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....~12-The Deily Sentinel
Meigs ....COntinued !rom page 1
~~~;""
.
--Local
news
briefs
...
l ,r,
eludes a variance, II will mean
COntinued trom page 1

'

Friday, May 25, 1990

Pomeroy-Midclaport. Ohio

Sunday

~ '

WilY they will stop taking trash to
that haulers conthlulng to use tbe the West Virginia landfill Is by
West VIrginia lanclflllwillhave to court prder. At that point, the
pay the " tipping" fee to the Joint members of the newly organized
Solid Waste Management association agree4 that they will
Dis trlct.
file a suit against ihe Solld Waste
Most of the haulers concurred Management District to get the' ·
that It will take a court ogder to ·matter Into the courts. Carman
stop them from dumping In West reported that · A. 0 . Powers,
VIrginia. As It was explained by owner of the ERO Landfill, told
severaloftliehaulers,thecbarge him tha:t be will belp pay any
to dump there lsmuchlower, ll's legal costs.
'
much closer, and It's more
While some statements for
conve nient. Any additional costs radical action were made by one
to the haulers will have to be or two of the trash haulers there,
passed through to the customers, Manley and several ·others emthe haulers agreed.
phaslzed that their Involvement
Most of tile haulers attending would be only within the guidethe meeting agreed that the only lines of the law.

f

j

Cemetery at 9:30a.m., Middleport Hill Cemetery at 9:45a.m.,
Addison Cemetery at 10:15 a.m. , Cheshire Gravel Hill
Cemetery at 10:30 a.m., Middleport Gravel Hill Cemetery at 11
a.m. and the Legion Annex Cemetery at 11: 15 a.m.
Dinner will be served trom 11:30 a.m. to'l2: 30 p.m.
Following diMer, the pOst will travel to Howell Hill Cemetery
at 12:45 p.m. and to Bur lingham Cemetery at 1: 30 p.m.

Patrol cites Radne woman
A Racine woman was cited In a two-car crash Thursday at
11:50 a.m. In !jutton Township on C.R. 34, just nortl) of the
junction of S.R. 124, according to the Gallla·Metgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol.
·
Sharon L. Deem, 19, of 45710 Carmel Rd. , was cited lor driving
left of center alter her 1986 Mercury Lynx hit" 1989 Pontiac
Grand PriX driven by Gina L. McClellan, 23, of Racine.
Deem was driving north when she went left of center In a
rlght·hand curve and hit McClellan's car, -which was heading
south, In the left side.

.M iddleport Council meets

T~y

·Units of 'ttie · MeigS COuniy Emergency Medical Service ·
responded to six calls for asSistance OD Thursday.
At 12:50 a.m. tbe Pomeroy unit transported Keith Musser
.from the Metp COunty Sheriff's Office to Veterans Memorial
·
·
Hospital.
At 1:49 p.m. the Rutland unit was called to Meigs Mine No. 2
tor Thomas Cross who was taken to Holzer Medical Center and
later Llfefllgbtecl to Columbus.
The Middleport unit at 2:46p.m. Will! called to Beech Street
Apartments for Ken Dowell who was transported to Holzer, and
. at 4:15p.m. the unit went to Fisher Street for Derick Cremeans
who was taken to Veterans.
.
·The Pomeroy unit transported Kelly Lee trom ChesterJI.oad
at 9:06p.m. to Veterans.
·
·
· ·... ·
The llna1·· caJ1 for assistance came at 9:09 .p.m. when the
Tuppers Plains unit. responded to Route 7 fpr Wlltlam Grueser
who was taken to Holzer.
·

HUIIAD'S Gl&amp;fiiDUSI
Continued trom page 1
~a.lt
.~co~n~o_n_ued
__tr_o_m~p~a~ge_l________________ requested $43.9 million .
.J. ~ r..J I •• •• • • PUCO ChairWoman Jol)'nn·
AU IEDDIN&amp; PLANTS
Barry
Butler said, ''Tbe rehearcare
If
he
doesn't
particularly
that Taft wants il law requiring
3 PIS *1"
Ing In this case presented us with
'
local governments to provide you vote."
lEG.
lUI
Ftm
,
N
OW
15111
the
opportunity
to
revise
the
Brown said if Taft were really
'
such services.
•
•DOING GEWIIIIs
"He says one thing and does Interested In voter registraUon, pricing used In the original
decision,
saving
COlumbia
custo•••
112
IIOW
$911
•
another.'' said Brown. " That's he would have acted differently.
••J
4 tl. GEIANII.s ....
pure hypocrisy. The real Taft "Let him start today," chided mers a total $1.4 mllllon. Custo· ISc lA. - 10 FOl '7"
":
doesn't want you to register, and Brown. "Let him start mers should 8ee that savings
reflected In their July bills."
yesterday."
4 IN. HARDY MUMS leg. •i.OO ••
In making rullngs . In rate ·
NOW 85c •· ...:_ 10 F.OI S7SO •
cases, the commission ' Is re10 IICH HANGING IASKOS · :.:•
quired by Ohio law to authorize
lEG. 15.50 NOW S450
•
rates which are fair and reasona. Cblcken Barbeeue
made Ice creain. Flavors avalla- ble to customers, while at the
Ill&amp;. $671 NOW S$71
••
The Racine Volunteer Fire ble are chocolate, vanUia, peach, same lime allowing the company
•
All SHIU. .Y &amp; TIEES
Department will bave a chicken lemon, pineapple, strawberry,. the opportunity to meet ex•
20'/o
Off
•
barbecue on Sunday beginning at banana, and butterscotch. The penses, pay Interest on debts,
WoCIIII-..llll' ct1 tlllts..- ·:
11 a.m. at the fire statloJi. The cost Is $2 per quart.
and provide a reasonable return
HUIIAID'S GID-ISI :
Ladles auxiliary will be serving
The annual Ice cream social to stockholders. ·
SYIACISL OliO
homemacle ice cream.
will be held June 7, 8, and 9. ,
PUCO decisions can be ap.•
Orders should be made by peale4 to the Ohio · Supreme
"1·5776
Homemade ice cream
Tuesday. To order call992-3777, Court.
L..~=:l~D::a:::lLl:;;,lli:&amp;,',:S:,u~n.;.1:,;·:,6....1 :
The Trinity Church of Pome992-3222 or 992,5480.
.•
roy Is taking orders for liome-

, YEAR

MAKE

1420-A

1985

GM238-A

1985

STOCK

1527-A

'nL 4 P.M.

S3795

36

FORD

LTD

S3995

36

103.73

DODGE

COLT

S4995

48

111.30
121.14
. 121.14

1985

CHEV.

CAY.

S4495

36

T-2

1985

FORD

EXP

$4495

36

t21 ·A

1987

DODGE

.S5495

48

1341-A .

1986

856-A

1985

DODGE

SATURDAY
MAY 26

1488-A

1987

NISSAN

1400-B

1984

AMNESIA

T·4

,:30-1:30

,........,

CAY.

36

125.35
155.80
15
167.17
183.39

S5495

36

STANZA

S6995

48

BUICK

LESABRE

S6295

36

1984

MEIC.

WAGON

S4995

24

1440-8

1984

CHEV.

WAGON

. S4995

24

193.48

1329-A

1984 '

DODGE . ARIES

S4695

24

217.69

1990

CHEV.

CORSICA

510;399

60

1990

CHEV.

CORSICA

) S10,599

60

220.00
225.00

HAT EXTRAVAGANZA

1989

CHEY.

CAVALIER

S9495

60

1988

OLDS.

CIERA

S9995

'54

MIDDLEPORT MASON'C.·TEMPLE.

1989,

OLDS.

CIERA

S10,995

60

1403-A

1987

FORD

BRONCO

S9995

48

1514-A

1986

CHEV.

C-10

S8695

36

1324-A

1987

OlDS.

DELTA 88

S10,895

48

·'

SUNDAY, MAY 27, 1990

10 A.M.

CHEV.

TERM

ncKnS $4.00

Punch•Coftee-Light Refreshments

1510-B

1986

, CHEV.

. MIDDLEPORT AilS COUNCIL

1447-A

1985

M MAX HILL'S ...'"' .
COUNTRY CORVETTES

'

1969 CORVETTE CONVERTIBLE

White/black, 4 speed, original motor.

BLAZER

$9995

CAD.

Sm. DEVILLE

*8995

36

1987

BUICK

ELECTRA .

S10,995

48

1468-A

988

GMC

SIERRA

*12,495

54

1094-A

1987

CHEY.

BLAZER

. S11,900

96

1989

OlDS.

CUTLASS

510,995

60

105-A

1984

CAD.

S10,695

36

1517-A

1988

NIS$AN

PATH FINDER

*14,499

54

1990

CAD.

SED. DEVILLE

525,500

60

1978

. CHEY.

BLAZER

*4995 .

197 6 CORVETTE T·TOP ·
Yello.w /black leather. original engine, loaded.
•

1976 CORVETTE T-TOP

I

White/black leather, original engine, loaded .

1978 SILVER ANNIVERSARY

33,000 mllea,

automatic, loaded.

.•

Vol. 2&amp; No. 17

- - - -·-----

-·---

Three are' injured
·five-vehicle pileup
- GALLIPOLIS - Three Jackson residents were tJ1!ated and
released from Holzer Medical
Center for Injuries suffered lri a
five· vehicle accident on U.S. 351n
Spring Valley Saturday.
Treated were Conrad R. Stalnaker ' 48, and two passengers in
his car, Velma Stalnaker, 48, and
Tracy .Stalnaker, 9.
The Gallla-Melgs Post of the
State Highway Patrol said Con-

$

336.03
346.11

"ALL PAYMENTS FIGURED WITH REBATE APPLIED AS CASH DOWN-

.

·

11,700

614·247·4861
LEIAIT FALLS, OHIO

1206C

PLUS-.TAX. ilru

. - .

GALLIPOLIS - Two State
Routes ill Ga!Ua County Will close
in the early part of June, and two
routes will open, acco~dlng to Joe
~ach, District 10 deputy dlrec' tor for the Ohio .Dep!lrtment of
'l:X:ansp()rtatjon &lt;Ol&gt;OT), Stljte
·Route 160 In VInton and State
Ro.u te 554 ea~t ofPorterwlllclose
Friday, .June 1, b?th for bridge ·
replacements. Bridges on State
Route· 7 and State Route 218 are
planned to be open In early June.
Ratzlaff Construction Co., of
Chillicothe will replace the SR
160 bridge-In Vinton at a bid price

Tlie·mo~ given goes ior veterans' rehabilitation
• and child welfare funds. Catherine Welsh, Loretta
Tiemeyer, and Veda Davis, left to right, · have
been. on the streets with )Hippies for the past 25
years.
.

of $455.502. A $1,500 per day
liquidated damage fine has been
set If the strucrure Is not open by
Sept. 13. Detour for the closure Is .
SR 32~ nortbeast in Meigs
Gounty, to SR 124 West In VInton
County, to SR 160 SOuth.
Construction on the S;R 554
bridge, located south of County
Road 18, will be done by Dial
Construction Co., of Stockdale
for $172,281. The closure Is set fo r
90 days and a $1,000 per day
liquidated damage fine has been
set If the project Is not comple.ted
by Sept. 30: Detour for the SR 554

closure Is SR 160 South to US 35
East, to SR 7 North in Cheshire to
SR 55'4· West.
According to Leach, ODOT
realizes the lncolll'(enlenc!l of the
closures to U. 11'6\lt!lll&amp; public
and' plans to monltOf t~e progress
of both projects with the contrac·
tors and hopes to open both
bridges sooner than schecJuled.
Leach sal!! weather permit·
tlng, the bridge over Raccoon
Creek on SR 7 and the SR 218
bridge near Mercerville will
open In early June. Both bridges'
completion dates are June 30 .

GAHS graduation set June 2

.

. 294.73 '
303.95

11 Stctlono, 80 Pog•
A Mullillltdltlnc. N_ _.,

Midclapon-Pomtloy-Gellipolis-Point Pleasant, May 27, 1990

C"''Yriiimod 1990

227.11
230.63
. 239.07
266.51
275.67
276.57

.

'

tS

"'.

Roads to close for repairs

MODEL
CHEYmE

Cl..llltleds ................. m-7
Deaths ......................... A3

Editorial ...................... A2
Farm .., ...... ........... .... Dl·8
MHtly cloudy. Chance ef
~--------.---------------~~------~-------L--~~e~-::·;:~~~~~~~--~~--------~--_J--~S~o~r~m~-~..~--~-..~--~-·~
.. ·~--~··~--·~·~C1~-7~J__JS~ho~w~e~r~s.~ID~ lnmld7h.

IN REMEMBRANCE - American Legton
Auxiliary members of the Bend area traditionally
mark Memorial Day by offering red crepe
poppies made by disabled v~terans lor donatloru;.
...
.

1195-A

DINING ROOM

Main Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
OPEN 'MONDAY
MEMORIAL DAY

James Sands:
•'
Lafayette Legion Post 27
or.,.nized in 1919;.;A-4

..

-

,•

Along tbe'River ....... .. Bl-7
Business •.•.•••••••••••••••• Dl·B
Comics· ................... Insert

A time to rememher...B.7

Bryce aad Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellill A Leewi

AT THE

:1•'

Beat of the Bend:

Dail)' stock prices
(As of 11: SO a.m.)

DON'T MISS THE

O'DELL
i LUMIER CO. ,

Inside

.

Stocks

TAVERN

TIME: 2:00P.M.

Honor those
who paid
the supreme
sacrifice

..

ZWAY

· Veterans Memorial
Thursday admissions - Ethel
, Shastee, Pomeroy.
Thursday discharges - Ro·
' nald Erb, Carol Wines, Agnes
' Boggess, James Fisher, and
: Mary Gilkey. ·

tOM A,,,,., 1,111 U.

500
starts
_
a
t
1
•
m.
C-1
74th
Ind
~------------~-----------r--~----~--~~·----~~~ .

- - - -·Meigs announcements'---

· Thirty-five IndiVIduals were days jail, operator's license
.fined and eight forfeited bonds In suspended, no operator's license,
Am Electric Power .. ...... ..... 28%
;Wednesday's session of Metp $75 and costs, three days concur- . AT&amp;T ....... .................. ........ 42\1,
•COunty Court under Judge Pa· rent with other charges.
Ashland Oil ........................ 39 \1,
:trick O;Brlen.
Charles F. Ohlinger Jr·., Pome- Bob Evans ........................... 13
: Fined were Thomas .Beha. roy, failure to control, $25 and Charming Shoppes ............... 10~
;Ripley, W.Va. , speed, $22 and cos~; Dwight rc. . McDaplel, City Holding Co .. .... .... .... .... 14~
costs; Jonathan Smith, COium· Pomeroy, no operator's license, · Federal Mogul... .. ...... ; ........ 21%
•bus, seat belt violation, $15 and $75 ·and costs. three days jail Goodyear T &amp;R ...................34 ~
:costs; Don Allan Hatrls. Pome-: suspended If valid operator's Heck's ................................. 3~
:roy, speed, $21 and costs; Larry license provided within 60 days;
Key Centu.rlon ....................14\1,
;Davis, Shade, failure to control, Donald R. M¥ys, Reedsyllle,. Lands' End .... ...... .. ............. 15~
·$20 and costs; Patricia L lngraa, disorderly while intoxicated, $20 Limited Inc ......................... 48!iJ
:Belpre, speed, $24 and costs; and costs; Harley Barton, PomeMultimedia lnc .. ...... :........ ... 80
Tom E . Buckley, Rutland, do- roy, auravated menacing, six
Rax Restaurants .................. 2~
:mesuc violence, $100 and costs, months jail suspended to three Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 163,i
;six months laD suspended, 30 days, costs, restraining order Shoney's Inc ............ ........ ... 14%
•days, two years pr9batlon, res- Issued; Luther White, MiddleStar Bank ...........................20'h
; training order Issued;- Wendell port, safety vlolaUon. SlOO and
Wendy's Inti. ; ........... ....... .. .. S'h
;Howard, •· Gr.aup. Ky., DWl, costs; Freddie Hill, East Lynn,
Worthington Ind .................23'h
;three days jaU, $250 and costs, W.Va., safety vpolatlon, $25 and
City Hoidlng and Worthington
. ' operator's 11ce11se SIIIIM!nded for costs;. WilHam Lake, Millfield,
were ex -dlvlde~d today.
· : 60 days, exp1fed ltc~ pllites, speed, $22 and costs; Btlan
,costs only, driving un!ler suspen· McDade, Gallipolis, speed, $20
·. . slon, $75 and cos.ts, 30 days jail and costs; Randolph Dudley,
: suspanded; ·three ~ys concur· Louisville, Ky., safety violation,
•rent with JWI charge, probation $25 and costs; Jantne Gerhold,
Ravenswood, W.Va., passing af
:one year.
: Keith Burnette, VInton, seat lntersectlo.n, . costs only; and
•belt violation, $20 and costs;
Gary A. Jordan, Long Bottom,
Adam Harshman, Columbus, disorderly. while Intoxicated,
seat belt violation, $20 and costs; · · costs only.
., Janet Burkhardt, Deerfield
Forfeiting hoods were Robert
:; Beach, Fla .. speeding, $26 and B. Campbell, Racine, speed, $60;
•costs; David Doerfer, Pomeroy, Glenn Dempsey, WIXom, MJ.,
:: domestic violence, $75 and costs, speed, $60; Thomas Hoffman,
·· 60 days suspended to three days, Washington, W.Va .. speed, $52;
• probation one year; WIIUalll Lee A.dam Harsham, Columbus,
:.• Marks, Pom!'!roy,fleelllg, costs; speed, $80; James Lacy, Bar·
:, six months jail to 30 days; two ooursvllle, W.Va., speed; $60;
.. S'ears probation, driving undet Timothy McClelland,. Vinton,
·S2.00 Cover. Must be 21.
· :; suspension, $75 and costs, six ,overload, $129; Arthur Moore,
Corner 5.1. 7 I 143 .
:: month jail suspended to 30 days Carrollton, speed, $60; and Thor·
Jell Bentz, Racine, sa:tety viola, concurrent with other charge;
:: Robert Scarberry, Middleport, tlon, $55.
,: menacing threats, costy, three
days jail concurreQt with bench
warrant charges; George .R.
t
·· Church, Reedsville, speed, $22
' and costs.
:
:: Orville L. Eaves, ·Flatwoods,
:: Ky., failure to possess a doctor's
·• medical examination. $25; Chad
· A. C:::ook, Por'neroy,speed,$22and
1
'
costs; Thomas E. Hoffman.
· Washington, W.Va., speed, $22
• and costs; Robert L. Burdette,
: Glouster, saiety violation, $25
· and costs; Debra F. Scott, New
: Haven, W.Va., failure to ylelcl,
:: $10 and costs; Thorllef V. Bentz,
i Racine, safety vlolatlo_n, $25 and
costs; Charles Barlels, Pome; roy , expired registration, $10 and
· costs; Catherine I. Crist. Racine,
SPONSORED BY
, assured clear distance, $30;'
-; Dana R. Williams; Pomeroy, no
· operator's license, $75 and costs; .
.
' .
:· three days jail suspended upon
proof of valid operator's license
. ' In 60 days; Michael S. Gray,
. Racine, OWl, $300 and costs, 10
1

••

PUCO...

suo

Squads hatie ·six calls Thursday

.;Hospital news

:t.

•

.

Due to the Memorial Day holiday, Middleport VIllage C~ll
will hold Its regular meeUng on Tuesday, May 29, at 7: 30 p.m.
All village offices Will be closed on Monday, May 28.
·

-: Meigs ~nty Court news

As for the management dis~ · just how many propertY owners ,
trict's proposed mandatory trash were aware that the District Is
pickup districts, the haulers at proposing an annual cllarKe to go
last night's meeting expressed dlreclly onto property tax ·:
r
strong opposition ·contending duplicates.
Otber haulers at the meeting
that this would result Ina bidding
sttuaUon with large refuse com- · were Harley W. Eblin, Sr., who
panies which· could ln!Ually go collects In both Metp and Gallill ••
• for a low bid and then raise the · COunties, Burl Putman -and . ~
rates once the small haulers are Frank Well of Well and Putman :
Sanitation; Don Jeffers of . •
out of the picture,
The need for better public Jeffers Trasb Service, George ~
awareness as to what Is happen- ;Francis, Greg BUI'!Iem, Jack .:
Ing with t~e Solld Waste Manage- Provence; Chuck Van Cooney, '
ment District was stressed by Robert Lawson, all of Mejgs : ·
Manley. }fe said he wondered Coqnty, and · Roy Robinson of
Athens, who serves a section of ;;-&gt;
Metp County.
. • ...
:

50 cents

JENNIFER DONNALLY

One of the evening's highlights
GALLIPOLIS - Jennifer Don·
nally. a representative of the top will be the presentation of
Honorary Awards, Including
10 percent of the 1990 Gallla
Academy ijlgh School gradual· Scholastic, Music and A-thletics.
lng class , will deliver the main by Galua Academy High School
address when 181 GAHS seniors .'Principal John Ellingson.
Supt . . Grant Sheppard will
conclude their secondary educaIntroduce the commencement
tion Saturday, June 2.
The annual combined GAHS speaker. Principal Ellingson will
will present the class lor dlplo·
Baccalaureate and Commence·
mas. to be conferred bv Dannie
ment programs are scheduled to
begin a t 7 p.m. on Memorial Greene, president of the Gallipo·
lis Board of Education.
Field.
Christopher Broyles will lead
Rev . Arthur C. Lund. director
the·
singing of the GAHS "Alma
of chaplaincy services, Holzer
Mater"
and Re'' . Lund will
Medical Center, will give the
deliver
the
benediction.
baccalaureate sermon. Vocal
Charles
Brown
, president of
selections will be presented by .
Mrs. Anne Fischer's GAHS the senior class, will lead the
changing of the tassels, signaling
Madflgals.
an end to the commencement
Brant Pauley will open the
commencement program, sing- exercises.
Ing, "America the Beau tlful."

Johnson comments on
GALLIPOLIS - L. Nell John·
son, Ph.D.. superintendent of
Gallia County Local Schools.
responded this week to the school
district 's successful conclusion
of a suit before the State Board of
Tax Appeals.
The action, Initiated upon the
recommendation of Johnson In
1986 by Board of Education
members Carl Waugh, Philip
Skidmore. Claudia Lyon, Bllley
Halley and Fred DeeI, sought to
reclaim tax dollars resulting
!rom coal piles at the Kyger
Creek and Gavin power plants
that were being sent to other
school districts and governmen- tal agencies outside of Gallla
County.
·

•

SUlt

The school district said .]ohnson took aggressive action In
pursuing an injustice to county
residents and alone JhOuldered
the burden of legal fees and time
necessary to reach the eventual
set tlemelit .
Johnson pointed out that not
only did t~e Gallla County Local
Schools bel\e!lt from the success·
ful suit, but other county agen·
cles received funds as well,
Including Buckeye Hills Career
Center, the University of Rio
Grande, the Guiding Hand
School, Addison and Cheshire
townships, and the county
government.
COntrary to a recent news
release by ·Tax Commissioner

•

VICtory

Joanne Limbach, Johnson said It
should be pointed that the state
did not take steps to correct the
Injustice that was being done to
Ga!Ua County residents .
''The state legislature simply
passed legislation In 1985 making
legal that which had previously
been Illegal," Johnson sald: "The
result of that legislation was that
!rom 1986 Ga!Ua County res!·
dents lost $1.2 million each year
to other counties. For the Gallla
County Local Schools the Immediate result was devastating.
"Suddenly the school district
Income was · reduced by 14
percent and the board of educa,
tlon had to consider other revenue sources or drastically cut
expenditures," Johnson said.

rad Stalnaker was at the end of a
row of vehicles stopped east·
hound at 9:20a.m., waitin g for a
car .to make a left turn into the
Star Bank branch. A tractor
trailer driven ·by Scott A. Mit ·
chell, 29, Vinton, Va .. and owned
by Great Coastal Express, Rich·
monel , Va., failed to stop and
struck the rear of Conrad Sial·
naker's car.
The crash forced Stalnaker's

•m

....

•
•

•

car Into the rear of a pickup truck
driven by Lisa M. Ragland : 21.
Beaver. Ragland' s \'ehlcle then
hilt the rear of a pickup truck
driven by Kevin R. Stalnaker, 21,
Jackson, wblch In turn hit the
rear of a car dr iven by Pat rtCia
A. Schnieder, Columbus.
The Stalnakers were taken to
HMC by theGallla EMS. Mitchell
was cited by the patrol ·for
assured clear distance.

Kroger recycling p-astic .bags
POMEROY "- Meigs, Gallia
and Mason County area shoppers
at Kroger's in Pomeroy and
GalUpoUs have an opportunit y to
do their part for the environment
by depositing used plas!lc groc·
ery bags In special recycltngblns
In an expansion of a pilot
program begun tn Charleston
several weeks ago.
4 ~&lt;c .iiJII.
Plastic grocery bags deposited
at the In-store recycling bins will
be collected by Kroger, accumu·
lated at Kroger's area dlstrlbu · .
tlon center. and returned to tl\e
bag man.u!acturer -and therr re·
cycled lor a variety of uses
tnciudtrtg plasuc bags.
Test results jlave been so
successful at three Kroger toea·
lions In Charleston, that the
company has made the decision
to make the service available at
all Mld·Atlantlc Marketing Area
Kroger locations, according to
Dick Warner, manager of the
Kroger store In Pomeroy. Susan
Hudson Is the manager of Kroger
In Galllpolls.
The recycling project ·is a joint
RECYCLE THOSE PLASTIC BAGS - llroger'• In PomerDJ Iii
effort of Keep America Beaut!· . participating In a recycllnl prGIJ'am , for It's plaeUc bap.
ful, Inc., Kroger and Vanguard
Customers may return lltelr pla&amp;Uc grocer)' bap to lite recycllDI ',
Plastics. The State Department
bin locaied near the entrance of tbe store. Pictured Ia Carolylt l
··of Natural Resources Of!lce .of
Ohlinger, employee a&amp; the store, depositing a plj18Uc bag In tbe ·
Conservation Education and Lit·
recycling bin. Kroger's In GaiBpolls Is also taking part In lhe
ter Control has been assisting
· program. (Times-SenUnel photo)
·with the program, stated
Warner.
which will be helpful to our Team which unearthed 25-year
Allan Robinson, store operacustomers."
old newspapers J)lat can still be
lion sen1ces manager. said the
As an example of the com· read , carrots thiit are still orange
pilot program Is part of the
pany 's environmental efforts, and bread without mold. "Since
company's on-going effort to
Robinson points to the plastic little deterioration Is taking
provide customers with environ·
grocery bag and the research place la··our. landflll!;,- the -l'eaJ
· mentallnfonnatlon as well as t)le
conducted before It was Issues are volume, ground water
opportunity to apply It In a
Introduced.
leaching and recycling, " Robin·
meaningful way.
'
. ''The solid waste Issue Is . The dwindling number of land· son explained.
fills
across
the
country
has
According
to
Robinson,
plastic
extremely complex. While It
focused national attepllon em the grocery bags can actually be fhe
~on't be resolved overnight,
environmentally compatlbfe cholss~e of solid ~aste. "There's a
there are certain steps we can all
misconception that solid waste Ice, a situation which surprl!ies
take to make a difference,"
degrades or deteriorates In land· many consunlers. "In a landfill,
Robinson said.
!Ills. In fact, It doesn't ," Robin· the plastic bwg consumes seven
"The Kroger Company Is
son said.
times less space that a paper
spending considerable re~ources
He describes landfill research grocery bag. It weighs 89 percent
fo analyze .the packages we offer,
conducted by the University of less than paper and the Inks useo
recycling programs and general
Arizona 's Garbage Project
environmental Information
(See UOGER, pace MJ

ery

·P\astlc
Ba

Eastern board considers cuts
By CHARLENE ROEFLICH
Tlmes-Senllnel staff
EAST MEIGS- The financial
condition of the Eastern Lqcal
· School District In view of the
recent levy defeat and how to
reduce expenditures were dis·
cussed at Thursday night's meet.
!rig of the Board of Educatl6n.
Members of the hoard beard a
report from Dr. Dan Apllng,
'1.

·-- ',_'

· superintendent, on school flnan·
ces. Areas being considered for
adjustments were lunchroom
operaUons, maintenance, transportation, field trips, textbooks,
and libraries. OPtions discussed
dealt wtth turiher reductions In
programs and personnel.
Some declllona are expected to
be made at the June meeting.
. The board authorwr the at·

hletlc and band bboater Oflliantza·
Uons to ralae money for the
support of athletics and marcltlni band thiOUih totally external
clonatlou. This will be the third
year that . no Jenera! fuDcl tax
montes will be u1ed to support
these pJ'Oil'ams, It was reported.
Followlq a meeting In executive se~aton for the purpoae of
(See EaaterD A-1)

.--·- -·-·+-·--- -- - ·- --

AU. IN FUN -Wnrbn II&amp; Po_,- VIDap

Ball, wbo al10 wen hmero, Pallllllll'll Blp
8cbool aiiDial, bad tillataiiDial eplrll•l'rklar II
tiler ''eaptan4" rival Middleport Yellow .Jaclleta
Hlp School alamna, Kane St-. Tbe "capture"
.
~ .
'
.

- ----· ·-··:1--- _.-c........;...-

wu all doae Ia fu .. a part of 11-.J ~
r.r lbe weelleltd. 0t1aen plalared are Helft
11Mllq, Pal Tboma, Brenda Monti, 'hrrJ
Loq, Rlla Deam, Jim Carpenter, ud Donaa

.

Carr.

'

�'

•

M.y

Commentary and perspective
$unb~ ~imts- itutintl
A Division of

8211 'lblrd Ave,, GaJtipfJHI, Oldo
(61{) Y6-t.14!

1ll ·C::OUrt st., Pomeroy, Ohio
· (&amp;14) -.uH

ROBERT L WINGE'rl'
Palllllher
HOBART WILSON oJB.
Executive Ecruor

PAT WIUTi:JIEAD
Aulatanl Publllber-Controller

A MEMBER ol The United Prese lll1ei'IIJitloaal, lnlalld botly Preu Associ a·
tlon and the AmeriCan New..-per Publtlb... A11oclat1on.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION ar. welcome. They lhould be t..a tban 300 wordJ

lma. Alllltters_.eJUbject toOIIJtlnJ 111td must be s)lnl!d wtthname, addreuand

1 wloj&gt;bone lllllllber. No ullllpld I-rs will be publllhed. Letters sbould be ID
• good taow, odc!reiiiDB.~I!!!'o ~ot persclllltu...

.

~uest Edit~rial

~State law mandates changes
~ garbage for landfills

•
:=The
way you handle your garbage will change. State law requires

we reduce the waste that we landfill by 25 percent. The law also
)equlres that we recycle and that we find a different way to dispose of
~ass, leaves. prunlngs and other yard waste. This yard waste can:t
··· ~~~ the landfills beginning ln .1994. Neither can auto batteries or
&lt;~Pat

'.

•: A state law passed in 1988 mandates this. A local group, the District
:rollcy Committee, formed in 1989 and Is charged with figuring out
:Ji9w we are going to do It and how It will be paid for. Six Counties in
Southeast Ohio have joined to fonn the Athens, Gallla, Hocking,
·..Jackson, Meigs and Vinton Counties Solid Waste Management
:)&gt;!strict. Five members from each County make up the District
-&gt;f'Olicy Committee and must develop a solid waste management plan
)or the District.
• To prepare this plan, we must figure out how much waste we
1!etH1rate, how much we recycle, how much more we will take out of
)he waste stream, how we will take it out, and bow we will pay for the
::O!!W programs. The decisions will be hard to reach and may not be
;:popular. They will require change by all of us reguardless of how they
·.ate made or what the decisions are.
·
:• .,At this point, we know about how much garbage we throw away
;:each year, where It goes, how much is recycled and how much is
1:Jandfllled. We know that entirely too much Is landfllled and that
:-without some rapid action, the entire area will be out of landfill space
;:within six or seven years. We have established a goal of reaching a 35
,:percent reduction of the amount lalidfllled by 1998. We will reach a 25
~·percent reduction level by 1991.
;: To do this, we will encourage all existing recyclers, profit and
·:non-profit businesses, to expand their operations and to increase the
:•types of materials they take for recycling. We will Implement a series
;~ curb-side recycling collection programs In the more populous
•:09mmunlties and will provlde recy~lng drop·off centers In the rural
i•areas. We will develop processing centers for the reoy~lable
::materials so. that we can market them in the mqst efflclfnt, co~t
.•effective way possible.
..
.
·
1
f
·
:; This. alone. won't do the job, though. RecycliOg will only work If ·
;.each of the residents of the District participates. We will only meet
•:the state and District goals If each of us thinks about what we are
;, throwing away and 111akes a distinct effort to recycle, reuse or, even
i:better. reduce those .t!tlngs that we have been throwing away.
•: To help with this, we will develop an extensive educational
:. program. We will use the exlstlni education programs and add to
: :them. Through working witII the schools, civic organizations,
~ g9vernments, trade groups and others, we hope to make waste
~· reduction, reuse and, recycling a norma1 way of life. ·
• ; The law requires us to do still more . ~ have to clean up all those
~ ll!egal dumps throughout the area. We have to remove the tire dumps, .
~ address the concerns of household hazardous chemicals and stop the
~· u~~e of Illegal dumps In the future. Wewilllncreasetheenforcementof
••• Illegal dumping. We . will Increase the staffing of the Health
: Departments and the funds available for detection and prosecu lion of
" t~ose using the dumps. .
; , ' Regardless of our efforts to reduce the amount ofwaste we send to
•: tl)e landfills, we will still need facilities to take that waste which ·
:: c!'nnot be recycled or reused. So we'll need to develop or support the
~ development of at least one and probably two landfills In the six
.; c()unty District. We are now facing the question of supporting the use
:; o~ privately owned landfills I two new facilities have been proposed )
: . or the development of publiCly owned landfills. This Is a tough
•; decision which has and will continue to generate considerable
; . discussion and aebate.
;: We are also faced with thetoughdecislonsabout howtopay for all of
•: this In an area In which there are already not enough dollars to go
!-around. A fee has been Imposed on all waste going to the landfill but It
;: is not producing enough fu!lds to fl!lance our efforts. Too much of our
.~ waste is being hauled out-of-state so that the fees won't have to be
;. paid. The Policy Committee has agreed to Impose flow control •: keeping all the waste generated In the Dis trlct within the District -In
::order .to Increase our income and to effectively manage the waste
;. problem that we .are cr,eatlng. We have discussed mandatory fees•: an assessment on all property owners- to pay for themanagemen t of
;; waste. We'll certainly need more money- If we ha,-e a publ icly
:· (government) owned landfill. We'll also have more control of waste
•: management.
:: We will face these decisions and weigh the Impacts carefully. We
;. will make those choices which will most effectively comply with the
•: law ·a n4meet the needs of all resldentsoftheslxcountYDistrlct. Most
: . of all, we will prepare the District for the future in which the way you
:: handle your garbage will change. There is no choice about that.
•: Submitted by,
•
Dale Neal, Chairman
•
:Dis trlct Policy Committee
;:
Court House, Jackson, Ohio

~Today in history
•

•.
By United Press lnlernallonal
:: Today Is Sunday, May 27, the 147th day of 1990 with 218 to follow .
;: The moon is waxing, mo,ing toward Its first quarter.
• The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
:; The evening star is Jupiter.
:. Those born on this date are under the sign of Gemini. They include
;: financier Cornelius Vanderbilt In 1794; social reformer Amelia
•: Bloomer, for whom the undergarment Was named, In 1818; poet Julia
;. Ward Howe. who wrote the lyrics for "The Battle Hymn of the
:: Republic," In 1819; financier and railroad !leveloper Jay Gould In
. ; 1836; frontiersman "Wild Bill" Hickok in 1837; dancer Isadora
; . Duncan In Ui78; detective novelist Dashiell Hammett in 1891; Vice
; : Pr!!5ident Hubert Humphrey In 1911; actor Vincent Price in 1911 (age
-; 79).; golfer Sam Snead In 1912 (age 78); author Herman Wouk In 1915
:- 1age 'IS); actor Christopher Lee in 1922 (age 68): former Secretary of
;: State-Henry Kissinger lri 1923 (age 67); jazz musician Ramsey Lewis
•: In 1935 (age 55); actor Lou Gossett Jr. in 1936 (age 54) and
: -singer-songwriter Don Williams In 1939 (age 51) .

.·

•
• · On this date in history:

; In 1703, Cur Peter the Great founded St. Petersburg as the new
: capital of Russia.
·
• • In 1911, the British Navy sank the German battleship Bismarck 400
•~miles west of ~e French port of Brest. f.&gt;

v. 1990

A-2'

ByUa~dP~Ia~~
With another boating season
officially underway on Lake
Erie, the Coast Guard Is adv!Jing
pleasure craft skippers to file a
·'float pian' ' that Indicates where
they are going and when they
expect to return.
Airplane pilots file flight plans
before takeoffs, making rescue
operations easier shoUld a mishap occur.
The Coast Guard suggests
boaters follow a similar pattern
when venturing out on the broad
expanses of Lake Erie
The Coast Guard says seven
people died In boating accidents
on Lake Erie la.s t year, up from
five the year ~fore.
A float plan often Involves
telling a marina, a family
member, or even the Coast
Guard about a boaters plans.
Mike Kitchens, a petty officer
with the Bay VIew Park station In
Toledo, said excursion plans
make It easter to ·find overdue
boaters. A plan would Include a .
desctlptlon of the boat.

Enforcement of child support lacking

JaCk A.n d. erson and Dale T/
A
I" an
tta

WASHINGTON _ An est!- appoint someone to the job of
mated one In every four Amerl· enforcing that law- the post of
can children ·lives with only one assistant secretary of family
parent, usually a mother. And In support In the£ealth and Human
baby. Before th.e ·courts can
a staggering number of cases, Services Pepdrtment.
the other' parent, usually the
At least desperate mothers · assess child support, they have to
father, pays little or no chUd now have an assistant Cabinet find out whd fathered the child,
support.
secretary on their side. What and that has created a bigger
As a .result, nearly half of the they still don't l!ave Is the web of red tape than collections
alone.
American , faml.tes headed by monthly check.
In Washington, D.C., 90 persingle mothers lives In poverty.
Single mothers like Mlna Veacent
of the child custody cases on
In 1988, the most recent year zle of Washington, D.C., find
the
books
are still at the stage of
for which the · federal govern· ways to cope. They can pay the
establishing
paternity, and Wa·
ment has the figures , about $18.6 rent or the utilities, but not both.
shlngton
is
not
unique among
billion in child· support payments The father of Veazie's child Is not
urban
areas.
Last
year, the
were due to change hands be- on the lam. She knows where he
District
of
Columbia
Office of
tw(!en parents. Only$4.6billion of Is. The judicial system knows
Paternity
and
Child
Support
that was actually paid. That's $1 where he Is. Shehasacourtorder
Enforcement
took
~.500
blood
collected for every $4 owed, when · forcing him to pay child support
tests
at
a
cost
of
$300
each.
even the $4 was ·probably not - a court order that cost her
The;o!flc;e has 100 staffers and
enough to meet the child's $3,500 of her . own money for
an
annual budget of $9.5 Jhllllon.
expenses In the first place.
· il!wyei'S and other fees In three
Nationwide,
s~te and local child· .
This Inexcusable abdication of jurisdictions. Sbe has ·been In
support
collection
ageacles
the most basic of human obllga- court 10 times, and still np one Is
spend
nearly
$2
billion
a
year, all
!Ions - parenthood - has been making the father send the
to
track
down
people
who
have
mlitchedbyabdlcatlonofgovern· checks. Veazie Isn't on welfare,
perfected
conception
but
can't
mental responsibility, too.
so the government hasn't pitched
Ronald Reagan signed the In tomakeupwbat she bas lostln quite picture themselves as
mommies or daddies for the
Family Support Act Into law In child-support payments. .
duration.
Therisingdlvorcerateisn'ithe
November 1988, tightening the
Even that amount of money
enforcement procedures for · only social p!lenomenon contrltracklng down delinquent par· ,.bu'ting to the chlld·support de- isn't enough. Irma Neal, who
enforceents. But it took George Bush
licit. This is 1990, and marriage Is runs the
ment
nearly a year and a half to
not a prerequisite
.for
having
a
.

D.C.. told our reporter Paul
:?;Immerman that her annual
budget hasn't Increased In the
past three years. Her office can
handle 7,000enforcement cases a
year, but it has a backlog· of
nearly 70,000. The office established a hot line in FebrUary for
anyone with chlld·support problems to call. It has 12 lines
operating 24 hours a day, and In
the first two months, 26,000 calls
came ln.
Since a wave of remorse and
moral accountability Is unlikely
to sweep over the nation's absent
parents to eliminate this problem, wi!'I'tl stuck .with enforcement by governmental mandate.
There are a few things tbilt can
make that flawed system more
efficient.
The state and federal governments should start with paternity. In Wisconsin, some fathers
who are·ready to admit paternity
are turned away because they
can't afford the filing fee to
change the baby's birth certlfl·
cate. Democratic Speaker of the
Wisconsin . Assembly Thomu
Loftus plB!Is to Introduce a bill to
eliminate the f~s. but Gov .
Tommy Thompson has already
vetOed a broad ranging bill that
would have done the same thing.
In Washington, D.C., even 11 a
man and ~oman both agree that
they are the parents of the child,
they are not allowed to simply
sign an affidavit. They must both
go before a judge to explain their
sexual activity during the time
the baby was conceived.
Ol!Cl! the paternity Issue is
settled, child-support enforcement agencl~ simply need more
money to track down the delln- ·
quent parents. The federal government has· an Incentive program to give more.money to the.
states that have a better collec·
tion record. But In only a handful
of states does that money go back
to the collection agency. It Is
more often used to build new
highways.
In the meantime, single parents struggle to make' ends,meet.11'"
When they can't, they turn to
,nlllll
welfare, and the tax)layers foot
11// .
the bill for thecareand feeding of
&gt;tl~l I
children Whose parents . have
~~~~::.,~_...,.,J -skipped town.

.

.

.

In defense of affirntative action
Any attempt to explain today's
contentious state of race' rela·
!Ions sounds like the fable of the
three blind men trying to des·
crlbe an elephant, each feeling a
different part of the anatomy the trunk, ihe tail and a leg except that our racial problems
have more than three parts.
I can·count at leastflve. Sut the
number isn't as Important as the
sorrowful reality that 26 years
after the· passage of the historic
1964 Civil Rights Act, this nation
Is still putting out brush fires that
either Inflame racial distinctions
or remind us of our apartness.
For example:
(1) In Washington, D.C., a
Seqate·House omnibus civil
rights bill has placed President
Bush between a rock and a· hard
place: How does be reach out to
African· Americans who are supporting the bill, but still remain
faithful to his conservative anti'
civil rights constituency? .
(2) In New York City, the .
cauldron of race relations is
boiling over as AfricanAmericans are locked In a bitter
two-way conflict with Korean-

Wher~
.

of Massachusetts Professor Julius Lester and San Jose State
University Professor Shelby
Steele pu~llcly opposed afflrma·
tlve act ion.
Lester's opposition was pres·
rt~!! ~~~~~~~~geh~::P;::~·· ~:: ented in a speech before the
ported In more than 300 [Jistan- National Forum Foundation, a
ces, not only on black students, Washington:based WAC group.
but on women, .gays and Asians. Steele's opposition was COD·
talned In a superbly crafted
(4) On the concert circuits, the
most popular comedians, rock article In the Sunday New York
music groups and rappers are Times magazine, "A Negative
those whose routines dehuman· Vote on Affirmative Action."
lze Asians, blacks, gays, Jews or · In this vldeocratic era, Steele
women. Spewing bilious bigotry Is a triple threat - academic
on stage, these performers are scholar, eloquent writer and a
making hatred legitimate and telegenlcally handsome personality. The brother also speaks
ethnic antagonism respectable.
(5) In the media and In public . with soothingly smooth baritone
speeches, white American con- cadences. Yet, when you hear
servatives (WACs) are merchan- one BIM, you've heard them all.
dising a new breed of black They make the same arguments
and even use the same words.
Intellectual mercenaries (BIMs)
Lester: "To fight against ra·
to dismantle affirmative action
in academia, business and clsm ... leads to a self-definition
as a 'victim' (my emphasisTJilnd
education.
It Is Important that these new any one who defines himself as a
apologists ,be black In order to victim has found a way to keep
neutralize the accusation of himself in a perpetual state of
white racism. Recently, two self·rlghteous self-pity and
· distinguished BIMs, University anger.''
American grocers in black neighborhoods and with ethnic whites
who attack blacks who Inadvertently stray Into ethnic
neighborhoods.

Chuck Stone

Steele: "Another liability of
affirmative action (is) that It
indirectly encourages blacks to
exploit their victimization .. .
(and In so doing) become ln-.
vested in the view of one's self as
a victim, (my emphlll!ls) ."
:
Would Lester and Steele coun·
sel Jews and women to refrain
from protesting anti-Semitism
and egregious sexism?
Would Lester, Ironically a
professor of Jewish studies, have
urged Jews In Germany's economic and educational main:
stream In the '30's to keep sllentln
the face of that nation's antiSemitic binges?
I readily concede that aftlrmatlve action Is not the only cure for
America's racism. Black economic, educational and moral
self·help are equally Important.
But without both ....... affirmative
action and black selfdevelopment - respect between
the races cannot be achieved.'
And the fight for justice will be
played out by harlequins on
concert stages and thugs on
mean streets.

Glasnost and perestroika may
have put the pacifists out of
business on the world front, but
there has never been a greater
need for peacemakers on the
home front. ·
Violence Is doing us In - and
the Teenage Mutant Ninja Tur·
ties are not helping. Neither is
the new TV hit "America's
Funniest Home VIdeos."
The Ninja Turtles engage In
lots of violence on their TV
cartoon show and In their new
movie. While, It is true, they are
fightlns the bad guys, tlie mes·
sage that comes across, says
Action for Children's TV, is that
violence Is OK. ·
It's bad training for real life,
says ACT: "It's no!tbatafter
seeing violence on TV we all pick
up a gun and shoot up the
neighborhood. it's that we childrtln and adults alike -start
to think that violence is an
appropriate solution to problems. We are no longer shocked
by it. We get used to lt."
ACT's objectlo~ !'America's

··

Funniest Home Vldeos"ls that It
trains us to laugh at otliers'
mishaps; "It desensitizes us.
When t.hls ·happens, there is the
danger that, even In real-life
situations, we will laugh or not
notice when' people are hurt,
rather than sympathize with
them."
.
The effects go further. "There
Is a scare In the land," as one
columnist puts it. People doubleand triple-lock their doors. Some
cab drivers -among the tough·
est of · New Yorkers - are
refusing to drive at night. Four
cabbies were killed In the aronx
recently In the space of five .
weeks.
Muggers in New York sometimestravelinpacksoffourand
five.
.
Fear and insecurity are bardeningordlnarycltlzens,causing
them to lose their good neigh·
borly instiDcQ.
Nelpborllness belongs to a
bygotH1 time Ill our national life.
We learn early to walk with our
auard up.

,What makes this so terribly
Iron!&lt;; is that we ourselves have
brought on the violence that Is
destroying us. We have allowed It
- every one of us who watches
violence on TV or In the movies.
Playwright Arthur Miller said,
"There is violence because we
have dally honored violence. Any
half-educated man in a good suit
can make his fortune by concoctlng a TV show whose brutality Is
photographed In sufficiently
monstrous detail. .
•
"Who prOduces these shows?
. Who pays to sponsor them? Who
1s honored for acting In them?
Are these people delinquent
psychopaths slinking along tenement streets?
,
''No,theyareplllarsofsoclety,
our honored men and women, our
exemplars of success and social
attainment."
Violence reaches Its ugly zenlth when It threatens or terrorlzes any one of us individually.
What Is a peacemaker to do at
such a time? .
Tberella15-year-oldorganlza-

COLUMBUS
State Rep.
.T he Appalachian counties are
Mary Abel (D-Athens) an- Adam~. Fayette, Hocking, Jacknounced· the commencement of son, Lawrence, Meigs, Morgan,
'the Healthy Babies project, a Pike, Scioto, and VInton. These
statewide publicity and commun- counties are targeted due to the
lty organizing campaign em· high teen birth rates.
phaslzlng early and comprehenThe $250,000 marketing camslve prenatal care for palgn Is funding by the Ohio ;
low·lncome women.
Pepartment of Human Services
· According to Abel. these
and Involves the efforts of Ohio's
women are at·rlsk because In
co_unty department and local
many cases these · expectant WIG and child/family services
mothers do not begin prenatal
clinics, the state departments of·
care tlntll after the first three · Health and Human Services,
months of pregnancy. In add!school system GRADS progJ.am,
lion, once prenatal care is begun,
community service organlza·
visits to the doctor are often
tlons,· and volunteers.
r_nissed. As a result~ problems
The toll free number, (800)
may not .s urface until the last
642·BABY (2229), • will dlreet
.trimester of pregnancy or after callers to ,support services In
birth.
their area.
· All of Ohio's 88 counties are
"This program Is necessary to
participating in . the campaiiPI.
assure these women that the
Ten metropolitan areas and ten
proper. prenatal care is not only
AP,!!!'II',Cb.lan ~ountle.s are
available, but accessible and
)a:rgeted.
affordable, particularly for

·Meigs County employees recognized
ALBANY - . The followmg · C~rlos s. McKnight, longwall
employees from Meigs County machine operator at the Meigs
are being recognized for their 15 No. 31 mine.
years of service at Southern Ohio
Jerry D. $wartz, shuttle car
Coal Company's Meigs Division
operator at the Meigs No. 2 mine.
this month:
Randy L. Williams, roof bolter
Anthony P. Adkins, continuous at the Meigs No. 31 mine.
miner helper at the Meigs No. 31
mine.
Michael B. Marklns, roof bol·
SEE OUR COMPLnE
ter at the Meigs No. 31 mine.
LINE OF PENTAX
David H . Zirkle, plant mechanic at the Meigs No. 31 mine.
CAMERAS! ·

tVSP,5%»M)

•

•

Published each Sunday, eThtrd A~ ..
Gallipolis, Ohio, by llleOilloVaUey Pub·
Ushlng Company /MuiUmedla. Inc. Se·
cond class pootage paid at 9alllpolls,

Ohio 45631. Entered as second class
mailing matter at POmeroy, Ohio, Post
Office.

'

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Meigs," Abel said.

Member: United Press International.

POMEROY &amp; GALUPOUS
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Sunday .. ....... .................... ;.. 50_Cents

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Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
New York. Ne.w York 10017.
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tlon known as Alternatives t~
VIolence. It Instructs classes In
churches and other places on
non-violent techniques to keep,
conflicts from escalating.
..
Among other things, partie!·:
pants are asked to propose a
course of action for an elderly
woman returning from the super·,
market with her arms filled with
grocery bags. Suddenly, she·
realizes she is being followed by a
gang of bullies who are rapid!~
drawing closer. What should she
do?
·
,
Most In .the' classes are surpr!Sed to learn what the woman·
actually did.
,Turning to face the boys, she
said: "I'm 10 glad to see you.
These bags are very heavy.
Would you carry them to my
house tor me?"
With that she handed the llaas
to the boys and led the way to Iter
house, where they depoalted the '
groceries and left peacefully.
Would the Teenaae Mutant
Ninja Turtles have ull(lerstood .
that kind of couraae? . •:

"It's rough to have to go ou t Marine Information Is ava ilable
and look for a boat when know . on a special radio channel.
one knows Its size, description,
- Having sufficient life pre,j
where It left from or anything servers for each person on board;·
else," Kitchens said.
- Having a two-way radio and !
In addition to the float plan, the being familia r wi th marine dis: •
Coast Guard also suggests sev· tress c hannellG.
:;
eral other tips for safe boating,
-Not overloading the vessel . .;
including;
Authorities are also concerned :
-Being aware of lake condl· about the use of alcohol among •
tlons and weather forecast~ . boaters. .
'

IOIIfii(IOifl

Healthy Babies proje~t begins

respc~t~lble for advance payment•
made to carriers.

George Plagenz

••

&gt;

PREPARE FOR MEMORIAL .DAY- Members of Amerkan Legion PO&amp;t l3 ~Point Plasant
are shown above selting crosses and flags In the Legioa post yard, In IK1nor of tblllt wbo died Ia batlie. Assisting Ia the memorial were Ray Wood, Q.H. Wickline, D.K. Simpson, Joe Alltll, Jr., WUbar
·Jordon, Jeddl Kennedy, Jessie Jordon and Roy Anderson. The Lelion and V.F.W. Post 3531 ~Point
Pleasant wiD bold a memorial service at the Mason County Llbnry on Sunday at 1 p.m. The public
1
. is inviled to attend. (Register photo by Mindy Keams.)

The Sunday Tlmes-Sentll'lel wlll not be

to put the .blame for violence

•..

Coast Guard promotes float plan

May '2:7. 1990

Page

Sunday TIITIBI Sentinei-Paga A-3

Pomerov-Middl1port-G•ipcilia, Ohio Point Planr •t. W.Va.

•

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�Tmn Sentinel

Ohio-Point Pleuent, W. Va.

;

27. 1990

·'-"""•

Ohio Point Ph

GAHS students take honors

' ARIEL BOARD LOOKS AT THE TOP - Ariel
Theatre Board members took a once In a lifetime
dlance lo examine the hlslorlc theatre's ceiBn&amp;
up close. Braid Painter Is shown here polaUng out
~lie lntrlca&amp;e designs 1o vollmleers John Strauss
l(nd Joe Snyder and board member, Sllelley
Haskins. The designs were discovered oa the
~Ding once scaffolding was erected ~fallltate

•

painting and plaster work. The May Ariel board of
dlre!)tors nieetlng was held on the scaffolding 30
·feet off the Door of the theatre as members
lnspeded the coMtructlon progress. The Grand
Opening of the Ariel Is set for'June 9. Tickets are
avallllble at Brunlcardl Music and Peddler's
Pantry.

Lafayette Post 27... ___._.. B~y_J..,-am_e_s.;_Sa~nds_.
•

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I

~y

JAMES SANDS

'

GALLIPOLIS- The Lafayette
P,ost '1:1 ol the Amerl~an Legion
q.as organized on July 26, 1919 at
!Oe Elk's Club In Gallipolis with
O.e election of
~fie post's offlc·
fts. The
ommande
as Lieut.
fred M. Bar·
~w with
. pl!n H.E. Hou•~k
•lected as the vice commander. ·
l-uther Broyles was the first
1
tecretary and Charles Robinson
Jbe first ireasurer. Stanley Han ·
Served as historian. The other
111embers of the Executive Com·
111lttee w.ere Raymond Mossman.
J:arl Thompson, Will Gee and
!larry L. Broyles.
; The firs I commander of Post 27
tas the only Galllan to be
awarded the Croix de Guerre In
!lJorld War I. Barlow was par·
pally crippled In the war ·but
llecame a practicing attorney.
fie was the prOsecuting attorney
Ill Gallipolis In the 1920's. Later
lie traveled on behalf of the
hllonal organization of the
American Legion throughout the
midwest. .
Barlow went to France in
World War I as a member of the
Third Battalion. 148th Infantry,
37th D!v'!slon. Barlow had
learned French in Gallipolis and
It was this fact that got him
appointed as the billeting officer.
. It was Barlow's job to find places
for the American soldiers to stay
, in french homes. It was reported
• IJlat he had some problems at
ftfst since some of the first
, Americans to latid In France had
•

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Soviet Frontier", second place,
Eric Roderick. Anthony Sola,
Eric Hoffman, John Hoffman
Jessica Strafford and Clirts Mul·
aJUI Sam Hamilton, ''Tbe Begin!Ins, "DNA: The Secret of Life."
ning of the Jet Age". and third
Junior lndlvldllal Media, firSt
place, Richard Kuhn, " A Tribute place, Jill Roderus, Jessica
Tayor and Sherry Casanova,
to Charles F. Kettering", second
"X-Rays:
A Window to the .
place. Mark Willis, "SliVer
..
Body.
Bridge: Techi!C)Iogical Triumph
•.
'
.
Ohio Council tot . the Social
to Tragedy." Junior Group MeStudies Prize for an Outstanding
. dla, second place, Bradley Har·
Entry on Ohio History Using .
rls, Kyle Clark, Bob Mayhussen
Primary Sources was In the
and Kevin Turley, "Art Air·
Junior
Division·, Mike Donnally
conditioned Century."
"Suspension
Bridge Techno!·
Senior Individual Perforrnan·
Gailla
Acad~my
Jr. High.
ogy"
ces. second place, Heather WakeWinners
will
advance
to the
field, "About Gas Masks ... So
finals
June
10-14
at the
national
Who Cares?' • Senior Individual
University
of
Maryland,
College
Media, first place, Nathan Bel· ·
ville, "WES: . Army Corps of Park.
Engineers." Senior Group MeJohn Lester Is the teacher for :·
dia, Jared Ford, Matt White and .the Talented and Gifted at Gallla •
Katherine Strafford, "Space: A ·' Academy Jr. ·Htsh and High
School.

There all around me the
ground was blood red.
Where the soldiers had fallen
and the poppies had bled,•
With faces uplifted, they gave
me a glance, .
And I knew then, the)&lt;' still
bloo{lled on the battlefield of
France.

Then I stooped down to touch
one hero's grave,
·
And I knelt there and I said a
prayer,
Looking up Into hea,·en to the ·
These angels of mercy with
great God of love,
He assured me that their souls smiles on their faces
Were telling John Doe to be
were up there.
kind.
"Wear a poppy and ~elp war
I took an01her look at the
veterans. not dead. . .
·
crosses so white.
.But maimed With sick minds
But behold their gleam "'as not
and some blind."
Ihere.
The poppies had ·vanished. but
"Let us always remember the
.
right In their path
war."
thev said.
Were hundreds of men In
·'How
theSe fought hard side bv ·
wheelch;llrs.
side,
·
·
And
'think
of
the
sacrifices
Their legs had ' been severed.
there were scars on their faces , made for you,
And wear a red crepe poppy
· But their hands seemed to
pride. "
with
work with great skill.
And as I turned to glance just
one more Time
I noticed how shell•shocked

Cropland rents down slightly
COLUMBUS. Ohio 1UPil Rent for Ohio cropland is averag·
tng $69.10 ail acre In 1990. down
slightly from S70.BO in 1989.
But Allan Lines . agricultunll
eco nomist at Ohio Stat!.' Unil'er·
s it1·. · sa ~· s rental prices for
top- qualit~ ground in no rthln's t
Ohio arc almost doubll' thl' state
rare

Lenders and .f armers reporT'
that rents of $125 an acre ate not
uncommon for the best land in
areas where competition is st iff.
On the other hand. some corn
ground in other parts of Oh io is
being rented for as llttl&lt;' as S~5 an
acre. The lower·priced la nd Is
generally of lower qua lit~· and
under limited demand.

BOARD CERTIFIED SPECIALIST IN
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GENERAL SURGERY
NEEDED

• General Surgery
• Gynecological Surgery
•Women's Health
• Yearly Female Exams

I

"Cancer Can Be Cured With
Early Detection"

For immediate position .with
busy group surgical practice
located in Parkersburg,
WY.
.
Contact: Mr. Dayhoff, Bus. Mgr.
!Parkersburg lhdkal Anoclates
P.O. Box 659, Parkenburg, WY. 26102
·,
304-485-5532 or 614·919-2305

Dr. Jack M. Levine

11 ~

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Privileges At Pleasant Valley and
Veterans ~emorial Hospitals

MIDDLEPORT -The Brad·
ford Chqrch of Christ will con·
duct Vacation Bible Sc.hool June
4·8 from 9-11:30 a.m. dally. The
theme Is "Island In · the Son.
Living In the Warmth of God's
Love." There w!ll be recreation.
crafts, songs, and refreshments.

Golf notes

·u...-..

I 'II

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tlfllgo

•c·'. an
" 'd:

. t tng
•.'
t es p lan mee.
l' with ·Southeast ·Council
~

10.YEAR
UMITED
WARRANTY*

Robinette,' Jessica Russell. Ha·
rofd Taylor and Doris Wood.
Births for May 24 - Mr. and
Mrs. Roger Dowell; a son,
Middleport. Mr. and Mrs. Mitch
Harman, a son, Patriot. Mr. and
· Mrs. Richard Spears, a sori,
Crown City. Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Williams; a daughter, Rutland: -

ell!! A

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448-2no
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360 Second Ave., Gallipolis, ~ Ohio

t480889

GALLIPOLIS- Both of Ohio's
gut\ernatorlal candidates will.
• meet with thP Southeastern Ohio
: Regional Council Highway Com;
, mlttee. Chairman G. Kenner
' Bush,announced.
, The meetings will occur In July
• and August , with each candidate
: addressing a full meeting of the
' SEORC following the committee
: session, Bush said.
•· Former Cleveland mayor
• George V. Voinovlch, the Repub·
llcan candidate. ·will meet with
· the highway committee on
• Thursday, July 12 at the Fair·
greens Country Club in Jackson
• County. Volnovlch will speak to
· members of the SEORC at a
dinner meeting that day.
· Attorney General Anthony J.
Celebrezze, the Democratic
hopeful, will meet with the
committee on Thursdljy. Aug. 16,
also at the Falrgreens, and will
speak to the organization's memberShip at a special dinner
meeflng.
Bush said he was elflled that
both candidates accepted the
Invitation.
. "Our highway needs are great
and well documented," Bush
satd: "The Celeste admlnlstra·
tton ha$ adopted much of the
SEORC highway agenda and has
programmed several of the projects through the mld-1990s.
"Compleflon of these projects
Is ·v ital to the economic growth of
southeastern 'Ohio," Bush con·
tlnued: ''These two meetings will
give us an opportunity to register
at the highest level of our
concerns and highway needs."
The SEORC Regional Highway
Agenda 2000 Includes completion
o.f the Appalachian Highway In
Pike and Athens counties; con·
structlon of U.S. 35 In Gallla
County tnow ullderway); a con·
· nect01' l'OBd fronl U.S. 331n Meigs •
County to the Ravenswood,
W.Va., bridle:· a U.S. 23 bYPass
at Portai'JII)uth: !WD sectiOIII of35

i

DISCOVER

,1,..

.,UU

.

I! Helps protect your children
and pets.
.
• Enhances appear~nce of
your yard.
• Helps provide security and
privacy for your hOme.
• tO·yr. llm~ed warfanty, see .
store for detalis.

EMS responds

VBS slated

' i'· t:ALt:IPOL:iS. - A total of 17 year the:J6.hourcoursehas been
: ,ftrefflllters from six fire depart· offered to area fire departments,
; !MillS Ia O.llla and Vinton ' free of c~rge. ·
,
'• ·. !' llo*tltt81'tl•theelghth week of · Instruction In basic !!refight·
.; r •
llulc fire training lng Is required by law for all new
;· 'ICIIMI' .-.ored by the Gallla 'VOlunteers. The Instruction must
· . COU!ily.Pbt'lllhtetsAssoclatlon. be taken In the first year of the
;
~Y lush of the Gallipolis volunteer's appointment.
: Valua!Wr ''Fire Department Is
Required courses Include com·
i tllt~or.Thls!stheseventh mumty fire service. safety,
' , · .·. :'
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(304) 675-1460
(614) 992-6990

•

:\'Firefighter -school underway

opportunity to examine housing
and urban development Issues
like community development
projects, programs for providing
affordable housing and in·
creased borne ownership, and
.addressing homelessness.
Over the course of the conference, the grOup will have the
opportunity to visit the downtown
area 'and see the recent Improvements that have been made.
A prime example of commun·
tty development, revitalization
of downtown Gallipolis Includes a
brand new streetscape, restora·
tlon of the building facades, and
extensive waterfront
development.

POMEROY -Deputies of the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department are Investigating a break·
lngand entering report from Ed
Johnson, Reedsville.
According to the report, Jolin·
son stated that sometime on
Friday someone had entered his
house but nothing was missing.
· Johnson stated that he believed

POMEROY -Units of the
Meigs County Emergency Medl·
cal Service responded to four
calls for assistance on Friday.
At 2: 36 a.Jll. the Pomeroy ul)lt
was called to Welch Town Hill for
Timothy Davidson who was
taken to Veterans Memorial
'
Hospital.
The Rutland unit, at 6:57a.m .•
went to Beech Grove Road for
Eva McKinney who was trans·
ported to Holzer Medical Center.
At 3: 33 p.m. the Syracuse unit
responded to a call on Swan Road
for Ruth Stethem who was taken
to St. Joseph's Hospital.
At 9: 19 p.m. the Racine unit
took Clarence Wickline from
ijoback Road to Veterans.

. I awoke from mv dream and
what seemed an artillery.
Was only ' the women of the
American Legion Auxlllar~.
They carried large l)unches of
red flowers in their hands,
And were singing war songs to
the beat of the band.

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges for May '24 Jewell Dunlap, Junior Gifford,
Sheila Henry, Pamela Hlggln·
bothm, Patricia Howell, Mrs.
Richard Kyer and daughter,
Patricia Lawless. Mrs. Tracy
McCormick and son, Phyllis
McGuire, Bernice Nelson. Gloria
Phillips, Mary Riffle, Dollie

facUlty looked just a few weeks qo, and below Ill
the structure as It standa today. Construction
began In October 1988. !Ttmes-llenUnel pbololl by
G. Spencer Osborne)

THEil( AND NOW- An liddlllon loOIIIo Valley
Bank Ia ander conatrucllon lo bouse a data
pncealn1 center, and Is expected to be complete
an11 operalloMI by October. Above Is how the

Around a long table they ..
worked without words
They seemed happy , but yet
they were fran.
With thetr· hands · they were
busy and this l)~lped a lot,
They were making red crepe ; .
poppies for sale.'
,
•

·OCCD to gather in Gallia
for 1991 annual meeting

: The Lafayette Post 27 of the American Legion was officially
organized in 1919 when Alfred M. Barlow, a World .W arl hero. was
~lected as the first p051 commander.

Deputies investigate
·B&amp;E
.•

and 111.

And I knew as I gazed at the
crosses white.
I had wandered Into Flanders
Field.

An exemption !rom sitting for
final examinations was approved
lor seniors, and seniors were
approved for graduation. The
board also approved a waiver of
tuition for two foreign exchange
students, one lromGermany and
one from Japan lor the 1990-91
school year. Rejected was the
disciplinary appeal of a one day
out-of-school suspension for a
student at the high school.
The policy on the employment
of classified personnel was
amended on the first reading.
Arrangements wer.e madefor the
district to join others In Sou·
theast Ohio, the Coalltilon of
Rural and A,ppalachlan Schools,
to conduct a school finance
equity study for the purpose of

(Frtm Pa1e A-1)
dealing with several personnel
matters, the board voted to
proceed with actions to consider
the termination of the contract of
teacher, Robert Shaver.
Mrs. Debbie Weber and Ron
Hill were employed as head
teachers for Riverview and Ches·
ter Elementarles, respectively,
for the 1990-91 school year. The
resignations of Mrs. Mary Rose
and Duke Pullins, both retiring,
were·accepted with regret .
The board adopted a notice of
commendation resolutions for
the elementary students who
have made the hOnor rolls for the
fifth grading period.

Poppy Dream poem remembered

By CHARLENE HOEFUCH
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - More than a
dozen years ago around Memor·
Ia! Day, the late Carrie Neutzling
penned a poem entitled "My
Poppy Dream." That poem took
first place In Ohio In a poetry
contest sponsored by the Ameri·
can Legion Aux!llary.
.
,.
It was · written by Mrs. Neut·
acted • In a dt.unken and dlsorNext Barto~ and his men illY In zllng during the year she was
derly manner. Barlow stood In
the mud at St. l\'llhlel and thence . plagued with health problems
themlddleofthetownsquareand
Into Belgium with a brief stay at which made It necessary for her
Informed the. French citizens . the British camp referred to as
to turn her talent from distribut"Dirty Bucket Camp", famous
that his men were not drunken
Ing poppies on the streets of
Marines as had been there,
for the size of the native rats
Pomeroy to penning poetry a bout
before, but were Guards none of
(twice . as large as any In
the one flower which as she
whom ever got drunk. Barlow America) .
commented at the time "says lt
even knew the French hymn, The
On Novemoor 2,1918, the Third
all" for disabled veterans.
"Marsellaise" and heledh!s men Battalion was hot on the trail of
Carrie for many years was .a
In a rendition of It for the.French the Germans who had position
pUlar among poppy promoters
citizens of Pontenason.
across the Sheldt Canal. This
for the Pomeroy Auxiliary.
"Regiment des guards" who canal was quite deep from water
At · the request · of another
could sing the "Marsellalse" diverted from the Escaut River .
devoted to the poppy cause of
convlncedthetownsfolkloput!Jp Battalion scouts felled trees so
raising money for veterans'
these particular American sold!· . the canal could 'be crossed.
rehabilitation and child welfare
ers. Later In September Barlow .Barlow had taken some men to
programs. we are again printing
moved with his unit Into the string hand railing wires on the
Carrie's poem.
Argonne. These untested soldiers felled trees. Some members of K
MY POPPY DREAM
were ordered to begin a march Company were able to cross the
·
Last
nigh! as I lay sleeping
toward the front lines at 11 p.m. canal and had set up a line on the
had
a dream qu!IP rare.
I
While they marched they heard German side of the canal. Barlow
T
stood
on beds of soft green
shells bursting all around them was helping others cross and
moss,
and Imagined that they might be repairing part of th.f railing when
Looking down at some crosses
wondering between the Allies a shell exploded near him,
there.
and the Germa~s. At daybreak jettisoning a piece of wire into his
they learned that they were still left leg.
:fhen I saw the ra~· s from an
quite a ways from the front. The ..Barlow ordered· the crossing
eter
nal light
guns they had heard were all stopped until dark. Later that
Displaying
the red popp~· yield.
American naval guns. Later In . day a piece of shrapnel tore Into ·
the fir~t day of the advance Into • Barlow's rlgh.t foot. He kept his
the Argonne Forest, the men post and ordered the crossing
were getting jumpy. A jack that njght . He also orde~ed the
rabbit jumped out from behind a dead Americans to be burled in
tree and several men fired, . the canal so as not to discourage
' without realizing what they were troops that were following behind
firing at or that they might hit his unit. Faint from pain and the
their own soldiers.
loss of blood and unable to walk.
GALLIPOLIS - It was re' Later that day when they Barlow effected the crossing and
cently announced by the Ohio
starfed up a hill, German fire stayed In command. untU word
Conference of Community Devel·
spat down upon them. The men reached him that the Americans
opment that Gallipolis has been
flopped down and walled. That had bu!lt a pontoon bridge across
selected for the 1991 annual
night some ·Germans stumbled the canal not far from his
meeting site .
Into Barlow's unit and heavy position. Thus.theGerm&lt;\nS were
Following consideration of a
fighting ensued. Of the170'men In pushed back. Barlow·lost part of
proposal submitted by City Man·
Barlow's unit that entered the his right leg and spent considera·
ager Dale Iman and Angela
ArgonneForestonly70cameout. ble time In the hospital.
Taylor, director of the Ohio
Valley VIsitors' Center, Gallipolis was selected as host city for
the 1991 event.
The three-day conference, In
July 1991; Is expected bring 150 ·
people from around the stale .
The meeting, which will be
held this year In Canton, Ohio,
provides OCCD members an

W.Va.

Em tern...

in Ohio History Day .eve~t
CLEVELAND- More than 350
students competed In Ohio's
National History Day state com·
petltlon..Saturday, May 12 at Case
Western Reserve University In
Cleveland.
Winners from Gallla Academy
Junior .High SChOol Included:
Junior Individual Projects, Mike
Donnally, "Suspension Bridge."
Junior Group Projects, second
place, Blair Simpson, · Carolyn
Skinner and Laura Barcus; "Pas- .
teurizatlon." Junior lndMdual
Performances, third place, Jean
Knight, "Who's the Man Behind
the Little Screen?" Junior Group
Performances, first place, Kelll
Smith, James Morrison, Laura
Linder, Shannon Poff and Claire
Roderick, "Albert Einstein: The
Life of a Physicist" , third place,

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In Jackson and Ross counties; a
two-stage project with the fourlanlng of 33 north of Nelsonville
to south of Logan , tobestartedas
the first part of a long·term
Nelsonville bypass; and two
feasibility studies : a study of the
Portsmouth East bypass and an
Imp-roved north· south rou.te link·
!ng Chesapeake and 'Lawrence
(:ounty with Jackson.
'

•
POMEROY -WinnerslnTues·
day's Ladles Golf League at the
Jay Mar Golf Course were Nellie
Wright, low gross and low net,
and Elizabeth Lohse, low putts.

ultimately effecting cbanges In
leafllatlon favorable to this area·
of the state.
·
The board renewed the con.
tract with Trlpte A of Sout)J
Central OhiO for the purpose of
providing classroom and beblndthe-wbeel Instruction, modlflecJ
tbe 1990 lottery budget, the
Chester and Tuppers Plains
Elementary School Activity·
Funds, and the Chapter I fund . •
Approprlatlgns In the Uniform
Supply FUnd were revived, mo&gt;:
ney was transferred within the:
cheerleader fund, and the next .
regular meeting was set lor June :
28 at 7 p.m. In the SChOQI :
cafeteria.
..:...
Attending were Ray Karr :
Charles Knight, Blll Hannum, 1; ~
0. McCoy, and Jim Smith.
:

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entry was galne&lt;l through a
kitchen window.
On Friday evening, deputies
took a report from Dl;tne With·
r.ow, Shade, ·She reported that
during the di!Y. a Vtdeo cassette
recorder . was taken from her
residence. The method of entry Is
unknown at this lime.
Deputies took a complaint on
Friday from Letart Elementary
Elementary .It was reported that
sometime on Thursday evening
or early Friday morning, someone threw rocks and broke five
windows. The Investigation Is
continuing.
On Friday night, deputies took
a report of an assault from
Tammy Baker, Mt . Olive Road,
·Long Bottom. Charges are
pending.

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PLANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POMEROY:
236 E. Ma.in St. 2nd floor
992-5912
1:30 to 5:00 Mondoy-fridoy
Closed Thundoy

••
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GAWPOUS:

414 S.CONI ,,.~ 2nd flotll' .
446-0166
'
1:30 hi 5:00 . . .,.fridoy •,
1:30 to 12 Satoday
.,
.
Closed Thun.y
. ALSO: Jacbon, ChiS!1peak1, lthtM, Chillicothe, fotan &amp; McArthw

...

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stress, public relations, fire
behavior, fire e"Xtlngulshers,
ropes and knots, fire hoses, fire
pum10s, self-contained breathing
apparatus. ladders. tools and
equipment.
Bush said the current class
Includes five f!teflghters from
Wilkesville. lour from Galllpolls.
four from Guyan Township, two
from Vinton ,and one · ~a ch from
the Crown Citv and Greenfield
Tow~ship votuineer units.

•

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions -Timothy
Davidson. Pomeroy; Derek Cre·
means. Rutland; RebeccaKauff,
Pomerov. and Clarence Wickline, Racine .
Friday discharges -Florence
Baer, Audrey Torrence, Timothy
Davidson ..

ESTABLISHED 1895

GALA
GRAND OPENING
SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1990

9 MONTH SPECIAL!

WITH THE

OHIO VAllEY SYMPHONY
THE ARIEL'S OWN 47 PIECE ORCHESTRA
FEATURING
PIANIST

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Th•• 11 a 1ubat11ntlel lnter•t penehy for early withdrawal.

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Performing Gershwin's

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Rhapsody In Blue"

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Annual Percentage late of 7.7 50fo is Compounded
Dally to Protide I.D60J. EHoctlvo Annual Yield.
This CD haJ ,a 9 month Naturlty and roqulros a
$2,500 deposit.

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TICKETS AVAILABLE AT BRUNICARDI'S
AND PEDDLER'S PANTRY

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Call446-ARTS for More Information.

· 4U·2631

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Member FDIC .
ec.nvenient Locations

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M8y ?:1, 1980

Pomeroy-MidciiiPOit-Gm''ipcllll, Ohio Point Plnrrm. W.Va.

Ohio Point Pleasant, W. Va.

-Local news briefs- Numbering progt•&amp;Jn con~ues in Galli*
Center to obseNJe holiday ·

GALLIPOLIS - Woodland Centers, Inc., will observe the
Memorial Day holiday Monday, May 28.lndlvlduals may obtain
emergency services by calling 446-5554 In 'Gallla County or
1-8()().2!11-5554 In Meigs or Jackson counties. .

Court Home closed Monday
POMEROY -Meigs County Common Pleas Judge Fred W.
. Crow III reminds residents his office and all other county
offices, with the exception of the sheriff's office, wlJI be closed
Monday In observance of Memorial Day. Offices will re-open
Tuesday at the usual 8:30a.m. hour.

No paper Monday
POMEROY - The Dally Sentinel will not be published on
Monday, May 28, In order to permit employees to observe
Memorial Day.·

Middleport Council meets Tuesday

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I

Due to the Memorial Day holiday, Middleport Village Council
will hold
regular meeting on Tuesday, May 29, at 7:30p.m.
All village otflces w,lll be closed on Monday, May 28.

Its

Lunsford convicted, sentenced

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•

GALLIPOLIS - In Gallla County Common Pleas Court
Thursday, Otis W. Lunsford, 26, of Lewisburg, pleaded guilty to
two counts of sexual battery, after which he was Immediately
sentenced to two years at the Orient Correctional FacUlty and
fined $500.

:

Bond forfeited .

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GALLIPOLIS- In Gallipolis Municipal Court Friday, Haria
J. Saunders, 28, Rt. 2, Gallipolis, forfeited,a $43 bond for !allure
to yield.

•

SR 325 closed Tuesday
;

GALLIPOLIS - State Route 325, between the village of
Vinton and SR 124, will be closed Tuesday, May 29, according to
Jeff Phllllps, Gallla County superintendent for the Ohio
· Department of Transportation (ODOT). The bridge will be
closed 'from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m., weather permitting,
The closure Is to allow maintenance crews to replace a culvert
near the junction of SR 160.

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GALLIPOLIS - Within the
next few days, resident; who
receive mall from the Cheshire
Post Office will be getting letters
In the mail notifying them of their
permanent address change.
This makes the third rural area
completed In the county, with all
rural routes In Bidwell and
VInton having received their new
addresses,
.
Currently the house number·
lng department Is working on
rural routes In Patriot and Crown
City. ,
Thurman and Ga111polis were
set back In scheduUng due to the
construction of U.S. 35 bypass.
Construction and realignment
of ~any of the township and
county roads wUI change the

Kroger...
(From XROGER, page AI)
are water· based to prevent possl·
ble groulld wafer contamlna·
Uon," he said. "Despite the~
benefits, preventing recyclable
materials, such as plastic bags,
from entering the solid waste
system Is the best source of
action. Even though plastic groc·
ery bags comprise only onequarter of one percent of solid
waste, every effort can help.
That's why we're testing the
plastic bag recycling program."
According to Robinson, the bags
must be clean and free of any
paper or other scrap materials.
. Although Kroger offers custo·
mers the option of plastic or
paper grocery 'bags, Robinson
says the plastic bags are pre·
!erred three to one lor their
convenience, strength, numer·
ous re·uses and moisture· resiSt·
ance. "By learning more about
the plastic grocery bag's envir·
onmental compatibility and the
option to recycle, our·customers
can make an Informed decision,"
he said.
·

Mary Elizabeth Craig

•
POINT PLEASANT _ Mary
~ Elizabeth Craig, 90, Point Plea·
,. sant, died Friday In Pleasant
t: Valley Hospital. ·
r Arrangements will be anr nounc ed 1a t er b y til e c row·
•' Russell Funeral Home ..

t:

Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call after 9 a .m .
on Monday morning at the
fulnner~~~~o~~owers, memorials
may . be made to the Meigs
County Unit of the American
Cancer Society.

Tuesday at 10 a·.m. at the
Coolville Cemetery, with the
Rev. Robert Sanders officiating.
.Friends may call at the White·
Blower Funeral Home on· Monday from 7·9 p.m.

John L. Moore

i:

COOLVILLE -JohnL.Moore,
81, Mansfield, died at the home of
his daughter, D. Marie Brannon,
on Friday.
.
Born In Jackson County on
Sept. 15, 1908; he was a member
of the Diamond Hill Baptist
Church In Mansfield, . and an
18·year employee of the Spitzer
Motor Co., from where he retired
In 1958. Prior to that employ·
ment, he operated several !Ullng
stations In Mansfield.
POMEROY -The Meigs Soil
Mr. Moore Is survived by a
daughter, D. Marie (Bernard) and Water Conservation District
Brannon of Mansfield; three Office will be closed Wednesday,
grandchildren, Bernard Michael Thursday, and Friday to move
Brannon, U.S. Air Force, Holm· from Its present location on the
·stead, Fla.; Larry Stephen Bran· second floor oft he Farmers Bank
non, U.S. Air Force, Fort Walden building In Pomeroy to its new
Beach, Fla.; and Patricia Marie office space at, · 33101 Hiland
Greiwe of Mansfield; six great. Road, !'fmeroy, just off Route 7
grandchildren; and two sisters, toward Veterans Memorial
Orpha Prince of Davisville, Hospital.
W.Va., and Laura Gunderson of
Operations will resume as ·
. usual at the new location on June
Stoddard, Wis.
Mr. Moore was preceded In 4. The phone number will remain
death by his wife, Zola Zlle the same, 992·6647. The SWCD
Zickefoose Moore In 1972; and office regrets any Inconvenience
the moVe may cause.
.
two sisters and one brother.
Graveside services will be

GALLIPOLIS - Leonard Hoi·
~ stan, 92, Crown City, died Satur· .
~ day In Holzer Medical Center.
~
Born March 28, 1898 In Crown
:1Cit.y, son of tne late John (Curl)
•; Holston and Flora Sowards Hoi·
;. s ton. he was retired from the
:: Galllpoils Developmental
:: Center.
,; He was preceded In death by
!. his wife, Clara Mae Sheets
!: Holston, on Oct. 9, 1984.
:• · Surviving are three sons,
·, Wayne Holston, Tom Holston and
~ Jerry Holston, all of San An.tonto,
,. Texas; a daughter, Mrs. Francis
·:(Norma Jean) Kuhn of Galllpo~· Us; a stepson, Dale Sheets of
•: Scottown; a sister, Lola Sims of
:j Cordele, Ga.; six grandchildren.
four step·grandchildren and sev·
•, era! great ·grandchildren.
:. He was also preceded In death
;: by three sons and a brother.
;: Services will be lp.m. Wednes•
.. day in the Willis Funeral Home.
:: Burial will be In Crown City
•: Cemetery. Friends may call at
:• the funeral home from' 6·9 p.m.
Tuesday.

:1

MIDDLEPORT - Lee McCo·
mas of Middleport, died Satur·
day, May 26, 1990. Arrangements
will be atmounced by Rawlings,
Coates and Fisher Funeral .
Home.

Office ·to close
temporarily

Beulah G. Knapp
~ POINT PLEASANT- Beulah

r

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:: SYRACUSE- Don Lisle, 70, of
:syracuse, died Saturday, May 26,
,1990 at his residence. He was a
·$on of the late Ked and Norma
.Miller Lisle.
: He was a retired freight
·conductor with Conrail and a
;veteran Qf World War II, a
inember of Syracuse Methodist
. f;burcl\, Pomeroy DAV, United
!Transportation Union.
;' Surviving are his wife, Mary
·Hardin Lisle, whom he married
:May 19, 1941. Also surviving are
;two sons, John Lisle of Syracuse
IIJid Keith Lisle of Warrior, Ala.;
;a daughter, Rose Ann Jenkins of
•Forest Run; seven grandchild·
ren; a sister Mildred Crooks of
:Columbus; and several nelc~s
·.and nephews.
: Services will be Tuesday, 1
;p.m. at Ewing Funeral Home,

~~?:ur: a~e:rrou~~tc~e~~!~i
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a

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124 In Salem Township.
;
Qark was eastbound at 4: 3\1
p.m . when she reportedly loli,t
control on a curve, went off lhi
right side of the road, spu4
around In the highway an.
overturned, causiDi alteht darJl'
age to ber vehicle. She was take'
to the hospital by prtvatevehleie'l
The patrol cited Clark fot
failure to control.
·
The patfOI ticketed Jeffrey Ti
Bennett, 37, Kettering, for as;
sured clear distance In a · tWo!
vehlcl~ accident on u.s; 3~
Friday,
l
Bennett was easibbund at 8: U
p.m. when his vehicle reporledlll
struck the rear of a car driven bY,
Bobby D. Garrett, 19, Chllllcothe.•
Garrett was turning right IntO
Green Township Road 274 (Sur(
Valley Drive) when the acclden~
occurred.
.
Damage was sllght · to bo~
Vehicles, the ~trot said. •. __ ' '

SATELLITE SALES
AND SERVICE

Bus, car
collide

•UNIDEN
•TOSHill
•DRAKE

GALL.IPOLIS - A city school
bus and a car co lllded Friday
afternoon, as the bus was taking
students home.
A school bus driven by Hilda
Copley, 28, of Route 2 Bidwell
was at~mpting to make a left.
turn onto Court! Street from
Fourtli Avenue when she struck a
car driven by Harry J. Kearns, 60
of West Columbia, W.Va.
There was no damage to the
bus and minor damage to the car .
There were no Injuries and no
citations Issued .by the Gallipolis
City Pollee.
A hit and run accident was
reported In front of 227 Third
Ave., late Friday night by Brian
K Alley. of 507 Main St., Point
Pleasant, W.Va. His 1979 Toyota
was p~rked at 227 Third Ave.,
when a car backed out of the Old
Brick Tavern parking lot, strlk·
ing Alley's car on the left side.
The second driver then left the
scene. The lnclden t Is under
Investigation.

WE HAVE A URGE SELECTION OF
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; Sou&amp;hweetern High School valedlclorlall .Joe Hammond told his
fellow rraduates and lite crowd at Frldll)' night's graduation
••• ceremoalea
at SWHS. "Thourh tbere 18 very lll&amp;le room at &amp;he top,
~ tile dlffereDee between tbe picture ud a palnllnr 18 that a plct ure Is
~ · wbat It lbowa, while a palnllar Ia whatever you w~llllo be. Lei
1 tbe palallap Ill yonr IUe become pletures." (Ttmes..Senllnel photG
•. by G. Spencer Osborne)
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.':Walton's baH-brother shot to death

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Cn.IO&amp; II

~ &lt;;:HICAGO (UP!) Chicago
' Cubs outfielder Jerome Walton
·sat out the first game of Satur·
· ;• day's double-header after learn~ tog his half·brother was shot •a nd
: kOled In Atlanta .
' Cubs Manager Don Zimmer
• said after talking to Walton for 40
~ minutes Saturday, he decided not
' to start the center fielder In the
first game of a double·header
' against Houston. However, Wal·
• ton plnch·hlt 111 the seventh
! Inning and started In center field
·
·
: In Game 2.
"You don't know how to handle
: something . llke that," Zimmer

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DENNIS L. HOCKMAN &amp; ASSOCIATES
657 HIGH 51.

H.OME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER .

391 WEST MAIN STEET
992-3524

614-992-7066
MIDDLEPOII, OHIO

.... td on numbw of ve•• •nd b-'111~ l.ft on yow mortg.,ge

•

POMEROY, OHIO .

IG.Cn••--.••

said. ''I told him, 'I'm not going
to tell you what to do, you tell

me."'

•'

DUATES
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: Weather

South Central Ohio
'· Sunday, mostly cloudy with a
:, ~Ught chance of showers. High in
, the mid 60s. Northeast winds 5 to
1 15 . mpli. Chance of rain is 30
~ percent.
1 .. Sunday night, variable cloud!·
1 ness with a slight chance of
j fhowers. Low around 60, Chance .
1 of rain Is 30 percent.
l ~ Memorial day, partly sunny
: ,)VIth a high 75 to 80'.
• •
Extended J'orecul
; , Tuead81 throulh Thand111
~ .: Fair Tuesday and Wednesday,
~. a chance of showers Thursday.
S;Highs In tbe 70s. Lows In the 50s.
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failure to control and no seat belt.
Troopers said Philip V. Hovat·
tel, 16, Middleport, was Injured
when biB vehlt;le crashed on
Meigs County Road 5 (Bradbury
Road) at 11: 55 a.m.
Hovattel was northbound when
he reportedly lost control on wet
pavement, went off the right side
of the road, struck a telephone
pole and then hit a set of concrete
steps to a house owned by Lester
A. Lathey, Middleport.
Hovattel also complained of
rplnor visible Injuries and was
taken to Holzer Medical Center
by private vehicle, but the
hospital had no record of hi$
treatment. Hovattel's vehicle
was heavily damaged and he was
cited by the patrol for fl!llure to
control and no seat belt.
Beth A. Clark, 16, Langsville,
was treated and released from
Vetera11s Memorial fQr Injuries
suffered
In a one-vehicle crash on
..

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district. The dlslrlct has also
established a goal of reducing the .
amount of waste sent to landfills
by 35 percent.
''The 35 percent reduction goal
Is an ambitious goal and may
reqUire significant changes In
the way Individuals handle their
garbage In the future," ex·
plalned John Van Volkenburgh of
SCS. "The district plans to
Impose mandatory fees In order
to fund Us solid waste management plans."
The district's solid waste management plan, as required by,
Ohio law, must Include details on
how the waste reduction goal will
be met ; documentation that the
district will have sltl!lclent ca·
paclty to meet Its disposal needs
for at least ~o years; and.
assurances that sufficient funds
will be avallal&gt;le to Implement
the dlslrlcl's plan. The plan Is
expected to be submitted to the
district In draft form by the end
of June.

.

POMEROY - Three people
were Injured . In separate accl·
denu In Meigs County Invest!·
ga)edFrldayby theGallla·Metgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Terry R.
Foster, 21: Racine, was Injured
after being ejected from bls
vehicle after It struck a utility
pole on State Route 124 In Sutton
Townslitp at 4: 15 a.m.
- Foster was westbound when he
reportedly lost control on· a
left·hand curve, went off the left
side of tbe road, struck a ditch
and then hit the power pole,
causing him. to be thrown from
the vehiCle, the report said.
Foster complained . of minor·
visible Injury and was taken by
private car to Veterans Memor·
tal Hospital, where he was being
held for observation as of Satur·
day morning.
Damage to Foster's. car was
moder11te and he was cited for

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paper, they saw all phases of the O))l!ratloa,
lncludlq the newlll'OOIIl, compoelnr;, advertlabig
and lh_e preotsroorn. Group tours are available by
calllDI\IIbe newspaper office daring bulllness
hours Monday lhrOUih Friday.

·~waste district slates meeting

FRI., SAT., SUN.
TOM HANKS
,
IN

··~23

. ·: Elementar)' fifth craclera after taklag a receat
:' tour of Oblo Valley Publllhlq durillr their field
• trip lo GalUpoUI area locatio•. AI
. the news·

.-.
Ophthalmology
·
D•seeses &amp;. Surgery. of the Eye

to 180 cjla. f211·2815

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50

i . TOURS NEWSPAPER - Pldared are Green

•

JEAN •• DISSELE.., M;D.

Alg.371.15
LowAIIIIPor-·

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chanee and to utOtze le!t~te;r~J~;!Cou!;~Dty~R~u~r~alJH;ou~ae~N[u~m·
beads, etc: In otder:.lti;o;;;;. ;::

219••

COLONY THEATRE

'(:;erlacb Knapp, 89, Point Plea·
sant, died Saturday In Holzer
Medical Center.
; She was thewlfeofthelateCarl
Jl. Knapp.
·: Survivors Include threedaugh·
:ters, Mrs. Harry (Arrtetta) Click
:Of Mount Alto, Mrs. Gay (lm·
;ogene) Herdman of Leon and
·~Ida Knapp of Point Pleasant.
;. Arrangements will be an·
;nounced later by the Crow·
Jlussell Funeral Home. ·

:Don Lisle

and Inconvenience to a
minimum.
.
U anyone In the Bidwell or
Vlntoa area has not received
their new house number or bu !l
qllfttloD concerJUq the samlj,
contact. the Gall!a County Com·
missioners (446-4612) or tbf!

.- ·

GALLIPOLIS - The fourth In tant, has complied data on the
a aerieS pf public meetings to dlslrlct's existing solid waste
lltscuss solid waste management management methods and, by
:!llternattves has been scheduled utilizing that data, has developed
.
~for Wednesday at 7 p.m. at'the : alternatives for the· district's
Wilkesville School on State Route . consideration.
'124 In VInton County.
The district's pian for recy·
'; Tile meeting Is sponsored by
the Athens, · Gallla, Hocking, cling and waste reduction wlll be
'Jackson, Metp and VInton Solid outlined at the publiC meeting for
:waste Dlslrlct to discuss alterna· comment and discussion.
!Jives now under consideration by
At this time, the district has
' the dlslrlct.
agreed to Impose flow control so
: SCS Engineers, the district's that all waste generated In the
•solid waste management consul· district will be disposed In the

Lee McComas

••'
~; Leonard Holston ·

.

possible, although tervlcel will
not be termlllated lhoulll they
use their okf matilDa address
durtne the Interim period.
A normal tnlialtlon period of
one year wW etve residents an
opporlulllty to notlty. varloua
Institutions of thler address

Three are hurt in accidents ·

..

r Area deaths.---------......;..._
~
•
:'

existing road system )n .and
around the couatructlon area of
the bypass. These chan&amp;e~ wUI
add and siabtract mlleares to
various roads.
·
As residents receive their new
house numbers, the bouse num.
bering department Is uklng for
their cooperation In posting the
new address either on the mall
box or on a post at their
driveway.
··
This new system, once lmpJe.
mented, wOI place . various go.
vernmental agencies and private
lndustrlel on a uniform system.
Services such as fire; electric, .
telephone, sanitation collectloa,
pollee, ambulance, mall, parcel
delivery; ·and various human
serv~' wOI be able to function
properly al)d more efficiently.
Perhaps one of the largest
benefits to be derived will be tbe
Inception of "911". ln order for
Gallla County to receive· this
beneficial service, one prerequl·
slie Is to have a functional house '
numbering system.
When residents receive their
new numbers, they will be asked
to use this numbes' u soon as

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.,

�Paga A-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

May 27, 1990

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

No paper Moncwy; offiCes to close

.

;

•

river

.

Tllere will be no GalUpolls
government bulldiiiJS. liquor
Dally Tribune published on Mon· · control ou rtets, the post offleei
day · 50 that employees may utility business offices. loca
banks, municipal and common
observe the Memorial Day hoU·
day . In addition, city and county pleas courts will not be open.

D&amp;M PIZZA &amp; SUBS

people of all ages.
B)' roLIE E. DULON
The weekend of June 8, other·
. 1'lmei-Sentlnel Staff
POMEROY - Free entertain· wise. known as Heritage Weement, cuhural experienceS, good kend, will feature activities perfood ,- souvenirs, and much more taining ·to Pomeroy's pioneer
will be off~red during the year as . heritage. All festivities will be
Pomeroy celebrates It's 150th ·carried out In the Court Street
area, ani! all ·entertalrunent for
a!lnlversary.of Incorporation. .
11he sesquicentennial commit· this we.e kend Is free of charge to
tee' has been hard at work the publiC.
On Friday, June 8, beginning at
preparing an agenda of events
that are sure to accommodate 6: 30 p.m. the Melody Men Bar·

IN SYRACUSE

ANNOUNCES A NEW
SOMER LUNCH MENU
TODD SAUNDERS

,MELANIE ANN MOODY

STACIE WELLS

FEATU.ING PIER 19 FISH, IAR·I·QUE,
HAMI..GER, PIZZA P~CIO,
CLUB SANDWICH, SEASONED TWim. FRIES
AND MEXICAN SALAD.

CARITA SMrnt

GCLEA announces scholarship winners
Club, National Honor Society, and the Junior Falrboard.
GALLIPOLIS - Tlie Gallla
C::ounty Local Education Assocla· band, and represented KCHS In
Stacie L. Wells Is a graduate of
tlon established a scholarship the All Ohio State Youth Choir.
Southwestern High School. She Is
She also Is a Regional Scholar, · the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
_program during. the 1980-Bl
In
the Talented and Gifted Wllli11-m Wells, Gallipolis. She Is
school year. This program
program
, and participated In the planning to at lend the University
awarded to one senior !rom each
Marshall
Academic Fair. She Is of Rio Grande majoring In
area high school $100 to furtller
actlve
In
her
church youlh.group
his or her education. '
and
helps
with
the Athens Dis·
The Association changed the
trlct
Special
Olympics.
name of the scholarship during
Todd Saunders, a graduaie of
the 86-87 school year to the Faye
Hannan
Trace High School, Is the
Sauer Memorial Scholarship In
son
of
Archie
Saunders of Galli·
memory of a veteran teacher of
polls.
He
plans
to attend Ohio
i3 years.
State
University
majoring ·In
This year's award will total 40
Engineering.
scholarships given since the
He was active on the quiz bowl
establishment of the program.
team,
In Beta Club, on student
To date, the Gallla County
.council,
and piayed football as
Local Education Association has
contributed $5,800 In scholar- · well as baseball all four years. In
khlps to outstanding young men the community, he is active In ·
and women In the GaiUa County church and w.orks with the
elderly. ·.•
Local Schools.
A graduate of North Gallla
: This school year the Associa·
tlon Is awarding four $300 scho- High School, Carita Lynn Smith
larships, one In each area high Is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
school. This year's Faye Sauer Keith Smith of Bidwell. She plans
Memorial Scholarship recipients to go to the University of Rio
are Melanie Anne M_oody, Todd Grande and major In computer
Sa under, Carita Lynn Smith, and programming.
. In high school, she was active
Stacie L. Wells.
.
Melanie Anne Moody, the In Beta Club, National Honor
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Chales Society, Band, ¥""HA, SAPO,
J ; Moody of Cheshire, Is a French Club, and Superintend·
graduate of Kyger Creek High ents Advisory Council .
She served her school by
School. She plans to attend the
University of Clnlnnati majoring working In the library, office,
and the newspaper staff. Her
In architectures.
While In high school, she was community activities Include
active In Choir, Art Club, Key working as a volunteen at the
hospital, 4-H , Junior Leaders,

POMEROY - Judgme nt action has been flied i,n the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas
by Monte Ray Wolfe, Pomeroy,
and Shirley Wolle. Pomeroy.
against Sutton and ehester
Farmers' Mutual Fire Insurance
Company. Inc.

POMEROY - An entry of
confirmation and order of distri·
butlon has bee!l filed In the Meigs
County Court of Common' Pleas
In the case of Citizens Federal
Bank. Miami, Fla. versus Wil·
llam E . Morris, · et al, in the
a'mount ol $18,666.67.

•C.rpet C...ning
•Stain Re1.illt Cleanil!g
•Upholatery • Fabric: Cleaning
•Water Damage
•Odor c ·ontrol
•Fire Restoration

Name restored
POMEROY - In the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas.
Barbara C. Young, has been
restored to her malden name.
Bar tiara C. Brown.

II ( U

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No Money Down~ No Payments.
No Interest
'ID October 12, t990r

Once again, Advanced Cleaning Service
kicks off' another anniversary in the cleaning
business with #17.We're proud to be a part of
GaUia and Mason Counties history! After 16
years . of hard work and-qcdlcation we feel
that Advanced Cleanlng''Jtaih!merged as the
· .
leader In the cleaning industry.

Rsgistertcl

MEMBER

•1 wat .

Applicatilrt · ·

Chartll' Mlmlllr of l.eGI
chapt., Mld..olio Valier '
•1990' '
llipllr. w. Va.

Our latest accomplishment is joining a national organization (UCCI) United Carpet
Cleaners Institute, Inc., and forming a local
chapter as a chartered mem!:&gt;er In Ripley,
. West Virginitt, called Mid-Ohio Valley.
,..

.
ADVANCED

In carpet 'cleaning, the bottom line .
is how many satisfied customers
the company has, and Advanced
Cleaning Service wUJ ·match its list OFFICE &amp; WAREHOUSE .,
of -satisfied customers with any in 1506 JeHerson ·llwd. 1
the region.
Pt. Pleasant, W. Ya.

CLEANING to 1 II·
_,oed oppllcMion ...,Ice lor Du

Pont'o

1914'THRU .1990

As you can see (by the border of this ad) we
are fully knowledgeable and trained to clean
any carpets based on our accomplishments in
training and educational programs, certifications, workshops, and membership associations. All because we want to be the very
best at what we do!

All-American Sale
Toro Wheel Horse helps you celebrate Amerka's
.
summer holidays. staning on
MEMORIAL DAY,
when you buy a Toro Wheel Horse tractor or riding mower, you
get All -American financing.· The offer lasts until ·
INDEPENDENCE DAY,
with no money down. no payments and no interest until
COLUMBUS. DAY!
Buy an AII; American tractor or riding mower during the
AII: American Sale! Visit your dealer today!

when carpets and upholstery items have been
put through the test of snow, mud, grit, wet
· and dry ·so1ling from the winter months.
These conditions can be very damaging to the ,
fibers and texture of your carpets if allowed
to remain for several months, unless cleaning
precautionary measures are taken.

We look fotward to serving our customers In
1990 and pledge to offer the best and latest
techniques designed to keep their carpets and
upholstery looking great throughout the year,
at the lowest possible investment.

,-··· ····· -·- ···-·-··· ---··r,,.--·- .

r-tlonory

MASTER·

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42" Mower Deck

"The AII·American sale lasts from May 25. 1990 to July 7, !990. 1nterest begins
to ~rue on Octobtr 12. 1990. Participating dealers only. Prices

may n~X include
frt!lght, dealer prep. delivery and taxes. Financing plan available lO quaJifled
buyers only, Paymen~ based on 38 monthly payments.

Haven·! you done
without a Toro
long enough ?•

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2
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CHESTER - 985-3301

I ! ANY 3 . . l
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I
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llooms ..... 44.95
Rooms ..... 66.95
Rooms ..... l8.95
Rooms ••••• 99.95 fir 1

Uvtng • Dining Combinetlonc or Overaed Fomlly
lloomo ;over 300 oq. ft.)

ore conoldered 2 roomo.
Coupon Expl&lt;• 8/14/90
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May 27, 1990

bershop Quartet will perform,
followed by Bob and Kendra.
War4-llence. The evening will
cpnc_)ude · with the Midnight
Clpggers at S p.m.
.Also on .Friday. the exhlb!t,
"Orn;lte'. and ~lmple Forms;
Pomeroy Furniture and Fasplon,
1840-18~" will open at the Meigs
County Library at 8 p.m. This
ex~lblt will feature plec~ of
furniture and clothing as well a~
jewelry and other Items that date
from that period.
The exhibit Is being presented
by Catberine Steiner, Ph.D., of
the Interior design department at
Ohio University, and Schuyler ·
Cone, Instructor In the School of
Home Economics at Ohio Unlver. slty. The exhibit will run through
June 22 and catalogues of the
exhibit will be sold as a souvenir
of the sesqulcent.enntal. The
exhlbl I Is made possible In part
by a grant from .. the Ohio
Humanities COunciL
On Saturday,June9, at 10a.m.
the Pomeroy Merchants Association Is sponsoring tile Heritage
Days Parade.
Tile route for the parade begins
•a't the old junior high school
building and will follow Main
Street to' Butt!)rnut Avenue. Tile
'Parade will end at t.h e Pomeroy
Fl~ Department.
·
• Lellnle Eliason, owner of '
'" WMPO radio, will serve I!S
·· • pilfade marshal and the theme
for. the parade Is "The Pioneer
Spirit; yesterday, Today, and

The parade Will be judged
according to six categories In·
~;luding equestrian,
historical .
commercial float, historical noncommercial float. horse drawn
vehicle, antique car. apd march·
lng )!Dit.
.
All entries should relate to the
sesquicentennial celebration •.
and anyone Interested In partlcl1 paling In ·the parade should
eontact the the chamber of
commerce office iil Pomeroy at
·992·2005. or Leesa Murphey,
parade chairman, at 992-2922 or
992-3643.
Following the par.ade, the Ohio
Brigade, a. civil war t:lrll\ team
made ..up of ll)embers from the
Portsmouth area, will pt!rform
muskel drills in au then tic dress
of the period.
At noon the Shady Rl\•er .
·· Shuff.lers. a clogging group made
up .o f members from the Meigs
County . area, will perform. A·
barbershop quartet will enter·
taln at 1 p.m .
·
The Restoration Jazz Band will
•.
.perform at 2 p.m. The group,
. from the Columbus area, )VIII
_.perfotrn a variety of ragtime jazz
music.
1 A' 4 pmi. the outhouse races
will be held on Second Street. The
entry tee for the race is $5 per
outhouse and 'e ach team member
must sign lj.D entry form. The .
nice will be conducted according
to the following specifications.
' Each team Will consist of not
more than five persons, four
mem~s on the ground, and one
sittlng' ln the outhouse; wheels
and rollers are permissible.
There Is to be no form of
propulsion or mechanical power
other than the four ·members on
tM ground; outhouses must
remain In an upright position;
· and must be six feet tall from th'e
floor to the roof top.
,I•
THE
- ''l'hla thermometer In the
, Outhouses must have four
.
of the Melp County Chamber of Commer~e Of~ee In
straight sides a!ld a roof of solid
~ : ~O!!I•rqmeuuree the·prop-ess of the luadralfl!ng efforls or.the ,
construction with ·'One opening
. · Pomeroy SI!J!Iqulcentennlal Committee.
. allowed !or window or half moon
-· ~''
./'---~------:"'
1no more than 12 Inches by 15
Inches) and one door opening.
'
There is to be no A-frame
construction or lattice wo~k;
motors·. gears . chains . pro'
iJellers, or batteries are not
. permitted, but batteries may be
used fo( ·sound effects. music,
' '
lights, or decoraled effects.
The official race director has
... -·' . ,,
the final word on·au entries:
For additional Information on
the race. contact the Meigs
County Chamber of Commerce
Office at 992-5005.
'
•
The distance ortlte race will be
·
•
'
determined
at the time of arrival
'
on-raced~ and theracewllltake .
place rain or shine. If necessary,
·~ .,
multiple heats will be run, with a
-run-off fot heat Winners.
Prizes will be awarded (or best
looking outhouse and costume.In
the places of first, second, and
· third. Entry tleadline for the race
Is June 4. Contestants · must
&gt; · report to . the l;'omeroy parking
,. lot at Court Street by 2 p.m. on
, June 9. lnspectJon and briefing
•· will be held at 3 P.!%1- on tbat day.
"'
:-- . The jildgtna · of ·the Pioneer •
C011tume Contest will take place
i
.at
5 p.m. with the Brothers of the
'·
,.
Brush Contest to be Judaed at·
5:30p.m.
'
This
contest
will
feature
com·
•
petition and priZes In ten catego-ries with three groups.
•
OUTBOUSE8 RACES- Aa part ol tbe fun oa Heritage Weekend
The categories In group one
for Pomero1'• SelqllleeitennW the committee baa planned
Include .bQy, airI, m11n, wom111,
.: senior m111, seniOr worn111. 111d
Ot!llu
tacell• Pldtlft'd II an artllt'l deplctleo o.f a paMihle
family, which will consist ~f a

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FOR AN APPOINTMENT

MODEL 310-8

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TOmorrow.'' · •

It's That Time Of Year
.Again ..•

JudgnBentrendered

POMEROY -A!Mvorceaction
has been filed in the Meigs
County Court of Common Pleas
Howard Edward Searles, Pomeroy, ·against Sara M. Searles,
Pomeroy.

LUNCH HOURS
. TUESDAY ·FRIDAY 11 :00·1 :30
lEG. HOURS: SUN.·THIU 4·11
FRI. &amp; SAT. 4·12; ·cLOSED MONDAY

ADVANCED CLEANING
SERVICE

"1988"
. "1989"
"1990"

Divoree sought

·~

WATCH FOR DAILY LUNCII SPECIALS

business management.
She has -b een active In Beta
Club, band, FHA. Student Council, Scholastic Team, an!! Ll·
brary Club. She· was chosen tlie
Business and Professional
Womens Girl of the Month.

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Heritage Weekend festivities expand during sesquicente~ial

STARTING MAY 29, 1990

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Coupon E..,.._ 8/14/90

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SWEET MOUNTAIN SOUNp - Sweet Moun·
lain Sound, a popular musical group made up of
.. Meigs County residents, Rog~r and Mary
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minimum of on e parent and one
child .
Group two categories Include
Brothers ol the Brush. and
women's hat and hair.
Group three consists of Mama
and Papa Pomeroy. .
Each person can enter In group
one, two , and three for competi·
lion. There are no age or gender
restrictions, but each person can
ente'r In only one of the agegender categories In group one.
· Brothers of' the Brush will be
judged on beard, moustache,
halt, and headwear. Women's
hat arid hair judging wlllincluile
hair, - ribbons .. clips, plris, and
·headwe,a r.·
All other categories will be
judged on all hair and headwear
Items, all clothing and footwear,
and "props:" For .example.
broom . .cane. rifle, shepherd's '
crook, pitchfork, hoop, doll, etc.
Mama a,nd.Papa ·Pdmeroy will
be judged based on one man and
one woman. bolh residents of
Meigs County. Judging will be on .
all of the above lter:ns. and the
winners will reign as Mama and
Papa Ppmeroy In heritage
events for the remalndep C)! the
year,&gt; 'l'!tis· category Is the '
one wltj! residency restrictions.
First. second. third. and honorable mention prizes ' will be
awarded in each of the ten
ca tegories.
The judging .criteria for every
category will Include appearance, authenticity, and uniqueness . There Is no deadline for
en tering.
Following the costume contest
the Kyger Valley Quartet Is
scbeduled to perform at 6 p.m.
followed by·. Sweet Mountain
Sound at 7 p.m. It Is tentatively
planned to conclude· the evening
with a square dance at 8 p.m.
In addition to all of the
entertainment there also will be

Gilmore, Jennifer Sheets. Ron Ash, and Tim .··
Glaze, will entertain durlog Herllage Weekend In
Pomeroy on .tune 9 at 7 p.m.

an . arts and crafts fair on the . trict and points of interest.
parking as w~ll ·as buggy rides · On Sunday, June 10 all actlvl·
throughout the afternoon ties Will take pla ce at the ~elgs
through Pome.roy's His torlc Dis· County Museum.

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SESQUICENTENNIAL ITEMS - When the year Is gone so Is

Pomeroy's Sesquicentennial. Bul, don't worry, because ihe
committee has )lienly of souvenler~ !!ems to choose from. '!'here
are t-shlrts, sweatshirts, caps, mugs, •key chains, stickers,
pq_sleards, cookbooks, bricks and more. Check out the activities
and the souvenleres at Heritage Weekend on June 8, 9, and 10.

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�Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Fj-aa B-2-Suriley Times-Sentinel

Pon'Moy-Midcli!pGit-Gdia:lolil. Ohio Point PlsnMt. W. Va.

May 27. 1990'

lee ·Greenwood will perform
"f

Music lovers, mart your calen·
dar for 8 pm., Saturday, JWIC 16.
Nashville reCording star, Lee
GltlCIIwood will be performing 81
the Jacbon County Junior Fair
grounds near Couageville, WV.
'lbe fund raisin concert is being
joindy sponsored ~y the Ohio River
Feslival committee lllld the.Ripley
4th of July cotnmiuee, along with
help from Pl. DistribUting Com·
pany/Budweiser. Money raised
frorit the concert will benefit both
the 4th of July cclebralion in Ripley
lllld the Ohio River Festival in
Ravenswood.
During the 1980's GltlCIIwood
earned 1be Counby Music Association's Male V~t of the
Year awanltwo years m a JOW and
was also voted a Grammy for Best
Country
V~
performance.
C0111try mUSJc fans everyw~
love to hear Greenwood weave hts

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" TOPS IN·I'WRSING- Pleasant Valley HospiW
l,ssued awards to three gradrites ol the Hollei'
Collele of Nurslnc at the University of Blo
Gralide. Maklnl · the presentation · wu Inez ~
Rowes, R.N., second from right, director of
lilll'lln1 services at PVJI. Flanking ber, from lett,
~e Karen Barker, recipient ot the Oullltandln1

vocal"magic in such albwns as "If
Only For One Night," or his outstand}nl song, "God Bless the
U.S.A. "God Bless the U.S.A."
has been performed by Greenwood
as a musical tribute to his counuy
all over the world. The song won
him the Song of the Year honors in
1985.
The Neon Cactus Band, one of
the newest and "hottest" bands
around will play wann-up for the·
Greenwood
concen.
Having
worked with such acts as.John Con·
· lee, McGuffY Lane, Eddy Raven
' and Eddie Rabbit. Neon Cactus has
also performed at fairs and festivals
and other functions around West
LEE GREENWOOD
Virginia. Their perfonnances have
drawn raves from music lovers . dressed, stamped envelope to :
wherever they 80·
Concen· Tickets, 106 Royal St,
Admission to the concen is $10
Ravenswood, WV 26164. Or for
in advance or Sl2 at the gate. A
more infonnalion call: (3()4) 273money order, along with a self-ad9372.

STORE HOURS ·
Monday thr\f Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFFECTIVE ·SUN., MAY 27 THRU SAT., JUNE 2

"Coupon
Good
Sunday,
May27
Monday,
May28

'

~uesday,

==========CO~r=ru=l=lun~icy~_ ~c=al=en~d=a=r===========~

Nurslac Graduate Award for an q&gt;N In tbe
advanced placement track ~ebedule; DORobi-n, who wu 11ven the Oul8tandlnl
·Nnrslnc Graduate Award for a lwo.yeat padu·
ate; · and Judy Davie, winner of lhe Spirit of
Nursln1 Award.

SUNDAY ,
RODNEY - Prl!,lse Quartet is
at Faith Baptist Church, Sunday,
10: 45 a.m. Group is from Pensac·
ola Chris tlan College.

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Holzer College of Nurs~ng pins
grads; leading students honored

public,
RACINE - The song evangelist team of Jan and Kathy will he
at the Racine Nazarene Church
for both services on Sunday.

GALLIPOLIS - Lemley ·
Ralph Reunion, Poplar Ridge
Church, May 27 with dinner at
noon.

.CHESTER -The Chester Vo· ,
lunteer Fire Department wlll
have Its annual Memorial Day
chicken barbecue and other
festivities on Monday beginning
at 11 a.m. at the fire house.
'
RU.TLAND . -The Rutland ·'
Garden Club will meet Monday
at 7: 30 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
Albert Woodard, Langsvi)le. Pro- ·
gram on lilies will be by Mrs.
Jack Robson; Mrs. Vernon
Weber, and Mrs. Ruby Diehl.

BRADBURY -The Bradford
Church oVChrist will have a
Vacation Bible School kick-off
program on Sun.d ay at 7: 30 p.m.
P R 0 C T 0 R VILLE - • The theme is " Island in the Sun.
Woodyard-Moore Family Reun- ' Living in the Warmth of• God's
ion will~ held Sunday, May 27 at ' (-ove." · '
the Proctorville fairgr~unds .
RACINE -The Racine VolunBring a picnic lunch, family and
TUESDAY
teer Fite Department will havE' a
friends.
KYGER ·- Cheshire Twp.
·chicken barbecue on Sunday Trustees will meet 5· 30 p.m.
beginning at !1 a.m. Ladles Tuesday, May 29 in the township
GALLIPOLIS - Haner Reunauxiliary will serve homemade building in Kyger. Open . to
ion, May 27, 10 a .m to 3 p.m. at
ice cream also.
Mcintyre Park, Shelter House
public.
No. 1. Potluck.
·
MONDAY
HARRISONVILLE -The HarCHESHIRE - ·Memorial Day
VINTON - Vlnion American
risonville Past Matron Club will
Observance at Gravel Hill Ceme· meet Tuesday at the home of.
Legion 161 Memorial Day, Vinton
tery, C))eshlre, Monday, May 28 · Gracie Wilson at 7: 30 p.m. All
Memorial Park, Sunday at 2 p.m.
,beginning at 10:3,0 a .m. with past matrons are invited to
speaker Rev. Harpld Tracewell. attend.
GALLIPOLIS Hannan
Trace HighSchool Class of 1910,
20th year reunion, Sunday, May
27 from 10 a .m. until dark at.0 .0 .
MOMENTS TO REMEMBER!
Mcintyre Park in Shelter House
~t HASKINS-TANNER help you make
4.
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those speelal momei''lt8. Vou will hfve over

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:RIO GRANDE - . Pins were
p)liced on the uniform~ of 44
gtilduates of the Holzer College
ot:; Nursing at the Unive~slty of
Rfu Grande during !he •nnual
pl!)ning and £erognltlon 'c,eremony on May 18.
.
.The ceremony was higftllghted
IJl the presentation of awards
fl¥lm two area hospitals, Holzer
1t1J!dlcal Center and Pleasant
Ve,lley Hospital.
.'The graduates and the , aud~!ICI! gathered in the Christensen Theatre of the Fine and
P,i!rforming ArtsJ Center .were
"!l&lt;~omed by Dr: Paul C. Hayes,
president of Rio Grande, while
I~ class was presented by
Nlincy L. Gooldin, R.N., assistan) professor of nursing. The pins
~e presented by Janel M.
Byers, R.N, , dean of the College
ot Nursing, and roses were given
tO'the graduates by Margaret J.
Leedy, R.N., assistant professor

.nlght i' sbe said.
en ted awards from . her
. 'FollOWing the pinning, the
Iniltltutlon.
.ii', .
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·award. for the Outstanding Aca· ' The Spirit of Nursing Award,
for a graduate who .demonstrates
demic Achtevemel)t for a tw.oyea,r graduate was presented to ·' the most Interest in the future of
Joyce A. Fairchild of Rlchmon-· nursing as wei~. as academic
dale. The award was presented
prowess, was ·11ven to Judy
by HMC, represented by Angela
Davis of Langsvtlle.
McCausland, R.N. , the hospital's
Davis and her husband, Fred,
associate director of nursing..
are the parents of three
Fairchild was chosen for com·
daughters.
piling the highest grade point
The Oulstandlng Nursing
average of all graduates (3.7).
Graduate Award for a two-year
The daughter of James D. and
graduate was presented to
Donna Fairchild, she Is ern·
Donna Robinson of Gallipolis.
ployed at Ross County Medical The Outstanding Nursing Gradu·
.~enter Hospital In ChllUcothe as
ate Aw;u;d for an LPN advanced
a staff nurse on tqe surgical- placement track graduate went
to Karen Barker of Ravenswood,
orthopedic floor.
HMC awarded the Outstanding W.Va. Each were chosen on the
Academic Achievement for an
basis of academic excellenc~.
LPN in the advanced placement
high achievement In the cla~strack schedule to Frances F . room and clinical performance
CHESHIRE -Campaign FWB
Secoy of Kerr. Secoy earned a' and leadership In the university Church revival May 28-June 1; 7
grade point of 3.6, the highest and the community.
p.m .• Rev. Miles Trout.
. among her peers in the special
Roblnsonisemployedasastaff
o~nursing.
advancement program for LPNs nurse in medical surgery at
GALLIPOLIS- MI . Zion Mis·
1.n her remarks, Byers re- · wishing to b~ome registered PVH. The daughter qf Freeman sionary
Baptist Church features
mUtded the graduates that nurs- nurses.
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Justice, Shelbiana, Ky., she and Rev. Richard Unroe preaching, ·.
IIIJ is a vital link to the success of . A nurse in the . ·Intensive -are her husband, Denver, are the
·
any health care Institution, ad- unit at HMC, , Secoy is the parents of two dJl\lghters, Cheri Sunday, 7 p.m. •
dltlg that the jobs they bold today daughter of ~irginia Kemper of· and Denica.
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·
MIDDLEPORT -The Middleaiie the "key to lbe leadership Kerr. She and her husband,
Barker is employed as a nurse port Arts Council will sponsor
pi;litions of tomorrow."
Daviq, are the parents· of two hi medical surgery at Charleston "Hat Extravaganza" on Sunday
•"Quality comes from high sons, David and Brian.
Area Medical Center. · She and at 2 p.m. in the dining room Of the
ca1tber people, such as the
Inez Howes, R.N., d!rector o! her husband, Patrick, are the · Middleport Masonic Temple.
giiduates we honor here to- nursing services at PVH, pres· parents of two chl.ldn!D.
Ticket price· is $4.

29

PIICIS'STUT ll

$ 49
Chuck Roast ......... 1

.U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONE,LESS BEEF LB.

·.

Rump Roast ••••.•~••

$

$ 99 Ham •• ~ •••• .-••••••••••~•• 179
.R1beye _Steak •••••• ·. 4
U.S.D.A. ·CHOICE BEEF BONELESS BOTTOM $ 9
5
Round Steak •••••L:-.. 2 ·
U.S;D.A. CHOICE BEEF BONElESS LB.

With
Triple
Vendor
·Coupon
Below-

$

WILSON'S CORN KING ·

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FLAVORITE

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W1eners •••••••••••••••••

lnquiro about adciitianai saYings with Tu• luclcs.

liltllI

LIJ

1 ..::c.....::.~...:~

J

tH 8 P.M.

HOMEMADE

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Sandwich Spread••':. 99 (·

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GUTLAND - George and
Debbie Pickens will be at the
Zion Church o! Christ on Route
143on Sunday at 7:30p.m. Robert
E . Purtell, minister, invites the

Chicken ••••••••••••.L:••• 59&lt;
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS BEEF · . .

190 otyleo of lu&lt;edoo to ehoooe frem In•
&lt;ludinl! the POPULAR FORMAl, BAG·
GIES. We have a large oele&lt;tion of the Ia•
test styles and complimenlift@: aceee10riee
to make thio your ope&lt;ial night. $

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LEG QUARTERS

May29
Wednesday,
May30
Only

WEST VIRGINIA BELL CRUISES
DO'SOMI'MNG
. SPECIAL FOI
. FA:r"~I.'S DAY

. In·the service

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SUNDAY, JUNE 17
CHRISTOPHER S. SIMPSON

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• OUTSTANDING GRADUATES - Angela
McCausland, R.N., assoeiate director of nursing
tit Holzer Medical Center, Ia flanked by the two '
reclpienls of HMC's oulslandin1 11'8duate awards
for the Holzer Colle11e of Nursing a&amp; the Unlverslly

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~hat

.: of Meigs County's high schools gather to reminisce
::and renew old friendships.
.·
It's amazing how the ye.;trs fly by- first it's the
· fifth reunion and before you know it, the 50th rolls
'
: up.
Time passes .by quickly fdr us, roo. We have
·· been on the Meigs County scene for 27 years and,,like
· you, we're not getting older, we're getting better.
·: Like you, we consistently change and upgrade. Your
: changes bring about a bettet iildi vidual - ours .bring
; about a better healthcare service for the Community.
.: We're delighted to join you in growth and progress.
·:
Our entire healrhcare staff hopes that your
; 1990 reunion has been ·a most memorable'and happy
·
: occasion.

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VETERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 E. Memorial Drive
Pomtroy
992-2104

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of Rio Grande. At lett is Fran Secoy, awarded for
completin' the advanced placement track
· schedule for LPNs wlahlnl to beromlnc rellltered nurses. At right is Joyce Fairchild, aamed
the oullltaadlng two-year paduate.

ALUMNI
REUNION
TIME
Traditionally, this is the weekend
alumni

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Airman Christopher S. Simpson has graduated from the
information management specialist course at Keesler Air
Force Base, Biloxi, Miss .
Course graduates learned administrative support aild office ,
management for functional staff
elements. The course included
typing, administrative communications, telephone etiquette;
and managemeni of publications , forms and records.
Simpson is the son of Crystal E.
Simpson of 2112 Carrol St. ,
Syracuse, Ohio.

BRUNCH
9AJitll11 AM

••.so
Chid

•11.ts
Atltllt

LUNCH

7 p.M. to 9:30

lt lOON to 2:30 PIIME

FliED CIICDN
121.00
110.50 127.50
Adtilt
. Chlhl Adult

liB DIIIND ·

•

LB

o.p.tlng from Gotllpollo Pork Front. Advonce RM-tion ot A.V.

.

1~~\1

G1\ Lll roLls

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..(I t~l\PI •lCJPil( \.

$1
6
9
2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••

~;::.,:::n;~:..a.a:ou:r:-:lR;;;;3•o;im•zi
.i:-m~
. =o~-N••;;J=-. ~Cpon:==.2:;=,,;

JUMBO

We Bought 'em All!
RUFFLES - REG. ·s1.99

P~tato

oz. . 99&lt;
Chips ••••••••
10

....__./

Ketc~up.~ •••••••••• !~~~. 99&lt; Sherbet ..........~.':~ s1·09

Swag...19.34

No Other

$119
Parkay ·Spread ••• •
SWANSON ,
.
.
Sl
99
Fried Chicken ••••~~.

HEINZ

Mo.21.U
•o.II.U

PLASTIC GALLON

3 LB.

PAHEI-8
"M"Valance
12.9rt

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'*-AFPIY

FOR. FAMILY NIGHT!

·EVElY MONDAY FIOM 4·1 P.M.

·u t ta

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Elr&amp;IOIDERED
IHEEII

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FLAVORITE

REG. 28.88
ll"d4"

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CHEESEBURGER .

57c·

SUNSHINE .

25%

OFF ·

DOG FOOD
20 LB.
BAG

$299

Good Only ., Pow••• S....V~lu
s... May 27 tlwu Sat. Jutit 2

Goo4

STARJIIST OIL or WATER

CHUNK TUNA
6.5

oz.

2/S 1

Goo4 Only At Powtli's Sup. Valu
G.... Sun. May 27 thno Sat. Junt 2

IIIIDIISON, W. VA.
GAIWOUS, OH.

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· - :liD A11l. 'mt IIOWIITOWIIIMIIiwnM

MARCH ON IN TO
McDONALD'S

.liGHtNING

.
39C
Bananas ••••••••••••••••

113.75
Clllltl

.._

PURE SWEET
4L8.
BAG

SUGAR

Sl19

Good Only At Powtll's Sup. Valu
Gaad Sun.. M.y 27 tlwu Sot. Junt 2

CHARMIN

TOILET TISSUE
4 ROLL
PIG.

99&lt;

GeM Dolly At Pew••• S... Vallo
GIOII S.... May 27 tlwu Sat. Junt 2 .

ONE TRIPLE
VENDOR COUPON
PER FAMILY

LIMIT S TRIPLE :
MANUFACTURERS
COUPONS (SOc
v-.lue Maximum)
.
WITH TRIPLE
VENDOR
COUPON
'

(SEE STORE FOR DETAILS)
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0 1:"'t'lll'I

I~:Z:~
1z~

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�27,1990

B-4--$unday T.,.,..Sentinel

·-...

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

•

~· Anniversaries - - --Engagements-.:.-

Wildermuth anniversary noted
Allensworth and their daughters,
Kristin and Courtney, Tiffin; and
Mr. and Mrs . James Wildermuth
and their children, Ryan and
Casey. Galloway; entertained
their parent&amp; and grandparents
with a dinqer party In Marton.

MIDDLEPORT -Millard and
Kathleen (Brown ) Wildermuth,
275 W.W. Meadowbrook, Tiffin,
formerly of Middleport, cele·
brated thei r 50th wedding annl·
versary May 19.
Mr. and Mrs. John (Judy )
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Watsoo anniversary to be noted ...
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SYRACUSE - Mr. and Mrs.
Leroy Wat son will celebrate
their 50th wedding ;ulntversary
on June 3 from 2 to 4 p.m. at the
Syracuse Elementary School
,
Auditorium.
Open house will be hosted by
the.couple's children and grand·

children, Deanna Summerfield, .·~ · .........
Darlepe Jones, and Jim Watson, ~~""
,
Columbus; grandchildren , Re- _,., .,
....
nee Summerfield and , Brando11
:'1•
Watson, Columbu s.

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Bible School _to begin

"""
KANAUGA Fair Haven _... ....
United Methodist Church will have • ·..T
Bible School from Thu!'iday, May .~-'\
- "' \o.&lt;
31 through Thu!'iday, June 71rom 6- .-,....:
-,_, .,,
8:30 p.m. There will be clas,.,. for
fou r year-olds through junior high,
with cr;lfts and refreshment s. For -. t :P"·
....
more Information call Florence AI· .-·~
...-.-.:'
len, 675-:ll52.
···1r

Bible School set
BRADBURY - The Bradford
Church of Christ will have a
Vacation Bible Sc hool kick -off
program on Sund ay at 7:30p.m.
The theme Is "Is land In the Sun.
Living In the Warmth of God's

...
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RIO GRANDE - Announce- Gallipolis.
ment Is · being made. of the
Miss Evans Is a graduate of
engagement and upcoming wed- Gallla Academy High School and
ding of Nancy Jane Evans and .· Ohio University. She Is a·tea·c her
Scott Henry Seeburg. She Is the with the Allen East Local School
daughter of Clyde and Rosemary district In Lima, Ohio.
Evans of Rio G'rande. He Is the
Seeburg Is a graduate of
son of Fred andPeggySeeburgof Urbana Hlgb School and Ohio
Urbana, Ohio.
Northern University. He Is emThe wedding will take place ployed by 7-up Bottling Company
July 7, at 4:30 p.m. In the First of Dayton, Ohio.
Church of the Nazarene In

BELPRE - Mr. and Mrs.
Richard H. ~oller, Belpre, announce the engagement and
. approaching marriage of thetr
daughter, Lora Ka:,~ , to Steven
Lee Eddy. son of Mr. and Mrs . .
Robert L. ~ddy, Parkersburg,
W.Va.
.
·
Miss Roller Is a graduate of
Belpre High School and a gradu·
ate of Marshall University with a
bachelors degree In accounting.
She Is employed at E.I. DuPont
De Nemours. and Company
through· Quantum Services In
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Eddy Is a graduate of Parkers·
burg High School and of Marshall ·
University. ·Currently, l)e Is at -

Steratore'
Kemper

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CLARF;NCE AND ANfrA E. BROWN ·

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Browns' anniversary to be-- noted
AMESVILLE, Ohio - Clarence and Anita E. Brown of
Amesville. Ohio. will obs.e rved
their 50th wedding anniversary
on June 10 wlth an open house
from 2 to 5 p.m. at the·Amesville
Ma,sonlc Temple.
They were married June JO, .
1940 In Galllpolls by George .
Sagan.
·
He Is a graduate of Middleport
High School and Is a retired
electrician and farmer

member of Amesville Masonic
Lodge 278.
Mrs. Brown is a graduate of
Columbia. High School and at- .
tended nutslng school ln. Dayton.
Ohio.
They ai'e members ,of Columbia Chapel Church, and are
parents of C. Richard Brown.
They have two grandsons.
The couple requests gilts be
omitted.
·

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y

Frank anniversary
'
POMEROY
Ralph and
Stella Frank, Route 7, Pomeroy,
will celebrate their 71st wedding
anniversary on May 31.

••

.

FOR
MEMORIAL DAY
Mixed Pots
Beautiful Geraniums
.
SMELTZER'S
NURSERY
449 Jackson Pikt•Gallipolis, Ohio
follow Our Driveway. To The GrHnh,..•e
II

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~

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tending Life Chiropractic College In Marietta, Ga.
The double-ring ceremony will
be held June :ll at 1: 30 p.m. at the
Rockland United Methodist
Churcl), Z300 Washington Blvd .,
Belpre. with Rev. Robert E .
Elmore officiating. ·

Hoffmans plat). aniversary eyent
POMEROY - Paul and Ma·
re11e Hoffman, Sumner Road,
Pm;neroy . will observe thzlr 50th
wedding anniversary on J.une 3
wlt.h . an open hquse reception
from 2-4 .p.m. at their home near
Chester .
The couple was married May
31, 1940 In Kentucky and have
five children, Steve and Terry,
Long Bottom; Beth Sherman,
Columbus; Janet Chafin, Gallon;

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COLL.INS ANNIVERSARY ~ Mr. and Mrs. Ruben. Collins,
Middleport, celebrated their 50th weddinr; anniversary May 20
with a dln.ner at the Frontier Farms Restaurant. The couple was
married May 23, 1940 In Catlettsburg, Ky.

Rincker named administrator

'

,. August 28- Sept~mber 12, i99b
Dr. · Hagop S. Pambookian, Escort.

'I

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'
.
lri the past few years, Glasnost and Perestroika have opened
the doors to a Russia that has seldoiT) been seen by Americans.
Join. Dr. Hagop S. Pambookian as he takes you on this fas~inat·
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·

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GALLIPOLIS - William F .
Rlncker , vice president of opera·tlons for, North American Health·
care, Inc., recently announced
the appointment of David Snyder
as administrator of Pinecrest
Care Center. located at 170'
Pinecrest Drive, Gallipolis.
Snyder comes to Pinecrest
with a varied ·background In
health care. He has been Director of Emergency Services. Gal~
.ua County; Emergency Room

more
360 Second Ava.
Catt Todoy

·~,:

"Serving the general public
liS well,liS our members. •

Nursing Assistant. Charge Nurse
- ICCU, Staff Accountant, and
Assistant Director of Nursing for
Pleasant Valley Hospital. He
served the Nursing Care Center
- Pleasant Valley Hospital,
Point Pleasant. West Virginia as
administrator.
Snyder Is a Galllpolls native
a nd graduated from Gallla
Academy High School. He furthered his education by earning a
B.S. degree ln Business Admin Is·
tratlon from Rio Grande College,
an A.A .S. Degree In Nursing
from Rio Grande, and is pursuing
.,, a Master' s Degree In Business
Admlnl$tratlon. He Is a Ucensed
administrator In both Ohio and
, West Virginia . .

4.

Welsh
•
anniversary

BANKRUPTCY

observed

336 S. ffitlh

fl riiiiiOrflr 1:11

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We like OVS because we feel
our children need an atmos·
phere at home and school
which demonstrates · not only
moral and spiritual values, but
also the values of free enterprise. We have found OVS to
meet .those stan~rds. Since
1981 our children have received from OVS values and direction money cen't buy.

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Jenny, Jean, Jobn and Jodie Hager.

CHOOSE YOUI EDUCATION

-

CALL 446-0374

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WU:.IJMI RINCKER
'
Group recognized
POMEROY - The Meigs Local School District was one of 236
districts In Ohio to be awarded
tbe Ohio Departm'ent of Education Medal of Honor for Right to
Read participation In the state of
Ohio. The program now in Its 13th
year emphasizes special actlvl·
ties each year during March.

(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CE)'n'ER)

25TH &amp;: JEII'nRSON ~VENUJI:
POINT PLEASANT

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"

A

Col_.us, OH.

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LO(Al CONSULTAnON
KNIG!fT,,MUIUN lAW OFFICES,
I'OMII9Y, 992-2090
II! P-oy with
ATTORNEY D. MOIAEl MWEN

POMEROY - A surprise 25th
wedding anniversary for Denzil
and 13arbara Welsh was held
May 11 at 7 p.m. at the home of
Tim ana Jeannie Hood, Hysell
,
Run Road, Pomeroy.
The couple was married May
15, ljl"' at the Harrisonville
Presbyterian Church In
Harrisonville.
The event was hosted by the
couple's daughter , Jeannie
!Tim) Hood. son. Denny Welsh.
and sister , Sharon Pratt.
Out of town guests attending
were Lee and Joyce Reed,
Westerville; Randy and Becky
Pierce, Albany; Blanche Parsons, VIcki Ellis. Brittany Harrl·
son, Mack Layne, Cathy Capron!,
Gallipolis; Bob and JoAnne
·Spaulding, Chesterhill; Gerald
and Juanita Clark. Pete and
Elsie Ohlinger, New Haven,
W.Va.
Others attending were Bill and
. Cheryl Facemyer, Butch. Ma·
rllyn. and Becky Meier. Chuck
and Ruth Ann Riffle. Cleon,
Sliaron, Reggie. and Ryan Pratt,
and Helen Hood,.
Gifts and cards were presented
to the couple following a cookout .
Others ,presenting cards and
gifts were ·Charles and Ellen
Rlfe. John and Martha Wess, and
Bob and Betty Frazee.
Serving of the tiered cake,
baked by Sharon Pratt, and a
wine toast to the couple, concluded the evening .c elebration.

FORMER PATIENTS OF DR AARON BOON SUE AND)
NEW PATIENTS WELCOME

~ ·~

ATTORNEY-AT-LAW

FAMILY PRACTICE
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ROBERT M. HOLLEY9 M.D.
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DENZIL AND BARBARA WELSH

ToUR

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Sovlirr UNioN

Hannan
GALLIPOLIS
Trace High School Class of 1970,
20th year reunion, Sunday. May
27 from lOa.m. until dark at 0 .0 .
Mcintyre Park in Shelter House

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Reunions set

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and Myrna Carpenter, deceased.
The couple have also U grand'·
children and two great
grandchi!(jren .
' M~s. Hoffman is !be daughter
of the late Oris and 'j..ucy GauL
Hoffman is the son of Peter and
Estella Hoffman.
The event will be hosted by .
their children.
The couple reques ts that gifts
be omitted.

·••) "

MONICA STERATORE, MICHAEL KEMPER

GALLIPOLIS - LemleyRalph Reunion , Poplar Ridge
Church. May 27 with dinner at
noon.

FOR ·
SAFETY
- Hotzer
Clinic was lite reclplento!four
awards at the recent 'Gallla
County Safely Council banquet. Jane Garvey, center,
Ohio congress Coordinator of
the Division of Safety and
Hy&amp;lene, made the presenla·
tlons to clfnlc Admfnlstralor
Robert E. Daniel, left, and
Susan Davis, clinic safely
committee chainnan, right.
The clinic was recognized for
group and 100 percent awards,
was Ute on)3&lt; recipient of the
1190 Achelvement Award and
was one of two get ling Special
Awards. The clinic operated
814,558 mao-hours without a
lost time ·accident In Ute past
year.

':&amp;?
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MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Arts Council ·will sponsor
"Hat Extravaganza" on Sunday
at 2 p.m. In the dining room of the
Middleport Masonic . Temple.
Ticket price Is $4.

GALLIPOLIS - Haner ReunIon, May 27, 10 a.m to 3 p.m. at
Mcintyre Park, Shelter House
No. 1. Potluck.

......

PAUL AND MARENE HOFFMAN

Hat event slated

PROCTORVILLE
Woodyard-Moore FamUy Reun·
ion wjll be held Sunday. May 27 at
the Proc)on1lle · fairgrounds.
Bring a picnic lunch, family and
·
·
friends .

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GALLIPOLIS -""' Mr. a11d Mrs.
Frank Sieratore announce the
engagemen of their daughter,
Monica, to Michael Kemper, son
of William and Barbara Kemper.
Miss Steratore Is a graduate of
Marietta High SChool and will
graduate from Marietta College
with a major In sports medicine
and sports mana2ement.
Kemper Is ,a graduate of North
Gallla Hlgli School. He Is attend·
lng Marietta. C91lege where he Is
majoring In bUsiness manage-·
ment with a minor ln psychology.·
He Is also employed by United ·
Parcel Service In Marietta. · ·
The wedding has ~n set for
June 22, 1991.

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Love.''

Roller-Eddy

NANCY J. EVANS, SCOTI' H. SEEBURG

Evans-Seeburg

........

LORA UY ROLLER, STEVEN LEE EDDY

..
ANNVERSARY OBSERVANCE - Mr.
Mn. David L.
Beaver celebraled lhelr 2$11t weddiDI anniversary receoUy. The ·
couple was married May 22, 1965 by .lite Rev. Bruce Uoroe. They
have lwo chlklren, Jeanfne Terry oi.Jacboo and Brad Beaver,ln
the United States Air FoMe.

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Page B-6---Sunday Times-Sentinel

.

May 27, 1990

&amp;holarshi. . . awarded at Rutland

PorT181oy-Midcleport-GIIipolil, Ohio Point Plaa••nt. W. Va .

Beat of the Bend

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Senior
Center

Time of remembering
Bf BOB HOEFLICH
The Meigs County Chapter of
While this Is a weekend of the Ohio Civil Service Employees
remembering across the nation, A~oclatlon
been doing a
It is especially a
fund raiser with a set of twin
" remember
Middleton dolls being offered as
when" one In
the prize.
Meigs County
So that there could be no
where the anreflection on who would be
nual h!ih school
awarded the twin dolls, the
alumni reunions
winner was selected , through a
. have become
.
drawing held at '!:he Dally ·
tradition at lh-ls particular time.
Sentinel office Friday evening.
Can you 1magine how many Awarded the attractive set of
times last night the question:
dolls was Mary Jo Fulks, Route 1,
''Do you rem.ember when we?' • Crown City. Pauline · Wolfe has
was used as classmates from advised Fulks of her 'win - she
years p~t got together to renew should be deilghted.
Those
friendships and review events of Ml!ldleton dolls are special.
their high school years?
I, for one, am Impressed with
The upcoming marriage of
the work of local alumni every Charles R. Wolfe Jr., and Eliza·
year as they plan and . work beth Lyons was announced retowards holding 'the reunions cently · but without a date and
every Memorial Day weekend. time.
These reunions just seem to get.
The ceremony will be at 5: 30
better since the alumnlllylng In p.m., Thursday, May 31, and,
the county seem every year to weather permitting, will. be an
put more planning and effort In outdoor event at the home of hls
their work in creating a special : parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles
enVIronment for their friends Wolfe Sr., in Racine.
The
and- formeriy classmates who bride-elect Is the daughter of Mr.
are "coming back home' • for the and Mrs. Harry Lyons, also of
weekend. The spirit is really Racine. By the way, the wedding
there - if ' it weren't - the Is open to all relatives and friends
reunions would have dropped to of the couple.
the wayside long ago. So the
And a salute to the members of
devoted local residents who
make so much effort in staging the veterans organizations who
the reunions of high school again this year will travel the
alumni - and some of the high county in conducting services at
schools, of course, no longer exist numerous cemeteries over Memas such - certail'lY get my v0 te. orial Day Weekend. These are
'Jlhey really have fond memories dedicated, caring people. Their
of their school days as do the energy and fortitude Is
out-of-county alumni who make Impressive.
the trip in - manY times
And - thank you for your
traveling fong distances - to be
supportive comments and calls.
on hand for the get-togethers.
I 'prec!ate It. And do . keep
'The late Virgil &lt;Bo) Brown was · smiling.
always such a spark In getting his
.former classmates together for
the annual Pomeroy High School
reunion.
And this, .of course, leads me .
tn'to telling you thlit his widow,
Nellie. ts doing well. Nellie fell
GALLIPOLIS - On June 3,
several week&amp; ago in the drive· 1990, The First Presbyterian
· way at the Brown home and
Church of Galllpolls will celereceived a fractured hlp. She
brate Its 175th anniversary of It~
spent some time at. Veterans founding.
·
Memorial Hospital and then at
Oyerbrook Center. She pro- · It Is homecoming and we are
Inviting the public to the services
gressed well with her physical at 10: 30 a.m., a 1\lncheon (by
therapy and is back home. Her · reservation, call446-1030) followbrother-In-law and sister, Bill Ing ·the worship service and a ·
and Joan Childs, of course, have history of the church with music
bi!en supPortive and on hand to . and narration at 1 p.m.
hlilp her over the rough spots. .

plans
• • •
aatvtttes

nas

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DAN KENNEDY

TAMMY LAMBERT

RUTLAND - Four .scholar·
ships were awarded Saturday
night at the annual banquet oft he
Rutland Alumni Association.
Recelvlng the scholarships
were Tammy Lambert and Dan
Kennedy. gra~uates of Meigs
High School; Tracy DeWees of
Wahama High Scliool, and Greta
Rime of Eastern High School.
They are all directly related to a
graduate of Rutland H!gh School.
Miss Lambert Is the daughter
of Richard Lambert, (1963), and
Barbara Lamliert of Langsville,
and thegranddaughterofthelate
Mts. Ruby Far)ey Lambert. She
plans to attend.the t,rnlverslty of
Rio Grande and m~jor lp ac·
counting. At MeigS shewasa ·1988
Cove.r nor's summer scholar. a
member of the National Honor
· Society; an AcademiC All Amerl·
can, In the choir, a cheerleader.
and on the newspaper staff.
Dan Kennedy plans fo attend
Ohio University and ma]or In
electrical engineering. He Is the
son of Carl and Jean Edwards
Kennedy, (19561. Rutland. At
Meigs he has been a member of
the Academic Quiz team for two
years, a member cif the Spanish
Club. on the school newspaper.
and on the track team. He was
also· active In Boy Scouts for
several years.
Tracy DeWees will graduate
next month from Wahama High

School. She Is the daughter of
Earl and Peggy Tillis DeWees,
Mason, W. Va .. !1967). and the
· granddaughter of John and Pauline Haley Tillis.
She has been h member ·of the
National Honor Society for three
EAST MEIGS . - The Eagle
tic Press Association.
.years, In the Wahama Band and
Call, school newspaper of East·
Eighty high schools competed
the Drama Club for three years.
· ern High Schoo~ was the recipin the contest. Represen ta fives of
a member of Hi·Y for two years,
Ient of a second place award· In
the high school publications
and belongs to the accounting
the 1990 edition of newspaper
accepted the awards at a lunclub, and serves on the yearbook
competllloa sponsored annually
cheon · at Bowling Green State
staff for a year. She was the 1989
by the Great Lakes In terscholasWHS Spirit Award winner and
the regiOnal speech winner In the
Voice of Democracy.
Tracy will be attending West
Virginia . University, Jackson
County Branch, where she will
. major In office administration . .
· · Greta Riffle wi)l graduate next
weekend from Eastern High
School. She Is. the daughter or
GRETA RIFFLE
. UPPER RT.7 • ~CROSS FROM S.E. EQUIPMENT
Curtis and Sharon Riffle of
GAWPOUS, OH. - 446-3051 .
Racine, and the granddaughter
she has been active In the concert
of Mrs .. Mary Katherine Davis
and marching bands. the chorus
Mon.-Fri. 9 AM·7 PM/Sat. 9 AM·5 PM
Holter, t Rutland 1941 l. ,.
and chOir, and on the newspaper
· Sunday 12 Noon to 4 PM
Greta plans to attend Ohio
staff. She Is a member of Job's
University where she will major - Daughters, the Teen Institute
In political science and then
and a teen volunteer at Lakin
pursue a law degree. At Eastern
Stale Hospital.
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University.
Advisors and professionals ·
from around the state judg~ ,
entries by division, according to...
school size and awarded first , '
second. third and honorable •
mention awards.

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s~:lo.

May 2'3rd .thru May 26th

..

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Attend·reunion
MIDDLEPORT - Velma Rue
and Helen Bodlmer of Middleport ·attended the 50th annual
reunion ol their graduatiOn class
frOm Gallla Academy. The celebration; only the thltd In the past
50 years, took place at the Elks
Club In Gallipolis Saturday.

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~EGISTRATION FORM

G~llia

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County Fou.-th of July Parade
for Registration-June 25 1990)

LINE UP BEGINS AT 9:30A.M.
Parade Theme:

"Commemorate The Past ... Celebrate The Future"

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. ,_ Name or Organization: - - - - - - - - - - - -

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COIISirucllon could begin In April. Church and
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NEW CBUBCH - The Syracuse Nazarene
Church conp"egation will be moving Into lhllllew
strueture locat.e d on State Route 124 In late .Juile.
Plano for bulldln&amp; a new church bepn about
seven yean aco when four acres al011gtherJver lit
· upper Syraeuse were purchased. The cbureh -site
had to be raised above the flood plain before

nlla-cllllrch members have donated lbetr lime co
the proJect. 'l'he building is 52x104 and Includes a
ll&amp;llctiiiU'y to seat 168, a Jarce multipurpose room,
six· claall'ooms and a nursery . . The Rev. Glenn
McMUiall 11· tbe paator. The current churel! on
Brldcemap Street, Syracuse hils been sold.

Free clothing day

Dyson featured in ·newsletter ·

. TUSCON, Ariz. - .tody Dyson, polls. She Is a certified legal ·
formerly '\)f . Galllp~lis, baa fea· . assistant, specializing In
probate.
·
tured In the newsletter of Mesch,
The
Tuscon
Association
of
Clark and Rothschild, P.C., ·atLegal
Assistants
named
Dyson
torneys In Tuscon, Ariz.
She is the daughter of th~ late Legal Assistant of the Year In
Cecil and Verna Mehl. Dyson is 1989, which was based on profes·
the neice of Mrs. Warner Hal1ey slonal status and · activities, as
of Galitwlts, and the grand- determined by. her peers. .
According to Mrs. Halley,
daugh1~r of 102-year-old· Roy
Dyson
will be In t.own fOr .. the
Mehl, ·a · br,lcklayer · In Gallla
County, now residing In New Gallla A.ca~emy all-class reunIon In :June. ·
Orleans. La. ·
·
Dyson has been with the legal
firm since 1987, and was a
secretary to the late Henry
Cherrington. attorney, of GaiU·

CHESHIRE -The Gallla
Meigs Community Action
Agency will have a free clothing
day on Wednesday from 9 a.m. to
non at the old high school
building In Cheshire.

Barbeque slated
RACINE -The Racine Volun·
teer Fire Department will have a
chicken · barbecue on Sunday
beginning ·!II 11 a.m. Ladles
auxiliary· wlll serve homemade
ice cream also.
.

Activities a.nd menus for the
week of May 211-June 1.• at the .
Senlot Citizen• Center 220 Jack·
son Pike will be as followa:
Monday - ClOsed
Tuesday - Stop/Physical Fit·
ness, 10:30a.m.; VIdeo Matinee,
12::)0 p.m .; "The Return to
Snowy River".
·Wednesday - Armchair
Travel "Maryland", 10:45 a.JII.;
Cards, 1-3 p.m .
Thursday- Bible Study, 10:45
a.m.; Herbs Class, 1:30 p.m.;
Potluck Supper, 4 p.m.
Friday - Art Class; 10-noop;
craft Class, 1-3 p.m.
Menus co!llllst of:
Monday - CIO$ed
Tuesday - Scalloped pota tcies
and ham, spinach/vinegar, bls·
cults, fruit cup.
,
Wednesday ;.. Beef tips, noodles, green beans, bread, bana·
nas In orange Juice.
Thursday - Oven fried
chicken, whipped potatoes, cauU!Iower/ broccoll, bread, Ice
cream or sherbert.
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Penny Burge of Hair Highlights is celebrating her
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: P8g1 8-8-Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant; W. Va.

27.

•

ientinel Section ·C
ports_
Fittipaldi,. Unser renew rivalry t ay
~imes-

'

OPEN
MEMORIAL DAY
9 A.M.-6 P.M.
•'

\

May 27. 1990 '

------•

'

"'By BOB KEIM
wln~r Bobby -Rahal, starting, fourth; the Andrett!s, 1969 winner
UPI Sports Writer
Mario and Michael, starting sixth and fifth, repsect!vely; and 1985
INDIANAPOLIS~ The rivalry was In pl.iicj! much earlier, but It
charrip -Danny Sull!van, who w!ll start ninth.
was the dramatic finish to last year's Indianapolis 500 that forever
Barring a biiarre set of occul'E!nces on race clay, one of those drivers
linked Emerson Fittlpaldi and AI Unser Jr.
will win the racef,and the common thread tying those men together is
Bump your way to victory In any other race and lt'.s a memorable,
a Chevrolet engine.
possibly controversial, win that folks talk about f!&gt;r years. Do it In the
There are 11 cars powered by a V6 Buick engine, two
Indlanapoll$ 500 and it's history.
Porsche-powered cars, two Alfa Romeos, three Judd engines and five
"I think (the rivalry with I Little Ails great for racing andd great .
Cosworths . But the 10 drivers whO have the Chevrolet engine are the
for the public, '' said 'nttlpaldi. who won last year's race after he
envy of the rest of the field.
The front three rows are occupied by Chevrolet-powered c ars,
bumped Unser in Turn 3 on Lap 199.
Unser spun and hit the wail. Fl)tlpaldi took the checkered flag and a
while the lOth Chevy, driven by Formula One veteran and lndy; car
. $1 mUlion payday .
rookie Eddie Cheever, is In the middle of Row 5.
They had battled before, with Unser bumping his way past
Hard-luck Marlo Andrei tl is making his 25th start at Indianapolis,
F!ttlpaldi in 1988 at the Meadowlands, and .Fittlpaldi f!nl$hed less
as is !our-time winner AI Unser Sr. , starting 30th in an AI fa
than 2 seconds behind Unser this year at Lpng Beach, Calif..
Romeo-powered March. Ot.h er former winners in the field are A.J.
The competition was renewed this month. as both men battled·for
Foyt starting eigltth, and Tom Sneva, starting 25th.
the fastest speeds in practice as a warmup for an anticipated duel for
An~ther trait the top drivers share in this year's race is
the pole position.
.
.
.
·
'
.
membership in one of Indy car racing's . three " superteams."
Flttlpaldi won that battle in a runaway , earning the first pole of 1\ls
Fittlpaldi, Sullivan 11nd. Mears drive for Roger Penske; Rahal and
career at Indianapolis with a four -.iap qualifying average of 225.301
Unser Jr .. drive for the Gailes-Kraco team; and Michael and Mario
mph, a pew tr\1-ck l'E!COrd at the Itldlanapolls Motor Speedway. Unser
run-for owners Carl Haas and Paul Newman.
qualified a disappointing seventh.
.
· Those teams all have 1990 cars, another huge heneflt. Older carsOn Sunday , Fitt!paldl will lead the 33-car field In the 74th running of
any made befOrE! 1990- have been equipped wilh a diffuser under the
the motorsport classic when the green flag drops at 1 p.m. EDT in
car that has proven to be a big handicap so far this month , as only one
front of an estimated 400,000 fans at the Speedway and a nationwide
1990 car was Involved in one of the 17 practice lncidert1s at the
ABC television audience.
Speedway .
Lurking six spots behind him will be Unser Jr.
•'The rules package has started down the road toward exactly what
the drivers wanted, and that's to slow tile cars down in the corner and
"I like being the underdog," Unser said. .
While Unser may consider himself a longshot, there's noway he can
bring the driver back Into it," said Unser Jr.
·
be called anything but one of the favorites, along with F!ttlpaldl. .
That, after · all, . Is tile attraction of automobile racing - the
Other drivers with legitimate shots at victory Include three-time . c6mbination of speed and driving skill. Fittipaldl and Unser Jr. are
winner Rick Mears. whO will start in the middle of the front row; 1986
.

'

ALL BEACH
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Writer pick$ Aftdretti
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ByBOBKEIM
. UPI Sports Writer .
INDIANA:PbLIS - Marlo An·
dretti'won the Indiana polls 500 in
1969, but that ,won't be his legacy
at the Indlanapolls Motor Speed·
way. His story Is one of heartache, despair and frustration.
After blowing his engine in last
year 's race, Michael Andrettl
feared that his father had passed
on more than a great set of racing
gene$. Michael feared he also
had Inherited the.Andrett! Jinx.
As ihe young lions of the Indy
car series, Michael and AI Unser
Jr. have waited patiently for the
torch to be passed to their
generation. · They've won just·
about every place else, but until a
member of the new generation
wins at IndianapoUs, the , old
guard still Is in charge. '
' The only non:wlnner,s ·in ,the
first three rows of the r~e ~the
only rows where any driver has a
reall$t!c hope of winning - are
Michael. Little AI and Arie

'Luyendyk.

of course. Emerson Fittipaldi
and Rick Mears have the fastest
This-!$ the year tlie new kids
cars · In · the field, and Rahal ,
take over. It's · the. year an
Marlo Andretti and Danny Sulll·
Andretti dri:ves his car to victory
van are former winners who
lane. takes a . sip of·. milk and
have the cars and guile to win ·
shatters ·the string of bad luck
again.
·
that has shadowed the family for
Picking a winner In a 500-m!ie
20 years at Indianapolis.
race, especially at Indianapolis,
This IS the year Michael
is a tough chorE!, mainly because
Andretti w!ll win the Indianapo·
so many weird things can happen
lis 500.
once the race gets underway .
Michael is starting in the
Michael knows ali about that,
mldgle of Row 2, betwj\en Bobby . havl~g waJched his fat~ter walk
Rahal andhls father, In a K·Mart
away from the Speedway heart·
Havollne Lola-Chevrolet he qualbroken more times than he would
Ified at 222.ll55 mph. He drives
care to remember.
the car hard, like his father, and
Michael's 'been here often
he's a .fierce competitor.·
enough to feel comfortable on
: Michael liad a chance to win
any part of the track a.t 11ny point
here two other times. He was
in the race. And he's young
leading on Lap 164 when his
enough, hungry enough and
engine blew in.l989, and he led the
talented enough to overcome the
firsf421aps In 1986before a series
Andrettl Jinx.
of unfortunate incidents on pit
Racing observers have said for
stops shuffled him back in the
years that Michael was capable
field.
of winning the Indianapolis 500.
Winning won't be a cakewalk,
Sunday, he will win.

'

30

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by 51ol'ft

MONTREAL iUPI) - Barry
Larkin delivered a two-run dou ·
ble In the ninth inning Saturday
to lift the Cincinnati Reds to their
third stralgh1 win, a 5·3 c)ec!sion
over the Montreal Expos .
With the scorE! tied 3·3, pinch·
hitter Ken Griffey singled off
loser Tim Burke, 0-1. Chris Sa,bo
walked but Griffey was forced to
leave the game when he twisted
his ankle running between first
and second. Tom Browning.came
on to pinch run.
,
Mickey Hatcher then reached
on third baseman Tim Wallach's
throwing error to load the bases.
Larkin then ddoubled home two
runs. helping to make a winner of

..

...
EMERSON FrrTIPALDI

'

Astros, White Sox .triump·h

CHICAGO iUPI) - Glenn
Davis homered twice and Mike
Scott pitched a nine-hitter to end
a personal three-game lasing
streak · Saturday, giving the
Houston Astros a 8-1 victory over
the • Chicago Cubs In th&amp; first
game of a double-header ..
I .
Davis, whO entered the game;
batting 1ust .}43 the past, two
weeks; drove home five runs with
his ' sixth career two-homer
Rob Dibble, 3-0.
for his ninth homer of the season.
game. He has 152 career homers,
Randy Myers worked the ninth
The Reds took a 1·0 lead in the
but only eight lifetime against
inning for his ninth save. ·
third inning off starter Zane
Chicago.
Montreal had tied the game 3·3 , Smith. Sabo doubled with one
Scott, . 2-5, pitched his first
in the eigl)th. Tim Wallljch led off out. stole tllird and scored on a
complete game since Sept. 9,
with a -walk off reliever Rob . sacrifice fly by Bil~y Hatcher.
Dibble and was replaced by
Montreal tied the game in the , 1989. , The rlght'l!ander, who
entered the game with a 6.33
pinch runner Delino DeShields. bottom of the Inning. Smith
earned-run average, struck out
One out later, Mike Fitzgerald O'pened with a single and was
two and walked two.
doubled DeShields home.
erased on a forceout by Nixon,
Rookie Shawn Boskie, 1-1,
Chris Sabo belted a two-run who stole second. One out later.
making
his second major league
homer -in the seventh Inning to Nixon went to third on a Tim
start, gave up nine hits over
give the Reds a 3-2· lead. Pincli
Raines single and scored' on a
seven innings, walking two a,nd
hitter Hal Morris doubled down
single by Ar19res Galarraga.
striking out three.
the right-field line off John
The Reds missed a chance to
The Astnis broke a 1·1 tle in the
Costello. who had been activated
take the lead in the fourth. With
second
inning when Rafael Ra·
from the disabled list before the one out. TOdd Benzinger and
mirez
scored
on Eric Yelding's
game. Sabo followed by driving a
Oliver singled. Rolando Roomes
two-out
RBI
single.
1-2 pitch over the lef!-f!eld fence
then ~lngled up the middle, but
Houston made the scol'E!d 4-lln
center fielder Nixon threw out
the
fifth on a two-run home run by
Benzinger at the plate.
Montreal took a 2-1 lead In the , Davis.
The Astros added four runs In
fifth. Otis Nixon led off with a
the
ninth when Bill . Doran
walk and stole botb second and
third. One out later, Tim Raines stroked an RBi double and Davis
hit his second homer of the game
hit a grounde'r to ,third baseman
·
off
the first pitch from reliever
Saba, whose throw home Wlljl
Bill
Long.
dropped by catcher Joe Oliver
· for an erdll' as Nixon scored.

Reds conie from behind to
defeat. Expos for 29th win
0/_ ' SEIK()®
-/0 WATCHESini

Unser's desire thi s year Is fueled by his disappointing qualifying
run, and the yearning to become the third family me mber to win this
race, after AI Sr. and uncle Bobby.
·
"Qualifying was a setback," Unser said . " I did some things I
shouldn't have done and I learned from it. A,J. !Foyt) kind of put lt
best. He rolled the dice and he won . I rolled the dice and it came up
craps."
.
He also rolled craps in last year's duel wlttt Fittipaldi. While Un&amp;;er
will admit he was fru strated by losing last year's race, he quickly
adds that the memory won't haunt him on Sunday.
·
''f haven't second-guessed last year at all," he said. " It's stili wUh
me. The day I lose it Is the day I reach 1981aps again . I just hope we
can get to the end of the race so tllat it can be behind m~ once and (or
ali. I would llketorun and complete the500mlles at Indy, which I have·
yet to do." .
And if Unnser and Flttlpaidi end up battling for the lead again ,
neither driver will even think of letting up. Both men hate to lose,
es~edaUy to each other.

Commentary

ALL FAMILY
SHORTS, tANKS
and SWIMWEAR

- E1c:MtN

.

is. "

'

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clip tans.

.

among the most skUlful drivers in the world.
"I ·reallY don 't have a rivalry with Emerson," said Un.ser Jr. "I
tl'E!at Emerson the way I treat everyone else out there. He's 'an equal.
. He's another driver I have to pass to win the race."
·
Fittipaldl definite ly is an equal, and anyone who hopes to wtn the
· race w!il have to deal with his Marlboro Fenske machine beforE! the
e nd of the day. But Unser and Fittlpaldi have an on-track relationship
that is much more Intense, much' more competitive , and much mort!
Interesting than the norm.
"Away from tile track, we are good friends ," F!ttipaldi S!'id. ' 'H~'s
a very competitive driver, one of the most competitive drivers I've
ever raced against . I think what happened last year, (and) what
happened in Long Beach this year, shows how competitive Little AI

Cubs first -base coach Jose Ventura then lined an appare~t .
Martinez was ejected in the single to right , only to have it
fourth Inning for arguing a close turned into a forceout at second;
But Calderon doubled in one
call with umpire Ed Montague.
run.
making the score 7-4,
White Sox 10, Tlsers t
pinch-hitter
Carlton Fisk
Lance Johnson and Ivan Cal·
walked,
Ron
Kittle
slilg~ home ,
deroil each singled home a run as
two
more
runs
and
Steve Lyons
part (If a three-run sixth Inning
followed
with
an
RBI
single.
Saturday, sparking the Chicago .
Detroit
scored
twice
in theWhite Sox to a 10·4 viCtory CIVer
fourth
to
take
a
4-31ead
anC!
chase
the' Detroit Tigers.
rookie starlet Jerry Kutzler.
The White So1t, traiHng 4·3, · With one out, Uoyd Moseby
tripled and Larry Sheets doubled
strung together one-out singles
off the right -field wall to tie the
by Ron Ka~kovlc_e, Ozzie Guillen
and Johnson to tie the score in the score. Sheets .,..ent to third on
sixth and drive out starter Jeff Gary Ward's single, bringing on
Patterson, and plnch-~ltter Mike
Robinson, 4·4.
Heath
stroked a sacrifice fly to
Jerry Don Gleaton relieved
and Johnson stole second. Robin score Sheets .
Ventura broke the tie when when
he grounded out to second and
' •
Calderon laid down a. squeeze
bunt and beat It out for an RBI
_single to put Chicago ahead 6-4.
. CHICAGO IUP!)
Michael
Ken Patterson. 1·0, earned
Jordan scored 47 points and
the victory with 2 f3 Innings of
ScottlePippenadded29Saturday ·
hitless relief. Chicago won its
to lead the Chicago Bulls to their
first game in five tries against .
first victory In the Eastern
Detroit this season and broke a
Conference finals, .a 107·102
five-game overall losing streak
Game 3 triumph over the Del rOil to the Tigers.
Pistons.
• •
Chicago put the gl!_me away
ChiCago can even the best-of·
wl th four runs In the eighth,
seven series with a victory In
pounding Matt KlnzAir In his
Game 4 Monday afternoon at
· American League debut.
Chicago Stadium. Game 5 Is set
Guillen beat out a one-out
for Wednesday night In Auburn
Infield single of! Gleaton tp bring
Hllls, Mich., where the Buns are
In Kinzer, who walked Johnson.
winless this season.

Bulls tpp
Pistons

ORIGINAL PRICE.••.•.•••.• 20.00
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�~C-2-Sunday

: Page

Tmes-Sentinal

- ~M~a~y~2~7~,~19~90~=============~Pomar~=·~ov~~M~idd=eport::;~-;:G~a:rr~ill~OO=Iis~,~Ohio-=·
~Poil~int:~PI~•:•:am~,~w~.V~•:;·======S~u~nda:~v~li~mes-=~Sel~~nt~in~al~,.~~g~a~C~-3~

May 87. 1990

Ponwoy-Middeport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Annstrong blanks Expos for eighth w~

=:Suns wallop Trail Blazers, .1 23-89 in NBA West playoffs
advantage by halftime, at which
polntthey nailed 30 o139 shots for
,•
77 percent.
PhoeniX, which dropped the
· ·•PHOENIX - For the second
first
two games by·a total olthree
straight game, the PhoeniX Suns
points
and blew a 22-polnt
lfuilt a 22-polnt advantage in the
second-quarter
lead in Game 2,
s econd quarter. They 'didn' t
canned 70 percent of Its shots
·squander this one.
through three quarters.
· · To the contrary, Phoenix kept
Poor shooting by reserves in
building its lead until it reached
the fourth period cost the Suns a
46 points near the end of the third
-period. Shrugging off their dem- · chance atthEi playoff record of 67
percent set by Boston In Its
·'otalizing defeat two days earlier.
1he Suns sank a club playoff 157·128 first-round triumph over
" 'rticord 61 percent of their fieldNew York this season.
Still, their accuracy topped the
"'goal attempts for a 123-89 rout of
prevlm,1s club playoff record of
the Portland Trail Blazers.
60.7 percent set against the
'· The victory cut Portland's
Lakers last year.
'edge to 2-1 in the best-of-seven
The Suns, emphatically avert'Western Conference finals.
lng
their first three-game losing
'· "We played real well," said
streak
since March 1989, can tie
'Tom Chambers, one of five
the series Sunday with another
.PhoeniX starters who combined
·'l&lt;i hit 35 of 42 shots. "We went victory at home. Game 5 Is
scheduled for Tuesday night at
lifter them from the start and got
· · llac~ to playing the way we play
Portland.
The Blazers · made , only 36
. best. We, put the pressure on
percent oftheir shots·in suffering
, Jljem i!nd kept it on them." .
•: The Suns sprinted to a 40,18 their most lopsided playoff de:. lead a(ter one period and a 71-43 ·feat ever.
·
ByMIKEBARNFS
UPI Sports Writer

"The Suns were just very
good, " Portland Coach Rick
Adelman said . "They were aclive and we weren't. we looked
llke we were a couple of steps
behind all night. "
Chambers led the onslaught
with 24 points on 11 of 13 shooting.
Kevin Johnson and Jeff Hor-nacek each added 17 points, with
Johnson collecting 12 assists.
The Blazers, now 1-4 on the
road In these playoffs, were
paced by Jerome Kersey with 16
points. Terry Porter, Portland's
leader the first two games, had
only 6 points.
The Suns unleashed their fastbreak at the start and raced loan
18-4 lead four minutes Into the
game. When Johnson set up
back-to-back transition layups
by Chambers and Eddie Johnson, the advantage ballooned to
30-14. The Suns then closed the
explosive quarter with eight
unanswered points for their
22-point bulge after one period.
"When we're passing the ball
we're at our best," said Hor·

nacek, whose team had a 38-25
assist advantage.
While Chambers led the
charge, Mark West contributed 8
of his 9 points. The Phoenix
center, so Important In the
semifinal upset of the Lakers,
had but 12 in the first two games
In Portland.

" The team was concentrat mg
rejections - .to trigger a 10-0
on getting me Involved, " he said .
bur st .
.
The Suns shot 18 of 23 for 78
The Suns remainPd relentless,
padding thPir cushion to 61-31 on
percent In the first quarter. The
Blazers hit only 9 of 27 for 33
Cha mbers· jum~ with 4:22 left
in the quarter. Remarkably, they
percent.
Portland scored the first four
built on t hel·r lead without Kevin ·
points of the second quarter. bu t . Johnson. who sat out lor as tretch
of 10 1-2 minutes.
reserve Andrew Lang blocked a
. Portland layup - one of his five

MEMORIAL DAY SILENT SALE
WE WILL BE CLOSED ON MEMORIAL DAY

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ANOTHER SHUTOUT - Cincinnati's Jack Armstrong hurled
his second straight shutout as tile Reds blaaked Montreal, i-0 at
Montreal Friday night. Armitrong burled elghl innings as he
chalked up his eighth win against one loss. (UPI)

MONTREAL (UPI) - Jack
Armstrona has started fourofthe
Clnclnnat!Reds'sixshutoutsthis
year, yet finished onlY one of
them.
He looked like he would get a
second Friday nig)lt, but was
lifted In tbe eighth Inning for a
pinch hitter while cruising with a
three-hitter. The Reds scored
follrrunsinthelnnlngtoseala5-0
victory over. the Montreal Expos
and .convince Armstrong that
manager Lou Plnlella made the
right decision by taklnghlm out.
Armstrong, 8-1, became the
National League's first eightgame winner and joined Oakland's Dave Stewart as the
biggest winners In the majors.
''Lou made the right decision
taking me outfor a pinch hitter, "
Armstrong said. "A one-run lead
is not that safe."
Randy Myers worked the
ninth, giving up 'one h.lt. .
"Armstrong has really come
on this year." Plnlella said. "I
think confidence plays a big part
In it. He worked har!,ilast winter
· In the Instructional league where
he had some good tutelage. He:S
throwing the ball well and he has
four good pitches. LaSt year he
was trying to overpower
himself."
· Armstrong struck out seven
and walked none. Former Expo
Herm Winningham powered the
Reds's attack with a two-run
triple and scored twice.
"All four pitches of mtne were
working tonight," Armstrong
said. ''My fastball was not that
gQOCI. It was probably at about85
percent. Onegamei'IIhavetogo
out there and really throw the
best fastball I can.
Montreal starter Dennis Mar'!Inez, 3-4, gave up one run on five
hits and three walks while
striking out 10 over eight innings.

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DUCKWOR111 HEW IN CHECK - Phoenix
,.,.,. Suns' Mark West (left) leans on Portland's Kevin
. Duckworth under the Trail Blazers' basket during

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· ••:~;scheduled
for June
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Into two sessions, with
•' ~e junior session, which Is for
;. :atea students entering grades'4-8
;: ;Oils fall, running from June 18 to
, . ..June 21.
~~-:The cost of this camp is.$35 u
.O.e the $15 pre-registration fee
:; ~d materials are turned In
:- )!!fore JunP3. Aftpr Juilp 3 the fee
;: oj) $40 . .
!· :•:The cost of thP senior session,
~t students entering grades 9-12
;- fOils fall, is $40 if the $15
, :: 4!J-e-registration fee is paid be;, fore June 10. After June 10 the fee
:: is $45.
!• For both camps, thP remainder
:: is to be paid on the first day oft he
t! camp.
;. All participants will receive
l; instruction In shooting, ballhan;: dllng, offensive moves and defen\, slve fundamentals from the
'•
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Academy
basketball
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•l coaching staffs and Blue Devil
~· and Blue Angel cagers past and

. o: 'l!lvided

••

'NE'W- ORLEANS - The Old
Freneb City had a weekend vlllltor In Don
MacKenzie, a native ol Ollio who Ill publicizing his
new book, "From the Eye ol An Eagle," by
paddling a kayak (shown above, doeked at &amp;he
GaiUpoUs Boat C!ilb) from Oil &lt;;lty, Pa., to New
. Orleans, La., a distance o~ approximately Z,,lH
mUes. Thus far,lt, has paddled approximately 450
mUes. MacKenzie, wbo stayed at Circle's Motel
over the weekend due to bad weather condlllons
on the, Ohio, bepn hill hLiest adventure May 14.
Weather permhUng, he hopes to be IJ! New

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1

Sports briefs

Basketball
'• Pat ,Riley, head coach of the
; Lo$ Angeles Lakers, Friday was
""named ali the NBA Coach of the
: Year by Thf Sporting News in
! voting done by NBA coaches.
~Riley won by two votes over Rick
! Ad"lman of Portland and Jim
; Lynam ol Pbllldelpllla.
• -111 Riley's nine seasons as
~ coach ol the Llkers, he has
•compiled 1 ~194 record lor a
:winning percentage at .733 - the
: best in NBA history. .. . The
• players' choice for NBA Player
:.Pl. the Year Is PhUadelph~'s
Charles BarklfY. I

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whfle navagailng the Allegheny River last week,
MacKenzie said he averaged on~)~ tO miles a day
due to stormy conditions. Tile one-man kayak,
with an open cockpit, welgltB 310 pounds whett
loaded. MacKenzie usualiy starts bis trips around
7 a.m. and wraps up lor lite day around 7 p.m.
MacKenzie baaed his latest book on bis ~989
experience~ whUe'tourlaa;·Central America.

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FAIRLAWN
50·FT.
REINFORCED
.VINYL HOSE

hit a three-run home run In ihe
eighth inning to give the PhUlles
their fourth straight win. Hayes
hit hil third home run of the
season to score Von Hayes and
John Kruk, making a loser .of
reliever Joe Hesketh, 1-1. J E:ff
Parrett, 2-2, pitched one innll)g
and Roger McDowell earned his
league-leading 12th save 'by '"
pitching the ninth inning.
.,
Dodgen 4, Cardinals 1 ..
At St . Louis, Juan S@JilUel hi~ a
two-run home run and Ramon
·Martinez pitched a five-httter ,i&lt;&gt;
power the Dodgers' thir,d
straight victory, also the thl~
straight for Martinez, 5-2. Ml!f·!Inez threw his third complete
game of the season and came
within an out of hl.1 seco,nd
shutout. He struck out eight to
give hlm 65, tops In the NL. On,bl
one Cardinal reached third base.
Joe Magrane, 2·7, retired 18 oqo
batters after allowing a fir~t Inning run, but faltered In t~e
seventh.
"" .

L.R. GeaR.~

,~

,•.

Friday's NBA playoffs In Phoenix. Duckworth
was held tp six points as the SutiS won, 123-89 to cut
Portland's series lead to 2-1. ( UPI)

Winningham doubled 1n the after lolln&amp;thelrfirstnlnegames
sixth and scored on a single by there tbil aeuon.
Eric Davis for a 1-0 lead.
Thevictorywassometblnaofa
Cincinnati added four runs Ia the "coml111 out for Mitchell, who
eighth off Dave Schmidt. After feeil he has sttuagled. despite
Joe Oliver walked and pinch hitting .307 before Friday night's
hitter Ken Griffey Sr. slnaled, outburst.
Winningham tripled both home
But Mitcbell has been working
and scored on Barry Larkin's with hitting coach DuJty Baker
single. Paul O'Neill's RBI' single on his rne£hanics, and 1f Friday
scored the fourth run of the night 11 any indication, It Is
inning.
working.
"You're always at your best
Will Clark and Jose Uribe also
when you play . your former homeredfortheGiantswhileJeff
team," Winningham said . King, Barry .Bonds and Bobby
"There's nothing personal. in- Bonilla homered for the Pirates.
volved. You just give that little
John Burkett Improved to 3-1.
extra."
Jeff Brantley pitched out of a
Montreal's bestscoringcbance first and third jam In the ninth by
came 1n the second Inning when getting Mike LaValliere to pop
Andres Galarraga doubled lead- out and Jose Lind on a groundout
lng off, but Armstrong then set for his fourth save.
the Expos down In order.
''The fact Is tonight we just
Tlm Foley o~ned the third didn't throw the ball well,"
w'lth a single and Larry Walker Pirates Manager Jim Leyland
led oft the eighth wltha single but sajd. "We threw some fat pitches
Armstrong again retired thenext and they hit them. Jn a game like
three batters each tl~.
this you can look back at a 100
"Armstrong is for real," Exthings."
·.
·
.
ix&gt;s Manager Buck Rodgprs said.
The Pirates have lost eight of
"He has a good record and he. 11 and fell out ot first place In the
showed us why tonight. he has a
National League East, slipping a
good breaking ball. It's too bad half-game behind Philadelphia.
we couldn't keep· the game close
After falltng behind 7-1, then
In the ninth;"
8-2, the Pirates got back to 9·8
Martinez hit Armstrong with a
with runners at first and third
pitch In the seventh Inning, which with one out In the ninth, but
Armstrong claimed was couldn't push home a run.
Intentional.
"It showed that · we are bat''That was no accident," he tllng," Pirates shortstop Jay Bell
said. "But I have bigger things to said. "We're not playing as well
worry al1out. I've got too much as we were, but we still feel like
respect for the game of baseball,
we're the team that will be on top
my teammates and myself to d9 at the end.,This Is not the stretch
something like that."
· run. We ))ave to wait until
Martinez disagreed.
September to see What
"I didn't throw at hlm on happens."
purpose. Why would .I want to do Padl'ea 5, Mets 4
something like that? Tile pitch
At New York. Benito Santiago
got away from me. I pitched well smashed a three-run homer and
tonight. I just wish the guys Phil Stephenson and Joe Carter
would have got some hits for added solo shots to propel t~e
me."
Padres. Dennis Rasmussen. 4·2,
' Elsewhere in the NL Friday yielded seven hits over five-plus
night. San Francisco outlasted Innings. Craig Lefferts picked up
Pittsburgh, 9-8, San Diego edged his seventh save. David Cone, ·
New York 5-4, Philadelphia 1·3, was roughed up . by the
nipped Atlanta 5-4, Los Angeles Padres for flvp runs and fi"e hits
plucked St. Louis 4·1, and Hous, in lour innings.
Phlllles 5, ~raves 4
ton at Chicago was rained out.
Giants 9 Plrate118
A! Philadelphia, Charlie Hayes
Maybe the Sail Francisco
Giants should build a new bali
park, something along the lll)es
Spo118 briefs
of Plttsbllrgh's Three Rivers
Stadium.
Tennis
"
If It would keep Kevin Mitchell
Austrian ThOmas Muster, who
hitting tbe way he did Friday
notched his eighth Grand Prix
night, when the Giant slugger
title last Sunday when he won the
belted a career-high three home
Italian Open, said he dreams of
runs for five RBI, powerint San
one day winning the Wimbledon
Francisco to a 9-8 victory over
Tennis Championships. "Winthe Pirates, It inl&amp;ht be worth It.
ning Wimbledon would be great
Home hasn't been sweet to the
just fol' the feel\llg, even if It's
rest of the Giants either. They
only a dream." the 22-year-old
have gone 6-16 in Candlestick,
clay specialist said .

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~~~~========================~~~~~~~~~~~~~2=.,~~P~Ui=:d~PI~•:•:•::~~~VV~.~V~a~.======~====~S~un~~~·~v~~~~~~~~~~:~·

M-v 'D, 1180 ...

Pomeloy-Middleport-GIIIipolil, Ohio-Point PlaMent. W. Va.
'

RIO GRANDE - Former record In his rookie season. He
Cincinnati Reds pitcher Brooks was traded to the Reds In 1956,
Lawrence and former WSAZ·TV and In that season won his first 13
sportscaster Bob Bowen will be decisions en route to a 19-10
the guesl3 of honor at the benefit season. In 1957 he went 16-13 In
game between the Cincinnati 250 Innings. Tnday he Is the head
Reds Dream Week team and the baseball coach at Wilmington
.
Ga!Ua County High School All- College.
Lawrence will pitch about two
StarsonSaturday, June9at11:30 .
a .m. at the University of Rio Innings for the Dream Team,
Grande' s Stanley L. Evans Field. which will compete against a
Lawrence, 65, a member of the . Ga!Ua County aU-star team comReds Hall of Fame, began his posed of -recent graduates.
Bowen, former sports director
major-league career with the St.
Louis Cardinals midWay through at WSAZ-TV, was named West
the 1954 season,_ posting a 15-6 VIrginia Sportscaster. oft he Year

In 1976 and 1981 while being a
fixture on the station's 6 p.m . and
11 p.m. newscasts for nearly 25
years.
After starting his career at a
radio station In Coshocton,
Bowen was hired by WSAZ Radio
In 1958 and served as an announcer before being named
program director. In 1967 he
succeeded Jim Thacker as sports
direCtor at WSAZ·TV. and there
he remained before retiring this
spring. Bowen will throw out the
first pitch.
Bowen an4 Lawrence will

CONCORD, N.C. (UP!) -Dale
Earnhardt and Derrlke Cope will
be racing In Sunday's Coca-Cola
600 with more than Just the
winner' s circle on their minds.
Both drivers are eligible for a
$1 million bonus to .t hedrlverwho
wins ·three of N~SCAR's four
major races. Cope qualified for
the bonus by winning the Daytona 500 when Earnhardt, who
dominated the event, cut a tire on
the final lap. Earnhardt won the
Winston 500 at Talladega, Ala., to
qualify for the bonus.
For either driver to .take the $1
mtlllon home, he must win
Sunday's race at the Charlotte
Motor Speedway and the Southern 500 on Sept. 2. If O~Jeofthe two
should win the Coca-Cola 600 but
not the Southern 50Q, · he will
receive a $100,1)00 bonus.
Bill ElliOtt Is the only driver to
collect the $1 mUllon bonus,
accomplishing the feat In 1985.
"Coming to Charlotte after
winning Talladega puts a little
more emphasis on this race,"
said Earnhardt, a three-time
NASCAR champion. "I'm proud
to have a shot at the Wins ton
Million since we haven't had one.
We've kept a couple of guys from
winning It a couple of limes, but
that's about lt."
Earnhardt, 38, said his Chev·
role! has been· consistent
throughout practice this week.
"I think that's what It's going
to take to win Sunday - consls-

are ·:

BOB BOWEN

"

\Vilson says diabetes not
$• hindrance to football career

•• '· By TRACEY WEBB
: WASHINGTON tUP.I) - Dlabi!tlc Minnesota Vikings quarterb)ck Wade Wll~on told Congress
'11iursday that the disease has not
hSndered his career and should
be used to · dlscrlm!!late
. aialnst other workers ' with
·
dJabetes.
:Wilson, who was In the nation's
c~ltal to testify before the
~use Civil Service Subcommit·
t~ on behalf of the American
Iltabetes Association, said a
•son with diabetes that must
llfltreated with Insulin should not
~ma~~~~l~~al~y disqualified

nPt

i!' 'When

l
'

I was first diagnosed
h diabetes , I was concerned
ut my future in pro ball,"
I son said. "But .. . I decided
t~t diabetes was ~ot going to
l~e,rfere with my caree~ choice.
~d It shouldn't Interfere with
atiyone's chosen profession.
'It all comes down to perforrilllnce. and diabetes does not
~mper my performance," WI!. s§n said.
~iabetes Is a chronic disorder
clused by the body's inability to
IJit'rn and utilize glucose for
~rgy within body cells. As a
I$ult. the glucose levels rise to
llte·thre'a tening levels without
. t!ii;uun.
~~bout 12 million Americans

:!

suffer from diabetes.
. The House hearing was held to
examine medical criteria and
fitness .for federal employees
with diabetes In such public
safety positions as air traffic
control. ·
Wilson, who has been 'tnsullndependent sin.ce 1985, said "selfmanagement is the cornerstone
of diabetes treatment.
"Personally, I'm grateful to
the NFL for responding to me as
ari Individual ·and making Its
decision based on my Individual
performance and abilities,'' Wilson told the subcommittee. "I've
often wondered where would I be
if the NFL suddenly decided to
prohibit Individuals with diabetes from playing professional
football?" ·
·
Rep. Gerry Slkorski.,D-Minn.,
and chairman of the subcomlt.
tee, said while a "misplaced pass
Is not the same as a misplaced
aircraft,'' the career of a professional quarterback Is just as
demanding and stressful as that
of an air traffic controller.
"Wade Wilson Is the quarterba&lt;;k of the Minnesota VIkings
because he Is the most qualified
for 1the position and no one should
dl.s crlmlnate against him because of his diabetes," Sikorski
said.

Ieney, the chassis and the crew contention, ~t If we C811 go out
on pit road," Earnharilt said. "If and bave a good, patient day and
we can hold It all together, we'll run toward the front and stay out
be all right Sunday.
of trouble and be there at 4
"We've sort of got a handle on o'clock In the afternoon, I think
these !Chevrolet) Lulillnas now . ·we'll have a sbot at showcasing
We know what springs and what we have left.
chassis stuff the bodies want.
''It's not just Dalewe'retrylpg
We've worked on the front-steer to beat or any other guy. We Just
cars for several races now, and want to show people what we're
we're getting better with them. capable of doing and that's
We feelllke we can win with It at running up front. We have a lotto
a11y time. Everybody's confi- learn yet,. and we realize that.
We're just' trying to get up front
dence level is really high. •·
Earnhardt qualified 12th In the each week and get some consis42-car field with a lap of 171.418 tency with the team."
mph, while Cope put his ChevKen Schrader starts Sunday's
rolet In the lllb starting spot at race on the pole after qualifying
171.625 mph.
his Chevrolet at 173.963 mph. The
"Every other ,time I've quali- other front row spot went to Mark
fied ahead of Dale, he's gone Mardn's Ford at 173.221 mph ..
right by us," said Cope, 31.
"Hopefully this time, If he does ·
S~8 brief8
go by, f can go with him and try to
Golf
stick with him and pit with him
Argentine Eduardo Romero
and do some things that will help joined the two earlier leaders in
me learn to win races. Whatever the PGA Championship at WentDale Is doing, he's doing right, so worth, England, when he posted
I think I'd rather follow the a 6-under par 661n the first round.
best."
Romero, England's Paul Curry,
Since winning the Daytona 500 and Zimbabwean Tony JohnIn February, Cope hasn't posted
stone, wbo had returned thelr66s
another Top 10 finish. His best
by lunchtime, were tied for the
finish since his first career
lead. one stroke ahead of U.S.
victory was 12th at Rockingham
Masters cham~lon · Nick Faldo,
in March.
fellow Englishman Richard Box"We're just trying to get on a
all, and South African John
roll here where·we can get some Bland . ... The Sazale Corporation
consistency," Cope said. "We've will sponsor the ~ale Classic,
had some engine failures and
which will be held Dec. 6-9. 1990.
things that have taken us out of The prize money for the team
tournament will be raised from
$600,000 to $950,000. Tournament
host Johnny Mllltir announced
that the event, known as the
Chrysler Team Championship
since 1983, wlllchangeltsformat.
This year It will be played on two
courses Instead or three and
there will be 52 teams Instead of
tlle usual 72.
·
Hockey
SwediSh elite series Ice !Iockey
• club AIK has signed up Norwegian
'International defender
Petter Salsten; ·Swedish dally
Dagens Nyheter reported.
Salsten, 25, has spent the last
seven years with Norwegian club
Furuset and was a member of
the Norwegaln team that played
at the World ChampiOnships In
Switzerland llist month.
' ...

· 17 lom!IWENSON

speak brlefiy at the lwacheoa and
auction, which wilt be Mid
adjacent .to tbe baseball ·g ame Jt
11:30 a.m. Luncheon tlcklttl
$10 per person, which are alao . •
good for admission to the game.
Luncheon tickets are available · .
on sale at Peddler's Pantry, Bob
Saunders Quaker State_and Side- •
line Sports In GalllpoUs u well as ·
all Ohio Valley Bank locatlona In
Ga!Upoll.s and Rio Grande.
Tickets for people wishing to ...
attend only the game are$Z.50for ,
adults and $1,50 for children .
younger than 12 years old.
Uttle Leaguers In unlfonn will
be admitted free to this event, ..
which will also feature glvea- .
ways of baseballs autographed , by current Reds Tom Browning, -,
Eric Davis, Barry Larkin, Ro- lando Roomes and Chris Sabo,
posters or Davis, Sabo, Ken
Griffey Jr. and Bo JaokSon, and
baseball cards. •
Among the Items to be auctioned orr will be bats autographed
by Johnny Bench and Pete Rose;
baseballs autographed by Hank
Aaron. Davis, Rose and Tony
Perez, and an autographed bat
with signatures from 10 ronner
Reds.
The game Is sponsored by the
Southwesterll Ohio Chapter of .
the Arthritis Foundation.

Earnhardt, Cope go for big bonus

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\l.io

'UPIS, uta Wrller
From 111ybody except Jose
Caaii!CO, It might sound a bit
lmmodetst.
"I like to watch those," Canseco said Friday night after
blasting a two-run homer In the
eighth Inning that helped the
Oakland Athletics to a 5-2 victory
over the Cleveland Indians.
"I can guarantee that ball
would have been In the fifth deck
In the (Toronto) Skydome. The
outfielders just stay there , don't
budge. You know It's out."
The ball bounced off the seats
high In the left field bleachers of
the Oakland Coliseum. The homer was Canseco's third In two
games and gave him the major
lea~e-lead with 18.
Canseco's "Bash Brother"
Mark McGwlre also slammed a
solo homer and . RBI single to
' pi'ople tbe A's attack,
Scott Sl!nderson, 5·2, scattered
·five hits In 5 1-3 Innings for the
wl!l. He struck out ' fQur and
walked one. Dennis Eckersley
went the final 1 1-3 for his 12th
save.
Loser Greg Swindell, 2-4,
pitched seven Innings and allowed five runs on eight hils and
three walks while striking out
five .
. Cleveland Ma11ager John
r,tcNamara was more worried
~bout his team's ,offense than
~th Swindell hanging a pitch (o
·&lt;;:an!JE!ilO.
· " 'We've had· trouble hlttlpg
since last S.unday ,"he said. "We
!US! haven't been able to string
tbe base hits together."
; McGwlre gave the A's a 1-0
l,ead by leading off the second
with his 12th homer of the year.
l:lls blast off Swindell came on a
2•2 curve, which he hit Into the
cienter field bleachers.
, Oakland Increased Us lead to
3-0 In the third. Carney Lansford
'
.
singled
wilh two outs,
took
!!eCOnd on a Canseco single and
scored o.n McGwlre's single to
liert. Dave Henderson then
~lngled home Canseco.
, Cleveland scored a run in the
9fth. Chris James led off with an
iJifield single, took third on Sandy
Alomar's single and scored on a
~acrl!'lce fly by Steve Springer.
, In the fifth, Rickey Henderson
doubled and stole th lrd for his
:loth stolen base of the year and
l\91st of his career -one behind
Ty Colib for·third on the all-time
list,
[ Lansford singled leading off
!be ·
scored on Canse~o's
. ·for a 5-.1 pitch.
scored the first run
~kersley this season In

••

the ninth when Cory Snyder starter Greg Hibbard, 3-3, were
doubled, took third on a single by unearned. Paul Gibson, 1-1,
Chris James and scored when
pitched one scoreless Inning In
Rickey Henderson bobbled the relief for the victory , with Mike
ball for an erior. The run was Henneman pitching the last two
earned because Snyder would Innings for his 11th save.
·
have scored on James's fly ball
Yankees 6, Royals3
with one out.
At Kansas City, . Mo., Jesse
Eckersley had previously Barfield doubled home three
pitched 17 sCoreless Innings In 14 runs In the first Inning to pace the
appearances. .
.Yankees. Barflel~'s hit came
In other AL games , Detroit after four consecutive singles off
edged Chicago 2·1; New York Royals starte~ Storm Davis, 1-5,
topped Kansas City 6-3; Balli- In a four-run first Inning. The
more clobbered Texas 12-2;
early outburst made a winner out
Boston lost 16-0 to Minnesota,; of Chuck Cary , 2-0.
Toronto shaded Seattle 3-1 In 11
Orioles 12, Ranpl'!l 2
Innings; and California snuck
At Arlington, Texas Joe Orpast Milwaukee 5-4 In 13 Innings. sulak tied his career high with
Red Sox 11 Twins 0
four RBI and reached base five
The Boston j'{ed Sox ran out of times io lead the 13-hlt attack
pitchers Friday night during a that carried the Orioles. Pete
16-0 blowout loss to the Minnesota Harnish, 5·1, gave up seven hits
Twins and turned to utility over seven Innings for the vicInfielder-outfielder Danny Heep. tory. Kevin Brown, 5-4, lost for
Heep became the first Red Sox the fourth straight time, giving
position player to plftib In 38 up the first seven x:uns.
years • when he hurled the final
Blue Jays 3, Mariners 1 .
Inning, giving up four .hits and
At Seattle, Fred McGriff's
one run In ' what was the best two-run homer In the the 11th
pitching per1ormance of ,the Inning helped the Toronto Blue
Jays snap a four-game losing
nlgbt for Boston.
.
Meanwhile, Roy Smith, 3-5, · streak. Jim Acker, 1-1. pitched 1
limited tbe Red Sox to four hils In 1-3 Innings for the victory and
registering his firsi major l!'ague Tom Henke recorded the final
shutout. Smith mowed through two outs for fifth save.
the lineup, retiring 22 of the last
Angels~. Brewers 4
24 batters he faced.
At Anaheim . Calif. , Devon
Tigers 2, Wblte Sox 1
While scored from second base
AI Detroit, Ken W!Uiams
on a double error with one out In
doubled home the tie-breaking
'the 13th Inning, giving the Angels
run In· the seventh Inning,
the!~.. fourth straight victory.
helping the Tigers Improve to
While doubled with one out off
4-0· against Chicago tills season.
Tony Fossas, 1-3, for his third hit
Both -Detroit runs off Chicago
of .the game off.

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OPEN MEMORIAL DAY
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Canseco's hot bat tops Tribe

Lawrence, Bowen honorees at all-8tar game

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· Pege-C-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Georgia ·Southem ·pulls ·upset
.with 4-2 ·win over '89 champs

Kneeling In front are Kellle Salder, Becky
Jolmson, Karen Stanley and 01- Law!!On.
Standing are Terry Hagerty, Beve.:b' Weekley,
Rhonda Wood, Shelley Baaldns and Donna Nease.
Not pictured are teammates Becky Anderson and
Karen Birchfield.

,
ADVANCE TO DISTRICT- By poallnc a l-1
· record over West Vlr&amp;IDJateams from H•nllngton
·• and Teaya Valley, tile Galllpalill Racqaet Club's
~ Womea's USTA Vol\'o team advanced to dlilrlct
' compdltlon after placla&amp;llrst In the Huntlogton
Sprtnc Vol\'o Leape. Tbe Galllans wUJ enter
·· dlslrklt play on Aug. 3-5 In Charleston, W.Va.

•

More than .a few wins are needed
.jto cure . Kansps City Royals' woes
I"

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By RICHARD L. SHOOK
UPJ Sporta Writer
What's wrong with the Kansas
~lty Royals? Nothing that a few
wins won't cure - except a few
Wins probably aren't going to do

I

~t.

~ Greatly

simplified, Kansas
Pty's problem is It isn't pitching,
~ltting or playing timely defense.
f. No big deal If the Royals were
In the American League Least.
But In the AL Best, It's a kUler.
:; Spotting, the Oakland Athletics
~ 10-game lead early in the
~ason ls about the same as
giving ··Emerson Flttlpaldl a
350-mUe bead start In the JndlailapoUs 500. Only a breakdown
would prevent Emmo from winning the race and only a breakctown will enable Kan$as City to
Overtake Oakland.
·
: Danny Tartabull's leg Injury in
the second game of the season,
which kept him out of action until
.last week, started the whole
chain of disasters that have
befallen the Royals.
It wouldn't have bt!en so bad,
but nobody picked up the sbick. It ·
Is likely the good Oakland start
got made Kansas City's players
reel they had to keep pace right
away Instead of just playing the
best they could and waiting for
the long season to unfold.
George Brett, who hit .240 over
the first half of last year, started
even worse after having a good
spring training. And Bo Jackson
Is having his ordinary half·
season at the beginning of this
season Instead of at the end.
Kevin Seltzer and Kurt. Stll- ·
!well are hitting, but not scoring
enough. And when Frank White,
Bob Boone and Brett were In the
lineup at the same time, they
clogged up the bases. White has
since been replaced In the lineup
by rookie Terry Shumpert.
· ''They're easing us out," said
\'{hlte's long·time teammate,
Willie Wilson.
Manager John Wathan, who at
one time had none of his three
outfielders available for duty,
has replaced Wilson In center
with Jackson. Jim Elsenrelch Is
the regular left fielder, with
Tartabull scheduled to return to
right field any day.
If Kansas City, which briefly
had the worst record In baseball
early this week, doesn't right .
Itself soon. the club may be
tempted to replace Boone with
Mike Macfarlane to get a head
start on 1991.
But given all that, things might
not have been so bad had Kansas
City not pitched well. Tabbed
having the best·and deepest staff
In baseball, the Royals Instead
have been mediocre.
l3ret Saberhagen has been
excellent In every odd-numbered
year since breaking Into the
ieague In 1985. This Is an
even-numbered year and Saber·
hagen has been ordinary, though
he pitched well last time out.
Mark Gublcza has struggled,
as his arm strength has been poor
since he had a sore shoulder In
spring training. ' His ERA,
thougl), has been Cllmlng down
and a return to fortn by Saberbagen apd Gublcza would go a long
way toward righting th,e Royals'
ship.
Tom Gordon, 17·game winner
as a rookie, has looked like a
nash In the pan this year. Control
trouble has bedeviled him nearLv
every time out.
Storm Davis hasn't had the
help from Kansas City's relleYers that he got from Oakland's.
Rich Dotson has been poor and
may be replaced by Kevin
Appler.

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The biggest f.lop · has been
reliever Mark Davis. who got a
gigantic salary as a free agent
after a 44·save season for San
Diego.
"He looks like he's trying too
· hard to justify the money," said
Detroit manager Sparky Ander·
son, who enjoyed Davis' pres·
ence In a tour of Japan a couple of
wlnt!irs ago. "When I ha«! him In
. Japan, he threw hard. He's not
now.
"Here's a guy coming off his
first big season and getting big
money. Maybe he doesn' t know
how to react."
Jeff r.iontgomery. who performed well In Davis' role last
year, Is being shifted back and
forth .between setup man and
closer. That hasn't helped him.
either.
Wathan shows the usual anxieties from losing. When a massive
team slump hits, even managers
sometimes look like they're
trying to flnd .a light switch in a
clo5ed closet 31 midnight;
· But he's In no danger. After all,
he's the same manager whose
team won 92 games last season.
And the Kansas City organ!za·
lion doesn't pull the trigger at
every noise In the night.

SUNSTAl SllllS GAlliEN IIACTOIS
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I I PAYMaTS 01 FINANCE

•

ClliGI'II. AnD lliOI
DAY 1990.

90 DAYS Sill lS CASH

~a 11001 !IIIOUIII MillO. IHO

DUE TO OBSERVANCE
OF MEMORIAL DAY
TRASH COLLECTION
WILL BE

ONE DAY LATER

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I "'.'JN ll DY

T

ACROSS

Harrison, Schubert
. to co-captain Redmen
_.

... RIOGRANDE-Twoveterans
Schubert will star t his third
· of the University of Rio Grande
year with the Redmen. During
men's basketball team have been
his seniOr year at Bel~ v ue High
selected as co-captains of the
School, he averaged 22 points per
1990-91 edition of the Redmen.
game. was All-League In basket·
Gary Harrison, a senior from
ball and football and made the
.. Galllpolls, and Brad Schubert, a
All-State third team.
junior from Bellevue, will share
In his first year at Rio Grande.
leadership duties durtng the
Schubert averaged 9 points per
campaign, Coach John Lawhorn
game and recorded a field goal
·a nnounced. The two were trl·
percentage of 55.4. From the foul
captains with John Lambcke
line, he was 81.1 percent. During
during the 1989-90 season.
1989-90, Schubert shot 44 .2 perHarrison, who holds the Gallla
cent from the field (190-430),
Academy High School record for
Including 43.4 percent from the
the best free throw percentage
three-point range !129-297) . In
(85.7) and most career points
addition, he made 50 of 64 free
(],347), joined the Redmen In
throw attempts for 78.1 percent
1989 and established himself as
and averaged 18 points a game.
the team leader In assists,
Schubert was named to the
totaling 256 for an average of 8.5 MOC honorable mention list at
per game.
the end of the campaign. The son
He posted ·a total field goal
of Sam and Carole Schubert, he Is
percentage of 47.3 !201-425) and a
majoring In biology at Rio
free throw percentage of 75.3 for
·
Grande.
rnaktng 73 of 97 attempts. His
Both players were starting
points-per-game average at the guards for Lawhorn last season,
end of the season was 17.6.
with Earl Thomas serving as
Tbe Mid-Ohio Conference ho- . defensive coordinator. Schubert
nored Harrison at season's end played In all 31 games, scoring a
by naming him to the €onference
high of 33 points against Dyke on
second team; He Is the son of Feb. 10. H.arrlson was In 30
Gary and Cornelia Harrison and games and also posted a high of
Is majoring In physical education 33 points over Shawnee State on
Dec. 16.
at Rio Grande.

1 O~spaeeln
.
.

forest
6 Harvests
1t Begin,
16 Dinah21 Wanderer·
22 Be
23 "Growing ,.-"
24 Tetrarch of
Galilee
25 Imitate
26 Fiction sto,Y
28 Adventure
storlel: cotloq.
30 Emerald Ill&amp;
32 Roman gods
33 Gym course:
abbr.
34 Through
35 Fall behind
38 "One - Beyond"
37 l.an)prey
38 The "alxth" sensa
40 "The Good -"
42 Informer
43· Final
«Wild plum
45 Young boy
47 Fluffs the hair
49 Food fish
50 Crony: colloq.
51 Talks Idly
54 Let fall
55 Quarrel
56 Spin
59 Sugar - Leonard
80 Pinch
82 Suffocated In
water
64 Clamping device
85 Stack 10
86 Negative prefix
87 Corded cloth
69 Handle
70 Apportion
71 Small amount
72 Encountered
74 VItal organ
76 Sailor: COlloq.
77 Sheet of glass
78 Hawk's leash
79 Ness
82 Remunerated
84 Tardier
8&amp; Criticizes
8118rply
86 Baker's products

KC's Noble, Vannoy net softball honors
GALLIPOLIS
Ky ge r
Creek's Vlkkl Noble was named
the most valuable player of the
year and her coach. Sharon
Vannpy, was tabbed as the coach
of the year In the 1990 AIJ-SVAC
softball selections m ade by th e
league coaches.
Vannoy's Bobcat team. PO·
wered by Noble, a senlor,cres ted
to an 11-1 league fin ish to cinch
the recently-completed season.
Eastern finished second In the

SVAC at 10·2. Following me Mays (sophomore) and J e nnifer
Eagles were Symmes Valley, Owens tsophomore ) .. Symmes
9-3; Southern. 6-5; North Galll a. Valley; Shelly Winebre nner (jun·
4·8; Southwestern, 1-11; and lor) and Michelle McCoy 1sophoHannan Trace. 1·11.
morel , Souther n; Nonna Oller.
coaches sele cted the following
tseniOrl and Deena Petrie t jun·
athletes from eac h school to th e
lor l. North Gallla; Lisa Hall
All-League team : Noble, Lee _ (junior \, Southwes tern; and Tlf·
Ann Newell tsenior! and Bobbie
!a ny Swain (senior), Hannan
Jean Shaver (j unior! , Kyger
Trace .
Creek; Edna Driggs (junior).
Named to the honorable menLori Baker (junior) and Toby
tlon Jist by the coaches were
Hill (lurilor), Eastern; Leah
Michelle Conkle ( s ophomore~
and Julie Wamsley tsenlor l .

:94.C.:;;
aplrtt
Extraordinary:
COlloq.

1!11 Heraldic bearing
99 Heep

100 Female sheep
102 Nightly sound
103 Opp. of SSW
104 Even score

105 Mountain ~
106 Poverty-stricken
108 Title of respect
109 AI home
.
110 Bone
111 Tree trunk
.
·. 112 Music: repetition
, 114 Herbert .~ ·of
"The Pink
Panther Strikes
Again"
118 Bush clump

117 Aineh; quail
119 Free ticket
120 .Cere for
122 Blackbirds
124 Everyone
125 Retained
128 Margin
128 Kurotawa film
129 Time gone by
131 Insect
132 Indian weight
133 Talk
135 Rocky hill
138 "Salem's -·.·
139 Sly lOok
. 140 Article
141 Slender finial
142 Concerning
143 Teutonic deity
1« Top of head
145 Speechify
147 Aphorlam; saw
149 Mature
150ea152 Seagoing Y8188(
154 "- otlwo Jlma"
156 Royal
158 Blemish
159 PreciplliOUa

180 Maltreat; mistreat
t81 Short jackets

DOWN
1 Shade or purplf
2 Runs eaally '

3 St. relatiOn
4 C.FIInkup

. 5 Sea eagle
· 6 C9me back
7 Putln vigorous
action
8Belll
9 -,Q, R,- T

RIO GRANDE - Vacancies
and person,to-person defense.
are still available In the Univer- · The camps will be staffed by top
sity of Rio Grande women ' s coaches from 1he a rea and bY
basketball camps. The camps · players from the Redwomeri
will be conducted for girls In team .
grades 9·12 from July 8·13 and for
In addition . the camps feature
girls ) n grades 5-8 from . July
team
competition, with no more
29·Aug . 3.
than
10 players on a team ;
The camps focus on lndlvlduallectures,
discussion groups and
lzed attention and Instruction for
films;
and
weight and aerobic
athletes, particularly · In the
training.
areas of shooting, pdst moves

10 Pigpen
11 European herring
12 Zest
13 Three-toed sloths
14 Hosp. attendant
15 Sleepingsick .... fly
16 "~ oi.Fools"
17 Cltlcken
18 Alternative word
19 Cowboy
competition ·
2Q Roman oftlclal
27 New Deal agcy.
29 Word ol sorrow
31 Saek. as flax ,
36 Seasoning

37 Miss Cinders of
the comics
39 Frolic
40 Paradise
41 Difficult
42 Rumor
43 Burden
44 Surfeit .
'Ill Neat
48C.IIy
49 Bal'tecuda
50 Attitude · .·
51 Preen
,
52 More unusual
53 Alluring' women
· 55 Trltlll ,
56C.emon1
57 Threetold
58 Chemlc8l
• compound
61 FUB\
83 H~ .on one's
person
64 Sell

88 Drives onward
10 Young ladles
71 Faatenelt
73 IJPe!)d .•

74 Sharpeh
75 Commonplace
77 Cooplel
78 Alight
80 'Masculine

113 Flnlahee
115 Olympi81 Spilz
118 Temporary
shelter

.'

knees

132 Keen

134 Goal
138 Mullcal
Instrument
137 Walks unsteadily
139 Separate
140 Woody plllnt
14&lt;4 Shallow v8asei
t45 Number'
148 Emp. Standards
Adm . .
147 African anleloPe
.. t 48 Before " ·
t49 Tlll)ll gone by
t 51 Agave plant
153 That thing
155 Hebrew month
157 Spielberg allen

Semifinals set in NCAA tennis
INDIAN WELLS. Calif, I UPil
- The top three singles seeds In
the NCAA's Tennis Championships were upset In the quarterfl·
nal round Friday.
Stanford freshman Jared
Palmer. unseeded and ranked
49th In the nation, trounced top
seed Todd Martin of Northwest·
ern 6·2, 6·4. UCLA junior Jason
Netter, also unseeded and
ranked 30th nationally. also
upset No. 2 seed Jonathan Stark

'
of Stanford by a. score of .6-4, 6J3.
Texas Sophomore Ste ve
Bryan. ranked third In the
nation, outlasted third seed ,Jose
Luis Noriega 2-6, 7-6, 1 7-5 ~, 6-4,
while uriseeded Conny Falk of
Miami advanced by defeating
Steve Herdolza , also unseeded, of
Northwestern 6-3, 6·3.
Martin had nothing but praise
!or Palmer 's performance. even
comparing him to CNilchafi!l
Chang.
·

.

White/black, 4 speed, original motor.
TURKEY DISPLAYED - Earnle McCoy ol Ewlngton (left)
displays this 19-pound, 11-ounce wild turkey he bagged during this
year's turkey season.

,i•v ·
~ ~.

,.

·.·. -~.

'

REDMEN CO.CAPTAINS - Brad Schubert, left, and Gary
Harrison have been named co-captains of the 1991-91 University of ·
Rio Grande men's basketball team. Schubert and Harrison, who
were both starters, served as tri.:Captalns last season with John
Lannbcke.
·
I

'

Scoreboard ...

'
•'

I

BllllknOW! at Tn.U
Mliwaulll!e al Calllernla
Clnelud at OakiiUid
ToroMo at ~t&gt;Utk. nl~

. rMajors
'

;.
I

I '

I

I

•

..

118 Hurt
119 Summit
121 Relies on
123 Old Dominion st.
125 Rests on the
128 Borshl·lngredient
127 Rest
· 129 Fold
130 Chief artery
131 Obtain

camper is being offered for seven
or more athletes from one schooL
For more lnfonnatlon, contac t
•Doug Foote at the Universit y bf
Rio Grande, Rio Grande. Ohlo
45674, or call 245-5353, extension
300. The toU-Iree number In Oh)o
Is 1.800·282-7201 .

1969 CORVETTE CONVERTIBlE

.

•!ltllllhl

Round·the·clock supervis ion
wlll be provided by coaches and
counselors. Camp participants
wlll be bOarded In the dorm itorles and meals will be provided
by the Rio Grande cafeteria.
· Cost of the camps is S180 per
camper. A group rate of $1 70 per

M MAX. HILL'S ~an- .
COUNTRY CORVETTES

81 Still
83 A Boone
··94 Cover Inside of
87 Slumbers ,.
89 "Experiment In
90 Engine
91 Get up
92 Distance nieasllre
93 Pilcher
95 Drudgery
96 Coalition;
combination
97·Dispatche8
99 Talee a vote." . •
101 Newspaper
.
executive
105 Wind splralfY.:
106 "E'"pty ~"
107 Rl-. In Belglu~
111 Nut's companiDf!
)'
112 Transpot1ed In

Kyger Creek; Lee Gilli an ISophomorel and Am ~· Murphy tse·
nior l. E astern ; Trlna Snyder
(sophomore! . Jessica Clifton 150phomore l. Dana Blankenship
&lt;sophom ore! and Trisha Sn yder
ISOphomore), Symmes Valley ;
Tony a Ingels tjun ior!. Southerq ;
Karen Spence ;sophomore ). Susie Robie tjuniorl and Be(h
Salisbury (freshman ), North
GalUa ; and Christy Lewis (senlor). Southwestern .
.

Redwomen basketball camps scheduled at Lyne Center

Sanitary
Commercial Services

86 Decle~
89 Shade

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-C~7

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

Answer to Puzzle on Page· C-4

·TO·
YOU ····
MOWER CREDIT.

MULCH I'LAT1 ................ 11.11
IAG .....................I4.11

42·18. UCLA, the No. 4 seed,
dropped to 39·25.
Bennett, 10·2, went three Innings
South Alabama' s Zimmerman,
and gave up six runs and six hits
12·6, scattered elg)lt hits and
for Arkansas.
gave up only three ·earned runs
Fordham, seeded sixth, scored
while striking out 13. UCLA •s
five runs In the first Inning and
also received a homer rljn from · Tim Lindsey, 9-7, gave up six
runs In 6 2-3 Innings. South ·
Bill Champ!.
.
Alabama. tlie ·No. 3 seed, scored
. In the. second game,. RobbY
four runs. In the first and added
Robertson homered and Mike
two more In the seventh to close
Zimmerman pitched a complete
the scoring.
game ,to lead South · Alabama.
14 hits and striking out one. Doug

SUNDAY p·u zzLER

.WE'D

21" . . . . . . .
S211i'll

· WICHITA, Kan. (UPI) - Rob
Fitzpatrick homered to snap a tie
and Mike Yuro lined an RBI
double In the .13th Inning Friday
night as Georgia Southern upset
the defendln~t NCAA champion
Wichita State Shockers 4-2 In the
NCAA Midwest Regional baseball tournament.
· In other games, Fordham
upset No. 1 seed Arkansas, 8-5,
and South Alabama posted a 6·4
victory over UCLA In the first
round of the double elimination
tournament. The regional winner
advances to the 44th CoUege
World Series In Omaha, N:eb.,
June 1-9.
Fitzpatrick hit bls 19th home
run of the year to open the 13th
Inning and give Georgia Southern, 47.16and the No. 5seed, a3-2
lead. Chad Sumner followed Wltb
a single and scored on Yuro's
·double off loser Jeff Willlams,
3-3.
.
· Wichita State, 44-18 and the No.
2 seed, tied It 2·2 on RBI singles
by Jim Audley and Doug Mirabelli In the ninth Inning.
Scott Ryder, 11-7, pitched the
final four Innings to pick up the
victory. Williams allowed five
hits In 2 2-3 Innings or relief.
In the first game Friday, Kevin
Secor homered and drove In four
runs and RayMontgomery drove
In three runs as Fordham, 36-12,
topped Arkansas, 47-14. '
Fordham's Bob Alymer • .4-1,
went 7 2·31nningswhlle giving up

May 27, 1990

May 27, 1990

By \Jallrd .Ph!MIIInttr•Uoral
AMERICAN I..EAGVE
Elo&lt;l

Team

Mltwaaller ..... ..............t!
BoMOII ........ .............. ...%1
Toro.to ............•..........!'!
Clt'\'elud ........... .........!t.
~roll

, NA110Ni\L LEAGUE

W L P['l . GB

................-: .......!1

17
It
2!
U

,5&amp;1 .521 I~
.SOl t 1.(1
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t.a ...
·u .-121

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N-l'orl .:.................. l; tt .UI S

Balllmoft' ......... ....... ,. .. l!l

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Oakland ... ... .. ...... ..... ...':! I ~
f'hiUI{D .. ... .. .. .. ..... ... .. . .!~ J3
Min.-eta .................. :n Ill
~.-attk" ....... ... ...... ..... .. ..u ta

31 1

•707 ,10$ Jl/'f
.Hl It

.111 &amp;lrr

t:alltornla ..... ...............'tfl ~ ~ .til 10
TexAK ..... ...... ............. .. I/1 :r.. .t21 II' ~
KIUI~~~M&lt;;f'lt:f .. ,,,, ......... .. U tS .375 U \&lt;r

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Fl'ltlll.Y Rl"'lllls
Oft roll t , Clllcqo 1
MlnnPKOII.Ill. Bo"(OnO '
~PW

York 6, Kan!W! Clly :1
BaMimoft' )'l, TfiXI"'I ~
Oakbnd 5, 01!¥f!land 2
,
Toronto :1, Sl'Md• I. lllnninK!'
raiVnrislal. Mllwaullrl'-1. 131nnln~~:M
SMunlll)' Gl\nw.K

Ch.k-:&amp;«0 IH11111er ~.f l al Del roll t'Rohii'IID• HI. 1: Iii p.m .
C'IP\'j•lud IV~di"Z 1-0) Ill 0111kh1.nd
("'ridl HI. -I: CIS p.m.
BoMIOO IBod~~f'l'

i-.1\ at MlnM"'iooa

1"f'St !-:11, li : •~ p.m.
J'iew Yerk. tHa"·kl~ 1·31 w. K unllll~&gt;rlt y
(GordOn UJ , Ii:U p.m.
lloiiiiMOI'l' (MIInl'ld 1-!1)
{Bohuont-!), I( :!U p.m.

at

1 'f':f.ib

Mlhraukl'f' CHipor.l -1-1 I al ( ' llltl'orMll
!Bh' .. wn '!·:tl . IA:fiS p.m.
Torn•o (Stol:ll••m)'ff' ·1-31 al :"'nllk•
(Rolrnun &amp;-~L ll:fllp.m.
S•n:lay GIIIIW"S
C'hlt·~..,_

IWinlll

Bo~n Ill ~htiiNiol!l

N..a· \'nrk at K llnl'llli fit~·

E..l
Team

\\' L Pt•l.

GB

Pllllallelpllllll ................t-1 16 .600 1
PHIIIhMI'I(II .......... .........:!-1 11 .lte
1
Me•real ............ .........t '! :!CI .S:!-4 :1

s..., York .......... , ......... 19 '!I .-113
Chkqo , .... ................. .lt :!2 .-It:!
~ - Loub; ........... ........... lt :!3 .-152
\\eot
Clnclnnatl .......... .. ........tl
W Al!~f'!l .................:! !
Sail Dlel{l) ....................~ l
San f'rlllld!WO ............ .17
r\Uanla ... ..... ........ ........ IS

.\
51 1
8

ID .7TJ '!II . l~

IC

:!1 .-IIIK 91"!
'!:i .-IB.1 1.1
:!-1 .:IKJ 1:11 2
Ho11.1lon .. ..................... n '!3 .:r:s 1-1
Frldll)' Rt•sulls
su Dll'p 3. l'lir&lt;A' l ' ork -1
l'illftFraJH:htco!, Pllblbut-.:hll
Pllllldelllblll :&gt;, i\Uunc.a -1
ClnclnMtl 3. Monln•al u
lA~ An' ~~;e~ -1, Sl. Lolli~ I
HouMton at Chlt'IIII:O, ppd., rain
SlltUrdl\\' GIIIIM'!I

HOUMton (St•ult 1-5 und Df'Mkltlr.!i t-tl Lll
Chk-.o Ulollldf' 1-0 a..J Maddn.&amp;-:1) , ~ ­
l :fl5p .m .
flndn..UI (·hd,..on 8-1! Ill Montn•al
ISmiUI '!-.1),1 : 3Sp .m .
So Dlf'~ ([)11- 1).{11 a l ~t'll' l 'olii
IFI'rlllndrz :HI . 1: 13 p.m.
,\tlanta CP.~mMh 11-:11 at Pbil.adelphlu
crombto ,._,I , ; : o3 p.m .
~. .

Ftanf'lsto CGarn-lh; H I 111 PUt..,.

hurrh cDrubrk i-1) , ; ; rt3 p.m.
Los .-\nr:rle~ fMora:~~n a-:l) lit :-It , LoWs
! BSmtlh }J), 14:03 p.m.
!Wnd~ G~me-s

flrM•Inlllltl

~•

!'I lUI Dlf'p :u

lloiW...-1.11

~ .... 'll' ortl

,\llunta at Philud1•l !lila
SIUI FrllndM'!I ut Pll W111_,;h

Los ,\111{1'11'!" at Sl . Loul.s
flo~ on 111 C'hk:ull{o

Mize leads Atlanta Classic
by .one stroke after 2 rounds

MARIETTA, Ga. (UP!) Larry Mlze. the Georgian who
won the 1987 Masters with a
150-foot sudden·death chip shot .
took over the lead In another
"home" tournament Friday the $1 million Atlanta Golf
Classic.
Mize turned In a 3·under·par 69
In the second round [or a two· day
total of 9·under 135that gave him
a 1-stroke edge over runnerup
Howard Twitty; two better than·
third-place Nick Price of South
Africa. .
.
Twitty, 41 and winless on the
Tour for a decade, recovered
from a double bogey wl t b birdies
at the final two holes for a second
straight 68 and an S.under 136.
Price ha:d a 69-137.
"I felt like I played solid. " said
Mlze, who has earned more than
$266,000 ·so far Ibis year on the
PGA Tour, but hasn't posted a
victory since that '87 Masters.
"Ever since 1987 1when he was
second In the Classic), I've
played better here. It's hUller
than most oft.he courses we play,
but playing goU In this area as
much as I have, I don't tblnk
anything abOut it."
Mlze started the second round
tied, at 6-under, with Wayne
Grady of Australia and Steve
Lowery, who had to qualify to

"l '

play this week because he lost his
Tour exemption several years
ago.
Grady, suffering a bogey·6 on
the final hole after hitting his
approach shot Into a lake, posted
a 72-138 Friday to share fourth
place with Morris Hatalsky, who
had a two·day low 7 -un~Jer 65;
Wayne Levi, who had a 66; and
Keith Clearwater, who llad a 68.
Lowery, who had expressed
surprise at opening with a 66
Thursday In his third Tour
appearance of the year. played
more toexpectatlonsFrlday with
a 74-140.
•
Jan Baker· Finch, Kenny Perry
t701.and B!lly Andrade t70) were
at 139. Nine others, Including
Curtis Strange (671 who wlll be
going after his third straight U.S.
Gpen •championship In a few
more weeks, joined Lowery. at
140.
"Of course the Open Is on my
mind," said Strange. "But, right
now, I'm concentrating on trying
to win this tournament. I'm (five
shots) behind right now, so I'll
bave to make some birdies."
M!ze started out Friday with a
lO·foot birdie putt on the first hole
and added four more birdies Including a 15-foot putt on the
(Ina! hole. But bOgeys at No. 7 and
No. 9 kept hl"il. , from ~ulllng

away.

\1,

District, MOC honor
trio of Rio athletes
RIO GRANDE Three
members of the University of Rio
Grande softball team received
honors from District 22 and the
Mid-Ohio Conference for their
work during the 1990 season.
Named to the All·District
Team was Robin Si ull, a fresh·
man catcher from Hillsdale,
while Cindy Ridgeway,' a fresll ·
man pitcher and Infielder from
Jackson, was awarded honorable
ment!ori.
The MOC selected Stull and
Gena Norris, a freshman from
Kingston, Ohio, ,
All ·
Conference for their work as,
respectively, a catcher and In·
field player. Ridgeway receive d
honorable mention .
During the season, Stull com piled a .375 batting average on 85
at bats and a fielding average of
.923. She scored 14 runs on32 hit s,
and Jed .the team in the number of
hits during the season at 1.14 per
game. Stull 'a:Jso. had 16 RBis, or
1.75 per outing. Stull was named
District and MOC Player of the
Week during the Redwomen 's
final week of the campaign.
Posting 30 runs on 29 hits in 82
trips to bat , Ridgeway' s batrtng
average was .354, with a fielding
average of .944. She led the team
in the number of runs (1.07 pe r
game ) and placed second behind
Stull in th e total number o!
individual hits. In pitching,
Ridgeway was on the mound fo r
751nnlngs. recorded 11 strikeouts
and crafted an earned run
average of 7.84.
Norris was credited with a
batting average of .329 on 85 at
bats and ended the season with a
.803 fielding average. She scored
14 runs on 28 hits and led the team
in Individual RBis with 19, or 1.47

per game.
Overall, the Red,women were
5·23 and 3-11 In the district.
Within the MOC , the team was
1·7. 11 recorded a batting average
of .266, a field average of .860 and
posted a team ERA of 7.87.

1976 CORVETTE T-TOP
Yellow/black leather, original engine, loaded.

1976 CORVETTE T-TOP
White/black leather, original engine. loaded.

1978 SilVER ·ANNIVERSARY

33,000 miles.

automatic,loaded.

$

11 ;700

614-247-4861
LETART FALLS, OHIO
.t

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sare

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·",,
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD

RATE COMPOUNDED MONTHLY

Hyou've been holdinl! back waiting .,r felt rates, here they are.·
But you've got to act 1ast These rates are availa6Ie for aHmited time only.
For more information contact your nwest ~ Trust office.

,,

•Minimum depostt lOr these special ratasis $5000.00. Subllantial ~tor early.withdrawais.
Iaiii tfflcliwt lily 4, IHO.
·~

GALLI~OLIS

CENTRAL TRl8T

446-0902
21 9 II. Second
....llport - 992·5627

..,
.'

EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD

~D• ····i
NIKE
AVIA
KEDS
REEBOK
BROOKS
o CONVERSE
o BRinSH KNIGHTS

.•

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o
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•

APNCBANK .
MtmbtrFDIC

,I

MIDDLEPORT '
992-6661
~
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Pometoy-Middlaport-Gallipolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

Page C-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

May 27, 1990
•

·Farm/BuSiness

•

THE
RIGHT
PRICE•••
• ••
•••

-

- -

--

---

.

.

- -

--

-

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~hltes ,.,

-

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Section

ientiuel
-

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--

--

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D

May 27, 1990

-

- ---- - - - - - - - - - - •
•
•

Gallia, Meigs jobless

••

rates decline in April
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) percent In AprU- ~law!lre and
The Ohio Bureau of Employment Geauga (4.1 percent), Greene
o Services 'reported Friday AprU
and Union' (4.3 percent), and
unemployment, rates in , the Holmes (U percent) .
t'erry County w.. one of five
state's 88 counties ranged from a
low of 3.8 percent In HamUton counties' that reported rates
and Franltlln to a high of 13.7 above 10 percent In April. The
other four were: MonrOe (13.4
,. percent In Perry. ·
.In Gallla. County, 8.3 percent percent), Harrison (13.2 per·
were unemployed compared to cent), Adams (12.1 percent), and
8.5in the previous month whUe In Pike !10.&amp; percent) .
AmOIII the state's largest
Meigs County had . '7.7 'percent,
·clUes, Younptown had the high·
down fronl.ll.4 percent. •
. .
· · Overall, the jobless rates de- est rate, 9.5 percent, unchanged
creased' In all but 14 counties, from the previous month. Canton .
following a state trend', t)le was second at 9.percent, down .
three-tenthl of a point. Columbua
agency said.
·
·
The · state's unemployment had the lowest rate, U percent,
· rate for April fell to 5.6 percent, compared with '4.6 percent for
from 5.9 percent the previous March.
The OBES also reported Frl·
month. The comparable rate for
the nation was 5.2 percent last day that Ohio's non-agricultural
month. After seasonal adjust· ware and salary employment
ment, OhiO'a Aprll rate was 5.9 was 4.~ million In AprU, unpercent and the U.S. rate was 5.4 chan&amp;ed from March.
Service-producln&amp; Industries
.
'
t
percent.
.
J Nn ~ .,... . Wallpaper' interto.- IUid
reMIJJIIda.. p rTI...-palat, wallpapar aH trim, ,. In addition to Hamilton and 'reached 3.566 mUilon jobs last
Klnl)ll ,..: ~it- ltllllda lllld eammerctal
Dllillp II• lprbiJ Vallll)' Plua Ia lift• new
Franklin, seven counties had month, up by 3,000 government
c.r,etbia. T1laJ !lave proleule_. paper haiapn
. aw ljliJ. 'l'lle new ownen
PIIJUp an4 letb
unemployment rates below 4.5 positions. as workers were hired
'• ·Jle••a.P Of . Jlldwell. Pictured 18 · lletll · avalll\ble, ·aile adw.· Tile ·ehap· will make·
.~: Jlih±;tll. wbo 18 manapnc ille ~op, 'wblcb · dellv,.rlel of ~·· wl~n Gallla Count,;
lloUubuJb ·saN. ll'lle. ph- aumllor of the
~--·'line a&amp;alf' memben. GriUicl ·o .-lnJ
dela•.at• will be Jue 11, It a.m. to t p.m., ' · bllilne111n...,:7113.
S.allneJ Jlletol
.. .)! hqla Ald. Tile apeelalllie In cuo&amp;om and · ·

...
z

1-

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•
~

...
......_
•
...

'

.

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are

for census taking.
Sllcht Improvements also were
reported In service and In wholesale trade, but there were reduc·
!Ions In ret aU trade and transpqrtatlon and publiC utilities , the
agency said.
•

-

.•

The southern Oh io county-by-,
county breakdown of unemploy- 1
ment rates In Ohio, listing the •'
jobless rates for April 1990, .
March 1990 and April 1989:
"
CouatJ
AprtO Marte Apr88:
Athens ... ,...... 5.5 .. 6.3 , 5.6.
Fail'fleld ....... 6.2
6.6
5.3:
Ga1Ua ........... 8.3
8.5
6.6 '
4.5
4.1
Geauga ....... ; 4.1
Hocking .. ,..... 9.1
10.3
8.5
Jackson ........ 9.6
10.3
7.6
Lawrencl;' ..... 6.4
6.5
5.2
7.5
Melgs ........... 7.7
8.4
Perry .......... 13.7
n :8
9.5
Pike .......... .. 10.6
11.6
10.6
Ross ............. 9.3
9.6
8.2•
Scioto .. ......... 9.0
9.8
8 .~
VInton ......... . 8.9
10.5
8.9
Washington .. 6.7
6.5
5.6 ,
Olllo .
5.8
5.9
S.O :

&lt;Tim•

I

n~ t

•.

.

Tom Reed

named
.;ito. ~ard position

Q

t- -

::1:

"ar:

1!ltG &amp;Ell PIIZII ~ 110011 SEDAN

.¥4111 . • c~indlr , S speecl, air . powtr Slllertng
&amp; Drakes . AM/F M sTereo cassene . raillals.

NOweee7t'

1990 CAYAUER WAGON 14217
Gt~y

Wllh gray tlottl . ~ speea, air. AIII IFM Slereu
t.Issettt . po•er SIHring &amp; brakes 4 CV\In&lt;ler

1ttf'atl¥Y 1-10 a IICIUP 'IIUCI!

-··-7·

J411f. 4 cy~lldtr engine. ~ speed transmissiM .
rai:liats. rallt wheels

NOWS888B'

0 3019
~~~v~e~r~~~9~0~V~e=~=cl~e~s~ln~S~t~o=ck~P~r;ic=e=d;U=n=de=r-$~9=9=95~*~~~F:in~an~c~ing
'speclaliston ou~AtAIITimes

$

$ave Thousands Off Price Of New Factory Vehicles,
All With Balance Of Factory Warranty. Over 30 Vehicles To Choose From.

NOW $8995*

This all new 1991 4 door Cap rice has a wh ite
fin ish, plu s it has loads ol gre~l options and
IUJmty

features .

1919 PONTIAC ORAND AM

4 ooor seoan . wra~ linrsll. flont wheel 1111 ve. 4 q lrndet,
a~ t omar lc . air. power sleenng &amp; brakes . trnl~d glass . tilt
wneer . cru1se conlfol. AM/ FM rad1o . whrl~wal l \Ires.. ,.h e~l
covtrs &amp; more. lac1o ry ve~rcle

Stoctr No. P21112

NOW $9495
2 door model, converti ble, red ll nish with
~hlte lop. gray cloth bucket seats. 5 speed,
au , -4 cylinder. AM/FM !ltereo with cassette
· on/orf road rad ial ti res.
'

~ ooor ~an . blue l1nish. lmnr wbtel (!rive . 4 c rJmd~r .
auiCINIIC. arr, power steering &amp; brakes. AIUFM r.;dio. rear
w1n00w deiOg!Jilr . factory .~eh1cle .

1 - 010 PRiltM
Stock No. P2211

ave
On Pre-Owned Vehicles
1986 CHRYSLER Sih AVE.

NP2117. ~l'ltr • tkllrS!Oin. Vfi . auwt.
~~ ~ ! l~ung. ~ rilkes.

w!lldt7!rs.' seat~
llflled glm cru1sf conuoL

&amp; door a~' M.llfMrD. llhr:rwlll5 , Will williS. rea1
w1ndaw de-fogger

NOWS8991S
..

1979 JEEP WAGONEER

Brown. 2 door. ~

••ttl

arNe, &amp;tylindet.
j;QIII'tr Sleerl~!l &amp; bUIIt1, tinleG
fiO:ss . lllu.l ltUtr !Ires. rallr .metls.
~u:~rrwlit.

1984 CHEVY S·1 0 BI.AZER

NOW $2995

~t\llloer .

Marocn lirtisn. 6 c~tinde r. !i speed.
air conail iOrtii'IQ, I)Cwer steering &amp;
Drakes: linted glass. cruise. AMJFM
ridio wllh stereo casseu e. rliS&amp;d
lelt11 tills, rear step bumper.

Q
'"'·6
oower S!etflllt &amp;

• ~.

ill .

IIU~et linleG O~S$. CrLII$e. AMIFM1~10.
stereo easst~~e . rld~a1t 1res . McUISNis.

rur wllldGW ~ttwr

N9WS3881S
1911 Alit JEEP CHEIOIIEE

1985 CAVALIER

IP2245.4 0001 . 'wbtt! drtvt. 6cylindllr.
a~tom.11ie a~r. power steenn~ . flfaliM. witt\IOI'IS &amp;ill»! IOC~ S. tinted gllss. IMI11tl!f·
ing 111\ei,·cnlise. AM ifMraclit. ~ails .
ral~ wlletis, ~~~f'IWIIIIII wlletls.

-41147,\ 8rl)wrl , ~ IDK il&lt;ticrl "'PP· lrmt
wheel ~:itt tc-;IJar &amp;!IIIJ1lai1C. ail:. p;llll!r
;;wing &amp; ~~a•e s ,_ AM /fl.l 1o1dla .
\ljh~twll$ .

NOWS31S91S
1911 OLDS CUTLASS

IMI. Ibroon . ~ilool~

daw delo!l~r .

detoggtJ.

·tU! CHRYSLER CORDOBA

, M\1151!1. BI~Wn . t 1b:1r OO~pt . V8. II',
~ Sleeffl(l &amp; bra~es till steering. cnist

NOW $9995*

1986 MERCURY

BliCk . 2 dool. ~8 t11Gine. ~ spete~ , ilr.
power 51eerflg. tnka S wnbls: tCstw·
rnQ. UUISe . AMif MIM\it. Sltrtousseltt.

Slnnn~

NOWS1991S

NOW$12,995*

NOWSt8,991S

6cyiN'Idrr.
S bral!ts,
hnle.:J g~ss . tllJisttootrol, AM! FM sll!reo
US!lltl . wM~JI'ills . I.IIUrll!fls. rt¥win·
luHJ!IIIOC. ilr, I)O'I'tl

contrOl. ~/F t.l r•do. wh~twalls .
wlleeiS, rear wrndol'llleloggei

,.,~

NOW$1995

cylinder ena•ne. 4 speed tr1ns-

missim, tinted _glass, radial
tfes, bucket seats.

lr2115A. Gr,y, 2 aooc • wrtetl

1990 S·10 PICKUP

1tas (IIEVY arvmr

t39148 ..Re~ 2 door COUI)O. 4

NOWS1991S

NOWS9881S

Now· $9995*

liQlaiS. COI'ISOie. buc~el WIS. lUI -m.to.
i~ll'll1um

wlltf:ls

NOW$7495
105 POIITIAC liOIINEYl1.E

11•221M. ~ door Sldail. 2 tn belgf &amp;
orown. a~ONiiC . lu!l ~with ~s
&amp;- b' l«kt . tinted gliSS, til , CIList
AM /FM lUI!. wh~tw"l$. Ill~ whHIS.

NOWS8291S

1918 CHEVY CREBRITY
.a.n.·m .._. ~t~rv..

IP224t. 4 •

6 qM'Mr. illllllft. Iii. tllll P"fJ'f wilh
lrinl»&gt;ls &amp; dallr facb,.lillleC Qllu. ti~ .
crw~St. ANIFM rJJIG. Sill~:! cmtt!t,

'llll!itew~. ww'lttet!.

NO

S8981S

1111 IIIITA115 CDIIVmii.E
• •IJOWtf . . . . na. ... &amp;....

m.JA. Alit 2dllr CIIIJIII, VI. 5- '·

loi:k1, ·lit wftllll. cnlise. AM!fl rldio.
slef• emelle, rldials, c:onlllll: ~udll

"f\11Nf'I99&amp;1S
1116 atEYY MillE CMI.O II
1'22«1. Silver. 2 a r COolllf. 111.
iUI"*,ilir.f\IIIJIMIJ!CIIillnll......,_

&amp;Qs, AMJfM rd:nrtll lltrltCISSirlf:.
T-!,1. rally wheels, tulsllle, r*'d 1111tt

''NOV.t~,9911
1117 CHEVY CAMAIIO 8

lf22.tl. 2 dOur COI4JI, V!....... !lilt
~ Nitllldillg wirl!bn &amp;.,. b;kl.
tn.lgim.till . trllisf, AIIIIIMwiltlstno
cassd!e. ~~ - Dmlltl, bl:ktl..., ,..de!agolr. f·klps. alumii11111"'--S tnn.

NOW Stt,99ll

4 aoor seaan. blue lln ls ~ . tront wheel dri\te. V6 . aulomatic.
a1r, power steerrng &amp;.brakes. linlfld glass. AM I FM radio .
raa~a!s. I'A1eel ~rs. raar windoW delogger, factory vebiCie .

1976 Maverick

NOW $7874*

2 door, runs good

Wnhe tlnisn. 2 door eoupe, 4 cylinder engine 5

speed . power steerirtg &amp; brakes. AMJFM
bucket seat s, radial tires.

rac:tio

(as is price)

•

. : Prices. includ~ all fact~ lncenlives to dealer and GMAC tst Time Buyer Proaram
All un&gt;ts subJeCt to pnor sale. Fll!anc!ng available with approved credit.

See ·Salesmen Lloyd Cooper
Gary Lee Tippie, Mark Graves,
Ed Gillian, Rich Eberts, Jeff Davis
Bob Hartley, Sales Manager
Jerry Bibbee, Gene.ral Manager
'

'

·.(

.I

'

· . · ' POMEROY - .Tom Reed has
llt!en elected to a three year terin
on the Farmers Bancshares
:·board, .President Theodore T.
'Reed, Jr. announced.
, •. '!I'ol'!l Reed is program coordl·
,., ut-or of ·the Gallla-Mel&amp;s Com' ln!lnlty Action AJi!!llcy. HP ~nd
, bJs 1flfe, Kathy, and their son.
Pru. reside at 106 Union Ave. In
Pemeroy.
.
Reed IJ'Bduated from Meigs
Hl&amp;h School 1111973 and attended
Marlet~ CoUege. He Is assistant ·
scoutmaster ofthe'Pomer6yBoy
Scout Troop 249, board mem~r
:'&lt;i· or the, Meigs Cunty Chamber of
, , Commerce, a member of the
.."'-rd, ~ directors for S~renitY
· !louse In G!!lllpolis, and a. Job
~ $erylce Employee CommUtee
., inembef.. H!!,IU volunteer public
relaftlll)l coordinator of the
~eroy F:'lre Department and
1 the Emergency Squad. Reed is
a!Jo a lay reader and member of
thl! Vestry of the Grace Eplsco·
pal Church.
Reed Is a past mas.ier ol the
1

~

I
Pomeroy ~,Uon'lc Lodge.
The annqal . meet1n1 of · the
stockholders of FarmerS' Elane·
shares was held on Al!rll 18 at
Farmers Bank. Members of the
board of directors re-elected for
thr!!l!- year terms were Fred W. "'
Crow, Jr., an!l Ben H. Ewing.
Highll&amp;hts of the annual meeting Include plans for ·contlnulnl
to Improve customer services
and Initiate In-house COf!lputer
system operations. Farmers
aank Is a member of th~ ~ederal
Reserve's ·. electronic ;1~ransfer
and payment network , ·a service
providing customers with Ulftodate money wire and ele&lt;itronlc
trans'fer payments.
. "
"I:he 1989 annual ·report' has
bee!! dedicated to the memory of
LesUe.F. Fultz who served on the ·
Board of Directors of the
Farmers Bank· for 31 years. The
bank Is currently celebrat'lng Its'·
85th anniversary. Dec. 4 marked
the beginning of 85 years of
financial . services · In Mj!lgs
County.
·

·.

·~···· ~

(

Ra~liff pro~Qted

POINT PLEASA~T . .... Kelh ,
neth W.. Ratliff has been pro· often ••II bMNIDJ Hr-vlcea u plannln&amp;•
moted lo. malntenanc'e superviNBWLY FORMED PAKTN£lt8111P- Tewn
excav.aloallll411• wll'k In addition 19 flnlllles In
ud Country Bullderi; the newl)-forme4 ,...•••
sor for Appalachian Powtr
tile real...llal ud IIJitt commerelal blllldln1
'Company's Centralized Plant
ahlp of Patt1ck Law10n and eMile lawn, Ia a
marbtl. rnm loft $0 r[JIII are Pal Law10a,
Malnteilance II'OUP (ACPMJ . .. . 4•lfll/bulldln&amp; colllltrucllon compaay wor1111111n
CUIIe Bowen 11114 Glea LawliQn.
GaiUa, Meigs and Jac~n Colllltln. Tile firm
Headquarterecl In Point Pin·
sani, W.Va., ACPM provlcles
maintenance service to Appal•
achian Power's Mountaineer,
.John Amos, and Philip Sporl).
Plants and Ohio Power's Gavin
Plant.
ALBANY - Jim Latham, as senior m1n1ng en11~r In
A native of Herold, Ky., Ratliff
Bru'ce Hann illld Paul Kraus have charge of manaaement systems.
,
By Stan Evans .
·Per 's hare, Limited earnecl
assllmecl new positions at South- He . tranilferred to . the Meigs
•, 1
.
·,
. $h0.34$, a 36.0% hlzlgdner arnoullt.tharr, attended the· University of Rib
Grande.
He
began
his.
career
at
'
2
0
5
1
ern
Ohio Coal Company's Melp Dl;"'illon In the ume capacity In .
. · ' GALI:,IPOLIS - The Limited t e . . rea e a year ~o.
ACPM
Ill
1977
as
a
maintenance
Division.
·
early 198!1.
·&lt;
;·1, 1-ePortfd, outstandina first quar· ··
These results in ' a aenerally
Band
was
promoted
to
mechanic
·
'
Latham'was
promoted
toadml·
_
A
graduate
of West Vlrlillla
'or ler resulla. For Its open Ina sloppy -retaillna envtrontpent·
Latham holds
quarter, Limit·
glowlnJlY point to the succtQful maintenance· mechanic · A tile ' n~tratlve a.s slstant at ·the Meip Unlvenlty
~ilowina
year.
No.
2
mlpe,
where
he
reports
to
a
bachelor
s
dtJree
In mining
o total
re·
manner in which Limltecl ilu
·Dave Zat~alo, general superln· enlineerlnJ. He and his wife,
'I' en u e s ad .
fully positioned Itself In ap~rel
tenc!ent. Latham jolnecl the Lisa, live In Atbens.
t' • vllllced 14.11% to
retailing. The Company • can •
American
Electric Power SysHann was named· senior min$ill billion. Toactually take advantaae of the
term
on
a
permanent
basis
In
lng
engineer In charge of man·
sales comrelatively middling conditions at
1981 at Southern Ohio Coal's agement systems for the Meigs
, rtaons were
the expense of others, partlcuDivision where he reports to
Martinka Division In Fairmont
eitralned by
larly those leveraged operators.'
w
.'
v
a.
He
had
previously
worked
James
F . Tompkins, vice pres!tbe presence of the sales of the
It Is apparent from a wide
•
four
summers
at
the
Martinka
dent
and
general manager. Hann
.tpce.. sold Lerner Woman dlv: range of perspectives .- Limlto
No:
1
mine
while
attending
had
been
resldentenli•r at the
.." liien,ln'the results of a; year ago. ed's vast array of approaches .to
college.
Melp
No.
31 mine prior to taklna
.. , '· · E!!cludJ.III these sales for.co 111• its· business, ·outstanding man:
Arter'
stlrtln&amp;
as
a
eneral
the
position
ltft vacant by
·, 1.,. :&lt;- ~l'llon purposes, Llmlteds total · agement; strong 'finances, rlllna
1
~~~~ advanced 22% on appr~xl·
returns, market leadership, tic.
inside laborl!r at Martinka, La· Latbam.
!ham waa promoted to section
Hann Joined Southern Ohio
" lnatlily 8% more ilnlts in opera· -: that this specialty apparel
~uperVlsor
longwall
In
NoCoal
in 1978 u a a~or at. the
Same •tore sales (sales of retailer possesses the pteans to
.
vember1981..1Iebi!ganperforrn·
Melp
·No. 1 mille. He moved to
, pnltl open In both periods) pos,t substantially abovi!averaa_e
lni project engineering work for the division . omce three years
· ,;Wvanced a ·very healthy 22% In sales and earnlnp IJ'pwth for a
the mine ' superintendent and later as anlndua~lal ei\alneer. In
·o · ~"' quarter. Selected highlights . long-term period. (Moat lmmegeneral manager In 1986 and 1980hetransferredtoMelgsNo. 2
of the same store sales perfor· dlately, we expect earnlnp per
s~nt his final
at M~tlnka as • a section supervisor until
mance bY division Included a share In the cun-ent fiscal year to
·
being named resident engineer
)Gild lain by the Limited Store advance 25.0% to $2.40.)
for the Melp Noo1 and Raccoon •
division, continued stronc gains
Alone, such prospects would
No. 3 mines early Jut year. ,
at Expreas, vi,Orous growth at lead to an unquallfl~ purehbe
Hann earned a bachelor's
the VIctoria Secret stores and recommendatIon; . tJnfQrtu· .f
dearee
In lndustrjal and systems
noticeably Improved sales aalns nat!!lY . the "story" and .potential
enJI"eerlna
from OhiO Unlver·
'' at Lane Brya~Jt.
, of Limited is well-known as
·· KENN&amp;'QI RATLIFF
slty
In
1!10.
He and his wife,
:., ' ·ln total, the Company was signified by the lOIIJ·t.nh priCe
Melanlt,
live
In
AtbiiiS with their
·'
'' readlly able to capitalize on the · performance of Its sbarea. In
.
,
dauJhter,
J
..
all;a.
i '-': ! ,Pfi1a4''s 'Jal• advance. Grols addition, a· biJh level of' IMtltu· , ' • ,t ~·
Kraua baa IMcome rtlldent .
'
•
~
mar~ lft!Jirilved tubatanttally
tlonal ownership .l W occaalonenJineer
for the Melp No. 31
"' to a Company recof!! 29.4% of ally led to coaslder~le volatWty
mine,
fllllna
the poaltlon left
•
BBUCEBANN
sales. lubltantlal control or In the sllare price.
.
vacant
by
Hann.
Kraua, wbo now
· other expenses wu also main·
Consequently, In our ciplnloa, •
reports to AI Hlllarcl, general
talned as the ratio of sales
these factors, cilmblnecl- With
superintendent, bad previously
. CHARLESTON, W.Va. -Key
Jllleral a. administrative ex: U,mlted's substantial yeat·tobeen senior rnlnlnl engllll!er lor
Centurion Bancshares, Inc. anpenae to ules decllnecl 30 basis date· appreciation, limit the apthe Meigs Dlvlelon. Kraua bqan
I!Ounced at last Monday's
polnta, while Interest eJ~pense proprlateneu of purcbue of
hla
career at the Melp DlvlaiOn
montljly meet Inc that It declared
contracteclnearly 25% versus the tlieae shares appreciation, .limit
aa
a
co-op atllllent while attend·
a quarterly diVIdend of.S.15 per
pslod a year ago. Consequentiy, tbe appropriateness of purcbue
lng
the
University of Plttabulth.
share. Tills will be paid on July 2,
pre-tax Income rose 37.9% as of these shares at th~ ~.rrent
UYNOTB
sP&amp;UUCa
. He jolled ' the company on a
and to •hareholders of record on
marJins widened 1511 bas is · tlmj! to that Of a lolii·ll!rm core
Georp
8.
GoldberJ•,
diNepermanent bull In 1912 ila a
J11ne
12.
points. A comparable earnings por,Uoljo. addition; Thus, we rate
mlnllll
enJI-. ·
.
101'
of
Merpn
akd
Ac~=j
·
Key
CenturiDD
ario~ed
~
"rformance after tal! was the ,s)lal'fl .of this quality ~th
tlo•
for
Flttle
Inter.&amp;
·
Ill
Ul6.
Kraua moved to the
fuiltlv~
merpr
a11
Wllleutl
with
· JIQatid: net Income of S62.3 retla!Jer "2".
·
IDe.,
wUl
be
·tile
k.,_..
Melp
No.
2 miM U I lleliDD
thl!
beatda
ol
Sou~
Banllmtllllln ,aiiO repreaented a 37.9% (Mr/ B\lau 18 aa IDwut ' t
..,.ma.
for
two :yens tllfote
•
ahd,
Inc.
of
lltOiclly,
anct
adVaaet on 110 basil point wider Broier lor Tile Ofllo ComPMJ ..
retiii'Dinl to dledlvllklll omeeu
$pii:U'Um nnanctal Oiqtoratlon
._,....
tiHIIr Oalllpolll omeo.) ,.
aenler lllln1q engiM«.
and Leaderlblp Coal&amp; • - al
, of ~I· Combined the two
' ' May
loan appllcaaion end •
OrJalnall)' tram Pltllburgh,
_ COIIIJIIIifes have I5&amp;C million IJi · Ill• llnlvel'lftJ 61 Rto Gl'lllllle
, on MoliiiQ, l - II. GoldKraus UVea In the Atllens
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP!) cotton and soybeana.
astetl. ·•
berJer wu alao lite elallf
IIJ'JtL He earaed a bacbalor' s
May 31 Is the deadline for .
"Filrmera who are Interested
Key Centurion hu banklna
.,.,UIIII afllwr lerllte..._ldear- 1n ml•iba eq1Mer1n1
larrnera to apply for '1989 price In obtain Ina a loan on thele.crops lutilldlarfes with 45 officea 111
....,, Prlylle . . ,• ......,.
trom Pitt • -ucllla member
tupportlaanafl'am tbeAarJcultu· ahould apply .. soon u poael- W•t \'lraiiD ud Kntuelijo,
• (lee&amp; c ................... 111
of tM ~II!ID lDitltatl of
nl SllliiUIItlon and Colllti'VI· ble," ASCS official J. Ropl' lneludm,-et..._ Natlollll Batik
, • lie Gnee Cemmflaloa.
MlDinl hlf'llrl.
ttoa Service on corn, torahum, Schneider said Wedllt!llfay.
or Polilt Pleuan t.

}'wpner.Idea.s

Three area residents are
promoted by Southern Coal

The Limited

\Ill.,,

eda

h'

• Fe

0

tto!L

. Key Centurion

...................... $Htl·

'

:

•

I

'

I

I

•

announces
diridend

\' ;t:k•.::....=

s:f ..

··~··

,/'

·=

'

·w

�May 27, 1990
11

Halp Wanted

Classifi

2br- Komia .

AVON • AI

-·

- - - -·2145.
CA-8 NEEDED: lam y.ur
own IP I ndll. rnarwy or ~

d.l'f\l

YfORD
GAME

I'UIZLEI
__
_,...._\:)~
_ _ Etlitocl by

O words
Rea rronlje tne 6 serambled
below to make 6

Zlonaholrld-.-old

I--

=.,a:z,;&lt;~.,'f:'to iOOd Juno

1

2 .......... - . • ldll- l q
holt,
old,~
2 ........... • ' ldll.... ..
·lvM-.IM4.1121o
.

simple words. Print letters of
ea ~ h in its line of sqvares.

I

I

ENYROO

I

.,...........

4~~--­
~- .

I

wAR L y E

~-

nRalld,

=~~~'
..... ..._, .....,. • 111

..,.

. -

..... -

........... 114-

Lost a Found

6

Loll: - · loun weiOhlilg, ..,.
W lb. a Haro1ord Bull,

-

.....
. hing· .....
w. ..... ce-.y,

1,2,4. -

11

.....

WWMt

ICiolool~l:'·
., I i~

dlihH,

ent.., Dki=

ralaacllng e41"'""N1.
furnlhn:
rid II
Hotlunll. 4 1 1 1 - Ill. 7 an l:r 12 ....... Rlc!Do

lllll!.lur!o
I o.rro.-1
- · · - 2nd. ""
..,.. p.m.
Mor
.....~ tor ..... ,..~ 114-

•••m.

Lolli af, uluel.._

hemahalll

cfq,- lraad
II)' llreet,
llkl·
· l'rloliv
...........
illlport. - -

r

·

r-t7

rr.rr1·rrrrr1

, _ _ Auetlen Cornpony
,_ booldng IUCIIono, IX•
=noe lftllki• the c:ltt.rence.
did Dhl.!z... KentuckJ, Wat

Vlrglnlo, 304-t,..!l'/85.

·

9 . Wlmedto Buy

:~]~E~~!:::J .
=:L-=::::.,-=::iiii
...............
....
=to -

.,. ,.. -

.

1:":_
... _...It-Ald ... ,........

!~i;M;;;;;;;;;;;--

~

Notice

·

PUBLIC BALE
'1"'------,._.,;;.___...,.1
_.., .. ,.
.• ,...,.,..
1978 Chevrolet pldlup
'· IN MEMORY
-·---truck, Serial No.
In loving memory
- - - -·
CKL14itF474872:
Of
.
•----19158 rood
Gillian
Modol, U3·7 • lerlol No.
VIOLA ' LOUCKS
4110MG45&amp;H. ond oncow·l who paaed away
. Public Notice
plow.
D
Sato wil bo 1 p.m. on the
acember 18,·
NOTICE OF
Cecil
Wlao
- r t y in Mer·
1981 and
·
PUBLIC SALE ·
cotvlloonlotunloy,J-2.
WADE LOUCKS
On the 31ot doy of Moy,
Guylln Twp. Tru-.
1110 11 2:00 o'clodl P.M.
Jeff Fowler, Clerk
.who pnnad away
the undorolaned ' will offer
Rt. 1, Crown City, Oh.
January 14 1978
for public ooleto the hlgh•t
Ph. ; (614} 218-&amp;861
'
:
!ilddllr.by-.d·bldtobede. Moy 18, 23, 21, 27, 30;
'No one k - • tho dent
livered to Stor Bonk. 26 June '1
.
heortoclt•,
'
only
Coun Btr...; O.lllpolio,
·
thooe who hovoloot
Ohio 4H31. tho following
con toll,
por._l property to wit : .
Of tho grief thot II borne
Klrilbell Splnot Plono
in silence
Serial #T08947
For the onee we lovt~d ao
NOTE: Plano willbeovoil·
well.
able to be aeen prior to placOur heorto otnloche with
ing bid. For appointment coli
Elizabeth Rumloy. Stor Bank
Our ..,..
ohod many
N.A .• Tri-State. 814·.448·
0882.
Ood only ~nowo how we
The undersigned reserves
mia1 them
the right to bid on oaid prop:
Altho end 'o f wory year.
erty •nd the Bank reHrY111
.,_ right to reject onv and oil

r•der.

-.. ...

, ,...

A h•ppy home we once

'

enjoyod
'
How IWMt the memory

Star Bonk N.A.. Tri-State
Qollipolio, Ohio
· By: E.lizoboth Rurnloy .
MAY 2&amp;. 27. 29

IIIII, · . ,
But dollh hH loft on
emptin••

1 card of Thanks
The family of Ed·
Sr.
werd Borden
wilheo to thank ail
those who gave gifts,
fooda.
flowaro and
moat aapecielly, their
prayero, love and presence. Alto a~ial
thanks to the pall bear·

1 : card of, Thanks

,

1

'
: The family of Helen
1:. Cooper would like
to give our thenke
(nd gratitude to the
"'•ny
people end
tiendo for the beau·
~I flowers,
food
ind prayers ' in . our
tlma of 11 greet loll
for our lclved one. ·
: : We . . would Ike
~ give special thljnke
*o the I.C.U., 4th end
~ ftoors of Holzer

IW!IIdk:el Center's.,...

"'g atlff.Sholtll.
to 01'&amp;
M.D .•

Iii.

.Celol

Mark A. Welker, M.D.

)lnd Edward J. Ber-

fdc:h, M.D. tOr their
~~~
cere when
~ the Ray. Mr.
6 Mrs. Andrew . Par·
:.una, Rev. Dennis Par·
,.ans, Rev. MH• Trout
.,d Rev. Mr. 8o Mrs.
:Oen
Wellman for
~ngthemany

~"!' ~rs with Helen

.end the family lit the
~pill!. end
other

ilf!hlillllia th8t atopped
"' to hew prayer.

ih:~. t:'~~e ~:r:

'$ unerel Home; · and
'steff. for
Federal
CJlllogul Plant and em:
:Ploy- for the time
.Off given to her hua::bend. Franlde
R.
~ooper, for their cere
.-nd understanding of
EC»ur greet loll.
. • Again we give our
:.pec1e1 thank&amp;.
•
Sincerely,
The Family of Helen
L. Cooper

In Loving Memory
of IVA STEWART.
who peued ewey

ers.

Wife, Imogene
Borden,
children.
brothers,
oilter.
Step-children and
grandchildren,

2

~[=~~~~===I
I
n

Mt!IIOfY
of My Grandma

-

IN MEMORY
In loving memory
of IRMA
IHLE
who passed away
March 20. 1964
and
. CHARLES P. IHLE
who passed away
January 8 , 1968.

a:

No one knows the silent

heonocheo,

Only those who havelolt.
can tell,
Of the grief that ia bor~
in 1ilence

WEALTHY VANCE

-large-··

ootloc·

""""·CAll~.
Compill1 tt at aahold or htat•l
Arfy type

ol

fumfturo, opo

toyo, ·- potto, - · . , . _ =~ .:=~e...":iJi:.
_,...11t,2nd. '
·
flld
Junk aoro w"h or wHhoul
~-.:; lMIJt"r.'"~
" Coli LJony Uvoly 114·T,v. a ontonno.- ='"=.:.'--=--:=:----,_,
au1no
- - tor 0 ·
1 Arltiqua or now. Excatl.,. eondiHoo •lhol!',~ttai. ,.~"l::. tlon - · Prompt payment. S14138 W. Roanoy I l l , - Rd. =112~-6117~··=:-:-:-:--::::-::::Juno1,2.H.
iioao1 Mob110 HornM, ,,......
Oflll
·
Pt. Plealam
• VICinlly
otonclng limber ondlot
•
;;i;ol·lond~~ tor purcheoe In
Yont 8ole. :zttl. Unaoln Avo. r.
Clboll, Put~mon,
1:00 IIIIU:Go ~ond Wacf.
·"'i~iic1Jaekoon
Countloo
oroo. ~
Brown Hlrdwood
noedoy, IIOV 2111111
Luoobar c:!'•• Orowor 8, Froziero
Bottom, · .,. 21012 or phono
C8fd
Of
Thlnkl
304·'1h.ot13
botwwn 9:00 ond
1
1:00.

=-

Our llincere thanks
to the temHies of the

Buleville Community
end ell of our other
friends that helped
with food.
cards.
flowera end ll'•yers
during the loss of our

father.

'

the Children of
Raymond Stover
.11

Help wanted

11

Help Wanted

CHANNEL
MARKER CONDOS
North Myrtle
Beach
Dates Available:
June 2 · 9
August 18:26
August 26 -Sapt. 1
t60o per week, Sleeps
8, ovarlooldng ocean a.
· -Imming pool. . '
446-2734
attar 5

RIVERSIDE FLEA MARKET
SPECIAL: MONTH OF JUNE
83.00 A DAY TO SET UP OUTSIDE
9 ACRES TO SET UP ON
SPACES AVAILABLE INSIDE
Roseville, Fenton, Hull Art. Foatoria, Heisey,
·
Stoneware Glass.
Toolo. Uaed Furniture, Antiques.
Located St. Rt. 3, 3 mi. So. of Eureka, 6 miles
No. of Crown City, Oh .
For Info: Cali Jane- 614•388· 8557
Fri.-Set.·Sun .
·
Come Fl.. with Us.

Who Passed Away
on May 27, 19n.
ORANOMA'B
RQCKINQ CHAIR

..... .

I learned a lot about Je•

Around Grandma' a rock.

i"g ch•r

·

She would toll a Bible
atory
Then have a word of
prayer.

NOAH'S
tllrl frilly
1'81M111ba lht tim• we
heel
'
.
Hciw I do looo them so

Vot thoy oloo mlkti mo
very ood
For there ohould hm
too., more
And I ohould hove n ·
voredthemoo
lnotood I cloH the door
Soylng goodbye; tho pair
do• know
If only onti loot chance
To ooy '1 LOVE YOU",
To - her loving glenoo
To Iii-. to her voice

Our hoot1olllll ache with
Our ..,..

Or wei euppo11 to bo -

I-•
To mike ono loot phone

For the on• we loved so
well .
'

ohed mony

Ood only knows how we
mi11them
At tho end of every year.
A happy home we once
•enjQyod
How tweet the memory

•._1... -

.

I could h11r my grandme

preying
And ohe olwoyo men·
tionedmo.
She ....., did hm fova. rltll .

chime

Tobe-'*.lloll
IAitlng her knoW . how
much

-· .

coli
There'o n..er "'-h to

To loll ...,eono oo deer
Even otter ooytng goodbye'

otlll,
But deeth hoo loft on
The world can nevet fill.

Orondmo'o gone to -

It ...... - llop tho · From
lolling or • - t._
Tho
lo otll 10 roo1
And
m......,... wll

But 111

Now

Sadly mioeed by:
Mr. ond Mro. Robert
Loulco

Mro. Fran- Roberto
Mro. MHdred lhlo
Mr. and Mro. Jolm lhle
ond Orondchlldren.

n1m1.

ven now

there

'

moot her -

~~~of

ell thooe
proyorolheproyed
In thot aid rooking choir.
Roger Yonce

ARK
ANIMAL
FARM

'
JACKSON,
OHIO

INFO:
1·800.282-2117 OH.
800-848-4111 NAT'l

Nltional vohtntaty hellth
orpnizalion is lltkina intlivilual to 111111111 5
county divisions. Orp~izl·
tionat. ules, •d lund reis·
in1 skills helpful. Ohio
driver's license requ~ad .
Travel. some ni&amp;hl.&amp;1111ek·
end work. SaiiiY Sl9.000 &amp;
c• allowance. Send resums to Director of Field
Services, 5455 N. Hip Sl,
Columbus. Oh. 43216. EEO

one more time

Sholoited uoolthe 11m1,
But wh.., my grondme
preyed
She coiled uo oech by

emptinna

Ill-

lhohlll 1 • z Ore per ...k.

aontiiCI

==·

Public Sale
\ r'uctlon

Ohio, IM~B-7112. ~:..O. E.

Mldnklht rwlelf LPN, 11 hour
--.lFCIIIA, ~7141.
NMd modVIIM Nlf4tl.,era tor

~·

....

-

Onoy~~r,~t

SALE/I SAlE// SALE/I SAL£//
ANOTHER LOAD SHENNIU
TRACTORS .

Set Up and Ready to Go
25 H.P.Dsl. w/3 pt., 8 spHd.

$499500

UST 17995.00 SAU
lest hal in the Yri-State
WID lake lradt·in•
. Complete Stock of Parts and

S.nlce Awallaltlt

Jin's Farm Equipment Center
S.R . 36 W., Gallipolis, Ohio
Phona 446-9777 or 446-2484

upanolon

•br honw, vinyl

HouM For s.le, 2 acrM , W•
Columbia, 3 bedrooma, ,...

•

..,...

-··

nlohorl. 114'112-3M7 or 114-1t2·

.

On-·

2 tlldroom home In H•rttord.

oldlng, now wtn-, dlllodapooh roqulrld, 304w-. ~~- &amp; rotrtg .• tuat oil ·- - e
~ ~ ~ mYII ~~~~~···~:!~~~~
... 1111W11-3111.
3 l:ladroom, 2 tun bath, ..rv•

program.

bon I l l and eX~

::;-:.:
,g-~~-::-ndl:~=
lnwntory -unoo

•

~5 34. OORT 8UT ARYIHIIG' UNTil TOU SEE THIS All BRICK4

BEDROOMS - NOT JUST AGRACIOUS HOME - AWAY OF LIFE:

Charmtng all brick oanch. lg. ~' ·

1m. w~ h

dining area. 2 full balhs.

new car pet, kttchen, utility rm .• .also2 car anachtd garage wtth automatic door. Localed in Sunklst Vill age You may see t his h ometOOa~
an dbuy tor everlasling co mfo ~ . Crty htghschool. Wee an ar range fa·
vorable long, ter m finanong. Bythe w a~. you can have possesston

im medialely. We will sell iW tlteextoa lotfOI S6.500.0wne&lt; ~anl s Ia
deal.

.

Real

$

f:.:

$ SOUTHERN HILLS REAL ESTATE, IN(.J$:;
$
731 $ECOND AVE., GAWPOUS .
$:
$
$

. $. :~

JUDY DEWITT, BROilER

446-6624

.

f ·;

s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s s-s, ..~.
.

Real

Eatate General

General

~ou

Generil

..

gout~eAn 9Ji~~~ CRea~ £state ~ne.
n1

Jud~ COewiH _;, · CBhob.en
738 2nd AVE.
_GALLIPQJIS
,
.

Lll

. REALTOR'

. BROK
. ER' .. ..... .. ... 446 - 8147
J UDV DEWITT •
'II
rt
J Morn
a er ...... . . ...... , ........... 379 - 2184
•C.at h y
ray . .. .. ............ .. . .. ........ .... 446 - 4255
.

w

c

·

·

()

· ,,

~w;::ro:::;:

9
4
Sam Hoffman •.• •••• ••.•• . •••••••••••• •••• • 379- 24
446 6624

Jeannie Tolliver ..... ..... .. . .... .. ,.. .. ... 441 - 0703
Tammie DeWitt .. ... .. ...... ... .. ... ... ...
-

llvl~ room, dining room, and

kH- ·~ •-·-~~ room 2
• -~..
•
1 *o::!""rlal~
,.1....
. ~~-centrolc--n
IWI
•

=·•

~~ or IM- •
3br, 1 112 .tory home,
I iOCoiiid milo lrorn Oatllt&gt;OIIo,
OIIUpoiiO, POint Ploeeant and One of the ond uniGue dlooel! &amp; ,.,.,_ required.
JKiuton. Ftex!We houra. No homea, 2 112 MI._, new fu,.. 5514-44*~-~~34~1~3~.:_·--:-~:--:
oatllng. Appn&gt;x 10 In par noce, Ill Nu-Sooh wlndowo, T=h
a-~
1u 1 ~
· rnontfi $6.00 par hour. Tute. double car garage, Muel ••·
,..
.,.oom, un m •·-1:00 All to 10:00 All ONL't, ......
~ 304.e'IW030 or ~31.
ho- p.m.
In - J . lll-112-2218
lhtrl
)Owarty 1n

757oltM.

POSTAL JOBI

18

•

Pl•ntz Subd., 3br, R1nch, 2 tole,
rolr, ally ochoolo,
rwaon~~bty Dlloed, 114-llf.

Control

SMart It ttt411hr. For •••m 1
•ppllcatton Into. e~~l 7 *YI
1Lrn.·10p.m. 1-21e.lll'2tt9, Ext.
101.

1112, eu ue D31o.

Reducld for quick oolo. 3 bed"""" houN North Moln St.

Poelal .lobo. Start at $11,41 ., 121,000. -·1871 ot ' 304hr. For exam a •ppllc•tlon Info. 111o-7187.
coli 7 dop I o.m.-10 p.m. 1-21e.
~~·~.~. 10l
11 Help wanted

located from Racine. Ohio on St. Rt. 124. Take Co. Rd. 28
IBa~han.Rd. ) to Blshan lake Co. Rd. 32 (Eagle Ride• Rd.)
besode forehouse to Rambow Ridaeapprox.lV. miles.llr.
and llrs. Lockhart have moved to smaller homi in Belpre
So will sell the followine.
·.
. ·
"TRACTOR AND EQUIPMENT' ·
1975 MF 245 doesel w/ ps. Lp. spin-out wheel, 6 speed
w/only 626hr., 5' bush hog, II' 3pt. sidewinderblade,3pt
posth~le digger, 3 pt. cut off saw w/ pulley and belt, MF 3 pt.
flex dos k, 2 wh eel tratl er w/ IH pic kup truck bed good shape
Bronco 300 lerlilizer spreader, 3 pt. wood box, 5000wall10
hp general or in house on skid, 8 hp electric start Troy Built
hiler, and 8 hp Roper Log Brute log spliller.
"TOOLS AND MISC."
250 amp AC.or DC Lincoln welder, 'A hp air compresser,
Craft man Radoal saw 10, Sears Roebuck 6" JOinler w/ new set
kn1ves. acetylene gauges and I Iorch, trailer axle and longue, Craftman .bench v1ce. pope vice, W' eletric drill. W'
alum. cha10 hoosl, Craftm an m1ter box, 020 Stihl chain saw
8xl0 melal bu!lding, m1sc. hand lools. 2 new 12' gales:
2- 10 ~. 1- 6 gales. appro• 70 sleel posts, wil d.cherry,
poplar. pm e, oak rough sa(l'ed lumber chain binder. V(Ork
bencH, lots ol mtsc. han.d tools. .sc affolding jacks. pipe
stands, wmdow Ian and etc.
·
"IIISC·.'"
Corn jobber w/ ferlilizer hopper, sar lools,.Corba 40 hannel
CB, headboard for bed, roll away bed, Kenmore chestfreezer
end lables, rocker, misc. dishes, pols. pans and redwood out:
door furn~ure.

,POSTAL SERVICE Jobo. Sollry
tO $MK. N_.lonwkle. Entry level
pooi!lono. Coli (11 805.U7~00
nt.P-10181.

POSTAL SERVICE Jobo. llllry
to $85K. !Qtlonwlde. Erilry loval
-lono. Coli' ttl 805bt. P-41112.

Producta 11 - · Sol 10 trtoncto
and Nlittv... FrM gift. 10.50%

Profll. Avon.' S14-112·7180.

Raod for payl SIOO. a IHio.
1-100-147·71110 (IO.Himlnl
o r -: PASE~70, 111 S. u,...

COR

colfrway, N. Aurol'l, II 80542.

· Teichlra nHd extra I , retired,
work mornlnga or' evtnlngt.
Send rnumt, P.O. Box 1D.!i,

.Siclwall45614.
· Wontld: Port~lmo bartondor for

locll prlvat_, club. ·Exc. working
cond. WHktnd nlghta only.

· Send mum• to Cia 033 Gat~
Upolia Daily Trlbuna1• 825 Third
Avenue, Oaillpolla, 011 45631.

18

Wanted to Do

13 yaare experienced Carpenter.

Will do roots, aiding jobs, or
Vlrloua typea of buildings.
Good rafertncti ava llabla. 114-

OWNERS: Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Lockhart
PosHive ID
Refreshments
614·949·2033 or992·7301

44t-4T19.

Babyaltllng In my home. Mon·
dly thru Friday. Phone 304-675-

Dan Smith-Auctioneer

5149.

·:·For sale by owner 83 acre farm w!Windson 14x70 mobile home, 6 rooms anil bath w/bottl."as furnace, central
"'· 2 porches. also outdoor buildini on a lovely saltine.

.

Babplnlng lob for day lima

~ura, 614~46·3388.

it willing to babyall and clean

hous&amp; Salary n-aotlablt. 614-&lt;

992-2920.

ESTATE AUCTION

E&amp; R TrM

Strvlct,

topping,

trimming, ,,.. rtmovtl. F,rel , ..
Umat•.-Include• hedgn' &amp; lawn

10:00 A.M. JUNE 2, .1990

worll. 114-441.e4111.

. HOuucleanlng,

Refer.ncee,

SI4-:J71.2211.
Llwn . e~~n _,..,Ice, mowing,
cte1n houM, mterlor exterior

POMEROY, OHIO

. ESTATE OF BAILEY HUNTER
MEIGS CO. PROBATE CASE 1126528 '

painting.

Odd .Job'o.
SttadiJIUI. 1 - 3.

Located at th.e junction,of SR 7&amp; U.S. 33 at
Pomeroy, Oh1o.
ANTIQUE FURNITURE &amp;MISC.: 7 pc. Crown Brdish Slerl/ng
w~h copper tea service, 3 pc. solid walnut bdrm. suite w/T
headboard bed, marble topped dresser w/B.G. mirror, wash
·stand w/ marbl.e top &amp; splashboard, all 3 on excellent condi·
t1on, Tree of Lofe Lamp !unmarked, beli~ved to be Quisell.
Handel type lamp w/caramel slag ~hade junmarkedl. pr.
elect. brass pnsm lamps,,31ter stackong bookcase, drum Ia·
blew/drawer &amp; claw lee!:. chalk statue of couple IRarwas,
Ind., Inc.). O.S. rocker, Smdhsonoan Scientific Ser ies books
several old books, L~moge. oval covered dish !wid rose!. ser:
voce ol 8 whrte Engl1sh chona, Cambridge Chocolate Pol w/ 4
slemmed glasses jponk w/gold trim!. 5 green dep.(Snowflake) plates, 4 pl. setting Blue Willow !Royal China!. W.S.
George platters. Oc c. Japan blue willow servinR dish 3 pattern complte, lhumb print punch bowl &amp; 12 cup~ ' walnut
handmade des~
MODERN FURNITURE &amp; MISC.: Diningroom table w/6 chai(s,
dmette set w/4 ch~r s, 14.7' G.E. relrigerator, Frigidaire dou·
bl.e oven elect. mnge. 5 pc. Fr. Prov. bdrm. sude, hydabed. re·
cloner, .several occ. ch~r~ coffee &amp; end lables, G.E. washer,
Fn!lJd81re dryer, brass chandelier !Italian made!. crystal chan·
deloer &amp;much more loo numerous lo mention.
AUTO: 1984 Olds Torooado, lully loaded !will sell at 12:00
Noon!.
This is only a partial .listint everylhina is tlean &amp; in VERY
GOOD condition.
.
TERMS: Cash or Check w/bank letter of credit for out of
town buyers.
GUY HUNTER , ADMINISTRATOR
COL. W. KEITH MOLDEN. AUCTIONEER
614-742-2043 .
Lie. in Ohio N4318 &amp; W. Y1. 863
Plenty of parkin~o lunch ond restroom faciiHies.

Dr

$

$

for Rent
t bed- opt. In Mlddllpcrt .
u~ . -·. 110&lt;11~
quo. Wotor lnd kllalton lut'

on eft. In Ohio C.ll: ·1-814-44&amp;-

contract, 3

•.

i..,
S

YOU
LD NOW!!
Make him an offer. you mighl be surprised.
will be
impressed when you see lhis 3 bedroom ra nch home
that has just been recently pa inted (interior and ede· $
riorl. You can even pick out the color of new carpet $
you'd prefer. Large lot. carport and IMMEDIATE POS· ...
SESSION! Call today and let us show you this one! $; ·,
..
#2830

~ 122.-. 304-77WIM.
1on1 oomln~ SalOl and In Oallit&gt;OIIo, Wol onaiAIIIned, 11•'- Required. S14-247- ·· Fullllllnlng. Fot f""go;lull b o - . fl...... 42111.'
'
lntorv!M, coli 304-342-2280 II prtYate
112" ballto, .rolnlblo loalllon, F ~
Ille: poea..,...
lk~ land
-.,.. ·
dri.,.. I'M ae "M
or ,_n or
'conlncl, 3 ot 4br homa, vlnyl
laking •r.pllcatlone for LEASE WITH OPTION. Lorge lkllng, ,_ wlndowo, lllah·
Porneroy &amp; OIH polio, Oornlno'o "'mlly homo olio on J ocroo. ·w-, otovo a 111rtg., lull oil
Pizza.
For.w tq -'• bedrooma. · tour furnace, wood runv.ce, mum
llr.plli-~round pool. M:.1. Hftlt14-37148511.

roplcl

OUIItfr lor

SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1990
10:00. A.M.

57-68· 1344

·.'

44

EARN MONEY Roodlng 1-.1 For Rem or llio10: , _ _ iaiod 41 HOU88S fOf Rent

·PUBLIC AUCTION

.

•

..,,,.nrnent

BETTE~~gc~81CK!!Jg:~::~~S~

.. -

Polllfttor-, SOW7U104.

304-344-5638 after Sp.m.

130,000/yr lneoCM potlfttlal.
natr hiring (11 IIOI-I8UOOO Ext.
Y·10111.

Consi&amp;nments taken 1·6 P.M. Saturdays or call for other
dan Want mstant cash? Sell your unwanted items at auctiOU. Bookma Summer Auctions. Call for details.
AUTIONEER: FINIS ISAAC
VINTON. OH.-614-388-9370
Licensed and Bonded 13 Ye•s

Cash

=. .

Orlv!o Oolllpollo, 6111, In Wool Vl;glnlo Clll: 1·

110 P I -

LOCATION: 624 Deenie Dr., Sunkist Village. Out S.R.
35 to Krist I Dr. /'ust past Foodtand . Follow the sicns.
YDUR HOST , M KE MILLER.

43 Fantla tor Rem

&amp; ....

c.,. Center,

OPEN 1:00-4:00
SUNDAY AFTER NOON
MAY 27, 1990

-

"""*"'

Nural~ Plneci'MI

Real Elllle General

33 Farms tor Sale

Will....,,_,_

PARTIAL LIST: Round oak ped estal table wilh damaged ve·
neer top. sol.id mahogany rocker, rocker with cloth seal, cane
bottom cha1r, wall shelf, corner cupboard, S&amp;P shakers,
steamer .trun~ Oriental rugs, Western Electric wall phones
and parjs, WE bell boxes, cradle phone. ovens. coffee
grinder,.brass kettle, iron kettle wilh lripod, ball &amp;wrestling
cards. otllamps, oil lamp rellectors. church bell, blacksm~h
lools, grocery paper holder, uncirculated silver dollar, R.R.
car mover, RRspike puller, RRoil can. braided rope winder,
saw horses.. milk boUle .carrier, shoeshine box, drawing
knoves, dulcomer, corn knole. shell corn racker, big grinding
stone. coal mmmg augers. U.S. army blaslmgmachine, whis·
ko!y spicket clinker mover, well pulley, car lighl with STOP,
nveter, wooden lool box , mowing scylhes. 5~ bubble gum
dospen sers, 5 &amp; 10 gal. milk can, adv . ~em s llhermometer,
-cheese boxes, Rem ongton Shur Shol wooden box, Grasselli
dynam•le box, ~~eler narian ·box wil h supplies, union-header
plug can and morel. lots more ilems too num erou s lo men-

·.

ror Sale '

.,.t,.·

lrondl II :IDU75-3230
nt.
tltN Frldly 1:00
All IlK 4:111i PM tor bid lorm.

·

31 Hom88

ltll . , . -.,.lull 130 ..,. lonn, ,.....,
EARN' IK*EY Aledlng 1-.1 on - . 2 llalfo c-y, Ohio 3-4 bodt:~ 1 - t&gt;Oianllal. outloulldlng, ""'""I llr, 1 ocre
~.':':;....,~
111 - . . . - Ext. v. a::.""'~~·· Pl,tiOO ..,..
, ~- ono1
. . . , _ . . tM,IOO.OO. CIH
lxpo..._d rootor. 111111 bo 212 Mullrorry, Po•orov. • - 114 112 att doyo; o14-112-250tl
to lor lhlngloa. lluot by oppolnt- only. 3 bed- ...,.,_
.
_
._ . .
CMn tronoportotlon. room.
71--11111 ..._.,... '
Somoouo to ulch 2 children 11 :1431.
311 I7H.
..
ll'ld
I reate
~S14-112·7712. and an...'r ~~::"".::f':~~~.·~
biOI.,..__
i
VEAL FARM f'OR V.LI or loa"
Fultlmo LPN oxc bonotho ohlft l:"r"nt
WHh . option 10 buy. 114-241dl._'""'~jj lhlft 11:00 1111'7:00,
- ·11011 N. day ohlft. Contoct
B
Tent Honor. Caro Hovon of Point A·lrltnl."" uiO·bJ - · :i200 34 ·
Ulllllll
P l -.
oqu- 1111, IIYI"' , _ Wllfl'lol
0111- • flrojllaco, - lno
Hiring nuntlng aoalotorilo tor all cludeo cuot- mode 101111 olk
ahlfte. AIYtnawood Care C.n- built In bookcliH. Dining room,
tar. App.IJ In pareon. 11).3. 304- bulh In kitalton with rongo, II""
273-948:.
laundry - · 4lof
.
I NEED HELPI
oj&gt;plolL 121&lt;!4, 10XI2. 10x~ 35 lOti &amp; Acreage
k OOO
FT
••
b40.
2
bllhroomll,
wall
IO . . .
PT • •••
mo.,
• .,.,ooo corpallng lh......,.,..,. E - 0 ' Whlto ...
mo., ..ay phone work. no baaabaard ....,,.. 3 c.r detech ng , a ,... KrH,
·-lng. ftt-m-7729 Ext. garogo .,,_
county c-rlclodl loulldJnt
H-2.
wotor, IIIPIIc oyllorn, &amp; oiiiiiMe alta, Ill :HI IIIII.
,lmrnadlola opening IVOIIable for dloh, Ill an 43.1 oonl for .
2 Aoht
~ •
tu'"l
o 111ft A
S85,ooct an t3 ocreo for ~
on, t • .,. :--. •
~ '"' ovan ~ • • .N. Suo $75,000. 30.1 ocreo aN ovalllbll mleo oouth Oolllpollo """""·
=~~.;.l::":.!,.l:f.!"~~ w/pjirch- of'- for on add~ . public - · · nc rutrlatlono,
I~ - · dlffeoentol whh ox· tlonolftO,OOO. loColld IIU, Oat· "'"h 1r0nlogo, 304parlence. Aloo ovollablo part· llpolla. Dlr~cllono: Take 111.38 to 571-2331,
111.1188 to Conr Mill Rood. Home
II II N .._,loh d 111 rt~l
""' •1. •CilntiCI·IIto
.,..... •n•OINC""rno
L.P.N.
ol Ia •cprorlmotoly 2 112to 3 mlleo
Rentals

--·0-IILUin

tton.

Real Estate

2ttlolerS:30p.rn.

-lolo..-lllrllor an Ill tor

AT MEIGS CO. FAIRGROUNDS

She would reed the Word
whiorocklng
And nover loll her piece,
I kn-Qodwoo olive and
well
for I IIW Him In her f11co.
At night while I -

...,..

Good

iorae

In Loving

In Memory

eldn111

olol-

Nat door. 'TIIUrNn Poll"otrll•.

,

The wO&lt;Id con nover fill.
Sadly miond by;
'Son end Wife, Robert
and Elml Loucko,
grendchildren and
greet·grendchlldren.

RPM -rdo.

41

In M1mory

......
~;::;;.-..:•-""

bldo.

rnv.etme,...

7lltoxt.T-420.

lnl- -

Point PIIIHnl Rogi"!~!' 200

Corumpo Faahlona Ia JookJ~
for 3 In Molgo oreo. NO
cuh
SiJ; rour own
- . lull ltalnlng. Coli 114-1'12·

Ill on T.V. llo!'f noodld far
oorn,_lolo. Hlnng ell 11101.
l'or - . . . lnlo. ... ltl·771-

8

-=-

............ ,..... ....... lmDI*

-

Main 81., Point Pllaant, wv.

c/o

JACKSON ST., VINTON, .OH.,
SATURDAY, 'JUNE 2, 7:00P.M.

-

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

will -Icier
- · 011 .....
lp.m.
-.1'181.

-lo 1t0m0 tor 1110 or ront'.
Fu~~ w.-!dryer, oa.
--2·1'17'11.

MllnrMr. Dlytlme only.. Send leta

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

Complete the chu~kle quoted ·
by fillin; in the missing words
• you develop from step No. 3 below.

.

tar with ,..terence. to Box C-21,

a

C,H E S T I · 18
11

(II-

Child care worker nHd~ for

Public S81e
Auction

t--.,..;;...;,;....;:.,..;.._;,....;;;..,...,.....1

-. June ctrl
111,
.
. ..·........
.., 3br,_totol
I20U1nto.

~au,.111er wanted: ~I!:' ·
F~.-loHoizer,my
,

LliNO ~~~~!~· Njl :lml Rock•
:c2'&amp;
. -roy. S14-

Yard Sale

3 bldcaom- tral..,, cteln, 304115-10?1.
~No palo,

lng oondMiono. 101. ConiiiCI

c..to'a Auc:don Service, · Suf. .
fllo, WY. Uc annd OhiO and
Woot VlralniL 30 yooro lli·
ll*'lenoe. J:or your Mle catl -.
~ C.oto JOI.m-2271 or
.reoper Cooto 304-137-2121.
Pulrllo _ ....., VInton County,
neer Wll-llo, OH, Bot .tune
•11 • 1:0Drl.m., U acre.. more
or - . 2 oiooy, :llor. 10 ft. IIIII. . tptem, itokemallc atove,
day of ouctlon, tor
~oliwmlllon, 1113-424-11121.

Our

2342.

AVON I AI Artola I Bhlrlor

yor&lt;t, 114-

-lo tor roril on
laloMoCormlckRold,lt4-441-

peraana. TO pul your Mmt ·on
ow lttt of proeP«tlve cwrt.,..
con lito Dilly Tribune at fll-446-

Help Wlnttcl

Ar•·- -...

The teacher drew the signs
L.--L.-1...~--L..--1..--1 for less than and greater than.
She asked the class what they
Z A QR U T
meant. One ·youngster· off1---.1.;..__,;.I..,;';:..1,.;.;....;,1..,.:1..,.0....1---f ered, "One means rewind and
L.---1.'--..L._J.._--1.'--..L
. --1. the other means -- ---."

I •I •I •I •I · 1•

Help Wanted

~1 Oocllnolo.tuno13,1110.
,
.,.All ........
typoo
0
......... ·~ ..... 11'111Nulling
IIIII _ . ........ C.Ur hoi
. . . Dh p June 1-2. z dQs
knmodlolo
oponlng
tor
n-•·
onljl. lloln .........
.
CompMidvt .....,.. MMfhl,
plaoearil .......
. nclng .lnd -

ORNULL
1---.-l__,..,,7,;.;..,.;,1'~1~....
1 -I

1
•

11

........
........
.._"""""- T--.
: •••• 1'1111 klna•llu~ Ad.

I
I

I
I

Employment Serv1ces

Pomeroy,
llldclllpon
,&amp; VICinity

Real Eltltl General

2llr

... _ wolklng - · tokao 30
mlnulie • • r ond 11u • protft
ol $100 per . . . -. lluoo bo 11
Ioiii 11 yeo11 Old. ond
cloperldolol4l. 0 - tor rallred

0-3

Rio -·

-J . . -. .. · • llrgO

110M, CON llatllyn

your 1 , _,

44

42 Mobile Homes
tor Rem

32 ' Mobile Homta
for Sill

..._100 to ,70,000 per yeor. COli
114-441-lat.A·I

plom«ot

TIIAT DAIL\'

21

"AIAUNEJOIS'

• The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

S unday Times-Sentinel-Page

Pomwoy- Middeport- GIIIipolis, Ohio- Point

Jim

Mia• Paula'• O.y C.rw Center,

Slta, atfordlibla, chlldclre. M.f
I un. • 5:30 p.m. Agel 2 ·10.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
:z BA mobltl home In Portar
oroo. You pay utllftlao. Ooposlt

Valuable skill
training with
good money.
The Army Reserve ofters
you a chance lo Jearn a
valuable skill. AsMill that
co uld open new career
opt1ons lor you.
Team up wilh a nearby
Army Reserve un11. Aft er
co mpleting Basic Train1ng
you'll attend an Army
school lor skoll lratn iH g
that woll sharpen your
talents. Then you'll relurn
home and serve usually
one wee; end a monlh and
two weeks ol Annual
Trat ntn ~ You r weeMend
pay slarts at $85 wtlh
opportumtoes for
. promOiton.
Find oul how you can
get a useful parHime skill.
Come talk to us.

11

l*'ienca, c11r Elmer O.lur, 114

'

8

)88.g101,

w.a 0ryor repolr,
' or ohop. All worll

.....-.
·
--··.
=: '_.,..,.,, ......,
Bomao:

In -

Wll do ._...INning, oall•tlar

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

._.., like 10 de lloilmltllng.
Looatld LeO,._ Blvd'. Rol I

21

Bullnell
Opportunlly

1.

Yono!fnl'llooole: . . - . - A•

,,. lnairloli.-... -..

··~--

·WANT TO BUY A FARIIT - Then why nol consider this one' Approx. 71 acres in all. Corn crib,
metal lree sl~ll barn. storage bu ilding, pond and
spring, tobacco base. Milkingsystem and mineral
rights included. PLUS 2·3 bedroom home w ~h living room, balh, lormal dining and more. Call fo1
complele lisling! IOEAL LOCATION!
U835

.

Help Wanted

SUCCESS.
GET AN EDGE
ON COLLEGE
EXPENSES.

DO YOU WANT MORE FOR VOUR IIONEY1 Call us
lo see this appealing 1988. 14' x56' mobile home.
situated in quiet area. Nice well maintained lawn
Ca llloday for more inlormation.
#2833

The Army can help
you get an edge on
college eKpenses in 1us1
two years.
When you enlist and.
quali fy for a certaon
skill . you could .become
eligible for the •
Montgome ry Gl Bill Plus
the Army College Fund .
That means you could
earn $17.000 for
college with a two·year
enlistment.·
And the Arm y will
give you another edge,
too. You:11 develop the
self-discipli ne.
self-confidence and
maturity you 'll need to
succeed in co llege.
Fmd out more about
how you can get
$1 7,000 for college in
1ust tw o short years.
Call your local Army
RecrUiter for mor e
mformatoon today.

TOO MANY CHILDREN TO LIVE IN A SHOE? Need a bigger home. bul think you can't alford •I'
This one will cost you less than $45,000 and ol's
only 1'·1miles appro•. Irom town. ll's a large split
level loc ated on qu iel cul · d~sac street in a good
neighborhood. Large kilchen and dining area, l 4
bedrooms. two baths. lamt ly room / rec. room.
Owners translerred out of state and wantlo sell
· DES PERAT ELY!
#2827
. . . ""'·..""'"'.

446-3343 -

446-3343
BE AU YOU CAN BE: ·

liMY IESUVE

BetoN, after tctiOOI. Orop-lrla

walcome. 514-446&gt;1224.
Plano tuning, 30 yao11, n ·

TWENTY-TWO THOUSAND DOLlARS is all rt lakes
lo purchase this pre· manutactured hom e, app oox.
24'x60' which includes 3 bedrooms. 2 baths.
lormal dintnR area. lamilv. room. ltVtng room,
kitchen with built·in range and double oven s.
· Ulility room. Situaled on easy lo matntain lawn.
Rural waler. Gatn equ rty bydo tng some repair. Call
today.
.#28 14

Roqulr.d.lll-388-11104-

CHURCH
SECRETARY
Computer
correspjllldence,
newsletters, 35
hours a Wftk.
References
nftded.
446-1772

LOOK AT ALL THE
SOPHISTICfiTED almost
new "spaciou s"
bi-level home. 4 bedrooms. 3 balhs. fa mily room. 2
· car garage, appro•. lour.acres and so much mooe.
Call today for your leisurely tour ol lhts
#2839
rem arkable home!

~LUMBER
MANAGER TRAINEE
84 Lumber Company, the fastest
growing national lumber chain has career oppohunities today. Advancement
is rapid and all promotions are from
within. First year earnings ·average
$20,000-824,000. Benefits include
hoapitalization .
profit 1hering and
much mora. If you ·enjoy a combination
of sales end physical work, have
completed high school (some college ·
preferred) then you may qualify. No
knowledge of building material• neceaairy - we'll teach. Muat be willing to
relocate within th!l tri-state area.
Immediate Opening• - Act Nowl
SEE DON WILSON
TUESDAY, MAY 29. 9 A.M.-1 P .M •
Apply At: 84 LUMBER COMPANY
Rt. 2
'•
GallipoH. • F.e rry,

:~;''",()f..·'·.,.,

''~·tq~ft·/.k~,.~~~

.

OWNER REDUCED PRICE TO $28,000.00 AIID
WANTS AN OFFER! If you are looking lor a lot in
the city scho ol system, then why not consider this
lol already set up for you w~h this almost brand
new 14'x70' mobile home. complete w~h vinyl
underpinning. 2 1u ll baths,liv ing.room. equipped
k~chen . 2 nice decks lor relaxinp, IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION!
N2837
NEAT - CLEAN - SOLID - Sky li ne mobile
~ o me 14'x70'. 2 bedrooms. living room. bath
w/garden tub. an d shower slall. Excijing dining
and kitchen comb. wilh bay window. Lot ~ of
extras. IMMEDIAT EPOSSESSION•
#2838
RESIDENTIAL BUILDING SITES - Each lract
ran ~ n g lrom 6 lo 6\? acres. Excellenl locatiOn.
Restricled to prOiect property values. Ldlle, tl any.
excavation needed. Rura l water and elect11c
available. Green Townsh op. If you're lookinglor an
ideal home site with acreage give us a call looay!
N2807
THINKING OF BUILDING? - Get a jump start on
building yoor new home by fi nishing this recently
conslructed 28' x70' frame homeshell - 40 acr es
parlially wooded, tillable acreage. Several feet ol
road frontage. Call today for locatoon and more
details.
·
#2846

LOOK AT THIS HOllE + APPROX. V.
ONLY SlS.SOO.OO. 3 bedroom ranch, livtngroom.
eat·in k~chen. utility, balh. Kyger CreekSchools.
N2809
BUDDING. Buy now and sett le in time lo v1ew
nature's magic al work as all thelrees bud and lhe
llower s bloom. This s p&lt;in ~ yw will enjoy nature's
beauly around th~ well maintained 3 or 4 bedroom
home. 1 1~ baths, more closels Ihan usual. Modern
home wrth lhe usual to nventences. even a large
screened·tn porch and.two utilit y butldings. Green
Tow nship. You need tosee. Ca ll lor appointme nt
#2813

••
''I

YOU CAN AFFORD THIS ONE! ASKING ONLY
$U,900.00 - I stO!'j hom~w~h livongroom, eat·
in kilchen. ni ce large h. parlially .remodeled.
Large back porch.
.#2126
PRICE REDUCTION! $29.900.00 - PRNATE
LOCATIOII! - Vinyl si ded ranch, nice approx. I
acre lawn. 24'x24' two car garage. Call today lor
more informat ion.
•2829
BE SORRY. CALL TODAY lo ii ew lhos 2
story vinyl sided or lormal dining, spacious
kllchen, liv ing room. Carpeled lhroughoul, above
ground pool with privacy fe nce and decking. This
home is presently used as a s1ngle lam •ly
residence, but with extra provided kitchen could
be easily c9nverled into apartments. Located
within city.
#2832
VACANT LAND LIQUIDATION
Hunlinglon Townshi p ............................... 12 Acres
Huntinglon Township .............................. 80 Acres
Hu ntington Township ............................ 50 Acres
Ohio Township .................... ................. 133 Acres
Harrison &amp; Walnul Township ................. 81 Acres
CALL TODAY FOR PRICE AND
MORE INFORMATION
U$.500.00 - V. ACRE + HOllE
a aood
b•pin. 3 bedrooms. bath, dining room and more.
Call lor more details.
!12809

=

$18,000.00! - Approx. 30 acres, lrontage along
SR160, partially wooded, mineral rights included.
Call today.
N2823 .

•

-w...- ,_...._ •....,r.....___ ,_

t
'•

••
I

''

100 ACRES MORE OR LESS! - Good building
tobacco base. ru ral water avail able. Cily
scho ols.
#2824
s~es.

BEAUTIFUL fAIIII SETTING- Seven room brick ·
hqme w~h ·2\? baths. Apartment bu ~ ding used for
caring lor elderly and h811dicapped people. Lar1111
modern barn used as Ieeder pig business. Located
in G~yan Township. Approx. 50 acres level til able
land surrounds farm buildings. Call tcxlay for ' .
showin,
N2758

446-6624

,~--------------~------------~--~.J

i
l.
•

2 LOTS WITH IIIPROVEIIENTS - Ea ch lract ~
over 2 acres wilh septic and rural waler on each.
Good loc ation! Call today fo r more inlormation.
#2825

WANTED-NEW LISTINGS-CALLTODAY!!!

·wv.

-. -

- Approx. 5
acres
and
bo-level. Bedrooms. 2
lull baths, family room. lormal donmg, equipped
kilchen. Efficienl electroc heal pump/cenlral air.
2-car altached garage. pond and more.Ca ll tooayl
City Sc hools'!!
N2844

QUICK SALE! - Smal l
co mplete farm with al l the eK tras. 22 ac&lt;es,
modern 6 room home wilh I ·~ balhs, cenlral atr,
full basement rural water. Elfidency apartmenl
wrth 3 rooms and balh. Barn and machinery shed
tn good condtl ion. Pasture land with farm pond lo r
livestock waler and recreatto n. Aworksho pgarage
or small business bu il ding 32'x48' approx .
REDU CED PRICE . NOWASKING$51.900.00. Call
us nbw 1
#2845

�Page-D-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel
Apanment

44

51

5I

Household

5I

HousehOld

....,...,...,...

5I

HjiUHhold

Goods

Goods

Goods

for Rent

May 27, 1990

Ohio-Point Aea1ant. W.Va.
-

I

Top -

-11111, -

CiJI!O

-o

-

-·

27, 1990

.II

·
- ..- .. 120.
h':ftllaed.

• pc. -

·-

~-=

61 .Fann Equipment

-74':• ~ 711.

~ dtl.::

114-38'1·

63

73 vans &amp; 4 WD's
Livestock
lull, 30 montho old, u.nou.tn oowe a catwe of ••~

Chi--

taOO. 364-'JII3-..

1201

......

---hoyblndtft.

Puro-brod UmouaJn Sullo, IM-

.-.

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

.

-47&gt;1211, ~
11111131.
1 olumlnum
o10m - · Old K,_ll
· Old omoll
,... .antiquo
. dolo
1101. ....,

ot,_

~II &amp; M

''

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•

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,, -~

-.

,,

.

Life Choir,

111111!cal, 3044'11·~-i
;"&gt;· ''J

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112 ....

wv,

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-

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.

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F - Apl. 1220 U111Hioo
Pold, 1br, 7111 Founh, Goillpcllle,
~ after1p.m.

f : - · Elllcioncy,

f111,

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o~r

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In car.

CA, ...- . 1, 2 ~

One t 1rDorn apia. fDr rwll.

IJoPooll .........

1221 -

Z1111ftef I p.m.
1'lla , Tmuhau. Auwbi...,.a.
'" •

~~~
2br,CNCH,
2 - · 1111
ft. '
112
Mlh,
dllll&amp; ....,._,

:~ ·a~~

For

!¥llr _ , -

lor $1.00,

r.f:;;;i:R=---45

Fumlshed
Rooms

t::t"'ifio.:' ': ~

~-..--0,_

lllllllna Ill - - - Clallla Holol.

11~···

wfltl DUklng.
AloOinlllr- Alt-.upo.
Clll .... 2:DO p.m., *·773-

. . . . . . . NIMM'

~.-WV.

48 Space tor Rent
Coun1ry
- » , --o i P- o nPorto,
-.

~.r·lim.lo
51

..

.........
CITY SCHOOLS - 3· bedrooms. I bath, lamily
room, gas heat, cent. air. I car garage. $48,500·.
#240

IDEAL FOR ALARGE FAIIILY- 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal
living room and dining, modern kitchen, family room. Very
nice home. large back dec~ 2 car garage. All of this setting
on an acre plus. Green Elementary Schools.
BUYER WARRANTY - 3 bedrooms, full basement, central air. City schools. ·$49,000. 11219

ADRIAN AVE. sided. $34,000.

-

...., ._ _ $31'

sa. llod lramoo 121, a.Sizo $35 a kina- NO. Good
ooloollon .. 1lodroom ......
1111111 ellblnltll, h•A•arde hO
ond up to MI.IO doro • - •
.... wtll'l ~~row.t OrHII. 31111.
out lull- Ad. 0aon I A.ll. to
s P.M. Mon. lhN Sot. eon ,,..
411 D322.

A GRUT LmLE FARII! If hunt1ng, farming or gardening is
the name of your game- we have the perfect farm for you.
13.6+1-ACIES. tobacco barn, farm equipment, 2 bed·
room home, washer and dryer, stove, refrigerator and all the
· country a1r you can breath,e.
'

Comptoto ool ol -

bunk
bodo wtth rollo, good concl,
$171. 304-8115-3172.
County Appllonco Inc. Good

uood oppllanAS, T.'v. oolo.. Opon

an otfer.

Npollo, OH

IIEAUTY SURROUNDS Yilt IN
QUIET COUNTIY liVING II Murraw
~ill ltd. liddloporl - 2
bedrooms. lrv. room, dinmg room.
krtchen. bath. plus amXher kitchen.
2 bedrooms and bath. lr~rng room.
On a beaut1fulterraced 11? acres. In
the 30's. Make us an otter

Go~

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

lOVE UPIDA lli!EAII- AJOY TO
liYIIN- E. loin St., Pomttoy3 bedrooms. kitchen. dirllllg rm., lg.
11'1 . room w/ mer vrew . bath. utra
large lOis. Comfort ~ou can alford at
S30.000.
AHAIIDSOII OlDER BR ICC HOII
THAT RIFliCIS STABiliTY ANO
CNMM - 2nd St. Middleport 4
bedrooms. llvmg room. lam rt~ room.
krlchen. 1 bath. large corner lot.
1

'

Vrew of rNer. Needs ~ou to decorate.
In the 30's. Well •sted.

· D. C. Metal Soles, II!(, :
. Cannillburg, Inc, 47&amp;19 '
Spociolizlng ·i.n Pole
Buil~ingo.

Deolgned to moet your
noodo. l'ny size.
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
• FREE ESTIMATE on

poet bldgs.and peckage

. deolo. Save hundrodo,
even thouundl of
dollars.

Locol Solos lopros.,tatiwo
DONNA CRISENBERY
E.S .R., Box 188

Gltllipolia. Ohio 41131

AS lOW AS 1300 A IONIH {To
Oooliliod Bu,..; APlACE TO liYI
fOR Tltl liST OF YIIIR liFI TH£ IYIRYTltiNG HDII AI SYRCUSI - 2nd St I Hoar pon. 3 be~
rooms. dlnrng room, INing room. 2
baths, lulty ca rpeted. central air. AI
~ppliances, Ju st move in. low 30' s.
r,ttake Us an offer.

~

CITY SCHOOLS - 3 bedrooms, lireplace, dec.
$34,000. Must See!
#188

-7140.

27 ACRES- Raccoon Creek lroniage Full base
ment. 3 bedroom ranch w/2 baths.
· #204

'· SWIMMiNG POOLS
111M Ul an otter • mu.t ciMr
IIINJ.IUHIIyl V.rioul . . . Df
toctooy -""'"!&lt;~~ dotuu
· KAYAK
P&lt;X&gt;LS
MoNIIoolu..,.
worrwntr.
lnotol-•
tottpn 7 flnonclng -lobto.
Lln)ltod Quontltlu, col loll - .
1-:J.'IHI (Boo 025).

.

TWO FOR ONE- 14x70 Mobile Home &amp; 2 bed·
ropm home.
#210

our professionals. We will help
you find the best possible selling
p~ice for your home. There is no
obligation.

burlchng (wiS g1otefy and statiOn},
rarare. When road ctl101t5 ~ could

De about the only service station

between R111enswood 10d Athens. If
want to own ~our own busrnes5,

overloOk thrs one. Mike us an

y,.', 1HII I• Ntt~HI Ou. "

'

ss
.

AS lOIUS IZOOUONIH(IoQt!alifiod Buyor) THIS IS A 111111 FOI
li~ING at N. 4t h St. mMuklteport 3
bedrooms, livinR room. dining room.
bath, full basement. pnvate parkrn~
nice priVate yard. Wll.Y wa~ . Here s
the home klr you 11'1 the mid $20.

SICIUSIOI AIOIIG IHITRIE$·Jih acres ~aeant land in new
addition. RiRirt outside Mrdt1teport.
Why wait. Here's the choice spollrx
!MDI RINT RIC!IPTS FOR !HI
DIID TO THIS HOII and nice I!'lei
lot in • wut neirhlxlrhood on S. 4th

In Middleport, Needs some w01k but
the ffst $8,000 takes ~- Lot IS wctth
tht price. We'lltust throw fle house
in with il.fA~~tnl OW" fled). Make usan ·
offer.

PlAtEFUl, SIClUDIO, SO NIAI
AND Yll SO FAR at 1633 lincoln
His. . Pomtroy. Alull acre of comfort•.ble INIIlg. 3 Woorn:s. livioi rm .•
~itchen. l ~bat hs. Spti~RIOVer with
v1lue in tile low 30's.

.• '
I

NEW LISTING- ~arge spacious rooms in lhis I \7
story ~ome. 4 bedrooms. This house n.eeds some
rep~ir, but has lots of character~ Check l o~t.
Priced at $39,900.
·
#244
COMMERCIAL- Over 5000 sq. ff .. basement, gas
heat, sales Uoor area. storage area, 35x851ot. Only
$55,000.
#212
COLE STREn - Duplex offers a good Income
w~h each apartment having 3 bedrooms, bath,
living and dining rooms, kitchen. Asking only
$22,QOO.
#208
7.25 ACRES 11/L plusal97914x70Windsorwith
2 bedt'ooms, bllh, front porch, cent: air, barn and
other buildings. All fenced. A'sking only S22L500.

POIIEROY AREA- 3 bedroom brick, ranch~~~·
wlh
2 baths, farniy rm., on approx. I acre. $~9,500.
.
#152 .
ASH STRUT- 3 bedrooms, full basement large
attic, 2 latel corner lots. Close to General
Hart!!Jeer Park $21,500.
tll7.

Building '
Supplies

2 RENTAL PROPERTIES IN PATRIOT. Mobile home .and
house on separate lots. Both lor $25.000.00.
NEW LISTING: Near Crown City. Buy 1 acre with house and
barn for $35,000.00, or house, barn and six acres (or
$45,000.00. Located along Sl. Rl. 7.
NEW LISTING - 3-4 Bedrm. borne, srtuated within Ohio
Twp , I mile north ol Rl. 7, Hannan Tra ce and Swan Creek ·
Rd. Buy now lor $37,500.00.

·~ llntolo,
brick, -Cloudo
olpoo, Wino
doioit,
ole.
toro, Rio Orondo, OH Col 11424U121.

56 , Pets for Sale

GREEN SCHOOLS - 5 bedrooms. 2 balhs,
basement, 2 car garage, gas heat, cent air.
$69,000.00.
#234.

11 .... ' old Englftlt Rod Tick

eoo. Hound tor ..... 2 y..r old

.'

W.lkor c-.
-3
.

'

Hound

IF YOU ARE ALREADY TIRED OF CUTTING GRASS, SELL
YOUR MOWER and move mlo a beualiful 2 bedrm ., condo
localed al~ ng Grape Sl. Am ple. irisulalion wtl h heal pu mp
gives you comfortable atr conditioning and heat with econ·
om1cal prices. Averages less lhan $50.00 per mo. tax abale·
men! program. I block to grocery, 2 blocks to City Park. low
mainlenance. Call 446-1066 l~r info.
CONDOMINIUM: 1st Floor. 2·bedrm. co ndo. 2 baths, cent
A/C. heat pump, cust001 cabinets, dishwasher, disposal. uti I·
ily rm., arport. Call lor more inlormation.

114-

AKC Clll- Puga, hod oholo,
wormed. Hereford Bull, CIH till
11.:00 PM, 304-I'JI..2207.

AKC Golden Rlllrlovor puoolao.
bolh .,anrnt8. Ch••

can ...

p~lp bloodlino. $200 oooh.

---

pletely Jemodeled. new 2 ur garage.

dmmg room. kttchen. bath. full
Dasement. new srdme Beaulitu l tot
E• pect to be env.ed at thiS bl:at10n
rn low 30's. .

.

.'

.

NEW LISTING- Mobile home 12x55 on nice lot.
Excellent rental or beginners home. Asking only
$6.000.
'
#245

114-M7-ota2,114-446-4313.
lJood NMglrotoro tar oolo. CoD
~Milnor Aport_mont~•.IMW-mor, good oond, $71.

WANTING TO BUILD?- We have lluildln110ts, smalland' lariU~reqes,
County. Call for more information.
.
.

NEW LISTING- Nice home to start out in. 3 bedrooms, wrap-around deck. Located in Pomeroy
Village. $22,000.
#243

jOIJ •

TAlE THE lAIDllli!O OFF YOUR
PAYROll II AQUIET COUNTRY 2~
ACRI SEntNa at lan!'vill• l
bedroom~. lrvrng room. dinrng room
•itc.hen, bath, aaraae. nice porches:
A little prrvale kingdom in the mid
$20's. We'll listen.
NOW IS IHITIIITD BUY RIGHT IIIYESTIGATE TOOAY IIBur.nghem
on Rt 33 tow•rd Athens. Store

"PII

only 15 minutes !tom lown.
bedro001, I bath home th dudes family room,
dining room, living room and a nice kitchen. Has
3.5 acres. more or less. and is located in Oallia
County School district. This home has many e&gt;tras
you must see. Call today ' $54,900.
#707

304-773-1445.

If you have been considering
eelling your home talk to one of

the 70's. Call us.
IN SURRIIINOitiGS YOU'll lOVl
TO GET HOlE TO - 122 ""' of
pure pleasure on 681 ne~t Reeds·

SURROUND YOURSElF WffH FUN
liVING AND FIIINOlY PIOPll on
Broildway 10 Middleport. 2 bed·
rooms. 1 e~lra roorn. Irving room.

lJ"t.BID:
~9.101(
$64,900 Owners have cut the as~ng price on this
turn-of-the-century 2 story home. Well cared lor
over the years- ready for a new family loenjoy.
Features include large eat-in kitchen, formal
dining, living room, family room, den, 3 large
bedrooms and w.orkshop. All lhe original flavor
and character has been maintained. Extra big lot
Would make a nice antique shop or other
business. Immediate occupancy.
#221

ii

TOMing booth, now bulbo, $350.

.

HUNTING LAND- We have several tracts in Gallipolis and lleip Counties. Small and largeacreqe. someborderimg.
·.Wayne Nation1l Forest. Clll lor
inlormlliOII.

listen.

~nlllf.ORT~ AND NEIGHBORI\000 OF. THE
LOT i i
the Ohio River from your waterfront 1st Ave .. orooertv. 4 .. 'h bath down. 3 rm s. &amp; balh
lull up. 2 WBFP. HW floors. screene:l·in porch. A classic hom~
wrth character. Don't let this one get away, call today~
CO~NER

_

lui bnemenlr garage. barn ana

A new WDf1d of priVaCy and
convemence al only $56,000. We'H

•••

•

TIRED OF BEING CORNERED? - That won 't
happen in this roond house located in Meigs
County. Truly a home to ·be admired. Beautilully
decorated in country atmosphere, this'home has 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, livin groom. fam ily area, eal-in
kitchen and utility room. Unlinished full
basem ent Wrap around decks on both lloors will
give a view that will take your breath. All this and
·more! You must see to believe' Only $67,9001
.
8608

-lots of character
and charm can be lound in th is I ~ story home .•
w~h i n walking distance to town. In clud es 3
bedroom s, large living room, dining room and I\?
baths. Full basement. 3 car garage w~h renfed
apartment overhead .
#100

•

--

boodod - .. .,,_ on por1o
otllio oiMveo, oldrt I troln. IM-

.LAND FOR IIOBILE HOliES -We have several tracts that are unrestricted, lor mobiles. doublewides or mostanyth·
ing else. In Gallia and lleip counties.
· &lt;·
·
..,.

vrtle. Plus 4· bedrooms. l1vmg room.
drhmg room, kitchen. bath. Com·

·- '""""to.•

$100; 304-

- ·otzo lormol woddlng gown;
wltong ol-• l 'ohopollilngth
trotn open nook llno, lacy

FOR PEOPlE WHO DONHIIIJUSI
PlAIN liVING- A' IOOCH OF

wl1h mmeral nght s. 20 mmutes out
of Pomeroy 30 mmutes out ot
Athen s. Prestrrpt10n .tor pleasure m

'

''

•

.''

....'' '.'

241\31113.

•

SELL FASTER - LIST WITH A MEIGS
COUNTY REALTOR COMMITIED TO YOU.

pond. good huntmg and f tS h rn ~t frUit

bOx t.aera, tao; mlcronve
own, 171; ...... ct.k, 30" w •
S' ,.,,, $71; otoncllng pon.

off,:~~;;"~

CUT Sl4.000!!1 - Owners
Avenue home at a bargain price. Very attrictive
and well decorated 2 story brick w~h lots of old
lime character and charm. Master bedroom has
lireplace and sitting room pius gorgeous v1ew ol
the river. formal liv1n g room an~ dining room , •
family room with fireplace, den and much. much
more. New gas lurnaceand central air. Learn wh al
living in town can be like' $96,000
#226

a

ARE YOU READY TO IUY OR SELL't
IREII~MIU HMS WARRANTED HOMES
FROM HAYES REAL ESTATE

trees. lodge type home on 30 acres

Ltglllod 4' x 8' olan with otancl, 2

WHAT A DEAL! i
bedro001 home has
kitchen and . wall ·tOcwall car.pel. A large
outbuilding could be used for either a2car garage ·
or workshop. All this located on 1.4 acres. Ahome
you will cheri_
sh tor only $39,900.

. Plonlo hlbto oncl tour town' oholro. h12 Brwlded rug,
odllr •mal IIM'ttl tor ..... 114-

We Need Listings! II

ClASS near DeJter 3 bedroom~.
l;uge h ~rn g room. krt chen, 11· bath.

$7S;

hoopilol bod, $1~; I 112 ft. truck
......... $7110.00. 30W7Hill.

ot ~36-7111 onyllmo.

DEPLI;TING OUR
INVENTORY ·
DRASTICALLY.

All II TAKES IS A SILill OOIIIN
1\\JIENT AND $3SD AIOWTH (to
11ualifitd burtf) to secure this
Htmlod GfM holfte snugled in a
~holcl settinc. one yew •renty
l etc. Ranch style lull)' carpeted 3
bedrooms. 2 bil:hs. dm1ngroom.IN·
tng room. flont poJCh, hack deck. lP
waler. lluhcre. lcw 40's. Make us

Hcitpolnt · Rolrla...tor,

home or
rental un~ . 2 bedrooms,
and outside
storage buildin~ Plenty of space _for a new lamdy
to slart housekeepin~ Located tn Addtson, thts
house is a great buy al $24,900, but-the owner is
willing to sacrifice- $21,900 and rt's your~ Why
pay rent when the mortgage payment is less? .
8614

PIANO FOR SALE. Wontod:
All.-analble party to takt on
amlll monthly ~""'nt' on
ptono. Boo -tty. Coli llonogor

'

Stutes Real Estate

8 o.m. to I p.m. Mon ..Solli814-

441-11H U7 3rd. Avo.

3 bedro001, famtly rm .. vinyl
#233

· 3\'t ARES - 3.4 bedrooms, 2 car garage.
$34,900. Call for details.
#220

Call our 24-hr. answering service at
446-4206 Anytime

We H~~Vt Property Too Numerous to Advertise

'*

PAIIT PWS. s ... ot tooot S4.
,.. goilon on o-od Interior
ilnd oxt«&lt;ar Pfttoburg Palnto,
uve· 50% on Burpee Meda.
2411 Jackoon Avo, Point
P l - . 304-175-4014.

41 ARES- Tree farm. 1972 Fleetwood. $34,900.
Call for more info.
·
#~25

IIOBILE HOllE AND ~0 ACRES more or less in the Rio
Grande Area. Some woodland and there is anew pond on the
property. Nice private area. Ideal for hunters or to raise a
family. Not restricted, w/mineral rights.

We Need Listings!

doy

..,.._...

1988 24'x56' CEDAR SIDING- .75 acre m/ 1. 3
bedrooms. 2 baths. $39,900.
#229

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

I, I, -&amp; 10

•

robulft

.....,.n Fumtturo: OuatHy
.Fuftlllurw and Co..,.,, ot low
prtoOol Corpot otortlng ot $1.00
p«Jord.I14-441-JII44.
• Now' on· ule at PAINT PWS,
Hu..,varnl Trimmers. Slrve
120•.to $10. PAINT PLUS, Jock·
.an Ave, Point Pte. .nt, 304-

26 ACRES - 3 bedrooms, I bath, 2 car garag~
$59,900.
.
#231

Goods

.....,ot&gt;rinal
$110
- ...
boJ&lt;
lull or·
twin·'}:"'
NI.-Onolfti.O....a

NEW LISTING- BRICK BONANZA - Oon'l wait
to check out this 3 bedroom bnck becau se~ won't
last lon~ Located 5 mtles lrom hosprtal, this home
has plenty of stotage space and cabmets galore!!
Central atr. woodburner. 2 car atta ched garage
(with inside and outSide entrance!. Oth er (eatures
that will also excile you. Oh! The Price? $49.900.
#611

GIVE YOUR CHILDREN THE CHANCE!- Because
ytlu'd loved to have lived here yourself a~ achild.
Nice 2 story home on 2.44 acres leatures 3
bedro001s, 2 baths. lull basement and more. Easy
access to Rl. 35. Paved road. City schools. Priced
to sell at $54,900.
#222

..

SOLD, SOLD 8r. SOLD

-$3tloncluptof311.

7

t17R2:W.

WE HAVE

1141 up to $371. - - S400 a
. . . . . . . . . DOnlpl. . wtth

UOed

o~ tior wfth 4' long

Household

...
4 111. K!nl
Gun $310.
Cobl-

..

Bonnie Stutes 446-4206
Patti Hawk 446:1967

- up
$HI
10..........
Sill. TobiNpOicod
$10 oncl
1o 1121. l:ld• • t11t1 1310 to
$HI. Roollnln $221 to ~
Lompe Rl to $121. Dl-oo
$101 oncl up to MM. Wood • .,.. $211 to·1711. Doou

SolO:

-1-

2\'t ACRES AND A STATELY HOllE in an mellen! location.
Over 3,000 sq. tt., huge living room w/ woodburning fireplace. ex.lg family room with w/b, fireplace, lz formal din·
ing room w/paper and chairboard. modern equipped
krtchen, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, wonderful view. Washington
Elemenlary.

~1erchandise

.

'I

For Solo: Amigo -ric whool
cllalr, . . . . - condHton.

ACREAGE - Prime building lots. Can selllhe 6 acres or di·
vide into 2 srtes. Some woodland in quiet neighborhood only
4 miles from town. Crty schools. ·owner/agent.

- · - · Col

•

-"'~ 114-367-0234.

REDUCED- REDUCED- REDUCED!!. Now only $32,000
buys a 3 BR doublewide, 2 baths, lormal LR &amp;DR, FR,21arge
patios, sitling oo 1.59 acres m/1. Shown by appointment

A LITTLE COUNTRY! - 30 acres more or less and a·nice
home. 2,081) sq. ft. of livingspace plus a full unfinished base·
ment. Living room w/ a great view. Diningroom w/cathedral
ceiling, skyight~ and a window seat. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths,
den w/ftreplace. Kilchen has lots of cabinets, pantry and is·
land. 2 stocked ponds, haybarn, shed and fruit trees. When
the 35 bypass is completed this property is only 5 minutes
from Ho~er Hospital. .
·.
.

rawtng ma-

w.-a I dryorw, to

U11111oo Pold, 7111 FoUnh A..,

Od~

a

-}j;~··(~

";,..-.-~.~·;);.,~,,d

For Solo: lid' wooden 111...11'1
building. 1 yur old, ton wfth
brown
tall •fl•r 5p.m. on
_
, .lrlm.
_ IM-24Wm.

To be awailablt for applications to be fa·
ken June 4, 1990. 7.57'14-lo fixed Rate,
1st Ytar. The following 29 years, inter''' rate to be 8.250fo Fixed Rate.
GIVE US A CAll FOR MORE

""· ,..

......

-......
'&lt;\.

For oole. bldiOo whllo unlf9nno.

~~ •

OHIO,BOND MONEY

• Fumlohod Al'l, upotalro, 1bri oil

-

chlno.SIO•
FOR SAL.I • au-. olzo -por
- · I ,..,. old. Good ooncl~
tloft. 3044'11-1114.'
.

General
-.-lo
Complo1tlr
"r
' "1
' - .«
·2
-

drive, -

IIHrdM bench,

ond-

dryer. :IIM-I'II-1011. .

IIEW LISTING! HAVE WE GOT
YOU ... And Your loth•·ln·law,
.
decorated 3 bedroom, 2 bath stone ran
garage apartment which yields tncome PO.tlentiial
or ideal for live-in relatives. There is I a 3
bedroom mobile home that owners will
to stay
w~h the property or separately to be moved. Call
details. House and garage-apartment
mid $80's.
#507

Compul« lor-- Commoclono
AmigO- s 112 a on ..,,. 1 11~

I WAIN
AUCTION a FURNITURE. 12
Ollwo • .• Oolllpcllle.

w

.... --...0

Connon NP120
OIIC - ·
3D4.f7I4100
or.......
11Wi01.

....
)1. ·,.......,...
- · · -$10.111
....
-.vt'Ro
Rt. 141,4
- o i l Rt. ~Opon 7

'"

•

--..-with
bomo.t_-3...
A - Blolr Glide

•

Real Estete General

""17.111
-.
......
- 111.20
4 Chol
- ..
- . Moglo
M ou. ,...
R.

tumlurw, - - ·

oollonl quality, Ho.. r~~t~lolrallon

= = - l o - l o t o,

llupply,l-.onJ

-211-1720.
... - - · sao. '*

Reel E1181e Generlll

.,...... por

-

&amp; Lr.estoc~

4llollllo-Urwol~me,llke

khchen, living room. dining room, family room,
2 .l ull betht, central air-conditioning.
Location: corner Routa 326 and Cherry Ridge
A.,.,.ue, Rio Granda, Oh. Seoled bill• will be
accceptad et the Buainaoo Office. Room 208.
Allen Hall, Unlveraily of Rio Grande, Rio
G,.nde, Ohio 46814 until· 2:00 PM June 8 ,
1990. Minimum accepted bid 114,000. Home
may be viewed by appointment May 30 and 31 .
Home mutt be removed from the property no Ia·
te'r than July 20, 199().

-..,......._ouRe,
-·$12.•.,....-.u

___ '.__,: : ....
... __ ,., __
61 Fann Equipment

Fd'P1 Supr;ltr"·.

32"--·~~~-­
... " - ' 22"

3 bedroom, double wide modu;.r home.

RENT TO OWN

Fruits &amp;
Vegetables

MlrchlndiM

THE UNIVERSITY OF RIO GRANDE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES Wli.L OFFER
THE FOLOWING :

1 • 2 Jr. Allto. $11W3110 per
MO. AI ullllloo lncludod. Dop.
lloq. Coli ~fa~· lloll. .,..
441-17SS .. 441'4222.

58

54 MI8CellaiiiOUI

FOR SALE

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page- D-5

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W.Va.

·-1355.

pJn., ,. 111 ..., .
AKC

INVES.TIIENT PROPERTY IN VINTON - 6 rm. house located
along Main Sl. Rent or live in. Presently grossing $2.100.00.
Buy now lor $15,000.00.

Douchouncl

roglolorod

""-v. 10 .,.., old, Rod In color
voiY.
r.-hj,poo.
vary - · axe.
wlel'llldren,
304-112-3714
louippolnt- to ooo.
AKC

Roatotorod

NEW LISTING: 10 acres. Perry Twp. Some timber. Buy now
fDr $10,000

Dobonnan

maJo pup. "Tol hoo ..., clockOd

l..._hovoboonrwmoftdl
AKC ~orod Lobrodor pupo.

6.5 ACRES. WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS situated
along Garfield Ave. Site includes 2 bu if ding lots w/city water·
sewer. Buy now for $30,000.00.

•

118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP.. Graham School Rd
Super view' $44.000.

WOI'IMd. I'Mo-258-1320.
' I

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12 ~- Black oncl gold. $250.
11Q4..2512 botwoon I..Cp.m.
...,.robbltlo.~-­

.

DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure with
3 rental apartments. Also, adjace;" uo ctal storage/utility
bid&amp; Est. gross renlai income, $820 per mo: All priced for
$65,000.

S l - ond Hlmoloyon kMiono.
1'Mo441-3M41Her7 p.m.

Floh Tonti, :MIS JacU.. Awo.
Po1n1 P-nt, 304-471-2011, 10
gal 0o1 up $14.11 onc1 10 got

cafi Jlld 143.21.

WE HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodn_ey Village II and Mills Vii·
lage. Call lor more information.

.... Supply , . , Pol

Q-ng. All b r . • AI otylot.
' - Pol f - Doolor. Julio

.·-,304-

· Col 1M 441 0231.
One outo ,..,_ kiiiOII to good

2 BEDRM. REMODELED HOME along Chillicothe R.d. Walk to
groceries and school. Buy now lor $26,500.00.
1.02 ACRE LOT along Klicker Rd. nearCenlenary. $8.000.

Musical

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plono ..,. 304471-

PERFECTLY PRICED" FOR YOUNG FAMILIES! Smart 3 bedroom boasltng 2.5 acres. large eat-in
kitc hen with dishwasher. range and relrigerator. 2
car garag~ lenced yard and all for $53,900.
.
. #503

FOR THE BEGINNER! - Nice starter home
located just minutes hom the hosprtal. Ltvmg
room, dining room. 3 bedrooms and I bath.
Detached garage. Home needs a l~tl.e work, but
could be a showplace. Wrap around porch and
. plenty of yard make this a great place to start a
lamil~ $27,400
8607
PRICE REDUCED TO BARGAIN LEVEL! U •
Looking for thai great buy1 Here 11 1s!! Hug_
epnce
reduction on this 3·4 bedroom home tn ctty
schools. Features like family room, large
living/dining room combination, 2 baths,
!~replace with woodburner, allached garage and
2.5 acres aren'l usually available for $49,900.
Sellers want it SOLD NOWl! Make unn offer.

#-402

1

PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED on 3 properties within the
Village of Porter: #I - Old Cottrell grocery building, Now
'15,000.00!! #2- 2 story home adjacentto store bldg. Now
$25,QOO.OO. #3 - 3 bedrooms home next to above. Now
$20,0DO.OO. Call for more info. Will sell any or all!!!

IT'S THE
"LITTLE BIT MOR'E''
THAT COUNTS!
Certainly, reelty is • service busi·
ness. But we like to think we give
you more th11n just ordinary ser·
vic;e. Appraising, financing, adv·
ertising, negotiating, closing all that goes without saying. So
we strive to do MORE. Come in
and let us show you how our "lit·
tie bit more" in effort, courtesy
and know· how can GIVE YOU so
much morel
COUNTRY COMFORT - There's a splend id
country view in any direclion fr001 this 2 story
home near ChamPIOn Farms on Rt. 554. Home
tncludes open kitchen and livtng room . 3
bedrooms, one nice bath and utility room. Over I
acre of lairly Hal ground. Possible 9.5% loan
assumption. Pr iced at $34,900.
#224
QUIET, SECLUDED, WOODED ~ Dilly II&gt; mile
from city limits771 - We're talkmg about lots of
privacy, a beautiful view, the conven ience oftown
. on a 6.5. 7 acre lot. Partially developed homes tie
City sewer and water will probably be available
$18,000. Call last, il won't last long!'
#217
IN TOWN CONVENIENCE - At an allordable
price. $34,900 buys this neat 2 bedroom
bungalow. New siding, new wiring, gas forced air
furnace with central air als~ Located tn a n1ce
neighborhood on 3rd Ave. Has carport and back
porch. Well cared lor home. Call us l~ay lor an
appointment.
~209
PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK •
Perlect setting lor relaxation and enjoyment ol
Raccoon Creek. 3 acres; m/ 1, w~h good access to
the creek and plenty ot room for recreation. Log
, home includes 6 rooms including basement. Large
deck overlooks the wonderful setting, Perfect lor
weekend get togethers or full time country liv ing,
$39,900.
11231

.'

FEEL THE BREEZE- Bufnot the su~ as you sit in
the shade and enjoy country living this summer.
. Vinyl Siding and a ·2 year old roof wtll cui
·. maintenance to a m1 nimum and l_
eave plenly of
t1me fo( swimming in lhe 24x40 thground pool.
This home has 3 bedrooms. over-sized·livingroom
and a 3.~5 acre lot. $45.000
#506
WANT TO BUILD BEFORE FALL?- Before you
build, even il you already own a lot, please look at
lhese oulslanding 5+ acre sites. We have lwo.of
the best lois in Green Township. Flat, levellols ln a
quiel, country surrounding, Cily schools. ~128
EXCEL~ENT BUSINESS POSSIBILITIES!! -'- Lo·
caled in high traffic area on St. Rt 7 wrth. 80'
frontage and 180' deep. Includes aresidencewrth
2 or 3 bu~ness ro001s and 2 mobile homes. Drilled
well and 2 septic tanks. County water aviilabl~
Owner is very anx iousto sell. As~ng $54,900, bul
would consider any reasonable offer.
#203

WAS THAT A DEER I SAW?- Capture the wonder
and beauty of natur~ 12 months a year in this 3
bedroom ranch located just afew miles lr001town.
Nice starter home that needs a lrttle T.LC. Over 6
acres of wildlife habitat will give you hours of
enjoyment and the cozy family room will be a
great place for famtly galhenngs. An inveslment in
your future lor only $39,900.
#610

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MIDDLEPORT ~ Turned off by "Tiny
Aflordlbles"7- It's time to get excited with this
2 story brick localed on Rutland Sheet.
Beautifully lailored wrth 2 bedrooms upstairs and
2 more on the main floor. Texlured plaster wallsin
both the livtng room and dining room help make
lhis one of the tru ly finer homes in Meigs County.
And with afenced in play area lor lhechtldren, its
perfect lor a growinR lamilv. Alot of extras butlt in
wrth tender 1ov1ng care you must see to believe.
Fall in love all over again for just $54,900. •604

We Need Li1ting1/

21.5 ACRES. NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL. No structures.
Located along Frank Rd. $18,900.

-

51

GREAT BUY FOR.$29,500' -Very nice home fo r
starter lamily or income · properly, etc. 3
bedrooms. large living room, eat-in kitchen wilh
nice cabinets, I bath and separate utilily room.
Nice flat lol. Convenient looation.
#liS

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DroJIIIIII'ynd Coltorr Porwlan,

-

.

AN OLDIE. BUT GOODIE!!!- Go back intime and
relive all the charm of a house at the tum ol the
century. This 2 slory house built in IB50 in Mei~
County has 3·4 bedrooms, I bath wtlh eat·m
kitchen. lireplace and a double garage. 3·4 acres
with alarge flat lot beside rt. Has anew front porch
wilh many extras. Needs work done on it. Nice
starter home. All for $25,000.
#709

.,
CLEAAVIEW
ESTATES - .The subdtvis1on is
growmg Several new houses in thts qu1et area just
10 minutes from town. We are olleringan II year
old brick/ Ira me in very good condition wrtll oplion
to buy two lots on each side for exira space 1296
sq. ft. , 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, liv ing ro001,
kiichen/dining area, 2 car garage. $50,900.
#-410

well built, well
i
brick ranch · Spring
Valley Estates. With features like hardwood floors,
21ireplaces, lull basement, in ground pool; there's
no way you can duplicate it for $79,900, unless
you're a builder. Professionally landscaped lot 2
car garage, gas heat. central air. Very well cared
lor. Don'I hesrtate on this house.
#206

...

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· LIST WITH GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER .

w·iseman
Real
Estate
.
(614) 446-3644
E. M. Wiseman, Broker

~l~~~~~S~~~~d~ir~:~~~ ....CALL AN
DevidWiieman, 448·96&amp;&amp;
a..J. H•lrftol\, 44~_-42~

' Tom Ruaell, 448-2675

_Bill Todd, 448:3443

•·•

Loretta ~cDade, 448-7729

Chria Ellceuor, 448·3&amp;21

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�nmes-Sentinel -

May 27.
71

72 Truclcs for Sale
tt.y &amp; Gl'lln
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REALTOR'

IESIDEIITIAL. t"-STIEIITS. COIIII(ICI" • f••~~ts
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23 LOCUST ST.
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446·6 06

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VIRGINIA SMITH, BROKER, 381·8821
DIAN CALLAHjt.N, REALTOR. 211-12111
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR, 441-1117
RUTH BARR; REALTOR. 441-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, REALTOR. 3'71·2. .1
DEBORAH SCITES. ASSOCIATE, 441-a312
LYNDA FRALEY, ASSOCIATE, 441·7411
MICHAEL MILLER, ASSOCIATE. 441·14011

Mortgage Revenue Bonds Issued
· Low-Cost Money o~ the Way

.

.

Total DoUar Amount of Issue:
Set Aside•:

'$280 +

New Conslrudlon

million

Other Special Program

None

SUIIIIY HOLLOW - Appi. 30'h acres vacant land. Ideal
hunting and camprng s ~e·. Electric available and all minerals. ·
$13,000.00.
TUPPERS PLAINS ~ lll~rlon Addition - 3-4 bedroom
ranch in excellenl condition on a large I acre lot. Alarge family room makes living here ajoy. Electric B.B. heat plus wood·
burner. Large storage shed. Call lor appointment.
$41,000.00 .
:
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MIDDLEPORT- Would makea great rental or ahome lor a
young couple. Has 2 bedrooms, dintng_room, one floor, all
carpeted, new root, and 2 lots. $24,500.00.
·
SALEM CENTER - Anice 3 bedroom Shu ~z mobile home,
14•70 w~h attached,family room. Efectric heat pump, plus
·coal combustion stove. Equipped kitchen. Storage buildings,
. orchard and grape arbor. $19,500:00.
·

.
&lt;1

LOOK AT THIS! JUSl$34,9001- Very nice
home near Green Elementary School,
Attractive features include LR, kitchen
' w/stove and refrifillator. 2 BRs. bath, 2 car
attached garage. Call today.

EXTREMELY NICE STARTER HOllE located
Jl!st at the edge of town. This home features 3
bedrooms, bath, living room, k~chen, dining
room and a full basement. five minutes to
downtown.

THIS COULD BE THE ONE FO.RYOU!- Very
attractive home situated on .-1.9 acres.
Features include 3 BRs, LR, kitchen, 2 baths,
basr!me~nt. gas heat, carpet and hardworxJ,

BLACKBURN REALTY

.,,.,.,, .... .._ ...
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STARCHER RD. - POMEROY- 6411 acres. vacant ground,
gas and electric avail able. Spring tor development. CALL FOR
DETAILS!'
.
. .

Counlie8 Covered:
Every county in the State of Ohio
Probable Date for Accenting

Loan AepUca.tloiU!: June 4

million)

Loanl!l ar availahlr on ·a fair and equal ha·
ala rett:ardl~w of Ra&lt;'e. Color, A.nentry.
Natonal Origin, R r ligion, Sn or Phy o1..1
Handicap

Call Virginia L. Smith Real Ellate re·
.. .rdlng your application for low In·
tereot money. 446-6806.

MIDDLEPORT- Beautiful Colonial •Home! Level lot. 2 car.
garage, 'has ornate trim atttc studio w/sk.lylight. Well in·
sulated. REDUCED. $49,900.00: MAKE OFFER!!

-..

:.

OUR SALES VOLUME HAS BEEN GOOD AND WE STILL HAVE BUYERS
LOOKING FOR MEIGS COUNTY PROPERTY. IF YOU WANT TO SELL CALL
CLELAND REALTY TODAYIII

VIe Need Listings!
Real Estrte General

Real ESJate General

IB

:til CANADAY REALTY \ .....
.

Caltb dellls.

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;••

0

DY&amp;.
0411.
.

Cllow-

lrltllll I'll

_.

POMEROY - B\ slory house w[h 3 bedrooms and bath.
Carpet and wood floors. New shingled roof and nice fronts~­
ting porch. $21,900.00.

First :a~ ,,uuu
$50,000
On Balance
Points
2%% maximum to buyer
1% to seDer

($28+

L£TART '. !.. Nice nei&amp;hborhood - 7 room house. 3 bed·
rooms, I bath, carpet throughout Large kitchen and patio.
Gas heat and hot water heat 2 car garag~ large living room.
and TV room . Well insulated. OWNER WANTS TO SELLPRICE REDUCED. MAKE OFFERII
•: . ,J HENRY E. CLELAND ..... ., ......... ........ : ....... .... ...... .............. ....... ... :: .. ... ... 992·6191
. . JEAN TRUSSELL .... .. ... ...................... .............. ..... .. ..... .... ............ ~ ........ 949·2660
.~:, MAE HUPP ....................................................... .. .................................. 949-2257
• • JO HILL ...................... ........ ................. .............. .... ........ .... .......... ........ 986·4466
:·· OFFICE .~....... , .................... ...................... ..... .......... ............................. 992-2259

ALL BRICK. + 2.15 ACRES +SMALL POND
and just 5 minutes to downtown - Lovely
home at the edge of town offers LR wdh
woodburning fireplace, very nice k~chen,
dinette, bath, carport, gas heat/cent. air,
basement. 111any more features also. Call for an
appointment and details'

DUE TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL
HOMES. WE NEED
NEW USTINGS .

eludes aS0.60 bam S0.17 ~dg on S0. 50' concrete
pad. corn c11bii illd sever~ Cltrer outf&gt;dgl. Tobecco
bas~ Smatter amoult of aaeage can be purchased

..

TWP. ROAD 348- Appx. 93 acres of vacant land with 2
story barn;· stocked pond. old house s[e wrth well. Appx. 25
acres tillable w1th balance in timber, abundance of walnut
· Get a return on yoor investment from sale of timber.
$60,000.00.

To Be Announced-10% ·

· ' RUTLAND ~ REDUCED- One lloor plan wdh 3 bedrooms,
·Ill baths, dining area, large level yard, garage, and wood
· s~ed . $32,500.00.

'· '

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TUPPERS PIAl NS - The perfect building site with tree gas,
. water and electric available. CALL FOR INFORMATION.

....

514 Second Avenue
""···...
·Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·..·:· ''Phone: (614) 446·0008
....~""' Blackburn, Broker
WORIGIIG FMIIII- 23L18 acres. more or les~ Perry
Towmhip. swth of Rio Grill de. Very na home wrth 3
~~~~ l'o balhs, kitchen and dinng room, new log add&gt;
tion boasts abeiUiiluliJe.l rrm wrth beamed ceiing;,
14x24' ~it. si)Oal s!Jir~ stone chimney and tree standing woodbrr"". par1ial basement farm llllding in·

\.
.

RUTLAND- 26.2 acres 1n the country. 6 room, 3 bedroom
home. Private and secluded Needs some wori\. $28,000.00.

Interw Bate:
1st Year
Remaining 29 Years
Type Loan: · F(IA-30-year llxed rate me~ii_Je
..
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Dr-'-

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446-3636J\t~
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TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE
21• Eat S.ond St.
Pa•n.y, Ohio 45769

4.9 ACRES 11/L, JUST AT THE EDGE OF
TOWII. BEAUTIFUL VIEW -1260sq. ft. home

614-992-3325
GALLIPOLIS- Out oft own.
3.B.R. ranch style home with
full basement on 2+ acres.
$25,900.
lEW LISTING - Beautiful
Vendale mobile home, electric heat pump, all new carpeting w~h expando living
room. This home has been
well taken care of $8,800.
lEW LISTING- Racine, 3
bedroom wh~e brick ·home,
2 baths, modern kdchen ..
pnvate location. $65,000.
IIEW LISTING - Minersville.! 3 bedroom, 2 baths
wdh full basement. Has a
large rarden spot. $15,000.
II[IJ ISTIIIG - IIIDDLE· .
· PORT, Lounge and Restaurant w~h two rental apart.ment~ Remodeled and in
full ·operation. This is a well
established business with a
lot of potential. Ready to go.
$75,000.
liM LISTIIIG- Baron mobile
home wtil florida room. all
new filttns, 2 fully insulatal
"Itt carpaled $10200.
POIIEROY - 3 B.R. house
in town w~h garag~ Partial
basement storage and wash
room. $18,000.
PRICE REDUCED - Pomeroy, 5 room house, very
little upkeep, good starter
home. full basement and
carport. $17,500.
LANGSVILLE - Well taken
care of Vendale mobile
home. 2 B.R.. new carpeting.
Well worth the price. $8800.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice 3
bedroom just out ot town on
I acre. Full basement and
fully carpeted. $19,500.
SYRACUSE - Newly remodelal home wah a large
yard. 2·3 bedrooms in anice
neiahborhood. $40,000.
POMEROY - 3 bedrooms
on llacres. Very private locllion w~h a lot of potential.
$34.000.
.

WEaLIITIIIS
11.11.1. ..-B AVMAIU
Offlq 161.1 992-3325
ME.
f92.JJ29
I. A.

ALL THE COIFOITS OF AWELL KEPT HOllE
.;_ Very nice ranch style home. Offers 1,382
sq. ft. Other attractive features include an
18x24 fam~y room w/fireplace, eat-in kitchen, .
living room, attached garage, utildy building.
15x30x4 above-ground pool wrth wood deck.
S~uateij .on a very nice lot in village of Vinton.
Call for more details.

DO ·YOU LOVE LOG HOilS? D.0 YOU WAiiT
SOliE W D TO GlOW 0111 - This may just
be the ticket. 27.6 A. Green TownshiG.. close to
town. Very nice iog home offers 3 Rs, bath,
LR, kitchen, fireplace, carpet Also offers a
25x30 detached garage and a 20130 barn on
property.

offers krtchen, living room, 3 BRs. FR,
fireplace, attached garage, workshop and a
12x60 mobile home that would be ideal for
mom or rental. Call for more details.

•

6,000 SO. n.
PWS 1.200 SQ.
n. OF Ol'FICE SPACE -Very nice building
located just off Bulaville Rd. Overhead garage
doors.
heaters in warehouse,
four nice
. reception area.
Sduated
. call our office for
more detailed jnf~rn1111ion.

41560. LOOIONG FOI NEW

,,...,

LOCIIIOIIf Try

D-ti on 1110

mag. 2+ 1cres mil oo Rl. 35. -; rrw. from ROdn~ 1 2 mtll!i trom Holzer. Mobile .
home hooii·UI). road frontage.

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ALL BliCK -JUST OFF RT. 35- CLOSE TO
HIIC AND SHOPPING- Attractive home in a
nice neighborhood offers 3 BRs, bath,
eqUipped k~chen, LR, dinette, tireplac~ new
carpet, 2 car attached garag~ gas heat and'
central air.

WANTED! NICE IOIR£D COUPLE WHO Ell·
JOYS WORKING Ill THE GARDEN AND OUT·
DOORS - 2.6 acres m/1 of level land. AI·
tractive home offers 2BRs, LR, k~chen, bath
and a 24x30 unattached block garage.

ATTIACTIVE HOllE All DTWO LOTS ,
bath, klchen w/range and OW, LR. carpet,
elec. heat, I car detachal garage. Srtuattd on
two lots Very nice

PRICE REDUCED TO $65.000! . Beautiful
L·shaped brick. An rooms large. Eat-mkrtchen,
formal dining, LR w/FP, 3 BRs. I 'h baths,
attachal garage.

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COMMERCI~L

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HOllE Ill THUIIIAII -

.ft. homeoffers4 BRs, LR,
garage, salel·

30.382 ACRES. TAYLOR ROAD - This small
farm also has a 1966 Vindale 12x60 mobile
home. small barn. Gleen Elementary School.

LOTS OF POHNTIAL- 61.496acres, m/1, on
Crouse-Beck Rd., nice woodei! bu I dint s~es.
rural water available.
·

EAGLE RD. - RACCOON TWP. - .39 acres.
$6,900.
.
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IlEAl 1101'" WUA H.$. - 2111 acres m/1,
Morpn Twp. Frank Ward Rd. - $17,500.

$15.000-:-19.143 acres miL Approx. 12 mile
from c~y hmds. All ulildies available.

SIIALL HOIEWITH
$21,000.

DTRA Lm 3 BR b"h.
• • .

£VAliS HEIGiiTS- SIIIIIUHS TO TOWNCITY SHOOtS- Very nice homeoffers3 8Rs,
LR w/fireplace. DR, kitchen, 2 baths, attactive
sundeck, attached garage, new siding. gas
heat/cent air.
141 ACIES 11/L, HUII?IIIGTOII 'JWP. Approx. 1 mle of trontaee on Raccoon Creek.
Some boltcrn land, black walnut

SITE \

~

....

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ll

"

'

'

I

'''"·

Sl~lE aaulE 7

LOCATED ON UPP£R RIV£R ROAD
ACROSS FROM NEW SHOPPING CENT£R

4 SALE- Lot on Rodney-Cora Rd. Very close
to St. Rl 35.
.
$3
4.77 acre· m/1 near Village ot
1
.
Euieka, Hazel Ridae ~d.

soo -

36.5 ARES 11/L, CLAY TWP. - frontaAe on
Friendly Ridge Rd. Old house n land. $19,500.

•

. ..

~.,

•

. ,.

1512. iun You1 MDV£ fiDW - Cheer lui. roomy ran ch house situated on

25 acres m/1in Clleshtre Twp. near Me1gs County li ne. Seethr5 one soon. Call
tor lJlpl iOOay.

$~0s .

ground! we hawe a 165acre !arrn wrth over 100 acres of wooded ~rea. Mobile
t.ome twge blrn and an oulbutldina If I!' loclted on the proptrty. S1tuated on
Rt. t4laboutlifte!n minutes lrom town. Ca ll !or deta~ls. ,

~' TRUE'

• $42 000 PRETTY RANCH NEAR HOLZER'S- 3BEDROOMS,
''NICE LIVING DINING AREA. ATTACHED GARAGE: GAS HEAT.
' CENTRAL AIR CONO. LOW PRICE AND LOW GAS BUOGET
·:MAKE
THIS A VERY AFFORDABLE HOME.
' . .

FEW IIIIUTES FIOII TOWII - BRICK RANCH, LARGE
HOME. 4BEDROOMS, EQUIPPEO KITCHEN HAS RANGE,
REFRIG ., DIS}iWASHER, TRASH COMPACTOR, DISPOSAL, FULL
BASEMENT WITH REC. ROOM. ATTACHED GARAGE PLUS
24'X40' GARAGE/WORKSHOP. GAS FURNACE, CEN. AIR COND.
ONE ACRE LOT. UNBEATABLE PRICE. $65.000. DON'T WAIT.
CALL NOW!
.

$62 000 OVER 16 ACRES - 4 BEDROOMS LARGE LIVING
• ROOM WITH FIREPLACE. NICE DINING AREA. SIDE PORCH,
' BASEMENT. GARAGE. LOCATED IN AVERY PRETTY COUNTRY
; SETTING, SJiORT DISTANCE FROM CITY.
·
.
.
.
'
::ju~t LISTED IN KYGER CREEK DISTRICT- FRAME RANCH
•"JUST ABOVE CHESHIRE. j BRs, FAMILY ROOM, CENTRAL AIR
' ON NICE LEVEL LOT. GREAT PRICE OF $35,000.
: $10 000 11081 LE HOME HAS 3 BEDROOMS. ONE BATH.
,.ALSO OLDER HOME ON LOT. NEEDS REPAIRS. LARGE LOT.
• LOCATED IN EUREKA.
, FEW MILES FROII RIO GRANDE - 3 BEDROOM RANCH
~AS FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING
ROOM 11\ BATHS CARPORT, APPROX. 3 ACRES. VERY
~RETTY SETTING. LAND IS PARTIALLY WOODED WITH NICE
: GARDEN AREA
. $55,000. NEW ON THE MARKEl

.

· ·PRICE SLASHED- OWNERS HAVE REDUCED THE PRICE
. OfT HIS HOME $3,000.00. NEW LOW PRICE $32,000. 3BED·
' ROOM, 2 STORY HOME LOCATED ON UPPER SECOND
'AVENUE IN CITY. EXCELLENT BUY!
FARMEJTE· OVER 9 ACRES, 12 YEAR OLD 3 BEDROOM
HOME WITH A COUNTRY KITCHEN, DEN HAS WOODBURN· lNG STOVE I 316 SQ. Fl LIVING AREA. 2 CAR GARAGE.
KYGER CREEK SCHOOLS. $52,000.
·

$44,000. .

.'7

'.
'.

t575.111£W USntiG- Want to b1.uld a n~ home andhaveyo~rownhunll ng

~·QUICK POSSESSION: ROO!olY CAPE COD IN NICE AREA Of
• .NEWER HOMES! 3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS. FORMAL DINING.
2 CAR GARAGE FULL BASEMENT. SHOWS LIKE A MODEL
HOME. $G2,oo0 OR BUY WITH EXTRA LOT FOR $68,000.
GEORGE'S CREEK ROAD- 3 BEDROOM RANCH . FULL BASEMENT, ATTACHED GARAGE, PULLMAN TYPE KITCHEN
' EQUIPPED WITH RANGE. REFlHG AND DISHWASHER,
FULLY CARPETED, ELECTRIC HEAT PUMP, CENTRAL AIR
' COND.. LARGE LAWN. $49,900.

$29.900 - LOCATED Ill CITY- Older home
offers 3 BRs, bath. LR. kitchen, gas heat, city
water and s~er . Call tor an appointment.

13.2 ACRES, 11/L IIEAIIIEIGS lilliE fl. Older two story home wdh vinyl siding Storm
windows. Two small barns.

CHECK THIS CUSTOM RANCH. 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS,
EAT-IN KITCHEll. FORMAL DINIIIG ROOI. LARGE LIVING
ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND FRENCH DOORS OPENING
ONTO SlOE PORCH . COZY DEN WITH FIREPLACE, LARGE LOT
WITH RIVER VIEW, $85,000.

1£11 IETHEL IIOAD: HOME PLUS RENTAL APARTMENT. 2 ·
BEDROCII HOME HAS LARGE LIVING .ROOM, EAT-IN '
KITCHEN, BASEMENT. . PLUS 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT.

v: .

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.,
IUSINISS
tin,.,.,

COLOIIAL CHARliER - HAS ALL THE EXTRA TOUCHES.
THAT MAKE AHOME PERFECT FOR FAMILY LIVING AND ENTERTAIN lNG. 4 BEDROOMS. 2BATHS, LARGE LIVING ROOM
AND FORMAL DINING AREA. FAMILY ROOM WITH FIRE·
PLACE KITCHEN EQUIPPED WITH JENN AIR ISLAND RANGE,
SNACK BAR. LOTS OF BEAUTIFUL CABINETS. THE CLOSET
SPACE IS AWESOME. PLUSH CARPETING, NICE COLORS
THROUG~OUl 2 ~AR GARAGE. NEAR CITY CALL SOON!
$94.900.
FARMS:
.
APPROX. 30 ACRES, Rl 7 AND OHIO RIVER fRoNTAGE . 3
BEDROOM HOME, BARN AND OTHER OUTBUILDINGS.
$69,500.
APPIOlZIZ ACRES. 4 ~OMES ON PROPERTY NEED SOME
REPAIR, 3 BARNS. $124,500.
APPROl ' 72 ACRES. 2 BEDROOM HOME, BARN, MOSTLY
FENCEO. $~4. 500.
.

.

TRY TO REPLACE THIS HOII£ FOR $42,000. 3BEDROOMS,
2 BATHS. MASTER BATH HAS GAR0£N TUB. FAMILY ROOM,
CATHEDRAL CEILING IN LIVING AREA. NICE PilliNG AREA.
HOME IS ONLY 4 YEARS OLO. LOCATED NEAR RIO GRANDE
ON APPROX. 1/3 ACRE LEV£L LOl EXCELLENT BUY!

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�4-H members to debate license law
.

.

Auck, debate coordinator for the nor will get to hear what teens
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio teenagers will have their Ohio 4·H program. "Opponents tljlnk about the Issue."
Before the 4·H debate, teens
say on a new state law that will counter that the blllls unfair
revokes the drivers' licenses of to students who must leave will lobby their peers outside the
students who drop out of school or school tb support themselves or statehouse, Auck says. Inside,
their famllles. We chose to argue they will assume the role of
are suspended.
legislators, debate and vote on
The law, which went Into effect a tougher version because It was
the
bill. The results will then be
May 2, will be very similar to a · one originally favored by many
sent
to Ohio's legislators.
biU 4·H members plan to debate legislators."
The
teen-agers will spilt Into
The debate Is the final session
In a mock legislative session at
1
three
groups
and meet In the
of the 73rd. annual Ohio 4·H
the Ohio Statehouse on June 15.
House
of
Representatives
Unlike the Ohio law, the4-Hblll Congress. It brings 500 teens
has no provision for cases of from all of Ohio's counties to chambers June 15 at 10: 30 a.m.,
hardship or unusual clrcumstan· Columbus for three days of noon and 1:30 p.m.
Ohio 4-H Is part of Ohio State
ces. About 50 Ohio students have workshops on topics that range
University's Ohio Cooperative
already been affected by the new from dating to water quality.
·'Debate over the new license Extension Service. About 150,000
law.
law lasted more than a year · young people are enrolled In Ohio
•'Teens backing the ·bill will among legislators In the Ohio 4-H, which Is assisted by 20,000
probably say It forces students to Statehouse," Auck says. "Now, volunteer leaders.
be more responsible," says Allen those legislators and the gover·

Farm Flashes

·'Beacon' granted federal label

tlits season. The product Is being
·produced In Europe and the
Import process takes time. We
have also learned that CIBA·
GALLIPOLIS - A major
Geigy may target southern
breakthrough was announced
states for 1990 marketing.
Safety Is In season this
this week. "Beacon", a post·
emergence corn herbicide for
summer. Summer Is almost
control of problem grasses was
everyone's favorite time of the
granted a federal label. Gallla
year. On the farm, the mad rush
County farmers have long awa·
of planting some crops and
lted a product that could beputon
harvesting of others means a lot
over the top of corn to control
of hard, hot work. A number of
Johnsongrass. Research bas
safety reminders may be neces·
found "Beacon" to be somewhat
sary to help farm families enjoy
less effective for control · of
a safe summer.
rhizome Johnsongrass and may
Power and speed are attributes
require split applications·. OSU
of machines. U people are not
weed scientists have been very
protected by a·pproprlated
· guarding or fall to employ safe
operating practices, machines
can Inflict severe Injury. In the
U.S., some 30,~ roadway accl·
to this system Include eastern dents Involving slow-moving
By Gall DeGarmo,
and western white pine, red pine,
Earth Team Volunteer
agricultural equipment occur
and
the oaks. This method works each year.
GALLIPOLIS - The next
reproduction method ·to be dis· well on any specie that can adapt
Do your part to maintain water
to germination and survival quality. Strict accordance with ·
cu~ Is called the shelterwooq
method. As Its' name Implies, under the partial shade and root label direction Is the law. Some of
reproduction by this method is competition of the remaining the most serious accidents result
gained by using a portion of the stand.
from failure to stop machines
Species such as the birches and before attending to operating
old stand to shelter the new
1
. regeneration. The regeneration the true populars, which are very problems. Falling from or being
Is encouraged by performing a Intolerant and need mineral soli ·· struck or run over represents
series of cu.ttlngs spaced over a with full sunlight, would not be another segment of accidents.
: very small part of the stand's the 'best choices to apply this Fatigue Is often a factor in
method to. The shelterwood equipment. accidents. Occasional
rotation.
method
though has the ability to breaks really help. Have a safe
The first cuttings, If necessary
• at all, are for the pul'pose of be modified to such an e~tent to summer!
· creating openings within the accomodate the needs of many
stand to allow new lref!s to begin. different species.
The advantages of this method
· The subsequent old stand helps
a~e
(1) the abundunce of seed
the regeneration to become esprovided
to assist reproduction, .
tablished by providing some
(2)
the
protection
provided by the
protection to the seedlings and
remaining
overstory,
(3) the
continuing to serve as a seed
JENSEN BEACH, Fla. -The .
Is
more
fully
growing
space
source. Gradually, the entire old
Edward
J.' DeBartolo Corpora·
· stand Is removed when this·- ut!Uzed during the regeneration
shelter does not benefit the period, · (4l slash disposal Is less tion recently announced the
necessary· since each cu ttlng appointment' of Jay A: Saxton to
growtl\ of the young stand.
leaves
less debris, (5) the shade assistant manager/marketing
The trees kept the l.on~est
stimulates
decomposition and director of Treasure Coast
; during this method are the ·
reduces
the
danger of fire, (6) Square on March 19, 1990.
largest, ·m ost v,Igorous and best
Saxton will be responsible for
except
for
the
selection method
· formed Individuals of the deslra·
overseeing
all advertising and
this
method
is
superior
In
regard
ble species. Trees of poorer
promotional
activities at the
to
protection
of
the
site
and
.· quality are the ones gradually.
mall.
He
will
also handle all
aesthetic
considerations.
removed In the series oh:uttlngs.
special
events
and assist In
The·disadvantages
are
(1)
the
' The number of cu ttlngs Is u_sually
overall
mall
operations.
.
residual
trees
and
the
new
· a minimum of two up of several
Prior
to
his
appointment,
Saxreproduction
are
subject
to
dam·
. : cuttings if there Is intensive
ton
was
admlnlstratve
assistant
age
during
the
cuttings,
(2)
they
: management.
Tile stand produced with this also impede the harvesting and at the Florida Mall and market·
method Is considered even-aged site preparation operations, (3) ing aide at Boynton Beach Mall.
Treasure Coast Square fea·
· even though the age of the trees the cost of logging Is greater, (4)
tures
141 specialty shops and Is
: compriSing the stand. covers ·a by remoVing the worst and
anchored
by Jordan Marsh, J.C.
smallest
trees
first,
the
financial
: broader • range tlian is usually
Penney,
Lord &amp; Taylor and
benefits at the beginning may not
· associated as being even-aged.
Sears,
and
Is located at 3174
be
encouraging.
. The species that respond best
Northwest
Federal
Highway In
The shelterwood method has
Jensen
Beach.
firmly established itself as an
.
Saxton is the son of Okey and
important silvicultural tool. It
Mary
Lou Tawney, Gallipolis,
will continue to be important as
and
the
grandson of Howard and
good multiple-use forest manLlda
Garland,
Gallipolis Ferry,
, CHESHIRE ~ Donald R. Bell, agement is applied to our wood·
W.Va.
land
resource.
· stores supervisor at the Ohio
· Valley Electric Corporation's
. Kyger Creek Plant, received his
anniversary award for 35 years'
service to the company.
ALBANY - The following
Hubert Francis, general prep.
Bell joined OVEC on May 17, employees from Gallia County aration supervisor at the Meigs
1955, as a guard In the personnel are being recognized for their 15 No. 31 mine. Francis resides In
years of service at Southern Ohio Gallipolis with his wife, Beverly,
department.
In 1956 he transferred to the Coal Company's Meigs Division and son, B.rlan.
stores department as a stores thls 'month:
Kenneth W. Halfhill, belt re·
Stephen A. Addington, general palrman at the !'4elgs No. 31
attendant. In 1970 he was promoted to storeroom supervisor maintenance supervisor at the mine. Halfhill resides In Bidwell
and in 1975 he became a,purchas- Meigs No. 31 mine. Addington with his wife, Marllyn, arid sons,
resides In Gallipolis with his Jeffrey and Bradley.
lng assistant.
In 1980 he was promoted to wife, Linda, and daughters,
Paul R. Hersman, faceman at
stores supervisor. Bell and his Lindsey, Meredith and the Meigs No. 2 mine. Hersman
wife, Lois, reside at 49421 Light· Stephanie.
resides In VInton. with his wife,
house Road, Racine.
Frances.
By Edward M. Vollbom
County Extension Agent,
Agriculture &amp; CNRD

reluctant In the release of this
product because of the many
precautions associated with Its
use.
Some of the precautions In·
elude not applying with "Coun·
ter" insecticide during the same
season. "Potentially susceptl·
ble" corn hybrids may not yet be
comfortably identified. Specific
cleaning of sprayer procedures
must be followed before going to
another crop.
It may be difficult to obtain
"Beacon" during the "1990" crop
year. The Southern Ohio sales
representative for CIBA·Gelgy
told me earlier this week that the
product would be very limited

The shelterwood method

Saxton promoted
by .corporation

.

Bell honored

Gallia County employees recognized

•
"•

~

1990 PONTIAC GRANO PRIX COUPE

:.

'

.

MYD'ERY FARM - . Thll week'a myltery
farm, featured by the . Melp SoU ud Wllter
Colllei'Va&amp;lon District, II locllted 10111ewhere In ·,.
Melp County. Individuals wlllllnr &amp;o participate
In tbe weeflb' contest may do 10 by peulnr the
farm'• owner. Just maU, or drop off your peu to
tbP. Gallpolll Dally Tribune, 8U Third Ave.,
Gallpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, 111
Cou.-&amp; &amp;., Pomeroy, Ohio, 457611,and you may win

Meigs County
agent's cor~er

a II cub prlae from the OIIJo Valley ..rht 2 e.tj&gt;
Co. Leave your name, ad_. aa4 tdt~~t• '

number with your card or letter. Ne ~=
cal.. will be accepted. All contest entrlel
,.. . '
be turned IQ &amp;o the newtpaper olflee 111 • ,...... ,
Wednesday. In cue of a tie, the......., wiii-M
choeen by lottery. Next week, a Galla CniiiV
farm will be featured by the Galla SoU
Water
Conservation District.
·

an•

.

Hay harvest around comer

Jly Jolm C. Rice
POMEROY - Hay harvest Is
fast approaching. If the weather
continues as It has, hay Is going to
be difficult to make. Also, much
of the hay Is harvested with large
round balers. Hay baled with
large round balers needs to be
drier than hay baled with square
~alers.

Hay baled too wet .heats. Hay
that heats caramelizes and as
much as 25% of the protein In the
hay can become unavailable. It Is

very difficult to make Jilgh
quality hay. we' need to cut hay
early and harvest as rapidly as
possible with out baling too wet, .
Withholding Fonns
•
Two new commercial farm
account pages are available to
help with your records. One Is a
"Federal Tax/ Ohio Tax Sum·
mary by Pat Period" and the
other is "Individual Payroll
Record". We hav.e ordered these
and they soon should be avallable. Examples of these forms can

Cassell retires from Columbia Gas post
COLUMBUS :.... Charles T.
Cassell has retired as area
manager for Columbia Gas of
Ohio at Ada: He had 40 years of
·service with the company.
Cassell started in 1950 as a
serviceman at Elyria. He was
promoted to regulatorman In
1954, to district regulatorman .
foreman at Norwalk, In 1959 and ·
to local manager at Amherst, In
1961.
Cassell was named division
plant foreman at Athens In 1964
to·area manager at In 1967 and t~
Ada area manager in 1973.
A native of Eaton, Cassell is a
graduate of Cadiz High School.
He attended Wittenberg Unlver·
slty and West Virginia University. He served more than six

years In the Navy.
Cassell is past president of the
Ada Chamber of Commerce and.
the Ada-Pomeroy Lions Club. He
serves on the Hardin County
Regional Planning Commission'
and is a 42-year veteran of the
Boy Scouts of America, which
honored him with the Silver ·
Beaver award for outstanding ·
service to boys.
Cassell and his wife, Ruth,
reside In Harrod. They have
three children and nine
grandchildren.

be viewed.
Alfalfa WeeVIl
Don't spray now·. Cut your .
alfalfa (lfyouhaveany).Cutand ··
reevaluate weevil actMty on
regrowth 4 to 6 days later. The '
presence of 2 or more larvae per.
crown Indicates a need for a · ·'
stubble spray.
.,Corn Plaatlnl
Quoting from a specialist ,
(Thompson). "When we 'j!lscuas ~ ·
the planting of corn hybrids, We '
generally focus on seedlnr rates·
(plant population) and plantln&amp;dates.
•·
The significance .of unltorm
spacing within the row II aom.etlmes overlooked and not &amp;tve •
sufficient attention. · ·However, '
corn seed needs to be planted u
uniformly as possible within the·
row to ensure maximum yleldl ·
and optimal crop perfonnancereeardless of plant . population
and plal)ting day." .

CONTRIBUTIONS FOR~!!
OF PROVIDENCE CEMETERY
ON TEENS.RUN RD. MAY IE
MAl LED TO: 8ttty HIIIP(IIII,
Clerk·Trus.; Rt.. 1, Box 370,
Northup, Ohio 45551.

Life Insurance

..•
Whocanyou

callwbenyou
have questions
,.

about

life·insurance? .

nan tua

CHARLES T. CASSELL

A "•
..........

ORIAL DAY SPECIAL!

W•
The Arrow Knit Shirt .for good looks and &amp;oocl lltiiH
that will never go out of atyle.
This truly fine knit ablrt, 11 a
polyester/cotton blen_d-wblch
makes It easy to care for. With
a wide variety' of colors and
patterns to choose from, you
can select several to complete
your casual wardrobe.
Arrow ...The Shirt
America Lives In.

AM-FM-cassette, automatic trans., tilt wheel, delay wipers, . ,
55/45 interior, air conditioning.

$12,·500 Salt Price After ltbatt
-600 Colagt
1st Timt luvtr or
Grad Program

Factory List Price •15,569

$11 1900

*Ntt Cost·

• BRAND .NEW CAR - NOT A MISPRINT!

~

SUNDAY
JUNE 17th

3 FREE ~AXFU DDH Ill GOLF BALLS
. WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY
ARROW SHIRT AT REGULAR ,PRICE.

=-=··

OPEN. FRIDAY 'TIL 8 P.M.

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