw myself lnlo a
corner for a c&lt;iuple of hou rs during
the oontinuance oi the fever and
ague, and then· rose up refreshed ,
with the lightness of spirits which I
·possessed in an unusual degree.
"I AM OUT of the house, and
along· the bank, where 1- met a boy
about my own size; I laid hold of
him In mirth, but he, mistaking my
vivacity, gave m e a sound

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Touch-Tone/pulse dialing' .

1143-298 Bod&lt;up b l - - ·

�1

•

,.,.,.

-·

..

'

House ••• -----------~C~o~n~tln~u~ed~fro~m~E~-3~-------

"ON ONE OCCASION· the
brother of Madame Saugraln and I
pushed a light canoe to an Island
above the town, wliere we pulled
some com, took it to the floating
mill. and, excepting some of the
raw grains, had had nothing to eat
from the day ~fore, untU we
carried home the Oour and made
some bread, !Jut had. neither milk
nor meat."
experiments: _
·
Brackenridge also totd about how
· "But what most astonished some
he returned to his home In
of our Visitors was a large peach in
Pittsburgh on the barge of General
a ·glass bottle, the neck of which
Wilkinson:'
could only admit a common cork;
"ThE' hoat was propelled against
this was accompllshed by tying the
the stream by :.5 or ll men,
bottle to the limb of the tree, with
sometbnes with a pole, by the
the peach when young Inserted Into ' cordelle. and often by the oar.
it. His swans, which swam round
There was also a band of musicians,
basins of water, amused me more
and the whole had the appearance
than any of the wonders exhibited
of a mere party ot pleasure. The
by the wonderful man."
splendor of the furniture - the
Young master Brackenridge also elegance of the dresses- and then
told how the people of Gallipolis had
the luxuries of til!&gt; table produced
a fondness for S.hots which were
an . effect which cannot he easily
wooden shoes. The sabot maker
described. The boat was fitted up in
among the French 500 had been the
a style of convenience, and even
saoot carver at the Palace of
magnificence scarcely surpassed
Versa!Ues where the French kings
by the present steamboats."
resided. Brackenridge Included In
Twenty North Buckeye, Crooks·
his report of his 1794 Gallipolis stay
ville, Ohio 43731 Is lhe address of
bow the town had little to Pat that
James Sands, auihor ollhls article.

Agriculture and our .community
summer and fall cutting management are related. Research has
determined that when harvests are
GaWa C&lt;lunly
.
made at late bud-early bloom stage
of
developmpnt, the tall ~uttlng
GALLIPOUS- It's not too early
schedule
Is important for stand
to he thinking ahout tall alfalfa
management .
maintenance.
Make the tast regular harvest by
Growing conditions during Sep-·
temher and · early OCtober are the calendar; northern Ohio, Sept.l
frequently favorable for at!,alfa to 7; central Ohio, Sept. 3 to 12;
growth. Producers observing this southern Ohio, Sept. S.15. This
growth may desire to harvest meal\S that on those fields with an
during this time period. Increased intensivP cutt-Ing schedule, no harvemphasis on alfalfa. production, est should he taken ftom an
higher ,hay values and recently Intensive cutting sehedule, no harv·
developed alfalfa varieties have est should he taken from early-mid
renewed questions on the possibility September to mid-October. At least
30 days between til&lt;' last regular
of making a fall harvest.
In terms ·of persistence, spring,
By BRYSON R. CARTER
Exlelllllon Acen&amp;
Apiculture and CNRD

7 i s time for visitors and

Hall would not divulge the
locatlon,orsaywhenGMwillmake

YOU

rea

a

,

GALUPOLIS - Some of you
have noticed In reading the Peeps
column that It refers occasionally to
a wiie. Well, this wife has a slew of
relatives, principally In Jackson
County, and it's the, summer
months when these relallves come
by the Peeps mansion for a soclat
calL
TRUE IT IS that Frau Peeps
calls upon them occasionally, too,
and almost always she takes along
her husband who gets a charge out
of these kin. In some instances the
only thing any of ttl!'m have In
common with Frau Peeps is
CO!lsangulnity. But that 's enough.
ANYWAY, THE society pages of
this newspaper are bubbllng with
visitors calling upon friends In and
around Gallipolis and vice versa.
The little desk dictionary reads that

Is
J

MIN~,o~~~o~ ~10DELI
PH. 245-5051

e m 10 paperworkoutdetatlsconce,.;m,gthestte
,
and finalize a labor agreement with
vice versa is pronounced vice-see the United Auto Workers union
vurs sah, and It's pure Latin he fore announcIng IIs dec lsi on.
meaning '"conversely" or '"the
Hallsalditappearsanagreement
relations being rever~."
With the UAW on the pioneering
labor contract, a key fealure of the
THEREFORE, IT'S not only a Sa,t;Jrn proksjleclkt, Is~ear. tin
1t 1oo
case of visitors calltng upon friends,
ewe reget gc1oseto
but friends calling upon visitors. Or
wou)d you argue that the second 'r,;::;::;::;::;::=;::====::jj
choice there merely converts the
second part of the statement to the
meaning of the first part. U you're•
not confused, you're a better man
than Peeps.

MGM FARM CITY.~INC.

ANYWAY,ALLthisarosebnm
the visitors at the Peeps' house. A
42-year-old m,a n from Colorado and
his family were part of the visitors.
A 40-year-old man from Columbus
and his family were the other part.

Diamond
I
Ring Center

YOU KIND of feel that you
wasted your time reading thls,
don't you? Nobody made you do it!
I

Cat returns home - after long trip
DAUPID.N, Pa. (UP!)- A black leathery bottom lip that we always
cat that jumped out of a van near madefunolwhen he was little."
Dayton, Ohio, has returned home
The cat, named Muddy Water
nearly three ypars to thP day after White because of his color, was
running away, its owner satd traveling with the woman's stepson
Friday.
on either June 23 or June 24, 1982,
"I'm sure it's mine," said when he jumped out of a van near
Barbara Paule, 37. "When I took Dayton, about 450 miles from hts
him to thP veterinarian yesterday, home.
the doctor who examined hkn as a
The 4-year-old cat returned to his
kitten said he was confident it was Dauphin home .In southcentral
the same cat.
Pennsylvania on June 24, Paule
"His markings are the same. His said.
chest is the same," said Paule, who . "He came and just flopped down
added th\' cat also has a ' ' 'very llke he was home," the woman said.
"Hedldn'tcome like hewanted lobe
fed but llke he belonged here. I
thought It was strange."
Paule said shP fed the animal for
three days and then on the fourth
Continued from E-3
day realized It was Muddy Water
pollination is disrupted. If five or White. "Once I held hbn and really
more beetles are found per sllk looked at him, I knew It was
mass when 75 percent of the plants Muddy," the woman said.
have sllked, and silk clipping to
The cat was "banged up with
one-fourth inch or less is observed, scratches and cuts" when he
a rescue treatment is warranted. If showed at thP house, the woman
silks are wilting and turning brown, said.
poUinatlon Is complete and addl·
"He stU! doesn't look good, but he
ttonai cUpping by the beetles will is loved. He must he exhausted
not affect yield. Monitoring your because he is laying around .... We
field can also determine if an don't know what he did all that Ume.
lnsecficlde ls needed next year.
He's not talking."

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3 gol. GOTT COOKER .........!I,q.,:.U,!L Now oidy 119.99
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1.3 (U. ft. WHEEl BARROW ....!!P.·.!1.9.!l.. Now Only 122.99

'I•

how the children would react to
Mrs. Moore also said she walked
being separated.
.
Tlf!any
to school "longer than
"Tif!any and Tort were •close,"
Tlf!any
wanted
me to. ''
she said. "Tlftany doted over Tori. I
"The
second
day Tltfany said
worried about Tory's feellng left
'Mom,
I
don'
want
you to walk me
behind, so I put her In pre-school
any
more:
But
I
told
her I walked
earlier than usual to give her
with
her
because
Tori
wanted to,"
SC)mething to do so she wouldn'tfeel
·
she
recalled.
.
left behind."
And this year when Tori starts to
school, Mrs. Moore admits they'll
probably be some tears- from her.
"I cry· the first day and the last
day. If they've had a really good
year, I'll get misty-eyed when they
leave knowing they won't get that
teacher again," she said. "But rm
usually excited, knowing they're
Hammond says klndergarteners parents expect, parents should not readytogo,eagertogo,andeagerto
are Introduced to books and reading, worry, she says:.
learn."
although! many of them already
Some schools wUI suggest that a
That flTst day of school is a
know their alphabet by this tbne.
child he held backtorepeattheyear, milestone in the family - fo~ jx!l~·
Thecla5sroommlxleads.chlldren ·she said, adding that the move is cWidrel) and pan'nts, says ; J:Jr:.
away bnm a self-oriented concept, made only wfth the parents' Richard Leavy, a clinical psycholo· gist at Ohio Wesleyan University In
or a "me-f~us" to "us", she said, consent.
adding that this change can he
"The early years are very Delaware.
particularly bnportant tor the child Important, but they're not make or
He'll reach that t'nllestonethls fall
who hasn't hac! many playmates his break years," she said. "It may be when his son Aaron goes to SChoo\ ••
age.
they're (children) developing And his reactions ma1.. be ~ Utile
And it also acqualrits children
with what she calls the "regime of slowly."
1 The Toledo public school system 1
study skills" that wUI guide them suggests parents help the youngster
through Ia ter years.
by reading - and not necessarily to
If a child doesn't perform as
the child - before the child enters
the classroom.

•·

Kindergarten;s social role
in a child's total education

By United Press lntemallonal
Kindergarten Is a social as well as
edUCatlonal'playground for youngsters that helps change· 'me" to •'us",
according to a Bowling Green State·
University educator.
· Ro8aUnd Hammond, associate
professor of education. at BGS!J,
says kindergarten not only lntroau.
ces a child to the basal learning
concepts, but also provides a social
context for them.
A third part of kindergarten is the
developmentofstudysklllsthatthpy
can adapt to through the rest of the
educational years, she says.

w

COLI.l"MBUS (UP!) -A gigantic use the ColumbUs· schools for a .
elfiCtrOnic screen conS\lmes one testing ground for the 1990s micro'
wall of a classroom. Students have computers and see how the teachers
and students can work with the
smaller screens on their desks.
Teachers can project maps and products to move classrooms
graphics onto the big screen. They further Into the computer age. .
Assistant Superintendent Howput assignments on them. They help
students work math probleins on ard Merriman believes Columbus
them. ·
· was chosen for Its sgrong overall
A scene like that could befoundln computer program within the
a science fiction movie today. And schools as well as the summer
it 's possible it could he the class,room program. .
"We have done large-scale proin an American school In a . few
jects and done thelt) well. plus ey
years.
TheromputerflrmApplelnc. has saw we had a strength of people,"
chosen the Columbus Public Schools Meriman said.
The program willglve students
as one district in the country to '* an
experimental computer classroom. -access to state-of- the-art equiJ?ment
Columbus Public School officials that won't get Into the regular
say they were chosen because of education pipeline for five to 10
their Summer Tech computer years, officials say.
"It's really a futuristic kind of
training program that has been held
thing. That's why It's not well
for the past thnee summers.
The computer manufacturer will defined yet,'' Merriman said.
He also said Apple and school

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THIS COUPON IS WORTH '2.50 Off
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MGM Farm

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afler

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Call Carol &amp; James Svoboda, Gallipolis, OH.
(614) 446-6318
EFFS/Educational Foundation for Foreign Study, 23.5 Greenwich ~ve.

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1981 OLDS. CUTLASS ............................ S4695

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T-Top, V-6, auto.

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1979 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE ................. S2995

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·

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1971 OLDS CUTLASS ............................. S1695
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1978 FORD MUSTANG COBRA .............. S1695

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1982 BUICK SKYLARK ........................... S3895

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Marine Battery

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21.88
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Ten delicious, hand-breaded
fried shrimp, with our
natufa1..cut french fries, fresh
c.Ole slaw, Southern-style
hush puppies, cocktail saUce
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from 39.95

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Chrome Timing Chain Co11er m9o
For

Prices In effect July 21, thru July 27, 1985. We reserve _the right

$3 99
•

GALLIPOLIS OH.

·

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limit

.... Sale9.95

Small block Chevy. Reg. 13.95.. .... . .

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Custom Air Cleaner mao &amp; *1481

-

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18.95 . . .. ..... ... ..... . . . ........' . ..

$3.39
Each dinner includes: 2 lloklen brown fish fillets, natural-cut french
fiies. fftsh cole slaw and 2 hush puppies.

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__ ......J..._ .... - - - -

•

Our service

'

Sa•e Over t 0 00

•or Danish. Cennan, Dutch, French, Italian: Norwegian, Finnish
Spanish, JapapeJe. Mex.ican, Swiss, Belgian or Austrian.
,

350 V-8, air cond.

18240C &amp; H627DC

Call us and. discpver how you can hoat an European student.

&amp;lencbhlp II our lanp..e.

1980 CUTLASS SUPREME ....................... S549$

a good buy.

Reg. 89'

Reg. 21.88

At EFFS.

1980 ·DODGE PICKUP ............................ S399 S

6 cyl auto ., P.S, PB, A.C.

1.50 rebate

I

· High

One of the most ettciting things about opening your home to a European
high school s'tudent from Educational Foundation for Foreign Study Is
sharing each other's . world - in English. With EFFS there ~ ~o
language 'barrier, because every one of our students speaks English m
addilion to his nati\'e language. And EFFS removes other banien as
well· all students are thorou~hly screened, ha\'e Full insurance ooverase
and \heir own spending money . .. and you don't ha"e to ha~r"e children
to host a student So there's nothing standing between you and this very
special friendship.

Farm
homeowners
Insurance

Valvoline
10W30
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*U1 L Reg. 29.95

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You both speak

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-----------------------------1

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404 Second An., Gallipolis
446·1647

Stove, sink, ice box, sleeps 8.

Your Cost

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----------------------------,

Extension ...

officials wUI begin work this fall to
make a blueprint for the program.
Merriman· has vl.slons of replac·
lng the traditional chalkboards with
large electronic screens. Teachers
will he able to type assignments or
math problems onto the large
screens. That would !hen showup on
the smaller screens on the students
desks.
Teachers would also call maps
and other graphics onto the screens.
Stude.nts could use thir computers
for research, ·calling Information
from theschoolllbrary and possibly
publlc libraries.
Merriman says students ~auld
have unlimited access to educa·
Uonal material through their
romputers.
No price tag has been put on this
program but It "really Is anything
we want to make It ," according to
Merriman.

SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
Huck-Finn Self-Contained Camper ....... S795

Lowrafes

Electronic classrooms appear ·

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PHONE: 992· 7 711

~~~~~i·~~~~~·~··~

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'\ ·

MOWERS - TILLERS - TR~CTORS

hplr••
7131/U

The Sunday Tirnes-Sentinei-Page-E-5

different that what Mrs. Moore
He says that if parents have the
experienCed.
negative attitude, they will feet
Mrs. Moorehadstayedhomewith more emotion. He said that can
her children, although theydldgoto · transfer tot hechild and the child will
pre-school. Both the Leavy's work think thai going to school is terrible.
and Aaron was in full-day child care
"Look at it as the child embarking ·
at theageofthree.
on a wonderful journey, " he said.
"Some parents probably wnr he · "He (the child 1 is growing up, .
emotionally upset, but they've got to expanding his . knowle(jge, his
reinemhertota!&lt;e it as art every day friends ."
·
. ·
event," Leavy said of the child's
Leavy says his SQn is quite
going off to scbool. '"What makes it prepared for that first day In school
difficult is the uncertainties."
In that he knows where the school is,
Some of the uncertainties - or how to get there, and knows some of
'' things you can't control" - are his classmates, so he isn't anticipathow wlll the child get a long with the ing many prol;llems.
teacher, the classmates, the other
Leavy, himself, is getting a little
kids on the bus, the lunches, he said. more excited each day as that first
To overcome those lil'St-day day of school gets closed.
problems Leavy advises parents to
"I'm looking forward to the new
take a positive attitude.
topics of discussions with my son."
'·

"'oore

••

r;B:lan=ch:a:rd:.=;:==============;;:~~::~=====:::====~
ar~~~~':::::U::o%':'~~r wants io
SPECTACULAR SA~INOS AT

..

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Sherry since shortly before Tiffany was
Moore had feelings ot being left born nine years ago, will see her
behind when Tiffany, her oldest second child Tori enter first gl'ade
child, started to school.
this year. Three-year-old Ryan will
"I wa_lked her Into the door of the go to pre-school two mornings a
classroom. She raced In without week this year.
turning around to ·say goodbye,"
"Thatleetlngofhelni;t)eftbehind
Mrs. Moore recalled. "Ifelt a tlt.tle wasn't real bad," Mrs.
said,
left behind."
· adding that her b~t concern
Mrs. Moore, who has not worked when Tllfany went to •school was

•

24 HOURS

theendofourwork,".hesald.
Michigan, Tennessee and Kenlucky are said to he the leading
conienders in the hlgWy publicized
Sattirn contest.
MlchlganolflcialstoldtheJournal
the longer GM delays, the better the
state's chances are.
"The longer the delay, the more
we win," said Rick Cole, a
spokesman for Gov. James J.

ut

By J. SAMUEL PEEPS

NOW OPEN

Pomerov-M\ddleport-Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

FirSt ·day of school: milestone for the family

grow

alfalfa
.
harvest and killing frost are needed first cutting is delaye\:1 until mid·
to adequately restore root and bloom, early to mid-June In Oltio, or
when cutting Intervals are lengcrown reserves.
Recent research from Iowa thened In 42-45 days, the detrimenIndiCated alfalfa yields were 0.61 tal effect of harvesting on any date
tons per acre lower the following in the fall ts lessened. However, It's
harvest year where a harvest was stlll not wise to cut alfalfa stands on
made durtng thiS period the. a regular ba.s ls' from mid·
previous fall. This trial lnclud&lt;d . September to intd ,Qcfoher and
both the older adapted var.Ietlesand especially not the same field year
. .
more recently deve)oped varieties_, after year.
If you would like more detalls on
with thP carryover effect slmllar
this topic call us for a free copy of
among all varieties.
Both Pennsylvania and Michigan Agronomic Tip F·l4 "Fall Alfalfa
have recently reported when the Management."
.....:~---------------------------------------:-----­

GM has selected plant site~ paper says

PEEPS, a Gallipolis Diary:

bo

best months to

September and October are

LANSING, Mich. (UPI) - ,The
General •Motors Corp. teptatlvely
hasselectedaslteforltsflrstSaturn
automObile plant, a Lansing, Mich.,
newspaper reported Friday.
The Lansing State Journal based
the report on comments of GM
spokesman Stan Hau:
"Wehaveagoodldealnourmlnds
wherewewantlttogo, "Hall to1dthe
paper.

d

July 21, 1985

winter.

which that of Dr. Saugraio's was
one, .;onsisted of two long rows of
barracks built of logs, and partltl·
oned off Into rooms of 16 or 20 feet
wide, with what Is called a · cabin
roof and wooden chimneys. At one
end there was a larger room than
til&lt;' rest, which served as a council
chamb&lt;'r and ball-room ...
BRACKENRIDGE also made'
mention of Dr. Saugr,aln's !;~bora·.
lory where he conducted·.

'II

July 21, :1985

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

Page E-4 The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Sale 14.88

Save Over 10.00
Chrome Dress·Up Kits *&amp;78o &amp; ma1
For oma'll

block Chevy. Reg. 49.95 .........

Sale 39•88

Save 20.00
Chrome Oil Pan •ss4o
For

om all block Chevy. Rag. 59.95.......... Solo

39•9

�Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleaunt, W. Va.

Page E-6-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 21, 1986

Nation's beaches
face destruction

Inside today:

'

• By llle B4!Dd ......... Pqe~~5, 8
Orulhilll ........ Pqe~~t,1, a
~

By ROBERT McNEILL

Fight, saymanypropertyowners,
Unlled Press lnlematlonal
developers and polltlclans. Retreat,
The New Jersey roast was once a say scientists and
strip of broad, sandy beaches. But envtronmentallsts.
most of tbe sand has washed away,
What they are up against are
l~vlng ugly sea walls to protect . ocean levels thatareriSing at aboutl
property . ..
toot per century. That might 5oui.l
Sea·front buildings at Oce31l City, minuscule, but 1 toot In vertical rise
Md .. Including scme new condom!· is multlpUed mai)Y times when
nlums, are threatened by vanishing measured over a gradually sloping
beaches and people are demanding roast - from 500 feet to 1,500 feet
that something be done.
over much at the U.S. coast.
North Carolina commerclal flThese were tbe tlgures presented
sl)ermen areseekingfederallegtsla- In June In "Saving the American
tion to permit construction of Beach: A Position Paper by
mile-long jetties to prevent shoallng Concerned Coastal Geologists. "The
In Oregon Inlet.
13-member group met In Savannah,
''
The National Park Service has Ga., at the Skidaway Institute of
•
••
•'
built groins to keep the lighthouse at Oct&gt;angraphyConferenceonAmeri·
~
Cape· Hatteras from being under· ca's Eroding Shoreline.
,,
\'
f
mined and toppling Into the surf.
They concluded: . "Sea level Is•
f
'
.\
Millions of dollars are being spent rising and the American shoreline Is .
to restore .the beach at Miami retreating. · We lace economic and
,.
•
Beach, which aU but disappeared envtromental reallties that leave us
under advancing high water. And twocbolces: planastrategjcretreat
the state of Florida plans to spend now, or undertake a vastly expenUXl m!Ulon to rebuild beaches along sive program of amoring the
Its Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
roastUne and, as required, .retreat·
Each year, the Gull of Mexico lngthroughaserlesofunpredtctable
floods 50 square miles of Louisiana disasters.''
marshlands. Entire Islands have
The conference recommended 43
disappeared.
· measures that federal, state and
RFSTORATION - Pictured Is the SIH mlDlon beach restorallon
projed spannln~r the full 111-mDe length ol M1aml Beach, expanding the
California cliffs are collapsing local governments could impose.
beach
to a 006-foot width, as seen In this before-and·atter shot. UPI
Into the Paclflc Oct&gt;an.
Included were:
Why'! Because the sea level is ·
EUmlnatlon of public works
rtslng.
projects that would' encourage projects to stabilize beaches protect
Jeff Williams, research marine Williams. "They are losing .we·•we Mve no rock, no solid
· The oceans are rising because of development of ocean front prop- property, not beaches. "The pro- geologist with the U.S. Geological Uands at a rate estimated at 50
sediments out there except lor our
the· "greenhouse effect," excess erty, ellrnlnatlon of all tax and tected property belongs to a few Survey In Reston, Va., saysvlrtuaUy square miles a year."
clam shells and oyster shells."
carbon dioxide In the atmosphere Insurance subsidies tor coastal lndtvldualsrelatlvetothenumberof aUcoastalstateshavebeacheroslon
Harold Schoef!Jer of Lafayette,
·Moreover, engineering projects
caused by the burning olfossll fuelS.
construction, prohibition of sea· · Americans who use beaches," they problems. The worst are In Louis!- La., president of a groupcalledSave
along the upper Mississippi River
This Increases and traps heat,
walls and jettles, Umlted use of said. "If left alone, beaches wlll ana, Florida and New Jersey, he Our Coast, notes that the Louisiana
and Its tribu\ilries have reduced the
causing glaciers and polar Ice to
beach reconstruction, removal of always be present, even lllhey are says, butthereareseriousproblems delta plain wa5 built by river
sediment flow that contributes to the
melt, thus raiSing sea levelS.
buildings threatened by high water, moving landward."
along tbe mid· Atlantic roast, the sediments and, grologlcally speak·
delta.
No end tothlSisforeseenandthere and creation of "setback" lines to
"American taxpayers are paying Gull roast of Texas and the lng, is relatively young.
"It's hard to picture bow a dam In
Is not one thing man can do to stop it. ensurenewstructuresareerecteda huge sums to temporarily protect California coast.--"Since it's all new and recent
Montana could affect a marsh In
So the question is, shaU man reasonably safe distance !rom the the private property of a relative
"Tbe entire stateofLouislana has deposits, it's very sensitive to wave Louisiana," said Schoef!ler, "but It
confront the ocean and.!Jght it foot by ocean.
few," they said in their position problems except forpartso!Grand
action, current, storms, wind and does."
loot, or shall he gracefully retreat
Tbe geologists said that most paper.
Isle, which Is a barrier Island," says what have you," said Schoef!ler.
before an Inexorable force.
r-~~~~~~~--~----------------~----------~~--~~~~~~----~·- -------------

•

Navy visitor
.to Great Lakes
gets its share
of attention
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP! )- Summer
voyages on the Great Lakes are
providing the U.S. Navy 'with
exposure to potential recruits and
this year's visitor, the U.S.S.
Edenton, already has attracted Its
share of altention.
"It's one of our best advertising
tools," Lt. Dick Trahan, a recrutter
who follows with a truck·load o(
navy exhibits, said at the Toledo port
of call.
The 283-foot Edenton marks the
eight season the navy has scheduled
trips on the Great Lakes.
The vessel already has attracted
20,000 visitors, although the majorIty board It to see a navy ship first
hand. The respoll.'je by Toledo
visitors may have )leen Its best and
most enthusiastic yet, said Lt. Russ
Sturgis, Its chief engineer. Its next
ports of call are Clayton, N.Y., and
Halifax, Nova Scotia.
"For tlleslzeofit, it's gelttngvery
good numbers," Trahan said.
The Great Lakes exposure offers
the navy a unique recruiting
opportunity, Trahan said.
Another way of drawing attention
to the navy's presence is the
reqlrement that sailors wear the
popular while bellbottom uniforms
while Oil shore leave, said Sturgis.
Recruiters survey newly enlisted
sallors to determine bow effective
ship's visits are, said Trahan.
"We keep a very close track of
that," he said.
· While not iarge by most standards, the Edenton can tow the
navy's largest aircraft carrier
across the Atlantic without
refueUng.
The Edenton is capable of
performing a similar type of
recovery mission conducted for tbe
Air In.d ia wreckage off the coast of
Ireland.
" We've done that type of work
with deep sea drones, " said Sturgis,
referring to the unmanned subma·
rlne that pulled up the aircraft's
flight recorders.
The Edenton was commissioned
In 1971 and Is home-ported In Ut.tie
Creek. Va . A British-built vessel, Ills
one of three In the U.S. Navy, Sturgis
said. Its captain Is Lt. Cmdr. Silas
Thorneiii.
.
Earlier thiS spring It retrieved a
jet tighter off the roast o!New York,
where divers worked underwater
tor 64 hours, said Sturgis.
At most the ship Is Involved In
three major rescue operations a
year, he said. The rest of the time Is
spent training.
. ·
Twenty divers fill out the crew of
110. Master Chief, Ralph Hernan·
· dez, one of fll master divers In the
Navy, said the divers are capable ot
worldng at depths of :OJ teet.
It's the tlrst ship In the Atlantic
Oeet to be equipped with a
mlxed·gas diver's life support
system, which allOWS divers to stay
'under water longer, Hernandez
saki.
·

THE

•

e

•

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Vot.3&amp;, No.88
Copyrlfhtf!l 1 98&amp;

and n e w opproa t:h to in-ce ntive a wards; and

in addilion to regular p re m iums and ribbons.
Ce ntral Trus t will present to winners in nearly

lOO d es ig nated cat ego rie~ of non-livestock
proj ects a nd s m a ll ani mals:
l et· Pl ace ........................... 15.00
2nd Pia c., ............;............ S I 0 .00
3rd Place ............................ 5 5.00

\

s

in reeognition or the- Ca llia County .YOUth
who put forth hard wo rk and long hours of
effort in tl1e planning and develo prit ent of their exhlhha4

oPI•

.. , r

.. I

.

"'

PITTSBURGH (UP!) -A West
VIrginia senator $8YS Wheeling·
PlttsburghSteelCorp.,struggllngto
survive In bankruptcy, and the
United Steelworkers union are ''not
that far aparrt" In a wage dispute
that luis led to the first major
walkoutlnthelndustry lnmorethan
25 years.
Picket Une; sprang up at nine
plants In Pennsylvania, West Vlrglnla and Ohio at 12:01a.m. Sunday,
marking the first time !be USW has
struck a major steelmaker since

1959.
The union meanwhilelsappeallng
a federal judge's decision not to
Interfere with a bankruptcy court
ruling allowing the company to
abrogate the labor agreement.
FederalmedlatorsRobertHouse·
holder and Carmen Newell have
recessed negotlatloris after saying
the two sides were too far apart on
vital Issues. They said they would
attempt to bring both sides back to
the table but not tor several days.

26 Cent•

Sen. Jay Roc~efeller, D-W.Va.,
wbo as West VIrginia governor
played a role In the survival of
Weirton Steel Co. as an employeeowned firm, disagreed with the
mediators' assessment.
"As both skies know, my of! lee
has stayed close the negotiatiOns on
a daily basts lor tbe past few
months," Rockefeller said Sunday.
"I happen to knowthatthetwosldes
arenotthatfarapart. Theyoweltto
themselves and tbe whole region to
go the · extra mile to reach an
agreement.''
During eight rmnths of Intense
bargaining the company at 'first
sought a reduction In hourly wage
and benefit costs from $21.«) to
$15.20. 'The firm then llled for
Chapter 11 under the U.S. Bank·
ruptcyCodeAprill61nanattemptto
restructure a $514 mUllon debt.
After a federal bankruptcy judge
ruled Wednesday the company
·• could dissolve Its USW contract, the
company proposed dropping the

hourly rate to $17.50 for at least six
months .The USW said anything less
than $19.50 was out ct the question.
"The company and the union
obviously disagree about What the
company can afford to pay tbe
workers," RockefeUer said. "In
tact, tbere Is . no single certain
number. What th!&gt; company can
afford wlll depend on many factors,
Including Wheeling-Pittsburgh's
sales, the price level for steel, and
how the claims r1 the creditors are
resolved."
The senator said one approach
would be to "guarantee the workers
a set base wage whlch would be
reviewed periodically and In·
creased lftbecompany had attained
certain agreed upon levelS of
performance, profitability, and
cash on hand."
He said the company could grow If
an agreement Is reached and
reorganization under Chapter 11 Is
successful.

joined In lhe 11rst lllrlke In 25 years 31ainst a ~or
sleel producer Sunday and nine plants ol the company
In three slates were affecled. (UPI).

'

,·

COPENHAGEN, Denmark
(UPI) -Bomb blasts claimed by a
Lebanese guerrilla group wrecked
the olflce of a U.S. airUne and
damaged a synagogue and a Jewish
old people's home today, Injuring
more than a dozen people, pollee
said.
No deaths were reported.
One bomb was thfown through tbe
window of the Northwest Orient
Airlines dflce. Pollee said the blast
Injured about 10 people In the office
and a passing bicyclist.
The other bomb exploded between the Jewish Synagogue and a
Jewish old people's home, injuring
three or lour people, pollee said.
Both bulldtngs were evacuated.
In Beirut, an anonymous caller
saying he represented the Moslem
· guerrtlla group Islamic Jlhad saki
the group had planted the bombs to
avenge a raid Sunday by Israeli
paratroopers on the village of
Kabrlkha In soutbern Lebanon.
"In response to the barbaric
Zionist attack on Kabrlkha, one of
our cells cperatlng In tbe Scandinavian countries bombed the Jewish
temple and Northwest Orient AmerIcan company In Copenhagen,'' the
caller said In Arable.
Copenhagen pollee said there
were "absolutely no reports of any
deaths" In the twin bombings.
"The two bombs were very large
and could be heard over most of the
city," saki the duty ofllcer at
Copenhagen pollee headquarters.
"I'm soocked, and I have no idea
who could haVe done such a thing,"
said Chief Rabbi bent Melchior,
splrltualleader r1 Denmark's 7,000
Jews.
·
Umar Kltrnltto, representative of
the Palestine Liberation Organiza·

tton In Denmark. told United Press
International be regrelted the
bombings, and that his "deepest
sympades go out to tboseJews who
have been hurt and their farnllies .''
"I really regret these terrorist

actions against !be Jews. I, my
office, and the PLO are totally
against such actions. We cannot
justify any terrorist actions against
t11e Jews Inside or outside Europe,"
Kltmltto said. ·

Service~

COLUMBUS \UP!) -Olflcilllso!
the Ohio West Conference of the ·
United Methodist Church have sent
leiters expressing satisfaction 8nd
support for recent labor negotla·
tlons to the Campbell Soup Co., the
tOmato growers ot northwest Ohio,
and the Farm Labor Organization
Conunlttee.
1be letter, signed by Bishop Edsel
A. Ammons, said the church
olftdall are pleased with progress

•

A Long Bottom man, Joseph C.
Taylor, 40, was arrested Sunday
night by the Meigs County Sherlff's
Department and charged In COIII)€Ctlon with the shooting death of his
wlte, Marilyn Kay Tlmmons Tay·
lor, 35.
TaylordledatVeteransMemorlal
Hospital at 7:15 p.m. !rom a single
gun shot would to the neck !rom a .22
callber rev'olver, according to a
hospital spokesman.
Tbe shooting took place at
approxlrllately 6 p.m. Sunday at the
Taylor residence on Silver Ridge
Rd., near the Intersection of the
Stlversville-Portiand Rd. (Co. Rd.
31) , Investigators said.
Sherltf Howard Frank said that
several of hiS deputies and lnvestJ·
gator Paul Gerard spent Sunday
night and part of Monday morning
Interviewing witnesses and collectIng evidence.

The weapon alleged to have been , lodged In the Meigs County J'ilil . .
Bond of $50,!XXJ, llond was set for
used In the Incident was recovered
Hysen last week by Meigs County
by authorities at the home. The
Court Judge Patrick O'Brien.
shooting appears to have been the
In another Meigs County murder
result of a domestic quarrel,
case, a second competency hearing
authorities said.
for Lindsay Taylor, 35, formerly of
the Racine area and charged with
The couple's live chlldren were
aggravated murder 1n the October
home at tbetlmeoltheshootlng and
are now staying with realtives. 1983 shotgun slaying of Danny
Melton, has been tor 9 a.m.
according to Gerard.
Wednesday before Judge Knight.
Taylor wlll be formally charged
Officials said sheriff's depart·
with murder In a written complaint
ment officers will be returning
to be filed scmetlme Monday In
Taylor Monday afternoon from tbe
Meigs County Court, Frank said.
Timothy B. Moritz Regional ForeTWenty·one-year-old Tracy Hy·
nsic Unit In ColijmbiJS wh!&gt;re be has
sell, d Syracuse, wlU be arraigned In
been undergoing therapy in a high
Meigs County Common Pleas Court
security envlrunment since an
as soon as a bearing before Judge
Initial competency hearing before
Charles Knight can be arranged,
Judge
Knight In April.
Franksald.
Lindsay
Taylor and Joseph Tay·
HyseU Is charged with aggra·
vatedmurder in the beatlogdeathol lor are cousins, according to
Douglas Rosenbaum, :!&gt;, and Is authorities.

Maples housing facility opens
for area elderly, handicapped

praise labor talks

" Your Consta11t Source of l rr noralit·e F'inancial

1 Section, ;·o P•gn

A Muhimedie Inc. Newapeper

Sen. Rockefeller says
steel stalemate would
would be 'devastating'

Church officials

MEM BER : FDIC

enttne

W()man shot, killed, charge
I:ehanese guerrilla unit says husbariil iii Sun·day incident
it is responsible for bombing ·

Salute&amp; arul re wards participa nts in the 36th Annual
Gallia County Junior Fa ir as a hroad

'

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, July 22, 1985

STEEL STRIKE -Jill&amp; eaoop plclteU lo block
acceoo 1o II* IW'l'OW brldp leading 1o WheellngPIIIaburgh Steel Corp., In Mone•en. Pa., but not
........, .utke slpo for each picket. 'l1leW.......,rs

UST

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at y

'

c----~ENTRAIJ

.............. P-.el

D e ih .......................
- 11101
~ ••• • ooooo o uHooo Pale I
Spori8 ................ . l'qal3, 4

110MB .IIIAST - Tile Amertcaa Nortll Welt Or'm'"l
AlrtiB8 alice Ia Cto*lll ~ Denmark WM bombed Suaday,
woundlq.....,.. of poeple. (UPI).

The Maples, a federally subsld·
!zed bouslng !acillty tor the elderly,
handicapped and disabled, has
of!lclally opened In Pomeroy.
The first residents ot The Maples
moved iit Thursday with most of the
first group ot residents expected to
be settle Into their new home over
the weekend.
Situated on Mulberry Heights,
The Maples Includes 45 units .
TWelve are efficiency apartments
and 33 are one-bedroom apart·.
ments. Six apartments are
equipped to accommodate hand!·
. capped residents.
Resident manager r1 The Maples
Is Mrs. Evelyn Clark, a uteiong
resident of Meigs County and a
· former receptionist tor the late Dr.
Sellm J . Blazewlcz. She also !lei'Ves
as chainnan otthe county board of
elections. Management agency lor
the project Is SUwr HeelS Development Co. ot Marietta, which
currently manages five slrnllar
projects In Marietta and Athens.
Owner ot The Maples IS the Meigs
County Elderly Hwslng Corp.
"We'reverypleasedtoheapartot
thiS outstanding new project," said
·John L. Matthews, president of
Silver HeelS. '"The Maples Is an
excellent facUlty lor the elderly and
handlcapped, particularly when
you consider the proximity of the
senior citizen's center and Veterans

Mernorlal Hospital."
Construction of The Maples
lncludedextenslverenovationo!the
former chlldren's borne plus the
addition d an attached three-story
building. ,Within the newly COD·
structed addition are both apart·
ment units plus meeting and
recreation areas lor aU residents.
Residents of the faclllty must be

e ither 62 years of age or older or
have a spouse meeting that ag.,
requirement , or they must be
handicapped or disabled. In ·add!·
lion, residents must meeting government 'slow income criteria ,
AppUcants can contact Sllver
HeelS through The Maples or
contact the senior c itizens center.

Six_people die in Ohio auto
accidents over past weekend
By Unlled Press Intemallonal
Six people, Including a bicycilst,

died In accidents oo Ohio roadways
during the weekmd, the state
Highway Patrol reported today.
The victims were killed In six
separate accidents, Including two
Sunday, two Saturday and two
Friday night, a patrol· spokeswoman said.
The patrol counts traffic fatalities
resulting from miShaps on, the
state's pJbllc roadways each weekend · between 6 p.m. Friday and
midnight Sundsy.
Killed were:
Sunday
Akron: Larry Hupp, 39, Akron, In
a o!le-(:ar accident In on , .1lo :m In
Peninsula, Summit Cwnty.

••

Martella: Sarita Strode. 20,
Bartlett. in a one-car crash on a
WI)Shlngton County mad .
Salunlay
Cincinnati: 1lmot hy D. Fields, 23,
Delhi, w~n th!&gt; car In which he was
riding crashl'd on a Hamilton
County road.
Youngstown : Irene L. Meinlngh aus, 42, Rome, when the Jeep in
which she was a passenger overturned along Ohio 45 In Mahoning
County.
Friday
Wooster : Mark D . Webb. 13,
Creston, when his bicycle was
struck by a car on a city street near
his borne.
Attica: Cheryl A. Wurm. 19,
Attlca, In a two-car collision on a
Seneca County road .

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