<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="11351" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/11351?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T01:09:06+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="42318">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/0d36c5be4c438bef69701b65bc8db525.pdf</src>
      <authentication>ba74d956788ae5cc740102d0b8b4f0e8</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="35771">
                  <text>Paga 1o-The Deily Sentinel

Forty-siX Individuals were W.Va., fishing without written
fined and three forfeited bonds In permiSsion from landowner, $25
Wednesday's Meigs County and costs; Terry A. Mayes,
Court of Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Pomeroy, Intoxicated pedesFined were Barry A. Redman, trian, $10 and costs; Ronnie E.
Point Pleasant, W.Va., failure to. Taylor, Long Bottom. failure to
yield right of way, $25 and costs;
display proper regiStration, $10
David W. Jones. New Marsh- and costs; Michael R. Gilkey,
field, safety viola tlon, $25 and Newark, no operator's license,
costs; BrlanEdmundAlexander, $100 and costs, six months jail
Sandusky, Mich., speed, $30 and suspended to 30 days, one year
ci&gt;sts; Janet Mane. Charleston. . probation; Timothy D. Clark,
· W.Va .. speed, $22 and costs;
Litchfield, speed(ng, $24 a nd
Thomas J . Beckerman. Bay ·costs.
· VIllage, Speed, $23 and costs;
James G. Scott Jr., Crown City,
BillY Lundsford, Akron, DWI,
speed, $25 and costs;. Kelly $300 and costs, 10 days jail,
Tobin, Middleport, speed, $20 operator's license suspended for
and costs; Jeffrey L, lnglld, 90 days; Tina Carpenter, Bid·
Buchanon, Mich. , speed, $20 and well, !allure to control, $30 arid
cOsts; SlielJeY M, Proffitt, Por· costs; Michael Deddens, Athens,
ttand, speed, , $18 and costs;
speeding, $23 and costs; Rollins
Kevin Jewell, Rutland, speed, A. Will, Rulland, ATV on high·
$23 and .costs; Terry Sharp, way, $25 and costs, ·no motorcyReedsville, lllegal dumping, $30 cle endorsement, $75 and costs,
and costs; John M. Harper. three days jail, suspended with
Chester, DUI, $250 and costs, stx valid endorsement within 60
m.onth jail, driving under FRA days; . Jason A, Rupe, Middlesuspension, $75 and costs and six .port, reckless operation, $35 and
month jail concurrent with DUE costs, failure to comply, $50 and
cl)arge.
costs, five · days jail susjlended,
·;Robert Morrison, Oceana, Va. , one · year probation; Douglas
speed, $20 and costs; Thomas W. Young, Pittsburg, Pa., speed, $25
Shriver, Huntington, W.Va., and costs; Robert Conlin Jr. Ann
speed, $20 and costs; Howard S. Arbor, Mich., speed, $25 and
R.pth, South Charleston, W,Va. , costs; Igor Janke, Cpapel Hill.
51\fety violation, $25 and costs;
N.C., speed, $22 and costs; Dalvd
Howard S. Roth, South Charles- · Roach , Huntington , W.Va.,
trill, W.Va., safety violation, $25 speed, $20 and cos Is.
and costs; Kerry· Cox. Rutland,
Rebecca L. Cooper, Athens, .
sJ!eed, $27 and costs; ~land passing bad checks, $25 and costs
WID, Rutland, speed, · $22 and and res titution; Wendall L.
costs; Joseph Bryant, Langs- Barber, Reedsville, .assault, SiOO
ville, DWI, $250 and costs, three and cost, 10 days jail suspended
d.ys Jail. operator's license to seven, probation one year,
suspended !or 60 days; Sharon restraining order Issued; Micah
neem, Racine, left of center. $10 M. Large, Pomeroy, disposed
a~ costs; Angel Ia Curlls, Pomebeverage can In river. $25 and
n iy. speeding, $21 and costs;
costs, 16 hours of communlly
Richard L. Deem, . Tuppers service ·with litter control .or
Pialos, failure to yield half of three days jail; Mitchell Allen,
r6adway. $10 and costs; CamUia Syracuse,' DWI. $250 and costs;
s ; Morris, Rutland, dispose of three days j all, sentence susbfverage container Into the wa- pended and $150 of fine sust~r, $30•and costs.
·
pended upon enrollment and
·Harold Kennedy. Lebanon, completion of RTP school, operaW.Va .. speed, $26 and costs; tor's license . suspended for 60
. ~rry Bartlett, Covington, Pa.• days; Joseph
Whl)e, Chesafety violation, $25 and costs; shire, speeding, $20 and costs.
A)len Gay, Milan, Ind., speed, $27
Forfeiting bonds were De· aild costs; Tracy Beegle, Racine, bor,a h NicholSon. Lancaster,
SPeed. $20 and costs; Clayton speed, $55; Robert Williams,
·Brabham, Liverpool, W.Va., Little Hocking, speed, $60; and
f~hlng without valid license, $25
David Lambert. Rutland, squealand costs; Robert Epler, Reedy, Ing tires, $55.
•

w.

-.__;.-Area
deaths--,
'
"irginia
Pratt
•: VIrginia E. Wagenhals.Pratt,

Erma Szlrakl Wagenhals, all of
Mansfield, along with several
•
aunts and uncles.
She was preceded In death by
6J, of Lopg Run Road. Long her father. ·
Bottom, died Wednesllay at ·
Funeral services will be held
Wright Patterson Medical Cen- . Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Ewing
ttr. Dayton, !oUowing an ex- Funeral Home. The Rev . Law·
tfnded Illness. She was a school renee Bush will offlclalate.
t~acher.
.
Friends may call at the funeral
; Born on Nov. 4, 1928 at home from 6 to 9 p.m •. Saturday.
ll!ansfleld, she was the daughter Graveside services will be held
of Fred Wagenhals and Erpta at the Mansfield Cemetery a\ 2
!'o&lt;lrakl Wagenhals. She was a
p.m Tuesday. The Rev . Edward
rllember of the Mt. Olive Com· Gayheart will conduct the graveJi!unlty Church. ·
side rites.
1Mrs. Pratt Is survived by her
l(usband, John C. Pratt of Long
Bottom; a daughter, Shereen V.
Jtammett, a grandson, John D.
ijammett, and her mother,

I

!

UnIts of the Meigs County
EJmergency Medical Service responded to six calls for assist·
ance Thursday.
: At 6:21 a.m. the Rutland unit
went to Meigs Mine No. 1 lor
Marvin Gardner who was taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
a)ld at 10:16 a.m. the unit went to
Jtoute 124 for Malcolm Ingram
who was transported to Holzer
Medical Center.
: The Pomeroy unit, at 10: 59
a;.m. was called to Main Street
lor Amber Mltz who was taken to
Veterans.
• The Rutland unit, at 5:09p.m.
went to Zion Road for Cammy
fl'lorrls who was taken to
Veterans.
i'
: At 9: 31 p.m. the Pomeroy unit
was called to State Street for
Amy Wright who was taken to
Veterans, and at 10:22 p.m . the
qnlt went to Liberty Lane for
Mike Hewett who was treated bu t
not t~ansported .

Probe continues
l Deputies

I

coUectlon of pioneer toots.
Equipment used by early
women In making clothing, covers and rugs will be display,
along memorabWa of some
Meigs County's freedom fighters, and pictures of various
boats that traveled along the
county's shoreline.
The River Valley Herb Club
·will be featuring a program on
herbs, those used In the past and
still grown today , and .will be
demonstration the use of herbs.
· wtth samples to be avallable to
visitors ..An herb garden has been
planted at thesldeofthemuseum
for visitors to enjoy.
Other displays will lnclu(le
research materials and posters .
made by Meigs High School
students ·of Mike Gerlach, and ·
essays written by the fifth grade
students who participated In .
Yesteryear -at the museum this
spring. The essays were judged
and the winning entries have
been posted at the museum.
Yesteryear Js an annual event of
teaching children about the arts
and crafts of bygone . years .
cosponsored by the Historical
Society and the Retired Senior

Meigs announcemenl8
Sbrlnen .Invited
The GalUpolls Shrine Club has
Invited are shrlners to ride on Its
truck In the parade Saturday In
Pomeroy. Wearing of a fez Is
required, according ·to a local
member. Theparadewillformln
back of the old Pomeroy Meigs
Junior High School at 9:30a .m.

of the Meigs County
SherlfCs Department are contlnulng their Investigation of a
Ji'ported breaking and entering
of a trailer occupied by Glor.la
Ross, Portland.
: According to the report, the
ttailer was entered sometime
bf'lween May 28 and May 30. She '
reported a fur coat and some
groceries were taken.
: DepuUes returned Richard
~ussell, 32, Athens, from the
~thens County Jail Thursday
111orning. He Is to appear In
Meigs County Court.
!Sheriff James M. Soulsby
s11ggests that 4H ·clubs In the
county undertake a community
p~oject of placing ·five digit
·alldress numbers on residents'
llJailboxes. Utility companies,
~Uce, and emergency personnel
aft use the five-digit numbers to
locate.the residences ,

.

Divorce granted

••.,........, •..,.

H08pital news

~THE .

GRAVE.LY

__BYBTENI.

.

Member: United Pr,..i IDternattonal.
Inland DaUy PreasAII!Ic:daUOn aad the
Ohio rfewapaper Auoclatlon. National

Advertlalns Representative, B&lt;anlwn
Newspaper Salea, 733 'Iblrd A"'nue,

New .York. ~ew York 10017.

. POS'!1I!AsTER: !ielld ad&lt;ftss ehanam
to The DaUy sentinel, m O&gt;urt St.,
··I'Omeroy, Oblo-.

YW
1420-A

1985

MAKE
CHEV.
'.

ODe Month .................................$6.10
One Year ................................. m-110
SINGLI! COP\'

GM238·A

1985 .

FORD

LTD

Dolly ................................... 2&amp; Cents

1527-A

1987

DODGE

COLT

' PRICE

Subscribers notde&amp;lrlngto pay the car·
rter may remit in adv4Dce direct to
The Daily Sentlnel On a 3, 6 or 12 mODth
buts. Credit wUI be glveo carrl..- each

13795

· TERM
36

S3995

36

'

.

HOURS: 10 A.M . TO 9 P:M . 7 DAYS A WEEK

=-=·-·
.

1984 MAZDA B-2000 ~ ••• S1695
310 .......... a $ 79. 5

1983 BUICK SKYHAWK •••• S1795
Auto ., PB, PS. Sunroof, 68,000 milea.
1976
CHEVY
CHEVELLE
•••••
S395
2 DR .
1981 BUICK SKYLARK •••••••• S495
4 Speed.

, EXP

FORD

1215-A

1987

DODGE

1341-A

1986

CHEY.

856-A ·

1985

1488-A

1987

NISSAN

STANZA

1,40D-1

1984

BliCK

LESURE

$6295

36

·4

1984

MERC.

WAGON

S4995

24

1440-8

1914

CHEV.

WAGON

1329-A

1984

DODGE

ARIES

•

LANCER

S4495

36

S5495

41

$5495

36

15495 '

36
48

C-1

Belmont Stakes results

Exhibits on
display at
Meigs Library
. until June 22

.Beat of the .Bend:

Inside

Former Bedtord Twp., l'f'.8ident
tum11 100 on Flag Dfay-~age A-4
..

Aloac the River ......... Bl-8
Bualaet1 .................... Dl·B
Comlca- ................... Insert
Clualfleda ................. OZ.7
Dea&amp;ba .......
A..7
Edl&amp;orlal ••••••• ••••••••••.•.•• A2
Farm ............................D8
SporlB ........... : ........... .C1-8

'Heritll@tl Days:
Wei;lk.en4 aetivilies
conti{l~e today...Pap A·3
·J•
.

B-1

. '96.8

Vol. 26 No, 1.9
. Copyrightld 1990 .

·'

,.

u

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

S4695

24

--

CAVAUEI

1989

CHEV.

1462A

1981

OI.DS.

. CIRA

GiA-234

1989

OI.DS.

CIRA

1483-A

1

1514-A

1986

. 324-A .

$9495

60

19995

· 54

. 110,995

60

IIONCO

19995

48

CHEV.

C-10

$8695

36

1987

OLDS.

DELTA 88

'10,895

48

1510-8

1986

CHEV.

BLAZER

'9995

42

1447-A

1985

CAD.

SED. DEVIW

'

.

GALLIPOLIS - . Although
of the home of Warren F. Sheets,
landing on Rlverby's roof, !&lt;nockthere were no official reports of
lng several bricks loose on the top · 120.First Ave .. !ell. blocking both
torn.ad&lt;J!'S , Gai\lpolis and sur- left side.
the sidewalk and part of. the
round lng areas were pummele4
street
overnight.
The fallen portion of the trei;!
around 12:40 a.m. Saturday, then rolled over onto the porch of
A. giant tree was uprooted
behind Empire Furniture Co. on
. when a storm front came through the historic structure, causing
ilke a freight train , leveling trees . extensive damage. Volunteers
the 800 block of Third Avenue,
throughout the city and leaving worked all Saturday afternoon to
smashing a wire fence. The tree
landed In the Ohio Bureau of
debris blocking streets and clean up the mess , and
Services
parking lot, 45 Olive St.
Intersections.
scrambled to cover the roo( With
Extensive damage was re- a ca11vas before more rains hit.
Fourth Avenue and Spruce
ported to the city pollee, but no
Street, and Mill Creek Road were
blocked by fallen tree lllribs.
Heavy damage was done to the
deaths pr InJuries were recorded
during the severe storm: which rear of the roof of a building at · Additionally, Eastern · Avenue
was hard hll Saturday, and trees
lasted more than an hour. More the comer of Third Avenue and
than half an . inch of rain Is Cedar Street, which houses Foun· .were l!prooted on thE: Gallipolis
Developmental Center Grounds ..
estimated to have fa.llen during taln of Youth' beauty Slllon.
· Policemen on duty, along with
A portlo·n of the tin roofliu)ded··
the-storm's onslaugl)t.
Ute Gallipolis volunteer firemen,
B!lrglar alarms were set off at In between the building at 600
helped . clean .up some of the
various locations throughout the Third Ave. and· the home of
city and no major pow11i' outages Marguerite Gothard, 606 Thli'd . debris Until the city's maintewere reported.
Ave. Another section o! the rooL · nance crew could be rounded up.
As of late Saturday morniQg,
Rlverby, 530 First Ave., home · landed on Gothard's 1984 Buick In ·..
of The French Art Colony, was the driveway, causlng"ell;tenslve
the Gallla County Sheriffs Deamlopgthe hardest'hit; The top of damage to the top of . qer
partment had not received retree was sheared off.
automobile.
ports of damage, but a spokesPot'tiOJ"s of a
.·man .Sl!ld SOII)e Is expected.

1987

. 110,995.

54

CHEV.

BLAZER

48

OLDS.

CUTUSS

60

CAD.

ELDORADO

36

PATH

54

1988

GMC

1094-A

1987

196

1989

105-A
1517-A

199(s.o-i.-DCAD. '
1206C

SED. DEVI!J.E

S2§,5o0

294.7
303.9

.60

.

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE

..

CAD-GEO, INC.
'

POMEROY.,

•

•

bul1clln11: at 181 Third Ave. II laaded .. her ltM
Buick durln1 an ear)f mombtg storm 8aturda;y.
Other storm damagl! photoa are on A-3,

POMEROY - A $40,000 grant
for a ·demonstration transportalion pro]ect has been made by the
Ohio Department of Transportation to the Meigs County Board of
M~ntal Retardation.
Announcement of the grant
was made by Rep . Mary Abel
(D-Athen~). who noted that the
moneyhwJll be u!kd primarily
for coordlnatjng transportation
with other agencies .
.
The. emphasis of the .project,
according to Rep. Ab~l. will be to
assiSt client~ of Meigs Industries
·
·

1.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP.IJ The Ohio Senate and House will
meet -tlila week In separate solo
sessions, ' hoping to finish busl·
ness for the summer and clear
•

ln,getting back and forth to their
job sl\es and to medical facilities .
She described the demonstration project as Innovative and
one which should work well in a
rura.l area.
In diseusslng the grant, · Lee
Wedemeyer. superintendent, Carleton School-Meigs lnllustrles,
said that .for the clients In the
adult program who have be:en
· placed on jobs In Athens, Gallla
and even Meigs. Counties. the
biggest single problem Is
transportation.

arded.

Thts Is the second year that the
·Board pf Mental Retardation has
flied an application for a gr11nt
from the Ohio Department of
Transportation, The prltnary
grant writer;: accordlng to the
sup~rlntendent, was Keith ··
Black, former adult services
director.
Wedemeyer said tbat he Is
hopeful of coordinating transportatlon with other agencies by
using their vehicles and ex·
pressed delight at having Meigs.
County selected to do a demon·
stratlon project. ·

What's in a name? The real
Mr. and 'Mrs. ·P omeroy visit
mind was "yeah, right."
The-couple standing before me,
Jonathan and Pam Pomeroy,
POMEROY - Wllo sa)'s mira-' · said they were from Cal·Uornla,
cles can't happen! Well, maybe It butl was still a little leary, !think
wasn'f a miracle, but It certainly they were aware. of this so he
quickly reached for his driver's
was unusual.
On Thursday afternoon I was license.
Well, -they really were the
oiit taking feature pictures for
the paper and when I returned to Pomeroys, and they live In
The Dally Sentinel office there Diamond Bar, Calif., wblch Is
was a couple standing at the located about 20 miles east of Los
Angeles:
· general manager's d~k.
Wbat really struck me as
You're probably thinking, "big
strange
was that they bad no Idea
deal, so wbat," Just as I was until
that
Pomeroy,
the village, was
they were Introduced as Mr. and
celebrating
Its
sesquicentennial
Mrs. Pomeroy. Well, the first
thOUJllt that went through my· this weekend. They were simply

.. By JULIE E. DILLON
Times-Sentinel staff

~·

..

ll,l

Rod ~oclatlon's Sprlngnatlon·
jil~ ,(Ji : Klrkenvllle were told to
leave .. Tbe hoi rod races sche.
duled for Saturday and S)Jnday
were postponed until next
weekend.
Denpy_Darnell, a spokesman
for the Sprlngnationals, said
between 12,000 and 15,000 people
attended Friday night 's races
and as man:r as· I!O,OOil had been
·
expected thiS weekend.
Spiker said between 200 and 400
cars owned by campers at the hot
rod races were covered with
water. The captpgi-ound· was In a
low area while the rl!ce cars and
pits were on higher ~~~:ound .
Some ·people along the river In
Newark were also ordered to
leave their homes as a precaution when the flood gates were
opened and the water flowed

Legisl~tors return for ses~ions

T' ransporta_.ttolt . ~
. ant· ~w . . .

· . PLUS TAX.

.·

"O~ruite

. '•

PAYMENTS FIGURED

·
C
OBB
.•3D8 EAST MAIN

••

Llckllli : 'COiiJiiY , aliihorlties
of LlcklrifiCQ\IIit)O ~~~ten~rvi,11'ld il\e thl'l!at pf a dam llreak at
ces, said atiiill i 4,0oll people In~.
Buck~ Lake ap~aPi!a •to be , village )Vei"e evacuated _as· a
over by mid-Saturday after flood' precaution and another 6,000
gates were opened and pressure
people In Hebron and Klrkers- ·
relieved 011; a leaking earthen
ville were told to be prepared to
dam.
flee 11 an emergency fire whiStle
Gov. Richard Celeste declared
sounded.
a staie of emergency (n ·uckllig
•'It looks like we may escape
•County and tater toUred th!! area
here wlthO!It any Injuries ,"
to check on relief efforts. About
Spiker said. "At this point I think
4,000 people In the village of
we pre past the worst ·
Buckeye Lake were llvacuated.
Spiker said some roads 'fere
The Ohio National Guard sent
tlood'i!d and bridges were washed
out by the flooding. He noted that
.troops a9d. equipment to help
authorities from Ll.ck.lng, Perry ·· the Ohlo·Department of Natural
.~md Fairfield countieS shore · uP
Resources had. been testing the
,tile dam· with sandbags. .
area around the dam as part of a
Ali Intense rain Friday had
project to rebuild It and streng·
soaked the ground and filled the
then the wall.
.
'About 1,000 people staying In a
central Ohio lake. about 20 miles
east of Columbus.
campground at the National Hot

OPEI'UNG NIGHT -The exhibit
and Simple Forma:
Pomeroy Fumtt11 re ~d Fashlon,-11148-1880" openellfl)'iday nlghi
at the Melp County Public Library. Plct~d Ia Schu:y!er Cone,
rlfl:hl, a presenter for the exhibit, explalnbt&amp; one of the pieces to
Clarice Krauller. TJte exhibit will continue lhrbn&amp;h June 22.
'
. · ·

1
.

~

_,,;y P~Jte4 1;1~ latel'l!litlo..J!al · · Randyl !ipDcf1:1 cjep\aty,q_~or

217.6

48

' SIERRA

1468-A

1

STORM DAMAGE - Marperlte Gothard, 1118
Tblrd Ave., Glllllpolls, views the section of a lbt
roof which blew off of the old Cedar Street Markel

FIOQd .t~t eases at Buckeye Lake .

167.1
183.3

36

MuhkMcllolnc.

•

125.3'5
·155.80

275..6

N--·

Poo•

Stonn pounds city;
FAC ·s ustains· damage

·111 .3
' 121.1
121.14

60

14 Saetiono. BS

-------

'

60 .

'A

MicldJepqrt-POmaroy-GaUipoi~Point Pleasant. JuM 10. 1990

24

CORSICA

&amp;speed.

1985 CHEVY CAVALIER ... S1995
2 Dr. Auto., PB, PS. Air.

14495

1985

No subscriptions by mall permitted
afeas where bomf earrter service
available.

48

CHEV.

1195-A

week.

A Dellciouo Combinetion of Ground -~and White Rice Stuffod Into A
G...., 11811 ..._and Slmmerod In A Rich Tomato Sauce. Servod With
Hot Buttorod Corn. Homemade Col•law. and Your Choico of A Steamy
Hot Roll or fluffy H o m - Blocult. Coffee, Regulor or Decafflnatecl.
Both F,..hly llnlwed, Toa or Small Soft Drink.

1984 DATSUN

50 cents

.

SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 1990
STUFFED GREEN PEPPERS ............................. 53,99

4 Speed.

.

meroy, Ohio, by the Oblo Valley Publlahtnc CGmpany/MuHbnedla, Inc.,
Pum..-oy, Ohio 457tll, P!l. 911'J-2156. Second clus poataee paid at Pomeroy.
Ohio.

Hot. Crlopy Wecla• of Gol- ltNk Frieo, C,_my Col•law, Macaroni
Salad or Bakod.leMo ond o Hot B - Roll or Homemade Biocult.

.

..

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

thrwal&gt; Friday, 1U Court St., Po-

SUIIIH)BII'TION UTES
BJ cant.- or Me(.- Boote
One Weelt ...................................$1.40

Sunday

Weather

Published every a!terliO&lt;lll, Monday

FII..AY ,.JUNE 8, 1990
CHICKEN
RWT DINNER-··-···················... •• S4.69
Dtlidouo and Ton.._ AI- White Molt Chlc:ken Fillet &amp;trlpo, Sented With

./

'

Volunteer Program of the Meigs Dal)f alock prteea
County Council on Aging.
&lt;As ot 1e:11 LIJI.)
' I
The museum will be open to the Bryce and Mark Smllb
public from 1 to 5 p.m . on C!f Blallt, Ellll II Loewl
saturday and Sunday.
Special activities of the weeAm Electric Power ............. 29}8
By Untied Preu IDterutloDAI
kend will include an .a ntique car AT&amp;T ........................ ... ...... 42%
Phlo could be In line for a .,..,
show to be· held Sunday In Ashland 011 ..•••••.•.••••••• ,....... 36 . major outbreak of severe ·
cooperation wltb the Big Bend • Bob Evans .. .'.................. .'.... 12}8 W.eather Friday night.
Car Club. ,. remote control car Charmtna Shoppes ....... :....... 10
The National Weather Service
rac_e will be held at 2 p.m . on City Hold!De Co ............... :.. 14%
said warm and mum weather
Sunday.
Federal Mogul. ................. .. 22%
conditions over the entire state .
Entertainment wtll be by
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................34% will contribute to the develUJr : .
Denver Rice at 1 p.m on Saturday
Heck's . ................................ 3%
ment of very strong thunder·
·and the Country Gentlemen on
Key Centurion ....................13* storms through Friday nliht.
Sunilay afternoon from 1 to 5 p.m.
Lands' End .... ."..................... 16
Refreshments wtll be for sale by · Limited Inc ....... ,...... ..........46%
The air mass over Ohio Friday •·.
the Society on both days.
Multltnedla Inc ...................81% morning was expected to grow
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Increasingly more · unstablfi! . .
Robbins &amp; Myers ................~% · throughout the day. An Intense
Shoney's Inc .._..................... 14~ cold front over the Plains will
Soutll Cen~J&lt;al Ohio
trl_geer the storma well QUI a !lead
T()night, showers and thunder- S t a r BaDkoe oooooooooo oo oooo o oooooooo o 2 l
storms likely. Some storms could Wendy's Inti . .................. ..... 6% of It as It approacbees Ohio.
•
A batch of early morning :;.
be severe. Low near 70. Southw- Worthington lnd .................24%
est winds 10 to 20 mph. Chance of
thunderstorms that developed •
over Indiana Thursday ·night
rain 60 percent.
Saturday, partly cloudy. A
moved Into western Ohio and ':".
chance of showers and thunder•·
A divorce has been granted to bttensifled.
storms. High In the mid 80s. Terrance .B lankenship from Shir·
Chance of rain 4ll percent.
ley . BlankehShlp, and Shirley'
GRAVELY TRACTOR ·;
Extended Foreeut
Blankenship has been restored to
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Sunday thrCJUib Tuesday
her malden name of Shirley
204 Condor St.
~~~~-. OH .
oFalr Sunday through Tuedsay . Taylor In the Melp County Court
Highs will be In the 70s with lows of Common Pleas.
In the 50s. •
MONDAY THIIU FIIIDAV
I A.M.·I P.M.
. SAT. I A.M.·1 P.M.
, I..ieell8e is8u~
CLOIED MONDAVI .
A marriage license has been.
Veteraaa Memorial
Issued In M'lgs County Probate
Thursday admissions - BerCourt to Richard Lee Collins, 37,
nice Bailey, Long Bottom.
Ravenswood, W.Va. , iuld Donna
Thursday discharges Mae Miller, 35. Sandyville,
Gladys Tuckerman, Thomas
W.Va.
Frye, and Carol Taylor. ·

(VIP8 .U . . .)
A Dhloloo of Mdbnedlo, be.

Weekend
Speciale
.

.

Severe
weather on
•
way to Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

'

EMS has six calls

Stocks

Celebraiion. J.eontlnued p:-om pa_ge 1

Meigs ·County Court

'

Friday, June 8, 1990

Pomeiuy-Mickleport. Ohio

passing through town on tbelr
way to West Vlrglnl.a . . ·
Jonathan Pomeroy aald he has ·
always known there was a town
called Pomeroy In Olllo but he
had never visited here ~ore. So,
while Mr. and Mrs. ' Ponneroy
were visltlni 111!1 mother In
Detroit, Mich., he decided to
change their travellnl plans a bit
an«! go to lhtlr deaUnaUon a
different way. He planned tbli as
a aurprlle tor hla wtte.
·
Well, ·the aurpHie wu on them,
becauae when they arrived In
Pomeroy they dllcovered Ute
cek!bratlon was going on so they
(See WHAT'S IN, on AI)

the decks ror a recess until after
the November election.
The Senate plans a Tuesday
sessiOn at 10:30 a.m. The House
will meet Wednesday to complete action on any bills returned

war on drugs this week, because
William Bennett, the federal
drug czar. wlll address a ]oint
session of the House and Senste
at 1:30 p.m . Wednesday.
Bennett, the guest of leglsla· ·

lawmakers worked Saturday In an
attempt to fashion a comprehenslve drug-fighting bill acceptable
In both chambers. But Democrats declined to attend the
meeting. Indicating there are too
many unresolved Issues to get
the job done this week.
Legislative leaders had hoped
to pus a long awaited bill
slgnaltna the start of the &amp;tate's

control strategy.
The Republicans who met
saturday with representatives of
the medical community and the
county.!lrosecu(9rs said they wlll
offer a compromise to a S~?lect
House committee chaired by
Rep. Wayne Jones. D-Cuyahoga
Falls .

by~:c~:r~~;:::::~

::~~~~e[~~-;:~!~~!~!·~~
President Bush's national drug

•

tq)l:~rd' thE! Ucklng R.lver .

·rb'e OHio · Hj ghwa~ Patrol ad-

vis~ motorists to avoid using

Interstate 70 ·east of Columbus
because of fears It wouid become
flooded ,.I hen the floodgates were
opened.
The state ot emergency was
the latest In weather-related
woes for Ohio. Five more counties were declared disaster areas
Friday, bringing to 11 ,tile
number eligible for state and
federal assistance because of
•
tornadoes and flooding.
Celeste asked ihe State Ct\ntrolllng Board Friday to make $1
mUllon avallabje to assist varIous political subdivisions · !il
repairing public property dam·
age caused by . tornadoes and
floods .

.
contmue

Trial to

'

Monday
WINFIELD, W.Va: IUPI) The trial of a Galllpoll~ , Ol!IO;
man charged with murder In the
shooting death of a Putnam
County sheriffs deputy will be
resumed Monday after opening
arguments were presented
Friday.
•
Rpbert Gray , 32, Is charged
with kUling deputY John Janey,
who was .working as a pnv•te ·
Insurance investigator when Janey, allegedly discovered Gray '
trying to. set fire to a house In a
rural area.
The owner of the house. Ray·
mond Huck of Hurricane, already has pleaded guilty to
second-degree murder in · the
Aug. 17,.19891ncldent. ·
Putnam County Prosecutqr .
O.C. Spaulding told the jury Gray
had spread gasoline In the house
and was ready to light It when
Janey, on a stakeout, surprised
h.lm. Janey tried to handcuff
Gray but he escaped and shot the
deputy, the prosecutor
maintained.
Judge Clarence Watt admitted
a taP~: of the last transmissions of
Janey before his shooting, which
lncllcated Gray was Inside the
bouse pouring gasoline. Admit·
dng the tape waa resisted by Joe
Thomas, a cletense lawyer.
Thomu admlta that Gray
killed Janey but Aid the lnvesd·
gator never entered the house,
Gray chliiP,d hla mind ·about
settinc the bouse afire and wu
trytnc to leave wben Jumped and
beaten by Janey with a flublight. The defendant killed Janey
In self-defense, Thomu told the
jury.

�June 10, 1!190

.

.
\, Commentary ·and perspective·
'

June 10, 1990

Page A-2

·d

Sunday Tmes-Sentinei- Poge- A-3

Rodney house
fire causes·
$30~000
loss
'

'

~

Pomeroy-MidlillpOI't-:-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Plana rt. W. Ve.

'

.,•,.

junb~

thnts- ieutinel

Family pays the price

A Division of

•

•
&lt;

... .,.....

111 Court St., Pomeroy, Oblo
' ( )

• : 8211 'lblrd Ave., G~ Oblo ·
:
(81i) «i-!Bt2

ROBERT L WINGETt
P1lblt.ber
; HOBART WILSON: .JR.
: E~:ecutfv.e Editor

PAT WlllTEIIEAD
A•tlptent PUI.Ialler-CoaVoller

•

A MEMBER of The Unlt&lt;d PrHalnll!matlona~ Inland Dally Prell Al•ocl•tlon aad tb~ American NewJPilper Publllhers ASIOCiatJoa.
.a •

won!.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. Tbey should be leo• than 300
· long. Alllet~Msaresublecttoedltlllludmustbealllled wlthname,a4dreoaand
,i ll!lepbone nwn...,. No u11111Ded letll!ra wtll be publllbed. Lelll!rs sll9u!d beln
, ,..xr tull!, addreulnals..... not pen&lt;NIIUes.

WASHINGTON- Natalia and of the Soviet Union.
Alexander Levchenko, a mother
The United States has been
and son living In Moscow, know khld to Stanlslav Levcbenko. In
the dark side of glasnost. When Moseow he has bee!\, sentenced to
President Bush f!nlshes toasting death. He wou!cl be bound, but noi
and praising Mikhail Gorbachev ]ll!ndfotded, and ~hot In the back
this week, lje should take the of the head In r,foi cow priSon
Soviet president. aside and tell courtyard. But as a free man In
him this: If Gorbachev Is serious the United States, be has pubabout his country' s Image, be lished four bob!Is. He ' lectures
must let the Levchenkos go.
extensively, consults with the
Stanlslav Levchenko Is a
JustiCe Departmellt on espionformer KGB major who defected age cases an!f 1$ .a fellow at
tn 1979 and Is currently living at Boston University.
' '
an undisclosed location In the
Gorbachev has ,· nllt been as
United States: He left behind his kind to Natalia arid ·Alexander.
wife Natalia and son Alexander, Levchenko had to several years
now .25. .By mutual agreement,
because the KGB was harassing
the Levchenkos were divorced his famUy to find-O!lt where, be:,was , He thought he :Could make
r . after his def~tlon. Mother and
.life easter for them If M' drdn't
son
have paid
the price
Levcbenko's
defection,
arid hefor
ts
call or write.

a

I 1¥==========:;;';:;===========--.JJ.
at .
:;.-.

l

:~Backstairs

.

.

:the White House

determined to get them both out

.

'

lack Anderson and Dale Vall Atta

He was wrong. Natalia has ·
been &amp;llowed tQ take only lqW·
paying jobs. Alexander•was qat
permitted to enter college'. ·'
While Levcbenko had been·out
of touch, . bls. son .had bef!n
arrested. on trumped ·up charges
of "comrrlerc!al dealings, " and·
spent a year In Jail. There he was
beaten so severely that he has
lost the use of his right arm and
leg.
ThelmmlgratlonandNaturallzatlon Service, at Levchenko's,
urging, has promised Immediate
entry Into the United States as
SOQn as Nat111ta and Alexander
get Soviet exit visas.
Natalia was fired from her job
last November when she applied .
for the visa. Last month, mother
and son were dented visas on the',
grounds that .they had access to

~

.

&gt;

'

',.
•'"'·

By HELEN THOMAS
.
VPI White House Reporter
~-·WASHINGTON -U.S. officials were often more Impressed by
: what the Soviets wanted to know than by what !bey had to say during
.• theW ashlngton summit meeting.
·: Ofl!clalt said the Soviets questioned them about how democracy
: . works. :rhey wanted to know how the White Hou"se operates, how a
• press conference IS organiZed and, for Mikhail Gorblichev, how to be
~ president.,
· '
: Tbe · Concept of democracy, · after centuries under dl~tatorlal
• czarism anJ 70-years under dictatorial communism, Is new to the
: Russlahs . Slit they were willing students.
.
:
Eagm~ess 't o jump Into the dying 20th century was !be Impression ·
·• they left. And even more anxious was President Mikhail Gorl!achev
: to urge American business leaders to jump on tile Russian
-; bandwagon, transforming the Soviet Union Into a capitalist society.
• Karl Marx Is dead. No one doubted that when they: watched
~ Gorbachev avidly woo the blue chip Industrial CEO's during his side
.; trips to Minneapolis and San Francisco after the Washington
·• meetings. ·
'

state seCrets ·- a boi\is argument the Soviets also use to
detain Jews.
On May 14, another bu)ly In
. that department demanded that ·
Natalia take'backthe emigration
applications. When she refused
he told her t"at no one c;ould help
her, Including tbe J].S. meinbers
of congress who ha.ve written to
Gorbachev to plead lief case.
Alexander's h~tllllas tAken a
turn tor th~ w'or•. ,. Whell, we
recently visited teVcb4!nko, a
friend of seve~ yelq's, he was
severely depressed. He told us
his son was talking abo11t suicide,
perhaps by setting blmselt Qn
fire, the same method used
recently by a :WtJI!Ian~n .who
,also wanted to ge' the attention of
Gorllac\lev. :~
: ~
..
·
·
·
'
''
~-

-

·"

.,,•.

•.

•

•
~

·~

·"

~

'

~

•
.:
"

r
.
:

•

I
t

;
;
•
:
:·
,:

~

:
•
;;

---

B!it the Russians did not lack for media eJfposure. The Kremlin
leader was on live television for nearly every public appearance .
Public relations Is charismatic Gorbacbev's forte. ·
At one point, the White House panicked when Gorbachev stepped up
to the microphones at !be "stake out'' position outside the West Wing
where distinguished visitors are Intercepted lor Interviews.

.

Even so, Fitzwater tried to give his Sovjet comrades a tip on public
relations. Alter Gorbachev hit a ringer In tossing his first horseshoe
aJ Camp David, .the ·Navy quickly had the horseshoe inounted on a
wooden plaque.
· ,
·
· ·
; When the summit session was over at the presidential retreat and
t~e two departing presidents made a few passing remarks · to
rellorters, Fitzwater tried to get a KGB man and a Soviet aide to give
tl)e horseshoe trophy to Gorbachev to hold up for a picture taking.·
'f'!ley refused, apll\irently afraid to approach the Kremlln boss who
would have loved to make the triumphal gesture.

•
:; The name of the game for television correspondents ts getting on
, :: the air. There Is little joy for network correspondents when they are
• "No. 3" behind their White House chief.
$ Naturally, the chief correspondellt will take theblg storyoftheday.
: The need to be seen often leaves the third personon the staffout!n left
;. tl"ld. As a consequence, three No. 3 network correspondents have or
:!: are about to quit. ·
.
·
• One was NBC-TV correspondent 'Emery Ktng, who became an
~· anchorman lh ()etrolt. Others leaving the White House are Lark
: McCarthy, holding the No.3 spot in tbeABC-TVbooth, who Is joining
;• the sta!f of Fox Television network news as an anchorwman and
•: CBS-TV corl'llllpondent Norman Robinson, who Is leaving to,~orne
;; an anchorman In New Orleans. .
'
,. Michelle McQueen, a White House reporter for The Wall Street
~ Jour.nal, has been offered a job with CBS-TV, but she apparently
.. wants to stay where she can do more writing.
'•

'··•

Blrt!Jdays are not given big play In the Bush family. Barbara Bush,
'• who turned 65 Friday, chose to low key the marker. And PreSident
:: Bush, who will be 66 on Tuesday, Is takJng It all In stride.

.

·:

~,.

Berry's World

..:.,.

..
..

.,
•

'

.". -,.
'•

.
.·•.
,.

.

~

,,'

.•..

,.

·..•
...
1'

~

1 .
••
'•

•
~

~

'

~

•

..•
'•

••

1... ~ ,.

"Wh.ttever you do, don't let ·sm back you Into
the Fiscal Responsibility Corner. "
'•

.

u

·

'? " ·

"

evenla. Tile attractively costumed aiiiiJefl
"danced up a stopn' • u one viewer commented.
Yep, they d~, bu I the storm didn't make tbe acene
111!\rerlll hoiQ'B

&lt;·i~il·fiil

-1

'

Roirer Gilmore MDI
son1 lle wrote
for Pomeroy's lleSqulcentennlal, "The
Heart of the
durllll· Friday night's perfonnance of local
entertalaers at the Herllace Weekend _festivities.

------.

Patrol cites
Middleport youth

.'
•

.,

•.

GALLIPOLIS - A Middleport
· youth was cited In a one- truck
crash Saturday at 1:30 p.m. In
Meigs County's Rutland Township on S.R. 124, .8 of a mile east ·.
of milepost 14, according to the
Gall!a-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
James G. Hysell, 17, of 34735
Jividen Rd. , was cited (or failure
to control after his 1986 Toyota
pickup, which was heading east,
went .out of contrQl and off the
rjght side of the ·road !&gt;!!fore
overturning and coming to a rest ,
In a ditch. Neither Hysell nor his
passenger were Injured ....

•'

•

·T

the larp crowd
11i&amp;ht f!)r
Me lOlly
of My'
were

Jnter.pened
were lrom the
Dez Jeffers,
Mike WIUioq ancl Ron Aalr, with AI Harlaon, who
joined Rice, JeHers and Ash f.o r several 110ngs.
JennHer 8beet1 wu at the keyboard.

Somebody In Thornburgh's
Then-Gov&gt;.Dick Thornburgh of
Justice
Department also has
Pennsylvania was .only 18
been
leaking
grand jury Informamonths away from being aj)about
Washington, D.C.,
tion
potrited u,s_ attorney general
May_or
Marton
Barry. :rJle Wawhen that state•s ·treasurer,. R.
shington
media
repeatedly lias
Budd Dwyer, stood before a
published
grand
jury Informapacked press conference, placed
tion
before
It
was
offl~lally
a gun In !)Is mouth and blew his
rel~aJed
by
the.
l):lst!ce
departbrains out.
ment.
Leaking
confidential
Just before Dwyer committed.
suicide, he accused Thornburgh grand J'!ry Information Is !llega~
of orchestrating a political ven- and Tho~nburgh has beim C,)l ~·
. detta against him. He noted that !ously sUenr about these viola.
he publicly had refused to ap- tions of the law. ·
Those of us who are long-time
prove . expense vouchers -for
Thornburgh's wife for a Euro- Thornburgh watchers are feeling
pean trip, and also had questi- an acute sense of deja-vu. As far
oned Thornburgh's use of state back as the '7.0s, ·political OPPQtroopers to chauffeur the gover- nents were frequently accusing
por' s children to prep school In then-U.S. A;torney: Thornburgh
of respoils!bllty for grand jury
Massachusetts.
Thornburgh spokesman David leaks.
So, It came as no surprise w!t~ll
R11nkel contemptuously dismissed both allegations as those conservative columniSt William
Satire recently held, Thor.nburgb
of a "paranoiac."
This Is the same Runkel who • accountable for approving " the
recently flunked a lie .detector sleaziest entrapment yet perpe~
test during a Department of tratetl oil a susPec.t." Saftre also
Justice Investigation of phony accused Thornburgh of a prosec. leaks to the media about an utorlal double standard In using
Investigation of Rep. William H. entrapment to nail Barry for
alleged cocaine use, but decl!nGray III, D-Pa.

lng to prbseeute.a former close lng of grand jury Information.
aide of two •decades, William
So, what seems, at first blush,
Barr: He was accused In testlm- like a series of Isolated Incidents
oli~ . before. a Harrisburg, Pa .,
actually reflects a pattern.. And
,grand jury of frequent cocaine the Bill Gray affair Is tbe latest
use. -Barr has reslgried.
· . recrudescence of Thornburgh's
cesspool politics.
,
.:- ~}' It ,tile attorn~y:· ge~eral
But · why B!ll Gray? Thornc~ses to be · a. :realot tn the
a&amp;rry cocaine.,. case," wrote
burgh may hiive Jlgured be was
Saf!re, "he cann!)t,choo·se to be
doing his party. ~ favor In gomg
an ostrich Jn the. cocaine case after the third-ranking Demotlia't may J nvolvlf his dght-hand
crat In the'Houlie, especially one ·
man. ~ ' ·
.._
· fTom Thornburgb'·s home state.
011;.but ·he can, because \hat's Ironically, botli men are ell ttrom
i tHe way the,!n~!41ously man!pulthe same venoniouslY,t~I~b!tlous
cloth.
~tive &amp;nd collnivlngly amoral
ThOrnpurgh opefiltes. Yet, ·he
·One day, ,Thornburgh will
·c ause P-resident Bush acute
has mjlnaged to arm himself with
'I'efiqn Image of Mr: Clean , ~
embarrassment. Whether playIn'1975, w~en Thornburgl! was
Ing racial polltlcs with appointbeing considered for assiStant.
ments, reviving a Comstockery
u.s. attorney general, Al.leghany crusade against obscenity, or
Sheriff EUgene L: ·coon testified
presiding over leaked-grand jury
before a ·Senate Judiciary comInformation, Dick Thornburgh
mittee that' Thornburgh was
could well be one of the albarespons!~le for Illegal dlsclos!'ie
. tresses that leads to Bush's
(lefeat In 1992. '
.
. o( grand..Jury .Information about
.Coon. . In that same- year, the
Why else do you thlnli: Bush •s
Alleghany district attorney, John· Ideological comrade In arms,
Hlckton, also accuseq .ThornWilliam Sa!lre, Is so upset with
burgh of "Improper condt~ct" In
Thornburgh?
apparently condoning the leak-

$199.

Here the I arring souDcts of the
world canna! be ~eard and we
find rest and eilse.
Sometimes Jt Is not the church
service .but.the church structure·
that conyeys to us "peace that
passeth \lhderstandllig." Usually
It Is the older churches that do
this.
·' A reviewer 9! \!le b!lok "English Country Churches •• speaks of
entering a medieval church
alone and feeling "a sense of
':!'Pose that_one experiences·In no
other ~ay eli:cept In a beautiful
wood. In spring or on ·a
mountaintop:"

~~1&gt;
~~~

'

'.

446·PIPI
12:00-9:00

~If? :

'

. 1t~ "·•

30 MONTH .SPIEIAU·::

''.----r--~-..;.._---.,
,~

i,

1

... I''

- · I~ql"~-~
.
.
.
~;:.

. &lt;;~; • ... ~;ll8P 1 - l
'~·,

'

,,

'·

•
&gt;

'

.

'

'

I Pllbl(lbe!leae~Suixlay, 825'lilirii'Aw..

Galllpd.Js,Oblo,~ -llleObloVIII.PIIb-

llshlai .Cam-!Mulilmed.la, IDe:. Sepaotaae paid al Gallipolis,
Oldo
. Entered .u aerond clus
maDfng mat~M at Pp111e!'oy, Ohro; Post
~d

·

·t !:

.

0111~-

EXHIBIT OPENING - Approximately 58 boat Room of the Melp County Public Library.
people were In atteadaaee at the Friday openlag The opening wu a part ol Her1ta1e ·Weekend
ol "Oru&amp;e and
Forma: • Pomeroy · actlvttlet In Pomeroy.
Fundture and Faablon,
In the River-

.

· AIINIAL
PDCEIITAGE

Member: United Press Jnternat lonal,
Inland Daily Preas AssoCiation and the
Ohio Newsp1=r. Auoclatlon, Natlc)nal
~~~~~~~~
l'ftelltatlve, Brullam
Newapipe•' Sa es. 733 Third Avenue,
New 1for•. Ne)V York 100~7.
·

• IIUNDAr ONLY-'

un ·

'·

-

-

..~ ·one ;:k~~-~:~~-~~-~-~Ctnt;
P.

One Year .............1.. .. ..... .. ........ :.$11..0

'

SINGLE CQPY
. PIUCB

'

'

Sunday•..• •... •:................ ....... . Ml C~nta

• No subOcrlpttons by mall penni\ted In
arns wht!l"e mot~ carrfer servlc.i ll'
available.

There Ia a aubatantlal interest penalty for early whhdrawal.

The Sunday Tlmes-ilentlllel wUI not be
respmslble lor adVan'l!e payment•

446-2631

made to carrlera.

1!1A1L 81J118CBIP'nON8
Sa.... , Olilf

Dal=r~

_ _IIAILiuld6 c.uQ ONI •
13 Wet!ii ........ :........... .. ........ .... $19.24
. • 26 Weekl .... ............................ .. $31.96
'' $2Woeki .... :............................. S71.~
, · Ral.eo ~!llide' (:ouliiJ .
13 Weeks ..... ..... .:.................... . $31.110
26 Weeks ................ ................ . St0.30
52 Weeks ......................... ... ..... $7'-10

' . ;

-.

REVIJ.i:\V.ElUIIBlr - ·.ruit "1/elto~
. Rote St.on·'revlew imllque, Jeweii'J

;. •

;,

,.

' J'

'.

..... '

,.

2~DAY

OUTDOOR
.
GOSPEL SING

.
'
.
"'
FRIDAY. J11NB us. 6 P.JI. AnD SATURDAY, auNB 1'6, 1
Ai TD UNION CAMPGROUND, DW BAVEI'f, wv

P.ll.

No
Admission
Charge
-For Signs
.
~
.
'
, Watch
'
.

OVBR 10 G08P£L 81NGING GltOUPS

. CONCI:8810N ITAND

AVA"4J&amp;

. .

,,
'.

1~800-468-6682

,·

·

Me.ber FDIC

1

.

·4 Convenient Locations
..;t,_.;; Fonna: l'oiaeto1 l'llriiiAire ud Jl'...laa:
:.mt ~ther ' 1888'~. The ellblblt opeaed oa Frldq u .• ~t
Items~~~~ are'on diiiPiaf at "~rUt~ and Sl~ple the Heritage Weeb;·;nd;;.;l•;;*~;.vJ~Uea~.-•~!!~~!---------~---~-----~--~---

sm.ANNtJAL

.

..

. Ohio Valley Bank

One Year .. ., .. . :.... ...... .... .. .. .. ..... $37.14
Six months .... .,............ ............ . $19.110
.:

.

Annual Percentai•l•to of I •.Js~·ls Co~poundotl _:
Dally to Prowldl ·~·,. ·EH,ctlwo A~nual Yield. ':
This CD has a 30 ..-nth maturity and requires a ,:;
$5,000 deposit. , .
.
'u

IIVIIIICBIP'nON BA.TD •

(

Today Is Sunday, June 10, the 161st day of 1990 wttb '204 to follow .
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter~ .
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Jupiter and Pluto.
,,
Those born on this date are under tbe sign of Gemini. They Include .
British explorer or. A!r!ca Henry Stanley ln. 1841; Academy
Award-winning actress Hattie McDaniel In 1895; Britain's Prince
Phll!p, husband of Queen Elizabeth II,In1921 (age69); sln&amp;erJu~
Garland In 1922; ch!ldren's author and Illustrator Maurice Sendak In
.1928 (age 62); attorney F. Lee Bailey In 1933 (age 57) andtactor
Andre"''.Stevens In 1955 (age 35) .
•'
·

.

liNE IN 01
CAHT OUT. ''

t•

Today in history
By Urilted Press International

'

NEXT TO IIIUS IN
01110 11m PlAZA lhun: MDn.-lhun. 10.30.9; Fri.·Sat.

. Veterans Memorial
Admitted: Clarence Co Iwell,
Shade; · . Mary Kesterson,
-· Pomeroy.
Discharged, Ora Sinclair and
. Paut Er,vtn.
,..,.

a

attent!Cin may not, however, be
the mos Important thing when we
go to church.
A church service Is not designed to put people to sleep, On
the other hand, Christianity has
always promised those who labor
and are heavy laden, "Come ...
and I will give you rest." This -Is
does prtmarUy and best through
the ancient liturgies of the
church with their age-old symbols and rituals.
These appeal to the Imagination rather than to the mind and
are able to transport us out Of
time and make us feel eternal.

.'

THE BEST FOOD YOU'IJ.. EVER GET FAST

'
·~· Hospital news

Snoozing in the ~WS_ _ _ _ _ _G_eo--=rg.:......e_P~-=-enz_
The classic joke about people .when they see w~at time It Is In
sleeping In church goes like this:
the belief their watch must have
Seeing a man asleep In the stopped.
.
CO!J_gregat!on, ,the·minister InterIf these flgu,:es are the same
rupts his sermon and says to the for the United States, It could be a
f.!!r'son slt·tlng' nex~ to the ~leeper, cause of concern to many
. Sir, wake that ma,n ·next to preachers. But probably an even
,You.''
· ·
· ·
greater cau~ of concern Is the
.- The reply comes back from the · number In the congregation
pew, "You wake him. You put whose are eyes are open and who
· ·
him to sleep."
feign paying attention but whose
In the Purltlill.churches In the thoughts are afar off.
·
17th and 18th centuries, the
One of my acquaintances turns
napper would. have been roused down his hearing ald during the
from his slumbers by an usher
sermon (he calls It "taking
can·ytng a long _pole with a
advantage of a natural hanfeather of.sorts at the end of it. He dicap") , Another replays In
would rub this under the nose of
Imagination .a game of golf In
tile person whohaddozedoff. The which he broke 80. Th.ls. he says,
tickling sensation would be accounts for the smile on his face
enougl! to \Yak!! l)lm up.
during the sermon.
1
Today those who nod off In
A maJotltY may Just let their
church are not forced to endure
minds Vfander at wUl or tune In
humiliation or public ridicule
and out of tbe sermon alteralthough their numbers may be
nately. It Is my guess. that only a
large. In a survey of churches In
minority of the ·congregation
Great Britain, more than four out
follow the !ll!rmon closely and
pf . 10 parllb IQIII8r' . illllll •tlJeY
would be able to give a clear
· sorl\l!tlmes fmrlsleeP tlmllirch! . report on what had been said.
Others have to flgbt off the
If you asked inost people what
11rge. More than one out of three
the sermon was !\bout, !}ley
say they often look at their watch
might be. likely to say, "It was
while the m.lnlster Is preaching.
about 15 minutes" and let It gt)at
Another 10 percent put their
that.
watch to tbelr e11r or sha!&lt;e It
Staying awake and paying

MONDAY NIGHT AFTER 4=00 .P.M.

lndiiM 2 side ............, tortilas or dinner rolls.

Cl,~yton A. Snyder, • 55, of
Vlntqn, was arrested Friday
night by_ ·the Galll.a County
Sheriff's Department on a warrant. The charge was not
specified.
·

··f

.-

2 PIECE CHICKEN DINNER

Arrested
on warrant

Double Stand8rd __:·:~,~-·_·~~~------~C=h=uc~k~St~o~ne

MESQUITE B.B.Q

SPECIAL ·

'

'

•

•• • · · White House press secretary Marlin Fitzwater, who wrapped up his
.fifth Sl;lffimlt, said the Soviets were "frlendl1er Ibis time."•
.: • FitzWater tried to give equal tim~ at news briefings but there were
': difficulties when his Soviet counterpart, Arkady Maslennlkov:
: showed up two 'hours late lor one briefing, skipped another, ,a nd was
:: unable to-break through a security barrier at Ca.lri'P David: .

' DOIN' THEIR STUFF Mldnlgld CIQigeH be.ted lip
night ·
they ···en~rl&amp;lned -~;:ta~!:~.~r~~;;~
gathered for the
of._B

Pike, was an electrical shortctrcutt. Only the wire was
burned, resulting 111 a $50 loss.
One truck and 15 men were
called to the home of Danny
. Alderson on Evans Heights Friday at 1:27 p.m.
• Three 60-amp fuses blew In the
, fuse box, where the fire started.

.'

·;
The siune was true with Ra!sa Oorbachev, who plied· Mrs. Bush
'. with many quesijons on how things are done and whether she was
.: doing the right thing. ,
.• Tbe Gorbachevs, exuding polltlca! know-how: did not have to be
:; taught, ho:.vever, how to reach out to people and to press the flesh.
Th~ both stopped to shake hands with the American people, wbo
:
.~ have not seen that style of campaigning ari'long their own leaders In
·: many a year, mostly because of the Inhibiting constraints of security
•: In a more dangerous world.
--

H~e1Sch!lolcraft,of536Jackson

•

·•

r•

GALLIPOLIS - A house fire
Saturday at 4: 35 a .m. In Green
. Township on S.R. 588 In Rodney
• caused an ~tlmated $30,000 In
· damage, according to the GalliP911s Fire lD epartment.
The proilable cause of the !Ire,
Which started In the utility room
: of the home of DOn Berry, Rt. 3,
,· Gallipolis, was an electricai
short-circuit ':vhe !Ire,. wblch
' burned the Interior and the •
• .con'tellts of ihe ,nearby kitchen'
. and living room, caused an.
. estimated $20,000 In damage to
the bu!ldlng and $10,000 to the
contents.
•
•{ .
.Three trucks and 16 men were
called to the scene: ·• .
: ' A ~ar ftre Friday atl: C5 p.m. at
. the corner of Second Avenue and
Spruce Streef brought one tru~k
, and 1,2 men to the scene.
The c.iluse of the fire, which
started In an unspecified area of
: .a 1983 Mercury Lynx owned by .

. BXPBCTED .

•,

••·s
2 PIICE
sum

CARDINAL
.. JUNE IS
DRY· CLEANERS DAD'S MONTH!
446-9495

•....(=.

.............
....~·-··., ,.
No!Yti4Mt~

...

•

MDI'S

DIISS
PAfiTS

�•

Page A-4-Sunday limes-Sentinel

.1
.
.
0
;! 1 er wms mme
1
J

Ponwoy- Middlaport- Galipolil, Ohio-POint PlaMQ. W.Va.

rsafety award'
: LANCASTER- William (Bill)
• L. Oller, flreboss at Southern

After determJnlng that Hersman's neck was broken, Oiler
~ OhtoCqaiCompany'sMelpNo.2 treated him with a new method
~ mine, has been honored for his for stablllzlng neck trijurles
•:contribution to safety with the which he had recentt,y learned at
&gt;· Dalton E. McNece Safety Award an EMT refresher course offered
•:presented by the Southeastern at the Meigs Division.
Hersman's doctor In Hunting:·ohio tltstrlct Councn of the
: Holmes Safety Association.
ton, W.Va., · later commented
; Oller Is the fo11rth recipient of that without the care given at !he
• the award, gtv,en •t the 'district's accident site, paralysis or even
; annual banquet, which was held death could have resulted. Hers-·
~ In Pt. Pleasant, W.Va., this year.
man has been recovering since
;, McNece, who died several 'the accident and l s expected to
;·years ago, was an Inspector with return to work.
• the federal Mine Safety and
As a membi!r of tile Coal
: Health Administration and was a Miners Political Action Commit: major !orce In the formation of me (COMP,&amp;.C) , Oller has lobbied
• the Holmes Southeastern Ohio for health and safety·tssues In the
mining Industry throagh COM: District Couricll.
~ Oller " Is dedlcted to the field of PAC local and state councils. He
~:health and safety-both on and ott
also has served on the United
: the job," according to the appll- Mine Workers Safety Committee
•'cation materials which were at the mine.
,
: submitted. "He has -been tn· · Oller Is a sports trainer tor the
: volved with nuitterous ., cctdent North GaJ.IIB Htg~ School a~d
: .situations as an emerg~ncy ~ed- serves as an EMT at the school s
• . teal technician (EMT) at the athletic events. He also has
•mtne and as· a volunteer for the served as coach and trainer tor
;:GaiUa County EmergencY Servi- the VInton Youth Baseball
: ces (GCES)."
•
League since 19'15.
•' Last year, acting as
"first
An employee of the Meigs
: responder' : for GCES, Oller Division since 1974, Oller and his
:responded to an accldept site wife, Carol, live In the town of
: !Jivolvlng fellow employee Ro- VInton with their children, Brian,
•pert Hersman. Hersman worked Norma and Jerrad.
~on the set-up crew at the·Melg\s
Other Individuals recognized
' No.2 mine.
at the Holmes banquet-were Ron
;· Hersman, working on· rep,lrs · Priest, safety supervisor for
_;at home, had fallen from a ladder Central Ohio c;oal Company, and
•and fractured two vertabrae In, Max Whitlatch, shuttle car oper:hls neck and fractured and ator at the Meigs No.31 mine.
~lslocated his tight shoulder and
Priest receh•ed an outstanding
"'.vrlst
service award while Whitlatch
~
was presented a humanitarian
)Peat OJ . t e . e
award.
•

a

;n

,( h B nd

.~Ring tho~ bells...
:;

By BOB BQEFUCR .

~ It will be wedding bells today

'

'

heat like Friday eVening. Wow!

In

ifor Bob ana Jean Glbnore,
There ate 'umes
my life ~tddleport bust- usually after someone kicks me
:71ess people.
'- .when I get letters.
• We II, not
Now I don't get as many letters
)-eally weddllli
as , Perry Como did, but I do
't&gt;ells but Bob
alright and what a pleasant
;'and Jean wiiJ
experience It Is to get all that
te new their
· supportthroughtheselettersand
,wedding vows
comments from readers who
:at 2:30-p.m. this
at the pick me up, so to speak, when I
yld American Legion Hall In get knocked down. They seem to
-Middleport- that's on Fourth St. know that as you get older, It
: The event Is being staged by sometimes Is a little more
lthetr children to mark the dltflcult to get back Into the
~ ouple's 40th wedding action. Iwon'tbeatthehorseto
;anniversary- .
death - bu I do accept my sincere
; Friends and crelatlves are tn! thanks ,... I'NEJl:QED that! , · ·
Among the recent correspon··
Nlted and' the Rev. Roy Carty will
~fflclate.
dence came a letter from Dr.
., Bob and Jean are so busy with Edward W.W. Lewis, formerly of
~heir business, Mlddtwort Tro- Middleport, now residing at 31
)hies, that I'm really surpr!Je French Pond .Road, Henniker,
~hey can lake the day ott. Nice to
N,H._
~ee them doing so well Alid, by : · ·nr..Lewis Is and always has
'he way, Bob says absolutely no _ ,been such a Meigs County
~lfts.
-..
ent)luslast. Like . many young
:i
people, he . had to leave Meigs
:: Alld speaking of local bus!- County to ,pursue hf4 calling to
~~~!~II, Bob's Market across tl!e the mlnlstty. But periodically
~lver• helpi!it a friend Ill ~ • thro~h:lhe' rears In one form or
Jarly this year.
.·- -.- .
another~ he has expressed his
~· F1orlda had a ft'eeze and
love , fot Meigs County auc1 Its
· . .: ' !ltoweis were.acarce down there. l peo111e. · ·_,
!I\ 'florist called11ob who lfl!l:have . ot: r.ew1s has had ail outstand;ome· pansies going s.o .a half hlg career - "he's well traveled
)ruckload of pansies was dis- and has rubbed a Jot oflmportarit
s&gt;atched !o ''sunny" FlorfcJa·. · - ·~tiinYII :_ ' however, he never
.•· •
--seems to fQrget Meigs County.
~ People are living lqnger, you Hl!&gt;c~lts the late Frank Wilson
•now.
. "-1
'
•·
'
.a nd:•, the late Jbe · Wilson of
;· Proof of the pudding Is ClaYton · Middleport for getting him lnieroi'ubbs, former Bedford Town- ested'1n activities at the Mlddlelchlp resident, who will mark his , -. port First- Baptist Church. Dr.
lOOth blrthdi\Y oil June 14 :.:... flag ' 'Lewis was born again at that
~ay, I believe.
church on Jan. 15, 1933, and
. •: He llkesgettlngc~r&lt;;tsand,_~hey ~ retur~ six years later to the
~an be sent to -him at 601 W~ber
chilrch to be ordained.
Avenue, Akron, Oh,lo 4,4304:
· .- )1a1I paS&amp; along a quote which
;:
-,----:
.
,expresse.s somewhat his
:• I cer.talnly enjoyed the enter- - 6!eltngs?
"1 shall die on earth, a grateful
tklnmeni presented on Court St.
l!'rtday night as a part of the son Qf the First Baptist Church
,Veekend Sesqulcentennlsl Cele- and of Meigs County; I shall live
!Ira tlon In Pomeroy.
.
forever as a S\)n of the First
!: All of the Frlc!ity tJient was Baptist Church and God through
jocal and I have had so much Jesus Christ"
association with some of the
Yep- It's always good to hear
i!eopte In the past that I was from br. Lewis.
L)arttcutarly Impressed.
The
erowd on hand ga,ve all of the
My sister, Betty Hammer of
entertainers -a nice reception, so Columbus returned to MlddleCierhaps, I wasn't rea,lly all that pOrt for the . annual Middleport
~ejudlced.
.
· _,, High School Alumni Reunion thta
f: .The Melody Men QJ artet was year-thefirsttlmeshehasbeen
jhe first group on stage ~ the' abletodosoforseveralyearsdue
troup has appeared In· seve'ial to health prqblems.
,
ljlg Bend Musicals - with and
F:or her, the reunion was great
fllthout AI Hartson-who lends his - she bubbled With enthusiasm
!f. lent nicely to the group;., AI wari as she recounted the enjoyment
OJ! hand Friday night to join In ot seeing old friends and cla8s, _
(lllrt of the numbers- Sweet mates. -However, returning to
Jfountaln Sound, the second Columbus, she folded like an
eroup to perform, did a nice Job accordtan. She was taken to
and you gotta admit Roger University Hospital' where a
~llmore Is a talented entel'-' · treatment for a lieart allmeni.
tatner. Heshouldbeabletomake wllfch had helped before, failed
I~ anywhere - not only does .~ · to provide· any relief._ 'f¥t was
spark the Sweet Mountain Sound ·' on Tuesday. On Wednellay, It
group, but wl;'ltes some of their _was back Into surgery for a
r,Daterlal. 4- couple of Roger's ' pacemaker. On Thursday evenotlg~s were used In Friday's
lng, she was returned to her
J)rogrllm by·th@.'grollplncll!dlnga home and - at least on the
nilmber whlcllloaer wrote espe- .• telephone - seems to be getting
ofally for t~qulcelitennlsl..
along great. Bottom line Is that
T.heflnalgrolpwas the Midnight It's absolutely Incredible what
Qoggers undet' tile dtrecflon of the medical profession can do ·
Bruce Wolfe, lUclne. · They these days. We really have come'
~rformed well 'and were nicely a lona way, Baby.
cOstumed.
These clorgers
amazemenotonlyastohowthe:Y
On the other hand, Isn't there
~ake their feet go .a fast, but the ' something someone can do about
~Y thet keep up that pace In . all of this rain? Do keep smlllng.

.'

-

,J

June 10. 1990

.

·:June 10. 1990

Chester afunini banquet ·held.
'

CHEST-ER-TbeannuaiCbea, Christy, Clayton Allen, Chester.
ter High SciiOol .\himnt banquet
1936, Thelma White Eddy.
and dance were held re«ntly. In . Kllbuclc, Mary V. Mora Stewart,
the Chester Elementary audlto- ' Pomery, Eilther Frecker, Rartum with 180'Alurnnl and pests cine; 1937, Cletus Alen, Columatll!ndlng.
bus, W. Lester Spoaqel, Crown
Blue and white streamers City, Geneva Sununtrrleld Tutcreated a talJe celltna In the tie, Middleport, Alfred Wolfe,
auditorium and whlll! painted Pomerw,KatllrynBalleyBaum,
trees with clear miniature llg)lts Chester; 193$, Victor Babr, Lo11g
completed a prom-llkelletUngtor . Bottom, 1939, . Paul Meredith,
. tbe evenllli. David Kolllentz was Westeryllle; 1940, Ula Bahr
chalmwtn of' tl\e . decOrating Winters, Parker~I'J., Howard
c&lt;immtttee. • _·
Bailey, Jacl,tsonvtlle, , 111a.,
· Kath!'yn Windon, preslclent - Louise Coleman· Gilkerson; M11·..
gav!! tlie welcome, followed by rlette, MI., Jacob Gaul,_ Avon
group singing of ''God Bless P~ F1a., Rlebard Hall, ,~pl'Amerlca..-Jed by Gertrude Stal· llsnl, Wlltam Hannum, · WUma
nakerRoblcson,cl.ssof1940and _ White Balla~ Long Botjom,
accompanied by DOrothy Holter Helen Marc!DJ[o ·lfenry, ~asKatr, clsss of 1947. Jaclc Eisel- - ter, Martha~. Marlon Orr,
stein. clsss ot 1945.: gave the Col~us. Glii.~PlckensMereInvocation preceding the dinner dlth, Beverly, :wlll)da Ptclcens
BILL OILER
which was prepar~ by the Meredith, Westerville, Gertrll!le
Chester PTO and served by the Stalnaker Robinson, Coolville,
Chester Queen Bees 4-H Club.
William Will, Pomeroy, and Guy
Officers reelected ·Jor 1991 Stalnaker, Uniontown. ·
were Mrs. Windon, · president;
1941, Myra June Sisson, Arga- ·
Roger Kelter; fltst . vice pres!- brite, Norfolk, Va~. Maxine Bahr
dent; Robert Woods, second vice Goegleln, Pomeroy, Richard
president; ·Victor . Bahr, ·third Fl&lt;;k, Homer Parker, Long 89!·
POMEROY - Twelve calls f01
vice
president; M. .ne White- tom, William Meredith, Beverly,
assistance I!Vere answered b)
secret!lry; Betty De11n, Mlll!red M;organ "Gaul, · Avon
head,
units of the 'Meigs County Emerassistant
secretary; Nellie Ml- Park Fla.; Paul Baer, Racine;
Rency Medical Service Friday.
chael; treasurer, and RDsemary 1942, Harold Hawk, Tuppers
Keller, assistant treasurer.
Plains; 1943, Opal Van Meter
- At 10: 14a.in. the Pomeroy unit
The
oldest
living
·
alumnus,
Elchlnaer.
Chester, Norman
went to Peacock Ave.hfor Harold
Knight
WIIJ,
clsss
of
1918,
McCain,
t.ong
Bottom.
Helen
Cundiff who was transported to
was
given
sJieclBf\
recogniUon.
·
1944,
Ru)ly
Hall
Steele, ColubVeterans Memorial Hospital; at
Honor
classes
recflgDlzed'
were
mus,
Geroe'e
~olter,
Racine,
10: 24, a.m . the Middleport unit.
1925,
1930,
1935,
1940,
1945,
~950,
,
Betty
Genliel"1er
Dean,
Dlile
took Berni~ Wlnn to Vetefans;
and
1955.
F1oral
arragements
-·
Kau~.
Pomer.oy;
1945,
Jack
at 1:20 p.m. theMiddlepo~tsquad
were awarded to Mary Spehcei: J;:lselsteln, Cplumbus, Jeanne
answered a call to North Second
PeGroot,
ot Fountain. Cd)o. who _CarnabllJI Murray, MlddiWQPt,
Ave. for Mary I.ane \vho was _ .
traveled
the farthest and to · Joaj\·.Ciark Tuttle, Donald Mora,
taken to Veterans, and at '1: 39
Howard
Knight,
class of 1925, · Pomeroy, · Joan Hawley Haas.
p.m. the Middleport unit took
retired
teacher
and
alwilnl!s, Norwood, MBJilne Pickens WhiteMary Kerns from South 'Third
milst
"
former
stu- Jlead, Reedsville:
'
who
had
the
Ave. to the Holzer Medical
dents
present.
1946,
David
~oblentz,
Horace
Center.
A musical combo Including Karr, Pomeroy; 1947, Delores
Mary Lucas at ihe oraan, pro- Epple Holter, Dorothy Holter
The Pomeroy unit was called
vided music for dancing follow.- Karr, Chester, Woodrow Mora,
at 3:22 p.m. to the Cliff Apartlng
the business meeting.
Cleo Weber Smith,
ments tor George .Cummings .
Allumnl
attending
by
classes
who was treated but not trimswere
ported. At 3:47 p.m. the Rutland
_1918, Mrs. Will, Cheste;-; '1922,
squad and fire truck went _to an
Grace
Frecker Hawley, Middleaccident scene on State Route 124
1923,
Earl Knight, Mtd«Ueport;
east of Wilkesville to transport
port;
1924,
Bertha Fell Smith,
John Hamilton to Holzer Medical
and
Flossie Frecker ·
Chesier;
Center.
Allensworth, Middleport; 1?25,
- Howard Knlglit; 1926, Mildred
Bailey Well, Racine, VIctor and
_ At 4: 37 p:m. the Mtdcyeport
Nola knight ·wm, · Canal
unit answered a call to State
Winchester.
Route 7 tor Linda Ogden who~@S
1929, Ada Swan Bissell, Long
taken to Holzer, at 5:31p.m. Uie
Bottom,
Sibyl Dorst Barr, Mid.,·
Racine unit went to Route 338 for ·
Zalpha Stewart \\&lt;ho was· taken to illeport, and Earl Silmmertleld,
Veterans, and at 6:50 p.m. the Murraysvllle, Pa.; 1930, Erma
Reed Cleland, Jean Frank FredMiddleport squad took Curtis
erick,
Chester; Thetma 1Uddel
Rime from his Cote Street
Hayes,
Doll(lld -.-Myers, Long
residence .to Veterans. At 8:18
p.m. ,the Rutland unit -went to Bottom, Cur'ils 51llley, A!hens,
Meigs Mlne ·2 tot Wayne Gilbert and Vlrgll Roush, l;'omeroy.
1931, Pauilne WICkham Ridenwho was taken to Holzer, at 10:01
p.m the Racine unit went to the our,' Ch.es ter, Nellie Michael
home ot Wesley Clark, State Parker, F~ Smith, Pomeroy.;
· Route 124 and transported him to li'ene !;!ummertleld Parker, SyrVeterans, and at 10: 11 p.jn. the acuse; '1932, Betty Matlack
Middleport unit tral\sported Roush, Pomeroy, VIola Pooler
Mary Batley from· Overbrook to Teagarden, ;pomeroy; Wllburt
Veterans.
-·:
Weber, McKees Rock, Pa.; 1933,
Pauline Mora Myets, Long Bot.' .
tom, Lula Wilson Circle, Racine;
1934, Harvey Newland, Mason,
W, Va.; Josephine Ritchie, Long
• Customized to IH your home.
Bottom; · Llfllan Williams
• Made Of ilurable aluminu.m.
Pic~. ·Reedsville.
. _
1M
1935, Edith Stalnaker Curtls,SAl/lfltlltifd
,.,_,
mith, Akron, Evelyn Stalnaker
Sedgwick, . Tuppers Plains,
Wayne Russel~ Woodbine, Md:,
Jl
Silv•
. Mildred Summerfield Cal~well,
Warren Pickens, Owen Dame•
Plaza
wood, Reedsville, Samuel Ml,
.
~-2770
cl\ael, Long Bottom, Harry Lee
~, -800.386·3000
Batley, Pomeroy, ftj)nald Os'

EMS calls.

DJade Friday

1948, ~ght M!Jhcian,: Pomerw.
1949, Jeannette Clarjr lawrente;
Racine, Phyllis Lawrence
Glasco, -,Reedsville, Leroy Mar:
tin. Marietta, Jean· Pooler Sexson. Sllade, .Jeraldine Wood
Hawk, Tuppers PIBI'n$.
,
1950, Grant an4 Eltzabet~
Crary Smith, ~ville, B41tty
• Daines Milhoan, Pomeroy, Nola
Epple Brown, Marlon; Mary
Hellman Gillian; .C anton, Paul
Osborne, Lancaster,' Betty Jan~
Mor11 Russell;: Columbus; 1951,
Buck, Rhode$, Navarre, Kathry4
Karr ·Mora, Pomeroy; Haroli!
Newell, ChesiJ!r; 1952, Mary
Spencer - DeGroot, _ Fountain;
Colo.; Martha Orr Lee, ·Raolne;
Betty l'lelsoo Newell, Chester;
StarltnaMassar, R~villz, Ar;
thur Qulvl!lf, Sarasota, F11p
1953, Emm• Ritchie Rhodes;
Navarre, James Rldenour,'Ches;
ter, VIrgil Windon, Pomeroy;·
1955, Joyce Batley Robinette,
Rushville, Roger Keller, Emer;
son Pooler, Pomeroy; 1956, Rosemary· Rose Keller;--Pomeroy;
Audella · McCain, : •nd .Gene
Riggs, Reedsville. ·

Sunday lim.,...Sentinei-Paga A-6

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

•

.

,. _,"

•'

, STARTING ' SUNDAY, JUNE 10

REAT NEWS FOR AMES CUSTOMER
'( . .
-

•'

'

•

Run

Reebok~
Whether you're a weekend -road
warrior or a competitive r.u:er,
there's a Reebok• running shoe · for you.
'Oll.

qa.p1

ON RED TICKETED MERCHANDISE
ONLY
.
.
.,
.

~

'

'

ERS"2000 '

•'·

·.What's Your.

.ORIGINAL
PRICES*

Famrite Jam?
'

'

Reebok• Japt"'Series basket- .

bal\ shoes all give you the llghtv.eight cushioning of Hexalite'"
technology. So you can slam 'rl

jam any way you like.

·

.

,,

·. quui:»&gt;'k.,,

.•·

\..

-·-

'

.'

LAGU

·.\

~§)

. .:

.

"""llld ,, ,.,,111111
..,by,_,,

· ·~ ~
~·

....

.

n.....30 tl 7 P.M.
s , .M.

s.t. Ill

Bottom, • Roy . :~;;;;~;;;;;;;~;;~~~;~~~~;;;;;~; •

borne• _ Long

COLON'of THEATRE

.. FRI. THR~ THURS. • -

.

Tu.., Will.

• MORGAN FREEMAN. JESSIA TANDY
DAN AYKROYD

IAIHER SDAY
1

~~

.:~(p

. .' ;

.. 't·- -

'. ;...

'

"t· - • ~ - ,

';t

'

• • I

•

.

,

'

'

'I

"

'

·:· ,·:tPECtALS .·
... ,. .· '...

'

....

ONE EVEIIIIG SHOW 7:30
ADIIISSION $1-50

446-1011 .

446-0923

...

: • I I . I \ , . . . . . . 141M. AlMnD..,..."Fo..r.YOW

.,......."*•• ............

e··rrra

IIICIITNMAeleiN IW-1111111-.r•aotJC•

.

~

·•

GROUP Of ARROW

Dress
4

·''

. ·.:
VALUES

SPRING VALlH CINEMA
446 4524

' : .

.

~\l~

~

.

'

~AMAIN ":[~~~T~W.::'

I SUNDAY
IIAR&amp;IIN NIGKT lUESIMY

All

~EATS

SZ-75

.

Shi.rts.sil~oo

SPRIN6 VAllfY CINEMA
446

~, ' o'1\C\(E."{E.O

~
\-tE.tl\S

GROUP MEN'S ARROW

Knit
Shirts

ORIGINAL PRICE•••• :••••••••• 20.00
CLEARANCE PRICE•••••••••• ,_12.00
BONUS. 26% SAVINGS•••••••• 3.00
RNAL SALE·PRICE.............. 9.00
*RNAL PERCENT SAVINGS••• 55o/o

.
'

REG:

Sl8.00

$.]2.99

.,

OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY nL 8 p·.M.

,•

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

•

GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO
.
'

·-I

v

' '

�•

Page-A-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Jim L. Shorter Jr., 20. Rt. 3, Bld~il, was c)larged Sat)U'day
morning with disorderly conduct after warning and r~lsllng
arest. He was not jailed, and was released from poJl&lt;:e custody
on a summons.
·
Randy Lee Green, 28, R(.1, Galllpotta-, was arrested and jailed
Ftlday night. He -was .clijlrged with disorderly c;onduc;t after
warning and reslldng arrest. He pgsted bond and was releUed
later Ftlday night .
.,
In otJJer pollee news:
.· ' .
-Jeffrey L. Dyer, 27, Rio1, NortJJup, was lssl!edoa spans
Saturdi!Y'momlng: He was charged with awavated m~dllg. ~
-Leo L.-McCombs, 21, Rt.1, Northup, was lssuecl a s~ons ·
Friday night. He was .ch..rged witJid,':Wrderly co~ucU:~r
warl!lng.
.1
,.
• '

Summer enrichment set at Rio
_,

RIO GRANDE - A Summer Enrlcllment program for
kindergarten and pre-kindergarten-age studeJ!ts. Is being
offered at the University of Rio Grande.
Conducted by students In the Kindergarten Methods class at
tile university, tile enrichment program is open to students
,
between the ages of 3 and ~ "Tile program will be offered from June 18 \llltll June 28 dally
from 12:30 p.m. untll2: 30 p.m . A$2 fee will becbargedforeach
student. The program will be conducted. at Rio Grande
Elementary School.
.
For registration and more lnformatloll. contact Ule College of
; : · Education, Fine Arts and Physical Education at Rio Grande at
~ . 245-5353, extension 328. The toll-free number In Ohio Is
• ' 1-800-282-7201.
.

"'

.•

' •

-

~~e _«fomestic au,tomake~
~f

I

.
'

••

.'

'

,. , DETROIT (UPI) - General
: Motors Corp.'s Buick Division Is
~tile' only domestic carmaker
; . rated among the top five In an
•• annual survey of automotive
•••
, Quality, II was reported
:&lt;Saturday.
·~ ' The Detroit Free Press said the
R oon-lo·be released survey, con~ucted by J.D. Power &amp; AssoE clates, will give Toyota's Lexus
·':Division - In Its first year of
;'-fxlstence - ·the highest quality ·
r:;Jatlng In the study .
·~· The survey, one In a series
:,;)nnually prOduced for the past
~lx years, focused on car buyers'
i=!valuattons of 1990 ~els.atter
, ·lhe first three m11nths, of
!:Ownership.
~:' Japanese

automaker~

~.

The top-rated car In the survey
was Toyota's Cresslda. which
bad an average of 63 problems
per 100 cars. Merc~es-Benz'
E-Serles was next.on·the lis I with
71 problems. Toyota's. Camry
was third with 72 problems and
Lexus' L$400 was fourlb with 74
problems.
The Buick LeSabre was the.
only dolllestlc automobile 111 tJJe
top 10, ranking slxlb with · 82
problems.
Heading the ·list. of the worst
automobiles was the Chevrolet

~

'

•

'

'FATHER'S DAY
SAYINGS!

.

three days In jail and a 60-day license S\!Spenslon for DWJ. He .
was also fined $100 for resisting arrest~
Jeffrey P. Staten, 30, of Wellston, w!lll'flned $50 f9r disorderly
conduct while Intoxicated.
·.
•
Debra L. Ramey , GME, Bidwell, was tined $50 for writing a
bad check.

GALLIPOLIS - Ronnie G. Smith, 19, ESR, GalJlpolls, was
artested and jailed by the GalJlpolls Pollee Department
Saturday m~rning . He was charged with disorderly, conduct,
·resisting arrest and vandalism of city property.
Ttrnothy E. Lundsford, 21, of Scottown, was arrested and
jailed Saturday mornln~t for disorderlY conduct after warning.
. .

PICK-3

024.
PICK-3 ticket sales totaled
$1,447,874.50, with a payoff due of
$414.650.50.

Fair Monday and Tuesday. A
·chance of showers Wednesday.
Hlgbl70 to 80 Monday, from 75 to
PJCK-4
85 Tueaday and ,In the 80s
8134.
Wednesday. Lows .~5 to 55 MonPICK-4 ticket sales totaled
day, In tJJe 50s Tuesd~y and 55 to $275,711.50, with -a payoff due of
65 Wednesday..
$97,100.

K. Litchfield, 31, of Point Pleasant, W.Va., was fined $400, given

J

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Fri.
day 's winning · Ohio Lottery
numbers:

Sou.. Central Ohio
Mostly s11nny, high about 80.

•
. Monday lllroqb Wedllellday

GALLIPOLIS - In Gallipolis Municipal &lt;;:ourt Friday, ~0'

; : Police arrest four, jail three

Lottery numbers '

Eneaded Fe~ast

Gallia court cases completed

•
'

'

..

CamarC?. which had .an averag~
' of 317 probl~ms per 100cars. The
Pontiac Flreblrd was the runnerup with 290 prol;llems. ·
Seven of Ule study's worst 10
cars were from domestic
automakers.
J.D. Power, basild In Agoura
HI Us. Calif., complles tile 'Information for subscribers- mainly
au tomakets - ,and releases
some data ,to nelivs niectla. That
U\!ormatlon Is scheduled for
release In early July.

.

•MEN'S MOCCAS1NS':
••llFOLD.S , .
.eiELTS AID BUCiuS ' .
eHU. .IGIIRD FEEDIRS .

(From DEATIIS, liD A7)
·Also p~ing her.In death are
two sisters, two brothers.
Funeral services will be con·
dueled 1 p.m. Tuesday at
Rawllngs-Coats-Fisber · Funeral ·
Home, Mldi!leport/ \vtth Rev. AI
Hartson offlcla~ng. Burial will
be In Rlveryjew Cemetert.
.
Frlef1ds may call ibe funeral
home Monday from 7 to .9 p.m.
and Tuesday until the time cit the

'

..

' ·~

'

OFFEI GOOD NOW
.. THIU SAT., JUNE 16

.,G:FEED;.&amp;,-SUPPly .co.
. ' 992~2Hil

Pomeroy, Ohio

servl~e.

!:Harold E. Cundiff

'

lllOC)() Sl./ i!
•

.

" miner. ·

.,

'
l,.aptop

111ft '9oo 2 ~00

$"1599

=

PC-Compatlble COmputer System

. PC c:aql8llble has '7.68K RAM and superb ao • 25 backlh LCD

•.

'271lM '
~

Reg. '
;,-'"" :MI.H

Low.Aa .,.

TWo-Line Answerer

34~0tf
flog. SOf*llt• noma 37.90
112~ 136/33-1000

Batt•iH extra

S.V.*40

Save.•so
·,

. ftftiiR

4918 :.L

14915~=~
-

I

~hy drtVe."alone"?
. #21;1514

••n.tsln • - CNtog #410 ,
116·160

Reg.

;,;r-

i3ti.il

•

•

Low Aa .,. " " ' - ·

Beeperllu remote. f43·317

CD Stereo Portable

.•

STUDFINDER

flog. S0pol... -

llol0.15

N17 ·1005/203123-1,81

., 1ftGK
;Ill"''·

Reg.

2t.H

• 112·722

Locateo walt studs fast.
164·2825
.

Bat!.,... extra

.

Mattrlii

~·

PLE,:ASE..JQIN JJS' .·

I

1
1

~; , . v· tr ~'·,

•'

MI Ret.
; , - . 3UI

2

Hu clcck, alarm, scheduler
loci calendar. 165·937

.,

'

.

DlatlncUve styling. #43-359
·

.

•t
.'

,

..
'•
'

MONUMENTS ARE OUR ONLY

•

LOGAN
MONUMENT CO.

....,CII , • •

. ...~

•

electronics IPfCialtst alnc. 1921
., . . . , I •

DIIPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
LEO L· VAUGHAN, Mgr.
PHONE 112·2&amp;88

' ·

,

u

,

I '

•ti.

•

illl-

SWITCHAfllE TOUCIHONEIP\JLSE phont$ wo~ on """ lone 11111 .•
lines. ThonfOnl. ~.,.., """"9 D01y •tn&gt;tary '"J linn, you ""Ill
1
101
'""""""""" " ' " " rcc 119i01t&lt;od. Not
We "N"' whll "' 1011 · • Raelio Sha'k Vlluel'lus- re'IOiving crsdit. Payment

~

atockld. We HMct whit we eel!
....,CII I M

•~•
.-

'""linn.

liQUIIInt - · 1o - - - - - a
may vary dependlnQ upon yoll' IIUFdlaa.

•Special price requi11s otW acliYatkln~ind minlrTIIm Slrvice COtnmittnltll wifft 1uthoriztd Radio Shack catMr

t .

·MoetiiiiJorC.-.n

ClirdaWelcome·
AT ""RTlClPI\TING STORES AND DEALERS

~'"'

""

.

jl

•

' . """' . .. ''r" .l

•'

(

'~

' ...'' '.' ,.....
·,
.

~

.

~

4

.

.

' ..

..;

..,

~

.

.•

~

t•

~

'.

J

-

at

'

.

.

~

•

,.

~

•

""'

,

\

.'

_~.;

til~

.

'y\

.:t-'

..'

(

..

~

........

.•

..

.•.

"

l

.

J

'

·~

'

•'

·~

·. '

.

I

.

'

•

-

•

""

•

~

'

••ltl
'11111111;..
......., - · 16 .
. ',.,

nSOII ,..

I'

c

'

f

'

•

'.

I

-··\
i
••
'

.•

....
~

...

:&gt; ·
,.o;

,; '
. '
·.
' b ..... . , . . .
'·.
OrdJr tOday to pi IIIII ................

I

•

I

•

•••
•'

.

l

.

.
•

I

WHERE: The
frHch
500
.
"
·,

-~

· Ch&amp;tnpionship title. Many who saw the fight. shown exclusively on~: Sa.~ he .
· was finish~.
.
···
··
·
· .Now, be's back. And he's not happy. He's leaner. Meaner. And he wants his .
belt back.
' .
•'
You ean see bini hit the comeback trail by ordering HBO now~ Because on
· June 16th; only HBO ~televise his first fight since defeat live~ Las Vegas.
So don't Wltit Get HBO in time for 1)oson's revenge. Can now aJid order.

f

,!

.' ' 1 ...- •
Last Febfuary, Mike~ took a beating. And lost his Wort~ H~t.
.

4:00p.m.

•••

7000 drop-off poinle nlllonwlclltntu'* dei&gt;er&gt;dabie

· .

the· ,

'

··cholem,ol ·
-' ''· ...., Coniposlti...
~WHEN: Thursday
June 14, 1990
'
.
lO:OO a.m.·

•

''•'•

•rvtce to your aattofactton. Men than 1,000,000 pariS

Check Your Phone Book for the Radio Shack St~re or Dealer Nearest YOu

\

"'

"'•

rnun ana

· MEIGS COUNTY

....~-·

UC...S~IPICI'IU1101
, .
From our IatHI, h~ IIIChnoloiiY comPu1er to our
tong-tile ballllry, we are ar&gt;dliave been America's •

n_,

1

'

' '. • ..... typl...
" BINd pns.Ure

'•
••

Over. 7000 USA toca11ona, 31,000 employees, seven R&amp;D
centers, 27 USA ar&gt;d louf .,.,.,.... manutocturfng plants

•

·7tli ·ANNUAE .: .. ..
: ~,· HEALTH INFORMATION FAIR·.'
'l'

·1'·

Tonolpulto dtoilng

1

'

. ::.HOLZER MJ:D·ICA~ CENTER .
.FR~E- SCREENINGS:

~. (

.

~~·~· r.

'1.

. .,.

Phone With Rich
Wood-Grain
L:ook
,;
'
.
·,
"•

..,

: --------~~
. --~--~~---~-.--~~~~
..

., ,.,., ·

...... WNII

IUIINEU, NOT A SIDELINE. ••

JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
'PHONE 388-8103

'

' Firm '
Innerspring

': at his home following an extihiled
• 'Uness•
'
.
·• 1
•. Boin JBJiuary .t, ·1931, he was the
• son of the lale .&lt;Robert and Ivy'
;: {'lbor)llllll)· 0~ He w.as ~tim!
,. from Foole Mineral, he was .~

;

_

NATIONWIDE

• Lelart, died Thursday, June 7, .1990 .

.. ~: on .
.. '3911
flel . •
.
51.15

CutiS~-·

35~

12• f.15

Montha ~

• •

WIIH LOCA'IION&amp;

Delmer D~ 'Gam~ · .
; Deliner ~ Games, 59~ of .

'

Cllculato; Ymh
Phone Directory .

Transportable

S499* ~~

.

1res.,._u

~

·•'

'

Cut

CAll. NOW.

,

~•..,

Save'841M

Offli

AISOUII'I

. nrwwa·

a

'

Cellula.r Phone ,

,

~ dliughter, Slindra; son, Dale; a·
·,,• grandson, three brot!t~rs a011
'· thi;l'!e sisters,
·, ... '
~
Surviving are his wife, Char~ lcitle · (Kimes)
Cundiff; , two
daughters, Sylvia Casto of Ma· '
sem, and Wilda Kincaid of Point·..
, PJepant: lbree-&amp;Ons, Elmo C~n- .
dlft and Russell.Cundlft, botli o(
'; Mason, and Cecil CuDcitft ol
BidWell; nine grandclllldren; 10
.great·grandcbUdren; ancl sev· :
' ·e ra! nieces and nephews.
~ A grjlve~lde . lervtce wm be . ·
1 held at10 a.m. Sunday.ln Sunrise
' Memorlal Garden, Letart. Ar,
~ rarigernents were by the Fogle~~ song 'Funeral Home. ·' . · ·

II••.

1e....,

1Je was preceded In death by a

&gt;

Stereo &amp; 'Phohes

24•

.

""'llloollh·

(16·510 ---~

'

AM/I'M

STATE RT. 110

:

l

s.te•7o ·.

DISPLAY YARD

II

:,' . MASON, W.Va. - HarOld E.
·. (Jack) Cundiff, 83, Mason, died
Friday In Veterans Memorial
' Hospital, Pomeroy. ,
·
Born March 13. 1907 In Mason,
son of the late John and Blanche
()(night) Cundiff, he waa a coal

TANDY

. a· better look at llle.town

VINTON, OHIO

II
I.
.II
:1
I
I

tO

m

•

r

M •

ev.

fJPhat's .in...
·S
(Frolll wHAT'S IN, oa Al)
.
;:teturned to Pomeroy on Friday

I
I

I

)o

The Store with "All Klndo of. Stuff"
· "
For Pets. Stable., Large II Sm..l Animals, Lawns II Gardel'!•·

.-,

Now is the time to select a
family monument. Perpetuate,
tor all time, tile memory of
thos11 you love. Our knowtedgs
and experience ars yours for
the asking.
Nothing you buy will ever be
as permansnt as a family monumsnt. Its purchase warrants
thouQht and Quidance. See
what you buy. Visit the monumsnt dealer who has a complete display, and wllo can
design a personalized monu- ·
msnt to harmonize with Its
surroundings. ·
We have the experience. We
have ths complete display.
Your purchase Is backiK[ by the
stronQtst monument Qlllrlntflfl .
obtainable today.

--------·
EIGHT t·a

one·

&amp;.:\ · .

to dominate th~ top 10
·~pols In the study. Subaru and
; •Mitsublshl,. however, fell to the
::tolddie.Ot.the ~c k.
· c;1 Mercedes:Benz was rated se!j:ol)d, Toybta was third and
r:l:ntinltl was fourth. Buick was
~lfth on Ule car-quality Jist. .
• ·.; Richard Thompson, a spokes·
'2!1an for GM' s Buick-Oldsmobile•~adlllac car making group, said ·
flle hadn't seen. the report, but
&gt;Mded, ·'I've heard Buick did
~"'ell.'' Buick was also the
:f!tghest-rated domestic division
11Ji11989.
.. .
'. .
l : The next clomestlc division
:~ted was Ford Motor Co.'s ·
rz;tnco!n-Divlslon, which was 11 tJJ.
• 0

stated tbal he colthat he bad sent
a Pomeroy po6tmarkabout30
~J~a.rs
which he stlll has In his

three

r&amp;r.!!

con~

to pick up some Pomeroy

=

•w

.

:~Jinued

' •lc

. .:. . . Area deaths-.- ·· -...;._

w

j

t·,· .

399_W. Mc!in · i

.
10
. nV. Pleasant, W .Va.
Plano, Texas, Rlclll!rd and R~Charleston Memorial Hoapttal.
May
Funetal
orne
in
Chicago,
IlShewasbom0ct.
29,1909lnPt.
nald Gross of Cuyahoga FaiU; ,
Bom Sept.1, 19281D Welllburg,
linois.
Pleasant,
daughter
of
the
late
Ohio
and Donald Summers Qf
W.Va. ,aon ottbe late Rev. James
Family and friends
call at Hart Dillard and Eva Grandstaff Birmingham, Ala.; seven nlecl!!' ,
·Rev. Fred Aldridge
members of the Steelworkm G. and Vad'a M. (Worrell)
.
Nettle Hayes of Mlddlepor~.
OAK HILL - The Rev. Fred Unim ·and was the owner and MorNoa. lle W.. a. member 11f ·Jolin V. May Funeral~e on Lyons.
Monday, June 11, 1990 from 6 p.m,
She
was
a
homemaker,
50
year
Ferne
Rouse and Eleanor ThQAldridge, ·81, Oak Hill, died
of Garnes Greenhouses at
the Ualled MetJJodlat Contereace
10 9 p.m. Burial will lake place at2 member of the Order of Eastern
mas,
botJJ
of Pomeroy, Hell\"
Friday at Oak Hill Hospital.
Onlllld Lewt.
and had pastored cllurebes In Ule
p.m.
at
Elm
Lawn
Cemeler)o
in
a
member
of
Atkeson
of
Mansfield , Ohio,
Star,
Harrisville,
Born June 14, 1~ In Lawrence
He is survived by his wife, Dor· Lewlaburg, Hlfntlllgton, CI!Jrles·
Elmhurst,
Dlinois.
the
White
Shrine
of
Jerusalem,
Lenora
Summers
of Medlllf.
County, son of the late Joseph thie M. Games; four brothers, Rela lo!l and _Par.Itenbutt:· Dls~s.
Rutland
Garden
Club
and
MidOhio,
Barbara
Gordon
of Norto11,
IJetR-nice Opal Winn
and Jenny ·Hunt Aldridge, he Is ~bc~loZaoOI. ~oo~ He most ~~puton!dthe
dleport
Church
of
Christ.
OhiO
and
Vtrglnla
McDaniel
~f
survived by bls wife, VIola
"""'
..~,.,.
LChockphort · \IDI-t,ed ,t.f!_tbodlst.
She
Is
survived
by
six
nephews,
Akron,
Ohio.
·
:.
MIDDLEPORT Bernice'
&gt;Aldridge of Oak Hill.
~ BIICf.
Ia ). MjiiiiJ of
urc .· ·, ·
·.·
, • , ,
Tllomson
of
Silver
Lake,
She
Is.
preceded
In
death
by
her
Robert
Also surviving are
Kegley: four .~ Jlmes of
A . 19•7 graduate o&amp;·. 'Point" ~ ,Winn, ~1. ' of : Middleport
husband. Paul Wlnn In 1975. : .
daughters, . Eloise Sharp, . Gall RiRJey, ~. ·ameBl 'and PleSasant Hlg~ SC~~ ·h,e ~as jl ; · died ·Friday; June 8; 1990 at OhiO, Douglas Thomson of Tuc·
Ariz
_,
.
Darryl
Lyons
of
(See DEAT!Ill, on A8)
;
YalleY Hospital, pt.
JobnsonandRhondaKerns,allof ~allofJvans~~··~~ U. . Army .veteran: ,• · ' . , ·
, Oak Hill: t)Vo sisters, Rulb ·
'
_. ..vans;
mne
He was ·a lso precect!d !n·death·
• Taylor of Oak Hill, and Pheebe grandellildell'. ll!d seven great· by 'three .broll!ers, Frank. Rl· '
;) Minnix of West VIrginia;
~~~ will' be beld at.2 chard and Bruce. . i ' ' ' .
1 bro!J!er, FrBIIk Aldridge oi Iron.-..,.... _.,_
SurviVII!J·areqla.wife,
~: ton; ~lx grandchlldren: and two p.m.; Silllday, 'J~ 11; 1990 It the (Li!hrmer) Mon'laop; . a
,, great-grandchildren.
Casto Funeml Home' Chapel in ter, Shirley Morrtson· of
Services will be 1 p.m. Monday Evans with the Rev. Jaines Pinker- Lanes; two · irantld\lugbters,
•• In the Oak Hill Freewill Baptist too officiating. B'urial will follow in Emma K.ll'ranklln and Sarah G.
':: Church, .with the Rev. Danny
the Sunrise Memorial Gardens.
Morrison; a sls~r, Judi Ill Perty' ·
:: Boggs officiating. Burial will be . Alva MeGuire
of Logan, Ohio: ·a brolber,
;• In C.M. Cemetery. Friends may
GALLIPOLIS
Alva Michael W. Morrison of Alexan·
drla, Oblo.
"' call at UleKubner-LewlsFuneral
•
McGuire, 78,formerlyofMercer·
Services' will be 11 a.m. Moo·
0
ville, died S~tur~ay In Jackson,.
day In Ule Crow-Russell F1,lqeral .
-; Home, ak Hill, from 2·9 p.m.
:: Sunday. .
·
:. •. . Born- JM~ 21-, 1912 at Bladen, Home,'with theRev.:Aarry'Foley ·
~ Harold S. Braden Sr. . · : ~n of \lie latll..fbarlle M.cGulre • an4 the Rev . . Dan :: Joh11son ';
'1·
MASON
v
·
. ani! .Roxie. Ctalg McGuire, be officiating. Burial will be In the ..
'
- . .
. .• a. - Harold S. _ was a retired · Iarmer and a Morrison famlly cemetery on , .
.: :;~n ~r. , 64, New Haven, died · member of Mercerville. Baptl~} •· Sand Hill Road, Point Pleasant. ·
• .Y n Vete!ans Memoria_! Cblircb. .·
'
Friends may .call at the funeral
~~ H~f:~l~oym9eroly92.6 ln ' Mtaml
960He was preceded l.n death In ;.~home 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Sunday. ..
;;o . .,..
.,
•
•
,
1
by his wife, Wilma Smith ·
·A p lk
.Ya., son ottll~·late Clllvln and
M~-ulre: They were married J' Margarette .... 0
·:i
, l3e~sle (Hardman) Braden, be : 'Mar&lt;;h 25, 1937 at ChlllleotJJe,·He ~
~ Ann ~lk. 67, of .~,
:;. .:W!IS a construction electrk:Jan, a
w~ . also preceded·· tn death 'by·· R . i 2, &lt;Poiat Pleasant died ..
•.: World War II Artny veteran !ll!d
lllrel!'qrotJJer_pl)d two silllei'~. ,. ThiiiJdiy,;Juni 7, 1990 in ~olzei' ...
i1 a , member. of the _Stewart· : ~ SuMVfllg
l ~,da!ighJilr, ·, Hospital. inGallipoli,;~.
.' '
l ~hnson ;YFW Post No~ .99~ !,rr . · ppt~!l . McGulie.' of Jac,kson: ~e
~ May 29; ~· 1n·
·
. ,., - ~on,. ·'·.' r' . '
.-. '
slsw.t NelU~ Watspn of GalltpO- she wls' the .~ of
~- Su,rYJy.lng ai'r!' hill wife, P.byl~" !Is; ~ llalf·siStet; cAllce ·Trl~p of. Geaac·· Lalisll:. and · Anrui' ~Ptil
· WHAT IS
l1. (Pa~g~)' ar~dep:, two · sons, . Mis~,Ut~. ~!'&lt;I : lf, balf-brolller, 'Lalisfl. · ,.... ,- '' '. ·· . • .• , .
Is -a , rnalutlonei'J
hila wtlilat
~ Har,o!Q. !&gt;· J:!t:lldf!J!.,•.Jr, of New · Ji~JitfS Draytof;.GldUk:OtJJ~." · . Surviving Is ilne . ilaughtet,
totally IU..,.....
otMr 1111tllad1 If rltlud .. lly ,
, H~ven, ancl.:~tanley ·Braden · Qf
··$ervlces wtube 1 p.m. Monday Barbam. Smith, . ~int Pleasant;
::;; QU\!n~n. Ky., ·two dat,tghter,s, 1n !he Wllll,s·Fiine~al!Jome, with three sons, Robert L., Richard L.,
provfcllllf a safe, •-• ...... , .. , .. wa...llass ,..,._ thet
Lynd~Young and Rhonda Ten- Ule~ , Br~Unroeofflctattng. and Russell L ••. all of ChiCBjci, IlIUINS IODY fAT wlrtu•r .. fwt w II ••I Is lsstlaa. willie
,.;lll1Dt.'1..- ll(\111 o.f Ne~ Haven; a ._Burl'! will lbe hfMlria Chapel ijbois; one . brolher. uecirge
jlt
tile 11- p;aul k 1 . . tile .... elhl illltri&amp;RII .... ~
~, slste~ &gt;~' f..eota Starr of Cc!rnlng, Cemet¢ry. FY:Jends miiy call at . Lalish:1S pdcbilcben and two
llocly_liNch every ..,..._ .., for hallllll . t •ll•lf.
" Ohlo,,.,three ,lirolhers,. Robert the f\lneral borne from 6-9 p.m. Bre&amp;t·gnmdchildren.
·
WAS
'ClEATED UQ.USMLY ,., ... "HAAD TO LOll· In·
;- Brac!eJ of Florida, Carl Braden
Sunday. t,,
She w11 preceded in death by her
.. of Brewster, Tenn., and Doyle
R. J·
·
bll$band, Robert L ~lk
. •elduel. Yeu will ....... ,.., .... tsslpt wmtOUT p:
~~Bra.den of Charleston; and eight
8Qle8 .i. ~ 18011
· Services will'~ belion )une 9
IICIII. shots, llfeulcl pralel• ., alw call •· a.t justlssiRI llll't
~ grandchlldren.
POINT J:'LEA:&gt;ANT. - . The 1990
Wiilco
p ra1 H '
eilllilh· That's whr W( ellen • •a:llfl
C11111to
" " Services wlli be .1: 30 p.m.
Rev .. James, W.' Morrison, 6+.
. at
XCII une · ~ .
11lan an duty hill 111111 to wert With you lftdlvltlu•t· .,_
) Su~ay In ~e Foglesong Funeral
POint Pleasant, .d,led friday In J~;om 6 A\ -10 9 J,J~-lbe body 'till ..
JM 1oH ,....,., you woat It
elf psrlfta-Jir...... M
" ·Home, wllh the Rev. Richard
·
.:1', Tennant officiating. Burial will ·
da W.t N- far a llmiMd 111111. lAVI N% ..... - . . . . . .
:&gt;be In Sunrise Memorial Gljrden,
.,.,.. • • - ..,.,, ead Cfllldd~. WI CR!AIAtml rn ..
;;&lt;;,1J.etart.
·. ·
So...coll us todayllt may lie tfje -'lnlputanl coH you-

t"

.j

in top _five Deaths;.:.
.

Sunday Tirnee-Seutina-Paga A~7

Ponwoy-Middeport-G..ipolil, Ohio Point Plnsrnt, W. Va.

r

S1 0.00 OFF ANY
LAWNBOY TRIMMER

' .

•

June 10. 1990

briefs---~-----......-........., Weather

--Local news

..

June 10, 1990

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

'

·'

~

..

•

l'

'

adlolnhlg patios
.

i
I .~.! _

'

'

nEE·••~c •vn••·•~m),_
.
.

.Holzer Medical Center
.

•

Simply the Belt. ...e
li1

'

�...
.'ga

A-~Sundey

Ponwoy-MWieport-Gal~lil, 'Ohio

Timea-Sentinel

Point PlaMMt. W. Va.

•

r1ver

June 10, 1990 .

_,_. Middleport court report
•MIDDLEPORT - Eight defendants we're fined and five
otbers forfeited bonds In the
court of Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman this week.
. Fined ·wwre Robert M.. Scar·
berry, Middleport, $50 and costs
and five days In jaU, no opera·
t9r's license, $100 and costs and
live days In ja!l, leaving the
. scene of an accident; Mark
·McCloud, Middleport, $25 and
costs, diSorderly manner; · Carl
£;. Cas to, Middleport, ·$25 a nil
costs, disorderly manner;
George Ostermeyer, Middleport, $10 and costs, !allure to
yield the rtght'ot way; Atrlcla L.
Louden, New Haven, $10 fine for
runnlna a stop sign; Jeff Cundiff,
Middleport, $425 and costs and 10
days In jail, OWl, and $50 and
costs, no operjltor:s license; Sam

.

'

McCloud, Middleport, $50 and
costs, disorderly n\anner, and
$50 and costs, menacing threats;
Bailey J. Dugan, Middleport.
$100 and costs, false alarm
charge; ·and Aaron Davis, Mid·
dleport, ~ and costs, littering.
Fortelttna bonds were Cindy r...
Hayes, Po!lleroy, $60, no lnsu·
ranee, and $60 for opening a door
In th~ traffic causing · an ace!·
dent; Timothy H. Higley, Galll·
polls, $60, traveling the · wrong
way on a one-way street; 'J'Im
usUs, ·Middleport, $110, disorderly inanner; ·Edward A, J3ell,
Pomeroy, $60, running a . stop
~lgn.

.

· Mike Hlndy , Middleport,
pleaded Innocent to a charge of
destruction of jl~operty and the
case :was transferred to Meigs
County Court.
., ·

,,

...

B

•

Section

June 10. 1990'1

)

'

.,

.

.•

• •

•

lor u

Ht~e.aloMI

exlllblt 11
0111! dllllcr bllt pllldlla lbe
arllelee lor ellllll* II u 1Uaer.
BY~... .... to lie jut
rllllt. AH rltbt 1t wru be u
Ca&amp;ltert.e .....' left, lllid
SciMIJier Coae have llltlr _ ,
abelll K. They U'e pjdiiNCI
lllaelal lleCIIIIIJt lw- Ia A
• ..,.., c - lor pari ol lbe
eldlllllt, •'Onllte and Simple

.,

'

CAREFUL PIAa£11ENT
BeteiiHblal ... prepal'.. l ;'!!

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

Fenna."

...... .

''"

10 ' •

JH
o"f'j

...•a,
:tt

.

,,..

..,~

·" '
~
~

· -~

'
PART 01 ROOF
BLOWN OFF - Pari of lhe relll' roof.oa llle
hullcllar a&amp; ,&amp;IJe comer of Third Avenue and Cedar Slreet,
Gallpolls, wu bll)WB awQ' duriDI Sa&amp;lliday morulnl'• etorm Ia
Gal)lpolls. Photil wu takea from~ up11aln room·Ill llle home ol
Mr. ud Mn. Jameti Betz, 888 Third Ave. (See pap 1 story) . .

J,

:rl.E~i0it-1ets
... r.

. ,

'"-

•

.o:

'

.:;·~Ck_,; ifi
,• l-·

I

......."
•

';;,·

•

* •

..
-

'

'

vie'Yers ·step
Meig:s AlsrOcy

~.....

'•

..

•

,

.

'

,

,

,._

'

'

0.:; •.

I

.
.t
'!' .•

••
.

&gt;1

'

'

With 'hOurs, that- turned !lito · while providing necessiUes that
II'IOntbs, of niseai'Ch and palienee, n pieces were located.
· Many 9f thote pJi!ces are from
-illl4eand ·aome wert actu-

made life to.lerable, and ev•m
pleasant.
A 49-page cataloeue has been
prepared as a gulde .tQthe~lblt
,,
_ 1· but Dr. Stetner fee~J l~h
•"~~ more than a us
ld
~
' •feels It Is a majot. eature
he
total project and a lasting co'ntr!·
blitliln of .the .exbl It since It Is •
only tempgrary. f •• \~ · · 10., ·J
; . The catalogue cqnta'lns nb,is-~:· ·
tratlons o! some qf the lt~s ·
'
': displayed as well asea~ysonthe ~·
.
.,
.
of changing patterns dfi productlon
·
aecessorles, '; . ·
na
to 1880 In ' of items between 184o'.and 1880. It
•· alld'tooll u well as otber'lttiTII, Southeast Ohio. : 1t ·
·
,... also provides biographical
· .- e pre!talent duriJII the time
.\i,rantfrom tiJi!DhloHuman- t sketches of all the crattamen
~ ~metQY, aa we~ I as:.other towns' ties ~uncU madi .the exhibit . Identified.
· "and ' villages, were being , possible along with funding from
Research for the · cataloeue
~ ls'tlbllllbelt. . ,:·.•
"
· · other 'ources. 1'11~ Schocl ·of came from various primary.and
(.f · ~eeJihlblthasbeenprepared . HomeEconomlcsjitOhlol!nlv~secondary sources such as cen' ~ 111!1 1'1111 be pblentec!·by, Cattle- , ~y 4!10 provtiled ~a ~ant for the suses, probate court records,
floe Ml!QIIa~ Steiner, ,P h.p., of.-' Qblbtt and according tq, ~u~lth marriage, death, e~etery rethe"llltertor· 0e11an pepartmeht ;.) 4attlijrws, Ph.D., .director of the , cords, newspapers and ·the like. ·
-" ~ i':(l)tl~ . ~ t!le :· ~1\ool ' of Home t School ·Of . Ho~e if!onoml~s. It
The major)ty of the cataloeue
1 ~coiM!m~a at• Oblo Untversltyi".:, waa ·well :worth it. ., , ·
··
was preparl!d by Steiner and
~ and 'Sehuyler Eat~ Cone, ol the
Dr. ~atthew~ teelalt.ls lmpor- Cone; except for the typesetting
J Aolhlnl and Textiles Depart· tant mat the school has the and printing which were pro'; 1ntnt within the School of Home ,:· chance to make a fiqntrlbptlon to "vtded by other agencies. Ali of
;,~conomlcs at Ohio University.
Pomer~~ that will help the , the drawings In the catalogue
~ The Idea for the exhibit origlcommunity achleve!Jts goal as , . were done by Daniel Marlhugh,
:- l\ated about one year ago during . well as ldenUty Its craftsmen. , · an Interior design student at Ohio
~ tile pi&amp;Aain11tages of the sescju~ ..· J\ccordlng to ·Qr. ~telneri the . University.
.
!'~nlital celebratlort tor Pome;\ exhibit focuses on .lt:'F historical
So, with the work of Steiner and
- ~ no11D1 111 1~ ~P , of,., and ~~tl~e . acbteyements · of
0 Cone, not to inelltlon thecooperaJiiiiorporatton.
· · ·' · Po~oy s early ful'htture rna~- ., tlon of area lenders, the library,
· !~· S!nee that, t!me Steiner
~ tnd ciCJt!tlen. F~r thOle of · and other volunteers too numerb*Vil been researtllinl and •JIOu,wh!l don t iqlow It, Pomeroy ous to mendon, the exhibit ts
ALMOST READY
pi- fertheeldtllllt, a
.• atlng pieces for the ,xjllblt aa · ~ h!,lil Its sluire• of cl)alr and ready to transport the public
silk aed lace wedding dreie da&amp;lDg 18'18-1880, wu
·'
aa rolng thro01h !'tfetP J.calllneJmakers, talto'rs, .aeam· l;&gt;ack In time.
.
lined with acid lree paper to proted II derln1 the
· ';ICQ.unif. Courtlfouse anil ~elga , stred.e s, and jlat and · '"Of'nate and Simple Forms:
. i~unty Museum records arid
Shoemakers:
·'
·
Pomeroy Furniture and Fs,shlon, ,
''
l"locuments. Not only.did Steiner .. Qr. Steiner went on.to say that 1840-1880" will run through June
:and Cq'l• . hav' to · travel to , these craftsmen were Important 22 at the library from the hours of
' P.l!Jne~QYil)any,J'!l~nytlriJes,blit f~res ln. the early years of lla.m. to4p.m. Monday through
~atM,trayele4toCoJumbusto
Pomer-oy, and that they fashl· Friday, and Saturday and Sun'l!lill t&gt;hlil Hlatorlcel SoCiety to do · oned w~ which ~lned the day Ho 4 p.m.
•
·•raearch. '
··
pra.cUcal with the beutlflll, •

•

t,

.

..•£f
..

i).l""r·.. -•....

ud•,· ..

-nts

•

•

..
C!P'

...

· ~alaeelll..._';m '..._
period. OMiaiM II I 1 II

...........,........ el .........

. MtlpCJSUI Qhllllll!l' Uj.TIIeer'•ntdru
. • I'll,_ II. Pq ....... --~~~~~~
. . d'TII tMk aiiMt a JNI' te _ , . .
......_ ..........p.

r

•

.~

�''

Roush-Shriver

--Engagements-

CHESHIRE - Mr. and Mrs .
Joseph Roush of Route 1, Cheshire, announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, . Amy Marie
Roush, to Bruce Darrell Shriver,

;

Elliott~ Hineman
GALLIPOLIS - Charlotte and
Michael Elliott of Gallipolis, and
1\a and Norvin Hineman of
Crown City announce the engagement and approaching marriage
of.thelr children, Janelle Maxine
El liott and Charles Henry

June 10, 1990

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

Page-B-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Hineman.
The open church weddlne will
take place at the Church of God
on Garfield Avenue, Gallipolis,
on Saturday, June 1~ at 7: 30p.m.
A reception will follow In the
church hall.

Sting nets 340
'lottery winners'
BELLFLOWER, Call!. (UPI)
- Tbe letters congratulate(! ·
the11) for winning IOO lotlery
tickets, but It was actually a ruse
to lbre·fugltlves Into the arms of
sheriffs deputies whO snared 344
suspects on charges ranging
. lrom manslaughter to narcotics
VIolations, pollee Said.
·
Tbe week-long sting was closed
out Friday by the Sheriffs
Department and BeverlY Hills
Pollee Department.
Ftve-thouaand letters were
sent to suspects with warrants seve~al week ago, telling them
they bad won free lottery tickets
andWGuld be ellglble to win other
prizes, Deputy Bill Wehner said.
The "winners" were asked to
KEIJ,Y J. MARTIN, ~ANIEL E. DAINES
call !or an appafutment and
· about 50 percent ot those who
made appointments had showed
up and were arrested, Wehner
said.
GALLIPOLIS- Mr. arid Mrs. Hills Career Center. He Is emSheriff's deputies In plain
Oda Martin announce tb' en· . ployed by Daines Logging and clothes posed as employees of a
gagement and approaching !mar- Lumber.
marketing ouUit and watched as
riage of their daughter, Kelly J .
the suspects signed In before
Ml!f_tin, to Daniel E. Dal111!5, son
going Inside. to be surprised by
of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Daines of
handcuffs and uniforms.
Crown City. ·
"Some of tl\em tell us they
Tbe open ,c.hurch weddlne will
llnow they're under arrest, but
take place·June 23 at 6:30 p ,ni, at
they ask 'Po I still get my
Canaan Missionary Baptist
tickets?"' Deputy Bernadette L.
Church.
·
Roberts
said.
POMEROY -The Disabled
Miss Martin Is a graduate of American Veterans and' the
"One- gentleman, even as he
Hannan Trace High School and Is · ladles auxiliary ,will meet Mon- was being booked, still kept
employed by Rax.
day at 7 p.m: · at the haiL hoping he was on Candid CaDaines lsagraduateofSouthwmera," she said.
Refreshments will be serVed.
es tern High School and Buckeye

June 10, 1990

,soD of Mr. and Mrs. James P.
Shriver of Bidwell.
,
Tbe open church weddlna wUI
take place on June 16 at 6:30p.m.
at Good News Baptist Church on
George Creek Road.
Miss Roush Is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School and the
University of Rio Grande. She Is
currently employed . hy Allan
Boster, D.V.M.
Shrtver Ia a graduate of North
GaiUa High School and Natlonal
Institute of Electrtcal Training,
Q!lanclo, Fla.

--Engagements-

·Trend
setters

'1'"
RAIIlEY, DENNIS NORMJJ.N

Ramey-Norman
MISSIES &amp; ·WOMIJI'S
.SIIES ·

Marrin-Daines

DA V7j Auxiliary
meeting slated

'

ANGELA M. HOLLEY, DARRIN J. MALONE
'

Holley-Malone
;GALLIPOLIS- Mr. and Mrs.
Holley or Gallipolis an-

~

:r~~i~~~.~th~e

engagement
and
marriage
of their
An1~ela Marie Holley,
Darrtn James Malone, the son
Mr. and Mrs. Desler Malone of

double rlilg, open church
~ eJrem.ony will be held July 14 at
02: 30p.m. at the First Presbyter-

ian Church, GalllpoUs with Rev.
AI Earley officiating.
A reception wlll follow at the
church.
Miss Holley Is a graduate of
Ga!Ua Academy High School and
Ohio University, Athens.
Malone Is a graduate of ,t\thens
High School and Is employed by
Warehouse Tire In Athens. ·

MARLENE K. BARRETT, NATHANIEL J. CARPENTER

leatfler Seal:rest Slip-On

~~=

Thaxton-Perry

They Feel GOOd.

BIDWELL - Mr . .and Mrs.
Miss Thaxton Is a graduate of
Charles Thaxton, Bidwell, and North Gallla High School and Rl~
Mr. a~d Mrs . Daniel Perry of .Grande College. She Is employed
Sclotovtlle, Ohio, announce the as a computer programmer lor
engagement and approaching the Natlonwlde Insurance Commarrtage of their children, Nikki pany ,In Columbus.
Thaxton and Ray Perry,
Perry Is a graduate of WheeThe open church wedding will lersburg High School and Rio
take place June 30, at 2: 30 p.m.ln Grande College. He Is employed
French
Church, as a marketing consultant for
A reception Cozn k Enterprises In
Route 160,
will

Corbin and Snyder Furn~tu_re
Is Bustin' With Bargains!
'

'

BEST

REG. $843.00 ,

N0"$599

&amp;.11~11'-"~t.al

BROYHILL

~R~P.~R~~t~o~.U!!twER $

•v•ll•ble.)

•

'l•

POMEROY· - Mr. and Mrs.
James Soulsby, Pomeroy, are
the engagement and
approaching marrtage of their
daughter, Cindy Lynn Soulsby
Richardson, to Joseph Richard
Fields Jr., son of Joe and Rita
Fields, Pomeroy.
The outdoor wedding will take
place · Aug. 18 at 2 p.m. on
Mulberry Heights with the Rev.
Carl Hicks' officiating. In the ·
event .of rain the wedding will
take place at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Ms. Richardson Is a graduate
o! Meigs High School and Is
with The Dally

program
·j leads to. marriage
l

TOLEDQ, Ohio (UPI) - A
: milestone for the University of
' Toledo will be marked next
Saturday with the graduation of .
, four students who are the first ·
' class of Presidential Scholars. ·
Two of the first participants
• will also look at the program as
: the start of a relatlonshlp that
: will lead to their marriage ln.
··
•
• July,
:
The program was begiln In 1986
, l .under former president James
· : McComas to attract high achlev: ei's to UT.
:
Now entering It~ !ltth year, the ·
• program provide~ full four-year
: scholarships and the opporh~nlty
to have the president ,38' lhelr
adviser.
'
: , Norman Frankowski of Toledo
' and Deborah Hetzel o! Port
! Cllntop!Lrstmet wh~n thefcame
: to the university ·!or··thelr Initial
; Interviews.
• ·~
·
:
Frankowski, who · .ruf study
· ! Jaw at Ohio State Urtlverslty next
1 year, later showed the three •. ·
l out-of-town mlinbers around
: Toledo and ~giln dating Hetzel.
• The two plan to be married July
: 28.
.,_
• Hetzel will also attend OSU
•
: next !all to purse a master's
• degree In either business admln·
l lstratlon or health
I_ administration.

!

l

.

The other two members of the
Inaugural class are Joel Mayerson of Lima · and Katherine
Wohlever of Amherst
Mayerson, who was Frankowskl's roommate for three of the
four years, said his perspective
has changed greatly durtng the
years at Toledo.
"I was a . cookbook pre-med
when I cm;ne here, and lthoughtl
would take a recelpe of classes
and get Into medjcal school, and
now I Jove to take humanities
classes," said Mayerson, who
was accepted at Johns Hopkins
University's medical school.
Wohtever Is an English secondary education major who hopes
to land a teaching job.
Each year four Incoming freshmen are selected Into the program on the basis o! high school
grades, test scores, three teacher
recommendations and a personal essay and an Interview.
.

••

'

·

SUNSTAR s•s GARDEN TIACTOIS
bcilolllo in 14-16-11 &amp; 20 H.P.

-

IS.!dtw 201

CINDY L. RICHARDSON; JOSEPH R. FIELDS JR.

CHECK

•Nor•..,., CIO hp)

us

•Aut. . .k ............
.... dlltdlitl. lnfifttte . , . chtk•

•42'', 41" • W' shaft-*;,• 1MWW noil-

.,·-·
...n::-·

alllt. ......... ,.,... to folow piMirMiro•

OUT!

•Tithl 16" twling
. radius
·~'

lf•int

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

to litl tltht turN. two ti'Oitlnissiorl tpitl , . . . •Ill •tf•Mtiallod: fw

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

We've EXPANDED .. 111orc HITS .. Illllre COPIES

•~Mdl tlicl wsfionH •••

eSh 1-*h"' atted!oo.,ll for .,.,..... ,

,.... lf'Mtfw t'
-tledrl
E11..P ..d

PLUS

••gag• attachwith ftitt ef a switch

no

'

USED MOVIE SALE '6.95-'9.95
. HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM

•ttr••di, lift relu and lower DttiKhmtnh
efforlleoolr

40 NEW UNITS IN STOCK

WITH SAYitGS II' TO ll,IOO.

REED'S COUNTRY STORE
4th &amp;

HoME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER

Reedsville, Oh.
PH, ·378- 11211

992-3524
•

..-~

~

••

•

•" .

-•
•

ese
sare
3 -Year

••
•
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL

Table with 2
Arm chairs
&amp; 4 Side
Chairs

BROYHILL, BERKLINE &amp;
BEAU STATION
•
EVERY . ITE~ . REDUCED FOR
· THIS SALEI! .

REMEMBER FATHER'S DAY IS
SUNDAY, JUNE 17, 1990!

- NOW

$1539

WE HAVE A.NICE SELECTION OF
. . GIFT
ITEMS SURE TO PLEASE ANY DAD.

CHINA

CHAIR
Reg. $1465

NOW

S929

$599

. NOW

$999

•FATHER'S DAY
CARDS
•COLOGNES
•AFTER SHAVE .
•CRYSTAL ,
COLLECTIBLE CARS

955 Second Ave. • Gallpelh, OH.
614-446-1171

Fill DEUYIIY

Open All
Day
Thursday

•PLUS MUCH
MORE

NOW .

'

o/o*
EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD

.

•

o/o*

RATE COMPOUNDED MONTHLY

15 -Month

EFFECTIVE ANNUAL YIELD

~

,•

•

o/o*
RATE COMPOUNDED MONTHLY

Hyou've been boklinll back waiting for great ~' here they are.
.
But you've got to act last. These mtes are avallable for alimited time oo]y.
For more fuformation contact your nearest Central Trust office.

30°/o
OFF

''
'
't.ln!mum
dlpOIIt for theN apeclll rate1 II ~.
00 . SubstM1Ial penalilea for early wilhdrawala.
lllht tltldivt JVft\ I, lt90.

"

GALLU~OLIS

.992-6669

,.

•

%*

Timex
Watches

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
.DDLEPOIT,
271 NOI'III SECOND
. .....

Y~ELD ·

'

35°/o
SAVINGS!
The look you can live
happHy ·with forever after

CORBIN ·and SNYDER .FURNITURE .

.

'

lleg. $2354

It's ·Spring

and

'

2 -Year

Reg. S1S25

SOFA

o/o*

o/o*

SOLID
OAK

99

, Reg •.'
'1410.00

"

........

NOW

SOFA and CHAIR
'

POMEROY, OHIO

391 WEST MAIN STREET

M~ln,

3
O/
5 /0 TO 40°/o ,
ALL WITH SAVINGS Of

I
I

•L•

.fREE!

Five Difftrent Styles From
Which To Clloost

Best Bargain: Sofa,
Loveseat and Chair
All 3 Pes
Card shower planned . .......__ _ _ _ __..._ _..........__

A card shower Is being held for
Mrs. Ralph (Ruth) Whitmore,
who will be 84 on Jupe 14,
Cards may be sent to her at
Room 302, Pinecrest Care Center, 555 Jackson Pike, Rt. 2,
Bidwell, Ohio 45614.

7·99

SOLID .OAK BEDROOM &amp; DINING ROOM

Susan Renee Johnson and MIchael Joe Plantz. ·
The open house wedding will
take place on Saturday , June 16 ·
at 2 p.m. at Mammo'th, W.Va. ·
A reCeption wi!Ifollow .

j Scholarship

,

or rent another movie

Fields Is a graduate of Meigs
High School and Hocking Technical College where ~e majored In
pollee science. He also attended
the Galli a County Pollee
Academy and the University or ·
Rio Grande where he studied
manufacturing technology, He Is
employed with · the Pomeroy
Pollee Department.

Your Choice

KELLER GALLER)' BEST BUYS

MICHAEL JOE PLANTZ

Johnson-Plantz

POND GAP, W.Va. - Cecil
and Doris Johnson of Pond Gap,
I W.Va., and Milton and ' Shlrley
: Plantz of Gallipolis, announce
: the engagement and approach• lng marriage of their children,

~··

to be here •••

, ftllltll

OAK OR PINE

CHEST. HEADBOARD w/FRAME or
' BED. INiglot T•bloo not inclUded but

SUSAN RENEE JOHNSON,

RUTLAND - Mr. and Mrs . .
Charles Barrett Sr., Rutland, are
announcing the engagement and ·
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Marlene Kay Barrett,
·to Nathanlei.J-,-Carpenter, son of
Clem! Carpenter, Huntington,
W.Va.
The open church wedding wiiJ
be held July 21 at 1 p.m. at the
Rutland Nazarene Church. A
reception wlll follow In the
·fellowship haiL

Richardson
.:fields '

SOFAS, LOVESEATS
and CHAIRS
STOREWIDE .SAVINGS!
SOFA and
CHAIR

Guaranteed .

Barrett
-Carpenter

NIKKI THAXTON, RAY PERRY

AT
'

on Saturday, July 21 at 1:30 p.m~:
In Calvary Baptist Church. Tbe :
wedding Is by Invitation only. ; •
Miss Ramey Is a graduate ot :
GaiUa Academy High School and :
the Uplverslty o! Rio Grande. · : •
Nonnan Is a graduate or Nortlt: ··
GalUa Hlgl\ School and Is attend: :
lng the Unlversi ty of Rio Grande:::
He Is .employed by Merillat':
Industries, Jackson.
"

RIO GRANDE - Announcement Is being made of the
engagement and upcoming wed·
ding. of Melinda Sue Ramey ,
daughter or Velnia Ramey of Rio
Grande and the late RObert
Ramey , and Dennis Nonnan, son
of Mr: and Mrs. Mose Norman o!
VInton.
The wedding will be conducted

· Leaiher Seacrest Oxford

_

CENTRAL TRIBf

446-0902

·APNCBANK

OHIO
MtmbtrFDIC ••

MIDDLEPORT

992-6661
I .

�luna 10. 1990

_7 - -

Pomeroy-t•· 1'11i41"-At-'Gallipolis,Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

June 10, 1990

Page-B-4-Sunday Tilfles·Sentinel

Community calendar

- - I n the service - -

Engagements-

She Is a 1986 gradll81e of North
Hardin Jllgh ScbOol, Radcliff.

SUZANNE E. HICKMAN
Anny Reserve Private Suzanne E. lllckman has completed basic training at Fort
Jackson, S.C. .
During the training, students
receive~! Instruction In drDI and
ceremonies, weapons, map read.lng, tactics, mU!tary courtesy,
mU!tary Justice, first aid, and
Anny history and traditions.
. ! Hickman Is tbe daughter of Jon
M. Holloway of Rural Route 5,
ClarksvUie, Tenn., and Rosa .A.
H()lloway ot 1348 S. Woodland
Drive, Radcliff, Ky . .
Her husband, Army Sgt. Carmen- J. Hickman, Is the son of
Bonnie L. Hickman of 154 S. Park
Drive, Point Pleasant, W.Va. ·

SUNDAY
LECTA - Larry Dillon Is at the
Lecta Church of Christ In Christian Union, Sunday, 7 p.m .'

MtroHEU E. POTI'S

Marine Staff Sgt. Mitchell E.
Potts, son of Helen and .Sh!rly
Potts Jr., bolh of VInton, OH,
recently departed Camp , Le·
jeune, N.C., on cJeplclymenl to the
Mediterranean Sea while serving
with ·22nd Marine Expeditionary
Unit, Camp Lejeune.
· Durl!lg the siX-month deployment, Potts'and over 1, 700 sailors
and Marines will participate I!J
various military exercises Involving numerous squadrons and
Navy ships. He wtll also visit
several forelgn.por.ts.'
He Joined ~he Marine Corps In
J~ne 1979.
_
·

VINTON - Homecoming,
Communion and foot washing
Will be held 10 a.m. at the
DeerCreek church. Preaching by
Rev. Roy Grlfflt of Ashland, Ky .,
singing - by . the Temple Bells
Quartet, and lunch will be served
at noon. Everyone Is Invited.
GALLIPOLIS - Clark family
reunion, Sunday. Raccoon Creek
•.County Park.

GALLIPOLIS - Houck reun. ·ion Is Sunday, Raccoon Creek
, County Park, shelter 3.

. l
®
-"'-'.

.,

••

~-

·;:
;:
•
-.
~-

•

-Young--Montgomery
.Nance~Wolford ·
CROWN CITY ..:_ Mr. and Mrs. Chapel Church. k reception will
James Nance announce the en- follow at Eureka· Lodge Hall.
Miss Nance is a graduate of
gagement and upeoming wedHannan
Trace High School and
ding of their daughter, Tara
Renee Nance, to James Edward , Buckeye Hills Career Center.
Wolford, son of Junior and Judy · Wolford is a graduate of Gallia
Academy High School and BuckWolford of Eureka.
The wedding will take place eye Hills Career Center .
June 30 at 6:30 p.m, at Liberty

:: Never assume family
j~ will do ·the .·r;ght thing
Dear Ann Lander.;: I am 34 yean
~ old. Both my parents passed away
;: within three yean of each other. My
, . inother went ftrs~ after a two-yeat
:; battle With cancer. My father died
from a hean anack.
::
Soon after Mom died. my father
: · remarried. He ;md his new wife
: ' moved 1,000 miles away. "Jennifer"
was financially set before ·s he
~:. married Dad. When he died, we
.•· learned that he had named her
~:: the sole beneficiary of his life
-::; insurance policy. {It was a sizable
=~·- one.) She will also collect his
~ • retirement benefits. Jennifer has all
._ • the furniture !hat was ·in our family
l home as well as my mother's
;
clothing and jewelry.
'
She wrote me soon after Dad's
~
funeral and asked that I send her a ·
i
list of the things I would like !hat
,
belonged to my parents. I requested
~
only the three pieces of furniture tliat
1
I ;- Dad had promised me. I also asked
1
;
that she send me anything that
~
belonged to my parents that she
. didn't want.
'
··
The furniture was never sent Last
: night! came home and found a box
I : on the porch that contained some
1 glassware and crocheted items and
', a sack of old pictures. There was no
: note. I had .beoo' expecting her visit
·, for a month but had not heard from
\
' her. It appears !hat this was her way
' of severing all ties.
After only I 0 months of marriage,
, a vutual stranger has everything it
{ took my parents 35 years to build
together. It hurts to !mow that my
·• parents did nothing to prevent this
, from happening. At ames, I wonder
• · if they really cared about me.
·
Memories are often wrapped
around "things." As, the mother .of
an onIy child and !hi: stepmother of
. Utree, I want !he children in my life
to have what is important to them
and rightfully theirs. Once you are
gone, the only contrOl you have over
your estate is what you have put on
paper.
I urge everyone .who reads this ·
to write a wiil and make sure it
is in the hands of a lawyer. It
- should not be done in a hurry. A
wtU should be a true reflection of
the yean you have spent with !he
people you love.
My hope and my prayer is that
,,
you will print this letter and that
someone will be spared the pain I
have experienced. Thank you for
giving me an opportunity to reach
so many people. -- MODESTO,
CALIF.
DEAR MODESTO: I appreciate
your taking the time and trouble 10
' ' share a heartbreaking story. As your
I
letter points out, it is a mistake to
I
assume !hat !he next of kin will do
ll)e right thing. Too often, they dont
Dear Ann Landers: My 20-yeatold sister {111 call her Marie) wo&amp;s
as a pool typist in a large office. She
is a sweet, atttactive girl, and this is
her frrst downtown job. She 'hasn't
been around much.
Last nigh~ Marie pho~ed me, and
she was tembly rattled. She said her
boss called her into his office after
everyone else had gone home and
asked her 10 please help hitn out It
seems !he ziP,per in his pants broke
• and he had tO' go 19 a fancy supper
directly from the office.
:

4

t

I.

I

Ann
Landers
ANN LANDERS
''1989, Los Anfi'\"'N

Timn S;rndl~f' and
Marie succeeded in fixing the zipCrral111111 Syndl.,lllr
per {it had gotten off the ttack), but
she was very nervous about whether 1.--------~.;...:...;;..,J
or nor she had done tlle right thing life of a loved one? "Alcoholism:
by agreeing to help him. She would How to Recognize 1t. How to Deal
like your pPinion and so would I.-- With1t, How to Conquer Ir" can turn
Llbk~RR~~K: I need more things around. Send a self-ad·•
infonnation. Did the boss remove dressed; long. busilli!ss-size envelope

his pams7 If so, where was he
when Marie ftxed ·th~ zipPer? If not,
was he businesslike
? U . . .during the
ed
proc ure. ntt 1 you s~pp1Y me
with
. these details I am unable to
gtve you an answer.

Is alcohol ruining your life or the

· and a check or money order for
$3.65 (this includes postage and
handling) to: Alcohol, c/o AM Landers, p.a· . . Bor 1156.2, Chicago, 111 .
60611-0562. (In Canada, send
$4.45.)
'
ANN LANDERS®

e 1990, Creators Syndicato

MOMENTS TO REMEMBER!
Let HASKINS.TANNER help you make
those special momeuts. You wW have over
180 styles of tuxedos to chooae lrorn. We
have a larl'! selection of the latest styles
and coinpllmeulary acces8orles to make
$ 9tS
this your special night.
PIICES SUIT AT

Buckeye Hills Career Center. He
Is employee! at Zenlx VIdeo In
Galllpolls . .
Weddhtg plans are lncomp~te.
·

Representative
to visit

ssaa
AlLow AI

&amp;180countporcile
• Fltt~ 01 llot llyloo~

14

CROWN CITY - Crown City
area Mt. Zion Missionary Baptts t
Church will have Richard Unroe
preaching Sund.ay, 7 p.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Miita Chapel
Church will have Ralph Workman speaking Sunday, 7:30p.m.
POINT PLEASANT. W.VA
-The ·Ohio Kanauga Branch of
the Sons and Daughters of
Pl9neer Rivermen will hold their
quarterly meeting on Sunday at 2
p.m. at the Mason County Library at Point Pleasant, W.Va.
The pubilc is invited to attl!nd.

AlLow AI AIIO Spaclally Pricld llltclllng I

POMEROY - On Wednesday
a representative from Congressman Clarence Miller's office will
conduct an open door session
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. In the
Courthouse In Pomerey, Anyone
with questions concerning the
reileral Goverl)lllent. may stop
by to discuss them with the '
representative.

·On honor roll

Percale Sheets
·~OCouni..-IJcallon

MIDDLEPORT - Vacation
Bible School will be held Monday
through Friday at the Ash Street
Free Wlll Baptist Church.
Classes will be held from 9:30 to
noon.

Fua..............Comp. $20 IIIII up..........ll.ll • CDECRIEIIS
• Gu-..........Coql. S2811111 up.............JI.II •BEDSPREADS
Klng. ________eomp. $34 and up....... ....Ji.ll
• WIIIIOW SETS
Str ca.........COmp. $20 IIIII UP----.1.11 pr. •PILLOW SHAMS
King Cue.....Comp. $2211111 up•• _.ll.ll pr. • DECORATOR PUOWS

Sharon Parker of Route 2l .
Cheshire, _was on the dean!s
honor list for ttie ·s pring quar~r
at the University of Rio Grande;
Her name was not Included In a
listing of Meigs County students
making the dean's honor list
supplied to The Daily SentineL

.
, _.

STARTS'
TODAY!

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

•

- -"""'\'

TUPPERS PLAINS - The
annual VIneyard reunion will be
Sunday ·at the Tuppers Plalns
School. A potl!-'Ck dinner will be '
served at noon.

---·;

'

KINDSBURY .- There will be
a gospel sing at the Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road on
Sunday at .7 p.m. Feat,ured
singers are Narroways and the
Wells Family.

CROWN CITY - Bible School
at Providence Missionary Baptist Church, Monday through
Friday, 6: 30 p.m.

MONDAY
ADDISON- Addison Freewill
Baptist Church Vacation Bible
School, June 11-15, 6:30 to 8 p.m.
for all ages.
'

CHAR-BROIL

.

2

FOR THE PRICE OF

GRILLS

1·

THE DAIRY BARN

STARTING AT

S 0 U T ll E A 5 ·r 1: R N 0 II .J 0 C U l T U R 1\ l

GERANIUMS &amp;
HANGING BASKETS
REI)UCED

•

AN ~XHIUITION OF
T RADITIONAL QUILT S
FROM SOUTHERN OHIO

GAS

All BEDDING PLANTS
'

WORTH REPEATIN

GALLIPOLIS - French City
Baptist Church Bible School Is
Monday through Friday, 6'8: 30
p.m. for ages 2 years through ·
sixth grade. Commencemeht at 6
p.m., June 17.

EWINGTON
Ewington
Church will have Vacation Bible
School, June 11-16 from 6 to 8:30

LA·Z.

A RTS C CNT ER

JUNE 9 -JULY 4, 1990
8000 DAIRY LANE .

WITH FUU TANK
OF GAS

ATHENS, OHIO

For hours, ndmission and ~pcci al cvcnls inrormation, call (614)592-4~~1.

Smel~zers .Nursery
RT. 35 WIST

Casto, Debbie Baslm. Third row, Karla Hunter,
R.N., ADON., Sue Compson, Janet Davidson,
Anna Wlles, Nancy Manley, Shirley Smtih, Steve
.Mahan, Sandy Guilliams, Cyndy Neutzllng,
Darlene Milam, Sheila McDaniel, Sally
Gloeckner, RN, DON. Not pictured are Garcia
Adams, June Mayes, Peggy Clifton, Marlene
. Lantz, Mary Frye, Angle Donahue, Sherry ,
Teaford, Terri Patterson, Lori Nash, Karla
Kimes, Tract Bartles, Cindy · Rowe, AllciR .
Council, Christy Ward.

r----------------PATTERNS

p.m.

f

.

!il!i

NURSING ASSISTANTS -The nursing assist·
anls were honored Thursday at Overbrook Center
In observ!Uice on National Nunlng Home
AsslstaDis Career Day. Pictured, first row, Dawn
IIIII, Charlotte Satterfield, Sharon Darst, Kelly
Allen, Maqlee McDade, Freda Allen, VIrginia
Bland, Betty Foster, Callle Richmond, Sharon
MU8Ser, · Shannon Goble, Mary Perdas, ilrenda
Cunningham. Second row, Pam Humphrey,
Regina Kimes, JoAnne Smith, Della Brown,
Jackie Wamsley, Cledlth Schnabel, Barbara
Coleman, Carolyn Little, Sharon Jacks, Carolyn

Clearance Sale -

--..

•

REEDSVILLE -The Olive
Township Fire Department will
have a three and four wheeler
pull Sunday at 1 p.m. Thefeels$7
and registration begins at noon.
Admission is $2 and there will be
cash prizes for each pulling
class. The track is located at the
Intersection oi Routes 124 .ani!
681. Concessions will be available
by the ladies auxiliary.

W I 1' II ' C. l: N l! R tl U S S l l T'

~JQ,_

r 0 R T .•· F It 0 M

ID3 lf2___ f.¥Jr. -;_hi-i:t

II I""MIII N 1' \RI a\' 1111 IMIIIIIlr l'llll~l HI I- II \it:i tlMoll Nl , l ~ I k I IJI ' Ill WII ,\Ni l 1\ K o ~

.GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

2

;

••

•

Sl 59 5

Sale!

417 SECOND AYE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

$399

. 1A•r•u fr- Colony ~ter

446-7441

I

SWEEPER
SERVICES CLINIC
-OFFER GOOD 30 DAYS,

fucludes Control Deck, Light Gun.
2 ControlleiS &amp; Duck Hunt"'I ·
Super Mario Bros."' Game Pak.

7

Nintend

everyday
Minimum 24 per store.
Umit I per customer.
No ralnchecl&lt;s.

•

-·•••

.

RECUNA-ROCKER"RECLINER
OR RECUNA·WA"V-WALL CHAIR
Pamper Dl!d with the style and comfort
of this pillowed transitional redineil
.,

OUR B POINT SERVICE UNIT Wll PUT NEW 'iiFE .IN
YOUR VACUUM CLEANER .
I. Replace Paper Bag
2. Check AH Mav..lt Parts
3. Check Electrical System
4. Check Filter System

.• ••

ACTION SET"'

NlNTEND()®

.
••

!.

'

RACINE ~Mr. and Mrs. Glen.n
A. Ypung Sr., Racine, anno11nce .
the ~ngagement of their daughter, l\'llchelle Ann Young, to. ·
Brian Keith Montgomery, son of
Stanley Montgomery, and Mrs.
Dorie Vanscoy, both of
Mercerville.
Miss Young attends Southern
High School.
Montgomery is a graduate of ·
Hannan Trace High School and

GUY AN - Annual Guyan
Volunteer Fire Department picnic 1 p.m. Sunday, June 10 at the
Mercervllle Firehouse. Bring
potluck dish. Guyan Women's
Club will furnish hot dogs, buns,
chips, eating utensils and pop .

POMEROY -The descend.
ants
of George and Anna Thoma
RODNEY -Leonard J . Seidel
Wells
will hold a reunion on
presents a sacred piano concert,
Sunday
at the senior citizens
Sunday, 10:45 a,m .. Faith Baptist
atll a.m. Bring
center
beginning
Church.
a covered dish and table service.
GALLIPOL,IS - Stra ight and
POMEROY - The second
l3aker family reunion, Sunday ,
annual
Heritage Weekend Car
·Raccoon Creek County Park
Show
wlll
be held Sunday at the
shelter 2. Coffee and doughnuts
Museum, The
Meigs
County
at 9:30a.m.•.business meeting to
event
is
sposored
by the Meigs
elect officers Is followed by
·
County
Pioneer
and
Historical
covered dish lunch.
· ·
Society and the Big Bend Cru.!s- .

No_-lron

TARA R. NANCE, JAMES E. WOLFORD

ers Car Club . Trophies will. be
awarded and dash plaques will
be given to first 100 entries.

••

MICHELLE A. YOUNG, BRIAN K. MON'IGOMERY

....

GALLIPOLIS - Mina Chapel
has Ralph Workman in services ,
Sunday; 7: 30 p.m.

'

MERCERVILLE - Rev. Bill
Han ·s peaks at Mercerville Missionary Baptist Church, Sunday,
7p.m.
KANAUGA - Reunion of the
family of the late Fred and Mary
. Lewis ijarris is Sunday, DAY in
Kanauga; lunch at 12:30 p.m .

~ -

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page B-5

GAME BOY"' GAME PAKS

1997.2997

·•

S. Check Malar &amp; Bearings
6. Clean &amp; Check Agitator
7'. Replace lelt
I • Lubr'. ~ta t1 .•

IT'S ALWAYS BEEN A GREAT CHAIR.
AND THIS FATHER'S DAY, IT'S ALSO A GREAT DEAL!

New titles arriving all the time 1
Solar Striker. GoU. Super Marlo Land,
Alleyway. Tennis. Baseball.
ntles mCI)' IIOI'f by store.
Ratnctlec!&lt;-' C&lt;IIII)Ot be Issued by ttUe.

Your~ 01 e11t1er a

a.ctllta
Of

sale!

A.

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

sale!

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

CARPET SHAMPOO, SPECIAL

I.

1I .

II
I

5 ROOMS
AND HALL
ONE RQOM

I

.

·

sale!
c.

$9995

L

COUCH, LOVESEAT
&amp; CHAIR CLEANED

·

.$ 5 99 5 II

Offer Expires 6l30/90

.,,.
.,,.

I

New &amp; Used Vacuum Cleaners $29.95 and up.
Bags and Belts. for ALL M•kes and Models ·

Parli:lng

Delhrery

HOURS: Mon.-Fri.1Q to 6; Saturday 10 to 2

ELE CTRO LUX

S459

salel

S399

c..., of lhlnl &amp; Olwe,

446-3045

F.

..

'•·.

•'

••

NINTENJ)()® COMPACT

S439

-salel
I.

-----.... ----COUPON·------------~

RAIN BO W

S339

D.

~-------------------~-------~,

I
I

S299

salel, S459

SCOTCHGA~DED

Offer Expires 6/30/90

Ra car NCinel

n.ctlr!a-WI!Y" WCIII c:bc*1

Open 9 to S Daily
9 to I Fri,
Master C.rd,
VIsa, Dllconr or
Ult e• laiJ
· Flnaftc.....

GAME BOY®
.·
New HUes arriving all the time!
• . SupeiSplke V'BaU. Tetrls. The Legend
,
otZelda. MJJceTyson'sPunc:;h.OUtll.
• . Rad Racer. Pin • Bot Dragon Warrior.
;. ntles vary.by store.
Ralnchecl&lt;s cannot be issued by title.

,.' •
.•'•
•

'

Includes stereo headphones.
Tetris"' Game Pak. Batteries &amp;
Video Link"' cable tor 2 playeiS.

7
everyday

Beats Hills/
WI will maiCII any local compelilor's currant
adverllled price on tile ••ltam: limply bring In lhelr ad.
Double and triple coupons, clearance and flat percentage off
promotions are exclllled.
.
(See service desl&lt; for details~

.There's No Rlslt 1b

OHIO RIVER PLAZA
IT. 7
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO

�June 10, 1990

limes-Sentinel

· June 10, 1990

Ohio-Point Pla111nt, W.Va.

G:unmittee set to pick
new Nurse of Hope

--Anniversaries-

18 Wint,zers exhibiting .river paintings

. ILLINOIS REPRESENTATIVE - ''Showtlme
on tbe Ohio.' ' Is the title ofthls "Watercolors of the
Oblo River" exhlbll painting ai the French Art
Colony. The painter, H.. ·Grant Sailor, was one of

three representallves from Dllnols to display
their work cluiing the exhibit which continues
through June 21. (Times.Sentlnel p)loto lly Krls
Cochran).
·

GALLIPOLIS - "Watercolors
o! the Ohio River". sponsored by
Gene Johnson Chevrolet·Geo·
Inc., Is the current exhibit at the
French Art Colony until June 25. .
Watercolor societies of the six
states that border on the Ohl!l
River, held a competition with
three winners from each state
being selected to form this
traveling exhibit that Is being
shown In 13 plaees during the
next year.
The painters were asked to
create paintings tnat would ·
evoke an entire range of assocla·
lions, emotions and Images of
thlppeclal river reaton.
They responded with strong,
b~autlful paintings that ranged ·
from narrative paintings that tell
a very human story, to very
lyrical color compositions of. a
more private, abstract nature.
Of course the stern wheel paddle
ooats and the bridges crr:&gt;Sslng
the river are featured prom!·
nently; but the sky and land, the
'

i

ducks and the architecture are
also lovingly portrayed. The
shOw Is so successful because
underneath the familiar subject
matter Is the diverse, profes·
stonal skllls of a dedicated group
artists.
The Galleries are open Toes·
day and Thursday from 10a.m. to
3 p.m. and .Saturday and Sunday
from 1 to 5 p.m.
This painting exhibit is (lne r:&gt;f
the first events of a more
ambitious program called, "AI·
ways a River - Tbe Ohio River
and the American Experience."
This larger project Is sponsored
by tile Humanities Councils of
Dllnols, Indiana, Ohio, Ken·
tucky, Pennsylvania and Is In
conjuction with the National
Endowment of the Humanities.
The Ohio Humanities Is Inter·
es ted In supporting and helping
to fund local projects In this .

· POMEROY - Weight control
: classes will begin next week 'at
: the Meigs County Health
· Deaprtment.
: • The series of six classes will be
: held beginning on Tuesday and

Wednesday at 6: 30 each evening.
Those enrolling . will have a
choice of which night to attend
classes which are free to Meigs
County residents.
Each class will be of two hours.

region tnat reac)l out to nearby
communities and to people living
In the rural areas. They hope to
ef!ectlvely use the local cultural
and !!ducallonal resources within
this area. Exhibits, book discus·
slons, public history/folklore
coJ1!erence are all planned. ·
A meeting for anyone ot any
group that would like to learn
about h!lw they might join In will .
be held Monday, June 25 .trorn',
noon untll2: 30 p.m. at the Fren~h
Art Colony, This will Include 11- .
free luncheon, a tour o! the. '
''Watercolors of the Ohio River'•, :
exhibit 11nd a discussion period :
aimed at helping people ail$1 :
organizations become a part ot ·
this history In the making.
:·:
The luncheon Is free and: ·
reservations must be made bY: :
calling the French Art Colony at·:
446·3834 or by writing toP ,0. Boi ;
472, Gallipolis 45631.
· . ••

..-..
-

..

.
JUNE 11-15, 1990

duration. Attendance Is required Meigs County Health Depart·
at only one two h!lur session · ment at 992·6625, Indicating at
·. weekly . Classes w.m Include that tlme their preference for the
nutrition educall!ln, stress man· Tuesday !It Thursday night class.
agement, weekly welgh·lns, re·
laxation techniques, recipes, diet
recall sheets, exercise tech·
nlques. and other phases of
weight control.
HARRISONVILLE -The ijar·
There will be a limit as to the
rlsonvllle
Senior Citizens Cluj&gt;
number of people who can be
will
hold
a
blood pressure clinic
admitted to each series of classes
on
Tuesday
from 10 a.m. to noon
which are to be held In the
at
the
townhouse.
conference room of the mfiltl·
purpose building, Mulberry .
Heights, Pomeroy.
Resident should register as
soon as possible by calllng the

10°/o OFF EVERYTHING IN OUR STORE

Blood pressure
clinic set

ON JUNE 11.

.

REGISTER FOR PRIZES • REFRESHMENtS

WALLPAPER &amp; INTERIOR DESIGNS
SPIIIIG VAWY PLAZA

GAWPOUS, OH.

-;-

.r.·

MR. ANI) MRS.' ORION NEL'OON .

Wallpaper, Paint, Custom Furniture
Custom Bedspreads &amp; Drapes.

(614) ....7333

~elson ' golden

anniversary set

He Is the s!ln oHhe late Pearly
: DEXTER, Ohio - Mr. and
Mrs. drlon Nelson of Dexter will and NeiUe Nelson. Slie Is the
daughter !If the late WIIJ&gt;ur arid
c~lebra(e thefr 50th wedding
anniversary on Ji.tl)e 10 at Brad- Neva Pierce.
The are the parents of Richard
bury Church of Christ with an
Nelson of Delaware, Ohio, and
op!!n lio11se fr'¥'1 2 to 4 p.m.
They were marrl~d June 8, 1940 · Wayne Nelson of Swanton, Ohio.
In the Bradbury Church of Christ. They have fr:&gt;ur grandchildren
· Mr. Nelson Is retired from and two great- grandchildren.
The family requests gifts be
Penn Central Ralirmld. Mrs.
omitted.
Nelson Is a homemaker.

v Che~k
bly
..
' ...... ' ·· ............·---'--"-"'-.......;::..-~
:.,. . FIRST COMMUNION - . Sacred Heart Church, Pomeroy,
. recently celebrated the Sacrament of First Ho!y Communion
· Receiving Commtmlon for !he first lime were, (L toR) Christophe;
. Randolph, son of l!fr. and Mrs. Stephen Randolph, Racine; Grace
Cochran, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cochran Rio Graade·
Laraine Lawson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Lawson'
Racine; Marjorie Halar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M!clw!l Halar'
Pomeroy; (second row) Jessica Braanon, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Brannon, Tupper Plains; Jennifer Shrlmplln, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. .Gale SluimpiiD, Pomeroy; Morpn Mathews,
daughter of Barbara Mathews Crow, Pomeroy; (third row) Paul
Cochran, son of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Cochran Rio Grande
Officiating at the celebrailon was Rev. RobertBo~r, Eucharlstl~
Ministers were . Elizabeth and Amy Brown, Cheshire, Altar
Servers were Jennifer and Deanna Lisle, Syracuse. The first
CommunlclUIIs did the readlnp and carried the gifts to the Altar.
The Scared Hearl Choir ofler~d Special music for the celebration
.FoDowlng the First C!lmmualon Maas the Catbollc Women's Club
hosted a breakfast for the parish and visiting relatives of the First
Communicants

· 219 N. Second
Middleport - 992-5627

JENOs

Administrator Scott Lucas and Kim Shamblln, Radiology Dept. Head, with new Unlver1
sal X-ray equlpmen,t featuring easy pallenl .
movement recently Installed at VMH.
·

At Veterans Memorial Your Hometown Hospital-.
we are under a constant, consis~ent program of upgradi~g
our facility and equipment to
provide you with topflight
healthcare.
We've been on the local
scene ·for over 25 years and
have come a long way with
the installation of state-of"
h
·
t e-art equ~pment, the redoCO ration and 'remodeling of
•y

.
. . our fa(ility and the assemblmg and the assembling of . a: .well-trained healthcare staff
·which is dedicated to giving "down home" care arid treatment.
At Veterans Memorial, we care for you and about you.
Look to us for all of you(healthcare needs provided in your ·
own home area where family and friends can keep in dose touch
with you. ·
·
.

We're Getting Better Every Day!

fMiJ ·

_

_

_

'V.

Veterans Memorial Hospital·
115 East Memorial Drive
,vi
992-2104

• Possess High Work Standards
• Work Well With Little
Supervision
._
• Participate and Show Initiative .
• Possess Good Communication
and Listening Skills

Pomeroy
'y

.

The Pillsbury Company offers competitive wages
and excellent benefits.

:~

CHILLICOTHE

].Wacks to note 50th qnntversary

38 Marietta Rd.

Beginning June 11th, 1990
From 8:00A.M. • 5:00 P.M.

GAIUPOUS, OliO

MON. T..U Fll. 9 TO 9 P.M.
SAT. 9 TO 6 P.M.
SUNDAY 12 TO 5 P.M.

CHEESEBURGER

57 C.

•

• t:HESH~RE - The family of Electric Corp. for 25 years. Mrs.
Hfr!llc\,and Odella Mack will host Mack Is a homemaker. Both are
iJi OPeD hOuse lri honor Of their · Involved In community actlvl;
P!lrents' 50th wedding annlver· lies, Including the Masonic
sary at Cheshire Baptist Church Lodge and OES. They are
ciJi Sunday, June 24 fr001 2·5 p.m. members of tlje Cheshire Baptist
.
.
:ilarold Mack and Odella Church.
The Macks have two children,
D$mmond were married June
Myron !If Hilliard and Mrs. Mary
19,•1940 at Cheshire by the late
(Michael) Fulton of Wooster.
Rev. Ernest Higginbotham.
. They have five grandchildren.
:Mr. Mack was employed by the
It Is requested that gifts be
Matletta Manufacturing C!l. for
·
omitted.
15 ¥ears and tly the Ohio Valley

:.., '

Flame speaker
POMEROY - Hershel A.
F'acemyer · will be the goes t
speaker at Tuesday's meeting !If
tbe Pomeroy Flame Fellowship
at the senior citizens center In
Pomewy at 7 p.m.
·

A GRANDFATHER
FOR A

HENDERSON, W. VA.
GAWPOI.IS, OH,

1'1 E H ,\VI

(, !· I ,\ I

1/ ,\ · ',

: 1J

"GRAND"
·FATHER!

" 1\ r

The perfect gift for the
perfect father,.
A beautiful time piece and
wonderf\!1 ll!ldition to any
room, Westminster Chime.
A brilu plate engraved to

"

job's Daughters
meeting Monday

dedicate the dey will be
placed on the door.
Chool8 from either Ridge·

MIDDLEPORT - Interna·
Ilona! Order of J!lb' s Daughters
wlllmeet Monday at 7:30p.m. for
Initiation at the Middleport Ma·
sonic Temple.

ltOck or lflldal ordlln) -'
.. betentlal liVings. Flll8 deliVery end set up.
SHOWN:

way

FAMILY PRACTICE .
PAIN CONTROL CUNIC

..

::

215TB a J'D'li'BRSOitAVENUE

·&gt;

POINT PLltASANT.

uo4l 675-1675
.-

.'
I

~(

•

$699

Save

30°/o to 400/o Off

SEVEN DIFFERENT ON SALE I

Weather Walken:"The First tOO% WaterproofWa!lcing Shoe.

. (PO~ PLEASANT MEDICAL CENI'ERI

Ho\~• d Miler (In

ONLY

• (FORMER PATIENTS OF DR AARON BOONSUE AND)
·
NEW PATIENTS 'WELCOME

. ..:

Or

YOUR CHOICE
O~K or CHERIY
REG. $9.9

ROBERT M. . HOLLEY, M.D.
·
.

ATHENS .
WAVERLY
110 E. Emmitt Ave.

MAY 28

· HAROLD AND ODELLA MACK

317 Broadway ·

246 W. State St.

446-SIIIS
0110 •va PlAZA
IETW&amp;N HIUS I •G lEAl

EVERY MONDAY FROM 4-8 P.M.
· BEGINNING ,
.

JACKSON /VINTON
GALLIPOLIS

/

FOR .fAMILY NIGHT!

Applicants should also:

.,

"

.j.

• Working With Others On A Team
• Solving Problems
• Learning and Performing A
Variety Of Jobs
• Assisting and Coaching Others

Applications Will Be Taken
At Your Local Ohio Bureau
Employment Services Offices

Chris

~

Applicants working in the team environment will ··
preferrably · have had some manufacturing experience and ·e njoy:
·

45 Ollv'e St.

REMEMBER...

1/J,.~,~·

Pizza Processing
Frozen Vegetable Processing
Distribbtion ·
l
Maintenance

I

-Rev.

CHESTER- The Mt. Hermon
United Brethren Church (Texas
Community) will be having bible
school Monday through Friday
9:30·11:30 a.m. dally. The dlrec·
tor Is Julia Will and the theme Is
"Island In the Son." ·There are
classes for all ages.

·MARCH ON IN TO
McDONALD'S
. ~./!i

The Pillsbury Company, which supplies premium
quality food products and outstanding service to
its custor:pers is now accepting applications for
full-time E'ltnployment as a team .member in the ·
following areas:

We're Getting Older,
And We're Getting Better!

REEDSVILLE - Nadine Goebel, Reedsville, and ·Marlene
Donovan, Coolville, both lnstruc·
tors at the Hocking Technical
College, were recently Inducted
Into Lamda Mega Chapter of
Sigma Theta Tau, International
Honor Society of Nurses. Thll.ls
the first International honor
society of nursing at.Ohlo Unlver·
slty from which both Goebel and
Donovan hold degues.

RUTLAND - The Rutland Meenach and the Sunshine Gang
Freewill. Baptist Church will , will c!lnduct Bible school at the
have vacation Bible School Mon- Pomeroy Church oft he Nazarene
day through Friday 6·8 p.m. Monday · through Friday 6: 30·
Classes for pre-school to teens.
8:30p.m. nightly.

POMEROY

•
•
•
•

Inducted into
nurses honorary

.Bible schools · .

out/

o NIKE
o AVI~
o .KEDS
o REEBOK
o BROOKS
o CONVERSE
o BRinSH KNIGHTS

CancerSocletyUnltmayconduct
a local Nurse of Hope activity to
select a county winner. The local
Nurse of Hope becomes an
official spokesman for the Gallla
County Unit, appearing at meet·
lngs, volunteer training sessions
and In media Interviews. Tile
Unit Nurse of Hope also enters
the statewide· program for the
selection of Ohio's Nurse of Hope
held In Columbus.
For more Information contact
Pat Boyer, execu live director of
the Gallla Co11nty Unit, at 446.
7479.
.

They are the parents of eight
children, Elizabeth Mitchell,
Gall White.- Naomi DeBoard, Ed
Stone, Ronnie Stone ·and Larry
Stone, ·a n of Columbus; Jewell
Eddy of Gallipolis; and Gary
Stone of Orlando, Fla. One son,
Donald Stone, Is deceased. They ·
also have 16 grandchildren and 10
great grandchildren.

__

u··l

ut

GALLIPOLIS - Orville and
Beulah Wood Stone observed.
their 60th anniversary at home In
Gallipolis on Mother's Day with
family members.
The Stones were married May
15,1930 at Eskdale, W.Va. He Is a
retired coal miner. and she Is a
·
homemaker.

RACINE - The Racine First
Baptist Church will have bible
school Monday through Friday
6·8 p.m. The !!Ierne Is "Friend
Dimension." There will be
classes fcir all ages and the pubic
Is Invited to attend.
,.._

~~
411ii61D

ORVILLE ANI) B'tJLAR WOOD ,STONE

Stone·anniversary observed

.

- ..

'

Weight control classes planned in Pomeroy

GALLIPOLIS - Three selec·
tlon committee members were
named recently !!lr the 1990
Nurse of Hope Program of the
GaiUa County Unit of the Arnerl·
can Cancer Society.
According to Lee Ann Baker,
CST, RN, current Nurse of Hope
and chairman of the program,
the selection committee will
have the Important task of
naming the new Nurse of Hope at
the local program Monday, June
11 at the French 500 Room of
Holzer. Medical Center. Selection
factors Include ability to com·
mun)cate, professionalism and
sincerity of concern and the
presentation !If a .two-minute
soeech on caiiCf&gt;r.
The selection committee In·
eludes: Trudl A. Franks of
VInton, RN, Gallipolis Developmental Center; Alvera Robinson
of GallipOlis, former executive
director· GaiUa County Unit
American Can~r Society; and
Steve Dlsseler of Ga111polls,
account executive/announcer,
WJEH!WYPC Radio.
Under the plans of theN urse of
P~:&gt;i!!~ each Anl.,rt.can

'

· Made of WeatherTuff!' leather and crafted with our exclusive
waterproofcc;mstruction,
Walkers"""'"""'
warm in winter, cool in summer, and diy all the time.

aiC:Iil

FANTASTIC STOREWIDE
JUNE SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS

•Free Delivery
•Carpet ·

SJ4DO

•Wallcovering

•Dra.,.ry

Mlft. I FrL 9tJO Ill I P.M.
Tee. WM. h . 9-.30 Ill 7 P.M.
s.t. til 5 , .M.

.~

.

• •

�~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=~~m=-~~~~M:~:d=~~~-0-~.~-~~~==;w~.V~·~·~~~~~~

Christ UMC
Bible School
scheduled

•
•

CLIPPER , MILLS
Christ
United MethOdist Church, located six mUes south of GalHpoUs
on State Route 7, will hold Its
annual Vacation Bible School
lrom Monday, June 18 until
Friday, June 22.
Sessions will begin at 9 a.m.
and end at noon each day, with a ·
special service of celebration
during morning worship on Sun·
day, June 25.
This year's VBS theme is
"FRIEND!menslon: Jesus• !)e.
sign for Friendship lillia Hi-Tech
World. "
Students from preschool
through senior blgh will explore
this design, as shown In John
15: 15 ("I have called you
friends ... ") and other scriptures,
tbrough · music, lessons and

ports

STO.RE HOURS
Monday t~ Sunday

Family nighi
set at facility

298 SECOND ST.
..POMEROY. OH.

By POIII,A SMf.L'a. .
UPI SporiB Wrller
ELMONT, N.Y. (UPI) -Go anti Go brought an
emphatic touch·of Ireland to the Belmont Stakes
Saturday, surging to an 8~-lengtb victory and
denying ~entucky Derby winner Unbridled a
second jewel of the Triple Crown.
.
-The mystery horse from Ireland, shipped
across the Atlantic just three days ago, received a
commanding ride from Irish jockey Michael
Klnane. Go and Go charged from fourth place
around the turn and took the lead early In the
stretch before drawing away tn the l22nd edition
of the Belmont.
The colt, sent off at 7'1 and trained by Irish
champion Dermot Weld, became the eighth

PRICES EFFECTiVE SUN., )UNE 10 THRU SAT.,.JUNE 1

'

··-

U.S.D.A. C~OICE BEEF.

$

.

T-Bone Steak •••• :~.

4f:.
4 ·· .

.'
69
Cubed Steak .... ~e;·• . 2.
B~CKET BEEF

' .

.

.

.

~$

La• .

•

FRESH PORK Bun
Steaks or COU~TRY .srvLE

' ',

•

$]59.
•
'

Pork R1bs ............L:.•

-t.-

nAvoRITE ASSORTED.

·

Lunch Meats .:•••fee S12·9.

Leg Quarters ••••••••
LB.

tying for seventh fastest In the race's history. The
time was 3.2 seconds off the record by Triple
Crown champlo~ Secretariat In 1973.
Go and Go paid $17, $6.20 and $4.80. Thirty Six
Red, ridden by Mike Smith, placed at $4.40 and
$4.20, and Baron de Vaux , under Jean Cruguet , ·
shdwed at $12.60.
This was Go and Go's second trans-Atlantic
trip. Last October he won the Laurel Futurity,
wblch was scheduled to be run on 'grass but
switched to dirt because of rain .

~·guests

at all-star contest

Eric Davis autographed baseReds games he had been to as a
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE ·
ball, Motor Parts, Inc., $275;
boy and to the Reds games he had
~mes-Senllnel Staff
Johnny
Bench autographed bat,
the occasion to cover for WSAZ
RIO GRANDE- Though Reds
$250; Hank Aaron
Steve
Lee,
Radio and WSAZ-TV In his many
Hall of Fa mer Brooks Lawrence
autographed
baseball, $425; Pete
years behind the mike and In
and former WSAZ-TV sports
front of the camera. In guiding Rose autographed bat, . Tom .
d'Irector Bob Bowen had few
the event toward the Introduction Wiseman, $625; 10 former Reds
words to say to the crowd of area
autOgraphed bat, ' .Dr. Ralph
of Lawrence, Bowen also rebuslnes$men (some of whom
Lach,
$375; Chris Sabo autoflected oil the major-league playwere also Reds Dream Week
ers that have come from the graphed baseball, Bob Eastman,
team players) and area baseball
$55; Barry I::arkln autographed
Minford native's home territory.
fans at Saturday's Bob Evans
''A jot of good playerscamefrom · baseball, James Mullins, $60;
· Dream Team luncheort. their
there - Larry Hisle, Gene Tom Browning autographed
words carried some weight.
Tenace,
AI Oliver, and of course, . baseball from his perfect game,
"Like Nux (Reds sportscaster
Dr . .Ralph Lacll. $375; and eight
Branch Rickey."
and former hurler joe Nuxhall)
former
Reds autographed. baseauction
that
followed
Law)'he
last year, I'm goJIIIa make two or
ball,
Steve
Disseler, $200.
rence's
speech
resulted
In
the
three pitches, and then I'm gonna
"
There
were
also other sales
following
sales
·to
these
sit down," said Lawrence, the
made
from
buyers
not poste~ on
Individuals:
head baseball ~6ach at Wilmingthe
sales
sheet.
I
Pete
Rose
autOgraphed
base.
ton College. "We don't throw as
Proceeds
from
the
event
will
ball,
Bob
Evans
Farms,
$550;
hard or as often as we used to."
go
to
the
Arthritis
Foundation
·
Tcny
Perez
autographed
base. Bowen, now a retiree living In .
and Its GaiHa County chapter.
ball, Dr. J ..A. DeLamerens, $150;
South Point, reflected on the

WINS BELMONT ~ The Irish-bred Go and Go
claimed victory In Saiunlay'a Bebnont Stakes by
8% le11glbs over Unbridled. Go and Go Is only lhe

second Irish coli to win the race, joining ttlll ·
winner Cavan. (UPI)
·

•

.•

Ground. Turkey ••'!•• 99&lt;

CORN KING

Boneless ·Ham ••• :~·. $199
!

FLAVORITE

Wieners ••••••••••••••~:•• (j 9 c:

. HE~D 2/Sl"
LE'TTU.CE'•••••!t••••••••
FLAVORITE

,. · 2~'o·
:
.(t

Wedding policy

..

•

Ml.lk ·••••••••••••••
~LAsnc
$169
GALLON .

Colby Cheese ...~:~~., 99C
BANQUET

&lt;

SaIt1nes
. ••••••••••••••••• 79&lt; .. TV Dinner •••••••••••••
oz. 99·
C
.
LUCKY LEAF CIDER or WHITE
KEMP PAIL
$
Vinegar ..........~A:~: •• 199 Ice. Cream QU~~T ~~L $2 99
·

-,

1-LB. BOX

10-12

•

5

••••••••••••

ASSORTED FLAVORS

PLAIN OR IODil~ED

LOSTA POP

MORTON SALT

• 2~A~s oz.$

329

Gotd Only At Paw••• ~- Valu
Gaotl !ton, June I 0 thru Sat.; Junt 16

260Z.

.,

PURE SWEET

1.0&lt;

4 LB.
lAG

: • GlOMI Only At ,_••, S.,.. v•
Gaotl Slln. lunt 10 thru Sat. Junt 16

'

·I

' .

GETS INFIELD HIT - Ex~Melgs Marauder Chrll SlewBI~I.
shown wearing his Meigs American Legion unllorm, reaehes out
lor a Broolul La~nce pitch In the firs tinning Blld sends _It oullo
shortstop, where II dies long enough lo allow Stewart to reach first
for an Infield single. Stewart scored later In the lrame.
(Tlmes-8enllnel photo by G. Spencer Osbome)

BEATS OUT LINE..JIUGGEB.- Kyger Creek grad Brtail VI MOD
pu~ ll!e neeeellll'i eDglllh on '11118 Brooks Lawrence plleh to gellbe
ball to roD down &amp;be ftrM.bMe lhie slowly enough to let Vl1180n get
to first In the opening frame. (Times-Sentinel photo by G. Spencer
Osbome)

FEW
Ball of Famer Brooks
Lawrence, the peal of hoaor IIi Saturday's Bob En.DII Dream
Team game and lnncbeon, premised only a few plkhee In lbe gam~
agaiMt the Mid-Ohio Valley Stan, an area all-filar leun lbat
co1181sled of area blgh acllool graduatea. Here he deliver• his first
ptkb of the gune to Melp gradnate Chris stewart. ( Tlme8'
Sentinel photo by G. Spencer Osborne)
·

National .Le~e to ·. announce pla~. to add two new ·teams
'

~

,-

'

I

·:

1

scrutinized for every nuance of partiality toward
Former cotnrruss10ner Peter Ueherroth de:.'
executive officer of the Pltlsburgh Pirates and
a potential franchise site.
... '. clared expansion a "front-burner ltem"'ln 1984;
chairman of . the NL Expansion Committee,
UPI SporiB Writer
.
"I'm not satisfied that It's taken 3~ years and
· then put the ISsue lri cold storage. Potential
Indicates presentations will begin In the late
CLEVELAND · (UPI) - National League
we
still don't have schedule for expansion," says
expansion cities were summoned to New York two
summer. An announcement on finalists could
owners are being dragged, kicking and screamexasperated
Sen. Bob Graham, D-tla. "It's an
,years ,later to mi!Jte presentations before an
come by the winter meetings In Los Angeles.
Ing, Into a major step toward baseball expansion.
Important
national
Issue. Baseball Is more than a
expansion committee tllat eventually dissolved.
"The June 14 announcement will spell It out,
On June 14, the NL's expansion committee Is
making
a
profit.
Right now, segments o!
means
of
Apparenlly, basebal.l management has simply
step-by-step, what our process Is expected to be,"
scheduled to release a long-awaited timetable for
large
cities
In
America
are not being wellDanforth says. ,
run qut of excuses at this point. ..
adding two franchises and matching the Amerlserved."
"It's pretty o)&gt;vlous·that baseball Just doesn't
With no additional expansion expected before
• can League. total of 14 teams·. The timetable
•
want to e~pand,!' says Sen. Connie Mack, R-Fta.,
the tum of the century, the 12 NL owners will be
merely will detail the selection process- with the
· who.stumped UOSI!CcessfuUy for a commitment to
announcement on specltlc cities not expected
•••
add six major-league team,s .within the next
untU the suinmer oll991. The NL' s two new teams
decade. ''My fear Is that baseball has thrown the
will hit the field In 1993 or 1994.
. An)erlcan ·:people a .)loJ1e with · the two-team
. .Leading cqntenders for baseball's first expanexpanslol\. Now .we need tlie meat with tour more ,
sion In 13 year~ Include Penver, ·the Tampa·St.
three hits, He struck out hvo a~d
BOSTON (UPI) , Dana
Murphy couldn't retire a batter,
teams." · . '-1
'
Petersburg area of Florida, Phoenix, Buffalo,
walked
two.
allowing two hits, before Jerry
Klecker, a 29-year-old rookie who
The battle lines for that bone are being drawn
Chicago
N.Y., and Washington, D.C. The NL liasn't
Is 4-2 In extra Innings_
spent seven seasons In the .Reed got the final four outs to
and the fight could get ugly_ Cities vying for the
season,
Including 3-0 at
expanded since Montreal and San Diego were
.this
minors, gained his first majorpost hts second save.
two
new
franchises
will
soon
parade
belorethe
NL
added In 1969, when the Expos and Padres paid
home.
.
league victory and Ellis Burks
The Red Sox Jumped ahead 3-0
Expansion Committee armed with glossy
less than $10 million apiece In franchise (ees.
Trailing 3·2, the Phlllles tlEMl
drove In six runs Saturday In the first. Wade Boggs opened
brochures, demograp)ltc charts and stadium
The cost this lillie around? Try $1110 million per
the score In the ninth on an RBI
afternoon to lift the surging the Inning with a double off the
blueprints.
St. Petersburg's $110 mllUon Florida
franchise. That's a healthy Inflation rate by any
single , by Lenny Dykstra Boston Red Sox to an 11-G left-field wall and Jody Reed
Suricoast Dol!le, which se,ts 43,000 for basebal~
extending his major leaguesstandard.
:
~rlumph over the skidding Cleve.walked. After retiring lhe next
was recently completed wl th- no guarantee of .a
leading hitting streak to '·22
"There's a very brief economic windfall when
land Indians.
two hitters easily, Sergio Valdez,
team to ocCiipy the .facility.
·expansion occurs,:• says Peter Savas!, who ran
Kames.
Burks, who belted a solo homer 2-2, walked Dwight Evans on a 3-2
Baseball- Comrnlasloner Fay VIncent, reiteratToronto's Inaugural baseball operation In 1977.
,Dickie Thon opened the ninth
In the sixth, collected, three hits pitch to load the bases. Burks
Ing the views of his late predecessor, A, Bartlett
·'But that benefit l~sts for a,slJort'perlod of time.
as the American League East- fobowed wjth a two-run siJiile •with a walk and moved to third on
Glamatti, has Indicated a preference for natural
You have to balance that Y.,ltl} having ,to play
leading Red Sox won their and Qutaiana sliced a ground· . ! a single liY Darren Daulton. one
•
grass
and a11 open•alr stadium, but would not rule'
. out later, Dykstra's sinalescoied
games a~nat expansion clubs, eliminat-Ing
seventh straight game and&lt;sent rule RBI double, ll)aking It 3.0.
out the feaslblllty of a domed facUlty. He claims
games agaiQ.St tradltloJ:Jial ·rlvala and aplltting up
the.Indlans to tbelrstxth •
ina
eu11e '· PhiDI• a (Ulan.) . . ThDn for a 3-3 tie. With the b~
his sport has a ''limited appetite'' for expansion . row.
the TV pie. From an economic standpoint, the
· At' Chicago, Mark Grace · loaded. Lancaster was able to llet
beyond two new teams,
'
only benefit 1!&gt; expansion Is the Jtroceeds each of
Klecker. 1·2, made hill sixth
atnaled ho~ Shawon Dunsllln two groundouts and end the tally,.
·Last mol!,tb, Tim Wirth, a Democratic aenat&lt;if
the established clubs receive.'' :. ~
start, pitching six lanlnp. He
from second base with no outs In , The Cubs led 3-0 In the !Jist
from Colorado and head of the Senate task force,
•
Tbe U.S. Senate Task ·F orce on Baseball
allowed one run, three blta and a .the lltb tnntna Saturday to lift inning on a home run by Rype
said Denv~ and the Tampa Bay area are virtual
Expansion has grappled with ' obstinate NL
walk, striking out seven.
the ChiCago Cubs to a 4·3 victory Sanjlberg and two-ruo trlple 'by
certainties for the two aew NL franchises, based
Marvell Wynne.
'
owners for several years, thre$flenb)g to revoke
Kelcker, who signed with the Red over the Phlladelpbla Phlllles.
on unldenutled SQili'Cel. When baMball officials
With one out, Sandberg sent
baseball's antitrust exemption unlees new fran·
Sox In 1983, compUed a 58-t6 , Dunston led off with asingle off
··· Issued heated denials, Wlr1b WM forced to
chtaes are.awarded on a tlm,ly !Jaalll. In responee,
minor-Ieaeue mark betore mak· , Jeff Parrett, 2-4, and stole Marvin Freeman's first pitch
b&amp;cktrack. ~ mucb apeculaiiDn aDd In·
they have beep~ wltb ·a batballflllbulll!r
lng the club In spring training. He second. After Andre DawiOD Into the left-center field
nliendo untU . the NI; offers Ita · otflctal
- as ' major leallllt! owners • &amp;~~4 bliseball
lett wltb a 7-1 lead.
wallred, Grace sinaled sharply to bleachers for bls 14th homer.
aniiOIIIICemtllt.
.
'
- - ··.out later, Dawson and G~c:t
commtssto~rs trotted out a " jihmy of ' woes
. Delltlls Lamp pitched one and center, scoring Dunston.
Th' exact date ow.ner~ bel tow tho.e expensive
ciestaned to keep Interested cttie( ~1.\:11 perpetual •.
tw&amp;tblrd innings and surrenLes Lancaster, 5-2, pitched slnaled, both scoring on Wynnt''l
glfls
ri!mallll
uncertain.
Dou&amp;Ju
Dlllfol'th,
chief
'.;
dered four runs, one earned. Rob , fo~ I~ allowing o~ run on .triple to the .wall in right,
f,alting list.~
·
, ·'·
ByiRA~UF~

a

FLAVORITE

.
•

.foreign-bred to win· the 1~-mtie race and the
Lastx, skipped the Belmont because of New
second Irish bred, Joining 1958 winner Cavari.
York's medication rules. Unbridled's trainer Cart
Unbridled, running for the first time this year
Nafzger chose to risk one race without Laslx
without the New York~banned drug Laslx, began
because the colt experienced just one bleeding
his usual big move from the middle of the pull&gt; · , ·episode last fall.
entering the Mme tum. .
·
. ··
Unbridled, who was osecond In the Preakness, ,
He then unexpectedly · slowed with about
needed only to flnllh the Belmont to collect the $1
five-sixteenths of a mUe to go. He struggled to hold
· mW!on challenge bonus for the best overall finish
fourth place, behind second-place finisher Thirty ·
In the three races.
Six Red and 65-l.sbow horse Baron de Vaux.
The chestnut colt covered the course, rated fast
The outcome oNhe Triple Crown finale made
though still drying after rooming ral.n , ln2: 271-5,
this the first year since 1986 tbree different horses
won legs of thoroughbred racing's showcase
series.
Preakness Stakes winner Summer Squall, who
has serious bleeeding problems ancJ runs on

LONGACRE

RACINE - The Southern Local Board of Education will meet
at 7 p.m. at the high sch~l on
Monday.

'"

. '

'

School board
meeting slated

I

.

4wrence, Bowen honored ,

GALLIPOLIS - The Scenic
HUll FamUy Night DinnerwlU be.
held Monday, June 11 at 6: 30 p.m.
Tbe menu will be spaghetti,
tossed salad, garllc bri!ad, apple
pie a Ia mode and Ice tea or
coffee. Cost Is $2 per person.
Speaker for the evening will be
Sue ,Ann Bostic, Senior Citizens
Coordinator from Ohio Valley
Bank.
· Reservations can be made by
contacting the fa£1Jity by 1 p.m.
Monday.

. The Sunday Times-Sentinel
regards wectdlngs of GalHa,
Meigs and Mason counties as
news arid ts happy to publish
wedding stories and photographs
without charge.
However, wedding news must
meet general standards of timeliness. The newspaper prefers to
publish a~:couots of weddings as
soon 11s poSsible after the event.
To be published In the Sunday
edition, the wedding must have
taken place within 60 days prtor
to the publication. Material for
Along the River mustberecleved
by the editorial deparbnent by
Thursday, 4 p.m., prior to the
date of publication.
Photographs of either the bride
or the bride and groom may be
published with wedding stories,
U ,desired. Photographs n\ay be
etiher black and white or good
quality color, billfold size or
larger.
Poor quality photographs will
not be accepted.'Genetally, snapshols or Instant-developing photos are not of acceptable quality ,
Questions may be directed to
the editorial deparlment from 1
to5 p.m. Monday through Friday
~t (614) 446-2342,

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

Go and Go ·captUres Belmont by 81/2 lengthS

8 AM.10fM

chairperson ,Bev Jeffers, outgoIng pastor Ken Burkman and new
pastor Michael Smith Invite
children and youth in theGalllpolls. area to come and dlscovel'/
Vacation Bible SChool as ·~the ·
place where friendship grows." ··
F!&gt;r further Information and/or to reetster your cbUd, call'
Jitters at ~ or the church
Office at 44~-

CHESHIRE - The GalllaMetas. Community Action
Aai!IICY will be dlstrlbu tlng flour,
peanut butter and butter to
. peoplf_holdtna Food Commuot~y
Cards, on Tuelday, June 19 at the
followii!R locations:
Melp County - Meigs Couoty
FaJraound,l, Racine American
Lepm, Tuppers Plains Fire
Station and Pagevllle Town Hall.
Distribution will begin at 9:30
a.m. and lastuntil12: 30 p.m., or
untu the -supply Is exhausted,
whichever comes first.
Gallta Couoty- aallla County
FalrgoUnds, .Bidwell Mount Car·
mel Church, Guiding Hand
School. and Crown City Fire
Station. Distribution will begin at
n0011 aDd last until 2: 30 p.m., or
until the supply Is exhausted,
whichever comes first.
· Those picking up for others
must bring a signed note from
. that person, along with their
Food Commulilty Card.
Iad.M duals picking up commodities are asked to. bring
·
'paper bags.

Section
June 10. 1990

-----

-

crafts.
VBS director and education

Commodity
distribution
set loeally

~imes- ientinel

SUGAR

$119

GMII Only At Pow••• Sup« Valu
· Gaotl Sun. J- 10 lllru Sat. Junt 16

R!)SE'S '2111Jo CHUNK

,, DOG$FOOD
::aLB.

249

Gelll Only At ,_••, Sup« Va..
.GMII Sun., liM 10 lllr1 Sat...... 16

-

Red .Sox beat Indians 11-6

.

..

I
I

-.

ope

It

- ....

~

"'-·

- ····-·-·
~-·

. ~- ...._.

--

.t
'

.

l

�June 10, 1990

.

- -Pega C-2-Sunday Tmes-Sa'ltinel

June 10. 1990

Ponaoy-Middleport-Galipolia, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

~

J

•

By Un~d Preas lntemattonal · Award winner has won six of his
It may not have been a vintage
last seven starts and has a 1.80

'

three-run homer in II th gives Astros 3-1 victory

It 4-2 In the seventh.
" We,'ve been struggling to get
perfonnance, but Roger CleERA.
somethlnlt golog, " said Clevemens stUJ had what he needed to
Jeff Reatdon, who got the last land's Chris James. " Going
become the first 10-game winner
two out$ with runnersonflrl tand
against one of the best, like
In the major leagues tliis year.
third, pitched the final " two &lt;;lemens , Wl! S an e xtra
· " It had to be the worst game
Innings to record his elghth'save challenge." .
and Ills second In many nights.
Cl4!veland, which suffered Its
he's thrown all year ," Boston
catcher Tony Pena said Friday
"We kept the fans here to the fifth conaecutlv.e loss, went In
,night after Clemens led the
end,", sald Boston manag_er Joe tront 2-llb the second on rookie
S\l~lngBostonRed ·Soxtoa 4-3 Morgan, :"but It was .a sweet BeauAitted'stwo-runllomer,hls
triumph over · the Cleveland
ending."
first hit In the majors. Allred,
Indians.
.
.
Ellis Burks' go-ahead t.,vo-run recalled from Colorado Springs
· ''He was 'all over the place," ,homer In the seventh was the key ThurSday , lotted a drive that
·l'ena said. "But when he got In' offensive,blow for Boston, wltlch . hooked around the right-field
foulpole. It was the first homer In
trouble, he beared down. That's · posted Its siXth straight win.
why he's one of the. best. "
Trailing 2-i In the· sixth; the Fenway against Clemens this
Clemensbattledthroughseven
RedSoxJumpedaheadonBurks' season.
Innings, allowing two runs, eight
two-run blast. Tom Brunansky
" Clemens wasn't nearly as
hits, walking three and fanning
doubl~ leading off against John good as he has been, but he won," •
'
· Farrell, a-., After two outs, 511ld Morgan. " It just shows you
eight.
''I fought with myself a bit
Burks lined a shot Into the bow good he Is."
tonight ," said Clemens, 10-2. "I
Jeft.fleld screen for his seventh
Elsewhere In the . American
homer.
·
,
League. Seattle dumped Detroit
struggled from the Second lnnlbg
JOllY Reed's suicide squeeze 5·2 In .the first game of a
on. I was throwing the ball In the
scored LuiS Rivera, who had double-header, Detroit downed
middle of the plate. When you do
that , you get ln trouble."
doubled and moved to third on Seattle 6-3 In the nightcap,
'
The 1986 and 1987 Cy Young
Wade Boggs' grounder, to make Baltimore edged New York5·41n
'
· .
· •
·
.. ,,
F'

•

.· .HOUSTON (UPI) -Stellar pitching and late-Inning heroics have
.·.been mlsslnglngredlentstrom theAstrossofarthlsseason, but Mike
·.:Scott and pinch-hitter Glenn Wilson combined to lead Houston toal-1
win over the Clnclnnetl Reds FrldliY.
•. ,Scott-(3-6) pitched 10 lbnlngs, allowing only one run on three hits,
•: "'fbUe striking,out a career-high 15 batters and walking only one.
. :;: : • " My plan was to go out and throw some sliders and changeups, "
•• • said Scott. ''But my split-finger was working so good early, I just
: -stuck with It. It really set everything else up."
·
i! ; Scott's effort wol!ld have gone for naught If not for Wilson.
&lt;:•. Entering the l!ottom of the lOth, the Astroa were down 1·0.before
:;:: Wilson delivered a two-out, three-run homer to win the game.
•,.. "It felt good justto be able to help," said Wilson.
:'C Wilson has lost his starting job this season because of a lackluster
:;;: perrorma~at the plate.
,
~-! lt was Scott's first 1990 victory In the Astrodome.
.
,.; . "It was the Mike Scott of old," said Houston manager Art Howe.
:=::"He's really had his good stuff In two of Ills last three starts. He's
... :starting to come around when we really need him."
-scott, the National League's only 20-game winner 1111989, was &lt;h'lln
:&gt;: ·seven starta at the dome up to Friday.
~._:: Trailing 1-0, Eric Anthony drew a one-out walk and was lifted for
::.. ·pinch runner Louie Meadows. Rafael Ramirez singled and Meadows
,.· :moved to· third on Alex Trevino's fly out to center.
.: : ~DCIIIJ!AII starter Tom B~ownlng allowed five hits over' nine
•·;-Innings but didn' t tlgure In the deciSion.
.
·
·~: The Reda bad taken a 1,-0 lead In the lOth. Larkin ·singled with one
:!:-out and moved to second on Davis' groundout. Larkin then stole.third,
~:and after a walk to Paul O'Neill, he scored on Todd. Benzinger's
:i;":Single.
.
.
...:· Elsewhere In the NL, Chicago hammered PhUadelpbla 15-2, San
::;:Francisco pounded Atlanta 23-8, New York shocked Pittsburgh 7-1,
!:•:and San
snubbed Los Angeles 12·6.
11; PlaiUieiiZ -Aller three teams scored a total of 56 runs lb
; extraordlliacy victories Friday, some unusual po~~t-game comments
~-:were heard In clubhouses around the National League.
.
~.;.·;'When It was ll·1, I slapped myseH a couple times," said Chicago
~;manager Don Zimmer after the Chicago Cubs trounced the
':·?hUadelphla Phillles 15-2.
.
·
. .: . ' 'It was crazy out-there, " recalled Braves outfielder Dale MurphY,
l:: ilfter suffering through a 23-8 annihilation at IJie hands o( th~ San
~;Francisco Giants._"They just kept hitting and kept hitting a!ld kept
: tbtttlng."
..
.
. .
~~; •! 'There Isn't a mllnager alive who hasn't had a g&amp;ll)e like )Ills," said
•• • vflteran St. Louts skipper Whitey Herzog, after the Cardinals were
.
.. . llwied 18-2 by the Montreal Expos.
, .,:-:The day boardered on the bizarre, beginning with the afternoon
•' : contest Ia Chicago. Sbawon Duns!Dn smashed .Ills second career
;;:·~ . gra,Jid slam to cap a season-high nine-run third Inning, helping the
::~: Cubs set a season-high for runs In a game while snapping a five-game
;. . · losing streak.
~~: Jeff Plco, 2-0, scattered six hits, struck out two and walked two over
~~:: seven Innings. Te~ry Mulholland, 3-3, took the loss, lasting two and
.;..; two-thltd lnnlags.
.
• ~ "I remember a game last year when I had a pretty comfortable
!...:;. lead, I think 1Q;3; &amp;lid we ended up loSing 16-~3," Plco Said. "Hector
-:' (VHianueva, catcher) a.11d Dick Pole (pitching coach) kept telling me
'A to act like It waa a It() game. "
,
:,;~~ Glllllla IS, BraY. 8 - At Atlanta, Will Clark belted a pair of
.!:•three-run· homers, Rick Parker drove In sQI runs and the Giants
ii.} establlshed major league season-highs In runs and hits,
.,,: "Pretty much everything we hit fell In tonight," said Clark.

Parker had four bits, 'Including his llrst major lea&amp;ue bomer; Jose
Uribe went4 for4, knocked In three runa and scored four times; and
the Giants roughed up ~en AUanr. pitchers with 27 hits.
In H~rzog's nightmare, Nelson Santovenla drove Ia a ~areer-blgb
six I'UJ!II and Tim Wallach added four RBI. Santovenla blasted a
three-i'On homer to highlight a six-r.un firs~ Inning and added a
two-run single lb the eighth to pace Montreal s 14-hlt attar;k.
.
"It Is nice to see bull tis difficult to plt~h that type of game because .I
had to walt so long In between Innings, said winning pitcher Dennis
·

Martinez, w~o even' ed his reco rd..a t 4-4 · "That Is the first time In my
career that I ve had a ~2-0 lead.
Dar Strawberry bit a pair of
1
Me&amp;a 7, ~ 1 - ~t ~~w Yo~s an?Gresg
Jefferies added a
home runs an drove n ree r
ernandez 4·5 allowed two hits
two-run shot to power New York. ~~!"deJa ed f~r a iota! of two hours
over seven lanlbgs ln~ta~e~~~tll to •
the help of two Pirate
4 4 111
48 minutes by rain.
a
e
.
· errors.
_ ·At S Diego Benito Sandago stroked a
Padre&amp; 12, D~ger;' 6
ixanun sev~nth Inning and J e Garter
thr~run homer to gn11e a 5 ·r San Die .to Its fourth9 straight
contrlbu~d tb[~ RB\ ~~:r~gdres' thlrf:&gt;ttcber, allowed one hit.
vlctoGry. r a ig e edrjts,t~ · t:lr~s of anlnnlng,allowingsixrimsand
Jim ott, 0-1•1aste us
o.
•
three hits.

J;

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

... ~ •·~ r-

·~~
....
.fJ

REGISTRATION ·''
FORM

.....1'"""·0 L O&lt;

SOU~RNFOOTBALLCAMP

f

v ·~

AM~

-. .
. ·~\Ki• :' '....
"'· ....

::..:: .N--r- :· .:.
· ---,---.,.~~-----------­
'

:'""'~
t"':~

.;,;:;...

"•

Ill .: '

! - --

r

-.

•

-·'

;-~; .Utulle In Scbuu.l lhbi fwl: - - - - - - - - - ' -- - - , ~~~ -- ~
' \_
:;;..~· di~lieol you will at~nd
~· ·:: tills iaii--.,...---·-'-- - - - T-Shirl Size _ __

...

.

·. ~

1,

;:

Parents Naoi'"-- - - - - - - - - - ' - - - - - -

.....

.....•.

~

=:;

llome l'hqnc'- - - - - --,,- - - - ·· - -' - - - --

~~

.~

&lt;

!':.} '

MUST BE SIGNED BY PARENT Olt GUAitDIAN
By slgninJr thiK st:r.tement, I will not hnld Snuth.,rn l..no:w
.~_: : DIStrict nor any ol lis empkoyeo,; reNpnn!llhle lor any Injury Uu&amp;l
-:~,. "'· may occur to, ......... . ,,.., ............ ...... ....
.,..
' during Lhu 1990 rout~ ...... ' hall camp.
· . ··
,

;;;!

.

·~J .. '
.... f • •
f;::~J.

Guillen overlooked · as All-Star

•'

I

· " --------~------~----~------~---------~la:nohl,f'f! nf l'"r•"tlt/C:.,U,dw,

.:... • ""

~.; ·~...

~ : •.. . ANY QUESTIONS, CALL DAVID GAUL AT 992-3636
-::-..

-·-.

~~l;tegistration dates announced
Southern Football Camp_

t;for

f{ACINE - The secomd an:~::: nual Southern High School Foot;;&lt;':';1ball camp will be held for kids In
~.;:il)des 7-12 on June ll; 12, 13, 14.
A: ~I area football players are
t_"''wetcome to attend. The campers
._ ~;wtu receive Instruction In the
t:;f~ndamentals of their position,
~ ~ndltlonlng, and welghtllftlng.
w.,-:; •.Camp will be broken down as
:i~.!Ql!ows: Mooday and Tuesday
~a~ defensive days-Defensive
S.pitt'ks report 4:30-6_: ~.m. Line.. backers report 6. -7. 30 p.m.,
'&gt;'(

backs report 5·7 p.m. Offensive
Line, Tight Ellds re~rt 7·9 p.m ..
Camp staff ~II Include head
Southern football · coach David
Gaul and his staff and various
college coaches and players.
Cost of the camp Is $20 Cost
Includes Instruction and 'camp
T-shlrt. Checks should be made
payable to David GauJ aqd
players can register when they
report to camp.
·

r:,~\.t(.

.

;; _~rs. Running backs, Quarter·

:Sale 3995

.~;

.

.

E~J:aney new UIS.
~.i activities director .
...,...;
·. LOGAN. -Ron Janey, a 1966'
~~

:s":·Ga!Ua Academy graduate whO
;.;--;:recently resigned from the heail
~: : baseball c~chlng post at Logan
• Hljlll School, was named the new
:;;director of student activities at
.
'
,."'•"...tJ"~
.L..A.o'5a n.
:':· :tfe steps Into the post vacated
~-;by former Logan football coach
'
rTA- t"'la
'
.r·,: ~l."'rence Perry, who move,d on to
t;.t;ecome head coach at Zanesville
=._":!High School.
::;,; fn hiS 10 years as the head
.. •.Chieftains, his teams won 206and
:;..; ;Jost83, claimed two Southeastern
~-:Ohio Athletic League titles and
; ~:made the top 10 state ranklngs
;:., -;three times. Janey, a 1973gradu·
....:•ate of Ohio University who also
0:· llolds a mas ler's · degree In
::-· )econdary admlblstratlon, was
· . 11amed coach of the year three
~ limes, selected district all-star
' :: ~ell tour times and waa picked
as a coach on an Ohio alktar
team In 1983. ·

'

,

$8 95·

•

WILL BE OPEN

87 Pullac 6000 LE

_Sale

~79!J5

,.

87 Dodge 600 $E

~ONDl y I

JUNE 11
AT OUR
NEW LOCATION!

Automatic, ai,r, stereo
cassette, till, cruise, wire,
wheel covers.

Sale s4995

.. ··,

Per "·"
Mo•.,.

dOif&lt;n -

66

~~\,f(..

Nlsian 300 tx
5 speed, T·tops, air, power
everything.
and bright re~~led Hot " •

Sale '$1

credit

'
86 -Fonl Mustang

4 door, 5 speed, AM/FM ,
rear defrost, clean car.

locks, cruise . Low mites.

Sale s4995 ·

·Sale 3995
5

85 Ni$san 4x4

Sale s5495

cassette, loaded.
5

Sale 9495

Sale $'5495
89 Shelby Daytona
intercooled )ulbo, power
. windows, locks and seat,
leather, sunroof, cassette
with equalizer.

86 Olds Cutlass
4 · door, automatic, air,

electronic stereo , tilt,
crui,se, local trade .

Sale 54995

Sale s9495
88

Dodge Caravan

Automatic,

atr,

Stereo

cassette, low miles. Great
for vacation .

Sale s9495

Olcllrunkard Musk Store)

, WE WILL BE HAYING A
DRAWING JUNE 18
FOR PRIZES
'

'

· Grand Prize: 1 Pair Diamond Earri•r ,:·
Also, $2 5 Ca$h
446-7621

~

~

·-

..

•

.•

SAT. 11·10
'

Gray, 5 speed, has topper, new ear
trade, one owner, extra nice,

~~~ . 'NoW '6795

CIIYIOUI•

E16-1 61ASIW A¥1.
&gt;,

(61.........71 '

1986 NiSSAN I(INO CAB

1so UPPER RI¥ER RD.
(Accroti• from K-an)
'

1985 CHEVY BWER 4x4

Sport package, cruise, tift, AMIFM
casHtte, air, PQWar y.'indowa &amp;
locks, luggage r~k; mag wheels.
WAS
$9295

'

1886' FORD RANGER :

116, 5 speed, 4x4, new raised white ·
letter Urea, black, AM/FM.

NOW '8495 :~

.1985 CAMARO Z·28

IAOC, fire red with gray cloth In·
lerlor, power door locka &amp; windows,
air, tilt wheel, crul1111, Eagle GT tires,
local trade, only 64,905 miles.

~

NOW '6495

1:987 NISSAN SENTRP,t•

2 door, light blue with gray vlnrr:
bucket seats, sun rooJ, AM·FM
cassette, new radial tir•s. onS:•
owner, local trade, 64,524 miles .~ :

NOW '7895 ;';~

~~

NOW '4995

,h, 1

NOW '6895

~~

NOW '6995

1978 CADILLAC Ei..OORADq•·

'Converllble, white flnlsh lind white
leather Interior, air, power windows
&amp; locke, cruise, power trunk, all op- •
tiona work. You lllUBt see this .
classici
• ·.

~~~

. NOW

llir, AM·

P:M

cuHtt•l Wl!t wheel covera,

Oftl ownerr '

I

~
. ..;,: :. . ·NOW

• GEO ·

'•

1988 MAZDA 32'3 LX

4 wliMI dri~e. allver llnlah, bucket
4 door, burgundy with Siddle cloth
-.ala, AM·FM oassetta, air, power . Interior, 5 speed, AMIFM c...ette.
steering, 5 ·speed, g*"gea, one
low miles, locarnew car trlde.
owner, focal tNQt .

ON

:

1·110·-121 ......

OPEN SUN.·F•. 12·1 0

O'DELL$ LAWN &amp; GARDEN :.-

.

86 Nlssan Puls~1r NX
5 speed, air, stereo ,
sunroof, rear defrost ,
sharp sport,s,car. Red.

Sport Truck , 5 speed,
chrome ' wheels, ' sliding
rear window, sport seats .

1888 MAZDA CAB P.LUS

~

61 COURT ST., GALLIPOLIS
(the

1989 FORD RAN.GER

Cab Plus XLT· 4x4, 80140 seat, 116,
raised white Ieifer tires, burgundy,
extra al)arpl ·

.~~ . NOW '8995

I

86 Honda Civic

4 speed , stereo casse.tte
with equalizer, power

4 door, automatic, air,

86

sa··g9s

S,

88 Mazda 626 LX

,. Sale.:

'

~

.- · We need to
· l·ow~..- inventory
.. . - ·so ·we ·are · .
,_ pasiing the
Savings to y.fu.
. '
:. .
'I
. ·While the. r'
dealers ·are
h~ving. special · ·
event -sales ~
·we are g1v1ng
:. Everyday;· Do~n
Home deals.
' Stop by nOW' ~ '
ride and .drive.
Ask our ·Sales
Stciff to demo
the, car or. truck ·.
:. of :your-: c·'*~ice.
_· .. ; w··~wwlt.: and.
·&gt;rap,..,c..te· our:·
· · ·business.

Au.tomatie, air, AM/FM stereo,
·tilt .wh~ I, tlnled glass, rear .
· defrost~. powe·r : steering, .
DRIVERS AIR BAG. more.

AUtomatic , air, power windows, locks &amp; sunroof,

5 7895. ·

PIOFESSIONAL MODEL 12G
•12 HP Kohler engine
•60': mower deck
•gear drive .
·
•6 year limited warranty

'

89 Dodge Slladow
electronic •1ereo, rear
d ~}rost, power steering,.

.

GENE .. J·OHNSON SA . S:·

•$.1

Sale 4995

New York Its seven tit stra;fght
loss. Brian Holton, 2-l , gave up no
hits and no walks In the lOth and
Allan Mills, 0·1, took the loss.
White Sox 3, Twins 2 - At
Mlnneapous. Ron Kittle hit a&amp;plo
home run In the eighth IMlng'and
(See AL on C-4 )
'

as

--~---~---~-·-···············

Sale Mo~ev .

Sa.le ss395

Wagon, 116, automatic, air,
cassette, power windows
&amp; locka, lilt, cruise. more.

tODAY

UAY; JUNE, IP
,I·P.M. • 4 P. •

ARLINGTON, Texas (UPI) know what his family 's Uke, but
Oakland Athletics slugger Mark
he could be set for life right now. ' '
McGwtre has been· to' the Co liege
'. Canseco said that If he was In
World Se(les and ' the Olympics,
Van Poppel's situation, " I'd be In
Uu t he recommen~ high- school
uniform 3lready. A kid doesn' t
·- pitching phenom- Todd Van Popget a chance like this ·too often. I
pel P!iSS up bOlp for the ..major · wouldn't want to see him turn the
leagues. ·
' money down, pltc.h two years at
Van Poppet, 18, Insists he will. college and then tear a rotator
honor a -commlttment to attend
cuff so big they cari't fix it."
the University of Texas despite
Van Poppe! visited with ·oakrumors that the Athletics · will . land manager Tony La Russa
otter btm a multi-year major- and other members of the organileague contract worth more than
zation prior to Tuesday night's
$1 mllUon.
game against the Texas
· "I think he should sign,"
Rangers.
McGwlre told the Dallas Times
HeJ:aJc!. "With the rumor of the
mQneY. they're talking, I don'tsee
how II!! say no~: He can go to
college three or four times over
With tliat k!Dd Q/. money."
The flam~thr.owlng right·
bander, who 'll\aaesSflS a !15,-mph
fastball and ~ &amp;: . wicked curve,
widely _ Is cOnsidered . the dip
amateur prospect In the nallon.
However, he told t!!ams not to
take him -In · Monday's draft
because he wants to play in the
_College World .Series .and . the
Olympics.
· Still, Oakland took him W)th the
14th selection.
. •
'
Before' tu~nlng Pr~fesslonal,
McGwtre starred for Southern
Cal In · the College·,world Series .,
3.9L ·.V6 en~lne, .' 5 , Spell(
and' played oil: the 1984 ·united
power
steering,,stel'ilo,
clo,ck.
•
;I •
States Olyinplc team that won a
silver medal in Los"Angeles.
.! 'The things lie wants to do, I've
done," MeGwire said. "But for
Dtwn ., .
the money they are talking, he
has to sign. With the opportunity
he's got. there's not a player here
'
who doesn't want him to sign.
85. Nlssan Sentra XE
86 Chevy Nova
He' s got a chance right- now to
Hatchback, air, stereo, 5
4 ~oor, automa(ic, air,
definitely get a shot at the big
speed, power steering,
seek/scan stereo, power
leagues.''
*
·
steering &amp; brakes.
rear defrost. Low miles.
Pltc!Jer . Dave Stewart and
5
5
major-league home-run leader
Jose Canseco, two pivotal play: .,
ers In Oakland's · consecutive
88 Nlssan Sentra ·
World Series berths, agreed with ··
Wagon. air, stereo cas·
McGwlre.
i'.
sette, rear wiper/defrost,
"It's hard to see how you can
.roof rack. Hard to fin_d.
take a chance by going to
college," Stewart said.' "Too
many things can happen. I don't

1-----------------.
----.
~~~~~s~::d~!~ea':r;~J~:-:/~'::i R&amp; D y·IDE 0
.....
~;:he: offensive days-Wide Recelv-

0

.~ -.

~~\~:~:~~~~.:~;~~~

KIPLING
SHOE CO.

8!

Van Poppel 'should sign'
multi-year contract - McGwire

Tanana , 4-4, a llowed 10 hits In
four and two-third Innings.
Orlolell5, Yankees4(18lnn.)At Baltimore, Randy Milligan
scored from third base on a
throwing error by r ookie· third
baseman Jim Leyrltz In th e lOth
Inning,
- Baltimore hand

S'RIHG
SALE·

TENT SALE
-NOW -IN

DOUBLE PLAY- San Diego llhonstop Garry Templetcin (left)
llreil to 111'11&amp; b - 'after fo~llll oul L.A.' a Lenny Harris lll' second
bue Ia the louqh IBDIBI ol Frlda.y nlgbl's game In San Diego,
which the Padres won 'lz.6 .. (UPI)
. ·, · .
-

10 Innings, Chicago nipped Minnesota l-2, Toronto trounced
Milwaukee 11-5, Oakland outlasted Kansas City 3-1 and Texas
topped California 10-6.
In the NL, 'tt was: Chicago 15,
Philadelphia 2; Montreal 18, St.
Louis 2; New York 7, Pittsburgh
1; San Francisco 23, Atlanta 8;
Houston 3, Cincinnati 1 .In 10
, Innings and San Diego 12, Los
Angeles 6.
Tlcera &amp;-2, Martaers s-5 - At
Detroit, plnclt·hltter Gary Ward .
was hit by a pitch with the bases
loaded, forcing home the. goahead run In the eighth Inning to .
lift Detroit, to victory In .the
nightcap and a split of a twl-nlght
double·header. Mike Henneman,
2-4, ear!)Bd the victory with one
and one-third Innings of shutout
relief. Keith Comstock, 1-2, took
the loss .
In the first game, Jay Buhner
hit a two-run homer to. support
the four-hit pitching of Erik
Han$0n over eight Innings. Hanson, 6-4, matcl)ed a season-high.

'
eJ,ghth tor Mike Jackson, who
. ·ARRIE MUSKAT
By C
Tuesday he has benefitted tror'n better," Guillen said.
earned hfa ·second sav Frank
The pressure w.as there. 'l'eam·
"'ff'
e.
UPI Sports Writer
hltdng coach . Walt Hrn lak' s
CHICAGO (UPI) _ The first lessons
mate Tom Seaver noticed lt.
"I used
. . to beag"""
''Sometimes
·round of All-Star balloting has
"""'hltterlb the
I'd
k I'd go 0 for 4,do·or
I'd
been tabulated, and the winner minors but they wanted met~.~ 8, or . rna e an error an .
Isn't Ozzte GuUlen.
a defensjve player, ; a gOOd have·my head down or I'd feel
, In tact, Guillen ranks sixth shortstop," be said. ''It wa~elove . bad going to the airport and he'd
. · say something,"ld Guillen
said 1oft
among American League short· first •. then my hltdng."
h
·
The
"-."
·
""
.
ego
Padres,
who
Seaver.
"He
sa
t
ere
are
....., v~
d
id • a •o
stops, trailing Baltimore's Cal
' as a tree agent.ln of bad games
an
sa
Rl, pken Jr. by 196,696 votes.
Slgned·. Gulllen
ood
d you red
'
"I care. about things I can · 1980 ·wile-n"' he wa$ •16, made that going to be g ysome
• ays
t toanbe
handle," Guillen said: "I . can't cl!!!ll' In 1!!!lJ! ~ He 'bit .295 at bad some days. ou v.e gQ
; . handle the 'votes. You ask three Beaumont('~uf led 'the. league the same every,day." '
k
·
wit:~
·
38'
"e'
r
..i.rs,"
The
previous
But
after
a
game·jn
New
Yor
.· PT.~
f
~~~to~bthe~
•
•u
Gill
d .
ballplayer and some still vote' for
season, ·he made 41 errors.
In whiCh u en rna e a run' 8715-7870 .
Reg'gle JackSon... .
J ack Mc~eoii; who was In t)le scorl!lg error, he showed Ills
•
Guillen may. not .lead the fan Padres front office at the time, . disgust,by throwing a ball at the
balloting, but Is tops-In the league wan.t ed. Gu,llli!n · to play lnstruc- • Pitcher s mound. Seaver call~
In hitting at· .354. . .
tiona! ~l;_ratber:than return to ~ shortstop Into the trainer s
. "People who know the ·&amp;arne Venezuelli/'Gullleii wanted to go .. room.andscreamedathim, using.
kn~ ," ChiCago Whl\e Sox man- to honie, ...
:~; . .
expletives even Guillen could
ager Jeff Torborg said.
"Sill cal~ the r'ntDor league
understand despite his broken
It would help Guillen's case if dlreclbr aild told hbn my mother
En&amp;llsh,
' the White Sox remained' In was '!ead,': :9unlelt sald.·.~1hey
·:He, said 'You ne,v~~ do that
conten~on In the_ AJt ·:W~t so gave ·me· $3,~-.fott; the . tune.-ill · ::~· and I dldn t, .GuiUen
The cO;captaln on the White
Guillen s name becomes lis fa, . ·and, told, ,.me 1tq go born~. And
mlllar'
the shcittstop's ~ fdol, . wllo s the first pe~son lsee at the
So
lth . Carlton Fisk Guillen
Da,ve Concepcion. " · 't
airport when &gt;J get home? My
x w
•
/lWJuin they ·(fans) ·stop and mother. l · told ·her 'I killed you
makes sure .h e now keeps an eye
tl)lnk a !lout It (All·Star voting) · la•t ,night,' a!ld she sal!i, 'Don't
on,the Y011!1i P!ayers.
aniHook at the ictnd of yea('()zzle ever do that again." • ·'"'·
· .
. If · somebqdy Is late ..for
, IS having,' he'll get the votes,"
Guillen never paid back the
stretch~· I. jump 111!· ~~~m, he
: Torborg said. .
.
$3.000 . and says the Pa~s . said. I d do that ,';"hellier I was
.
Guillen, 26, Is In his sixth probably still think his .-mother · co-captain or not.
season. . Over· the last 21 games, passed away.
Guillen says he would bypass
;. Guillen Is 26 for 65 (.400) and
San DlegO ·traded him In 1984
the All-Star Game ~uly 10 at
; lea~ the White · Sox with 16 with pitchers Tim Lollar and BIU
crosstown Wrigley Field If he
'· mu}tl-hlt 3 amw: -Not mall'y No.9 Long plus Infielder Luis Salazar ·could win a coveted Gold Glove.
men hi the llbeup have a .435 for pitchers LaMarr l;[oyt Todd
W.hat about the l!atdng title?
slugging· perct'iillige·-· ·and 10- Simmons al\d· -Kevin . K~lstan. ,
" I wish I could win the batt!~
stolen bases. Of Guillen's 56 total Guillen won Rookie of the Year
tllle, but I'd rathef have a Go
Glove,
said.
"WinThat;d
the title.
hits, only nine are for extra honors In 1985, bitting .273 and
bet · " he
Gold
'Glove?
be
'bases;·
making 111st 12 errors.
ore..a
· .,
A career .263 hitter, he said
"I told myself I had tQ do
crazy·

Dleao·

•-:

•

as

::=:

.,.:; c•

Sunday Jimes-Sentinei- Page- C-3

Clemens. suroive~ ..~ub-pa~ effort t9 h(l.nd Tribe .4-3 defeat

Scott wins first game in Astrodome

.:~. :WiJsori's

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

. IALUPOUS, 01.
);..~·~

~ ~'

'349! .

.,

Cilri&lt;AHCI

Mlkt T!nkhtm

Dwight Hontktr

11' '

~· ATHENS

HONDA CARS

"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE" .
. 810 E~ State (614) 594·8555

�..
June 10. 199o

..

Pomelov Midclaport-GIIIIipoU.. Ohio-Point Pleuant. W. Va.

Page C-4-Sunday THnei-Sentinel

June 10, 1990

Area sports briefs-·____, ]avor's·A2000: glove enters fiftft decad~
,Cage romp slated to start June 18 ·
GALLIPOLIS- The Gall!polls Area Basketball Camp wiD be
. divided Into two sessions, with the junior session, for area
·students entering grades 4-8 this fall, running from Monday,
. June 18 to Thursday, June 2l.
The senior camp, which Is for students entering grades 9-12
, this fall. will run frOin Monday~ June 25 to Friday, June 29.
. Since th-e pre-registration deadline has passed lor the junior
camp, the cost of this camp Is now $40.
The cost of the senior session. for students entering grades
, 9-12 this fall, Is $40 If the $15 pre-registration fee Is paid before
. Sunday, June 10_. After that date· the lee Is $45.
For both camps, the remainder Is to Ill! paid on lheflrst.day of
the campp.
All participants will receive Instruction In shooting,
ballhandling, offensive moves and defensive fundamentals
,from the Gall!a Academy basketball coaching staffs and Blue
Devil and Blue Angel cagers past and present.
' In addition, campers will receive a camp T-shlrt, materials
lor development of skills and motivation, prizes lor competition.
· winners, refreshments, and an athletic bag, sockS and
.wristbands.
·

'

·North
Athens
Lions Club
'
.
sponsor softball to~rney

:to

•

' ATHENS - The Glouster Merchants/Trimble Township
Lions· Club w!ll :sponsor Its lOth annual round; robin softball
tournament on the weekend of ·June 30-July 1 at the West State
Street fields.
·
The entry fee Is $75, and teams must hit their own balls.
Each team ts guaranteed four games on Saturday, with all
teams returning on Sunday with less than two losses. Saturday's
record Will carry over Into Sunday's drawing.
Sponsor trophies will be.aw&amp;,ded for the top lour teams, witb
Individual plaques for the champions and trophies for tbe
runner-up lel!ffi. In addition, there will be an MVP 1\)Vard and a
best defensive player award.
.
The bracket placement will ·be bit rhursday, June 2S. For
more Information, call Tim Sikorski at 1·767·3106, Phil Faries at.
1-767-3153 or Fran Tullius·at 1:592-1228.

Playe~.s

Championship softball tourney
scheduled for June 16, 17 .
ATHENS - Tbe men's USSSA -Class C-D-E District VITI
Championship Softball Tournament will be held In Athens on
Saturday, June 1~ and Sunday, June 17. .
.
The entry fee Is $80 and Is due by Thunday. All entries must
be mailed to the.Atbens Parks and Recreatlon-Departme!lt, 7~
E . State St., Athent'Oh 45701.
,
:· •
For more. Information, c~ll Kevin Schwartzhoff at 1:592-3325
or !'.lar~ Kelly at 1'374·8914. ·
·

Br.SCOTI' WOLFE . .
T-8 c.rre.pondent ·

.

like George. Brett,
Shawon Punston and Roger
Clemens .won'.! part with 'their
Wilson gloves either. Javor loves
to beer that. .
"This gliiVe Is going to remain
a baitc In ilie game," Javor said.
"The more I sit here. and think,
the more I think you can'tchal)ge
the. thumb, you can't change the
·Iflnge."
·
.
· What he:s trying to ~IIY Is,
Javir
wouldn't
change
a, thing.
:
I
•

..

Adalns ·p osts victory
Friday· at Skylin~

~.

one up."

~

.'

,
•
.
,
.,
•

-~

'

flail... i'lldDr.

Ri!:CEIVES BICENTENNIAL MUG - As be Ill
bJ Gall.lptillll entrepreneur Bob Evant

e
· u

_..._•g.
' "a to·ps
51
CoJ.)eae
. ·WOr
· Jd Senes
. 8emJ8
e
·
·
.

Lanes

S

. ,_..
C

-~?

ClYII

§:

1.911,12 c .

,a

.
OLIVE TOWNSHIP FilE DEPARTMENT

fu ,.ULL

'trsf

a

···

.SU.ND·AJ,· JUNE _10

;. ._. . ,:•------------...&amp;

BAUM .LUMBER.

Al'state 8IIDOUilC8I
lower auto rates!

HEATP_,S

F....,* QMJMrt•r

···-

. ..........

IN modll l1118ill,.m.

...,_ IOID41fll

WJ.-.n CUp dGCk car ..ce wltll drlwr'a

'

Ollklulll.' &amp;.-a&amp;J.1
'l'eult ... CaiM.nla."l ~

at Bolt..
.

.._.. ctt, &lt;AIJIIer 1-n at ouaaa•

.

Jt.lll:
'
. ,11'. 8t•lq Matlht, C.lumbla. Teall.,
OhliNnebiS. C.llua SuP"nne, 111.1111; Ill.
Brett Bodhw: CJiemu. ., N.Y., lillie•
Roepl, AUIS; II. Jterrtke £lope, 8PI'U·
__,, W•h., CheVrolet LumiM. 88.11'4:
M. MlcWII Wallrtp., OWe•lbOre, Jb'.,
r,•lac , Grud PI'... 8&amp;.111; II. AJaft
Kllhrtckt, hnl Tllunderbtl'tl, • •418; tl.
Da\1~ Marcla. W•saa, Wile., Clln-rolet
LMml•, U.4tl; ·U , Q .. Uti•, Sp.Une,
WMh., Ford TIH&amp;Iderblrd, III.HII; t4. Rot.
Mo..... Ma411Ha. Co•JL, OI._.,.Gblle
Clttl ... Sllft~e. IIUII; II Henhel
McGriff, Portluul. Ore., Po •lac Grud
Prtll, 111.111.:
NvW: f1_.·lSpoaltle•anclprot1aional
...,..,.. will be dfterml.d 8111.-dq.

~

'

Tdall (JelleoU 1·1) at Callhrllla

s.. ...,.o&amp;mM

Clnel_. at • • •
•.,
N• Yo,._ at Ballrno~
O.tup a Mlai!He&amp;a

a. ..... at Detroit

Teus at CaiiiOrala
Kaa. . Cll:rl&amp; Oalllald
Tonllo a llllwullte, •IIIII

-

NATIONAL LEAGUE

N• Yorii ......, ............ Jt

L Pd . 08
• .•• -

·u -••
14 .1M

•
I

n .n1 ""'

llfr
.til IVt
.na II \It
,Jtl" 14}1.
.SU ' 11',1,

WIIIINCHSIIT

Lightweight design. Belt clip. Ear
pad speakers. I PRO 1.

..

· SAE or metric. Carbon graphite·
handle. 13801-620.

450 Sec I lw..e.IIOJ
a Wu •••· 01. 4stJ1

lElNEn'S

Mobile Homt Heating/Cooling

s.tfenl Sctuiiii.•GJJifi I , OH.
hllwlhw•w. (...., &amp; ... r.tlly - &amp; 5lnllt
f

11/ICHAIIGEABLE
RATCHET
114" drive. Forward and reverse
rotation. Oulek charge. 1904C.

Jloll'fM" . . . llteve

•'I :
•
•
•
"

c

,,'

.•
'-.

&gt;

•,

.' ...

••.,.,
.
'. -,
.

Ht-. pl&amp;eltenTom

-·

IU-....- ......w.... OwrenBe.,.,
MI . . . GI'IIMin ... Qatwick Sllwr"

Molllrtll

Brie (DL) -.Wtv.. •dpud bekt'

11 a~ .....

Dlep c~·n&amp; ...,. 11:11 ""''
S.IIII.,Oamea
lit.
a&amp;lllfllrell
Plilllllllll II .Hew.York
San Frudscl a1 At... lll
.............. Qdl:...
...

'

,'

lo-. Kftl IBal• ,., Mo ... met'J',
Eric Rill ... 01fJI.Mee, c•IMrRJaa

lllrrr: rele•• lol"'nnrd aooteYel\

Chlpmu.

,

.

IA~t -~- (Valea.lta 4-1) al San

1M Mill• ~ I • Dlep

For effective sun protection. Does
·· not block vision. Easily stored.

318" DIIIVf

,,

....,te.

p., .

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

DICK TRACY
· PUi.L·DOWN
SUNSHADE

'....

....rhlll,

•• ....._._. c•rwt Sol) at AU•ta

a.w:~

.

•e

....., .. ._cr.n.r•••1)atNewV•I'II

1.0•

'' .
.. '

BvutiUChace&amp;cll: plleede-.eiii•Ridl
c.er.. •• Ule U4., . . . . . . IIR; Nil
.... b ....... Mille 11.,.-ert •• Col....
IN11f
later..tlt.aiA..- (A.U);
e ....., pllcWI\JaaMIIIa ... e*lwl'
.llrn ....,. rtta lnm CoMb. a; ~lped
elllflel.... Carl Ev!l'lell ...
ltebert ..........
•
.............. - Sl~d drafted i~t­
lltlller•hrse PMCUI, a,. Nletal, ,Jelf

....... oama

p.m.

..•
I

. New "'" tAL) - Name• D•rell

p ........,(....._f.l)aiChlca,o
(. . . We I·S), t:• J.lft.
·•

(CIUtJ J,J), II:M

.\_

, pttcller De• Wllld• from Iowa or&amp;.le
AIMI'Icu o\IHdiUon 1.4..-\.-\),

s.. Dleae 11, lA• ..-.-. 1

(........ t--tJ

.

".

Dllup (NL) - Plared plleller Bill
Lolli•• aetl-illqillllMble•llll: calledMp

.Ill -

.an

.....
a.a.t.-ttt;•••••••
New Vtft 1, PH.... II'tlil

a.c~....at

·~·

.......

Cllkap11, p ........... .
llollrtall&amp; 81 . ...... '
S.. ........llcO ......... "

. (Lei ........ N). 7:11p.m.
St . . LotD . (TIIIIor 1-1) •
(Garda..- 1-1), 1:11 p.m.

... -.

FrYar Bpi!M'b Traaac:UG•

F

(C•• i-4 l, HI

..

Tr8118adions

, lt. IA.U ........1 ...... 1..... J4 11 .t. II\;
Qlcap ............... ~..... ;z:U 12 .4114 IIY,
Weill
O.cl .... l. l..............'~.. .N II
s .. Dlep ................... .n It
'_Loa Anpl8 .................11 _II
San Frudl(lG ............ .!1 -•
Atlit.n&amp;a ..................... : •.n II
Hodoa...................... .tl 1-4
~ Prw., Rftllls

,..

/\..., Ford Thillllert.lrd, 111.1 11; II. But
strtcklln, Calera. Ala. , Bedell •epl,

(Mc:CMkiUN),ll:llp.m.

Te...
· W
......... .................. .14
Mo.ueat ......... t ...........a
Plalt.del... • ............... .18

'""
'"
' ...

Che¥rokt

Lo•.

.......,.o....

(stewarll·l) , 4:• p.m.
·
S..a&amp;l! (Swu N)_lltOdrolt lPetrrf.:
1),1:Up.ID.
..
'
New Yof'll IC&amp;rJ t-Il at BaiUmon
(•ar-.elll ..1J,1:Q p.m.
Clllcap UU11 +-U I&amp; MI._..
lAIIder••I-1),.:11"P~_m.
'
.
Toi'OIP_ (8tle. 1-1) · at MH.....- ,~
(IIHID 4-S), t:ll p.m.
,

Calif.,

-·

... ••

bln:f, ••II&amp;.
1. Ttri'J Labo~M, carr-Cbrlld. Tex.,
01._.111111e O.tiUs s...-eme, 81.111; 11.
Dale btreU, C...wr. N.C., Ford
ThMntttnl, 8U41; 11. &amp;atlf ·WIIIace,
81.
Mo., Ponllaef Ora. . Prl:ll:,
Jl.4tl; IL Darrell Wlltlt,, FruWha,
Tetua.. Cllrvnlet Luml•, •.siT; U. lb'le ,
PetiJ• &amp;adlllemu, N.C., PoiiUac.GrPII
Prk, IIU11; 14. &amp;lck Wtlaoa, Bart.w,
f1a., Old.ntblle CuU•• ' S.premoe,
8Ut1; IS. Daver All...,._ Buer•a.

a.lllmtrt I, NewYorU, tiiDIIIIP

,

••&gt;: '·

IMrnl-.
M.t'1t: T. Ku Scllra•er. PeniOa. Mo.,
Oie¥..a.t Lllmlaa, M.MI; I . Mof'IU
ShePerd, Ce110wer, N.C., Fonl TIRllller--

'loi"'II•IL~I

(V.... t-1)
(lUeder 11-1), I:N'p.m.

. . . . ,.......... per llo.-.
I. &amp;lciQ' IWd. Clle~Qelke, Va.,
·a.~rolet . .mi., ••• (lrack record,
oN "IUII Jnlb1 Ra•r Wllllace.
Erllle trwu, Mo8to, cat•.• Ol._. . &amp;e
C.Uus'8a)II'«Re, tU-M; S. Dale lara..,.., Kaa.-p.all, N.C., OI"'"'W ~m1•, ••ftf; 4. Bill Blllak. Daw•tiwllle,
Ga., FDrd n.u..tedllnl, •.ISlt; I. Mark
Marel•, a.tenlltl!, Ark., Ford ..,_.nd«-·
bini, tt.lll; ._ T~J KenUII, La
Call&amp;d.,

••
..••..,..._,

-"

. i .

.'

~&gt;-

•

... c.u... .

. . . . . - NUD!t4 Ro4 'r.ner
llolfi'WUalaetoeb.Uu•...u.

;...

54fl
..na.y ·

......

M.-.al - ,M.-ee• ,_...,loa ••
................ MMIII ... Marla.
Pep,..NI• - N.........e "t:P"I

-CYGU

. ........ .' .....
.11Cf1.
-~

ma'ab,...... .._..,, ·

w•
.....................
LibertJ -

Nund Da• Petri

.,

'

AUTOWORKS'
FOR.ION
POLICY.

• •I

""--.In""

.

"""'*' ytlfJI,n,wit,.,.from.
......
•

FrontJ'lurtltfS tor Al.udl5 to
(1i$Jam lor Potscllts. From ton

Mlllttl'

III.UGS

l.tmn 16 at salt priCe.

lfel- &amp;

CAU 1-IOO-I7,2·5f67

•

•

ll&amp;flle, Mmetowa, rnak•u•m•l of c•

~-

CieoveiMII ...................-'1, B .... ~ .
New Y~ ......... .o.-...·-.11 It 1 MI 11%
...... ~!. -.,.:. -~t.
oald•d -~~~~..,~~P.A
........................S·n (~~
Clole........... ........, ... ;.-It II .Ill I
Mllll!ll"tlia .. -.. ..... :........::11 'U
.%
Caillo- ............ .:..... .18 II .Ill' Ill
8e.tile ........................ .l1 • ,4'M 11
T~ ....,................ 1... JS II .418 11
Kaa . . Cli,-.....:...........tt ' II .411 11

Clf'V~laa·

s.•..-·•

f• ...... ~ ....... -

. Auto rates. ..

'

•••

At so...-na. Calli., Jllllt I
Tile &amp;o, II q_.lflen tor
· ...__. ft'oaea FoDdt . . NMCAit

~.;:::·.,o:=..: t

,., P.C.I.D. Hell Pump fiN&gt;
tu•: 10011 2·yr, plltl Md lobar
.... .....,.100%1--yr. ~~·. .
......,,. Gil .... oompi'IIIOI', outdoor IIICIIOI'Iftd ...a ..ogwlw:deilgn.d Md ~-to . t i l - '

Find out how much you could
save with new,lower Allstate

•

"••• Rldnr ........
NAIICAR Baa- Fr1111e1

.uiD:JC:_.l.J!J.WtJB

' ....... Rnlltl
$eMOt I, J)diDII I. bl 111M
INbOII t.leilllf l tllilllllnt!

HOtrlf

Hl·lmOENCY

'

Br u... Pr:-• '~ ..........

1

SUPPLY INC. ·

.l

• •

.1•

HOMECARE -ICAL

''.,

'I

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

81080 orr

.'

Sl 2 5

•
l.
•

,........ ............ -..........1.

Dexter Shoes

'•,•,

8 ,INCH GRAYELESS LEA.CH PIPE

•

Team
W L Pet. Gil
BM&amp;e1 ........................ .JI II . 1 . - t
~
1% .
•~wa~~~~ee.................... • .HI 1%
a.lllnlore ....................-, • ·" .ttl 4

\.
Men's
.'

•

•

•
:

'.

.. AL~e8... .

;
'1

4 INCH FLEXIBLE
DRAIN TILE

Majors

'L

,

.c

1

'

"

•

1

'
Rio Grande's staa~
L. Ev- Field. Bowen
received a m111 eommemerat1n1 tbe .. IGGtb
aanlverury of tbe fo•dlq of Galllpolll. Beds
Ball of Famer Bnou Lawre- ataada'at Evana'
rtpt, • bCI!Jne plate umpire ~le!J Perdue 1oou011.
(Times-Sentinel pboto by G. Spencer ~borne)

:''PrObe on,. gambling by. Texas
athletes to·be sent.to NcAA~ ·

-.·

By JOE U.I.UZD
loqshot.
'
tlameroon." ·
.
the net. •
this matcb," said Valeri Nepom- · stream!
onto the field In
UPISporta Writer
Blylck's goal, scored with
'F ive minutes after Blylck's
· The west African nation had
niachl Cameroon's Soviet coach
I b t?
·ROME (UPI) - Cameroon Cameroon with one man short, · brother AndreKanaBiylck was anotberplayerejectedwithtbree
whorommunlcateswlthhtste~ cere ~a ontl
h 111 1 11 1
needed Just 90 mlnuteS'Fl'lday to
also Imperiled Argentina's bid to
ejected' for tackling Cl~udlo munutes Jell. French refer~
through hls chauffeur. "I don't vis~on r:~~lo~~· ~T~~ c~l~ ~:e
show why biD Ions on the planet become }he flrat country to win
Canlgp -Cameroon struck· A Michel Vautrot ISsued Benjamin think Argentina were as fit as we A
ti
.. dl te ..
' ld
ti
w
ld
1
'
·
rgen ne 1earn a
sas r .
Walt four years for the Wor
consecu ve
or
PI s nee
~ kick on the left ca11ght the
Musing hill second yellow card
were today."
.
Radio Continental said, "You
Cup.
' ..
Brazlllil1958 and 1962.
Argentine defense off guard, and when he nailed Canlggta with a
Asked If Cameroon would be can't 18 worse "
In arguably the biggest World
''Thb,ts the darkest day of my
Omam B!yick's header went ferocious bodY block.
tbe surprise team of the tourna·
Onepfil~ ear-oki Ar en tine told
Cupupsetln40years, Cameroon career, Argentina coach Carlos
lhroughgoalkeeperNeryPumpl·
"Ibelleveourtactlcsprevalled ment, he said: "Yes, why not?
United /ress Intert!tlonal the
.swelled Its . national pride and Bllardo said.
.
do's hands, off his knee and into as the mo,!t Important elementln We are hereto show what we can game "truthfUlly made me
drove AfiJentina to shame by
Argentina's Diego Maradona,
do "
..
opening soccer's .month·long whomanydeemtheworld'sbest
~
S•--~o--1
m•
·
l..
d
d
h
.
ashamed.
Thatse.ntlmentcame
.
• uetJa
· UlJIJ.I ct1 · •
Ha e:ere !"it quesdons about
from a country
whose fans
spectacle wl!h 1,11-0 VIctory ovef · played with a sore toe and was
. ·
·
.
toue;h play Nepomnlachf sidesh .ted "Vi t 0
d th" 1
thll defending'' champion.
,
)lollnded all game by tbe Cameoe
• · •
tepped the iss!JI!.
•
~:~930 Wor~
or ea · a
Before 73,'1110 fans at Milan s .roon defense.
·
"I am the trainer of the team I
1 th 5 Ia d c p.
-p 1
Giuseppe Meazza Stadium and
"I felt OK until the goal '
•
am not Involved hi the reteree'•s
n e · n s, ameroop res an estimated global televlslQn
because It was a goal I didn't
o~~. Neb. (UP I) _ Geor- games. The ·first three were to . t job...
. ·
dent Paul Blya received hand·
The'ouii:ome 'rha s the most shakes from Argentina Prestaudience ,of1.3 billion, Francois expect," Maradona'Sald. "It Is no gla baseball coach Steve Webber College ,World Series entrant .
Omam Blylck scored on a 66th·
usetosltandtalkaboutgpalswe ~ys tM season Is run of peaks. Louisiana State. The Bulldogs startling lh th~r:orlcu since .dent Carlos Menem,. Italian
minute header that brought
missed The result speaks for ·anci valleys. · ·· •
followed that with an 0-2 showing
P
. President Francesco Cosslga
·
So' c f
· •the United States beat England and Brazilian President Fer·
~udden respect for the . 300.1
Itself, and we have to applaud
The BuUdogs have re·ached the In the utheastern on eren~ . 1·0 1 1950 . b
bt th AI 1c
·
·
·· ·
pinnacle of college baseball. tournament.
~ .. ......! ..!'oug
e r .ans
(See WORLD CUP oo C~)
kvl~ne
c
Th~lr 5-1 victory Friday night
''When you're In a valley, you
•
J, •
.
... -· ( onti!lued from -4) .
'o\oer Stanford P.Ut them Into the hav.e to fight your way out,"
n, but when the checkered
' ·
Gollege· World Series chllmplon- Wellber said. "We didn't have
"'6
RonWIIliams,whileAaronFlem- ' ilblp g· arne, which -was pla'•ed. many vaiteys this year, but the
g flew Bobby Hill again came
lng set last time of 16! 00.
'
dld have came at the end
0
home the winner In the 30-lap
Harold Pickens anq Clatr SulllSaturday '' l!gatnst Oklahol'lla .Jl~~ ~eco.uld'ye kil).ed us. But tlie
Solid, Slotted,
•Perforated
Seml·Late Model main.
.
van. each clalrqed hellt wins, but
St~t~i~w ;"~kS ago, however, ~ys fought back well. Theyw~t
.
.
~~/~~f~nla~~\vr:e~~!'!:tt.:t · It was again Pickens takjng the such
lofty 'llscompllshment 10 tbe 'Northeast Reg!onal. With
-"
,
chec)&lt;ered flag for t¥., fourth
see'm ed .unlikely. c:&gt;eorgla, •t-19, clear heads."
...emp Kelly-was 'third. Rounding tt-" this se · · t Sk t••- J 0 h. n
"
·
c ")
AFOOT
"'"
ason a
Y ""'·
lost ItS last five regular season
(See· GEORG~
on .,.
out the top ten were Marty Isner. Schneider was second followed
100 AND 200 FOOT lOLLS
Carry Stat-.ers, Greg Flinn, E;d by Tim Frame, Cll!lr Sullivan,
Shuman, Darren Smith, Bill Rob House, • ll.alph ,Gardner:,
Lucas and Mike Adklils.1
Terry Moore and Roger Dunlap.
•
, Hill won the dash, Sayre the
NextFrldaynlghtwillbeoneof
.
IS SPONSOII~G . AN
lieat; and' Larcy Slathers the biggest shows, of the year In
•
';Vetfasttimeof15:26.
· ·
the .' mld·Qblo , Valley as tile
· ·
,,
.
• 'In the sportsman A-main STARS National Late Model
'
· •
. ·
.
.
20 FOOT JOINTS
FOOT
Kevin Haughi In the 'Hughes . circuit comes to town for a three
: ., , co••'Nin. UILDING •.N REEDSVILLE
Hoo4a H·l , took the lnltal lead day weekend. Action begins at
V
before Ron Williams took over ·• Skyline Friday, _June 15 at 6:'30
·•
·
·
.lind led until tile 12th lap, when forwarmT"ups.a'ld ·8:30raclng.
Keith Riddle found some spark
For tans convenience there Is
.on the tnstde groove. Williams no alcohol sectton .for the family.
IEG.I.STIAT.ION: 12 N
. DON _PULLS START: 1:00 P.M.
CHESTER
985·3301
11nd Riddle' Pl!l on quite a show,
Former Daytona 500 racer and &lt;. L.._,..;...c_____
'before Jim Amick slipped by to ASA champion Larry Moore
grab !!fcond at theflnlsh._Roun_d- leads theSTARSpolntS,!l'oUowed
'
lng out the top ten were Haught, closely by M:lke Balzano. They,
Gary Bertman, Roger Cozad, along with all the STARS regu- .
Phil Davis, Tim Lauderman, lar~, will challenge the local boys
Scott Pierce, Steve Woods, and In their quest lor a national
Rick Tracewell.
championship.
Heat winners were Haught and

.. ,...;...---~.... ..
'

While Ada:m, l!ld Benny Hickel
(center)
EdwM.dBerldch (rlp&amp;),lonner
' 'of Pomeroy·tri the BankSMason
WSAZ-TV sporlll director Bob BoweD (In dark
. STF;""ART - Three familiar
Auto Glasa 51. ~
.
1111111) ope• hla ·Jlll!Unl from Evana dartnc
faces lgraced the victory circles
Duetotbelargenumberofcars
pn-1ame cereinODiell at Saturday's Bob J!;vans
.Friday night at Skyline Speed- a . li·MaiJi wall run w)th Greg, '· Dream Team baseball came at the Unlvel'lllty of
way as Bob Adams, Jr. or ((;a.rpe!lter taking the ivln over
' .••
Racine; Bobby Hlll .ol Green- Scott ·Peltz, P.aul Garvin ln·lhe'
wood, W.Va., and HarOld
Marc' French' 29, .Doug Mc.\tee,
.. . .
· Plck81111 or 'Parkersbul'l'- again J: Gary Buck, Marc McComijck;
· reacbecl·vtctory laue, while new- -ancr· Bryan Wolfe In the McDo~
comerKelth RlddleofPeiiiiSWi'o
nald's Restaurants!Ebers Gulf
It Willi
hit victory lane for the first time
5R froni Racine.
Cl.ibSIIOADS I ~.. ,
•
this season In the sportsman
An eartx duel between Cotton
port,
sat&lt;llt
consists
of
more
than
AUSTIN, :fexas (UPI) - A
division.
•
·Sayre, Bobby H111, and Kemp
lengthy
lnvljj;dgatlve report on 200 pages and . "!lye or six
In the Late Model division
Kelly was "exciting In-the early
allegations of widespread gam- volumes" of Interviews, transrlm·rlder Larry Bond, took un· (~ SltYLINE'On C-11)
bling
by University of Texas . crlpts and various question·
Puzzle on Pase C-6
characierlstically to the low
nalres filled · .o.u l by . Tens
.
"
-athletes
has
been
(!ompleted
and
groove, but led the first 18 laps
will be fo,rwarded to the NCAA, · athletes.
while strelchln8!~1s lead over the'
•'I think II was a very I!Jorougp
school officials said Wednesday .
'.
rest ~f the fll!tli. The excltjpg
Investigation," h~ ' sald. "As far
(Continued from C-3)
.' ,
But
Texa~ officials would have
Albany' drive was Jerril.k ' In
Ozzle Guillen drove In two runs. r no' comment; on the contents of as what I've done, It's complete."
traffic: but a lap-15 caution
The "iCAA sayS'knowledge by •.I'!:.f!~~
the repQr,t until Attorney General
Kittle's ninth homer heiped
bunched up the field and. put
a coach or other staff member of' . 1-!l+-'Jlni
Mattqlt'
office
rules
which
make.
a
loser
·
o
r
reliever·
Juan
.
defending champion AdBIIIS In
gambllng among athletes would
lnformatlo~; (ails ~.under the
Berenguer, 4·1. Scott Radlns_ky,
the JD Dr1111ng , Flve:J fi'otnts
make
. the school .subject to
state's
~n
Record.
Act:
5-0,
pitched
two-thirds
Inning
of
Express A55 on·hiS .~L .-.:;&lt;~, '
sanctions.
. . ..
"I
dm(t
want
to
respond,"
Adams' car goi- stronger'· and • scoreless relief a,nd Bobby
Tal Elliott&lt; ..a walk-on .deep
Athletic Director DeLoss Dodds
Thigpen notched his 18th save In
tighter a_s the rac_e progiessed,
snapper from,J986 to 1989, was
21
opportunities.
·
"I've
got
to
be
careful
about
said.
while Bond's tires began to fade,
the attorney general's ruling and named by 19 cqrrent ot -former
Bl11e .Jays 11, Brewers 5 - At
setting the stage for the lap-19
Texas football ' players·· as a
what I can and can't say."
Milwaukee,
George
Bell
hopass by Adams.
bookie who took wagers from
The
Texas
athletic
depariJllent
mered twice and drove In six
Bond's Ball Logging/FaceLonghorn, athletes. Elliott quit
paid
.the
Houston-based
law
firm
runs
to
power
the
Toronto.
Tom
meyer Lumber No_lO settled for ·
or Vinson &amp; Elkins some $35,000 . the team Nov. 6, citing "personal
GlUes, 1-0, earned his first
a strong second place finish as
i'!
for
the Investigation and rep6rt, · reasons,''
and
Tom
major-league
victory
Bond continues to get faster ·
which
wl!-s
prompted
by
a
series
.
Hen~e . plt~hed the final two
every Week.
·
of ar tic)es earller tbls ye~ by e
Innings for hIs eighth save.
One of the best drives of the
evenlne; carrie from . second- · Chuck Crlm, 2·2, suffered the Austin American-Statesman.
The newspaper: quoted lll!ire
loss.
generation driver Brad Goff, wbo
than
a dozen Texas · athletesf is
A's 3, Royals 1 - At Oakland,.
came from eighth to thlri! place
saying
that as many a5 40 cutTen t
Curt Young fired a two-hitter
at the finish, lolloweq by Delmas
'
stodent-athiefes·
had placed bets
through six Innings and Dennis
Conley, Mike Haught and Rod
on
professional
and
college
Eckersley saved his 19th game of
Evans, who advanced after going
., . .. 1 .- .,.... ..
the year to lead Oakland. Young games.
to the tall, Billy Childers,- Andy
Betting on ci;iteg_late•sporfs 'ls
BOnd, Greg Carpenter and:steve • Improved . to 3-1 while Kansas
•
starter
Mark
Gublcza
City
an
NCAA Vl~tlon~ and any
Burnside.
.•
dropped
to
3-6.
Danny
Tartabull
player
who placed bets would be
Again over 30 late rriodelsfllled
·
hit
his
fourth
homer
for
the
.
ruled
Ineligible.
· Gambling· on
the plis for ,a regular show and
Kipling Shoe Co.
Royals.
" '
j.
spor1s
-carries no
professional
fine overall raclll'g. Billy
NCAA
penalties;
'
Pt.
Pleaanl
17~7870
Rancers
10,
An&amp;els
8
-:At
Childers of St. Mary's, W.Va.,
Anaheim, Calif., Rafael Pal·
Knox Nunnally; . one of the
clocked In with a fast tlmz of
·,
metro
·
c
ollected
three
singles
and
lawyers
wbo complied 'the re14:06, while Dave Nutter drove
a home run In five at-bats,
,.
an Impressive race to. claim the
driving
In
lour
runs
to
power
Helmet Dash pver Bond,
Texas. Charlie Hough, 6-4, scatChilders and Conley .
EQUIPMENT· SALES· RENTALS • REPAIR$
tered seven hits over ·seven
Andy Bond In the AIO clal~ed
. "Complete llfdk:ll Equ/pmtnt For
1/R"
Innings and survived three A.ngel
the second heat over Mark
home
runs.
Mike
Fetters,
0.1,
DickSon and Rolando Esparza,
suffered the defeat.

... 61 ..... 1·1114

Sunday Times-Sentinei-Page-C-5

W~ Va .

Cameroon hands· Argentina ·1-0 loss in World Cup .opener

with, plus a triple-lock webbing liked to catch the ball high In the seemed to automatically coland a reinforced shelL · ·
web as opposed to what was then lapse around the ball."
"It was a new concept," said a small pocket." Solution: the
Javor said he remembers
Javor, 77, of Schaumburg. "Ev- A2000.
when the Idea of creating hlne;e.
erything you found In thai. glove
In ~957, the first A2000 was actlon came to him: he was
had a functional value. But the Introduced and grabbed by play- eatlnelunch and began to study a
most Important thing Is when you ers like •Ted Wllllams, Ernie door hinge.
.
put It on your hand, ltfltand was Banks and Nellie Fo~t.
'These guys (ballplayers)
ready to use. "
,, - ~
"Everybody wanted one," Ka· jump up n~w to make a catch and
The A2000 was created with line said. "There was a mad tush the web ts so flexible, It's like a
Input from ballplayers In the late when they brought them out In bear trap," Javor said.
1950s, tired of the small, deep- sJ&gt;rlnl! tralnll!g.
Puckett likes the effect . .'The
.
"The A2000 gave you so much ' Minnesota Twins center fielder
padded gloveS that required
two-handed catche:r and did conflden~e. pardc,ularly when has used a Wilson glove since he
nothing inore than protect a · you had to catch the ball with one was 12 years . old and now robs
player's hand.
··
hand," said the Hall of· Farner. hitters of home runs at the
Javor says .he remembers "You didn't bave to worry about .Metrodome with his A2000 and
manager Paul Richards telling a small area II) your ·palm to his leapll)g ability. ·
. ·
him something had to be done catch the ball like you did with
"I love It," he said .. "I'd never
because his catchers couldn't the other gloves. Now you had a switch."
handle Hoyt Wilhelm's knuckle- web all the way down to .the bee!
Kittle, a first baseman·
ball. Solution: the first oversized and a deep, soft pocket In the designated hitter with the Chicatcher's mitt. Al Kallne told the middle.
cago White Sox, received his first ·
"And ·when you reached to A2000 when he was 12, and sij)l
Wilson · represe!ltatlves he
needed ''loJlier lingers
because I make the catch, the glove treasures It at home. ; .
,
-- .- ' .
''When I was growing up, that ,
was the only glove you saw major
leagliers use," he said. "Wben
· you went Into spo~tiJ,Ig· goods
stores with your father to buy a ,. ·
glove, that's the one tnat was on
, . .
the top shelf. "
White Sox manager Jeff Tor·
borg has two Wilson catcher
mitts Immortalized In the Baseball Hall of Fame: one fl:om
Sandy Koufax's first no,hltter In
1962 and another -used when Don
Drysdale's scor~less streak ·
ended at 56 Innings.
"I also have one with a .hole In It
which Nolan Ryan threw the ball
right through the . webbing,"
Torborg said. '•r won't gt:•e· th!lt

By C~JE MUSKAT
· UPI Sportll Writer
CHICAGO · (UPI) - Kirby
Puckett and Ron Kittle use the
same glove today they played
with In Little League. Ron Santo
works out with his 1960s .model.
AI Kanne raves about lt. Lltt)e
boys dream of them.
Ted Javor cduldn't be happier.
"If you go thr_ough the evolu·
· uon of the baseball glove, yau can
understand why this tool Is
· adored by baseball players,"
said Javor, the Inventor of the
most revolutionary mitt In
baseball.
.
The Wllsoil A2000, named
simplY alter Its stock n1lmber,ls
entering Its fifth decade In 1990.
Currently used by nearly · 250
major leaguers, the A2000 was
the first glove to.feature a deep
pocket and sn11p-action hinged
palm, the better to catch balls

Pomauy-Micldfpport-GIIIipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

• HOME oxYGEI!

• A0U1.T DIAPERS

• UfT CIIAIIIS

• UHOEAPUIQIUXS)

• MOSPITALIEDS
• SHOWER STOOlS

• BEOSIDf'COMMOOES • OtABmC SUPPliES
• PAnM um ·
• OSTOMY

WE BILL MeDICARRI

' rHru~sr.

I1

I

WAUC&amp;AS

RESISrDR ... -

• WHESLCIWAS

.

criHIR. .RANCI AJR g
I

I

'!

1

I1

I

446-7283

CNI. ,I.TIM
l.lmff 2 If ulo prlca.

Orlgi!VIIQUipment
qllllity.

btlts for FillS to ·vllvt COI'IfS lor

;,

Aulowort!. BlcluSI

'•
'•
'

forrlgtl to us !

.,'•'

VO/wl
So If JIO(I drivt '"
impon cJr. d[lvr·;, to

imports Mtt! .,

. . ...
....
--·---·
-........... ·---··
,...
..........
_, ...,
,.......... .
.... ............

·-·-··-

,.,

,.,

~......,,......,

.,'•

.,··.

••

�limes-Sentinel

June ,10, 1990

·:: June 10, 1990
Sel.es wins .women s,crown •

Tile Bulldogs' rlgllt fielder
Bruce Chick said the tact Georgia was sent to Waterbury, Conn.
built collfldence right away.
"We thouaht at tint we were
going to Miami (Fla.) and that's
a toqgh place to Win," Cblckeald.
' 'It was more of a psyclloiOfflcal
thing. We felt like With the teams
!hat were In there, we could Win.
There weren't any Miamis or
Stantords.
,
"Confidence was really alltbls
team needed ·to get golnl again.''
Georgia got 'i'olllni 1 In the
reglonals with three straight
, victories against Connecticut,
Maine and North Carollna. Tile
. Bulldop lost to Rutaer~ 4·311J!d
'needed a 20-9 victory In a seco_l'id
game agalnat 'the the Scarlet
Knights to earn the, College
..
World Series berth.
• Once tile Bulldogs get Into, tile
Colle~e World 'S eries, 'IIley uled
the- underdog role to win tw9 ,of
' three games from the Card!....
"Going Into tonight.- Stanford
. . It
was expepted to ·wln bi!cause
. was the ·.No.•.• 1· 8eejl and ~op­
ranked telilif : In \lie - nation;"
Chick said. ''When· a team Is not
eJI))ected tO win; •they're very
dangerous as we Pl'OV!ld tODight.
We're domg everythlllg well
right now: - pitching, lllttlng and
defense."
Georgia pounded 10 lilts, including five Ina decisive four:run
fourth Inning. Winning pitcher
Mike Rebhan scattered six 'hits,
and Georgia committed Just one
error belllnd him.
·Still, Ok~lloma State; tlie only

"We've played better-as under·
dogs all season," ChiCk said . "It
helps our concentration." :

team unbeaten In the serle9, Is
fllvored Saturday. But tor c;:hlck,
that's Just flile.

FIPTR-GRADE CRAMPS - The Gallipolis
Elks flftlt-gra!le bas~ball team won the
Gallipolis Rlnky-Dinll: basketball champlolllihlp
after pe~~Ung a H recor!l. This crew, which wan
Its seeoild stralpl Iitle, was undefea&amp;ed as
faur~· graders;_ Kneeling In front are (L-R) Brett

.---.-p--.- • ....;......,..___~...,.._,

World Cup...
&lt;Continued

Faml1y· 1_annlftg

trom c-5&gt;

It Makes ·• Sense•••

nando Collor de Mello.
The last time Cameroon appeared In . the World Cup, It
ola·ved eventual cnamplon Italy
a 1-1 draw In 1982. Its victory
over Argentina continued the
"l:" l'"'"- luck of defending champions In ln!IUguf!ll gaines. England, In 1970, was the last tltllst to
.__•.:-..-..- with a victory.
an effort to contain drunken
:~; ;;~~a;hn.~a;l;cohol ban was In effect
0:
Milan for the day, as
onallmatchdays. Udlne
and Naples aretheonlytwoofthe
12 World Cup cities not to
announce alcohol restrictions.
About 3,0011 armed pollee and
paramUltary carabinieri threw a
M,seourjt;y cordon around the Milan
• """'"'," · Authorltfes repbr11!d
m•nu&lt; scuffles near the facility.
~~r~;[e~:p of youthS who Joined a
l'l)arcll by steelwor!Cers
l'!" thr&lt;lw bottles.at offlce~s.

Sliding "' ...

t.o 0111 rllu..d sirwas • • ot ikl;ility 19·']lay. ·

··of SOmEASTDN OHIO

.

•

group

; ll- ..'11 FootNka p.rt

logan I ' McArthur

ALSO; Jackson, a..IIIJI'IIkt,lthens;

•. . : · 12~ Temporary l)ad .
··
1'23 E-green tree
· 124 Plid not~

125'Mothlr
12-7-"Juattha Tan
.

of-"
129 Roman ofllclal

48 Free of •.
47 J-M linkup

'

13' Backbone
133 Chlrlel' PrlncoiS
mom "
1a;(Runnlng

48 HIIW8IIan WIMih
49 IIIMOprlc .
·:

,a....e.tv

50 Abstract baing •
51•paltk: .

13i''DI!IY

53~symbol

54 Eggar 10
· 55· "Deelre Under'
the -"
57

Daniel .-

Lawia

59 Evil '
60 - Lawai
61 Olear winner for
"Accidental
Tourilt": lnlts.
62 Roof of mouth
64 Choir wb
68 Squanders
68 Equality
70 Babylonian. hero
72 SIICCOI'
73 Look fixedly,
74 Recede
· 77 Suclily brew
. 78 Norf1!iili typical
1!0 .:Want In

2 year Certificate of Deposit
$5000 minimum deposit

8.

••

%
Effeccive Annual' Yield

-~

..

'

1:il'o,iP.orwsw

··;

140 pt~mlre
141 ·:Anything •. . .Love"
142 Sodium aymbol
143 Hit light"'
: 14&amp; Trllllfl;•
147 lntr..:table

i per10nl
151 Golfer's nMd
152 Ma. Jlllan

153 Harem rooms
155 Tibatlll gazellil

157 Wanta
158 H8QIIIrd heroine
159 P,_,tly
160 Conc:emlng
181 Gold symbol
163 Barter .
168 Old -nanlah
187 Prtlll)' ID
82' Baker'a product
168 Old prODQUn
83 Ten cents
189 Aroma
85 World 171 Ur;ed on
68 Floated In atr
172 Flbuloua king
17 GIIIIP
173 ShOwy"-'
. 68 .soJon\n wonder ,·, -~ · 175 Surfeit
; 9CI'l.till'
• . ,. ·• 1711 Jim Morrllon

--

·-

'

DOWN
.

87V-1
89·Flnlities
92'Hat material

. .. ,

,

93 Consumed •
94 Salkil': c;oiiOcj.
95 Lavieh foNiness

...

'

1 Frlght8n suddenly
2

uncaqny

on
• · · 87 Brown kiWI
·- 98 Barrier
89 North .(merlcan

3 AlgonqUian

Indian
4 Free ,ot
·. 5 SpaniSh article

ecoters
100P·101 Chop up finely
102 Electrlthld '

8 Abound

7 .. _Ate the
1
Wortd"

a ,.._.of ship
· 9 ShOUlder wrap ·

,.__t

39 Consumed
40 Nelson inn..
41 Profltod
.
44 Basebllllleg.

'

178
Conduct
·,

i . : 1 .~
1 ·- :' ".:ee A'nato-Saxon
, , l 10· KlnQ tCJIII!Ir. , ·. .
'
1 alave
" 13_Armadllo8 ·.
·, ~. 89 Moullllin Jl&amp;8l8l
19 ''The- C~OO"
10fHolcl beck
20 New.!
• :•
104 Type 01 cross
21 Parilei,Oflllld • • :· ' 106 Calnlne
'i. 22 CllaatiMI .
' 10il'em8ie deer
24 Peeled
• •
1n debt
2~ Teutonic deity
' · , 100\Ytre ,_.,.
, 27 Aa.far .aa
·. ' 110 f'WIIdlglt
· 28 That thing
::
,_ 111,Go utray
29 French article
•
112 Pine
30 ~ . 11( Negative ion
31 Great Lake
111
32 Book of Old •
-117 Laat Spani8h
T81dament
·,
.c.q~
34 Tannla,ttroke
, 111 Printer's measure ~.
38 Sootiii!IQ
• r;. 120 Sand forth .

ointment
38 Small valley

'

177 Freehat

ae

' "'· ,

POMEROY:
GAWPOUS:
236 E.Maln. St., 2nd FlOor
414 Stc'1!nd ·Awt. 2nd floor
992-5912
. 446-0166 .
1:30 to 5:00 MollllarF•r - lt30 te SrOO Monday-FrMiay
Closed Thursday
1:30 to ~ 2 Satur~ ·
' ;(lanll 'th.nday .., ' -

:i

..-

. _,.:; ' •' . . 92 On behalf of
" . . ) Covwt;,furtl~ . ' . ·- . .93· Be~ '
~

PLANNED PAIUtTHOOD

.

•

.

By M.U'DN lADER
" He'll be In for a long afternoon because 1
retaliated In the fourth, sixth and eighth
UPISporta WI Iter
want It pretty bad," Agassl said. ' 'I didn't
'OZ,~~ In tile fourth set Agassl jumped to a
' ·· PARIS (UPI) - .Andre Agusl, already
stay ·IIi Paris two weeks to come In second
"!,: colorful an!l controversial, moved to Within
pJace. I am our tllere to win lt, and 1 Will do
3-0 lead, only lo be IH'okep In the flftll game.
, • one victory of adding cllamplnn to his name
wllat 1 have to do...
But Agassl gained tile decisive break In the
Frl~ay wllen he reached the French Open .
Fpllowlng an . American drought that
eighth game, tllen lleld his serve to end the
" final agalllst Andres Gomez.
h
match.
.
I
started In 1956 aad ended ast Ytlar wen
"Todayltwasn' tsoml,lchmebeatlnghlm
On a cold, wet, overcast day Agassl
Mlcllael Chang won, tile United States now
but who would deal with the cltcum'stanqualified for his first ever Grand Siam final
bas
a
cllance
to
capture
tile
men's
crown
In
ces," Agassl said. " It was cold and windy, It
· With a ~1, .£-4, 3-6, 6-3 victory over Jonas
· Paris iwo years In a row. Agassl suggested
f-h
uld'h
1 th
..
Svensson, an unsee!led Swede.
tllat tile trend sllould continue
til sucll
was 'a question o w 0 wo
ang n ere.
Gomez, a 30-year·old left-bander from
• Gomez, playing In bls 27th career Grand. ·
strQng, young basellners as lllmself, Chang,
,Ecuador, has an opportunity tQ win his first
Slam, _also.made It lo a flnalfor the flrsttlme
·
• G1'8nd Slam championship In his 27th
Aaron Krlcksteln and Jay Berger.
by beating Thomas Muster 7-5, 6-1, 7-5:
The
women's
final,
played
on
Saturday_.
attempt. He Is the first pllzyer 30 years or
Both of the semifinal. match~!!~ were
saw
No.
2
Monica
Seles
beat
top-seeded·
older
to reach the final af Roland. Garros
Interrupted for a short time early In the first
,Steffl
Graf
7-6,
6-4.
since
Nicki
Pille, tllen 33, In 1973.' ·
set because of rain.
AgasslwonlOottlleflrstllgamesagalnst
·
Only
three
weeks ago, Muster defeated
Agassl, a brash 20-year-old who has
•
Svensson,
who
declared
later
that
he
was
Gonlez
In
tile
semifinals of the Italian
• created a fuss with biB outlandish ouUits lind
•
'Very,
very
nervous"
for
tile
first
two
sets.
,
c;:hamplonshlps
at
Rome.
_
.
, creative language, llopes people will thlllk of
Svensson,
ranked
Utll
In
the
world,
·
•
''When
1
played
against
111m
'
In
Rome
I
. 111m In different llgbt II he beats Gomez
didn't throw everything 1 had," Gomez said.
suddenly threatened to pull back Into tile
: Sunday.
·
match
as
be
won
tllree
coJ~,seCutlve
games
"It lsn~t. that I didn't want to win the match,
~. "I dOn't see any reason why they would not
~~:nd
llad
double
break
point
to
even
tile
but
}1wanted to save a few shots that I was
,J'tblnk tlult way," said Agassl, tile tlllrd seed.
second·set atM.
.
.
golng,•to use bere If I bad to play 111m." .
; 1 "If I win a Grand Slam tournament, tlley
But Agassl held Ills serve and ran out tile .;. . Gomez added, "I feel 1 still have
:~ slloui!J focus more on my teQnl$ and my
• capabilities, but I wouldn't be sl!l'Prlsed If
se!;It tOOk a long.time before I got hi~~ lt, but ,,,, (s()l\'letllslngdthat~. didn' t use today tl\atl could .
: ... ~ey don~t."
· .
· I
1. t It I th ht I play-ed very " use on un ay .
oug
.
. Gomez , on tile strengtll of service breaks
once .. got n o
~ Agassl and Gomez are 2-2 against each
.
In the second and sixth games, built leads of
well, Svensson, 23, said.
other, with Agassl .wJnlilng tllelr only 1990
Agassl appeared ready to wrap up the
3-0 and 4-2 In the opening set. Muster, also a
·meeting, at tile Lipton Cltamplonshlps In
match
quickly
wtten
he
broke
In
the
tlltrd
.
left-bander, got the breaks back In the fifth
Marcil.
game of the. tlllrd set, but Svensson
and seventh games.

~~.Toledo

A,;.l!wer io Puzzle on Page C-4
ACRO..

.Agassi, :· Gom~.· in French Open final

t

·•.

Confidential SeNice·a:
Birth Control
. V.D. Sreening
Canc;er Screening ·
Preghancy Testing
'
., ·.,

f.
...

, partic;le ;, n '' ,,
' 103 :r88Chara' erg., .r
:r

'
10 ExOUIIII
'
1pe C9fltaat .s.·'t ;, ..
11 Temporary bed
109 HonMi's neck Jhair
•
12 Latin conjunction
'
·, 113 Tll'ry
13 Son of Adam
,. 115. Malden loved. by .
14 Hebrew latter
15 Skill
· Zeus
t6 Foray
· · 118 Liquid maasure
' 17 Eaeenca
~
119 E811han drinking
. 18 Vending
,• I
19 TalkS
,.
121 :-~ · ,
23 Sowed
123 Metal·faat-.
28 Actor Lowe, et al.
124 ~leland
29 Young boys ..
125 Englrlllll
32 Enllwns
126 Gartanda: pOetic
'

I

.

•

I

33Sow
35 " - MICe and

Man"
.
38 Twllt' _
;
37 Bocame adept In
· 40
42
43
· 46
48

128 Soak liP
.. .. . 130 ~··

i •· ~rt·
:t·, ·· .132 V••ble

I' · 133 Owtng

Bank WOi'ker · :
Tidy I
• :~. ,"./ Rip ,
· ·'•!
lncilnad
•.
MndCIW
52 1n addition
58 Pu1 1111 a play
· 58 "The Wonder - "
59 Portends

&amp;d ExtrM
62 Too early
63 Habituates ,
65 NICkel symbol
68 Cubic meters

67 Parted
68 CuahiOn
e9 Former boxer
71 Pl8cad In 8 .
'

...... to

straight """'' n
73 Fastener ·
75 Storage
comP!Irtment

76 w.,W

79 Diphthong
81 NeQatlve
84 Femalo lhaep

•.

•

.

-

134lrrillltad
135 Mode of
'· procedure
· 138 Excavate
141 Stinging lnsac:i
144 Father
148 Famed
148 WINII and Rex
149 Tallurlum symbol
150 Father ancl8011
• PTaaidents
15 f The ones here
152 Article
154 5euonlng
,
158Juons Ship
158 Narrow, flit
' board
'159 Chun:h part
162-Rubber tree
by
164 Time QOIJ8
·
168 Mountain on
Crate
187 Crony: COlloq.

11o Babylonian deity
174 Tlntalum symbol

'

dominates boys' Ohio all-star roster .·
·

..

TOLEDO, Ohio IUPI) Geauga, Steve Jettinglloff of,,. brand of Sturgis, Andre Jackson
1'11iedo, which has won the last Delpllos St. Jolin's, · Terenz of Flint Northwestern, Cliff J~o~dtwo boys' Division I state lllgll . Parker of Euclid, Bob Patlbn of klns of Detroit Cooley, Anthony

scllool
basketball
Utl115, wlllilave
· five
players
on theOhlorosterfor
the Buckeye State's fourth annual battle against the top
!~'graduating
seniors from
Mlchlg!ln.
.
, The two states will match both
their top girls ·and boys In a
two-game series- Friday, June
· 22, at tile Unlversly of Toledo's
Savage Hall and ·the following
night at Tile Palace In Auburn
Hills, Mlcll.
,
Toledo Scott, wblcll won tile
big-school title this year, leads
tile way With three players ·
named to tile 12-man roster guardsSean,Scrutchlns and John
White and foi'Ward Antllon:~~.
WJIIIams. ~. ·
Tile other two Toledoans se.' lected to the ·team were John
' AmaeeblotSt'.John'sandDonnje
Dobbs of Macomber, the 1989
-'state champ. ·
.
Rounding olit .the Olllo boys'
team, which Will he coaclied l!Y
.. Bob Arnzen ofDelpllos St. Jolin's
and Doe l)augllt!rty of Euclid,
are Walter Evans of Cincinnati
Withrow, K.C. Hunt ·of \Yest
'

.i

· WATERPROOFER

Copley,Staci~Esposlt~ofHuron, .

'

Lynn _Holzman of North Royalton, Stacie Howard of Orrville,
·sue Logsdon of Barberton, Tra·
cey Lynn of.iWarren Champion,
'L auta S(llmeltzer of Delphos
Jeffersqn, Sonja Swopes of Cieve. land Glenville and Julie Unslnger of Oregon Clay.
Mary JoHulsmanofClnctnna!l
Mother of Mercy and Charles
Maler of Coldwater will coach
the Olllo girls.
Making up the Mlclllgan boys
team are Marcus Buckley of
Saginaw, Elton Carter of Detroit
Soutllwestl!rn, KabUl Felder of
Detroit Pershing, James Hamilton of Grand Blanc, MaU Hilde- ·
.

.
)

L

.

Ill'

;

~There is a eubetantial peilalty ftr e~y widxltawal.'Anrwl ~ computed by Ct1q'lOWldinc dlily.

...

•

~-

.....

Easy to u.se-J~st Brush on
.·
Like Paint
.
Waterproof from the
Inside or Outside

· per 21 pound pall
'

CAROLINA LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY COMPANY
·

,

·

BANK. ..ONE.

'

Eighteen Thousand People

-

Jrho.,Care•.. ~ .
.,

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NAIA I'ART OF THE CAIIINQ T!:AM
Athens, Ohio

f
-· ·-·· -·'' .--. --·---·

-"'-"'~-"'--'

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

Member FDIC

•·

Poollll!tedule
8uad1Q' - 1-3 p.m., open swim
Moadq - f-8 p.m., open swim
Tllllll'diQ' - 6-8 p.m., open swim
W.peadq - 6-8 p.m., open
· ~

'1'llarldq -

.

'

'

'

6-8 p.m.; open

awlm
frldq - 6-8 P·lll· ' OpeD lwlm
WllrdQ - 1-J ,p.m.; . Opt!ll

awtm
......,. I'!M 1' ..,.

'~~ IIWirri .

1-3 p.m.,

.

Hours:

Monday-Frtday. 8 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturday, 8 a.m. to 12 noon

-

PhOne 675-1160 '

Point

312 6th Street

BANKRUPTCY
61,4-121-0818
L.W. CENNAMO
• ATTOINEY-AT-LAW
336 S. High St;, Colu•us, 011.
lOCAl CONSUlTADON
.IINIGH1'
'
, MUllEN lAW OfFKES,
POMROY, "2·2090
I• ' - o y with

AnORNEY D. I'I1CIWI. MUlliN

..

••

-.,

NewlYweds? .
Plan your financial fUture
A good llle lns~rance program Is a first atep to your
secure financial future. Let's talk over your choices.

MODERN WOODMEN SOLUnONS

' ~;a,.·~
MODERN WOODMEN

wv

~
.- ·Jim

Cobb's--.......
sp~Clal FaCtory
'

.·. Purchase· Sale
'

. Go'ing~
''

·Lyne Center· gym,
:pOol 8ehedules

/ .-:;::::;:::~. . . .

-.

'.

.

.I

'

The Solution to Leaky Basement Problems

class Included two prospects
rated among the nation's Top 25.
Kriyzewskl, wllo Is starting his
11th year at Duke, got Involved
with the Celtlcs' position after
the NBA club hired Gavitt to
bead up all basketball. operations. · Gavitt, a f9rmer coach at
Providence and the 191ll U.S.
.OlympiC coach, had been conimissioner of tile Big East for tile
past 11 )(ears. ,
Krzyzewskl led Duke . to tile
li'lnal Four for tile past three
seasons and four of the last five.
His teams have put together
seven consecutive 20-wln seasons, and his total program Is
considered as strong as any In
college basketball.

RIP GRANDE -Tile sc!ledule
of events for tile coming weelrllt
Lyne Center is. as follows:
G)'lllliCbedule
S.ada)' - CLOSED
MoMay - CLOSED
Tueedq - CLOSED
Weaeaday -CLOSED
Tbandli)' - CLOSED
FrldiQ' 6-8 p.m., open
1
recreation
Sat~ 1·3 p.m._. open
recreation
8ulld1Q', .J111ae 11 -CLOSEP

•.

11-f. (UJ'I) .

I

Krzyzewski staying at.Duke
By KEriH, DRuM
UPI Colle1e Jlal!ketball W~lter
DURHAM, N.C. (UPI) -Duke
Coach Mike Krzyzewskl announced Friday that he Will
remain at .the university, wltlldraiillng !lis name from consideration for tile·head coaclllng Job of
· tiM! Boston Celtlcs.
"I apprecljlte the OpPOrtunity
to talk to tile Celtlcs about the Job
and I appreCiate Duke University aJJOwtng me to do so. ~have .
made the decision to remain at
Duke,'' Krzyzewskl ' said In ·a
prepared statement Issued
through the Duttesports Information office.
Krzyzewskl's decision ended a
week of discussions with Boston's newly named executive
vice president, Dave Gavitt.
Tbe Celtics now are expected
to offer · tile Job to longtime
assistant · Cllrls Foro, wttom
Gavitt inet with Thursday mornIng at the NB;\'s pre-draft camp
In Clllcago. · .
.
Krzyzewskl gave no reason for
his decision, but according to
sOurces, the key factor In Krzy. zewskl's decision was Ills love for.
teaclllng on tile college level and
the expectation of continued
success at Duke.
Duke center Cllrlstlan
Laettner and point guard Bobby
Hurley llead a strong cast of
returnlng players, and Krzy.
zewskl's five-man recruiting

SELES WOMEN'S CRAMP - Yugoelavla's Monica Seles llolds
tbe champion's cup after wlanlng tbe French OpeD womea's
qhamplonshlp against West Germany's Steff! Graf, who fell7-t,

Miller of Benton Harbor, Ross
Rlcllardson of Flint.Central and
Marc White of, Battle Creek

•••---·-----~Ce;:·::;n:tr.:ai;;.·----~~-~~=---~~-=~~~~='~~==~=~~-·
®..

Youngsto'fVIl
Liberty,
Jim .rRi,tllff
of
: Middletown
· and
Yrlce
Walker of.Han'!Ufon. '
The Olllo gtrls' team Is lleaded
by ·Division I UPI pllzyer of the
year Susie Gas!!ell. a 5-3 guard
who led - Pickerington to tile
big-school state cllamplonslllp .
Also on tile Buckeye state's
girls' team wll!'he Tonya Booker
of Mt. VeriiOJl, Sylvia ~awley of
SJeubenvllle,. Marti Dunlap of

J

fTl imited Tune Offer! Get the Sav~ ers Special at any BANK ONE
of%e in A~, Perry, Hocking and
MeJgS counties.

•••

a

SUNDAY PUZZLER-'

..

.,..-

'·

w
_ l

'

tBIII'Cham, Ryaa Elliott BDd Moraaa SMMon.
Players standing are Jan Folden, Aaron Beaver,
Kevin Wood and Mark Wamsley, aaj) standl!ll
bebln!l them are coaches Dwala Beaver aa!l
,
Larry
Burcliarn.
··
·
.
'

Sunday Tlll*-Sentinei- Page-C-7

Porrwov-Middleport-Gallipolia, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

On .. .-

STOP IN AND TAlE
ADVANTAGE OF niESE
.. SUPU SAYINGS

1990 OLDSMOBILE DELTA 88 .~..... ~ ................ SJ7,995.00
1990 CADILLAC DEVILLE •••••••••••••••••••••••• .-....... S26,995.00
1990 CADILU( FLEETWOOD ..........................$28.995.00
1990 OLDSM~IU 91 ••••••••••••~················~···.. S21 ,995.00
1919 CHEVIOLD CIVALIEI ..............................s9495.00
1919 OLDSMOBilE CIEIA ...................................$9995.00
1919 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS .......................... S12,900.00
1990 CH.EVROUT COISICA ••••••••••••••••••••••••••~·····$9495.00
1990 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS, SUPREME •••••••••••
S14I 5·99.00
.
.
1919 CHEVIOUT lEimA ••~.............................$8995.00
. . 1990 GEO PIIIM••••••••••••••••••• ~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••$899 5.00
,.

.,

0 MONTHS
NEW CAl
RNANONGI

'ALL CAIS HAVE .
IALAN&lt;E OF
FACTOIY WADANn

OF AMERICA
'

.

A fRATERNAL Lilt INSURANC( SOCitTY

HOMUliJICt • lOCK ISLIINO. IU.INOI5

' UFE • ANNURIES

·IIA'S
.
FUUIIAL PIOIIAIS
•

CHEVROLET-OLDSMOJJIL'E
CADILLAC-GEO, INC.
992-6614
308 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

�Pomeroy-Midclapon-Gell~il.

Paga C-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel.

·FarmlBtisiriess

.

June 1 0, 1990

Ohio-Point P1easMt. W. Va.

.~Defending. champion R:udd captures pole fo~ Banquet 300
B;y WIU.IAM D. IIJURRAV
VPI8porta Writer
SONOMA, Calif. (UPI) DefendlngchamplonRlckyRudd
sUpped and sUd on the 11-turn
Sears Pollit road course Friday
:.ol'lutcaptured the pole position for
·;:today's NASCAR Banquet Fro.:zen Foods 300.
Rudd - one of ·a handful of
NASCAR drivers who .like road
. ,courses -was Clocked In a track
· record speed of 90.954 mph on his
,qualifYing lap over .the twisting
Sears Point track and will start
"along side little-known Ernie
Irvan, of Modesto, Calif., In the
tront row.
Dale Earnhardt, the current
;Winston polntleader, will startln
the second row along with Bill .
~IUott while Mark Martin and
,{Dad course specialist Tom Ken~all will start In the third row.
' ''Thespeedswearegett!ngare

at least a second faster than last
"It'll be a .tight race," Rudd
year," said Rudd, who has won said. "Earnhardt has been runtwo of the last three NASCAR . nlng real well In practice·and you
road races. "They probably hllve to always take Rusty
would have been even faster If (Wallace), Mark Martin and
the weather hadbeen a bit cooler probably Ernie Irvin Into conslcJ.
(temperatures Friday were In eratlon. I sure there will also be
the 90s) .
some surprises."
Martin, currently second to
" This Is a tough track to judge
your speed on. You go out arid Earnhardt In the Winston pollits
drive the car as hard as you can,
standing, felt coming In that a top
slipping and sliding In every six qualifying, position was
corner. But you dO'h't know how needed to be In contention for the
fast you are gollig until you have
title.
''On a road course you want to
finished your qualifying run."
The qualifying was one of the beuplnfront,"hesald. "Tillslsa
liar row race track and.lts hard to
. most competitive In recent NASCAR memory as less thah 1 mph
pass so the fewilr cars you have to
go by, the.better."
separated the top six cars.
Davey Allison, an· oval track
However, Rusty Wallace - the
man who battled Rudd at both
specialist, also proved to be
Sears Pollit and on the road
somewhat of a surprise by
course at Watkins Glen last year
qualifYing 15th.
-qualified a dlsmallltll and will
"I really was Intimidated by
be hard pres~Sunclay .

the Sears Point race COill'Se las~
·year," Allison said. "But I left
here a lot more optimistic with a
better attitude toward road
racing."
Rudd took no chances In
capturlna the pole position which could earn him a $30,400
bonus If he wins the race. He
came out 'to Sears ·Pollit three
weeks ago to test a Chevy
L11mlna that was specially-build
for road courses.
·
"We were the l)nly team to
come out ~ere and test," Rudd
said. '
+ve just didn't want to
come
this
w1 th an

untested, new car."
Rudd also said he felt the car
setup knowledge picked up dilr·
log last year's victory would
make a difference today.
"I think juat running hen,- last
year helped· our team and the
others get. adjuated to this
track," he said or the two· year·
old event at Sears Point. "Now

By ROBERT J. Ml!BPHY
:'
VPI Sports Writer
. OAK BROOK, Ill. (U:PI) ·Payne Stewart replaced Ray
Stewart atop the leader board at
'the $1 million Western Open
·Friday after shooting a second·
'round 5-under par 67, good for a
ODe-stroke lead at the halfway

mark.

" I must have f11llen asleep,"
Levi· said. ·
But he awakened quickly,

we know where you can get Into a
wreck or tear things up ... '
But Rudd says the winner
today will also need a little luck.
"We've got a real good shot at
winning this thing," be said.
•'But there are a lot of chances to
make a mistake here. Odds ·are
that something Is golitg to happen 1
beyond your control. "
··

Stock market in firSt
down week since Aprii
.

'at

242 W. Main .

· strlligllig tOgether birdies Nos.
12, 13, 14 and 15, and another on-.
No.18.
··

OWNEIS
992•2101

'-

•

. 'Pomeroy

-~

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

...---------------.....--~------..-..· ·

,

.,-

CJtUMON~, -

RIBBON CUTftNG
Showa
. and David Shalfer. Bear - Paul Davlee, Nancy
durllltr Star Bull:'I rlllt.-~UM. c.r-oalea for
Hille, Sublaa Vellll, Mlady Arrowood, Barbara
then a,.aflllef $lie . . . . . . . . . J!IMa~;y • .. Patrick, Vlell:le · Allie, Robert Dalton, Alva
- · left te rtp&amp;, ........ c.l-aa, 0.. Qavle., .
Sboetnaker, JA~J~el Heald, Maxine Holbrook and
Jan Thaler, ~ leCII V....walller, •
huaband and Deu Evans.
.

&lt;Dr. Dan NeUer, • - W•p. HarP lnhl!r

Cere~ij,ies

·

•, 'Tlle llamboyant Stewart
cilrded six birdies to one bogey,
&amp;lvlng him a two-day total 135,
&amp;-under for tile tournament.
·
~ '1~m playing with a lot of
Confidence, and ·I • tllllik It's
!howlng up In the scores that'l'm ·
ir.'llootlng," said Stewart, curi:ently this year's second-leading
Jnoney winner on Tour, already
)With two victories.
,. Mark Brooks and Wayne Lev!
~re a shot back at 8-under
Orough 36 holes.
.
;· Brooks, taking advantage of
.• e soft mornllig greens at Butler
~ atlonal afttr overnight rains,
fecorded thf day's best round of
t5. .one off the course record.
llevt, winner of the Atlanta
.¢lassie two Wll('ks ago, carded a
jjecond-rOIIDd 66, which Included
~ve birdies on the last . seven

· of Star.~Bank's

I

·Only • '~~ou ·h Friday,·

are hf?ld

I

.

Si'lv~r

'. .

l

for grand re•opening
. Bridge Plaza facility, .

._lift!
ln tciilrtb

~~e"1ltld •
~nd ~ 11tone

place, still In contention
lit 6-under. •
•
~· 'This ls .probably the closest
I've been to the lead all year,"
..ld Ray Stewart, In search of his
,f irst PGA win. "That's what I
want to do. I want to keep my
•11011e In there, get my nose dirty
ud If somebody kicks me out,

line."

.

· GALLIPOLIS - Area officials
attended the rlbbon'autt!ng of the
reopening f1l. Star : Bank's Trl·
State Sliver Bridge office located
on upper Route 7, Gallipolis.

EXCITING, MONEY..SAVING

The event culmlliated six
months of an extensive remodel·
lng project, which Included a
complete facellft o1 the exterior
of the office, Interior remodelllig,
euler drlve-thru access and
landscaping.
A 1 11ew Tellerlflc Money Ma·
chine, _offering the latest lp
automated teller services has
also_been Installed. "
· '

I

•x:BNI'l'I:NNLU. ~NATION' ..;. D11a DavJea, Star Bull:'•
Seat.. VIce Prwldent, left, prwenta Jaa TIJaler, center, of the
Gilllpella JlledleM'III Coounllllon, $1 bUll lllled In place of a
rlllliOa ...., tile llaall:'s "uet
ceremenla at the
lllhw :~~Up l'fla. JA·tlatr •• at, rlcht II Donna Waugh. the
tadli&amp;y'a brucla manarer.

We Let YOU Deeide What's On Sale!
.

nft;•••lill

.

'"'Preseut,:Tbeae:OouJMIIlB :F.qr·EXTRA CASH SAVINGS ,
Evcm ~ Tl;le F'urQishtngs You Choose Are ALREADY SALE PRICED!
'

'

!

s~nlor Vic~ Ptes,ldent .Dan
Davies· commented, ~'The Bo~rd
of Directors, officers and employees of Star Bank, Tri-State
are · extremely proud of this
project. Bank customers o~ the
Tri-County area deserve the
most modern convenience In
bankmg and we at Star . Bank,
have respOnded to tMse needs. ••

Patterson
promoted
.
.

Davies a(ided, "The future of
our area Is bright. Many good
CHESHIRE ·'- Paui ·L. Patter· · things are happenllig in' our
• son lias been promoted from
maintenance mechanic-A to region. Star Bal\k has expe- '
rlenced growth In our communmaintenance supervisor In the
Ity and wants to perpetuate this
Maintenance Department effec- .
progress."
tlve May 14 at the Ohio Valley
Star . Bank, N .A., Tri-State ..
· ~lectz:lc Corp.'s Kyger Creek
currently
hu nine offices located
plant.
.
In Gallla and Lawrence counties.
Patterson joined OVEC In 1955 Total assets on March 31, 1990
as a pard In the Personnel were $268,590,127, up $17,80l,to2
Department. The following for the same period· of the
month he · transferred to the previous year. Star Bank, N.A.,
1\falntenarice Department, Trttstate Is one of the 15 affiliate
where he advance~ to the posi- ·banks of tHe Star Bane Corp., a $6
tion or maintenance mechanic-A
bllllon hol~)ng · company in
In 1967 .. ;
Clnclnnatl.
.
.
. Patterson and his wife, Rose,
The
bank
Is
a
member
of the
reside at Box ·63, Rutll!nd.
FDIC.
.\

'

Bundreda Of Items Tbrcnqtbout
Our Store
Arer AJioeacty Sale Priced
. .
·
To S.ve You lloneyl
.
But, Just 1n case
'
.
The N~ Rome Fuhlou You've
Bad :Your Eye On Aren't Included
ID The Sale Priced· llerclwldlse •

'

Steve Pate and Spain's JoseM'-lia Olazabal were next at
• 5-under. Roberts was at4-under, ·
· along with three-time Western
Open cbamp Tom Watson, cur:
rent money leader Greg Norman
·~nd Chip Beck.
• Some other big names, on hand
· to warm up for next week's U.S.
: Open at nearby Medinah Country
: Club, were not faring all that
· well .
. Curti~ Strange, who will at·
tempt to become only the second
golfer to win thre~ straight U.S.
· Open titles, followed a firstround 73 with a 71 to move to
.: ~n-par through 36.
:' Several members of the for·
elgn contingent, usually not on
hand for the Western, just came
In at the cut of 147. Those
• Included · two-time defending
. Masters winner Nick Faldo; 1988
Masters winner Sandy Lyle and
Spain's Seve Ballesteros, who
tame up with· a second-round 70 ·
!lfter a dlsasterous 77 on
Thursday.
Notables to miss . the cut
Included Ray Floyd, David
FO{St, Flazy Zoller and rookie
sensation Robert Gamez, who
shot an 81 Friday.
·' Payne Stewart, who began the
day three shOts off the lead, has
been on the move sllice wlnnllig
his first major at the PGA
Championship In suburban Chi·
c!ago last year. He said he wasn't
t!lren on top of his game Friday
,but missed just three greens for
·the round;
".i' "Here I am again In position,"
·1\e said. "I'm looking forward to
·the next two days ..III go out and
' !_eke care of Payne Stewart's job,
you never know - I may walk
'iway the winner this week."
-'The 5-7 Brooks had a bogey·tree round,wlth five birdies arid
~.il earle. 8e was at 4-underwhen
'hi! rolled in a 20-foot putt at the
•flth hole, chipped In troll) about
~t for an eagle on tile par 5,
Yard 12th, then sunk a 12-foot
te putt on No. 13.
·
!' 'They started going lri," said
'Brook.l, who last ·won at the
;Greater Hartford Open In 1988.
"The greens were soft (early)
'foday ... and there was no more
dian a one-club wind."
· Levi recorded his only bogey of
the day on No. 11 after he
amashed a 15-foot par putt five
feet past the hole.

,

.

. .

:J!oles.

, , The co,Jeaders after the first
1-oulld, Ray Stewart, no relation
jp Payne, and LOren Roberts,
~lpped back. Both carded 65s on
~unday,
.
.
t Ray Stewart too'k a bogey on
ida iirat hole~ but mounted a

'

By JANICE KIRKEL
ago.
the 35-pelnt loss Friday, t~
UPI B!J81neu Writer
.Prices fQught off· the blahs In sharpest loss since Feb. 20, whq
NEW YORK - The stock early gollig Monday to stage a
!t rell38.74.
,
market weJghed In With Its first late rally and send 'the Dow
Analysts were not &lt;llsturbed by
down wee.k since before the May
Industrials to yet another record
the declllie, however, calling tt:S
rally got under way, as Investors high, their flnt close slgnlfl·
normal follow-up to the M'IY
tlnally took profits once the Dow c~tly above the 2!100 level.
rally.
,;
.!!ldustrl(lls rose significantly
Financial lllllft led the way,
above 2900.
.
their s.t rength atemmlng from an
"The market was extreme!
TheDowJonestndustrtalaver· lmprowd outloolt for Interest
overbought," said a trader
age tumbled 34.95 Friday to close rates after · the 10vernment's
Shearson Lehman Hutton In· .
at 2862.38 and fell by 38.56 PQllit&amp;, weak report 111ued June 1 on
' 11 was.llkea runaway train a
or 1.3 percent, on the week. Its May employmet~t In the U.S.
!t took time to slow It down. '
!at t weekly loss carne In the week · loves tors ·began to feel the news
with trtple-wltchlng next wee ,
of April 23.
·
mflllt hulea any move ~ the
we mflht see even more selling,
Broad market Indexes were Federal ReseTVe to lower Inter·
but I don't think It's the start of
anything really meaningful. ... :
lower, St.a ndard &amp; Poor's 500- est rates.
stock Index fell4.45 to 358.71 and
At 2935.19, the current record
Next Friday marks the quar·
the New York Stock ,Exchange high, the Dow lndust:r~~~ls were
terly expiration of stock,lndex
composite .Index lost 1.98 pollits within .Jtrlklng distance of the · futures , op)lons on them and
3000 mark. But that was ali close options on Individual stocks that , ·
to close the week at 196.05.
Declllies led adva11ces 959·927 u they would get this week.
taken together, known as " trlplfamong the 2,184 Issues traded
After Monday, lnvestora dewltchtng hour."
,
this week. Big Board volume clded the market had come far
He said he would not ~
totaled:841,668,174 shares, com- !!ROUCh and took proflls. The Dow
surprised or unnerved If the Doyi
pared with 690,533,470 a week clciaed lower. In each of the next
!ell2 or lpercl!lltfrom !tshl&amp;h, 411'
earlier and 950,677,220 a .year · four sessions, culminating with · .even as much a~ .5 percent.

.,

MEIGS
TIRE
CENIER
. JOIN FULtz - J. atAICUS FULTZ ..

0~

June 10, 1990

•Whttl ·•
Alignment
•Brakes &amp;
Shocks
•Struts
··used Tires
•Goodyear Tires

;~Payne Stewart leads .Wesiem ·Open·
·•

SecUon

'

·YOU CAN DECIDE
'
WHAT TO
APPl-Y
YOUR
. '
Dl$COUNT COUPON$ TOWARD!
Any Furlilture ID Our Store -

Famous Name'...m1lt1ue Items
J.l'or Every Room ID Your Home - ·
Uvlng Room- Bedroom
J)lntng Room - Bedding - Tables

P'lESE:NTI~D 30-YEAB SERVICE AWARD-

. rtctt are lluaa

•Stalnaker, head ·mall&amp; Cllttel' II&amp; &amp;W
Gallipolis &amp;roger store, reeeDtl3' celebrated Ilia
38-year aanlveraar;y with tile KrO«er Co. Left to

Jhdlon, .... maaa,er, Stall
aaker ud Edwin 81eveklq, Kroger vloe
•resident, llreeenUq S&amp;•l•ll:er with a Sellli
cleeiL
- .,.

Lamps :.... CarpetJnc!

FOR ONE WEEK ONLY
OUR ~IGANTIC
COUPON SAI,E
WUl' Give You An
Extra Cuh Discount
On Any
Furniture Purchase!

KEVIN KING

King promoted .

'.

l' '

:t...~.\~::::~;.·_ .,

..
TERRY ROBERTS

GI:OIWE STEWART, JR
' '

I

.: Kreiser; . S·tewarti. B;Dd R~berts
as's ume ne~ j)O~ts .· at coal firin
.

'

Pick your own savings!'This is your sale ... decide
what you want on sale just by clipping these
coli.
pons. Bring to Mason Furniture :,oo~·· cmd save! .
.

,.

.

,

ALBANY - 'J'hree empiO)'efl·
at Souther-n Ohio Coal Company's Melp Olvllicm. have
• aii!IIDed new poaltioal at ~ .
conlpany'' mlntna OJIII"tlolrr. ·
TtX:I')' E. Roberta-now
It
-, the Melli Dtvlstoa'a pc.,..llcm.
plant 111 ~era! · ,PtcJiitafklll'
· l\ll!frYIHr In cllarfe at aalnte.
nlinile, Owflht D. ~ llu
been named !Ienior Rlflhllllllli·."'
aeer at tbe ~elp DMIIIIDotJIG!t,
' · ud Geox1e Stewart, Jr., ' been promotedtoeleetl'lealenet·
neer for tbe divlljon omc..
Robe!U bqaa bllemplo)'mftl
, 't'!tll the CGiftJIU1lB 1t'N u a ·
. IIDil'll lllkle lal!drfl' at' IM'
.elp Nil. ~ mine. He teld tM

....-a

r.

MIDDLEPORT- Kevin King,
son of Mr. and Mrs. William
Klng1 Bradbury Road, Middleport, recenlly assumed the polli·
t!on of Corporate Controller with .
VOCA Corporation In Columbus.
VOCA develops and managea
homes throughout the Eastern
United States for people with
mental retardation. King, a
certified public accountant, orla·
lnally J~llied Ernst &amp; Young In
Columbus .upon graduation from
·Ohio University In 1983. ·,
He and his wife, the former
Cathy Hess of Middleport, reside
In Dublin w!th their daughter,
'
Chelsea.

.,

.

positions or preparat:e:~t mine before being promoted to
operator and plant
1c hll current position.
• before belng.promotedtomalnteKreiHI' received a bacbelor'a
DaD~ aupervlaol' at Uie ~- delree In mlnfna englneerlnl
No, 3 prep plant In ij'll. He alao from West Vlr&amp;fnla Unlveralty In
llu lltld the title of aneral 1980. He resides In Addison.
~4QI su~ for the
. Stewart beean hlumptoyml!llt
.~ pt"'t.
wltb Southern Oblo Coal u an
· !bile: tJ II a Ioq-ume resident · · enllneerlng tecbnlclan at the
· of Wellitln, w,bere he lives with · Mel11 Dlvlalon'l preparation
bli ·wJ61i Llilda, and 111n, Tom.
plant 1111984. He wu promoted to
· KNeer.J::.IIl the American alllocla~ coal preparation en&amp;fEltcl2ie
System In JJil as neer the follol'flna year.
a mtalng n&amp;fneer for ·Central
Qrlalna!Iy from Middleport. ·
, Appalacblaa Coal Company, lo- Stewart earned a bachelor' 1
cited near Cbarlllton, w. va. He degree Ill eleetrteal englneer'tq
. tn;'.ct•edtotbeMI!pDivllten ' from Ollio Untvenltylallll. He
, bl
llid aile IM!d tilt Utili of llvn Ia Pomeroy w1t11 1111 wtt.,
Met- IUpervtlor aDd lolllftll Mtey, _ltlploa, ~thaD, and
aupervflor at the Melp No. 2 newborn aon, Stepiii!D Tyler.

.

~

r..i

81STER8 UCBIVE AWARD- 8111'1111 Lyaa BID, left, reeelvea 1a
her Nll&amp;lrarJ J•aler ADIDI Alaoclatloa llllver Award and Ntom•t ~
llQ IIIII. rfiM, paller NJAABNae Award frGQa Deaa Bwlbut '6
of tile Amerleaa BPI "-latlon. Tile lliRers f1WI Blclwell • - r
lao_.. Ulr p tile --*loa's Natleaal lunfor BsoepltiN ·
Prop- Ia wldell ,..... are aWIII'IIell
ae&amp;IYitlea, 1 '

fer....,.....,..

. .!' , . . . . . . .,Aapa ................., .............~
predaciDI A pa catae. '1'111 ,_,. wen pa •••• at 1te 1111 ,.
AtJantlc Nat' c Julor Aall!l 8how Ia TlineJRaJ, Md.
•a

-

•"!'

. '11

Jane Stowers I .ane named ;~
·to Rio Grande Aluinni board ·
.

'

·d

GALLIPOLIS - Jane Stowers
Mrs. Lane's first year ,Iff
· Lane, daugbt.r ol Ruth Stowers,
teaching wu completed atGallla
Rt. 2, Bidwell, wu recently
Academy High School, Gallfll!t"
elected to aarve on the Alumni
111. She presently teaches ~·
Board ot Dlreeton for the ness Eclllcatlon at I;awrenQI!
Unlvftllty of Rio Crande/IUo
County Vocational Scbool, Cllt
Grande Commualty CoUeP In . sapeake, where she bas bW
1t1o Graade.
employed tor the paat 11 years.
Alao,. Mrs. Lane recently I!"
~- LaJJe tP'llduatld crorn Rio
Gnu.. Colllle Ia 1t7ll with a celved tbe Golden APR"
deiree Ia a..lnell Edueatlon Acble¥er Award presented Jlt'
' alld comp!IW4 her ll'aduate
Ashland Oil Inc. ,In recopiUoqif
work· at Matlball Un!Vel'llty,
her superior teachtna effo~: ,
BUIItlngton, W.Va., also In Busl·
Mr~. Lane was ODe of Dilly~
nesl Education.
Ohio teachers recelvlnJ
special award for ber accomp.
Durlq her study at Rio
lllbmentl!• Innovative teacbll!l
Graade College, Mrs. Lane wu
metllodl ud concern for atudl@t
·active In atliMilt aovernment,
acblevaawat.
r··
Alplla Mu aeta IIOI'OI'lty, Cbeer·
Mrs. I.:ane resldll In Cb•
lnlllr, Ult wu llla:tld for
Wbo'l Wllo Amoiil AJMrlcan
pealle wttll - l!el'bllld 0....,
and 9-)'ftl'-old - Cllrlltopber,
.Collep 1114 UDiwrllty Studeata.

'*

.

--~------~------------------~----·-----------~----~----~-·---·--~·------------·----~--------~
,
'
•

J

~)

�June 10, 1990

Times-Sentinel

-··.

.-..,

"

Classified

·-'

=.........

TIIAT DAILY

p~
- - - - - - - Etlltetl loy

June11, jiiO
Sudden and dramatiC changes In your
material affairs could ha"'' an uplifting
atlect on your lifestyle In the year
ahead. Be reedy to move SWiftly when
opportunity knocks.
GEMINI (llltJ a-1-JUM 20) Buslneu In·
volvements wtth friends could produce
more complications at this time than
prom. Think twtoe before getting pals
Involved In your big deals. Major
changes are ahead for Gemini In the
coming year. Sand for your AstraGraph prediCtiOnS today. Mill $1.25 to
Astro-Graph, c/o this~. P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
Be aura to state your zodiac sign.
CANCER (J- 21-JuiJ 12) Today you
might have to break your word regardIng a commitment you've made that you
now realize does not serve your best interests. Try to bow out as tactfully as
posalble.
.
LEO (July :IS-Aug. 22) Co-workers can
be Inspired today, ·but thay cannot be
brow-beaten. Don't rnalce demands. ol
others with whiCh you wouldn't comply
yourseff.
VIRQO (Aug. 23-llept. 22) You could be
a trifle romantically adventurous today
and you might form a audden attach·
ment that may end as abruptly as It begins. Don't start sometlllng you can't
finish.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0c:t. ~) It's beSt not to
depend on others to take care of things
for which you're jletter equipped to
handle yourseff. Thole you c~e~e~Jale
may be poor pr(!!lucera. ·
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-1\10¥.12) Things you
do In haste o• out of anger today'C!)Uid
be ·m-tated. Keep a cOQ!Itead .and pace
yourself so that task.s won't have to. be
dooeover.
,
SAQITTAIIIU8 (li!O¥. 2J.Deo. 21) Fir
nanclal rltlts . you wookln'l normally
contemplate could look a trifle tempting'
to you today. You were better oil when
you relllzed you didn't get something
for nothing.
CAPRICORN (OK. 22-.laiL 11) Yow
lack of tolerance In dealing wtth Olhenl
could leave a lot to be desired today.
Keep In mind that If you start puahlng
people around, someone might puah
back.
·
AQUARIUS (...... 20-Feb. 11) Usually
yOU're reasonably good about keeping
secreta, but today you might be smitten
wtth a Ill or talk811venesathat may Impel
you to blurt our more then should. ·
PIIICU (Felt. 8ll11dt 20) An attack
of Instant gratification could Induce you
to be more elllravegant than you llloUid
be today. ~beryou wtll.....,tuatly
be billed for wh81 you buy.
ARES (llerdJ 21·Aprtl1~ 11 you don't'
g8t your way with othera today, there's
a poaalbHity you might behAve In a manner that could demean your Image. II
will prove wl- to practiCe aelf-control.
TAURUS (April ~ 21) Guard

June 10, 111110
Your• llnancial prospecls look encouragi'1Q for the year ahead, but there Is a
possibility you could make mora lrom
joint ·endeavors than from that which
you

4o on your own.

QEIIIIHI (May 21-June 20) Something
prof~ble might develop tor you to(!ay
from.a situation engineered by a friend.
It m,y not live up to yo••r 'fuHest expectatloos, yet II should be worthwhHe.
Gerrltnl, treat yourself to a birthday gilt.
Senif for your Astro-Graph predictions
for o(le year ahead by mailing S1.25 to .
AstrO-Graph, clo this newspaper, P.O.
Boxll1428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428.
Be Sllre to stale your zodiac Sign.
C41¢ER (June 21-.IUIJ 22) Don't feet
otltlgeted to stick to a particular procedur&lt;l')oday it a companion has a better
way ~ of doing things. Flexibility Is
impQftant.

.

LEO" (July 22-AIItl.

22) Exercise patienCe if you make a few mistakes at the

onsllt of ~ project today. Minor prob·
lemS: can be more easily rectified than
you ""allze.
.
.
VtR4o (Aug. 23-S.pt; 22) Conditions
mlgltl Initially look they are going
agai,ist you today, bUi Sllrprlslng twtsts
cou~Z! be In the offing and enable you to
snatch success from the taws of defeat.
LIIIIIA (llept. D-Oct. 221 There's a possibitlly you might try a bit too hard today
to gfn peer approval. However, If you'll
relax and be yowseff you wtll eaaily acquirti the endor_.t you're -lng.
SCQIIPIO (Oct. :M-Nol. 22) II rn)ght be
wise-to downplay the advice of a Well intentiOned liiend today, bocause you'll
be ~Iter equipped to evaluate a partie·
ular""atter.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21) Your
ext,.vagant Inclinations could still be
stirl.thg again today and will have 'o be
kep~ In check. Try lq enjoy yourself as
in:~~slvety as possible.
.
C,
ORN (OK. 22-JM. 11) Soc)ally
thi$4hould be a rather pteeaant day tor
YOU: provided you trast all of your
fri~sequally.lfyou!lre partial orr play·
faY~Witea, it might not be so gr•t
AOOARIUS (Jon. 20-FIIIt. 11) Serious
matfers should not be treated indtfferenti today, eapeclally if they InVolve
pec!tiJe other than yourself. Wishing
won't make problems vanish.
PISCES (Fab. 20-118rch 20) Do not at·

._l(IU,_,...._

I..... IO •

4

lljaanlal
llftil I -.IIIWJ
Collie.
I -.llall
Mdt•
rlar.eM-lQ.Jal

=· ~-:..-= ::..~
rr

Palr-lon.IM-JIIIIIJI.
4k-•ar-,2111land
2111lMd-..7 . . . ald,:I044 ......... - - Old. 1111.....

:::0. l:. .t;;::r

to . -

Ill -

--·

Wll. houliCIT&amp;rHg.

2

ll?loftlrllp.IIL

-·-ha,-a.

tiJ

good-.·- .'

- ·. -

yaara

AHut

11W11Y to

I

........... lao• 44WM1

~ In
114-

l'lnt.-Dolly
,

flrat - lZI Thild
ClotTrfllune,

.... OllllpOIL

e
I 11 11 1 I· I· I I
• &amp;::ad r r r r r r. r.
.

.

.

•

•

r rr r

:

l'aalllr

Avo, ,.,.,.1111.

Prlcod

ALL Yonlloln- le.Pald In

t:"
...";".;.':..~~2:00
t~ 'P.lll
:i.':::
~ edition
~~ .d.toi. • 2:aO
lola:, 111 W-.nd
12, 11 ll.nL·7

l;i!*r,_..eiioh -""· -

He 1p wanted

·a
1101
Bpotng

11

Help Wanted

='r,wv.~orm.

-~FinOilalolllldo
Pine v.ll

-t.tuce.
... -

210'1·

lohDDII t.
mden Awo,

Pllrtllnburg, wv 1......8 lt11.

18

·p-

IALEIII 8ta~
P - . Juno 11-

-

boy

Woolll Excetionl Pay! MProclucto ot Home. Coli

oooODIIng opplicottoo. lor

.,.

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

C~servation District Bolird

•

C1!41mers Corn Plantor. Bida
will. be accepted untH 4:30
P·'%!· on June 26th and will

BAB1' •

tKJ

fK11S

uu
tJ112

at the regular

monthly board meeting on

thf:· 25th at S:OO p.m. The

tQif
f4QIII
t HIH

bifl. Arrangements mey be

1

-

t - . ! Applli:onto ohould conIHI: John lagw 01 ~-

SOUTII

Bolrd reserves the right ~ to
acq,pt or reject any or all

~:

=
--

•1. t 'at

for l&gt; their Two Row Allis

mode to ... lho plantor by
coiitocting tha Geltlo SWCD
at L448·S887.
JljiiiE 10, 17, 1990

Cert111C81ian ond, National
lllory ,...11'811. Succaalul
• Ieoni mull lao lloxlblo, ond
1 to traval,_ to oH otlllona,
Wllllln BEOEMlO eo,_,. AMK.... olloWII- poovldlld.
Solari lo oomJIOIHM In full
bonollt -""to lo ovoltoblo. In-

:.!Qou

wi!l;be accepting oealed bicto

be.~ opened

,:g:

1

Wanted to Do

- . p.oo
Pointing
ot.o104-4111
.P."' hour.
IOU, Bildlo tung.
ilag1e Y - Doy CU. Conler
re•an....._
clependlble,
lice-, -IllY child cora. Molay lhru Frlditf, 7:10 INI 1:30.
For mara lnfDrmlltlon at to

=

lui, port-dono o m - Apply owglster J9W7WM7.
Ill poraan llotw•i 11Lm.-4p.m,
. . . . . _ , - lrtdgo Plaia.

======---

Fulloti.,., ftuillle houro, tfplng,
telepbone IIMI oommunlcltl0i1
llolllo, I'OtUWIOto P.O, Box

tAQ

Yllloero!Ne: 11ot1a
lluler: llooll

.....
INT

- ..
,

•

• Clolllpollo, 011 -

·

Poot~lmo -~~-clark, mull CAL a PWMIINO EXP. HAl
hevo ootall oxpo-, ..,.._ REFERENCES.
ALL
INlnt oxpo- a~"'P ~CA't'i"~~:."'.::
;r'':~p.:, at
ZM-1111.
Gonion Contar, 413 .........

Loi.!::

Pike. Glllp 1111, 114-4......

POITAL125/rr.

J018
$1l,ll2....,,
hlolna, Col
(I) a.
IIUaOo Eat. 14182 lor -

11

1111
•

PIPE FITTERS
PIPE WELDERS
111medill1 op•inp lor till
abovo crafts in lobila AI•
Only lirst-tlas witU to
5,.., uporionco o10ohpply,
Earn up to SU.OIIper taour(i•
Iodin&amp; per di..,).
Applio:ants 1111s1 furnish thllr
own ,,. lor lntlna, II hind.
Ill cnlts 1111111 iurnish tlllir
own hand tools.
AU IPP I'·-'
,..,,., must """' nltiJ &amp;1•.. llld lllrd hll in
order to 10 lor ., inltrYiiW. '
F
Dfllllirl inforl1ltlion, call co~
IICI (205) 43l·iol4 (londly
l)tru f_riMI).
.
CALIPER, INC.
1900 $ ; 81084 St.
Mobile, AL 3Sil16
EQ\MI Opportunity
E"""-r

,..,L

Expanding: physician office needs
a receptionist. Duties include appointment · sheduling, typing · f60
wpm), filing and medical insurance billing. Qualified applicant
should have appropriate experio
ence or education.

POITAL SEIMCE Jolao. ~
to IIIK. tut--~z.:::
::'l.':it~ 111

:-;Card of Thanks

Send ruume with salary requirement to:
Medical Receptionist, P.O. Box 7290, Pomeroy, Ohio 46789.

Employment Serv1ces
Help Wltnted

STEEL FITTERS
SHIPFITTERS
FABRICATORS
WELDERS

ir==e=p=a:n:ted==:.L=======~

Nw
ll'i'l'..

11

--

H I W

;==e~p=:n:tact==:;

-or.

Spring Avo.
Ohio. Oilnail toY the
lllo llooy Vloglnlo llelbol, ollwd
1w oote. Building In oxcotlont
physico! canoltiOn. Contolna
. . . . roori'W, bath, lttlo, .,....
mont. lmonedlotO· --ncy.
Soolod bldo -ld lao oubmlt·
to Crow lnd c - Law '
tocotlld

,

ond - roor ond win--..-""""
,.,A...,
' .. tool.
.
11n1on
,_roy,
814
Coli
11 H I Wa
·

Ill'-* • flu• oor•)

Rd. Lonaovlllo, Ohio, Phano:
I·----~----------~~~~~4=~~~~aa=.---~--~~
=.,Odd~:::0,~~·..~
For lnfonnolion. if04.141-ioo:J ~ - ' . tull-llnw, raqul... =ng.
,._
Eat.
,,,
~ Public NotiCe
diJpJndable
traneporwion,
-oao,. _...
TJplo:g
loofboonl
oldllo,
•
-.114
ue
BRIDOI
""'"
- otgnlflcorol
~ ~~~~~~~-= Inc.,
Fullotl.,. poroonedlc, SEOEMS . Munloiotton oldllo, n.flOOfllo otngtoo
II •ooklng oppllconto lot
•· PUBLIC NOTICE
r
"'lottoo.~,lor
land ,.._ to P.O. 1o1 iiEIIIoo£UNO INTEII!C?!L~!1043wollo:
tho pooltlon « luO~Imt llootor 11oon.
nR~R P~~ ~~
tl.e Gallia Soil and Wotor
_.,. •~•
=~
4
Box
•CW.
201
Qalllpollo, Ohio 41131.
CONCRETE WORil, EI.ECTR~
poroonedlc.
Currwnt
Ohio
E!IT·P
11

'

....... - ""' q'*k ..... 3 badNooth lololn St.
11:11,000. 304 451 tl'lll Dl' . 171-7117.
Vwy nice two otory homo

I,_ ·

~
- .,:;..·~'l.!::
12X11 born, 4 milia ·of

Hotot/llolot
~.
Airline travel, "..
" ..........
' - Ald. Tractor Tlllltar training, ROII-

3 Announcements
-

·-r
":,"'.:

~rpotodc b

....
...............
I1WHO an
~

_

Juno1\111G.

COLLEGE COUNSELOR
The Unlverlity of Rio Grande announces
the opening of a polition for a full time College Coun1elor.
-~..
The College Coun•lor will be expected to
provide a one-tQ-one career, pertonal and
educational ciouneeling to ttudllnta, fllculty,
ltaH, and mental health dlatrlcu; facilitate
developmental groupa and workahopa organized for the purpoaa of growth and de·
velopment of any of the population• ~
by the Counlellng Canter; provide part-time
academic lnttructlon; counlellng end lnltruc:tlon f« GIMk Organizations aa well as
ACT ttlltlng end allietMOe with campus organization• for handlceped ltUdllnta.
Quallflcetlone Include· a M.A. Degree in
Counaallng or related field with a doctorate
preferred. Two yNra of prevloua experience Ia dalirabla.
lntareaad paraona ah~uld 18nd en lntarelt
letter. nstume, Including the nam•. addran and telephone numbera of three reference• and trenecr!pt before the diladllne •
of June a. 1980 to:
Me. Phyllis Mason, Pertonnel Officer
The Unlvartlty of Rio Granda
PO. Box &amp;e9
Rio G~ancle, OH. 41S74
Th• Un...,olly of Rio Granda 1o •n Eq..t
Opportunity Afllrm811ve Action Employ8r
P.O. 2SIOI
·

bid Iorin &amp;orao.

M
..elt O•e
-1eer
More
Now She'• 141

n. ••••

-0,.

1.112 aa•.
a-3 ,boJ 00&lt;110, IIIII"

~~~~~oft":::

lad

Ollleo Dolor to 4:10 on Juna 11,
oflll'lll8adll
. 1D1'1Y RootIJ:.!!'.~rty
1111
dallora,
(140,000,00~ Thlo .... tar IIPf!Oint"*" only.

11110.

Con4ocllhe ..-...... .. .,._
III2-UII. l:ti0-4:00 Dl' 114-tiZ3721
·
.. •ppolnliMnl:. The .
. . lor
. . flllrWd
by
the ~••• EDcutor,

to

rojocl any omd oil lalolo.
Ricl\aird E. Jonee, Exeout•. ·

32 Mobile Homes

ror Sale

·n

Now t2JIQ with 121124
otldltlon, 2001200 lat. wll ...

_ . .•. 30W71-71111.
'72

All. 12110 lroltr wfth MilO

idtllllon oil tODl200 II tot, CA, .

"!'~ ..- . -

• di'Y!!! ...
. 304-812·2011
oftor

d..,, 2 cor ga-. IZl,IOO.

010.
5:00PII.

12110 M - . - on IIOJt:tiO
lot, eon.. ..... - it 310 Paart
St .. llklclhpart. 2-lp.m. Tuee.·
Fol.

lnvoctor 12144, 101110
rapolil noodod, aood oomp oho
trollor, ~J5.3IJOO 11111:00 Pll.
11111

1173 12115,11000.1114-4-.

tm llobllo - .

Ma7l with

1x21 up.ndo, 2 beclrocwna, 2
bathe, ce.nlral air. QDOd cond,

11\000. 30W7waaG".

1183

~ 30W82..,..7.

.

2 bad,_, mo1111o - . Han-

z bedroom mobile home, n101
loallon, ..... 304-fJ1.4711.

211r, 1 mile out o1 Oollpollo, on
1118.1M3111104.

8

~·

ONo.

........

Public Sale
&amp;Auction

211adt001:-. ......,....,.,

••

2br, t

a 3 quootw bolh,

--2p.... '

haot puol!p, 2 car garo~ Cho,.
an.e, Crawn ctty, 814--26fo

1M;

lty BR,c
. .-...
.oanclllon.........
111110.'

111

~~··
aat•. 1•1

' For

L - . mobile

home. 3 bedroom, lof• of I •
pi&lt;IVMWI'IIO. Muot -

to ap-

. praclot.. Mull aall l......lloty,
suoo. 114-1112-2122.
For-Silo:

Mollllo ._, :lbr, 114-

371-2440.

Uonftod otlor. Foatory "' you,
Mll70, I at 3 badroom, -lido

Cll...,.. and oablnltL oar.n tub
both with oliyllalit.L. vinyl oldot·
lng. $15,100. 1~'rzt-4041.

.=

llpoolol, 24111,
28poclel
lloth, regular
pnco,
tl4,1l10 lhru JWIO 18, 1110.
' Fronolt Clly llollllo H-o, 114-

--~
....... . .
4411,._,

3033.

33 Fanns tor Sele
41 .... l i n n , -

a-y,

"""'
·
r-lllp,
ar,
......,
vlllfl -.g,(Ohlol
11om, outtauldlntll. ....... olghlo, 1111
pound ·
- -.
ovonlnga:
114-44f.t212.

...

n - ....._,11om,

out-

Qlooniii:!l
tno-.M

IM!IIdlngo,IMolod Ill

wv-.

~hto. COli -

«&lt;tMO, -

4::10p.m. 114.,_._ MW71-

8141.
11g illiiOtA IMlt - . !Mill on
~l. 1a1. tM.... ~P. ,,.._ .

a

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
t.oto a _... ovollobll 1or
,,_--ton
an
Rayt&gt;um Ponti ......
~
·
H , . . II
;MIItlui&amp;-••hw•
rllen
lllelld
011 .....-, . . .- - . John
D. Olrllolt. 110
,_..,,.._

........

I

•'

~I

..

SATURDAY, JUNE 16, AT 10 A.M.
Location: From Gallipolis take 35 to Rio Grande.
Tum richton 325 and follow approx. 4 miles to iron

brid•e 1nd follow to auction s1•ht. Follow si•n .
•
e
•
Ruson for sell ina: Mr. Hively sold his farm.
HOUSEHOlD: Full size bed, dresser, chest, bunk beds, hide·
a-bed, e~d tables, dinette set, occ. chair, small kitchen appi·
ances, d1shes, pots and·pans, iron skillets, oil lamp, beauty
shop hair dryer and 4 watting chairs;.eiec. base gu~ar, 8,000
btu aar cond,, base CB antenna, (21 36" storm doors, (2)
horse saddles, 4ft. fluorescent light, 3 burner kerosene cook
s\ove, Pump, kerosene cans, camp stove oven, kerosene
heaters; w,lioden c~icken crates, clothes, wringer washer,
Single axle 5 ft. &amp;10 It, alum, end closed trailer, lots of flea
mkt. items, and more.
FARII ·£QUIPII£NT AND TOOlS: '73 International dump
truck, Ford 801 Powermaster tractor, A.C, Model C tractor
. kl e .bar and single plow, Ferguson 14" bottom plow
w,rth stc
With 3 pt. hitch, Fer1111son 2 row cuftiv~tor.King Kutter 5"11.
brush hog Dearborn post hole digger, Ideal lime spreader,
10ft. drag d1sc, Case pull type 2 row corn planter, L&amp;S sub
SOli plow, Cunmngham hay conditioner, 6"ft. grader blade, 2
row rotary hoe, 6 row 200 gal. sprayer, 3 pt. boom pole, grass
seed ers 1P!0 &amp; DC),&amp;Zundapp ll)Ud bike, Sears 12 hp law~
1rae1or 138 . mower scraper blade), elec. fence posts, locust posts, fence charger, 2 wheel trailers, stock racks, woven wire, (2120" mower~ hay fork, 1beam (4x61, 8" metal
pope, culve.rt pipe, (2160 It roll plastic pipe, 14"·16" tile, 10
gal .. Miracle Grow, orchard· grass, .fence s)aples, mowin•
scythe, 4ft. step ladder, st~ei cable.. post driver, split n•
maul, axes, rope pulleys, Ford wrenches, blow torches, shll"
vets, PICks, and many more tools too numerous to list.
.
Tns: Cash or Check with proper I. D.
lunch
OWNER: ALBERT M. HIVELY
AUCTIONEER: FINIS CIKEl ISAAC
VINTON, OHIO - 614-388-9370
Not Responsible for Accidants or Loss of Property
Llcennd •nd Bonded 13 Yeers
W~ are now booking summer •lea. Call for detills.

Located on St. Rt. 338 just East of Racine,
Ohio. This is the personal property of the late

At the Scipio Twp. Fire House Located
On St. ·Rt. 684 in Harrisonville, Ohio.

Maurice Lott.

"HOUSEHOlD"
''
2 pc.living room sutte, coffee&amp; end tables, 2WarmMorning :
heaters, 40,000 btu, small air ccndttioner, Gibson 427
upright freezer, 16,5 cu. ft. Wllirlpool refrigerator, Sharp Car·
ousel II. mirowave, Bendix electric range, Whirlpool auto.
washer, misc. chairs, portable TV, C3fd table. New Home
electric sewing machine, bookcase, metal &amp;wood cabinet~
couch &amp; odd chairs, misc. dis.hes, pot~ pans &amp;etc.
"ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Table &amp; chair~ china cabinei, bulfl!l, 3 pc. bedroom surtes
from early 30s, Highboy, rocking chairs, misc. chairs, Dukes·
mtth table. desk made in Washington Court House Ohio
stone jars, k~chen table &amp; etc.
'
'
OWNER-JON II. LOn
DAII SMITH-AUCTIOII£ER
614-992-7301 or 94~2033
Positive ID
Cash
Refreshments . '"'

Somethinc for everyone. Anyone hlvinaany items to
sell bring them to the firehouse on Sat .. June 9 between 1 P.M. &amp; 6 P.I. Afirtmln will be there to sicn
you up when you come with your items. All of these
will be sold on coosi&amp;nment. For more inf11rmation
call these numbers: (614) 698-4544 or the Auctioneer, Col. W. Keith loldtn (614) 742-2048.
Not R1sponsible for Any Accidents

PUBLIC AUCTION
MB,T CONSTRUCIION &amp; EXCAVA114G INC.

THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1990 · .
,
. 10:00 A.M.
LOCATION: 10 miles NW of Gallipolis, Oh.on At 160

to Rt..554 E.
. ·
.
· ..
DOZERS: Jli B50B. Sn: 718338: JD 850. Sn: :i76101T' f2l JD
4500, Sn: 7077981706557; 1HC TD25C: Sn: TD25i:·5l64
SCRAPERS:
(2) Twex
TSIB Twin Eng, Sn:
33TOT58542/33TDTS8531: (21 JD 762 Self Load, SN:
003734T/003725T; JO 760 St f Load, Sn: 4W220
LOAD[RS-BACKHO£S·HYD. EXC: '85 JD 544C, Sn: 507100;
JD 5448, Sn: 350211T;(21 JD 4108 Turbo, Sn:
712759/711519; JD 410, Sn: 321540T; Prime Mover L·
1200, Sn: 120422: JD 690B.
ROLLERS: IIISC. EQUIP.: American Steel Works 60" Tdm.
Sheepsfoot: (2) Wabco Tdm. Sheepsfoot; Case/Davis 16·4
Trchr., Sn: 1162264, (Less Eng,l; OW Walk Trchr.; IR Walk
Roller; Trench Box: Allied Compactor. 36" V·wlteeth; (51 Hoe
Bkts.: Pear Shaped Drop Ball.
.
AUTO·TRUCKS·TRAILERS: '89 Cadillac Cgupe de Ville
. w/Gold. Kn: ·sa Ford F250 XLT Lariat 4Xil; diesel· '811HC
F2574 Tdm. Tractor: IHC Tdm. Dump; Ford F700 SA Dumps·
IH SA Flat Dump; IH SA Straigh\; Ford F250 Dualee Service:
Boom; GMC 35 IT Van; Chevy C30 4X4: Dodge Ram 350C/C
&amp;250 PU: 351 Triax Lowboy; 40' Flatbed: 12T Filth Whii2T
Tag 40' Tdm. Stl)(age Vans.
SHOP' EQUIP,: Jumping Jac~ Jack Hammers: 7500 &amp;
4000W Gen.s; Propane Healer; 2000 psi Washer; lnstt.
Blower; Cham Saw; Eng, Stand; Resurfacer; Quality of VBetts; Fuel Tanks.
TERMS: Paymant Cis h. Certified Check or Bank Letter of
Credit. on Sti e Dayn
CALL OR WRIT£ FOR COMPLETE BROCHURE!
FREY &amp; SONS
P.O. Box 7, Archbold, OH . 43502
.
Phone 41H45-0015 - FAX 419-445&gt;-8888

~===~. ,v:.r...

~

,,~,

PUBLIC
IUCftOI ·

..

thur. June
. ' 14
11:00 noon

.

Locoledat 805 VlandSI. In Point Pleasonl, Wv
Mr. Welch Is moving out of state and wiD be
selling lhe tolowlng:
HOUSEHOLD a MISC: 7 pc. wood group LR. suite, 7 pc. .
dinets... 3 pc maple pooler B.A. suile, ches~ rollaway bed,
metal wardrobe, hlde-a·bed, 2 old quilts, Whirlpool rulrigeral!&gt;r, Tappan gas ~nge, imaM Kanmora upright lreezor,
Old Chlrie Weaver b&amp;rtander, old horae clock, 2 bOUO
wash boards, iron skillets, lamps, tables, pictures, metal
cablnet, glasswera, pots end panl, typewriters, slllnlo, old
rBCOrds, Maslar Mechanic 16 galon wet dry ahop vac, viae,
skllsaw, leW tools, step ladder and more. 1929 $5.00Silver

OWNERS: Garnet Bachner &amp; Bernice Winn
AUCTIONEER: Col. W. Kaith Molden

Auction Conducted By .

.

liCK PEARSON AUCftOI CO.
LUNCH

MASON, WV

773-5785

OWNERS: Samuel L. Weich

614-742-2048

Lie. in Ohio 114318 &amp; W. Vs.'8&amp;3

71QI
IIC·71D

BROKER - 446-0008

SAnRDIY, JUNE II,
10:00 A.M.
Localed al Harlford CommunHy Building lr)
Hartford.
on Rt. 33 about 4 miles north of
the Pomeroy bridge.

wv

FURNITURE
2 oak ftltwllll cubbarda, walnul bed, 2 Jenny Lynn
beda,18panecomercablnel,hlgllprlmltlvaoheet,
oak eteck on bOokcata, oak ho. . waah etenda,·
dr..tare, walh 1tand1, wall cubbard, oak lllnd
tablea, primitive night stand, ea.d lrona, and much
GLASS

Blue &amp; whitt buttermilk pitcher a. other, dated Jar•
1B581tc., old plact~markad Mlllga Co., Itone Jar•
-H1111I1ton &amp; Jon11, Donohue juga; ~.W. Roberta
from Ellzabelh, WV, COnrad from Sltlnneton, WV
(2gaL), milk crocks, oow bella, olllllmpa, caetlron
1t1111111, &amp; about 35 boxN of 1111alllteme.
GUNS (tall It 1 p.m.)
Marlin model liD 22-1. auto, Marlin mocfel11, 12
ga. pump wfth hammet, N.R. Davta l So11112 ga.
doubll barnal, Mo•berg No. 45 bon action 22 18
shot, Savage 12 ga. elnglt barral (old), 12 ga.
Hopklna, 12 ga, Champion, Wlnchtetar 37 A 12
ga., muzzla loader, old pellet guna, cap gune,
sliver dollara, Indian head pennlll, lara• lf)VII,
VIet l MYBI'IIIfllalllttml.
·
NOTE: AU theta lttma are clean &amp; In very good
ahlpt.

AUCTIONEER:

Col. Oscar E. Click
Licensed &amp; Bonded In WV (754-90)
304-895-3430

RIPIIID.fiiDID

.

RANNY BLACKBURN

DO YOU LOVE LOG HOliES? DO YOU WAIIT
SOli HAND TO GROW ON? - .This may just
be the ticket. 27.6 A. Green Township, clo.seto
town. Very nice log home offers 3 BRs, bath, ·
LR, krtchen, fireplace, carpet. Also offers a
25x30 detached garage and a 20x30 barn an
property.

THIS COULD B£ TH£ ONE FOR
attractive home sit.uated on 1.9 acres:
Features include 3 BRs, LR, k~chen, 2 baths,
lull basement, gas heat, carpet and hardwood,
utilrty bldg
PRICE REDUCED TO $6S."Ooo! - Beatllilul
L-shaped brick. All rooms large. Eat·iil
kitchen, formal dining, lR w/FP, 3 BRs, 1'h
baths, attached garage.
83.2 ACRES, M/L NEAR MEIGS MIN£ SJ. Older two s\l)(y home with vinyl siding, Storm
windows. Two small barns.

..·.\..

4.9 ACRES 11/L, JUST AT TH£ £00£ OF
TOWN, BEAUTIFUL VIEW -1260sq. ft. home
oilers kitchen, living room, 3 BRs, FR,
fireplace, attached garage, workshop and a
12x60 mobile home that would be ideal for '
mGm or rental. Call for more details.
EVANS HEIGHTS- 511111UT£S TO TOWNCITY SHOOLS- Very nice home gffers 3 BRs,
LR w/lireplace, OR, kitchen, 2 baths_,attacllve
sundeck, attached garage, new Sldln&amp; ga.s
heat/cent. air.
$24.900nl Very attractive price for a nice
home. Two or three bedrooms, bath, LR, DR,
krtchen, carpet, part basement, laundry rO(/m.
$15,000- 8.7 acres, m/1. Approx. 1 mile of
nontage on Raccoon Creek.' Some botioiri
land, black walnut.
141 ACRES ' 11/L, HUNTINGTOII TWP. .::
Approx. 1 m~e of fronuge on Raccoon Creek.
Some bottom land, black walnut
'
li£AR IIORTH GAlliA H.S. - 2111 acres m/1,
Morgan Twp. Frank Ward Rd: - $17,500,

ALL BRICK. + 2.15 ACRES+ SMALL POND
and just 5 minutes lo downtown - Lovely
home at the edge of town oilers LR wrth
woodburning fireplace. very nice k~chM,
dinette, bath, carport, gas heat/cent ait,
basement, many more features also. Call for an
appointment and details!

LOOK AT THIS! JUST $34,900! - Very nice
home near Green Elementary School.
Attractive features include LR, kitchen
w/stove and refrigerator. 2 BRs, bath, 2 car
attached garage. Clil today.
ATTRACT IV£ HOllE AND TWO LOTS- 3 BRs,
bath, kitchen w/range and OW, LR, carpet,
elec. heat, l car detached garage. Srtuated on •
two lots..very nice.
36.5 ARES 11/L, ClAY TWP. - Frontage gn
Frii!Jllty Ridge Rd. Od house on lilld $19,500.
.

·~

\r,

.~·
: ··':
..,.;;:

..

,~,

,, .
,...,.,•,

: ,_.
_.,
""!. "'

...

REALTY
j

"'' IU

pannlea, 1982 G.W. Anniversary Birthday haH dolar and

other coins.

BLACKBURN
'

~~

, .,.
:"'

· AT MORRIS EQUIPTMENT YARD .
· SALEM ST., RUTLAND, OHIO

Havin&amp; combined the household items of Bernice
Winn 1nd the equipment &amp; items from the buildings
of the lite Dale Bachner, we have moved both to the
Rutland site to better serve you. ·
From Pomeroy, Ohio take SR 124 West to Rutland,
left on Salem St. Sicns will be posted.
FARII EQUIPMENT &amp; TOOLS.
· 9 N Ford Tractor w/6' side mtd. mower, Ford 501 3 pt.
mower, lnt 46 baler, large selection nuts. bolts, and shop
related Items, Craftsman saw, 6" vise, lots of shovels, axes,
sledges, hammers, cant. hooks, grinder, miter bo• w/saw,
. ladders, lawn roller, work bench, lots of hand tools.
,
-AUTO
.
1956 Desoto Firedome (bod~ rough).
·
ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTABLES
Theodore Roosevelt g; Zig Zag Adv. button, Watkins Sample
li.n, NY RR cans &amp; wrenches, Buckeye wringer, wash stand
(needs refinished), stone jars, wheat rake, floor lamp, granrte
pans, sewing cabinet
·
MODERN &amp; MISC.
''
Very nice l.R. suite, round table. occ. thairs, end tables,
Craftsman· table, hutch, full bed, metal cabinets, sewing
mac~ in e. lots of books, corner shelf unit. room divider, Kerosun heater.
This is only a partial listing, Theraare lots we haven't&amp;one
through yet. Come, brinnoul lawn chairs &amp;enjoy thesale
with us.

....

Certilicato,$1 .00SilverCertilicaie, 1922 SilverDollw, ,.,_,

10:00 A.M.-JUNE 16, 1990

Still.,...
..

.

PUBLIC .AUCTION

Not rtlfiOitllbll lor loat or dltltlgad 111ttchlnclll
day of 1111 bJ Cllh or Cllleok wltlt prop111D

~·

3011.

-~nd,
lor rant,
Old
30W71-

t'~.;.;.~,.,..;=======n=:::...- ~-1

mora.
1Wo mobllo homoo, 211 llodrooon. MliOI lao 114-liZ·

Town

Public Sale
&amp; Auctlo

PUBLIC AUCTION

THURSDAY EVE., JUNE 14, 1990
5:30 P.M.

SATURDAY, JUNE 9. 1990
TIME: 7 P.M.

.........

I

PUBLIC AUCTION

PUBLIC AUCTION AND
CONSIGNMENT SALE

2 llldr0011t trelw~'th ~

c::M~Hre,

on

Dpon -

L'nneul llllt'lpeullc Dllllaln
lor 111 bad ...,..ng to
ICF raqul- nat to
-tllnpor-Con-

*

Booch ..,_, MlddtojJort.

- · :IOW78-1!,72 alter 1:00.

Looklnt lor , badoaom hotne In
Sy.....- . . _ lllolrlct. Mull
. . - FIIIIIA raqunmlnl•. ew11112-111111 Dl' -.fOGO.

.....,.,
Ho_, Holahlo. Hovan, WV. f"'l -=a4. ·
4 bad- 2 ~ • lilltha,

Baakk••lllnWAccaunllng.

Spoora, - - ·

n~~llablllf

1110. 3I7S7 8olom -

~-

rr.n

1 milo
Dopoott,

.

Lo;r.
l:.o ~":'~~lng

on tolld ...,.
traat 1300.- Md . _ por

Schools ..
"Instruction

AVON I AH - o I Shlrloy

Announcrments

.~litO, NEWSPAI'!:R ENTERPRISE ASS!'·

15

llml~

Roeol.ltl 185 35111
4 bad,_ ~

rr.n oon"' ol1 an 11. 111

:..~ r::.~:~ ~

,.,., 1 112 111ory, -

_,, - - · oft.rt p.m.
tu
Do~
Mobl
..::-.,..~ 42
le Homes
OH-G2cuONntllolo. 24 hro.
for Rent
- , . . , leto By ownaa" Por 141170 upondo, 3 tr. 1n
dfvlolon •
• country. VInton oroo. stavo,
·lao'J:Ilda 112, • 11,:: ,.~~1_2 "":~•tor, truh
. room, .._nod In porch, 3/o\ r,...~··
Dop., Rol'•·
..,. tot, ally oc-o. 1,.__
1HII.
Fat _.... or . rant, 2 badiOOIII
HouM on ,. M - on Sumnor =..,..,CI"3.;~~::!;;!::

n•d.

~-=======:::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::~-~ I , _ Md 110111.'1'1111 hun11

s bad-,

R-

to ooll. l...,...oto -

441-3411.
1 badW'II -

~:::::r ~~

k=.

~

-.114-44tlo3411.

day II the procedures you're p,_tty
using have been running smoothly. Alterations you make might not be tor the .
better.

112

,

1.

Full

po1o,

-nlntiL

-lido; 114-112-2111 doya,
8.Y - . 2100 .non,
MI. y.,. , _ lodo-n, untumlohod
potco rid.- 30447&amp;-11111.
OOVERNIIIENT HOMES -~~~ Pomoroy. 114-112-2211

mile CloiiiDofle , on
!'BR,1!111-•
:
d Rd. 1.7t I
1ultY _,....., oily - ·

.LHEJ/7:.1 .LSI::I/:1
i\~:Jtl ·
mol. S!4J S8M, 'pe)!S8 JUIIpu81J8
3111://A
UV 'J&amp;tJ!OBd 8 PUll lf0940 WfBIO
S.LHEJU
' II
S
8 Ln!NI 8J94J pooJS I 1\1 U!MOU)!UO
A W/HM
·w!8JO el5861leq . &amp;4J OJ JU&amp;M 1
Xl:/31:/d
·
9t!W~ J&amp;ljJBnep JU8JU! AW ll(lOJ p8(]
3H:::Jf7'11F) .
5131-WVI:IO,S
· •
..,
· n.....t
•
01 1 c.])
~~-a(/-~\!' g.~ .OJ. SIIIMSNY

.

Fumlohod. Rot• ..., ctopoolt.

::n,.~,f.';f::o-,o

31 Homes' lor Sale

.&lt;.lHE&gt;I1:1.LSI::II:I

Yard - · 414 Fowtll

ouonotoon.:I04-57&amp;-zata.

B y - ............... iotot..,

Real Estate

YIJ'd Sele

&amp; VlclnHy

m

:::Ot'.':'

Mlunal -

~-~tm:::.:;"'::.;::....,::::""::.:::;:'IUl=.--..,:::·io&gt; -oy,::: '':"'
0

, _ , 2 bathe, P,OOO, and-

s;.oo 1u

1

1

~~•room ....._, Nooth Moln,
...... 'FI!~L ~llflcte, 3(M...

itor- -

lpiM enky,

Ill.
2 ""'-J
- -11-~
-..
too
i-

Gallipolis

4

1:110

Fer ,,.. Jn.

•• ..,.... ltlltll

a-

7

In

llou .Ill. 11110

-~-:Hobby
En!........ P.O. BOii - . l.an'
-.01143110.
NIW UO HIAD VIAL FARM
I'OIIIALE or with aplon

Complete the chuckle quoted
by filling in the missing words
. you develop from step No. 3 below.

0

•

To

tloyo ...............

ia.l~~~~;1-.o;.,•i;r"';•;z.~'-i;ii0;-i'""~';r.;:,...

S y - . 114-4--.L
OoiiiJ'OIIo,
Appto 0..,.. Itt. 2, H-I bad- , . _ ~ulracl. nt·ue 1411.

&amp;·10

t--r.F~A~R..,.;...F...;A.y._Y;...,..--1

ageiMII mailing ....,.._ -DII to-

or $ques today where you know trom
expwtence the wetc.orne mat Ia not out.
S!lfld yoilr lime ~h 'true pals instead.
Aillls (llbrcll 21·Aprll11) Even serlou(plevelopment can be worked out toda~r so don't despair II your mettle Is
tesild. 'Think win and take your chaitenillls In stride.
.
TAiiRUS (Aprt120-May 20) II a conflict
of ]IPinlons erupts today, stop and
couot to tan. then talk things out. wfth
ottoW party Involved. Asoothing of egos
ca~
achieved.
.,,--

-

Dad

i..

Woodlln ,...... .. .....•• , .

'

41 HouMBtorRent

Fnma
:lllf, 1 t12
....,., ""Wood
-. u.s.
111-.1
=-~ :::t; l;:=to;'.n..ne:.=.
~ ..r port, uttlltr bulkllntt,
on 2 - lolo _ '!!r ..Iii
1
All Oak

ad

.

Pl.- PI
", !Maa .~ Unooln
Avo, N,IOO. 114-'Ae owl;

Vlrglnto Coli: 1· 1

104 Jilt BIUaftarlp.m.

CU. an4 oandw OUillllr ohop
...-..,...114-'Jit...S: -

took · my infant
....· ---~,__....---~..__..__-'"·__, daugttler whi!e I went ~o the
baggage claim. UnknoWingly I
I E R I y 1· stood there with a claim check
1-.....=-,...;.l--=-..:l,;,...:;..l9..:._l--1· and a pacifier. An .attendant
asked, 'Was this your I 1
L-~--._~--~~~
----?"

c.t, ..lpodo, . 3

aid, haa -

I

GTHIST

r.-6....1,..;;.....,.1__;,.;1;;...,.
.. ·.;,17.,.;-..,....-1
.

Ohio ~ ~

Mt\ 1n -

,__-:~•~11111
Hal' . . . . . - ·
the

... _....

Dlioctlono: Toto. Rt.• to
Roeol. Home

1o
on

INOIICil ·
OHIO VALLI1' ~UII.III CO.
rtr ..... thlt~dollluel-

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

Galeton Rotrto.W.
4 IIIOIIIhe old. To

=T.tn•=••

Opportunity

__
..... ""'..... -

:.PII~·~*~m~;;:-~
· ;;iGLLifto;;jft

ft:i£:~~~:_~]_________

·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 ~I~ W:Di1 furnWwd mobile
Hovon, eal otw 7:10 . honle
IDr Nnlln Poun•ror .,.._

LAIC Ill -

3--

BuaiiiMS

21

.

progo W - ~, · OOUIIIy Jlli.Z131.
ballbnnll!llllng.

I~

~OC:.l::'..r,-:

·•

....I DfiAI'Ia...............

loundly - · ...... -ring 2-. 1 toto, 3
~ bot~~Dlt2. 10"~• - h oa•t•Uo LaoU,
, ""'' to public wotar, no - - ·
..,...alng lluaughout. Eloolrlc rt- - · · :104- .

-All -

Dl' .......

loot.

::=.. , "' e.••. .._

Wll .....,.. Ill llir - · 114-

Nil .... ....., Hullcy,

-

-

--a~-"·

;=-.....~~~~~~
~

acrea.IOM1'I.JIII . .III...
-loroolotar-hlng , _ wlojiriij
Inbuill In:-:::~..::
bull In kltchln with largo

Centw.

,

. .;;X.. ;.F_,.R;.;. . ;,.,I...;..p~~ ·
'·r~E
. I, I I 1~ l .

112.ntl.

.. Dor C..

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

E HUG
A,c
'.

1\

r1

_

..,.......,....._..Oiplne

simple words. Print letters of
ea;.t&gt;j n· its line of squares.

Glvtlway

2·-doaoo _ _ __

-..., ...... _-• :.:;.n-:w:r~.::

..... • J b' • Clh'd p, 11-ft
........ ·I :II p.M. ~ J ·10.

O words
ReQrrange the 6 scrambled
below to make 6

'

1 month o1c1 oo111 1\

-

42 Mobile HOmes
for Rent

I , _ IIIII both, _,niry

18 wanted to Do

WOlD
lAIII

Q.lfiil

PUZZLU

7:: =:'.\~!...:-~
WllirNI.A--

BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Homes for Sale

3 Announcement~

' ASTRO-GRAPH

~J~u~ne~
~1~0~.~~~~9~~~
~
,
:
-~~~~~~~=i~~~~·
~
~~o~n~•~o~v~
~
M~
,
~·~'~S~:~•o~n~G~P~Ii~po~I~~~·~O~h~~~~Po~i~m~A~e~as~•~nt~W~.V~a.~:::==:~==~~~~~TI~t~~~~S~•~n~t~~
~
ei~~~~-~D~-~3
~
i1

• The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

.

ALL TH£ COMFORTS OF AWELL KEPT HOllE
- Very nice ranch style home. Oilers 1,382
sq. ft. Other attractive· features include an
18x24 family room w/fireplace, eat· In kitchen,
living room, attached ga~age. ut~~Y building
15x30x4 above-ground pool w~h wood deck.
Situated on a very nice tot in village ol Vinton.
Cali for more details.

EXTREMELY I!IICE STARTER HOME located
just allhe edge ol town. This home features 3
bedrooms, bath, living room, kitchen, dimng
room and a full basement. Five minutes to
· downta.n.
MAYBE IN YOUR PRICUANGE- Very nice
home oilers 2 BRs, LR, kitchen, bath, attached
g3fage,· small hothouse, concrete block shop.
Corner lot.
'

6,000 SQ. FT. WAREHOUSE PWS 1,200 SQ.
FT. OF OFFICE SPACE - Very nice building
located just off Bulaviile Rd. Overhead garage
doors, ramp, overhead heaters in watehouse,
four nice offices, fgyer an4 reception area.
Situated on 2 acres of land, call our office for
more detailed information.

HALE - Lot on ROdney-Cora Rd. Very clo.se
to St. R~. 35..
.
ALL BRICK- JUST OFF RT. 35- ClOSE TO
HIIC AIID SHOPPING- Attractive home in a
nice neighborhood offers 3 BRs, bath,
equipped kitchen, lR, dinette, fireplace, new
carpet, 2 car attached garage, HIS heat and
· central air .

, SMALL FARI FOR SALE- 50.15 acres, m/1. Clay
To~nshop, Home on property offers approximately
l1u0 sq. ft., 3 BRs, bath, living room, kitchen.
Ouaet set!tn&amp; frontage on two roads. Call for
.details.

ATTRACT IV£ OLDER HOII£ IN THURMAN $34,000 -1650sq. ft. homeoffers4 BRs LR
kitchen, bath, 2 FPs, unattached garage, sitet:
lite dish, vinyl siding

$3.500 - 4.77 acres m/1 near Village of
Eureka,
, ·r Hazel Ridge Rd.
.
14.7] ACI£S - Extra large pond, 3 miles out
· of Vinton on Rl. 325. $16,500!
'

. IDTS OF POTEIITIAL- 67.496 acres, m/i,on
Crouse-Beck Rd., nice wooded buiding s~es.
rural wlter 111ailable.
lr.J£10.- RACCOON TWP. :- .39 acres.

$29,900- lOCATED Ill CITY- Older home
offers 3 BRs, bath, LR, kttchen, gas heat, city
water and sewer. Call for an appointment.

iua ACR~S -Harrison Township. Will sell

smatter Irati,

30.382 ACRES, TAYLOR ROAD - This small
f11m also has 1 1966 Vindale 12x60 mobile
home. srnali blfn, Green Elementary School.
$15,000-19.143 acres m/1. Approx. 'h mile
from ctty timh. Ali utities available.

514 Second Avenue, Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·(61 446-0008

.:•'
'·

.

,,,
'

'

.,.,

�· Page- 0 - 4-~unday Times-Sentinel
Apartment
. for Rent

44

5I

BUILDING SUPPLIES
Closeouts-Buyouts-Seconds
bone, rost .............................................. S199.95 ea ..
CHOICE COLORS ACRYUC WHIRLPOOl TUIS. CDIII(IIItt
with timers and tult draill ................- ....... 1399.95
REG.TUBS. Filttrglass. stMI, PVC. Choice calors or

white ........................._.................................... ss9.95
1 PC. TUB AND SHOWERS. filttrgla~s and arylic: color .
and white ..........................................- ....... 11 69.9 5
ELECTRIC BREAKER BOXES 1200 amp 40 circuit
1139.95) (200 a~ 32 circuit 17U5f 1100 amp
20 circuit 1()9.95) (100a~ · 14 circuit 159.951
INSULATED GLASS PANELS. Same Low E.
.
l'/4174"x33" 145,00 ea.) 1Sfex76"x21" 139.95)
l'fex76"x46" 145.00)
EXTERIOR GLUED WAfERBOARD 1!..48"x32", Ust
for sheathing or flooring .......................... 11.50 ea.
INTERIOR PREHUNG DOORS. AI sizH and finishls.IGracles ....... ~ ........................................- ... 129.!15 ea.
PREHUNG PINE WOOD 6 PANEL DOORS. Smral sizK,

~R'Et:U~Gt:~ft.·iA'l'oAiiiNriiiiol'ii'oo'ii"A~~:i:~
....,.............:........................................:...... ••s.oo eo.

PREHUNG AND PREF!NISHEP lEGACY OAK INTERIOR

DOORS. AI sizlt...........................·............. s•s ~oo

PREHUiiiG EXTERIOR PINE 9 UTE DOORS. 32"

Qr

to.

36"

size..........................................................st S9.95 ea.

Complololy lurnllllld, om,•ll
how:t, euttable for 1 or 2
~~~ ~r.""
Rotonno; ••

.

•

; Fumlohld Apt. $220, U1llltlot
- Pold ~.... 7V1 Fourth, Golllpallo
- e14 44 41hllor 7p.m.
- ~~~~~~--~~
Fumlohld EHiciii)CY, 1185,
U111Hioo Pold, 7V1 Fourth Avo,
•• Golllpollo, 614-446-4416, oftar
7p.m..
.
~

1

Groclouo llvfng. 1 1ncl 2 bodroom

Monor

1t Vlll•g•
ond
Rlwlrslao
In Mlddlo-. From

1p1rtmenta

Apo~monte

PR£HUNG EXTERIOR STEEL INSULATED DOORS. 36":
No !trick maid ..............; .....................~.,.. 159.95 ea.
SALVAGE STEEL ISULATED DOORS. Choice sizes.
•
,
$19.95 ea.
SALVAGE INTERIOR WOOD AND MASONITE DOORS
15.00 .ea.
60" STARTER KITCHENS with 60" ltaSI (2-IS"
wall!, 60" pc. counter top, oak raised panel d-s.
'259.95
· ALUMINUM tRIM COIL. Brown and whitt
(24"x50' I59.9S a.) (Two fM 1110.00
· (four far 1200.00).
12"x12" WHITE WASHABLE CEIUNG TILE ... 35' ea.
2'x4' Embossed Fire Rated 11.99 ·ea.
4'11'x 112" PERMA IRI SUI SIDING. Insulation foil

noaft lpm. At. 141, • ....... oft
111.7.1- ·

--·

""' S.lo: Couch • Choir, 114-

_..nil.

c-

piiiJIIOUna. 2 ·
. , dlo-1,
WIIOr, &amp; gorblgolncliidoc(
Slort
:. 11'1211. 114'311'7110. .

Rooms

uv-1-

Seve -on .a oorpotln otooll

• 114.. ~.

- -••

Wl~ - : :::;:4:.• II hM Furn~lft

-

-plot•

e

G.l. -by '""
drylr
Nlrtgoilul
Refrlpool-. .•
lloolilo .,., .... :II" ....

•

-----

Eloclrlc

IWial~ ,40
Whlnp.oo~

Inch,

wu,.r, Ill:

Ill:

ICeft.

_,.., 1110,· Dr/W~:
G.E. Dryer, til: Wh r1poot
I
$95; A~ lOki wtth • guo,. •
Applll~. 814-441-

=--

-

.... ,_,

. Optn I to 5. Closed

-lalo

=-

~ tonnlng .-

-

MerchandiN

on -

..

et

PAINT PUll, ·

Real Ellhlte General

'.

..

dming room,

I anotller kitchen,

bat

SIVE· US A CALL:
.

all apphnces. Just move 1n. Low

.

m.

.

.

Jud,~ COewiU -

L.Jl .

, REALTOR' .

LMGSYILlE -

ACIIES - 3

bedrooms, hving room, dining room,
kitchen, bath, garage, nrce porches
A little private kr ngdom m the mid
$20's. We'll listen.

'

&lt;Brwbeh

2~

MIW LISHNG - MIODLEPORl -

(;)

r

~~~'11:,•::::~

2nd St. 4 bedrooms. living rcom,

!am i~ room, kitchen, H~ ba!h, large

corner Dl. Vrf!W of rive1. Needs you
to decorate In the 30's. ·

REDUCED - REDUCED - REDUCED!! Now only $32,000
doublewide. 2 baths, formal LR &amp; OR, FR, 21arge
patiOs, siltmg on 1.59 acres m/1. Shown by appointment.
ACREAGE - Prime building lots. Can sell the 6 acres or di·
vide into2 sHes. Some woodland in quiet neighborhood only
4 miles from town. City schools. Owner/agent

IIODLEPORI -

MIDDLEPORT - AS LOW AS 1200
A MONTH (ro Quallflod Buyorl. 3

BOIADWAY. 2

bedrooms, I edraroom. lrvingroom.
dming room, kitchen, bath, lull basf&lt;
menl new siding. Beaulrful klt. Ex·
peel to be envred at this location rn
low 30's.

large living room. krthen, llh bath,
lull basement. garage, barn and
pond Good hunting and I!Siln&amp;,
lrurt trees. lodge ty~ home on 30
acres with mineral righ!s. 20 mi·
nules out of Pomeroy. 30 minut es
out 01 Athens In the 70's

THINKING OF BUILDIIIG1- Get ajump start 0n
building your new home by finishing this recently
constructed 28'x70' frame home shell- 40 acres
partially wooded, tillable acreage. Several feet ol
road frontage. Call today for location and more
details.
#2846

~

1422. rHIS HOUSIIS FOR 1HE fAIIILY WHO LilES BOTH SPACIOUSIIISS
AND BEJUTl - Close rrt Brtc~ ranch wrth 3 BRs. ex·lg. elosels, LR. 2 1&amp;.
baths
eat-rn kllchen on grouOO le¥et lower leYel - ~ bath. rec
room.'
. 2·3 BRs, vpshe. /dryer, 2 range:s. 2 rets . beaul~u\ 1 5'•44'
deck. A~
I
3 car attached garage. lat. mil rrassed ~d levet,
1 6
1 home! Call tor tx:atron and prrce.

~~68 .

AlL 8RICK 8EAU1Y Of PIRFECIION CHilli · PEISIIIIAliiY · COliFORT - Quality buin new home on 3ih acres w~.h pond. Enter thmugh a
leaded glass door rnto a 16' x2.7' llvr ntrm. ytith bav wrndow and l!lassdoors to

an atrllm . .The kHc hen rs e.trao rdmar~ wrth ISland and frosted IJ!Ik ~jMI)tJ§

by Bedford. Master bedrm. is very hugew~h whirlpool tub. 2 full baths.. 2 car

garage. Th is home is maintenance free. Areal classrc beM.rty. Buy " pf.tcaaie3,
ac. mil at a reduced l)fice or buy all 53. acres. M111st set th tS toG ~

'

IDEAL FOR ALARGEFAMILY -4 bedrooms 3 baths formal
living room and dining, modern kitChen, family room. Very
mce home, large back deck, 2 car garage. All of lhis setting
on an acre plu s. Green Elementary Schools.
A LITTLE COUNTRY! - 30 acres more or less and a nice
home. 2,086 sq. ft. oflivin gspaceplusa full unfinished base·
ment. living room w/ a great view. Dinmg room w/cathedral
. ceiling, skylights. and a window seal. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths
den w/fireplace. Kitchen has lots of cabinets, pantry and is:
land.
2 st~~tked ponds. haybarn, sHed and frun l!ees. When
.I
the 35 bypass is completed this property is only 5 minules
from Holzer Hosprtal.
A GREAT LITTLE fARII! If huntin~ farming or gardening is
the name of your game - we have Ihe perfect farm for you.
13.6+ 1-ACRES. tobacco barn, farm equipment, 2 bed·
room home, washer and dryer, stove, refrigerator and all the
. country air you can breathe.
·
MOBILE HOME AND 30 ACRES more or less in the Rio .
Grande Area. Some woodland and there isa new pond on the
property. Nice private area. Ideal for hunters or to ra1se a
family. Not restricted. w/ mineral lights.

bedrooms, living room, dining room,
bath, fun basement, privllle parking,
nice pfiYate yard. Why wart. Here's
the home for you in the mid $20s.

IIODLEPORI
- SICLUDIO
NIONG THE TRE.ES- 11h acres ~a­

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

carl! Iand in new addd!(ln. Rrght out·
side Middleport Why wall. Here's
the choice spot for you.

Stutes Real Estate

POIIIROY - 1633 Lincoln His. A

full acreof comfo rtable livrng. 3 bed. hmg rm .. kitchen, !IrS baths.
r CIVer with valu_e m the low

Bonnie Stutes 446-4206
Pf!tti Hawk 446-1967

Real Estate General

Real Estate General

flEW LISTING! BEAUTIFUL BRAIID flEW HOllE
IN TUCKED AWAY NEIGHBORHOOD! Exquis~e 3
bedrooms. 2\\ bath home in great location, 'h
wtth approx. 2,374 sq. ft. ofliving space+
appro~. 28'x24' garage. Family room, formalliv·
ing room. dining area &amp; mui:h, much more! City
Schools Call today fo• coinplete listing #t 848' ·

also 2 ur attached ~araBe with automat iC dooLlocated mSu!Mrst Vtnqe
Vou may see ttis hOme today and bu~ for everlasting comfort. Crtr man
school We can a_rrange favonrble tor~~ term tinancin&amp;. By ltre way , you can
have
rmmedtately. We wrll sell yDtJ ltre extra lot lor $6.500. Owner

21'! ACRES AND A STATELY HOllE in an excellent location.
Over 3,000 sq. ft., huge living room w/ woodburning fireplace, ex.l~ family room with w/ b, fireplace, I ~ formal din·
1ng room w/paper and chairboard, modern equipped
k~chen, 3 bedrooms, 2 bat~ s. wonderful view. Wa ~ hington
Elementary.
.

NEW LISTING - ON R1.7-Gallio

Co. Abolll lh mile below Mergs l ine
3. 74 acres. House needs somework.
Would make agood trailer s~e Great
location. On ly $7,000.

DEXTER - FOR PEOPLE WHO
DO)tl LIKEJUS1 PLAIN LIVING A TOUCH OF CLASS. 3 bedrooms.

Sam Hoffman ............................. 379-2449
Jeannie Tolliver ........................... 446-66i4
Tammie DeWitt ................... ........ 441 -0703

MIDOLIPORT - A HNIOSOIIE
OLDER BRICI( HOME 1HA1 REFLECTS SIABILill AND CHilli -

lbd:land St. - 3 bedrooms, l 1h
bath, living room, dining ro om,
kitchen, garage, quiet street. Excel·
lent buy at only $30,000.

. 1-314·3645
Thur. &amp; Sunday

('

bath. e, ra larBe lois. Comfort you
can afford at $30,000

30's. Make us an offer.

738 2nd AVE. GALLIPOLIS

JUDY DEWITT. BROKER ........ :... 446-8147
J. Merrill Carter .......................... 379-2184
Cathy Wray ................................. 446-4255

POMERO'I-E. Main St. 3txlrrro.,!l,
~,f.,ng rm .. tg:li11. 10om w/ rlver,

bedroOms, dining room, l1vingroom,
2 baths. fuly carpeted. central 111r

11534. OON1 BUI AN11MINGUN11L YOU SEE IHISALLBI1Cl4 810100115
- NOT JUS1 A GRACIOUS HOlE -A WAY OF LIFt Cllnmg •II b!ick
ranch, lg. hv. rm witJl din ln~t lfta 2 full batt\" nP.w u r ~t kitchen, utility rm .•

bu~s a3BR

rooms. 2 lil! lhs, dining room, liv .ng ·

SYMCUSE- 2ndSLIIIooc ~on . 3

'

8 1 - ilnd Hlmollyllc\ ~114-446-3144 111•7 p.m.

To be available for applications to be taken June 4, 1990. 7.573/4% Fixed Rate,
1st Year. The following 29 years, interest rate to be 8.2 SOfo Fixed Rate.
GIVE US A CAll FOR MORE DETAILS!

HEMLOCK GROVE- ALL IT TAKES
IS A SMALL OOWN PAYMENT AN 0
1350 AMONTH (to qualified buyer)
Ranch s1~1e ·fully carpeted 3 bed-

. 2'h acres en

lhe 30's.

446-6624
gouf~ehn SM~s C12ea~ Bslate-~ne.
'

room.

23 LOCUST ST.
446-6806

OHIO BOND MONEY

'irT.'O~

room lront porc h, ba ck deck. TPwa·
ter I full acre. Low 40's. Make usan
offer.

l1vm~

REALTOR'

FAlliS ~

VIRGINIA SMITH . BROKER. 3BB-BB26
DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 256·6251
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 446-1897
IU.ITH BARR. REALTOR, 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE, REAI:TOR. 379·2686
DEBORAH SCITES. ASSOCIATE. 446·6362
LYNDA FRALEY. ASSOCIATI' . 446-7499
MICHAEL MILLER, ASSOCIATE. 441 ·1406

Real Estete General

LIST WITH US
- BEMJIY SURINOUIEIYCOUNTIII
-;,c···::·cftill Rd. - 2 bed·

~=

SERVJCE MAKES THE DifFERENCE

•
~==========:..1=====~===~

NOW TAKING APPliCATION - LOW.(OST
OliO BOND MbNEY NOW AVAILABLE. 1st YW
71/•"'o, REMAINING 29-8'1•% IIXBI RATL
CAll Olll OIFKI 992·2403 FOR OlTAIS.
LOANS ARE AVAILABLE ON AFAIR &amp; EQUAL BASIS
REGARDlESS OF RACE, COLOR, ANCESTRY. NATIONAL
ORIGIN, RELIGION. SEX OR PHYSIAL HANDICAP.

Real Estate General

Real Eatale General

na ,...,,

- . _,..., 1
10 go,
~ ..11111111 p.m.

~ ~,X, E , ~ , .~ ~ ~ ~?1~~! ~i !!~RC I~

~-= ~~~. !:. Gollipollo, Ohio 45831
Avo, --1"1, -,J.-.;.'";.;.;·..;6..;1....;.4..;-2;,;;5~6,..;-6;.;5~11;.,.J.

G:t [B'

Puae. ldoroblo, DrogocowJIIICI C.aory Ponlln,

AKC Chi-

a-·•

Jack W Carsev· Healtor

~ 'OJkJ'k

~:2111111.2-.

Real Estate General

loc.. Salt~ Ropr•.,rit;,.
DONNA CRISEN8ERY '
E.S.R .. Box 188

Real Estate General

304..7U31t

For llellt.
Pouncloge: 1,160 poundo, coli
lighted olgn W/Lottoro 114-Z4Hm, or 545 poundo, coli
Ntt. ,,.. dlflvooy, Prootic Ill· 114-Z4HSI3. ·
W. 147.10 box. 1-533o345S.
Uood rolln&gt;ld tiM $5.00 IICh,
=.,~Como 111 1hco tlmo, cell llllor 5 p.m. 3Q4.675-5702.

-.-•-· ,,.,.h

54 MlscelllfMIOUS

bl~

rifmn£

RESIDEIIliAL • INVESTIIENTS • COIIEICIAl·

lor - · m . 114-~-2410 lf11r
5 p.m. -lcdiJo.

Cool 12,517.10.
I will
1111 H 1203
ot
Chrt.lmoo.
Orlglnol
2p.m.
o1 1Drl1,100. 114-317.o:ll&lt;l.
Two Toi&gt;occo

-In

--n.ooo.

PENN'S WAREHOUSE

WEllSTOtt, Ohio

loot,_

l~jt.~~~~~~!~

C)/~ ~~

........... ole. CloUcll -

•.... Mlo Oroncll, OH Coli 114-

Ill
oyotom conolotlng
of 1 Tllldy 1000 TL/2 computer 1.-a43-7185 (liM 025J.
wlh 1401&lt; "'· RAil, lloth
Thr11 2x10 c.rvono.
Cot:lr rreor, lntWRII clock, 3 ...... --··,
hootd
112" lloDDY dllk drlwl, 5 114" 0101
• l14-441·
!Jo!lpy chk drtvo, 4CI-m1f11byto
·
lntOmof hord dille drtvo, 14" Totel Shop, 5 In 1 -ortclng
lllgnovox --lonol Color mochlno, l whh occ-rllo,
Monitor, I rocelvld thlo tyotom NMondo C.rtrldgll. '· 114-2ea. ·

.

llefr1pol.::.r Rellfteo-.

no·

Furnished

mllol olllll. ~.,.opon 7

»
-...... ~...
Clio llolor, twin "'lilil~t.!!'!.!lr

....

unfinishtd ..........................................S1.2 5 to S2. 99
2 CU. fT. CYPRESS MULCH ~ ....................... 12.59 ea.
(6 for 113.00)
40 Ll. BAG TOP SOIL OR ORGANIC PEAT ....... 11 .79
· 3"x5"x8' TREATED lANDSAPE nMBER ..... I3.19 ea,
15 Pes. UP 1;1.99 10.
PAINTED MITAL ROOFING OR SIDING. 38" wide
ll'pc. -•11.951
pc. •13.951 112' Pc. '16.951
114 pc. IJ9.95)·S0me as is for IKs.
WillE CqMMOD£S. U.S.Mfg..................... 143.95 ea.
:
Colors 169.95 ea.
19"x16" NO RIM OVAl. VIRTUOUS CIRNA VANITY
IOWL. Whitt and lite yellow................. $29.95 ea.
SEVERAL WOOD AND AlUMINUM WINDOWS. bam·
pies: 36"x60" white or brown alum. Insulated.
S49.95 ea.

-.VI'IIo ,.........._ N . MI. 4

-.

Sunday Times-Sentinlli- Page- 0-5

Estate General

-...cn
S6 Pets for Sale
;''j;;;';idji;;ji;;jj;;;'j;;;pj;;;i
UmHid Ouan11llee, call toll me, 1 ,..r old Auetrallan Shtppcrd

-.304..

G.

Building
Supplies

.-.-.- ....

Merchaildlse

PAINT PW8. Sovo· 11 IIIII f4.
SWIIIIIING POOLS
.., ~ on IIIToced
Mallo uo 111 o11or • mUll _ ,
ond 11&lt;1- Plttoburg Pointe,
of
uv• 501ft on Bu~ Hedl. lmmldlltllyl V1lrlou!e - ......
:1418 .........., 4vo, Point ~,:Z• -Mion!'L
KAYAK
l'UOLS •
71-4014.
llanufoclurore worroraty, lnoloJ.
PC Compotlblo computor. Thlo lotion 7 financing onUobfo,

Alr - Riding
· - · Llwn
12,1110rru,
$421;
· ~ ............... flfiCI.
Cnol-lo, illllaae ~-111~10~-- SWAIN
Tllllr, .,., • •
AUCTION . a JIURNmllll. . 12
...... - · ..... D'IJ 111 lel1 . . . . Rt.143_ 314 ..... 11311: 11447Nti:IO.
0000 UIED APPLIAHCII OtM• .• fuml4ure. - ... w- ' 3441.
.
Inion lllzwly 11..m lfld aro..IJ
40" - · · Ill. 7. 2 . _ _ wllh llr
~·
- · lk.laa...,..., •rof!1gcn1ADiUMmn,
ac-h•- - · - 101M, D.
C. Metal Salts, Inc.
U - Rlvw Rd. S..lcle IIIOM .,.
'"nt''"',...
Cannelburg. Inc. 47519
hal ....
June
- ·u.e
· - too ~
-~.eon
,.-;;-;;-;"Liii......,..~;A;;;q;:;: """
lilY,.,
_
tlwlllld.IIIW4
Specielizing in Pole
PICK INS FURtiTUAE
Buy « .... RIM~- Antfquoo, IMIIY-IIMI-1ollll.
11341
Buildingo.
....., 11 ~
11M L lllln .,...., P.woy. ........ ........ 1110:
Dooigned to mMI your
Hou..hold -hlng. 112 mi. - : II.T.W. 10:GO un. lo I:GD
~~-Jomcho Rei Pl , _ wv. p.m,_...,., 1:GO to 1:00 ,..... 1100: l'l4-ll'NI4I.
Hoewuto,
· Duly ~ lor
I . 'Mill lonG S
nHdt. Any eize.
caiiiCM-I'JI-l
I
111 nil 2121..
uto:lOW'INIII
CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
Mall ot. . . . unit, Jn.
FREE ESTIMATE on
doOr a bulft.Jn , poat bldgl.ond poc~ogo
2dr, PI;
.Ntor, fniat trw,
City
daelo. Save hundrodo,
-IG; Clio Ranae.
lloblle.Harnea. ~14 Ut 1340.
:
even thou .. ndl of '
20
- ·20w~l
•11: ElloCilci
~
dou.,.:
.......
..............
.,.:

8'-10'·12' BUTCHER BLOCK KITCHEN COUNTER TOP.
$5.00 lill. ft. (Other calors 54,00 lin. ft.)
4'xl'x 112" TREATID LAmCE PANELS ............... 17.95
OVER 2,000 PCS. PAN£UNG. Waod and harllloord. •
Example: 4xlx~/• Mindy Paneling. Ntw cut cedar.
I 14.99 ea.
AU TYPES WOOD AND PLASTER TRIM. Finished and

•. -=-~~-:--,-:7--:-:-::-::-­
•. Flftllllld Apl, Nut to Ubrory;
•• porlllng,
11 r · -ftlonod,
:; ,.wrence required. Sulable tor
" 1 - · 614-448-0338.
· Nlooly lumllllld llol!lll In City, CA, ou••blo, 1, 2 • Roforonco. &amp; d._rt, •~
• 0338.
; Ono bedr&lt;JOm op4s. for ron1.
• $225 monlh. Dlpolft roqufrld.
: 114-1182-2218 ollor 8 p.m.
To,. TownhouM Aporlmon1o.
El&lt;ogoont 2br, 2 floor, 11841 oq. II. 1
112 bath, CAICH, . d l l -,

::• 45

~112-Npor-.11
t ...... 1'10.10 . ~ pot

ou. 11.

!1!1
liOnSot-...........
· ..-llun.Open
12

55

,,..lor

=
_,. -. lnlo-

two sides._ ......,_,,,.. ,_ ............................. s3.99 ea.

• 1111. Coli 614-tt2·7781. E~.

.....
.
.,.

•Wlillt.4~t
"'" - .....
114.01.....
pot
d - - o f - 8 4 4....
111.20 pot - .
All _ , i11M '*'"'te, I
wllll 4 GilliN RIO pot
ohllre a IMncll, t:llt. '!Win. or .- . lll8tlk! Chol " ou. II.
lull .......... ..• •H. l!lughn

-

54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise

IIIHI' 'TO OWN

CoottaConrlolo

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

54 Miscellaneous

HOUMhOid
Goods

N!gllllltonD, HUI. 4 ..... bed wttft ~ 11N. 4

fiBERGlASS AND ARYU&lt; GARDEN TUIS. llut, brown,

_.

HO!*holcl
Goods

June 10. 1990

June 10,

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

®. CANADAY .REALTY
NEW LISTING - COMPLETELY FURNISHED
1988 Flfllllinallobile Home- 2 bedrooms, liv:
ing room, bath, eat-in krtchen. Exellent condrtion.
You can keep cool this suml)ler w~h the central
air. Call.for detail~~2843

WSII INYIS1ME11111EAI.- MIUIEO.FFEI- RioG1111· - $31.900. Lorge

home. w/3 bedrooms. I ih baths, sunrm., din. rm., partial bsmt. Deep klt. A

mo"'Y maker. 402 E. ColeR• Sl.
W594. HIDDIMTIIUSUII FOR SALE -

.

Toke lileeasy an a condo. En~ th is

wonderful new way olliving. 2targe be~ms., 2 baths, hua;e hvrn&amp;rm w/ dllling area, stePsaver k~che n. Make an appoi~tmenttoday and see if you can re· ·
sis! ow ring an' e~ lra neal and clean dweltrng.

LOCATION AT ITS BEST! Pasloral view overlookin_glhe Ohio
River Valley. One acre. Priva&lt;;~: inside cily limils ... w1lh ALL cny ·
seNices. RANCH·STYLE HOME in 'mini condition' wilh 3 bedrooms, 2·112 baths(·2brick fireplaces (w/gasslarte!s)livingmom;
dining room ; fami y room; large kitChen Ioak cab•nels!Co!ian
counter lops); laundry room; workshooislorage building; gas
ouldoor gnll; covered palio; gas heai/AC; 2-car covered ca1p0~;
3.326 sq. fi.

l:::::~65~~~~~~~111p=o~lls::·::44:6-~74:00:·::::~

Merchandise

~: -------=
Household
51

Real Estate General

GoodS

'

THE. PRICE IS RIGHT - Discover the love and
beauly in lhis home. Treed lot, I \? slory construc tiOn, 5 room s, 3 bedrooms, I \? balhs, drilled well,
only $22,500.00. ·
. ~2141

!

LAYNE'S RIRNnuRE
- Sofa' and chal,. prlcld from
·• $315 to "1!15. Tobloe S&amp;0 1ncl up
'" to tl25. Hldl • belle $380 ID'

·: 15115. Rocllno,. $225 1o H711.
1, Lompo $2a to 1121. DthMIM ·
•· 1101 ond up to MIS. Wood tlble
• w.. chon $285 to
Doolco
• 1145 up to S3711. Hutchoo $400 &amp;
.. , up, bunk ~ complllll wtlh
moHrooo 1215 1nd up to $311.
bllby bldo 1110 1111110- or
' box oprlngo Ml or twin $78, finn
; $88, •nd 198. Queen ..._ $275 &amp;
• up, King $350. 4 d,._ choot
• .... Gun C.blno,. I, 8, I, 10
·.:
&amp;.by m.nr.....

PRICE REDUCED! - OWNERS ARE NOW ASK·
lNG $9.500.00-FOR THI.S-DELUXE 14'170' 110.
BilE .HOllE - 2 bedrooms, living room, bath
w/garden tub and shower stall. Eye appealing
k~chen and dining combination. MAKE US AN OF·
FER TODAY!
#2838

sm.

J

...,

Bed

ttam•

- : L -~.. ,

PRICE
TO
acres, more
less, with a well kept home that offers 2 BRs bath LR
kitchen, carpet and hardwood floors . Extremely 'mce
detached garage measures 24x30. Owners live out of
state and want to sell. Immediate possession .

t
1
I

~ 7h. Couch l
• C•r,_l. Call

• 8695.

Choir. t1x1Z Fl.
•ft•.
&amp;p.m 814-441-

or formal dining. spacious
·:·•.:.--···: Carpeted throughout, above
ground pool
privacy fence and deckin&amp; This
home is presently used as a single family
residence, but with extra provided krtchen could
be easily converted Into apartments. Located
w~hin cfty.
#12832

ECONOMICAL HOUSE only $59.900 3 bedroom
2 bath ranch. New vinyl siding and windows (Spr·
mg 90) . Energy efficient electric heat pump/central a1r. Approx. 2\\ acres treed lawn. Private settmg, able TV. Approx. 2 miles lrom Holzer HosPI'
tal. Call today _for complete listin&amp;
~2795

LOOK AT THIS HDIIE +. APPROX. 'h ACRE fOR
ONLY $15,500.00; 3 bedroom ranch, living room,
eat-in k~chen, utilrty, bath. Kyger Creek Schools.
#12809
PRICE REDUCED FOR QUICK SALB - Small
complete farm w~h all the extras. 22 acres,
modern 6 room home w~h I !+ baths, central air,
fuH basement, rural water. Efficiency apartment
w~h 3 rooms and bath. Barn and machinery shed
in cood condition. Pasture land dh farm pond for
tivestock water and recreation. Aworhshop garage
or small businflSS building 32' x48' approx.
REDUCEO PRICE. NOW ASKING $51,900.00. Call
us now!
H845

'

NEW LISTING! TREED ACREAGE! - Approx. 5
ac1es w~h brick and frame bi-level. Bedrooms, 2
full baths, family room, formal dining. equipped
k~chen . Efficient electric heat pump/central air.
2·car attached garage. pond and more.Call today!
City Schools!!'
n844

•

' •• - · · ~ - - ..•

$!5,500- \\ACRE+ HOllE =aaoodblrpin 3
bedrooms, bath, dining ,room and more. Call•for
more deta11s.
.
n 809

.w.

• County Appllonco Inc. ~
• uHCI opptlon-, T.V. oolo. o_,
~ e o.m. to I p.m. llon.-11111. 814441·18N, 127 3&lt;d. Ave, Gef.
llpoflo, OH

STARTING UP! This 3 bedroom doublewide ~
ideal for you. 2 full baths, family room, formal dinin&amp; Master bedroom has walk-in closet and bath
w~h garden tub. Sitltlted on a nice level lot (approx. 86'x172'). DOn't let all this fool you, priced
at ONLY $22,000.00. C~y schools!
112814

; Real Estate General
BEAUTIFUL FARM
Bulaville Rd. 86 acres. 3D
' acres
woods, pasture.
.pond. 5 bedrooms. country
kitchen, privacy, but cloSI
' to town.
•r
. . (6 14) 448·9660

LOT. 92 ACRE .,..- Located a short distanc~ .off
High1way 5S4 at Eno. On Eno/Vintoo Road: Great
or Mobile Home.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

•uorK1, CALL TODAY to view this 2

SO YOUNG AIID BEAUTtFUU- This 4 bedroom,
3 bath well constructed frame/brick bi·level off·
ers relaxed c~mfort throughout. Equipped
kftchen wrth beautilul cherry cabinets. Attached 2
car garage. All this and more nestled in 4 shady
acres.
#2839 .

AFFORDABlE PRICE- Cozy and comfortable 2
bedroom, I bath home. Large 24'1124' approx. detached gara~e. Nice lawn (approx. 1 acre), pri·
vate, ~vinyl Siding. ONLY si.9,900.
12829 .

$11,000.001- AppiOX. 30 acres, frontage along
SR 160, partially wooded. mineral rights included.
Call today.
12123
2 (OTS WITH IIIPROVEIEIITS - Each tract is

owe~ 2 acres wrth septic and rural water on each.

Good locat1on! Call today for more information.

#2125

"IIUST SELVI $11,900.00 - 2 bedroom one
story home located in the Village ot Vintoo ..Nice
large lot. barn, ,Partially remodeled.
112826

$6,000.00 REDUCTION•.•YACAIIT ACREAGE, ap.
prox, 8.12 wooded acres. Site cleared for mobile
home or house. located at1SR 7, view, of Ohio
River. .
v, Hl20 ,

CHECK THIS CUSTOM RANCH. 4 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS.
EAT·IN KITCHEN, FORMAL DINING ROOM, LARGE LIVING
ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND FRENCH DOORS OPENING
ONTO SIDE PORCH. COZY DEN WIT.H FIREPLACE, LARGE LOT
WITH RIVER VIEW, $85,000.

STEP BACK IN TillE! THE ABOVE TURN OF THE CENTURY
SKETCH OF THIS BEAUTIFUl OlD HOMLPROVES IT ONCE
WAS ONE OF THE MOST ELABORAtE HOMES IN GAlLIPOLIS.
IT COULD BE NOW, WITH SOME WORK AND IMAGINATION.
IF RESTORING AVINATAGE HOME IS YOUR DREAM, CALL US ' .
FOR ATOUR OFTHIS ONE... AND MAKEYOUR DREAM COME
TRUE'

OWNER REDUCED PRICE TO $21,000.00 AND
WANTS AN OFFER! If you are looking for a lot in
the c1ty school system, then why not consider this
lot already set up for you w~h this almost brand
new 14'x70' mobile home, .complete wnh vinyl
underp1nmn~ 2 fuH baths, living room, equipped
k~chen . 2 mce decks for relaxin&amp; IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION'
·
.112837
BUDD!NG. Buy now and settle in time to view
· natures mag1c at work as allthetrees bud end the
• flowers bloOO). This sprinR you will enjoy nature's
beauty around this well maintained 3 or 4 bedtoom
home. I\\ baths, more closets than usual Modern
home w~h the usual conveniences. even a large
screeraed 1n porch and two util~y buildings. Green
Township. You need to see. Call lor appointment.

ERS PRIVACY, AND A Nl MODERN HOME. FAMILY .
ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL DINING ROOM, EAT·
IN KITCHEN, CARPORT, APPROX. 3 ACRES . 2 MILES
FROM RIO GRANDE. $55,000.

A FAMILY.
,
SHHHHHHHHH! DON'T TELL ANYONE THAT WE HAVE A
NICE 3 BEDROOM 2 STORY WITH FRONT AND SlOE PORCH ·
ON LEVEL LOT IN THE CITY FOR $35,000. JUST CAll ME.

N2813

'-

.

CHOOSY! -You can pick out the color-of your
neW carpet in this home. Owner has just recently
painted interior and the ellerior. Cute 3 bedroom
ranch, living room, klchen/dining combination.
Cerport, concrete driVe. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! OWNER WANTS SOLD, PRICE REDUCED TO
$31,900. MAKE HIM AN OFFER!
121~

ELEGANT AND PRACTICAL COLONIAL: FROM THE SPA·
'CIOUS FOYER TO THE GOURMET KITCHEN THIS HOME WILL
IMPRESS ANY GUEST. 4BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS. LARGE FOR·
MAL liVING AND DINING ROOMS. FAMILY ROOM WITH Fl·
REPLACE. ALL BEDROOMS HAVE AMPLE CLOSET SPACE.
THE WOODWORK IN THIS HOME IS OUTSANotNG. 2 CAR
GARAGE. NEAR CITY. $94,900.

~~

....... ...

basement. natr .11S furr.ce.

bot'

oil
l l+ ac. m/l
..._

BUILDING LOT WIH RIVERVIEW - lOWER ROUTE 7 AP·
PROX. I ACRE. $5,000.

•

NEAR RIO GRANDE - 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH HOME HAS
FAMILY ROOM, NICE DINING ROOM, KITHEN EQUIPPED
WITH RANGE AND REFRIG., BATH OFF MASTER B£DROOM
HAS GAROENTUB. VINYL SIDING, ONLY 4 YEARS OlD.. LOT
IS GENTLY SLOPING. LOT HAS BEAUTIFUL TREES. $42,000.

carpeted, ktchen, rlnlf, ref., dry
Take 1look, seeing is believing.

SOII£THIIIG DIFFERENT: L·SHAPED RANCH HAS STEP
DOWN FROM FOYER INTO MAIN liVING AREA. COMB.
KITCHEN/DINING/FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE AND
SLIDING DOORS OPENING ONTO PATIO. 3 BEDROOMS, 2
BATHS 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE. CONVENIENT TORT. 35.
HOllER HOSPITAL $65,000.
SUGAR CREEK ROAD - JUST LISTED! IF YOU THIN~ A
HOME WITH ACREAGE IN AGOOD LOCATION IS MORE THAN
YOUR BUQGET .CAN HANDlE- LOOK AT THIS PROPERTY.
THIS IS ONE YOU AN AFFORD. NICE 3 BEDROOM RANCH
HAS VINYL SIDING. COUNTRY SIZE KITCHEN WITH OA~
CABINETS, RANGE AND REFRIG., FORMAL DINING ROOM.
FUll BASEMENT. WASHER AND DRYER. DETACHED 3 CAR
GARAGE. lARGE FRAME BARN, 30'X40' EQUIP. BLDG . AP·
PROX. 56 ACRES. $60,000

WANT TO BUY A fARM? -Then why not con·
Sider thiS one! Approx. 71 acres in all. Corn crib,
metal free stall barn, storage building. pond and
spnng, tobacco base. Mllkmgsystem and mineral
r1glrts 1ncluded. PLUS 2·3 bedroom home wrth liv·
1ng room, bath, formal dining and more. Call for
coraplete listing! IDEAL LOCATION!
112835
ABSOWTELY GORGEOUS INSIDE AND OUT Uvin1 room,' family room andformil dining room.
31arge bedrooms (large walk-in closet ofl master
bedroom). 2\\ baths. Oversized 2 car _garaga
Equipped k~chen. Maintenance free vinyl sidin&amp;
.concrete drive. Prestijpous neighborhood. Keep
cool this summer w~h the club pool!
#12131

11517. LDOK IIIlA! $lUCiO CAll IUI!n 2~ ory hou" wllllA'&lt; LR.

VACANT LAND - HUNTINGTON TWP. APPRbX. 14' ACRES.
$6,000.
VACANT LAND - HUNTINGTON TWP. APPROX. 81 ACRES.
\ $35,000.

I'

...

home hos speco pforo. 3 ••

~~- a2~~;::1 ~~.~~ RioG!IndeUnivtniY.
IUtchon. llmly ......
......
8o list.,,..
ftll IIAUIIIUliO AC. OF IJIIO o/hoino l moi,;~ homo~· Koolor Rd.

Buidinp, !Gid ~O&lt;Up l same woods.

~ ..

�June 10, 1990

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pl8818nt, W. Va.
61 Fann Equipment

Pets for sale

56

Transportal ron

71

71 Autos tor sate

Autos for sale

75 Boats • Motors
tor Sale

71 Autos for Sale

•=:m.

P.' PIS,

tDI7 llool , . _ -

... 4drr

till Ford

do~ ftln-

~~·

........
~.·-~·
,..., -·-....., ..........
...,.. ttooe, -

ouiO -

1111 ctN;II• • t rou Coupe,

1112 17 fl.
- · 121 . .,

-roll

Home
Improvements

- ln---.
.
----·.Til-Hull

IYinrudo~

.,..._1,.
--·~
.... ollor

Coli

81

•

Ron'• lV s.Yioo, -'"'lzlng

P,fll. '

~=14::

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

1178 •• :
,-_c.ll
111
!!II,
.._,·
AI\'2 ;
Evenll9,
1143
441
. !1of*Y or oolllf lool drllll!ll·
ep.-.114 •• .,...
· TX 1t11 Dodae - d a, lot bluo, , . _ ,toumo7Q hp ~- c.ll
•114- 1!31.
"'
. .nice
33,000
_,:_AlloFll
1 _.......-veoy
Tonk PIOIIIIIna tiOLOolllo
;;;;;,.;;.';;iron. Coli 11117 La- - - . With 1110 Soptlo
Co. 110111- ENTIAPKI8ES,

vtrY . ... • • • • call ......

t•

. 'U-

CcMI"• tau ovor 1"1 molor. Loedod. $1000 ftrm .

=--~mi

I1H41121G .....1pm. .

-

.,...rlenl ......... 1m Ford

· ond - -. :104-11S21D3.

piciiUP. .... t14 -

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

Mullk:al

2711.

Instruments

SorYice,

....Yio

doll...,..

Auto Pans• ·

Acceaortes

1\000

·~

82 . Plumbing • .
Heating

-lo.

Fruita •

=

H·ay • Grain
.: ,. :-:...
=~-:T=
.. :-:::bo::r..:-a~::.--:~~oy:=
Stoo.
1112 oil« s:oo

Plano tunl"l ond ..parr. 25th
yoor o1 - · lono
64

=. .

Pll.

Vegetables

- " lo IIUI up hoy on
·Y!MI cui. ohoroe, :IOW1!4111 or 811-

callbogo, iorgo -

76

. . ..

., AII/C """""" . O'TA,

58

-

0111 ~ Creek Rd. Parte, auppiiM, plcllufl, .....
114'
141-

1, ., Dodgo .DI!ylono l7,000., S Noroe P - Joh- llolor,
ttn Dodgt plcllup, $8,'1110, bolh $110. ttc ue oc~s

1 - ·
lllu DU!IIIIIe
.Shih
Toy Poodlft,"
Coo..,
Saanlolo,

,,..._..

--.1111--.

Memory XAZ. llolor Qulde lroii-

114-»2101 """' lp.m.

S1

:;,

114- ·
$Lolort
.10 oFoliO.
hoocr,1114-247-3042
John Hlll'oorFlml,
247-2142.
Dunnl'lln FNh F.m. Juol oil Sr
111 .... ol Albony. -

-·--·-

111111 Plymoulh
PI, aood. -

Vollonl, Ill;, PS,
oor, $100. 114-

4001:=·~·-------£44Mtlli==·======~l

.

r'

LOCATION + PRICE
probably not another house on the market nght
now that is comparable to thts home. Located 10
one of the area's best se1!10g netghborhoods
!Spring Valley) and priced at or near what other
homes, that offt!led much less, mthe same netgh·
borhood hllle sold for.
is a real value!! Fea·
tures Rke brick
i full basement, 2 ftrepool are .bound to please. Call us
'
1doubt it will be around tomorrow.
H206

carter'e-ondHoetlna

-ond~

Golllpolle, Cillo

114 4ti3MI

83
72 Trucks for Sale

.Excavating

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

79. · campera •
Motor Homes

Tronclllna.

-=

woter,

goo

end

304-77UII28.

10 ft. Port.,..,
1 t~~ ...Ck I Mallrl, T. . . lot box ond oolo~ror, to.,.,
. lair .... .. $2,7110; wtll ·· - - . . . ·~0 o l o l ~raciO. -mt.
- · f14.tll2'm7.

84

Electrle8! •

Refrigeration
Com- ond Affklonli.:;

l'"'d""!,
111e. or_
... polotP-11.,..10_
......,..

orPooquole
oopolro.
LlceriiiOd EloclrtclonL

wlrlng. -

IH clolly, _ - . . - , .

iloelrtc-.1~.

ond v.got- Plonlo:
Old l
llan: North H.l. l..olallan:
111 milo up oa.. Rd. on

-donllol
or --~~~
wiring,
MW MrVIce or repelra.

v-•*·"

LIDIIWIII
Eloelrtco~

~..:::.. ~"l

H54. lo .IS

~
.

0 -

Rouoh 91-rloo, Big Bonfoo

•pier

$1.10 qlll2 .,.. . $1.00 ql. Plcll

_

.... $1.oo· •·

400

No Sunday

IliON In -

85 General Hauling ·

mer.
mainte·
of time tor
This home
OVel·s~ed-living I'OOm and a 3.55
H506

Ill plonlo holt ......

•

Po-'o Wottr Houll!'f, 100D or

2000 gal. PoOle, . Slotomo l
Wolle, rouonoblo m•il q!Ack .
dotlvory, open 7 dol/11, ~ · ·
40118.
'

tlll1. Ford Ro,_., v.., 8TX 414,

40p1,

A lo A - I f Sorvlce. -_,_cr.
- . wolll. 1!11....01•1,..., or
~ dotivwJ. can-.

•ovflllrtvo, oorr afltr

ep....114 ••• a•.

'"'· :J04.el2.2237.
Aotah'l Stoawtwna. picking
now,· 2 mil• bocll ol Ne!i

1W Ford

f1ontor

XLT oc. 114-

Oiound. .... In - . No sun.

Servrces

doyo, :1114-8112-2237.
Shawbeulw, You pick or we
olck. Tnlor'o Bony Poleh. Korr
Rood. IIOM'rt: lo.m..a,&gt;.m.• Sol:
lo.m. .. p.m. 1114-2-78, 114-.z,

- . 2,000 to 4,000 cooocllv,'
~ - . oti:. calr

Sti6wbarriel: Pfeil you own,
Coil Cloudo Wlnlm, 114-2455121.
'

..

NEW
- This brick
story
home that has had
loving care through the
years is bound to provide acomfortable way of life
for your family. We're adding to our offeririgby in·
eluding the extra lot beside the house. lots of
character and charm included along wtth 3 bed·
rooms, I\? baths, altractive living room wtth nice
fireplace, full basement, garage and more. warm
efficient gas hot water heat, energy savmgAndersen windows with storms. Call today to see th1s
home and be enchanted!!'
uoa

Farm Supplrcs
&amp; Lrvestock

61 Farm Equipment

RACCOON CREEK- Per·
refaxatio.n and enjoyment of Rae·
coon
3acres m/1, wfth good access to the
creek and plenty of room for recreation. log home
includes 6 rooms including basement. Large deck
overlooks ·the wonderful settin~ Perfect tor week·
end get.togethers o·r full time country living
$39,900.
11231

1 0o1 CUIII'Iolor lor lomlll oub
, _ _ $121, 304-175-1rt7.

1030 ca.. Dl-, w/110 NH
Round Bolar I Hoy Sino,

c..

Tnc_.,

.,_,., mochlno.._!M" Rob

--·-hog,
::..Ho·~·~

-Will ....

3S IIF - o r _,plowo,

$1,400;

lnl'l

11-m

cu~

11uo11 HoaL:
; will rlnonco.
·~
~---·
eu 211'!11;u
·!Ill.

Real Estilte General
I I I I

Ill

I '

1/l&lt;j/

' '

lj

I

I ...

TEAFORD
REAL ESTATE
21 II East Second St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 457119

614-992,3325
GALLIPOLIS - Out of town,
3 BR ranch style home with
full basement on 2+ acres.
$25,900.
NEW LISTING- RacineBeautiful 3-5 bedroom wrth
finished basement and tully
remodeled. This is an excel·
lent family home. $48,000.
NEW LISTING - Racine3 bedroom white bflck
home. 2 baths. modern
krtchen, privale location.
$65,000.
PRICE REDUCED - Pomeroy .- 3 bedroom wiih 5
lots, full bas~ment A great
vieW of the flver: $15,000.
NEW LISTING - Middl•
port - lounge and restau rant with two rental apart· ·
ments. Remodeled. and in
full operation This is a well
established business with a
lot of potential. Ready to go.
$75,000.
NEW LISTING -An over 68
acre farm, house. barn and
outbuildings. 3 gas wells
with free gas. $50,000.
POMEROY- 3 BR house in
town with garage. Partial ba·
sement, storage and washroom.
PRICE REDUCED ~ Pomeroy - 5 room house, very
little uokeeo. 2ood slarter
home. fuft basement and car·
port. $17,500.
lANGSVILLE - Well taken
care of Vendale mobile
home. 2 BR, new carpeting.
. Well worth th e price.
$8,800.
MIDDLEPORT - Nice 3
bedroom just out of town on
I acre. full bas,ement and
tullycarpeted. $19,500.
SYRACUSE- Newly remod·
eled home with 'a large yard.
2•3 bedrooms in a nice
ne~gl1borhoocl, $40,000,
POIIEROY - 3 bedrooms
on II acres. Very private location wrth a lot of potential.
$34,000.

WE NEED LISTINGS
H.U.D. HOMlS AVAIWIE

- COlY
FIREPlACE or
by the pool with this 3bedrm. home located along adead end
street. WaterlronL family room, patio and decks. Reduced to
$75,000.
3-4 BEDRM. HOME located approx. 1 mile above old Silver
Bridg~ along St. Rt. 7. Use for residential/commercial. Lot
size, 153'xl54'. Buy now for $35,000.00.
·
3·BEDRM. HOME. conveniently located along St. Rt. 141. 2·
car garage, brick front. Buy now $43,000.00.
'

2 RENTAL PROPERTIES IN PATRIQT. 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 for
$45,000.00. located along St. Rt. 7. ·
LISTING - 3·4 Bedrm. horne, sftuated within Ohio
I mile north of Rt. 7, Hannan ·Trace.and Swan Creek
Huv .nnw for $37,500.00.
1

TIRED OF CUTTING GRASS, SELL

MOlNER ~a'~n;dr"~m~~ove into a beuatitul 2 bedrm.. condo

St. Ample·insular ion with heal pump
corr•fortable air conditioning and heat with econ·
Avera~es less than $50.00 per mo. tax abate·
I to grocery, 2 blocks to City Par~ low
i
ce. Call 44!H066 for info.
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON- 6 rm . house located
along Main St. Rent or i~e in. Presently grossing $2,100.00.
Buy now tor $15,000.00.
•
,
NEW LISTING: 10 acres, Perry Twp. Some limber. Buy now
for $10,000
6.5 ACRES. WITHIN THE .CITY OF GALLIPOLIS sftuated
along Gatlield Ave. S1te includes 2 building lots w/city water·
sewer. Buy now for $30,000.00.
.
DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure with
3 rental apartments. Also, adjacent metal storage/utility
Est. gross rental income, $820 per mo. All priced for

$6-S.ooo

HAVE BUILDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and MillsVii·
Iage. Call for more information.
21:5ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures:
located along Frank Rd. $18,900.
BEDRM. REMODELED HOME alcng Chillicothe Rd. Walk to'
o"v"''ii•• and school. Buy now for $26;500.00.
ACRE LOT along Klicker Rd. near Centenary. $8,000.
REDUCED on 3 prriperties within the
-Old Cottrell grocery buildin~ Now
J,U\Ju.uu!! H2- 2 story hOme adraceot to store bldg. Now
H3 - 3 bedrooms home ne1t to above. Now
!f~·~~!~·~· Call for more into. Will sell any or all!!!

137 ACRE FARM - Near Kuer Creek High
School -This has been avery productive farm in
SHADY LOT- CLOSE TO TOWN - Lots of char·
lhe past. With a little work, it could be again. Own·
acter and charm can be found in this I~ story . · ers have priced this farm to sen due to res1den_ce
home within walking distance to town. Includes 3
in Florida. Older 2 slory home 10 good repatr wtth
bedrooms large living room, dining room and 1~
free gas. Large shed, barn, 2 ponds. Call toclay for
baths. Fuit basement. 3 car garage wtth rented
more information. $79,900.
#215
apartment overhead.
41100
CUTE ANDCOlY- Situated on a private lot near
"A PIACETO START' -Nice starter home orren·
Clay School. featuring 2 bedrooms, eat·m
tal unit. 2 bedrooms, I bath and outside storage
kttchen washer and dryer hookups and alumt·
buildin&amp; Plenty of space for a new fa.mily to start
num siding. Call us today tor an appointment.
housekeepin&amp; Located 1n Addison, lh1s hou$1! •s a
11238
great buy at $24,900, but the owner is willing to
sacrifice- $21,900 and it's your~ Why pay rent
A Place NOT Commonplace ...., Historic home
when the mortgage payment is less!
#614 .
which has been well cared tor by particular own·
ers: 4,300 sq. If. of living space and an enviable
CHAROIAIS lAKE ESTATES- Arare opportunity
location at the corner of first Avenue and Court
to design and Compl~e the interior of a home in
Street in the city. $150,000.
11504
an e•cellent neighborhood at an affordable pnce.
The completed exterior·of this I \7 story log home
CHAROIAIS LAKE ESTATES - Indeed, this is an
includes a deck 2 car garage and basement.
outstanding home in an outstanding location!
Buyer w01lid' own. !/20th ot an 8 acre stocked
Spacious 12716 sq. ft.). well-built redwood home
lake with full privileges. $75,000.
N401
wtth 313 tt. lake frontage/dock, unfenced tenms
court, garden space and scenic view of lake and
29.6 ACRES o·F LAND - Consisting mostly of
area. footage includes : 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, hv·
go oct growing timber. 5 acres or more of 29 acre
ing room wtth fireplace, dining room. complete
tract is open land for garden and has frurt trees
krtchen 13x48 family room, 13 x 40 storage area,
near 7 room remodeled home. 2 car garage and
2+ garage and large l ·shapeddeck overlookin.g
several other small buidings. Peaceful location to
the lake. Private, excellent settmg JUSt a few m•·
hve wtth goocl view. St. Rt. 160 between Ewrngton
nutes from town.
11405
and Wilkesville. Priced at $47,500.
11302
PLEASE READ- As this is such a nice home and
GIVE YOU. CHILDREN THE CHANCE! - Be·
at such an affordable price that we want everyone
cause you'd loved to have lived here yourself as a
looking for the right house to know about this one.
child. Nice 2 story ~omeon 2.44 acres features 3
.New on the market, it~ a brick/frame ranch, well
bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement and more. Easy
cared for 3 bedroom, 2 baths, living room with
access to Rt. 35. Paved road. City schools. Priced
fireplace, large garage and much more. 41410
to sell at $54,900.
#222
OUTSTANDING 17-ACAE HOME SITE- Green
AN OLDIE, BUT GOODIE!!- Go back in time and
Township, St. Rt. 588. Includes flat crop land,
relive all the charm of a house at the turn of the
gentle rolling slopes and a wooded knoll tor some·
century. This 2 story house built in 1850 in Mei(IS
one wanting privacy, country atmosphere and a
County has 3·4 bedrooms, 1 bath wrth eat·rn
king's ~iew. Maybe you want some horses or some
krtchen, fireplace and a double garage. 3·4 acres
other animals There's already plenty of Wildlife.
wtth a large flat lot beside tt.Has anew front porch
'
#124
wrth many e1tras. Needs work done to rt. Nice
starter home. All for $25,000. .
11709

446-9172

"I

JI

Ill //111/

" I \

I

'''
·~ '

. BEGGING FOR A FAMILY! - A\1 the ingred_lents
are present except a family. Very attractrve 2 story colonial in a tarnily·oriented ne~ghborhoocl .
3 bedrooms, 2\7 baths, beautiful famtly roomw.tth
'Slone fireplace (~oodburnertnsert), sunken hvmg .
room, formal din1ngand eat-m kitchen, lots o( closets and storage. 2\7.car garage. Central atr fll·
cently installed. Restmg on approx. I acre l.ot rn
Porterbrook Subdivision. Close and conventent,
but not noisy and dirty!
·
11205

"RENTAL UNITS" -located just amile from hos·
pita!, 4 miles from town. Two units, both with 2
bedrooms, bath, living room, full carpeted range
oven, refrigerator. Occupancy level·at lllO% fo;
last 3 years. Make this your first step to financial
security. A small piece of the rock for only
$53,900. Income statement available upon re·
Quest.
11609

PERFECT SETTING - Peaceful country living
only 15 minutes from town. This comfortable 4
bedroom 1 bath home includes family room, dtn·
ing room' living room and a nice kitchen. Has 3.5
acres, more or less, and is located in Gallia County
School District. This home has many utras you
must see. Call today! $54,900. ·
11707

,-

uc•l•nl

11144.&lt;

1- -

...
-~.

g•ag~

base·

11219

114-tll-

condtlon.

c1t110 r!IOio!l blu

wllh·· roclna tiOO. 1178
~h 'lalorl, I cyl, 4 , _
tlllll: ..... botlery, ..... - ·

tiOO.--.

.

N

1111. re-Id 110 C8R Good

.....

- . _ - sdo. t14ZIH133.

..,...
"'
AI

. -:.·..

ADRIAN AVE. - 3 bedroan, family rm., ~inyl
sided. $34,000.
11233

Ill

Tree f•m. 1972 fleetwood.
$34,900. Call for more info.
1225

BUILD?- We have buildini: lots, smatlandlaraucrti&amp;IS, several locations throuchauttilllia&amp; •ip
for more inforlltltion.
·

·1111i·Vomoho '1110, YlrogoL Esc.
conot 2,'1110 mlllo 01,100.
IOCII'121 oomp!Oioty owbulll,
~1114-m-2111...
liM Suzuki tniNd'!t.!llocll wlh
lolo' ol ~.
114-441-

LAND FOR MOBILE ~OMES- We have s~eral tracts that are unrestricted, for mobiles, doobltwides ormosllnyth·
ing else. In Gatlia and Meip counties.
.
.

11.-.

4~.

-

41 ACRES -

H~~:~NI:~~~~~- we
I
Forni.

and Meip Counties. Small and l•c••cnqt. somebord•inc

.,1Nf
Hondo
_ , ....

...

ZIOR. ATZ
ol
IMdrto,_or

DCMMIIIan. 12.210.

LOCATED ON UPPER RIVER ROAD
ACROSS FROM NEW SHOPPING CENTER

BLACKBURN REALTY

'.
'.

ASH STREET ...,. This home is situated on 21evel
. corner lots. Close to General Harttnger Par~
$21,500.
#ll7

Real Estate General

Real Elblle General

.

'

.·

.-

'•

YOU DESERVE THE BEST - and this one offers
you quality construction, excellent neighborhood
·in a convenient location. A handsome (looks
brand new) 3 bedroom .ranch which includes a
lar.ge living room, formal din in&amp; big kitch.en wth •
lots of cabinets and bu1tt·ms. Han(iy uU1ty area
and 2 full baths. You'lllovethedecoratingandthe
openness of the floor plan. On Debby Drive and
priced to sell quickly by an owner that's moving
out of the area.
11112

•
•
•
'

.••
.,'

.•::
..

·-·'.

..
....
I

..•.
·'·''
·'•'
,\

·''

..

,I

·'
••

E. M. Wiseman, Broker

i/, II I,'

In Numb11r On11.'

74 :" Motorcycles
tm Honoio 1110 as. wt-lold,
11111111. oNitt. 17,400 11111111. SilO.
1112 CR 410 dirt btu teoo. lolh

CITY - 3 bedroom~ 1 bath, 1 car
ment, s1ded.
',
.

.'

·wiseman
Real
Estate
(614) 446-3644
Tom Russell, 446-2876

Put your trust

2421.

'

LIST WitH. GALLIA COUNTY'S LEADER ·

DavlctWiieman; 446-9666
B: J. Hair~on, 448-4240

-on.
l!.f!.CI!.~uol mltoe.
$11,000. 1114--- or 114-1112-

for such abeautdul home. There's not going to be '
enough spa'e to describe this outstanding 2'h
story chalet styled redwood home. Window~ win·
dows and more windows. Approx. 1500 sq. It of
decking plus jaccuzzi. 2800 sq. tt. of living space.
2 beautiful stone fireplaes (one in the master bed·
room), 31h baths. Vauled ceilings, solid oak trim ..6
panel oak doors. You just don' !feel !1ke YOU are m
Gallia County when you're there. There's much,
much more but the only way to appreciate the lea·
tures and quality this home offers is to see· rt. Call
today for an appointment.
11207
FOR THE BEGINNER! - Nice starter ho111e
toc:ated just rnintites from the hospiUI. Livin1
roo11 din in&amp; room, 3 bedrooms and I bath. Detached a•r•1e. Home needs a l~tle work. but
could be a show place. Warp-around porch and
plenty of yard mau this a c,reat ~lace to start a
!amity. $27,400.
11607

COMMERCIAL SITE

1W Ford · Von. Laroln
eonv-ron.
Looclod.
ElloolltiW

L£T THE OUSIDE IN!!- What a beautiful setting ,

We Need LilfinRII

Offkt (6141992-3325
Dale E. Tarlor 992·3129
R. A. (Vall Y..... lino

·' .

We Have
Buyers We
Can't Satisfy!
We Need
Listings
Nowlll

EXCELLENT BUSINESS POSSIBILITIES!! Located in high traffic area on St. Rt 7 with 80'
frontage and 180' deep. Includes aresidence w~h
2 or 3 business rooms and 2 mobile homes. Onlled
well and 2 septic tanks. County water available.
Owner is very anxious to sell. Asking $54,900. but
would consider any reasonable offer.
1120~

a

'

·,'

'

If YOU DON1 LIKE.. ..old time character and
charm, beautiful river.view and the convenience '
of downtow.n living, then sto~ reading. If you do,
then call me· on this fantastiC property on ftrst .
Avenue. fettures include spacious master bed·.
room with sitting room and fireplace, upstairs
study, large deck and screened in porch. Family
room, living room and dining room and much,
much more. If this doesn't sound appealing, call
me anyway, I'll sell you something else. N22§

Dlooot

The CENTlRY 2.1' team knows
what It takes to sell special home
like yours.
,. Together, we'.ve sold more of
them than any real estate system In
the counlry.
At our CE:'\TURY 21 office , we
take care of all the business details,
so mu're free to take care of your
family during this busy time.
Gtve us a call today, and let us
get started.

.
-·

..,

t 1h

Ill

Your
of
home needs our
kind of experience.

wan....,•,
Woltr Houlng,
_......,... - - d l •

IIIIZ.G44.

-..,WVnntlo~COmp

$1,110;

lllotriclln. Ridenour
304-e1S-1711.

••

-

Loretta McDade, 448-7729
Bill
Todd,
.
- 448-3443
- '

.••·'

...

Oon't go to tha flea market todayl '!Je're opening u~
the biggest bargain In town. Beautifully. decorated .
tiedroom home with Iota of amenities. Priced below market value. Owners wants it SOLD I
Directions: Rt. #141 to Burkhart Lane, flrat lane to the left
!Willow Drive), tlrat house on right. Watch for signa.

WISEMAN lEAL ESTATE AGENCY

,.

"'·3644

•·:

•'

•

"\

•

...

"

�Page D-B-Sunday Tmes-Sentinel

June 10, 1910

Pomeroy- Midcleport-Galllpolis. Ohio-Poim Pleasant. W. Va.

Ticks are out in full force
.

Reds lose
third in row
to Astros

.

.
paper towel or tissue paper, or
tweezers.
To remove a tick, grasp It u
close to the skin as possible ud;
with steady pressure, pull
straight out to remove the entire
pest. Jerking or twisting II may
leave the mouthpart atuell. 1!1
skin. Do not crush or puncture a
tick duling removal. And never
use a hot match or cigarette,
because a tick may burst.
After- removing the tick, wash
the a rea with soap and water.
.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)- An
Ohio State University specialist
says Ucks are out In full force in
woods and fields and should be
handled carefully to reduce the
riSk of Rocky Mountain spotted
fever and Lyme disease.
' 'The best thin&amp; Is to avoid ticks
by staying out of weedy, over·
grown fields and woods until
mld·Auguat, when the ticks stop
' feeding on people," says Julie
Steele of the Plant and Pest
Diagnostic Clinic at Ohio State.

Meigs County
Ageqt's Comer

But sometimes those areas can't
be avoided and pei)ple or pets
br ing home an unwanted visitor.
Any ticks you find on your body
should be removed Immediately
to avoid disease or Infection,
Steele says. But handle the pests
with carj!. You should never
touc h a tick with bare hands ,
Spotted fever or Lyrne dlsejlse
may be acquired froin Infected
tick fluids that .come In contact
with 'broken skin, the mouth or
eyes. Shield vour fingers with a

use

665
Piek-4.
9652
Super Lotto
9-22-25-35-37-40
Kicker 063886

Weather causes hanrest del~y
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, June 11, 1990

.Ohio Dairy Day July 13

a

COSTUME CONTEST - The Pioneer Costume Contest
attracted quite a bit of atteollon on Saturday during Herlta1e Days
fsllviUes of lhe aeaquleealeonlal. Despite the bot and humid
wea&amp;her tile prielpaalll Ia lhe eonleat remalaed In coetume for a

larp part of the day. Winners are, front, Mepaa Bayaee, Myca
8ayD81, and . Baebael Downie. Baek, CaJby Edwards, Robert

Titus, TaWDle Johaaon, Gina TIW., Matt CotterOI, MarlyD Wlleox,
Uoyd Blackwood, Llaa Poulin, and Elizabeth Dnwnle.

.Car show
•
wz,nners
are
announced

~eproduction

Cattlemen plan
roundup June 22

Is is time to plan
f9r 1991 tree planting

TOWN COUNTRY.
BUILDERS

.,e

=·:w~~ttr;:~~..fa"'·

Dairy contests scheduled June

Plan regional
show June 29-30

IS

;'

TOP 10 - Top 10 trophy winners at the Secoacl
Annual Heritage Weekend Car Sh.ow were, front
row, 1-r, Everett Stalnaker, Gene Whaley, Sbella

Whaley and Doris Deal. Back row, 1-r, Duane
Weber, Dave Allen, Randy Offenberger, Ch~ls
PoHs and BID Patton.
j
(See additional pictures on page 6).

Several hundred visit Meigs Museum
Several hundred residents vi·
sited the Meigs Museum Satur·
day and Sunday as the Meigs
County Historical Society ob·
served Its 19th annual Heritage
Weekend. ·
A slide show by the Southern
Ohio Coal Co. was featured In the
little theatre, several new exhlb·
Its were In place, and the River
Valley Herbalists h.ad an educa·
tiona! exhibit on herbs and

everlastings In one of the upstairs rooms.
On beth days there was enter·
talnment and r efreshments
.under the shade of the trees on
the museum lot.
Instrumentalist Denver Rica
entertained on Saturday after··
noon and c .·J. and the Country
Gentlemen played a variety of
country music. The music was
sponsored by the Farmers Bank.

Weather
South Central Ohio
Clear Monday night, with a low
In the mid 50s. Mostly sunny
Tuesday, with highs near 85.
. Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A slight chance of showers or
thunderstorms through the pe·
rlod. Highs will be In the 80s
Wednesday, and ranging from
the mid 80s to the low 90s
. Thursday and Friday .

Entry forms due .

Homeowners Insurance

CINCINNATI WEEKEND
July 21-22, .1990

HOLZER
CLINIC

-•lAIII

CUNIC

SYCAMORE CLINIC

Sy-•

315 ._loon Pille 41H &amp;
5trtlll
a.po11s, Ohio
GaiHpolis, Ohio
16141 446·5244
.

.

'.

Who offers
homeowners
insufaooe Withbulk-In

.

"SMvvtW 1M gena public
., w/1 • our m.mtr.n.•

25 C.nta

By JULIE E . DW.ON
Seollnel New1 staff
Great entertainment, crafts, a
vartety offood and tun, attracted
people of all ages to Heritage
Weekend activities of Pomeroy's
sesquicentennial celebration.
The festivities kicked-off Frl·
day evening with entertainment
by the Melody Men Barbertshop
Quartet, Sweet Mountain
.Sounds, and the Midnight
Cloggers.
Also on Friday evenlllg, the
exh.Jblf ' 'Ornate and Simple
Forms: Pomeroy Furniture and
Fashion, 1840·1880" opened at the
Meigs County PUblic Library
with approximately 50 people In
attendance. The exhibit will
continue through June 22 during .
the hours of 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Monday through .Friday , and 1 to
4 p.m. on Saturday and Sunday. '•
On Saturday the activities
began with a ·parade, sponsored
by thePomerqyMerchantsAssoelation. Winning entries In the
parade lnclqde the following. For
best equestrian, the frontiers·
man; best carriage, Lloyd Black·
wood's 1820 Conestoga wagon;
best walking unit, Pomeroy Cub
Scout Pack 249; best marching
untt, Southern High School
Cheerleaders; best historical
commercial unit , a delivery
wagon from Vaughan's Card!·
nal; best historical non·
commerlcal unit, the Ewing
Chapter SoJIS· bf' the .. J.merlcan
RevOIUtlon 'and the Re{urn Jona..

Southern; Eleanor Smith, a
trustee for the Meigs Historical
Society; and Mike Lively, South·
ern OhiO Coal Company.
Following Saturday's parade
the crowd was treated to a Civil
War presentation, the Shady
River Shulflers, the Special
Request Barbershop Quartet , tbe
Restoration Jazz Band, the an·
nouncementoftheMelpCounty
Fair King and Queen, an out·
house race which was entered by
a team froin Bank One and a 4H
·team from Rutland.
Tile Pioneer Costume Contest
and. Brothers of the Brush
Co.ntest drew quite a bit of
attention. Winners In the category of best Individual female
costume were Elizabeth Downie,
first; Gina Tillis , second, who
was sponsored by the Fabric
Shop and whose outfit was made
by Tammy Dummitt; and Cathy
Edwards, third , who wore her
great grandmother's wedding
dress. Best female teen outfit
was awarded to Lisa Pouun. and
best child's costume went to
Myra Haynes, first; and Meghan
Fiaynes, second . Rachael Downie
received first place In the senior
adult female costume category
for her side-saddle riding outfit,
and Marlyn Wilcox received
second.
5·6 p.m. - Pioneer costume
review and winners announced.
6 p.m . -Kyger Valley Gospel
Quartet.
.6:30 P, frt: ,,... Brothers of the
· Brush contest.
7·8 p.m. - Bob and Kendra
Ward-Bence.
8-10 p.m. - Peter ShawHotpolnt String Band. Square
·dancing In the street .

Two men are injured
in weekend accidents

Junior fair royalty announced

by AAA today!·
441~0199

1 Section. 1 0
A Multlmedio

a

Enjoy the best' of Cincinnati - the Cincinnati
Reds &amp; King's Island - fun {or the whole family!

Call or

'

By BRIAN J . REED
Senllnei News Stalf
Warren DeVault of Spencer,
W.Va., took home best of show
honors for his 1970 Nova at
Sunday's Second Annual Herlt·
age Weekend Car Show, which
was held at the ·Meigs County
' M:usellm.
• Slxty·foilr enth slasts brougtit
cars to the show, and other
than Meigs Chapter Daughters of
activities Including musical en- the American Revolution; and
tertainment and remote control best antique car, a yellow model·
car races, were held In conjunc· T Ford. Judges for the parade
tlon with the competition.
were Lee Smith, Columbus
Top 10 trophies were awarded
to Duane Weber of Rutland for
his 1979 Chevrolet pick· UP truck,
Gene Whaley of Shade for beth
his 1969 Chevy Chevelle and his
1959 Ford Edsel, Sheila Whaley·
of Shade for her 1953 Ford,
Everett Stalnaker of Ripley for a
flown from there by Life Flight to
Two men were transported by
1940 Ford, David Allen of Albany Life Flight to Grant Hospital In
Grant Hospital.
·
for his 1972 Mercury Cougar, Columbus for treatment of lnjur·
JohnS. Cline, 18, of Lowell was
Doris Deal of Point Pleasan tfor a les received In two separate reported In stable condition at
1987 Monte Carlo SS, Chrts"i?llos Meigs County accidents Sunday Grant Hospital Monday morning
of Athens, who brought Ills 1969 · afternoon and early Moaclay foUowlng an accident In Racine
Corvette, Bill Patton of Mineral morning.
at 12: 54 a.m. Monday.
Wells, for his 1957 Chevy Carfleo
According to a report from the
Roger McPherson, 34, of Galli·
a nd Randy Offen berger for a 1977 polls reportedly received exten· State Highway Patrol, Cline was
Chevy pick-up truck.
traveling east on State Route 124
slve head and other Injuries In a
The award for Best Ford went motorcycle accident at 4:40p.m. at Racine when he lost control,
to Sheila Whaley for a 1953 Ford Sunday In Syracuse. This morn· went left of center and struck the
Wagon and the Best Chevy lng he was listed In serious right front of a car .driven by
trophy went to Warren Devault condition In the Intensive care Charles Batley, 59, Syracuse.
for his Nova.
Cline continued on and struck a
unit by Grant Hospital officials.
Best Chrysler honors went to
According to reports received utility pole and then the vehicle
Gene Cherry of Logan for a 1968 from a Syracuse village official came to rest on its top.
and an emergency squad
Continued on page 10
Cline reportedly had serious
member, McPherson struck the
rear of a car driven by Jeff Injuries and was taken by Life
Maynard, 21, Syracuse, who was Flight to Grant Hospital. Tile.
traveling west on State Route 124 Racine emergency squad was on
In Syracuse. Maynard had the scene and took Cline to the
stopped to make left turn Into Southen High School football
where LlfeFiight landed.
Chauncy's Food Mart.
The accident remains under·
Upon striking the car, McPher·
Investigation,
according to the
son lost control of the motorcycle
patrol.
and It traveled 20 feet Into the gas
Another motorcycle accident
Island. McPherson was thrown
Investigated by the patrol
was
from the bike which then landed
Sunday
afternoon. David Rose,
.
on top of him, It was reported.
29,
of
Racine,
was traveling north
" McPherson was not wearing a
on
County
R~ad
28 Sunday at2:45
helmet, observers noted, al·
p.m.
when
he
lost
control of the
though one was attached to the
motorcycle·
,
went
off
the side of
tnotorcycle. There. was medium
the
road
and
struck
a ditch.
damage to the Maynard vehicle.
to
the
cycle
was
heavy: ·
·Damage
.J im Connolly, chief of pollee,
Rose
was
not
wearing
a
helmet,
It
Investigated the accident.
was
reported.
He
had
minor
The Syracuse emergency
squad was on the scene and Injuries and was taken by private
transported McPherson to Vete- vehicle to Veterans Memorial
rans Memorial Hospital. He was Hospital.

.,_. IHih, Escort

PHYSICAL
THERAP.Y

.

Celebration
big success

·

Vegetative

Clear toiiiP&amp;. Low Ia mid
561. Mottl)' sunny Tueaday.
High near 811.

•

1

bales or sJacks under all kinds of · with bales occurs with stacks. '
weather. Fields are frequently
With well·formed stacks, JOllieS
too wet during the winter feeding of 6·8% can be expected. In atack.l
season to permit moving the hay
with depressiOns, hllber IIJIOU·
off when desired.
age, 9·14% or higher, can be
POMEROY .:.... With the wet
Another Important P!llnt ·Is to expected. .
MYSTERY . FARM - This •week's mystery
weather and delays In hay allow sufficient space between ,RETURNING GRASS CLIPa 55 cash prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
larm, leatared by the Melp SoU and Water
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
harvesting, there will be a push the bales. Serious hay losses can
PINGS TO LAWN
Co~~~ervatloa Dls&amp;rlet, Is loeated 110111ewhere In
to harvest In a hurry. Here are occur from crowding the bales so
number with you~ card or letler. No telephone
Homeowners are flndiJic that .;.
Melp County. IndiVIduals ,nDID1 to pllrilclpate
ealls will be accepted. All ceatest entries should
·
·
be turned In to the new--rofilee by4p.m. eaeli · some precauUons: One · of the close. that rain or snow accumu· . ·. the cool a11d wet coqdltiDna ar~
Ia the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
........major problems encountered Ia tes betw.eeU:' them and rottll!g · · promoting the production of an
!arm's owaer..Juat mall, or drop off your gue~~s to
Wednesday· Ia case of a tle, the wiiiJ!Br will be · · with large bales and stacks has •· occurs. Allow s!lfficlent space (at abundant amount ot• cllpplnp.
.the GAllpols Dally TribUne, 8211 Tblrd Ave.,
chosen by lottery. Next week, a Gallla County
!ted
least several teet) around eac)l The only two practical options to
farm will be featured by the GaiUa s0uand Water . resu
9m putting up hay that
GaiUpollll, Ohio, 4HSI, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Is not · sufflcleiltly dry . This
bale. for air circulation.
deal ., with this .material Is to
Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio, 41'lll9,aad you m.Y win
Conservation District.
results In moldy or "tobacco
Storue Loues
either' collect the cllpplni&amp; anjl ~
brown'' hay, and a serious loss In
Hay stored outdoors develops deposit In an off-site locatloQ. or
feed value. ·
several Inches of "thatch" which return the material to tile laWD.
The problem has beeJi more sheds the rain. After several In most sltllatlou we ' recoM-"'
f
common
with bales than with
months of storage, the large mend the cllpplllp be left 01 the '
results . There are · several meeting Tuesday, June 12. This
BJ Edward M. Vollbora
·The
large
round
bales
stacks.
round bales will have an unwea· lawn as they contain 2-4" ~ • •
farmers concern~ with symp. ' Jra-sclieduled date for ACP cost
Couaty Extension Agent,
denSity
similar
to
that
of
have
a
thered
core ofabout 85-90% ofthe gen,, 1% phosphorus, ~% pota• ~
toms of fescue toxicosis already share practice approvals.
Alrkilllhlre 6 CNRD
11nd
heat
readily
If
square
bales
total.
The
· weathered "thatch' ' slum and a: variety of mlcronut· .
this season In cow herds. Animal
The Ohio Dairy Day Is schetoo
wet.
For
the
large
round
bales
decreases
sharply In feed value, rlents. Despite common llellefs, ;
GALLIPOLIS - Wet weather symptoms associated with duled for F)'klay, JUly 13, 1990 at
dry
as
for'
the
hay
should
be
as
so
that
the
total storage loss Is clippings do oot slgnlftcantly .
fescue toxicosis may Include O.A.R.D.C. In wooster. This
and recent fioodlng has stlmu·
square
bales
20/
moisture
or
abeut
10%.
This
will vary some- contribute . to thatch ·accumula· . ·
reduced rate of gain or loss of year' s . theme wm .be Forage
lated a lot of . concern abeut
less.
·
.
,
what
depending
on
the forage. All ,tlon. When .the grasaes "lire
weight, reduced milk produptlon, Production and Utltlzailon. The
. nitrogen availability . to crops
The
upper
limit
for
stacks
of
hay
(grasses
along, growing at .such
rapid pace, .
kinds
rough hair coat, low feed Intake, · program will start at 9:30a.m. A
such as corn. The standard soli
appears
to
be
abeut
22%
mblsture
grass-legume
mixtures,
and
lereturning
this
mater·lill
to the
panting, high rectal tempera· similar program Is also being
test really does not help, because
to
avoid
heating
and
serious
have
been
satlsfac·
lawn
Is
a
satlsfactor)''Optlon
only :
gumes
alone)
ture, and excessive salivation.
planned on July 12 In western
the nitrogen recommendations
of,
digestibility
and
qry
losses
·m
bales
If
proper
management
Is
lmpie'
·
torlly
stored
outdoors
We use the service of Auburn Ohio. According to Information
ate esUJnates based upon past
malter,
Also,
care
needs
to
be
and
stacks.
.
mented
In
regard
to
mowing
·
University Fescue diagnostic that I just got, the western Ohio
crops, Yield goals, etc. Nitrogen
In
forming
the
stacks
In
taken
The
storage
.
losses
do
not
height
and,
more
Importantly,
:
center to determine levels of event will be hosted at Quletcove
behavior In soli Is very complex.
justify barn storage of round ·mowing frequency.
Infestation. The cost per sample Holsteins Farms near Wapa· order to obtain a good ' 'roof'' on
Penn State University Agronotop
without
ridges
and
valleys.
The grass should be mowed ·
bales for beef cow-calf opera·
Is $25.00. A fact sheet on fescue koneta. This might be a little
mists are currently doing a lot of
Stora1e
or
sheep
produc·
"as
needed" so that no more than
lions.
Dairymen
Is
also
available
free
toxicosis
more attractive than the Wooster
work on nitrate-nitrogen (N03·
The
location
for
storage
Is
ers requiring excellent quality one-third of the leaf blade area Is ·
from the Extension Office.
N) testing and Its timing In
location to some of our Holstein
Important.
If
tbe
bales
are
to
be
hay, such as pure alfalfa, are. . remoyed at any one mowln&amp;.· :
In
date!
The
local
A
change
dairymen.
relation to when the corn crop
accessibility
In
wet
moved
later,
justified
In adapting !»'esent With 'llle optimal mowing hlllht :
ASCS
office
has
announced
the
Reminder! The Burley Touses nitrogen. The O.S.U. lab In
weather
Is
essential.
The
hay
storageorconslderlngconstruct· of the Kentucky bluegru~e~,, :
final date to certifY all crops has bacco leasing will end ·on Mon·
Wooster offers a nitrate-nitrogen
or
should
be
located
along
a
lane
lng storage fo~ ·hlgh value forage. perennial rye grasses and floe. .
June
20
to
been
extended
from
day,
July
2.
If
you
own
quota
and
test for $3.
road
that
permits
·
moving
the
Storage loss similar to that fescues being 2¥.. '\ these grasaetl; :
July
16.
There
are
some
excep·
did not produce or lease In 1989,
This Is not an exact science, but
should be mqwe&lt;l when the&amp; .
tlons,
such
as
the
need
to
destroy
you need to either produce a crop
you 1'1111Y want to consider getting
heights rea.cb 3¥.1-3% Inches; Tat! :
growing
on
·
set·a·slde
wheat
oae sample checked. John Un·
or lease awa~"pr you will lose
Is normally maintained at. :
fescue
ground
prior
to
June
20
date.
Call
pounds. We need everyone's help
derwood, Extension Agronomist,
a
slightly
higher cut of 3.0 IDchei·
county
ASCS
office
for
the
In getting as much of the 1990
has shared some Penn State
and
should
be mowed before the :
The
Gall!a
County
ASCS
details.
effective quota gr.own as
charta that wUI help Interpret the
selection method wltli the prim- gra~ exceQ 4.5 Inches Ia ·
. By Gall DeGarmo
Committee will hold Its regular . possible.
ary difference being the reproEarth Team Volunteer
height. Wheu11owed under 111Cll
. ductlon originates from sprouts a schedule, most of tire cjlpplnp.
. GALLIPOLIS - There are not from seeds. This method are fine enough to satisfactorily
methods to regen'e rate a forest performs poorly In North filter back Into the lawn's canopy
and not create aes thetl!;
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla based on vegetative reproduc· . America.
The coppice-with-standards concerns.
County Cattleman's Association tlon. Vegetative reproduction Is
Is. planning Its Annual Summer reproduction from sprouts of one . ·m ethod Involves two d!Uerent
~.
~
ages of trees In the same stand
By Gaey Vollrath
tree seedlings, and plantlngcos.ts Roundup on Friday evening, form or another.
If a for,est originates from with specific selected trees or
for reforestation purposes (2,000 June22at7p.m. Theeventwlllbe
Service Forester
,
tree minimum, o.r . abeut 2\S held at Bob Evans Farm Shelter vegetative reproduction It Is standards kept on a longer
rotation. The age group beneath
AND
considered a high forest.
GALLIPOLIS - Landowners
acres). Vendors are available to House In Rio Grande.
are
managed
by
the
standards
Tllere are several different
who wlsb tq plant tree seedlings
do the work.
Ail entertaining evening with a
Potential planting sites need to steak dinner ls·belng planned. A . types of vegetative reproduction. · the simple coppice method.
for reforeaiatlqn In Spring 1991,
The layering method Is the
should start planning now to
be looked at now to determine If short annual meeting will follow There are stump sprouts which
No matter what type ot bu11c1irQ '
technique
applied where reproavoid being disappointed when
any site preparation (brush, . dinner. The program will In· come from dormant buds or
you're
tookilg lor-lrom a subulban
duction
occurs
from
living,
low·
seedling supplies are exhausted
grass &amp; weed control) work elude: election of officers, elect adventltous buds located any·
shOp or 1110n1 to an ottce or a 1111111 .
hanging
branches
that
have
later on. The ODNR Division of
needs to be done before planting. directors for expiring terms, where on the stem of the tree.
mart-we build the best We olfer •
Only those at ground level can become partially submerged In
Such work may need to be done proposed by·law change, associ·
Forestry offJ!rs numerous spethe option of eilhet' ~ ruraiiiNI ·
the summer before planting. atlon report, and presentation of produce a useful seedling; those moist organic materials. This Is
or L-.ter• wocxHrame buildlngl. '
clea of beth hardwoods and
We have exac1ly what you WMI. flwn
Planning needs to begin now to Gal !Ia County Cattleman's Dis· at higher levels are refered to as an occurence In peat begs where
conifers for sale to the public at
sphagnam moss overgrows the
eplcormlc branches.
basic utility to the latest in .. chillc· . :
fl!asOnable prices.
avoid delays In the forester tlngulshed Service Awards.
of
trees
In
open
lower
branches
Aacther
type
called
root
tural
detli!!'l·
.
Landowners may also quality
getting Ol.\t to review the sites,
Early reservations are encour·
·stands.
Of
the
American
species,
We
put
our~ range Of engl- '.. ·
•
sprouts
which
develope
from
the
for free white pine seedlings . and delays In getting site prepa· ag!!d to facllltate planning. Cost
neer1ng and conslr!dOn ~
(3,000treemlnllnum, orab0ut3-4 ration done and seedlings Is $10.00 per person which In· root of a tree that has been only black spruce and white·
to work on every proj4cl, and we· •.
acres) thru a cooperative pro- ordered.
eludes the meal and Gallla damaged In some manner, And cedar have been extensively
.
back those capablliliea ·will1 J\IOinp!
the third Is the layering form . regenerated using this method.
gram between Mead Paper Com·
Contact Gary Vollrath, Service County Cattleman's Association
The advantages of the ~pplce
which will be described In that
pany and the Division of Forester, ODNR Division of dues for 1990-91: If you have any
·
methods
would Include (1) the
method
of
reproduction:
Forestry.
Forestry, 36 Portsmouth St., questions concerning this event,
call. We'll help you design your bullci-: · •
trees
grow
faster during the
Many
species
of
woody
plants
lng and stay within you&lt; budget
The ASCS offers cost sharing Jackson, OH 45640; telephone call the Gallla County Extension
have the survival cbaracterlstlc early part of the rotation, (2)
programs tohelppayforthecost (614) 286-5900, (office day Is Office at 446-7007.
to
reproduce vegetatively. This trees attain a larger size on a
of site preparation, the cost of Wednesday) for more details.
trait Is valuable when any given short rotation; (3) more certain
species Is faced with destruction than any other method to repro. CoH: Tow~ &amp; Cwntrr ..;..,.. .
prior to I:Bachlng seed·bearlng duce, (4) will preserve whatever
after the. crowning of the Dairy
GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla
Patrick LaWIOII .,
good genetic qualities existed In
age.
Princess. The meat and drinks
County Dairy Promotion Com·
Canit kw~
There are many dlfferen t re- the previous stand.
GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Junior
will be provided. Everyone Is
mlttee and the Cooperative Ex·
(6141 691-3511
The disadvantages· Include (1)
tension Service will be conduct·
asked to bring a covered dish and Hereford Association members production methods used to en· the trees produced are usually
...
8ullr f\1'11,....,.,
Bullr.L-.: Blllll'~ni..._.I'U..........
their own table service. If you and Ruth E. and John 0 . Butler, courage vegetative reproduc· small and poorer In form the
lng the 1990 Dairy Fitting and
MlMI 01.- MIJ Co.
•
tlon:
Since
the
term
coppice
have any questions, please call of Butler Hereford Farm, Galli·
Sbowlng Demonstration and
(2)
not
the
older
they
become,
the Gallla County Extension polls, are putting together the refers to a stand originating best method to use to man11ge for
Dairy Princess Contest on Monfinal details as hosts for the$3,000 plOStly from sprouts, tlie regen· sawtimber, (3) this metliOd Is
Office at 446-7007.
day evening, June 18 atthe Gall Ia
Pacesetter Regional Junior eratlng method Is called the usually dependent on the
Co11nty Junior Fairgrounds.
Hereford Show and Ohio Junior coppice or sprout method. There
The Interviews for the prllicess
markets for firewood or small
Hereford Association Field Day are different forms of this products.
contest wUI begin at 6:30 p.m.
,
method.
on June 29·30.
followed by the Fitting and
Multiple-use
managetnent
Is
The first of these Is the slmplef
GALLIPOLIS - Entry forms · The event will be held at the
Showing Demonstration at 7:30 .
centered
around
finding
the
best
4·H and FFA members Gallla County Junior coppice method. This one Is
m· the Show Arena. The Fitting for
to exhibit at the 1990 Fairgrounds ."
planning
applied by performing a clearcut techniques possible and appling
and Showing Demonstration at
them to each lndlvldua! piece of
Ohio State Fair need to be
The pacesetter event Is one ot at the end of each rotation.
7: :.&gt; In the Show Arena. The
completed and mailed as soon as eight regional shows being held
The coppice-selection method woodland. Knowledge abeu t all
Fitting and Showing Demonstra·
Is very slmillar to the regular of our options makea this more
possible. All entry forms must be across the United States this
tlon will be conducted by this
possible.
signed by the County Extension summer.
year's fair judge, Krls ·Cava·
Agent or FFA Instructor.
naugh. After the demonstration,
Entry forms must be post·
the program will move to the
marked
no later than Wednes·
Activities • Building where the
. t
day,
June
20. These rules are
1990 Dairy Princess will · be
strictly
enforced.
If you have any
crowned.
questions, call the Gallla County
There will be a potluck dinner
Extension Office at 446-7007.

Farm Flashes

Daily Number

Page3

By John C. Rice ·
Co. Eld. AJeat,
· Apieul&amp;ure

r
· r

Ohio Lottery

'

BB8T CARRIAGE - Uo¥4 Blac:kWGCIII'alllll Coaee1D1a wapa
•received u award for
Carrlqe IDSaturday'a Herlta1e Daya
parade. The wapa wu the oldellt entry Ia lhe parade. other
memben rld1D1 on the float were Tom Karr, Whlbley Karr, aacl
WealeyKarr.

ae.*

SAR AND DAR -The EwiDI Cllapier SoDI of the Amerlcaa
~ Revolnlloa ud tile Betun Joaatllaa Melp Cllapler DauJblen of
the Amerleu Revolulln captllred the l(llri* ol the Ber...e D-r•
pal'lllle, a,a.oi'M by tile Po_r., Merrb••.,. ~Jattoa, wbleb
WM held Ia PomeN)' OD SatardJIJ U pari ol the lll!lqulceDienalal
fstfvltlell.

Michael A. Parker and Ml· queen and their court. The tiara
randa Nlcholscn have been se- was provided by K&amp;C Jewelers .•
Ieete&lt;! as the 1990 Melp County
There was a tte for first
Junior Fair king and queen.
. i'liDner·up between Tamara Re-'
Announcement of their selec· · nea, Boaess · and KriStine Lee
tloli ancj therest·o fthe junlor·falr Ash. Second riiJ1ner·up from the
court was made Saturday after· .fteld of 10 cont'eltanta was
noon durlnii-Jferltage Days fes· Lantlla Rose Price.
Uvltles In Potneroy. The royalty
The Junior fair kin&amp; Is thesonol
waaselectedbyapanelofJudges. Leland and Market Parker,
Janice Weber of Eastera High Pomeroy. He Is a member of the
Scl\001. an FHA advisor, was Duck Tales and Melp 4-H Dairy
chairman.
Clubs and Is an avid outadoof
Greta Rlflle, the 19119 queen, sportsmen.
presented flowers, banners and
gift certificates to th!! . king,
Continued on page 10

. .• ..
·

·· - . l ',o/"

- _ . - --· ------ - -·----·--&lt;.-r--- ~-,..----- · --··------1:7·-~------;r:----~-:--71,;-

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="298">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9571">
                <text>06. June</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="35773">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="35772">
              <text>June 10, 1990</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="1855">
      <name>aldridge</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3429">
      <name>braden</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="892">
      <name>cundiff</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="68">
      <name>garnes</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6692">
      <name>lalish</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1247">
      <name>lyons</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="442">
      <name>mcguire</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6693">
      <name>mmorrison</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1048">
      <name>polk</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3430">
      <name>winn</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
