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Page 10-The Dally Sentinel

Friday, June 14,.1881

Pomeroy-lddleport, Ohio ·

'&gt;tlllll~l\

Chester High School reunion .held HC graduate

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: One·hundrCd·flftY·eight alumni
Alumni attending and their dates
lmd guests attended the annual of graduation were:
Cbestu High School Alumni AssoHelen Knight will, Chester,
ciation Banquetand Dancerecenlly 1918; Earl Knight, Middleport,
:at Chester Elementary School.
1923; Bertha FeU Smith. Pomeloy.
: A patriotic theme was used on 1924; Howard Knight, Chester,
1he tables and throughout the 1925; Mae Stout Dorst, Vincent,
:school gymnasium.
1928; Ada Swan BisseU, Long Bot. Preceding the banquet Kelli Bai· tom, Sybil Dorst Barr, Middleport.
·ley, Anna Wolf, Lisa Slethem and 1929; Thelma Biddle Hayes, Don,Brandon Bucldcy, CbeslerElemen- · aid Myers, Long Bottom, Jean
•tary students and also graqdchil-. Louise Frank Frederick, Chester,
. ·drell of local association members, Virgil Roush, Pomeroy, 1930;
sang "God Bless the U.S.A." Pauline Wickham Ridenour, Opal
·:accompanied by Dorothy Holter Gaul Wickham, Chester, Nellie
.J(arr, Jllllilist. John Riebel Sr., class Michael Parlccr, John Bailey, Fred
'of 1956 ~ve the invocation.
. Smith, Pomeroy, Irene SummerReumon classes, 1926, 1931, field Parker, Syracuse; Betty
1936, 1941, 1946, 1951 and 1956 Damewood Davisson, Mechanics. were rccognized as well as the old- burg, 1931.
est alumnus, Helen Kni,ht Will,
Wilber Weber, McKees Rock,
class of 1918. The alwnnlassocia- Pa., Betty Matlack Roush,
tion presented engraved gold Pomeroy, 1932; Pauline Mora
chilnns to the women graduates Myers, Long Bottom, 1933; Edydla
and charms on key chains to the Stout Webster, Columbus;
mengradualeSoltheclassofl941. Josephine Ritchie, Long Bottom,
Kathryn Sinilh Windon, presi- Wilham Matlack, Pomeroy, 1934:
dent. extended speciallbanlcs to the Marie Ferrell Hauck, Pomeroy,
.members of the Cbester Elemen- Roy Christy, Chester; Mildred
·tary PTO who prepared the ban· Summerfield Caldwell, Owen
quet, the Meigs County J11nior Damewood, Reedsville, Samuel
Leaders Club who saved the ban- Michael, Portland, 1935; Kathryn
;quet, the Chesler Garden Club for Williams Dietz, Belpre, Thelma
'table arrangements, Dale and Joe White Eddy, Killbuck, Esther
:Kautz for the printing of the pro- Freclcer, Racine, Mary Virginia
:grams, the officers and decorating Mora Ksutz, Pomeroy, 1936; Cle. committee and others who helped bas Allen; Columbus, Lester Spon' with the alumni reunion.
agel, Crown City, Kathryn Bailey
Officers elec_ted for ne.xt year Baum, Chester, Alfred Wolfe,
, were Robert Wood, pR:Sident; Vic- Pomeroy, 1937.
•tor Baht, first vice president; MaXVictor Bahr, Long BoltOIJl,
:inc Pickens Whitehead, second 1938; Gertrude Stalnaker Robin·
:vice president; Paul Baer, third vice son, Coolville:, Lila Baht Winters,
: president; Betty Genheimer Dean, Parkersburg, W.Va., HoWII'd Bai·
•secretary; Opal Van Meter · ley, Jaclcsonville, Fla.,J.M. Gaul,
i Eichinger, assistant secretary; Avon Parle, Fla., Gladys Pickens
·~ Rosemary Rose Keller, treasurer; Meredith, Beverly, WiUiam Will,
and Esther Tucker, assistant trea- Pomeroy, 1940; Paul Baer, Racine.
:surer.
John andf,Eioise BCuclarick!ey LodBwbarticlc,
· .ApPo,inted to the decorating and Wen Je aerson,
e am
:no11111181ing commiuee were Harold · Willford, Rushville, .Dorothy
·:ani! Betty Nelson Newell, David Hawk, Richard Ficlc, Howarlc Pllrk:Koblentz, Starling Massar, John er, Homer Parker, Long Bottom,
1Riebel and Maxine Goeglein.
Milton Tuttle, Maxine Baht Ooe1 Alumni and their guests danced glein, Pomeroy. Eugene Buclcley.
tto the music of Charlie Brown Ritz, Cheshire, Clarence Dean, Colum:Gallipolis, following the banquet bus, Hazel Mae Frank Lynch,
;and business meeting.
Athens,
Donald
Pullins,

Williamslown, W.Va., Iris Weber
Wilsoo, Rochester, N.Y., Mildred
Mor11an Gaul, Avon Parle, Fla.,
William Memlilh, Beverly, Elson
Spencer, R~eiDe, 1941; Kathleen
Prince Dean, Columbus, Harold
Hawk, Coolville, 1942.
Ruth Coleman Tuttle, Pomeroy;
Marion Meredith Murphy, Sandusky, Opal Van Meier E m ·
O!ester. 1943; Maxine Ha
nell, Columbus, Willis Par er,
Parkersburg, W.Va., Harry Holler,
Racine, Betty Lou Genheimer
Dean, Dale Kautz, Pomeroy, 1944;
·Donald Mora, Pomeroy, Maxine
Pickens Whitehead, Reedsville,
1945; Eileen Ritchie Kuhn,
Louisville, Charles Pickens,
Willianistown, W.Va., Betty Dean
Chevalier, Tuppers Plains, Glen
Stout, Long Bottom, David
Koblentz, Horace J(arr, Pomeroy,
1946; Dorothy Holter Karr,
Woodrow Mora, Pomeroy, Cleo
Weber Smith, Robert Wood,
Chester, Ruth Ann Williams
Balderson, Reedsville, 1947.
Phyllis Lawrence Glasgo,
Reedsville, Jean Pooler Sexson,
Shade, Jeraldine Wood Hawk,
Coolville, 1949; Kathryn Karr
Mora; Pomeroy, Chester Buclcley,
Reedsville, Mary Barnhart Lar,e,
Rushville, Norma Wright CaiD,
Athens, Pauline Swain Primmer,
Logan, Howard Larlcins, Portland,
Junior Smalley, Weirton, W.Va.,
Joan Wood, Harold Newell,
Chesler, Forrest Rhodes, Navarre,
Dorothy Pullins Chaney, Shade,
1951.
.
Betty Nelson Newell, Chester,
Starling Massar, Recdsvill~. 1952:
Emma Ritchie Rhodes, Navarre,
lim Ridenour, Cbester; Virgil Win·
don, ~eroy, 1953; Donns Dorst
Story, Marysville, Jeaneae Thomas
Koenig, Mansfield, 1954; Roger
Keller, Pomeroy, 1955; Helen
!faqy Fields. New Haven, W.Va..
LouiSe Riebel Morton, Belpre,
John Riebel Sr., Rosemary Rose
Keller, Pomeroy, Marilyn Scott
Mason, Gallipolis, Gene Riggs,
Reedsville, Dallas Marks, Belpre,
1956; and ~ Smith Windon,
Pomeroy, 1957.

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Community calendar

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FRIDAY
Plant Club House. Friends and rela·
: 'I'lJPPERS PJ.AINS - There will lives are invited. Bring a covered
.
· be a round and square dance at the ilish.
: Tuppers Plains VFW Building on
: Frfday from 8-11:30 p.m . The
POMEROY- Rev. Eddie Buff• building is air conditioned, rdTcsh- inJIIOII, (lallipo1is. will be the guest
1ments will be served and the public speaker at the Naomi Baptist
Church in Pomeroy on S!Diday at
! is invited to attend.
11 a.m. The public is invillld. Rev.
' POMEROY • The Pomeroy SamueiJaclcson is the peacbcr.
: Senior Citizens Dance Club will
• have a dance Friday from 8·11 p.m.
POMEROY - Tllere will be a
; with music by the Happy Hollow 12-Siep A.A. meeting on Sunday at
~ Boys of ~Wtens. Those attending 7 p.m. a,t !he JTPA office in
: bring snacks for the snac!c table. Pomeroy, 117 West Second SICCCI.
: The public is invited to attend.
BARNESVILLE • The BarRIPLEY - The Ubeny Moun- nesville Area Coin Club will meet
; laineen will perform at the Slcale· Sunday at 2 p.m. ~ Hutllln Memo· Iandin Ripley, W.Va. on Friday.
rial Library. Final plans for the
June 21 auction will be discussed.
LONG BOTIOM • There will
, be a hymn sin~ at the Faith Full
CARPENTER • The ML Union
:Gospel Chun:h m Long Bottom on Baptist Church, Carpenter Hill
· Friday. Dinner will begin at 6 p.m. Road, will have homecoming Sun:followed by singing at 7:30 p.m. day. Dinner will begin at noon fol!with the Gabriel Quartet. Rev. lowed by singing at I p.m. by True
Steve Reed invites the public.
Gospel Soun.ds, Gabriels and the
Messengers. Pastor Joe Sayre
SATURDAY
invites the public.
LONG BOTIOM • There will
RACINE • The Teaford Family
be a hymn sing at the Mt. Olive
Community Church in Long Bot· reunion will be held Sunday at Star
tom on Saturday at 7 p.m. with Mill Parle in Racine. A basket
Russell Spencer and the Southern lunch will be beld at 1 p.m. Bring a
Hill Gospel Singers. The public is gift fer the door prize.
invited to attend.
MONDAY
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
D~·Weelcendserv~es
at the Danville Church of Christ School classes for preschoolers
will be held Saturday at 7;30 p.m. through 1eens will be held at ML
and Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 6 H~rmon Church Monday lhrol!gh
p.m. Denver Hill, Foster, W. ya... Fnday from 9:30-11:30 a.m. daily.
will be the spealcer. The pubhc IS CaU Julia Will at 985-4344 to register.
' invited.
Wll.KESVll.LE • There will be

COOLVn.LE · "1esus and You

Willcesville Pylhian Hall on Satur·
day from 8-11 a.m. Price is $3 and
includes sausage and pancakes.
Pub!~ is invited.

Vacation Bible School at the
Coolville Uniled MCthodist CbiD'Ch
Monday through Friday beginning
at 6:30p.m. nighlly.

, JACKSON • The Liberty Moun·
laineers will perform at the Slcale:Iand in Ripley, W.Va. on Salll'l:lay.

RUTLAND· Vacation Bible
School at the Rutland Freewill
Baptist Ch~ will be held Monday through Friday from 6-8 p.m .
nighlly. Pltbllc is invited. ·

culin skin tests will be offered at
the Harrisonville Scipio Township
Fire Department on Monday from
4:30-6:30 p.m. by Joan Tewlcsbary,
R.N.
RACINE • The Southern Local
OAPSE No. 453 will meet at
SoutbCm High Sehoul on Monday
at 7 p.m. All members ate urged to
atlend.

is honored

Beth A. Rin!lolph, Minot, N.D.,
daughter of Mr. IDCI Mra. Donald
1acbon, Reedsville, received an
"Alumni Excellence in Achievement" aWitd at HoclciDg College's
22nd commence~ent ceremony
receutly.
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RaaCiolph tepi esented the hospitality department comprised of
travel and tourism, cuhnary arts
and hotel restaurant management
progJIJII.
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· She is a l987 graduate of the
travel and tourism program at
Hocking College and is general
manaaer ol reservitiona operations,
ChoiCe Hotels lntern•tionel Reser·
vations Center, MinoL The Minot
center is the largest and newest of
Choice's fi~ cenren in the Uniled
Stales and will employ appro xi·
m~y ~~by falll991.
Randolph fonnerly III8I1BgCd the
resavatien center en Hocking College's campus.
·
· The honoree was flown by
Choice lnlemational from Minot to
iluend che ceremqny and. accept the
award. ·
Sbe resides in Minot with her
husband:

PWCmeets
"Living One's Life So That
Regret is a Word You Can Do
Without• was the topic of Kathryn
Miller's devotiolls at a recent meeting of the Presbyterian Women's
Circle held at the Middleport Preabyteriaq CbiD'Ch.
Kate Brown presi!led at the
meeting and members discussed
the fuewdl dinner fer the minialer
and his wife. The churches of the
United Meigs Ministry will com·
bine fer the poduclc dinner at Mid-

dl~ group also notcc! members
and friends in need of sympathy
andprayen.
· Lennie Haptonstall read "The
Stone Has Gone" as the Lesst Coin
offering was collected.
Bel$)' Horky led the bible study
on "Empowered for Discipleship
Under Trial," chapter three from
the studles in the Acts of the Aposlles. She stressed that the church
and individual members are oil a
journey and can overcome obsta·
cles and trials of the journey
through life with God's help and
comfort The study concluded with .
spec ill messages from · South
America IDCI South Africa where
church members often suffer
unjusdy.
.Kale Brown·closed the meeting
with prayer and hostess Lennie
Haptonstall served desser'..

Father's

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POMEROY - There will be a
,gospel concen at che Laurel Cliff
'Free Methodist Church in Pomeloy
RACINE • The Southern Local
•on Saturday at 7 p.m. featurinl the Board ol Education will meet Mon:Gabriel Quartet. Pastor William day at 7 p.m. at the high sehoul.
:Williams invites the public.
HARRISONVILLE • Tuber! POMEROY - "Happy Prince"
and "Hoober·Bioob llighway" will
be shown at lhe Meigs County Pub;lie Library in Pomeroy on SIIIUnlay
·at 2 p.m. and at the Middlepon
:Librlr)' en Monday at 7 p.m.

: RACINE • Entertairunetn at Star
:Mill Part, Sttiltday, 7:30 p.m ..
Jx&amp;blic invited.

';

Major league .baseball scores

Day

Lottery tickets bearing three 'entry'
notations Scarce • Bob Hoeflich - B-7

1991

Gallipolis minister arrested in 1894 for
posting lectures· James Sands- A-4
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Vol 21, No. 18
Copyrighted 1991

AWARb PRESENTED· Betb RaaclOtph, Mblot, N.D., a 1987 :
graduate ol Hocldlla College, receives an award of "Alumni Excel·
renee In Ae•levement'' at the sc•oot•s commencement ceremony
recendy from Beth Leidy, !llumni assoclatloa president.

~Ciure's

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Gen. Hartinger PkW\t !'78 Jeckoon Pika 364 Eaot Main St.
MIDDLEPORT
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
814-448-3837 1: .8 14·982-8292
814·982-11248
-·

b

FATHER'S DAY
SPECIAL

~~

SUNDAY, JUNE 16 ONLY

Banana. Split 2 ·for·l Sale
~BUY ON£, GET ON~

FREE . .

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MONDAyI JUNE 17 THRU
SUNDAY, JUNE 23

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It

No Flltn, Ground IMf Gr.Und Fresh Locany

WITH .MEDIUM..FliNCH FliES .....................". $299

"

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A the House lias been blocked by
Senate-passed bill which would Speaker Vern Riffe, D-Wheelers~ive t~x breaks to utilities that
burg, because of a lack of support
mstall anti-pollution equipment and ·from House Republiqns.
·
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burn Ohio-mined coal has drawn
Voinovieh said che Senate bill
the support of Gov. George made a variety of options available
Voinovich.
to utilities which have to comply
Voinovich endorsed the mea- with tougher federal clean air regusure Friday in a news release and in lations.
letters sent to editors around the
Utilities face the choice of
state.
switching to cleaner out-of-state
"The Senate legislation is a coal or installing costly anti-polluconsensus solution which balances tion equipment known as scrubbers
the concerns of coal miners, Ohio's to continue burning Ohio's highemployers and our state's residen- sui fur coal.
·
. tial utility COnSu!lletS ," Voinovich
The Senate bill would give utili. said.
.ties that install scrubbers an excise
Sponsored by Sen. Robert Ney, tax credit of $1 for every ton of
·R-Barnesville, the bill cleared the Ohio coal burned, beginnin~ in
· Senate this week and now is pend; 1995. An analysis by the Legtsla. ing in the House,
.
tive Budget Office estimated the
· Action on a related coal bill in potential revenue loss to the state at

Continued from page 7
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Allen, Katie
and Bobby. Greenwood, Ind., spent
Friday mght with Mr. and Mrs.
Claytcn ADen. They came to attend
the reunion picnic of the Eastern
· High School Class oll966, held at
Long Bottom on saturday.
Marilyn Newnan, Galion, David
Newnan and son, Kent, Mt. Uberty,Jane Beacom and children, Ashley, Will and zac,Jolmstown, wae
guests on Friday of Ethel Orr. CaU·
ing in the afternoon were Martha
Lee, Becky Bentz, Amy and John,
Bashan.

National Dodge Sell-A-Thon

FIVE PASSENGERS
FOR UNDER $11,000. ·
REALLY. .

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Dovel Myers, Don Jones, Tom White, Dale Caldwell, Bob Barcus, Bob Wood, Hollis Queen,
Robert Steinbrunner, Warner Halley, Johnnie
Jackson, Jim Saunders. (T -S photo by Melinda ·
Powers

Gallia veterans contribute to .fund
GALLIPOLIS- Members of
area veterans groups gathered at
the Doughboy in the city park to
kick off a donations campaign to
build a new war memorial.
The construction of the new
structure was approved by voters
on May 7 in a special election. The
Gallia County Veterans' Associa-

.,...,r

Salclll Cenler.
10 111enc1.

,
SUNDAY
: CHESHIRE • A r.dly reunion
:ot Elbert 1DC1 Della OIDilln will be

'held Sunday at tho Ky1or Creek

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. Times-Sentinel Stair
POMEROY - The Meigs County Public Library will lose thou- .
sands of dollars in state funding as
weU as all services from The Ohio
Valley Area Librarjes (OVAL) if
the state budget adopted last week
by the Ohio Senate is passed,
according to Ruth Powers, Meigs
Librarian.
Powers said that the 250 public
libraries in Ohio will suffer a $14
million cut in funding and the elim·

ination of all OVAL fuhding under
the Senate's budget
That version will now go to che
conference committee before going
back to the House of Representatives for final action.
A letter-writing campaign
protesting the proposed cuts has
been initiated on recommendation
of Sen. Jan Michael Long and Rep.
Mary Abel, both of whom suppon
current funding levels.
Mrs. Powers suggests that let·
ters from library patrons be sent to

the conference committee mem bers, Theodore M. Gray, Robert
Ney and William F. Bowen of the
· Ohio Senate, and Thomas Johnson,
Palrick Sweeney, and Barney Quilter of che House.
If the Senate version of the bud·
get passes, Powers says it will
"take a big chunk of moneY. out of
the local bud¥,et and th;lt wtU affect
local service. '
·
"It has taken 50 year~ to get
decent fundinp; for libraries and we
Continued on A-3

tion is now spearheading a drive to $10,000 would held in an account
c.ollect the estimated $75,000 need- for emergency repairs of the
ed to build it.
· memorial. City workers will mainVFW post 4464, the American Jain t!Je memorial in the park.
Legion, the Disabled American
Saunders said anyone interested
Veterans and AmVets made dona- in making a donation can send a
tions of more than $4,000 to the check or money order in care of the
fund Wednesday.
Gallia County Veterans AssociaJim Saunders, of the Veterans tion to P.O. Box 101, Galllipolis,
·
Asso ciation, said that an extra Ohio, 45631.

HUDSON.HAWK

But Cromartie learned well and
now he' s passing on what he
knows as the state's first and only
"resource father," talking to
young fathers about such things as

R

JODIE FOSTER
IN

With more rear seat legroom than any other car in its class~ Spirit can actually
hold five people. Comfortably. Not only that, Spirit also offers a .
standard driver's airbag, and the longest powertrain warranty in its class~
And after cash back, Dodge Spirits start at $10,526~·

lj Plus £actory-to·dealer incentives could save you even more! I

drug problems, joblessness and the
advantages of breast-feeding.
·'When people look at me and
see that I can be masculine and at
the same time ... sensitive - guys
respect that," Cromartie said.
Cromartie, 26. works in the
poorer parts of Tallahassee, includmg his old neighborhood. He grew
up there without a father.
Along with a "resource moth·
er," he goes into the homes of
pregnant women and talks with
them and their partners about
things like prenatal care and childrearing. Worlcing solo, Cromartie is
also likely to talk with young
fathers and fathers-to-be over a
pool table or on the basketball

court.

•Compart10118 va..ward's loWer middle domestic class. Sea tho 7170 limited p&lt;Mertrain warranty and liS
reetricllonalll dealer. ••Elaee !o!SRP after $1000 cash baCk (on models in '!lOCk! excluding taJc .

See Your Dodge Dealer Today.

·have a fun ni1btiDCI POduclc on

'the IIIP8C Iiiii ·All members.,..

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MEMORIAL DONATIONS- Local veterans groups gathered at the Doughboy last week
to make donations for the building or the new
veterans me111orial in tbe city park. Those
attendinR the were, from left: Jabez Parsons;
'

SALEM CBNTER • Star
at

runded by the
Department of NAtural
Resliurces and tbe Gallia County Litter Prevention and Recycling Program helped organize the
local eiTort. (T·S photo by Kris Cochran)

Proposed state budget would .
eliminate OVAL funding

;Oranp IIIII Star Junior Orange will

:s.anay belinnilll• 6:30 p.m.

13 Soctlont; 94 Pogeo
A Muhimedla Inc. NlwiPeper

RIVER SWEEP • Memtiers or the Kyger
Creek Hilh School Key Club were just some of
tbe many volunteers who roamed the banks of
the Oblo River Saturday afternoon during the
Tlllrcl Annual Ohio River Sweep. The event was

, TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)Pete Cromartie was in his teens
when he became a father. With no
d!td to guide him, his parenting wa5
self-taught.

BRUCE WILLIS
IN

SILENCE OF THE
LAMBS R .

'Humid, cloudy. High around 90.

Former teen dad helps
men adjust to fatherhood

FRI .. SAT., SUN.

AND

Sports........- .................~.Cl-6
Weather ...._,,, ..................A·3

!!!!!!~-~~~

ByCHARLENEHOE~CH

Rediscover Spirit at the

Editoral .............................A2
Farm............... ·................D1·8

$9 million in fiscal year 1996, up to
$12 million in fiscal year 1997, and.
up to $19 million annually in subsequent years.
ln addition, the bill would speed
up government approval of dispos·
al sites for waste from scrubbers;
authorize che sale of tax-free bonds
to pay for scrubber installation;
expand state authority to review
clean air compliance plans: and let
utilities begin charging customers
for the cost of construction work in
progress, which would be reimbursed to .consumers later through
lower electric raleS.
Voinovich said in his letter to
editors that the slate. must do all it
could to protect the coal industry .
and jobs of minefS while at the
same time ensuringfthat utility rates
remain competitive.

POMEROY - Bible school at
the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel. Roure
143, Pomeroy, will be held beginninjl Monday from 6:30-8:30 p.m.
nightly. Rev. Victor Roush inviles
the public. Call 992-2952 for information.

Chester...

Deaths.................................A3

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Along the river ..............81·8
Business ..............................D1
Comics. .........................Insert
Classlnect.......................D:Z:-7

Pleasant, June 16, 1991

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Quarter Pounder Burger •••••Sl 79

l'l'lll'l

Inside

Voinovich backs Senate
clean air-coal legislation

Family Restaurant
.

a Father's Day Breakfast at the at Camp Can-Do" is the theme for

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NEW
• W11Df Vea._, left, Belpre, baa been
appolated
plllllalller 11 tile Tappen PlaJ. PGit Oflke.
Venhwlleptllll earner wltb tbe pa1ta1 aenta Ill Belpre In 1!168
wllere be worbd .. a
clerll ror ..... J11111Dd. db curler
ror 15 ,an. He a11o wwkld • tbe oftleeo Ill diarp at llle
Plill Oftlee frol8 198!1-911. Veollul 11.::111 wldi .....,._
ter Ton7. SaiDJ)IOtl wllo will be 1IOI'Idla at
AIHay Pill Oflke.
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For Cromartie, whose son is
now 7,the objective is clear.
"I try to get that fa !her more
involved with the pregnancy,"
Cromanie said. "If we can increase
that family bonding, then we can
also crea1e healthy babies.''
The resource parent pi'OgJIJII is
designed to prevent infant monality
and low birthweight babies.
Resource parents are employed by
the slate and paid about $11,000 a
year.
Cromartie was inlereslcd in the
job because his fiancee is 1 social
worker who works with pregnant
1een-agen.

FESTIVAL • Several area residents gathered
in the Gallipolis City Park, Friday, Saturday
and Sunday for the First Annual Gallipolis
Retail Merchants Association French Festival.

The festival featured arts, crafts and games. A
craft auction will be held today at 2 p.m. c'r-s
photo by Kris Cochran)

RAC fined $Sl,OOO over 2 years
WASHINGTON (AP) - A
congressional subcommittee has
requested more details concerning
$51,000 in fines levied against a
West Virginia aluminum plant over
the past two years.
·
The House Subcommitte on
Health and Safety requesled a his-•
tory of fines at Ravenswood Alu·
minum Corp.'s Jackson County
plant after company officials in
May told federal investigators they
couldn't inspect the facility. ·
Company officials claimed the
Occupational Safety and Health
Administration investigators were
beina manipulated by a uni!lll with
1,700 members off the job at the
· planL

most of the fines.
In a related story, steelworkers
from RAC were among 1,000 people expected at a solidarity ra\ly in
Connecticut SatUlllay.
'The rally was organized to show
support for legislation beiog con·
sidered by Congress that would ban
the use of permanent replacement
workers durin~ strikes.
air contaminaniS.
RAC has htred more than 1,000
About $27,700 in fmes followed permanent replacement workers
'
the deaths of four workers in July union officials said.
1990. One man was burned while
U.S. Sen. Christ Dodd and U.S.
trying to change a fuse, two were Rep. Rosa DcLauro will speak at
overcome by fumes as the fousht a the daylong rally. Dodd and
fire, and the fourth had a heart D~Lauro are co-sponsores of tile
attack after worldna overtime.
· bills to amend the National Labor
,
Plant officials have co'¥ested Relations Act
'if.
~ .
United Steelworkers 5668 offi.
cials say the company has locked
out the workers. The company
claims the workers are on slrike. ·
The subc.ommittee has been
studying OSHA records. According
to its investigation, RAC has been
cited for violating rules applying to
fire extinguishers, protective equipment, floor and wall openings and

.
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�0H P'olnt PII I

June18, 1111
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Commentary and _perspective
.MULTIMEDIA, INC.
• 82:1.'1'lllnl Ave., GaJilpoUa, Ohio

(8l4)

4441-:lM~

•n

Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio
(114) 982-21~6

ROBERT L. WINGE'l'T
Publisher
BOBI\RT WilSON IR.
Exeeullve Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher·ControUer

A MEMBER ofTheAs-oclated Press, Iriland Dally Press Asaoclallon and the
Amertc,an Nl'WIJNlpt"r Publishers Auoclatton.
LETTERS OF OPINJON are welcome. They should be less than :t:JO words
long. All JeCters areaubject toedltlnr aad must be staned with name, address and
tt"lephoneo number. No untlaned lettrrs wUI be publ!shed. Letten should '00 Jn

COOd taste, addreulng Issues, not personalities.

·

The current recession has not
produced anybody even remotely
resembling Father Divine. The
black evangelist, whose followers
believed he was God, was savior to
many homeless and unemployed in
Harlem during the Depression
years in the 1930s.
·
He ran an employment ageney
that got jobs for thousands. In tum
they had Ill wrn over all their earnings to Father Divine, but it is also
true that they "lacked nothing."
The various residences he
owned were called "Heavens."
Here his Angels (the name he gave
his followers) received free room
and board. There was a fme dinner
every evening and a comfortable
pla~e to
every night. They
were
than they hafl ever

been.
Those who attended his meet- ·
ings but were not ready to forsake
all for Father paid $110 $2 a week
to Jive in one of his "Extension
Heavens." Meals were 15 to 20
cents.
He served free Sunday dinners
to hundreds - · with hams, roasts,
chickens and turkeys. Sumptuous
though the .meals were, critics
noticed the old .Father Divine canniness at worlc. .
·
When the hungry diners would
sit down, Father would bless the
tea and coffee that was placed on
the tables in big pots. Everybody
was told to have ''all you wanL"
Thirty minutes !alec, great platters of spaghetti, potatoes, lima
beans and 'other starehes would be

brougllt out The guests would dig ·
in.
· so when the hams. roasts,
chickens and turkeys would appear
in anotber 30 minutes, evetybody's
appetite was gone and these dis!tes
would leave the table almost Without having been touched to be
brought in again at succe$Sive sit- ·
tings.
·
At the end of the day there
woUld still be enough left over 10
feed the Angels at the various
Extension Heavens for an entire
week.
With bis Angels wrning over all
their earnings 10 him, Father Divine
was able 10 dress in $500 silk suits
and ride around in a chauff~urdriven Rolls Royce. In the 1930s
he bought 25 restaurants, six gro-

MlchMI E. Elliott Sr.

George R. Plagenz ·.
'

eery stores, 10 dry·deaning estab-:
Jishments and a coal business. His ·
net income was figured at $10,000
a weeiC.
·.·
In 1941 lie moved into a 32-'
room mansion along Philadelphia•s ·
posh Main Line. In 1946 he married Edna Rose Ritchings, the 21· ·
year-old daughter of a Vancouver
florist whom he rellllllCCI Spotless
Virgin Bride. They remai!'ed mar- :
ried for 19 years- untll Father ·
Divine's death in 1965.
Father Divine pcl!Cbed purity of ·
mind and behavior. His worshipers ·
greeted each other with the word ·
Peace because Hello started with a ·
swearword,
· Sometimes whet) the 5-foot-2 ·
deity would seem to be .violating ·
his own tenets about sexual absti- ·
nence, he would explain to his .
female partner of the moment, "I ·
am bringing your de~ 10 the sur·
face so that I can eliminate them,"
A judge once denounced Father
Divine from the bench as a home- ·
breaker.
The black religious leader, who
was born George Baker, estab- ·
lished bis divinity in the minds of
his followers in 1931 when the
judge who sentenced him to jail on
a disorderly conduct charge
dropped dead. "I hated to do it,'' :
said Father Divine when he heard
the news. To his followers, this left
no doubt thai Father had struck the
jurist dead.
.
Even when he lay dying in bls .
Philadelphia mansion in 1965, his
body crippled with arteriosclero~ ·
and wasting away, Father Divin'r.
was still God 10 his disciples.
\
1be word was passed along that'
the dijlllified evangelist had taken .
into h1s own body all the physical
afflictions of mankind.
. "Isn't that just like Father?" bis
followers said.

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

Governor makes case for
privatization of liquor sales
By TERRY KINNEY
Associated Press Writer
CINCINNATI -Gov. George Voinovich made his way around Ohio
this week to rally support for budget proposals' that are headed to a Jegislalive confmoce committee.
But be chose suburban Cincinnali for his pill:h to tum the operation of
Sllle liquor imes over to privBIC ageniS.
1be ~:1)9~ was significant While the Ohio Department of Liquor
Conttol points to declialng sales, officials in the solllhwest part of the
st8IC periodically threalen to qack dowo on Ohioans who drive to Kentucky or Indiana to buy cheaper liquor.
Ohio's stBIC 110re1 mark up liquor 35 percenL PrivBIC stores in Kentucky and •lndia!JII have 10 be competitive, and nm frequent SPeCials and

sales.

Voinovich, ICCOIIIpanied by Sen. Richard Fi118D, R-Cincinnati, a longtime propollellt of pnvBIC retail sales, wged residents to show their support by writing 10 legisWon. .
"I W8Jit a lot of pressure building up, all over Ohio," Voinovich said.
~ 'Write to the canference commince members, tell them how you feel."
· Voinovich has made the liquor, issue an imporu,mt pa11 of his budget
ptoposal. He contends that over the next four (ears, Ohio could save and reallocare to education - $106 million i it didn't have to operBIC
stBIC liquor stores.
·
. :"The dOllars this would generare are absolutely needed at this lime,''
VQinovich said. '"'be argwneats for this move are overwhelming.",
· · Voinovich said opponents are trying to malre an issue out of the numbei of jobs that will be lost at st8IC Stores. He said the 1,400 figure menpaned by opponents is inf18ICd and that 835 full-lime jobs would be lost
• "What we've go&amp; here is big union bosses in the llouse trying 10 save
835 jobs VI. ed•IC81ion," he said.
· :He estimated that in tbe first yu1 of a swill:h to private agency s10res,
an·addilional $11 million would be available 10 education, and that would
iDc!rease to $33 millioli the second year.
' !Ohio
has 136 J'l:ivatc l8eiiCl Stom, along with its 261 Slale·
stores.
voinovlch. s proposal,' the Slate would retain conttol of
1M liquor inventory.

alreadnk
u

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~Today

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in history

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If Shakespeare were a baseball

+

fan and with us still, he might say
something about taking the tide of
distress sales at the flood, Jest we
be forever bound in shallows and
miseries.
If I were his interpreter, I would
tell you what he means is this:
Thanks 10 a recession and 10 owner
and player greed, a number of
major-league baseball teams - as
many as nine by some accounts are suddenly on the market. Buy,
people, buy. Save the spon. Save
your city's team. Buy!
Now you need a Joespear interpreter, right? What I mean is this:
. Professional baseball is up to the
letters in filcal doo-doo. Re~~enues
have soared, but so have player
salaries. Thanks 10 free agentry,
arbitration and the deep pockets
·and huge ef!S of such owners as
George Stembrenner of the New
York Yankees, Gene Autry of the
Califomin Angels and Joan Kroc of
the San Diego Padres- 40 playezs·
are now making 53 million a year
or more. Boston's Roger Clemens
is getting $158,242.64 for every
game he pitches. Oakland's Rickey .

83
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CHERNOBYL EAST

•

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~~~;~~;
of futiliin ·ofeeling
ld golfen'
eyes

~

occasions. Espetrue in E. F. Robinmany occasions he
club house lawn
~~~~~~:h~11,~~t
teeemphysema
off on the
ti
was necessary for him
to
an oxygen case in order 10
breathe. He was always friendly,
but you could sense this despondent feeling was quite prevalent in
his mind. Others fiUing this category of golfers dying inside for the
chance to play one more lime were
Charles Gibbs, Superintendent of
Schools, Ed Nelson and Perry
MilCh.
The case of Russ Brown typifies
the golfer whose great desire 10.
play overcomes his handicaps,
Approximately a year or so before
he died, Russ had serious eye problems. His vision was so bad that his
wife, Jane, had to place golf balls
on the tee and steer him in the right
direction. His determination and
desire kept bringing him back to
the golf course one more time.
A spectator watching this would
wonder what force compelled Russ
10 play this game at that lime. His
desire to play overcame his handicap and in the last year or so managed to play a few holes because of
his desire to play the game o.ne
more time.
This year three of the regulars
who have played on the local golf
course namely, Ralph·Graves, Wal·
ter Grueser and Cash Bahr, are
sidelined temporarily because of
physical disabilities. The writer
expects all of them to return very

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H•Dk StoDtnp

GALLIPOLIS - Michael B.
{Mil:by) llUioll Sr., 41. ollcale -4,
Gai1ipoliJ, died. Friday, I - 14 It
Holzer Mdlc:IJ Center.
He wu bani Dac. 22, 1942 ill
GallipQlis, 100 of the laic Ellis E.
Elliott and Muine Fannia Ellioa
of GaDipolls.
He Ia survived by bil wi.fc,
CUioae Robata lofocn Eliiou of '
' Itoute 4, ()tJI~ wbom he IIIII'·
riecU-11,1 · iaNortbup.
·
He wu a U .S. Azmy veteran
and a lelf~ mechanic
Otller survivors include one
daUihter, Mrs. Cbar1ea (Janelle)
Hineman of Gallipolis; one 1011,
Mifhlll E. Elliott of

o.ur::

·-ca•n

a.n.e.a-,

•m

James M. Edward

..

Nonh
ClloUDa.
._
lfllliiQa
B. lllddqhtcrofthe
Lltlie Mllllr. Her
GAUIPOLIS - I•mes M. father/receded her In death oa
Edward, s~. of :ao... 1, Glllipolia. April ' 1913 and bet motlter OD
died Tllunday, June' 13 at Holzu: April9, 1919.
·
Medical Cen&amp;er. Funerallei'V~S · Slle was a bomemaJw,
·
wen lle1d 1 p.m. Saturday at the
Her rotmer huabaad, Claude
M~~Moore Funeral Home, Woodie, preceded bet in deadl; one
W
t Oaaoe1, Galli1JOlil, with . sister, Lola' Smidl; lnd twO 1JcOtb..
Jtev. Alfred Holley and bv. K.cith ers, Bun and Robert Miller.
Adkiu olticillliaa. Burial wu in.
SUr\livou-IDclude two daqll~
Ohio Valley Memory O..doas.
ten, Mn. JIIIICI (Loui•) Jlraiey of
Pallbciiers were: Bob Holland, Gallipolis lid Mn. MirY Smidt r1
l&gt;aul Hollin1sheacl, Ropr Detl, Galena;
Allen Woodie of
Emest i4war4s, Mu li&amp;:Farlan4 Sunbury and Don Woodie of
ll!d&amp;nieMcFarland.
·
Nonhup; oacblocher, B4Millcrof
Cldmus; three step-lf'llldchildren;
James Rollins
i oarendcbildrea; and 17 ~tC&amp;t·
GAU.IPOUS _ JllllC:S Ec1wlrd ~·
·
ItoUins, 76, of Gallipolis; died .. Funenl~ervicea will be conFriday, June 14, 1991, .l l Holzer · .ducted 1 p.m. today at .Willis
Medic:al Center.
Funeral Home with Rev . .Kenneth
Born June 11 , !915 ill Racine, Slliders officliuna. Burial will be
f the late John Ohio Valley Memory GlfllenS.
Rollin• He
Pallbcliua will be Pliillip Fra·
... d _, ...-4 ..... Icy, Jeff Fraley DIM Price, lal:ob
was I'R •pwJ' - Service Miiler Wl'/fl/6 Woodie IDd D!r-

two_,

.

··

· :J'•.:_&lt;,.:,:;.:.)

Fred W. Crow

Joseph spear·

,;

~::,. r;:tt!led F~

&lt;•

~,

Float bonds, make fair offers, and
if the owners refuse to sell, seize
them by right of eminent domain.
1bis is also nol a wild idea. In most
major-league cities, the taxpayers
already own the sladiums. Why not
own the teams that play in them?
New York Gov. Mario Cuomo suggested two yean ago that the Stile ;
and New York City buy the Ylll· '
tees. A Montreal city official, •
upset that the Expos might be sold, ;
said last year that "governments .
have to get involved. It's like subsidizing zoos, planetariums, aquari- •

urns.••

·

Pril;c. '·

Proposed...

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.......

K+

Radnc, WV; ~
.
IIJld two ~
Service wW IJe lleld - Mlildly, .
'
J - '17, I&amp; 1 p.111. I&amp; v..p.~
THOUSAND OAKS, Calif•.
ley-Wool! Fuaeral Houle, .. Gal- (AP)- Former·Praldenl .......
1lpo1is, wid! Rev. En.- Plrtina answ•rinl c:harges that ban
ollldatiJII. Bllrial will IJe 111 the ·doJPCII'relident Buall, said SlturItoyiolds Celfletay
day that their J91(} CIJDP'ip tried
PriCIIdS 1111)' caJi • lbc funcrll 10 help - not binder - the releue
home on SUDCiay fql 6-9 p.m.
of Amerlan ~in h'lll.•
"I did some dullp actually the
other way to lry ucl be of help in
gettin&amp; t11o1e iloaiFI- I felt very
sorry for thein - in geuilll them
out of there,'' Raapn said. ·
"And thil whole tlliaa that I
\
'
\lias lfo'orried Jlbout that as I CIID·
paign th~s absolute fiction,''
Rapn
"I did some llliiiiS
10 try die Oilier way."
Rnpa diacuued the ilsuc with
· -reporters briefly durin1 a 10lf
M.-r. na. Allctdated Pm• In·
' match with Bush. Bush· has
11114 Dally Preea AIIGdatlOII and
cmpbaaieal1y deaiod the allepNatiollll

:::=
RoJIIn , or

·hostages

AnciCa-.

-... 711 Tlttrd " .......
New York, N- Yark 10017.
·

..

--

IIUNII.\Y ONLY
1\IIICSII'IION U'l'llll

.,~
()no WHk
.. .. : ...................... 10 C..to

One Y•r ....... .... :..................... 11&amp;.10
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.
FmCII

Suaday ......... ........................ 71 Cfllll
No oultacrtpltonl by mall permltlfolln
aree1 where motor carrlft" llft'Yitt ll

_,IJWL..-...

IYIU.I•.

'l1lo IIIDday TI_.Sio!tllol wOIIOt llio
-IIIIo l&lt;&gt;r ttdnoce pa~to

-..Oolr

O!te Y"r ................................. 117.14
IlK m.. u................................. JIU.'lll

w-.. .......
. . . . . . . ,. . . . . .
MAIL alJIICIIIPI'IOIII

u

~

12I.I4
21 W- ..................................IIUI
aw................................ ........M

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,.

IRUCE WIWS

HUDSON HAWK
AID
JODI£ FOSTER
II

••

'.

25°/o

OFF
DRAPES

SPRIN6 VAllEY CINEMA
44b 4)24

OUR POliCY
Brin1 1ny COIIIpttitors UniX..
pirld discount coupons for
1ny Dry Clllftina Slrvice and
n will ~nor lhlt coupon plus
&amp;in you an ldditlonll5% OFF.

' : .•

'
AJkecl if a member of hil CIIA· ·
paian staff miJ)u have aca.d wilbout hla bowledp, 1'11"1' . . . .
"I don 'I think 10."
· 1111 allcptio-&amp;lll'lc bela niiiCl
~ Skt, • Iliff taltabcr ol
•• Nalk-•1 Scurlty Coundl
Sidt llicl 11111'1 is aridlllel dill
R0111n' I Clllp&amp;iln StratCiiiU
feared Carter •ilht pull .off.an
"Octoller Supri10" by willn101
the holllpl' "'-·and dlllltll·
gan' a Jtaff worttd wllll Iranian
wntlcll 10 ens.n that would aoc

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YOUR DENTt1RES IN ONE DAY
Cu.tmn Pitted Denturea In 0111 Day A1 oUr n:.y. Valley Olllce

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DMTURBS START AT 8134 PER DEN"''tJiEI
SM4' r ADDIDONAL CJlA1«;lE FOR s.ofE DAY SERVICE

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(Jit.lJI

,.•,•.

Expl,... 8/30/81
'

(JTV
\LICk IRS

((\ DUIE
\.j) CLEAitEIS :
446-1412
675-4630

,I
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CELEBRATING
OUR 58th YEAR IN
BUSINESS
'

Servtnc the Tri..COunty Area u the
Number x Jeweler Ylewlnl Store, Not
Only In prig, but ·Q uaUty and
Selection!
WE NOW HAVE THE WORLD'S

~144 ..

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t031 QJ.IARJEA STREET

BRILLIANCE
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DIAMONDS.

3041 .IIIII Bid; .. Cltatlnton • -

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IIIII . . callilllr'llr" ..' fll ..

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Aaociatt DtgrHs

IUSINISS COLLEGE

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Stop in and see.our selection and we
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PICIUP AND DIUYIIY AYAIUILI
CALL 446·9495

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______________ ....

44HIZ3

Caru:t

..

Ben Chandler said his father
died. at his home, apparently of a
heart attack.
It was during Chancller' s tenure
as baseball commissioner, 1945 Ill
1951, that that one of.the most
important events in baseball history
occurred ~ the breaking of the
color line.
Chandler, despite considerable
pressure, su~poned the introduction of Jack1e Robinson into the
major leagues with the Brooklyn
Dodgers in 1947. Chandler also
made the controversial decision to

R

ADIIIUIOfl I 1.10

liked f«. ftlll-lcalo ~
probe of alleptiolll dial tile Jlea.
pn-Bush camJ*p COIIIPind 10 .
delay lhclr rele"• until &amp;ftlr 11M
IIllO election COIIIUI with Jimmy

'

Coatinued on A·S

SILENCE OF THE

.OlE EYotl• SIIOW 7:30

EiJ)u of the 52 hostages held in

-.

suspend Brooklyn manager Leo·
Durocher for the 194 7 season·
because of his associations with
gamblers.

said.

1: GC,t:U Dl\llt
IATISUN MAUIOS
l ~ OO.l : II ·

8rl1btt11 Your Future II

-.

VERSAILLES, Ky. (AP)A.B. "Happy" Chandler, former
Kentucky governor, senator and
major league basebaU commission·
er during .the late 1940s and early
1950s, died Saturday at 92, his son

p,....,, Thla Coupon

Alls:diun

I

Former baseball commissioner
~Happy' Chandler dies at' age 92 ·.

FRI., SAT.. SUit

•

. Listen up, Baltimore. Current ·
owner Eli Jacobs wants 10 sell the :
Orioles. There is not a city in the ·
country with more gumption IJid ;
pride than you. Buy the team and ;
keep it forever. Listen up, Wasil- •
in~. You're tryinl to raise $95 :
million 10 buy an OXJIIU!sion taun. :
You've already bougllt 23,000 sea- •
son tickets as a show of support. ;
Form a coopemlive and buy slims :
instead.
1be tide is high, and it's time 10 :
ride it.
.

Texas.

And 81v1.

rem. flllm 1979 until 1911 ·lll~~e

IW,;i'IO!II. -.If

.South Central Oblo
. Sunday, variable cloudiness and
humid with a chance of showers or
thunderstorms. High near 85.
Winds west 10 to 20 mph becom·
ing nonhwest. Chance of rain 40
percent. Sunday night, mostly
clear. Low near 65. Monday, most·
ly sunny. High ncar 85.
Extended forecast:
Tuesday throogb Thursday:
Fair through the period. Highs
in the 80s. Lows in the 60s.

•

tiolls.

... ==

c...ar
u
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.......
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. . . 0 tdt

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0

Weather

generally from the lOUth to iiOUti!:• .
west at leas than !I miles an hour.
Hi&amp;h ~reuure over the East ·
Coast and low preuure over the · .
Southern Plains were expected 10' :
keep Ohio ·
very warm souther •
Jy.t1o'fol~andSunda .
·::
B Sunday night, a cord front:·
·
Y
led to extend from the· ·
was e(Ct Lakes 10 northern Illi-:
UpPer
••
no!S.,
•:
Around tbe nation
.;
Damaging winds, hail and even, •
a 'few tornadoes were expected in •:
the Plains st8ICS later in the day. ~ :
ShOwers or thunderstorms also: •
were likely today in New England,•
and around the Great Lakes, as:,
well as in Iowa and adjacent areas•.
of Missouri, Illinois and Wiscon·&lt;
:.
· sin.Thunderstorms also were•.
expected in the afternoon and: ·
evening in the SoutheasJ.
:
High pressure over the Rockr.
Mountains was expected to pro-.
duce sunny Jkies in the morning,: ·
but isolated thunderstorms were•:
· likely from Wyoming Ill New Mex-::
ico by afternoon.
· . ·- ·
Highs today were expected 10 be
in the 70s across mt~ch of the
northern tier of states. in the 80s
across the central United Slates and
in the 90s across the South and iii
much of the EasL
~
High temperature for the nation
Friday was 102 degrees at i,..aredQ,

. .final"'"i·kw•wllil~~Mea•

t••

Ollloll""opoEF.="'
kOI·
_..,
·
atlft,llranum

coatlaued

don't w•IO - - tltalaow,• com· '(lffered to the l'brari
· th e 10
1
es m
.....S Powao.
counties.
Por t... pall ICV~:~
He said that Sen. LOna offered
Jilnritlllave boca fmu
an amendment to rea lOre the
6.3·pGCiiftl rA tile 111111 iiCGn1e tax OVAL fundinJ but the finance
mOIIia. Till Sen11a piiD calls for commiuee rejected the amendment
awir.ellilllllle fundill1 IOURlC for
"We had assumed that becaute
Stale Ubl'lry open&amp;icllll from the both the Governor 111d the House
GeHral bnaue Jluad to the had included u• that we would
Library an4 Local 00¥Illlllent clear tile budaet hurdle. We never
· SUIIPOR Flll!l '1111l-lhll ~14 :;,~~tOll that the Senate, con!Dillioa w~Ich. 1111.beta.~nl
by the party of the Gover111111 Joeallillal• wiD~ _ .1Dclto nor. ~d reverse 1!iJ rec:ommenColu•bul for operaUOII of die dalioa," Andenon llid.
Sta~eUllllry,I'DwaaDGiD~ouL
Andmonlaidthatiuppeanthe
Sbe 1116 dlat tbelocal hbrary · fate of both OVAL and pubhc .
"could five• wilb tbe ooHalf per· library !UDdina is in the hands of
cent cut for tho .at two yean as
the conferenceoommi• .
PIOIJC)IId Ia bath Oo;emor Georae
OVAJ. wu estlblisbed in 1973
Vofnovich IIICI tbe HoUle ofl.epre- as tho fint state-funded re~ional ·
sentatives' version of the budaet.. public library system in Ohio. Up
b11t that if die Sea~te budge~ is until two years ago when Meigs
approved. the fuadina reducuon • purchased its own vehicle, book- .
wouldbiiJII"'bk'ID . . . .
mobile ~ervice was provided
AI fill' llle total obmiDillon of throul1l OVAL.
OVAL fiiiiCiitll in the Scad !Jucl·
The aaeacy now provides
pt. Erie
0~direc- numerous consultina ~ervicea,
t«, ~ dill be wu
Y sur- · operates the Books by Mail proprised by !he DIO¥e.
graDI and furnishes COIIIpUIIn and
OVAL serves libraries in other
· em used at the Mcip
Athens, H~kinJ. JiackS!Jn.- eoun:LWC:::andtheMiddleport
bWRIICC, Me1gs, Pickaway, ~· Branch.
Ross. Sci«o and VInton Counties.
A iepl n•taive flolll -=it county
MTYCI Q!llbl Boerd of Trustocs
nk* 1 d'n ~ ~ llllkel·

Rea·aan trie'd : ·
u-.
_.. _. u...,_.... .....
r!u.~tn=~~ t hel
t
.,.._ Betty Cald-ll of PhOeniJt.
0
rn,
no
w~
!rown ot
· · 'l" AZ; a half-sisller, Dorothy Brown
h
.
.
•
.J
1ra ft .jnn
Ral:ine, WV; half·brocber, Dole
Jnuer

Uflllldlbdlodl• Quda.
s......_ ! - L• .I. !olo wife,

llolbatHI_,

produced the legendary Honus
Wagner
original member of the
Hall of Fame) has no divine right
10 its Pirates. Give me a confound·
ed break.
There are some sure-fire solutions to this mess, and the timing is
perfecL Baseblll fans themselves
could restore fiscal sanity to the
sport and ensure their teams will
stay put for a long time if they
would just 01ganize themselves and
buy them. There are at least two
ways this could be done:
1. Form "coopentives" and sell
shares to raise capital. This is not a
far·fetcbed notion. The Green Bay
Packers football team has been a
private, non-profit corpofation
since 1922, when slightly more
than $100,000 was raised through
the sale of shares that pay no clivi·
dends and cannot be IJBded. Faeed
with bantrupu:y in the 1950s, the
PICkers sold more shares, raised
$125,000 and has been healthy ·
since. The stockholders elect a
board of dilectas, which manages
filllllCeS llld biJu personnel •
2. "Municipalize" your teams.

B Tile Alloclalld Preas
'1
Summery weatlter aqd above
normal. tempallllrel .were forecast
to C0D11DUe 11C1011 Ohio through the
weekend.
'
.Mostly clear to panlr clou~y
sk1es were expected In Oh10
t~ough Sunday . Lows Saturday
m-ht were proJected tC? be m the
mid ·60s to mid 70s. Hi$hs Saturday IDd Sunday will be m the mid
80s to lower 90s. th\\ National
Weather Service said.
A few thunderstorms were forecast for the weekend, mainly in the
aflemoon. But most areas were not
,expected 10 receive any rain until !I
cold front pushes into the state late
Sunday night
Sun~hine was the rule across
Ohio Friday, with afternoon tempetaturel in the mid 80s to lower
90s - about 5 degrees above nor·
mal at most localions. Winds were

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Hcnderron got a tour-year $12 million contract and poUted because a
Ferrari Testarossa wasn't tossed in.
Now cOllies an economic downtum. CBS and ESPN lost money
last year on their collective fouryear $1.5 billion contraCts and want
rebates. Only two franchises - the
Yankees and the Los Angeles
Dodgezs - are believed to be con·
sistently profitable. Teams in
smaller ciues, which have to pay
the same salaries as those in the
major markets to stay competiti~~e,
are in trouble.
Does anyone involved in the
sport outside those cities give a
damn? Listen to the words of play·
er agent Cllii Fenech; as quoted m
1be Washington Times: "There
a be pockets where there are
lems, such as Pittsblqh. But if
Ulldtnlland the me rnartet. tams
can move somewhele else - SliDe
as if I open a Jata~~~~q, A city has
no divine ri&amp;htiO a lell1l."
Heir that, Pltublqh? The team
that played in the first World Series
ever (1903, vs. Bolton), is no better
than a hash house. .the city that

CHESTER Hallie D.
SIDIIinp, 76, of Olatlr, formerly
ol Mllli1a, Boooc County, W.VL,

died Friday, JllllC 14, 1991 a Holzer Medical Center of injuries iustained in a «*' accidenL
He - bani Mlrch 21, 1915 at
Manila, the - of the late Olcy and .
Nannie BIIUr SIOUiqs.
.
He wa a redrell11110 meeltinic
and was prti'C"'hd iD death by tluee ·
sisters and one bmlher. .
He is survived by the his wife,
Inez Oore.Stollilw, one 1011. JKJ[.
ie Stollinas, Chester, and one
aran~dauabter, Atlita Ackerman.
Huhaap, W.VL
~ ..vil:cl will be oondr'
oae~,J
Jc•
•
one &amp;other. BOb ol S.IWII, Fla.; 1 p.m. ~lldly at iviRI PllAiral
and two ulldea, Dallas Jilliotl of Home at C~IIIUville, W.Va.
Gallipolia aad Blaer Blliott of witlt Mr. V I Hill oftlcialina.
Burial will ~
at SlolliJIIS Filii·
. . . . . . W. VA.
. ~City,'Colo.
ily Cemcray at Manila. w:v.. .
Pullfihl~ervicea will be' con·
Friends may call between 6-9
. dueled 2 p.m. M?aday at Willis
. ,F_.Ifoma, With Rov. Charla, p.m. Sunday • the funcrsl.l1ome in ·
. I Ulller oll'iciililll. Burial wiD be iD Chapmanville.
· Ohio Valley Me111ory Gardens.
Friends may call at tlle funeral Georaie R. Woodie .
home IOdl)' fnlm 6-9 p...
~==::::;:::~~~::~·=-~~~r~A;
: c~•:~=:c:~;;~
· Pallbeuera wUI be Dol Cox, .7.8,G~A·~~w~
of
Galeaa,
died thursday, JIDIO wa • ·
;w
0111t -..-~&gt;~r. Jrc.
· . Bobby
Jack Willilms,
. . RDMrt R.otll&amp;•b, Robert ,Roaers 13, 1991 at Riverside Metltodist
aad Jiia lflllaa.
·. ~.!.~;m.:."':p.u 2.
ill
from A·l

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shortly.
Eaclr year the writer feels that
with God's help he was able io
· this may be his last golf year. This
walk
the 18 holes. It KlOic Dale 18.
year both the legs and the eyes are
months
of this type of exercise
giving me a great deal o( ttouble.
together
with prayer to overcome
However, through perseverance I
th1s
disability.
Dale credits this to
have been able to get on the golf
God.
course to play a few holes this
There are not many ~pie who
spring.
.
would
do what Dale d1d to over1be most amazing example of a
come
his
handicap. This story is
.
man overcoming a handicap is the
unbelievable
but uue.
s10ry of Dale M. Dutton. Dale is
There are, of coursp, many,
now 86 years of age and he has
many
more stories involving golf.
probably played as much golf each
The
reader
of this article who is
year as any iitdividual now a memnot
a
golfer,
would wonoo! why an
ber of the local Meigs County Golf
educated
adult
would walk around
Club. Tbere was a time about 10
a
golf
course
hilling
a little ball.
years ago when Dale's back
My
only
response
to
this
question
became a serious problem and he
could hardly walk, let alooe play is that this game is a spon which
golf. He was treated by two local compels the player to try to · ·
improve his score each time'out. ;
docrors for pain.
Golfers seem to band together ·
1ben he was treated by Dr. Tom
for
the pleasure of spon, but also in :
Lewis of Columbus, who referred
good
comradeship. It's )ike any· :
him to an orthopedic specialist.
thing
else.
If you get hooked on it ·
After extensive examinations this
you
become
addicted.
:
specialist told him that there was
To
summarize,
these
men
and
:
nothing that he could do for his
physical condition. The doctors others were hit by the ravages of
said the only remedy they could see Father time and suffered mentally .
.
would possibly be exercise. So as well as physically.
So
Rupe,
get
on
the
golf
course
•
Dale decided 10 do his exercise on
and
stan
hacking
away.
Maybe
you
.
the golf course. At first he started
walking on the Jaymar golf course can beat Father time. However, you ·
and he could only get 25 yards may also win the "duffer of the .
·
without tiring. Dale carried with · year award."
·
Carryon.
:
him a stool on which he could sit
(Long-time Pomeroy Attorney ;
down to rest when he became tired.
At f llSI he could walk one hole Fred W. Crow iS a contributor of : ·
carrying the stool and would return columns for the Sunday Times· ·
to the club house. As time passed Sentinel. Readera wlshlag to :
he increased the distance and later applaud, criticize or comment on ·
we would see Dale walking the any subject (except for potitlcs or ·
course by himself with a golf ball religion) are encouraged to write
and his puuer in his hand. Finally, to Mr. Crow in care of this news· ·
paper.)

Save baseball from greed, doom

Berry's World

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Old golfers never ie, they just keep hacking away

The passing of Everett Bachner
is another example of a golfer who
has crossed the great diwde and is
now resting in peace in golf heaven. Everett was a person who took
up the game of golf lare in life.
He started playing occasionally
at the Pomeroy Golf Course when
Hugh and Shirley Custer operBICd
it. He did not take the game seri·
ously until after he retired from his
grocery bUSiness. His wife's death
was a severe tragedy 10 him.
As a result he became an exces·
sive golfer in order 10 get over the
loneliness that developed by her
By The Asloc:iated Press
death. In short, the golf course and
• Today is Sunday, June 16, the !67th day of 1991. 1bere are 198 days his friends occupied most of his
left in the year. This is Fathcl''s Day.
spare time. However, in the mean·
• On June 16, 1858, in a speech in Springfield, m. Senate candidate t\l)le Everett had a severe heart
problem and had open heart
;&amp;.braham Uncoln said the slavery issue had to be ta10l~ declaring ''A
!lOuse divided against ilself CIIIIDOtstand."
'
•
' surgery 10 correct his physical con' On this elite:
. .
dition. He was warned by his doc·
' In 1567, Mary, Queen of Scots, wasimprisoned in Lochleven Castle in tor not to overdo his golfing as it
Scotland.
could be detrimental to his health.
: In 1883, baseball's lint "I adies' Day" took place as the New York
There were times, notwithstanding these warnings, that
Qochams offered free admission for women to a game against the Clevebind Spiders (New YOlk won, 5·2).
Everell wou.ld play as high as 27
In 1903, Ford Motor Company was incaporaJed.
holes of golf per day. He became
In 1932, Praident HooW~r and Vice President Charles Curtis were
fati~ued and a couple of years ago
I'CIIIIIIm.l by lbe Republican National Convention in Chicago.
dec1ded he should cut down on his
playing. He sold his golf cart think: In 1933, die Nllioall lndullria1 Recovery Act became faw. (It was
ing that he was going to quit the
lallr
: In--=~...'!.!t
IN), I
. SupeweCourt).
piYeiiiiiiCDt was inltlllccl in the Baltic stale
game permanently. However, the
~I ill'_.,
iDI .. invuion of Soviet flln::ea.
urge to play was 100 great and last
• In l955, Pope PiUI XU ucommunicated A -ntine President Juan
year he rewrned 10 his old way of
Dbmin l'aua -a ban lifted ei&amp;ht yean 11111r~ 11 ~
playing.
:• In
30 ,em 1110. Soviet bellet dancer'RudolfNureyev defected to
This apparently got to him
die West wbile Ilia troupe wu in Plris.
again atid last year and earlier this
• In 1963, Valentini Tmabkova became the fii'Sl female space traveler
year you could see Everett sitting
when VOIIQk VI wu launched from the Soviet Union on a three-day mis- on the bench on the ftrSt tee want·
sibn.
ing to play in the worst way, but
In 1970, Kenneth A. Gibson of Newark, NJ., became the ftrSt black to
not able 10. It was sad indeed 10 see
win a mayoral election in a major Northeast city.
an old golfer who wanted to play
, In 1976, riots brW out in the black South African township of Soweso desperately, but could not for
101
'
health reasons.
: Ill 1976, u~s. All:hmdor 10 Lebanon FJ'IDCis E. Meloy Jr. and an aide
wae kidnllppcd llldlbot to dealh in BeiruL

run

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Sunday nmea sentinel Page A3

Above n«mmal temperatures to continue ~:

June 16, 1991. :

Father Divine's 'heaven' had a twist
A Division of

nt, WV

flnllnolal Aiel Aval•le To Thoae Who Qualify
A,ROVID fOR THI! TRAINING OF VETERANI

v

4U SECOND AVE. GALLIPOUS
C•14) 44..1•11
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Page-A4-Sunday Tlmea Sentinel

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June 18,1891

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pl....nt, WV

Gallipolis minister arrested in 1894 for posting lectures
GALLIPOLIS - "An Outrage!
Rev. P.A. Baker anested and at·
taigned in the Police Colirt."
That's the way the Gallipolis Tribune reported it in
Au81lst of 1894.
Purley A. Baker of
the Grace Method·
ist Church was
given a criminal
record for the
"heinous crime" ol
taclr;ing notices of
a locture on telephone
The backpound
quite complicated and has to do
to wilh Mr. Balcer's involvement in
matters pertaining to the movement
to limit the sale of alcohol in Gallipolis.
Baker was active in the politics of
the town, not only serving as full time
pastor, but also as chairman of the
Republican party in Gallipolis.
Baker was not afraid to openly
SALOON STOOD HERE IN 1894 • This bulldla1 ased to
talk politics on the street comers
and he had welded the young men
S\Bnd OD the 600 block of SecoDd Avenut1 11CI"OIIS from Grace Ualt·
ed Methodist Cburcb. Ia 1894, a saloon was localed here. Rev.
of Grace Church into an active
Baker of Grace Church saw saloon keepen as the greatest eae·
. politic11l force for social reform.
mies of the church and saloon keepers fought back llpiDSt Baker.
Chief among those reforms was the
limitation on the.sale and consump; tion ot alcohol.
W.G. Sibley, editor of the Tribune and great ally of Baker, once
wrote that "reforming Gallipolis
was a hard nut to crack and Mr.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Many
~-, Baker acquired a large list of ene'
Americans - particularly minorimies-mostly saloonkeepers and
ties, the young and single people
lheir customers. But Baker was full
:.... find the dream of home ownerof grit and threats never phased
ship slipping from their grasp; a
him,"
Census Bureau srudy concludes.
Nliw it seems that the mayor of
The report. "Who Can Afford
Gallipolis then was a saloonkeeper
to Buy a House?," found that 57
himself'named Alexander. When
Breakdown, In
percent of all households - both
the
mayor saw Rev. Baker and a
percent, of the
owners and renters - could not
young lad of 11 going around the
, maxlmum-pHce~ , .
afford a median-priced house purtown tacking up posters advertising
· ~ousl ng .that black .
chased with a conventional, 30·
a lecture to be held at Grace by Dr.
. · alldWhite'lamilles
year, fued-rate mongage.
Edward Thompson, the mayor saw
Thirty-six percent of current
·. ciiri afford to l!uy, . . .
his chance to publicly embarrass
homeowners and 91 percent of
Baker.
renters did not qualify for a medi·
.The mayor went to. the office of
an-priced home.
Mr. Jones, the telephone manager.
Even a modestly priced house is
and urged Jones to make out an
too expensive for 48 percent of lhe
affidavit and complaint against
nation "s households, said the
Baker. This was done apd Alexanrcpon, released Thursday. And 15
der immediately issued a warrant
percent could not afford to buy a
for the arrest of Baker. When the
home at even lhe lowest prices.
news got out that Mr. Jones had
A median-priced house is one
sworn out a formal complaint
that is more expensive than half the
against Balcer, even though persons
homes in a market and less expenhad been allowed to put up bills
sive lhan half. A modestly priced
advertising various forms of
house was defined as one where 75
"unseemly entertainment", the telepercent of the homes in the mmct
phone manager was read the riot
cost more.
act by members of Grace Church.
"This seems to be telling us that
Mr. Jones was soon persuaded
the step from renting to home ownto withdraw his complaint. Howevership is a big step for a large numer the mayor said it was too late. A
ber of households and perhaps a
warrant could not be withdrawn.
bigger step than was generaUy real·
Baker personally tore down all the
ized," said economist Mark Obrin·
sky of the Federal National Mortgage Association. · ·
The study, which anal yzcd the
income, debt levels and savings of
12,000 households surveyed in the
spring of 1988, found sharp' differ~nces in the ability to buy a home
oU(i-2342
by region, age, marital status and
race or ethnic background.
992-2156
, For instance, 77 percent of black
675-1333
families and 74 percent of Hispanic that lower interest rates, which
families could not buy a median- translate into lower monlhly mort\'riced home, compared with 43 gage payments, did almost nothing
percent of whites and 46 percent of to improve renters' prospects of
oon-Hispanics.
.
home ownership.
Thirty-nine percent of married
"It helps some, but it's not sta·
couples could not afford a median tistically significant. They just flat
~ouse, compared with 75 percent of don) have the money. You can
all single people and 87 percent of lower monthly payments, but if
single women with children.
they don't have enough for a down
• Twenty-seven percent of fami- payment then· it's an irrelevant
lies headed by people between 55 question,"' Savage said.
and 64 years old could not pur ~
He said the findings are still
chase a home against 94 percent valid three yej!CS later. Home prices
headed by individuals younger than in many markets have risen less
rapidly or even declined and mort~s.
By region, the percentage of gage rates have fallen from
Households who couldn "t afford a between 10 percent and 10.5 per1pedian house were: the West, 63; cent in 1988 to 9.5 percent this
Northeast, 59; South, 56, and Mid- spring. However, with the onset of
west, 51. The medil!n prices were the recession, fewer lenders are
Northeast, $1 00.000; West. offering low-down-payment mort·
$95,000, and Midwest and South, gages.
. The problem of declining home
~.000.
.
, Howard A. Savage, a Census ownership rates is· not new. After
Bureau statistician who wrote th.e rising steadily from 55 percent in
report with Peter J. Fronczek, said 1950 to 66 percent in 1980, lhe rate
the most surprising finding was edged down to 64 percent in 1990.

posters and removed the tacks in
addition to apologizing to Jones.
.The ordinance had been passed so
as not to endanger repairmen who
had to climb the poles.
Baker went to sleep thinking the
thing was settled. Early Tuesday
morning. however, Marsbal Kuhn
arrested the preacher and notified
him to appear in the police court
later that day. Baker went to the
city building and was arraigned
before the mayor alon~ with an
assortment of drunks, disordcrlies
and malcontents. The telephone
manager failed to appear and Baker
refused to enter a plea. Balcer was
held on his own recognizance
under penalty of $50. •
The Tribune reported of the
matter: "What view the people of
Gallipolis may take of the situation
we are not prepared to state, but
there can be no doubt as to the feeling among the Methodists."

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.
(AP) - A judge delayed ruling on
a gag order in William Kennedy
Smith's rape trial after hearing two
hours of arguments from prosecutors, who accused the Kennedy
family of trying to sa11otage their
case.
Palm Beach County Circuit
Judge Mary Lupq voiced alarm last
week about pretrial publicity and
proposed a ·sweeping ban of out-of. court commentary on lhe case by
v inually all trial participants,
including potential witnesses.
But at a hearing Friday, she said
she would issue a decision later on
whether to impl~ment the order.
Also Friday, Lupo set a June 19
hearing date on a defense motion to
dismiss charges against Smi.th
because of alleged prosecutonal
misconduct and state-generated
prejudicial publicity.
Smith, 30, faces trial Aug. 5 on
second-degree sexual battery,
Florida's equivalent of rspe, and
misclemeanor battery charges. He's
accused of raping a 29-year·olct
woman at his family's estate on
March 30. He has pleaded inno·
cent.
1
During Friday's hearing, atlor·
ney Martin Reede~, representing
several news organlZ&amp;Uont DI'J'?S·
ipg the gag order, offered the Judge
language for a less sweepmg order
' .

'\

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SEU..G PIICI

I•lczz:-~~~~:~~:2~
Now is the tif(le to select ·a
family monument. Perpetuate,
for all time, the ·memory of
those you love. Our knowledge
and eKperience are yours for
. the asking.
Notlling you tluy wm ever 1111
as permanent as a family monu·
ment.. Us purchase warrllntll
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wllat you tluy. VIsit tile monu·
mel)t dealer who haa a com·
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design a personalized monu·
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surroundings. .
We have the eKperience. We
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Your purchase Is tl/ICked fly tile
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MONUMENTS ARE OUR ONLY
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LOGAN
MONUMENT C0. 1
MEIGS COUNTY ,

DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY·MASON BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH. Mgr • .

.· tfum:J . HONDA
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PHONE 992·2588

VINTON. OHIO
STATE RT. 110

KIMBER~Y BUSH, Mgr.

• DOHUK, ':~AP) - Allied
out of the city
of Doblik Saturday in a test case
for a complete wtthdrawal from
northem IJaq later this summer.
Hlllldreds of soldiers and truckS
fillod with equipment are leaving
liaq ell:h day, and the U.S. military
announced that troop strength in
OCcupation Provide Comfort had
dtopped almost 30 pen:ent aince its
peakMay21. .
Tho pullout mikes Dohuk the
fU"St city vacated h¥ allied troop1
during their occnJII"ll'' of hUithe.n

~e ~ithdrawal

Whe'n You Say Trucks
,Think Of Simmons
''Joclay's Tnck Is Chevrolet"·

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1991 CHEVROLET 8·10 PICKUP
n'*1· In Aspen blue finish, 4 cylln.der e~glne,
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Saturday "to keep the Iraqis honeS!, •' he said.
"We'd like to show a littlo bit
of a presence,'' Nub said as be sat
at the Dohuk Hotel, while the last
American soldiers cleaned up
around him.
The· colonel said he was not
worriedlhe Iraqi army would break
the agreement immediately. Still,
like most Americans in the opera·
lion, he expreasacl concern about
the future ol the Kurds.
"I'd worry about the more subtle dlblp,'' he said. ''lbe way they
tighlca the ICI'OWS In this country,
thinp we can't monitor.''
d litAmlrican 'OIIklen CXji
tlo opli111i1111 thll a U.N. IOCurity
force of 4l·~~lpod to Dohut,
will deler' !JUlll8ll npts violations
in the longlorm.
About 500 of the U.N. officers
should have been in Iraq this week·
end but so far fewer lhan l 00 have
. arrived, a problem U.N. officials
blamed on funding.
By Saturday afternoon, all of the
89 American, British, French and
Dutch forces who had occupied
Dohuk since May 24 were gone.
They entered Dohuk to heiR
restore essential services to the city
of 250,000 people, one of the
in northern lrlq.
presence also acted as a
magnet to · Kurds who fled to
squalid refugee camps in the mGOII•
tair)S .between Turkey and Iraq after
their failed rebellion against l'resi·
dent Saddam Hussein in March.

~ir

S&amp;L president plunges 12
·stories from hospital, ~ies
CINCINNATI (AP) 1 - The
president of Hamilton savings and
loan feU to his death Saturday from
lhe window of his 12th-floor hospi·
tal room in CinciMati, authorillCS
said.
David Stitsinger, 48, fell six stories to the roof on the sixth floor at
Good Samaritan Hospital about

JJJ 1Wnl ....

.,

...
•
••'

.
'.••
•'

.

•

•
••

The merger was delayed when
First Financial ,approached Home

SIRM IS ON THE MOVE!!

Fcdaal officials on May 3 with. an
amended buyout offer. Home'Fed·
eral"s board ol directors voted last
month to accept the amended offer
and the meraer is expeQecl to be
complete by the end of the yar.
Stitiinger was appointed on
May 31 to serve as Home Fedctal" s
president 11Dtil the meqer is filial.

The mobile home
heat pump...the air
oonditioner .
that also
heats. · Financing Available

\

1OO'Io 2 yr. Parll &amp; IJollor
Wammty
100'1.
Parts &amp; lollor on
Rnaniftg at,., (ompr-r and
Outdoor Fan Motor

sr..

8ennetts M0b"lI 8 Home HeGflng
• &amp;. ( 001ing
Rt. 2 Box 447, Gallipolis, Ohio
Call 1-800-872-6967 or 446·9416

1- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-----:=~---------,
l

TRUCKLOAD

1

·

~J
~SIII
SAVE S70

THE
HOLZER
CLINIC

Ph. ....JJJ7

t

~~·rOin ~ber;:r~pital Lottery results

meraer
with First Financial Ban·
corp
of Monroe.

........,,. I

STANLEY A. SAUNDERS MONUMENTS

The window to Stitsinger's
room had been forced open, said
CLEVELAND (AP}- Here are
Rosenberger. Stitslngcr was alone the selections Friday night in the
in the room at the time he fell, . Ohio Lottery:
Rosenberger said.
Pick 3 Numbers
Stitsinger was promoted on May
· 3-2-3
31 from senior vice president to
(three-two-three)
interim president of Home Federal Pick 4 Numbers
Savings and Loan in Hamilton.
4-2-9-8
A ta~ telephone message at
(four, two, nine, eight)
tho thnft said its offices were Cards
Marrlaae llceue illsatd
closed S8lllrday.
6 (six) of Hearts
POMEROY • A marriage
StitaiDger had been a patient
4(four)ofCiubs
license has been issued in Meigs . iincc ThiiiSday at Good Samaritan
8 (eight) of Diamonds .
County Probate Court to Randall for llellment of injuries he suffered
5 (nve) of Spades
Wayne Cowdery, 21, Reedsville, in an automobile accident on Ohio
The Ohio Lottery will pay out
and Lisa Joann Gray, 19, Long 177 in Butler COunty, Rosenberger $1,060,748 to winners in Friday's
Bottom.
said. He was transferr~ Friday Pick 3 Numbers daily game. Sales
from ~ hospital's neuro-.intcnsivc in Pick 3 Numbers totalecl
Hospital news
care umt 10 the .neU1"0SUl'l!licll step- $1,393.316.
down unit and his condition was
In the two other daily games,
VETERANS MEMORIAL
improving, Rosenberger added.
Pick 4 Numbers playen wagered
FRIDAY ADMISSIONS
Stitsinger succeeded former $266,89l.SO and will share
Melba Hayes, Racine; Oneida Home Federal President Ben Bar- $192,800, and Cards players bet
Ward, Pomeroy; Marjorie Kapple,
Pomeroy; Dorothy Roush, Middle· tels, wbo retired last month. Bartels $48,522 and won $12,620.
his retirement to coincide
The jackpot for tonight's. ~uper
port; and Helen Williams, Middlc- planned
with Home Federal's J?lanned . Lotto drawing IS worth $8 milliOn.

Dilloladoa soagbt
MEIGS • An action for disSolution has been ·nlcd in the Meigs
County CoiD't of Common Pleas by
Charles D. B.-reu Jr., Rutland, and
Ann B. Barreu. Rutland.
Divorces sougltt
MEIGS • Actions for divorce
have been filed in the Meigs Coun·
ty Court of Common Pleas by
Teresa K. Barber, Reedsville, from
Ray Bllrber Jr., Reedsville; and Joy
King, Middleport, from Todd King,
Pomeroy.
SissollltiPOiated to bolll'd
PO~ROY • Iva Sisson has
been IJli)Ointed to serve u trustee
of the Meigs County Public Libnry ~RIDA Y DISCHARGES •
Board for the late Ted Reed's Sharon Barber, Tracy Simpkins
remaining 1em1 of seven years.
l8lld Cheryl Powell

-·1760

LARGE SELECDON

Meigs County Court news

I •

5 speed transmission, standard shift, power
brakes, tinted glass, radial Urea and more.

~cdcd

was.
Friday Dilbt by a peacetul demonsttalioD o1 about 1,500 Kurds wbo
sarroullllod the allied compound
ll1d pk eec1 with coalition fon:eaiO
extend their three-week occupation.
"No, no Saddaml Yes, yes
Bush!" the crowd chanted. A placaid read: ''Please leave peace when
you go."
The gathering ended after 90
minutes when U.S. Army Maj.
Gen. Jay Garner, commander.of
allied combat troops in Iraq,
aisured the crowd that the Iraqi
&amp;rmy and secret _police would not
be allowed back mto Dohuk for an
unspecified period of lime.
'
Under an agreement between
lnlqi fon:es and the u.s. command,
the Iraqi army and other security
forces will not enter the city,
according to U:S. Anny CoL Dick
Nub, a negotiator for the coalition.
Naab and other allied officers
have the. right. to visit Dohuk after

BOrn in 1898, Albert Benjamin
Chandler - he got the nickname
"Happy"' because of his toothy
smile - nest turned to politics in
1929.
He was a state senator at 32,
lieutenant governor at 33, governor
at 37, U.S. senator at 41 and, after ·
.his stint in baseball, governor again
NEW FRONT COMPLETED • Work wu
spokeaaaa said plus hive beea completed for
at 57.
completed oa die aew froat of tile Sears Store
rlbboil-cutllag ceremonies oa Thursday, begia·
•'When I got into politics, I .
bulldlna at the corner or Third Avenue and
aing at 9 a.m. The store opened Ia downtown
llecided to move fast,' Chandler
. Grape Street In Galllpoll1 Friday. A store
Gallipolis on Feb. 1. ·
.
said. ''Only four of us ever were
elected governor twice. It's the one
job I prize above all others."
.
He made one last try for the
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - A vague and needs to be enhanced,·· nances, but they couldn't exceed governor's offiCe in 1963 but WI!$
defeated in the primary.
group tepiCSCnting Ohio's lheriffs CornweU said in the letter. "Sever· what state law says."
has voiced support for a disputed al members suggested that should
Existing state law docs not
House bill that would block cities House BiU 4l4 pass, then the Leg· impose the kind of restrictions
from enacting gun control ordi· islature should immediately follow some cities have adopted such as ~-·~~~~-~---------,
• POOl • EFFICIENCIII
1IIN II
nances .
up with some type of flfe8rllls reg- waitiog periods for fllC8rnls buyers
• 1 ILOCK TO MV111011
11)1 I
Gov. George Voinovich, how- · ulation legislation."
or bans on guns classified as
ever, is opposed to the mcaaure
Cornwell said the board is made assault weapons. Malone acknowlbecause .it appears to violate the !IP. of IS sheriffs and four deputies. edged that even with the proposed
· conslitutional right of mllllicipali• ' It was a consensus of opinion to amendment, such local gun control
tics to exercise the powers of self· support the bill. It was not UIU!ni· ordinances still would be negated
government
mous," he said:
by the bill.
The House Commerce and
Curt Steiner, Voinovich's
Labor Committee has scheduled deputy chief or staff. said the gov·
another hearing and possible vote ernor oppoacs the mcuure.
on the bill Tuesday.
·
"The governor is very con·
The measure, sDonsored by Rep. cemed about that bill because in
Mart Malone, O.South Point, drew the opinion of his legal counsel it
fire last week from the Ohio Asso- violates the home rule provisions
ciation of Chiefs of Police, the of the Ohio Constibltion. Therefore
Ohio Fraternal Order of Police and he is opposed to the legislation,"
Attorney Gcneml Lee Fisher.
Steiner said.
The Buckeye State Sheriffs'
As introduced, it would give the
Association, whose members state exclusive authority to re~
include all 88 county sheriffs and the possession and tranlpOrtlllon of
about 2,500 deputies, said in a let- flfe8rllls and ammunilion.
ter to Malone it suworts his bill.
Malone said he was ·preparing ·
Robert Cornwell, the group's an amendment to deal with conexecutive director, said the consen- cerns about oonstit11tionality.
Rook of Ages offera you • choice of 8 different colored
sus·among the 19-member board of
"That seems to be most peogranitM.
Whllttwr your requirements may be, complet"
directors he surveyed was to sup· ple's biggest Objection, the CQIISti.Mtlafectlon
Ia aaurad with Rook. of Ages.
port the bill.
tutional question," Malone said.
Open
Mon.,
Tuea.• Thurs. • Fri. 9:00 a.m. 'til. 4;00 p.m.
"There also was concern that ''The amendment would allow
Other
Hours
by Appolntment-693·8688 or 44d·Z327
the current state code is somewhat local municipalities to have ordi·

:=~Ell£

GALLIPOLIS -Rick A. Smith, 38, Gallipolis, was arrested and
incarcerated for driving under the influence by the Gallia County
Sheriff's Department
'
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troops quietly

...
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from A·3
It was during Chandler's tenure
as basebaU commissioner. 1945 to
1951, that that one of the most
important evems In baseball history
occurred - the breaking or the
color liDe.
C:hiUidlcr, despite considerable
pressure, supPorted the introduc·
tion or Jackie ltobinson into the
major lea~ues with the Brooklyn
Dodgers 1n 194 7. Chandler also
made the controversial decision to
suspend Brooklyn manager Leo
Durocher for the 19'4 7 season
because of his associations with
gamblers.
·
·

Sheriffs, Voinovich split over gun control

: 1 a"ested overnight

Allied troops pull out
of Duhuk 'in test case'

Cart .

-

m&lt;111mg.
On Fric!ay at 11:13 a.m. the Rutland unit went to Route 124 for
Ron Pettie wbo ·was transported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• At 8:14 p.m. the Pomeroy unit was called to Wek:btown Road
for Angela Fmk wbo waa taken to Holzer Medical Center.
On Saturday It 4:42 a.m. the Rutland unit responded to Route
143 for Bessie Gra1uim wbo was taken 10 O'Bieness Memorial Hospiral.

.

810 E. STATE ST.·
ATHENS.
011 · ~'ll-ll:l55 ' :
.
'

PHONE 388-8103

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I

. The f'&amp;it mishlo occmred on County ROIId 28 around 12:30 a.m.,
Jlllt off Route 248. ~g to the rqJOrt, Franklin D. Cox, 20,
Norfolk, Va., wa travclins south on ColiDty Road 28 (Locust
~e Road) and came into a sharp curve in heavy fog. The driver .
did not see the curve and went off the right side of roadway and ·
overturned in the ditch. The vehicle, a 1988 Chevrolet Cavalier
!&gt;W~ by Jimmy Wolfe, Racine, was reported as totalecJ. No
mjuries VIele reported.
.
The second wreck occumd around 1:20 a.m. on County Road 20
(Rock Springs Road) approximalely one-quaner mile soutb of Hemlock .Grove Road. According to the report. a deer ran from the ldt
• side mto the path of a 1983 Ronda traveling north driven by Dcck.er
R. Cullums, Hemlock Grove Road. The vehiclo sustained heavy ,
clamllgo to the front end. The driver was not injured.
~igs County Sheriff JBIIICI M. Soulsby reported that two ol the
mailboxes ltOien on the weetend of Julie 2 were n:covered Friday
cvcning along the tivcrbant in Syracuse. The boxes belonged to
Fred Smith, Morning Star Road, and Patrick Johnson, Roy Jones
Road.

'

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Former
...
Conllaued

P0!dER9Y • Dcpulia oldie Meigs County Sheriff's Depert·
='~ two "Xideats e~rly Salurday miXlliD&amp; in Olesler

MEIGS· Units of the Meigs ColiDty Emergency Medical Service

$799·5
.. .
91·214·1 91 Chevy S10
$6900
91-026·2 88 Iretta 2 Dr. Red
$7495
91-044-1 88 Dodge Shadow
,.1.os1 88. Accord LX 4 Dr. S10,595
91·212·1 88 Accord DX. 4 Dr. Reel S7595
$7495
91-190·1 8 7 Cougar LS ••
$4295
91·231·1 8 7 Sunbird SE 2 Dr.
$8995
"1.osz 8 7 Accord LX 4 Dr.
57995
90,331.1 86 ·Mazda RX-7 11111
$4995
91-821-1 86 Pontiac Sunbird
91-114.2 86 Ford Te.mpo 4 Dr. $4995
P91-D49'186 lsuzu Trooper 4X4 $6495
91·240·1 86 Skyhawk 2 Dr. White $4295
$3295
91 ~245-1 86 Escort 4· Dr. Blue
$2995
91-141-2 as Escort 2 Dr. Rill
P91-o5o-184 Honda Accord 4 Dr. $4295
$2495
91·059-• 84 Ford Mu$tang
, .... 16 80 Prelude
·
$2800
90-oJs-1 76 Cadillac Conv. . S9995
P19.o12 63 Ford Gcilaxie 2 Dr. XL S6995

Sunday T1mea Sentinel-Page-AS

Two wrecks probed; no one hurt

.P-~----~----------~·;.•

Judge delays order in rape trial
than the one She proposed.
Smilh's attorneys indicated they
would likely accept a modif~ gag
order. But Moira Lasch, asststant
Palm Beach ColiDty state attorney,
said she wouldn't bargain.
.
Reeder's proposal would gag
prosecutors, defense anorneys and
police, but not potential wiblesscs,
ulcluding Sen. Edward M.
Kennedy, D-Mass., who is ~mith's
uncle.
It also would ban discussions of
guilt or innocence, the merits of
evidence and the character or credi·
bility or witnesses.
And it also·would set a two-day
waitin~ period before the release or
depositions or investigative information so defense attorneys would
bave time to ask a judge to block
such disclosures.
·
Smith's attorneys asked last
. month that police and prosecutors
be ordered to stop mllkln~ what
they called "inflammatory' corn·
menta they said indicated Smith
was guilty.
Ms. Lasch said the motion wu
an auempt by Kennedy family
attorneys 10 control publicity, She
compared their tactics to lhoee she
said were used in lhe 1969 Chappaquidick investigation ·into the
drowning of Mary Joe Kopechne, a
Kennedy aide.

,---Local briefs -.---.

CCSJIO!ldcd to three calls for assistance on Friday and early Saturday

Sky ·

Costs ,

1

mayor which som~ Gallipolitans
found incredulous. The mayor •
wrote: "There has been no preju· :
dice in this matter of Balcer's pros- !
ecution under this ordinance." •
However Baker was lhe fii'Sl one to
be arrested under it Prior to that .
the telephone manager had simply }
requested bills be removed. Most ~
had been except for bills favorable '
to the mayor's vieWj)OinL
;
Balcer was born mto an abusive :
home on a small farm in Jackson •
County and had liulc formal educa· ~
tion but rose to be the leader of the '
National Anti-Saloon League :
which was lar~telv resoonsible for I
Prohibition, By JAMES SANJ?S ;

Squads respond to 3 calls

Study finds home ownership
eludes many A·mericans
Hi. 9. h .

The next day the mayor was
seen walking around town
with"egg on his face~, as it seems
that Balcer's attorney AJ. Greene
had discovered the fact there was
no such law about bill posting on
the books in Gallipolis. It was tnJC
that the city council had passed an
ordinance making it legal to post
bills on poles, but Mayor Alexander failed to have the ordinance
posted in the record book of the
city clerk. Hence there was no law
and the city solicitor recommended
that the whole case be quickly
dropped by lhe mayor.
. The Tribune of the following
week printed a statement by the

~J=u=ne==18='=1=99=1:;======::==::=:=:==========~P~OI~me;;ro;;:;y;;;MI;;ddleport
G•mpola., OH Point Pleeunt, WV.
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$

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MARK I
8,000 BTU 7.5 EER

lporte, laduetrial au .....llltatiYe IIH1cl•• ..,....
the
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at Fovrtll lvaaua aad
s,...,. Stnat.
MOU SPACE- IIPIIDII SEIYICIS- ADDmOIIL STIFF
Tha liST .... ~~~.c- lrtnll
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.............. llack ..... - .........,."

Holzer Clinic SIRM. DepartmentNow

Loet~tld

........

at the Syo.more Clinic In Gallipolis
t

Bob's
Electronics
Ann1.versary .,,.
ou~ 25 th

11.1

.

IWIAIIA.

o11o

�•

·:Along the River
••

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~imes'•~ .entinel

•

Section

B.;:.

.. .
June 16, 199(;

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1fheatre renamed in honor of Morris and Dorothy Haskins
·: GALL! POLIS • Morris and celebnll ~Ariel's Fll'lt Aaniver·
t!Protby Haskins have been long sary of !be Grand Ro-opeJiDif of
dine residents and supporters of tbe bisloric 11195 tbeaiN.
(lallipolis and Gallia County. Funds raised fer die Morrillllll
Many of their friends and business Dorothy Haskin&amp; Aiiel ~ will
l!isociates believed the renwing of • belp retire the deb&amp; tor die roC.tiy
~e , Ariel Thea_tre ~n thch' honor
installed healillg 111J11 air tondilial.•w,ould be a spec1_al tnbute !" tbem.
ing system. They will allo lie llll!d
..:• James L. Dailey, pres1dent and to fll!ld the restortion of tho bel,·
cl!ief executive off1cer of Ol!io COD]. )hat iJ currently underway.
\lalley Bank said, ''We wanted ':'&gt;
' When the balcoay ruiQnldol
cJb something that we knew Morris is completed in the fall, soat1n1
and Dorothy really felt close to Bl!d capacity will be increued by fifty
they have always loved tbe histone percent " said Artistic Director ·
dOwntown .~ea of Gallipolis.. With Lora Ly11n Snow. "That mean•
lire restorauon of the Ariel m tbe mon: people will be able to •.ior ·
IJeart of Gallipolis, it~ ,a per- tbe Ohio Valley Symphony wbiclt
~ct fit with alllhat Morris and ' wu compleldy sold ciut of •ooa •
Dorothy have given '? the area. • ..
·tickets this Jlllll yell'. ~ lil:kelil
_,, ·Dan Evans-, chauman of the for the 1990-91 SCIIBOII are on alcl
tioard and chief e~ecutive officer of now. Our ftature consiiiiCiioo p11ns
.~b E_v~s ~arms, Inc: of Colum· call for lbe iP•oJI•dm of a perma·
,t;os said IR hiS letter of CODgratuJa-' nent lightiDJ system in tbc lflealre
iibns to Mr. and Mrs. Haskins, "As and thC reifurition of tbc DriliRal ·
.ftle finishing touches are being dreasing ,:ooms ill the bllemeDt."
~pplied to the Ariel Theatre, it
Persona imerested in lddldonal
~ms right that we honor Morris
information may coniiCl die Ariel
MiHI ~thy by naming this beauti· 111 (614) 446-ARTS. A recorded
~I building after !hem .•..both are schedule of events iJ aVIilabie .24
ll!l ,impo~t part of th~ citfs 1111-'t, hours a day at that number. ~
l!Oth are VIbrant, contnbuung pat· iheatre will be open for tours dur~ipants in tpe life of Galliplis
ing the July 4111 holiday.
~Y and both will be remembered - - - - - - - - - 'alld revered for a long. long till)e' to
~me."
.
~-~
· ~:· Ohio Valley Bank of GallipoliS
•Jld Bob Evans Farms, Inc, oo' '
~ponsored 1' A Galaxy of Stars,'' to

.

SPECIAL

ANNOUNCE·

MENT • Jim Dailey made the
surprise announcement or tbe
. Ariel's new name and ackaowl
edged the donors who have made'
contrlbt~tlons.
•

PHOTOS BY . .
DAVID SNOWJ!)EN

. '

ARE ANNOUNCING .THE DEVELOPMENT OF

GARUENS DEDICATED TO VETERANS
OF THE ARMY, NAVY,
. ,
AIR FORCE, MARINES

.

••

Morris and Dorothy Haskins are up in lights

AND

COAST ..
~ GUARD
.--·'!!

Haskins
Theatre
donors

•
•

,.•

.••

Bob Evans Farms ..••
•
•
Dan &amp; Charelene .••,••
Evans
.•
Keith Bradbury .•.
.
•
Vorys, Sater,
.
'•
Seymour &amp; Pe,ase ••
Ohio Valley Bank
Keith and Evelyn
Brandeberry
Buz and Betty Call-;
Jim &amp; Becky
.
Dailey
-:.'
Bob &amp; Sheila
·~•
Eastman
·
•
Merrill &amp; Charla ·'
Evans
Casey &amp; Eva Jo •'•
•
McKenzie
••
Frank &amp; Eloise ••
Mills
•'
Warren &amp; Phyllis :
Sheets
Jeff &amp; Marsha
••
Smith
Leon &amp; Juanita ••
•
Saunders
Mike&amp;Kim
•'
••
Berridge
••
•
Madge Boggs
•
Wayne Niday
•
•
••
Wendell &amp; Lois .•
••
Thomas
••
-Wiseman Agency ·
I

HONORED GVESTS • Dorothy and Morris
Hasklas react to the announcement that tbe
Ariel will now carry their ume. Daualiter Carol

Sue Wedge is seated between them and her son,
Paul, Is shown on tbe right.

Call 446-3014, 992-7440 or Mail. To:
'
. 0 OHIO VALLEY MEMORY GARDENS
0 MEIGS CO. MEMORY GARDENS
659 LeGRANDE BLVD, GAUIPOLIS, OH. 45631
NAME _ _ _.:__~-- --------'~--- PHON&lt;--...c...=ADDRESS _ _ _ _ _....:__ _:__-,.-_ _ _ _ _ _ __

__

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- - - -·----·__.._ _ -._
....

(,

....

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Ernst &amp; Young
Stan &amp; Doris
Harrison
Freda Martin

.

ARDL EXCI'I'EMJ!,NT • A capacity crowd · the Ariel. Tboae •lltDdl•l enjoyed perfor·
manc:aby"AGd .,ora..".
.
tul'lltd 011t lor tile pia Analverury concert at

__.._.

•

•

~

'I .

~

Mary Warehime

•
•

•

..,•,.
.•
•

�,.

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Page-82-Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

Gallipolis,
OH-Polnt Pleesant, wv
------------

-Engagements--

-

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' GALLiPoLIS - The fifth annual
Country Hymntimers reunion was
held recently at the Gallia County
Fairgrounds.
Blessing for the dinner was
given by Jerry Unroe. Following
dinner the group played music and
sang.
.
Next year's reunion will be held
the first of June.
Attending were Dan, Faith ani!
· Tamara Hayman, Cheryle Knight,
Debbie and Marvin DodtiU, Diana,
Melissa and Brian Frederick, Sid,
Carol, ayan and Roben Hayman,

Family Planning
It Makes Sense•••
'

SHERRI LAWRENCE, PATRICKBOSTER

liarris-CJrueser
: REEDSVILLE • Mr. and Mrs.
Dale Rockhold and the late Donald
1-iarris annnounce the engagement ·
of their daug!lter, Mandie Diane
Harris, to Kevin 1ay Grueser, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Gerry Hupp and
llie late Jobn Grueser, Racine.
! Miss Harris is a graduate of
Eastern
School and iss CUlTIIIItBcmard

I:IOUSTON, Texas - Mrs.
Wands Lawreace, of Bry111, Texas,
auomey-lit-taw: She will be attend·. would lib to IIIJICIUIICC the engageing the Univmity of Rio Grande in ment l1ld ~ marriage of
her dauf::r, Slleni Marie, to
the fall.
.Boster, son of Mrs.
Grueser is a gmduate of South- Patrick
em Hildl Schoof and is ilmployed ltuth Boster, l1ld the late Eugene
-by' Arthur Hill Greenhouse~. He Bo•. The brlde-olect iJ die also
will be attending heavy equipmc111t the dau.bter of the late Larry
training school in Jacksonville, Fla. lawla1cc.
The couple plln 10 wed Iune 22
in July.
at Bear Creek United Methodist
Wedding plana are bmmplala
Clll1adl il1 Rnustm, T-.
I.aww is a 19110 ~fA
· Albeit Lea Cennl'lli&amp;bl School in
Albert Lell, Milln. Slie is a 1986
~of Tcwl loAM Univmi·

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inr.tlilty to pay.

P.lANNED PARENTHOOD

Lawrence-Boster

KEVIN GRUESER and MANDIE HARRIS

DAVID DIDDLE and BETHANY MD..STEAD

OF SOUYHEAmiN OHIO .

ty. where slle obtained her elementary education degree. She will ·
continue to teach third grade at
Yeager Elementary Sc!lool in
Houston, Texas.
· Boster is a 1974 graduate or
GaUia Academy High School and a
1979 graduate of Ohio Stale Uni·
versity, wbcre he earned a blche·
!or's degree in welding engineermg. He bas worked for 13 )'ellS at
Vetw .Oray, Inc., an engineerina
IIIII manufec:t,.Jring .c:ompllly of oil
and gas indnstty equipment He is
cUil'CIIIly manager of subsea fabri.

.

POMEIOY:
GALUPOUS
236 E. Main St., 21111 Floor
414 Stconcl An., 2nd Floor ,
992-5912
446-0166
1:30 to 5:00 Milndoy-Frickly
1:30 to 5:00 Monday-Frlilay
Closed Thunday
1:30 to 12 $ohlrclay . ·
_.
(JoMd Thursday ·
AlSO: Wr•t, 0111apeab, ,..._, Olllcotht. li.,.n &amp; McArthqr

.~.

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Thomas' to observe anniversary

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. • Methodist Church in Flatrock,
Mr. and Mrs. PhilliiJG. Milslcad fA W.ViL A reception will foDow in
Point Pleasant, Vf. Va., announce , the church feDowship hall.
· tho _engagement and forthcomi\ig · ·' ~ss Milstead is a l989 l!llldli·
mairisge of their ~•.~y a~ Qf Point Pleasant High School
,Lynn, to David Lee"])idiUe. ion of .and is cun~iltif auending Marshall
Mr. and Mrs. George R. Dldllle of Univmity,IIIIJOrlng in Law,
Gallipolis.
·
;
.
+ Mrs. Diddle is a 1987 graduate
-Tlie open chW'Cb w~ding will of'Nonh Gallia Hi!lh School and is
be held Friday, July 5.1991 at 7:30 employed by the Pillsbury Campa. p.m. at The gooll ~hep~ Uni~ ny, Wellston.

GALLIPOLIS ·Mr. and Mrs.
John Richard "l)jck" Thomas will
cele!lrate their 45th weddjng
anniversary on June 16, 1991.
Mrs. Thomas; the · former
Dorothea MiUer, is the daughter of
Zelia Miller. She retired from
Holzer Medical Center in May.
Mr. Thomas was a fonncr news

director at WYPC/WJEH and a
columnist widlthe Galli{!Oiis Daily
Tribune, and Times-Sentinel.
·
The couple are tho parents of
four children, Cheryl Enyan of
GaUipolis, John ThomilS of Athens,
BiU Thomas of Lancaster, and Nate
Thomas of Columbus.

...

Meigs County calendar

catioll.

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LABEl I E, Fla. • SU1M Rebec·

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Plantation. She is a graduate of

ca BIBIII IIIII Juon Dcln Hill will LaBelle High School and is cur-

LISA PATTERSON and PATRICK DAY

be united in marriage Saturday,
July 20 at 6 p.m. at die Pint Cbristilll Chun:h in IaBolle Fll.
A ClpiiiiiC~ Win be held at
the LIBello WOIIIeD'a Oub follow. -~· . . .
~~ Brant 11 the daughter of
Mel .11111r ~~~ Brant of Pioneer

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Patterson- D~y
, "POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
J'"" Patterson, Pomeroy, are
a,flliouncing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their.
daughter. Lisa Lynette, to Patrick
]JJiy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
Day, Bidwell.
: An open chwch wedding will be
Mid on June 29 at 6:30 p.m. at the
Addision F.W.B. Church in Addi·
son with Pastor Richard Barcus
p¢orming the ceremony.

A reteplion wiU follow the ceremony.
Miss Paaersoil is a graduate of
Meigs High School wiih a licenae
in cosmetol~-__Sbe is employed
with Ames in 0811ipolis.
Day is a graduate of N!Klh GaJ.
lia High School and attended Buckeye Hills in Rio Grande. Ho ia
employed by the PiDsbwy Company in WeDston.

-

Card shower
l!lbena JBIVII will celebrate her
981b birthday Wedneaclay, Iune 19.
Thole - - 10 send birlhday
wishes can 1lllif them to: Elberta
Jarvis, c/o Dodrill Private Home
Care, Route 2,' Box 180-229
Dodrill Rd., ViniOII, 4S686.
'

rently aoending Edison CommunityCoUege.
Mr. Hill is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. JimrDy D. Hill of Fon Myers,
Fla., formerly olGallia Counly. He
is employed by Merton Howard
Land.Surveyors of LaBelle. He
attended Edison Community College and is currently enrolled at
Lee Vo-Tech.

50 lbs. and has kept it
off lor over 24 vears.

'

,"Weight.Watchers®
- knows what you want this summer!' .-.

QUALITY HEALTH CARE
At Veterans Memorial Hospital, we're committed to quality health care.
Proof of this commitment is our accreditation by
the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations.
We chose to be reviewed by the Joint Commission because it stands for quality health care, and so
do we. The Commission sets high standards of care
and evaluates health c·a re organizations against
these standards.
'
Made up of the American Medical Association,
the American Hospital Association, the American
College of Surgeons, the Ame_rican College of Physicians and the Amerie""an· Dental Association- the
Joint Commission is leading efforts in the nation to
improve the quality of health care provided to the
•

pub2f.a.a..-L- VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPRAL

'

v.i.,...,. u.mo.w llospilal

·-····"/

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11 5 E. M1111orlal DriYI
PIIMI'oy
992-2104

Bing, Mr. and Mrs. Nonnan Will,
Dwaine Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. :
Clw'ley King, Mr. and Mrs. Harley •
E. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Hoskins •
and Matthew, Mrs . Dorothy
Reeves, Mrs. Virginia Wyau, David Napper, Eric Downs, Mn. :
Ida Murphy, Mrs. Pat Arnold and .Melanie, Mr. and Mrs. Gary Bales, :
Mrs . Ann Lambert, Carrie and :-Kristi Lambert. Mr. and MrS. John -.:
Williams, Ed Daniels, Jeff Arnold, •
Cathy Hess and Mrs. Freda Elam •
and Carolyn.
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Harry and Vera Hayman , James.:: :
April and Angel Hayman, Evelyr( :
Roush, Don, Rose, Shawn and-·.·
Amy Madden, Prisciila Dodrill, -~
Gladys and Jessica Collins. Mary ::
and Angela Carney, Andrea and :Nicole Satterfield, Linda Myers, _
Jerry, Louise and Jerry Lee Unroe,. ••
Chrjstina and Elizabeth Taylor,: :
Marlena Wallace, Goldie F(eder--:-:;
ick, Bonnie Landers, Junior and_;.~
Peggy McQuaid, Gene and Jeanie :
Vaughn, Bill Kuhn, Katie Shoe-."
maker, Jewell Martin and Larry ·
and Mary VanMeter.

Monday through -Friday beginnjng
at 6:30p.m. nigh~y.
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RUTL~ND • Vacation Bible
School at the Rutland Freewill
Baptist ChW'Ch will be held Monday through Friday from 6-8 p.m.
, nighl,ly. Public is invited.

For That Special
-Occasion ...
Special occasions require 1pecial preparations. If you are planning a wedding, annivertary or prom, then yo~
should come see us at Haskins-Tanner.
Yo~ will have over 190 styles of tuxedos to choose from. We have a large
selection of tha latest styles and com"plimentary aeeeasorlos for this special ·.
•occasion.
QUality formolwtor at Affordable Pricu.
GROOM TUX FREE WITH 6 OR
MORE IN WEDDING PARTY

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SUNDAY
CHESHIRE - A family reunion
''.
., of Eiben l1ld Della Gillilan wiD·be ·, .•, RACINE.• The Soulbem Local
held Sunday •t the Kyger Creek ~ Boanl oi'~IICIIim will meet Mon·
P1aru Qub House. Friends and rela· day 111 7 p.m. at die high school.
lives are Invited. Bring ~ covered
·
dish. ' ·
. HARRisONVILLE • 'Fuber1
culin' ~-ts will be oifered at
POMEROY· Rev. Eddie ~uff" lhe'.~ Scipio 11)Wnsblp .
. ingtOD,·Gallipolis, will be the gue5! :pue ,Dtplrtinent on Monda~
speaker at the Na!)mi "Baptist .. 4:3o;6:30 p.m. by Joan T!)w
,
ChW'Ch in Pomeroy on Sunday at R N
'
. II a.m. The public is in_viled:·Rev.
· ·
_.
Samuel J~ is the preacher.
RACINE - The Soulhem Local ·
1
- MERO.t Th
.,_.
'II .,_
OAPSE No. 453 will meet at
PO
Y ere WI "" a Soulhfrn High School on Monday
12-step A.A. meeting 011 Suqday at 11t 7 p m -All members are urged to
7 p.m. at the JTP~ .office in . attend· ·
Pomeri!Y. 117 Welt Second Street.
.
. ''
POMEROY - Bible school at
.50TH ANNIVERSARY ·Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Fink, Rutland,
B~RNESVII:-1;-E • Th_e Bu· the Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route
celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary recently. Tbe couple
nesvs
·.. ~ ~2. Cpin CIHuaonub
willMemmeet ' 143, Pancro), will be beld beginwas married May %4, 194lln Rutland.
,
.~!. ~ P·~-11
.,
o- niliJ M'onday CrQm 6:30-8:30 p.m. '.
na) Lli*~ .. Jiu'\· Pl~~ for the ·11ilhtly- Rev. Viet« Roush inviteS ~
•. June 21 aqCtioo will~~'.
~public,
992-2952 for infor·
THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN TRAVEL.
Th
M
U
.
11'18110D:
'
.
CARPENTER • e . L moo · , , ~
Baptist Church, Carpcn_ter Hill
· TUESDAY
Oth Anniversary of the bombing
Road, will have homecommg Sun- · SYRACUSE ~ Lifeguard trainf .
day. Dinne~ w~U begin at noOri fol- 'ing will be held at London Poohn
0 Pearl Harbor &amp;
lowed,bY,~IIDBds Gatahl~.ml.andbyTructh . SyracuseTu~ylhroughJuty3
Hawaiian Island Tour
ospc .,.,un •
ne s
e from 6:9 p.m. mghl\y. Fee 1s $45
~e.ssengers. ~a~tor. Joe Sayrp and participants must be at least
IDVItes the publtc.
age IS. Call 992-9909 for more
infmnation.
RACINE • Jbe Teaford Family
reunion will be beld Sunday at Star
RUTLAND • Tbe Continental
Mill Park in Racine. A basket Singen ,will perform at the Rutland
lunch will be held at 1 p.m. Bring a Church of God on Tuesday at 7
..
•gift for lhe door prize.
·
p.m. Pastor John F. Corcoran
November 26-December 9, 1991
invites the public.
MONDAY
Visit the USS Arizona Memorial at Pearl Harbor .on
CHESTER - Vacation Bible
School classes for preschooleJS
this memorable tour of the islands of Hawaii, Moui,
through teens will be beld at Mt.
Kauai &amp; Oahu.
Hermon Church Monday ~~f,h
Friday from 9:30-11:30 a.m. · y.
Call or stop by ~ today!
Call Julia WiU at 985-4344 'to register.

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1 I

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WED., JUNE 19 IHIU SUN., JUNE 23

ALL AREA K MARTS:
Wed.·Sat. 10 AM·7 PM
On Sunday From Store
to One Hour
Wore

Tournament slated
SYRACUSE - The 1991
William "Bill" Hubbard Memorial
Little League Baseball Tournament, sponsored by the Syracuse
Fire and Emergency Department,
will be held July 8.
Entry deadline is June 30. Call
992-7777 or 992-2181 for more
infonnation.

· Come to the Wek!ht Watchers meetbul nearest you.
N£W BIERI: PUAIE AliiiM • ••111!1 w~v FOR Riai8TRAn011 Mo WEIGH·•·

'.

AT-WORK MEETINGS

· lost weight where you work.
WIIQIII Wlli:heil will set up a meeting for
Yllltllld 18 afyour fellOw employees.
Cal for further lnfonnation.

GALUPOLIS

IT. PETEil'l EPISCOPAL CHURCH
541 SecOnd Avenue

Tue: 7:00p.m., Wed: 9'.30 a.m.

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sa.ao

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COOLVILLE • "Jesus and You
at Camp Can-Do" is the theme for
Vacation Bible School at the
Coolville United Methodist Church

Regltlrltion Fte ........... $17.00
AlSI Mooting Ftl .......... tJ.gp
Regular Price ...............
TOU iA¥1 $14.00
--.MI022.1...

'•

. Open Moll. &amp; Fri. til I P.M.; Tu11., Wtcl. Thur. I Sat. til 5 P.M.

,

,.

.

~.

c.n

.

;:!::~~

Mrs. Bonnie Arnold. Mrs. Bertha

,'

Commanlty Calendar items
; appear two daY!! befnre an event
and alae day ,of tllat eve-. lt~~ms
' milst be rea!lved we!! In adVI\nce
to usur~ publlcallon In the cal·
endar.
·
·

·Brant-llill

~.-

MR. AND MRS. RICHARD (DOROTHEA) THOMAS

· Milstead-Diddle

!'.-~

JASON 81LL ud SUSAN BRANT

.

Fifth annual reunion held

.;

Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.[). Screening
C8ncer Screening
Pregnancy Tesiing ·
'·
$ling he .._ HI Olit llfUMd llniclll'llcata

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POMEROY • A surprise
anniversary party was given in
honor•of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
' Pur!el1 at the Zion Church of Christ social room 011 Iune 2.
Refre1hments of cake, ice
Cft81D,c:llipundpopwereserved.
Attending were Mr. Md Mrs.
Robert E. Purtell, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Schuler. Mr. IIIII Mrs. Jeff
Bole, Mr. and Mrs. Dano King and
Julie, Mrs. Evelyn Tboma. "Mrs.
Kay McElroy and Jessica, Mrs.
Carrie Wears, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Stanley and Emily, Mrs. Lee
Hysell, Mr. and Mrs. Art Allen,

Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the date ~;
of pubW!ion,
·
~:
Photographs of either the bride ••
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories if ::
desired. Photographs may be either •
black and white or good quality ;:
color, billfold size or larger.
.•
Poor quality photographs will ::
not be accepted. Gencrally, snap- .;
_shots or instant-developing photos ~
are not of acceptable quality.
"
Questions may be directed to the ::
editorial department from I to 5 ~
p.m. Monday through 'Friday at ~
(614) 446-2342. '
.=:

· The Sunday Times-Sentinel
reprds weddings of Gallia. Meigs
IIIII Mason couolie.; as news and is
·~~appy to publish wedding Stories
lllifllhotograpbs without charge
llowcver, wedding news must
meet general standards or tim eli.
ness: The newapaper prefers to
• publilll accounts of weddings as
110011 as-possible a&amp;r the event.
To be published in the Sunday
edition, the wedding must bave
liken place wilhip 60 days prior to
the puhli~. and may b\1 up to
600 words.I':! length. Material for
Along the River must be received
by tbe editori!ll d~partmen t by

-·'

~

=J==une===1&amp;:=,1=99=:'E::=
.

•••
-·••

Wedding policy

...

~-

~n~g=a=g=e~m=e=n=t=s=-~_=_=_~_=_=:P=ome==,o=y-M~A;'d;;.~~ep;~;;7;v;"e~npo~~~~;~:~-P~r~~;;;~·;;e:ua~-n~t,~wv~A=n=n=i=ve=r=s=a=r~;~un:;·~;~~~m;~~;;aSe~t;g:;~~~n:;;I-P~h;:;•;~~;;;;~3 .

June 18,1911

Pomeroy Middleport

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�Page 84 Sunday nmes Sentinel

Pomeroy Mddleport Ga'llpolla, OH Point Plenant. wv

--Anniversaries---

. 11, 1991

-----

OH Point Pleasant, wv

Weddings

FlAVORITE SHREDDED

CHEDDAR
CHEESE
8 OZ. PACKAGE

89&lt;
FLAVORitE SHREDDED

MOZZARELLA

CHEESE
8 OZ. PACKAGE

MR. AND MRS. GREG

MR. AND MRS. ORVILLE STONE

Couple celebrates 61 years
~ALLIPOLIS • Mr. ll!ld Mrs.

: Om lie S~ne of Gall!pohs, ~ele. brated their 61st wedding anruver: sary May IS.
.
The C:!&gt;U£~!rs marned May
, IS, 1~30 m.
e, W.Va..
• The IIIIU~ersary celebration was
held at_ Dlle I s~~- Those
attendin~~=·· c:hlldren, Jewell
Eddy of .
hs, ~ SIOIIe.l..an)'
Sto~, Ehzabetl! Mttchell, Gatl
While and Naomt Deboard, all of
:Columbus.

Grandchildren attending were:
Mr. and Mrs. Jim (Carol) Whitting.ton of Apple Grove, W.Va., Omdy
S1011e ofGallipolis, Gayle Milehell.
Shelia and Shelly Deboard,
Leonard and LOrraine White, all of
Columbus. ·
Grcat-grandc:bildren attending
were: James Mill:hell of Columbus,
Jimmy Wallac:e and Ambea- Whit·
tington, both of Apple Grove,
W.Va. Also anending were Bernice
Glassburn and Irene Browning of
Gallipolis, frialds of the c:ouple.

MR. AND MRS. ANDY (NELLIE) GROvER

Grovers obs~rve anniversary
~MEROY- The 30th wedding

anntversary of Andy and Nelhe
Grov_er and the 50th buthday of
Nellie Grover was ce~ebrated
~dy at the horne of theu daughterm Pomeroy.
.
Attendmg were Randy, Gema,

Rachel and Cody Hysell, Karen
Grover, Juanita Humphreys,
Norma Grover, Virginia Barreu,
Stephanie and Joshua Cleland, Gloria and Bradley Slayton, Douglas
and Rhonda Grover.

Lifeguard training offered
SYRACUSE -·Lifeguard training will be offered at London Pool
in Syracuse Tuesday through July 3
from 6-9 p.m. nightly.
The fee for the class is $45 and

participants must be at least 15
years of age to register.
. Call lhe pool at 992-9909 to regISlet for the classes.

•clure's
Family
Restaurant
.
-Gen. H8rtlnpr Pkwy 479 J8Cbon Pike
MIDDLEPORT
114-112-11248

GALLIPOLIS
114-441·3837

3114 Eeet Mllin St.
POMEROV
11 4-192·&amp;292

FATHER'S DAY
SPECIAL
SUNDAYI JUNE 16 ONLY

Banana Split 2-for-1 Sale
~BUY ONE, GET ONE~

~

~

FREE

CHICKEN \

CLARK

Leg Quarters ...•. ~B

••

Gilbert-Clark
.

FRESH PORK BUTT

Tenth Grade: Sandra Adams,
Christy Mock, Meredith Pollard;
*Brian Ric:e;
EleYCIIth Grade: *Beth Blevins,
Jenny Hugbes. Cindy Sheets.
The following students have
made tbe B Honor Roll for the
sixlh six weeks:
First Grade: Joe Morgan,
Maahew Price, Laura! Browning;
Sec:pnd Grade: Donuavan Ashworth, Sell! Easton, Jason Perry,
Andrea Sims, Amanda Wilcox;
Fourth Grade: Lisa Bowman,
Emily Hill, Rachel Lusher, Jessica
McCoy, Daniel Sizc:IJJcR;
Fifth Grade: Deanna Martia,
Leah Hill;
.
s~ Ol8de: Billy Miller, Leila
Waltm.
While;
•
Seventh Grade: Kristen Dassylva,Jami Gianechini, Shellie Hen·
son, Nan WiDiamson;
Eigbth Gtade: Cara Bahr, Abby

HOMEMADE

USD~ · ~HOICE BEEF
412

Sec••• An.. I

We rill

LB .

THO_RN APPLE, VALLEY ROUND .

446·1615

LB

9
2
Sandwich· Spre~d ..'!-. $1

$ 199

..

ZESTA
CRACKERS
POUND BOX

99&lt;
STOKELY
CATSUP"

$ 39
1

TuriCey ..Ham.........
.
Vi Pork Loin·~•••••~. $1 69

32

oz. aonLE

89&lt;

"

'

~
Nmlh Oralie: Jeremiah Brown,
Jodie Hqer, Adam Meek;
Tenth Glade: Nikki Saunders; ;
Eleventh Grade: Hollie Bartel,
Pall Holley, Darin Peck.

·ECKRI.CH

Bologna •••••••••••••••
.

·

LB.

$139

SMUCKER$

GRAPE
JELLY

•

Your lmurance,
Wouldn't You Feel letter
With Our Nama On It?

32 OZ. JAR

)

99&lt;

·
Clloosinc 1n ios011nco .._, is olton
a ~iHicoH docisiolt. Us•IIJ tllort's oo
WJ ,... can nolllllollll SoMct fOU W~l

PASSPORT
AND I.D.

PHOTOS
liCitly In

5 MINUTES
'

TAWNEY STUDIO
U4 SECOND AVE.
GAWPOUS, OH.

rtctl¥t.

Goo uuplioll is w ·s 1-nc:o
1 rocopilod
- • yoo can roly oolor Ill tho q•l~ios
YOI •ot in Ill iOIII10U

c•- .....
..,_
.........
.........,
Soles

........"

•

AGENCY

.

.

!Frencli Square
!Jlome.Xmbe{{isliments

·

•

, . FLAVORITE . • : . .
~
0/0
GALLON
I~
.••••••••••••••

.'2

Milk

$

FlAVORITE IND.

•

•

Cheese Shces ...• ~!.0~. 9 9
$ 49 KEMP
Ice Cream ••••••••••••
Dog Food ••••••• ::!'.:~ S

SUNSHINE.

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VACATION

ARMOUR LUNCH MEAT

.

S QUART PAIL

DORITOS

(

•

(aa ieen in Country Homes and
Better Homes and Gardens llllll!razb~ea)

REGULAR 51.49

89&lt;

•

'AYLOR WDODCIA"

$2 99

GROUND
BEEF
10 LB. PACKAGE

oz.
Arinour Treet ~~:!·.c::. 9 9 ( Cream Pies •••••••••••

BIBLE SCHOOL

BANQUET

14

CLOSING EXERCISES
TONIGHT 6:00

QUGnNG VRSES AND PIAISING

3 LB. BAG

•

J38Seunui.fif.ve. (jalnpolis1 09{. 45631
441 ·0411

Introduces •..

First
Baptist
Church

9
9
(
·Onions ••••••••••••••••••
YELLOW

A&amp;IIOJ. AAA ln-ct is

SUNDAY, JUNE 23

.GROUND
CLOROX BLEACH

•

THE LO•I

. GALLON

.,.
~·

-·i~

r--=·-

_... ~-·· ~... ,. ~ · - - - -

.,

89&lt;

GN4 Only AI Pew ..s Super Valu
Geetl JIIM16IIIfll Jllllt 22, " "
Utilll I hr Cslst-

••

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r

, .

Round Steak........

TAWNEY'S JEWEUY

nm

HEAl .THE CHI.DIIN SINGING,

II

$ 39

.

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lie ,.,., GNitllll ..., Ground Fnth Localy
111
W"'n111
1 . . . . . FliNCH FliES ....................... S2tt

I

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Steak-/Roast •••••• ~• . 1

OVCS sixth week honor roll
GALLIPOLIS - The following
Ohio Valley Christian School stu·
dents have made the A honor roll
for !he sixth weeks:
First \~: • Am it Agrawal,
*Hanneb
ver, *Dawn Cbamber·
Jain, *Cbacl Dailey, *Deidra Hall,
·*Michael Jenks, David Bater
Ginny Miller, Rachel Tucker;
· Second Grade: *Thomas Day.
ton, *Kent ·Haley, *Charity
M~Queen, *Jordan Shaffer,
*Nathan Williams, Bllld Bowman,
Eriea Massie, Nicholas MnlhoWJd·
Third Grade: • April Agustin,
Amanda Brown, *Meredith CJart.
Rebekah Frans, *T .J. Frasher.
*Counney Gooch, *Laura Polllrd,
*Jonathan Taylor, Jessica Vickers,
Erin Walker, Eli Wilson .,....,._7
Zirille;
• ~·uFourth Grade: Becky Birchfield,
Alan Haley. *Dani Jenks, • Aman·
da Kohlhoff, *Natalie Pyles,
*Stephen Roberts, *Jessica Walker,
Andrew Willlams·
Fiflb Oradc: *Vandana Agrawal, Suzanne Clark, Brandy· Bahr
Daniel Hall, Lisa Volborn, Bo Pol:
lard;
Sixth Grade: *Melissa Brown,
Joy Chaksupa, Micah Lanier,
Nathan Smith, Benjamin Taylor;
Seventh Grade: Rachel Cochran,
• Aaron Holley, Nathan Lusher
*Gabe McQueen, Jill Mock, Amy
Pollard, Anesa VanMatre;
. E~ght~ Grade: Jenny Hager,
Robm R1ce; Ninth Grade: Amy
Wood, *Elizabeth Wooten, Dan
Chaksupa, *Jason Cheng, Sarah
Miller, • Apna Hamrick, Andrea
Lewis;

·

Fryer Parts •••••••• ~·•• 49&lt;

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MONDAY, JUNE 17 THIU

Quarter Pounder Burger·•••••S179

MIXED

The couple wen: engaged Oct.
19, 1990 llld were mmied JIDill 2
in a private 01•tdoor ceremooy.
Rev. PaW Stinson pedi'llDled the
ceremony and cnly immediate fam.
ily members attended.

GALLIPOLIS - Milford and
Alice Gilbert, of Rousb Lane,
Cheshire, would lite to announce
the engagement and marriage of
their clavPter. Bloudena, to Greg
Clark. son of Cart and Judy Clark,
of Galli~X~lis.
·

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WIITE CLOUD

TOILET TISSUE

89( .

GeM Onlr AI Pew••• Supor Yalu
GeM ... u lhru .. 22. 1991
llotll 1 ,.,

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CHUCK
10 LB. PACUGE

$1690
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Page-86 Sunday nmes SenUnel

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hts goal o( breakin&amp; the world
record for the number ol best well
wishes and cards.
The youngster reportedly has a
tmninal illness. The cards are 10 be
sent to Craig c/o the Children's
Wish Foundalion, 3200 Perimeter
Centu East, Atlanla, Ga 30346.
Oops I The da_te of llie The
Beach Boys concert with The Everly Brothers at the Capital Music
Center at Beulah Park has been
changed liOm 7:30 011 Auaust 8 10
8 p.m. on Augusl7.
·
The tickeu llreldy purchased
for lhe August 8 show wiD be honored at the new show dale. Anyone
who has purchased a ticket but has
a conflict on the new dale, can tum
lhe lictet in for a refund.

.. '1.

periorm T_., 11 7 p.m. at lbe :;
kudllld~GIOod.
. :~
The COiftlle•tala ar6 now Ill - •.

second will be handled by lbe
Intemltionll Oealmding Founda·
lion, July 23-26 (Telephone I-8002S5-0296).
..

dlelr 24tla ,_. IIIII ae caadauilla •
lbeir wcddwide ...... wjtla "Sci
Them P~.. A Coai:M of~ . ;
11111 Men:f, • JiOIIU tl I '·•- :

........
. __. =-

Committee~

are at work on
Fourth of July celebrations in 11
leu~ iluee communiliea - Middle·
port, ~.and Rutlamd.
There will be )JII1Idcs and fireworks in all duee IDWDI as well as
entertainment, games for the kids,
andplen&amp;yaffood.
Up Racine way we understand
there will be a new evem this year
- mud Wl'llllling.

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JWr' d Cblln:h of Qod. mYJieS ~ ;
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.Vacation~ Bible . :· ·';
school scheduled.·t
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The · MiddlePort Churc;b of •

pwlattFiftb IIIII Mila Su l.JIJ, wiB; ;

lla~ Ill Vaoatlon Jibl6'ofch~· .i.

111110 24-28 fluB 9:30a.m. tO IIOOIL • •
A lddt-otf ~ iiJ ieho4uled for: ~ ·
Jl!IIO 2 .friilll
u a.m. '19 '1
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that band-held sparlders bmn at
I ,800 degrees, ~OS I hot enougll
10 melt gold,
·
that the safest place 10 enjoy
fueworts is It a eootmunity·sponsored public display where 1the
igniting, detonating and handling
of fueworts is left 10 the profess~
.

SIWidar.
nooll.

----

GALLIPOLIS • ·Beginning
Monday, June 17, the Holzer Clinic
Sports, Industrial imd Rehabilitative Medicine (SIRM) services will
be operating from the new Holzer
Rehab Center at the Sycamore
Street Clinic. This move is
designed 10 provide more spacious
rehabilitation areas and expanded
serVices for all area palie!US-

., _ . . . . .

~.

square feet of floor' Splice Is pined
in the new ~lily'. This provides
space.for new services, such as lhe
ultra-modem B-200.compulllrized
back testina system, is well as
expanding and r.evampinl the
Holzer Health Center. and other
well-kno"'n SIRM rehablliUIIion

Therapy, etc. Approximately 5,000

services."
.
•
The Clinic'$' ·Family
Prae1ice
Department, which bas been l!ued
at lhe Sycamore Olnic, wiD llllinlain a presence there following the
completion of SIRM's,.ci8Dsilion..
Overall plans, however, c:all:fo.r
Family Practice 10 moye irs primary location to the Main Clinic laier
this summer. Until then, Family
Practice appointments will be
scheduled normally at Sycamore
using the same phone number (446- ·
5137). .
For any information about
SIRM serviCes at the new
Sycamore location, the phone number remains lhe same, 446-5244.
Sports, Industrial and Rehsbili·
tative Medicine is expanding to ,
better serve the entire area: new
location; additional staff, and new
services. The SIRM ream inviles a
visilto the reoovated facility 114111
Avenue and Sycsmore SIRetiO sec
for yourself.

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June 11.1891

· ;•

i haven't been swamped .with
me:.sages reporting that a great
num'ber of Meigs residents have
becin able 10 lalch oniO Ohio lottery
tic~ets beariDJ the three "entry"
notations whtch would qualify
theit) to entu tile drawing 10 partie- ·
ipate in the Cash Explosion TV
sho~ on Saturday night,s.
However, Charles
Searles of
Ch~hire, reports lhat he has ltad
some '24 of the qualifying Jickets submitted them - but his name
' wasn't among those dfawn for participation. Charles says lhat several of the qualifying tickets, however, were purchased in Meigs County. ~wo other residenu called in
indicating they have known several
people who have had the qualifying
tickets. I'm advised that we have
had one Meigs resident on the
show so far • Kenny Brown of
Pomeroy who~ name was actually
drawn for an appearance on the
show..
So, we really aren't settina the
world on fue as far as participation
is concerned. ue we?

w.

·Dr.Joon and 'Jean Ri~ay are
in {11&gt;111 Florida visitinJ friends and
relatives and are making side trips
in Ohio to visit Jean's sisters -IIley
left Friday for Columbus to visit a
sister there. Dr. and Mrs. Ridgway
are enjoying florida and Dr. !Udgway is doin&amp; a limited practice in
Flprida• .
'

: Nick Leonard one of lhe adults
wpo helps with lhe annual Meigs
County Junior Fair Livestock pro·
gram every summer repons thar
pllflicipation this year by young
JlC!Ople has aboul doubled. AI Ibis
paint some 400 animals • sheep,
C$tle and hogs - are bein&amp; raised
by young people across the county
foi- the Junior Fair Livestock Sale
wpich is held as a pan of lhe Meigs

, GALLIPOLIS ...- The Gallia
A,i:ademy High School Class of
1966 Reunion Commiu.ee will meet
011 Monday, June 17111 a1 7
at
the home of Bart.a (Parks Cald·
wen, II Allen Drive, Gallipolis 10
bOgin 10 finabe the plans (or !heir
2Sth Jltmion to be held II the Hoi·
idly Inn in GaiiipoliJ 011 Friday 8t
Saturday, July Sth 8t 6th.
All claamatea are encourq;ed
ID'COIIIICt B.-aat446-2782 u
soon • poaible for an11a1e registritions, au!Obiographical reports
: for inclusion in Reunion Memory
:: Book, or messages to be shared
' widt classmBICS in the prop.ms for
:: the reunion. Asaillllllce ts
:: needed 10 wodc 011 the ftnal
.
·· for this upcoming reunion week:: end. Classmates are planning 10

-"

u rou. can't repeat ot aiD,

..Ha111 a miUatone about your
" . ... '
C~ot younelf' into

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the oea

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Rotlrer lhiD to ldU and wreek.

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· EffeCt,i'(e June 18·30

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446-3353
SILVD 18181 PLAIA
GALUPOUS, OH.

LIKE TO SAVE 40°/o

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c:l.t,_. !l&gt;..,iPiol!'

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:;:~FREE

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MON.-'SAY lltiO MI-t PM

FOi ONLY$

---·

In case you hadn't recognized
her, that is lbe fmner Mryna Maag
of Meigs Coun&amp;y lhal you sec pet·
ty regularly on television doing a
commercial for Grut Hospital.
Mryna, a regislered nurse, is a
member of lhe healthcare staff at
lhat instirution.
I know We have some Hummel
collectors out there and perhaps,
they would be interested in the
third annual Hummel Expo to be
held at lhe S10uffer Center Plaza
Hole! in Dayton, June 28, 29 and
30.
Hummel BUthorities and artisans
will be on hand to demonstrate
painting of the Hummel figures;
there will be displays of some of
lhe most rare and most unusual ligures, and free seminars on the
Hummel works will be featured.
You can secUre more info by contacting Dean A. Genth, coordinator, 1312 N. Barron St., Eaton,
Ohio45320.
And !keep tellin' ya, you can't
lose 'em all. Meigs Treasurer
Howard Frank has extended the
real estate tax payment deadline
from June 20 to July 10. Now you
Jceep smiling.

attend from all over the counay. If
you can help in any way wilh lhe
reunion, please aaend the meeting
on June 17111 or contact Barbara or
Tom Gooch (446-7438). Hope 10
see e~ classlllllle on the eve of
July Slh if oot before.
All GAHS Alumni are invited 10
join the class of 1966 from 10
p.m.·midnight on Saturday, July
6111 for music, dancing, 8t memories.

Gallia senior
center schedule

........-

GAll.IPOUS • Most peope .-e
surprilcd 10 lc8m tbal Supplemental Seculi1y Jnrotne SSI J!enef!IIIO
to cbildlal, but !bey do. In l'lct we
pay IIIOIIIbly' SSI benefill 10 more

than 3!10,000 disabled children
under 18. About~ of this 10111
are under qe 1. Their pa)'IIICIIts
average $387 and in moat SU!lel. .
they're eligible for 'Medicaid,
wliic:h helps diem pay lhrir IIIICiical
biiiJ.
For children 10 act SSI, their
disabilities must Jut. or be expect·
ed to last for al leul 12 months.
Min tha balf tllhe chlldlal cur·
rently n:a:lving SSI have mental
disorders. For eliiDIJ.lle. they are
mentally retarded, IIUhotic, or bave
. serious psychiatric problems.
Anolher fourth have clissbilitics of
the liClVOWI system oc seue organs
such as blindness, deafness. or
epilepsy. Many children born with
leukemia, cerebral palsy, Down's
Syndrome, or HIV po~itive, oc who
have ocher severe biJth defects. aJao

pt:~ SecuriJy recauly adopted
Name or Organization--------~for evalulling ~·s
cliabililiel. UDder !be new proce_____________________________
clurel, we look It how !he child's
ditabi!f..'t.,
~him or her ftom
cloillg
· ellen of 1 similar
Phone Number________
111 Clll normally do. Undc:r previous rulel, only ch~ wbo met
specific medical criteria were
Equestrian _ _
Walking_g_
found eligible for SSI. The new
rules meail many more children
will be~ for SS!.
Aoat,~~--------------------~----In llddilino 10 being disabled, a
child must bave limited income and
Please specify size of float in feet)
resourcei 10 qualify for SSI. We
also consider !be pan:nts' income
Mail all entries to:
and I'CIOIII'Cel. but a flmily doesn't
Gallipolis Area Chamber of Commerce
have to be destitute for.the child to
Jll ~SL Many reaources-like lhe
P.O. Box 465
11111111'• bome for eump~'t
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
constdered. And we make
allowances for other children living
in the home.
Parents or guardians who have a
child they lhint could qualify for
SSI should contact a Social Securi·
IY office_, oc if you know someone
"God Bless lhe USA," will be downiOwn at 11 a:m.
with a disabled child, tell them
Mail the entry fonn below to lhe
the
parade theme for the 26th ·
about SSI. II can really mate a dif.
Gallipolis
Area Chamb~ of_Com.
Annual
River
Recreation
Festival,
ference.
July 4, sponSOJ'C(j. by the Gallipolis merce. Deadline for re~•straUons IS
June 21. For any questions call the
Area Jaycees.
Units will begin lining up at Chamber at446.0596.
11868 St. Ri . 160, Vinton, and 9:30 a.m. and the parade will arrive
Melissa Rae Cook. 18, 177 Hennon
Rd., Gallipolis, Ohio.
Paul David Lee, 22, P.O. Box
339, Rio Grande, and Lisa Renae
CHARLOTTE, N.C.- Bruce
Bickle, 18, P.O. Box 339, Rio
and Cathy Gilmore proudly
Grande, Ohio.
announce lhe birth of lheir daugh·
Ronald L. Lewis, 31, 5780 St.
ter, Carissa Marie, born Feb. 22 at
Rt. 325, Patriot, and Linda ,Lce
Pre$byterian Hospital in Charlotte,
Gorrell, 5780 SL RL 325, Patriot,
N.C. Spe weighed eight pounds,
Ohio.
·
four ounces and was 20 1/2 inches
Timmy Allen Roberts, 26, P.O.
long.
Box 183, Bidwell, and Bridgelt
Maternal grandparents are Lee
Mary Robens, 26, P.O. Box 183,
and Virginia Tyler of Gastonia,
Bidwell, Ohio.
N.C. and Robert and Rila Baylor of
Allen A. Cox, 2S, P.O. Box 217,
Zanesville. Maternal great-grand·
Gallipolis, and Regina A. Harold,
mother is Bertha Baylor of Middlert
.
.
P.O. Box 1135, Gallipolis, Ohio.
Robert Glen Hood, 29, 332 1/2
po Paternal grandparents are Lionel
Second Avenue, Gallieolis, and
and Judy Gilmore of Cheshire.
Kembcrlee Ka)le Hemphill, 29, 676
Paternal great-grandparents are
Yellow10wn Rd., Northup, Ohio.
Ruth Fink and Millard Gilmore,
Rundall Dean Nolan, 28, RL 3,
CARISSA GILMORE
Cheshire.
Bidwell, and Elizabeth Jane Law·
son, 31, 14679 St. Rt. 554, Bid·
well, Ohio.
Patrick 0. Day, 23, 91 Cedar
MOREHEAD, Ky.-· Eliza· 1991 Spring Semester.
Street, Gallipolis, and Lisa Lyneae
To be named to the list, a stubeth Davis of Crown City and
Patlerson, 131 l..aurr'J St., Pomeroy,
Samantha Phillips of Gallipolis dent must be enrolled on a full-time
Ohio.
have been named to lhe Morehead basis and achieve at least a 3.4
Kevin Eugene Halley, 24, 1403
State University Dean's List for the grade point average on a 4.0 scale.
Teens Run Road, Crown City, and
Judy Ann Dunt, 22, 203 Bastiani
Dr., Gallipolis, Ohio.
Charles Eric Russell. 26, 2748
Clarlc Chapel Road, Bidwell, and
Wendi_ Lynil Simms, 27, 2742
Clarlc Ollpel, Road, Bidwell, Ohio.
Donald Lee PlaniS, 35, Rt. 4,
Box 33SA, Gallipolis, and Greta
GALLIPOLIS· The Screamin's from Rickey Van Shelton, Alaba ·
Lynette Logan, 24, Rt. 4, Box Eagle Baild will be perfonning on rna, Hank Williaiiis Jr., The Ken33SA, Gallipolis, Ohio.
July 3 from 7:-9 p.m. during the tucky Headhunters, and many
River Recreation Festival.
songs from the fifties and si•ties
The group was Conned in 1989 and many more.
and have perfonncd for a variety of
The band consists oC Mike
clubs and festivals around central Shaver {lead guitar), Alan Shumakand southern Ohio. To their credit, er (rhythm guitar), Ri ck Stevens
The Screamin's Eagle Band has {bass guitar), and Danny ~ct s
open for such big names as McGuf- (drums). With 37 years of performfey Lane, Earl Thomas Conley, and ing experience between them, they
Mel McDaniels. They provide a provide an enjoyable evening for
fund, hig!l energy _show wilh songs the entire family.
new~

A~ss,

Parade deadline June 21

Gallia couples apply for licenses
GALLIPOLIS - 'Jbese couples
recently applied for a marriage
licenae in the Gallia County' Probate Coin
Steven Carr Wauah, 24, Rt. I,
Box 237, Gallipolis, and Usa Ann
Henry, 23, 582 Jay Drive, Gallipolis, Ohio.
.
Tmy SeoU Wall, 31, RL 3, ~
80 Quail Creek, Rodney, and Vlr·
ginia ~·Sheets, RL 3, Gallipolis, Ohio.
.
Chad Douglas Lewis, 24, 420
West Columbus Rd., South
Charleston, end Katrenda Jean
Provens, 19, 7494 Coramill Rd.,
Thunnan, Ohio
Ted Kenneth Smith, 18, 5951
Woodsmill Rd., BidweD, and 1ari
Kay Clary,l8, 485 Jackson Pike,
Gallipolis, Ohio.
Robert Lewis Gilmore, 19, Box
149, ~. and Mechelle Rena
Hamilton, 18, RL I, Box 533, Gil·
lipolis, Ohio.
Patrick Joseph Murphy, 24,
2013 Arthur Avenue, Huntington,
W.Va., and Doris Ann Clarlc, 19,
RLI, Box 119, Crown City, Ohio
William Walter Jeffers, 23, 327
Jeffers Rd., Southside, W. Va., and
Pauline Lynn Schwartz, 20, 327 ·
·
Jeffers Rd., Soulhside, W.VL
Kevin Roben Siegert, 28, S20
Spring 'Valley Dr., Apt. 701, Gal·
lipolis, and Lori Lynn Holle, 23,
520 Spring Valley Dr., Apt. 70 I,
Gallipolis, Ohio
Gerald A. Taylor, 43, RL4, Box
122B, Gallipolis, and Sherry L·.
Mullins, 34, 412 Burnett Rd.,
KMR, Gall' lis. Ohio
Joseph 'rvan Browning, .23,

New arrival

Morehead releases dean's list

Screamin' Eagles head
festival entertainment

L9VE A NURSE
Gift ideas for Your Favorite PmfeMional
IWical Insignia Toe
l'iln-I.N. &amp; l.P.N.
Nwst Tote logs
SS IK!tr ....,. S&lt;iaors

Taylor '- r rf1 1 llananen
&gt;(o..,....laol LP. Cuffs.

Ponlithll, SttlllotcO(MS
(3 rtyl01), HYONI colors.
-3 li101
Pr-toliOII c..., for
Crath Sdaon
StolhoscO(MS
,_., Gig ·,., w/4 1h " Whitt Supper! Pantyloost
.... !daM, Pttllighl llwo A N- Window Dt&lt;ah
aoiii3CalerPift.

l'ilna DDiraalllnd IID8flllll illa.
FESTIVAL PERFORMERS • Plctnred in front row (L to R):

Alan Sbu!Daker and Mike s..ver; second row (L to R): Rick
Stevens and Dan Mets members or the Scream ill' Eagle Band. The
group is scbeduled to perform July 3 from 7·9 p.m.

565 J~CKSON PIKE-HILLCREST PlAZA
PHONE 614-446-2206
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

.,

INC.

SPECIAL
VIDEO TRANSFER

Bring in any type of 8 mm film and we will
tran.ter up to &amp;0 feet of film onto VHS Tape.

We have blank video tap.. available for
:~1 purch.... or bring In your own, unund auper
.; .
high grade tape.
.
.•

•••••

"THAT YOOURT PLACE"

..............
2111•

Reports are still coming in 10 me
from Meigs resident&amp; who have
underaone some lype of heart
surgery oc proced~~re and the lilt is
~etting long, Some are jUSl report·
tng the facts, Mam, while olhers
are writing some real interes':f
detaill of their operiencm, I
that yc;u send t11ae ieports 10 me at
109 High SL, Pomeroy. Evenltlll· ·
ly, the entire list of residents hav·
ing had surgery or pocedures will
be published in this eolumn.

s.J!l~~Gil·
........, , ·

Registration Form
River Recreation Festival Parade
July 4,1991

l.

FOR INSURANCE PURPOSES WE WILL .
COME INTO YOUR HOME AND VIDEO
YOUR POSIEIIIONS .

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ather's Day Special For Dad
BROWNIE DELIGHT
•n

County Fair in August.

GALLIPOLIS - Activities and
menus foc the week of June 17-21,
at the Senior Citizens Center 220
Jackson
Pike, will be as follows:
•'
MONDAY, June 17 - Short
SubjeciS (Transportation of Haz·
ardous Waste) 11:00 Chorus I p.m.
TUESDAY, June 18 •
STOP/Physical Fitness, I 0:30;
CEm"ER WORKDAY at Raccoon
COUilly ParJc at 12:30; Video Mali·
nee·"For the love ol Benjin 12:30.
WEDNESDAY, June 19 •
Healtla Dept. Blood l'resslue 10-12;
Cards 1-3
.
THURSDAY, June 20 ·Bible
Study 10:45; Board of Trustees
Meeting, I :30; Seniors Potluck It
HasJrinsl'lrlc. 4 p.m.
FRIDAY, June 21 ·Art and
Craft Class cancele!l for renova·
tion.
Menus consist of:
MONDAY June 17, Sausage,
Tater ToiS, Spinach/Vinegar, Biscuits, Stewed Apples.
TUESDAY June 18, Beef Tips
with
Gravy, Whipped Po~J!toes,
. • "FURTHERS EDUCATION·
Green BeaD$, Bread Peach Crisp.
John.D.a:rid McCarley, s May 12
WEDNESDAY June 19, Chickl!qaors graduate of Miami UDi· en &amp; Noodles, Italian Vegetables,
~ity in Oxl'ord, Ohio lw been
Bread, Chocolate Dessett.
liUepted to the University or
THURSDAY June 20, Porlceae,
""'•eonsin Medical School at Scalloped POtiiOeS, Tossed Salad,
~disoD. Joba Is the SOD or Bread, Rice Pudding.
l'fggy Skidmore and David
FRIDAY June 21, BBQ Beef,
~Carley or Dayton and Is the Oven Browned Potatoes, Cole
pncl1011 a{ tilt late Warren and . Slaw, Bun, Pears Please make
ftQry Alice Skidmore of Ever- reservations by calling 446-7000
~. tile L8te LoweD MeCarley
before 9 a.m. on the day you wish
of \flnton1 and Mary Ann 10 attend.
~or Vinton.
• • ._

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GejJ~

by Bob Hoeflich

f.m.

Penn S8vlngsl · .• ..

were..

There are benefits for
disabled, blind children

Beat ~~the Bend....
•..

Sunday nmea Sentlnei-Page-87

Pomeroy Middleport Ce'llpolla, OH Point Pl....nt, WV

GARS Class of '66 plan reunion

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SUMMER
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ei&amp;JIIb pade lllfY !"'W' .

Reedsville .VMW meet

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. An~ •

John Cunningham, Supervisor
of Cardiac Rehab and coordinator
of the idocl!lion says, '1bis move
wiD •facilitate ow: rehab S!lfVices in
aU departments: Physical Therapy,
Occupalional,lberapy; WcdtHardening, Cardia&lt;: Rehab, Pulmonary
Rehab, Black Lung Clioic; Spee~:h ·

country and a visitiO Ken Gardens '
and Herb MarJcet, jncluding lunch;
aflernoon tour of·Pfliladelphia;·dinner in the Indepelldence l&amp;ll.
Day 3: Breakfast al lhe I lin;,
lunch in Lancaster prior 10 clepu· ture; dinner enrou1e 10 Oallipolis. t
Tour prices are: DOuble, $2~;
~
triple, $220; quad, $210. A $50
DISCUSSES MOVE • John Cunnillahlm, M.S. Oeft) dlseusses
deposit per person is due no later movlna tlie Clink Sports, Jadnstrlal and RebabUJtative Medicine
than June 18. Finalryment is due equipment With Pebble Halley, Physical Therapy Aide.
no later than July . Mail deposit'
''
to: Kalie Shoemaker, !192 Roush·
Lane, Cheshire, 45620. Or call
367-0583 for information. A few
reservatioos are still available.
Tour price includes: motorcoach
"Clod and WtiC" was the ropic of IIIOIIIS were served.
transporlalion, _two nighiS hotel the prop-am presented by "Nina ' Aaending wae Nancy B~ldcy,
accommodations, sightseeing and · Bostoii 111 the ~1 m•s of the Nina Boston, Emma Durst, Sandy
admissions, two breakfasts, three ReedsviiiO United Methodiat ·WCJt, Mamie Buc)tley, Gladys
lunches, three dinners, taxes and . Women Witli-Mri. FtanC:ea Reed. · + Thomas, Sally Brown. Diane
baggaae handling.
Flilty-one sict calls
Jonaa, Pearl · Osborne, Grace
ed and a money making J)roject Weber,lllld hosiCSS, Frances Reed.
was discpssed.
'
The next meeting will be wilh
Games were played and refresh- Mrs. Gladys Thomas.
GALLIPOLIS • The Gallia·
Meigs Community Action Agency
will be distributing apple sau~e.
flour, vegetarian beans, and beef to
persons holding Food Commodily
Cards, on Tuesday, June 18 at the
following locations:
MEIGS COUNIT • (9:30 a.m.·
noon or until supply is exhausted)Meias County Fairgrounds,
Tuppers Plains and Racine Fire
Statio.ns, and the Pageville Town
Hall.
GALLIA COUNTY - (noon2:30 p.m., or until supply is
exhausted) Gallia County Fairgrounds, Gallco in Cheshire, and
the Crown Cily F'ue Station. There
will be no disiribution at the Bid·
well ML Cannel Church. Persons
previously receiving commodities
al this silt are asked to go to lhe ·
Gallia County Fairgrounds.
Persons picking up for others
The Lafayette Garden Center
must bring a sl~ note from that
SPf'daliah&amp;~ In EW"rl•""" St..ppliet Mfll 0...,..,
person,llong wtlh their Food Com453 Joekoon Pike
modi&amp;y Card ..
Gal!tpa!to, Ohio 45631
Individuals picking up com(614) 446-41148
modilies are asked to bring paper
or plastic bags for easy handling.

'

m. '

Clinic SIRM departmentmgv~~
•

Our conllrllUialions to Eleanor
Thomas, director of the Meigs
County Senior Citizens Center,
who was the recipient of the 1991
Muriel Allen Bensch Award. The
award was presented 10 her at the
annuli Conference of lhe Ohio
Association of senior Centers held
recemly in Columbus.
When the senior Cenler opened
its doors on April 2, 1973, afler
several months of assessing the
needs of Meigs.elderly residents,
Elclmor was DEed director. She'll
be reliring from thst position as
soon as a new director is hired by
the Meigs County Council on
Aging.
.
Elelnor has clone a fan~tlc Job
in clevelopiDJ all sons of social,
health and informational. )lnlll'lms''
for lhe elderly over the past 18
years, and that was why she was
presented the Ba1scll Award.

'

The lhelle fcir IIIia ,_•• ~· . ·
is ~Be SII'OIIJ IIIIi ,Coutqoous.~ ~­
Visilon will ,..,..., a fli*ll
Palla, all4r ~ Mvtved ~ Ooocl, .
and ·Jolnl J1w 1 brkll! will was
br~glll 4owil wltbo'" beiiiJ '

The Continental Singers ·
•

Distribution 'slated

~

0

YIJOIII people funD all over tilt ·.
Ullbed S.. u 'riCIL •IIVIIII bo: ..·,

And speaking·of fueworks did
you knowthat almost 10,000 fireworks
injuries are repiJ(ted annually and
that ol the I ,600 involving the eye,
40 pi:rcent result in permanent eye

cla!Jta&amp;c,

I

u~c~~~a~ciiaur~U:~~;

County garden. clubs plan tout .

-

.

Sin~ I!II.~Y NCOI· ~
Dlzed ~ mJIIIIIII-IJUIIP, will ••

' Again this year Ohio University
will host two cheer!~ clinics
for senior high, junior htgh and
middle school cheerleaden. Cltm'ing skill$ and sideline chants will
be Jau-ht and at lhe end of each
clinic JUdging will take plai:e with
trophies 10 be awarded.
.
The first session will be con·
dueltd by the Univenal Clleerlead- .
em Alsoclltion, June 25-28, (Tele·
phone I .80(). 328-0286] while the . Have a nice weeki

GALLIPOLIS • A tour of the
Pennsylvania Amish Counlry, Aug.
20-22 has been scheduled for all
Gallia County Garden Club memhers and non-members.
.
·
The motorcoach tour ltmerary
includes:
Day 1: Lunch enroute to ':-an·
caster, Pa., _hole! accommodauons
at lhe Conunental Inn, Lancaster;
dinner at the Esh Family Farm,
Lancaster.
Day 2: B~ast a~ lhe Inn; ftlm
of the Mennomte htstory al lhe
Mennomte Informauon _Center;
four hour tour of lhe Amtsh fann

••

, iltm.AND •• o;w;-tat .,

by Charlene Hoeflich

The First Church of God of Gallipolis, pastored by Paul Voss, is
~ing 10 helP Craig Sltaxold reach

-

Continentals to : =~
perform Tuesday,l ~

ty

Corner
POMEROY • The~ written by Gay Marsh Perrin pyNished
in her book, ''The Pn:senl Golcf', is
delightful.
!from the many poems she bu
written OYII' the yean, Gay llelected,
her favoriJes, includinp ones pertaining to the place o her childhood. her family. the happy limes,
the sad ones. as weD as signifiamt
even Is including her da':l~~~r· s
weddin and her first gtiDCICbiJd.
· A~i special meaning 10 lhe
book of poeay are the illusuldiow.
They were all dOne by her daugh·
tel, Beth.
.
The last poem in the book entitled "The GreaiCSt Gold" is dedicated to her late husband, W. H.
Perrin, who pastored Trinity
Church for many yean. It is touching.

-

1111

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446-·'128

June17 thru 29
Layaway
•

1

�Pllgl BB Sunday Times Sentinel

Gallia County calendar
(Items for the collfllfunity calendar Church. For information call 446apptar two days prior 10 all tvtnt. 4889 or 441-1516.
- .
TIN1 11111st IH recelvltl by the Gal·
CENTERPOINT • Centerpoint
lipolls DaUy Tribune IIi odvonct
Freewill Baptist Church Bible
for publleation)
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS · The Alexanders
of Oak Hill, W.Va .. will be in concen at the First Church of God,
Sunday, June 16 at 7 p.in.
VINTON • Morgan Center
Chrislian .Holiness Church to have
homecoming Sunday, June 16 with
lunch at noon and afternoon service
to follow.
'

PATRIOT- Homecoming at
Bethesda UM Church. Potluck dinner at 1 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS • Gallia County
Historical Society board meeting at
1 p.m. at Episcopal Church. No
program.
CADMUS - Crossroads Church
vacation Bible school June 17-21
from 9 a.m .-noon. All ages welcome.
HENDERSON, W.Va. - Gallia
Twirlers to hold dance, Saturday.
June 15 from 8-11 p.m. at Henderson Community Center. Caller: Ed
Graham.
MONDAY
VINTON - American Legion
Post 161 Auxiliary, 1 p.m. at legion
hall.
GALLIPOLIS - Divorce Support Group Monday, June 17 at
7:30 p.m. at New Life Lutheran

Pomeroy Middleport Gllllpolll, OH Point Plee•nt, wv

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Country music star Randy Travis
and longtime companion Lib
· Hati:her were married last monlll in
Hawaii, an aide said Friday.
They were married May 31 at a
home tlley own in Maui, said
Travis spokeswoman Evelyn Shriver.
Hatcher, 49, is Travis' manager
and has ofllln been seen sealed next
to the 32-year-old singer at nationally televised awards shows.
She has been married once previously. Travis had· never been
married.
The two acknowledged earlier
this year that they have lived
together for 12 years.
In a five-year career, Travis has
sold mae than 12 million records.
His hit singles include "Forever
and Ever, Amen" and "Hard Rock
Bottom of Your Heart" His larest
sons, "Point of Light," was
inspired by a phrase President Bush
used during the 1988 campaign.
JESSUP, Md. (AP) ....:.. Olympic
track star Wilma Rudolph will be
lisled in the World Book EncycJo.
pedia for the first time thanks to
some indignant elementary scbool
pupils.
~udolph set world records in the
100-llleler and 200-meter races and
anchored the winning American
400-meter relay team in the 1960
Ol)'lllpiC Games in Rane. She was
the lint American woman 10 win
three gold medals in the Olympics.
She now lives in Indianapolis,
where sho Olllblished the Wilma
Ruclolpb Foundation to help disad·
Vlllll&amp;ed youna people.
A lourtb-llllle class at Jessup
Elementary SChool wanll!d to do a
project on the woman who over-

Bus going to wedding
skids into ravine

'Rocketeer' co . . star Alan
Arkin's.career finally takes off

experimental flight pact that binSBy Frank Lovece
forms
him into the Rocketeer Well, it's about time.
that even his tw may not immediAlan Arkin, one of America's
ately recognize him. And that has
GALL! POLIS - Vacation bible finest actors, fmally has a hit on his
linlc to do with the rumpled hair
School, Christ United Methodist hands. As co-star of "The Rocke·
· Church, Lower River Road, 9 a.m. teer" - ~ing up as possibly the
and mustache he wean.
As Peevy, Arkin steps back in
until 12 noon Monday through Fri- summer's btgge.st bkx:kbustertime. His voice, his expressions and
day· .
·
the veteran film star forms the
his gestures all feel like those of an
human center of a 1930s recbnoid
earlier America. It's as if he
TUESDAY
adventure, one that jets onto the
GALLIPOLIS • Gallipolis Area screen like · a cross between
stepped out of a time machine,
from 1938. 1
Christian Women's Club will nleet "Raiders of the Lost Ark" and
at noon, Tuesday, June 18 at the ' 'The Front Page." Beaer yet. he's
· "!identify with that period, at
0 .0. Mcintyre Park. Speaker will on a roll, having also been the n:cleast through the movies," muses
be Sharry Robens, village mission· ognizably human center in the sur- the actor, who was born in 1934. "I
ary, w(!o is serving with her hus- real "Edward Scissorhands" and
identify with people· who present
band, Jake, near Bellefontaine. in the self-consciously mythic
themselves, and talk, fast. There
Reservations should -be made by "Havana."
was a kind of openness about peocalling Mary Pope, 379-2~21, no
Finally, after a d«adc of having
ple 's behavior then that I like. So
larer than Saturday.
his talents wasted in dreadful films,
getting into that gear was relatively
c:asy {or me. l wanted Peevy to be
doing the bulk of his good work in
BIDWELL· North Gallia Band will-o' -the-wisp TV movies, the
very mt~ch of thlll period, not spend
Booster meeting, Tuesday, June 18 fiftysomething Atkin has become a lot of time brooding and thinking.
at 6:30 p.m. at North G;~llia High the new kid on the block.
Just out with it - .say it"
School band room.
"Who ever knows with this?"
Which Arltin does do himself. It
Ai'kiri wonders with a kind of wasn 'I too long ago he was
VINTON • Vinton Friendship .·. cheerful resignation, the .~ign of a expressing justified exasperation at
Garden ·Ciub to meet at noon at real New Yorker, Stardom, he real·
being a Tony Award-winning,
RCCP shelter house No. 6.
izes, "has nothing to do with what
three-times Oscar-nominated actor·
comedian-director
who):ept having
GALLIPOLIS _ The Lafayelle one does - it has to do with how
to
take
marginal
roles because
White Shrine wiD meet at 7:30 p.m. people perceive you. One of my
problems is nobody •s peroeived me those were the only ones offered.
for school of instruction.
as anything: There are parts I've Somehow, despite a string of stun·
played that nobody knows I've ning performances in "The Heart
RUTLAND • The Continental done. I'll remind somebody. and Is a Lonely Hunter" (1968),
Singers, an internationally recOJ.·
"Catch-22" (1970), "The Seven
nized Christian musical group will they'll say, 'Oh, my god, that was Percent Solution" (1976) and !he
premiere their 1991 World Tour on you?' Which '! take as a complimagnificent "The In-Laws"
Tuesday, June 18 at Rutland ment, but I don't think it's done my (1979), among other ftlms, stardom
star quotient, readout potential,
Church of God at 7 p.m.
eluded him.
whateV\ll'·they-call·it any good."
By 1986, Arltin was frustrated.
Ironically, his ·~Rocketeer" role
"I won't do anything on spec anyfalls in the "Oh,, my god, that was
more," he told me then. "I've
you?" category. Arkin so becomes
done an enormous amount · his character- Ambrose "Peevy"
movies and plays that haven't gotPeabody, mechanical whiz and
len done, writing treatments, sitting
reluctant mentor to the young pilot
in offices;spitballin.l! swff. I can't
came bouts with double pneumo- who finds a stolen, top-secret,
ma, scarlet fever and polio to
develop into a championship runner, but found she wasn't listed in
the book.
"It wasn't fair. All the other
famous people were in there," said
Christopher Whipple, 10.
De• A. . Landen: My parents
Delli' Aaa Llaclen: It is obvious
The students collected signahave
been
marriecl
49
years.
They
·
by
your unsyrnjlllhetic n:sponse, to
tures for a· petition and wrote the
are
financially
secure
retired
a recent letter that you still have your· ·
publisher after their teacher, .Irma
professionals who have held own teeth. I refer 10 the leucr about
Thompson, said she told them
positions of leadership in the the overnight houseguest who
"there are ways to show their feelcommunity, church and their pro-. accidentally lost her dentures in the
ings besides getting angry."
fessions.
A 25-line biography of Rudolph
toilet. They blocked the drain and a
My father in recent yean has plumber had to be called.
will be included in the 1991 edi·
tion, wrote back Mary Norton,
become ina c•rinsJy bgetful and
· The qnestlon was whether 10
is now lqi1111ing to be verbally return llpem or keep quiet about
"!rector of research an!~ library ser.
VICCS at World Book.
abuaiw Ill my liiOibcl. To avoid the discovery. Your support of the
. "We at World Book take great . confrontmon, Mo&amp;her is being no-rean 4rcision •• to ~ the
pnde m keepmg our encyclopedia uncbarac:ceristic&amp;lly meek and frien&lt;l from embarrassmen ..
as accurate, current and compresubmialve. He lw ll:ways been ~ full of cavi~ Ann. Properly
hensive as possible," she wrote.
~what domincerina. but she has fttltng, attractiVe dentures can
· SIDod up 10 him when
and be qx Ire mely cost! y. Freq uen 1
WASHINGTON (AP)- Gov.
he valued her ideaa and opinions.
replacements are not looked upon
Ann Richards' hair and almost
I have ~ about hanlening of kindly by dental insurers. It is
every aspect of her GOP rival
the art.eriea in the older population
Clayton Williams, were roasted ai and the symptOms of this disease. 1 poasible that the dcntureles$ friend
an annual roast by Independent think this may be what is happening is still toothless. You cenainly were
no help.
Action, a liberal non-profit group.
to my filth.. He also baa shown
The recum of those dentures, with .
. More than 600 people paid $500
rigns
of
depeuion
lheae
last
few
cr
without a kind note, ~ have
a plate Thursday night for the kind
yean.
Here
is
lite
jMObleon:
Fllher
been pqdy ~ialed. - R.S.,
of "low-down, big-time, fry-yourassets kind of deal" that Texas dislrulll doc:las. He !llinb they am RNERSIDE, CALIF.
Railroad Commissioner Lena Guer- all quaeb, il... ac doaJy in money. . DEAR RIVERSIDE: A great
rero said is typical of roasts in When Molher.IIJIIC"S a checkup, many readers wrote to say I had
his telpllllle is, "I un not sick. •
Texas.
given the wrong lllvicc. Lilcc you,
Whll
can
MOther
do
10
get
him
IIley felt I lhould hive advised the
Sen. Bill Bradley, D-N.J.,
10
seek
helb7
If
she
bios
10
reuon
IIOIIIess to return the teeth.
revealed what Richards told
with him he becomes angry and
Williams on the night she beat him
·1am SliD not totally convinced. It .
in the governor's race: "When lhrealens diVOite. He is pigheaded seems to me that the woman who
defeat is inevitable, you should just and insists dill lite problem is with lost her teeth down the toilet surely
her. I can't belr to see my mother was aware of' iL Applrendy, her
sit back:, relax and enjoy it."
misaaled
lib Ibis. Unfortunalely embarrassment was so great that
In his failed campaign for governor last year, Williams likened I doll't liw- them and have nev~ she preferred to say notlting llld
bad weather to rape and said if it been lble to relate 10 my father. sacriftce the denwres. Let's hope
was inevitable, "just relax and He hal never given me cmdit for the poor clear had 111 extra ,.,.;. at
home.
. ......
enjoy it''
.
111~ and would not lislen 10 me.
Richards' well-groomed coiffure
Pleue uae my cr Ill of this Jeaer,
Is life passing you by? Wtv~t to
drew several barbs. Bradley said it • you wilb. Thank you b my help · improve yow socilll &amp;lcills? Write for
was a little-known fact that the you can offer. •• DENIM OOU.Y AM Landers' /leW booklet, "How to
superconducting super collidcr pro- INTBXAS
.
Make Friends a11d Slop Being
ject was being built in Texas so that
HIU lO OOU.Y: Obviously you Uinely. • Selld a se/f-&lt;lddrtssed, long,
"it could come up with a formula can do nothing with your falher so
bii.!Utess-siu envelope dlld a cMck
for Ann's hairspray."
my ldvic:e is to COIICellllliiO on your ·or money order for S4J5 (tlris illMs. Guerrero admonished the mother. She desperately . needs
clwks poslage tutd htuulling) to:
other roasters for their politeness.
emodmallllppOrl. Since you n not Frkllds, do AM Ltwlers, P.O. Box
She said Richards launched her
political career with a desire for the lbere to live It, sagaea dill she ask 11562, Chkago.IU. 6061 UJ562. (In
power of Queen Elizabeth I, the her physician or clergyman to CIJIIOda •.setul $5.05.)
inteUigence of Madame Curie, the ft!CXI!IImald I good counaelor.
Your mother must find the
eloquence of Eleanor Roosevelt
and the courage of Amelia Earhan, lllell&amp;th 10 stand up aaaillll her
brill h bldpring and make a life
she said.
All fath!lrs accompanied by a
"Poor Ann," Ms. Guerrero said fer hcnelf. I am not suaesting
with a sigh. "She ended up with ·aepnlion. In this case it would be son or daughter will be awarded
the wrinkles of Uoyd Bentsen, the roo deslnlctive to both panics. Please three free games of miniature golf
judgment of John Sununu, the tol· write apiD and let me blow how on Sunday at the Park 'n' Putt
erance of Jesse Helms and. the rep- your mother is geuing along. I Miniature Golf Cousse at General
Haninger Park in Middlepon.
utation of Sue Ellen Ewing."
really feel for her.
Richards, who appOinted Ms:
school, June 17-21. Adult classes
wiD be offered.

People in the news
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Jaime
Escalante, the calculus teacher
whose coaching of inner-city. students inspired the movie "Stand
and Deliver," says he is leaving
Garfield High School when the
school year ends next week.
Escalante cited differences .with
his colleagues and a desire for "a
change of scenery" as reasons for
leaving his 17-year pcist at the East
Los Angeles school. He is going to
a similar job in Sacramento.
"I am going to teach. That is the
only thing I can do," he said.
His successful work with poor
Hispanic students at Garfield High
was cluonicled in the 1988 film.
His students' scores in advanced
placement calculus exams in 1982 ·
were so stunning that administra.
tors invalidated the results. Most of
the 18 pupils retook the test and
again attained passing scores.
Escalante said he will be teachinf calculus next fall at Sacramento s Hiram Johnson High School,
an ethnically diverse campus where
only six students passed the
advanced placement calculus test
last year.

June 1&amp;, 1181

stand it anymore. It's time-wasting.''
Fortunately, he bas other talents.
He has Jlllblishcd fiction since the

19S0s, the same era in whic.h he
ha4 a hit single, ''The Banana Boat
Song, •• as a member of The Tarriers, a folk-rock trio. ,He directed
two movies and an Academy
Award-nominated short. An~ by
the late 1980s - excepting
''Escape From Sobibor" (1987), an
extraordinary, fact-based TVmovie set in a concentration camp
- Arkin was spending less time
acting than he was directing for the
stage and writing books.
Then, as he says, who knows?
Maybe it was the rise of video,
making his top-notch performances
readily available on video cassette.
Or maybe his karma just turned.
But from 1'990's "Coupe de Ville"
on, Arkin has found himself in
demand. "Last year l was home,"
he fif,ures, "two weeks out of the
year. .
Now, sitting in a friend's Manhattan penthouse, visiting from his
home in the Hudson River valley,
Arlcin looks as bright as the Rocketeer's exhaust flames. His career's
going as it should. His actor son
Adam was m:ently nominated for a
Tony Award for Broadway's "I
Hate Hamlet." And his wife,
actress-writer Barbara Dana, has
just publishe~ "Young Joan"
(HarperCollins), a well-received
book about Joan of Arc.
And Arkin himself could be rid·
ing "The Rocketeer" to stardom
- except, perhaps, that he became
his role so much he's unrecognizable in iL "I always thought," he
says, grinning a rare grin, "that's
what I was supposed to do! I guess
I was just trained wrong.''

Years of wear begin to show

-•ary

· DICKSON, Tenn, (AP) - A.
bus chartered to carry passengers
from Dallas to a wedding in New
Jersey ran off an lnterstaic 40 exit
ramp, injuring' at least 36 people,
two critically, authorities said
today.
It was not immediately known
why the bus sltidded off the interstate ramp in this community 35
miles west of Nashville, police said
today.
"I felt bumps and I just woke
up. I couldn't see anything but .
trees," said 12; YCI!f-old passenger
Kendall Carter, of Dallas.
·
·His grandfather, Roben Bartee,
was a relief driver for the chartered
Carroll Tours bus from Dallas. He
said the other driver was at the
wheel when the accident occurred
Friday night. ·
· Most of the passengers were
Indian and a translator was called
in to help medical workers communicate with them, ·said Alan
Markowitz, administrator of Goodlark Medical Center.
"Very few of these people
speak English," he said. .. •

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"Lena, Lena, Lena," she said.
"What the
goyernor
giveth, the
·Guenero,
shook
her head.
governor can taketh away."
· •
The roast raised more than - J I " $300,000 for Independent Action,
which supports liberal Democratic

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110 3ld An.
OllllpoUa, OH.
(114) 441.0114
To C.t Cornfortoble, You Coua C.r Ruud.

,,

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'lintts .. ~mtintl Section

ports

June 1&amp;, 1991

~-

-·~ · xBoston

C

bombs California 13-3

BOSTON, Mass. (AP) Chuck Finley gave up seven runs
on six hits in the first inning and
the Boston Red Sol! went to rout
. the .California Angels 13-3 on Sat:
urday.
.
.
• Finley (10-3) ente(ed the game
tied'for the major.-league lead in
victories and a 3.12 ERA. But he
lasted only two-thirds of an inning.
. Jack Clark and Carlos Quintana ·
each drove in three runs ani! Mike
Greenwell and Tony Pena knocked
in two apiece.
Boston rookie Mike Gardiner
earned his third ·victory in four

decisions.
double off winner Jeff Ballard (4- who gave up eight hits in eight
0rloles 8, Blue Jays 4
. 7).
innings, got the victory.
At Toronto, Ont., the Baltimore
Padres 6, Cubs 2
Giants 4, Pirates 0
Orioles beat the Toronto Blue Jays
At San Diego, Calif., Jerald
At San Francisco, Calif., Mike
8-4 Saturday to snap a sill·game Clark's two-run single snapped an Remlinller pitched a three-hit
losing streak.
·
eighth-inning tie and the San Diego shutout m his major league debut
Bob Melvin. whose run-scoring Padres went on to beat the Chicago as the San Pranc1sco Giants beat
double put the Orioles ahead 2-1 in Cubs 6-2 Saturday.
·
the Pittsbur~h Pirates 4-0 Satntday.
the second. followed an RBI single
Tim Teufel added an RBI dou- ·.
Millt W1Jiiams hi! a 1wo-run
bJ! Randy Milligan in the fourth ble and Scott Coolbaugh drove in a homer in.the Giants' four-run third.
wtth a solo horner off Juan G02man run with a sacrifice fly 10 cap the
The four-run third inning did all
(0-2).
four-run inning that sUirted when the damage against left-bander
. The Blue Jays closed to S-4 in . reliever Mike Bieleclti (8·5) gave John Smiley (8-3). who lost his
the botlom of the fourth on Joe up a one-out walk to Bip Roberts second straight decision to San
Caner's 11th home run ?f the sea- and a single to Tony Fernandez.
Fransisco.
~on and Gle~allen _H1ll s two-run
Staner Dennis Rasmussen 0·1),

Japanese ciiy to get 1998 Winter Games
and Jaca, Spl!in.
By STEPHEN WILSON
"I think i\'s a fair vote,... said
AP Sports Writer"
BIRMINGHAM, England (AP) Francpis Carrard, director general.
·- The Japanese city of N~ano of the roc. "The shift in balance
was awarded the 1998 Wmter in continents IQ Asia is a very good
·Olympics on Saturday, beating out thing." .
·salt Lake City and bringing the . But it was nothing less than a
'Winter Games to Asia for the ftrSt crushing blow for backers of the
Salt Lake ·City bid, who have been
time in 26 years.
The politics of geography pre- trying to bring the Games to Utah
vailed as the International Olympic since 1966.
"We're just terribly disappointCommitree voted to put the game,s
in Asia rather than m the .United ed," Mayor Palmer DePalmis said
minutes after IOC President Juan
States for a second straight time.
Nagano· will be the first Asiari Antonio Samaranch opened the
city to host the Winter Games since sealed envelope and announced
Sapporo, Japan, in 1972. That · N~ano as the winner.
'We did everything we could,"
apparently proved to be a strong
selling point with the roc mem- he said. "It's a great loss."
"I'm sure Atlanta was a factor
bers, who had been criticized last
in
our
losing," said Tom Welch,
year {or giving the 1996 Summer
chBirn!an
of the Salt Lake bidding
9arnes to Atlanta.
,
comm1llee.
· Salt Lake City would have been
Senator Jake Gam of Utah was
lhe fourth American city and sixth
more
blunt.
in North America to stage the
"It bothers me because the IOC
blympics since 1976.
. The other candidates were for the Summer or Winter games
Ostersund, Sweden; .Aosta, Italy , ought to consider only one thing '·

.

which is the best city," he said. "If
you can't win when you're the best
city, you get very discouraged ....
Leave politics out of it, leave geography out of it"
The Japanese delegates were
ecstatic, leaping into the air in the
conference hall, holding up their
arms in victory and waving white
Na~ano flags.
'I feel great, this is just great,"
said Soichiru Yoshida; vice chairman of the Nagano commillee. "I
was very CQI!fident I had personal
contact with each roc member and
that was very imponant"
. Eighty-eight IOC members took
part in Saturday's secret vote.
Nagano led in each of the five
rounds, beating out Salt Lake 46
votes to 42 in the fmal ballot
· "It was not an anti-American
vote, merely an opportunity to go
somewhere else," said Richard
Pound, a Canadian who is an IOC
vice president.
Nagano and Salt Lake City had
been rated as the main contenders
in the race which lasted years and

cost millions of dollars.
It had been generally acknowledged that Salt Lake City offered
- on paper, at least - the
strongest bid. The Utah capital
received high marks in an IOC
evaluation report for its facilities,
infrastructure and finailcial backing.
Salt Lake City was hoping its
readiness and prepaiations would
carry it through, repeatedly so:essing that it could stage the Games
by 1994.
.
Nagano, a city of about 350,000
people located II 0 miles northwest
of Tokyo, emphasized geography
and technology in its pitch to the
IOC.
.
The Japanese also matched a
major financial incentive offered
by Salt Lake: free transportation,
meals and expenses for all alhleres
and officials.

Beginning June 24,

Private Man. captures Ohio Derby

By CHUCK MELVIN
h1m to the front early on the ~ack•
AP Sports Writer
stretch. But Velazquez kept Priyate
. NORTH RANDALL. Ohio Man nc::ar the front of th~ nme'(AP) _ Private Man overtook ho~se .f1eld and caught R1chman
heavily favored Richman on the gomg mto. the fmal turn.
final wrn and pulled away in the .
The P811' ba!tl~ at the top of the
stretch for a 2 1/2-length victory in stretch. before Pri-:are Man pulled
Saturday's $300,000 Ohio Derby at ahead m the fin~ s~teenth of the 1
Thistledown.
,
1-8-rrulerace, wmnm~ ~~ 1:501-5.
The lightly raced colt, ridden by
It was Velazquez f1r~t career
John Velazquez, added $180,000 to stakes victory.
.
his previous career winnings of
Kentucky_-~red. Pnvate Man,
$67,680. It was his third win in five owned by Philip D•l~ and ~~d
career starts.
by Jo.hn Herd~, fimshed th1rd his
· The winner returned $16.80, last ume ~ut m the Jersey Derby
$4.60 and $2.20. Richman paitl and won h1s two races before that
$2.60 and $2 .20, and Shudanz, at Aqueduct. He raced from the No.
third, paid $3.60 to show.
I po~•uon.
Richman, a 1-5 choice of the
,Richman, w~ose owne~,
bettors, broke from the No. 8 post W•lli~ F. Lucas, di.ed Thursday 10
position, and jockey Pat Day took Loutsville, was commg off a 6 1/2-

length win in the Illinois Derby,
but he was carrying a career-high
126 pounds. Private ¥an carried.
114.
"The weight helped us, and he
ran a good race, • • Hertler said.
"Comin~ up to this race, each race
was getung better, and ,the Jersey
Derby was an indication that he
could handle good horses. And he
got ~e job done::
. .
B1ll Mott, tramer of R1chml)n.
agreed the weight differential was
significant.
·
.. We gave him 12 pouqds,"
Mou said. "It looked lilcc he was .
relaxed around the first turn. He
just didn't have enough to hold that
other horse off. He had a few more
pounds on his back. Looks l!ke.~t
could have had a lot to do With 11.

Andretti gets Detroit Grand Prix pole
led every lap'in winning last year's too much in the slower comers. But
race. "Another thing is I enjoy this I'll get the set-up right tomorrow."
Andretti, sitting alongside,
race course. Some guys don't like
it, but I find it very demanding and glanced over at Fittipaldi and said.
very challenging. And when the car ''1'11 bet you will."
AI Unser Jr., who had started
getS some gOod grip, you can really
sink your Ieeth into it and challenge alongside Andretti on the front row
here each of the last two years and
the race course."
Andretti, who has earned 15 was second on Friday, had electri·
career pole.s, picked up his third of cal problems Saturday and failed to
the year, all on city street circuits. improve on his first-day speed of
Rick Mears has won the other 86.34 7. That sent him tumbling
back to lOth in the 26-car field.
three, all on ovals.
Mears moved to third at87.451,
Emerson Fittipaldi, Mears'
followed
by Arie Luyendyk at
teammate and the winner of the
87.381,
Mario
Andretti 87.134,
inaugural Detroit Indy-car race in
Pruett
86.712,
Bobby Rahal
Scott
1989, jumped from third to second
86.658,
John
Andretti
86.499 and
on Saturday. turning a lap of
Eddie
Cheever
86.499.
87.874 mph on his last trip around
Cheever was in his backup car
the circuiL
after
crashing into the rear of the
"I didn't expect to go that fas~"
car
'driven
by Didier Theys in the
said Fittipaldi, who spun because
morning
practice
session. Theys,
or a tire puncture and hit a tire wall
who
has
no
backup.
was unable to
earlier in the session. "At that
point; my car was pushing a little run in the aflernoon and fell from
16th to 23rd. His team was
attempting to repair the badly damaged car.
Something of a surprise was 56year-old AJ. Foyt, making his ftrst
road course start since injuring
himself seriously in a crash last
September at Elkhart Lake , Wis .
Despilll rebuilt and still very tender
fee1. Foyt was able to qualify 19th
at 83.611 on the tough race course.
"My feet are acting kind of
retarded," Foyt said. ''It's hard to
get used to the throttle and the
brake and also concentrate on
where I'm going on the track.
"As far as the race goes, I'm.
gonna work at iL I know it's gonna
be hard on me."
Most of the drivers say that
Detroit is the most demanding
physical layout on the 17 -race
CART PPG Cup circuit l)ecause
the driver has to work constantly
and there is no real resting place on
the bumpy circuit. Add to that the
hot, humid weather, with tempera·
tures expected to be near 90 ori
Sundar·
·
· "It s a difficult race to finish,"
Fittipaldi said. "It's very tough on
transmissions, hard on the brakes
and even physically, it's one or the
toughest races of the year. With the
humidity, by the end of the first
TURNS PAST L.AP- Mldl1tl AaclreUI (Ia racer) CI'IIIHs put
hour
I reaUy feel it. But you just
tt::,r.&amp;~ of Detroit lllallle OD die Dtlrolt Graad Prb: COIII'II during
q
1 ruua Prltlay. Aadrettl turned tile l'lltat lap of the day to
have 10 work hard .and keep your
wiD the proviSional pole ror today's race. (AP)
concentration.''

By MIKE HARRIS
DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit
Grand Prix race circuit holds no
mysteries . for record-setting
Michael Andretti.
' The second-generation Indy-car
stat: .broke his own track qualifying
record Saturday as he eame.d the
pole position for Sunday's 62-lap
race through the downtown streets.
Andretti's fast lap of88.721
mph eclipsed the mark of 88.512
he set in 1989 while winning the
ftrst of his three straight poles on
the 2.5-mile, 17·tum circuit.
He has shown amazing consistency here, running at or near the
front all the time. Andretti sUirted
the day with his Chevrolet-powered
Lola on the provisional pole after
leading Friday's opening round of
qualifications with a lap of86.374.
"Maybe we got lucky enough to
stumble across the right setup for
this racetrack," said Andretti, who

IQ

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DOESN'T GET AWAY- DeSpite appearances, Boston's Jody
Reed (lert) doesn't gel' away from the tag of California pitcher Jeff
Robinson at the plate in tbe fourth inning of Saturday's American
League game in Boston, which the Red Sox won 13-3. (AP)

Wimbledon's grass co-u:rts await
world's leading tennis players
.
By GEORGE ROBINSON
NEW YORK (NEA)- What's the ftrst thing you
think of when you hear the word Wimbledon? Grass,
of course.
The green eouns at the All England Lawn Tennis
and Croquet Club may be the most famous patches of
grass in spons.
"The only Grand Slam Championship. that has
remained true to its grass·roots," notes World Tennis
magazine, "it is comprised of 18 meticulously mani·
cured coons spread over 42 acres."
They're certainly pretty to look ~t But those grass
couns at Wimbledon can be perniCIOUS to play on.
Which malces for !llCiting tenms.
The I 14th All England Tennis Championships
begin on Monday, June 24. The sport's most prestigious tides will be determined in the final rounds on
Saturday, July 6 (for women), and Sunday, July 7
(for men). HBO plans coverage on cable TV from the
early rounds through the semifinals: NBC-TV's cov·
erage will include the final rounds of the tournamenL
Defendin' champ Stefan Edberg, Australian Open
champ Bons Becker and Ivan Lend! were early
favorites going into this year's tournament. On the
women's side, Manina Navratilova was seelting to
defend her title.
Sizing up Wimbledon against the prevailing hard
or clay surfaces on the world tennis circuit, former
star Clark Graebner says: ''It's a completely different
game."
He should know. He reached the semifinals at
Wimbledon in 1968, and the quarters in 1969 and
1970.
".You don't have time to get in position on
grass," Graebner says. "You get more bad bounces,
the ball sltids more than it bounces up. It's much
more difficult to hit topspin, so you have to volle~."
In fact, notes current pro Wendy Turnbull, 'the
ball bounces a bit lower than on other surfaces."
That difference changes the complexion of the game
considerably.
She explains: "You can come in (to the net) and
get away with a bad approach shot on grass because
the ball stays lower. Your opponent doesn't have as
much time to set up and hit a passing shot."
Turnbull is a three-time winner at Wimbledon
(women's doubles. 1979, paired with Kerry Reid;
and mixed doubles, 1983-84, with John Lloyd).
With a faster surface, she nores. play becomes a
bit more instinctive, "but you still need lo play a
good tactical game."
The tactic that Brian Gottfried prescribes is to
spend a lot of time worlting on return of serve. Got·
tfried was the 1976 Wimbledon doubles champion
(with Raul Ramirez) and a semifinalist in the 1980
sin~les.

'Your serve-and-volley game could lose·matches
for you if it's not up to standard," he says . .

Because of me' lower bounce on grass, "you've
got 1.!1 stay low, wa!ching the ball real close," Gottfried says. "Wben you hit a good return, and you get
the guy stretched out a linle bit, you've got to make
sure you move into the coun and not just stay at the
baseline setting up to hit a passing shot. You have to
make sure that if there's a chance 10 rake the second
ball out of the air, you can do it. You don't know
what kind of bounce you're going to get.
"You need to also make the coun look small to
the opponent. A lot more intimidation takes place,
particularly on you opponent's second serve. The
serve is more predominant, but at the same time, au,
the players realize tliat; You can lose serve early in
the set, and it can basically cost you the set.
"Because of that, there's a httle more pressure, a
little more anxiety for the server. You wat)t to make
him feel that. If he .misses a few ftrst serves, you may
want to step around and let him look at your forehand.
:·
"You play more mind games, I ~ess."
••
Graebner agrees: "A big serve IS obviously more··
helpful than on clay."
·
But the grass courts can get chewed up during service.
"
Says Gottfried, '.'The feet"are what does it the :
most, and the serve is ~ biggest grass-diaer. You-:,
play a guy who is a notorious toe-dnlgger, and he •
could be tearing up the baseline as you're plarng the :
match. You might actually have to change the place :
you serve from."
•
· The inevitable Wimbledon rain delays present :
another challenge to grass play, although the problem ·
has been mitigated by modem technology.
Turnbull explains: "Ten years ago, on the outside ·
courts, they just had covers that lay on the coun. The
grass would sweat underneath the covers. Now they
have bubbles on most of the outside courts. They
have air blowing into the covers when it's raining.
On~ they take the bubbles down, they can play pret·
ty soon after that The courts don't get as wet"
When the courts do get wet, she adds, they
become softer and slicker. which "sUits the serve- ·
and-volley player even more, because the ball stays
even lower."
There is ,one other drawback to grass-coun play,
notes Brian Gottfried.
"You ~otta be prepared to throw away the clothes
you play tn," he says, "because they get all grassstained.''
'You don't have time 10 get in position. ·
You get more bad bounces, the ball skids more
than it bounces up. It's much more difficult to hit
topspin, so you have to volley.'
Slefan Edberg, a Swedish-born star, won the 1990
men's singles title at the All Er!gland Tennjs Championships at Wimbledon. .
.

Leach, Pugh beat Spaniards to move U.S.
into Davis Cup semifinal action Saturday
By MIKE RECHT
Associated Press Writer
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP)- Rick Leach and Jim
Pugh played almost to perfection as they defeated
Spain's Emilio Sanchez and Sergio Casal 7-fJ (8·6),
6-3, 7-6 (7-3) Saturday and swept the United S~res
into the semifmals of the Davis Cup.
Leach and Pugh gave the United Stares an insurmountable 3~ lead as they extended their '!wn Davis
Cup doubles record to 6~ and gave Amencans ntne
sets without a loss for the weekend.
John McEnroe and Brad Gilbert, who swept the
first two singles matches Friday, will play the two
meaningless singles today against Sanchez and
Tomas Carbonell.
Afler the doubles victory, it was announced that
the U.S . semiftnal against Germany will be played in
Kansas City 01! SepL 2()..22.
France and Yugoslavia will play in the other semifinal. The final will be held in Oecember.
·
Leach and Pugh won all four of their doubles
,lf

I\,

matches last year when the United States won the
Davis Cup, and won against against Mexico in the .
first round this year in March.
Saturday's quarter-final victory gave them a 4-1
record against' the Spanish duo- the only loss carne
in the 1988 U.S. Open ftnal when Leach became ill
and they had to default.
Although playinl on the grass surflllle 111ey like
best, Leach and Pugh were dogged by tho Spaniards
throughout, but were at their best in the tiebreakers.
The ftrst and third sets were on serve through 12
games. The only g1111e brclt In the match came in
the sixth game of the second set with Sanchez scrv,
ing, when he netted a backhand volley.
The ftrst tiebreak also stayed on serve ~mtil Leach
punched home a forehand volley on Casal's serve for
a 7-6 lead. Then on Pugh's serve, Lcac:h won it with
a short overhead a1 Sanchez' feet.
The third-set tiebreak wu much easier aa tho
Americ:ans won the first two points and the Spaniards
never caught up.
.
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�PJIII 1

C2 Suncllly nrnes SenUnel

Pomeroy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant,

wv

June 18, 1991

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GABC'~

America's daily sports newspaper folds after sustaining heavy losses
1J SKIP
AP B WOLLINBIRG
I
Wrlllr
NEW YOlti (AP) - The
NIIPoMI !0011: illllll IUnl at bat
'lb!nday. ·
Tbe Nrim's OD)Jc..c!eily sports
DCWJilllll'l folded
17 months
of 11eavy 1oaes .-1 ......., cin:ulalion.
The final editiou carried the
banner headline "WE HAD A
BAIL" with "The fat lady sings
·

for."We
us" IIIICiemeldL
were just losing too much
money" Fllllk Deford edit« and
pubh~her, said mo~ents after
br=:, tbe news to the staff
w
y.
Deford bad left Sports IDUSirat·
ed to help crelle 8 n•riooal sports
paper similar to tbose popular in
Europe lllCI South America.
The National bad signed some
all-star free agents to its staff,

--Area SpOrtS briefS
.

Softball meeting
Monday
.
·
GALLIPOLIS - There will be an orpnizational meeting for ¢&lt;led softball at tbe Gaiiia County Courthouse on Monday, Iune 17 at
?p.m.
The fee for ICIIIllS joining lhe league is $70, with an additional
$SO for an open JOUmall!ent at lbe end of regular-season league
PlaY. The leque is opm to anyooe 18 years old wbo is no !011ger
participating in !tigh scbool ~
The tosleas n due on Friday, July S, and league play will start
on July 23.
·
For more infotmalion, call Danella Gr$me at the 0.0. Ml:Intrye
Park Disaict office, located in tbe Gallia County Courthouse, at
446-4612, ext 256.
··

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. . Reds tryout camp to start Monday

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LANCASnut - The Cincinnati Reds will conduct a tryout
. C8111Vor' ehall playen 16to 22 years old on Monday, June 17 at
: the - ~ • " High Scbool balelJell field in !...........
'
. Reds ICQ!!Ijnt:t:\'ia Gene Bennet! will oversee tbe work. oull, wltidl wiD
at 9:30 a.m. All particiJ*ing playm must be
· registenJd prior Ill the Sllrt tinle. Registmlion will begin at 9 a.m.
•· All eJiaib1e playas are requested to bring !heir own uniforms,
glo~ and sboel. The Reds will furnish all odM'r equipment All
playas will be mponsible for hisll'llveling.and living expenses, if
~ -· any, uliJea signed 10 a coni1'8Ct by tbe organization.
: • In addition, all All*icln J:.eaion playm iDUSl bring written per: • mission from dJeir Post cOIIImander or Legion coach to tty out.

.

· 1 ded
assemblinI! a lineup .~..
~ me u
former editors and wrlters from
s~h papers as The N~w York
Tunes, the Los Angeles Tun~. The
~Globe and The Washington
. .
Cnttcs, though, had warned
from the stan that casua_l sports
f!IDS already get the sports informa·
uon they want from_ local newspa·
pers andf .w~ n:cwThfromN~ volume o m.ormabon e altona!

Spans_ Cornmunieations LP, a pan·
ners~tp controlled by Mextcan
m~.a baron Emilio AZCitl'IJa.
~ 111 a lletcomeot tba1 "erodiag
!M"'!Ie" prospeels for tbe publisllmg ~as a whole.. IIIII IBi-'
the risks r!_ die~
In. acklob()n, ll ssid puspccts ror
S~ish-language television in tbe
Untt~~ States appeared more
~1V
g. Az.carrap OWll8 a Mexacan
oetwort.

Its box scor:es, thouah, were
complicated and its layout was
considmd~. . . .
Reader nri•A and logislics of
led The National to change its
focus, scnppina exteuive local
CO'I~ in favor of 11101e uriO!!!!l
·stones. The owners also had unex-

inte~~~,!Y.;ythe w~!'f.:=~~k~~=r

recessaon, the slow ad market and
competition for ads from other
media such as ESPN's baseball .
coverage staning last summer and
the Baseball W;CCkiY _paper started
by USA Today m Apnl.
Deford said.~ ne"fS!liiP!lr lost
about $1 00 mtlhon smce at was
launched Jan. ~0, 1990. Initi~I
h~ w~ tbat It could reach patd
carculallon of about 400,000 by
1991 , but Deford said circulation
was under 200,000.
"If we were losing money and
could see a turnaround that would
be one thi~g, " .he said. "But we
w"re stanng an_to the face of
!'lonths and ~ssably years of no
amprovement
Its owners, National American

beginTues4ayatMHS

Team ,
Fruth's
Mogie's
Stowaway
Gino's
Adv. Cleaning
FoslerSaks

staffers and 100 business employ-

POMEROY - Open gym for
ees.
· "I think !his was a dream for • , girls basketbaU will be held at
lot of us. We all wanJed. it to make Meigs High School on Tuesday
and Thursday from lO a.m: to
it," columnistJay Mariotti said.
· Columnist Mike Lupica wbo noon.
spent more than a year ai Tbe
National before retuming to New
York's Daily News in April, said:
" It was a great try. In its short
existence The National became a
really po-;.,erful voice in tbe world
of sports."
The National routinely broke
stories about which college football
players were leaving school early
for the NFL. It was recognized for
its coverage of the Mike TysonBuster Douglas boxing mau:h and
its long, offbeat features.

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.:; Reds ·hand Phi~s ·. 4-2 defeat
. /fo.; fi-ftb win·i.n·las.t siX·~games,
'

Boosten Club membels are asked to tmn in their ad campaign

; Junior golf series to resume Friday ,
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PllOCTORVILU!- The Tri-Siate Junior Golf Circuit. a sixgolfm 17 years old and younger, will resume
with a tournament set for Friday, June 21 at Bellefonte Country
Club ~ Ashland, Ky.
.
. The entry fee for JOlters, whlch will be grouped into .three divi$10!'3 (under-12, 12-1• and lS-17 year-ol~ age groups), is $17,
whidl covers pen fees lllld lunch. All entnes must be paid to the
hosl COilQI by the r.:1ose business ori the Wednesday prior to the
llli1l w- I&amp; No Wep!Oool will be llllowed.
s.ry forms will be awilablc in illucs of the Huntington Herald~ Qallipnlia driving ranae and at Cliffside Golf Course
IOinlmelll aeries for

or

There will be a player of the year selected in each division. Playera must J*litipaiD in at least four of the five tournaments to be eli-

gible fer the aw.d, whlch wiD be dettmtined by a point system .
The mnllning IIIUII1alllaltl are at Riviera Country Club, Lesage,

W.Va., July 12; Sanjly Creek Golf Club, Ash!and, Ky., July 19;
EsquireCounlry~b. Barboursville, W.Va., Aug. 2. Tee times will
• · be 8 a.m. each 'Priday.
:
~or more information, all Eil WilgQs at 1-886-8910 (Proc; totviDe borne number).

:••. Church tourney to begin June 21

• •
: :
CI!N'IENARY - The 0.0. Mcinttye Park District will sponsor
•• a men's churth aoftblll !OUmanlent for the weekend of Iune 21-23
'
at RIOCOOII Creek County Park.
The fee for the IOUi'lllnlent, which will be open io the first eight
enter, will be SS&gt;.
•
For men illfllrmalion, call the Park Dislrict offace at 4464612,
ext 256.
·
'
•
•

teams•

.
·.•• Tennis tourney to start June 22
•

•
''

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipollis Parks &amp; Recreation Department ia lpMIIOrinB its second annual sanctioned tennis tournament
on die weelml!ll of June 22-23.
· ·
.
The ewnt, which will be held at the Chink Haskins Memorial
Park, is IIIIICtiolled by the United S!ltes Tennis Association, tbe
WCI!IIm Tcnnil AIIIUCietion and !he Ohio Valley Tennis Association.
The Wtllpdilion, Open only to USTA members, will feature open
•in1lel aDd doublel, 01e11'1 35-and-over singles and doubles, and
45-aad-over siqlel and doubles. Eldl singles event is limited 10
32-player chw, with die doullles events iimiled to 16 Jauns.
Tbi enay fee, which Is $10 per singles event lllld $20 per doubla .-n, must be made )iay8ble 10 the Gallipolis Parks &amp; Recreation De!Millitent, S18 Second Ave., Gallipolis OH45631.
For more infeirmation, call P.tR direct« Tom H&lt;Jpkins at 4461424, exL 37.
.

Junior footbilll camp set for June 24
~ARY :-Tile 0.0. Mclntyte Park Districl will sponsor
an lnbmedittoe foOtball camp to nm from Monday, June 24 to Friday, Juue 28 from Ito 3 pJh. ~'at~ Creek County !'ark.
The COil or the camp, for childlen enrermg grades 5-8 this coming fall, is $35.
The camp, which will have Gallia Academy head football coach
Brent S!JUllde:ra and Blue Devil assisJant coach Mall Boltovitz as
!nlilrllClOrs•. will fesllll'e ~lion in ~8; placekicking, puntmg; m:eivmg and l011g .-ppmg. Alto tncluded will be offensive
and defensive line ~iques, Jinehacking, offensive backfield atid :
secondary tcclllliques. Only non-dela!chablc clealed shoes may be ·

worn.
To rqil!a', stop at the Park Dislric:t offacc, located on· the fii'St
floor or the Gallia County Courthouse, Monday through Friday
·rrom 8 1.111.10110011 IIIII from 12:30 to 4 p.m., or mail the registradolt fen~ and cllect to the 0 .0 . Mcintyre Park District, Gallia
CGaaty Courdloule, Oallipolls OH 45631.

Footb~ camp

slated for July 22

•

. aOCIC SPRINGS - The 1991 Meigs Marauder Fooiball Camp
will lit beld July 22-26 • Moip HIP Sdtool.
n. ~ is Clpllllo bora entering pades 4-8. The cost of tbe
~ =,~ $30 b 13 bol!ll ol m.action lllda muimum of $SO per
Par lllle
blldCGICII

....-llltiuM aad information you can contact Marauder
..a. Saral• Mdp Hip Sdlool at 992-2158.

, Roek Hill se1lcs scrlmmtlge foe
'
PEDROR«k Hill Hiab School, which is classified in Divisioa IV,Is lootiD&amp; for aloollilll ICrimmage ClppoliOIIt for Aug. 17.
~ ~ adlool1 may conlll:t Rcdmen head coach Bob
•.1
• J-533-«l69 (Jialloa).
~ --

1

•

..~

•

,

~

. ..

AREA ALL STARS - The area bigb school all stars seen
above, won 10-8 in the beaent game played with the Cinciuati
Reds Dream Week Team on June 8 at tbe University of Rio
Grande. Point Pleasant High School's Cbris Wentz was named the
game's most valuable player•

Point's Wentz chosen as MVP
of Dream Team-All Stars game
RIO GRANDE -The All Slats
learn from area .high ·SChools won
l0-8 over the Cincinnati Reds
Dream Team on June 8 during the
benefit game played for tbe Gallia
County Arthritis Unit.
Chris Wentz, an all star from
Point Pleasant High School, was
named the most valuable player
after the game, played al Slanley L.
Evans Field at the University of
Rio Grnnde.
Wentz was joined on the all
stars' learn by lhe following ath·
leJes and thear high schools: Bill
McDermilt, Poinl Pleasanl; Tony
Canaday, Gallia Academy; DoMie
Haynes, Gallia Academy; Jamie
Little, Meigs; Clay Smilh, North
Gallia; Micky Bauer, Eastern; John
Sites, Soulhwestem; Ron Woods,
Hannan Trace; Chris Metzger,
Southwestern; Shane Smith, North
Gallia; Kevin Taylor. Meigs; Tim
Frisby, Wellston; and Phil Kuhn,
OakHiU.
Members of the Dream Week
Team competin~ in the game were
Brett Domescik, Dayton; Michael
Leadbetter, Cincinnati; Charlie
Cooper, Dayton; Ralph Lach,
&lt;;olumbus; Bob Eastman, Gallipobs; Dan Carr, Huntington, W.Va.;
James Mullins, Gallipolis; Bill
Bradley, Huntington, W.Va.; Bob
Evans, Bidwell; Earl Foster, Huntington, W.Va. ; Riley Sorrell,

Eaion; Mike Stout, Gallipolis; John
Ecker, Gallipolis; Dave McHo1land, Reynoldsburg; Ed Berkicb,
Gallioolis; Curtis Drummond, Onenl; Steve Lee, Cltarleston, W.Va.;
. Ken Boniface, Cincinnati; and Art
DeLamerens, Gallipolis.
Head coach for the game was
Dave Oglesby, coach of the Universi 1y of Rio Grande baseball
team, Other coaches and their
schools were Btett Bostic, Hannan
Trace; Bill Buckhannon, Point
Pleasant; Rob Day, North Gallia;
and Brett Wilson, Gallia Academy.
The umpites were Bob Donnally,
. Rick PerdllC, Steve Pyles and Steve
Slone, all of Gallipolis.

p

R

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; : BIRMINGHAM, England (AP)
;- The world govemitlg body for
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.u.s. atblolcs could be
from
ihe world 'champiooshipl and
Olympics If Butch Reynolds is
allowed to COillpc!e 11ec0nd tinle.
: "Any · repetition would
Inevitably cndlnpr the participalion of AII!Cricln athlelcs in major
world compelilion inpludint the
world champiolllhips and the
Olympic Games." the lntern1~
AmaJeur Athletic: Federation said .
in a stllemeRL
•
: the IAAF expreucd ''suqn•
•
~and disaPPQinbllent11
at the decision by The Athletics
· Congress to let ReYnolds run in the
p.s. national championship• in ·
New YOlk.
· ..
~ •. : Reynolds, the world record··
holder al&amp;d 1911 Olympic llilver .
inedaJjP in the ..00-., WIDpet"
e4 for the ftnt lime in nille 111011Jhs ·
Thullclay night, finitlllng seventh
fn a field of eiglat in a preliminary .

TON

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·\ MUI'J)Ity then hil tbe next pitch
.;~ver tlie .left-field f!'nce for a
·homer, his ninlh of lhe season and
387Jh or his career. ·
·
:; Browning (9-4) allowed a single
. ,to Ricky J~.BDII ~hit Von
·Hayes on th~ wnst, sendinl Ha~
.!&gt;RIO the disabled 1jst for the rest of
·the seuon. ·
• ·• Browning then worked out of
' ', :the inning, inducing Charlie Hlyes

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1991

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1991
GEO STORM

GALLIPOLIS - Five homers
by the Gallipolis White Sox - two
by Tim Siders and one each by
Ryan Canaday, Galion Justice and
Kevin Wood - provided plenty of
fueworks in Thursday night's Little
League contest against the Gallipolis Indians, but when the dust
cleared, the local Tribe came out
on top with a 9-7 victory.
The decision gave the Indians
and the Pale Hose 3-1 records and
half-shares of ftrst place.
·
Seth Davis, who was the winning pitcher, hit a homer, as did
teammate Jason Johnson, who also
had a single.
In addition 10 his bomer, Justice
had a double, and teammate Andy
Tirado collected a triple.
The White Sox will return to
action against lhe Gallipolis Red
Sox on Monday at 6 p.m. at Memorial Field, and tbe Indians will face
the Gallipolis Yanlcees on Monday
at 6 p.m. at lhe Gallipolis water
trealment plant field.
Yankees 9, A's S
In lhe Yauks' 9-S win over the
Gallipolis A's, Yankee hurler Ron
Haynes tossed a one-hiuer and got
'plenty of extra-base hits from his

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Indians, Yankees
post Gallipolis LL
victories Thursday

record 10 2-2, got a homer from
Guy Guinther, a triple and a double
fromMarkWamsley,andadouble
from Aaron Beaver. The lone hit
for the A's, 0-4, was a single off

Don't get caught napping this flea season.
Prorect your pets, home and yafd with Prioriti, the
3-srep Oea &amp; rick control system from Purina' that's
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.

to hitiniO adouble.·play.
. .. bod!etwd 1111 out there,'' 11ic1 Mul·
B!OwnilltYu:U worked O~' his hoU..IICl ().5 lifolii!IO apintl the
cons= .aeuqn. .
· Reds,. ·~ IOIIOIIIC blOOp hits. I •
....~'l'pn #~~
waiDd two in an illlliniiiAd di4t
- ~~ •-"' or · .
Y
. didn't help." · ...
teep••a .mY t~m ·~ the ·ball
Tlto Jte4l broke the 2·21ie in
• -r
- 1
.
pme." ho ·llid. ~'111la IIJNcAalbly
•
•
··
0
.earlthebelt .I've dll
.:.illllt\Dolla = : a :
1Y ICIII?D· ,..,. ~ .
• Of!e..~ inninp for his fifth win
Morril' burllaq!e.
•, .in his last six SIIIU all!e Reds beat
. Ron Dtbble ralievad Blowllinl
. Barry Latkitl lin&amp;ild in Dolan,
.the Philade!piJia PtlilliCil4-2 Friday With oue out and~ a ranuer II ~ ch&amp;siRI M11lbolland. Ro1er
.. 1upt. ·
. . ·.
antiiJI'OIIII)dy sWCk OUI pinch-llit• McDowell relieved, and after IIIC• • ,&lt;
"(Tom) Brownina pitdtecl dam JetS k~ fonea and_ Wally Baclnlu rifice by Chris $abo. pinch-hitter
.
,10011. (Roa) Dibble finiJhed .it. We for. hts career·lfiJh 17th aave, Herm Winninham sin1led bome
:got the hitS we~ &lt;&gt;,ltside of w~ ~-tbe N~ Ltap.
~· · . .
··lllat pop-up we pllyCd good
.Pintelll'ls looJPn~ for- 9f
Philadelph~ ~ • 1..0 lead
, : defense," Piniella ~d afJer the tbe,~We,: been. ~· . around. in the fust With the holp of a wild
" :Reds' ftftb victory in six pines.
. e v~ , , •ouvenn1
pitch by Browning and Murphy.'s
. .&lt;: But Friday'·s game was more .500 ~~~ ~~ ~ tame. to ,f,ull,away ' $1Crifa fly. .,
; .
• · , than 1;2-3. The pop-up tied the . from 11, . ~'ll!iclla llld: . Vfe re the . With twO 011t in tbe fOUI'Ih, Mul. •· . score at 2-2 in the lhlil lind led 10 a onlr,. team an fhe davast~n , that holland walked LarJdn and Sa~
• :piiChin&amp;I:Otilllt batween .Btowninl haso I ~ 0!' a bot l!teik.
· · and allowed _.. RBI single 10 Chris
·:IIIII Tcny Mulbolland.
.
Tite Pba~1es, losers of five of JOIIOI.
'
• .. .
· ·: Date Murphy hii a foul pop . theit laat m, ,011 more tball .!he
The Reds toOk a2·1 Ield in the
; towazd tho l!lllds tlehind lin&amp; bale. ~ Aloal wtlh lfJ)'CI beial out llflll on Mania' sai:rif'a fty.
·'
Fint 'balomiD Hal Morris cauibt Cor lbll Nason,, Mulholland
Elsewhole in the NL i&amp; wu to.
:hp with it in front of !he l!lllds,llut wu compJaia.• na about. hil le
Anplea ~ $t LOuis l; Mbalnal2.
:theballpoppedout 'ofhis&amp;lovefor · ~·,
, .
.lie
'.
. · Atlanm1:Houston4,NewYonO;
1 m not gom&amp;to . to you. 1t
:ian error.
.
(Se,t NL oa C-4)
.

. ' '' run~ =d·= :ft.gi~v:i::t :~

CHESHIRE - The Kyger Creek Athletic Boosrers Club will
: : · bold ill Dllllltbly meeting on Wednesday, June 19 at 7 p.m. at Kyger
: Creek lfi&amp;h Sc:llool.
•

..

ly RALPH BDNSTEIN
AP Sports Writer •
PHILADELPHIA ·(AP) - To
' "bear Cincinnati man-ger Lou ,
PlnieUa lliU II. blseball is an easy
,., -otblllc: ........

.

• .· money collccfed up 10 !he time or the meeting.

-----...:CAIOU SNOWDa

2

3

~;

: :·

insurance needs."

L

.~ ~~ Booster meeting Wednesday
:

"See me for all
your family ·

Park District

women's softball

senior session concluded Friday

GALLIPOUS - Jim Osborne, Grande basketball retiree Gary sll'lltion on skill developemnt rouGallia Academy boys' head bllb:t- ~. wbo presented a demon- tines.
blll coach and ctirecl.or of tbe Oallipolis Area Ba1ketball Camp,
allliOiliD4 tbll 25 campers participare41trtlie e~~~~p's aemor Mnion.
wlricb wu for hilh ,scboolllD"'s
AmOftJ tbe winner of various
daily ~ntesll were Brett Baker,
Tonya Bila"d; Brett Cremeens;
•
. Tonya Drummond, Suzy Greenlee
and Bob Mabry.
, Chad Barnes , a Hannan Trace
soph'otnore-elecl, was the boys'
win~ in rou1 shooting. lhnle-point
. $booting and.one-on-one compeu.'lion; la!OCkinl off·Chris Roetlker in
·tbe ~r event. T)le girls' winners
~
Citoor tf 1!oit4
. were Lori Milliron (foul shooting),
Awe. I 51olt St. •
:Bil_..d (\ltree-point shootins) and
STATE FARM
a. •r446-4190
•••· Oh. '
Sara WaUcer (in one-011-one play
vs. Milliron).
·
. .
IH-•«•·4511
· Awards, skill-development
mareri&amp;ls, T-shirts md camp bells
were passed ou1· in closinr ceremonies as weU is ice cream sunLike a good neighbor.
~NSURANCE
daes donated by lhe Shake Shoppe
®
State Farm is there.
o( Gallipolis.
·
. .Osborne's ••sistanta were Galli&amp;
'
, ..tl tlklq part IIi tiM tiYHij. chic tlaat '
· Stile Fit~ lnauranceCompa n•eS • Home Ott\ces · BloOm1nQton . ltl~n01S
Academy
reserve coach Lynti
offered COilt;.ll Ia tllr...,olat allootlalo foul
Sheets, Blue I&gt;evil eighth-grade
sllootlalud .. ......... pliJ .. well .. ft1111a•
coach
Todd 'Miller and t~c:ent .Rio
11011 bat ethal' (111all . . . . . pMto) ,
',
'
•
.
!·
,
I

peeled trouble in. distributing lbe
paper.
~eford said be still feels a
nallOIIII spona newSjiitJG Clll IIUCceed but thai it is too much to
expect to build a distribulion systern from scrau:h.

Open gym for girls to

Sunday nm• SenUnei-Page C3

Poluco,; ..dclleport G..Upolla, 0H Point PI nsnnt, WV
··---- - - - - - - - - - - - - - · - -

··-

..

I

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lOS ANGELES
I'HOEMX · ·

1351.~0

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CHID
S17J.OO
1171.00

DENVER
- 1311.00· ,: ' sua.oo
OIUNDO · .·· · ( SfJ t.OO ~ .:.1191.00
'· lEACH . SlJI.ol :
'
DAllAS
· 1231.00
.,
.•ua.oo
'
..
IOSTON
·. ·. I 191.00
191.00
NEw YOII ' . . 1171.00 I ' saa.oo

......

'•

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Tlcbtsi!IUstt.-lu Ill

-.so, IHhM
.,

426VIA. _.

.'

. Pl. PUASAtn. 1 W.VA.
.
675·3,30
'

�Pomeroy Mlddleport-Galllpolla, OH Point Pteaaent, wv

Page-C4--Sunday nmet Sentinel

June 16, 1991

Minnesota blanks Tribe 7-0 for 13th consecutive victory
·--'
· By BEN WALKER
Roser Clemens (9·3) allowed two """'""' run'l on
AP Baseball Writer
eigh~ hits in his third complete
, The top story in Minnesot;l this week is the u.s.
Ju~ Abbott gave up five bats, mcludmg Jack
Open golf tournament, for sure. But tbe Twins are
Clarlt s two-;run homer, and tOOk • .4·2. lead ~to the
· malting big news, too.
se.venth inrung. But ~ and Lws Rivera sangled
The Twins set a team record with their 13th
With oneout.andJeffRobinson (0.1) gave up Carlos
straight victory Friday night, winning 7-0.in CleveQuintana's RBI double witb two outs,
h'
land.
White Sox 9, Royals 3 --:- Frank Thorn~ al a
Shane Mack hit a j!r&amp;Dd slam and drove in five
home run, .two doubles IDd ~ smale and drove m five
runs and Jack Morris {8·5) won his faftb consecutive
runs as Chicaao wonll Comiskey Park. .
start. The Indians, meanwhile, were shut out for the ·
Jac~ McPo-.:eU.(8-3) allowed !ive hll~ and five
Ih\rd straight time, matching a clu~ record lind one
walks ~ ~veo ~gs. Scoa Radinslcy palehed two
shy of the major league mark.
'
perf~t IDDIDj!l for his second, save.
..
; ''Whenever you win this many games in a row, I ·
Lws Aqwno (0.3( s~ m place of Stann DaviS,
think guys have !"e ~eeling, 'Hey, we are good. We
scraichedJbecal~se o a 5tiff .W:."-John Oierud . Kelly
can play."' Moms saad.
Blue ays , r 1I!1es 1
•
"I don"t think there's a lot of people who expectGruber and Marte Whiten each bom~!'W.at the ~k:yCd us to play tllis v,:ell, except for .the guys in this
Dome as TIJfOIIto se;nt Balbmore to Its saxlh Straight
room " he said. "It's certamly not l.lme to be paUtng
loss.
.
.
.
. . .
•ourscives on the back or beating our chests.''
.
. "!"odd Stot!lem~ (7-2) gave up e1ght h1ts m e1ght
• The Twins broke their record of 12 straight wi~.
mnmg~. Jeff R~bmson (3-6) gave up ~ven ru,ns on
: set in 1980. A crowd of 55,000, drawn by a postfive hns and SIX walks before leavmg m the oourtb
: game fireworks show. saw the Indians go in the
mrung.
8, y--•Jeff H
• three-run
opposite direction.
Rana~n .
....ees 4 ~so~ s
homer bighbgbted a seven-run .farst .mrung as Tex:as
Kent Hrbek hit a two-run homer in the third
inning off Jeff Shaw (0-1).
beat New"York for the lith stnught lime at ~ome:
In other games, Boston beat California 9-4, Texas
Jose Guzman (1·2) won for the fi.I'St 11me smce
topped New York 8-4, Toronto trounced Baltimore
Aug. 22, 1.988. .
.
.
9- 1 Chicago defeated Kansas City 9-3 and Detroit
Huson ~u his farst ma~eague home run m 628n
do~ned Seanle 5·1. The Oakland at Milwaukee
a~-bats. ~ulthe10Ffi~ ~ off n!:ele.X.::ta'y'b;(i.
game was rained out.
. smgles 10
tnt U1fUDI
d
Red Sox 9, Angels 4 - EUis Burks hit a three·
1).
·
run homer lhat capped a seven-run rally in the sevTi&amp;ers 5, M!lr~ers l - Dan Ga!ce1er ~10ppe
cnth .inning and led Boston past California at Fenway
Seattle on t~o h1ts m se~eo and two-tb~d IMmgs thefor
• Park.
h1s first ma.JOf teague viCtory as, Detroll won at

aa.me· .

.

Kingdome.

June1&amp;,1881

~

.Stewart leading U.S. Open after two rounds

reachina the majon. befon: Ibis year.
Cecil Fielder singled home a run giving him a
·I ·0 49 RBis, off Brian Holman (7·6).
=&lt;:u::n~
two-run triple.

·

. Gakeler (l-1) ~truck 4;1Ut four IDd walkod ~ve m
his second start SIIICC bema called up from Triple-A

By STEVE WILSTEIN
trim IDd gold-tipped 10e11.
.
AP S~ Writer
He lOot the safe, smart route
CHASKA, Mim. (AP)- In all · around Hazeltine National, the
tile mud and ~ill and craziness. aamellpJJI'DICb fawlred by hit main
J&gt;a,ae Stnart ISIUbayingiiOWid challengen- 1917 champion
II!' U.S: Open ~!bout IIDIIJdF on Scott Simpson, Corey Pavia and
h11 wlu~ atoc:tinp and barely a Nolin Henke- who lied a131.
blot 011 IQ score.
Pavia lllrlled in die best round r1
Stewart's flamboyance, in vivid the day, 67, after a sizzlina 31 on
COOinllliO the three plain-vanilla the front nine.
py_s chasing him from a stroke
This is a coune or 11811'0W fair~ Is IIIIPPin&amp; the IOomament ways and deep rough lbat charges
out of us 110111bemess.
. heavily for mistakes, as Seve
. Ill ~g a 70 Friday 10 go Ballesteros, Curtis Strange and~
wub his ope11111J·f011Dd 67, Stewart Trevino found out by missing the
wu leu daring in his play lhan he cut.
wuinbisdms-eye-popping!'W
· Masters champion Ian Woostnicters and cap. white stoctlltp nam, the world's No . 1' player,
and blouse. wh1te shoes wilh red

1

Toledo. He spent lmlll IDUIII•ID die lnilon,-

0

McEnroe beats Spain's Carbonell
in Davis Cup quarterfinal action
By CAROLYN THOMPSON
minutes.
yourself mentally ... You have to
"-lated Pr• Writer
"I used to be lite this all the put more into it witb less results,"
NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) - John tim~. on top or it from the begin- he said.
McEmoe is the first to ldn\it it's nina," McEruoc said.
"I know within myself tbat I'm
not as CIS)' to set up for a match as
McEnroe dido 't allow Carbonell not lbe player tbat I was day in and
it oru:e was- except when it's for . a point in the first game.of the lhird dayouL And that botbers me every
the Davis Cup.
' set and broke the Spaniard in the day of my life," be said.
McEnroe ove~wcred TomaS MCOnd pme. Tbe momentum from
. But McEnroe wants to •'so out
Carbonell. of Spam 6-3, 6-2, 6-1 a ruMing return sent him hurdling wltb a bang. Everybody does," he
Friday, 10 put the United States up a sideline chair and a 2-foot barrier said.
2-0 in the quarterfinals.
up to the lbe ecstatic fans, wbom he
That mearuJ winnina one more
major tournament. he said.
Rick Leach and Jim Pugh will greeted wilb a pumpin&amp; fist.
tty and give the United States an
McEnroe's nex:t return, a drop
"I don't think I'm ever going to
insllfll!auntable 3-0 lead against shot, forced Carboilell into an air· . be on top again. That would be like
Sanchez and Setgio Casal today in borne dive that left him sprawling a delusion," he said.
tbedoubles.
on thll grass court, sbating his
"It wouldn't even be a dream
Buoyed by tbe succeas of team- bead.
come true because I don't dream
mate Brad Gilbert, wbo took lhe
"He played unbelievable,'' Car· about it,' • he sail!. · .
first mllk:h from Emilio Sanchez 6- bonell said. "He has shots no one
But Davis Cup is different .
~ 4, 64, 6-2, the crowd or 5,000 Illelse has.:. He plays a little magic." McEnroe. hilS played and won ~ore
., lied behind McEnroe, and he
But lhe magic takes work, lhese Cup matches than any. Amenc~n
responded.
days, McEnroe said.
· because he likes playmj! for h1s
McEnroe, 32, looting for "one
"You have 10 prepare yourself country. It showed agamst Carmore bi&amp; one" before retiring, physically, you have to prepare bonell.
dominated his match against Car·
bonell, 22, who was matin&amp; his Junior golf circuit winners announced
first Davis Cup appearance. McEnLAVALETTE. W.Va. - The (Huntington), 87.
roe won 49 of 68 volleys and bit 50
12-14 year-old dlvisioa
winners and hit 23 passina shots \Op finisliers of the first maleh of
fll&amp;bt - Eric Willenbrink
First
the Tri-State Junior Golf Circuit,
for winners.
(Ashland,
Ky.), 83; Travis Hender·
The sun-splattered crowd waved sponsored by The Herald· Dispatch,
flags, chanted "U·S·A" IIICl pve the Hwttington regional newspapet. son (Huntington), 85, sudden death
McEnroe a raucous Slandinj! ova- and held at the Lavalette Golf winner over Casey Sparks (Ash·
land, Ky.), 85.
.
tion when the 10-year DaVII Cup Club, were:
Second night- Jeff Wertbam15-17 year-old division
veteran took the third set in 29
mer (Huntington). 78; Tim Perry
Fir~ night - Matt McClure
(Ashland, Ky.), 75; Matt Malooe Jr. (Ht,mtington), 83; Luke Bryant
(Ciial Grove), 76; Pat Pruden (Dun· (bomeroym unknown), 84.
· ll·under dlvisioa
bar). 76.
(nine boles)
Secolld Ri&amp;•t - Ryan Willis
Sean Riley_ (Ashland, Ky.), 39;
(Wheelersbur$); 81; Bryan Bel·
lvillil (ProciOrVille), 86; Scoll Pratt Alex White (Huntington), 46.

· NL games.•.
(Continued from C-3)
: Chicago 7, San Diego 3; and San
: Francisco 3, Pittsburgh 2.
:
Dodgers 2, Cardinals 1
#; Presidem Bush and the Los
·: ·Angeles Dodgers have a lei in
=i;ommon right now. They're both
: ;heavy favorites.
: •; Bush was among the 39,041 at
• podger Stadium on Friday nigh! as
=· the Dodgers got another 8olid start
:·from Orel Hershiser and a game;:"!Vinning single from Lenny Harris
: with one out in the ninlh inning to
· -beat St. Louis 2-1. ·
:• : · It was Hershiser's fourth start
· ·' ince reiurning from surgery on his
·: tighl shoulder.
"I don't want to talk about lhai
: after every start," he said. "Now
,; it's just a matter of working hard,
'• getung into shape and continuing
·' what I'm doing. If there's any
:: problem with tbe shoulder, I'll say

... so."

:
;.
•
:·
:
·
·
.;
•

The victory opened the
Dodgers' lead over second·place
Atlanta to three games in the
National League West.
Hershiser $ave up no runs and
six hits in sill mnings, waiting four
and striking out two. He left witb a
1·0 lead but Todd Zelle's RBI single off Tim Crews tied the score in
the eighth.
"Pre-operation, I might have
fell differently about losing the
win," Henhiser said. "Bll! just 10
be able to play again, to see our
club win, is good enou,h." ·
Los Angeles ralhed against
;. reliever Scott Terry (I-I) in the top
•: of the ninth. Jay Howell (1·2) set
'· down the Cardinals in order in ·tbe
· ninth inning for lhe victory.
::
The president was in Los Ange: lcs to give the commencement
;. address at the California Institute
.• of Technology.
;:
Expos 2, Braves 1
.
• , Gilberta Reyes' run -sconng
,· pinch sin~le in the sevenlh inning
' broke a ue as Montreal beat Tom
Glavine and Atlanta at Olympic
Stadium.
'
The Expos prevented &lt;llav_ine
• (10-3) from taking over tbe m&amp;JOr·
league lead in wins despite manag• ing only fiv~ hits off the left·hander
in seven mmngs.
Mark Gardner (2-3) gave up
four hits in. seven innings.
:
Astros 4, Mets 1
Houston roughed up New York
relief ace John Franco for th~ .~­
ond time this week as the VISIUng
Astros scored three runs m.the
nintb inning to beat the Mets.
.
Franco gave up ali three runs IR
the ninth inning on four hits to faD
' 101-6.
.
.
Mike Capel (1·1) puched two
innings or scoreless relief.

"
In the majors...
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division
W

Toronto
Bcoton
Detroit

LPcL

......... 34 27
.......... 31 l7
........... 29 31
....... '25 31
...... 25 32
........ 22 36
........ 20 31

New Yark
Milwaukee

Cleve!ond
B.ttiman

GB

.5157
.S34
.483

4 lli

.446

6 1}2

I 1/Z

.439
1
.379 I0 1/Z
.34S IZ 1/Z

West Division
W

LPcL

GB

......... 36 23 .610

Oollind

Min,...., .......

36 ZS .590
CaUfomia ......... 33 Z6 .SS9
Tcxu
.. .. ,.... .. 30 25 .S4S

Suttle
........... 32 28 .533
Chi&lt;l..
.. ....... 29 29 .500
KaniWI City ....... 'r1 31 A66

I
3
4
4 lfl
6 1/Z
11/2

Friday's soores

BOII&lt;lll 9, CIUfomll 4

co (bnlln. . 0-0), 4:0S p.m.
Cilllcilll\lli (Rijo S·2) 11 Pbilldelphia
(Aohby0-1), 7:9S pm.
)JoullOfl (I, .Jones 4·3) It New Yqrk
(Gooden H). 7:10p.m.
· Atlanu (Smola 2-7) at Montreal \.IJCift·
nit Mutln.c 1-4), 7:35p.m.
St. LouiJ (B. Smith 4"4) at lol AnFJe~~
(R. Mo:Unczi0-2), )O:OS pm.
.

Butball
BALTJMORE ORJOLES-PIIcod
Dwia.1u Ev1n1, outfielder, on the l.S·d•y
dillbiN lia. Aai\'awd Brady Andenon,
ou~det. frcllllh6 15-4ay 4liaab1ed .U.1. ,

BOSTON RED SOX-Sia•..t Scou
HattoborJ ilnd llmea Lentz, catch111ra;
Shcnd111 Bulb. Teat Hom. Chad Schoen·
' vapl, ani C•u ~ pitcheno and
·1.maJM IW.an and DOnn,. Jon., GUt·

MlilnOiell 7. Clevollnd 0

Tcnonto9, Bal.timoro I
Chicaao 9, Kania• City 3
Tu.u8,NewYodl:4 ·
.
Oollind " Mll......... ppd.. nin
'llcuoit s. S..lllo l .

riOid...

CLEVELAND INDIANS- Waived

They played Salilrclay
(All times EDT)
CIUfomll (P'utloy IO.l) 1111oau&gt;n (Quo.

dlnor :1-1), I :01! p.m.
Bllllmon (Billull 3-7) 11 T-10 (1..
Ouxmon 0-L). 1:3S pm.
OakJand (Stewart 4·2and Hswkinll-4)
I t Milw91ukee (NtviUl'O .5-4 and Brown Z.

3), DH, 6•3S p.m.
Minne~cxa (OuUuie 4-3) at Cltvcland
&lt;KinJ 4-S), 7:0S_p.m.
Kan1a1 Cil)' (Bodlllickcr S-S) 1t Chlc110
(Ouci1 CJ.l), 1 :05 p.m.
New York (Letty 3·5) 11 Tc.x.u
(K.BJOWR 4-5), 1:3S p.m.
Deuoit ,CRitz 0-1) 11 S01ulo (R. l~10n
3-&lt;1), 10:0! p.m.
•

Today'seam..
CIUfomillt-.L:O$p.m.
MinniiCI'Iat Clcwtland, 1:35 p.m.
Blhimon11 Torcnto. l:3S p.m.
Kuoau Cily11 CU..,., ;l:lS p.m.
Oakland at Wi!WIMkee. 2:3S p.m.
Daloit at Sanle.. 4:35p.m.
New York at Tau, I:OS p.m.

Lw. M,ec1iM. delitolled hi..... Cllled "''
·Jeff Malia, plle"her, from Colorado
SJirints ot "" 1'lcilic c.- IM1ue. A•·

lipid Mib Wlliw, plldler. 10 Colondo
N . - DooniDic C111i cmh.
C".U. 11p Jeff Mtdil, pilchc, fnm C•ntoa·Akron of the &amp;Item LNpe. ()p.
tiCNd Mike Welkw, pilcher, lO ColorWo
SJiri!lp .Coh•l'lcilic CouliM....
DETROIT TIOERS- Piaoocl Pae lncaviaJ.ia, oulfi.lder, on dM l.S-d•y dlcabled. lin. Pu.rchued th111 contnct of
Skeeter
outf'wldet, fn::m Toledo of
.!.he liua:natianalt..apo.
KANSAS CITY llOYALS- PLIOCd
Brei Saborlll-· ....... oa ohe L5·dly
diJ&amp;bled U.t.-llicllleil Mike Maan•nLc,
pUdlor, r- Omlhl &lt;l 1M Amerie~n A&gt;sodad.ma.
'
OAELANI&gt; ATJILI!TICS-Ac:livaled
·r..w B11m1, pildiR, 11om lhl I 5-day 411-

s't.'.r.·

a..,-.

sbled lill Sent Tro, ·Atenir, Cltdte.t, to

Taoom~&lt;llhiPocifieC-Lupc.

Nollooall.oque
All.AI'li'A BRAVES Qai,.ll4 Rick
Mahler, pitchlr~Ill!' waiv...
CINCINNA11 IEDS-Tnded Regie
, . _ lint .. tho cto.olln4
ln4lull lar Tint C....
Aa•lPM C0110 10 C.anaa Dll ~\1M SoWI·
GlllMJP"'
MONTRBAL BXPilS-Iilftod Cllf'
!oml Floyd, IIIII ....... l'llclol Konny
WUllams:, gutf'aeldet, oa dle l.S~d•y dil·
1bled Ut\, rtUOIOI.ivo 10 June 13. PurchaMIII lhl tMlllll al Brtt Bublrio, infiold&lt;r, ,_, -...pclil ellho ...
A&gt;IOOillion.
NBW YOlK MITS-Sianod Mm
KJom ond Illlrey Hond.,.., )'iu.n.n.
PHILADEI:PHIA PHILI;IES- Ro·
Wltd We~ Qunbedlin. and SU Campul&amp;nO, oulftel4ert.lrom Scnnton·Wilke.·

n;,;. -.....

NATIONAL LEAGUE
Eul DIYI1Ion
W L Pot.
GB
Pit~.......
36 21 .63l
St. Louil .......... 31 28 .5ZS
6
New Yodo:
..:.. .. 30 21 .517 61/Z
Chi&lt;lao
......... ll Z9 .Sl7 61/Z
Monuul
......... 26 34 .433 ll 1/l ·
Phllldclpbll ....... 26 34 .•)3 II 1/Z

.. . . .

West Dl•lslon
. Loa Anplel

Alllnll
Cincinnlti

WLPctGB
...... 3S l4 .S93
........... 31 26 .544
3
......... 31

21 .SlS

4

S1n Dleao ........ 31 31 .500 51/2
HOUIIOit
........ l4 36 ADO 111/Z
S~n F""cilco ...... :14 37 .393
12

Friday's acores

z

Cincinnlli •• l'hill4elpl1il
MOIIUOII Z. Atllnll I
lloill101t4,New Yodo: I
Chia.ao 1, San Dic&amp;o 3
Lot AnpJu. 2, St. f.ouia 1

• .,. ol"" tm.n.lload!M.....

51.

LOUIS CARDINALS- Pia"d
B.....S Oillloy,l&gt;lllfilldtr. 111 1M IS·dly
diolblodlill.

SAN DIEGO PADRES-Announced
MartJianett, aecoad bueman, hu
c:ltued wt.ivtrllftd ... ""~~'""

Football

S1n Frtncitco 3, Piuabur,&amp;h 2

TINy played Saturday
(All limes EDT)
Chlcaao (Ltncaster 2·1 ) 11 S1n Die&amp;a
(R.a1muuen 2· 1), 3:15 ~m.
Phl.lburah (Smiley 8-2) n S•n Fram:il·

NaU..I POOIMII ......ue
ORBEN BAY PACKERf-Sianed
Don O.vey, dlilftliYI Unntn.
KANSAS CITY CHIBFS- Sianed
D111'id Bailey and Shawn KniahL. delm ·

.....

.,

NEW ENCIL1,ND PATRIOTSWaiwlll Etn~~l Oibloa, 00111.ab1ck.
NEW YORK &lt;JIANTS-,'iian"' Mlko

-.qu.-....

~

,;,
I

against the hoSt Cleveland Indilins, who reu 7·0'
to give the Twins their club·record 13th straight
wi.n. (AP)
'

SUNDAY .PUZZLER
'

Today's aames

Amerkaal.a ..t

t.

THE BIG BOPPER - Minnesota stuuer
Kent Hrbek gets congratulations from teammate
Chuck Knoblauch after cracking a two-run
. homer in the tbird innina or Friday night's game

Allanu llMoo-'.L :3S p.m.
Oinc::iM•ti at Philadelphia, I :3S pm.
HouAoa.•New Yotk. l :.W p.n1.
Chi;ap at San Diqo, 4:0$ P:lll·
St.IAUil "t..o. Anael•, 5:~ p~m.
Pilllboqh 11 S.. Filncilco.I:OS p.m.

Transactions
,.

See Answer to Puzzle on Page C-3
ACROSS
1 Equals
6 Wine cups
10 Frock
14 Cater feature
19 Be present
21 .Shade
22

~·Peony

-"

23 Tournament's ·
lastgemea
24 More
dlaieputable:
cOlloq.

28 Stun
28 Treats
29 Cut of meat
30 Bucket
32 Mental Images
33 Marshes
34 .High card
35 Dye plant
37 Adversaries
39 Cash' ending
40 EvilS
41 Performs
42 Son of Seth
44 Clothelnlllcer
48 Slalk
47 lain debt
48 Dines
50 Gave
52 Summer coolers
53 Hebrew month
55 Short swims
57 Babylonian deity
58 Fate
59 Clothed
60 Sun god
82 Wager ·
64 Oecays
88 Neon symbol
88 Alternative word
89 Rubber trees
70 Hurry
71 All -(attentive)
73 Seesaw
75 Hunting dog
77 Blrd's hOme
78 Melancholy
80 Forays
81 Old name tor
Tokyo
82 Foreign Service
diplomat
84 Enthusiasm
88 Interior
87 Pillage
89 High mountain
92•Announcamenl

of proposed
marriage

95 Neap and ebb
98 Follow orders
~9 Ocular
. 101 Jl)lns
103 Rockflsh
104·01111_. signal
105 "School -"

108 Tantalum symbOl
107 Nugent ID
108 Algerien aeaport
110 Do wrong
111 -!Pfde
112 lhacullne ,
113 Permlla
115 '"Just ihe Ten
of-"

117 Hurried
119 C.F llnllup
120 "The Lost -"
121 P•ce
' 124 Old·llme lleve
128 Pleyera lor.money
127 Baptlemal bleln
128 Tell
130 Expired
132 "Bleck -"

133 lntllllect
,. 134 Depoalt
136 Brought Into
exlatenc:eby
birth
137 Couple
139 SkiM
140 Poet

141 "- Attraction'"
143 Metal f u t -

145 Gl)lter'a need
148 P*- apart' by
liMit
148 Fervor; erdor
150 Law
152 Pertaining 10
old age

153 HIIWIIllan·wreaths
154 Cllrlltmu c.rol
156. Refrained from
ullng
157 Ancient c:hariOI
156- or Man
158 Pintail duck
160 Winter couters·
DOWN
1 Former Turkish
title
2 Gueoua

hydrocarll9n
3L~woven

!'Olton
4 CrimiOil
5 Cut

8 Near ,

7 Wrong: prefix

8 One opposed

9 Palnter•s ,
wortdng rooms
10 Lucid
11' Simpletons
12 One, no matter
Which
13 Telurlvm symbOl
14 Contlli-s
15 Goal
18 Pretentious
homes

17 ChO&lt;IIft
18 Kind of curves
20 Hard of hearing
23 Cooling devices
25 Dl111urbarK:e
27 Looklld lntenlly
28 Tiller
31 Jump
33 Eacaped ·
38 Burden .
38("alher
40 Newspaper
l*llllriiPh

41 lnaplred wtt~
.wonder
43 Mix

45 Inclined
48 Laid away
47 Harem rooms
49 Blelnllh
51 Loop
52 Puts on one's
guard
53 In alleepinll
quarter
54 Chicago
footballer
56 Free from
microorganisms
59 Scouring
powders

60 Onttaught
81 Poker atllke
83 Locka or hair
88 Chair
87 Bitter vetch
89 Guldo'alow note
70 Retreats
72 Foolllh: liang

74 Agave plant
76 "Hart - Hart"

77 lowest point

79 - de Janeiro
83 Small bird
85 Competitors
86 Toward and
within
87 Medicine portion
88 Black
89 Gold symbol
90 Dormant
91 Piece of
· dinnerware
92 '"Anything ·Love"
93 Yearly
94 Nickel symbol
98 Wife of Geralnt
97 RatiOnal
100 Compass point
102 Weakens
105 "Happy-··
109 Wanl
112 Earth's satellite
113 Grant use of
114 Walks pompously
11.8 Pierce
118 Faucet casualty
120 Englishmen
121 Body ot waler
122 Keeps
123 Kind oi collar
125 Outstanding
CharacteriStic
128 Analyzes, as

•

:.

.'•
•

SECOND HALF 1990 lEAL ESTATE tAXES
EXTENSION GRANTED
Closing Date - July 10, 1991
'

•

~

·'•
~

•

•
•
•
•

1 )On ·first day of month following second half
closing, interest is charged on unpaid b81ar:wce of
delinq'uent taxes from previous yar for penod of
time from preceding December first to that day.

lo

•

'•

•
•
••
•

•
•

'

~

•

•
••
•
•
•
•

.•

FAILUIE tO IKIIVI -.a. DOG Offlct He1n1 I1Je All ..

All

MEIGS COUm TIIASUIR,
HOWAlD E. FlANK

.

.-

..,

IIIII·

-.

-.H

laCIII·I~III TlmerPIGglanmlng
lati2·C:hllmel Cllllt Colllpllllblllllnllfl

Save '70
LowAa.,SP.,-·

SURPRISE BALLOON Residents of tbe Rock Spriaas
area were surpriled early Tburs·
day evening by a low·Ryiag bot
air balloon. At one poi1U the bal·
loon d-dld to aboat 100 feet
above a pllllure field jut bellind
some homes before aainlng alii·
tude and beading ofT to the BOUth.
. No one seemed t() know for sure,
but the possibility exista that it ·
could be a stray from a balloon
race. (Times·Senlinel p•olo by
Dave HarriB)

..,

.....

Crmlll
RICRir

5~0ff

~-·

2915
..........

,.,_.
-···
Low Aa.,l

Cut~

I

With Chalalna Stand

And lltteiy Pack

5911
--lllollng

IIIII 7UI
allaM-to-HandMl
Paging 143·114

(PoiNT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25m &amp; JEI'I'ERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEAsANT, WV.

9985

(104) 675-1675

llog. ,.,...,

LOw All111 Per Month•
T~dlaling

.......... Aemole

S
ITH'S
FAST LUBE CENTER

•

•

.
•

••

•

• 20·Number Mamory
1

NOW OPEN!!

• Qrwt fat lt •• ~..

'

.

,.., - : .._.a.

.,

f

~

AIPCIIHTIIINT t
~ Ill CII UfiTIII~#

~---~

*Get your car stnlcld Fnt*

In 12 ~~~~~Mn• we wll chen.. your oil, add up
to 1 quartl Valvollne AJI.CIImatt 1ow:ao or
1ow40. C._.. Plltlr. Lu1Jr111te
\---.;•;;,;;MI;.;D;;;II;,;Iaii;;;.;,14.;.;.Yital;;,;;,;;.
·~;;;l;;,;nti;,;·_ _ _J

o-...

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.,

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118 Vine St. • Galllpelis, OH.

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PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL
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FAMILY PRACTICE

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Phone Nus l1r - ••"·'

A

GOLF TOURNAMENT THURSDAY - The Amer!can Heart
Association's annual 10lf tournament will be sla&amp;ed at the M.eigs
County Golf Course on Thursday. Activities wiD be&amp;ln with a noon
luncheon and calcutta that will precede the 1 p.m. tee-off time.
A-rds will he given during the steak dinner to follow ,tbe tourna·
menL AU proceeds w011o to the Meigs County Br!IDCb or the Amer·
ican Heart Association. Here Sandy Iannarell~ president-elect of
the AHA's Meigs County branch, and Bob Freed, co-chairman, go
over piaos for the benefit tournament.

'

•

2)0n December first, each year interest is charged
against the full unpaid balance of taxes for period
of time from day established In (1) above to date .

!'eset

ROBERT
M. HOLLEY, M.D.
.

sentence

127 Conflagration
129 Periods ot time
131 Ate to lose
weight
132 lift
133 Partner
t34 Out of date
138 lnaec:t egga
138 Marsh plants
140 Halrteaa
141 .. _Sale"
142 Weaving machine
144 Turns around
track
147 FallehOod
148 F~tllke part
149 Born
151 Hindu cymbals
153 XVII x.lll
155 French article

goiog iniO cruise control with 10
straight pan 10 fmisb up.
Stew!lrl then recited his round,
s~te by stroke, warning at oae
pouu:
.
.
, "I tno!" at'~ reat!r bonng,
folks, but stick wllb me.
. ~ ~C: plan ~ just as bel:·
mg: Put II In the fauway, knock II
on "
•
. tbat bad ~ Uo--"' h'
The ram
•O """' un
most of the mornin' yielded to
warm, muggy .sunahme, and the
steady play brouabt a sense or calm
to a roumameot
.bY ~lcms.
A day after ligbtrulig tilled one
fan and injured five others, a
bleacher stairway by tbe ninth
green collapsed early Friday. Teo
spectators suffered minor injuries.
Greg Norman pulled out with
pain down his leg from a lumbar
•
disk.
Stewart avoided a recurrence or
his own back trouble with a midnight bed switch wilb his two-year·
oldson.
,
"I ticked my son out of bed,"
he said. "He had a fll111er mattress,
so I put him in bed wilh my wife,
and I went and slept in his bed. He
won't be sleeping there tonight,
eitber."

...., Aa .,,...,. - ·

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•

bucked lhe trend of safety-fllSt and
saambled his way in10 conrention
wilb a 68 10 go witb his openinground 73.
Meanwhile, Jack Nicklaus
bopyed four of the first six boles
10 tumble 10 a 76-146 nine sbots
back along with Nick Faldo and
defending chamniM Hale Irwin,
•••• .... and
Stewart aVO!rded;--;; l!l1_.....,
boiZeYs. in his fll'll round, and made
onfy "oric in the second round when
be bit an B-iron short r1 the gRiell
on the 166-yanl, par·3, chipped on
and misled a five-footer.
After mating lbree birdies to
reach 8-llllder by the seventh bole
Stewart tesponded to the mishap 11Y

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'

Pl'IICES APPLY

Kr I'AIIT1CIMING

ITOAII AND DIALEM

�•

OH Point Pleaeant, wv

June 16,1

At lAke Vesuvius,
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -

dace fair catthes of crappies ilnd

CLENDENING RESERVOIR
- 1iy rubber worms, small spinner baila, pig-and-.iii c:ombi""ions,
nigbt crswlcll or pplk rindl to uke
laraemouth bus. f1sb ill shallow
wa1er near areas cl ; 1 tation and
mouih bus from the confluence submerged
structure for best
near downtown on small crank results.
baits, spinner baits, llld foor·lnch
Lake Erie
rubber worms fished around the
In
lhe
central
from Cleve· bridge pilings and brushy shore- land to ConDeaut,basin
some
limit caleb·
lines. An occasional saugeye is es of walleye bjve been
~
taken on small in-line spinners Ibis monlb with flab averaamg
such as ROCISier Tails llld Shysters. to 29 incbes. Top spolll are five 24
10
At the~ Dam south of
six
miles
north
and
northwest
of
downtown, channel catfish are Ashtabula and four to five miles
belnJ !Ibn on cut shad and chick· nonhwest
cl an area liom Fairport
en hvers. An occasional small- harbor 10 MealOr
Lagoons. Anglen
mouth bass can be taken on soft

Here is the weeldv fisbina l1!pDit as channel catfish. Try trolling or
povided by lbe division of wildlife driftina for walleye around Pew
of lbe OhiO Depanmena of NIIUral IJllnd llld Oldfield
RSCIOTO RIVER- AnaJers ~~~e
Soutlleast
IBkinlf llrgemouih llld IIDIIle small·

BROWN RECEIVES PLAQUE- Joe Iron, CIWIIel' fl BI'OWII's
Market or Gallpolil, receives a plaque rrom North GaUia Poay
LeaJae team pla,en lobby lliDk (left) ud Howard Caldwell ill
reeopltloa f~Ws Cllllll'lbutlal to tbll ,.ear's tam.

·. BLOCK RECOGNIZED- Fred Bloek (ceater), a contributor to
the Nortla Gallla ~ Leape tam, recelveai a plilque rro. Pirates
Bobby Flak (left)
Howird Caldwell mrecoPJtloa fl b1s efforts
toward lllelpllla to lleld .... ,..........

VESUVIUS LAKE - Brown
bullheads average 10 to IS 1/2
inches and can be labn on night
crawlers or chicken livers in this
Lawrence County lake. Spotted
bass up to 16 inches are likely to be
found near feeder stri:ams in the
lower half of lhe lake. Laraemouth
bass measure up to 21 inChes and
can be taken on small spinners or
J:llbbrz worms.
MONROE LAKE - Good
numbers of bJ•uegills averaging six
to 8 112 inches are present in the
40-&amp;CJe lake. Use small pieces of
ni~bt cmwler for best results. Use
ICink beiu or c:bicken livers fished
alon$1be boaom from shore cbing
even11111 hours to take cbannel cat·
fish.
·
Southwest
LAKE LORAMIE - Fish the
brushy shoreline areas using min·
nows suspended beneath a bobber
in sballow water to like crappies.
1iy the upper portion or the lake
during evening hours for brown
bullbelds. I..argemouth bass up to
four pounds are likely to be found
· around bolt docks, lily pads and
sborellne cover.
RUSH RUN LAIQl - Largemouth bass up to five pounds can
be taken from the flooded umber
areas. Bass between 12 and IS
inches may not. be liken. Worms
and larval baits work best any! Wbem around the lake for blucgills. ·
Ceatrat
INDIAN LAKE - Try the
channels and areas with vegetation
for largemouth bass. Analers
should use surface plugs or live
bait fUbed in shallow water for best
results. Shoreline cover will pro-

are fishing at depths of 1S to 40.

feet in water 4S to 60 feet deep.

- - - - - - - -----

SIUJ)CDded walle~es are being
taken by anglers 111111g wire line
and planer boarda along with " -·
div!ng crank baits.
-¥"
SIIIIDmoutb bass fishing is best
one-llllf mile north of CEI-Asbrabula in IS to 20 feet of water.
Anglers are using leaded bait jigs
tipped with minnows and soft
craws wcigbled with Small sinkm
fJSbed aloiiJ lbe llottom. .
Westtm basin walleye fJShing is
best around the islands and reef
complex, and also near the Toledo
shipping channel. ·

.

Hunters report increase in
Ohio ruffed grouse population

Wave. of the
Future.

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By JAMES M. KENNEDY
des)c~op computers. IBM would
AP Business Editor
provide the hardware, Apple the
NEW YORK - If you can ' t ·software. ·
.
beat 'em, join 'em, the saying goes.
The automakers alhance , by
IBM Corp. and Apple Computer con~t. w,as out of the closet The
Inc. reportedly talked about an startlmg Slght..of. the _tb~~ CEOs
exchange of technologies. And the seated on .the Naghtlme se! was
Big Three auto makers appeared preceded .m March by an audience
jointly on ABC's "Nightline" in a w1th President Bush.
. .
united front against Japanese comThe common. enemy mOilvaung
petition.
the autom~ as Japanese compe·
The collegiality displayed this lltlOn.. The three chaefs - Robert
past week among otherwise fierce Stempel of General Motors Corp..
competitors was a stunning illusua- Harold Poling of F9rd Motor Co.
tion .of where such rivalries can and Chrysler Corp.'s Lee lacocca
lead - to cooperation...
· - . wan,t ~o reverse ~hat t~ey
Joining forces with Brand X beli~ve as an outdated baas agamst
may ·be con sidered corporate ve~acles made by U.S. C!Jmpanaes.
heresy in good times. But when the
Th.e three companaes .P~St~d
going gets rough, the tough some- ,corgbaned losses of $2.3 billion an
I :J·•
"-~·bliP
times get together.
'i
. Inthelateste~ples,thereces·
s1on and compellllon are to blame.
OPENING .
llanll" '"11M.._. ~ iato a mtau·
The rivals are more worried about
- new restaaraat,
• ' .. ..a 31 c•h an. To create u elegant
.
Crew Road back
dllllla ••aiJI~In, llle1rl11be ulllg lola of can· sluggishsalesandmutualcompetitors than they are about each other.
.:: grounds, will ope~~ 011 Tbarsday.
dlei!Pt ucUiowere. Her waltr.... will wear
International Business Machines
By Constance s. Wblte
Vldutlu CIUibiJH, ncb • the dtess wom here
.: of the spadous 140-year-old bome
Corp. and Apple, for example, have
Galla SWCD
'
,, \
by Mrs. Fllber.
seen their profits squeezed by the
GALLIPOLIS _ The Galli a
'
economic downturn and tl)e sarura- SWCD.announces Cynthia L. Jenk·
tion ·of the market with various ins bas joined their staff as the'new
brands of interchangeable personal District Forester. The position has
computers.
been developed for the purpose of
· In addition, the two powerhous- better forest management of this
es face a common threat in important and valuable natural
Microsoft Corp .. which exerts resource in Gallia County..
increasing influence over the marJenkins is a recent graduate of
' HOEJJLJCH dining at The Brancbwood incln.dcw
Mrs. Fisher says that she will ketplace as the leader irt PC soft- Hocking Technical College where
, By CHARLENE
candkligbt and flowers with food decorate the dining areas for boll- ware, the inaernal operating sys- she received an Associate Degree
•
Tlma-Sentillel Staff
served by waitresses in black lnd day seasons. Currently there is terns for computers.
in Applied Science in Forestry. A
; POMEROY • 1"hC opening this white Victorian style c:ostwne.
ample space for parking and plans
One industry analyst, Pieter graduate of Jackson High School,
of The BllUICbwood ''Where ' Stemmed glassware, china, sil· call for expanding that area.
Hartsook of International Data Jenkins also attended Ohio State
'Dining's Good". i~ a ~ come ."!6 accelllllries.and crisp white and
All of the food prepsratioil will Corp., called the prospective IBM- University.
&amp;rue for Meigs Coilnty's talented · colored matching tablecloths and . be done by Mrs. Fisher in the Apple alliance an example of comJenkins has worked in the
'salala Fisbet. ·
,
. chair tQvers enhance the ~egant newly renovated kitchen:
puler makers ''circling the wag- WoodlMd Division of Mead Cor·
.• 'Three years ago Mrs. Fisher ~· toafe .o f tile new air-conditioned
The Brsncllwood wall be open ons. " Th e companies wouldn't poration doing Lands Management
~egan working on· converting the · restaurant. A~~:prlate dining on Thursday and Saturday only comment, but it was widely specu·
operations inventory. Prior to
~ownstairs of the F.isbers' spac;ious room attire is ~~. req~eated by .· from 6 to 10 p.m. Re~eryations . lated they were exploring joint working in foresuy, Jenkins bas
country boll!e 1oca~ed 011 Cre~ ~ ~' and•smoting IS not pll'· must be IJI!Ide five days m advance, development of high -powered managed the cow herd on the Rod·
Road back !l( the Metas·County matted inside.
aay evenang from 7 to 10 p.m.,
ney Marhoover Farms and been
Fairgrourids intoa·placelorelePn&amp; , · Tbe exterior brick,.froat and ~ with the menu ent~ee-filet
Market Hog Production Manager
diiling. ·
.
~
' "wbito pillar lelign of \he l.CO.year- ~ 111iP,OD, New York strip •. stuffed
for Jackson Agribusiness where she
' 'Jbursday she will serve bet lint ' old bousli ftitla its t\aD porcll where cornish ¥"· or flll!teed slaritJ!p-to
was responsible for the health care
customen in two dining areas diners Dll:l' relu. is t•1Duul 10 be ordmid at that tame. A vanety or .
of 800 head of IIUIItet hogs.
atttactively decoraled in a Victori· the overall design of the dining side dishes and d~sserts will be
Working with landown~rs in
an mqtif. Wedgewood ~lue and facility.
.
availablet:acb everung.
marlrlng timber for harvest, cruise
mauve are lbe colors carried out In
.FIII1bet enlaancinl The BrlacJI..
Mn. Pasher has space to serve
timber, recommend necessary tim·
the. ln~or dCoor which also fea- wood ~ the gardonJ of colorful 30 in th~ two dini!'g room.s. Slle
bersta11d improvement, thinning
tares a variety 'Of jllllique displays · flowers along the walkway and plans ~ mclude holiday ~es 1md
pr11ning practices, provid~
and
as well a8 theme .,.r~...
·, around the·~ , ', '· ,·
recepuons once the b.usaness as
sample
timber sale. contracts, af1jl
· Mrs' E"·~-- 0 f ,...._.,,
~ · ..
estatiliahed.
::j.I)IKir•sr~pt
~~ ' 1 , .~- ~~}1 ~ .n,:
assist with locating boundary lines
will encompass a portion of her
•
duties.
Preparation of tree planting
plans which will include. recommendations for site preparation,
,' I,'
species selection, planting methods
7 piMtation maintenance, and vari·
By Ed:ward M. VollbOm
mated 10 uve a 20 percent loss in O.S.U. will be the speaker for their
ous ASCS cost-share program
c;lallia County
yield A loss of 28 bushel per acre June Faunas Club Meeting at 7:30
information will assist the
Extension Agent,
on an 140 potential yield would be p.m., Ill Ponderosa in Jackson. CaU
JOHN A. MYERS
landowners in making sound conAgriculture &amp;: CNRD
estimated. With com at $2.50 per reservations to 286-S044.
servation
decisions.
Preliminary
plans
have
started
, GALLIPOLIS - W-er con- bushel this IIOints to a $70 value.
Another
aspect of the position
for
a
July
17
Twa~light
Ag.
Outlook
·
ditions have became ·very oppres- 'Ibis would be 'well abqvo lbe cost
wilf
be
public
information in the
and
Policy
Meeting
in
Gallia
Counsive with warm temperatures and Of a post-emergence apray Jirolrslll
POINT
PLEASANT
•
John
A.
form
of
field
days,
educational
ty.
Mark
lhe
date
on
yoW"
calendar
Jack of rainfall continuing.
and economically Justify the deci·
Myers,
markeaing
and
customer
and
call
if
you
would
like
a
particumeetings,
sch~l
presentations.
and
Some 26 percent Qf Ohio. sion 10 apply a pcalicide.
.
services
represenl8tive
in
the
Point
lar
tOpic.
;eporied soil moisture as short · Tobicco transp~ continues
The Gallia County Cattlemen's Pleasant area of Appalachian Erosion control
while a limited area ·i~ the 80\ath· with good plants becommg,SCEe.
west area of tbe state reported a. A recoad number of reports indi· Association Annual Meeting will Power Company's Huntington
Division, has been promoted to workshop slated
moisture surplus.
· ··
cate lbe failure of IObaa:o plants to be June 28. Get tickets from AssoThe Gallia County U.S.D.A . . establish after transplantinJ. Trans- ciation DirectOrs or at the County marketing and customer services
supervisor in the company's ·August 29-30
Committee met Friday (June 14) to plants simply had problems ban· Extension Offace.
Log~m-Williamson Division, elfec·
start the JliJlCrwOrk process' for a dling the stress faced durin• the
live June I. He is the son of Jerry
GALLIPOLIS - The Society
"Drwgbt" qeclsrsdon.
past few weeks. A reminder to
and
Margaret
Myers
of
NeighborAmerican Foresters will present
of
. At!ention alfalfa producers. tObacco (II'OWCII and Quota boklers
h~ Road, Gallipolis.
a Best Management Practices
Repons throt,agbOut Obao indicated to get all the leases completed
Myers holds a bachelor of sci- workshop for erosion control on
Potato Leafhopper ...-bcrs are'ap. before the .deadline. Quota boldln
ence degree in marketing from IQgging jobs. The workshop will be
Thumb rule is that wbell Lealbop. that do not grow tobiCC!J, but
Ohio
State University. He has held August 29 and 30 at C~mter"s
per catch per I 0 sweeps exceeas instead lelllle away sboulcl be IWIIO
anended Marshall University Grad- Cave 4-H Camp in Jacks&lt;in, Ohio.
the stand height expressed in inch· of whether or not they are in ~
uate School of Business. Myers Anticipated re8lsuation fee will be
~s, ueatment is justified. If stand• ger of losing pounds. Under the
joined
Appalachian in 1983 as a around $25 which will include
height exceeds 18-20 inches bar- new regulaliOns ~esulting from U.S.
marketing
and customer services meals and lodging.
velit sbou\d be considered
C9ngressional legislation last fall,
advisor
and
was named marketing
Jim Patrie , a retired United
' Economic thresholds for weeds. the 2 out Of 3 year rule applies
and
customer
services
representa·
States
Forest Service hydrologist
Lack of rainfall bas C~'astd failures 111M than the old 1 out of S year
tive
in
1989.
and
Pete
Woyar. forestry insuuctor
in many preemergence herbicide · rule. Bloc mold was confirmed in
Myers
is
married
and
has
two
at
Hocking
College will be the
fields. Studies conducted over the Monroe County, Kentucky this
children.
He
was
president
of
the
main
presenters.
years throughout lhe Midwest esti· week. Lab test also co.farm that
Point Pleasant Lions Club and an
Since logging has such a major
mate the yield loss due to various "Ridomil" resiltant llllinl uf Blue
elder
in
the
Poina
Pleasant
Presbyimpact
on water quality and soil
densities of some common. weeds. Mold are lp)ICiring in So8lb Clr·
terian
Church.
Conlinued on D-3
There are some year to year differ- olii\L
'
ences in environmental condilioars
Mr. Dave Samples, County
that contribute to this not ~ an ExiCDSion Aaent in Jackaon County
exact ~eience but rather aa csti· has invited Gallla Countians to
mate. A com field with 40 Cockle- attend a Monday, June 17, evening
Hur, 100 Pigweed and SO clumps of meeting in Jac~. Dr. Dean Bald·
foxtail per 100 feet of ro\V is .esti· win, Grain Marketing Speciillist for·

••
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'

the frrst three months of this year
- their worst quaner ever. Mean- ~
while, the Japanese expanded their
share of the U.S. auto market to 2S :
percent at the end of last year, com- :
pared with a little over 70 percent ·!
for the Big Three.
,
The National sports daily pub- .
li"shed its final edition Thursday
morning after a valiant, 17-month
effort to break into the big leagues
of newspapering. Frank Deford, the
swashbuckling editor who Cash·
ioned the paper after SPorts lllus- '
trated magazine, his alma mater,
said the venture was a creative suc- ::
cess but a money loser.
:
The final edition carried the headline, "We Had A Bull."
:
;
·

. •

news media releases.
With S3% of Gallia County covo
ered in trees .Md a very small per- •
centage of thas area undel any man- •
agement plan we need to work ·;
toward better improvement prac- -;
tices 1md stewardship of the land •,
that supports these trees.
•• .~
If you would like more informalion on the assis.tan~e available
from
new Dastraet Fore1ter;
conuct

rzear fairgrounds ,to open Thursday
week

NAnONAL TENNIS SHOE WEEk ·
All Tennis Shoes Now .20°/o OFF

...
....i.

·;

..., .

o

L

Farm Fltl$hes

iii

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&lt;

Lack of.;~ainfall in area
brings drought conditions

·

on

Myers promoted

\

MEIGS TIRE CENTER

Campanella named to post
CINCINNATI ·Joseph A. tamclnt~la had been chairman
IJanella .has been elected executive and cbaef C]!:ec:utive officer, Star
yicc president, Corporate Adminil· · Buk, N.A., Cleveland since the
lllltion for Star Bane Corpomtion bank's openina in October, 1918.
.effective July 1, 1991.. Tho Prior to that be Wll~ofCGr·
lnnouncement was made tDday by potltC llnancc for the Koplil orp.
Oliver W. Waddell. chairman. nization, senior vico preaidentfclr
-president and chief executive om- retail bankinj; at Broadview SaYcer of the $6.1 billion Cincinnati- . ings Bank and eliCCutive vice prui1&gt;ased b!mk holding CQIDPIIIIY·
·
Contillued 011 D-3

•

•

·USDA says food still a barg~in ·
• WASHINGTON (AP) - For
decades, American oonsumc:rs have
been told that food il a bupln. A
.nell&gt;' analysis by the Agriealture
Department U)'l it apiA, .oct uf.
A report contalniiiJ iiWia llld
comparisons, inclndiag 1011111 that
·ranked the Uoited!tartl with other
counlries, ·wail pablisbld Wednla··
day by the d~fs Bconomic ·
Reseudt Service.
.
One of the lllllinslays of USDA
(ood 41CC0unting are ~
that Ill ow how lllueh Artlil
spend out of
111111aal •:w r

*

·'

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tfhe ~r~nc!f:.w·ood; dining fq,cility

•

~ Kent in the ~lr 1960s and it
dado 't uve a wannang teaJiJ then,
either.
·
''As Ion$ as you bjve boards of
trustees watb macho people on
The Soucony Crosswove features the Wfl
them, you're goinf to bjve inter- ISIIItil!m';,Mlt"' expu~ion tubes that keep woter from
collegiate athletics. ' ·
dragging ',llU OOt.n. fill all aqua sports.
Amodio, a member of lbe MAC
task force to loot into retaining I-A
status ' for the league, said,
"There's never been a recommendation at Kent SIPle similar to that
made at Ohio University, but .it is
an issue that arises on camp~
from time to time. Faculties vote
for llld lgllinst things, but univeniMON. 6 FRI.
ties are run by administrators."
1:30 'TIL 1:00
Amodio said the MAC presiTUE.·WEO.·THURS.
dents will meet at Eastern Micbi·
1:30 'TIL 1:00
gan University June 17-18, "but '· BAT. 1:30 ,'TIL 1:00
discussion of this matter presently
is not on lbe agenda."
•1991 Hydt Athletic lndustrNts Inc. AI ·

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'::
Gall•za dIS
• tri•Ctfiorester :;

.•BlAKE JOBS •OIL CHANGE
•WHEEL ALIGNMENT

- ·-·- .....- ...

June 16, 1111

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J en k lnS
• named new

MAC presidents not expected
·to de-emphasize sports- Amodio
mrr.. Ohio (AP) -· Kents~
athletk: director Paul V. Amodao
says be doesn't expect the MidAmeric:ln Conference presidents to ,
de-emphasize their commitment to
athletics.
Despite a paDpOSoll by lhe Ohio
Univenity Faculiy Senate that OU
and tbe MAC drop to a lower foot·
ball classific:alion, Amodio said he
does not see any signs of support
for the change.
"llbink the MAC presidents
u~ a fum ~ on what role atblencs play in thas conference, and
'
CONTFSI' WJNNER - Joe BI'OMI, owner of BI'OWII's Market . that is reflected in the commitor GaWIIOia, coqratulatel Mamli'Saunden (right) for wiDDing the
ments of member schools 10 atblet- .
North Gallia Pon1 Leape baseball team contest, sponsored by ics," Amodio said. "The conferBrown's Market.
·
ence is noi run by its faculty sen·
aleS. It's run by its presidenll."
An OU faculty senaJe commit·
tee recommended last month that
the school and tbe MAC swi tcb
from NCAA Division I-A
.•
By JOHN WISSE
all data we've .collected since lion to Division I-AA. The~
Divllloll of Wlldlfe
1972." said Bob Stoll, a wildlife said such a move would save
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) money .b.ecause Division I-AA
biologists with the division.
Ruffed grouse bunten who shared
States such as Ohio. Indiana. schools are limited to about 20
information about their hunting Kentucky and West Virginia are fewer scholauhips that I·A
season reported a 16 percent the Car 11011tbem range of the ruffed schools.
increase in lhe liequency of birds grouse. Trends that occur in Ohio
· Myra R. West, chairwoman of
flushed, acc:onliJI&amp; to a Division of art similar to those in these olber Kent Siate's Faculty Senate,
WUdlife report. .
likened the OU recommendations
states.
Ohio's ruffed grouse bunting
But wildlife biologists here said to discussions she said she's ~
season is open liolll early October they don 'I have enough informa- atKenL
through tbC ·last day in February. tion to calculate longterm trends in
"There are a number or people
More than 30,000 people bunt Ohio's ruffed grouse population.
who d9n't think it's worlll it to
¥fi&gt;USC each year in Ohio, accord·
The beln of ruffed glouse COUD· keep putting money intO the Inter·
mg to Divisaon of Wildlife esti- uy includes states such as Micbi· collegiate athletic PIOJIIllll here,"
mateS.
gao, Minnesota, Wisconsin, the shessid.
There were 127 bunters who New England Slates and the Cana"In tams of fOotball, Kent State
returned their J!:~e bunting . dian . .
of Ontario and Que- bas made dismal showings for
diaries to lbe Di · WJUcb ana- bec. ~.as, grouse numbers years. My parents illlended Kent in
lyzed lbe dsta recorded list aeason. are higher and flush rates better the early 1940s and Kent didn't
The diaries encourqe ~unters to than in states such as .Ohio and uve a WinninJII team, and I attend·
report the dates, locations, number West Virginia.
o( hours buntM, numbar of birds
flushed and number of birds killed.
The buntet diary project began
iii 1972 to heleJ:vide wildlife
biologists with
ble dsta about
ruffed ~ abundance llld distribution m Ohio. A numbl;r of olber
states bjve similar projects.
Hunters sharing their diary
information with the Division of
Wildlife collectively recOrded a
flush rate of 1.1 grouse per hour.
Respondents loued S,7S4 boors or
hulliin llld 814birds !Ibn dwin
,•
the 1~91 bunting season. Tb~
provicu year's JeCorded flush rate
. from 1989-90 grouse bUnting sea·
son was 0.9S birds per hour.
"This dsta mew grouse popuJOIN FUll%- J. MAICUS FULl%
latioRs were up IIDIIleWbat last SCI·
242 W. Main
OWfiiiS
PomtroJ
son as we expected. In terms of
long-mnge tn:nds, the flush ratc is
991·1101
about mlill'lllge when coanpared to

---

+· Joining forces with brand :.
X new recession strategy

craws.

Northwest
NEW LONDON RESERVOIR
- Fishing along the shoreline is
best for crappies llld.bluegills. u;e
larval baits for bluc"'ll•· and mm
· •
nows fiShed be~bobber for
crap)Jies. ·Largemouth and smallmouth bass are present and average
10m 18 Inches.
·
CLEAR FORK RESERVOIR
-.: 1iy areas just off lbe shoreline
around ~· stumps and weed beds
for muskies, which average 30 to ·
45 inches. Trolling in the lower
half of the lake with large muskie
lures also works well. Crappies, ·
white bass, bluegills, largemouth
bass and cbanne1 catfish are readily
available 10 sbcireline an¥lers· Try
early morning and evemng hours
forbestresultstbismonth.
Northeast
BERLIN RESERVOIR
White bass are abundant and will
be found in lli;JCD warer. 1iy using
jigs and jigs upped with milinows
to uke these filfl. Use crappie rigs
lipped wilb minnows to lab white
and black crappies. Smallmouth
bass are likely to fall for a soft
cmw.

~imts ,. , ittdintl Section D ·

'Business

Livers, nightcrawlers work best on bullheads

\)

I _ _ __:_:.___
_ _ ___:_

__;__ _ J

tc••

Hopwood assumes
G!E position

MARION - A veteran Iowa
telephone executive, Rolland E.
''Roo" HopWood, lias been named
statt, public affairs director for
GTB Telephone Operations in
Ohio, it was announced Saturday
by ·R.R. RandaR, state vice president-gen(iral manager.
Hopwood succeeds David L..
Bradford, who recently accepted a
·position with GTB's main tder~'!'! ~~ons headquarters in
u•~ com,ing to Marion. H~
served six liP{! as public
fl
's midwest•
Clpllllliq uoi~ head·
in Oiinnell, Iowa. The
about 270,000 CUS·
~:ommunities in
~~~~~~~~~rl. Minnesota and
In bls n..W position, be will be
reapxaslble Cor inrcrnal and external communicationa, community

affain. conlributions llld economic
~L

DWJGifl" DAILEY

Dailey promoted

.
"

.. ,

CHESHIRE • Dwight A: Dailey.,
has been promoted from associate :~
engineer to performance engin~er , ·•
in the performance department',
effective June 4, at the Ohio Valley
Elecuic Corporation's Kyger Creek •
Plant.
Dailey joined OVEC in 1990 as
an associate engineer. He is a grad·.
uate of the University of Akron
with a bachelor of science in elec-·
trlcal engineering. Dailey resides at ·•
Route 4, Gallipolis.
.,

�June 1 1991

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galllpollt, OH Point Pleaunt, wv

11

Shadyside monuments
honor
flash flood victims ·
.

- SHADYSIDE, Ohio (AP) - .
Friends. family and neighbors ga!hered on the banks of two creeks to
.dedicate memorials to 26 people
!&lt;illed in flash floods one year ago.
• AI' least 300 people attended service Friday night at Wegee Creek.
A short while later, about 200 people galhered to listen to pmyers !hat
echoed off the hills surrounding lhe
Pipe Creek valley,
• Irene Hess, 64, of Pipe Creek,
lost her mother, Naomi West, and
her sister, Sophie Glazeslci.
"Nothing's left_of their home,
but the memorial is right across
from where it used to be. So that
/lclps the hurting. To this day, I still
expect to see the house when I turn
!he bend,'' she said.
: Some survivors wore T-shirts
with the slogan "Flood of Teal'$."
Members of the Mountaineer
Scuba Club of West Virginia, who
helped search for flood victims,
anchored a wreath in the Ohio
River at the mouth of Wegee
Creek.
~ During the Wegee Creek serv·jce, a stone monument was
unveiled bearing tbe names of 11
Wegee Creek residents and a Bellaire man killed by the flood.
At Pipe Creek, a monument
~i th the names of 12 people killed
~ the flood there was dedicated in

a service condiiCied with three ministers and a choir.
Neither memorial mentioned
Donald and Tiffany Webb of Glen·
coe, two children who died in the
flooding. A Shadyside woman wbo
declined to be identified called
them the "forgouen children"
because their names weren ' 1 put on
ei!her monumenL They dido 't .live
on either of the creeks.
The difference in the creeks'
water levels when compar_ed with
the height !hey reached m the flood
was noticed by m111y people.
Ron Palmer, 52, of We,ee
Creek, said he couldn't believe Just
a few inches of water Rowed in the
streambed.

''When I think back on it, it sure
is amazing that 25 feet of water
came roaring down !he c~" he
said.
Wegee Cre.elc- resident D.W.
Keyser, 75, remembers the creek
smelling of stagnant mud until
December.
''That awful smell was just a
daily reminder of tbe death we
went through," he said.
There is a new smell now one of pine being used in new con·
struction to replace the daniaged
homes.
For some people, tbe trawnil is
unrelenting. Raben Ramsey, 42,
whose wife, Rose, died on Pipe

,

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• The Area's Number 1 Ma.r ketplace

·I·

"l.ojo. ""

·~

i,;. •
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.......

I

lmmadlalaty,

:to.

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ROCK HALL DESIGN- R~nowned archl·
;: teet I.M. Pel Is showa witb a sll~e of tbe pro-

I

posed desip,of the Rock ud Roll Hall ol Fame
and Museum iD Clnelaad. (AP LuerPhoto)

I flock hall tower will
pot interfere with
planes: officials
: CLEVELAND (AP) - The
tilwer of the proposed Rock and
Roll Hall of Fame and Museum
will rise 160 feet just one-third of a
mile from an airport runway but
shouldn't pose a safety hazard, the
rock museum executive director
said.
' The height of :the tower would
not comply with federal regulations
but a preliminary study indicates
the structure would not pose a safety hazard, according to Larry
Thompson, executive director of
the rock museum.
• Rep. Mary Rose Oalcar, D-Ohio,
agreed, saying she expects Federal
Aviation Administration approval
of the design despite the site's
proximity to runway approaches to
Cleveland's Burke Lalcefront Air·
pprt.
- The proposal fQr the tower was
detailed Friday by the architect,
I:M. Pei, who said the design also
calls for a glass canopy on the
fpturistic building.
· " We think it's going to be quite
an exciting plaee to visi~ " Pei told
city council members in displaying
a- model of the design of lhe $65
riiillion project scheduled for com~etion in 1994.
• Pei, whose internationally
~laimed works include lhe recent

expansion of the Louvre museum
in Paris, said the rock museum
should become a highlight of tbe
developing North Coast Harbor.
The city has proposed building
an aquarium and Great Lakes
museum at the 7-acre manmade
inle~ which already is the home of
the William G. Mather floatina
marine museum which Opened last
month.
Pei said the design fQf the rock
museum inCludes more than half
the features of a design dollC for an
earlier proposed location along the
Cuyahoga Riv~. Thai location was
replaced by the lakefront site to
allow more room for fulure museum ex,J!ansion.
Pe•' s latest design calls for a
building with a glass canopy overlooking Lake Erie and anchollld by
the tower emerging from the harbor
alongside Cleveland Stadium.
The various levels of tbe museum will be coMected by escalators,
according to Pei. who said the configuration would give a sense of the
youthful energy which rock music
suggests.
The top level of the buildina
will house the Hall of Fame and
will be "dignified and quiet," Pei
said.

former president's
crypt
to
be
opened
.
·: LOUlSVll.LE, Ky. (AP)- The
crypt of Zachary Taylor will be
opened Monday to test an author's
tlieory that the 12th president of the
~ited States was assassinated with
peisoo 141 years ago.
U.S. Department of VeterattB Affain grmtred IPPIOVal Friday
for 1efferaon County Coroner
Richard Greathouse to open the
crypt in the Zichary Taylor National Cemetery, which contains the
r(malns of Taylor and his wife.
Clara Risma of Uolder, Fla.,
w'ho iJ gathering information for a
bOOk on Taylor, planned to be pre·
sent when Greathouse removes a
sam ple of Taylor's remains for
an3lysis.
; Greatbovse plans to see if
utere's lllf trace of poison lhroulh
tlje analySJJ of a piece of hair, ffn.
gemail or bone.
Dr. William Maples, a forensic

:The

•

I

A REQUEST FOR
PIIOPOSALI
The Gallla County 8oerd
of Menlo! Retardation and
Developmental Dlaabil~laa
lo -tlng propouta from
qualllled Individual•
or
agendeo far lha aoordln•·
lion. m.,agemenl. •nd ptDvlolon of ldont._ oupponed living oarvlcea lor tndlvldualo Pr-Ied harfin.
BNiect ,.._..., wit bti recelved •t llw 1-d Office,
GuldJna Hond
&amp;ahaol.
Chaohlre, Ohio untA 10:00
a.m. Eellorn 8 bondercl Tlrna
·fEST) on July 1. 1881.
OP.,Ing of llldo will follow

•

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anthropologist at tne Llmverslty of
Florida in GainesviUe who specializes in skeletal remains, also· is
expected to be on hand Monday.
He believes Taylor's symJIIOma
were consistent with arseiUC poisoning.
History books would have to be
rewritten should Taylor's death be
confirmed as a homiCide. Abnhani
Lincoln, the nation's 16th presi·
dent, is regarded as the 6nt Ameri·
can leader 10 be assassinated.
But another expert who wrote a
recent book on Taylor believes
there's little chance for a rewrite of
history.
Dr. Elbert B. Smith, professor
emeritus of the University of Maryland Deoartn~ent of His10ry, aid
he'd be {'ShOi:bd and •!IOO!!clrd"
it there was any evidence thai Tar·
lorwas_poi~~- .
·

•

•

BRIDGE

PHILLIP
ALDER .

.--..;_---------.I
NORTH
+QJ 10

f-11-tl

A-anced lndlvlduolo far
thll pr_.t Wll -lro a
varying af oervlca opllono and wll p o - a wide
range of -laa ao contained wllhln lhalr Individual
oervlca proftleo. lndlvlduol
........ prollloo ... evellable
to potentlll propout ...
pondento lor purpo- of review and devolo-nt olin·
dlvlduat -pon•lv• propouto. Prolllao wit aleo be lncluclecl In lha IIFP pacbto
which will be dlllrlbulod .
du•tnt lha Pre-Propoall
Conlwr.,...
Tho approVed
aorvloa
nl8nagar wtll provide ortlaulatlld ..,.... for lndl·
vkiU.- lleva ,_.. retardetlon Md/or -atop- . 1 dloallllllln. Tha ,..
ou-oonlrtiOtwtllbelnu101- lor a lima tiarlod of
_..lnl81aly 1 lone) yeer

tuntHJUM30.1H2) . Attha

concluolon of - h - r tho
contrKt wit be
rene·
+KJJ
gotlated beood on lhe ,...
+AJ5
10nable end projected - •
of lha lndlvlduala being
EAST
......... aa wllloa the quality
+AU
of aaovlcao being III'D'IIded
IDhlo
Rwlood
Code
+Q97S
112f 441.
. • QIOH2
Thto MNice monager will
be apeclod 10 coopereteln
SOUTH
all I!Ciivltleo lnvDIYing - .
+142
flcetlon. quollly - .........
• A J8'14
Program woluatlon end ep+ut
pllcable polloleo and proce.
•tta
du-.
AH contractual .._.......
Vulnerable: North-8outh
wtll be funded through
Dealer:·South
appraprlattono .,.... by
ODMR/DD to tho Geilla
S..lll
W..l Norlll Eu1
County loarcl of Mil/DO.
P. . 2NT- P.. .
A Pre-Propout Conlwr·
.,.,. wll be conductacl on
••
Paa Paa
Paa
• Jacoby forclnc bearI raile
June
18111118:30 a.m.
II tho 8oard
Guht·
lng Hllnd School. Chlllhlre.
Openinelead: 3
Olllo 481ZO In . . . . to II·
L.-:---:---.--.,----...1 I low l n t - partlea an opponunlty to nolao qu-no.
1 am often aiked If lUll comblna· clarify
~- ... and dlocuu
tiona should be studied. Well, it cannot conoarno.
hurt, but trylnl to learn them all Is JUNE 12. 11. 23, 1881

•Ito 13

•s

t•

zo.

+

2

Giveaway

W d•"'*ror'o AUCII•

C..a lwH .ltldlollnd .... , to
~.·'.·
· .- ,__ 4 manlh&amp;
IW7I4I4I.

9

_,_ .............
Dogo, ~-11417-

raile, Sol&amp;b's four-beart rebid showed 1

card of Tha...

a mlalmum openln1, with 110 s~nc~eton i ~...:.:.:.:;.;;.;...;,;,;:;:;,;;:::..,_
or wid.
•
Welt led a lpade, the defenders
The
family of Mil·
plafiiC lllree nltlllda of the IIIII. DeJune PWae
clarw bad Jolt two trlcb IDd wu dnld
would
lb
to 1lw* Ill
flail wltb potentllllolers Ia bath llld
their
flilndl
and nalgh111111. A wiDalDc . - Ia bearta or a
bllrl
who..,.
t1o ;s ;.
-c lui f~ Ia dial-* would
brbtc home the c:antnet. lui there food, - · ... yourwu e line of play tltet would uwt el· piiyWi, during our •
tbtr a pert or a f~. Declarer -.t lou. To the kind
plaJid 1 beart to the ace IDd 1 beart to peaple of ·~
~1'111.
Md MIIIMI .ncl the
Rw. O'Oulnn tc.11r
Hare the
f~
- · 10 the traetwu
life.
But..,...tbetiDIIte
n Rev. Krlt TNift.
.... lolt - wbat would But --- re- tong far their ldnd and
turned? Ualplde, declarw would ruff oon1ollug -.11.
Ia - llllld IDd dlleud 1t1a cllei!JCittd
laltlr frGIII tile other. U I minor, Sotltb 11111111 - wll alavB be
..... llllllect tltne trleb Ia tltlt IIIII,

v-

IIIII

10

withetbe
~~- dlstrlbtttloa.
............
,•• ,..,

•••mbiNd.

Tine Fowt., Paul,

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H-'P wanted

.

In

FINIS ISAAC. AUCTIONEER
388-9370 &amp; 388-8880

•oiNY, JUIB 17,1·1·1 P.M •.
. LOCATED
12 MILES SOUTH
FROM PORTSMOUTH, OHIO, ON RT. 23
_ TO LLOYD, KY.

iil34i0oo:io

101 ACRES - HANNAN TRACE ROAD. $29.000.

Aactianaar: Paul Lands
TEAMS:

PERFECT FOR HOISES -PASTURE AREA IS LARGE ENOUGH FOR RIDING RING. MODERN 3 BEDROOMS, COUNTRY
KlfCHEN, FAMILY ROOM WITH WOODBURNER, 2 CAR CONCRETE, BLOCK GARAGE. OVER 9 AC~ES. .$4~,900-

FAlliS AND VACANT lAiiD
25 ACRES- HANNAN TRACE ROAD, $15,000.

For Afore lnformlltlon 01111606-473-7885

67 ACRES- ROUTE 325- 3BEDROOM HO~E. 2 BARNS,
NICE LANO! $38.000.

OWIIER HAS REDUCED THIS LOVELY ltOIIE IN PORTER·
BROOK SUBDIYISIOII TO $62,000 FOR QUICK SAlE' HOWEVER THIS PRICE IS FOR A SHORT TIME ONLYI SO ACT
FAST! 3BEDROOMS I I! BATHS. l!VtNG ROOM HAS BEAUTIFUL FIREPLACE. 2 'cAR GARAGE, IN-GROUND POOL COVERED PATIO. LARGE LEVEL LAWN.

RACCDOII ROAD - ApllfOX. 39 acrp. mostly wooded. Mobile home s~e- Pretty area. $25,000.

THE BEST BUY WE HAVE SEEN FOR $28,000 - 5 ROOM
FRAME HOME WITH BRICK TRIM. LARGE LEVEL LAWN WITH
FENCED BACK YARD.

ACREAGE - ROUTE 218 BARN, $28,000.

Real Estate General

Memory

he•nL

..;;., ~

12.00 lo l!OU.hla, BR Ill, ''
Pndn... OM41771
'

Souf~eAn CJii~~~ CRea~ s~tale ~ne
Judg Oswltt -~ Btobt

[B

,.

446~6624
738 Second Ave.

REAlTOR'

IN MEMORY OF OUR

•

~...:::":

wa-

:::ft"iooc!"a;:

I

-atlanlt Loollli.,.Tarlan,
IM 111211112

LOIT,- l -

'

-Cal-

3 Announcements

-., ·~ - . .... llay lM
.._--,WY,-baln

·-.ea.. .
..._

WANTED

30 people with bid.

Anltnol .......

chlolorlne tlstina water. Have chlorine and
bid tlsta removed with
an In-home bottled WI·
Ill appliance. FREE I
week trial of demo unit.
No ollliptlon.

...,_!on ..... - 1...
~REWARD.

LOIT•- ,_.., llollor., Ill-114 !l!t!lo
Run a - 3 wb ago,
IN1M4.
t
Lool:

~

lot

-

CIMI!aq, M W. ~J!nl On A

Cllllltt••••
Looi:N..__,.,_,

T - II l'ourid, -

Phone 614·992·2554

.-.- Dot- Rod Collar, HOlM: Lldr- Loiiii Ylc*llly:
IEwOIII'..,ANI. IM 4111112

7
,;__

Gallia Co. Fund
Raiser Day
Craft Show
11 to 8
Sat., June 29

Ya... Sal•
__:.:;";.:,;':::;::__ _
GallipoliS
&amp; Vlclnttr

ALL \'lid . . . . . . . . . Pold In
1:00 p.m.
IN . , lloiON lha Ill II Ill run.
. . . . . . . . .0\,1:••
~

'rtdor."

'

. Elhlbiton Call

614-245-5363

. . . . 2:811 ,_.,_
llio!Miar Olllllen • 2:00

For A loath.

p.on.lalurdoy.
June 11111, 1-1. .... ' IIIIo,
.... hDid ..... 11!1 Vinton

Nlany

Other Evtntsl

GIIVIIidt seMct for
Goldie P. Dill will be held
llandly, June 17, It 2:00
P.l. II Gilmare C.NIIIf.
Amonc tht survivors
are o.ne son llld dliualltlr·
lft.IIW, lilly IRd flosalt
Dill;
. panddlllltter,
lllthy Osborne; p111d10n
and wife, St- and
Joanne DHI; parMWau&amp;ll·
ltr and husband, Cindy
and Dennis Btntdu11; and
IP'Ind10n - and SPICIII
lriend. Tl• Dill and lary
Btth Obitz.

SurviYill .,...,.,..,.

childrltl art lorrt 111d
KtiiJ llllior~t, Chris •d
T l - •.BIIIt..ll, 1111
Cody Dill. 1111 Dill is
1110 IUIYivtd by one Ill·
ter and lttlsblnd. Dorothy
and Willie Davis. .

L---~--~~--~

Ceurl.

WE DO

MlddJepon
&amp; VIcinity

Love.

•

•

ROOFING

AIID IVDYTHING IMDDIIIATH '

In Memory of

•

RALPH R (Toditl

;

KERWOOD
on Father's Day.
We 111 thinkine ol

•
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,
:
•
r

f
,

•
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you, thinkin1 ol the
past. Pictu1in1 you in·
our memory just as we

saw you last.
· How could o• ltetm
follfl JDU wlten tvtiYih·

q we do II somatftinc
thlt reminds us of hom
spent with you.
Our thoucbts are with
you althoup we Ire
apart. We will always
haw ·you with us, be·
cause you 111 ht our
heart.
Sadly missed by wife,
Anna, children,
crandchildren &amp;
lltll"lllndchildrtn.

,.
•••
•

2

lnlllmory

•Quality Homaund
Cuatom Remodeling

742·2321
1122/lfn

•
•

•

!

•"

We~ llltd 1

0., Clld

Fatlttr"t
•

'(our hind 111 cannot IDIIch
But Gad IIIII lind I
mettlgtlO

_.:.-.~

...

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,,

Aw., fronl

. . -..

torroW,

•••ndP81n

-~=ln

Until we

•

••

••

LOCATED 011 THE QUIETEST •
BLOCK IN ToWN
Older two story with·sunken famili room, beautiful must-see kitchen, 2nd income dwel!mg Included. Within one block of ctty schools.
412906
MAKE AN APPOIICTMENT IIMEDIATELYI
To vtew this 6 acre mini-l11m. Remodeled 3 bedroom vinyl slled ranch style home w~h garage.
In-ground pooL Large tilrn and numrous outbuildings. Several teet of road frontage . Beaul1·
fully maintained .
412907
REDUCED!

'

$9.000

REDUCED/$44,000
A LOT Of CONVENIENCE
' Only a lew blocks from churth, school and shopping, 2 story brick home Situated on .644 acre on
Gallipolis. 3or 4 bedrooms, 211111 baths, niceliving
room and targe eat-in kHchen. Call today lor an
appointment.
U888
BEAT THE RENT RACE!!!
With this 2 or 3 bedroom home. Remodeled, vinyl
sidinR. stora~e buddtni. 1~ acres olus excellent
garden area. Tobacco allotment Raccoon ToO¥nsmp. Unbeatable price. $29,000. Call today.
H2195

16 ACRES MORE/LESS
located in Huntington Township. 12 acres m/L
$7,000. 4 acres msl. $3.700.
IHJD07
ACREAGE - 35 WEST AREA
Ideal development property. Ovr 100 acres. land
lays well, partially wooded. Call for complete listing!
112882

SUPER LOCATION, SUPER HDIE
Very att11ctive 3 bedroom home. large living room.
family room, diningrliom and kitchen, recently re·
modeled, 2 full baths, 2 car garage. Over 2acres.
Situated at Buhi·Mortoo Road just off SR 35. Cali
today! Immediate possession!
12914
UIIDER $5,000 •
1972 Schu~ mobla holltt with expando. 3 bedrooms. elaetric hilt piumbmg has ben replli:ed.
Tie downs, 2 porches and underpinnine included.
S~uated on rented lot. Owner anxious to seiP. Call
at once!
M2110
ACREAGE I
Over 5 acreslil•ted In Gr1111 Townlh~uhiMoltlln Road. Clll tr more nllol n11tion.
tor
tlllt spacial home!
112115
VIEW OF THE RIVER

Wltlt tb11 onr I aert trut of land. Wooded. Site
clllrld t• rnollilt ltolltt or ltotae. Rural wa!Br

IWiilblt. Rolli IIGnlqe lioltl SR 7. $8,500.

•

ftlt3

••

MEMBER FDIC '
I

RoOMY &amp; ALL BRICK
Attractive 3 bedroom 11nch home with 3 baths.
family room. formal dining room, spacious kitchen
with solid oak cabinets. 2 car garage plus additional detached garage. full basement. heat
pump/cent. air. All this and more situated on over
49 acres. Ctll today!
'2911

Approx. 4.5 acres situated at .Rodney Pike. Rurat
water available. Anice level poece of land . Call to·
day.
·
*2114

'•

•·

446-1967 .

Make an appo10lment to v1ew this 4 bedroom. 2
bath home famiy room. dishwasher included
dh the kiichen, cathedral ceiling, utii~Y. room.
Central air heat pump. 24"x30" garage. W1.thm 5
·miles of city. Kyeer Creek schools.Owner w1ll consider financing to qualified buyer.
H2912

EX£CUTIVE RETR[An
1.975 acres m/1 provides Jllivacy and seclulion
for this maanihcent quality eustont home. 3 batlts,
llvinr room, family room. forint! dinin&amp; m•r
bedroom !f/dressinr room, welk-in closetuecur~Y system and so menr more amenllitl too ~
tu mention. located w~hin the city a1 Gt~=

•

The ant WIIOVeiO much.

379-2449

00111 JUDGE THIS-IIIACUI.ATE
HOME FROM YOUR WINDSHIELD!

DON'T JUDGE THIS IMMACULATE HOllE
FROM YOUR WINDSHIELD
Make an appointment to view this 4 bedroom, 2
!lith home, famfly room, dishwasher included
willl the kitchen, cathedral ceilina. util~y room,
central air heal pump, 24'x30' 1111118. wfthin 5
mi~s of c~y. Kyaer CrteW schools. Ownttwill Clll·
sider linancinrlo qUIIIfled buyer.
112112

.

Examine our
••two•8lep". mortgage
before you buy.

LAWRENCE MOONEY

' "TilACTORS"
M.f. 175 gas, live power/mufti. power; BOO ford g1s traclor.
"FARII·MACHINERY"
·
5600 Hesston round baler. Olive60 square b-'er, !nco 700H
brush hot~. like new 7.501 Ford mower, MF9" haybine. N.H.
55 hay ralie, 3 pt 2 and 3 bottom plow~ 3 pl. Black Hawk
corn planter. 13-7 Oliver grain drill. 3 pt 6' blade, 3pt. brush
hog. NH 24' elevator. JD 300 32' elevator, gravity wagon and
hay wagon, Oliver manure spreadet. 3 pt. Flex hitch disk, 3
pt. 2 row com planter. post driver, a· hyd. wheet disk, fertilizer spreader. lift pole. bale mower. 10' cultipacker, 3 pt.
cull. 2 wht!!!l hay tedder. and lots, lots more.
,
"AUTO"
1989 SeviHe Cadillac 4.51iterV8, wMew/ maroon leather interior, 27 .()® actual miles. Lolded. Kept inside.
"'RECREATIONAL"
"1962 Starcralll5' boat and trailer w/Johnson 75 engine
wllull tof).
0
1978 Honda Gold Wing w/59.000 mileJ.
'
0
1971 250 ford pic~up ,
0
1959 l!arley Davllsoo 2 cylinder.
0
1979 Chevy" Blazer 3/305 engine and 50.784 miles.
"Honda ATC 110
"HOUSEHOLD"
Oak dining room !Jble w/6 chairs. hutch, oak pedestai ·
k~chen table and 4 chairs, Maytagwasher and d1yer, Gibson
chest deep freezer. arm chiir, matching couch.loveseat and
recliner, coWee and end tables. recliner, oak desk and chair,
Zenrth TV. VCR, satellila complete, stands and tables. 4 pc.
bedroom Sll~e. color TVs, single bd, freezer, chest of drawers, bookcase, sew ina machine; rocker. misc. finens, pots
ond pens. dishes. king size box springs and mattress, lawn
chairs 111d etc.
•

Elteutor

Ul

lnllltmoryof

446-1260

10:00 AM.

This is to settle the Estate of l. R. Harmon, ·
located approx. 6\'z mils from Stlte Routt 7,
Pomeroy bypass, on Stitt Route 124 thru Rutland, Ohio.
.
· ·

Caull268lt
Doald 8t• Har1111on,

•

\

446-1434

u
SATURDAY, JUNE 22,

grinder, dr#i press. Homei!IB water pump, elec. impack,
sander, and .e'tc., porllband, ~oor jack, Rockwell ~ .. qritl,
vice. tool bOx. wheelbarrow. lots ol h111d tools.
"TIUCK"
· J967 IH 130 w/304-enlline and dump w/65,000 miles.
~
"MISC."
'
Exerciser bike. VermOnt wood stove, Gravely w/mower, Gra·
vety ,leu~.• gas and diesel tanks. Kirby legend. SWeeper,
stereo. gas blrbeQue IJ'MI. COPI* kttllt, ;as and lots. lots
more.
·•

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••-· ·-

Patti Hawk

..

"TOOLS"
•
250 AC DC w~"· bafld saw, 330 Homelite chain saw. ollset

•

TROMM
BUILDERS.
j
fiD 1n1MAns
:
•20 Y•ra Experience

Som Hoffmon

,

·

.

•

Pomeroy,

~

Children: Carol,
Charlie and ~rry

..... any

Counly. " -

thlra.

P.t1!-11t412_,_

441·0703

Shirley laster

•

So on this doy our haarto
go out
·
Tothadeoreotandbeolof
falharo
Who nevar hod time to
think of hlmoelf
But olwoyo thought of
otharo.

to...,, • d&amp;yer
In wwldnu _..,, collatw •

446·1006

Don C•ter

wa

We alwoyo. found him

'

Jeonnit France Tammie DtWitt

..,,

No nllllt•
when
na1d1d him

=--~~~..;_;~;.;;,..­

379-2114

Cathy Wray
446-42SS

llt."o beltla

lq&amp;ml'l

Lost &amp; Found

J. Merrill Carter

FATHER, CARL LEE
Ho a · Wonderful'

-r.
pl..,_

MOB)LE HOME HOOKUP.

.

· or Check with 1:0.

Evonlhoughyou"relntht
heevena ebove,
You witt alwoyo be loved.
Badly mluad by wtt..
Emma. chlldrorJ ond
grandoono.

Ho

6

ROUTE 160 -JUST AFEW MINUTES FROM HOLZER HOSPI·
TAL ONE BEDROOM HOME HAS LARGE KITCHEN WITH LOTS
OF CABINET SPACE. FAMILY ROOM. STORAGE BLDG. ON APPROX. 1.4 ACRE LOT. PRICED UNBELIEVABLY LOW AT
30.000!

NOTICE - HASKINS TAVERN ON COURT STREET WAS RECENTLY DAMAGED BY THE FIRE. WE ARE STILL OFfERING
THE PROPERTY FOR SALE. PRICE HAS BEEN DRASTICALLY
REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE.

Will Be 8elllng Personai1Tools Of
aaude Miller,
Al~ng. With Other Conslgnmets •
Otk, Walnut Furniture and Moret

thoughti end In our

•

\

ooirlA~DerJ~ip~.,;;;.~,..~
.................
=::..

..., milllllllr ~
Lee, 0. Alltn, ....... Adlm
• Anchw Halcamb.

Jon, Tony and Terry
PI-end our
fllftDin.

__

Wanted.t"
. Buy
I"'

THIS lllW HO•E SPA!It(l£S IN ITS COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS. HOME FEATURES THREE BEDROOMS AND TWO BATHS,
COMRJRTAillE FAMILY ROOM. FORMAL LIVING ROOM AND
MUQl MORE. SITUATED ON 3.9 ACRES MIL HANDICAPPED N:.CESSAIILE. CALL FOR DETAILS. $80.000.00.

BULAVlLLE ROAO- EXCELLENTLOCATIDN ONLY 5 MILES
FROM CITY OVER AN ACRE LAWN. 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH
HOME ~S -NICE OPEN FLOOR PLAN. KITCHEN HAS ROOMY
SNACK BAR DISHWASHER ANDERSEN THERMOPANE WINDOWS ELECTRIC HEAT Pi!MP. 2 CAR AnACHED GARAGE.
THIS t's A UNIBILT HOME. PRICED BELOW MARKET VALUE
AT $59,000.

You ere aJwaya m our

Employnwnt Serv1ces

11

=:::....__.:..___

•::'J:a7ft
:Wa!.:; thedon
eee
kllll Ill lteerta, lte wUl

WE WILL BE ACCPTING MERCHANDISE
IF ANYONE HAS ANY TO BRING OUT.

- · - · _,._ 14. 118&amp;.
Although you ore no ton·
gar wltti u1

NO EXPEAIENCa NECESSARY. :
1-100-255 02U IIITIHIIIOH p. •
2732A
:

"Dcltt _., lllae newr"

- with oaly
el&amp;bt tr.lpa, but with the q - mlainl, JOII take I flneai!, wbtreaa with
niDe trumpa you cub the ace and king,
hopinl the queen will drop. Tttoee are
the percentap playw, bulls II rigllt to
~
cub the tap honors bere?
ID 111p- to the Jacoby f o r c l n l l - - - - - - - - -

-

$51 000 1~ THE IIEW LOW PRICE on this lovely ranch on Jay
Driv~. Very conveniently located. 3 bech~ms. 2 balhs, me~
OjM!Riamily room/dllini/kilchen area w~h fi~ep!ace. 2 car,
attached prage. .

1380111AY PROCIIIIHG
•
PHCIHE
!'IOPI.£ . :

Otll-.

polatlela IDd would take eoas. Every
sltUitloa lbould be taken Dot in llola·
tloa but In terms of the lleal as a
A1111 ounccmc nt s
whole.
Coallder today's band. Looking only
at the North-Soatlt bearta, !low would - - - - - - - - - - JDII play the IUit for ao to.ra?
JllPt! \W IIIYe beard of the uylng

s-.,

Rio CINnillo, Ohio IM-lM~-~~52.

_ , f . UIIAIAY, 2110010 II.. GMWOU!, 011.

Of(.

THERE WILL BE NO AUCTION
SATURDAY, JUNE 22

NEWMAN

e14-2MI111.

lllW 011 THE •Ailm SPACIOUS SPLIT FOYER HOME. 4
BEDROOMS 2\i BATHS. EQUIPPED KITC~EN, HAS SNACK
BAR, NICE DtNING AREA. CtN. AIR CONDJVERY CONVENI ENT LOCATION NEAR HOLZ.ER HOSPITAL $65.000.
PRIVATE IIOOIIED AR£A - BEAUTIFUL PINES SURROUND
THIS OUTSTANDING REDWOOD HOME. THE COMFORTS Of
THIS HOME ARE ENDLESS. INFORMAL FAMILY ROOM/KITCHEN AREA. BEAUTIFUL FORMAL LIVING ROOM .AND
DINING ROOM. 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. LARGE STUDY OR
HOBBY ROOM OPENS ONTO DECK ON SECOND FLOOR. FIRE·
PLACE IN LIVING ROOM. WOOD BURNER tN FAMILY ROOM. 2
CAR GARAGE. AVAILABLE WITH 3 OR 9 ACRES.

P.l

VINTON, OHIO

whomp~~_...,aye

4.

446•3636

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

In m11mory of
CLIFFORD F.

..;,;.'!"""~~~;:..---­
112 112 ~b Puppy. IIIIo,

~- ...

QAVID IOGGS 11&lt;f-441·7710

·
Lie. No. 4591
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO - 614--446-7750
Licensed and Bonded. in State ol Ohio
Not responsible lor accidents or loss ol property.
WE ARE NOW BOOKING SALES

Wanted to Buy

9

.

,

Realty

Ua• nd ..,. lo-.. In • - of Ohio
Not rup an1IJ11 for ecoidant1 or lo• of proJMM1Y.
-~~~ ¥OU llko 10 hevo • ........ CaniKt

AUCTIONEER, DAVID BOGGS

-------'~

3 Announcements

.

Canaday

Gallipolis, Ohio - 614-446-7750

MISC: 1978 Honda 5 speed, 16,000 actual mtles,
needs some work; Amana microwave oven, floor model
color TV. hall tree, two chandeliers. elec. typewriter,
bi.nl cages. lis~ aquarium, pel supplies, canmng jars, ·
~lrby sweeper, White sewmg machine, adding
machme, check writer. dresser and ,stand, hvmg room
su1te. chairs, round kitchen table, bo~ fans, chain'bm·
ders, lurniture clamps, two axle trailer with ramps,
truck toppers, small utility trailer, recliner, 10" table
saw, 4" jointer. lathe , 10 hr Balens w1lh 38" mower
disk, plow tiller. Tappan microwave.
PLUS MUCH. MUCH lORE
Terms: Ctsh or Cbaek with Proper I. D.

••

Public Notlc'e

..

'

Slladyslde Friday evening. D11riag the fta1h ·
ftood last year, the Plesko's hOJDe was wulled
,away.(APLuernoto)
·

PIPE CREEK MEMORIAL - John
Plesko, left, aad his mother Joyce ancciver ,the
memorial to ftood victims along Pltie Creek near

'

DOOI PRIZES
.
AUCTIOIIEU, DAVID IOGGS, lie 4596

ANnQUE AND COLLECTIBLES: M1lk cans, wringer •
washer, old books, 2 claw feet end tables. Avon bottles,
2 old chairs, quilts, tops, old metal toys, Daisy BB
Guns, old license plates, stone jars, 2 iron wheels, old
school desk, old·trunks. china hutch, nail keg~. jumbo
peanut butter Ill'S, old glass, pictures and l1gunnes.
'.

•......_..,

ltd-.. IE tllctric stew &amp; llvlac room IU!tt.
Ttrllll: Casb ar clltcl Ilitlt prapari.D.

Lot of this merchandise is from the •
.
late Earnestine Spriegel. ·. '·

...

. .

~bllcSele
&amp;Auction

8

I

· EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 7 :00 P.M .
loaatlon DAY Building on Rt 31 llypa• ·
Conolgnmnt 1811• hom ttJ:OO to 1:00 doy of oale.
NEW AND USED MERCHANDISE

.'

,

•,,;·'..

-

Directions from Gallipolis take Rt. 141
to Lincoln Pike, go about 2 miles. Watch
for signs.
·

' · . ~-·~
'

~.r-

SATURDAY, JUNE22r 1991
10 A.M.
. ..

.

..

........--··-

-BOGGS AUCTION SERVICE
PUBUC AUCTION CONSIGNMENT SALE

PUBLIC AUCTION

Government loans and grants
totaling $3.7 million were made to
owners of homes and businesses in
the Rood area, and $2.7 million has
been approved b replacing roads,
bridges and other public structures.
Nearly $3.3 million in cleanup and
repair work was done by Ohio
National Guard troops as a swnmer
training exercise.
The Wegee Creek memorial was
built late last month on 1he site
where the Three K's nightclub
stood before the flood washed it
away.
A monumen1 commemorating
those who died along Pipe Creek
has been covered since it was
· placed on !he creek.

'·

.Help wanted

11

--~-~-

.-r

;

Help Wanted

AVON • All ~.Call llarltyn AVON I AI ANao I lhloloy

Crea, aid the llale has demanded
he
tues on relief money. But
he said he didn '1 receive all lhe
mooer the state says he got, and he
is livmg on welfare in a home in
Jacobsburg that lacks electricity
and running water.
"I'm about to lose everything
again; I can 'I go through that loiS
again. I won't go through il again,"
Ramsey said.
Belmont County Commissioner
Jim Hepe says some people have
been neglected.
••A lot of people, unfor11JJ1ately,
fell throuah the cracks," he said.
He wasn't familiar with Ramsey's

case.

Tlmea Sentlnei-Paae D3

June 18, 1911

....

- .' .
'

~~ ,

.

'

'•

.

· ·~ ·~

,.,

~

.. . - -

'I

HAVE YDU BEEN OVERLOOKING
THIS ONE?
Then call today tq see this extremely mce 3 ~eel­
room, 2 bath ~anch, !uti basement. family room,
·eteclnc heat pump. Approx. I acre lawn. And so
much more. Call today to see this one! 412905

TIRED OF YOUR LANDLORD?
Sick ol rent? Then own thiS cute little 2 bedroom
home situated on .9 of an acre. Large bath, storage building and room to expand as your fa mily
does! Call today. Price reduced. $22,900.

12884

WHAT IS THE SENSE IN PAYING YOUR
HARD EARNED lONEY IN RENT!
When you could be paying lor this remodeled
home. Llv1ng room. bath, forced air. gas heat.
ne~¥er deck, nestled amon g shade trees on approx. I acre lot.
12920
THE REDMAN
Located on SR 35 near RioGrande. Business only
includes complete inventory, pool tables. juke
box, equipment, and othr business chattels. lease
includes a 2 bedroom apartment to ass1st V14h
monthly rent. Possible owner financong, Call now
tor an appomtment at this super opportunrty.
HZI99
FARII
49 acres ol tand including two developed home
s~es . One 1979 mob1ie home 14 'x70' purchased
by present owners. The other home s~e haselectricity, runn inr water and aerobic septic syltem
all in place. Farm consists otapprox. 17 tillable
. acres, 15 pasturucres, 17 acres of woodland,tobacco ba$e and stocked pond lor rec18alion. let
us show you this one.
IH03

•

YDU'lliiiiOW THIS IS A GOOD BUVII
Whlll you'" this well taken care ol mobole home
nestled on 2 acres more or less of treed suHoul!dlngs. Pnvate settine. 2 bedrooms, living room.
blth with prdefi tub al!d eat-11 kHchen. Won't
last long! $14,000.
HQ5
SPACE FOR SAL£11
Approx. 36 acres. Recently reseeded. fenced,
pond. Mliority olacreaee is tillable and partially
wooded. Cell lor price and location.
412192
"

�- ....... -.

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·••o•l _ _ _ _ _ _

nmes Sentinel

OH--Polnt P-.nt, WV
18

W8nt8d to Do

31 Hamill for Sale

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

a..=
-a...--.....,
=-'0' •.

§!":! !' ltl:i....CIIw

~

Wo

, _ .... Jlw;'daYilt&amp; . , _ _ _ CIIw

32 . . . . . 1om•
for81Je

33 PMIII for 8ale

.'

42 Mobile Homaa
for Rent

t

taoun,
" - ...,,
.... ·~~a 241ar
~:1213

~

EAIY WORK! EllCllllHT
Poyi
0..3111e_,..o
__

me. IErt ClOT.

Mobile tfonl88
lot Sail

nlohod, Utllltloo loald, UIICIImo.
S100 DopoaM. 114:44J:t340, 114444-3870,
·

BEAUTIFUL APARTIIEm AT
8UDOET PRICES AT JACKSON

EAIIV WORK!

EllC(LL£HT poyl
r\oOd
-HOWl Call lor amaz1na
clolrlbuiOJO
rr e: did
Mttle§e. Ott PAID FROM

.,,_,,....a

BuildingS

rmanc

ElportooaeM In Clr
Stttolllo
So...tce And lnollfllllon, AppiJ
In P - AI llob'o Eloclr.....,,

31

~

21

.

Oo•lllrlna Sl!IO-NOO
Job ...,;tty, lonCulle
beneffta, no
ury, 24hr
OH111,

..-•a

a

,_

aullness
Opponu111ty

712-7111.-

=
=
•

OfFICE IliACI! FOR LEASE on
2nd - . Clolllpolla. ClaM to
~ HiUoa, 1 ,_., 2

MCcw-

s-

- · - ....

J -

••u
~

1 11J II~ Fr Full
IM1rMnl, 2 a.t., CA, C1ou

.U..,
Rolrlfn

To T-._ Doell End ..._, ·
Prlold To . . . tit ttl 7111.
...... ONo:ll•ta Jtt...._

"-fllloo--

·
~. 'r:J 43170
Vlllo¥
Pl-.
call,_,,~lonfiii.GI.1Zl&amp;IB.

18

1 Or .._
J04.42Nall,

Wantacl to Do

sa.-.

My co-worker confided that she
had already heard tt.e rumor I was
about to repeat " f1oy, • I sighed,
"the grapevine is lhe one thing that
can not be replacdd by ELECTRONICS."

Real Estate Genenll

Juo1

. - , .. - - I'Gionllot.

;Dololo. (11 - - Ettt. Y·

-101n.

. AESIOEIITIAl - IMVESTIIEIITS - COIIUCIAl • FAlliS

23 LOCUST ST.

nolghborWYhooJ._no .,304~_.:.:.'11-2:,::111;:.:;_
, =--..,-,----.,-,.
•. •PI:D~~
"~-~~~.
•·
a:
154200.
Nleo 2 BR, 4 112 mi. from Go~

aN pa

=

. Exciting opportunity available for an Innovative Individual to direct all aapacto of lite Patient Ac·
counting Department from the reglotretlon pro·
ceu through the final collection. ·
We are aesking o goal oriented individual. The auc,
ceulul candidate wHI po..- the leaderohlp ond
vllion to auperviae employeeo and will be raaeponol·
bla for policy, planning, directing, organizing and
controlling the patient a·ccounta erea - to lndude
account• roealveble, outpatient and emergency raglotratlon, billing, credit and collection.
Quallflcotlonslnctude 3-li yeero experience au Dl·
riCior of Patient Accounting in a healthcara Illling; a wo,.lng knowledge of a computerized billing/Information oyatam; proven In· depth working
knowledge of hoalthcara relmbureementand regulatory laauea. An undergraduate degree Is required.
AttriCIIva ulary 6 ·benefit package.
Send reaume in confidence to:
P.O. Box 729 V- C/0 The Dally Sentinel
111 Court Strt1et - Pomaroy,OH . 411789

l :IIIOKIIIO' loll on
Hilt Rood, :nr.t mlloa to
Polo! , _ oubllc · - I
- · ' ..... ~. 8Chaol bla

.-

lroeh pickup,

304-175-

lola 11 Molgo Mornorlll
yoa.,.,.
a - . Tho"""" ond
=.J:*toi•
lnclucW 3042

. 1D11 FOR SALE In Oollpolll
Ftory. Will .._
lrallora, oily
IVIIIabte• .Phone 304..e75-

F

For-= River bonk proporty In
....... 304-773-1111.

•

...._ · LooiiN 13 Whlt1
Rolrlgorotor
Fumllltod, · I17Sinto,
$100
~.11444131111.

iiiiiOik.

-.

Homo

From Ci!Y
locurtly
614-4-541
after

$30IIInto

lp.rn.

+

t4 ll!lnlllll Addn, aYOIIOblo July
1ol, . 12110. araonl!!1• -•rtly
I - " -INd. wlz
. . NoOoMI ...... :J04.1711-44110 Ul.

All Sltlfto.

•ora:
.
liOdlfll 3 banlntomo,

'!

illodbuiY

AS'l'RO-GRAPH

.. '

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

\
TAUIIUI (Aprti2Hh. 2DI Your bell
asaet tod,y Is your ability lo per~
tile Interests of olhert llrtd lo cOincide
your thinking and actions In ways that
will prOduce mutual benefit' lor all
concerned.

..._,,,,...,

•

; Improved flnanclal conditiOns are likely
~ In the year ahead, bul thll rejuvenation
~ .mlghl come about In a pecuUar manner.
' Be alert for opportunltl81 that are of an

&lt; unusual nature.

: .QE_. (..., 21""- 201 Even though
• others may think your expectations are
- rather grllrtd today, IIIey will be wllhln
; your relflstlc achievement levels.
,. There's nothing wrong with thinking big
:. - If you also think practiCally.- Gemini,
,. treat yourlell to a birthday gift. Send lor
• Gemini's Astro-Graph predictions lor
: the year ataead by mailing S1 .25 plus a
• long, setl-addreoted. stamped enve: lopo IO Astro-Graph, c/o lhil .-spa- par, P.O. Bo• 91428. Cleveland, OH
• 44t0 1-3428. Be IUrelo slate your zOdi: ec &amp;'Qn.
• CANCER (olune 21-.lue, 22) Conditions
: in'general are favorable lor you tOd,y,
bul II Ia your malerlal prOiptiCts lhal
• look the mosl promlalng. Use your
: amarta to entuance your financial
· pooltion.
; UO (Julr 23-Aug. 221 Sevet-al lflua-· Ilona where you may have fell your des- tiny was being controlled by outside In; """""" should be alleviated IOd,y.
• Now, il's up lo you to makelile moat of
~ existing opportunlllaa.
: VIRGO (Aug. 23-lept. 221 Unla8s
• you're backed Into a corner, you may
· nol be 100 resourceful IOd,Y. Wilen
• laced with challenging developments,
: your skill In managing things could be
· • rather remarkable.
,.. UIIIA (lepl, 23-0ct. 23) Afriend mighl
~ deny a request you make tOday bo~ cauMthlalndlvidual has no other alter;- Mllve. Indirectly, though, your pal will
: .try to work something out thai's even
• """" beneficial.
~-ac;OIIPIO (Oct, 24-Hav. 22) You're In
- an eKiremttly good cycle lor lullllling
~ your lllftbitioua expectations today. Es' labllsh ,..nlnglul goals and objectives
·: and pur- ,,_, positively, assomlng
:~.thai.., 111 ll uaured.

·~ IAQITTAIIIUI (Hew.~. 21) What
···you can't do on your own IOday can be
'l'accompl;.hed with the assistance ol
• 'compelenl - · Partnerships could be
:. tr8IMIICioully lucky.
·; CAI'IIICONI (!)eo. 22-.lan. 11) You
:• might beCOme lnvol\ied In an endeavor
.: at tltlll-lhallooka !Ike a loser to ev.• eryone IIIII you llrtd lhe other part leo
Don't be Influenced by out. side ltllnlelng; thla could be a winner.
:.:AouAIIIU8 ,....._ • l'ell. 1tl Vour
, ·judgn'ttnl 11 except~ kMn tOday,
·, .provldecl you take tlte -•o weigh and
: ballltoe ell aapecta. Don't tel anyone
-~ p r - you Into making haety

-=·-ned.

:· cfeCIIIOott.

-:FIICD (l'tlt.. Mt

all •1 You could

, ..,... . . opportunlty today to conatruc:~ their NClllfY a ciiYIIOpmllll tlt8t hun't

• lived up to your expectatiOns. II can be
: :lrantformed Into ~ltlng )'CKI _ , It
...

bt.

·, ..a(...,...I1-Aprii11)You'rellkely
:· to Ill bCIIII rwourcelulllld extrav~gMI
.: todlty. ~. what you pin
·~ lltOuld •OMCI wtaat ende up on lite
n•a•MIIdepttlleledger.

There could be good , _ . on tlte ftnMclal horlton In the year ataead. It looks
like there might be a141q111nee of windlalla at times you'd leUt expect. '
GEMII IIIey 11-.lune 2D) Althougta
you'l conduct yOIKMII well In mot1 ctrcumstancaa today, H an unexpected
change that no one anticipated dewtops, you'll -lruty shine, . Major ch11ng811
are ahead lor Gemini In tlta coming
year. Senll lor Gemini's Aatro-Graplt
prec:tlcllons today. Mall $1.25 plus a
long, 1811-~ressed, llamped envelope to Aslro-Graplt, c/o lhls ._..,.,..
per, P.O. Box 91428, C~. OH
44t0t-3428. Be-sure to elate yourzOdi-

••m- 1n- lton!e.

•. f!xlld · -

CANCER 1"-11-.llilr 221 A bright but
rather comptex Idea might auddenly
pop Into your 1-.1 today while you're
dlacuaslng an unralalact mattar with an
uaoctale. Write your thoughts down,
because you might forget I'*".
LEO (JuiJ :!S-Aul: 221 A prolllllble .,.,._
slbiHty may euddenly pr-1 Itself today, yel you may no1 be able lo recognize II - unlell you atop and thlntc In
terms of wtaallt could - • o ~.
VIIGO (Aile, :!S-lept. 22) Big, forward
strides can be made lod,y In a alluallon
whare you share· a common Interest
with two othtn, pt'0\1decl you tllke
charge of this e1tdeavor rather than
leave decllllorta up lo them.
U.A (lepl, 23-0ct. 221 Your greatest
allrlb&lt;lle lod,y II your ability 10 llndze
important mall.,. to your lallafiiCIIon.
· You m,y UM tltla Qlllln two lnatanc;ea.
ICORFIO (Oct. M-Ilo¥. 221 Doing
-hlng tun 10 gel your mind off
weighty mall.,. will not be a wute of
lime tOday. Att• you've had a Chance
10 lei go llrtd relalc, you'll perform much
mora ellecllvely.
·
IAGITTAIIIUI (llo¥. 21-0ec. 211 Rnanclal lranda look very Interesting lor
you tOd,y, eapeclally In situations
Where you do· nol _ ... along purely
traditional lines. Prolll may p,_,l 11setlln a unique peckage.
CAPRICORN (Dec. zz-., 111 You
may not be able to _. oul al your
problems tOday, bul you'll have lite
unique ability to help people you love
lind tile an-a they're -lng.
AOUAIIIUS (Jan. . . . . , 1tl You're
not apt lo be an eay ~ to clacel,.
tOday, so ll...._ae you tlkelllfll you a
lillie wlalte Hoi, don't amberr- t1t1a Individual by axpaalng n.
PIICEI (l'ell. • "nail 2D) You may
form a brlel ai. . &amp;Oit atlltla t - wt11t an
acquaintance you don't know very wt11
In order to achieve a common CIIIJectM.
II lhOUid work ou1 ralhllt ....
•
ARIEl (llarah 11-Aprll 111 A .-.,
lrlancl of yours, wtao II -emalyldapl
at lchlevlng urt1qua objle 11-. may
show you tod,y an lngenloua way to gat
around a problem lhat'a hed you perplexed. Do ealnatruolld.
TAUIIUI (April 10 ..... 2D) Hyou Pltllelpata In a - . 1 IIOC1al IIT8IIgemartl
today, don't Juallocus on otc1 frllncll,
Talk lo ttao. you clon1 know too ...;
something lnleleatiiiQ COUicl ell' 110~'

2 bolito,
lllddloport,
I

12 Mobile Homes

213 bed-

·,

• LR, for~t~l . din in&amp; ._ b o -. ctttllll ••· moo.
;;,iOiP~""I"' llfr,_!,~shwoshor, wosltS' mo dryer. Sbrt l!ou· ifhrwedi.,.., in thil chlrmilalrlrne.
16!1. lilT TO .YI£ IATIOUI FOilS!- 127 oc. m/1.
F...., .. 2 r•ds. lind comract. $25,000.00.
IMI. WMIW lOJS- Cbai:eloll 0111! stJKfleu~r •ew.You
Willw1nt I'IIDte thin one. Oa,, maple, dOIWOOd and ••areen
....,..ketNs olilburtl111 paood01. ~olots flonllneon Wllite
ltd. For filii parti;u~" coli 1D inspect Spoejol - ' Mit IUJIIIDifOUM£ OILY- WAllPAI'£1&amp; liT!IIIII
' DUlin- 1500' ot dis~y 11n lopolll!elinl ;.,..taryond

tor Rent

Help wantacl

,1

.

RlGISTEIED
NURSES

11157. 1111 COII£IICIM LISTIIG 011 Sl 7-COIIEILOTC.. be used lo Gil ""· '"""' mn, 1nl~on. etc. New
heot~t 1001. eloctric, £11$ 1ppr....t -.lie ..,..,m,"" II-bloc.
wittt blth end aerace. Great tondlitn and locltian.

lmmedlall openinas for
11aiateted nurses to
work in Medicii-Suf'liCII or Specill Call Unit
·- full and PI rt -time positions. $allry com111n-·
surell with experience.
Excellent fri nee . bene-

1553. IUUWillf 10. VACAIII LAIID- lot I.m/1. Uli~lies
IWiillble.

.

'

1114.1HIT W/OPIIOI TOIUY- We clollooie IOU ID lmd '"'
more tharll ~t~cation tnd cenvenience. TillS IS perttet fDr die ""
••1~· IOind, oriel 111. 2 bodr~ .•2lllh, ~~ .•~raeLR ond 01!,
uli ily rm. loclled onlloo tnt loor. Tru~ dei&lt;ahtful. Inspect bl
appa~ntNnt

this tandol'liRitlm .

flU.

PREFRRED REQUIREMENTS: PSYCHIATRIC
NURSING BACKGROUND AND MASTERS
DEGREE IN ADM INISTRATLVE NURSING OR
A NURSING RELATED AREA:· MUST BE ALICENSED REGISTERED NURSE IN OHIO OR
ELIGIBLE FOR LICENSING IN OHIO, Attractive compensation package - $46+K/yr
(within 6 mo. to $48+K/yr) with flexible benefit procram (equivelentt 35% of annual
salary) an liability coverage, Send letter of
application ·and resume to Athens Mental
Health Center. Athens. Oh. 45701-4261;
Attn: Mary Jo Ford. deadline for application is July 1, 199L

\

Contact:

· Rhonda Dailey,
~'
RN. RSN.
1 Director of Nursinc

IIIII 1111 01 THIIMUI- DO YIIU . . . 01 CIIS?IUY

a euwm-

THts'IIOI£ 5
Rombloa4 bedlnls. 2both~
\lilcllen, LR. lim
bosonena. Cle.on ond comlortlllle CitY
!lome loclted ,... ttte (JiiO her. Ci1y sthools. Owner mry
Iride.

Vete11ns Memorial
Hospital
'115 E. l1tnorial Drive
'Pomtroy, Ohio 45769
614-992-2104, ext. 213

ill'"'··

1
1

r-.

IN$. IITIM-AI' CIIAI- II¥EIVIEII IM£ will
_, loll- 4 l&gt;edr-, 2 bitlis, hUIIIMI1f
lor'!"!
lflnittl-. IQuipiiOII kltchon, tllll!i~ ,.., wrth -"""'
tnplico wotlt 111Udillo¥e i-t. bnem1111,ps holt w/-1
otr clock. il•lfOUnd pool. 2 car 11'111. 210 m/lwlttt 1 wooded

IC lign.

••

Rood,

Gltlo. 30W7MBM.
RICE- • ._,-

,.;.,., Convet~ilnl locltGn It tf!e edfl of town. Yo see truly de-

':~~;:;~' S©R~}A-l££tfS®
- - - - - - Edllld by CLAY R. POLLAN
:' 0 words
Rearrange the 6 scrambled
below . to .make . 6

IIIWif II

PIIOPIIIT - •
__,_
1 pod IO! 1 doublew~e. 1 101!11&gt; for I molli~ 11Gm! . 0
2 blldrm. home, 2 ""'" laps, 2 -.~~ SJIItms. 2 oln mil. Gel
the MOST ID&lt; 10ur money. $21h. CLOSE IN.
.

...,...ollie

WOlD
GAM I

SCEUXF:

"'

'

'

R AL I 0 T
' 12

13

!.

..
,.,__
•.r
~~:.:ui~Coll'.::...-r:.":""

~ rolllgorotoro, ::..:=;Y:,;I,:;RA;._FIJ::::;;:R"'NITU=R'"E~~'
114-441-3168
LIVING ROOII: Solo I Chair,

--· ~
RiiOmllor renl•- or month.
-~lore ~- -·-•--

aM.

-·

~:':41"' S12011M. 0.1110 Holol.
6
·
Sloopl~rooma with cooking.
• 'oolra · All hook:~~~.
"'
Clll aftor 2:00 p.m., 304·
1111, Ill- WV. -

No.rllud
Ho!Jooltold lurnlotalng. 112 lttl.
olenlolto Rd. Pl. Pl~nt, WV,
eoll :104:111-1410, .
Rahlgoralor $iclo x sido,
Avoeitdo,
OlbMn, . $175; .
R....__tor, 2dr, F"'"' ,,.., leo
11"k:'"fiteo
a •
• "'""
,._,...; A,,'"'•
..oro10&lt;'
2d!, VItello, F~ '1Fr:'·w~:S;
0'
Eloelrta Ronge,
ne •

·

n, - porto,ofHloo.
Pomaroy. Guoronlool iluaftgo Appllancoo,
Coli I"' ••• 7:Jtl •
~
·

loll, ~olo,
614-lll:l•lll7t,

Real Eltete General

' ~~~~------------,

1114.1UK OIIIUIOiotm- Video rOIIII, P!'!Oroam 1rH1
othef ul• rms. locolld In 1 •••i1110'•. IMII! 211ary buldinl with showrootns, 2.11tdrm. apartment .at !torite. Plat 1

:1
L _j_o_£L-s-l-u-sl--IL----11

n&lt;e 2 blldrm . mabi~ hOme. tailor dltoi•.

:.-rl-rl--1Ishe~yhadco-wo:·ker
c:onf1ded
already he;;iJd Ihe rumo1

, 11111 IJIIM, " 11011111 t a o - Ia llilllt Ills 2111,
lR w/~ ..... - ' I b i l l \ - bJ42 . . .

•"""*·

Ill nri 1111 for
....... "' ~·

:.· b6~...:..--r:l
_jMURSIT

Llllf

thai

...:.-1.-..L.-rA--___._ ·

'

cANGy

E
C)

.
•

I was about to repeat " Boy " I
sl~hed, 1he grapevine is lhe one
thtng that can not be replaced h~·
···--------.•

c

8

'

'

R F. r, , N E D
-

'

.

'

e

'

1:. ' I f,

Complete thB chuck!e quot ad
by filling in the missing woo ds
you develop from step No . 3 bplo w.

II 0 II 1

Roc:linor, 114UO;
Swivel Roebr, $11.00; CoHoe 6
End Tabtoo, ....00 Sttt.DINING
ROOM: Tobl' Wlh 4 Poddod
Chalro. $141.00;_, Country Plno
01-1 WHh nneh And 3
Chalrak 12111.00; llotctalng 2
Door Hell taCt· Or ..00
Sol; Ook Tablo1 il:zxn Wllh I
Bow
aChilli,
SIH.OO.BEDROOII: , _ loci:
, _ Su"o (5 pc.l, $341.00; 4
Dnawar Choll, 144.95; Bunk
Bod, $22tl; CornploiO FuR 11oft
Sol, 1105.00 Sot; 7 pc, Cadlr
Boclroom
Su"•·
Slllli.OO.OPEN:
Monday Tlvu
Solurday,
la.m. to
lp.m., Sunday 12 Noon Till
5p.m., 4 111101 Off Roulo 7 On
Rout• 141 In c.onaonory.
.
County Appllaneov Inc. Good
•-~•
- oppi!oneoo, T. -•oa ._ 0 'pon
a a.rn. to I p.m. llon..S.t. 6t4441:1111, 127 3rd. A•o. Ool,
llpolia,OH

$111.00·

Pinsru:ial
far !bole who quaJily
Honds-on training I No homellltdy
Pl'DIA C&lt;llifaod I UAW Appovecl
Commercial Dri•ers Ucenso (COL) pepamion
Job Search Asaistance offered
Weekday and Weetaad cW.O. available

•
•
•
•
•
•

PATRIOT
TRUCK DIUVBR TIWNINO CENTER
1-800~388-1150

A LI!ADER IN SUP!'!.VINOQILWTY TIWNINO
TP niB TRIDINO INOOSTRY.

.I

Real Estate General

Real Eatate General

PRICE REDUCED TO $75.000!!! - On this very
nice bi·level privately setting on a 7.75 acre tract
along Raccoon Creek. Very nice 3 bedroom home
. which includes 3 bedrooms, 21\ baths, la1ge fam ·
ily room wtth kitchenette and wood burning fire·
place. Nice deck overlooking creek with patio underneath. Located only 5 miles from town, but it
seems like a m1llion with all the privacy. 11700

IIOTHIII' BUT COUilT*Y - Very good loca\ion
along Rt 325 just sooth ol Rio Grande. Heres a 1 TOO PERFECT FOR WORDS!! --That's why we in deluxe home for the beginnet. 3 bedrooms, 2 · • vile you to see this 3 bedroom home sitting pretty
' baths. Very nice kitchen. living room, fa !'lily 1oom,
on Neighborhood Road . One look and you'll be
partial basement. Coull1ry surroundmgs. Ctty
hooked on the meticulous housekeeping, like new
schools. $42,000.
8220
carpet, eat·in kitchen with appliances, &gt;I bath in
maste1 bedroom, water sOitener. full house att1c
fan and a full basement lor a wealth of storage
space or a future recreation room or workshop.
This nome is a bell r;nging bargain at only
$53,000!
Washington - Elementary/GAH.S.
schools.
#814

"n. cittlriY ctiMIIIIT S1GII. I leo,......, flrillo-.WIIIo .... lilllll•·

I

\

"

sell thos
imBring us an offer, but be senous because they may just take it. Very roomy and nice 2
story dutch colonial on a 3.5 acre lot teatures 4
6ed1ooms. 2\\ baths, family 100m w~h fireplace
. and deck ove1looking in·ground pool. Also full
basement, 2 car garage, 2 new heat pumps. I mile
from hospital. Price reduced to $115,000. Don't
hesitate because they're go1ng to sell ~soon . Call
loretta McDade.
*502

ALMOST COUNTRY- Happy living starts here in
th1s well-cared lor three bedtoom brick ranch.
There are 2~ baths, a 2 car garage and a large
heated workshop for the craftsman in the family.
Take a look today. $64,000.
8507
I

COIIVEIIIEIIT LOCATION - Located on Rl. 7, 5
minutes from town, this~ a vety n1ce double_wide
home. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, valuted ceilings 1n the
fJmlly room living room and kKchen. Flat lot,
re~ced in .,lrd. Outbuilding. $45,000.
8205

4

6

7

•

9

10

'I

I

OWNER IN SOUTH CAROLINA WANTS AN OF·
FER!! - Cozy 3 bedroom home on the edge of
town. This I~ story home with full basement h~s
more 1oom. than you might thmk. !Jrge eat-an
krtchen with loads and loads of cabinet space,
large liv'ing 1oom and 2 baths. Secpnd kitchen
area in basement als~. Covered patiO, car~ort and
good storqe. Nice nver v1ew also. Walktnll diS'
lance to town. Gas heat wrth central ad'nce re·
duced to $39,900.
*123

RURAL RARITY - 13.9 acres goes wrth this 4
bedroom home on St. Rt. 554 just 5 miles lrom
Cheshire. Enjoy the privacy and convenience at a
price you can alfo1d. $50,000.
•501
BRING US AN OFFER WE CAN1 ~EFUSEU! -:We're offe1ing some of the best bwldmg srtes &lt;n
the ·county. Apprx. 5+ acre s1tes In Green Township. Nice level lots, 1deal settmg for building your
dream home. Crty schools.
#600
OON1 LOOK AT THE PRICE!! - It will shock you
to see that you can still own a home lor $33,500.
You will fond this 3 bedroom, vinyl stded ranch 1n
Centenary close to the convemence store. Smaller remodeled room perfect for sewmg room or
nursery. Master bedroom has been remodeled.
Detached 1 car garage. Approx. 3/4 acre. C11Y
schools. ACT NOW!!
11800
WHAT AWONDERFUL PLACE- Beautifully remodeled, 1edecorated I 'h story home on 13 acres.
Very comlortabfe _and cozy home &lt;ncludes large
eat-in kitchen, dimng area and hvmg_room w1th 11- .
replace, 3 bedrooms, baths and lull finiShed basement with separate kitchen. BONUS - Separate
1 bedroom home perfect for in-laws, relatives or
even rental. Both homes have been extenSIVely
remodeled and 11e In very good cond1hon. Well
maintained barn, tobacco base. Beautiful v1ew
and relaxing atmosphere make It easy to entOY the
clluntr;. Pnc:ed in the SO's.
8211

FINE COUNTRY HOllE - Here is as fine a home
as yoo'll find. Very quiet and Pllcaful setlil&amp; large
spactous home with very large comfortable
rooms. quality buin brick ranch lealures 4 large
bedrooms, 3 full baths, 2 fireplaces plus indoor
BBQ. Large k1tchen with dinene plus formaf din· .
ing room wrth hardwood floors. Full, partially finished basement. ove11ized 2 car garage. Huge
wrap around deck, inground pool and 40 acres to
romp around on. Ower $100,000.
8201
OUT·OF·STATE OWIIER IN A BIND! - Must let
this 3 bedroom brick and frame ranch go NOW! 2
baths, family room , fireplace. nice Hat I acre lot.
Possible VA loan assumpt1on. $55,500, Pick up
that phone and call TOO~ Y!
83a.
COUNTRY COMFORT- There's a splendid coun·
try w1ew in any direction from this 2 story home
near Champion F11ms on Rt. 554. Home includes
open kitchen and hvmg room , 3 bedrOQms, one
mce bath and util~y room. O•er lam of fairly llat
ground. Poss1ble 9.5'11 1oan assumption. Priced at
$32.500.
8224
FOR STARTERS. IT HAS All OF THE ESSENTIALS
including a vety resonable price tag. 3 bedroom
. ran ch in • conventent location mcludes living
room, faily room, eat-In k~chen and bath. New~
carpet in most rooms. Heat pup wrth centr1l11r.
large flat lot withm 2 miles of town. Priced to sell
at $43,500. ·
HOG

Wiseman Real Estate
(614) 446-3644
,David WlitmCI!n, Broker, 446·9555

LORETTA McDADE, 448-7728
B.J. HAIRSTON, 441-4240 '

,,

JOB WITH A FUTURE!

NEW ll
AKOIE FOR YOUR FAll·
ILY!
livabilrty describes this 3
bedroom ranch. Large living/dining room combination. New carpet in k~chen. lq5 baths plus nice
utility room. Friendly country setting for yout
ily. $39,000.

QUin COUNTRY SURROUNDINGS! - Vety
mcely decorated ranch home petfect for starting.
located at the end Of a quiet lane, this 3 bedrOOjll
home is ready to move into. Fully equipped eat:m
kitchen, dining room . l1vmg room wrth attr~chve
lireplace and nict, large lawn, all make thos the
home for you. Priced at $59,900.
•zza

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ANrl•

OWNERS TAKING ALOS'S- Nef&lt;ly listed home in
Green Township wKh 8 acres of ground. Sellers
moving South and want lo unload this 3 bed10om
2 bath home. Liv1nR room has cathed1al ce1i1nR.
very nice kitchen. formal dining room , 21arge covered decks for outdoor ~Ieasure. Oversized 2 car
carport. Priced to move at $55,000.
•226

I

fQ--

IJnluntloltod

PRICE REDU.CED- Stretch the Value of Your
Dolllll - In ih1S surptisingly affordable brick
ranch. 3 bedtooms. I~ baths, attached garage
and nice large kitchen. You'd better be an eager
beaver at the new low pric~ of $47,000. •505

:. simple words. · Print leiters o_f
: ~ach in ils line of squares.

mlloiWGOdl,
...,.•.c:ou~ bullll -

r:..t'ZSW. ,

wa-.,

~

Mol"-.

Ook

AAP/EEO EMPLOYER

·''

ltltl'llltame cal lor '"' IPpotnlmonl.

M7t. AITIIT. . -

Solid

The Athe.ns Mental Health Center,a120 bed
JCAHO accredited, Medicare certified adult
inpatient, public psychiatric hospital is
seeking a Nursing Director to provide leadership and direction to the Nursing De·
partment staff and participate in the overall operation of the hospital as amember of
the Executive Committee and Governin&amp;
Board, Interested candidates should have a
minimum of 5 yaars axperi1nce in administration and 1118naament, including development of goals and obj~ctives; plannin&amp;.
organizing, developing and implementing
nursing policies and procedures; developing standards of care; evaluating and monitoriq nursin&amp; care programs, staffin&amp; patterns and scheduling; knowledp of J.C,A,
H,O. and Medicare Standards and demonstrated laadership abilit'es with a multi-discriplil!ary treatment team approach,

a.r ..,_ 112 IIIIa

•

Old

DIRECTOR OF NURSING

A-. 51..., 1

t:hollo

53

Good a

41
tor Rent
,, HoUSH
.

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1

HousehOld

5I

· Houaehold
GOOds

-y

1121•

R-

DIRECTOR OF PATIENT ACCOUNTIN(l

446-6106

I

-

7,

-

VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 318-1821
DIAN CALLAHAN, RI!ALTOR, 441·1101
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 441·1117
RUTH IAIIR, REALTOR, 441·07U
DIIORAH ICITEI, REALTOR, 441·1101
LYNDA PRALIY, REALTOR. 441-11111
MICHAEL MILLER, ASIOCIATI!, 441,110f

I:AIUI MOH£Y IINdlno - 1

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lor 1 or 2 " " -· No ground opt, ldoot lor - ·
11111•. 1122&amp; pluo UIIIHIM. 814:44J: 11241. pluo oloc. Upolalt11 fur11331
nlolted op1. I2JI. plt11 otoe.
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Protor 1 odull. Coipol, IIIC,
or rani, lumlaltod.IIIC, Privo... Roflroncoo ond dopoOII.

Sonol

clan,

lito -

Yoor

mooloo, CIIISU 446 :zsea. EOH.
oport::"" oiRI= mont. Ulltllloa Pokl. No Polo.
8-h Slt11ol, lllddlopoot, Ohio. Aport.-o In lllddloom. From 3110F-Avenuo.
LAI'IIE'S FURNITURE
One room oHieloney 11&gt;1 tiN. CaH 614-111:1·771t EOH.
45
Cornplllo
tumlaltlnao.
Fumlahecl
Nflf'line• •nd depoelt, 304! Modein downtown, 1 IR, comHo!JN: . llon:loa, 11-1. 1~
..:1:2_ .
pltlo kllchon. CA. 114-441:01:11.
11322, I out BuloviHe Rd.
Room a
FrM ~Cornptotoay lurnlohocl omoll lit. Vorrt011 Ave lumlaltacl lpalt- ..lor 2 ot I
PICK- FURNITURE

w....

Oao--11-~..

ltoul:J0M11.111l
""" lo
elfl

11v•- 1 --• 2 bod-

avolloblo lor

La4a 1 - - , .

___·_______ j E

Real Estate General

=..

lrona $112/mo, Walk to ahoo 1 - -

naw holM oon.tructlon on
RoWftum Rood. Pavocl road,
couniJ
Naaonable
iHiriOtlol.. Complolo lnlormo·
lion ...loci .......... :JOI.I?San, ololtn D. Oortoclt, no
...... seldatrdliiW,piMH.

'

Real e-. General

1

=·-':'~pr::,."':,· ::.on . :,:Dow~no::to:;.lra_F_u-rn-llhed--A-pa_rl-_ :~•j,:-~: :.~~-::,~,:
mont. Walor Paid, S30olmo. l271 IIIIo, Aloo, 2 BR oportmont In
- :~ -.w.meIOfdly, ~::."i1~aa
:rl
:=,·:..·_.._Cidot
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' .!:R: tato: o:· :;'": ;nclo=:·: :'M:;: :•..
=r~~=031·__ 46 Space for Rent
~':~ =':...~w=~
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
11 Help Wanted
eou--'
Hamo Pork, lltyor Sol, S1IO &amp;;;j;h!r;lrtpoot
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WOoltor, SN· All
Wllh

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Household
GOOdI

Buy.,-· ~~- ~
I WAIN
Dining
RINT 2 OWN
1134 It
p
rat,
AUCTION
I
FURNITURE.
12
Room SUMo, lncluciM Plo lohi,
114-444:S1111
- : M.T.W. a.oa. to 1:
Olivo
II.,
Oolllpollo.
I
Uood
polo,
,
2 Solid Wood ler 11-. 1 Yolr
Vl'ra Furnllura
:00 lo 1:00 p.m.
Nol
lor
Old, ... lloclt; 1 Floor lonap, 1 . Sohi I Choir, 111.10 WMII; tumlture. helllra, WHtern &amp;
, _ . _ , . .h. CA.
11t 441 0331•
Work·•·
114:44WI51.
Y- Old, m; EntMalnrnonl R,c:IIMr, IUl' Wook, SCIIIYOI
a.n. No Pela. lllfllwiM I
Unll, ~Wood ~. 1 Yoor - · lUI Wook.Bunk Bod
31&lt;1 ... lllddl
Qltlo, 1 Old,
, 114-441 allor Complllo 11.41 Wook, 4 Dr-r
Dopoolllloqulrwd. - - - -1:1 I d Will
fumWIId
2 bellFumllhod Ataeolftlooti, 1 loci:
4pJII.
ChiM,
IU4 7;1!1.17
-·
- .._. rtitUirad.
oplo, ..-:104:
SUllo,
pc.,
Wook,
- . 12H'nto. Ultlllloo Pold, "'""'
- and
carpe~ $4.00 Yard I Up. VInyl lnal ~II ledd&amp;ng,Counhy Pine
14
Bualnesa
107 - . . , Gollpollo, .,.,...._ 1824-.
1111 l 14.11 Yord. Porch Tuil; Dlnollo Wlh I 4 Chalro.
Training
.:.-~a~ftor;t7p.llt=ji.i;ii;;·;;:-s;:jij Now Ill pit. apptC81Jon1 for 11M l Q,ll Vanl. llolohon IIO.N Wook.OPEN:
FUmlohod E,_
11110 MIMn •pa*allftl:l. ~I Hol»- Carplllt,IJI&gt;por Rl- Rood, 614- Thl" llfunloy, flo.m. to lp.ltt.,
Sundoy 12 Noon Till llp.rn. 4
Ulllltloa Paid, BhW,..th, 701 lng OaD.. all - ·· loundry 444:11144,
lllloo 011 Route 7 On Roulo 141,
F01111h, CloiUpollo, 114 Ul 1411 to
SHORT-TERM TRAINING FOR A
-•
· liM
- I.trash
_ .plolwp,
_ 304-773· - GOOO
USED APPUANCES In Caotlonlty.
oftor 7p.m.

rnllo
~~~ below •own.. owerla-..1
aking river,
....-_no
lkrllablo
Ctalldton, Polo,
F - _..

--.n1:JI: eo~r

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=

' SCRAM-LETS
EXCUSE
TAILOR
BISQUE
TRUISM
AGENCY•
GENDER
ELECTRONICS

roomo,

4 - . All nleoly

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iDNnll •lha'r ~
~r Oillpol
I'MY,
or 1-

91- lnoUillotlon And

5I

Apartment
for Rent

tor Rent

ESTATI!S, 531 JoeUori PIU ~-•--

-·-

11011Erll4:432_.711 old, TDS1.

Aplnment

'::I

2 Bod,_ ,.,.,mont. 33S
s.-r!Avonuo,IM:441-Q07.
1M locUli Stroot 3 Room F.,.

o..r :seo ...........

~-

.

Apartment
for Rent

~CIIolor4:GOI04:

tor MMZina
-I'll!:
ardellHOWl
m CMge
Coli.
Ool ~ fiom - 1 IM-C32,

o,lllpollo.

lA traitor, IIIII Crook Rd.

0434.

'72---··

£d,11f

44

-soJmo. S100 clop. &amp;14-:te7-

114
- ••••••
- · Cllilpolo, 011

lntln,

Sunday nmea Sentinel Page D5

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

aM .....

.,. •nn
Eant &amp;In llortoyt

June 11, 11MU

June

CAROLYN WASCH, 441-1007
CLYDE B. WALKER, 2411-15278

.,,

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�·~

nmes

Pomeroy-Middleport r..alllpolla, OH Point PI•Pnt, WV

Sentinel

'

June 11,1111
June 16,1111

ii.

wv

Auloe for Sele

72 Trucks lot Sale

Auto Parts a

1171 lnte!MIIoNI, 1'111 .... bod, ( - lood llorl, good

nmea

Sentlnei-Page-07

81

Acceuorlea

to Rlploy, wv.
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1113 Chovr .... Hew

IARTRII--.l!r:!
Tclau:•l&amp;,.,.. Ianoe ...

or Ole.

TrhNIIII4 , _ ltll ......,

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..._., ........ A n d Only 4.000 llllool 11W?NI2'i
••• 7p.at, '

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Ml s5 R ~ IEJI'fld. Nlw

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IVAIII, I " ' * - , OH. 1 -

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1171 Cadll 1 fltlttucod, aood
- : lllloh.-. ltoo or Tilde
For ,........, el 1!qull Yl1ue. 114-

2511·1443, blwn......... p.m.

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111711 Clllyelar Cot-aba 1110

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ConcJolt A piM!Ie otpllc II...,
Ron EY1110 E............ Jock·
Nn, OH 1400-U7 IW
,_,.... ~ Top, bioi.
11n1 Condlllon, 112111 or
tv. Ill. Polio Door, f!SO. l14o

S1100•.JIIre

11Wt:Hlll. Allor
ciiiiOW'IHIIS. .

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On F. Crelll IW. ,.._ ....
pllae,ol:.lulp, - tllllw.y. • ,..

· lillian
iDW•
l!ww
Ooillt. Air C.ndlllan.d, Clean.
114. 2124.

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1tT.I Yamlha TX 500, 11450. 1143417-7111.
.

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.

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84

Electrical &amp; ·

Serv1ces

-nllal

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ox llu:

On: I»UDR.

'llallorlln

...... end ct.DII ~h
T..... V Hoell Una, Willi l..ooi I
...,.,.., Aaldng Prloo: WI.
114'441-7140.

O.E.IIIr-,~1TU,
~

Plumbing a
Heating

Refrigeration

,..,_,o-..
.. c•rr

. . . .,

82

OWNER IEDUCED THIS PROPUn TO SEUI - 4 year old
vinyl sided ranch style home wkh 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, lam·
ily room, dming room, full basement, heat pump Cefltral air,
2 decks and a lot more. Only $45,000. Call today for your ap·
pointment.
8324

Home

...... - : ltlll Ford "-''I! XLT
Plcllup. 1\110 Acluol lllloo.
ao Enduro 11o1-1o.
' Qravely All~ Colll14-

. Wtdd'lnl

0

KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - Spacious..attractive. home w1th
3 bedrooms 2 baths family room, hvmg and dmmg room,
breakfast area: heat pump central air w/ el.ectric or propane
gas lurnace backup. 1900 sq. ft. m/ll1v1ng area. Part1al
basement. Big home and 20 ac. m/1.
#329

oandltlon, 114-

•

....... ,_ -

D. C. Mml.SalK. Inc.
CenMillu'lo Inc. 4'1118
lp ,,... lng .ln ......

1tn Ulw
Hondo
1,100
IIIIM.
- 1- ~· $1,100.
114-371-2ta7 aftar 7p.m.

O......,.to-yaur

1114 Ford F-110, _ , whlol
flue, otop olcle bod_._30tl e cyt,

-·

.........

,.,.,.....

Real Estate Generai

.

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE ojt

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de....... hu .... , ...
.lhouMncleol
clolln.

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OONNA CRliENBIRY
· E.S.R., lox 111
GeiHPOflo, Ohio 4il31

..

'

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1101*1, Ukt now. 120 mllto.
Paid 1111, wiU 1111 lor $375. 114-

.

• • '• •

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. 514 Second 'Avenue ,

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lleolllcal,
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1711.

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UphOIItery

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lrl.......,Uphollltrlnt
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21 ,..... Tho
In - - • .,._......
Call
fiw -

Real Eatate Genftl

lUI Rlnkar \1.201, V.. lull canVUI.... f11,500. 110 . - , . .h

rm.,

today.
NEW LISTING- 19.14 acres more or less, vacant land.
Property has royalties from producing oil well. Ca ll fo r loca·
lion and price.
#326

llollor, 104.171-1171 or 111-42a

!ItO - · YorMha 8ool 11-,
E x - Condltlan, JIOO, 114-

44t+4SS.

Ill FLOIIDA YACJlTIOI
Here· is your chance to spend a
weeks - a
month- 3 months- 6 months, or as long as you want to.
In your mobile home in SUNNY FLORIDA. Fully equipped, .
with a color TV. Located approx. 20 ~~tiles N.E. of
Buy this, then pack your car Wllh the clothes you'll
and go spend the 111rm witter in Florida. Phone now
deteils..
tZfOAI

PH. 446·7699 or 446-9539
LEADINGHAM lEAL ESIA11

c:om--

YOU'll MAKE ASPLASH WITH TillS ONE Just off SR 35 Ill is lovely home offers 3 BRs, 2
baths, LR, FR, dining area, equipped kitch~.
16x32 pool w/vac. syslefll, 2 car attached gar·
age, gas heat, cent. air. Very well kept home.
ean for appointmefll.
.
211 ACRES. IIORE OR LESS, HUNTIIIGTON
'IOWISHIP - Brick honie otlf!!S 6 BRs, 2
baths,' eat·in k~ehen, LR, FR, elec. and wood .
hal~ cellar house, log bam, sheds, frontaeeon · '
Raccoon Creek and little R~ccoon.

stwn. low 40's. Mike II! an offer
IIDDIIPOII- lftU
(IIIII t1ao1 111• """' has a """""'
l!ill! It, ~ bill!. bficl&lt; FP.
u~ has 3 1111.. Ill, lR. Ill, 2
ballls, w. utilty nn., den, """ fir•
PICt, 1)45 sq. ~ iYi111 space. PlUS

,_d-

lltJctlol 2 1:1r 111111". ., IGI
w/lrlolher 2 car pr. plis utility llldi
You must 101 INs
IPiirlcialo

"""'to

110 S, !RD. IIDDLII'OII- Victo-

OWN YOUR OWN FAST FOOD BUSINESS Plus laundry. Located ori St. Rl. 35. Call f~r
more Information.

riln style, tdrl nee, 3 Bft. u .. bw.
OR, LR, FP, N!l basement, ctntral

hal &amp;air. Abo" ,... ,... $49,90C.

Good-··

•

'011101'liii,IJ
I .....
am11. tencod
in

IIAY BE WHAT YOU ARE LOOKING FOR Newer all brtek home just five minutes from
downtown. 3 BRs. 3 bitlis, great room, family
room, 2 c.ar elteched garage, heat pump/cent.
·air, city utiit1es.

.

t ACIE lOt on H1rrisonvitll! Rd.
&amp;OOd b~£ tot wi1ll woods. $7.000

DON'T IE CRAIPEO FOR ROOM - Nice
home and 16 acres, m/1, on st. Rt. 218. Four
BRs, batll, LR, ·kkchen, 1~11 basement. City
school district.

LAIIE HOllE f111tures 4 BRs, Ill batlls,
krtchen, LR, DR, unattached 18129 garage,
North Gallia School Dist.

COIIEI LOTS, very nice home oilers 3 BRs,
bath, kftchen, carpel fireplace, I car de·
!ached prage.

PRIVACY SEEKERS LOOK AT THIS ONE! Large
log home can ba purthased wfth 162 acres or
2 acres. This home ~ers 4 BRs, 3 baths,
equipped krtchen, LR, FR, 2 fireplaces, heat
pump/cent. air (backup .system), oversiZed 2
car attac~ed garage. F~onllge on Raccoon
Creek. '·'
·

'THE RIGHT PLACE FOR YOUR F~IILY- Very
nice ranch style home in a family oriented
neighborhood. Offers 3 BRs, kitchen w/ran$8.
fam1ly rm., LR, nic' level lot, gas heal, cny
' school~ Call today for an appointment

HOllE AND 17.6 ACRES 11/l, GREEN TWP.
- Home oilers 3 BRs, belli, LR, knchen, at·
!ached 2 w garage. Nice patio.
'
NICE STAITEI HOllE ...,.. Located just at the
edge of town. This home futures 3 bedrooms,
batll, .living room, kttchen, dining room and a
full bas.ellleflt F1ve minutes to downtown.
$25,000 - Approx. I acre llong St. Rt. 588
,J400 ft. of frontage). Small home olfefs 2 BRs,
bitth, LR, krtchl'fl, mctllile home pad on prop·
erty.
,
•
.
.
'
.
AnEITIONII Very nice home on Graham
School Road - Ranch wnh 3 BRs, LR, FR.
knchen, bath, cent air, 2 fireplaces, cny
schools.
..,

COIIFORTABLE LIVING- away from the hec·
tic crty llte. Verl mce home offers 3 .BRs, 2
baths kitchen, LR, FR, DR, 8x26 porch 1n front
and rear. lots ,of mce wood in Ill is home. • ·DOn WAIT- Extra nice home and 20.390
acres, m/1. Attractive features include
IIEJGS COUIITY- 240 acres m/1, Bedford &amp; equiPfled eat-in kitchen, 3 BRs, 2 baths, LR,
C~ester Twp., old origtnallog home with an ad·
FR, carpet; cent. air. Bam on properly. City
dibon added, driled well, county water mila·
sch~.
~
ble. Has baen owned by the same family for
four generations.
6.49 ACRES, 11/l, fronts on SR 325, Sec. 34,
Raccoon Twp. Build a new home or. put a moIIOIIll HO• and .82 acres m/1, $14,500. 2 bile home here.
BRs,'LR, krtche11 w/range, fefrig., washer and
'
dryer, rural water.
CHILLICOTHE ROAD- Ranch
style home offers 3 BRs, bath, knchen w/range, refrig..
·SECLUDED HALF ACRE SURROUNDED BY
washer, dryer, laundry rm.,gas heat city uti!~
PliES - $12,000. lovely for your mobile ties.
home. Call for direction,
nACRES 11/L. SALEITOWNSHIP- MEIGS
COICinE BLOCK fiAIAGE IN VINTON COUNTY - Elec. on property, well, pasture,
28x32. Concrete floors, 220 electric service, wooded and tillable.· $27,000.
forced air fuel oillurnce, two 7x9 overhead.
doors, one walk·in door.
$21,000. Ill LOTS - Chestnut St., 2 BRs,
batll, LR, kitchen, city utilnies.
3 ACRE LOT FOR SALE - Located along SR
160 in Cherolais Acres.
NEAR GAGE- PERRY TWP. - 26.624 acres
m/1, bam and 2 springs on properly.
5 BEOIOOII HOllE near town wtth 2 baths,
equipped kitchen, LR, FR, fuH beseme~~t, 2 car EXTRAORDINARY - 112 A. m/1, beautHui
praga; liS heaVcentralair.
· large lot home, 4 BRs,. 21! baths, LR, knchen.
DR, F~, 3 fireplaces. Call for more details.
All IEIIODEllD .AID WAITING JUST FOR
YOU- F1¥e minutes frpm town on St. Rt 588.
ROOMY HOllE - Vlll11e of Vinton - Ill
Very ntee home offers 2/3 BRs. LR, kitche11,
story.
5 BRs, LR, DR, FR, kitche11, carpet c~y
beth, new vinyl siding and insulation.
water, 2 rm. bldg., formerly used as office,
$elter house.
CUISETO TOWIIIUT SECWDED SETTINGLocatad on Nei&amp;llbotilood Rd., III story home
'
'.~
oilers 4 Bill. batll, equ1pped krtchln, LR, DR,
part blsanient. llloc:k bldg. dh 3 rm5. and
beh1nd

OFFICE 992·1188
HOME 982·5192

RUTLAND - Hysell Run load - Juslwhal rou're looking
for! Hhas approx. 38 acres with 1 I!OOd buildong s~e. It has
water, eleclric~y, and free gas. Anil is priced Just rtght.
$21,000
JUST BElOW RACINE OAII - You'ft love the VIEW of the
GREAT FISHING alone the beautiful Oh1o River 11 you own
th1s 3.6 acre camp srle dh 786 ft. of river frontage h's approx. 1/3 cleared and has its own gravel driveway and elec·
tricity available.
FOR ONLY UO.OOO
MIDDLEPORT - Rutland Street - You need to see this
one! It's a nice 3 bedroom ranch style home wrth a full basement. 2 fireplaces, carefree vinyl sldmg,lully carpeted, and
a I c.ar garage all on a 2 acre lot.
PRICED AT JUST $39.500

;

t

FAIRVIEW SUBDIVISION - UnuiUII· Unique· Different
- Descrtbes tiltS octogon shaped house that has 3 bed·
rooms that open to the outdoors. Has 10 sets of sliding glass
doors that DPefl onto erther an upper deck or lower deck.The
woods in back are cool &amp; prtvate in the summer. Has a full
basement and 2 baths.
REDUCED, $54,900

'

., ' '

GOOD fN· TOWN lOCATION - Just a block
from grocery store.' Nice home offers LR,
k~chen, BRs, bath, large front porch.
lOTS TO OFFEI - This property· is locatad
·ust at the edae of town on Rt. 160 and has
our tracts, prtced separately, One features a 2
BR hoine wHh gas heat Three lddibonlllots
for sale - Cell our offig for dellils.

l

k~chen wlllll&amp;e·lr

lllbn•
just mtnula to
·Home features 3 BRs,

Ftlal

Real &amp;tate General

relrig., LR, DR, carpel, fire·
place, city scltoql dtSl

PRIDE Of OWIIhstiiP - BeautHul home
srtuatad on 3.605 acras' mll. Four BRs, 21!
batlls, eq'uippal kftcben. DR~ !-ft, FR. Cent
vec. syst~l !aree ~-~ pond, beautiful
detk work. wtl for delltls, •
\
FAMILY SIZE HOlE - Allllctive home
locltad at Cant..uy. oilers 4 BRa, 2 baths,
krtchen, LR. ,AIIIched garage aqd nicala"'\
.FAIII FOI SALE -lilYA• TOWIIIHP- 86
acres, m/~ older farm hou• wHh 2/3 bed·
1001111, batll, Lll• •en. sema1 outbuildinp, ·
IIIII! bitm, tubacco base. Call for directions.

32 Locuat StrMt, Osillpolle

Ken
Allen C. Wood, R..ltor-44e •._23
MOlle Catn1erbury, Reeltor-441·3408
JNnet1e Moore, RN1tor-2B8-1741

992-2259

MAIN

POMEROY,
OHIO
,.

1,:

.. '

located on Second Avenue, ~~~~~~1~r:.
downs!Jirs and 4 rooms ~d Ill

HOllE IN IIERCERVILL£- 3 bedrooms, living room, dining
·area, kitchen. 2 baths, \!acre lot more or less, storage build·
ing. Call for appointment.

:

IAI..OW IIDGE - 16.82+ acres with mobile home. Furn-.
ture, wOOdburner, shed. Properly 1s located in Eastern
School District ASKING $16,000.

l

POMEROY - Avery nice comfortable home has 2 'o 4 bed·
,, rooms, 2 baths carpet and full basement and mce yard.
•• ASKING $27,000.

:; :! lisll~i .cabin or comfortable home. ASKING $7.

IIIDOLEPOIT - IHclt bat- AI II Story frame home
wtth 2 bedrooms. Newly ramodeled. Comes with new Wisher,
dflll 1111111 Md refrtlefllor. Also, a 9 piece livin• room
suite.' 3 beds. and 2. ni&amp;ht sllnds.
JUST Stt,!Oo .

led I ftoor plan home. 3 bedrooms. extra large s1tlln.1deck~
., ·• e~~Joyinl tile summereven1nas -great for enlerlllmnstThtS
home can ba yours for $29,900.

·' WAIT -1 flOO' frame cozy home, 4 rooms, n~ bath, sheds,
? Jlldljl space and riwr fronllae grill for summer aet~;o·

.

~ CLOSE TO rou- COUIITRY,SEniNGI Recently remode·

C

- 3 Ill, I beth, lulch.. w/ranplnd relr~
llfiiDr, llx24 FR. LR, flrtplact.J.!Itlchld llf·
• · Clfl for appointment. PR~~&lt;t HAS BEEN
REDUCED.

IIEIIDA JEFFEI$ .......................................... 992·305&amp;
DAIUIE ~ ........................................ H2-e315
IAIIDY .IQI8........................................... 992·5371
SIIIIYL lAUD................................ .. ......367-0421

...

CliVI

·Ranny Bleokbum, Broker

_·441·0008

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IIGIAIDI aOullYAID - All IIICI, 3
8Rs Lll ldldl... batll, lui basemen!, gas
~ air, alllched aarage, erty ~ools.

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In WIEIIIOT TO S£LLIUOUISELfl TO FlU lEAII YOU
0

=M:uur:·EL -,~=Jiu=~:.

HEADACHE-= EIDLESS MOlY ... CAll US TODAY!

lEW USTIIG- Privacv, convenientand excellent location.
Rio village, plus 4 BR, Ill batll, liv. rm. wnh wbl~. DR,
ltlttnen. What else could you want Alovely larae family rm.
w~h wblp, and ut~ity room in basement. Sl.ldln.gglass doors
to back area. This house has been 11111 matntatned and 1s a
well insulated home. Lilli! I car prage and loads ofstorage.
call for appointment today.
3 BEDROOIIIRICI- Situated on I acre, 5 m11es from Galli·
polis on Bulavtlle Road, Kyger Creek School D1stnct. 1,440
sq. ft. Priced mthe 60's.
GREEII ACRES- Two lots. I large level homesite, 140 It by
14811., crty water, Green school, good location. Priced right
MSIO~.OO.
·
.
2 ITOIY FIAIIE DUPLEI - lDCated 10 Gallipolis, walk1og
dlsllnee to town. 2 epartmenls - one 5 rooms and I \l
baths, one 3 rooms and bath. Call for eppointme11t today.
10 ACRES, Perry Twp. Some t1mber. Buy now lor $10,000.
WE HAYE ·IU ILDIIIG LOTS in Rodney Village II. Clllfor more
information.
II ACID 11/L Ill OHIO TWP. Fronllp on St. Rt. 7 wrth
10111t timber. Priced II $10,000.
7t ACIU 1101£ • .LESS locatld in Ohit Twp. The property
hn 101111 timber. Call lor IIIOrt lnf01111111on .
ITOP 1Y OUII O,.ICI POll A COMI'UTI
01' OUII UITINQI.

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, Kyger Creek school u~~~h·~~~~;~~
baths, family room •
more.
deta1ls.
CITY PROPEm - Only $16,900 tor thiS 3 bedroom home.
Co uld be good rental ' Investment or starter home.
#333
GAVIN OR. - 2 WAYS TO BUY -Straight out or land con·
tract. 3 bedroom home; nice fenced yard, new carpet, newly
,...
Painted inside and out ' lamrly room and more. .$34,000.
f339
REDUCED TO $37,500- Kerr·Bethel Rd. 2 bedroom home
with lamilv roomJ~ts of furnishlr\.RS. lar\ll! t, car garage, se·
1 acre.
parate apa~ment 011! rents for .$250 month . ..1on I pus
Owner wants !his one sold!!!
N306
IT. 141 IS THIS ATTRACTIVE 3 BEDROOM VINYL SIDED
HOllE wrth family room, dining area, bath and more on 2.5
acres m/1. Askin&amp; $54,900.
#275
· BEAUTIFUL SmiiiG - And tllis 3 bedroom, I bat.h and
family room home. Also lerJ! building on 1.390 acre 1n c~y
schools. Call for more information.
8320
ST. RT. 581. 200 FT. OF IDAD FRONTAGE- I acre of nice
FLAT ground. Just like new 2 bedroom mob1le home w1th ex·
·pendo, liYin&amp; room, lovely dinin( room w/wood floors and
bow windows. large 2 car detached garage. Also an extra
mobile home pad and hookup wtlh separate drtve. Pride 10
their home is reflected here. City schools.
f347
ADAMSVILLE AREA- 1.9 acre m/1 and 2 bedroom vinyl
sided home. Has fenced area for animals. Also n1ce garden
area. Rural water. Only $21,600.
#328
PEACEFUL AND SERENE- lots of privacy.Very nice country home. large living room w/woodburmng(weplace. Eat·tn
country kHche11 w/appliances. 3 bedrooms,l.25 acres more
or less. top of 111ound swimmmg.pool. Very mce home wrth a
Pretty setting. Kypr Creek or B1dwell schools. Your cho1ce.
#349

ST. RT. 124- UUCRES II/LAND Alii STORY ALUII·
NUl-SIDED HOllE w~h 3 bedrooms, bath, k1tchen and liv·
ing room, 2 car garaJe, pole building wished, sate114e dis h
and more. Askmg $46,900. Only $39,900.
*284

PRICE REOUCEDII-Investment property 1n Vinton, 6 room
house located along Main Street.Rent or live in- BUY NOW
for only $12,000.

·:

vm liCE PIIC£ FOI AYEIY ..CE IIOil

IN CITY - 3 bedroom, I bath, kitch en, li vin g and din ing
rooms. Gas heal. Also woodburnel. Part1al basement. Only
$18,500.
.
.
#332

NEW LISTING- THIS HOllE SPARKLES and offers 3 bed ·
rooms, 2 baths, cozy family room with fireplace, fully
equipped kitchen, 16x32 in·ground pool. 2 car garage.
Located in a lovely area just minutes from Gallipolis. Call today for details.
11336
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS - 12.9 acres mil located .in·
Cheshire Twp, Approx. 700' road frontage, good home s11e
wHh barn. Rural water available. Agood buy at $16,500. Not
restricted.
#335
NOW HERE'S AN OPPORTUNITY to buy a home and stop
paying all that rent, w1th a little down and easy payments. 2
bedrooms, bath, k~chen, living and d1ning rooms. One car
sarage, partial basement. Owner may go land contract. Only
S29,500.
m8
. CITY SCHOOLS- 14170 BEDROOM 1984 OUKE MOBILE
HOlE ON NICE LOT. Completely furnished except for beds.
Electric lurnace and air conditioning. Gardentub and s.epa·
rate shower m bath. Above Around pool, 2 ut1hly bu1ldmgs,
one with electricity and concrete floor. CaH today. #342
IN CITY- 3 bedrooms, I II baths, family or dimog room,eat·
in kitchen living room, enclosed back porch, walkmg diS·
tance to sthool or grocery. This might be what you are look·
ing for. Call today.
•353

room,
mtnt "'/&lt;turlw hodi'DOIR
AC unit. 2
ll•oo fioot .,.....1 ""' '""· Al:so so1n.~
•carpeting
I
home. Large lots!

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NEW LISTING- FIX IT UP- and resell or ren t out. 3 bed ·
rooms. Home, large Hat lot. paved street Only $19,900.
:
#327

-i

IAUII ADDtnOII - Beautiful laying 178d17 lot in nice
subdivision. TPC water and Columbus Southem Eleclric
available. No mobile homes perm1tted. Great build inc site.
$1,500

PO•IOY -Ill. 7 - Approx. 18 acres of land, LCCO water
&amp; electric available. WIU SELL ON lAND CONTRACT.
.
$20,000

rn

' 446-1066
....
Morgen, Reeltor/Baoker-441-0871

LAND COIITRACllO QUALIFIED BUYER vm NtCE IAIICII lfYLE IIOIIE lOCATIO
Sl.200 down payment $363.45 per mo. MO.
ON STAU IDUTilM- 3 BRs, LR, kftchlf! ,
deled home is vacant a.nd ready for a new
w/range, refrigerator, one ear atllcftad gar:•
owner.
r age. 100x300'11. lot.
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NEW'LISTING - KINEON DR.- Rench style
$45,000- ST. RT. !lit- 3BRs, ~!itt~ en.
home: 3 BRs, beth, LR, kitche~.lull basement.
FR, l*rl basement. very njce home.
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111111 FARM - Located on BulaviHe·Porter
OWIIER
WILL
FIIAIICE
DOWN
PAYIIEJn
...;,.
Rd.- 13.44 acres and a nice one story home
Lovely 2 story home · in count!f, .aRs.
wtth 31!Rs, 2 baths, LR, kitchell, FR. DR, Car·
country
011, llx24 Ul; 181120 lllllttt
pet, oil and electric healing. 4 car unattached ' BR .nth ltildtlft,
skyfi&amp;ht
..d allis doars to deck. f,
metal garage, bam, epprox. 4 acres fe11ced
bitlis,
full,
balemllt
villi sidlnJ. s~tia11d oa
pasture.
7 acres more or fea ·on State flaule,
•
RACCOON CREEK UIT - Near Core. Septic
2Ut AdiES .11/L. liar Cr~ ld., OhtO
tank on properly, rural water end elec. eveila·
T.,.- Horne oilers 3 BRs, 2 baths. knchen. 2
ble. $7,900.
car prage, new barn.
ATTENTION IIIIIIT£RS - 35 acres in Clay
Twp, Sm1H frame house on properly, 2 water
taps. $15,000.
• RIO GRANDE AREA- 2.87 acres, mil, lovely
2 story home wrth 3 BRs. Ill batlls, kitchen,
SUOO - 17.5 ACRES VACANT lAND LR. ldeany located nsar new highway ..
Perry Twp., Symmes Creek bottom land. Some
hill. Tobacco base.
VACANT LAND 01 IT. 581 CLOSE TO TOWN
- Nice building s~e.
5 ACRE LOT$ FOR SALE -GREEN TWP. Ctty schools. Fairfield Vanco Rd. area.
PRICE IEDUCED - ~liE AIID 20 A., 11/L,
3 BRs, bJ!h:..l!._k_i!.~ ... 36115 bam, lots Ill
$32,000. EXCElllNT STARTER HOllE - 3
fruit trees. Ulllu... nAIIT$ THIS ONE SOLD!
•
BRs, LR, kitchen, batll, laundry, attached ill· •
age.
,
FOUl IEDIOOII HO. 4-SALE - Ill batha,
k~chen, LR,DR, 18x28 unattacltld g11ap. {
BUILD A NEW HOllE OR PUT THE IIOIIll
HOllE HERE - 29.8 acres m/1 vacant land.
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Frontage on St. Rt. 160. Rural Wiler milabte.
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THREE ACIES + 3 BR home wtlh LR. equ1pped
$16.900.
k1tchen, carpetln&amp; lui besemitlt, cent. ltr, I
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car attached carage, RIVER FRONTAGE!
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2.4 ACRE TRACT - COIIIIERCIAL Sift f1Xp.u,Po - !lome o«ers 3 BRs, bath. ~tt.,
Located on Upper ~. 7 across from the new
lR ' 3 .... 'unattached wtJiahop.
shopping center

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$41.000.00 - Crty property, 2 bedroom gar·
apartment reoting for over $200.00 per month. Also a
mce 3 or 4 bedroom home. large backyard and nice garden
area. live in one and let the other help pay the monthly pay·
ment. Owner needs to move this property.
8331 .
a~e

75 Boats &amp; Motora
for Sale

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
Phone: (614) 446-0008
Blackburn; Bro~er

llWIIITlll..
doonl!rwn - . ,.J 1111, nu

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. llloliltl, lirlt liviol-. lilltl, ""'
q rao~n, ir ealllf, cwpMI. Nfct
poreh, 4 cor 11'110. pltnty o1 ofl·
l)lriinl. Clost to post olice &amp;

utilite. l1lw 50's.

uldnt 12;300. 304•m-61173.
11114 Hondo y.g Soln..J... •••
· f1,300. J04.1111.1oll or
111-4235.

BLACKBTJRN
,REALTY
.

I

PH. 614-256·651

p~n1 2 •
~•ru. low

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APPRox: 24 ACRES w~h colonial home overlooking Pomeroy. Executive style home with formal entr~, Fem1ly room,
formal ·dinin~ room. Baseme11t has rec. room w1th stonelfre·
place. There san in·around pool. Many more ame01t1es. Ask·
ing. $145,900.
•294
SUMNER ROAD -Is this 3 bedroom aluminum sided ranch
wrth bath, livin' end family room~1 basement, one car R~r·
age, starege buiding. All this on .11'10 of an acre m/1. Ask1ng
only 54\I,WU.
.
M?liH
DSIOIIE ST. - Newer vinyl ~eel home wrth 2 bedrooms.
bath krtch.. and living room, laundry. Full blsement,large
L·shiped Cleek on nice lot. Good sllrter home.Only $19,900.
#243
IIDDUPOIT AREA - II! story w/3 bedrooms, bath,
· 60x100 1111 on BrOidwa~ St. Askin&amp; $28,500.
•zt3

NEW lilA RD. - Alent owned double.lot with 3 bedroom
ranch home wtth 1amiiY room w/frreplace, equipped
kitchen. lull basement. 2 car garage attached . 16&gt;32 mground pool w1th privacy fence. Asking only $55,000.
11308

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Pomeroy llddllport - e'llpolla,
Ott Point P-.nt, WV

Volunteers assist with Raccoon Creek

Broslo11...

rro. 0-1

WASHINGTON (AP) - The
Agriculture Depanment plans to
. begin a $16 million program to
check on pesticides· in fresh tru'its
and vegetables.'
',
Agriculture Secretary Edward

_Ohio Lottery

Reds
sweep
Phillies

Pick 3:955
Pick 4: 3017
Cards: 10-H, 6-C
9-D; 4-H
Super Lotto:
2-4-6-22-34-43

Page4

Kicker:
619687

Madigaa said Wednelday that tbe
federal-state c~~ PIOf"81U
was developed wt!h the EDVIIOD·
menlal Protection Agency and the
FoOd and DrUg Administration Ia
detennme the needs of diose federal B~~C~~cies,

Low tonight in mid-60s.
Thesday, partly cloudy.
high in mid-80s.

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It
111uchto
,youhappy

eqw~.
· dT -sh"trts
Parbctpants recetve

Campanella. ..

ued

·Ag department to check on pesti cides ·

l

and certificates and prizes were
provided by McDonald's, Long
John Silver's, Kentucky Fried
Chicken, Captain D's Seafood and
ODNR-Division of Watercraft
Lunch was sponsored by
Krogers, Ohio Valley Foodland
and Reiners Bread and Pepsi Warehouse. Members of the American
Legion Vinaon Post 161 prepared
the lunch wbich was served at the
headquarters for the day in the historic Ewingaon Academy.
The workers collected trash
along the streambank and cleared
an area near the EwingiOn Bridge
to develop an area 10 put canoes
into the creek. Exposed tree
brlmchea were cut 10 belp prevent
debris building lip and causing log
jams. Another project is planned
for the fall.
This is the beginning of a five
year plan which . will eventually
reach the Ohio River.

c •'

erosion, BCSI Mlliaaemen! Prac- lmtion ~- These ideas~
tiCII (BMP) were developed IO be IIICd in small WOOd loll ami
combll alai problema.
'large logging operations. All log·
Low cOli Wiler diversion t.ech- ¥ers and woodland owners are
Diques sucb as waaer bars on log- mvited 10 attend this infonnative
ging roads, proper stteam cross- session.
ings, and broad-based dips will be . For. more information conaact
demoasuaaecl aad discussed on Cindy JenkiJis,Dislrict Forestec for
lduallogging'sites. Boah ROOd aad the Gallia SWCD office at 446bad examples will be uscdfor lllus- 8687.
•.

COIIIUnce S. Wblte
Galllll SWCD
GALLIPOLIS- Recently, four
volunteers assisted with the cleanup project in the Ewington and
Vinton area of Raccoon Creek
acouts, FFA and 4-H members,
North Gallia High School reachcn
Gallia County Bass Association
members, members of the ViniOn
Post 11 of the American Legion,
the Vinaon Fire Department and
Gallia County Lilla" Control.
.
The Raccoon Creek Improvement Committee would like to
expresS their tllanQ for all the support given, for the Gallia County
BMS standing by in case of an
emergency and Bob Evans Farms
Canoe livery for the use of their
.

June 18, 1lltl

ASSIST WITH IMPROVEMENT PRO·
JECT · Voluntee~s recently assisted wltb lbe

AMonth

Hill girls to exhibit cattle ·at1991
Eastern Regional Junior A!Jgus show
BIDWELL'. Sarah Lynn Hlil
and Neenah Kay Hill, Bidwell, will
exhibit Angus cattle at the 1991
Eastern Regional Junior Angus
Show at the Virginia State Pair·
grounds in Richmond, Virginia,
June 21-23. repons Richard Spad-

Coallaued from D-1
dent of AmeritrusL
Edward J. McKeon has been
8AJOillred chief executive office~:. in
addidon 10 his position as president
at Star Bank, N.A., Cleveland,
usuming the responsibilities of
Campanella. McKeon had been
Jftlldent and chief operating officer o the bank sinee April. 1991.
WASHINGTON (AP)- NutriPreviously he wu executive vice tionists have long advocated that
president and senior lending officer people eat leaner mest; but a recent
at Star Bank, Central Ohio in beef
industry survey shows that the
Columbus.
most po~ular grade is still
"choice, ' not the less fatty
"select/'
WASHINGTON (AP) - In
The study was conducted to
some places, the wheat plants sim- help cattlemen provide the kind of
ply drowned out. In other areas, mellt that packers say is most profmseca and diseases reduced yields, itable.
the AJriculture Department says.
It showed 67 percent of ~kers
The net result: shl!f}ily reduced asked
for low choice, wuh the
winter whca! yields this year.
other 33 percent
for high

er; executi~ vice president of the of369 htat aoeompeae forcllampi-Anleric:an Anpl Associalion. . ' O!IIblp honor$ belng awanlcd.

Sarah, a junior momber of the
Americ:ID Aqus Aaocialion with
heedqulrtenln SL Jo~eph, MisIOI!ri, is one of 160 young Angus
~ who have entered a lOW

Ncll"e'l; • junior lllllllber of the
American Angus Assoclllloa with
headquarters in St. Joseph, MisfiOIIIi, is oae of 160
Angus
llrceders who have en
a lOIII
of 369 head ro eomp ne for champioasllip hoaon bdDB awaaded:
,
. Clieryl Pulbnoii, Sand SJnw
Okllboma, will judge dlviBlia lot
bred-and-owned lieif!Jr~1 bulls
COW-calf pain, owned IICilenl and
.
chQice. No packer preferred select registered Angus ~teen.
orprimo.
The Neath :Jest Repm( Junior
Prime beef, the fattest grade and Angus Sbow is sjloniiDred b)' 'the ·
often most tender, is usually American ·Angus Associatimi and
reserved for restaurants. Select is the Virginia Junior Alqus AMociathe new ~ that nutritionists are tion. It is one of four regional
advocatmg as healthier on the junior Anps lhowa tbo nalional
heart
.
orpai'lalioa
year for
. Ronnie Green, assistant profes- its ~Y'f active .Juniar Angus
sor of beef cattle breeding and members in the Unilof Slllea. '
genetics at Texas Tee~ University,
· who conducted the survey, said the
findings don't mean there isn't a
market for select curs. ·

\\'tth wi: 1\..."&lt;il'k J&gt;L'W Al:rord Nlf thn:i:. tilt:r or live 1car.;;
l..ewJ: PIW.un. di; distincmc J9lJI
Pltto;, IW'II ha~ the. i,xion ru
Aaml LX c:11 mtkc 1a: 1\'1\'
ll:v :f til: end ol\mr lease. The
him: H.r ,~. litdt:. . . cffl.'fCndi SIXI!l. sl111'hilc it lllliV
In fal.t.aiiAL·uwd Oup:s, i'•:r- Ill! lllkc nllK:h to rrnkc: )lilt hap~
DuiiS ;ud \\~JR! &lt;:an 111M' he.
)llll don't have muc:h tirrc, cit'-.-r.
k,:a.11!d ;~cxm.m..t.· falllr..di: rJtt'S.
ONDA
Wth link: nr Ill tkM'n rxiyrrcm.

Y::J

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Americans still like
their beef 'cho.ice'

Wheat yields down

.,

'19900*

Raccoon Creek cleanup project Ia the Ewlnaton
and Vinton areas. (S&amp;WCD photo)

m

'Pay-ni• bUild on eo monthl with
l at paymentlnCI MC:~~ty dtiPoalt of 1400.

Athf!n6

.or:••n-*

,,

HONDA

810 E. STATEST.- ATHE~S. OH -594-8555

.

WEEKEND

SPECIALS!
-JUST ARRIVED.

'

1991 GEO MDIO
Red, auto, air conditioning,
,AM-FM stereo

1991 GEO 4 DR.
Silver metallic, air,
auto. trans, AM-FM
stereo.

1991 CHEVOuT
CAVAL&amp; I.S. 2 DR.

•gg

'1

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White, air, auto. trans.,
AM-FM stereo. bo!IY color
styles wheels, extra aharp.

1991 CHEVROLET

LUMINA EURO
Red, air, auto., power
Wlndtt»WS, power door lOCkS,
AM-FM stereo 8t more.

Automatic, air, at1r10, rear wiper &amp; defroat, light
package, power at•rlng &amp;brlkes. 13281

1991 CHEVROLET
ROYALE "88"

4 Dr, power windows, power
door locke, AM-FM atreo
w/ca118tte, air. 80-40 ~eat.
- - - Seve 14,000,00 NOWI

GENE

JOHNSON

CHEVROLET~LD$MOIULE•GEO

1616 -lTJBIUie UIIIJIOUS. 1614,441 M1J •1·1· 111 . . .
.

"

Americans
continue to
flee .base ·in ·
Philippines
MANILA, Philippines (AP) thOusands of U.S. military dependents were leaving bases covered
with the ash of Mount Pinatubo
today, but Filipinos confronted
monumenlal chores that began with
securing clean drinking water.
Raymundo Punongbayan, director of the Philippine Institute of
Yulcanology and Seismology, said
the volcano was "simmering
down" after a week of violent
eruptions.
He said he might recommend
reducing the 25-mile danger zone
around the volcano but would wait
until an aerial inspection of the volcano. But he cautioned that
Pinatubo still remained a threat.
The Philippine Red Cross said
at least 101 people have been killed
RIVER SWEEP VOLUNTEERS - This
Englneen and the Division of Litter Prevention
since the 4.795-foot volcano began
volunteers
worked
along
the
riverbank
group
of
and Recycling. Pictured are Melba Eblin,
spewing ash, steam and super-heatin Pomeroy on ·Saturday as part of the Third
Kathryn Miller, Elizabeth MUler, Chris Wray,
ed rocks June 9 for 'the rust time in
Ohio
River
Sweep,
organized
by
tbe
Annual
Lilly 1'9well, Bruce Teaford and Angie Teaford.
(iOO years.
Over 200 people volunteered county-wide at
Most of the victims were killed . Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission
(ORSANCO),
in
cooperation
with
Environ,
other
sites In Middleport, Racine, Syracuse,
in a huge explosion Saturday that
Protection
Agencies,
the
U.S.
Corps
of
menial
Long Bottom and Forked Run State Park.
dumped ash as far as 375 miles
away. 'The damage was aggravated
by rains, and scores of buildings
collapsed in nearby towns and
cities.
At least 20 people were missing
' today. Relief efforts have been
complicated by impassable roads
.::,~r ~~~t ~~un~ed air'Toils&gt;ofbifsh"&amp;n;it detirls as ~11 ''sion of Litter Preveii1iolfali1iRecr-'~ area"' '·'·· · "
·Kenny Wiggins, direciOr of the
Defense Undersecretary Eduar- as several hundred bags of garbage cling.
do Ermita said food was in short were collected along 57 miles of
The sweep encompassed the Meigs County Litter Control Prosupply in the ·affected areas ani) the Ohio River on Saturday morn- entire length of the river from Pitts- · gram, stated the event was a real
water supplies had been polluted ing during the Third Annual Ohio burgh, Pa., to Cairo, Ill. which is a success and everything went like
cloclcwork.
by ash. Officials ordered Manila's River Sweep, organized by the total distance of 981 miles.
Participating in the sweep in
Among some of the unusual
fue department 10 lransport drink- . Ohio River Valley Water Sanitaing water to aowns hit hardest by tion Commission (ORSANCO), in Meigs County were 225 volunteers items collected were a parking
the volcano.
cooperation with Environmental who worked at sites in Middleport, meter in Pomeroy, a wallet and
In southwestern Japan, a vol- Protection Agencies, the U.S. Pomeroy, Syracuse, Racine, Long checkbook in Middleport, bed
cano that claimed at least 39 lives Corps of Engineers and the Divi- Bottom and the Forked Run State springs, tires and commodes.
earlier this month burst back to life
today, sending a torrent of hot
rocks down the mountainside and
spewing ash over a hot springs
resort. There were no reports of
" casualties from the latest blast of
Mount Unzen . .Volcanic experts
luive said the eruptions of the two
volcanoes are unrelated.
WASHINGTON (AP) - More month, or $358.80 a year, are being federal Health Care Financing
· The U.S. military began evacu- than 2 million poor, elderly Ameri- needlessly deducted from 2.2 mil- Adminislmtion, said some rmdings
ating all 20,000 dependents from cans are needlessly paying $29.90 a lion to 2.3 million Social Security in the Families USA report did not
the Philippines on Sunday. Many month for government health bene- checks.
seem reasonable, although the
had last week fled Clark Air Base, fits they're entitled to get for free,
These poor, elderly people also agency had not had a chance to
10 miles east of Pinatubo, for Subic an advocacy group said IOday.
may be needlessly paying $728 a evaluate iF in detail.
Bay naval base, about 25 miles
"The problem is that you dQn't year for Medicare deductibles and
"We think that we have, in fact,
south of the volcano.
get the benefit if you don't apply the rtrSt 20 percent of doctor bills. responded to the legislation in a
Chief Petty Officer Jerry Moore for it," said Ron Pollack, executive
reasonable way." she said. HCFA,
said.
said three ships- the U.S. cruisers director of Families USA Founda- theInfoundation
California, for example, 89 which oversees Medicare and Med.Long Beach and Lake Champlain tion. "The government has percent
of those who are eligible, icaid, has sent instructions to
and the frigate Gary - sailed from neglected 10 notify people of their or 225,000 people, aren't receiving regional offices about how to phase
Subic this afternoon. He said four new rights."
in the new sssistanee, she added.
the benefit, the foundation said.
others - the aircraft carrier AbraThe non-profit group said that
To be eligible for the Medicare
"We call upon Health and
ham Lincoln, the destroyer Meqill, under the congressional budget Human Services Secretary Louis buy-in, senior.citizens must have
the frigate Ingram and the oiler agreement a~ved last fall, older Sullivan 10 ensure that the elderly incomes below $6,620 a year and
Roanoke - were leaving tonight Americans bving below th.e pover- poor get the protection they less than $4,000 in assets. Couples
. with about 5,000 more dependents. ty level no longer are required to deserve from fast-rising, unafford- qualify with annual incomes below
pay out-of-pocket costs for Medi- able Medicare costs," Pollack said. $8 880 and less than $6,000 in
'
'
The Americans were sailing for care coverage.
Families USA is an advocacy assets.
Cebu, 350 miles to the south,
About 4.2 million senior citi- group that works on behalf of
The protection will be extended
where they will board flights to the zens qualify for the so-called Medi- senior citizens and their families.
to seniors with incomes up 10 110
United States.
·care buy-m, but more than half
Gail Wilensky, direciOr of the percent of po_veny in 1993 and 120
The weeklong eruptions have aren't receiving it, according 10 a
percent in 1995.
dumped IOns of ash on Clark and study by the foundation.
Subic and made it impossible to
Therefore, it said, monthly
use their airfields.
Medicare premiums of $29 .90 a

Meigs has 225 volunteers show
up for River Sweep project ·

Former Ohio resident killed
RAEFORD, N.C. (AP) .- A
Fort Bragg Special Forces captain
died Saturday after the. small
biplane that he worked on and flew ··
8s a hobby crashed near the HokeRaeford Airllort
.
The singie-engine plane Oown
by Capt. Judd Michael Herman,
formerly of Fosaoria, Ohio, stalled
shortly after takeoff. clipped a pine
tree, flipped and landed nose-rust
in a vegetable garden, about 75 feet
b,ebind a house.
Herman, 29, was rushed by
ambulance to Cape Fear Valley
Medical Center in Fayetteville. He
died in surgery at 3:35 p.m., a hospilal ~said.
Carol Campbell said she was
watching television when the plane
crashed in ber garden shortly
before noon.

"It sounded like a car hit the
boom!" Ms. Campbell
said. "I saw the tail Slicking out in
the garden. I said, 'Oh my Lord,'
called 911 and went back there."
The red-white-and-blue plane,
pine~-

-~·

.

1 Section, 10 Peg" 25 cent•
A lluiUmedlo Inc. !'l•w•pap•"

Pomeroy-Middlepori;'"Ohlo, Monday, June 17, 1991

Poor, elderly paying some benefits
needlessly according to report ..

LS.I. 2 DR.

XE, 4 door, automatic, tih, power steering &amp; brakes.
tinted glass. power mirrors, 36 MPG. h482

'

Vol. 42, No. 30
Copyrlghied 11W1

..

called "Super Scamp," was still
intact, with its sheet-metal wings
bent and its propeller and wheels
partially imbedded in the ground.
Brendan Kluge, an Army specialist at Fort Bragg and a student
pilot at the airport, said he saw
Herman at the airport and
described him as "a meticulous
mechanic."
Tim Thacker, co-owner of the
Raeford Aviation Inc. parachuting
center at the airport, said Herman
bought the experimental, homemllde plane a year and a half ago. ·
He wolbd on it as a hobby and
flew it for the rtrSt time at the airpurl last Sunday, Thacker said.
Thacker said Herman a ticensed
commercial pilot, had been having
mechanical problems with !he
plane.
"I /"ust asked him yesterday
when could fly it,'· he.said, "I
saw it was pulling out some black
smoke, which indicates 10 me as a
mechanic that it was running rich.''

~'

OU senior from
Newark crowned
1991 Miss Ohio

MANSFIELD, Ohio (AP) Margaret Renee Autherson tapdanced her way to the crown of
Miss Ohio at the Renaissance Th~­
ater.
The 21-year-old Ohio University senior was a double preliminary
winner. Judges awarded her highest
marks for talent on Friday night
when she performed her song and
dance rouune 10 Sammy Davis Jr.'s
"Fabulous Feet" from the movie
"Ta Dance Kid."
~n · Wednesday night, Ms.
Autherson won the swimsuit clivision in a red swimsuit designed by
former Miss America Cheryl Prewitt.
Ms. Autherson. of Newark,
wore the banner of Miss West Centtal Ohio Sarurday during the final
competitions. She said she has been
competing at the Miss Ohio preliminary contesrs since she was 17.
Ms. Authenon said she will take
a year off from her studies in
advertiSin~ management 10 fulfill
her obligauons as Miss Ohio.
· ~

Baker heads
to Germany
today for talks
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State James Baker heads for

Gemtany IOday for discussions on
the shape of a European continent
newly united by the fall of communism.
The cornerstone of Baker's trip
is the rust annual meeting of foreign ministers from the 34-nation
Conference on Security and Cooperation in Europe. The or~anization
includes European countnes, Canada and the United States.
Baker is scheduled to meet with
Soviet Foreign Minister Alexander
Bessmertnykh later in the week to
try and resolve differences over a
treaty slashing both sides ' longrange nuclear arsenals. Settling tlie
remaining differences would pave
the way to a summit between Presi. dent Bush and Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev.
In a late addition to his schedule, Baker is hoping 10 arrange a
quick stop in Albania, which
recently emerged from its communist isolation and began sharing
power with the country's political
opposition.
The United States and Albania
signed an agreement last March to
normalize relations after a bitter
52-year esttangement.
' Because oHts self-ilnposed isolation and severe human rights
abuses, Albania is the only European nation that is not a mem her of
CSCE. But it has asked to join the
organization and the United States
is willing 10 support the move if the
government continues democratic
reforms. a U.S. official said.
The two-day CSCE meeting,

which begins Wednesday, will
focus on fleshing out several barebones instiwtions formed last year
at a summit where the organization
celebrated the end of Europe's
·Cold War division.
·
"We're trying to tum tho theoretical umbrella tha! unites Europe
iniO a practical organization," said
one U.S. official.
Last November, Bush, Gorbachev and other CSCE leaders
met in France and decided the
organization's focus should be
expanded to include political and
economic concerns as well as
human rights issues.
AI this week's Berlin meeting,
leaders will discuss setting up a
mechanism for a country 10 call an
emergency session of the CSCE to
.mediate conflicts. The country's
request ·would have 10 be supported
by either five or eight other members.
The foreign ministers are also
expected to discuss the economic
inequities between the wealthy
West European members and Eastern European countries struggling
to move from inefricient centtalized economies to free market capilalism.
AI~ on the agenda are genCJ:al
· diSc!l~sions 011 futtite cuts of European, American and Canadian
troops deployed· in Europe by
NATO and others deployed by the
virtually deflirict Soviet-led Warsaw Pact. The 16-nation Western
alliance alread~ has decide·d to
halve its 1.5 million troops, and
more cuts are expected.

Court makes it more difficult.
for prisoners to win lawsuits
WASHINGTON (AP) - The · dard of proving malicious intent.
Supreme Coun today made it mo~
Justice Byron R. White, in a
difficult for prison mmates 10 wm partial dissent, said, "The ultimate
lawsuits challenging unfit prison result of today's decision, I fear, is
living conditions.
that serious deprivations of basic
By a 5·4 vote in a case from human needs will go unredressed
Ohio, the justices said prisoners due to an unneces~ and meanwho claim conditions are so bad ingless search for deliberate indifthey amount 10 cruel and unusual ference.''
punishment must prove offlctals
"Inhumane prison conditions
acted with "deliberate indiffer- often are the result of cumulative
actions and inactions by numerous
ence.''
The dissenters said the ruling officials inside and outside a
means inhumane conditions will prison, sometimes over a long periprevail whenever officials can od of time," he said. "In truth,
make a case that they lacked intent sinlply is not very meaningmoney to improve matters.
ful when considering a challenge to
Rejecting arguments by the an institution."
He was joined by Justice Harry
Bush adminislmtion, the court said
the state of mind of officials who A. Blackmun, Thurgood Marshall
pemtit unfit pri~on conditions mpst and John Paul Stevens.
be considered in such lawsuits.
The four dissenters joined the
Justice AniOnin Scalia, writing court in overturning a federal
for the court, said inmates must appeals court ruling that said
prove officials acted with deliber- inmates must prove officials acted
ate indifference but - in a partial out of malicious cruelty to win
victory for the prisoners - said such suits.
they need not meet a stricter stan-

TRUCK OVERTURNS • Scipio TOWII!Iblp
and Pomeroy Emeraenq Medical Senlc:es units
were called to the Kent ol thll accldeut on Stale
Route 681 on Sunday evenln~o Tbe truck, driven
by Ferdinand Schwartz, overturned wblle

j

detourlna around work on U.S. Route 33 near
Atbeu. Sebwartz was treated but not transported by EMS staff members. (Sentinel Photo by
David L. Harris)

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