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                  <text>Sunday

50 cents

KC tournament underway

Meigs farm
claims best
Jersey cows
in Ohio

Beat of the Bend:
It's the time of the year when many of
us take what we call a vacation... Page B-7
James Sands:
Gallipolis haskt'tball began on Third and
State in old Hayward building ... Page A-6

Page B-1

C-1

Inside
Along the River ......... BH
Business ........ .... ... -.... Dl R
Comics- ........... ... .... .Insert
Classlfleds ................. 02-7
Deaths ................... ...... A3
Edltorlai ................ .. .... A2
Sports ....................... Cl-6

Occasional s howers and
lhunderstorms. Hlgh near 80 .
Chance of rain 90 percent.

•

l

PMa&lt;; TIIIRT\' TWO
Vol. 25 No. 25
Copyrigh18d 1990

Trophies

wards

Tee=Sh~rt

no place

like home.

Peop~e

That's why we stay involved here in our
own community.
After all, you're not just our customersYou're our neighbors too.

BANKEON£

614 ssa s1aa
50 Riverview Drive
Middleport, Oh 45760

orne
•
a tiona
an

'

' '

Eighteen Thousand People Who care.
f!Af.lll ONl A f MENS. NA I A PARr OF THE CARING TEAM
Amens Ol'uo
!.le mbe• FfJIC

•
.,

tm ohh

CHEVROLET,
OLDSMOBILE, CADILLAC
GEO, INC.

By JULIE E. DR..LON
Tlmes.SenUnel Staff
Are you
MIDDLEPORT wasteful? The answer for mosl
people, whether you want to
believe It or not, Is yes.
According to Roger Manley.
owner of Manley's Trash Ser·
vice, solid waste disposal Is a
world·wlde problem , the san! ·
tary landfills are becoming full
and are closing. He stated that
lees lor trash removal service
have Increased drastically and
will continue to rise, unless
action Is taken to cut back on the
amount of materials going to the
landfilL
If this Is a troubling statement
for you or if you want to do
something about it , then recycle.
Manley 's Trash Servi ce Is
attempting to alleviate this prob·
lem somewhat by initiating a
volunteer curb -side recycling
program in Middleport which
made Its first run on Friday
morning.
According to Manley, the program Is presently set up so that
customers, which are already
using Manley's Trash Service.
have plastic recycling baskets.
In these basket s they pla ce th eir
recyclable Items, Including gl111s
bottles, plastic containers, news·
papers, alumlnum cans and pi e
pans, tin cans, and any pape r or
cardboard boxes·. The recycling
baskets are placed at the curb or
a lley and are picked up and
ret urned to the recycllng center.
Manley stated that he has
spoken with the Department of
Natural Resources to sec ure a
recycling grant wh ich would
provide tundlng for 1.000 recy ·
cling baskets which would be

distributed to his customers who
are willing to recycle .
The recycling program is cur·
rently opera ting only in Middle·
port but Manley stated that he
would lik e to see It expand Into
PomProy and other towns a nd "
&gt;1 11ages If e nough inte res t is
ex pressed.
Nelsel Gerard, a volunteer
participant in the program , fee ls
the program is something that
has been long overdo. She stated
that the Gerard famil y h.1s
always recyc led but had prob·
!ems getting rid of the materials.
She feels that the ch ild ren of
today must be tau ght, at a young
age, how to recycle and the
Import a nce of it. Mrs. Gerard
went on to say that her family has
cui down , by at least hall, the
a mount of solid waste th at Is
taken to the la ndfill .
Manley feels the fir s t day lor
picking up the recyc lab le male·
rials was successful and that he
was well pleased. He stated th at
al tllough everything Is sti ll very
new for the service they d ld ,pick
up on some preparation tip s.
For exa mple, when placing
Items In the paper bags, wrtte
what is In the bag,.on the outside
so that workers don 't have to
separate each Item by hand.
This cuts down on time spent at
each stop and therefore keeps
down the costs, Ma nley s ta ted.
He said, ideal ly, the plck·u p
service s hould not have to stop
for more than 45 to 60 seconds .
You do not have to be a res ident
of Middleport to take advan tage
of what Manley's Recycling
Center has to offer. The center.
located In the former RC Bottling

Plant on Mill Street In Middle
port, is equipped to receive a ll
types of recyclable materials.
Items accepted at the center
Incl ud e a luminum b evera g~
cans. and glass containers such
as ketchup, mustard, pickle, and
mayonnaise jars, jelly glasses.
soft drink, beer, wine, liquor
bol ties, medicine bottles and
more . Manley stated that glass
s hould be reasonably clean and
color sorted , clear, green, and
brown. He went on to say that
la bels do not need to be removed.
Ot her aluminum Items ac·
cepted Includ e loll, pi e plates,
food cans, pots and pans. s iding,
gutters, doors a nd window
frames. engine parts, wire, and
pipe. Manley stated that with
ca ns, the tops and bottoms should
be removed and th e can
flattened.
Plastic bottles, s uch as milk
jugs, two Ill er soda bottles,
dishw as hlng l iquid bottles,
bleach bo(tles, etc ., are recycla·
ble. Manl~y points out a rule of
thumb for pla stic bottles, If II has
a neck It is mo st likely recycla·
ble, {excopt motor oil bottles)
Manley ~tated that on plastic
bottles It is helpful II the lids and

caps are re moved.
The recycling center Is cur·
rently buying the following
Items. glas s, plasti c bottles,
al uminum cans, copper, brass.
radiators, clean aluminum , and
batteries . Ma terial s accepted on
a donation basis Inc lude news ·
papers, cardboard boxes without
wax coali ng, and tin cans.
So remember the next time you.
toss something Int o the trash can:
" If you're not rerycllng, you're
throwing It a ll away."

308 E. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio

PH. 992-6614

RACINE - SYRACUSE

CHEVROLET AUTHORIZED
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Phone

Your One Stop Center For
New Cars &amp; Trucks, Used
Cars, Parts &amp; Authorized
Service

949-2210
992-6333

A Multimedia Inc . Newsl)llper

Recycling helps solve
problems of landfills

The

I

12 Sections. 76 Pages

Middleport- Pomeroy- Gallipolis- Point Pleasant July 22. 1990

CURB-SIDE RECYCLING - Manley's Trash
Service began a volunteer curbside recycling
program In Middleport on Friday. Customers who
are wtiUng to recycle are provided with plasd c
recycling baskets which are picked up by trash

service workers and returned to the recycling
cenler. Pictured are Roger Manley, Dale UtUe
and John Roush . Manley hopes th e Idea will catch
on so It can be expanded for all customers.

ADC minimum~ standard of need
bill introduced to Ohio legislature
POMEROY - A bill that wi ll
a llow the Department of Human
Services to esta blish a minimum
s tandard of need for Ohio has
been Introduced by State Repre·
sentatlve Mary Abel tO-Athens).
The bill inc ludes provisions for
recipients of Aid to Dependent
Ch ildren and General Assistance
Programs to work and to keep
their earnings un til the recipient
earns beyond th e established
dollar amount of this minimum
stan dard of need . As their
earnings increase, the assista nce
a nd foob stamps amount would
decrease to that person.
Th e proposed legi slatio n would
permit recipients to keep any
Inco me up to 50 percen t of the
sta ndard of need In th e first year
a nd would Increase by five
percent until all of the needs
sta ndard was met. This would
not increase cu rrent bPneflls fo r
a ll public assistance recipients .
Instead, It would enab le tho se
reclplenls who are able to get
part·time or temporary jobs or
oth er form s of Income, to retain
more of th at Income without
red u ci ng th Pir cash ass lstan cr or

lose their e ligib ilit y for hea lth
car e.

Ac cording to Abel. "this bill
would provide a real financial
Incen tive fo r ADC a nd General
As sistance r ecipie nts to accept
lower wage and part-time jobs
without reduction of their bcnef·
it s until at leas t the minimal
necessary income level Is met "
"Research indicatPd most p('Ople want to work. but our current
system forces them to choose
between low paying jobs th at
don't provide health Ins urance or
co ntinue dependence on welfare
beneflls wh ich at least offer
health care coverage throug h
Medi ca id . If ou r welf are reform
effort s arc going to s ucceed , WI'
mus t c hange th e rules to encour·
age peopl e to wor k while e nsur·
lng that the basic needs of hpalth
care. food . c lothi ng a nd sheller
arr being met' ·, Abel expla ined.
Abel sa id that recent increases
In welfare cost s are ti ed m or e to
the rislng cos ts of health rare
than an ex pansion of ADC or
Genera l Assistance. Shr said
that ADC a nd General Assist ·

a nce bud gets have remained
consta nt during the past li ve
years while Medicaid payment s
have dram ati ca lly increased.
Abel explained that the inten·
tion of th e bill is to a llow
recipients to "fill the gap"
between what they currently
receive in public ass ista nce
benefits and what the Sta te
Department of Human Services
has ca lculated as "the minimum
s tandard of need "
A typical fam ily of three,
usually a mother and two ch ildre n, receives only $334 per month
In assistance. However, the State
Deparunent of Human Services
has determ ined that a fam lly ol
that s ize needs at least S776 a
mon th to meet Is basic needs of
clothing, food and shelter. This
falls below the Federal poverty
level whic h is approxim ately
$880 per m onth for the same
fam ily size.
Bl·partis an support tor lhr
leg isl a t io n Includ es 22 co·
sponsors. AbPI says lh all8 other
s tates have gone to a sys tem of
budgeting on the minimum
standard of need .

~--------~----------------~~·~
"~
"~
' ~
·· ~·~
· ·~
·· ~
.. ~
· --~~----------~--~

WORK PROGRESSES - Construction on thl.s
bridge on U.S. 3~ between Rodney and Rio Grande
began this week. Crews will be repairing the

edges of the bridge lor a few weeks. Trame has
been cui lo one lane and will he maintained by a
stop light througoul construction lime.

Meigs Health Services receives
grant for program continuation
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

same amount of money was

Times-Sentinel Stall
POMEROY- A $62,039 grant
has been awarded by the Ohio
Deparunent of Health to th e
Meigs County Healtll Depart·
ment lor continuation of the
Meigs County Child and Family
Health Services (CFHS) .
Announcement ol the award:
lng of the grant came from State
Rep. Mary Abel, ( D·Athens)
Friday.
The grant period Is from July I,
1990 through June 30, 1991. The

received lor operation of the
program In the 1989-90 fi scal
year, according to Norma Torres
R .N., nursing director.
As explained by Abel, the
CFHS program encourages col·
laboratlon through a group of
healtll care and social service
agencies In a co unty or region .
The program provides for community pia nnlng and public and
preventive healtll care services
lor both children and women of
child-bearing age .

The Importance of the pro·
gram, Abel said, Is that it allows
the provision of health care
services for pregnant women and
children who do not have the
financial means to secure that
health care. She said that est!·
mates show that lor $1 spent on
pre· natal health care, $31s saved
on post-natal health care costs.
"Providing preventive care to
these lamlltes Is vital to main·
talntng the well-being of our
community," Abel said.
(See MEIGS, page A3)

I'LL TAKE THAT ONE - Ken Randolph of
GRIIIpoU. Ferry, right, II ahowu plcklnJ out hla
fresh tomatoes al the frull and vere&amp;able Bland
near Point Pleasant Federal Savings and Loan on

VIand

st.,el. Shown managing hill lather'a ataad

Js Brad Turley 10 olltlt Mota Sl., Polo I Pleaaaal.
(OVP photo by J. Andrew Malcobn)

�July 22. 1990

Commentary and perspective
A Division of

Indonesia comes alive
WASHINGTON - In the world

Iwar of eco nomics, the sprawlin g
825

Third 1\ve., Gallipolis, Ohio

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

( 614) 446-2342

ROBERT L. WI:\'GETT
Publisher
HOBI\RT WILSON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher-Controller

A MEMBER of Tht:&gt; Unlted Pr£'ss lnter nat tonal . Inland Dally PrPss A.ssoc!allon and t he Amer lt'&lt;l n Nt.&gt;wspaprr Publi shers Associat ion
LETTE RS OF UP INION art&gt; welcom e . Thry should bf&gt; IMs th an :lXJ words
l ong. All letter s arP su bj ert toedlt lng and mu st bP sl.gned with nam e, address an d
tel ephon e numbt&gt;r. No unslgne::l I etten will be- published Letters shou ld be In

gocd taste , a ddre s sln~_l~S!J!'S . not persma!H les.

.·Backstairs at
•the White House

So utheast Asian na1ion oflndonPsi a Is shaping up as a key
battlefield for lhe 1990s. The
Japanese know It, as do the
Germans. th e English. the South
Koreans and the Taiwanese. But
American business people have
ye t to set up ca mp. The generals
of U .S. i ndustry may be hard
pressed to fi nd Indon es ia on the
map.
The fifth mos t populous nation
on the planet. with more than 180
million peop le liv ing on a neck·
la ee of 13,677 Islands. has the
largest and cheapest work for ce
In the Pacific . Ills teeming with
untapped natural resources. And
besl of all. It Is begging for

bu shtf'SS
Three yPars ago, the govern·
ment of lndom•sia wC'nt on a

deregulation binge. cull ing away
t he red tape and tariffs I ha t had
dlscou raged foreign Investors.
Since then. South Korea has
launched 126 business ventures
In Indonesia. Japan has begun
116. Taiwan 109 and Hong Kong
53 . The United Stales has
weighed In with only nine business ventures . In fact, 10 years
ago, the U .S. business presence
In Indonesia wa s far greater than
It Is today.
In Asia, Indonesia Is v iewrd as
the sleeping giant thai Is finally
beginning lo stretch.
Even wlthout an enthu siastic
response from the United States .
Indon esia n President Suharto is
pallin g himself on the back for
the "'miracles"' deregulation has
fostered - an up-and-coming
stock m arket and a growth rate
of 6 perce nt Indonesia's public

July 22, 1990
Page- A-2

lack· Anderson and Dale VanAtta_

rela tions m ac hi ne would like the
world t o beli eve t hat everyone
has benefll ed fr om Su hart o's
refor m s. bu t thar i sn't the truth
yet
Our associa te Jim Lynch v i·
sited Indones ia re cently and
found both the rich and I he poor
grumblin g that th e new eco nom·
lcs benefit onlv the r ich .
The canyon. between t he rich
and the poor Is so wide. and the
standard of living so varied
across Indon esia. th a t a beggar
i n Jakart a can do little w ith a few
rupiahs handed to him . But i f he
had the same money in a villagf'
100 m iles away, he co uld buv a
generous lunch.
Foreign i nves tm elll ha s don e
little to innl'a se wages in a
co untry whelP sk i l led labor ers
get only about $.1 a d ay.
IndonPs lan gnv Prnmpnt insid·

ers con fi dentially point out that
the most visible beneficiaries of
Suh arto 's r eforms are Suharlo's
rel atives. His children have
r eceived contracts to build highways, hotels and an airport.
There are the usual technical
problems that come with doing
bu sin ess In the Third World. A
la sting memory of Indonesia Is
peopl e shouting "'Hello? Hello?""
in t elephones thai don't work.
Probl em s aside. Indonesia Is
once of the last and l argest fertile
terrains In t he world economy.
Indon es ia n l eaders are hooked on
the drug of foreign money and
would particul arly like to see
more American dollars. At a
recent econom ics forum hosted
by Suh art o' s government, the
ft•aturcd speak~r was former
St•cretarv of State Alexander
Hai g

By II t; Lt: N THOMt\S
UP I White House Reporter
W AS III :\GTO~- Pre si dPnt Bush wa r nrd r{' pOrt&lt;' r~ shor11 y ;.1ftrr
flis C'!C'c l ion th at hP wa s n ot going to bP a s ta _v -a1 homr prP sidP nt. and
he is liv ing up to his word .
Npws orga niza ti ons havP tn man tlw barric adrs at thP \Vhitr Housr
srvr n days a I..I.'PPk. and mos t ni ght s. fora president w ho likrs to roam .
Bush i s out on tht • town nParl} Pw•ry n ig ht in th r werk. ~oin g to hi s
L:l \' Oritc Chinese or l tal iJ n r r .'i taurants, dropping by r eceptions and
. fund ·rai se r s That is l'&gt;hf•n II (' is not trave lin g around th e c ountr~ or
OV i ' I'~P a S.

Aro und 6 o'c loc k 1n thP t' \'l'ning n.• port l'rs havr bf'co mP usrd to th e
. fp mi! i;J r ca ll on thr public .1l1dn •...,s system in the WhitP ll ous(' press
·room : ' ·Th e trave l pool will fmm in 15 minutes. "
Bush keeps movmg. In the past few days he has go ne to a baseba l l
game in Ba ltimorf'. Thr nf'.\t P\'l? n ing he wPnt to a cong rP ssional
dinn('r Ow' r thf' wrrkrnd. onl .v dri\'ing rain and lig htning kPpt him
f rom at tP ndi ng a m inor leaguP ha s(' ball ga mr
Th r fact th at J i mmv Cntf'r turnrd down an in\'il a ti on to bPo n hand
for the ded ic at ion of t he Richard M 1\ ixon prii'R tr lr funded
pres idrnti al l i bran· J l Yorba L 1nd C1. Cali f.. is Cl sorr disa ppointme nt
)o m any peo ple arou nd thr cou ntr.v who wou ld very much cherish a
photograph of Bu sh w1th thr fou r li v in g f ormr r prrs idC'nt s.
The only otht-' r picturr !hill corm•s clos( · is thr photograph of
President Ro na ld !1Pagan s tanr1ing with ('X ·pr('sidrnts \' ixon . r~u·tpr
and Gerald Ford when Re-aga n spnt th em off as a par t of the lJ.S
dclrga tlon to th f' funer al of Egy pt' s Anw~n Sadat
WhitP Housr prPss secrr ta1·v Marli n FitzwatPr ....;i l l cat ch u p \\ 1th
his old Ooss. former Presidrnt Honald Rc&lt;Jgan. i n Ab i!Pnr, f\an s . on
. · · J ul_\' 2';' . Fit zwater will br att£&gt;nding th r reu nion of his high schoo l
· c la ss . Rraga n will bPi n tow n fo ra rommcm ora ti on in co nnrc tio nv:ith
t he IOOth anni ve r sar:-: of D wi ght n E: i 'ir nho wf'r's birthda .v. Ike's
prrs id ent ia l l ib ra ry is loca trd in A bi!Pne.
Fi tzwat er plan s to get togeth er bri e fly with Reaga n. But h(•quips to
. ~ re.Porl er s that he ca n see himself on the out sldP looking in v.:h en thr
limitl'd " prPs s pool" is allowrd to cove r lhf' ccre moll~' in ;he libran
A sk f'd if hp would in-.·ltr ll.ragan to hi s boyh ood homrf Fit?watcr
s~id he did nnr know il hi s parf'nt s could stand th r rxritmrnr
· Th e president belicvrs he had i-.1 grrc-t1 influ ence on SovrPI PrPsr dl'lll
M1.khai I Gorhac hn· - a r lea:-. t 1n 1hr sa no r i a J drpartmrn t at ..., pas and

..

p·re side ntia l rPt rPJ IS.
Ru sh worT' a S\H'Citrr &lt;J t Camp David dunng thf' .Junf' :-.unnn it
{;f) rba c ht•v was mo rr fo rma I]\· ill! irrd . a I though hP did g£&gt;1 down 111 hi:-.
~hirt s!['{'VPS .
&gt; But bv the l im p Corb:1rhr\· m~'l with \\'(·s t GC'I' Ol il ll fh;Jnel' l lor
rL' imu r ·Kohl &lt;Jl Cl spa in Huss ia. Bush and h is adv isP r s no tPd that th('
}\rPm lin ]('iJdPr worr a card igan i n th r l"f'l&lt;:.i.~f'd SP itin g

- letters to the editor
CalL5 letter 'a masterpiece'
Mrs . Woo tpn' s ktrrr of Jul.\ ll.

m.v opi ni on. was trul v ;1
ITI&lt;:JS tPrpitY'f'. I s up por t her a II f he
way . We lll--'('d mo re pro pl r li kP
hr r who have the co ura gP to t r ll it
lik f' i t is.
•
I hope she doc' not IPI peop le
Uk c S. R
Edwar d'. " ho so
V'isc iously a! tac krd he1· i n his
lPtter of .J u ly 12. di ssu(J df' her in
an.v W d\' Hi s IPtt rr w ~:~-. r ifr with
di srP spe cr. dishone s ty and
dlstorli ons.
[n Mrs Won trn· s ojX'nmg parJ
graph shf' sta! Pd. " I wou ld l ik P to
111

Extends thanks
• Dear Edi t or
I would like to thank all t he
people who helped us In gelt lng
- our granddaughter ba ck. Sheriff
Sousby and department , the FBI
In Athens. also the print er In
Middl eport who printed up the
: . pjlSters for us, and Linda Warner
f~r all her help and Linda War ner

•

(' :&lt;press m.v opinion on I~· and no t
forcC' thi s view o n somronr r ise. ,
Mr. Edwards's conc luding r c
ma rk wa s. I would propose. tha t
" m or r of us tr.\· to li\'(' togrthrr
wit hout b('ing so quick to c r it icizP
and j ud ge one another .. · M.v
adv i ce to Mr. Edward~ is to
p rar li cr w hat he prpa chf's.
It is too bad I ha t Mr. E dwa r ds
d id not thtnk this w a 1· befor e he
all ac kr-d all of us who rrul;
bl'liPvr a.' wr do .
Marshall :VL Burnell
Rou tr 2, Gallipoli s

to

Shondel appreciates support

Oear Edttor
; A spec ial t hanks to all who
attended the Air Force band
concer t Saturday night! The
band members were deeply
• tduched by your warm applau se
~ arid standing ovati on.
:And another "'thank you"' to
e~eryone who helped to make the
c"ncert a reality! Working together. we've shown both hometown folks and visitors alike that

Gallipolis Is Indeed one of the
best cities In Ohio In which to live
and work. Our two hundred years
of progress prove that.
Thank you again fo r yo ur
support of the many bicentennial
events and particularly the Air
Force Band of Flight.
William J. Shondel
Coordinator oft he concert
for the Gallipolis
Bicentennial Commission

Appreciates support
Dear Editor :
:on behalf of the Racine VoL
FJre Dept. I would like to thank
eYeryone who parllclpaled In our
Jidy 4th celebration . The Parade
was just the beginning of a day
full of food and entertainment .
From the Ftremans Bar-B -Que
: chicken to the Ladles Aux. Ice
-cream and games, to live music
and of course fireworks. We

sometime forget all the time and
effort put In by all the people who
make days like this possible.
From the people who organize
the events of the day to the one's
made this country a place where
we can celebrate freely. Thanks
to you all.
Racine Vol. Fire Dept.
David M. Wolfe

Florence Freeman

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPii Res trlcted driving privileges and
stiffer fines are the main tools In
a new state law. effective nexl
Wednesday. aimed at removing
Intoxicated drivers from cll y
streets and state highways.
Highway safety officials say
they are ready to begin enforcing
the state's comprehensive new
drunken driving law. which was
adopted by the General Assem ·
bly earlier this year after months
of debate, and was signed Apri l
25 by Gov. Richard Celeste.
The Ohio Highway Patrol will
he armed with new portable
breath testers pre-arrest
screening devices which will
enable officers to detect drinking
drtvers who might be able lo fool
the conventional '"walk the line ..
or ""touch the nose'" tests .
'"The motoring public Is going
to have to be more responsible
lor their driving actions,"' said
Lt. David Peters of the Highway
Patrol.
The existing 0.10 percent blood
alcohol content for presumption
of driving while Intoxicated will
continue, as will the mandatory
three days In jail or completion of
an alcohol intervention program
on the flr~t offense.
But the maximum jail terms
and fines for repeat offenders
will increase sharply. and driver
license suspensions will be dramatically longer. with no lmme~
dlate exemptions for driving to
work.
Teenage drinking and driving
Is attacked with renewed vigor In
I he upcoming law .
"'I hope this sends a clear
message to all drivers thal l i you
drink and drive, there will be
Immediate consequences , "' sa id
William Denlhan , director of lhc
Ohio Department of Highwa y

ASHEVILLE. N.C. iUPII Accused "'punk'· serial killer
LesUe Warren confessed to killing four women. Including a
woman In High Point. N.C ..
whOse body was found Friday
where Warren said It would be.
police said.
Warren, 22. of Candler. N.C..
was arrested In High Point. N .C..

Sa fety . "'This wtll have an impact
on r·epeat offenders and on our
youth. and It gives judges more
tools Ia help sentence a drunken
driver. "'
Denthan said a key provision
allows law enforcement officers
to lift a driver's license on the
spot If the driver has a previous
OWl conviction or refuses to take
the blood alcohol test. The license
will not be returned until afler a
court hearing, usually within five
day s.
Maximum jail terms will go
from six months to one year on
the second offense, and a new
four th offense mandates a min ·
!mum 60 days In jail.
Minimum fines will double 10
$200 on the first offense and $30()
on the second. Maximum fines
grow stronger for repeat offend·
ers - $2,500 on the third offense
and $10,000 on the fourth . Money
from the Increased fines will go
for alcohol education and treat ment programs for those who
cannot afford It.
The current 60-day driver
license suspension on the first
offense will be raised lo 90 days.
with no occupational driving
privileges for the first 15 day s.
Currently , a judge may grant
privileges 10 drive to work
i mmediat el y after suspending a
license.
Anyone caught driving under a
OWl license suspension will
receive three days In jail, a $250
to $1.000 fine and a maximum
one-year lic ense suspensions,
and the offender's car w ill be
Immobilized for :m days . Until
now, there has bC'en no minimum
fin e or jail term
About38 percent of all d ri vers
ar rested for DWI arl' d riv ing
while their licPnses are un der

suspensio n.
Dorothy Taylor. state chairwoman of Moth er s Against Dru nk e
Drivers. had special praise for
provisions allowing judges l o
impose elect ronic house arrest
and lgnltton interlock devices
allowing those convicted of DWI
to drive only when sober.
She sa id MADD also supports
the new felony offense of aggra vated vehicular assault- maim Ing someone while driving under
I he Influenc e.
"Those thai t hink they can
drink and drive belter think
again. " she said. "T he new
pena l ti es are going lo smart."'
For teenagers, the new law
provides a 0.02 percent blood
alcohol content 1about one drink!
for conviction, drawing a license
su spension of 60 days or until the
driver turns 18. whichever comes
sooner .
To prevenl forged drivers"
licenses a nd I.D cards. all
driver s' licPnses will have to be
laminated.
Th e new law increases the
penally for anyone under 21 who
presents a false or altered
driver's license to purchase an
alcoholic beverage. A first of ~
tense will draw a mandatory $250
to $1.000 fine and a maximum
six -month jail se ntence.
Denihan sa ill society must get
upset with the carnage on the
roads before dramatic r~sults
are seen. "'This law. while It 's a
good law. Isn't going to do thai,"'
he said. "'We've got to really do
so m(' work on changing
at btudes."
Th e hi ghway safety c hief sa id
fa tal it ies resulting from DWl s
a re declining by about 10 to lo
perc ent a year tn Ohio . bu t of the
1)0.000 OWl arrests each year.
only 70.000 are con v icted

Friday afternoon a bout two
hours after a national bul lel ln
was Issued for his detention.
Pollee began questionin g him
about 9 p.m . Friday about three
of the hom ic id es and ""Warre n
co nfessed to these three homi ·
cides... said Alan Hyder , a
spokesman for the Ashevlllr
Poli ce Department. ""Warre n

a l so conf essed to lhe murder of
t h e woman in Htgh Point on July
15. 1990. " Hyder said.
Warren was taken Friday
night to Asheville. where he wa s
acc used of killing Jay me Hurley.
whose body was found Wednes ·
day where Wa r ren said In would
b e - In the trunk of a ca r in a
snake-i nfes ted ar ea of the Pisgah
National Forest.
H yd er said Warren wa s
c harged with felony larceny in
. North Carolina. a fugitive charge
r elated to a murder issued in
So uth Carolina and the ktdnap·
ping and murder of Jayme
annual gathering of aboutlO.OOO
GRAND MARAIS. Minn .
Hurlcv . An o th er murder warrant
members of the back -to-nature
(UPI) - Authorlles said Satur
from New York state Is pending.
group.
day they have Identified a body
Hyder said .
Cook Co11nty au tho rities said
found at the Rainbow F amily
"Our poli ce rece lvrd informa ·
the cause of death was still under
gathering camp site this month
tion from Ashevi l lP and Spartan ·
Investigation and that they were
as that of an Ohio man .
burg County ! S.C. ! outhorilies
being assisted by the Minnesota
The body of William Saltsmon .
l ast night t hat Warren had .
Bureau
n f Cr imi na l
28. Canton. Ohio. was found on a
confessed to a murdPr in Hi gh
Apprehens ion
hillsid e at the conclusion of the
Point ," Police Capt. RR Rankin
sa id Sat ur day
· 'WarrPn sta ted he had mur·
(From MEIGS. page 1\1)
-D· • • • ...:..:..:..::.:::..:=~-=---~--- dered a woman and hidden her
body In the trunk of a car on the
In thP J11'P·_nal al program.
In talking abo ut the program.
sPcond leve l of a parking dPrk in
Torres listed the wide range of t herrwe rr101 nf•w c lient s during
downtown
High Point.
services which are provid ed with the 1989- 90 vr•ar with J22 vts it s
"" llr furthPr staled he had
the funding. These include. she being recorded. and 317 preg
co mmitted thf&gt; murdPr Sunday ,
said. lab testin g including a full nan cv tr sts were give n Thr
.Jul y l o. Hi gh Point officers
range of blood work. speech unusUal part of thp figurP s.
located thr ve hic le cmd subsl'
pathologist. social work. general according 10 T orres. is tha t
quent ly loca ted the body of a
health assessment. nutrition nearly one-third of al l Meigs
y oung whlt e female. ju st as
training. pregnancy testi ng. County women havi ng babies
Warren had describPd . " Rankin
last year had some of theit
even dental wo rk.
sa id .
Carol Tannehill is dirrctor of medical care handled through
lhr CFHS program with Co nnir lhe H ea lth Department.
While payment is ba se d on a
Lillie handling the pre-nat al
sl
idin
g fee sc ale the guideli nes
phase . Phyllis Bea rh s Is the
women's health carr lrrhnlr ian . are so libera l th ai many qualify
Last year In the health care without pay m en t . Torre s
program. 320 c hildren were seen repor ted .
Loc allv lhr program operates
for fir st visits with many ollll'r s
with s uPport from a co nso rtium
coming In for follow -up vi si ts .
FRI., SAT. SUN.
of health. educational and soc ial
MICHAEL J FOX
prof essions. Th e goal of that
IN
group is to have i nput on cl ient
se rvi ces and use of finances to
(US I" 5!)-838)
lhe best adva ntage of the pro~
gra m in It s implementation.
Published t"ach Sunday. 821 Third Aw ..
PG 13
The conlinu at io n of the fun di ng
Gallipolis. Ohio. bv thE-Ohio Vat\~ ~~ b
AND
ll!ohin~ Company iMulllmrota. Inc. $('
allows the Hea lth Departmen t to
l'Ond class ~lali: e paid at &lt;.ialllpolls.
continue for another year the
Ohio 45GJl Eni PrM as second r lass
num erous programs which supmaUin g ma1trr at Pomt&gt;r~ , Ohio. Post
PGIJ
Otflce.
pori the child and family hea l th
446 -1088
services. concluded Rep. AbeL
Member : United Press International.

Body found at Rainbow
Family campsite identified

" ... so I told him I would be truly delighted to support campaign finance
reform. How much is it worth to you?"

Carrying out Nation~s
Most of t hC' diet ion aries r rfPr to .
her as a t rmp£'ranc~ leadrr . But
if temperanl'l' sugges t s madera ·
lion. th e di cti onar ies ha ve il a ll
wrong. Thrrr was nothing mod ·
f'r atr m IPmp eratr about Carry
Na tion in hPr eru sa dr against
Demon Rum .
Hat cilPI in one hand and Bible
In I he ol hrr. she roamed the
sal oon.c; of t he co untry, beginning
in her native K ansa s, ar ound t hP
turn of t he century. smashing
liquor boll les . plate glass w in·
dows and saloon rlxture s and
leavi ng behind a streams of
spi lled bourbon- and rotgut and
redeye flow i ng Into the
gutt ers .
II Is true that her mother
!nam ed J eru sha ! lll erally be·
llrved she was Queen Vi c toria
and wore a crown of cut glass and
chandelier pendants as she rodr
in a c arri age through the strpets

bow ing l o the po pu lan ce.
Butlo Carry th ere w as nothing
crazy about wh at shP herself was
doing. She felt called by God to
destr oy the plague that was
destroy ing I he nation.
One r eason t he policP usually
kept their dist ance whl"n Carry's
hatchet was at work was that
many of I he sta l es where she took
her cr usade were legall y dry.
The saloons were operating out ·
s Ide I he I aw and werr no t l"n I It led
to poll ee protection .
Her actlvll ies helped t o expose
I he alila nee of saloon· keepers
and public official s who lei th e
sa loons run openly .
But Carry Natton did not
confine her exploits to dry
communities that were defying
the law. A Chicago paper once
published a front -page cartoon
showing a bartender crouched
behind his countPr as Carry

temperance _

brandl shPd her ax T hp capt ion
read: "But Madam , li quor is
legal in Chi cago ."
It m ay have bPPn but to Carry
Nat ion liquor wa s not legal
anywhere. Behind t hl" swi ngin g
doors. the country was going to
perdition F amilies wprp being
ruined and humiliated - includ·
lng her own .
Her hus band Dav id Nation was
a drunkard. WhC'n their dau ghter
was born dumb, it was. in Carry
Nat ion's mind. lhP r&lt;'sult of her
hav ing a d r unken falher. Yea r s
latrr a ra r e opera! ion enabl ed
thr gi rl to spC'a k _Ca rry was sure
thi s wa s the L ord 's reward t o hPr
for enlist i ng in "' Hi s fight "
again st alcohol
Ca rry Nation di ed in 1911 at age
65. II would be nin e vears before
the 18th Amendment wa s passed
forbidding the manufac ture and
sa le of liqu or In all 48 states .

P___,_Lag,___
en_z

Th rrc :trr those who say thai
Carr:,.· Na tion aroused t he consciencp of thr nation and paved
the way for Prohibition . That
'. noble ("X periment'" failed as I he
!Pm pNa ncf' movement had
failrd In her day and lor a lot of
1hr sa m e rC'a .';;o ns.
Ru t many will Insist Carry
:-.Jation's was a righteous cause
that was tgnoranlly spurned by a
benight ed nation.
A !'crrP nplay on her :tfe ends
wtlh t hese l ast words of hers :
"Ear ly In life I decided t hai the
wav to di r was as the flowe rs do.
Standin g up. ! think I can do that
now. I am standing up and I can
say to you. I have done what I
could."
And to countless others who
have been Inspired by her to take
up thei r cudg el s aga inst the
"rava~PS o f drink ."

For 9 years, S &amp; Ls owned Congress
I kn ew i t wa s rol1en. but I had
no Idea of the extent to which I he
savings an d loans association
execullves an d their pol It leal
action co mmllt ess had paid for
lhe U.S . Co ngress until recently
when I read an analysis by the
public affairs lobby Common
Ca us e.
The title of the analysis- "'ll's
a Wonder ful Life : S&amp;L Invest·
ments on Capitol Hill'" Is m isleading. t\ more accurate title
would have been. "' Mr. Dooley
Was Right. " II was Finley Peter
Dunne's Gaelic wit , Mr. Dooley,
who Impishly observed : "'It Is
better to know the judge than the
1aw." S&amp;Ls proved II was better
to control - Congress I han the
oversight agency.
A second suggested title : "'A
$1,000 Prostitute Is No Different
From a $10 Prostitute." That
came to me as I went over
Common Cause's list of the 81
members of the Senate and the
145 members of the House who
have received generous contributions from S&amp;L Interests during
the last nine years.
In lhe House, the chairman of
the Banking, Finance and Urban
Affairs Committee between 1981
and 1986, Rep. Fernand St.

Germain. 0 -R .I. . r eceived
$144,000 In S&amp;L -Interests contrl·
buttons. compared to Rep. David
Price, D ·N.C .. who only received
$1,750.
But all 12 members of the
Senate committee and all 13
members of the House commit·
tee received S&amp;L contributions
between 1981 and 1990.
Which brings up a delicious
apocryphal story about George
Bernard Shaw. "Would you go to
bed with me for 1,000 pounds?"
Shaw supposedly asked an at tracllve woman at a social affair.
'"M - m - m. yes.'" s he
murmured.
"How about 10 pounds?"' persisted Shaw.
"What do you think I am?"' she
angrily! replied.
"We've already established
that."' sa!d Shaw. "We're just
haggling about price now."'
In the House and the Senate.
though, S&amp;Ls didn't haggle about
price.
Of the $11.669.499 contributed
to congressional candidates and
political party committees,
$3,176.524 went to 81 members of
the Senate lor an average contribution of $39,191, while $3,606,505
went to 184 members of the House

for an average contr ihu lion of
$19.600 .
To show the high er impnrtance
of senators, both senators In 34
states received S&amp;L interes ts
contributions.
But what were the S&amp;L Interests buying? Call It protectton . A
classic example was a May 1987
vote to ball out fallin g S&amp;Ls . The
Reagan admlntslratlon had proposed $15 billion In bailout fund s
with the requir em ent thai the
S&amp;L Industry pay lntere't on the
fund s.
No way the S&amp;Ls wanll~lto pay
all that Interest. They successfully lobbied to reduce the bailout
funds to $5 billion . When you own
the Congress, such vlctorfes
come easily.
Even George Bush cannot
avoid the S&amp;L taint. and this has
nothing to do with the pain he Is

Chuck Stone
suffer! ng over I he obv lou s unethical behavior of his son. Nell, who
was a member of the board of
directors of the scandal-ridden
Silverado S&amp;L. Bush's 1988preslctenllal campaign raised $600,000
from what Common Cause called
"'Illegally soft money contributions of $100.000 !rom six lndlvld·
ual s associ ated with savings and
loans."
Paradoxically. Common
Cause's 26-page analysis does not
reveal a pa It ern of corruption as
much as II sorrowfully demons! rates how one segment of
corporate leaders can lobby
successfully to protect their
Interests even at the expense of
corrupting the best Interests of
the American people and the

economy.

Today in history
By United Press lnlernatlimal
Today Is Sunday, July 22, the 203rd day ofl990, with 162 to follow .
The moon Is new.
The morning stars are Venus, Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Cancer .

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- A-3

New drunken driving law will -----Area deaths----take effect next Wednesday

Accused serial killer confesses

those who help

for all her help and underst and·
l ng In her return to us.
A missi ng c hild Is a lhlng I ha t
worries you so and tts always
nice to know someone Is ther e t o
hr lp at such times Thanks lo
C'veryo ne.
Mr. and Mrs . Shelby Pi ck ens

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

Me i.us

BACK TO THE
FUTURE PART 3
SKI PATROL

Inland Datlv Press Association and lh r
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C(llltltG SOON! "ARACHNOPHOBIA" &amp; PATRICK SWAYlE 1n

"GHOST~

POMEROY - F lorence Freeman, 83. Lincoln Heights. Pomer cy. died Friday. July 20. 1990 at
Overbrook Center I n Middleport
following an extended Illness.
Born Aug. 31, 1906. she was a
daughler of t he late Georgr
Ca l vin and Na ncy Starcher
Sherry. She was a homemaker.
She Is survived by three sons.
Richard K. Freeman, Pomeroy:
Robert K Freeman. Cheshire:
and Jack Freeman. Middleport;
two sisters, Helen Wise , New
Cumberland. W.Va.; and Ka ·
thryn Lllless, St ubenville; seven
grandc hildren, Joseph Freeman .
Jon Freeman, and Robert Frr•p.
man . all of Pomeroy; David A .
Freeman. Gallipolis: Margaret
Ann Freeman , Cheshire; Shicla
Ferguson, Tell City . Ind.; and
Jacquilln Ann Walburn. Gallipo~
lis ; fou r great grandchpldren.
and several nieces and nephews .
In addition to her parent s she
was preceded In death by three
sisters. May Sherry, Etta !Sally 1
Harris. and Anna Harris; three
brothers. Abe !Mik el. George,
and Frank Sherry .
Services will be Monday al 1
p.m. a t Ewing Funeral Home in
Pomeroy with Rev . C.J. Lemley
offi ciating. Bu rial w i ll be in
Hi ghla nd Memori al Garde ns.
Lakeland. W.Va .
Friends may c all al th e funer al
home on Sunda y from 2 to 4 p.m .
and 7 to9p.m

Ezra E. Sheets
POMEROY - Ezra E. Sheet s,
70. Reedsville. died suddenly a t
his res iden ce on Friday, Ju lv 20.
19911.
A re tired carpent er and
farmer . Mr. Sheets was born
March 29 . 1920 In West Vi r gin ia
He was a son of the late John and
Alice Fields Dotson Sheet s Mr.
Sheets was member of th£• Silver
Ridge Church and the Caqx-n
tpr' s Local Union No. 6~0
Mr. Sheets is survived by hi s
wife of 50 years. Frances M. Hal l
Sheets. Reedsville; three sons.
Ezra Jim Sheets. Gallipolis;
David (Mary ) Sheels. Reeds
ville; and John Sheets. Colum bus; two daughters. Sandra
IJeffl Wrikeman. Reedsville:
and Delilah Ritchie. Richmond.
Va .: one brother. John Sheet s.
Ga llipolis;
12 grandchild ren.
eight grea t grand children. and
several nieces and nephPw s.
In addition to his parents. Mr.
Sheet s wa s preceded in death bv
a son. Donald Sheets, and one
brother. Charl es Sheets
Services will be todav !Su nday) at2p.m. altheSIIvcr Ridge
Church with Rev . Duane Sydcn
str lcker officiating. Burial will
be in Silver Ridge Churc h
Cemetery
Friends m ay cal l at th e church
two hours prio r to thf&gt; SC'rvirc
Arra nge mrnt s arP bPing handled
by th e Ewi ng Funeral Homl'.

daught er.
Vicki Spl•ncer ·
Merryman, Atlanta . Ga.: one
broth er. John Robert Spencer,
Lakeland. Fla ; and one grand ·
daughter. K athr y n MPrryman.
Atlanta . Ga.
Mr . Spencer wa s pn'l'P&lt;:kd in
death by his wife. Fran('es in
1981.
Mem orial service s w tll be held
Tuesd ay m or n i n~ at the Pome·
roy Unll ed Methodi st Churc h at
10 30 a.m . Visitation at Ewtng
Funeral Home wi ll be Monday
from 7-9 p.m .
Buri al will be later in the
Restwood Crme1 Pry in Hin ton ,
W.Va .
In lieu of flower s donations
may be m ade to thr Am l'rican
Cancer Societ y.

son . Leo Curti s. and a brother.
Bl adie Curds
Services will be Tuesday at 1
p.m . at the Ewi ng Funeral Home
in Pomeroy wt h J . David Pre·
ntice officiating . Burial will be In
Hemlock Grove Ce metery . Ma ~
son ic services will be held
Monday at 7 30 p.m at the
funeral home .
Friend s m av call at the funeral
home on M ond ay f rom 610 9 p.m .

Leo S. Curtis

RIO GRANDE - The Nursing
Home Area Training Center at
the Area Agency on Aging In Rio
Grand e. wi ll be offering lis
"'28-hour state-approved train
the- tra iner program"' Aug . ~- 9
from 8 a. m . to 5 p.m . on the
campus of lhr University of Rio
Grande .
The co urse . fully approved by
the Ohio Department of Health ,
will prepare RN 'sa nd LPN' s who
have had at least two years of
experience in ca ring for the
eldl"rly or the chronically ill t o be
a prog ram coor dinator or a
pr imary i nstructor in anty sta te·
ap proved TC E program t nurse
aid training) as req uired by
OBRA in 1987 for all long term
care nurse aldess .
The cou rst' ha s bren approved
IJv ONA for JO co ntract hours of
l';mtinuing pducation (for RN's1
and by LPNAO for J6 9 contract
hours for LPN" s
For an applic ation or to regis ·
ter. ple ase contact Barbara
Caldwell at 1·614·245-5306 .

POMEROY Leo Sa muel
Curtis, 83, Pom Proy, died Fri ·
day . .July 211. 1990 at Veterans
Memorial Hosp ital following an
extend ed i llnrss
Born Aug . 9. 1906 at H• •m lock
Grove, he was th e son of th p latp
Henry and Ploona Ca rpPr Curtis .
He was a carpente r and mPmtX'r
of the Hemlock G r ove Church o f
Christ. He was a Navy Vete ran of
World War II. member of Amcri
can L egion Drew Webster Post :!9
in Pomeroy . and the F&amp;AM
Lodge No. 453 i n Cheste r.
Mr. Cu r ti s is survi \·ed by his
wife. Jessir A. Curt is. Ponwro_
, ·:
a daughter. Donn a Vance. Li ver
marC'. Ca lif.: two so ns. Larr.v
CurtJ S. Newark. Dr I. ; and Alber t
CurtJ s. Po meroy: a broth er .
Jewe ll Curti s: eight grandchild
ren. four grea t g rand chtldren.
and srve ral niccrs and nephew s.
In addtlion to hi s parent s. M r.
Cu rti s wa s preceded in death by a

Train the
trainer set
by Agency

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1 YEAR CD SPECIAL!

ANNUAl
PERCENTAGE
RATE

Harold Spencer
POM E ROY - Harold " Ja ck "'
Spencer. 63, Pomeroy. died Sat urday. July 21. 1990 at Holzer
Medical Center foUo ..ing an
extended Illness .
Mr. Spencer Is surv ived by a

COLONY THEATRE
FRI. THRU THURS.

This 12 month variable rate CD with an annual in·
terest rate of 7. 7 5 Ofo is lOmpounded daily to pro wide
an effedin annual yield of 8.06%. This llrtifilate of
deposit requires a minimum deposit of $2,500 and
has a floor rate of 7.2 5 "'o. There is a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal.
•Annual Yield based on initial offering rate .

446-2631

1-800-468-6682

Ohio Valley Bank
Mf"mlwr FfJIC
4 (omf"nient Loration s

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
AO"SSION 11.10
~6-0913

CARDINAL
DRY CLEANERS
446-9495

6 MONTH

ANNIVERSARY
SALE

�Page-A-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

weal news briefs
Deputies make arrest
GALLI P OLIS - Rona ld E Morris, 40, Ga llipolls , was
arrested a nd Inc a rcera ted by the Ga llia Count y She rif f's
Depar !rne nt for a violation of a res tra inmg order .

Lawmen issue citations
GALLIPO LIS - Mark A. Stanl ey, 24, P a tno l, was ri ted for
failure to maintain a n assured clea r di sta nce a head by lhc
Gallipolis Pollee Depa r unent.
·

.Teacher hirings named
; GALLIPOLIS - The Galllpolis Cit y Sc hool Boa rd approved
· the hiring of 11 new Ins tructors for the 1990-91 sc hool yea r a t ils
:re gula r m eet ing Tu esday night. Those new e mployees a re .
:Cheryl Shea rd , Voca tio na l Home Economics. Donna Thomp.son, Special Educat ion. K-12; Lauren De Mars, K -8; Jul ie La ne,
;K-8; Lynn Rees, K-8; Lorn Patterson, K 8; Angela Pri ce, L.D .;
.Chris Tawney, GAH S Englis h; Chris Bullion, GAH S Voca l
:Music; Joseph Vall , GAHS Socia l Stud ies ; Rober t Cornwe ll.
;Athletic Tr a iner .

No wyoffs at city
GA LLI POLIS- Although reve nue is not comi ng in a t the ra te
·tha t city bud ge ters e &lt;p&lt;'cted. the re will be no lay ·off s of c itv
:per sonnel as has bE"en rumored .

·

: "We a re low on funds, but there a re no lay -off s, " sa id Audtl or
p ebbie Hughes ''Re venue is not coming in lik e we f'x prct ed a nd
lhe wa ter fund was over budgeted, but there are no layoffs ."
· City Manager Da te !m an al so wa nted to squPirh th e rum ors .
" We spent m o n r~. on the Bicent e nnial Celebration in advanC('
.and we' re j ust letting thr rt•venue catch up with our
~x p&lt;'ndit u r es .

July 22. 1990

Local man included
in U-Save club
GALLIPOLIS - Loca l res ident, Al an Eva ns of Ga lllpol is .
has been inducted int o U·Savp
Auto Re ntal' s newl y crea ted
E xecutive Club . The a nnonce·
m ent was made J u nP 21 a t th£'
Six th Annual U·SavP Na ti onal

GALLIPOLIS - Teresa Whit ·
tington, direct or of Sou theaster n
Business Colege, has released
the achelvem e nt Iist for sprin g
quar ter . To arhrirve this honor.
studen ts mus t ha ve a 3.5 or
better, out of a possible 4.0 grade
point average , and have ta ken at
least eight c redit hours.
Students o btaining 4.0 aver·
ages are Michelle Adkin s, Sandi

Convrnt1on .
The Executi ve Club recognizes
fra nchises who have achieved a
fleet size of 15 to 24 ve hicles .
Founded in 1979, U-Save Auto
Rental of Am eri ca has becom e
one of the fastes t growing fran -

OOMPD creep held
at Raccoon Creek

a r ound t hP Ha ccoon CrcPk a rea
a nd their way of life.
The seco nd pa rt of th p ac 1i v i1 y

was led by Ba rry Pa ssm ore.

Co le, Angela McKee, Ke lly Nelson, Belle Po lcyn , Darla Roush,
Lau ra Smith, Julie Spires and
J oy Thompson .
Stud ent s with a 3.5 or better are
Nikki J ohnson , Danelle Jo hns,
Dixie McDona ld, Gerrl Miller,
Odessa Proffitt , Barbara Samour , She ila Triplett , Kare n Wall
and Li sa Whaley.

HOLZER CLINIC~
SIX BOARD CERTIFIED OBSTETRICIANS

HELPING YOUR
"SPECIAL DELIVERY"
TO ITS FINAL
DESTINATION:

eco log ist w ith the U.S. Army
Corps of E ngineers. Passmore
provided informatlon regard ing
the various plants found in the

creek and then also provided the
va r ious ne t s and se ines used to

look at the differe nt fish a nd
other aqau tic life.
The fi s h that we re caught
includ ed grass pickerel, bluegill
sunfish. bluntnose a nd othe r

Supreme Court nominee view on abortion will be examined
WASHINGTON (UP!) - With
Roe vs. Wade hanging by a
thread at the Supreme Cou r t, the
next nominee's vle"'S on the right
to abortion will be closely exam·
lned - especially among Interest
groups devoted to preserving or
striking down the right.
Those opposing or supporting
a bortion rights are sure to use
whatever clout they have to put
pressure on President Bu sh and
the Senate, which mus t approve
Bush's choice.
Groups such a s the Nationa l
Abortion Right s Action League
that played a central role In the
defeat of Robert Bark's nomination In 1987 are sure to rene w the

Weather
South Ce ntral Ohio
Occasion a l shower s &lt;md thun -

d Prs torm s. high around RO. The

V!NTO I'\ - Nort h Ga ilia Hi g h Sc hool ba nd wi ll beg tn
pr ac tices for lh l' Ga llia Coun ty J unio r Fa ir on Mo nda v at 1t1
a .m . la sting unti l 11; 30 a. m . at the NG HS band room ·
: The band will practi ce Monda y throug h Frida.v . All rnl' mbns
ere expect e d to att e nd .

A chane e of shower s and
thund Pr s tor m s M o nd ay a nd
m ost!y fair T uesd ay and WC'dnc s
dav . The hig hs will hf' from thP

PC System

mid 70s to lhr mid HOs a nd thP
lows will be mainly in the 60s.

Cut '22570

of center when he was In vo lved in an accident on Town sh ip Roa d
J er r y Al es h i r e, .J r . 20, Syracu sf'. wa s tra \'Pl ing northOOu nd
when he w ent Jpft of center o n a curvr and struck a c ar d r ivPn b\

cont ra band reco ve red i n e-a ch sea r c h.
Court is not generally in ses sion on Satu r da y but a ccurd i ng to

Mrs. Warne r , Meigs Count y Probat e Judg e fiobe rt Bu c k agrpcd
to a rra ign the defendan ts.
Names are being withheld at this tim e.
Also Indict ed In Friday's grand jury ses sio n, a ccordmg to
Mrs . Warner . were Jose Scott on two c ha rges , one! or a ttempt ed
murder of Ronald Cremea ns , and one for burglary; a nd J o hn
Cline on two charges, one of grand th eft auto, a nd one of fleeing
and eluding law enfo rceme nt office rs .

low As S15 Per Month •

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!.UNSTAR SERIS GARDEN TIIACTORS

PO MEROY - 1'\ine de fenda nts . who we re ind ict ed in
Frid ay 's sessio n of the Meigs Count y Gra nd Ju rv. wrrr
exp&lt;'c ted to be a r ra igned Sa turday m orning , accord in g to Me ig s
County Ass is tant Prosecutlng Attorn ey Linda R Wa rner
A tota l of 13 defendants wc•re indicted on 19 cou nls of d r ug
rela ted charges, Mrs . War ner s ta ted. She went on to s av th a t
th er e had also been two searc hes of pr rmi ses and c a r ~ with

low As $40 Per Monttl •

c"'or monitm. mouse

·

Drug indictments handed down

200-ChanneiScanner

A•oiloble in 16-18 &amp; 20 H.P .
..... (S.nlt• 201 ............. (20 kp)
•Avt.-atk trtlftt ...16en
.,.. chhhlng. lnfM!Io ,,_; dMia
-.!", 41" ., 61Y ' durft-*';.,., ..... .,.

....

~~~

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

_~

ce11hvr.
•T111rt U " hlrtl6111 ...W.t

····filM

jNtWW

NEW OFFICERS - Ohio Valley Christian
School thanks lhls year's Booster Club officers for
a great year. Left to right are Tom Gooch, vice

. Separatetlems1524 .70

390 Fri day .

Donald Da vidson. 49, P omerov.
~a onP was injured i n the cfa sh .

NEW LOW PRICE!"'

5
tr0

~

POl'IIEROY - A Me igs County rnJn was cit ed for dr iv in g Jpft

Low-Cost Mobile Cellular
Phone for Road Safety

1299 S299*

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Patrol issues citation

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'200

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3

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Monitor Police , Ftre, Aviation ,
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Extended trequency

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coverage- even has the new

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•INctrl PTO In PI' and"' tnt-eo atlach,llflfo
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advanced edtttng teatures and B-1 zoom . #16-B52

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4th 8o Main . Ro odsvitlo, Oh.
PH . 378 -6126

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tly needs on the road #17-1076

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27995 Was
1990 Catalog

-

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Remote, dtgitat tuning,
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Kitchen ttmer. #12-1570

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Computer seminar set
RIO GRANDE - A series of
day ·long computer seminars entitled, " How to Turn on the
Computer and More ." Is being
offered In Augu st and September
by Buckeye Hills Career Center' s
Adult Services Deparunent .
Three different types of seminars are being offered: •'In traduction to the IBM-PC," "'Introduction to DOS Commands ,"
" WordPerfect Software
Training."
"lntrod'u ctlon to the IBM-PC"
will be held August 22, from 9
a.m. to 3 p.m. In the Business
Co mputer Lab at Buckeye Hills
Career Center. The course Is
specifically designed for novices
a nd emphasizes developing
hands-on skills and confidence in
using personal compute r s. The
cost for the seminar Is $25 and
pre- r egistration Is required . The
same seminar wtll al so be
offe red Augu st 29 .
"Introduction to DOS (Dis k
Op&lt;'ratlng System! Commands
will be held on Sept. 5 from 9a.m .
to 3 p .m . Participant s will gain
hands-on skills In learn ing DOS
co mmands such as formatting,
copying and e ra s ing files . setting
up d(rectorles, Pte. The seminar
witt also cost $25 p&lt;'r person and
participants must be prP ·
re gistered.
·'WordPerfect Software TrainIng - Beginnin g' ' will be offered
Sept. 10 from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m . In
the Center' s lab. WordPerfect Is
the most popul ar word proces sIng program In the bu sines s
world . User s of WordPerfec t find
11 easy to get jobs, upg rade the ir
present position. o r just beco me
mo re produ ctive . This course
witt cover the basics of the
progr am . Typing skills and pre-

vious computer ·e xperienc e arc
suggested . Th e co st for

se minar Is

~

th e

pe r son .

"WordPerf ect Softwa\e Train Ing - Intermediate" will be
offe red Sept. 17 from 9 a .m . to 3
p.m .
Interested persons may re gi ster by sending a check or money
order to : Adult Se rvic es .
P .O. Box 157, Rio Grand e, OH ,
AM/FM Headset

KIDNEYSTONELITHOTRIPSY

Cut 28%

1788
Stereo . #12-t45

2~~
Ba!\enes

Memory

Cut 27%

Car Speakers

Physical Therapy
program graduates
local relative

33o/o0tt

1095 :-:s 3995

Wu 59.95 In
1990 Catalog
2-way. #12-t706
Pllr

With case. 165-934

At Pleasant Valley llospltal. we've put a revolutionary technique to work
tn our community for tho"" who suffer fmrn painful kJdney stones.
It's known as shock wa"" lithotripsy. But we call it the "Stone Cru s he r. "
With ltlhotrlpsy. dodors use sound waves instead of a scalp&lt;) to reduce
kidney stones to a One oand, which can then be passed painlessly through
urine. That's good ntw~~ for kidney stone sufferers, becau"" that means no
surgery. Less paln . A faster recovery. And lo~r costs . And you don't have
to travello Charleston or Columbus to Ond lithotripsy terhnolo,zy . WEVK
BROUGHT TilE "STONE CRUSHER" 10 VOU .
Call Pleaoant Valley Hospital at (304) 675 -4340, Ext . 311 .. or cons ult
your personal ph~tclan .. to Rnd out If lithotrlp• y ran help you .

eiiiiAf'IIIC NIIW
Sf'AIIDAIIIIS
PROVEN LEADERSHIP
Over 7000 USA klcalions. 39.000
ell'C)\oyees. seven R&amp;D centers ,
27 USA anlllouJoverseas manufaC1uring plants

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CNer 1500 engineers and technic~ns deve~. evaluate and test
to our eucting standards

Nobody Comp•,.•

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
The family of professionals
Valley Dnve, Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550 (304) 675-4340

Check Your Phone Book for the Radio Shack Store or Dealer Nearest You

Moat Major CNdlt
Carda Welcome

SWITCHMU fOUCH·UHJ I'UIJi£ f11D* wart (II'I IIOfl lonl nllk*' inn n.tbl. r IfNI lllmg tll'lly •
trOQf'f IIIII) lirlls. ~ ten still liSt
lleMI:H JtQIIIMO IOIIH . . . lltmMM lonQ·dillnl Mil ~ lllftlictl_ ftC ~ '*::4 lor P¥1f bs W. 5eiVk1 whll• $II
._.., !'IIWitlilrltkln nl mir*rf.lll'llll'fia o:n:n1n11nt 11t11 RIIID SNell . . . llfi(IIIII'MI'IIf ac.at .,.,. ~by st~• llll' !$511111 ~ ~tkln) S.. 111n m111111f fCf -

• Radio Shack ValuePtuse revolving credit.

1

on

And if Bush doesn't r ealize the
vise he Is In, Texas Republtcan&amp;
for Lite spelled It out.

GALLIPOLIS - Joe Bar tee, 23, Bidwe ll, pled guilt y to
op&lt;'rat lng without a driver 's ltcense in Gallipoli s Munclpal
Court. He was fined $100 plus costs.
Roxanne Hale, 30, Rt. 2, Vinton, pled guilty to opera ting
without a driver' s license a nd was fined $100 plu s costs .
William For.;ythe, Sandu sky, pled guilty to domes tic vio lence
In Gallipolis Municipal Court. He was fined $100 plus cos ts.
Michael Mayes, Rt. 2, Point Ple asant, W.Va ., pled guilty to
attempted theft . He wa s fined $100 plus costs .
Ron Blanchard, Point Pleasan t, W.Va. , had his bond set at
$25,000 and 10 p&lt;'rce nt pa id In Gallla Coun ty Common Pleas
Court Friday . Blanchard Is charged with three counts of drug
trafficking .

''

.41116:

·

PRICES APPLY AT ~~AITICI~&gt;JIINQI
STORES

ATHENS, Ohio- Lola McKinney, daughte r of Mr . and Mrs .
Bob Fleshman , Gallipolis. graduated summa cum laude from
Ohio University's School of Phys·
leal Therapy on June 9, 1990.
McKinney was selected by the
school's !acuity to rece ive the
Joy Boyd Memorial and Out·
standing Service Awards. The
Joy Boyd Award recogniZes the
physical therapy student who
demonstrates academic merit,
protessloonallsm. and dedication
to the field of physical therapy.
The Outstanding Service Award
Is presented for contribution to
therapy oi'Jantzallons, commit·
tees, aad participation In special
assignments given by the School
of Physical Therapy Director
and faCility . McKinneY has accepted a position u a staff
pbyslcal therapia! In Ft. Myers,

Fla.

lD=:o

v Ched ut out/
NIKE
AVIA
KEDS
REEBOK
BROOKS
CONVERSE
BRITISH KNIGHTS

0
0
0
0
0

hos pital's Medical Office Build Ing. Appointment s a re r equired
and may be m a de by calling 1304 1
675-1759.
Ver ma nl. who earned his medi cal degree from the University
College of Medical Science In
New De lh i. India , Is a me mber of
the American Medic al Associa tion and the Americ an Soc iety of
Clinical Oncology .
He and his wife are th e parents
of two childre n.

0

0

_.

•

.,

'

219 N. Second
Middleport- 992-5627

UMMER BE T SALE
UP
NVOICE
TO $15 0 UNDER

Trustees meet
KYGER- The Cheshire Township Trustees will meet Tuesday ,
July 24 at 5: 30 at the township
building at Kyger . The meeting
will be op&lt;'n to th e public.

45674. Early regis tratio n Is e ncouraged and pre-regis tra ti on Is
required.

New 1990 Dodge Spirit

New 1990 Dodge Dakola

~ ~ l :\i;' ·\ '!"
......
'
I
~ . .!"":l_,.f

BIG BEND YOUTH FOOTBALL
LEAGUE 1990
SIGN UP DATES
July ·14, 21 &amp; 28
10 A.M. until Noon

8ft . bed , ve. automatic , casse11 e.
Ad&gt;Jantage Pack t

Pleasers Restaurant

New 1990 Nissan Sentra XE

698 West Main StrHt
Pomeroy

SALE .. . . .. 5 10,934

1500 ~~~grtE
, __ .,~,.1'
~

$

iftl' .

j

t:-9

.,f

SALE .... s7 405

Automati c. air . casse tte, split
benc h seal. rear del ros ter.

OMLY'158 PER MOMlH

$

SALE ... ... s10,483

S7QO INVOICE
UNDER

1000 ~~~g~RE
Sundance

New 1990 Nissan Pickup

~
....

~~~ ~~-

Furthor Information Con Be Obtained At That Time.

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.
FAMILY PRACTICE

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

SALE .... s7424 SALE .... s7422 SALE .... s7858

600 ~~~g~CRE

5

ONLY $158 PER MONTH

5

500 IN~~Pc~R

$

1000 ~~~gi~RE

ONLY s158 PER MONTH

•Prices after rebate . Payments with rebate down plus tax &amp; title -

66 month'S .

YONE

AlL LOCAL TRADES ·Pickup
Stereo. sliding rear
wimlow, stripes
(POINT PLEASANT MEDICAL CENTER)

25TH &amp; JEFFERSON AVENUE
POINT PLEASANT

86 Ford Taurus
AuiOI'(l&lt;1tic , V6 . air
full power

Wa gon. 5 speed
crutse . cassette

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86 Putiac

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Aulomatic. air. cassette .
wnroof, power windows , .

4 doo r. 5 speed .
greal economy

86 V2 Nissan King Cab

4x4 . stereo. jum
sea ts , one own eS . . . . . .

Our Medicare Supplement Insurance
is among the best...
good coverage, good price and
good neighbor claim service

--

88
Automatic.

88

Ask Aboul Health I118Ul'IUICe
'111e State Fann 1'ay

wou SNOWIIIN

CAU: (ornor of lltird
lYe. &amp; Stato St.

,.._ 446·4290
H- 446--4511

Galllptlis. 011.
a good neighbor. S121e Fann is there.
UATI fAIM

&amp;
Stat&lt; farm Mutual Aulomobik 1......-.nc&lt;: Company
Honx: Olli&lt;r: Btoomlngton, tttlnois
Nne l,'""""'tal wkh "' nUif!ll"d t... lht-1 ' ~

titM:TM~m

ur ~ ,_..-.: "'tplll. ( :.11 h

npllnlilklft uf brndilllllld

""**"-..

•

•

.••

president, Debbie Hughes, treasurer, Debby
Simmons, secretary , Mike Simmons, president.

price to pay tor the safety and convenience your fam-

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would be a na t io nal disas te r, and
NOW vows to mobilize the
American pu blic and co nvince
Congress to rejec t a ny a nti abortion nominee."

rights and the ir ver y liv es, NOW
has no c hoice but to oppose, tooth
a nd nail, a ny nominee who
threa tens to eviscerat e our con stitutional right s.
' 'To over rurn Roe vs . Wade

Guilty pleas entered in court

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va . Pleasant Valley Hospital recently announce the appointment
of Dr. Vlnay Vermanl , an oncologist and hematologist , to It s
medical staff. according to MIchael G. Sellards , executive
director of the hospital.
Vermanl , who sp&lt;'ciallzes in
the diagnosis and treatment of
malignant diseases and di seases
and disorders of the blood, will
have offic es In Suite 11 of the

Extended Fort' cast
Mo11day through Wedn esday

NGHS band practices slated

Is the time to put reality behind
th at rhetoric . "
~oily Yard , president of the
National Organization for
Women. said that with " so muc h
at s take, pa r ticul arly wompn 's

Pleasant Valley
adds oncologist

OBSTETRICS &amp; GYN ECOLOGY

c hance of r a in b 90 per cen1.

.

••

member s of the court, were
di sappointed that Roe was going
to be taken apart piece by piece.
" For a year, the right to choose
In this nation has hung by a
thread, " satd Kate Mlchelman,
executive director of NARAL.
"With Justice Brennan's r esignation, that thread Is now unravelin g. Unless there Is a massive
and unprecedented political m obilization , Justice Brennan ' s departure may be a death knell for
the tight to choose In Ameri ca ."
Ml chelman noted that the
Republican Party has recently
sought to di stance Itself from It s
anti-abor tion stand as a result of
losses at the pol ls and said ·'t hi s

fight as are anti -a bortion groups ,
who hop&lt;' the next justicewlil join
the more conservative members
of the court to overturn the
landmark 1973 Roe vs . Wade tha t
es tablished a constitutional ri ght
to a bortion .
The court has been mo ving In
that direction sin ce th e a ddition
of Justice Anthony Kennedy, but,
wtth a slim, 5-4 m a jorit y, the
steps are small and halting.
In 1989, the court for th e fir st
time reversed direc tion on a bortion and gave s ta tes more r ights
to regulate the proc edure that Is
done 1.5 million times a year in
America. While conserva t ives
cheered, they , along with some

HOME

of m innow s, sPv er al
spec ies of shiner s and hybrid
sunfish

S pt"Cif'S

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page- A-S- :

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

Business list announced

chi sores in the nation.

GA LLI P OLIS - On J une 24.
0 .0 . Mcin ty re Park Di s u·ict held
a "Creep Down the Creek' · at
R accoon Creek Park.
Those a ttending e njoye d an
informa l d iscuss ion led by Wendell Tope of the Raccoon Creek
Developm e nt Co mmittee. T he
discussion centered around thf'
p&lt;'Opir who orig in a lly settl ed

...

July 22. 1990

air.

4x4 . XLT, automatt c,
air . lull power .

New
Fiflh Avenue . auJomaltc. atr
cassette, till , cruise . all power ,
leaJner. one owner . . . .....

$4 995

•

�Page A-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

July 22, 1990

Along the River

Artrip appointed to school board

The Hayward Building

French City cage tradition
started at Third and State
By JAMES SANDS
Basketball in Gallipolis proba ·
bly dates to about1889. when the
Gal lipolis Gym- ·
naslum was or·

ga nized In the
Hayward Build
i ng on Third
Avenue

and

Stale Street.
Mos t basket ball games played In town In the
1890s and first part of the 20th
century Ia 1917 were, however, In
the Armory .
That was the name give to the
third floor of the old Aleshire
Building at 33-35 Court St.
Gallla Academy u.o;ed the Armory as the home court, as did
the town's lndependentGaiUpo!ts
Gllllgans
In some ways the basketball
played at the Armory would be
barely recognizable to modernday roundball devotees. In the
early days one cou ld only dribble
once after having received a
pass, and that dribble had to be
a bove the waist and performed
with both hands . A player could
bo unce the ball only once and
then he had to pass it. One could
not shoot ellher until he had
ta ken one dribble .
Another Interesting rule was
that the team that last touched
the ball befon&gt; II went out or
bounds got to throw It back In
bounds Instead of the n&gt;verse as
Is now observed. Obviously there
were some wild scrambles at the
si deline. some of which con-

tlnued down the stairs If the ball
wa s pushed of! the playing floor
to the ex it.
Into th e ear ly part of the
prese nt cen tury , on small floors
like the Armory, part of the wall
might be co nsidered In bounds;
this not only Included the side
walls but the back walls as well.
It was also legal for a player to
climb up the wall with his feet
and dunk the ball. Hence both the
ball and a player could be
bounced off th e wall and stJII be In
bounds. In the early 1900's the
back walls were ruled out of
bounds but the side walls continued In play for a few more
years .
Untll about 1917, lht• basket
wowd still be attached to the
back walls. The rule change that
year allowed for a two-foot end
zone whereby the basket could be
set out from the wall.
The scoring was basically the
same then as now. except that for
brief Interva ls the rules gave one
point to th e opposing tea m If one
team co rnrniled three co nsecu tive fouls . Throughout this era a
team could designate a player to
shoot all the team's free throws.
regardless of who was fouled.
Ga ll la Academy In the 1910's
had some strong teams. In 1915
the quintet was so powerful that
against Middleport the coach
used the second string the enUre
first halt. The scan&gt; at the half
was 5-4 Middleport, and the final
score was 47-10 Gallipolis. The
Thompsons took their nickname
from one of the earlv successful

Three get exchange students
GALLIPOLIS - Three area
fa milies will grow by one In
August when they host Interna tio nal exc hange students.
Herman and Elena Sprague,
Bidwell. Linwood and &amp;ver ly
Young, Ga llipolis. and L.T. and
Sheila Preston, Vinton, will each
give a female exchange student a
home until July 1991. The fami lies are participating in the
Youth for Understa nding tYFUi
exchange to leach the girls about
life In the United Stales .
The Spragues wtU l)ost Tulre
Marla Pekkola from Finland.
She wi ll be attending North
Ga llla High SchooL The Youngs
will host Blrgltte Schmidt from
Denmark. Schmidt will be at-

tending Gallla Academy High
SchooL The Prestons will host
Yazmln Alexandra Mendizabal
of Ecuador. Mendlzabal will
attend North Gailla High School.
About 4,000 U.S. famllles open
their homes to YFU students
each year.

1110 AVE. a fTlt ST., DCWfHI'OWN HUh'TJIQTON

By MINDY KEARNS
OVP News Stall
POINT PLEASANT - Dr.
WIUiam Artrip has been appointed to 1111 the position created
by the resignation of Chester
Pyatt on the Mason County
Board of Education. Pyatt resigned effective Friday to move
to Florida where he has accepted
a transfer from the postal
service.
Artrip's appoinunent will take
effect foUowing approval of the
minutes that include Pyatt's resignation. Those minutes will be read
at the next regular meeting on Aug.
6, 6:30p.m.
Artrip, 8 resident of Magistaial
District 4, will serve on the board
until a replacement can be voted on
by the pubtic in the general election
in Novenlher.
At the beginning of the special
session on Friday, called solely to
discuss and/or appoint a new member, Superintendent Rick Powell
reminded members they had 30
days to appoint a member or the
matter wonld go to State Superin·
tendenl Hank Marockie. PaweD
also reiterated that no more than
two members could serve from the
same magisterial district
Brian Billings expressed that
with 30 days available to make a
decision, he felt there was no need
to ''rush into something."
It was evident the remaining
three members came to the meeting
with the goal of appointing the
temporary member, however.
Citing there were important is·
sues to come before the board right
away, Harry Siders said there was a
need to replace Pyatt as soon as
possible.
Board President Olston Wright
began the process, saying three
people had expressed an inlfreSt to
him for the position, Artrip and IWO
unsua:essful school board candidates from the May 8 election,
John Sayte and Paul Doeffinger.
Maxine Nibert and Billings mentioned the same three had contacted
them. Billings also suggested other
names that people had mentioned
as possible replacementS, although
Billings said !he individuals themselves had not contacted him.
Siders stated he had been approached by Aztrip and Doeffinger.
The possibility of interviewing
the three was discussed, with Bil·
lings stating, "If I was that interested (in the position), I would be
here to say my piece." None of the
mentioned
prospective
replacements w~re _present

New York pro teams. Other
favored early nicknames for
teams Included Celtlcs, Whirlwinds and Shamrocks.
In the 1920's Gallipolis has a
team called the Shamrocks that
from 1921 10 1925 won 46 games
and lost only seven. playing
semi-pro te 1rns from Huntington. Athens. Columbus, Charleston and even Buffalo, N.Y.In 1924
the Shamrocks were bested 22-18
by the traveling Buffalo Sllents
which Included some players
from the old Burtalo Germans,
who were the AAU World
Champs In the 1910's. Another
famous team to come to Gallipolis was the Columbus Panhandles. This team was better known
tor Its football skill. being one of
the original members of the
National Football League. Link
Robinson was the star of the
Shamrocks that also Included
Earlch, Davis, Dutch Ghrist,
GALLIPOLIS - There will be
Thomas, Angus King, Mllls,
a meeting at the Galli a Academy
Burkett, Odatler, Sales, O'Brien,
Band Boosters on Tuesday, July
Broyles and others. The Sham24 at 7:30p.m. ,In the band room.
rocks played some college teams
All parents of GAHS band
- Morris -Harvey, Ohio Northern
members are urged to attend.
and Rio Grande.
IAitery numbel'!!
In the early 1920's most of the
games were played at the high ·
CLEVELAND iUPli - Frischool. The era saw Gallla
day's winning Ohio Lottery
Academy achieve a first and only
numbers:
- the 1922-23 team made It to the
PICK·3
final four In Columbus, when&gt;
229.
they lost to &amp;llepolnt. The Blue
PICK·4
Devils won six straight tourna3997.
ment games before falling. In the
regular season that edition of the
GAHS unit defeated Columbus
Aquinas, Huntington High and
the eventual West Virginia state
champ - the Parkersburg Big
Reds . Bill O'Brien and Art
Phillips were the leading scorers
lor a team that finished 16·2. The
next year's team was 17-3. But
probably the most successful era
lor Blue Devil basketball was
1953-56, when 58 of 64 games were
won.

..........--~----t

SUMMER SALE DAYS

RACINE - Dairy farm s aren't
a rare sight In southeastern Ohio
but most dairy farms In this are ~
don't have Jersey cows. Even
fewer dairy farms have prizewinning Jersey cows. The Green
Hills Farm, located In the Nease
Settlement area of Meigs County,
ca n make this claim; they have
the best Jersey cows In the state
according to the Dairy Herd
Improvement Association.
About 120 cows, along with a
number of calves, steers and

heifers, call the Green Hills
Farm horne.
Most dairy farmers In this area
raise Holstein cows; Holsteins
are larger and make more milk
than other breeds of cattle. Th e
main difference between Jersey
and Holstein milk Is that Jersey
milk has more solids and rnllkfat
than the milk of other cows.
Because of this, Jersey milk Is
highly used for products such as
cheese and ice cream.

POMEROY - Units of the
Wright asked tor nominations, Meigs County Emergency Medl·
'Pith Niben nominating Artrip, and cal Service responded to six calls
BU!ings nominating Doeffinger.
for assistance on Friday.
Billings once again tried to hold
At 10:22 a.m. the Racine unit
off the vote, stating Pyatt's resigna- was called to Route 124on an auto
tion was effective July 20 and he accident In which Paul DeWees
felt the vote should wllit until after was transported to St. Joseph
midnigh~ which would he the Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va
beginning of July 21.
At 11:01 a.m. the Pomeroy unit
A 10-minute recess followed Bil· went to West Main Street for
lings' opinion as Powell attempted Keith Musser who was taken to
to telephone Prosecutor Damon Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The Middleport unit, at 3:30
Morgan, Assistant Prosecutor Wil·
p.m.,
responded to a call on Page
liarn Rardin, and Pyatt. Unable to
Stn&gt;et
lor JoAnn Keys who was
reach any of the three, the meeting
to
Veterans.
taken
resumed.
The Tuppers Plains unit went
Wright stated he felt provisions
should be stipulated in any to SUver Ridge at 4: 55 p.m. lor
fonhcom ing motion that an ap- Ezra Sheets who was taken to
poinunent would be effective upon Veterans. The unit was assisted
awrovat of the last meeting's by Pomeroy's squad.
At 6:54p.m. the Pomeroy unit
mmutes.
went
to Minersville for Connie
Billings interjected by Slating
Capehart
who was transported to
since legal counsel could not he
Veterans.
reached, he abstained from all fur.
The final call for assistance
ther action on the matter.
came
at 8:48 p.m. when the
Powell suggested three options
Syracuse
unit went to College
open to the board, including
Road
for
Patricia
Stanley who
postponing a decision, placing
was
taken
to
Veterans.
Doeffinger's name in the fonn of 8

~c\)O

Most Jerseys don 't make much
milk. According to John Rice.
countyextensionagenl, the average amount of milk produced by
a holstein is 18,519 pounds per
year (Including butterfat); the
average amount for a wrsey is
significantly less, 12,490 pounds
Including butterfat.
One of the Neases' Jersey
cows, Tessy's Magic &amp;auty.
made more milk than any other
Jersey In the s tate : 29,953
pounds, Including butterfat. in
1989. That's enough weight to
equal six cars and much more
weight than that given by the
average, but larger, Holstein.
This Is Tessy 's Magic &amp;auty's
third consecu!lve year of making
more than 20,000 pounds of milk.
The Nease family has had nine
cows that each produced over
100,000 pounds of milk In their
llle!lrne. Six of the nine are still
owned by the Ia rm.

bought their first milking ma chine and star ted sel ling grade-A
milk.
These figures aren't just
boasts. the Dairy Herd Improvement Associa11on has computer
files on I he entire herd and on
each Individual cow In the herd.
The Nease herd Is a DHI
test-herd.
The farm Is a family operation.
The two brothers. Fred and
Dave, run the farm but are
turning it over to their sons,
first -cousins Dan and Roger .
To Illustrate the family orientation of the farm, Dave's wife,
Jean, keeps the books on the
far m. Fred and Dave's mother,
Leah, has been associated with
the dairy busi ness for over 70
years.
I had to ask many questions to

The Green HIlls Farm had the
bes t Jersey herd in the state lor
1989. The rolling herd averagt•
reached It s high of 16,441 pounds
In November 1989: the ro ll ing
herd average is acquired by
adding up t11e total pounds of
milk giv en by a herd and then
dividing that number by thl'
number of cows In the herd .
The Nease herd also contains
five state class-leaders. These
cows give more milk than any

cow doesn't have much time to

other Jersey cow in thelr agt'

s ec\a\

MONDAY
4:00 PM to 9:00 PM

ebUt et
C\\eeS

c

B

The best Jersey cows produce s-moo-th milk on Racine farm

DR. WILLIAM ARTRIP

~~\.~,s

Section

July 22. 1990

EMS logs runs

Band booster
meeting planned

llwlr ltoml Fahlonl pun:....
S.llarttcr-

motion, or placin~ Artnp's name in
the form of a motiOn.
Niben made the motion to appoint Artrip to the pooition, with
Siders seconding. Wright made the
vote call 3.0. with Billings abstain·
ing.
Just prior to the motion and vote,
PPHS Principal Mic.'hael Whalen,
one of on Iy a few spectators in the
audience. requested recognition to
take the floor. Being first denied by
Powell, he was !hen denied by
Wright, who stated !he JXllPCr procedure to take the floor included
making that request at least 15
minutes prior to any meeting.

~imes- ientittel

FUTURE PRIZE- WINNER? - Three-year-old Jacob Nease
displays a polentlal prize winner. Most dairy farms don't keep
cows very long; either they produce milk or It's "down lhc road."

resolve my ignorance on dairy

matters.
F'or Instance, 1 ie3rned a herd
of dairy cat tle turns over every
three years . That means a new

prove Itself as a milk producer.
Roger Nease used an old football
analogy to demonstrate this.
"The best ones play a nd the rest
go on down the road."

However . to make life a little
easier on the cows (and the farm
hand!. the cows are allowed to
slay in free stalls . A free stall is
whet&gt;e every cow has Its own

individual stall: this keeps the
cows from soiling their own
bedding. It also makes It a little

class.
The Nease family has a long
histor y of farming in the Nease
Set Uement area. There haw·
been eight ge nerations of

Pasier to keep the stalls clean.
The farm sells milk to Brought on' s Da iry. Th e cows are milked

Neases' livlng in this area. The

snow. shin e, every morning and
p·;e ry afternoon. The trouble

Nzase family has lived on the
farm for abou t 140 years.
In 1940, the family farm
switched over to an all -Jersey

dairy farm . That's the year they

WHAT HAS FOUR LEGS AND FLIES? - A cow In summer.
This critter just can't seem to resist examining the camera in
closer detail.

at 5: 30 evrr y morning a nd again

at 5:30 in the aftern oon - rain.
with cows Is they don't recognize
holidays Cluislrrws. Thanksgiving. Fourth

or

Photos and text
By ]im Freeman
Times-Sentinel
Staff

.July ... the cows

have to be milked.

1

!

No Grills Or Specials
AI This Price

171 5 Eastern
Avenue
Gallipolis, Ohio
446-1065

107
Chestnut St.
Henderson,

W.VA.
675-3908

e're
en
....,an'

ere
FOUR GENERATION NEASE FAMU.Y -Pictured here are
the lour Nease family members who are presently active In the
Nease farm operation at Nease Settlement. From the !ell the four

generations are Dan. his father, Fred. Fred's hrother, Oavt•, and
his son, Roger. F'ront Dan's son, .lake, a nd his I(Teat-grandmolht'r,
Leah.

WRESTLING PARTNERS - Pour-year-old Katie Sayre, left,
and her nine-year-old sister, Kim , pose lor a picture In between
bouts with a frolicsome calf. The two girls are Dave's
granddaughters.

Hospital news
VETERANS MEMORIAL
Friday admissions - JoAnn
Keys, Middleport.
Friday discharges - Martha
Anderson. Rose Raub. and
Elmer Lee.

Bible school set
GALLIPOLIS -The New Life
Victory Center will hold Its
Vacation Bible School July 2.1-27
from 9:30-11:30 a.m. VBS Is lor
chlldn&gt;n ages two through 12, and
will feature crafts, Bible stories,
games and songs. Everyone Is
welcome.

Silver Run VBS
CHESHIRE - Vacation Bible
School will be held at Silver Run
Bapdst Church. Cheshire, July
23-27 from 6·8 p.m. A p~nlc will
be held Friday , July 27, and a
final program will be held
Sunday, July 29 at 7:30p.m. The
publiC Is Invited.

AREA RUGS
IM wool GOON from
madllneor hudi'Ndt.,.....
AllortN ...... F-ft'"'*-

No «twr dllcounb apply.

""'"-

_____ _

30ENTIRE STOCK OF WICKBR
(}f() TAtal AN ADDmONAL
/ (

When

you care for an elderly or disabled relative In your home, we know

you want to be there for them aa much •• potl&amp;ible. But we abo know there are timl!ll
when you need to take time out hom your day-to-day responalbiUtles to trave~
wcatlon or handle personal or busineN matten. That's wh!!ft you can call on CareGiver
Pluo at Ple11ant Vllley Nursing Care Cenh!r to care for your loved one.

OFP OUII UGUIAII PRICii

,FURNrruRE lc BASKETS

For more lnfonnatlon about how' CareGiver PIUJ can meet both your need•. and
tholll of the penon you care for, caD Carla King at (304) 675-5236.

. . . . 6audrlln0fi.Na atMrdilcoulllllppty.
VIIIIO..N_,JR-~ "'-1

PLEASANT VALLEY

Nursing Care Center
!lind HI Aold. Paint P'leun. WV :11111110 (!04)17U231

GREEN GOLD - ..Uialla Is what makes or breaks the dairy
Industry In southeastern Ohio. To most area dairy farmers, there
are lew slt~hls at1 welcome as field oflhlck, green alfalfa stretchlug
otflnto the distance.

BEST JERSEY IN THE STATE - Roger Neaae dlsplaJs Ute
Green IDII's Farm prize wlnniDI Jersey cow: Tessy'• Mapc
Beauty. Tessy's Magic Beauty produced 29,953 pounds of milk,

lacludlq butterfat, lUI year - more l~an any other Jersey In 1111'
state. For compariiQD, the aveta1e ~.erseJ produces about 12.490
pound• of milk In a Y~tar, -lncludlltg •liulterlal.

- - -----------------·- - - -

�Page- 8-2-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Job Bank
seeks orders
for work

~

The number to call is 446-7UINJ
\ sk for the job bank.

LISA M . VILLA:\UE\ .~

Villaneuva to
. .
go on mtssJon
with Catholic
group
I'IIFSHIRE - LISa M l ' tllanu
(' \'a . daughlPr of Dr. and Mrs .
l .S Vil lanur\·a. rece nt!; grLidu
.tt 1·d with hon ors. cum laudP.
!ro rn Gl'orgetown l n!vPr sitv
\\' a,h in gton. D .C .. with a bach e·~
111 1 nf &lt;1r r d egreE' major in
, ('l\llO mics a nd a mmor in
;' "~ chology .
She is present l y is Kyot o.
l.tpa n. wh rre. for 13 months,s hp
. . t·r ves a s a youth missionary
" rlh the Good Shepherd Catholic
\ fovr mc nt he lping to trach th e
F n 1~ lt &lt;:. h

languagp to .lap&lt;HlPSt'

\ nuths She plan s to pu1suP
~ t adua te s 1ud irs a ftrr tv. o ) P&lt;H &lt;..
of misston arv work

111.'/C pick up
rmzes set
POMEROY The Meigs
~ nt~· Hral th Dt' p&lt;utmrnt ha s
.rnhouncrd the fo il ol'.in g 1\l C
p tck up datPs a nd s hot d a tes for
-\ ugu st T hP! arc July 30and 31.
" 11 a m and 1 3 p m : Aug . 2, 3.
.t nd 6. 9 II a m and 1·3 p m
\l ;ikrupdatrs.ne Aug 13and 20
~ h ot dates for Augu st are Au g
~ I 11nd 28. 9 II a m and 1 .1 p m
&lt;

RI O GRANDE -The dedica·
1ton of the npwes t acadPm ic chair
at th e U niver sity of Rio Grande
ha s ber n scheduled for early
Augu st duri ng a plannedcelebra

tion of traditional Welsh must c
and culture
The c hair ts in graduate
education and is named for Ina
Alban, an educator In Oak Hill
and Columbus, who died i n Jun e
1989. The chair's dedlcalion wtll
occur duri ng theGymanfa Ganu.
the traditional Welsh chora l
concert , Sel for the Fme and
Performing Arts Ce nter at Rio
Grande at 7 p m ., fr iday. Aug . 3.
Dedication of the c hair will be
conduc ted bv Dr. Paul C. Hayes,
president of the universi t y, with
dl'd ication mu sic provided by D.
Merri II Davis, an early neighbor
and longtiml' fnend of Alban's. A
benedictio n will be given by the
!{ev . James AM Hanna. pastor
of the Firs t Prcsbvlerian Chu rch
of Oak Hill
An open r eceptio n hosted by
Ha ) es and his wife Dorothy will
bf' hE'Id m the wrs t seminar ar ea
of the James A Rhodes Studen t
Center following the dedrea tion
ott he c hair. They will beassis ted
by lhe executive rommittPe of
the Cardigan tformcrly Cardiff!
Welsh Club of Sout heas IL' rn Ohio .
The academic chair has been
l ong used by co lleges and univer ·
sitirs to mPmorialize indi vidua ls
v. hu havp made outstanding
co nt n butions . The c t1 a1r wtll
el l tr act

an outstanding sc holar

1.~

ho wtll reach at Rio Grande thr
maj01 it y of thP It me. but s pend
the tl\matnd cr in the communi t ~
IPcturJn g.
co n-. u lt in g a nd
H r tlin g
"T he nam ing of an academic
c hai r t&lt;:. om' of t hP mo!"f la ::. ting
ho nors th at can bP af fordt'd an

Wedding policy
The Sund ay Ttmes Se ntin el
rpgards weddtngs ot Cal li a,
Meigs and Mason counties as
new' a nd is happy to publ is h
wedding stones and pho tographs
without c harge
Howe \' er, wedding nPws must
meet general sta ndards or 1imeli
nrss The newspaper prpfprs to
publish accounts of weddings as
soon as possible a fter thl' even1
To be publis hed i n !he Su nd av
edition, the wedding must ha ve
taken place wrthin 64l days prior
to the publication . Material for
,\lon g t he River must bPrrr1rvrd
by the editor ial departmPnt bv
Thu rsday, ~ p m .. prtor to th·,,
date of publication .
Photographs of either the brid&lt;•
or the bride and groom mav bf'
published wtth wedding stories.
if desired Photographs may be
either bla c k and whtte or good
qualit~' color , bill fold s1ze or
l c~1

ger

Poor quality photographs wtll
not be accepted. General ly. snap·
shots or instant -developing pho·
tos are not of acceptable qualit y
Questions may be directed to
thr edit orial department from 1
to\ p m M ondav through F'nda)·
at t6H I 446·2.142

individual." Hay es said .
T he event Is being held in
co nJunction with a week lo ng
Welsh languag e course spun ·
sored by the Welsh Studies
Institu te of Nor th America. f'ea ·
tured as one of the events of the
Gallipolis Bicentennial celebra
lion, the gyman fa ganu is open to
the public
Musician and gymanfa ganu
cond uctor Lloyd Savage wtlllead
the evening of music He has
planned an unusual and var ied
program, including background
material on th e composers and a
literal translation of the Welsh
words or the hymns
A display of Welsh hymna ls
collected fr om Wales and many
par i s of North America will be on
disp lay T he collection includ es
! he Australian hymnal published
by !he St Davi d' s Welsh Society
of Brisbane as a feat ure of the
B ice ntPnnia l Au stra lian Project.
The 'Jew Harlcch Men's Cho·
ru s of So u theas te rn Ohio will add
Its co llec li w' voicl' to tll£'evt:&gt;nlng
of song .
Co nductor Savage bnngs a
lifetime of chora l music direct ion
and teaching to thP Aug . 3
celebration. As a wnter . tra veler
and IE'C'turer , he is act ive in
various aspect s of music re ·
SParch and sPrves as music
archivi st of t he Ross Count y
H1stoncal Soc iety MusPum in
Chil lrcot he.
ThP gymanfa 1s bein g eosponsored by the Cardtgan Club
of So utheastern Ohio, the City ut
Gallipolis Btcen ten ni al C'omm is
s1 on and the UnivP rsit y of Rio
Grande Off tcP of Co ntinuing
Education.

Lifesaving dasseJ
SYRACUSE - Advanced life
.savmg c la sses will be offered at
the London Pool in Syracue
beginning Monday at 7 p.m. The
co st is $30 plus a book and the
rnstruclor Is Heid i Beelge. Cal l
Ms . Beegle a! 992-9909 or
247- H55 for more information

lzaak Walton
picnic Jet
CHESTER - The annual pic ·
nrc ot the l za ak Walton fami ly
wrll be held Monday. The c l ub
will fu rnish ham and families are
to bring a covered dish, table
ser vicP, and drinks .

Seniors meet

()~II!!&lt;

"After you lose the weight, our
easy-to-follow maintenance
/ program helps you keep it off'

our experiences with you ...
~

I\

}Prry CarfHJJWr, l.codf!1 lrx: I "il IIJ.. rmd
I..Y:1!1 11 0 fo r r'I'C!r fl )1'n r

~JI""\

DONALD P. CHi\PMi\N
Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class
Donald P. Chapman. su n of
Sylvia and stepson of Carl E
Lambert ot Route 1. Nort hup.
OH, wa s recenli)' commended
while serving wit h Naval Mobi lr
Co ns t ruction Batlalion . Port
Hueneme, Call!.
Chapman was r ecognizPd for
his ou tstanding performanrP of
duty, professJOnallsm . and O\ ' i'r
all dedication to !he service
A 1984 graduate of Southw es t
ern High School. Patriot. he
joined the 1\iavy In Aprtl 1 9~o
T.H fMY J. KALFF
Airma n Tammy J Kautf has
graduated from the U S A rr
Forcp Inventory manag£&gt;ment
course at LowD-"· Ai r Force Basr.
Co lo
During the course. student s
were taught p ropert~· accou nt
ing. customer support. stock
cont r ol and ('Qu lpmrnt manag&lt;'ment for a ba se supply S\" StPm
They also wrrr taught t o inventorv supplies using electronic
data processing machtnes Thr
graduaiPS earnrd crrd !t s toward
an associ at e degree through the
Comm unit v College of the A rr
Force
Sh e Is thrdaugh!erofShlrle) J
and Carl T. Kautr or 440 Rutland
St . Middleport, Ohio .
The airman Is a 198&lt;J gr ad uate
of Meigs High School, Pomero,·.
Ohio

THOMAS E. SAVAGE
Army 2nd Lt. Thomas E .
Savage ha s arr ived for duty In
West Germany.
Savage Is a platoon leader with
the 12th Eng ineer Battalion.
He Is the son of E lton D. and
Devna F' Savage of Rural Route
1, Northup, Ohio.
The lieutenant Is a 1985 graduate of Sou thwest ern High School.
Patriot, Ohio, and a 1989 graduate of the University of Rio
Crande. Ohio
MITCHELL E . POTTS
Marine St aff Sgt . Mitchell E .
Potts, son of Helen and Shlrly
Potts Jr., bo th of Vinton, OH,
recently participated In exercise
Dragon Hammer while servtng
with 22nd Marine Expeditionary
Uni t, 2nd Marlnr Division. Camp
Lejeune. N.C .
Durin g !h e exercise, designed
to en haner allied cooperation
amo ng NATO's sou thern region
conventiona l fo rces, as many as
20.000 serv lcemen from Italy, the
Net herlands, Turkey , f r ance,
Spain. the United Kingdom. and
I he U S. participated.

Lose weight
I and keep it off
' just like all of our
Watchers

I

!Randall F. Hawkins, M.D.

/&gt;tt l

Community calendar
SUNDAY
GALLIPOLIS - Harris Bap·
ti s I Church homecoming is Sun·
day, Glory land Grass in after ·
noon . dinner at noon.
KY GER Gr ubb family
sings a! Old Kyger Church,
Sunday, 7 p m.
MORGANCENTER - Union
m pellng, Morgan-Bethel Mls·
sionary Baptist Church, Sunday,
speakers Revs. Calvin Minnis,
Edward Buffington.
LE CTA
Walnut Ridge
church picnic is Sunda y, noon to
three at Raccoon Creek Cou nty
Park.
GALLIPOLIS - New Beginnings wi ll be at Gallla Baptist
Church Sunday, July 22 at 7 p.m.
ROTARY BOARD - Rotary Board ofDirectors
lor 1990-91 are, from left to right, Gary Roach
(past pres ident), Jim Cochr11n (director), Matt
Willis (director), Steve Dlsler (director), Bob

Hood (director), Mike Corbin ( secretary) , Rusly
Alonzo (v ice- presiden t 1 and Ron McDade
(president).

Quirks in
the news

5lntwunces tfie opening of liis practice in

Interna( Muficine
in the

Puasant Vaifey 'Jfospitaf 'Medi.c.a£ Office 'Buifding

WILLIAM R. ZUSPAN
Marine Pfc . Wtlltam R . Zu s·
pan. son of William G. and Lind a
C Zu s pan of Mason. WV. r Pcentlv reportf'd for duty w ith 1st

Seeing patients 6eginning :i!ugll.5t 1
'Monday tfirougfi r riday
9 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Caff (304) 675·7700 after July 18 for appointl11lnts

Monkeys go ape over birthd ays
CHI CAGO 1UP ! )
The
strains of "Happy Birthday "
su ng
IJy onlookers wa ftrd
through thl' New Great Apr

ltrJ

The

lam1~ of professionals

of th e primates smea red choc olale rr os ti ng ovpr her face ancl
Zoo officials F'ridav celebra ted
the birthdays of fiv e gori lla s ancl
one c himp an zee, including
Kumba, the fir st gorilla born at
the zoo.
Kumba. 20. M 'kolo. 3. Maka r i,
~ - Jo, 4. Ba ssa . 12. and M'Chaw i,
12, ce le-brated for ~5 minutes bv
tearing up bags fil led wit h
cere a I, rais ins and pea nut butt er .
"W e look for ex cu ses to have
pa rties ju s t l!ke anyon e rise
doPs." zoo Director LestN
F'i shcr sa id
About 50 c hild ren hel ped zoo
ofltcials si ng "Happy Birthday"
to the primates and rece ivc·c\
stuffed ape doll s for their troubl e.
Bulara, who was not celebrat
ing a btrthda y, nonetheless do vr
into the gorill a-shaped birthda v
ca ke and smeared chocola te on
her fa ce and on the clo thing of
Pat Sass , the ape house' s head
keeper .

ALL
{12 &amp;3 PIECE
LIVING ROOM SUITES
REDUCED!
Save
1200 to 1600

All
BEDROOM
SUITES
REDUCED!
SAVE UP TO'BOO

FI~Al

'

WEEK

FOR 0:\tY...

Sounds stmple doesn 't rf?
Well at Werghl Watchers.
that s exactly wllat we 've ooen
dorng tor over15 yt&gt;Jrs Our
meeting leader; started out
Just like yoo -they know what
you're going through because
they 've been there
~~~~; You'll find camlQ, under ·
':
standing Jeaoers wllo have all
oe&lt;il success lui on the Weight Watchers
or ~ram themselves.
Md. as always. Wtlljjhl Watchers fils rnto
yoUI everyday lrle so you can eat wllat you
wall!. w11en you want
Se Jollow lhe leader and come to
Wei'Qht Watchers Join now for only $12

to

Reg1strahon Fee $1 7 00
F1rst M&amp;etlf"lg Fee$ 9 00

Regular Pnce

$26 00

YOU SAVE $14.00

1m 1·800.582·1399

the Weight Watchers meeting nearest you.

NEW MEMBERS: PLEASE ARRIVE 30 MINUTES EARLY FOR REGISTRAllON AND WEIGH-IN.

AT·WORIIIEmNilS

GALLIPOLIS
ST. PmR'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
S41 Second Avenue
Tue 700 pm Wed 9·JOam

lose weight where you work
Werght Watchers will set up a meeung tor
you and 16 of your fellow employees.
Call for further inlormatlon

ROCKER
RECLINERS &amp;
WALL RECLINERS
REDUCED!
Save

to 1200

ALL
1990 ZENITH
&amp;SYLVANIA TV's
AT
CLOSEOUT PRICES!

ALL
LLOYD
OUTDOOR
FURNITURE
AT CLOSEOUT
PRICES!

ALL
GIBSON &amp;
KELVINATOR
REFRIGERATORS
REDUCED!

Grandmother sworn in as U.S.
allorney
LOS ANGE LE S tU Pl l
Among the people congratu l at ·
ing Lourdes Ba ird on her appoi n t·
men I as a U .S. at torney in
So uthern Camorni a ~N e r c hrr
gra nd children .
The 55-vear·o ld Lourdes' ' one
of only r·ive women U.S. at tor·
neys
th f' cou ntr v and th r fi r st
grandmother appointl'd to the
pos t.
Lourdes was sworn in friday
as the top federal prosecutor for
seven Southern Californi a coun·
tres, the nati on's m os t populous
judic ial district.
Baird, who passed the bar at
41. took her oat h as U.S . at torney
at the federal courthouse down·
town and pledged to adm inister
justice and carry ou t her duties
fairly and to !he best of her
abllllles.
After taking th e oa th, admin ls
tered by U.S. District Judge
Manuel Real, Baird smiled and
thanked a pac ked courtroom of
assistan t U.S . attorney s and
support sta ff mem bers who s!Ood
and applauded her .
Baird, a conservat ive Demo·
era ! who Is fluent In Spanish, Is a
form er asslstanl U.S. attorney .
Baird's distri ct Includes 14
mllllon people and Is one of the
most high-profile prosecutorlal
zones In the country.

a !fading ses sion, coin sale , and •
refreshment s. The public Is in·
vited to a!lend.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Vii·
lage Council will meet In special
session on Monday at 7:30p .m .

POMEROY - The Jay Mar
Go lf Club's Tu esday Morning
League is sponsoring a mixed
scramble and potluck supper on
Sunday at 3 p.m. Bring a covered
dish and table service. All go lfers
ar e inviled.

SYRACUSE - Advanced life
saving classes will be offered at
!he London Pool In Syracue
begtnnlng Monday a! 7 p.m. The
cos t is $30 plus a book and thr
rn str uclor Is He idi Beclge . Call
Ms . Beegle at 992-9909 or 247 -145J
for more Information.

MONDAY
REEDSVILLE - All students
atlen di ng Eastern High School
who want to particrpate in fall
sports should pick up an lnforma·
tion packet at the sc hool Monday
through Wednesday from 9 a. m .
to 1 p.m. at th e athletic office .

CHESTER - The annual pte ·
nlc of the Izaak Walton family
will be held Monday. The c lu b
will furnish ham and families are
to br ing a covered di sh, table
service, and drinks.

MIDDLEPORT - The Middle
port Church of Chr is I wrll have
Vacation Bible School Monday
through Friday f rom~: 30 a.m. to
noon. There wtll be classes for
child re n from age thrrr throu gh
junior ht gh.

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE -The Har
risonville Senior Citizens will
m eet Tuesday at i p 111 . at the
townhouse. A ll members are
urge d to at tend . Snacks will be
served.

MIDDLEPORT Till' OH
KAN Co m Cl ubw rll mee t Monday
at 7 p.m. at lhe Burkett Barber
Shop In Middleport. There will be

Grange meets
THURMAN
T hu r man
Gra nge meets Monday, 8 p m

CROWN CI TY - The faith ·
way Gospe l Si ngers will perform
.July 22 at 7: 30 p.m. at the Big
f ou r Church in Crown Cit y. The
Rev . Charles L ambert w ill do the
spea king

5 ..,,

lug. ntail

'1211.115
Only , IDYe '70
Quilte411nnenpting

CADMU S - Backwoodsma n
Mu zzl rloadtng Rifle Club shoot is
Sunday , I p.m at the range , two
m lies south of Ca dmus on SR 141.
RACINE - The Circ le·Zirkle
fam il y reunion will be held
Sunday at the La rry Ci r cle
rP sidcn cP on Carmel Road in
Ra c i ne. A potluck dinner will
bPgin ar 1 p m

PINNING- Incoming President Ron "cDade is shown pinnin~
th e past president on Gary J{.oadi. Gar) workt'd hard and
accomplished many goals in hi~ ,tdministr;dion .
J07·year-old "t' low&lt;•r Lady "
has surgery
ROCHESTEK. Minn tLPit An 107-year -old womJn know n lo
townspeople as thP ' 'Flo'IA.-PJ
Lady" i s att:Ia cting attrn tion
again
Reba Kellry was recovPr in g
!rom surger y at thP Mayo Clini c
and at 107 .vf'ars o ld shr is
believed to br the oldest person
rver to undr1·go surgPry at the
fam ed clinic .
Scvrral yrars ago she wa s in
the news when police caught her
takin g fiOWPrS from in front of il
1 eta i I store. Sht' cia imrd shl' was
only ta k ing th e flowers home to
protect them during the winter
KP IIry d idn 'l ha Vl' I o Sl'fVl' &lt;J rn
tim(' bul she did appear on
several natio na l telev i si o n
shows
She underwent surgery Thurs·
day with doctors trying tocorT CCt
a colon prob lem . She is In thr
tntenslve care untl at St. Mary 's
Hospl!al and Is expected to spend
about 10 days in the hospit al
A Mayo spokesman said a
check of record s shows that she i s
the oldest person ever to undergo
surgrry at thr cli nic .

POMEROY The Si nger
family reunio will be held Sundya
at the Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Cen ter beginning at ll a.m. A
potluck dinner wrll be served at
noon .

GALL I POL I S fERRY,
W.Va - The Love·Pyles reunion
wt ll be held at the Stauffer
Clubhou se , Ga ll ipolis ferry,
W.Va, .July 22 beginnin g at 12
noon .

HouSl' a I Lincoln Park Zoo a s onr

1711 PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL

GALLIPOLIS - On Sunday,
July 22 at 5: 30 p.m., the Tried·
stone Bapti st Ch urch Youth
Auxtllary will will be presenting
a play "The Judgement" with
former NFL All Pro defensive
end Coy Baco n as guest speaker.
The public is in vited .
GALLIPOLIS- T he family of
the lat e M .J . Clary will have a
reun ion July 22 at Raccoon Creek
County Park, shelter num ber
one. from 10 a .m . until dark.

across hPr kl'cpcr 's clothes

I

All

•

WILLIAM L. PRI'IT
HURRICANE, W.Va. - Second Lt. William L. Pritt was
presented the Air Assult Badge
upon grad uation from the U.S.
Army's air as sull school at Fort
Bragg, N .C.
Trainees learned to rapidly
and sa fely exit a helicopter from
a variety of different situations,
whe ther descending Into tree
tops or lowering themselves or
Injured soldi er s down sheer
drops.
Prill is an i n for mation managemen t officer with the 44 th
Medical Brigade. He Is the so n of
Norma T . Phillips of 421 Circle
Dr., Hurricane, W.Va., and the
grandson of William G. Winch ell
oi Dunbar . W Va .
His wife. Dreama Is lhedaugh·
ter of Bu rdrl l ,Jnd Gale Buck of
Ruule 3, Leon. W.Va .
The officer is a 1981 gradua le of
Hurricane High School a nd a 1989
gr aduatP of M ar sha l l U niversil y
i n Hun1 1ngto n. W .Va

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page-8-3

POI NT P L EASANT, W.Va . Dan Hayma n and the faith Trro
will perform Su nd ay at 7 p.m . at
th e Gospel Lighthouse in Point
Plrasant He,· Bill Bank s invit es
th e ~ u blrc .

Thrre w i ll be a choice of ni ght s
fo r the classes, Pilhl'l Tuesda y at
i p.m. or Wednesday at 6:30p.m .
Classes are f r ee to Meigs Count\
res id en ts
Attendancl' is r c•quired &lt;Jt one
two hour SL'ss ion week ly . Classr s
wi ll includ e nutrition educ ati on.

qrr ss mana gerrwnt. '.H' e kt\·
v.. r i gh -i n s. re l et.xatron t ech niqu es . rf'c ipes. dirt r pe;1ll
~ h ret s , r xprci sr trc hni4 uPs. and
o ther ph as es of weight {'onlrol
Th err \1/ tll be a I im it &lt;Js to tlwnumber of peoplP w ho can bt·
adm Hted t or&lt;.~ ch sPri Ps of cla s s('s
whieh Will h!' held i n l h1• confer ·
r ncp room ol thr mul11 purpo ...,r·
building . r~r .s tdrn t ~ should rt.'g i"
tcr soon dul' fu cltl ss si z1
lim itation s
Mrtgs County rPsi dl'nfs mc~ v

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

2 pc . country look living room
suite which includes couch.
chair, and two throw pillows
(no wood trim)

sr~£9~9s

Meigs weight control classes planned
POMEROY A sP&lt; iPs of
six -week classP s fm weight com ·
trol will begi n Tursdny at the
Met g s Counl y Heal t h
Depa rt menl.

HALF
PRICE

In our community, we're committed to offer
the kind of services and personal aucntion
you want and need . When you bank with us,
you 'U find that we're much more than just a fi.
nancial institution, we're a hometown friend.

Robin Burnem has been employed with Farmt·r~ Rank for 21ft
vt&gt;ars. Robin i• I'Urrt•ntly a Trller.
She resides in Ral'int' with her parents, Mr. &amp; Mrs. Jame s Burnem.
She is a graduate of Southern High
School and Rio Grande
University
.
.
where she obtained a 2 year associatf'
dt~gret' in Business Management.
She also ha s been enrolled in AlB
eoursl's. Robin enjoys howling and
laking pictures.

Plenty of
Convenient Parking
on the Side
Parking lot

HWe're Committed To Our
H orne I own ... "

STORE HOURS:

Monday thru Friday
9 A.M.-8 P.M.
Saturday
9 A.M.- 3 P.M .

WE INVITE YOU TO STOP IN
TODAY AND OPEN YOUR OWN
PERSONAL CHARGE ACCOUNT.

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
992-6669
2S3 North Sl!(ond Ave.

:;:~

Your Hometown Bank
Hires Hometown People!

JUST A REMINDER THAT WE ARE
NOW IN OUR NEW BUILDING AND
INVITE YOU TO STOP IN.

in

$39995

re gi ster by ca llt ng the health
department at 992·6626 and tndi·
ca re a preference of the Tuesday
w· We d nesda y even mg class.

'

1

Come

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

Activities during !he exercise
Included Naval operations
throughou t the centr al and west·
ern Mediterranean, land operalions In Northern Ital y, and
amph i bious operat i ons In
Sard in ia .
He jo i ned th &lt;' Marine Corps In
June 1979.

POMEROY - The Wildwood
G arden Club annu al picntc will
be he ld Wednesday at 6:30p .m .
at the home of Juanita Will.
Bring a covered dtsh . Meat will
b e provid ed

,, r.f /' fl.' l."'f!lrl ujJfur un&gt;r a \car

.. ~cet people like us, we·u share

RONALD L. TAWNEY
Marine Cpl. Ronald L. Taw·
ney, a residen t of Route :l.
Gallipolis, OH, recently received
the Se l ected Marine Corps Reserve Certifi ca te while serving
with 4th Marine Division, Cha ·
rleston, W.Va
Tawney received t he certlfl·
rate In recogn ition of his out·
stand ing parllclpatlon In the
necessary drills and annual
training lo r a period of four y ears
In the M arl nl"' Corps Reserves .
A 1982 graduate of Gallla
Academy Hi gh School, he joined
the Marine Corps Reserves In
May 1985.

Marine Division, Camp Pen·
dleton, Calif
A 1989 graduate of Wahama
High School, he joined the
Marine Corps In Novrmber 1989.

Ga rden Club
. meetmg set

"When you're part of o ur group, you have the
encouragemem and support of people just like you."
.tltlr-JiUYllldvU, /, •ad,.,. lrH t

,JAMES V. LUCAS
Marine Pte . James \' . Lucas ,
son of Jenny K . Lucas of
Gallipoli s, OH , has been prom oted to his present rank whil e
servi ng at Naval Technical
Training Center Cor ry Stat ion ,
Pensacol a. F la.

HARRISONVILLE- The Ha r ·
risonv ille Sen ior Citizens will
meet Tuesda y at i p.m. at the
t ownhouse . All members arP
urged to at tend . Snack s will be
sf' r \ E'd

Follow the leader.
• • &lt;"'

July 22, 1990

New RG chair dedication ----In the service
set for Gymanfa Ganu

CI\LLIPOLI S - T he Senio r
t' illlen Ce nter Job Bank. 220
J .rckosn Pike , Ga lhpolis , issee k
ing more job orders for appli ·
C,l nl s age 50 years and okkr
T hPy are also sePk ing appli C'. tnts for existing job openings
If you are interested i n thP
vpporlunilles at the job bank .
eume in and frll ou t an applrca ·
Iron for a job and talk to thl' job
,·ll Uil SPior about nPeds .
Thr job bank is open WrrlnPs
dd .\ from 11 a.m . to 3 p m. and
·1 h ursday and Fridav from I a m

ttl 3prn

July 22, 1990

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

Middleport, OH.

Your Bank~~···

Farmers
b •

Bank

._.__,

992·21-36
221 WESt ·SECOND
POMEROY, OHIOI

I

'·

MEMBER
FDJ(;
• I
.._ ·- r
1

"•' f

985-Jl&amp;S
STATE ROUTE 7
TUPPERS PlAINS, OHIO

'

'

"

------ _____ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....;.._-..).._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ---1

�Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Little things can help
save money, resources
Dear Ann landers: In th lS "dispo sabl e" day and age, wat er
pollution, !rash accum ulauon and
recycling have become important
issues. I would like to share wtth
your readers ways to conserve our
precious resources. If everyone who
reads your column pays Just a li ule
bit of aaention to the followin g tt
can make a world of difference.
I) Use low-wattage bulbs and tum
off hghts when you leave the room
even for 10 minutes.
2) Turn off unnecessary lights at
work, especially on Fndays be fore
clostng down for the wec kc nd .
Businesses are notOrious for energy
waste.

3) Tum off the TV wh en no one
has been watching for fi ve minutes.
It can always be turned back on .
4) Tum off the water faucet wh il e
brushin g teeth .
5) Wash laundry on ly when you
have a full load.
6) Recycle newspapers , alum mum
cans, plasuc soft drink bottles and
all types of glass (mayo and jell y
Jars, mouthwash boules, beer bottles,
etc. ). You will be surpri sed how
much glass you ha ve been throw mg
away .
7) Buy products pa ckage d 111
pa per or cardboar d when ever
ross ible . AVOid plasti c ll cms or
Hems in a plastiC wrap . If 11 cos t-; a
few pennies more, cons1der It your

contribution toward saving the en -

vironmenl
8) l':lckagc sandwtches for lunches
'"reusable plastiC contarncrs instead
of plastic wrap. Use brown paper
lunch bags over and over.
9) Use napkins , papet towels and
toil et paper conservativel y, and buy
only the white. The dyes m co lored
p.tper are pollutants .
10) Usc public tran sportati on

Ann
Landers
-\ \ ' 1. -\ 'IJ.:H!-i
·· t l,l(il,l. l.o~ \nl(rl ....

whenever posstble. Keep your auto

f" I m ,..

in tunc ·- no "b lue smoke. " Don't
dum p used oi l from yo ur car down

anti
"' • nrli r .. r

" "111 1Mll f'

I,,... , ~

:IIICHAEL R. HATFlELD
Marine Cpl. Michael R. Hot ·
rtcl d. so n of Charles R. Ha tfll'id
of Rout e l. Rutland, OH , rec ·:•nlly
participa ted In exercise Dra go n
Hamm er whil e serving with 22n d
Mar ine Expeditionary Unit, 2n d
Mar ine Divis ion. Camp Leje une.
~ c.

Durin g the exercise, des igned
10 en hance allied coopt=-ratl on

among NATO 's southern reg io n
conv ent tonal for ces, as many as

20.000 servicemen tram llal y, th r
Netherlands, Turkey, Fra ncr.
Spain, the United Kin gdom, and
the U.S. participated .
.~ c t l vltles during 1hc exermr
in c lud ed Naval o pe r a ti on s
throughout the central and wes tern Mediterranean, land opera·
tlons In No nher o It aly. an d
a mphibi o u s o p eratio ns in
Sardinia
A 1985 gradu ate or Kyger Cr ('(' k
Hi gh School. Ches hi re. he joined
the- Marlnf' Corps i n

~ o ve mber

19R&gt;.
SJI ,\W:-; D . SAVAGE
Marfnp Cpl Sh awn D Savage.
a 19R7 gradua te o f Ga lli a
Acad emy of Ga llipoli s, OH. ro
centl y

repo rt f'd

for

dut v

at

Marine Corps Air S t a t i o ~ r:1
Taro. Sant a Ana. Calif.

TONY E . !L\RK
PO INT PL f: AS,\\T W 1·,1
Arm y Pvt hi Cl J " ~ T r1n\ I&lt;
Cl a rk is ~ mPm hr r IJf l ht· 17th

Infa ntry. ro n Hlf hard &gt;t on. Ala
parti cipating

in

!ht·

mu lti na

11ona l pr ace kPPpin g !o rTP and
o bs en·1' r s 1 M FU ~as ttu• prim ;Jr \ "
US . milit ar y co nti g1•nt m tht •
Sinal.
T he :vi FO. &lt;ln Jnd1 ·pe rHJPnt
agency rr s(Xlns tb lP to th1 • E:O \"r&gt; rn
m ent s of l sr Pa l and Egy p t . wa . ,
rs ta blis ht•d as J rrs ul t of tlw J9';"ll

Egyp t-Is rea l peace tre at1·
T he m issi on of th(· un it

r..,

111

operate chec kpoi n t an d n b ~ p n·; r
ti on pos ts an d to ro ndur t n •co n
naissa ncC' pat rols along thPSi nai
Pennin su!J.
Cla r k is an inf an t r .'l"!ll Jn Jnd i.'&gt;
t hr son or GP nc,·a L Cl ;-11k of
Rout r '2 . Po int PIC' J '-'J nt .
Thr pr ivatP is a \9X:~ gr ~r d d ll li'
of Poi nt Pleasan 1 Hi gh Sehou l

of T hruman. Pnli sted in IIH• A1r
F or('l' ·s Drl ay·e d Enlis rmrnt P r o·
gr &lt;.t m rpce ntly, ac cordin g to Sg t
l&lt;t· irh Do ugl as, Air ForTP n '

cr ull er. Chillico th e.
Atr ma n Btshop. a 19R;, gra du
atr of Pre bl e Sha wnee Hig h
SchooL is scheduled lor rn li s t
m t'nl i n thr Rrgu l ar Air Fo rn• i n
.J an 1991. L' pon g r aduat io n f r orn
rhr Air Fo r ce's six ·wf&gt;f&gt;k b as i('
trJ in in g co urse near San i\nt o·
nio. T exa s. Ai rman Bishop i s
sc hr dulr d to r Pceive IPr hnic al
t ra in ing in lh P general r.1r-r•pr

field
.·\irm &lt;:Jn Dishop wi l l be earnin g
nPdi rs towards an as soc i ate
cl&lt;·grrp
in ap plied sr ir&gt;nc E:• s

Th o fi rst hint tha t a ll mig ht not
b&lt;&gt; well wilh the s urrmer' s usual
wra ther paner n came ear ly m
1he year when neighbo ring Ca·
bell Count y, \\' Va .. pos ted the

ment s J nd ca ncr ll ati ons brca us{'
of bad wr ;;~tht•r . but it w a s ~1
ma j or dec ision for this event
1nvol vmg ovrr nine m onth s of
pl annin g and th f' co mmitm t:&gt;n i o f
a Jar gr am ount of m oney Jnd
pcrsonnr l
\o rai ndatf' w&lt;.~ s

poss ible.
AIJ C s calendar calls fo r a
regional rl .\ ·- i n at Gall ia·M r igs in

Octo bf'r and pe r haps we ca n
pro, ·i dr somr o f t hf' r\·f'n ts
org in all\· sc hf'du l ed ft"Jr the ai r
s how . ~ u C' h as hr licoptcr and
balloon ac ti vi ti_
, . Pr r para tiom
arf' undrr wJy now . t im e will tell.
Cl oser to us ts t hP a nnua I picnic
with M id-Ohio V allr.\ · A\·i atl on
Assoc iat io n.
1M O\ "A A1. uu r

co unr er pa n rn Parkersburg.
W \'a Schedul ed for earlv Au gu st, t hi s i s a low -key afte r noo n
of fun and fellow sh ip wilh a
cookout n os ted jo inll y bv bo th
grou ps f or their m embers on ly I
spo ke wil h .JetTY McClu ng of
MOVAA la s t week . they wi ll fi ) '
down to Ga ll ia ·Meigs aga in lhi s
year v..'ith a car go of meat and
buns. Next ye ar w e wlll ge t to
have ttre fly i ng fu n wllh a trip to
Wood Co unl.\ Airport '

in thC' near futur e.

MOMENTS TO REMEMBER!
Let HASKIN S-TANNER help you make
tho se speclaJ mom ents . You wUI ha\l.e over

190 styles of tuxedo~ to choose from. We
hav e a lar~P selection of tht• latest styles

and complim entary accessories to mak~

$2995

Open Mondo 1 hi 8 P.M.

APPALACHIAN INSTITUTE FOR THE
ARTS AND HUMANITIES

( FAMILYFARE SERIES )

July 29 -Au gu s l 4
Fo r $20.00 a ra mlly w1 11 hr ab le to n tt tnd 8 t op·notch
performances in th(: F'int' and f\: rfo rmin g Arts Cen ter
Theater at the Ur, J v n ~ lt y Of Hio Cr. tndt·.
J u ly 29 , 2:30 P.M .
Ju ly 30, 10:00 A.M.
J uly 30, 4,] 0 P.M. .

. Oli ~r
A R.lflP Wil h liuey 1lu&gt; Engfrleer

. Appalac hian Sumi1l£r
Prrmkr Dance f\' rio mmn« Chor\:ugra phc.:d by Katherine
Pos in a nd Danny Cla rk or New York
July 30 . B:OO P.M.
Pas t. Prcsen.t, cz.rw:l Future ;
The Creal Srrwky Mountaln National Park
Visu;Jl Pnfo rm a nct• by !lUI Woody
Augus t l , 3:00 P.M. .
.. F'ilm · PtJ.l M.!lll.)(:;t ls y
Da-..1d Amram
Augu s t I. 8 :00 P. M..
. .. .. . Jw.z Ans Group of Co/umbu5
Mus ic Pc rfomlallcc by D&lt;:~v\d Amram an d B!ll Miller

Augus t 2,

...... .... .. .
. ... .. ..... SIO&lt;y TeUing
And African A mertcan Performer s
Omo pr- Dabolku
" J uly J t, 8 00 P.M. .
. ......... Ow of thR Red Brush
Pcrfonnancc will be p n::sc..· n tl."d a t th t.· A1umnl_ ~~mor1al
Audit oriu m at Athen s . Ohio
8:00 P M

1lc kcts available at lhc F'tne a nd Pcrfo nntng Arts Center
(61 4)245 -5353 or toll -frTc: 1·800-282 -7 20 1 Exl. 364

of thr A ir Force whi le at tr ndin g
b&lt;Js ir and tec hnical t rainin g
.,c hoo Is.

his way .
It wasn't until lost luggage put

Mike on stage withoUI his belove d banjo that he discovered

parent s for

a b;.m jo and

rcceh ·rd

o ne for hi s sixtee nth birth day. He
soo n found out , however. th at
lea rn ing 10 play would not be as
ea sy as he had first r .&lt;pecte d.
Mi ke prac ti ced day a nd ntg ht,
before brea kfas t, a ft er school
a nd be tween fa r m ch ores . Sin ce
he couldn'l rea d music he had to
lea rn to pl ay by ear. With th e he lp
of a few Car l Ja ckson records
and a banjo-playing neighbor.
Mike figur ed out th e in strum ent.
Being a part of a farmin g
famil y, Mike didn' t have a lot of
tim e - or money - to spend on
his mu sic. In additio n, gettin g a
la te sta rt on a d ifficult in stru ment req uired pa tience on li lf'

th e va lue of his sense of humor on

sta ge . Wit hou t his In strumen t on
stage , Mike felt tha i he had to be
hones t wit h h is audien ce. When
hr did , the aud ience went wild .
That . Mike re calls, was the
monwnt when he reali zed that

propir' found him funny and that
l1e cou ld touch them by just being
himself. From that evening on,
M l kr h as Incorporated his sen se
of hum or into his performances.
shar ing h is cxpe r iPnces from the

MIKE SNIDER
perf orm at thP Op r :: .
r\o t only v;as Mi ke inv it ed to
a I IPnd , bu 1so \\! i\S thC' who le t own
of G leason .
Suc h an im·i ta tion \\·~r &lt;; a fir s t
J nd on ly fnr rh r• Opr ~·
T hP I. JOO t ick!•t s wer e gone In
"IR hou rs, and th e r itizcnr y of
G l eas on tra vrlPd in rha rt l'red
buses to tht'i r rt&lt;J tivP son 's Grand

Ol e Opry dl'ilU I

fa rm

apd

l l' liln ~

about

get s tar s in your eyes wh en you

feed hog s twic e a day."

Family Planning
It Makes Sense ...
Confidential Services:
Birth Control
V.D. Sreening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing

Sliding lee sole. No one refused services ber:ouse of inability to pay.

PlANNED PARENTHOOD
OF SOUTHEASTERN OHIO
POMEROY:
236 E.Moin St., 2nd Floor
992-5912
8:30 to S:OO Monday-Friday
Closed Thursday

fl})

The most trusted name in travel.

COMMODORE MAKES YOU

Y!

CRUISE-

JOIN US
ON ONE OF THESE GREAT CRUISES!

Carlbe Country Music Cruise
fealurmg singer Patty Loveless
September 15-22. 1990
Hosted by Dortna Murphy
Carlbe SO's &amp; 60's Cruise
featuring Herman's Hermits
October 6-13, 1990
Hosted by Dave Lemon
Caribe New Year's Cruise
December 29 . 1990 - January 5, 1991
Hosted by Lois Weller

Will Be Held on August 19
at the Late Charles N,
Kuhn's Farm on
Foirfield-(entenory Rood.
Relatives and Friends are
Welcome. (overed Dishes
Welcomed.
Dinner Will Be AI 12:00

I

GALLIPOLIS:
414 Second Ave., 2nd Floor
446-0166
8:30 to S:OO Monday-Friday
8:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday

ALSO: J(J(koon, Ch01apeoke, Athens, Chillicothe, Logon &amp; MtArthur

KUHN-COON
REUNION

lam ily and friends and I'm happ;'
t· tght here In Glea son. It' s hard to

guarantee II . No place In Queens
you would have seen that. For 50
years we' ve been coming to
Manha ttan fo r excitement."

said of his home borough . " 1

upstaged at a news conference

the

and joki ng wilh Acuff as if he

never have happened ,' ' Cuomo

Thursday by a naked woman .
Cuomo and other polit ic ians had
gathe red at a Manhattan pier on
the Ea s t River fo r the signing of a
drug -fighting bill when a woman
In a speedboat approached . The
woman whipped off her bikini top
and yelled and then took off her

c ha r a(' te"ts i n his hometown .
M i ke is not set on li v i ng the lifl'
of a su(X'r star .
" If' s all hard t o b1.•lieve. I d on' t
rra lly knowwhprr i t will wind up ,
but I 'II be happy if it doesn't turn
int o a bi g c arPer. I've g or an
angf'l i n Sweetie ( his wife.
Sabrina) . I liv P rlose to m .v

Mike brou ght dov..TJ th e house.
pC&gt;rformlng "Shu ck in " th(• Co r n"

bottom be fore th e bo at, piloted
by a man, headed for the
Atl antic. "In Qu e&lt;'ns, that would

LtmJ/ed space available' Call or slop by AAA today'
~ C OMMODORE
~ C KUI SE LINE

~ 9ALLIPOLI$

360 moNO AVE.

Travel Agency

446 ·0699

SRfVIng the general publ•c
as welt as our members •

LIMITED OFFER
"I LOST 1 DRESS SIZE IN
LESS THAN TWO WEEKS!"

&lt;.~ c ros s

l he mo st exc ilin g

Debbie Cox
Total Weight Lost - 85 lbs.

J ski ng. Ar uff to in vit r Mik f' to

West~~

V"arginia Dental Service
William V. Bell, D.D.S., Inc.

II

103HlJAARIER SlllEEl
X16 .tilaB Bldg., Charlest!n 343-2954

Heroin added
to cocame
u.rers menu,
report Jap
J

NEW YORK iUPI J- Herotnls
makin g a co meback as thr

ANOTHER SERVICE?
YOU BET.'

coc al nr

ep id&lt;'mi c

rages

on.

c rea ting dua l addic tion s a nd
inc rea sing the potr ntt al for
s prca d i n~ the AIDS 1·iru s . . 1
published repor t said Salurd a.v.
The r\ew Yo r k Times r ile d
i ntCIT ir ws V.'ilh rrsearchrrs. eli ·

This sopht s ttt at cd , mtn pu reri zed
" rc ss res t c qu ipnwn r h .1s bee n in sr,tll ed . 11 Vcr erJ n s M e tnortal Hc " p tt .tl _·- .tn 11thn J' rog rc sS I\'l' s tep J()
p t·,J v tdc tlllr p .tlt l' tll s wirh th t' tn llS t
tn 11d cr n s t,tt c -ll f- rhc -art c~utptnent
tc s rtn g

ro•IOY

enoug h. didn 't see a banjo until
he was 15 yea rs old. Soo n after
th at. his falher gave him a Fl att
&amp; Sc ruggs a lbum. Mtke wa s
inst antl y fasc in ated by I he sound
of the Instrum ent.
··1 knew If I ever got a banj o. I'd
be able to pay it I ju st knew it."
Mike says.
Th e youngs ter a ppea led to hiS

seen

Mike' s fi rs t trip to lheCrand Ute
Opry in r\ ashvil le.
Over 100 towns peopl e fr om
Glea son sent a ha nd -signed lett er
to Rov Acuff. tellin g the fa mous
co un ti·v s tar of Mi kr's stor y and

$129

11 S EAST .MORIAL DRIVE
992-2104

a young man so
cele brat ed. Mike Snider was on
nev er

musi c and com edy in his ac l
HP gr ew up on a farm in
C leason , Ten n., and amazi ngly

P ro babl~·

DENTURES START AT
PER DENTURE!
Small Additional Char&amp;e For Same Day Service

Hos~ital

were an old frie nd The young
man's debut mad e national new s
and Ro y Acuff reported that In
hi s 45 years at the Opry, he had

even t in hi s musi cal r nrcer wa s

SAME DAY SERVICES ON RELINES AND REPAIRS!

Veterans Memorial

By BRIAN J . REED
Times-Sentinel Staff
POMEROY - Mike Snider. c~
regu lar on Hee fl aw and a
lrequenl guest on Nashville Now
wil l be the gra nd stand ent ertain
menton Wedn es day at the Meigs
County Fair I August 14-181
Snider is an awa rd-winnin g
banj o pla yer who combin es

paid off and Mi ke bega n 10 e n1er .

For An Appointment or lnformallon.
Our Regular Serv1ce Is Available At All Offi ces.

Th ts new l'&lt;l ui p rn c nr , fea turing a
tre admi ll w lm h tncr ea scs tn spee d
as well a s el ev a te s during se ven differe nr st ages o f re s ting, is used as 3
d iagn ost ic aid in c heck i ng p a rienr s
for coron ;try a rt e rt a l p ro bl e ms Y o u
can u nde rgo rh c s tress tes tin g pro g ra m , m e re ly by h a v tng yo ur phys i cian mak e a n a ppointm e nt .
Dr. M a rk 0 . Brown llf rhe V ete rans M c moml Medi c 1l Suff is in
charge o f direuing rhe patient rest ing . Pt c tured wirh Dr. Brown and
rh e e quipm e n r is Kim S hamblin .
head o f the hos p ita l's R ad io logy De parun e n r

yellow. The French arms are displayed on the
center white panel. These arms were used by the
French kings of the period. Mickey Johnson (left)
and Joselle Baker ( rtghl), members of the St.
Louis Church, serve on the Parish Bicentennial
Committee.

Hee Haw entertainer slated for fair

and win, banj o cont es ts
th e count ry.

CALL TOLL FREE 1-800-926-0025

Bait&gt;oo'!VIIIe. WJ 736-4132

NEW FLAG - Beth Vandawalker, executlvr
director of the GaiHpoUs Area Chamber of
Commerce, Inspects th e newly designed flag for
St. Louis Church In GaiHpolls which Is celebrating
200 years of CathoU c heritage. The flag consists of
a tri-color of French blue, white and Spani'h

pa rt or th r m usic i an towa rd h is
i nstrum ent .
In tl mc. Mike's deter m ina tion

Cus tom f'ttted Dentures In One Day At Our Teays Valley Offi ce
By Our Professionals And Trolned StafT.
Made In Our Dental Laboratory By Qualtfled Technicians .

109 ~ fOOK RD
Teays Valey. WV 75 7· 7441

By Untied Press International
I SAW HERCRYINGTHERE:
When It comes lo th e Beatles,
Jane Pauley Is sentlmental to the
point or tears. Her hu sband,
"Ooonesbury " cartoonist Garry
Trudeau. wrote a short op-ed
piece for The New York Times
about a tte nd ing a recent Paul
McCartney show In the New York
area a nd the nostalgic feelings It
stirred. He says Pauley lost It,
bursting Into tears, as McCart ney performed the Beatles hit "1
Sa w Her Standing There." Tru deau points that If the girl
mentioned In the song was 17, as
the lyrics say , In 1963, she could
be a grandmother today .
BOLIVIAN ADVENTURE:
Actor EmUlo Estevez Innocently
got caught up In a drug lnves tiga ·
lion In Bollvla last month. The
chartered Lear jet on which
Estevez flew to South America to
do research for a movle project
was confiscated by the government In an Investigation of
marijuana and cocaine smug
gllng. No charges were filed and
the Bolivian government and the
U.S. Drug Enforcement Admin·
lstratlon both said no charges
were necessary . "I want to mak e
It perfectly clear that as far as we
know there wa s no Involvement
In traffic king by thi s airplane or
by the passe ngers who were
down here on a purely com mer·
elal ve nture. " a DEA official told
the Lo s An geles Times . Es tevez
was quoted as saying, · 'ft would
be ludicrou s to bring drugs into a
pla ce that exports th em. Even If
you were a drug addict. you
would know enough not to do
something that silly . You 'd have
to be out of your mind .· ·
WOMAN TOPS CUOMO: New
York Gov. Mario Cuomo was

at the .J ackson County , West
Virginta Airport . Operated locctll v bv Benjam in Rou sh Jr. ,
R a~en · offers full -time flight
operations here as well as at
Ma son and .lackson County Air·
ports. We'll look closer at Raven

this your special night.
PRIUS START Al

Sunday Times-Sentinel- Page..:.. B-5

People in the news.......__ _ _ _ __

of Ravr n Avi ati on, home-based

YOUR DENTURES IN ONE DAY

51139 DAVIS CREEKRD

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

Cdll ia·:'.leigs Air port ha s w
c·r· nt ly add ed another bu siness to
tht· local a rea. we now have a
chartrr an d fl ig hl 1ra i n ln~ office

th rough lhr Commun ity Collrgr•
TERESA K. BISHOP
THUR M/\\, OHI O- TPresa
f\ Rishop. wife of Cl inton Bishop

July 22, 1990

Hanger flying ... _____._..B::_y_M_i~_eM_ '--_cG_in_m_·.r

a ny drai n. Check with you r sharply reduced , they live a grea t second wet test F ebru ar y on
chambe r of co mm erce fo r deal longer. Translated into human record .
Th at was followe d by intermi l·
compantcs that accept used oiL
terms, the scientists say, if people 1ant heavy rainfa ll in the region
II ) Don't litter. Pick up trash wh en dtd this they might expand their life
wilh th e recent cat as trophic
and wherever you see it. Set a good ex pcctancy to 170 years.
flooding In Shadyside, Ohio. But
example for your chtldren.
Sound wonderful? Well, think it lhrou gh it all I never believed
12) Don't bu y anythtn g made of through and you will conclude that lhat I would be writin~ about a
Styrofoam . The production of thts 11 would be a mghunare without end. weath er c ance llation of the Bi ·
sub stance prod uces chlorofluorocar- hH example:
rcn te nn ia l Air show . nor d id an y
bons that dcsLi ny our ozone layer.
f'or Chri stmas dinner. you would of those clo sely associated with
13) Usc rhe bac k of sheets of have to in clude not only yo ur its pl annin g. Th err sr Pms lit tiP
paper before throwmg them away.
in -laws but a couple of sets of grand- co nsolati o n that a rp sprct{'d lol' al
14) If you see a co mpany pollut - parents, great-grnndparents, great- m ete-or ologist told me j ust bdorp
ing the environmem, let them know g re&lt;~ t - grandparents and great -great- th e decision t o cancel the show
you are aware of it and then nottfy grea t-grandparents. Your dining that had been watchi ng the local
your loca l n c w s pape~ an d T V room couldn't possibly accommo- wea th er 10 year s and had nevpr
sLat ions.
dal e th at crowd, so you would have sren thi s sort of WPa t her i n .J ul ~'
be fore.
15) Before throw tng anyt htng 10 rent a hal l,
Ev eryo ne alte rnat ely prai ses,
away. ask yourself "Can I m:yclc
If yo u were 170 years ol d, you
cu
rsPs or jo kes about thr
tht-;'' C :~ n I reu se Jl for J tl o th cr
wou ld have to buy gifts for your
wpather . and al l agr er w P ca n do
purpose'' C m someo ne e l ~c use grandchildren, great -grandchildren,
no thing a bo u I i t . F or somP Pn'n ts
tt ?"
gre&lt;J I·great -graodchildren and great - lh at ordinarily lake pla ce out
16 ) Supro n compani es th at great-great grandchild1 cn. Tht s doors , we ca n pla n for she It er if
rec ycle and boycott those tha t don't. wo ulcl be qune a financial burden, t he we-ather sou rs , bu t no t so wit h
17) Suppon environmenta l causes. t'&gt;pcna ll y for a person wh o hasn't av i ation or iented q,n· nt s Co m ·
Remember, waler ts not in end - hcr n empl oyed for 100 years .
po und thai wit h th'l, assoc iated
And where, pl ease tell me, woulrl
less suppl y. Prcscrv mg the environ problems in providin g for a large
ment IS everybod y's responsibilit y the" 120-, 130-, 140-, 150-. 160
audience. parking. sheller. etc.
Th ank s for you r spa ce , Ann . and 170-year -o ld people li ve' and of bringing toge ther atrc raft
-- CANDAC E SCH OPPM AN, Today tt's not easy to find a good and exhib its from as f ar away as
CITRUS HEIGHTS, CALIF
nursin g home for less lhan $30,000 800 mJies lhrough ra in and
DEAR CANDACE: I apprwa te a year. And don 't forget that you'd thund ers tor ms and .\·ou can pic ·
your se ndin g along th ese sugges- have to take care of not only your lu re some of t hr co ncer ns of thl'
uons. Nobody ean do everything, but aged parents but their parents, their a irshow commi t tee whr n thr
eac h of us ca n do somethmg . How parents' parents and their pareoL,· c ance llati on wa s mad e
An airshow 1s morP 1h&lt;Hl
about it, rc:nlcrs?
parents' parenL,. Soond frightenin g'
puttin g fi w• or si x plan Ps m the
Ucm Ann Landers: li you ha ve Wait , th e re's more.
ai r for a fP\,. hours a nd thr
an y clout wtth sctcntisLS , will yo u
I am a 60-year -old woman who fl ooding of our parking access
please tell them to lay off" Up u II had a face -hft 10 years ago and I are as and soggy ground in thr
now they've been fwrly senstbl e, but still look pretty good. Ann , I don'1 acres of ai rcra f t and au t o park
1hcre's such a thing as goin g too far w" nt to thmk what I will loo k lik e tf 1ng fields played a major ro le 111
and I th ink they have done it.
I should live another 100 years. I the decisio n lo s to p the show. It
I read about some douhl c-dome enJOY hfe, but enough is enough. -- wa s a m ajor di sappo in tnw nt to
REAL IST IN VIRGINIA
e x pe rt~ who have dLScovcrcd that
the show sta ff Sevent)'- four
whc11 th e caloric intake of rats ts
DI: AR VA.: I'm with you1 Than ks
pN pl e "We sc hedu led to work
for a wonderful letter.
Sa tu rdav and Sund a)· ;\II who fl 1_
ofte n lear n to acce pt postpone

- - - - - I n the service-----

July 22, 1990

ni cians and law enfor ce m ent

MASO FURNITURE CO.
(.104) 77l-SS92
2nd Street

Mason, WV

offi cial s sug ges ting an up surg e
in hero in use Is mo st pronoun ced
in r\ ew York, wher e an esti mated
200.000 of the country's oOO.OOO
addicts live
But. lhe newspaper sa id, the
dru g al so Is finding its wa y into
th e dr ug cultures in Wa shing ton ,
Baltimore. Detroit. Ch icago.
Housto n. Los Angeles. San Fra ncisco. San Di ego a nd Seattl e.
according to special ts ts.
"Two generations of youn g
people we re sca red off heroi n. "
sa id Philippe Bou rgois. an an ·
thropologls t from San Franc isco
State Univ ersity. "Now coc aine
and crack have turned out to be
so extraordinarily destructive
that people, ironically, end up
back with heroin. "
Felix J imenez, th e chief of the
heroin dlvl slon of th e Federal
Drug Enforcem ent Adminis tra tion . predicted heroin would
become "the drug of the 90s ."
Heroin 's allure Is it s soothing
quallly, leading many crack and
cocaine users to self-medicat e
wlth it . Increasing, people a re
becoming addicted to both drugs ,
making recovery longer and
more dlttlcult, expe rts said .

PUPPET MINISTUY - The puppet ministry of Rev. Chris
Meenach and The Sunshine Gang will he al the Crown City
Wes leyan Church during the church's annual vacation Bible school
,July 23-27 from 6: 30 to R p.m. There will also be a VBS program
f eaturln~ The Sunshine Gang on .July 29 at9; 30 a.m. The church Is
locate d on Slate Route 7 in Crown City . For more inlonnalion or for
transportation, contart Rev. George Holley, Jr. al 251Hl463.
Refreshments will he served nightly .

NEW LIFE VICTORY CENTER
"Com e and vi$il us
ar

NLVC. -

a

frif'ndly, family
chur ch that·.~ here
to mini .~l e r lo
ynur needs.

"Come Celebrate Jesus"
Growing to Serve You, Small Enough to Know You

GE EVERYDAY LOW PRICE OF ONLY ...

$5.78 PER WEEK!
INCLUDES EVERYTHING!

•FOR MEN AND WOMEN!

•WEIGHT LOSS, STABILIZAnON AND •EAT REAL SUPERMARKET FOOD!
MAINTENANCE FOR BALANCE OF ONE
YEAR!
•NO REQUIRED FOOD SUPPLEMENTS!

SUNDAY MORNING ............................. 10:00
SUNDAY EVENING ................................ 7:30
WEDNESDAY HOUR OF POWER ............ 7:00

Call Today!
446-4664
TOLL FREE
1-800-726-4654

Vo(otion Bible School
New Life Victory Center
Gallipolis, Ohio
July 23-27, 1990
Airport Road, Gallipolis, behind Blue Fountain Motel
Radio Outreach Every Saturday 7:45-8:00 A.M. on WEMM 107.9 FM

•SUPER-STAll MElT-DOWN! ••

With Orer JOO Locations
fo Ieifer Jenoe You

�Page- B-6- Sunday Times-Sentinel

July 22, 1990

July 22. 1990 .

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

- Anniversaries-- Beegle anniversary noted _Engagements __
POMEROY -The Rev. and
Mrs . Ray W. Beegle celebrated
their 69th wedding anniversary
on July 1 with an open house at
their residence In Wilmington .
Mary Wilson and Ray W.
Beegle, both originally from
Dor cas. were married July 2.
1921 in t he United Brethren
Parsonage at Pomeroy wi th Rev .
Car l M . Sweazy offlcia11ng.

Wilmington and organized the
Church of Nazar ene in an old Ice
cream stalion with 13 members .
A church was buill later i n the
tm~rn.

He retired f rom that church in
1957 but was called as supply
pa stor to the Church of Nazarene
In South Lebanon in 1958 where
he became a full - time minister
aga in. He retired from ther e Is

Napper-Foster
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
David E. Napper Jr .. Rutland,
are an nounc ing the engagement
and approaching marriage of
th eir daughte r, Rebecca Lynn . to
Bobby Lee Foster Jr. , son of Mr .
a nd Mr s. Bobby Fo st er,

Mrs. Beegle wa s a Sunday
sc hool te acher f or over 60 years.
The couple has two children,
Mr s. Frank Cox and David
Beegle, five gra nd child ren and
nine grealgrandchildren .

By BOB HOEFLICH
POM EROY - I t's the time of
the year when many of us raise
noses from
the grindstone
and take what

Pomeroy.
Mis s Napper Is a graduate of
Meigs High Sc hool.
Foste r Is also a graduat e of
Me igs a nd is emp loyed with Ohio
Pallet Company .
A c hurch wedding is planned
for October.

we ca ll
vacation" .

COOL VILLE - Mr. and Mrs. Coli Index, Columbus.
He Is a gr aduate of Warren
Rober t S. Burke, Coolville, and
Mr. and Mr s. Harold F . Amos, Local High School and Is emVincent, are announcing the ployed at Morri s F:xcavating in
engagement and approaching Westerville.
An open chu rc h wedding will
marriage of their children , Lori
take
place Aug. 4 at 1:30 p .m . at
Lea and Jeffrey Blake.
the
Eas
t A thens Church of Christ.
She Is a graduate of Eastern ·
A
recep
llon will follow at
Hi gh Sc hool and Hocking TechniTu
ppers
Plai ns E lem ent ar y
ca l Co llege. She Is em ployed al
School.

,------------------------------,
RENTAlS/CENTER PIECES/CANDIES
INYITAnONS/NAPIONS/CUSTOM HEAD PICES/CAIIE TOPS
POTPOURRI/VICTORIAN AND COUNTRY
CHRISTMAS TREES/ORNAMENTS &amp; GIFTS

I
I
I
I
I

Pat's Posie Patch

I

I

I

~---1

COMPlETE WEDDING flOWERS, SilK
H~1ES

,\:"&lt;D UOIWTH\' L i\!';lEil WHITTINGTON

Annniversary to be observed
1;,\I .U PIJI . IS .l :im&lt; ·' I'
\\-llit tin g ton and Dorothy J 1 l.1.1n
it•r 1 \Vhit 1ington wi ll bP cf' IPbrat
1n g llwir -Wth a nnivPrsaJ \. b~­
rl '( 'iting lhPir w edd ing \ 'nw s r1n

Ju ly 2~1 &lt;1ft · .10 p.m at theCirurTh
·il (' !Jir st in Chi r stla n L' nion . ·217:\
I· .ts rr•rn t\\ 'P. , Ga llipolls.

BIDWELL Ru ssel l and
Gran' Sheets of Bidwell will
obsrrvr their :'&gt;Oth wedd ing anni -

Farm Bureau
talent show
set Aug. 4
GAL LIPOLIS -

-c:Y -

three classps -

75°/o

Th e couple request t ha i gifts br
ommi ted.

Men"s,

Women"s &amp;
Children's

12 vears and

Howard a1 2&lt;l .'&gt; ·9191

Bible school
fair scheduled
POMEROY-Th e First Sou th
rrn Baptist Church In Pom er ov
will have a vacal i on bible school
fair on Jul y 2S fr om 1-3 p.m . prior
t o bible sc hool Aug . 1-14
Rr glsl rallon for bible sr l10o l
will be held along with "your pe•J
plclure•· co ntes t, a popcorn man,
numbers lady, 20 yard dash with
go ld, sliver, and bronze meta l s
awarded, deer hunt, hot dog
stand , l emonade sta nd , ball l oss.
duck pond , ran dy m an, and
balloons.
Reglstral lon Is required f or
partlclpallon In bible school.
Bible sc hool hours wil l be 9
a m. to noon for ages two thro ug h
grade si x, and 6:.10 to 9 p.m. for
you th grades 7 n.

I S

OFF - / -~

REG. PRICE ~~- :

• //

Mon . &amp; fri.
q,Jo til 8 P.M.
Tues. Wed. Thur .
q,30 til 7 P.M.
loturrloy
qJo til I P.M.

The Ga l lia

und er. 1:1- 19 years and -m ixe d age
groups. Out -of -count y judges will
se lect the winners, and all fl r sJ
and second p lace winners will
rece ive a pl aque .
Al l entri es should be in by July.
31. Se nd name. address, age and
type of talent to: Gall Ia Cou nl y
Farm Bu rea u. P.O . Box Wi,
Jackson, Ohio 456-1 0
F'or further informalion. cal l
lh P Ga lli u Cou nt y F';um Bu rrJu
offi ce al 1-RQO .J.1.1 19H or Mcri&lt;'

)/

NOW

They we n' maried Jutv':IO. l 940
i n Leaper, Ohio bv the Rr\'.
.Jrnning Cr emeen s.

wi ll be Aug. 4 at 2:30p.m . al the
Ga llia Cou nt y Fair.
Thl' show will be di vided int o

I~ !

j

ilj··

/

IHLE

Ihle anniversary will be noted

'

/~
__.-Go - - __.. - • .

2 for 1
SUMMER
SHOE
SALE

·-/ --

--..

- - ~-':

__,.

---.- · .
- :::: _- . -

Ouf Sfofewide Summef Ssle!
Featuring

Our most popular cherry Dining Room!

Buy one pair at the regular
price 8o get a second pair
of equal or lesser value

The 1 Bth Century Ch~rry
Hutch features curio ends .
lighted interior, two glass
shelves .
The BuHe1 in cludes a felt lined silver
tray. as well as serpe-ntine
shaped top . All chairs fea tu re ca rved Queen Anne
legs and co ntoured back pa nels .
The Queen
Anne leg is also
seen on the Oval
. _. ~ Dining Table . The
- •..•1 Oval Dining Table
top is accented with
a straight grained.
cross banded bor der.

FREE!

Vinay Vermani, M.D.

CHARLES AND DONN.~

I

DRESS SHOES. :S
&amp; SANDALS ~ - \

,·ersary Jul y 29 w ith an open
house from 2 to 4 p.m. at tile
Ga llipolis Sen ior Ci t iLe ns Ce nt er,
220 Jack son Pik e, Ga llrpolis.

Counly Farm Bu rea u talent sho w

IIH·.'. .trt · tht· po~r P r r t _., of 1\ p n
rw l ll. l 't'.J'&gt; t' -\tr Fn tT f' H.l "l'.
~ I I . l".lt hn '-;w· l \tic k lt·"· Cl'r

10

WOMEN'S SUMMER , ./
Sheets to observe anniversary

lll ;rnt own . Md . : RonniP. Pomr·
ro.v : ,\n d d c1Jugh1Pr anrl.,on - in
- law , Youg Wood and StrVl'
1\r ir·kil's . Grandchildren inc lude
Carrie. Cathy , and Donna Youn g.
:&lt; ncl .J eff rey and Michae l
llnr kles .

1
1
~"',;,'i
1
1
o.. oo~ s.~ I
&amp; Mo~
I
Opon Doil'

LARGE GROUP

RUSSELL AND GRACE SHEETS

1' 0 .\ 11 ·. 1 ~( J"r
\orman .rru l
l, ·, rn \\'\; rnr \\ood C' Pirbr&lt;~t r• d
1~ . ' I I til! !\ \U•&lt;i&lt;ilng Clflrl l \' PI ' -,, !f\

DRIED

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

Thi s rf'rrmon~' will bP oprn to
f;.tmil.v and fr ien ds. T he reccpriun, w hirh was sc hedu led to
fol low al Kyg&lt;'r Cree k Clubl&lt;ou&lt;e. has been changed to the
Cliu r ch of God Fellowship Hall on
C~rfit' lci Av('nue.
The coup le was ma l'led July 30.
I ~JJO.

\'V&lt;x&gt;d anniversary celebrated

DR

20% Off Wedding invitation with Jhis Ad .
PAT PARSONS
1462 V.IlOR RD.
388 -~311
VINTON, OHIO 45686

REG.

Specializing in the Diagnoses and Treatment
of Cancer &amp; Blood Disorders

Hutch ............................ $799 .......... ......... $599
Buffet .......................... .... $799 ......................... $599
Oval Table ................ ........ $649 ........................ $499
Side Chair ........ .......... ...... $239 .. ..... .................. $189 '
Arm Chair ........ .. .............. $269 .................. ....... $199

(304) 67,5-1759
Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical Office Building +Suite 11
Valley Drive, Point Pleasant, WV 25550

So you qui ckl y lear n that you r
mput ha s not b&lt;'r n adpq uate. You
nuw have to name n ames to
prove that you reall y a re into l hr
._.c1ca t ion gam e - yo u k now lrke Indo China, I ra n . Siberiapla ces yo u know will never eve n
get on th e ballot - bu t at le ast.
1ou'rr pulling fo r lh a show of
inlrrPst .
So th e del'islon is f inally m ade
and ma ny of us decide to j oin the
mJsses - to take in one of t hose
po pul ar spots whe re t herP arP
wa l l- lo- wa ll peopl e and you
c.tand in lines waiting you r turn to
t•;l1 , t odr lnk,lo srra show. to use
thr r est r oom- no matter wha t
- you ca n pl an on lines
No doubl , 1hose of you who
"Prved in 1he armed forces.
&lt;'spec ially durin g the World War
II er a. r ecall how you stood In
lines for everything - and I do
~:wa n ever ything
But do you
ll' member thP number of timC's
·hal you ~alsed yo ur canteen
' ky ward wllh t he vow that If you
go.l out of this mess a l ive you'd

'·

Oncology /Hematology

SALE

Extra Special Summer
Savings on Norman's
Custom Made Drapery
All Slles-FrH Installation!

...

pl .. nned by the couple's five
children, Lois !hie and Melissa
L ucas, Alhens; and Kathy,
David, and Paul !h ie, Racine.

PLEASANT VAlLEY HOSPITAL
The Fami~ of prole"iono!.

I

OFF

44B·0332

MODERN WOODMEN
OF AMERICA
fRATlRNM LIFE IN SU RA NC E SOCIETY

HOM£ OFrKE • ROCK ISLAND . ILLINOIS

NEll MOlliSON

p.0•••• 3461
Rio Gra~. OH. 45674
Ph. l614j 245-~319

.,

. -'
~t

··---~L----------------------------··------1

Nursing home
resident
graduates

McPhersonSaunders
GALLIPOLIS - Mr. and Mrs.
William K. Hu rlow of GaiUpolis
announce the engagement and
forthcom ing marriage of their
daughte r , Angela Ho pe McPh er son, lo Ronald Andrew Saund ers,
son of Mr . and Mrs. Russell L .
Saunders of Scottown.
The open church wedding wi ll
take place July 28 at 6 p.m. at
Canaan Missionary Baptis 1
Church, State Route 218, Gal lipolis. A r eception will follow at
Hannan Trace High School .
McPherso n is a graduate of
Hannan Trace High School and
atteded the Univer sity of Rio
Grande. She Is presently employed at the Ga llia County
Health Department.
Saunders Is a graduate of
Hannan Trace High Sc hool and
the U nivers ity of Rio Grande,
with a bachelor's degree In
accounting. He Is emp loyed as an
auditor with Housing and Urban
Development In Co lumbus.

Videos available
GALLI POLIS - The videos of
Anne Fisher's Gra nd Fi nale are
ava ilable at 1139 Second Avenue.

LIFE • ANNUITIES • IRA'S • FRATERNAL PROGRAMS

ANGELA H . McPHERSON, RONALD A. S.I\UNDERS

ROSLYN. Pa. i UPi l - F lorence Hughes, a spunk y 79-year old nursing home re sident, surmounted problems of paralysis
and impai re d vis ion and memory
to earn her high-school diploma .
The Roslyn Nursing and Reha bi li tation Ce nter Roslyn, some of
w hose staff tutore d Hughes and
sweated wllh her through th e
genera I eq ui va iPncy degree
exam. celebrated Sat urday with
a spec i al cap and gow n
cerem ony .
" II wa sn'J too hard. " Hughes
modestl y sa id of her studies. But
In &lt;.1 tplephone ln lrr view last
week. she did co ncede "worrying
if I would make it. "
Hu ghes said her favorite subject was geograph y and her
worst Is ma th.
Nu r si ng homt- artiv i tlf'S super visor Sh!r ley Ca shin desrr lbPd
Hug hes as "a ve r y good
student ."
"S he worked very hard when
we were doing the tutori ng ....
She was very at tentlve," Cashin
sai d. "Ma th was most difflcull
because some went Into algeb ra
and geomet ry."
Hughes was determi ned to get
her diplom a des plle suffering a
st roke that left her paralyzed on
her lefl side and with vi sion and
m emo ry problems, Cash i n sa id .
The form er Philadelphian was
neve r able t o com ple te her
educa ti on because. as one of 12
ch ild re n, she had to help out at
home a nd work 10 support the
famil v . A m other of three children, Hughes was widowed at a·
you ng age and worked as a
tec hnician in a lab that made
den tures and then as a seed
technician for lhe W. A t ley
Bur pee Co.
Cashin. who wro te the 200-wonl
tes t essay as th e student dictated
11 . said Hughes was lucky the
lopir of th e essay was fas hion.

Now IS the lime to select a
family monumen t. Perpetu ate.
lor all l ime , th e memory of
those you love Our know ledge
and experience are yours for
the ask&lt;ng
No lhing you buy will eve r be
as permanenl as a tam1/y monumenr . 1/s pvrcf1 ase warrants
thoughl and gu•dance See
wha/ you buy Vr s11 the man u·
men t dearP-r who nas a com ·
plete diSp lay and who can
des1gn a persona l1zed monument to harrnon11e w1th ils
surroundings .
We have rh e experience We
have th e comple te display .
Your purchase is oackeQ by the
stronges t monument guarantee
obta&lt;nable today
MONUM ENTS ARE OUR ONLY
BUSINESS. NOT A SID ELINE . .

LOGAN
MONUMENT CO.
MEIGS COUNTY
AMYL . TERRY. llO!IODALL T . \IALKEHII

DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POME ROY -MASON BRIDGE
LEO L. VAUGHAN . M gr .
PHONE 992 -2588

Terry-Walker
VINTON - l. arrv and Shir lev
Te rr y of Vi nt on anno unce t he
engagem ent and upcorning mar·
r i age of their daugh le r . Am)
Lynn Terry. lo Ronda liT Wal ker
11. son of Ro nda!! and Do nna
Walker of Oak Hill.
She Is a graduale of Sou thw es t
ern Hi gh Sc hoo l and Is employed
al Co llege Hill M otel
He Is a grad uate of Oak Hill

H1gh Sc hool :1nd 1.., '&gt; t'll j•mpl o.\ t• d
at Walker s (;ar age.
Srptrmbrr wPdcl ing I "
,\
plannt'rl ill Fain·I('H" Chri .'&gt; li .tn
Church tn l "i'nl r rpomt. Ohi o.

VINTON . OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
STATE RT . 160
JAMES A . BUSH . Mg r.
PHON E 388 8603

Corbin and Snyder Furniture
AND

Sesting Systems

present ...

"THE BOOMERANG CHAIR"

I
I
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eShl"'pao ell\
o.t(l\1011

,.m

~·
.~~. .~~~ Sll"'

.f1

.Con'~

I
.• \

~ J..tic s-m'

-- ---r',
•
s ',

Th eres

'"J1LI~"

I
1

-- -

Pti('

p'&gt;,,

no need to,' .~~'"'Poa -11,
pay $60 ,' ' 11,1':!'••c., ,'Sp11~/(11t

renn.

L'

more (Or a great
I
Perro Conr~ Co111 : ll'r,p
At Fantastic Sams, you11 get
lJ.s,;t,~~~
a beautiful Helene Curtis• perm. ', ,.,,~... '()9's~
including a shampoo, cut and
,' Ah~:_',,,q
complete style-everything you /. -&lt;1(/0:fh-::-' ,
expect from an expenstve salon./ :~ . -~Q Q;j.
except the P.nce.
.
1 .,s;:: ..,.,
5
You doni need an appotnl· L -~
ment, we're waiting for y~u now. ~',,,_,~
Of

''-~-'·1

A.CJmztastzcSants•

V. the o.tglnll FamotHa&lt;rcutle&lt;s•
',.J
4U·SAIIS
MON. THRU Fll. 9 TO~ P.M.
OHIO IIYIR PlAIA
lAT . ~ TO 6 P.M.
ll(fWIIN HillS &amp; IIG IUA
lUNDAY
12 TO 5 P.M.
GAlliPOliS, OHIO
lNOEPENDeNTlY CN.tiED ANO OPERATED CIFM!IItlc: SM!l

t

You don ·r sit in it _. _vou fit in tt "

J

89

~'/t:Nnih-~
~

masses and so we do . The
standing In line goes on like a
so ng because we know that we
have to la ke In all of the
recommended attraction s and
restaura nts .
Ail of a sudden we tur n Into the
last of the big time spenders. The
plastic has no boundaries. We
dine In the restaurants recom m end ed for their atmosphere the atmosphere and decor are
sensational - too bad the food
Is n't. We spe nd as much for one
m eal as we lay out for a week 's
supply of grub on the home turf.
What's It matter - we're on
vacation - a nd we're going to
have It all~
Regardless of the pitfalls and most of us know al l of them every year we rev up for that big
vacation. We go - we spe nd we re turn bea t and broke. Then
with a bll of relief we gel to go
bac k to work so that we ran rest
upa fler thai release fromdutyor
business " .
Oh, by the way. did I tell you ? I
ju st love vacations. Do keep
smiling.

Now ou1 of lhP car and i t 's tim e
to begi n lining up which goes w ith
the te rrit ory on mil ny vacations.
Oh wel l. we did wa n I to join th e

MODERN WOODMEN SOLUTIONS

FURNITURE •FINE FURNITURE
GALLERIES •CUSTOM DRAPERY

IN GALUPOLIS

"D i d you turn off the co ff ee
poJ ?"
No one r emembers and il 's
dlfflcull to rid your mind of th e
home pla ce go in g up In flames
wh ile you are frivolously driving
lik e a bat out of helllo gel into
Vaca lionland as soon as possible.
We prop up behind the wheel f or
an eight . t en or t welve hour
dri ve . St op to res I? Look at the
gre at scenery alon g the wa y?
Stop at a po int of i nt eres t? No
way, it' s Pike Peak or bu st and
rig ht now. The drive, however .
does brr ng us toget her - we have
hours and hours to just communi
calc . Th£' Jraffl c, the heal , the
truck s, the assis tance in driving,
the complaining , the heavy rain .
and Olher f act or s prod us into
r ncourage ment l o vo icP a fpv.
opini ons l hat we'vp had fo r
mo n th s but haven't ex pre ssed
them because we haven't exactly
had a cap ti ve audience for such a
long period. As we r eac h the
la lk ing throug h clenched Ieet h
and fina lly t he complete silen t
stage, we arr ive at our d estination. Hmmmmm. doesn't look as
good as II did In the broc hure .

Modarn Woodmen now aHara major medical and disability income
plane . Along with lifelnouranca. an·
nuitiea and retirement plans. vou
hava complete

30°/o

•QUALITY CARPET
-COIUIIIOAl 01 IISIIIImAl-

never stand In a line again? How
many times ha ve yo u eate n those
words In the pas t 45 years?
Once the desti nation becomes
an officia l matter of r eco rd , one
Is o nly ankle deep into the
vacation ritua l 1 now remember
this Is supposed to be a release
from duty or bu siness ) . You can't
just go -you have to ca ll ahead
and make sure there Is room at
the Inn. This Is th e place where
you pay $60 and up a night to lay
down your wea ry head. There 's
probably nothing wrong with the
beds In these pl aces , bu 1 som ehow sleep doesn't come easily .
After all, we 'r e creatures of habit
and we're used to our own beddie
bye at home and the old crunched
pillow that we know j ust how to
fold over for r eal comfort
More than likely you 'r e not
goin g to get too much res t at the
inn. After all In Vacation Land,
you 're not only in strange surroundings but there will be all of
those noises Including the ones
coming from the next room made
by what seems to be a party of at
leas t 12 who ar e deter mined to
have a good time or else . And If
loud Is an indicatio n of a good
time, th ey're havi ng a blast.
Then comes mormng and that
cu p of coffee always seems lobe
a probl em at the inn . AI hom e.
you o nly have to work your way
to the k itchen - it 's lik e a dally
com e as you are party - look ing
like death warm ed over and grab
I hal cu p of li fe-savi ng java .
A t the inn - !t 's another st ory
- eve n If coffee Is availabl e, you
have to go throug h th e ritual of
m akin g yo urse lf presentable and a lot of mornin gs th ai's toug h
- b ecau se you not onl y havP to
beg in yo ur standing in line
ro ut lnP but for some reason you
have to be concerned abou t you r
appearance. Gads - you even
have to com b yo ur hai r. Si nce
you're probably nrvrr going to
see t hese people agai n, may be it
shouldn' t be a ma t ter of co ncern .
Howev er, mos t of us seem to be
vai n enough not to want the
general public l o see how bad
lhlngs r eal ly are for us the first
thing In th e morning.
A rea l pe ak of gettin g off on the
trip Is, of cour se, the packing . AI
best yo u are going 10 have four
days and nights at th e Garden
Spo t but you pack like your
Irav ing home forever . Chances
ar e I ha l you won't have the need
nor the time to even unw ad most
of the things yo u've pac ked. But
the bru sh with Boy Sco uting did
leach us lobe prepared- and so
we go.
Loading the car al so has il s
high points. There's not OtiiY the
Joo much luggage. but there' s' the
goodi e bag. the acr oss the
count er supp ly of medicatio n,
su ng l asses, road maps, ramPra
equipm ent. as we ll as a general
coll ection of all sort s of ot her
necessi ties . No rm all y. we forge t
so me l hing - a nd we ' re gener·
all y on the road for some 300
mile s a1 !Pas t beforP lht' ques ti on
arises :

Sunday Times-Sentinel -- Page- B-7

- - - E ngagements- - - -

Take a vacation...

Major Medical and
Disability Income

•FREE DELIVERY

I CIC!N F. - Charle s and Do nna
ll rlt•. Ha r inP, wi ll bf' cetebral ing
illl' ir 25th wedding anniver sar y
" " Tuesday.
.~
family dinne r is heing

"a

A vacation, of
co urse, Is a release from duty
or bu siness - a holiday period.
Psyc hologists and psychiatrists
have come to recognize that we
all need vacallons- so that we
don't "burn out" {did we used to
do that? I and em ployers have
been advised(] love It! 1 that they
will have better em ployees over
the long run If they offer a
vaca tion program . Often, these
vacallons ar e WITH pay . I love
that. too!
Of co urse , a vacation these
days Is no simple mailer.
Whoever said "Give me th e
simple life" certainly couldn't
have had vacations in mind. The
simple vacation would be to stock
up on plenty of food and drink,
unplug the tel ephone , turn on !h e
televlslon'a nd lei the r est of th e
world go by at home where there
is an easy ehalr ju st waiting to be
fill ed with your re laxed, vaca tion in g body.
But do we buy th at dream ?
Na w! We' re at a point in time
wher e vaca tions m ust be spl'c ·
tacular no every day hum ·
drum- something t o talk about
- somethin g 10 photograph something to capture on th e new
video camera.
Naturally, t hr first decision in
the vacation game Is ju st wh en•
we w ill go this yea r . We trul y do
gel around much any more and
there are theme parks . resort
ci ti es . ocea ns, mountains and a
numb er of attraction s In
h0twee n.
Th e amount of lime involved In
m aking th is des ti nation decision
Is conti ngent on ho w many peop le
are providing input. The f inal
derision must be one thai everyon e involved can l ive with . If
the k ids a r e still at home, there's
a strong chance that the th em e
park s will wi n Jhumbs down and
ever yone agrees to liv e with it . lf
the kid s ar e gone and ther e are
now silvPr th rea ds a m ong thl'
gold - come to think uf it, some
of us ar e now completel y wi thout
the gold - iJ's probable that
the m e pa rk s will move t o a low
position on the lotrm po lr.
If yo u are a part of the
desti nation decision - a nd yo u
should be unless yo u are a victim
of discrimination and your rights
are being viol aJed - m ay I
suggest I hal you simply use the
agr eea ble m ethod '' I'd like to
say that II works for m e- but il
does n' t.
At one point in time duri ng the
trequenl breakfa st, lun ch and
dinner table discussio ns on ju st
1he r i ght vaca ti on s put. you
rnrrely commen1:
" J ust whatever yo u decide is
okay by m e If it 's okay by you."
The co unte r answer will prob a·
blv be so melhlng to the effect.
·. 'Th er e certain ly mu st be
somepla ce yo u'd lik e to go so mething you would enjoy
do ing "
The Implic ati on here ma y turn
"u l to be t ha i you are dull. l aLy
and un interes ted in any act i v it y.

Burke-Blake

1967.
Rev. Beegle gave 46 years to
them in is n·y, starting as a circuit
rider with the U.B.C. in Gallia
Co unty for 11 years. While there
he built a parsonage.
In 1935 the couple moved to

Beat of the bend

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July 22, 1990

ports

~imes- Jentin~l

Section

C

July 22. 1990

Rijo, Mahler hurl
Reds past Phlls, 6-1

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out, Glenn Braggs doubled to lett,
scoring Davis and Sabo.
Cubs 3, Giants 2
At Chicago, Marvell Wynne
scored In the eighth Inning on
Jose Uribe's second error of the
game to break a 2-2 tle, boosting
the Chicago Cubs to a 3-2 victory
Saturday over the San Francisco
Giants lor thelr slxtb straight
triumph.
Mike Harkey, 8-4, pitched his
flnt career complele game for
the Cubs. He scattered nine hits,
struck out three and walked two
In hla eighth start since being
activated from the dlsa!Jled list.
During that span, he Is 3-3 with a
2.38 ERA. Jeff Brantley, 3-3, took
the loss In relief.
Doug Dascenzo singled off
Giants starter Scott Garrelts
with one out In the eighth and
reached third on Wynne's single
off Brantley. Home plate umpire
Eric Gregg called a balk on
Brantley to score Dascenzo with
the tying run.
Brantley lhen hit Luis Salazar,
bringing on reliever Steve Bedrosian. One out later. Joe Girardi

hit a grounder Ia shortstop Uribe.
The ball defelcted off his knee
and Wynne scored to give the
Cubs a 3-2 lead.
Kevin Mitchell and Matt Williams each singled with two out In
the San Francisco eighth. Terry
Kennedy doubled home Mitchell
to give the Giants a 2·llead.
The Giants had taken a 1~ lead
In the first on WlWams' slog lefor
his league-leading 79th RBI.
Ry ne Sandberg led off the slx th
for Chicago with his NL-Ieadlng
25th homer.
Yankll Worth MIUions
NEW YORK I UPI) -The New
YOfk Yankees may have the
worst record In the major
leagues, but money-wise, they
top most other learns and are
worth hundreds of millions of
dollars, It was reported
Saturday.
Gov. Marlo Cuomo -a former
minor league player himself cited the team's financial suc·
cess Friday when he suggested
the state and city consider
buying the !ranchlse If owner
George Steinbrenner Is forced to
selL

'Charlie Hustle' should not be banned from Hall of Fame

HOMEMADE

U.S.D.A. BONELESS BEEF

Chicago's Andre Dawl!On Satunl&amp;f at Clllcap.
The umpire called Daw!IOa sale with astolen bue,
telling Thompoon his loot was olllhe baae. The
Cubs won thelr sixth straight, H. (UPI)

CINCINNATI (UPI) - Jose
Rljo, In his tlrst start since being
placed on tbe disabled list, hurled
slx Innings and Glenn Braggs
doubled home two runs Satur·
day, giving the Cincinnati Reds a
6·1 victory over tile Philadelphia
PbUlles, giving the Reds a
10-game lead In the National
League's Western Division.
Rljo, who wasdlsabledJune29,
allowed one earned_run to raise
his record to 6-3. Rick Mahler
pitched three Innings for bls
second save. Terry Mulholland,
4-4, took the loss.
Philadelphia took a 1-0 lead In
the third on Tom Herr's RBI
single. The Reds tied the score 1·1
In the fourth when Mariano
Duncan singled home Chris
Sabo. Cincinnati went ahead 2-1
In the sixth when Eric Davis led
off with his 13th homer of the
year.
Cincinnati made the score 6-1
In the seventh. Mulholland made
an errant throw to first on a Hal
Morris bunt, allowing Joe Oliver
to score for a 3-1 lead. The Reds
made It 4-1 when Barry Larkin
squeezed home a run. With two

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes-Senllnel Stall
GALLIPOLIS- Okay, so It's old news by now
lhat Pete Rose, the man known to millions as
''Charlie Hustle'' and one of the main cogs In the
Big Red Machine of the 1970s, was convicted of tax
evasion, fined $5(),000 and sentenced to five
months In a prison In nearby Ashland, Ky .
And In light of this, some may - and many
already have - complain of how athletes have
disappointed us as role models lor our youth. And
while most of us still prefer to see our ballpark
heroes as virtuous characters with whom our
children can Identify, It's high lime thal we see
athletes as the human beings that they are, with
the same virtues and vices as the rest of us. Alter
all. athletes are paid to perform. regardless of
whether they are saints or sinners.

For example, let's take Babe Ruth. His
gargantuan appetites !or alcohol and partying are
legendary. but no one would deny him his
well-deserved place In baseball's Hall of Fame, as
his accompllsnments between the foulllnes speak
for themselves. And let's not forget Ty Cobb, one
of baseball's all-time great hitters and base
s tealers. He was known as a hal-tempered
lndlvldua l who would sharpen his spikes to make
keystone artists and stewards of the bot corner
pay for their determination to stand their ground
wtlen he ran the bases. Surely at some polnl In
time some unlucky Infielder ended up with bloody
shins , but even this didn't keep the "Georgia
Peach'' out ol Cooperstown.
Wllhout question, Rose deserves his punish·
ment. Anyone who thinks he can outfox the IRS
and conceal $350,000 In earnings from sales of

memorabilia, baseball card shows. personal
appearances and gambling on God knows how
many games deserves the loss of face that Rose
has suffered. But those who say Rose should not bP
Inducted Into the Hall of Fame because of his
off-the-field Indulgences are, to be kind, way out of
line (unless, of course, It can be proved that he
fixed games as a player or manager, something
no one so far has stepped forth to do).
Induction Into the Hall of Fame Is not a Citizen
of the Year award. As we have seen earlier. being
a jackass or something slmllar doesn't always
mean you won't get ln. but being a model citizen In
addition to being a good player helps (ask Hall of
Farner Ernie Banks. considered by many to be a
classy Individual who dellvl'!'ed first-rate play.
day In and day out, In his career as a shortslop
with the Chicago Cubs, whose last appearance In

the World Series was shortly afler Japan's
surreodert .
Rose was not the most gifted player, or even the
most talented hitter, to play the game, bul his
~ggresslve a{Utude, shown regularly In his
sprints to first base alter getting a walk and hls
coUislon with catcher Ray Fosse In the 1970
All-Star Game (among other events) was jusl
what lhe doctor ordered for the Reds, wtlo had
been beaten In the 1970 and 1972 editions of the
World Series, to shake off the past and become the
team of the '70s by beating Boston In that 1975eplc
and sweeping tne New York Yankees the
following year. "Charlie Hustle" was one of the
significant Ingredients In the Reds' five Nallonal
League West titles. tour pennants and two world
championships In that decade.
The
ought to consider tbat.

In the Kyger Creek LL Tourrwment,

Dodgers, Reds ·capture opening-night victories
By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tlmes-8entlnel Stall
CHESHIRE -The Middleport
Domino's Dodgers and lhl' Ra·
cine Reds No. I posted victories
over the Pleasant Valley Hospital Medical and Addaville
squads, respectively, Friday
night In the opening of the 1990
Kyger Creek Ll t tie League
Tournament .
The Dodg!'rs and the Reds will
squarl' off today at 4 p.m. at the
Kyger Creek EmployPPS Club
Field, site of the lournament.
Middleport. which hammered
PVH Medical 18-3, reeled off a
five-run rally In lhe opening
frame and chalked up three more
ott starter and losing pllcher
Jimmy Hall, who combined with
J.D. Holsleln to strike out four
and walk nine. Donald Goheen.
the Dodgers' pitcher. went the
distance. fanning nine. Issuing
four walks and surrendering one
hll- a single by MediCal catcher
Jason Wallis .

Middleport's 11 -hlt attack, In·
strumentalln Its 10-run jailbreak
In the third, was fueled by Brent
Hanson 12-3. a double,lhegame's
only extra -base hili, Goheen.
Wes McClure and Paul Pullins
I all 2·4). Willie Johnson fl -3),
Chad Burton and J.P. Fisher
(bothl-4).
Score by Innings
PVH Medical. .. 0 0 I 2- 3- 1·2
Middleport ...... 5 3 10 x-18-11·1
WP- Goheen
LP - J . Hall
Racine 7, Addavllle 6- Racine
needed a lhree-run rally In the
boltom of the third inning and a
pair of favorable close calls In
Addavllle 's fifth to slip away with
a one-run victory .
Addavllle, the visiting team.
scored three out of the gate. but
the Reds answered with a pair of
their own In their half of lhl' first
Then the Reds' Jamey Nelson
and the Bobeats' M.T. Blaine

took over tn the third, keeping the
plate clear of their opposition's
spikes.
Then aner the Bobcats were
sent away empty In the third. lhe
Reds surged ahead with a threerun rally In lhelr half of the third.
Then In the rourlh they picked up
a pair of what was at the time·
Insurance runs that put them
ahead 7-4. But the Bobcats
wouldn't go down without fight ! ng, as the Addavllle fifth proved.
Matl Williamson and Brad
Kemper started the Inning off
with consecutive doubles IAdda·
ville's only exira-base hils) lhat
trimmed Racine's lead to 7-5, as
Wllltamson scored. Then the
Reds' bralntrusl took Nelson oft
the mound and put shorts10p
Jeremy Hill In lo pitch. But
back-to-back wild pitches by Hill
got Bobcat Sieve Unroe, who
earlier singled In Kemper from
second base 10 cut the Reds'lead
to 7-6. from first 10 third.
Th e ra lly. however. began to

lose steam when Tim Caldwell's
grounder to the mound resulled
In Unroe's being forced at home.
Then the coup de grace was
delivered when Hill got the final
batter to strike out for the win.
Nelson and Hill combined to
strike out eight and walk two In a
winning ertort, whll£&gt; Blain!'
fanned five and walked three In
going the distance and absorbing
the loss.
Racine's hit parade was led by
Ryan Martin I 2-3, double), Hill
and Nelson I both 1-3, one double
each), John Card 11·2), and
Shawn Dally and Luke Holman
(both 1·31. Addavllle's hit collec·
tors were Joel Jagers 13-3), Jody
Slone 12-31. Kemper and William·
son 11·3, one double each) and
Unroe 11·31 .
Score by Innings
AddavlllP ................ 30012-6-8-2
Racine .................... 20320-7-8-1
WP - Nelson 1 Hill save)
LP- Blaine

Faldo has 5-stroke lead in British Open
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Writer
&amp;;1'. ANDREWS, SCOTLAND
- ~tck Faldo tired a five-under·
par 67 Saturday to lake a
commanding five-stroke lead
and put himself In position 10 win
his second British Open tllle .
The Masters champion, who
shared the second-round lead
with Australia's Greg Norman.

tamed lhe 6,93.1-yard Old Course
with six birdies and only one
bogey, finishing wllh a three-day
total of 17-under-par 199. It was
the lowest 54-hole lOla lin British
Open history.
Faldo's nearest competition
came from Australia's Ian
Baker-Finch and American
Payne Stewart, both at 12-under
204. Baker-Finch fired an 8-under

par 64 on Saturday, while Ste·
wart carded a 68.
An other stroke back at 205 was
Australian Craig Parry, who shot
a 69. Next at 206 was Britain's
Paul Broadhurst, who came
within a stroke of the course
record wl th a 63, followed by Jan
Woosnam of Britain and New
Zealand's Frank Nobllo al 207.
Norman carded four bogeys on

Bengals open training camp
WILMINGTON, Ohio iUPIITh~ Cincinnati Bengals open
tralnlngcampSundaywlth hopes
of bouncing back from a disappointing 8-8 season last year.
"On paper, we've got a lot of
good things going," said Bengals
roach Sam Wyche. "But we've
got some big question marks ."
The Immediate question
marks are several unsigned
veterans and high rookie draft
picks who are likely to miss the
start of camp until they sign
contracts.
"I think missing a week begins
to hurt you," said Wyche. "It
depends on the guy and the
position. If you have a leader In a
position, a guy who steps forward, II might not hurt as much."
However, lor the first lime In
seven years, the &amp;ngals' top
draft pick Is under contract lor

the s tart of camp. James Francis, a linebacker from Baylor,
signed a contract Thursday .
Francis Is given a good shot at
cracking the starting lineup
because of the retirement of
veteran starting linebacker Reg·
gle Williams.
Also playing under a new
contract Is veteran All-Pro offensive tackle Anthony Munoz. But
don't ask Munoz or the Bengals
how much money he Is making.
Tbe contract Munoz signed contains a financial non-disclosure
clause which will penaliZe him 10
percent of his pay If be makes the
ligures public.
Although Munoz signed the
agreement, he wasn't entirely
happy about II.
"I had a 10 percent penalty
going against me and they (club
oftlclalst bad nothing golna

agalnsl them," said Munoz .
"They're basically saying, our
word Is good, but your's might
not be, so we're going to assess
this penalty against you just In
case. Ifeel like my word Is just as
good as their word."
Munoz and other veterans are
scheduled to report to camp on
Thursday. Sunday's reporting
deadline was only for rookies .
The Bengals have trained at
Wilmington College annually
since 1968, tbefr first season In
the Natlonal Football LeaJIUe.
"We're looking forward to our
training camp at Wllmlalton
College, our sumrner home,"
said Bengals general manager
Paul Brown. •Thla will be our
23rd consecutive year at WU·
mlngton, so you know wt e11joy
the asaocllltlon."

the back side In ballooning to a
4-over-par 76, leaving hbn In a
group of six at 8-under 208.
Faldo, the 1987 Open champion, was expected to stage a
duel with Norman over the final
two rounds, but Saturday turned
Into a showcase for the British
star.
He rammed home a 15-foot
birdie pun at the par-4 first hole
to take command, then added
two more birdies on the fronts Ide
to make the turn with a threestroke lead. He carded three
more birdies on the back side, the
only blemish coming with a
bogey at No . 17 - the lreactler~
ous Road Hole - where his
approach shot missed the green.
In three rounds of play, Faldo
has recorded an eagle, 17 birdies
and only two bogeys. He has
played all but five holes on the
Old Course In lour strokes or less,
with three of his fives on par·5
holes.
'These three rounds I've been
doing great," Faldo said. "But
I've got to keep this going. I've
got to stay In the same mode and
be aggresslv~tomorrow."
"Now the guys bave something
to shoot at, and can go for birdies.
I have to just keep going
forward."
Meanwhile, Nonnan wu bav1111 bll worstl'OUDd shlee he lbot

• '18 In the lll'lt I'OIIIId ot lbe

Mueen and mluecl the Clll.

HEADFIRST SLIDE- The Middleport Dodgen' Paul PuUins
lakes a headfirst slide Into borne to beat the tbrow from PVH
Medical cateher Jaon Wallla to pitcher J.D. Holsleln In tile third
lnalns ol Frldllf ol(lll's Kyrer Creek Little Leape Tournament
opener at Cheshire. The 1'1111 was part ol a 10-run JaUbreak that saw
lbe Dodgers win 18-3. (Times-8endnel photo by G. Spencer
Osborne)

WILLIAMSON 8CORII8- .\ddaYille'tllatiWUllaiMM reacllel
lite pWe
117 leiiiiiiiMe steve tJ-111 &amp;lie tolll'dllnlllq
of l"rrdaJ •JP&amp;'• teClOIIIl 111111• 11ma1 llle BecJ• lledl Ill lbe
1ner Creel&amp; Ulale IAape "-amnl, wWclllbe IHa woo M.
('l'llaM 8r•l'MI ...... 11J G. 8praw Oltlle,_)

•••lillie

�Jt,lly 22. 1990

Page C-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

Sunday Times- Sentinel- Page- C-3

July 22, 1990

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

Reds top Phils; Giants lose

:I

CINCINNATI !UP!)- Clncin·
natl Reels Manager Lou Plnlella
will be playing more of Jeff Reed.
The back-up catcher went3 for
3 with two RBI Friday night and
Norm Charlton pitched six
strong Innings to lead the Clncln·
nail Reds to a 5-1 victory over the
Philadelphia Phllles.
"I hope that's the start of
something to come," Plnlella
said of Reed's performance.
''I've been playing Reed about
two or three games a week to rest
(Joe) Oliver," Pinlella said.
"Plus, Oliver got banged up
pretty good last night and we
have a day game (Saturday.) "
But the Reds' victory was
marred by a sixth-Inning brawl
between Cincinnati's Norm
Charlton and Philadelphia
pitcher Dennis Cook.
Charlton was beaned by a Cook
pitch and, after Cook was warned
by home plate umpire Bob
Davidson, Charlton charged the
mound and both dugouts emptied. Cook and Charlton were
both ejected.
"'I don't have much to say
about it." Plnlella said.
But Charlton had plenty to say

I

J
_;J

.·
.·

team, from 1-r, were: Tom Hawley, Harold
Hubbard, Gene Brasel, Gall Snyder and Jim
Wilson.

· . · WINNING TEAM - The winning team In
Thund&amp;)' afternoon's Hearl Aasoclatlon Golf
Scramble at Jaymar Goll Club finished with a
.score of 13 under par. Membel"!l of Ibe wlnnln1

in the locker room afterward.
"Rather than wail until the
next Inning, I just decided to take
care of It right then and there,"
Charlton said of Cook's pitch that
came too close for Charlton's
comfort.
"Whatever Dennis Cook gets
fined, Von Hayes sure ought to
pay because Dennis did the dirty
work lor him," Charlton
claimed. The PhUIIes outfielder
was struck by Charlton the last
time the Phillies played In
Ctncinnau.
"II Hayes has any class at all,
he'll wrtte a check tor the fine
when it comes in," Chariton said.
Phlllles Manager Nick Leyva
suggested Chariton overreacted .
"I guess when a pltc her is
pitching inside, they are not

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Corn Roast

POMEIOY, 992-2090

Continued on C-3

FROM TORO WHEEL HORSE
STILL YOUR BEST DEAL ON
A lAWN AND GARDEN TRACTOR

-Sports briefs- ,_BA_N...;;.KR_U_PT_C_Y"""1
Baskelball
The Erie Wave or the World
Basketball League has released
Dwayne McClain. Injured since
July 6. McClain, a forward !rom
Villanova University. played In
six games, averaging 13.5 points
and 9.2 rebounds a game before
being sidelined with knee
problems.

supposed to pitch (Charlton 1
inside." Leyva said.
The Philadelphia manager
passed off the brawl as "just
grown men having fun."
Charlton, 8-4, making his second start of the season after
being usell as a reliever. retired
the first 14 batters he laced and
allowed two hils In six Innings to
post his second straight win . Rob
Dibble worked three hitless In·
nlngs for his eighth save.
Jeff Parrett, 3-8, gave up live
hits in five Innings.
Cincinnati took a 2·0 lead In the
fourth inning. With one out, Eric
Davis walked and moved to third
on Hal Morris" single. Chris Sabo
followed with a single to lett.
scoring Davis. Sabo then moved

Included

20-HPlbro
Power Plus••

~u

Uni ·Drivt•

F1lltr

8-Pinion

Hydrostatic
Transaxle Hydraulic

Bob Evans Shelter House
Rio Grande, Ohio

Chrome
Hubcaps

Anachment

42' . 48 " &amp; b(Y

Lift

Commercial Mowing Decks (Optional)

&amp; Details

Speaker: James M. Petro,
Republican Candidate for Auditor of Stote

TORO

Right at home.

Cook-out, Corn, Socialize, Republicanize
Fun for all, Everyone Welcome
$2.00 Donation, Children Free

I
,

I

1986 CHRYSLER 5th AVENUE

1988 CHEVROLET !ROC

J2t67. Srlver hlll sh A doo1 swan ve

MP224t. M&amp;roon finiSh

efujrne

~uiOOl.JI '(. ~If

sl ~ung blak~ ~

Ct11drll(lll!r1Q powt''

w•llOows

seol~

hnled g•ass 1•1! wnee• uu rS!'
AM tr M raoro wrth &gt;le•eo CHser:e

buc~el

NOW S8991S.OO

fPZl3CA. &amp;~k cher1y hm srft van EcyhfiOr!' autW~aiiC ~''
!iletrrrrg &amp; Or.P.n trilled ~s~ 1••1wtle!o cr LJ•st AM 11V

Wh!!fl [Jf!~

iJU(()fl\d\1 (

~~h

llnteo

gl,r ~~

"'"
NOW S8891S.OO

wllft!S

1986 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY
-.ea.an 'ronl whttr drNe .lr..IOI"I.tll( ~.,
)(ltrrtr sreenng &amp; D r~ r i r,nttCI grJH

powtr !. l l!trrng &amp; tnkes AM Ifill r.ld10

IUI ,'f M ridiO lillaal tnt&gt; wl'letl co~r .\

NOW SUIBIS.OO

1989 JEEP CHEROKEE

1986 MERCURY CAPRI

rfP2245 . ~Goo&lt; rt'(l lrrrrsh 4 whee i dove
6 ry rnder dulo'll•hc ,.,. power ~ le errrq
&amp; OrJk~S p(lWfr Wrfli)OI~ ) &amp; ~001 IOlH
lrrrrfn Q•JSS tr: t whee· &lt;~tr r sf AM •f ~
',1~10 wtl~ ~e r to C~S,tl!t ldr~ed lrlle r
trrt\ buc~el se~ts ,trt,mon\;m wtreets ~~11

NP22J78. Rl.tck lirrrsh

? noo·

MP2181. Whtle

NOW $48911.00

NOW $10,9811.00

(1rhonwq ;MJwe•
~J IA&lt;,~

•lltomaltt

~1eerro11

&lt;tlf

IIIII
1989 CHEVROLET CORSICA

Red finrsh , • cylinder enotne . iiUI
AMIFM rad to wtlh sle•eo casselle

•P21 88 4 1100' Strlon ,ov holt lrnr~h ,IH
~o ... r· &lt;;' t~rrog ~ h·• r e·
A" ' 'M "JaMJ

tadtal 111es. ~eke! Mals. sunroof

Duf kel '&gt;€ JIS

NOW $39915.00

,._

con

&amp; brakes . !rflleO

tonnt t rOJUO~
' ~!llil • 1111.'~

NOW S79911.00
"A ll Un1t s
Subject To
Prior Sale

..

a
~

NOW 54898.00
.wntu

·

floo•

l c f0111 J I~
1·.ro(lt•
,!, '"·U II ~' ,t'e'

1978JEEP WAGONEER
~'0368 .

i

ooo•

ol whet'l

c:luwe . rmiWn

torr~h

VB rng!llf ,Ju1om.111r !riiMorniSSion

;xtw~r

i ktllnq .\ br dKt$

~"' ·lwl ''''"

NOW

brcn•'

1

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:X,.,~

''~!t•O

11.1 ·

1.1!1• ·

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aaaea

tNI SUIMUITITaiWIIIII
I!'UMIA
I I •1111'1

U JrOO'I

I

t .. l ~r~.tl I

.!II

WI)

, ,,.. "9 h' '' "· ""''00 .. ,
,,,,. , 11

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4

l))•tr

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ill'

'&gt;tO.II'I

M · ~a •o ,.n rttl'!, ~ r ~
~ tMrs / tone ortr,.n &amp; bi'!!Ot llf1 rS!t

c : ~r&amp;e

conii!JI AM

f

NOW SS8815.00

When t·ou Say
T1ucks Think Of
Simmons ChevrDiet
The Heartbeat of
Slluthea1tern Ohio
I

'u10111dlrt:

,1, d~ ·

~. r,r 1M

orr~

NOW 87881!1

~·r

Oll"ll'tr

ronte'CJ

114a

~lff· • nQ ~

Ul

IU

NOW 16995

NOWSB8811

NOW 88B8B

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

1911 I:IIIWY LUIIHA
IIPflU. ·IIIur)' :.ci\Jrt hlltr lor~ } •
, r\011\ilt ,ro" ~·f!' IIHIOOQ 1\.
bi.tlrf!\ lo ll\t~ IJI ' ~ ' U1 ' fill
•.1010 •.td•A I Ill~ ~ Wllfl'• I IJYII \

Now••"•

"-G!Light

*it I

Dl..

J '

l

11MCHEVml
n•1111. a ctoorc:oup~, • qlilllttlfiOI"•

• •II'M&lt;I tr..malon, ,,.. tlrtll.

NOWat•ea,Aala

•
•
•

1990 CHEYT BERm A

CFII~t
br.l~n

b Cyl,nrlt'r

Jrl lO!ltllliOOII"Q fJO"'f'
~!H' II'l Q &amp; l)ra kt~ trnld! q1.1~~ 1111 Wt\tf'

.lB.

bftta, IIIIIJII
1!\
rWif\t r.O.. •ht1•A

oow.tr 1)1 ~~e~

1985 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE
NP2213A. 4 liOO'

111.1(.

•nn ~~ ' wo J ern nor&lt;

All 18 $111915.00

f~Qrnt ;ull)fll,li H"

flr71ll IIIM1. 6 c,lllldlr .-It
.., IIO&amp;'a' lftlllf &amp;

1910 GEO METRO 4 0001

1111 tlt!VY
wttn. 1 dQr)t

a.

c-

pd..p 111«' '

r:ylr'Ofl po.er "-'1119 &amp; IIIM:r~
rJI!wj tlfn rl\'ly lfllltll IMut

"''"
NOWa...ea

1HD ll£0 PlltZII 4 IIOOR

~ W() •
Ill g(lwt:l

ty\~ 1

luii)ITII\1(

UM!IIIQ &amp; b•i·~~ h!lltd ld&gt;~
AM ·~ M

•IOro ' ~' bvr:~th

NOW . . . . .

lood
21 More unusual

22
23
24
25
26

Rabbits
Old pronoun
Boundary
Mature
Long for

28 Danger

30 Scoundrel
32 -. L. K. J. 33 Coroner abbr .

4•4 .

power

mirrors,

AMIFM

~~~

NOW '7,195

1986 FORD TAURUS WAGON

Red , AMIFM, crurse. IJ6. air. power t983 CHEVY c.IRI STITIJ!I WI&amp;ON
W!MOWS &amp; lOCk S, digr\!11 clock, Air, AMI FM cesselle, c rui~EI. Iilt . Jrd V6 . CIUISa. AMIFM ster&amp;o, air,
.'leal, 9 passt~nQe •, one o11mer
automatrc , one owner
IO&lt;:al trade-rn

~·.s,.

NOW '6,295 ~~~ NOW '4,495 ~~

NOW 12,895

1987 NISSAN SENTRA

1986 FORD RANOER
AMiFM CaU~IIe, 5 speed,. wMel
Ull'i1!1. sltd log 1ear glas s, one owne1

~~~

NOW 5,495
1

Su nrool . 5 ~peed, AM IF M t:asset!a
one owl'ler
WA S

S5.995

NOW '4,795

1986 TOYOTA CAMRY

1983 BUICK REGAL

c a ~se llfl LE equarrzer POW( ly wheel~ V8. locel
sun roo f . alur' 1onur11 wheels. on WAS
OWCO&lt;

WAS

"-"''

11185 NISSAN 300ZX 2x2

. . ., .

'

NOW '6,795

1985 NISSAN SENTRA

trade

NOW '3 ' 695

6 Trnt s
7 Ricocheted
8 Sea eagle

Jack son
105 Spreaos tor

91Gotup

11 Leather belt

92 Wander s about

43 Killed
44 Chore

119 Wtnter veh•cle

18 Marlm 10

120 Den

19 Measures

4 5 Obstruct

122 World 124 On the -

(lleerng)
125 Dock
126 Mediterran ean

vessel s

daughter

99 Beverage
101 Named

105 'The A -.
106 Declare
10 7 Tidy
Ill Pierce
112 Toward shelter
113
trae

115 Shout
116 Helps
118 Hard -shelled

the moon
Hit hard : slang
Go by water
Unemployed
Mer ganser

36
37

56 100 pennies

constellat•on
131 Burrowing animal

39
40

59 Native metal

t32 Mournful

41 MIX

rnoltu sk
119 Deposit of
sediment
12 1 Men d s
123 Concermng
125 Armed band s
126 "S imon - ··

42 Foot ra ces

133 Relatively sho rt

43 Jell and Beau.

period

to Lloyd

135 Seed
138 Goal
tJ9 Spar
140 Playthrng

(cheldren's game)

44 Htgh

14 1 S outhern
blackbtrd

4ti Irving 10
48 Unrl o l C htn ese

127 Lawmakmg body
129 Stone c ut in

currenq
49 Dougla s

130 Lasso

142 Hebrew lett er
143 Mother

50

70 Actor"s goal

144 Paddles

5 1 H1ghwn ys

71 Calloway of mus1c
72 TV's Benji or

145 Expunge
147 Decrees

52 Fung ous dt sease

Buck
74 Ponders
76 Drunkard

149 Goller' s need
ISO Short 1ackets

53 Flood

relief
13 1 Deface
132 Floats in air
134 Illuminated

(" Twrn Peaks
Ftlet of

ol rye

55 Seesaw
56 Stup1 d lello""'
57 With for ce
58 Long loose

15 2 Chem+cal
compound
154 Trilla amorously
156 Correct. as a
manuscrip t
158 Fertile spots
in the deserl

garm en t s

61 Sprtnl

63 Let Iall

159 Sa turates
160 Taut
161 Collect: gather

•

97 Jogs

dura lion of
20 Adhere to
27 Din e
29 Great Lake
3 1 It Jumped over

129 Cancer

College ofli crals
Church part
Rip
Beatty film
Accomplishment

93 Approach
95 Pa1rs
96 SitJiing 's

Bankrng

128 Conducted

84
85
86
88
89

idly

12 Chocolate -

1 14 Pigpen
1 16 Perform

-

69 Groups of ships

108 Ftsh eggs
109 "'D. O.A star
tnits.

,•

90 ·· uncle Tom 's-"

drytng
106 Once mo re

117 Drink olthe god s

79 More direct
82 Sentenct:! ender

87 Roamed

9 Neon symbol
10 ·' Th e s1xt h sense"

42 Tombstone ab br

instruments

81 Male sheep
83 Legal matter
84 "The - Hunter"

5 Attempt

1S Bed cano py
16 Defect
17 Amer In s\ o l

In Its
67 Workplace tor
TV's Quincy
69 Old musical

80 Imit ates

rnit s.

Love"
104 Hopkin s and

.•

78 Ray

136 Unlocks
137 NICk N oUe

film

139 Church service
140 Hike
144 W as htngton bill
145 A1r l1ne info .

146 New!
147 Fish limb
148 Ocean
149 Afternoon social
15 1 Bone

64 Cru c1lt x

153 Therefore

68 Improves
70 Male fowl
7 1 Wooden

155 French article
157 Monroe ID

1984 DODGE CARAVAN SE

AMIFM casae lta, &lt;1 door, 5 spud , Air crut se AMIFM cassett e.
ClOth interior. localtrede
p~sencer .. locat trad e

NOW '7 ,595 ~~

102 Drain
103 "'To - With

75 Prophets
77 Takes one's part

14 " LIIe Goes

90 Military student

T·IOp!, air, AMIFM canelte, 10
band eQualizer, digllal desh. cruise.
alumi num wheels. one owner

100 Openwork fab•tc

74 Light rain

3 ·vou - There· ·
4 Former Carmel .
Cali! . mayor :

112 Prevellted

77 Chimney carbon
78 Kind ol cheese

Automaht:, arr cru rse, trlt . A. M/Ft Arr. automatic. AMIFM cassa \la. ral·

1 Foot tr a-.elcr

1 11 Observes

65 Bullion st
66 " Matlock · star

73 Classifies

2 Rants

37 Dry, as wine
38 Greek letter
40 Stalks

60 Marry
62 Schoolbooks
64 Cylinder

cueene, air. crUise

property

98 War god
99 Prohibrts

110 Exist s

sound

containers

DOWN

35 Music variety
36 Pack away

55 High-pitched

11187 SUBARU GL WAGON

92 - measles
94 Disposition ot

COOkt eS
13 Lubricate

Murder"

r

NOW '3,595 ~'.~

~Jf
~
••

NO
AUCTION
CARS

trAde

L-------'

~~~

1987 CUTLASS CALAIS

1985 OLDS CALAIS
2 door, automatic, Air. AM/FM
stereo, rear luggage rack, local

Al r, automatic , AM/FM ca9se tt e \
cruise , 1111. one owner

~~

NOW '6,995 ,

NOW '4,495

See One Of These Sales Professionals:

1985 CHRYSLER LEBARON
mttl. Sed.irr tM

16 Abstains from

51 Depended on
54" - Mior

t91S OtD5 CVTW!2 Ill.
t912 CHEVY CAI'RICE

1 Pamphlet
6 Play part
11 Dart colloq

50 Capuchm monkey

NOW '7,295 ~~~

~

ACROSS

47 Sofa
49 The - Tops

AIII/I l,l r«J tO rJCitil l lttts WMtlti

(Cl\ffl

Harris, .John Felker, Larry Powell, Larry Bank.• .
Doug F;avt'nson. Th~ scramble was held at
.Jaymar Got! {;IuiJ.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

34 Bother

4 OOoor Sfilan

matte lransm ts5 ton. lmteo glass

t:244A. 8rowo hllt!.h l 0001 couPe IHWll
4 Cl lrOder

lin r ~h

1988 RENAULT 2 DOOR

1988 FOIID f·2SO PICXUP TRUCK
lfP2151 A. l. rg hl tllut: I me ) ~ 4 rloo• lr ont
wht'f• drrve 4 CVIInOfllr l!fi!Jifle 1!. 11101~

iIll
!!

NOW $88915.00

1986 CHEVROLET CELEBRITY
O • ov~

I

Pirates 4, Dudgers 2
AI Pittburgh. Barry Bonds and
Bobby Bonilla each knocked in a
firsl·lnning run and Bob Walk
scat tered five hits over 6 2-3
innings to ea rn his firs I victory 1n
eig ht s tarts. Walk. 5-4 . walked
two and s truck out two and Ted
Power worked a scoreless ninth
to earn his fifth save.

ATHENS f-fONDA CARS

trCIIll wh!tl dr,.,e ~ cyhrvlt' 111 CC11 d~ ron
'"9 po.er stetnng &amp; brJ•r~ l!f1!f(l Qld\1
Alrl t f-hf r.wliO r«11ill h&lt; e~ wlletl co.-t• ~
buck et SNh

~rr wtnOclw ~

139844. 4 • lll!el drrve 1.18 enQtne I)OWt''
&lt;.teerrfiQ &amp; br~k~s Uol!f M 'oldiO rMhAI
tores re.H HI) Oumper nyroon 1 on1~ h

Now•••ee.oo

.. 1\tel

:

third savP. Brav(•s' sta rt erSil'Vl'
Avery. 1-4, look the loss.

1989 POHnAC GRAND AM

VB

NOW S7991S.OO

1988 CHEVROLET NOVA

lr:)lll •llttl4l l\! J r~ · ~Qfr ~~to~' ·r tr r
~·r· ~~(~11ng 0. !)r . t~t'S !onlect CIA&lt;,&lt;, rr .MI' ~fl.l ' "' 1Jr11{]

1 . , •noe· ~-i, , t
HI !!.' 1l •C

·~l.l'i\

NOW S7291S.OO

NOW SS891S.OO

trnle&lt;l gtaH htt
cr ur'&gt;t AM /fM foldiCI wrth Sit'•~ USstll f
THdk€1

1986 CHRYSLER LEBARON 4 DOOR
I1M~

•P21fi0. WJ\rlr lo~r~ll T'1nl fl~tt dr , t
•~' O'TI Oir[ ):)Itt ; tee,nc I. r. •o o~~ '•'IIMl

2 DOOR

&amp; more

NOW $111,9811.00
•P111o1A IIIK'

~

QllSS AMlrM radiO . rW.a! lrrH bucOer

'll'heto r cover~

NOW $89915.00

NOW a9aes.oo

hn!Sfl . • I!Oor ~n lrom
-meet drNe 4 c-y111'4er iltiiOfmt iC ,w con
Orhoruno power r.ttenng &amp; bra• e\ ••nit(!

MP20158. 'l 1.1001 COupt V8 rl'lgrnt
nuromallc 1ansmrs\on . ~ cunortl()llrnQ

dll lOf10 1hOfWl ~

power SIHrtll{l &amp; br.1~e~
AM •fM rd(l~ rdOid• IU t~

12188.

1982 CHRYSLER CORDOBA

iiP2223. 4 IJoor std illl r~d hnt&gt;t\ !roo!

l)(lwf!l

V8

NOW SU,981S.OO

1990 CHEVROLET CORSICA

1988 PLYMOUTH VOYAGER

'l 0001'

sem ,rear wrnd&lt;Ww Ofl()g ger

.t!umm~m

wrt(ler CO~\ buCkrt

I

•

Cubs 5, Giants 4
AI Chicago. Joe Girardi
stroked a two-out single to cap a
two-run ninth. ra llying Chicago
to !heir fifth -straight win . Mike
Bielecki. who e ntered the game
In the scvenlh, retired the las l
SPVen baiters lo imp rove to 4-8.
Jeff Brantley suffered the defeal
and fell to 3·2.

Mets 6, Braves I
At New York. Sid Fernandez
allowed four hits over 7 2-:1
innings. striking out seven consecutive batters In one stretch,
and Howard Johnson co llected
three RBI. Fernandez. 6-6 . re·
tired 14 Braves in a row and
Alejandro Pena pitched I 1-3
innings of hitless relief for his

985-3301

1990 CHEVROLET CAVALIER

engrne lrnteO gt.us O• g ~.tl ciDC ~ trH
wl1eet crurse contrOl AM i ftr.l rao10 wrl h
stereo cassene r.&amp;dlill !Ires console

&amp; OOOr

loc~ ~ -

rM;t~l lfr ~

'

'

downed Los Angeles 4-2: Hous ton
belted Montreal. 12-6, and Sl.
Louis defeated San Diego 4·2.
Houston 12 Montreal 6
Danny Darwin won his second
straight start and Glenn Wilson
drove in three runs including the
5001h of his career Friday night.
and the Astros had enough to
withstand a s ix -run ninth innin g
rally in a 12-6 triumph over the
Montreal Expos.

R••• 1HE RIGHr PRICE!!!

•
•

•,u'llr)

•'

I

to second and Morrison was
roreced at third on Mariano
Duncan's fielder's choice. Reed
then singled to left to bring in
Sabo.
The Reds added a pair of runs
in the filth. Charlton walked and
with one out. Barry Larkin
singled. Center fielder Lenny
Dykstra misplayed the ball.
allowing It to roll to lhe wall as
Larkin rounded the bases .
Phlladelpbla drew to H In the
top of the sixth when pinch-hitter
Dave HOllins hit his fourth
homer.
The Reds made It 5·1 In the
sixth on Reed's RBI single.
National Leape Roundup
Elsewhere in the National
Leali"ue, Chicago topped San
Francisco 5·4 : New York
crushed Atlanta 6·1: Pltlburgh

BAUM LUMBER

CHESTER

THE RIGHr

•

.

THIRD PLACE FINISHERS - Also finishing
with a score of 12 under par but losing In a chip-off
for second place honors In the Hearl Association
Scramble Thursday was the team of. 1-r. I&gt;ean

Reds top Phils, Giants lose.. __c_oo_n_un_u_ed_t_ro_m_c_2_ _ __

Sealed
Seam
Headlights
With Complete
ThiDight
&amp; Indicator
Ught Package

faonl

held to decide the second place finisher. Winning
the chlp·oll was the team of, l·r, Dennis Ault, Joe
Clark, Harold Lee M!ller, Jim Frecker, and
Richard FoUrod.

IP2261A. l rflhl tllutiMio~h 1 dOOr . tront
w~te l Oflvt J cytrncler efiiJinf ~uiOmaiiC
nrr condrlrO!lll'lQ pOwer 51P.enf19 &amp; br il~e s
h!1 ll!d gms AU If M I ~C:IIO . loKhdl III!S
wnl'!el covtrs

Nows•aee.oo

ee a esman
Lloyd Cooper
Gary Lee Tipple, Mark Graves,
Ed Gillan, Rich Eberts, Jell Davis
Boll Hartley, Sales Manager
Jerry Bibbee, General Manager

and Business lllnager,
Marte 8eiler
'

CIIR-

-

Mlh Tinkham

Dwlghl Hontker

Qary R.,nold•

Prlcll Good Thru July 25. 1980

ATHENS ll[e]~t•t!J CARS
"THE HAPPY HONDA PEOPLE"
810 E. State (6

' .....

~_..__.__._

Crossword Answer on Page C-4

'

\

•

�Page C-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

July

22. 1990
July 22, 1990

E•'t'Or leads Baltimore to 3-2 victory over Chicago nine
BY BIUC MdftlGB
UPI 8porta Writer

• One &amp;borlltop made an error

fnd the other one didn't.

On a night when Baltimore's

Cal Rlpkell established a major·
leaiUe mark by playing In bls
89th consecutive errocless game
at short, Ozzte Guillen - his
Chicago counterpart - booted a
potential doubJe.play ball which
lueled the Orioles' two-run,
g•llll!-tylng seventh Inning.
Baltimore went on to victory
Fi1dl)' night, defeating the Whl te
Sox 3-2 when Randy Milligan
singled home Phil Bradley with
the winning run In the lOth
Inning.
"I'm relieved In a way," said
Rlpken, who fielded four chances
flawlessly In breaking Kevin
Elslier's short·llved record of 88
g8ml!s set In 1988. "It adds a little
pressure. I wanted to get out
there and not think so much
about not m&amp;klng an error."
It was a less memorable night
for Guillen, though.
With the White Sox ahead 2.0 In
the seventh, courtesy ol Robin
Ventura's two-run homer In the

first, starter Eric King walked
Mickey TetUeton to open the
Inning before Guillen muffed
Rlpken's grounder. The error put
runners at first and second.
''The ball jumped at me and I
tried to throw II before I caught
It," said GuiUen of his eighth
error ofthe year. "I took my eyes
off It too quick. I should make
that play."
When you only make one error
on the year as Rlpken has done It
stands out In your mind, so the
10-year veteran could sympathize wttb Guillen.
''My error In Detroit (AprU 131
was a slmllar situation," Rlpken
said. "I tried to go to second too
quickly with a ball Cecll Fielder
hit.''
Both runners then moved upon
a passed ball by catcher Carlton
Fisk. TetUeton scored on Tim
Hulett's RBI groundout as
Rlpken crossed over to third.
Plncb-hllter Brady Anderson
then sliced a trtple over the bead
ollettflelder Ivan Calderon, who
was playtng him shallow and on
the line, to tie the game at 2-2.
"I was just trying to survive

against King," said Anderson, a
.260 bitter In 31 games who came
offthe disabled list Friday. "I got
a pitch to hit and got most oflt."
Cb lea go Manager Jell Torhorg
was not happy about questions on
Calderon's placement.
"Don't ask me about the
defensive set on Anderson right
now," said Torborg. "We've
scouted maybe better than baseball has ever seen."
Rlpken may field bls position
better than anyone else baseball
has ever seen, and he thinks his
glove might finally he stepping
out of the shadow of his bat.
''The record gives me recognl·
Uon for my defensive ability ," he
said. "I have pride In my
defense. For most ol my career
my offense has overshadowed
my defense - except lor this
year. ' '
It was only the second time
Chicago lost two consecutive
games on the road In the same
series. With a record of27-13, the
White Sox still own the best road
record In baseball.
Mark Williamson, 8-1, earned

the win with three shutout
Innings of relief and Bobby
Thigpen suffered the loss and I ell
to H .
Elsewhere In the American
League, Boston and Kansas City
spUt a doubleheader: KC took the
opener 5·0, and Boston won the
nightcap 3-1, Minnesota nipped
New York 2-1, Sea!Ue downed
Milwaukee 6-4, Texas topped
Detroit ~-3, California bombed
Cleveland 9-4 and Toronto out·
slugged Oakland 8-6.
Royals 5, Bed Sox 0
First came
Red Sox 3, Royals I
Second game
At Kansas City, Mo., Kevin
Appler, 5-3, pltc bed a three-hitter
to lead Kansas City In the opener
whUe Roger Clemens, fell to 12-5,
deslpte passing Cy Young as
Boston's all-time strikeout
leader.
In the nightcap, Mike Greenwell hit a two-run home run In the
seventh Inning to snap Boston's
25-lnnlng scoreless string. Dana
Klecker, H, pitched 81-3lnnlngs
and Jeff Reardon recorded his
18th save. Luis Aquino, 4-1, went

NCAA bans UNLV from 1991 cage tourney
By JOHN HENDEL
•
UPI Sports Writer
. SHAWNEE MISSION, Kan.
IJ}PII - Defending NCAA baskfltball champion Nevada-Las
\l.egas Friday was banned lrom
!Ill&gt; 1991 tournament, the second
ril{ttonal title-bolder In three
Y.l!lli'S to be denied a chance ol
rejleatlng.
• fhe action stems from a 1977
I'{(AA decision which originally
barred the- Runnln' Rebels from
:be tournament for two years and
O)'dered the scbool to suspend
h$d coach Jerry Tarkan Ian for
tWo seasons for rules violations.
Tlie university lullllled Its peni(Jty but Tarkanlan waged a
Itngtby court battle and never
Ielt the UNLV bench.
: IJNLV president Robert Max slln reacted with anger at heart~ of the decision aimed at his
.(pool.
' l'l'm shocked, absolutely
si.Jxked," said Maxson. "We
cGctn ' t expect any penalties. The
&lt;Qitverslty did everything It was
as)&lt;ed to do 13yearsago. We were
pirt on probation. We lost televtsJ4ln revenues . We lost
S()lolarshtps.
. •·1 have a letter In my Illes from
t~ NCAA saying we carrted out
th~lr order In a model way. And
now, almost l4 years later to be
~J!allzed agaln.lt violates every
baSIC principle of justice."
•]wlaxson was particularly anrie_yed at the NCAA's order to
')lllow cause" why Tarkanlan
slaluld not be suspended from
eoachlng lor two years . Tarkanian won a permanent Injunction
tio ihe state court system during
lOa: lengthy court batHe. Despite
.. :u.s. Supreme Court ruling
tNrcktng the NCAA's rtgbt to
stiapend Tarkanlan, the state
oluer still stands.
: ·~be NCAA knows he has a

permanent Injunction," Maxson
said . "How can I show cause ? I
live In the state of Nevada and
this school Is tn the state of
Nevada . We have to abide by
Nevada law."
The NCAA added a year ol
sanctions to Its original sentence
saying the additional postseason
sanction Is equivalent to the
coach being suspended.
The school said It will appeal
the additional penal~es to t~e
NCAA Council. which could not

hear the case until Its October
meeting.
"Damn right we are going to
appeal this decision ," Maxson
said . "We are going to appeal it
as quickly as possible. I can't
walt to appeal this decision ."
The decision also comes at a
time whe-n UNLV has worked

hard to clean up Its athletic
program.
''I'm hurt and angry right
now," Maxson said. ''The discouraging thing Is I've been here for
six years and we've worked very
hard to do things rtght. We have
made- mistakes but we've worked
hard to correct those mistakes."

fifth straight win. Kenny RQgers
shut down Detroit over the tlnaJ 1
2·3 lnnlnp for his ninth !lave.
Steve Searcy fell to 1·1.

At Arlington, Texas, Nolan
Ryan notched career victory 299,
pitching slx·plus Innings of onelilt ball. Ryan, 10-4, walked one
and struck out four to pick up his

At MlMeapolls, Junior Ortiz
delivered a one-out single In the
ninth to score pinch-runner John
Moses from second base.

&gt;

"••'
••
•

•'

'
\

'•
•

Michael Andretti
gains pole spot

'

'•

•,

TORONTO 1UP I I -De fending
champion Michae l And retti took
advantage of c learing skys Frl ·
day, after heavy rains threa·
tened the qualiliying sess ion, to
c apture Ihe pole posi lion in thl' $1
million Molson Toronto lndv .
And ret ti, winner of thrt'P uf t hP

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last four CART races, IPmJJorar ·

RCA
SYRACUSE SLUGGERS - 1'be Syracuse
Sluggers T-Ballteam recently finished third In the
tournament. Pictured are front row - £:ody
Wallace, Tommy Sheppard, Cory Van Reet11 .
Second row- Heather Bable, Katie Sayre, J.O.

Smith, Mindy Chancey, Aaron Ohlinger. Third
row - Jusdn Allen, Nathan Martin, Justin
ConnoUy, Marc Barr, and Brice Hill. Back row Coaches George ConnoUy, John Van Reeth and
Bob Sheppard. Absent Jay Hill.

POMEROY, OHIO

ily put hi s Lola 1'9000-Chev on th r
pole with a lime of 60 151 second s
and a n averag e speed of IUJ .985
mph .
Per sist ent

drove his Chevrolet Lumina
157 219 m ph and will be in the
outside of the fi rs t row for the
15th ra ce of the ye ar on the
Winston Cu p c ircuit.
The lop 15 ca rs arc locked in
after Friday's qualifying. Fin al
qualtlyin g for the 40-ca r field is
se t for 10.30 a.m. Saturday . A
150-mlle ARCA rac e will follow
ftnal qua lifying
Greg Sacks of MattituPk, NY .
qualliled a Chevy Lumina coown ed by movie s tar Pa ul
Newma n third. and s hares the
seco nd r ow with th e Thunderbinl
dr iven by Geo ff Bod ine .
Harr y C an t, who won Junp's

Pocon o 500. is fifth in a n Oid smohile Cutlass , wit h Bi ll Ellio t's
Thu nde r bi rd nex t.
"I go t what I would consid er a

good lap and a lu cky la p, wh ic h is

necessa ry these days to sit on
poles.·· sa id Martin ·'But morP
than that . I had th e car to do it tn
today ·
Ma r tin will be look ing for hi s
second vic tory of th E' year , and
more import&lt;.~ntl y , is hopin g to

pad hi s Win ston Cup point lel\d
with H races to go on the 29 - rac~

car d.

.

"This is rea lly, trul y th e start
of the second half of the season
for m e," M artin s. aid '' And w.e :
mea n business . If Wl' can comO

away from here wtlh a win, il will
prove to everyone that we ml'an
bu siness for this point rar£'." ·
Even after posting his event :

rwo rd lap ear ly in th e qualify ing .
sPssion, Mar tin said he did not

r-r•st easy .
"I thoug ht I had the pole nailed
down tw o times before. and I losi. .
it and s tarted seco nd, " Mar tin
said . " At Rockingham (N.C. !'
Kyle Pet ty did it and at Dover
\Del.) Dic k Tric kle knocked
off a It er what I thought was a .

m.r :

super run .

Des pit e be ing more tha n a ..
mile-prr -hour ond second slower

than Ma rtin , Schra der wa~
sati sfied.
"I figured I co uld hold my
brra th ·for ano th er half a Sl'

cond, " Sc hr ader said . " but

.&gt;~

was n't going to hold it for a 5fd~6 _'

rainfa l l c:lrr nrhf'd

th e 1.78 - mil~ te mpora r y road
circuit throug h th e enti re morn ·
ing pr acti ce and continued right
up until an hour prio r to thP
qua lliyi ng session . Eve n a ft e r
s kys cleared. th e ti ght . twisti ng
11 -turn course wa s still damp
when the fi rs t group of car s took
to the tra ck .
Aft er the session. Andretti sa id
he expects to still be on th e pole
after Saturday 's final qualifying
round, but not necesarily with th e
same time.

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BLASTERS FIRST - The Syracuse Blasters
Pee Wee Girls' softball team won llrst place In the
tournament and lied for first In the league with an
overall record of 10.1. Pictured are llrst row, 1-r,
Michelle Lonas, Kim Sayre, Bridget Cross. Jenny
Friend, and Valerle Cundllf. Second row- Trlsha

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I

LONG POND , Pa. iUPli Mark Ma r tin pos ted a n eve nt ·
reco rd speed Friday to win th e
pole for Sunday's AC Spa rk Plug
500 Wlnstoh Cup race at Pocon o
Inte rnational Speedway
Martin, of Batesville, Ark ..
drove a Ford Thunderbird alan
average speed of 158.264 mph
along the 2.5-mlle tri -oval track
to win his second pole of the year.
Ken Shrader of Fenton. Mo ..

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Martin wins pole spot with record
speed in NASCAR Spark Plug 500

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the distance In defeat, allowing
five bits, walking two and strlk·
lng out two.

Rangers ~. Tlcers a

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Warner, Amy Northup, Ashll Davis, Megan
Drummer, earlssa Ash, and Jessica Counts .
Third row Coach Vickie Cundlfl, Frances Adkins,
Kerl Caldwell, Amber Thomas, Erica Arnott!,
Cynthia Caldwell, and Coach Greg Cundllf.

Top-seeded Agassi in Sovran semis
WASHINGTON IUPII -Topseeded Andre Agassl held off a
stern fir s t set challenge from
seventh-seeded Richey Reneberg Friday, then breezed
through the second set to advance to the semi-finals of the
$550,000 Sovran Bank Classi c.
Agassl, again adorned with
touches of flourescent pink. had
to fight off live set points and a tie
breaker to win the firs t set . 7-6,
before cruising In the second set
6-0.
.
Also .In the semi -final s are
second-seeded Brad Gilbert , a
6-J, 6-4 winner over unseeded
Wes t German Michael Stich,
sixth-seeded Jim Grabb, who
notched his third consecutive
s traight set victory, a 64,6-3 win
over former Stanforclleammate
Derrick Rostagno, and fifth seeded Michael Chang, a 6-3, 6-4
victor against 14th seeded Todd
Wllsken.
Chang wi II play Agassi in
Saturday's semi-final s. and
Grabb will fa ce Gilberl ,who ha s
los t twice brfurl' in the Sovran
final s
In thP Aga s si -Renebu rg
match, both player s hPid serve in
th e first set and Rene berg led 6-5,
wllh Agassi serving .
Reneberg, 24, led 15-40 and had
two set points, but he failed to
re turn Agassl's next serve and
lost the next point on a dr opshol
by the Las Vegas native.
The players went to deuce nine
limes, and Reneberg had three
more set points. but couldn't
convert any. Finally , another
Agassl dropshot won the game to
force a tie-breaker .
Reneberg took a 4-3 lead, bu t
lost two straight service point s,
going long with a volley and a
backhand. With Agassl serving,
Reneberg missed long with a
forehand and then gave Agas si
an easy put -away lor the set.
"I thought It was lmportan t to
win the llrst set," Rene berg said .
"If I wln the llrst set, he 's not
going to be as agres slve and
loose. I played well on the set
points. but be got to the balls."
"ill It had lost the flr~ t set, ) It
would b~tve fazed me In the sense
that I · would have needed a
different frame of mind," Agasst
said.

i\GASSI RETURNS BALL - Andre t\gussl returns the ball
Friday at the 5550,000 Sovran Bank ChLSslc in Washington, D.C.
1\ga.ssi defeated Richey Rcnt•burg 7-6 . 6-0 in thP quarter-final
match . I UPI I

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•

�Page-C-6-Sunday limes-Sentinel

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

. i

Por!;(: ht&gt; . S3.fl:t. ID0.9Sfl. HI. Tt"ff F~thl .
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Marion .

-

Thursday , Sptege l sentenced
ROSl1 to prison and fined him
$50.000 for filing false income tax
ret urns . The former Reds player
and manager pleaded guilty In
April to concealing nearly
$300,000 In income from gambling and memorabilia shows .
"Pe te wants to start his prison
term as soon as possible." sa id

R~~M•hall

!~

Man!lll.' ( 'I l l - l'l:t.t•Pd uutll ••ldt•r '&amp;1
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Tu"" - ·\cli•att&gt;d lnfll'ldo•ro Sh•\1'

Rt•urhf'lt· and .lt•ll K.unklr Jrom n -diQ·
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S,·nll Coo[h~~.t•l{ h to Oldahom" I II , ol
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t i -d ll.t dl.'lollf hlrd ll ..;t rt'l roortl1 t· I u .Ju 1.1 I I.

Rose

('., [ lo·~ ·

'"'m•·d Hol,..rt t:"'""

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rntn'" ha...¥11buJJ pro~~;tam trom i't!H
'( ·\ ., T•mrna.mt· nt : '"~p••ntl ~ d To•\,, .,

l(iiU~IIIll

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h'L"~o·thaJI

IO'llh'f

spokeswoman

pinpoint when Rose would start
his prison sentence. si nce his
recovery from surgery will be a
"day-to-day" thing .
Dr . S. Michael Lawhon. the
Cincinnati Reds' team physician,
repaired torn cartilage and removed some other cartilage
from Rose's right knee during
outpa tien t arthroscopic surgery
a t Christ HospitaL
Rose injured his knee Su nd ay
playi ng stickball with children at
his wife's famlly reunion.
The doctor sa id he found some
signs of advanced arthritis In
Rose's knee a nd removed some
carti lage to try to prevent the
sprea d of arthritis.
Lawhon said Rose's knee
sho uld be "functiona l" in 10 to 14
days, but would require six to
eight weeks of rehabillation to
get back to normaL

argumen ts . He took ·t he Intervention requests under advisement.
The university had sought a
delay until after It defends Itself
next month before the NCAA
Committee on Infractions and
tried to argue the judge should
walt to see the documents until
after the school prepares an
Index of Its objections to having
them disclosed.

" Jr 's creating a bigger morass
out of this simple complaint, "
Nally sa id.
Nally called for the immediate
release o! the records. before
Miller's closed-door review, but
the jud ge denied that requ€'1.
" I have to see the material
about which this proceeding is
concerned," Miller said .
The university a nd its outside
lawyers promise to have a long
week ahead. In addition to the
News-Gazette case, attorneys
and school offlclal s will meet
Monday with NCAA officials In
Kansas City to review the associ ation's "Officia l Inquiry" allega tions of wrongdoing, In prepara ti o n for the Infractions
committee meeting In Colorado
Springs, Colo. ,the weekend of
August 11-12.

"What's going on is the bi g
stall," said Tracl Nally, the
lawyer lor the newspaper. She
said Illinois, by welcoming the
efforts of Thomas and Collins and
by trying to delay the matter ,
was trying to thwart the Intention
of the state's records law, which
calls for the prompt release of
public documents and a speedy
judicial review of refusals.

-----

I i11i1'lnl

IJIII' lt::UIH' lor pW.~Intt In
1111n·'\llnrtlnl'l' d tnurnumo·11t
l'llt.-.hu nth - 'amt•d Klok Hur~)lokl, · r
oL"llll&gt;l nt dlhiO'I I• tnolo·r
'\o•utho•rn ( al - :"'ollmrtl .~HI:ut ·r t!!
Rarh ard F••rrt•ll F:dmoOO~ o n :md .J., hn
\!t· d\~d a~..l'itllnl lrat·l. r m" Jw..,
Foulhall
n no lnmut K•"- ~ i l{ll•· O ofl " u""n
l1u kl•• \n thotll.) '1Ufl ll'l llnd UJ, ht •· ud .lfm

\llanta a l ,,. ~ l ' urJ.
l ..r1' \n~1· l .... at Pl!t.. hUf1(h
"-'" f'r a no · l ~l ' " J l 1 hio li.IC II
' :Ill Di1't11 ul ·" ' l ~1 11i•
l'to ilado·lpltho al (' j lll' il'lll'&lt;l l
\to,lro·al at Hu&lt;L.. Ion

CART results

GALLIPOLIS -The Paul and
Elizabeth, and Eddie and Ann
Butler Famllles wUI co-host the
8th Annual Farm City Day on
Sept. 8, from 11 a .m. to 3 p.m .
The Butler farm, known as
Swancrest Farm on State Route
7, Is a beef-forage operation. The
Butler fam ily takes pride In
showing you their farm which
displays conservation of the land
at work.
Paul's grandfa ther, Ed purchased the home place In 1919. Ed
and his son, K.H _s tarted a dairy
In the early 1920's a nd K.H, began
bottling In 1925. Paul was born In
1924 and fr om a n ear ly ageofflve
years old he lped with filling the
milk bottles .

----:-.-,.,

}-

MEIGS
TIRE
CENTER
JOHN FULTI - J. MARCUS FULTZ
OWNEIS

242 W. Main

BUTLER FAMU.Y TO CO-HOST FARM-CITY

1)!\Y - The Butler family wlll host the GalUa
County Soil and Water Conservation's eighth
annual Farm-City Day on Saturday, Sept. 8. In

Pomeroy

992-2101

)

I .\f11-h1U'I .\ndrr/11. 1 .~&gt;111 ~1)-lllt•\
~I 1~ 1 "''' '"o:l~ . IU:i.!tHS mP't 2. t:nwr~""
Ftltlpulll . l'rn!J;o• !t~ - ( - h t'l, ~ 111 ~ : .

IOrt .IIO :I. J ll tt nn,1 o;,u iiiH!n , t&gt;o·n,~•·
llfioo · l'lt•·' Gll~~ . I D~ :t:. . l. llohhyRnhlll .
lAili T'JoOOIH "ht•• . fi I ~~~I, 183 '1'- ~ \ , :vi ~trl"
\n o.Jrt•l tl . Lob T'JOUO-( h f '\' ~I .619, lfl :t.8 l:l
1i. \rl~ 1~1y&lt;'rKI~· Io . Lola l'91101t- ( ho•\
6t l Ui. IU.II 'l ~- \ 1 I n..,.r .Jr . l.11L1
l'!Htllfl. ('h~l . S ~ '! ln .
Wl!lflli K. .;,, ·o!t

Bb

Barbara

(

Bush hopes for 'public compassion

WASH! J\ GTO :'\ IU P ! t - Pr rsidt•nl tlu .s h, a st•lf -describe d
" P('t r Rose fan . .. i ~ hopin g rora littl e public compa ssion for the
ba seball idol hf'aded for prison as a convicted felon .
" He \:io lat ed thP tru st and Is now pay ing thP pricl'." Bus h said
of Rosf'. who wa s spnfrn crd to fivr months i n prison Thur sday
for tax l'\·asion.
"HP stood up like a mltn and tonk ir J nd ma vbP people wi II say.
'Look. hr paid the pr nalt.v .· Hu sh told rPporters a board Air
Forc r Onr latP Frida_v wh ilt• I 'll ncu1t ' to \rVashington from
Wy omin.Q".
Bu sh sa id of Rn:--{'. w ho i" "r'r k1ng ro gai n r ntrv in thr Hal l of
Famr drspit e hi s c r i m ina l n•(·n nl . · 'Lrt th f' futurr be outthcff:
wi fh _
..,onw prom isf' for t h(• m;~ n ..
Th P prPsidPn r sa irl . '' I don' 1w;Ill r tn bP h;1r d on PPtf' H.osr . But
thr .:.\·srr m has wo rkr&gt;d and ir 'o; llP I ' Il d ifficult for him and all of
hh lo_,;!I fan s ac ross thr co untr _v . of which l am om·."

and man~gement ln. Ohio. Althou gh many comm unities and
agrlbuslnesses so ught alterna t lve w at E'r so urc€'s to supplement
depl eted s upplies, the state did
not have adequat e Information to

' ''
' {

Money Ideas

Bob Evans Farrns, Inc.

INGELS Furniture &amp; Jewelry
lOth
Annual
Tent
Sale
All LAWN FURNITURE WICKER SODfo OFF
&amp;

'84 FORD ESCORT
5 Speed with Air Cond.
Clean, AM'FM, rear defog .

BUY DIRECT OFF FACTORY TRUCKS SAVE

LIVING ROOM - BEDROOM
DINING ROOM - RECLINERS
Over S200,00000 At Direct Factory Prices

SALE

1-800-426-5581

INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

Clean, Small Car with Air Cond.

I ••f' s lle HOill' Sf .

Cream Beige - Like Nrw jnt c• t tell
1990 L i SMt'lt T ltA :'l

llli s

'82 LeSABRE LIMITED

•FREE DEUYERY
•CREDIT TERMS
•LARGE SELECTION
•FACTORY PRICES

w.. •1995.

2 Door
UMa A LHIIe Oil

C; tt

I&lt;; A Littl e• Fclqy ·-

But jf Hun s 1

5595

53995

INGELS

TENT

'83 RELIANT
STATION WAGON

55,000 Milas
Automatic with Air Cond.

4 'Door

HUGE SAYINGS ON ALL MAJOR APPLIANCES,
COLOR TV'S, VCR'S, STEREOS, AIR CONDITIONERS
BUY NOW!

'84 CHRYSLER E CLASS

'249&amp;
•3488
~~~ NOW *IBIS
'83 Buick
'81 Dodge Aries
Century Limited
Station Wagon

30-60°/o

\

TINY TECH TO OPEN AGAIN- Tiny Tech Pre-school, located
beside the Pentecostal Church In Middleport, Is under the new
management of Joy Sauters. The pre-school will operate as II did
previously but there is limited s pace available. There wtll be an
open house at the pre-school on July 30 at 7 p.m. Two sessions of
classes wilt be offered, Tuesday and Thursday from 9 a.m. to noon,
. and Wednesday and Friday from 9 a.m. to noon . Pictured is Joy
:: · Sauters and 1\llsha Mohle r, daughter of Barbara Mohler .

THE TENT IS DOWN' THE SALE IS STILL ON

106 N. 2ND - MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

'83 MAZDA GLC
Srnlll "--omy
4 Cyl. with Slllnd. Shift

'84 CHRYSLER sr" AVENUE
Ltathlr lntarlar I
Loadad with Power

By Stan Evans
GALLIPOLIS - As has been
the r ecurring theme for an
-extended period, difficult operat · lng cond ition s
aga in a fflic ted
Bob Evans' res ults In the 4th
quart er of fiscal
1990. Net sales
rose 11 .6% to
Sll6.8 million.
This amount brought full year
revenues to $454.3 million, a new
company record . In t he quarter,
.analysis by segment s howed
-(estaurant sa les up 12.5%, while
:sausage sales rose 9.6%. Restau ·rant sales gai ns were largely
.generated by more stores In
:operation. while sa usage sa les
·rose du e to so me Improvement In
:QOundage sold a nd higher p r ices .
: Neither segment's sales per·
·formance reflected strength of
.any not Ice a bl e magnitude.
: · More Importantly, Bob Evans
·margins remain under pressure.
Jn part lcular. sig nifica ntly
:tilgher hog costs negatively im-~acted both Company seg ments.
:This effect was ac ut e ly apparent
th e sausage segment's where
pre-tax Income fell38 % on a lmos t
•100 basis point narrower
margins.
This development more than
offset the slight pre-tax gain
realized In restaura nts so that
overall pre- tax Income was down
8. 7% In the period. Alter tax,
lower tax rates somewhat resf!! ined the degree of the short

in

f&lt;ood sales up
1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) U.S. retail food sales were up.
about 7.5 percent in 1989 to $686
billion, but the share of dlsposa ~e income Americans spent on
!Qed and other grocery products
fell from 11.9 percent to 11.6
percent.

MIDDLEPORT
!VISA • Discover)
I

Submitted by:
Constance S. White
Gallla SWCD

many concerns abou t water use

cluded a doub le and three s ingles Reliever .Jason Dailey. who
go t the savP . got a do uble, and
singles wPrP rrgistered by Ry an
Canada y. s ta rter Eric Humphre ys . Philip Howell. Ga lion Ju s-lice. and Kevin Wood .
The A' s were held to four hits,
wi th Bu rt Wood homering.
Crockett Wright gelling a double
and a sing le . and Tony Perroud
getting a single
Thr Whitt• Sox. who arr in the
Kyger Creek Little League Tournamenl, wi ll play !he Midd leport
A' s Sat urday at 1 p .m ., a nd thr
Elks A's , who received a fir strou nd byP in that tournament.
will play !he winner of Sat ur da y 's gamt• betwee n Ne lsonvilleYork ancl Ma son VFW Monda y at
i JO p.m .

1

water users
GALLIPOLIS The Ohio
Department of Natural Resources Division of Wa ter Is proceedIn g to register water users who
have t he capacity to withdraw
more than 100,000 ga li ons per day
170 ga li ons per minute! .
Agricultural usp,, such as
livestoc k watering and crop
Irrigation. must register If the
capacity to withdraw 100,000
gallons per day exists .
T he drought of 1988 raised

whose 4-fo r --l performance i n-

"OI)d~

tion District, and the Gallla
Cooperative Extension Service,
with the assistance of various
agrt-buslnesses, governmental
agencies and other Interested
Individuals and businesses .
This event takes a lot of
cooperation from many peopl e In
the country apd their support Is
very much appreciated for with·
out them the day would not be
possible.
Each year the site for the e ven t
Is selected to represent various
parts of the county and the
productive efforts of a farm
family. As Ohio becomes more
urban, farm famllles are becomIng fewer and fewe r.
Gallla County Is very proud to
have these conservation-minded
farmers and join them in lnv ltin g
the public to an afternoon In the
country.

ODNR plans
to register big

. 4 4$Jj f

T he Johnson' s Supermarkel
Wht le Sox posted a 5-2 win over
Bidwell a nd an 8-5 victorv over
Hannan Tract' in the Gallia
Co unt} Littlt' League Tourna ment before knocking off the
Ga llipolis E lk s A's 8-3 in seven
innings Thursday night
Powe ring the While Sox 's
of fense was Johnny Morris.

lll'lru\1 - ~~K"" ' d I"Ur 111·rh.1.1l. · ro • rr~
T a.l lor. lrt'o • ;t Kl'fl l I' t•nh· r Tt&gt;n&lt; Balik hand
,,..,. ,.. ,. lt't'\1 qWU" ~·rb IK k M J.)"IM' ' ' " hn.., n.
llo ll.'iton - Si JtrN· d dr.ltf'~ ,..-ld.. r l'·
, . ,~,f'r I' lit Coil&gt; u&gt;lUI
lndlanapoll" - A,ll;rt•t•d lo !NIIl~ with
w ldt'l rf'I'"Yf't Stan ... }' MOPJI[IIII; Mfl·
rHI-u nrt•d rf'lln•mt•n! ol tl n fn!oil'l' tackk
Stt·w· Kni Khl : SIKJif'd drdt~•"' ,.·ido•
n·o ·l'ill'f Stno·t".&lt; 'i humo,., d t• lt o'OI~t'
h1t• ·k &gt;\ian Gnnt . lln~•hac · lwr Jam•·~
~lnl[l l'taty , " ·I lit· rn t'hl' r Darwll Hut
fn111n. atwl nffo'f'l..t~ .. l l&lt;o ·IJ,. ll ran Rn'"'"
\1\,itul - _..;ll(l••d quar\t'rhllt·k So6!1
\lil&lt;'ht•ll and wldt• r•·· · ~h·n Th~~mu'

When Paul was In high school
In 1941 he became a partner In the
farm and continued In the dairy
business for the next 46 years
untll1986.
His son Eddie followed In hls
footsteps and the two have
worked together on the farm
which Is currently a beef-forage
operation on approximately 550
acres.
Jason, a sophomore In high
school, Is the fifth generation of
Butlers to participate in the
operation. He Is active In 4-H and
FFA. He has received honors for
the Hay Show at t he fair and
individual and team County FFA
Soil Judging.
Kent Is 10 years old and has
s tarted In 4· H activities.
This event is sponsored by the
Gallla Soli and Water Conserva-

front Is Kent Butler. Rear, left to right are Paul,
Elizabeth, Jason, Eddie and Ann Butler. (S&amp;WCD
photo).

White Sox capture
Gallia County title

Kit:.!:'

I \HT li •..,\llt •
\tol~on Toronto lnd~
' ' T11ronlo . Ont . lul_
l ~ II
nr ..a d~1 ol qWilifylrc
· Urt\t't . oat , 1-'P tl nw · &lt;lnd II H ' t &lt;l~ •
~f• ' o• oluro• fl•et•d hi'JO,. I

992-2635

By Constance While
Program Administrator

•Wheel
Alignment
~filAR
•BrQkes &amp;
Shocks
'.
•Struts
•Used Tires
•Goodyear Tires
.

D

Butler family to host
Fann-City Day Sept. 8

llo•t..lo·r~tU1

~urKI111 (janw ~

Xllimts - itntintl Section

July 22. 1990

Plnzka . "As soon as his doctors
say he Is adeq uat ely recovered
from his knee surgery, he will
start his prison IPrm in Marlon.
IlL"
Pinzka said It was difficult to

Jt;ulf L'll&amp;t h . .J a mt · ~
Kraml'r ho• ad ~wlmmlru: and , r n's
··nuntry t·oa, h aOO nro·lt 11onm11n ito· ad

l.o~ ,\flvJ~ I ~· 1&lt;-IIPr;; l ll-11'11 ~~hu ll(h

I ~I nl~ll
I 7~-;rult /1 ,i : I .U

U.S. Di s tr ict Judge Ar th ur
Spiegel said Rose wi ll go to the
Marion Federa l Correcllonal In
slitution Camp. That facility is
se paratr from a well-known
maximum serunry prison at

t :rlo • I \\'8L
H.t•lf'il.'&lt;'d 1111"1'-tlr~
IIIUJ Ill' \lti 'laln .
\!ill!J'•ota - Slftll"•d j{Uartll'ltn IA•It:lt•r
lo II lll't· )'f'iU' l'll l.. r.'d
l'ht~t~nl.\ ~llt'l''d unrt·~lrlt·t~d lr;•o·
a~~:•· ntl-:ol ~.·,J-" 1.&lt;1 a multl -yo·llt.-ol, .. ml'l

' ill;t! l ll ll.r!wy; · l l. 3 : 1 ~ p m

I ·~

federal prison camp on Aug. 10,
but authorities said Friday that
camp won't be ready to Ojll'n for
severa l months . So, Rose was
assigned to be imprisoned in
Marion. IlL

Frldlly 'i \' url' Tral'l..,.l'llu tr.

1.'1
16 1'

' '' " l'oril ' · ·'tbt,..,ta I
t&gt;ll"•hn!Jlh I. Lu, -\n~·lt"' ·;
) , l'hlladrlphl u I
'\1 . l.ot.i" I. Sar~ ()i,.K', '!
Hou.owon 1~ . o'-"orrln-al ~
Saturtla.,\ (, ;~ m• ·~
l'htl..dl'lphi:t (.\ lulholland I :11 at I lo
• lnMII t Rijo)&lt;lt, l · l.i jl. tn
S11n Fr.m·l,;t·o l (;llrrdh 1:1 al 1 hi

' l'nrtu11aJ

( uU a.~~.

Transact ion~

•

nn~· ln111111

\1o ~ti·al

Hld.~lllohlll'

Ill

t "r 1o.Jill H l' ~ldl'
l ' hl!-ar.:o~ , )o)ill'l Fr01.no 1"'11l

oT! • wk,~IUI')

(;unl,

1

;, ~
II
:111

-" all Dl~rt•
lltJtt-.t flit
\t ~.nw

Hurry

five -month prison sentence for
tax pvasion as soon as possiblE'
Rose had been sched uled Ia
report to a new Ashland, Ky ,

Ernlt· lr van , (lld~mohlh· ( ullll-~~. l)ti. l"
I I, lla lt&gt; Ear nhnlt . ('h&lt;'HOI&lt;'t Lumina .
l l~ l ll
It, IWrrld•o:• ( op ·. l'll f"tmld
l.umlflt, 1 5 .\. ~L 1:1. ftirh llud.-1, ('h,.,
roi M l ,un•i llll. I.\5Xt l ti, 1\)h• J' !' tl .~ .
l'u~ i ;w · (:rant.! l 'rllt , l j ,}Xl:i. 1), ll;al'!'.l
\ ll iMJil. f-' onl Thundt·rhlrd , I H . ~ '411

( lt·H ilutd at { ;difonu ~
llt&gt;trult 111 T o• \ a.~ . niJ: hl
Ru~t.•n ttl 1\ a n ..... , 1 it ~ - n&lt;~lu

-,,

surgery Friday and then told a
judge he want s to start his

~ . Rill tJJinll. Fnrd Thhundl."rhlrd .
Ja6 .:1!lt. ~ - Rnh _\lurmt·u, (JJ(ll;mohllt•
l'u!~,~~ .
15fi.:l i2. ll , Ru'll~ \hJI~I't' ,
f'onlillt' Grand l'r"'-. I:Mi . ~lt 9. Alun
Kulw lt· kJ. Ford Thundo•rhird. 1.16. 1il. 10.

~•·aU b·

,~

l'onll , I'lL , .lu l.v t o

Uti.l:l~

(; ;IIIII' '

l'llhllu~ll

l.o•~~:

Pete

Rose underwent successfu l kn ff

l llrl\,·r . o·ar and • fll't•d u1· lj,to· d
llo ·lut.\ 1
l. M..,.k Mttrlln. l' urd Tllllrtdf'mlnl ,
1)11~6t mph H·H·n t rf'l'llrdl
! . Kt·n
Sdn1ltk·r, ( 'ho•vro ld Luml1111, l.i7.t l 9. :1
t.rt·~t::Slll'li~. I II r' rolt&gt;tl.oml fll\. tn. l!7. I
lil'ull Rodl••·. Funl Thundf'rltlrd, I U . ~ lfl

'''" l11rk at .\ll~tll'"""'
( ltka~o ~~ Rallimon

....... \ .

CINC I NNATI iUPI ! -

QWIIiflf'r~

!I.C ' ~park P IUII: Wll

t 'Vid)o~ld ~ -lll . ni~t:hl

1,\

"I'll look for a pickup truck or
something to drive them over
this afternoon," Miller said In
reference to the nearly 1,000
pages of paper he will spend the
next severa l days reading _
Attorneys for recruit Deon
Thomas a nd assistant coach
Jimmy Co llins, both caught up In
the probe, asked Miller If they
could Intervene and join with the
Big Ten school to try to block
release of the documents sought
by the paper.
Miller gave the lawyers for a ll
sides - Including the university
- until Thursday to file legal

Rose going to Illinois prison

:u .:us

NASCAR qualifiers

Toronlo cStkh 11 -lt ,., O,.kb,ml c" :uKJ

To· oun

cars and cash to lure recrults .

711.1-" . ~UI ~. ~1 . 1R ~7. H~&amp;~~d} l .~·w b,

p,.,.,._ .. t&gt;li Buirk , 7J .ll61l, 117.69!1. 2X. .tdl

t· r~n 1 1 - .\ l , l'~l - li Khl

"undu1

lola - fu~wortlo,

n

"1 ,

H».llhuor.. :1 , Chit- &amp;IIO ~ . I!II nnlur:--"t&gt;allko ' · :\olilwaukt' t' I
Tf':ota~ ~. lk&gt;t roll :t
fa lllornla ~ - Cl""'llll•d I
Tomnto M. Oallind 6
Slllurd~Q· c;amt...

1

f) !l&lt;'t' O,

tiHll. !!7.6:1 1
! 1. Pnndu• ( 'llrwr, Lul.a C' t !M~· or!tl.
hli.OIII, !16 .,H H, Huddy Lazit·r. Lahl
8uil'k, liiLLii. ~li.!'f!tll
Mlduu• l Gr&lt;•••n
fldd , IAII..d ' n~worlh. UXtl. 9~ . 1!9.'1 . !1 .
'\il ko• Grull. LoLI-C "~"'· m111 . ~1.:149. 9~ . 1 16
!j, llo•a~t llit.IJ, l.ola I o~wortll. ~; . ; ·~ .
Htilt
2li. Toll,} Bt•IU·nha,.,.., , IA!I ~ · 8ultk ,

Minllt'~ota ~- '""' y,;.-., I

f 'h lo·qu

By MARC MAGLIARI
URBANA, !ll. (UP!) -A judge
Friday ordered the University of
Illinois to turn over Its response
to NCAA allegations of basket ball recruiting violations before
he rules on a newspaper 's request for the documents under
the sta te's Freedom of Informa tion Act.
Champaign County Judge
George Miller acted after the
paper, The News-Gazette of
Champaign-Urbana. sought a
court order to be granted access
to university documents respond mg to the NCAA's allegations the
!I lin i basketball program offered

Bra) tu~. Lola 'f9000.COJworth, 63.1~
JOD.&amp;&amp;o. 9, .loha AnG'flli. March 941

8 .1 ' "n itPd Pr1•" lntNnatk, 1wol
\~F:HH -\-.: I.Et\(;l t:

Farm/ Business

Miller to review Illinois response to NCAA

Scoreboard ...
Majors

July 22. 1990

fall In Income, but Bob Evans
stlll suffered a 5.9'l1 decline.
Per share. Bob Evans Farms
earned $0.21. $0.01 or 4.5'!f be low
that earned in the same period a
year ago. Reflecting the persist ence of difficult operating conditions a ll year, fiscal 1990' s
earn ings per s hare was down
8.4% ($0.87 versus $0.951.
AI the risk of being redundant,
the difficult opera tin g environment !acing Bob Evans largely
has been the sou rce of the fisca l
1990 earn in gs short fa lL Most
rec e ntly, unp rece d e nte d Increases In hog prices have
affected Bob Evan's results.
Some easin g In this fa ctor has
been witnessed and thi s development. along with the value of the
Company and Its franchise has
rekindled Investor interest.
We continu e to rate Bob Evans
"2" . Given th e source of the
Company's earnings decline. the
strength of Its balance sheet and
value of both Its franchise and
market position, we remain of
the opinion that patient Inves tors .
ultimately will be rewarded by
Bob Evans shares .
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment
Broker the The Ohio Company In
their Gallipolis afflce . l

assist everyone seek ing addi t iona l water. Thus, the lnform &lt;:t t lon provided thr ough the Watt•r
Withdrawal Registration pro
gram. as established under Seclion 1521.16 o f Oh io law In 198R. is
of great Impor tance .
Regis t ration could also benefit
a user If a confl!C't ovf'r watrr

rights ar ises .
Whlie Ohio genera lly ha s an
abu nd ance of water availablr for

all uses. fut ure droughts a nd
local shortages can be resolved
eas ier a nd more Jalrly for a ll
users . When the Division of
Water becomPs lnvolvP.d in wa ter

withdrawa l con filet. the in forma
lion obtained lhrough the regis
frat ion program ma y tx&gt; used .
If a dis pute ovf'r wntf'r r ights is
dPcidPd In a r ourr of law , t hedatp
of rC'glst rat ion undpr the Wa t pr

Withclrawa l

Registration

Pr o-

gram m&lt;~ .v lw usr'Cito dPtPrminr
which usrr was withdrawing
watpr first .
Thr quantity of wa ter. capac ·

lty of a system. or the purpose of
!he use may al so be cons id ered
Hence, It becomes Important to
registpr a npw facllity as early as
possiblf' slncc a court cou l d usp

this Information to assign a
higher p riori ty or use to the
wi thdr aw with thE' earl!pr regi s-

tration d a te
Another important rea so n to
register wa!Pr withdrawal Is
becau sP It's Thr Lflw . Failu re to
rf'glster water withdrawa l aC' -

cordlng to Section 1521.16 Oh io
l aw may result In

.1

su hstantla l

penalty .

RC'glstratlon forms are now
available throug h the Divis ion of
Water. Wal e r Resources Devel opment Section. 1936 Fountain
Square Cour• . Bldg. E -3. Co lumbus . OH 43224 -1336, and the Gall ia
SWCD office. There Is no regi stratio n fef'. For morr informa ·
I io n con tact Ihe DivIs ion of Water

at 614 -265-6/:iO .

RIFFLE PROMOTED Sieve Rlflle of Racine has
been promoted to sales man·
ager at Taylor Motors In
Athens. Steve Is a 1981 gradu·
ale of Racine Southern High
School. He was In the Army lor
six years and has been In the
car business lor five years.

SPEAKS AT DEDICATION- State Rep. Mary
Abel (D·Athens) speaks to the crowd ol
supporters and onlookers Thursday afternoon at
the dedication ceremonies for the new sheep barn
at the Gallla County Junior Fairgrounds, as Fair
Board secretary Tim Massie and State Sen. Jaa

Farm Flruhes
By Edward M. Vollborn
County E&lt;lenslon Agent,
Af(rlculture &amp; CNRD
GALLIPOLIS- Th e 1990 Gal ·
!Ia Cou nt y Junior Fair Is just a
frw days away . This years' lair
goers will see a lot of major
Improvements to the fairground .
The new barn Is only one project
In a long lis t of improvements. An
rsllmated $125,000 worth of Improvements will be finished prior
to this ~ca r s' fa ir. 4-H and FFA
exhibit numbers will break some
records .

Michael Long (D-Clrclevllle) (seated at Abel's
right). Fair Board treasurer Skip Meadows and
Fair Board vice president Gary Roach (to Abel's
lelt) listen. "Having participated In the (Athens
County) fair In the fourth grade, I know how
Important lhls Is lo GalUs County."

Major improvements noted
Increase. Getting calves s tarted
on feed before wea ning Is an
Im portant part of a ny preconditioning program . Creep rations
may be s imple or complex.
According to a nim a l sc ie ntist at
Purdue University, the first
cons idera tion shou ld be cost.
followed by pa latability, and
quality. Because energy Is the
first limiting n ut rie nt for nursing
calves, grain alone generally Is
adequate for a creep ration.
Supplemental protein may be
necessary, II the cow Is not giving
e nough milk .
The creep feeder should provide about one foo t of feeder
space for every three calves.

Market hog entries are well
over 300. Bee f Breeding entries
Most farmers wa nt the feeder to
exceed steer en tries. probably
lor th e fir s t time. The o rllcla l
workd a y 10 prepare exhi bits
areas Is Tuesday, July 24 . Unoffi cia lly falrboard members and
s upporters of the fair are workIng every evening to make su re
this years' fair will be the biggest
a nd best. Plan to enjoy the 1990
RIO CRANDI-: - In i!S .June
Gall la Co unt y Junior Fair July
q
ua
rterly meeting at !he Fawcett
30-August 4.
Ce
nt
er for Learning, the Ohio
Dairy herd Improvement reil on Eco nomic Education
Cou
nc
ports show milk production per
appo
inted
Daniel P. Davies.
cow on test In Gallla County
president
of
Star Ba nk of Gal lipomaking a good Increase since the
lis,
to
Its
Board
ol Trustees.
same period las t year. Record
Dav
ies,
a
member
of the Loren
summar ies at the end of May
Berry
Center
for
Econom ic
M.
showed t he current production at
Educati
on
tr
ustee
group
a l the
16,777 pounds per cow compared
University
of
Rio
Grand
e.
wil l
to the May, 1989 level of 16,073
represent
the
Berry
Center
while
pou nds per cow . The report also
Ind ica ted about 80 less cows on also working as a member of the
state board to Implement the
test tha n one year earli er.
policies of th e state counc iL
Production levels a re still reThe Ohio Cou nc ll on Economtc
bulldlng from the results of the
Educa
tion, headquartered at
1988 drought. Test resu Its s tllllag
Ohio
State
University, Is a n
the sta te average by about I
Independent.
statewide
nonprofit
pound per cow per day. There
organization
that
Includes
a
currently seems to be a lot of
network
of
eight
regional
centers
Int eres t from loca l people want Ing to get Int o the dairy business_ Ohio Cen ters lor Economic
Education.
The mission of the Ohio Co uncil
Creep frPdlng of beef calves Is
to e ncourage and service
Is
always an lssue !hat farmers
discuss this t !me of year. There better economic education In
are both advantages and disad- Ohio. primarily for elementary
vantages to creep reeding. Creep a nd second ary students. This
mission to Improve the quality
feeding Is most profitable when
and Increase the quantity of
feeder calf prices are high
relative to feed prices. Even with economic concepts and prlnci·
stron g c urrent corn price, tbe pies taught focuses on curriculum through better prepared
feed cost to put on a pound of gain
Is only about halfthevalueofthe Instructors, using effective
teaching maierlal s and
calf per pound.
techniques .
Most cattle feeders say they
Economic education centers
want to buy thin calves, but
are located at the University of
nearly a lways calves with bloom
and a little condition top the Akron. Ohio State University,
market. Milk production In bee! John Carroll University, Wright
State University, Ashland Unl·
cows normally declines rapidly
60-90 days after calving. This Is verslty, the University of C.:lncln·
nat!, Ohio University, the Unlver· ·
aboul the time that the calfs
slty
of Toledo and the University
energy and protein needs really

hold abou t a week's supply of
feed. Place the creep feeder near
shade, mineral feeder or water
supply, where cows a nd calves
conger a te.
A good precautionary measure
against en terotoremla (overeat·
lng dlseasells a vaccinate calves
with a 7-wav vaccin e for the
prevention o.f clostridia, blac kleg. and malignant edema.
Ruman overload (acidosis! Is
poss ible when calves eat large
quantities of high-en ergy feeds In
a s hart period of lime. This
potential problem must be prevented by management. Don ' t let
feed ers get empty a nd a lw ays
make sure the feeders are
feeding down.

Davies joins council
on economic education
uf Rio Grande.

The Economic Education Unit
of the Ohio Department of .
Educat ion supports a sta tewide program designed to promote :
economic education as part of the
e lementary, seco nd ary and adu lt
curricu lum in Ohio. The untt
provides K-12 teachers w!lh
rurrlcu lum

service

as sistan ce.

programs

a nd

in -

othe r

resources .

Readers who wish assista nce
in the use of K-8 Mode! Course of
Stud y In Economics, and other
eco nomic services available to
Ohio school dlsuicts, s hould
con tact the Loren M. Berry
Center lor Eco nomic Education
at the University of Rio Grande.
The Berry Ce nter servi ces
Gallla. Jackson, Lawrence. ·
Meigs and Vinton co unties .

�Teme&amp;-Sentinel

22, 1990
8
WOit

' ytK~~tJa

000'005

Ill • .,,.
JO .111M too fO

AlueutM I ~IM 8WOO

..-:t l.fOt8.4l

"*11. :JIIWOttm Oil ......

3 Announcemerns

tAMI

~~S3n!X)

Q Rearrange the

6 Krambl&amp;d
words below to make 6
Simple words. Pnnl leHerJ of
each •n 1ts t.ne of JQuores.

119

I
I I' I 1 I
I
~1;::::1:;:::1::;I::::;1
I
KRUCON

a few pennies spent here
~mes back folding money

2

Areas include: Language, Speech.
Vision, end Hearing
Skills;

REJINO
3

Physical Development
Skills;

FUTTIO

Flu i urI I' I.

Classified

Salesclerk to customer:
These stretch pants come
w"h a warranty of one year or
500,000 calories, whichever

I. I' 1· I I I I.
s ,,--1I
;
-,
9
I
S 0 J ELT

--··· ··---!"

• The Area's

A R T :....,
E-;-E
1:;:0

Q

~-T,-T,

7 22
"

Complete tho chuckle qvotod

Cognitiva
Development; and
Self Help Skills.
For more information concerning this
FREE SERVICE call 367-7371 from 8
A.M.-4 P.M.

by l•ll•ng In the miuing words
l_..L-....J._.J.......J_.J_.....J you develop from atep No. 3 below.

Number 1

1 1

e ~~=··" I' r I' 1 I' I' I' I' I' f' I

8

4

Marketpla"
Public Notice

~

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION

Public Notice
lho - . . . ,
Plko Offl• of lho Ohio VIler

The Oallla County Com·

Columbtu. Ohio

mluionert wll hold a h•r·
109 prior to tubmlnlng 1

Contract SaiM legal Copy

funding requ•t to 1M Ohio
Oepenment of Neturel Ae·

July a. 1990

No. 90·869
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT

Selled propo•l• will be
the office of the
Director of the Ohio Departrec~ved 11

ment of Tranaportatlon. Colt-miMI a. Ohio, untll10:00 A .
M.. Ohio StanArd Time,

ooun:oo (OONRI. Dlvlalon of
U - Provontion • Rocy·
cling iOLPR) fore Rocycllng
Operetiont Gr11nt.

The hnrlng wUI be hetd at
the Oallla County Coun-

hou•. on Tueodoy, July 24.
1990, It 10:00t.m. in

Tuoadoy. July 31 . 1990. k&gt;r the Commlukm.,. meet·
irnptovementeln;

Gallla County. Ohio. on

,.cfion

ing room.
The County lntendl to

GAL-110-1.61. opply lor up to 170,000.

State Route 180 in Gellipolie Townlhlp,
Gelllt

Theae lunda will be u,.d to
promote recycling tn Gillie

County. by groding. drolnlng County. Thaoo fundi ""'"'
And paving with •PMh cone ret• on a bltumnoua eggregate bate and by conttruct-

be tubcontracted to

32 foot · 1 1 lnchn. 401- ·

0 inche•. 32 few1 - 1 1 Inch•

to canter bearings,
roa dway 40 feet - 0 Inch•
fnco 10 face guardrafltl. over
L1tt1p Chickamauga CrHk.
c~ ntar

Pro}ect length -

1.376.00 Hn. IHt
0.280 miloo

Bidding on thlo project

It
restricted to Minority Bull·
ntfll Enterprins (MBEt)
certified 11 MBEI In accor·
dance

wtth

Section

123-.151 (B)f2)oltho0hlo

Revised Code by the Stet•
Equel Employment Oppor·
I unity Coordinetor and quel·
1fied to bid whh ODOT under
Chapter 6626 of the Ohio
Roviled Code.
" The da1e 181 for compl&amp;t ion ·of 1hit work 1Nill be a
set forth in the btddlng pro-

posal."
Each bidder shall be r•
qu ired to file with hit INd e
eerti'fied checlt or Cllhier' 1
check for 1n emount equel
t o trve per cent of hll bid. but
m no event more than fifty
thoutan d dollars, or 1 bond
fn r ten per cent of hit bid,
pD )'ableto the OirttetOf.
81ddert mutt eppty, on the
!Jr oper forms. tor quallfice·
tiona at least ten days prior
to the daUI set for opening
btds in accordance with
ChtPter 6526 Ohio ReYiMd
Code.
.,.,, and tpecificationa
nrfl Qn file in the Oepanment:
of Trentportllion and the offtce ·of the District Deputy
Duocto&lt;

The Oifettor reurves the

oght to reject any •nd ell

bidS

. BERNARD B HURST
DIRECTOR
JU LY 22. 1990
1 Card ol Thanks
We wish to thank
everyone for all
"the cards and
phone calls we
· received in
rirference to our
f;6th Wedding
· Anniversary.
God Bless
You All
Mr. &amp; Mrs.
Jed Will
:we wish to thank all
lainlly, friends and
nelJhbors for prayers,
II ~wera and food d ur •
int the Illness and
loss of our mother.
Spacial thanks to
Bro. Bob Purtell for
his services.
Jo tilt ,..._...,
Veterans llemooill Hoa~1. Owrllnlok Ntn·

q Home.

dociiJis.

IIUIMS. lids, hault-

ketpitll and those llflo

sent canis IIIII visiald.
It llltlnt 10 IIIIC~.

Till FaiiiiJ at

Qfldrs ''""-•

Ooll.,...,
o.m.. on Sotunloy, J&lt;Ay 28.
1990.

Tho vollldo will t.. oold to

tho hlghoot

Ia""

bidder ""•

wtthout any ••prw.ed Of
Implied wamnty. Thl• vehf.
cle m-v M ,..,. .. the

Jockaon Plko ()fft.,. of tho
Olllo Valloy B1111k Componr

afforded an opportunity to
comment on the proposed
progrem.
The hearing .tte it ICC81tlble to handicapped JMrttOnt.
Persona unable to tttend the
heering m1y meke com·
mentt by writing the Gellle

Utlor p,_lon
Proorem.
Courthouao. &lt;loNipolla. or by
Md Recycling

contactlnv Terri aetv•e 1t

441-4112..... 272.
By Order of the CJaltla

County Comminlonen

George Po.,.. Pr•ldent

JULY 19. 20. 22

ony bldo.
No bldo moy bo whl&gt;*-n for ot ' - t 30 doya
tho oohodulod aloolng
lime for ,...;pi of bldo.
By Onlor of tho
Galllpolla City Schoola
llolird of Edua.tion

Elon M. lorry, T,_urer
July 22. 28; Aug. 5. 12

up to the date and time of

Public Notice

Volloy Bonk
Compony ,..,.,.. the right

to ..::cept or nfec:t .,y and
all bide. and to withdrew tt•
volliclo from Olio priof to tho
alio. Torma of Bole: CASH

or CERTIFIED CHECK .
July 22. 2&amp;. 27
PWIIc Notice

hPMttlon of en ulttlng r•

.,. invited to attMld thie
hearing where they will be

Nlervel the right to eccepl
or reject .ny. 11 or pertt of

.....Tho Ohio

profit orgenlzatlon for the

or Counly

Work lenpth -1 , 3711.001n.
feet or 0. 280 miiM
P11ve ment width - 24 fHt .

Bonk c ....... nr. 370 - . ...
Plk.,
ONo • 10:00

1 non-

;ng: erldga No. GAL· 1BO· cydlng opltltlon.
0190 - 1 3 apen cantinuout
Cltizona of Gellle Counly

concrete alab aupeutrvcfure with reinforced con·
crete aub1tructures (tpent

Public Notice

public lllo ot

NOTICE OF
PUBLIC HEARING
GALLIA COUNTY

&lt;I ALLIPOLIS

CITY
SCHOOLS
LEGAL AOVERTISEMENT
FOR BIDS
Boporoto. ...rod propo-

w•

tor etch ofthe requW.
menta_. forth Mfow
t.
MII

rocolvod 01 the offlco of tho
Trooaurer. Gollpolll City
School a. a 1 s.... 81rNt.
Goilipolla. OH. 4&amp;t31 untl
12:00 noon Auguot 20.
1910 ond
bo pulollcly

w•

a--'llflllreodloy ... T,_
JU111r lmmHI ..Ify tt.rNfter
end ~ant..t lo tt. baanf
ot ha tiPI mooting. Bldl
must be cteerty martled on
the envelope ''Bid Opening.

Auguot 17, 1190''.
DESCRIPTION OF
REQUIREMENTS

NOTICE OF SALE
SURPLUS VEHIClES
loliod bldo will t.. r•
bv the Goillpolll City
lohooll .CNird of Eduootlon.
• 1 Itoto ......,. &lt;lolllpollo.
OH. 41131 Uftlll 12:00
noon on Auguot 20, 1910
for the aile of the foil-Ing

,.,.Buo.....No. I 1990 lm...,..

tlonal

IUL
Ilona!

ultl!l in

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Loodlng Creok Wo·

terlhed At~ociatlon, Inc ..
h• changed ita monthty
mee~tng date from the third
Wectn..dly of e.:h month
to the firet Tu•ct.v of MCh

month effective August
1990 ol 9:00A.M.
171 22. 1tc

2. Breed 1M'oduC11 tor
in ceteterles

SATURDAY, JULY 28, 1990
9:00 A.M.-9:00 A.M.-9:00 A.M.
This is 1 continuation of the Estate of Rollin Dill to
be held at the Meigs Co. Fairgrounds on St. Rt. 33
north of Pomaroy, Ohio. Watch lor signs.
"'ANTIQUE OR COLLECTORS ITEMS"
Boot jocks. oiler~ flat iroos, spittoons. chalk rtems. ~ron
money bank papa- weight collect1on. Oil lamps. li~d fetephon~ Shirley Temple ~ems. c!fnival. cut ~ass &amp; p1nk depression d~hes. glass bas kels &amp; shoes, child's metal ooo~ng
stove. rug beater~ Coca-Cola frays. 78 RPM record~ books.
w1cka- basket, picture frames. lard press. school &amp; dmner
bells. milk can &amp; pitcher. churns. apple peeler. George Jones
&amp; Sons England Mayflower dishes. washbo11ds, Klkus01
chmo, door stops. kraut cunet. slergh bells. Norrtake chon a
made in Jopan · serVIce lor 8 &amp; lots mor~
"'HOUSEHOLD"'
2 pc lwing room surte. reehne1. ch01rs, m1sc. stands. TV.
auto washer &amp; drrer. Slde-by·slde ~elrigerator. mise dishes.
pots. pans. electrical appliances. single metal bed. linen~
walket. wheelchaH. and several new ~ems of clothes and etc.
PHYLLIS BEARHS - EXECUTRIX
C.se ,26661
DAN SMITH- AUCTIONEER- 57-68-1344
Cash
Positive 1.0.
Refreshment•
Will Bo Hold lndGors. Bring Your Lawn Chlirl

lua. No. 34 1180Jnto,...
Ilona!

Vohlal• mey t.. • - ot
lhe but flit"- locotod b..
hind G.Elomomorv

lohool.
8idl mu11 be aUed •nd

al-'\'merllodonthe..,••

t..
,...miiiH"Oiy. Tho

lope 10 thot . . . • • -

01*\od
8oerd of Education , _ _
the right to - o r Nject
onv ond oft bldo.
EU.n M. larry. r,.._urer

Boord of Edu..,lon
Goit)Joollo C ltv Schoo II
July 22. 21; Aug. a. 12

u•

3. Milk producta tor u11 in
cafeteria
4. Geaoline end
Fvoi
S~d Botrd of Educetk&gt;n

0.••

7.

PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE
Tho Ohio Vliloy Bank
Company. 420 Third Ave·
nue. Gallipolis. Ohio will offer tor ule the following described property.
1988 Mercury Cougar.

Sorlol #
1ME BM804 1J Hll9889
Thll volllclo
bo •old ot

w•

11
Help W8nted
_ _ _...,:._ _...;._ __

r;:::;;;:;;:;;--------------..:....--------,
..._._

Attention General Managsrs!

STILL MANAGING
lHE LATE SHOW?
Why Work Untii2AM!
Find your freedom at the NEW Ponderosa. As Amalu's la¥Grite
family restaurant we offer managers un~ growtll ~l And hours
that make sense. The fact is, wive put togelher 0t1t olllldlly's most
experienced management teams. And we're ready to offer you:
• 5 !by won Wftlr/atlrld!Ye - • Store lloan of: 11_9,., S..·Tnrs.
&amp; 11•·10... Ftt.-Sit.
• Coapellllve salwy

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

• Cotlplete 9-wttll
.....
• Nedkal/delltll/llr. . . . _ , . . 401 (II)

You'liNed 3·5 ,ars:;:;: rat11mt IIIINgtl11tlll uptrltnce
with ulajor dlall. ClJieGe
Is d I ... Aid Ollllbout 0111'
In your IOC.II area. Fax or ma JOIII' raume with ullly hlltary Ill:~
Evans, Ponderosa, In&lt;., 6432 Nlln Sl., Rernelclsblnl, liH 43068. (Our Fu
I is 614/864·2039.) Loul htltnltwnl bt lmiged.

11

Help Wanted

::,~,:::,h. ~~:.:~!.I""~
employMe. 8 houl'li

DIRECTOR OF NURSING. RN
n..ad tor the OI!'Ktor ol Nur.
lng potltlon for 1 76 bed skilled

nvrolng llcllllv. Elcall.,l com·

lhould WO
-thor ~.li&lt;&gt;&lt;&gt;d~bro

And go to

In 1 ctoudle.a lkyThey heva bul gone

Jan, Shane and
Susan

1043, Ga.lllpolia, OM 45631.

4

Giveaway
1 mother c:at and 5 tiger
cats to good home

sm.

ltmale
German
Sheph~rd, 1 yr. old. 614-256-1037.

2

2-8 Monlh old eata Both Famtla,
HouH broke all Shote but
Rtbl ... 1114-44&amp;-4070.

Clara,_,_· a. On 1'1aNI

Folding at11c stairs. lwo 15"
tlr ... 304-882·2755.

Auction Conducted BJ

Fret to good home. 3 puppies, 2
female, 1 mtlt. 7 wtr.e. old. 614~2-3290 _

RICK PEARSON
AUCTJONCOe

yerd sale hems ,
uveral begs, 304-773-5040
Lett

PUBLIC AUCTION
FRIDAY, JULY 27, 1990
10:00 A.M.

Located 5 miles north of Pt. Pleasant on Rt. 62.
Turn left at Potters Creek Road. Y, mile to sale
site. Follow si1ns.
Anlique ool m•bletop dresser. oak 1ce box. Cwca 1925. mce:
SQuare oaf&lt; dining room tabl~ needs restoroo: parlor table; Jt.
brily fable; 3 pc bedroom surte; 2 pc bedroom surte; clothes
press; oi lamps; trun~ stooe liiS. crocks. old baskets; butter·
mold; sofa and chair; wash,. and dryer. •nn(!et washer; pressure conner; pots and pan~ d~hes end glassware: coffee and
end tables; smal appil!nces: hand fools; 31awn mowers; lo!Dtila- plus other rtems too numerous to menhon
Lunch Av.~illlble
Ter11s: C.sh or Check Day of Sale with PosHivti·D.
Selling the personal property of Hazel Chattin. Sale
by order of Brenda Chattin, power ol1ttorney.
AUCTIONEER: EDWIN WINTER
Millwood, WV.
Phone 273-3447 - Lie. H334
"We Apprecl1te You1 Attendance"'

PUBLIC AUCTION

ANTIQUES-COLLECTIBLES-HOUSEHOLD

TUESDAY, JULY 24, 7:00P.M.
GALLIPOLIS JAYCEES BLDG.,

RT. 35 (BYPASS) AT KANAUGA
GLASSWARE: fenton. Goofu&gt; DepresSion IUICe sels. Adam&gt;
plate• L1moge plltll!l. Cut glass soil&gt; Green DepressiOn relr llf'!l
alor do~ Woterlurd pressed plates, McCoy coo~e)&amp;r. Carnwol,
otd dishes, doneware cassetok!, planer corn !&gt;erver, m1sc
Of Sl'fCtALIIIT£tiST: 64 pc Johann HaVIland Bmria ch;na
set. indude! 12 pc chooolato sei{BIH1moro Rose poHerll)
AITIQUES: Ooi lamp, cast won 01fllo """ 3 Gr•wald slillet~
Jdvert~inr podures &amp; ~gns. &lt;&gt;lk h~l tree. mce oak Sldelxlard,
blue/wiMie swrl gunrte bo-o( other eranott ll'tlure frames.
smokers stJnd. ptus more coll"'lng. ..

COlliS: Walk1ni Liberty halv es. Mercury d1mes. lndoan head
pennies. 1925 Stooe Mou ntaon han doll~ . 1986 Prest1ge Proof
se~ Amet1c.an Ea~es
Tbio ita perlioi l~tlnt- Other lntar•tl•l ijoms co11in1 in tho
day olul• II 1ou wiah to conaicn itom1. call :
lESLIE A. LEMlEY, AUCTIONEER
614-367-0171
llceoutl I Bootlod in fnor of St. of Ohio
Cuii/Approood Ciltci
1111
A;t Condll;onod
Not hsponllbia lor Accldmh ,. lost Property
Ckoci wHh u ... lor booldolour ,....,. &amp; tall "'"~
"NO SMOKING PERIIIITED IN
•••

PUBLIC AUCTION

THURSDAY EVE., JULY 26, 1990
5:30P.M.

lr. Brown his sold his shop 1nd will offer for •uc·
lion misc. from his 1rchery supplies. Come buy, be
rudy for huntin&amp; seuon and buy Christmas &amp;ifts
Mrly. Located 11 44781 Pomeroy Pike. Chute~.
Ohio. Welch for sians on St Rt. between Chester &amp;
Pomeroy. Ohio.
"ARCHERY ITEMS'"
New Bows: HoyVEaston. McPherson &amp; Browmn&amp; vanous
ler1glh &amp;w~ghts, usoo bows - approx. 6 various modelt
tarBets · used 2-DTrue like targets &amp; new various others; ca·
mouhge clothing · 2 pc outl!~ coverall~ insulated jackets.
huntinl vests. hits. &amp;toves. thin sullied gloves, cfothin&amp; in
various ~zes sm-n 1~. Quiries . ~1de &amp; bow. arrows. Broa·
heads, bow cases. belt packs. ouordraw releases, arrow
rests. si&amp;fils. deer lure. turkey callt game call cassettes. an~
mal decorated lamp shldes. misc. la1ga Eq. Bow parts &amp;
pip&amp; Hmbs. 1nd etc.
"MISC."'
25" .oolor TV, 6 JUn cabinet~ AMIFM stereo wlrecord &amp; 8
track plsyer cabins model. and mise tools.

OIIEI - TERRY BIOWII - 915-3364
DAN SIITH - AUCTIONEER - 614-912-7301

c.•

PosHift I.D.
hfreslltll..ts
"lol ..po~~~lble lor Accident&amp; or lou of Pf'09111Y"

over

Ptrt Huskey and Samoyld . 3
months dd, good with klde,
304-882·3365 '"" 5:00.
Puppies, lo good home. 614-

773-5785

388-9349 .

Ranchtro truck \opper. 614·949-

TERMS: Cash or Clleclt with Ill
Nol RtlfiO!IIIIIit Fot Accldtntl or LON of Property
LlctnHd I Bonded In Ohio, Kantuclcy, Wut Vlrgi!U IG6

23i't.
Very Cute 112 husky, 1'2
eh1ph1rd puppies. 8 we•k• old.
614-367-0437.

Lost &amp; Found

6

Found : Black kitten Syracuse
area. IIM-H2·282t.

DOLlS

ANnOUES

GLASSWARE

Absolute Public Auction
SAT., JULY 28, 1990
9 O'CLOCK A.M.

One mile east of Oak Hill, Ohio on State Route
279. Owners. Ron and Beaotta Barnhart will offer the following:
·
ANTIQlJES AND FURNITURE
Two bow front chinas, wide ~ass front bookcas~ crocks,
good bross ove~ayed bed, brass lelephone. vanrty. round
oak pedestal table. 4 round bottom oak chairs. WICker rocker.
oak rocker. brass easel. trun~ oak corner cupboard trepr~
dud ion). nice spinning wheel. wooder1 churn, Brunswick Pa·
nair ope diamond disc phonograph. box Edison 78 reoords.
nice Edison standard phonograph Type 0 wdh brass tipped
horn. crane and mormng glory horn and cylindert painled
flat wall cupbo•d, 1930s secrelarr. 1880 date brass lamp,
mod,.n clocks. Un1on Poc1fic brass spittoon. Central Pacific
brass slop jar. o1nate brass call bell, Vidorl!n loveseat. modern oak bow front china. Aunt Jemima ~ron bank . ll inches. 1elly cupboard. dinn01 b~l. ranan planler. 6 wrought
lfon planlers. s· wrought lfon bench, 200 pes. Cllltume jewelrr, bedroom surt~ calf yoke. lanterns, oon kettle. Benf·
wood chairs, 24 space cup and saucer wall rack. spoon collectiOn. 3 gal. slone churn. several slereot chai1~ stands
and modern rtems. chesl freezer. copper fireplace cove1
IPub seen~. comoosrtion duck deroys, 50 or m·ore cactus
plants.
CONCROE AND MARBLE LAWN OUAIENTS
4 marble stalues wlpedestalt concrete gnome, blacl!
shoeshine boy. 2 boart 2 eagles. donkey ond wagol\ ~OfiS.
lurtle, servanl boy. 48"' woman w~h water jar fountain. wall
sconce. Raggedy Ann &amp; Andy. 2 limestone figurmes, Mex&gt;
can boy. man &amp;woman 36", ho1se head Mching post many
)ardmiere. 7wondmills. 14 ' flal bottom fiberglass boat ores &amp;
elec. motor, 3 lawn mowe~s, lools. etc.
DOLLS - OVER 300
In eluding S.f BJ . original ta··. 24"' composrtion sleep eyes.
3 laced bisqu~ 13" Kewpo~ By-lo cetam1cs. 35" A. H. walk·
1n11, several EHenbees induding John Wayne. May West
on gin al bom. 22"' Sea-let o·Hara ceramic severall7" Ger·
man chin' 24"' bride doll. 23" schoolmarm. set oll-8"
Salvation Army, chalk Charlie McCarthy googlie, Laura! &amp;
Hardy plaster, Charlie Chaplin. ceramic clown. newer wooden Sw~~ Gerber, BiK Boy Reslau1ant, assortmenl ollor~gn
paper mach' Un~da boy &amp; (!irl, horseman black rubber.
Ideal. Plump1es, Mahels. Eegees, Lorries. Renco. Reg~.
Lover. Goo-Goo Kid m bisket, Howdy Doody. Pillsburr
Doughboy, Wizard of Oz scarecrow. Betty Boop, Indians ond
many more common dol~. many heads parts. etc. Small celluloid dolls, w1g these dolls ore well dressed.
GLASSWARE
C.!lnivol in many styles over SD pes., candy conloiner~
pressed berry set !iO pes. n1ce Opalecant Hobnail. pr~ed
punch bowl set. milk glass, punch bowl set. ch~lfs moniature
punch bowl set pressed water set 50 pes.. Imp. slat rooster,
cernival(oow). buller mold, mtriflllld Ill~ dish. bow~ Imp, 3
ft. dish. Cllnival butter dish. complete water set. Johnson
Bros. serv~e hJr 8 Blue Willow ~ag. leaded giiSs bowllS
pes. ftashoo thumb print pressed, sweral depression pes.,
10 pc. etched stemware, culetoss, L&amp;B blue &amp; whrte, cheese
dish. German cake plate and bowls, Last Supper pllle, 3ft.
turkey dish, pigeon blood, cup&amp; saulll!f collection, TNT 1910
anniver!lrr plate. many commemorllive Illes, Bmrien
pointed plate, many minillure child's d~h. 2 small curio
cabinet~ Iris paUem set, milk pitcher~ oooije jars. frosted
lion on dish, pheasant on dish, cape plates, com poles, oil
lamps, cobalt Fenton. much more.
JFK collecl111"!4 pc., misc. !lfessed rtem~ 30 carnival grope
ptn.. also some poor to average quils. sm. blue gronrte pan,
WW II helmet, anmverury cloc~ 200 old Cracker Jack lrinlels.

TERMS: C.sh or Good Chlct-Out of Stat• Chtcb on
Approval
Lunch Served

TEIRY L LLOYD, AUCTIONEER
1614) 286-1229
LIC~Ritd

lftd l011dld Ill Olllo
Not ..1101111bfe lor Accl,_, 01 Lon

LOST billfold Maln Strttt bet·
wa•n 61h 1md 3rd
Point
Pltatant. RE.WAAO. brop 11
newspaper office.
LOST malt and ltmal• Bnglt,
blk, while, brown, plea a. c 111
304-458-1992, REWARD.
lOST-Blond Cocker Spalnlel
Apple Grove trnJ loll tiNt of
July, answers to Altx, 304-518-

2255.

Lost: In Hudson Valley arn of
Rtltdavllll. 2 pups. Trl&lt;olorad
lamale btagla end rust colorod
tamala
Cockerspanitl
pup.
Rewtrd lor 11f1 return. C1ll col·
leet 1·304-675-2798 .

7

CO

VENDING ROUTE: Local. Great
Income. High tn~Hic
locations. Prt~ tor quick 1111,

artra

HJ00.727-5300.
WOLFF TANNING BEDS
ContQ'Ierclal-Mome Unlta, From

Gallla Caunty EMS Baalc, Ad·
vanoed, Paramedic ~v11 Potl·
lion hJII &amp; part tlml . 614-446-

$1H. Lsmpa, lotlont, eccestori ... Monthty payments low
as $18 . C.ll today FREE Color
Catalog. 1-8Q0.22s.6292.
WOLFF Tinning Bldt . Comm•rclai-Home
Units
from

colnway, North Aurora, II. 60542.

$199.00. Lamps-Lotlona-Accotsorl... Monthly paym1nla low
11 $18.00. Call today FREE
Color Catalog 1-8Q0-2l8-6292.

Hair Stylllt needed. Full-lima or
pan-tlmt. Good working cornU·
lion. For Into. call 114-59:Z-4ffl
ask tor Monikl.

fhc40. 2 bathrooms, Willi Ia wall
carpeting throughout. Electric
banboard hitting. 3 car detach
gara,.. w/door o~nere, county

....
lc
water, upt syl1tm, &amp; lltllllte
dish, all on &lt;43.8 acrtt tor

Country Salting. 4 bedrooms, 2·
112 baths, cenfral h•at end air,
baaem•nl. attachttd garage. 20
mlnuln from Athens, 1-112
miiH lo Meigs High School .
R•terences tnd cfepoelt ,.
qulred. 614·593-6937.
Must S•ll: 2BR Log Mome.
N1w1y carpeted, stonM hearth
wood-bumer,
10'x24' Dick
l2'x 12' building. Riverview. Land
contract 6l4-446--4i09 or 614-25f1. 19 a2.

Nd. Will train. Send rnume to: tf3 aera lot wllh 14x70 1980
Box CLA040. %Gallipolis Dally 1 mobile home, 3 BRa , 2 full
TrlbuneJ... 825 Third Ave., Gsl- baths, garden tub In mas1tr BR,
llpoll1, unlo. 45631
dlshwaahor, washtr
dryer,
Lady to stay with .tdarly lady, : rang1lc refrigtrator. Cr.., to1al

Peaceful and quhe country
cabin, 25 aeru on Owl Hollow
Rd, 20 mlnulll from Point
Pluunt, 304-67S.TT1"1.

I

1B Clrt Polnl Pl~asant

p. l electr

Rtglster,
200 Main St Point Pleasant WV

2S550.

.,

'

I

,

appraised

value

$21,500, asking $18,900. Lan.d
contr.~ct ntgotlable. Call eve a
attar 7 p.m. 614·368-8158.

CHAIIM · PERSOIULIIY · COM·
~er e&lt;.

- Qualfy bUilt new home on

wll.h pond Enler through a

leaded ~lass door 111loa 1 6'~27' hvinR rm. wrlh bav window and tim doo r~ lo
ar1 alt ,um The ktlchen 1Se11raord tMry w~h r~ land ~~d ho sted oak tab, nel ~
IJy Bedlw1 Milster beduft rs ver~ huge wrlh whiiii)OQIIub 2 lull baths, 2 car
~&lt;lra~~ Tlus horner~ rnaltrteni"P! ht&gt;~ I '"~t dass•c beau1y Buy MHT\€ ar1d 3
ac m I ~t a reeuc!d pn;e. 8!:1,000.

_

K05 THURIUtl, one QUill sl!eellocated close to sl«es. po51 office. etc. A
ve1y n ~~;e comiOJtable 2 story home w/3 bedrms .. l.R. w/lireplace, master
bedrm. w/lt rep~ce 2 large bedrms. up., k~c~~n. dtn Ar!a. sunroom. decks &amp;
tronl ~r c h . basemen!. aU rn good repaif. Just the place lor a hmrly and tS at
an aHo1da~e p1ce
. CHESHIRE. SR ],JUSt at u.e edgf' or IClWn Vefy pr1v ale locatron Cou ld
t'&gt;@d1m s. L R. but~ tn krt .. lar~e L R loYely treed yard $35.000

Ntld experienced blu pl1yer
group. 614-446-

11130.

Part-time office job. Soma
typing tnd bookkeeping tklllt
,.qulntc:l. P.rtonlblt. Wrlta Box
nQC, Pomero.,., Ohio 45769.

POSTAL

JOBS

l16,392-$61

barn

S.crttary wtnted, bookkNplng
and typing • plus, l'tlghly
motivated and well organized a
muet. Apply In paraon Ohio Vallay Tire Outlat, Rt. 2 Gallipolis
Ftrry nert to 84 lumber Co.

Two Homes. One In Gatllpollt &amp;
one tO MILta out. Both mov•ln
Condition. 614-256-6855

·~~~~H1,:~:n~i,:;~~~i,~

&gt;52Q.
EXCELLENT ALL IRICK HOME
ranch w•t ~ ]17 balht E&amp;t·rfi k1k:hen. io.rmal dtn rm. t
unprove·
menls have befn made on this tharmmKrmmaculate home New pulse autut
na(e m~ta lled w/centr al atL Some new carpet, llm•ly rm wtwoor!Wrnmg lr
tep\ac~ on lowet lev£'1 2') car garage N1cc lot andlocal•o r1 Re~lly a lt ne home
!hill )OU ~ hould 5H wrtho ul delay

SIZE SETS

Mattress &amp;
Foundation

Ttltphone soUcl1ora. Call 614·
446..3615, Ask for April.
WANTED: Certer orianted In·
dtvldual tor weight 1011 Industry
aaln and marketing uparlence
1 plus but not raqulred. Paid
training 11 lncludld. Will rte•lve
baM pay, commission, plus
bonu!lel. Positive and an "on
tho go tltltude" a must. Ctll 614·

446-466-1.

BookkHplnCJIActountlng,
Holei!Motal
m1n1gement,

11607. YOU'll StEEP 8mER IN THE COUNTRY ATIIOSPHUE lhts three
bedroom home oners Situated on three acres m/1 neM Rodney Don't watt
untrl ( ~ too tale call us ar.d see lhl&gt; t o~y . Aflordabh or reed ilf S'Vi !Jm nn

STARTING AT

QUEEN SETS

$199° 0 &amp; UP

/l~nf..P!tial AND OTHER BRANDS
KOO.IEW liSTING: :NER S~£0 HOME. UMDER~aEOPRICE. Buut~l1 ·
Slrny home 1n PatriOt w1t~ 4 or 5 bedrooms 2 car ~arage and barn allstualed
on latge lot Call lor roore deMI~ a ~ dm~kean appotntmenl to ~ee lhi!S orre now
Pr ,o; ed tn I fie 20 's

BUNKIE MATTRESS

$40° 0

"467 NfW LISTING - OWNER Will lAND CONT AACT . Pet lect staller hom!'
or tent~l properly I wo bedroom) and one acre m/lloc~ !e d n ea~ ~·n t on Or'! ~
$/ 1500 00 Ca ll tm detarl'i

BED FRAMES:

FULL .. .. .. ...... .... .. .....

lf%8 WE flOW Ht\V£ S£V£At\L tors w~l'l r1~tr lt or. tagr Perfect lor an~lh1n~
lrom a umper loa nrw tmu)f II ~ou w uul d lt ~ e to soend vour lfee !tml' 'lratc h
'r.R the rt¥et roll by call us lor more •n lotmattOn loh a1e belo111 Bladrn on f?t

.. '20 .00

QUEEN ... .. .................. '30 .00

KING. ...

1

.. ..... .. ............ '40.00

~579 YOU CAfi 'J SEE IHEFOREST FDA THET REES - In1r1 ~ ~ P~fl n acrr' ol
wooUPU lantlwtlh lwo wells ou poperty Paled 101 :.troOu \ hunteo \ locAiell
ne~1 1\emp!'f Hollow Rd ONL Y$11 000 00

Schools &amp;
lnstrucllon

•SJ2 1r YOU WOULD LIKE TO HAVE PR!Yt\CY . a ~arMn antmal s. do &gt;Orne
tarm 1 n~ or JUSt teld' on the countr y we ha~P Ihe p lac~ lot you Three bedroom
houw ~nd tw enty h~e .VI I"&gt; mil situated m Ches h•re T111p, only $57 000

Alrllnl travel, NUrMI Aid, T... c. '
tor Tn~ller ln~lnlng, R•l·

deni!MoJN 11udy. Financial aide

JVtllabll It quatlllad. Placement
111ilfence. County School• local otllce 2307 Camden Ave,

Psrbrsburg, WV 1-8oo.648-6411.

18

Yard Silt. Earl 't'oung rt51denca

REG . 'B9.00

Wanted to Do

Babwalttlng In !'tome. Mother of
2 on 2nd Ave . Fullllmo prallr·
red. 614-44&amp;-anJ.

on Sf 7. Large elz• ladlll
ctoll"tts. July 19-20-21-22·23.

lf580. lUKE • FRJ:SH START m thrs ruril tln oret:l rar.ch house II has ar. rn
vrt 1 n~ trreplace . three bedrooms and much more All s~ uated un or1e acr~
more or less. Located 1r1 a qu~el area ~nr Rodne~ C~lllor delarl s and s~ th ~
home now $52 000.00
lt610. AffORDABlE AP.UTIENT KOUSE !Of Ihe WISe rnvestor. live or.e and
11110 oedloom un~ s 1ocaled on Second Al'f Tl'l e It me to rn~ est myou t1uture t5
r.o,.,. Call us and ~ Ul•s property today. Pr1c~d tn the $60' s

~~70-633~2~.----------

Gallipolis
&amp; VIcinity

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

homet Call tor locstton and prtr:e

R11d bookl tor ptyl $'100 a 11111.
Call 1-e00-847·7878 {$0.i9/mln)
or wr+tt:PASE-31E, 161 S. Un·
COinway, N. Aurora, 11. 60542.

15

p.m. Saturday.

tl)\/el~

125tyr Now hlrtng. Call (1) BOS...
687-6000 Ext. P-4562 tor eurrenl
1111.

Yard Sale

All 't'ard S1lt1 Must Be Paid In
Advance. DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
1ht day bttore the ad Ia to run.
Sundty tdltlon • 2:00 p.m.
Friday. Mondty edition • 2.00

I HOUSE IS FOR tHE FAMILY WHO LIKE! BOrH SPACOUSNISS

carpeted, eat-1n kfchtn on !(round lev!!. Lower level - 1'1 bath. rec. room.
u! tl~y rm . 2 3 BRs. washe1/ drvet. 2ranges.. 2 r !!fs. heautrlut 15'144' dec It An
ttew p~mbrns. 3 car attac hed garage. I ac mil srassed and level. J,llu s 6 car

11646

Clll l

tor local gotpel

State Rt 588

AND llAUTV - ClosE rn. BriCk ranch wU 3 BRs. e~ ·lc. closets. l, 21e baths.

EXPERIENCED
SALES
PEOPLE

FULL

1515 N!W US! IN~ CLOSEIOIOWN Y£1 OUIFNI ENOUGH TO HAH ANI MALS tf you so destre I am~ 13 br r3nch wfh LR. DR ~lichen. bat h. utl-y
1m. root cell¥. I oo t~d t . CISler n ptped to barn &amp;cell 11 . barn 48' ,37 lor anr·
mals
1 ar1d wur~sOOp A~ lh~ ilnd4 acs m/1terr cffltn Chec kme out I

1422.

MA.NAQERS1000 + WKlY

11 yr. old muhl-mllllon $ cor·
poratlon opening new division.
Mal\lgtrl needld lmmtdlattly.
It you tYif wlthed you could
get e break, It II now here.
Mond1y i a.m. to 5 p.m. for an
lnttrvltw. 1114--:Z8M381 COIIICI.

RUTH BARR. REALTOR. 446-0722
LINDA SKIDMORE. REALTOR. 379-2686
DEBORAH SCITES. ASSOCIATE. 446-6362
LYNDA FRALEY. ASSOCIATE. 446· 7499
MICHAEL MILLER. ASSOCIATE. 441 .1405

23 LOCUST ST.
446 " 6806

$32,500. 304·757-9280.

Nice 2 Br. home: Lg. LA wlfp, lg.
eat·ln kitchen, aHached garage,
lg. lenced· ln baek yard, lg
sera•ned-ln porch . Kineon Ave.,
Gallipolis. Bw owner. 614-446-

11 ht houHwork reply to Box

R£SIO£NTIAl - INV£STM£NTS · COMMERCIAL · FARMS

$85,000. Home on 13 acre• tor
S75,000. 30.6 acre. .,. avalllblt
wtpurchase ot home for an eddltlonal $'10,000. loeatltd Rt .3, Gal·
llpollt. Directions: Ttke Rt.3! to
Rt.588 to Cora Mill Road. Home
It ar,proxlmatoly 2 112 to 3 mllaa
on e". In Ohio Call : 1~14-44&amp;­
6611, In Wast VIrginia Call: 1·
304-344-S&amp;l&amp; after 5p.m.
By own1r, 4 Ndroom home
river lol, enclosed front and
back po~ch, BuHato Putnam,

HouHkta..., and NurM side.
Real Estate
614-992·5042.
lndependtnt isaln Atp, for:
Mutth Salas. wortc South•m 31 Homes for Sale
Ohio lroo. ExJ*Ionco Pralar·

Building 8x16 " · already 1om
down, you haul, 304-675-2611.

AUCTIONEEil'S NOTE!

MASON, WV

Whitt

4 pupplaa Maneh•stor Ttrrtar. 2
male, 2 femal1. 1 yellow male
collie. 614·742-2827.

bicycle. ftroplace blower, 1820's Ucense pial&amp;. 2f1' lawn·
mower. Redwood lawn iumiluru, old magazines. GE stereo
nice, Zorilh radio. ELitlka sweeper. low IDols and mom

LUNCH

kl"en
614·992·

!NOTICE!
LlE PUBL~HING

2775.

Gtl jMid for taking suy snap·
ahotsl $toO per 100. Wrltt
PASE-311-1, 161 South Un-

3 Announcements
Slrlgltl Information and a dig·
nllled option for Undlng 1
partner. Hurtanrch: P. 0. -Bo•

walerllod bedroom Illite, 2 pc. maple

EARN MONEY ANding bookol
Income potential.
Now hfrlng. tt I 1105-8117-61100
Exl. Y-10181.
EARN MONEY Roodlng bookol
$30,000/yr. lncom• potantla1.
Now hlrlng. 111 805-8117-61100
Ell. Y-4562.

DIAN CALLAHAN. REALTOR. 256-6 251
EUNICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 446-1897

REALTOR'

2097:

buill In kltchln wllh rongo. larga
OPJHOI. 12xl4, 101112, t011{.

on Investment, high prolltablllly,
low overhud. Franchl11 Is establlshed and reputable wllh a
proven tucctll 1111ck record.
Approl. 10/hrw. per week ,...
quired ot owner. Clll 614-5111·

1n1w1ring III'Vtoe. 114-H2-G3Ul.

4612 El259

Announcements

bedroom suite. old quit top, old kill:hoo &lt;Bblnol with lloor
bin, 5 pc. clnono 181, Ouaaar mlaowaw. Bunn oolloomaker. Unico freezer. Norve cheat type freezer, cabinoll,
Whirlpool waoher &amp; dryer. aarne as now. complol&amp; aot of
smewn clslies with matdmg camisiDr se~ 6 aid loe
Cream cllhet. 6 Skomwat9 gobloll. mtcrow8Y8 cookware,
sal of Meakin China· Red Rose pattern. ironware. Fenton
Carnival F~h. VIking Bowl, Rubv D;sh. Royal Copley Pl101l·
ers. Sl&amp;mwareCamivalgoblell, nioe cookware,8Mdkglaos
grape paUum. brass ftuhllght, old scoop. Tram CB. okll, ski
outfit old radio, bool&lt;s, old wagon. scoolor. gnU. 3 whooi

u•

way,

Sadly miued by
family. Freda, David.

I" '

July·DK•mblr. LMYI name,
addmt, and phOM number on

PROFESSIONAL SERVJCE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER . 38B-8826

Township Road 77. Arst road to
right_. Call 814·gg2-7'n8 or 1·384-

laundry room. 4br measuring

mtll until you have lnvett gated
lhe offering.
Local Merkltlng &amp; Sallt buslntn tor Alt. fmmltdlate n~tum

$30,000/yr.

And we'll Join them ega in
some happy day.

Business
rt It
ppo Un y

O
O

m

-).{'.f'.'~"~ ~-t; Q/,utf ~
l.E.J L.ll
(}'?t,nf (5 )/ttk
~~~·~~~·,-::~~

A· frtme for Nil by own.r, 2200
square r..t living room w/aprlal
stalrcaae, &amp;. fireplace, also lncludu custom made soUd oak
bulh In bookcaH. Dining room,

OHI VA
V
._.
·
recommends 1hll you do butl·
""' wtth peopll you know tnd
NOT to 11nd money thro~h th1

"Chrtltma•Around-Th•Warld".

In thllt home above

prepare the

an excellent
. For

Etm money by lhe week. Join
th• numbers to demorwlrale

BUI wl1y

Located at 6n 4th Street in New Haven, WV
Watch For Signs
Mn. Cook Is moving and will be selling
the following:
HOUSEHOLD &amp; IIISCaU.NEOUS: Kroehler 2 pc. living
room sull&amp;. rocliner, RCA color TV. chil&lt;fs oak roclwr. Kar·
astan 91113 Oriental rug. Zenith DOlor conoolo TV. beautiful

Thil

rttum

We are 10 11d
when those wa love
Are calledlo live

to

21

mun\clllon, ltader.tllp and
paillnl cor..kllluro o mvol.ln

In Memory of
Orville Facemire
who died
July 22, 1989

AUCftON

~ze

home, offlc8 or butlnus. "HIVI
tlperltnce. Aelt~ncu. 614992·7&amp;3i.

p.m. m1nlmum wtgl. Apply 101
Second Stt...t, Point Pllaaant,
on or before July 25, 1990.

PUBLIC

4 pc. queen

per day,

Monday-Friday, 1:00 a.m. to 2:00

location: D.A.V. Building on Rl 35 Bypass
Consignments taken from 12:00 to 6:00 day ol salt.
Truckload sale of new merchandise. Somethinc for
everyone.
Terms: Cuh or Chack with prop11I.O.
Air conditioned buildina. Lunch.
Uconsed and Bonded in StJte of Ohio
Licenst No. 4596
Not Rasponsibte 101 Accidents or Loss of Properly
WE ARE 11011 BOOKING SUMMER SALES
AUCTIONEER: DAVID BOGGS

4 room house on one tcre lot,
new roof and tldlng1 Interior
andrrch naoda won. Old 41

ond anlortalnmanl. Reasonable
raiH. Phona814·992-2830.
Rot , Aohlon, WV. Call HunWill Baby ollln my homa. Hm llngoon 304-623-4 29"1.
Gocd Raloran-. 814-381J.8114 7 roomo I 112 batha. counlry
living bu1 cloao tollolgo School
Wlll do gentl'll ctunlng ol and town. Rt . 33-4 ltnt,

In

bo

31 Homes for Sale

onerlng child cart In my home,
dayt.. Will provldt excellent care

cooking largo amounll ollood.
Ruponalbla lor locd Inventory.
Mult wort w.ll with other

EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT

SHUIIIY
JULY 18, 1110
10:00 LM.

WANTEO, llust

Wanted to Do

1B

==~-~=xp=~~':h.~~:-~;c:~

COOK

OWNER: MARY COOK

Public Notice

• ExctJIIIoul

2

PUBLIC AUCTION AND
CONSIGNMENT SALE

No. 31 19801nlem•

1. Ice Cnam products for
C8fet•i•

Public Notice

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ESTATE AUCTION

Public Notice

=========r-========r=======:=r========---·

Social. Emotional. or
Physicial Maturation;

0

L-----'-·--'---L.-L..--'-·--'·

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis.:...._:::O:h::;io:..,_P:_:o:;::i:.::nt:...:.,:PI:::ea::;sa~n~t.~W~.V!.a:!·~------S_u_n_da....;y....;Ti_•_m_es_
· s_e_n--ti.,...n_.ei::-::'P:::a::g::e:=D::-·-3,

22, 1990

Tavern Gallfpolll, Oh.

The Guiding Hand School is now accepting applications for pre-school en·
rollment ag11 0-6. Classes start Au·
gust 27. 1990. If your child has a davelopmantal disability in any one or mora
of the following areas, you may be eli·
gible for pre-school servicas.

r.S·

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

J

OUR PRICE

I,.... ~~WY ,
,..-nwLI

$4500

Car &amp; lawn mower repairt , pick·
up and delivery. Mobile homll
unbloeltld &amp; rebloekttd, roofs
palnlld. 304-576·2818.

Georg••

8

Portable Sawmill, don't
haul Juat call 304·675·1957.

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Have room In my home for II·
dtrly lsdy, more Information

Rick Ptlrton Auction Company
now booking tuctlons, Ill·
perl1nce make• the difference.
llcenNd Ohio, Kentucky, We.t
Vlrvlnl•, 304-173-5785.

9

wanted to Buy

~-676·2776.

Magic Ytara Day Care Center
reaaanabl1,
dtptndable,
licen11, quaiHy child c•rw. Man·
dty thru .Friday, 7:30 1111 5:30.
For mora Information or to
Ngjl1., 304-675-5847.

Complttl l'toutthold or Eatalu! Mill Peula't Day Cart Ctnttr.
Any type ol fumlturt, ap- Sate, attordtbll, ehlldcare. M-F
plltnctt, tnllque'a, 1tc. Alto II e.m. • 5:30 p.m. Age• 2 -10.
epprallll avallehlt. 614-246-5152. Btfore, after Khool. Drop-Ins
wtlcomt. 614-446-8224.
Complltl housahotd or El1atas1
Anw type at fuml1ure, ap-

pllancoo, anllqua"o, ole. Also

appraiNieVIIIIhle. 614-245-5152.
Ouutt
A.ntlqPJI or new. Exctollanl oondl11on only. Prompt ptymtnl. 114-

992-6&amp;57.

Employmenl Services
11

Real Estate General

REG. '79 .00
OUR PRICE

$4QOO

WORK BOOTS
BY WALKER

•
•

CAROLINA

SIZES 7 THRU IS

GOLDEN

RETRIEVER

•

AMERICAN
SPORTSMAN

•• •0&lt;

••• ,

, • •••

,.,,..!&lt;J,,,.,,&lt;ol\:

•116 IF YOU WANT INDIVIDUAliTY COif TO IHIS fRIEN DlY HO•E Lovely LR. w/cathect'al ce,lmgs, ~f chen loaded wrt h cabu1et ~ 3 Lum lut l~blt
I:M't1rm\ ba lh. slot a~e 1hrougooutthe hrJme G ar~ge l'ft1h wor ~ henc h. pat •n ! ~
rr 1111y
a ~~ ~II kt~t ~atd wr1 h ga tUen StxJl $43900 Caii ·.JI 1r1rarn dhuu .

1567. Hf LIVING AREA OF HIS •10: IWIOt is Desrfled to I tl'e needs ol
ev ery member ot yoorlamr~ ther e IS&amp;llrRe llm dy room w/ woodbur ner and
bat II. whtth IS wfll separated kom 1he lrvrnrrooms so 1he two groups caner.
JOY pr1wacy at the ~met1me. ator mal dtnl!l( room. three liWRf' bedroom~. ga t
age ThiS hom e~ srtuatP.d on 4 acres. m/ 1

Pil~Y h

Real E'.sla1e General

-;:;:;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;i;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;;l;;-;;;-;;;-;.·~-:;-.;;:;:;:;:;:;;
I

3RD PARTY OWNER DESPERATE
REDUCED PRICE TO $46,500

Help Wanted

AVON • All treae, C.U Mtrllyn

Weaver 304-882·2645 .

Accounting Potltlon ()pen :
Knowledge of Accounting 'P~
c.duree, Comput•r Erperienct
NeceUiry. 40 l-iour Work W11k.
Send RHume to Bo• ClA030
Clo Gallipolis Dtlty Tribune, 825
Third A.venut, Oalllpolle, Ohio

45631.

Aa per Artlclt t Trantflfl and
Vacancln, s.et{on B, Pa.llng,
of that Negotlal.d AgrHmant
Htwaen tilt MLTA and the
Botrd of Education, the MliiJI

locl:l School Dl1trlct Ia posting
lht rollowlng ncancln for ht
regular tllchlng ttatf: Slrth
Gr'ldl Tuchlrr al Salem Ctnttr
Elementary
Scl'toot,
Held
Tuchtr at Bradbury School,
Sad•l Sludln T11ch• II MliiJI

Outstanding buy on 1his 3-4 bedroom ho~~ on
. acres
city school district. Family room. large hvmg/dlmng room
combination, 2 baths, fireplace with wood burner and attache~
garage. No house compares to this for the price. Seller wantsrt
sold nowil Make us an offer.
#402

ChemlltryiOineral
SCitn~
Toachar Ill Malga High School.

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

High

School

AVON I All Aroaa I

on4

Bhirtl)'

SpMra, 304-e?a-14211.

__ _! _ _ .._ - - - - ' ' - - - - - - - - - - - - ----' ~---·-·-----------~~----------~--~
· ~
· ~~~----~

�Page- D-4- Sunday Times-Sentinel
Mobile Homes
tor Sale

32

1ifi9 2 BA. MobUe ·Hom.. 814-

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant.

32 Mobile Homes
lor Sale

32 Mobile Homes

1888 lwo Mdroom, til elec:lrlc,
14x70 trallll'. 304-882·3451.

1974 Guardon Futuram1 12165. 2
bedroom, Central Air $599!1
shown by sppolnlmt nt 614-446--

for Sale

m-5304 114-1112-6221
1fT1 llonarah, 1ZXIO 2 ~ SPECIAL Factory lo yout991, 2
room. Gal M.l, App~ancea In

-· .

l\~.~3~~~[~=~
price
13800. Milke me an otter. lt4I
and Ul
kl1chen
. ....
hoi liking
....,
tank. Must
be gu
moy.d.

1112-.3033.

up.

1m

tWJII Klr11woad 1211110 2BR, uc.
cond. hlao. 114-441-47f2.

141C10

2

BR.,

Electric, lg. bay window, sklrt1~, steps, good condition.
Frtnch City BrDktragt. 81._...611314.

Real Estate General

Qlrlgl, wathlt', dryer, range,
~a~l3tr1tor, good neighbor-

. Caii814-,.2·2Vn.

1012.

ICrtlgl

IVtllablt for

new home constNctlon on

Rayburn

A01d. Paved

county

water,

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 bedroom apt, offici or bu...

nau sp~ca, uptown location,
304-175-1748 or 67s.-21g4.

44

Apartment
lor Rent

44

2 BR ap~~rtment, sto~• &amp; rwf.
tumlshed. Upstair~. Watlf &amp;
traah tumtlhtd . Upper At 7,

i::~~=::,~~~~

fOld,

raaaonabta

Apartment
lor Rent

44

July 22, 1990

July 22, 1990

Apanment
for Rent

44

na

Unfurnis hed, 2 bedroom apart •
ment
with
stove
and
1'8lrlgorator. No pttll. 614·94i-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 538 Jllekaon Pika
from 1112/mo. Walk to shop

:=========i.__________ ~2~25=3~
j_

. _ __ _ _ __

Real Estate General

1090.

a

Jlmov~~,..~·ea~rr~6~1·~·~·~a~21~ea~.~E~OH~.

Real Estate General

t ...

room

n.,., JM•au.

Menor

' .
42

bu~d~~~ ~'"·

right a. 61

1or Rent

bri•.

mlln 10uth Gallipolis l.Deks,
pu~l c water, no r.. trictlons,
soma with rtver fronla~. 304-

576-2338.

Rentals

MOBILE HOME AND 30 ACRES more 01 less 1n the R1o
Grande Are a. Some woodland and there ts a new pond on the
property Nr ce pr rvat e area Ideal lor huntPr s or to ra rse a

!arT11 1y Not restr rd ed. w/ mmeral rrght s

LOG CABIN &amp; lAC RES - C1ly Sc ho ol D1sl 11d Only $1 G000
Call our 24-hr. answering servic e at
446 -4206 Anytime

'

41 Houses tor Rent
2

Bedroom

house

In

Suitable tor 2 people.

City.

614~4a-

one

CLOSE TO TOWN - Is lhis nice 3 bed room ranch wrth bath .
d~ni n g room . basemen! and garage, gas heat. Nice b1g lot.
Gtve us a call on I hiS one Only $~ 5. 00 0
#247

09~8 .

3 BR house . R1 . 141 GrNn Twp.

614-44~541

antr

s p .m.

Why P•y Rant1 Hom•• tor $1.001
Bank repoe, lax delinquent

properties,
government
gllt'taway programs. For Information call 1-"504-641-1178 Ext
R5214 . 24 houra

Apartment
tor Rent

Call attar 2:00 p.m.,
5881, M..on WV.

46 Space tor Rent
QUifl NEIGHBORHOOD- In Green
I
bedroom. ranch w1th balh. b1g k1tchen. liVing room. laundry
ro om. I car garage. 1'7 lots and mo" $~ 7.50 0
#161

Real Estate General

1.1 ACRE S MI L - And a 3 bedroom ~anch w1lh Dal h.lamily
room. dmrn g/ krtc~en co mbo. 2 car ~a r a~e Very nrce an d
clean hom e Call us lor more ~n fo r mal 1on $53 900
#1 46

W~lng cou~a

with 1 child

BA home w/gtr~ga In the RodGr1nde arta (ntar Rt .
35) Day·304-e75-6774 E¥...14·
245-6!102.
n~ • A~

Real Estate General

•

Household
Goods

5I
GREEN SCHOOL - Is lhll n~ce starter home wrth 3 bedroo m
I b at ~ . lrvrn Rroom and krtchen on 91 ol an acr e m/1 ! 1":- car
garage $27.000
#197

hra t

WOOdiJUfll £' 1

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof111 and chain priced fJom
$3i5 to Sst95. T•blu $50 and up
to 1"125. HldH·beds 1310 to
S5SI5. Recliner. $225 to $375.
lamps S28 to $125. Dlnattn
$10SI and up lo $C95. Wood lablt
w-t &lt;:halt'll $285 to 1795. Dnks
1145 up to $37'15. HU1chei $400 &amp;
up, bunk bade complete wflh
manrtts $295 and up to $3SI!Ii.
baby bade 1110 Man,..... or
bor springs full or twin S~.J!.rm
IM, and 191. OuHn Mtl w ra &amp;
up, king $350. 4 drawer chesl
MI. Gun C..blr.te 6, I , &amp; 10
gun. B•by manr..... $35 &amp;

GREEN SC HO OL DI STRI CT- Very niCPSbe d10um. 2'' bat h
ranch wrlh lull bas Pmen !. ~as heat woodbu rner 2 car gar·
,1ge. lamtly room crnl ra! arr 1t, ac re and a lot more Only
$69 000
#234

l7 ACRES - Plu s a n~ ce 3 bed1oo m. 2 bzlh . ta nch wtlh den.
drn rn g area . lrvtn ~ r oom . fu ll base ment. 2 largebutldmgs. Ap·

b ~ 1 h ~ ~~milv

p1ox 200' Raccoon Cree&lt; lronlage

COn V('f11Pnt loc alron $46 5CQ

BEGGING FOR A FAIIILY' - Alii he ingred ient s
ar e present ex cept a fam1ly. Very attractiv e 2
story colonial in a fa m1ly·O!iented netghborhood .
3 bedr ooms, 2~ balhs, beautiful family roomwrt h
stone lireplace lwoodburner insert). sunkenlivm g
room, formal dming and eal·m k1lchen, loisof cl osets and storage 21-i car garage. Central air re·
cenlly 'nstalled . Resttn g on approx I acre lol in
Porterbr ook Subdivisron. Close and con'Jentent.
but not noiSy and dirty '
#205

#104

RIVER FRONTAGE - 50 ac res mi l and a mu sl see log home
wrt h 3 bedrooms 1· bath. basement. lamrly room . dr nrng
room . ca l hrrl r t~ l cr rlmp, o;olarrum fr ont and back dec ks. 2
and I " ' ~ arage
' #147

5 P.ll. Mon, thnl Sat Call B14-

lil.l

-A

bedroom. I bath home wrth livrng room.

room. b-a th t1tra I.Jiii;" lot;. • i lt~tl
Vlftl Sll 000

132.ooo

1100l£POI1 - BIOAOWII. 1
bedl ooms. 1~·~~~room. iiY!nRIOorn

139 ACRES MI L - Plus I '· sl01y 3 bedroom I bath. Iarm
house wrl ~ ga s heat Toba cco base. la rge barn. mmeral
11ghl s Located" Wal n11llwp A s l m~ $59.000
#1 51

dtn•ng room. Ieit ch~ . bat h ft l b~ s e ·

Low
l~rie r, ~ ~ n~

10om.

k• chrn

I- bath IIJII bit\~

ment.

gdl,)~f.

bdl n and pond Good

hun t1ng and l~ hon~ lr ul! t r~
lOOee IYOl' hom(' on 30 acres ~~~~~
mu"leul r!ll hl ; ?0 mllull'!. oul ol Po

merov 30 m1nurrs out o1 .-mem

10 IIJI OUT Of Al HOIS OFF IU ~
Cood stuOC¥11 11'11t~ et pd rcmc I
fico plan 2 beclooms.. ~ 1nR room. ev
I'OOinl. hv1nR room. d1nmg room

blth. full biStmeli. ~ ~ wale p ;rk 1n ~
nt(f

()I IYI II!

~~~~~

liM

111'1 k~dlen tll!h i!ll rNI}rff'd ne.w
fuornav 111 !!l n&lt;.u l~al 3 ~tr ~ IcC
()!~

11900000

12(l"\

IAO.I - UOADIAY - Exll !
n1ct I ~ plan l be &lt;t oo~ I!'IIIli
rocm, b-ath . llfge eat -1n k l c~ n
• l ids ol beaut1ful c ~bln els . centr al
hut &amp; cen!fJI Mr. ba~emen 1. ~ Cir
~ e•tr ~niCe lot Greal buy 1n

Fum. 814-446-llll«.

NEW LISTING - C11y schools IS lh1s ranch wrt h 3
room s. bat h. l au n(i r~· lamtl y room. gas hpal . f11 eplace. brg
len ce d yard A s &lt;~n ~ on ly $ ~2.50 0
#115

JUST OUTSIOE CITY - Is wh ere1ou w illl~n d 11111~anc h Hilh
3 bedroom . I bath lau ndry. d~n mgl k1l che n co mbo ga1age
wood burner. gas heat. cr ty walt~r an d as krng only $48 .500
#140

Buuhtul 1

story. 4 tJedroorns. 2 bat~. ltvm~
room . sunroof. eat-111 ••chen. Rar

flen. cent ral heat cenl ral au new
roof. new Dki mbmg. Z ~ xt r a lot ; l CM

ulottt1ts Bes! bu~ around lew 40\
POMIROY - 16ll lin coln Ht!. ,._
fu iiKr eol com lo rta ~fll\'ln~ )bed
ro001~

hlnf rm . • •chen, I ~ ba t ~

NEW LI STING - POMEROY - Grand older home w1th po·
tentral 8 rooms. J 4 bed ro oms Bnck construct 1on Needs
some wo1k WA NT $25.500 .00
NEW LIST ING - POMEROY - Here 11 a ho me wrth an m
come Really large ho me rn Pomeroy w rt ~ a gara~e apart ·
menllor "ntal Must see l o appre~ale ASKING$31.500 .00

1-d lt-J

bllh. liwftl rorrr.. Om10~
fOCII!I'l. lrtdl81. P" Ct. QUII!f 5trl!l. [x
~ l~

Bill ONE - GET OIIE FREE
OWit£1 lUST SEll fiHW'!! P11ce
dra ~ l1 tally

reduced

lowely drum

home on a beau11lu I ']\', acreage ~tf

11ng Em•lfent locat iOn. 1 m ~e fr om
Mrddlepor1 Call me today 1()1 the
new kWo tow Jow Pf 1Ce'll
1~

acr~

rn new Jddrtcm
~dl~~ $6.000

R IQ~

1 100l £POIT -

wacant
outs(le

POMEROY PIKE - Forty· ooe atres plus a 1980 Liberty mo·
bile home. Beautiful Ylew. 2 ar garage. porch on 3 sides, 3
storage buildin gs, and barn. 1 good s11ed bedr ooms, bay
wmdow, equipped kitchen. real privacy. $31,000.00

roo AilED FOI lfliS OIIE - II.W
USTIIG - Appro x 2 Jeres of se-

SYRACUSE - A beautiful bt·level home in excellent cond1·
tion. 3 bedrooms, 1 baths, alarge family room with fireplace.
Attic fans. storage workshop and fenced yard.

Gardnet"'s Variety I Fumllwe
Shop, 1•1!1i E..tem Alfe. Buy,
Stlltnd Tradt. Low prtcn. 61444H221.

POMEROY AREA - I 2 acres mi l an d a lum ~num Sided ,
ranc h w1th 2 bed&lt;oom. bal h. den. 16&lt;32 ~n · gr ou nd pool.
woodburner. 2 car gara ge Satell 1le diS h A sk ~n g only

Good ustd 2!.. color TV, Floor

mJ

modal. 6M-388-9762.
GOOO

APPLIANCES

rangn. Skoggo App11anc..,
Upper River Rd. h1ldl Stone
Crest Motel. Call 814-446-7318.
Mollohan C.rpet1 Uppar At. 7
NOf'Jh Quality Carpets &amp; Fum~
I Ur'8 If low prlca. Check us out.
614-446-~44 .

PICKENS FURNITURE
Naw/Usad
HouHhold furnishing. 112 mi.
Jerrieho Rd. Pt. PIIUint, WV,

BAUM ADDITION - Vm yl Sided bi ·level wrt h ~ bed rooms.1
bat~s . dmrn g ar ea, famr ly roo m. bas emen t, ~ar ageo n I acres
mi l Ask1 ng only $62.500
#11 6

NEW LISTING: 3 BEDRM . HOME located on th e border ot
Ga ll ta-law" nce Co. lin e. Pme mcludes 8acr es $20.000.00.
If YOU ARE ALREADY TIRED OF CUTTING GRASS. SELL
YOUR MOWER and mov e tnl o a bea ul1 lu l 2 bed1m condo
located along Grape Sl Ample msulat1on w1!h heal pump
grves you comlortable au cond 1lron rng and heal wrt~ econ ·
omiCa l pmes Avmges less than $50 DOper mo. lax abale
menl pr ogram I bl oc k Ia grocer y 2 blocks lo C1ty Park. Low
mamlenan ce Call ~~6 1 066 101 mfo
NEW LISTING: INVESTMENT PROPERTY . 7 rental proper ·
ltes. located w1lh~n lhe C1!y of Gal li polis. 2nd Ave Pu iChase
all lor $100,000.00.
3-4 BEDRM. HOME locale u app1u• I mile above old S1lver
Bn dge, alon g Sl Rt 7 Use for res ~e ntta l /co mm e r ml Lol
s11e. 153'&gt;154 Buy now lor $3 5.000 00
3-BEDRM. HOME. convement~ located along Sl . Rt 141 2
car gara ge, bnck h onI Buy now $43,000.00

call304-e7S-1450.

COMMERCIAL - On Easl Mam St IS I hiS com merc~a l bu1ld
mg w11h lois ol polenl ~al Over 5000 sq H Sales lloor. and
storage area Good tralf1 c llo w $55 .000
#ll 1

Ratrlpr1tor and Range. 814--

441-4134.

wllk, 4 poeter bedroom aulte,
ccrnptoto f15.20 por -k,
dlnattl wtth 4 ch1lr11 SUO par
week. Magic Chef 14 cu. n.
Rolrlgorotor 112.115 par .......
cu. tl . frHZer, tl0.90
WMk. Vl'R1 Furnbura. Rl.
mil.. oH At 7.C.ntanary.Open
daya I WMIL

Roof 1 houM palnltng shingling roolo, houoe rapalr. 614388-8766 tfter 5 p.m.

ASH STRE£1. MIDDLEPORT - Is th iS br~e k hom e w1th 3
bedro oms. bat h. lull basement k1lchP n. I1 Y1n~ and dtn~n g
room. 2 car garage Askm g $21.500
#117

Solid oak tsblt with 8 chall'l. 2
eKI:r1 lelv... 534 Hilda Dr.
Falnrlaw Subdlvlolon. fl4-44fU85.

OAK HILL RD . - You w1ll fmd thiS 3 bedr oom . 1 balh. laun·
dry . k_rl chr.n. lr'J 1ng and dinmg rooms. Elec . heat. Central a1r

AFFORDABLE - AI $31,800 is this lwo story wrth 2 bed·
rooms, bath , basement. all [emodeled. garage. new er roof
and w11~ng
#118

All1 h1S on I acre. Asktn g $39,9&lt;10

BAILEY RUN RD. - 39 acres mi l and an older Ylny l Sided
home wilh 2 bedrooms, bath. &lt;rt chen an d IIY mg rooms. full
basement, garage, mobile home srt e wrth water and septic
Only $35,500.
·
#252

Spoclal 10 dayo ontyl Auto.

#250

wnhlf'l, electric drylfW, g1s
dryera, ps ltOVII, tlactrlc
lfov• and ratrigtrttors, rangIng hom 150 &amp;. up. Also 1 complate kitchen cent.,, sink lop
whh oink, ,_ garbago dlo-

NEW LISTING - Almosl l acre wrth 2 bedroom ranc h. fam ·
1ly room, full basement and aHached gar age Asking only
$49 ,500 .

- · buln~n ovon, drop In
kltclton bumor and hood loo
burner. Olahwastw. An com-

mo

plete Ancado. Stop and See.
o.lborl swl-'• UMd
Applla.-. Corowr al Rond and
Poit:h St. Kanauga, Ohlo.l14-

nso.

cluded 111111 • Ib OO ll.lfbrooel
w/ applil nte!. LA . wu hw &amp;

441-11173.

wale!'. utrlly
bid,, Cfllir - PLUSII'IOiher trailer
aoaf w/ elfldr i: &amp; water 1v1~1~ e.

AUCTtOH I

'""OiNtJ. Mob1le home and

" P"SALE PE" .. ~oo oo

814-448-3158
8 pc. wood group $14.01 .-r

80 ACRES Mi l - W1lh older lwo slory wrt h 5 bedrooms.
bat ~ . krtche n and lrvrng ro om. barn. poultr y ba rn and other
bu1ldm ~s . A s km~ $~ 5.000
#171

BEECH GROVE RD . - I \\ story aluminum sided home wrt h 3
bedroom~ balh, dining room, liv mg room and kitchen. Gas
heal, 1 acres mi l. Priced reduced lo $15.000.
N207

2 RENTAL PRnPr~m&lt;
house on

RENT TO OWN

MAIN SJ . MIDDLEPORT -- 1',\ story wrth ~ bed rooms. bal h.
k1tchen. ltv ~ng and dtn tnp, rooms. full basemen!. oas heal. Al l
#244
lh1s an l• o loi s Asktng on ly~32 , 000.

rr•
dryer. leldmg Creek

NEW LISTING: Ne31 C1own C1ty Buy I we w1lh house and
batn lor $31.000 00. 01 IJOu se. barn and Sl&gt; acres lor
$~ 5. 000 00 Located along St Rl 7
INVESTMENT PROPERTY IN VINTON - 6rm ho11se located
alon g Mam Sl. Renl or live 1n Pmenlly g10ssmg $1.1DO 00.
Buy now for $1 5.000 00

w...

(

I .'

i

ENJOY THE COUNTRY SETTING of I hiS mce slar
ler hom e' Ju sl 3 mil es lr om Rl. 7 on Rl . 21 8. you
can see l hiS 3 bedroom, I ~ balh home. Lar ge IIY
mg room. Covered porchi paiiD and breezeway lo
large recreat1on room w1lh firepl ace Carp ort and
two stora ge b uil d ~n~ 15 acr e. mi l. lor 1u s1
$ 3 ~ . 900
#800
"A PlACE TO START" - NICeslart er home or "n
ta l untl. i bedrooms. I balh and ouls1de stora ge
bull d tn ~ Plenty ol space for a new lamdy lo start
housekeeping. Located'" Add iSon , I hiS house IS a
greal buy al $ 2~ .900. but lhe owner IS Willin g to
sacr1fice - $21. 900 and 1l's yours. Why pay "nl
when the mortgage payment IS less&gt;
#614
$34.000 - 3 bedroom ranch located '" Plants
Subdi VISion on an e&gt;l ra nice lol Buy, 111 I up al1l·
lie and lhen 1u st lake 11 easy r es l~n g 1n lhe shade
in the back yard or ren111al any li me w1l houl has
sle.
#411

IN TOWN CONVENIENCE - AI an affordable
pt~ce $34.900 buy slh iS neat 2 bed 1oom bunga
low. New sidr ng, new wrr1ng_ gas forced arr tur·
nace wtt~ central arr also. Locat ed rn a n1ce ne r ~h
bor hood on Jrd Ave . Has carport am! biick pore ~
Qefl car ed lor home. Call us lrxta~l o ' an appo~nt ·
menl
!109
THIS OPPORTUNITY WONT LAST LONG' - li B
acrfls. m/ 1. rn OhiO To wnshrp P ot en l ii~l hornr
srt es . Pmacy assured lo r your own homer A bea LJ
!1lul panoramrc vre w of t ~e Oh10 R1w er Val lev Ac
cess from old Rl 7 and Hannan I ~ace Road O.n
your own hu ntrng ground at $148 an acres $17 .500
~ 8 03
87 ACRES . MI L - Vacenlland local ed '" Grep n
and S p 11ngf1~ d TownshiPS. iUS! oN U S Rt 35
Fronts on townshrp road and old U S 35 Wate1
and gas a ~ arlab l e Land la~ s mos t t~ rollm g wrth
excellent bu ildrn g locatron s Has h1Rh hill area
wrth mce v1ew. Ctty scho ols ~ str.m Best locatron 1n
Gall ~a County lo build and hve Pt~ ced al $67tlilll

NEW LISTING - 59 acr e far m located on Rt. 775
approx 6 miles from Rt. 1 ~ 1 Attractive II\ story
hom e has new vmy f Sldm g and new roof. 3 bed·
roo ms, I \\ balhs. den. new c a b~n el s " lhe eal"
k1tchen. pantry 1n lhe ul1hly room . Par11al b as~
men! 36 • 52 shop bulldm g plu s barn. garage and
storage b uild1n ~s A musl lo see at $87.500
#706

fOR THE BEGINNER' -

l ac hed ga rage Home needs a lillie work bul
cou ld be a show pl ace Wrap around porch and
plenty of yatd make thiS a great place lo start a
fam1ly $27.400
#607

2 LOIS - 40x 150 each on Chatha mAve nu e. AI·
ley rn rear separat es them fr om Eastern AOJenue
b us ~n esses

$1 9.000

PERfECT SnTtNG FUNCTIONAL THREE LEVEL ENGLISH STHE All brrck ven eer, qualrty built home 4 bedr oo m ~
w1th slldrn g door closets plus an abund ance ot
burtt rn storage spa ce Roman brrc K l 11epla c~ I '"
l1vrn g room also frrepl ace on low er le~ el 15~ ?8
garage at1ached w rt ~ pull down starr s to st ora~e
area. Specr al fr ont door w r!~ srde louvers Doublp
glass wrnd ows wr t ~ marble w1ndow srlls Home •s
well rns ulaled lor effrcrenl hea tm~ and coolm~
Located lUSt off Lake Dn~e 1n rro Gra nde nra r
Unrv ersr!y All qual r! y homes rn area Nrar
c hur c ~. recre atronal ar ea and la~e You ITiust see
rns rd e thrs hom e to apprwate 1!s many l1rP !Pi!
lures. LISted at $69.900
~301
29.6 ACRES OF LAND - ConsiSI ~ng mosllv ol
good growrnR trmber 5 acres or more of 29 acr e
tract IS open lan d for garden and has frurt trees

near 7 room remodel ed hom e 2 w garaie and
several other small bu 1ldmgs Peacetullocatro nIn
IlY e w1lh good view. Sl Rt 160 betw een E w ~n ~on
and Wilkes VIll e Pnced al $ ~7 . 500
#J01

#508

Peacelul cou nll y hvtng

onl y 15 mrnutes fr om town Th1s comfort able 4
bedroom . I bath ho me rncludes la mrly room. drn ·
1ng room. lr ~rn g room an d a nrce krtchen Ha s 3.5
acres. mo re or less. and rs locatedrn Gallr aCou nty
Sr hnol Drstrrct I h1s home ~ as many ex tras you

musl see Cal ll oclay 1S54 .900

OUTSTANDING 17 ACRE HOME SITE - Green
Township, Si Rt 588 Includes ll al crop land.
gentle rolltng slopes and a wood ed knoll for someone wantrng prrvacy , country atmosphere and
akrn g's ~iew Maybe you want same hor ses or
some ot her ammals Th ere's already pl enty ol
w11dl1 le
#114

We have

Now we need new listings!
If you want your property sold, call the
Real Estate Company that lets actions
speak for us!

2l.5 ACRES, NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL. No sltu clures
Loc at ed along frank Rd. $1 8,900
2 BEDRM. REMODELED HOME along Ch1ll ,coth e Rd Walk lo"
gr ocenes and school Buy now for $16.500.00.

Wiseman Real Estate

PRICES DRASTICALLY REDUCED on 3 properties w1thin the
Village ol Port er : #I - Old Cott rell grocery bulldm&amp; Now
•15,000.0011 #2 - 2 story home ad1acenllo store bldg. Now
$25 000 00 #3 - 3 bedrooms h9me nexl to above Now
$20:000.00 Call tor mo re tn fo. W1ll sell any or all\11

(614) 446-3644

E. M. Wiseman, Broker

.

a

.

·-11-1171.

I'

#707

TRACE YOUR RENT RECEIPTS lor I hedeed to I his
3 bed1oorn ran ch srtu aled on a sha dy 1 ~ 2 at1 elol
on adeade nd sl1 eet On ecar garage. new roof and
deck $25 500
~509

6.5 AC~ES. WITHIN THE CITY OF GALLIPOLIS Sllualed
along Gatfi eld Ave S1le 1nludes 2 bu1l dmg lots wl cily water
sewer Buy now for $30 .000 00. or purc hase house w1lh lol
for $15.000.00
WE HAVE BUILDING LOIS1n Rodney Village II. Call for mo re
informa tion.

racRnar, q - Ml 01 -!ng,

N1ce slarler home

located IU S! mrnutes fr om the ~ osp1t al L1 ~rn g
room. dm rng room, 3 bed ro oms and 1 bat h De

SOLD, SOlD, SOlD!

Wottl boola. 114 1tl ttll.
UMd rwtrtgonrtor 23 cu. ft ., Wal~
.....,, .... • malcltlng

·.

·~

NEW LISTING : ID ac res P' "Y lwp Some limber Bu y now
for $10.000

'

SWAIN

COMMERCIAL BUSINESS LOT - Located along
high lraiiiC ro ute on Stal e Roule 7 85' road lron lage ov er 570 lee! deep wilh 11ver fr ontage Bo·
nus: small 2 bedroom ~orne . would make mce ren·
lal or colla ge
•703

I'URNITURE. 82
Olivo 81., Qaldpolll. Now &amp; Uud
fumttwa, hMt. .,
tm

"-!to pUle an estate and w ~ l U ·
critic:e • orly $12,200. Th s one
ruly won't l si long. ~II me now

'

USED

Wuhtre, dryers, r•frlgar•tor..

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - One of Pomeroy's most
UniQUe sl ruclures The Old ElmHu rst Tav ern IS nowlor sa le.
ThiS buil d1 ng has a m tely of polenhal uses Callloclay for
your s h ow~n g. $12. 500 .00
POMEROY - PRICE REDUCED - ThiS handiCapped ac·
cessibl e home, ramp wavs. spee rat floor co vering, specral
bath fixtures. etc.. all des1gned w1th the handiCapped m
mmd. 3 bedr ooms, fireplace, bas ement, lar ge moder n
k1tchen. $~ . 900. 00.

~.,

wetar bed wtetx
dr1ww pedestal, drtlllt', night
t1and, armoire chest, 304-6756187 attar 5:00PM .

PROPERTIES

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - A l1ttl e b1 l of lhe SwiSs Alps
fight here '" Pomeroy Th iS 3 umt apa rtment bUildin g IS all
rented an d "ady lor sale. $1~. 900 . 00 .

1xrr o "" l ll.OOO
IIDOLII'OIT - IIICI HOllE 1nd St 4 btdrooms. hv111g room

llpolil, OH

Four

LOCATION - LOCATION - LOCATION - Ask
anybody ' "loca110n IS os11 mp ort ant when select·
in g a ~a me." Her e's a 6 roollJ home on I acre wit ~
a greal Yt ew oil he flYer and only S1les lr omtown
Includes 3 bedrooms. f11 eplace. lul l basemen!.
garage and bar n You' ll ~av e access to the uver
ll's priced al $59,500. and sho uld nol be on I he
market long
#116
COUNTRY COMFORT - fher e's a sp lendid coun ·
try VIew m any d11 eclio n lr om lh 1s 2 stor y ho me
near Champro n Far ms on Rt. 554 Home rn cludes
open k1tchen and IlYing room. 3 bedrooms. one
nice bal h and ut il1tyroom . Over I am ofla11lyfl al
ground PosSibl e 9 5%loa n assumpl1 on Pmed at
$34.900
#214

Crotlay air cond, Speed Ouaen
lltcll;tbla wnhtr and dryw,
both 110 wolta , beret otftr, 304675-1758.

home needs our kind of

NEW LISTING - POMEROY - ROCK SPRINGS ROAD NICe Qu1 et local,on IS the se ll~n g for lh iS 3 bedro om home
conven1 ent1y located shor1 drstan ce oli fou r lane Futi base·
me nt. large ya rd and garden ~r ea Call tor compl ete delarls
$35.500 00

NEW LISTIN G- POMEROY - ~ Unt l Apart ment build ~n gm
Pomero y Po l enl~al Mon1hly g1oss mco me $400 .00 . WANT
$17500 DO

County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appllancn, T.V. sell. Open
8 •·"'· to 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 614446-1699, 827 3rd. Av•. Gal·

3 ACRES - And a 3 bedroom . I balh v~nyl s1ded ranch wrtn
b1g k1lchen. IIY tng room. part ~a I basement . 2 deck s Redu ced
l o $35 .000. Call lor
#164

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT - Rivervioo Drivo - N ~ee
ne1ghbor hood cut e well ~ e pl hom e on deadend str eet 3
bed roo m home wr th l4x 15 11vrng room &amp; utllrty room. Hou se
rns ulated and has regular termrte1nspect 10ns Storage burl d·
tn g 6x8 . r11ce level ya rd $38.500 DO
li\CUt£. 6th St. -

flflllr reom. U:chtll. 1"': bath. la1Re
CMMJ kJI Vlt'll of r•ve- Slh

NEW LISTING - RUTlAND BRICK SIREn - 66d66 1ol. I
floor home 2 be drooms. I bal h N1ce k1l chen ca b ~nel s
$21500 00

Big Snlngs on Gr...a Turf In
Sl«* $3.~ ytrd. MoUahan

mo

s ~s . o oo

C'\1

· --

RACINE - New er ~ bedroom ranch lype house located on
2 37 acres 1n th e country. full basement and small bar n All
1n goocl cond1I10n $69.000 00

bed, 304.f75--2527

7ft . Couch &amp; Chair. 11w12 Ft.
Carpet. C.U 614-446-3695.

k1lch en and a 1979 l~ x7 D mob1 le home w1th 2 bedrooms.
\ 1h baths. famrl~ room wrlh lrreplace All on I acre m/ 1

11~

IIDOlii'Oil - "h ST. - Jbrd

ENJOY THE COMFORT S AND NEIGHBORHOOD OF THE
CORNER LOT while Vlewtn g lhe Oh10 R1v er fromyour waler ·
fr onl. l si Ave .. 01ooertv 4 1ms ' ' bath down. 3 rm s &amp;balh
full up 2 WBFP. HW lloor &gt; screen ed·tn porch AclasSIC hom e
w1lh character.
·
lhiS on e' gel away . cal l tocl aY 11

l pc. bed room suite with full

I fl oor plln. Lll

" ' """' - Very mce noe
for starter
1 or mcome property, elc. 3 bed·
rooms. large livmg room. eat ·m kttchen with nice
cabmets, 1 bath and sep arate utrlrt ~ room. N1ce
fl at lot Con vement locatiOn
#115

m. a....

145. Bod tn._

kit chen. !lith Un(]ef 20

[ la1n St

LIKE NEW - Bn ck and frame ran ch offers 3 bed·
roo ms. living room with fire place, tlt n~n g room. 1
bal hs an d eal·in k1tchen Energy sa Ying heal
pump 2 car gar age S1!Ualed on a flal I acre lot
$57 ,600
#304

Sla $35 &amp; king rr.ma $50. Good
HIICtlon of bedroom IUitll,
metal Clblnlll, hMdbolrda $30
and up to 165.i0 daye ume as
cah whh 1pproved credll. 3 mi.
out lulavllte Ad. ()p.n VA.M. lo

448-o322.

D£1TEA - 3 he!l!oom~ .

ms

Merchandise

TUPPERS PlAINS - 3 bedr ooms. I '' bat h. Drtc k ran ch. lull
basement Ga rage. lar ge lot. Fenced 111 back yard w1th abov e
ground pool Lots of shade trees. $4B.OOO.DD

sldm~ ~aul ~u l ~1

CUTE AND COZY- Silualed on a private fol near
Clay School Featuring 2 bedroom~ eat·in
k1lchen. wash er and dryer hookups and afumi·
num SJdln&amp; Call us tocl ay for an appomtment.

Stovt1 and ratrigar1tor. Water
provldld. No pets. Alferwncu
requtrld. $225 per month. tl14441ol248, 114-448-2325 or 814441-1425.

Pl..aant, W.V. 814-992-5858.

#14 2

menl ne"
Jlh

2 STORY CHARMER - Very aHr act1ve 2 slory
home on dead·end street on l he edge of town olf ·
ers your family more than moslwilh features l1ke
4 bedrooms. form al living roo m. drnrn g room
large eal ·tn kitchen and lull, partially f1nt shed ba·
semen!. T ~e r e's room for e'J ery onP toen1oy loca·
lion is perlecl lor k1d s. 2 car garage, porch and
more. P11 ced at $69.900 Won' I tasl long' #100

For Lease

49

1 bedroom apl. Slova r.frtg.,

lOO m. p, as

bedrms l.itct1er1 d1n1r1R 1m tg

PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK - Per ·
feet setting for relaxation and entoyment of Rae
coon Creek. 3 a c re~ m/ 1, w1lh good access l o th e
creek and pl enty of room tor recreation. Lo~hom e
mcludes 6 rooms including basement Large de ck
overlooks lhe wonderlul setting Perlect fo r wee·
kend gel togelhers or full lime country liYing.
$3~ . 90 0
#231

Unh.rnlatt.d,
on.-bldroom
apertm.m. Saeond floor, corner
Second 1nd Pint, GaiiiPGII1.

CITY - Nrce one story wtth 3 bedroom \ 1

POIEIO' -

NEW LISTING ON BURKHART LANE! - Character an charm can be found'" this aHractive, well ·
cared for home wilh~n walking diStance to town.
Remodeled lhroughou\ il ~n cludes 3 bedrooms,
livin g room wrth fireplace. !01 mal di ning room and
basement. Do n' I ove rlook lh1s home. Call for an
appmntmenl $6~ . 000
#802

PH. 446-7699 or 446-9539

WOuld Hka lo rent a nictl 2 or 3

lAND CONTRACT - On lhiS 3 bedroom. bath. ran ch'" QUiet
n"ghborhood w1th nice lot wilh lencefam1 l1 room wl wood·
burner an d mole Ca ll loclay Only $ 3~ . 000
#II

AN OLDIE. BUT
E!! - Go back 1n nrinear1o
relive alii he charm of a hou se at the turn of the
century . lh1s 2 st ory house bu1H '" 1850'" M" gs
County has J.4 bedrooms, I balh wrt h eat·in
kitchen . firepl ace and a double garage 3-4 acres
wnh a large flat lot beside rt. Has a ne• front porch
wrth many extras. Needs work don e on rt. N1 ce
starter home. All for ~&lt;J.'uuu.

LEADINGHAM REAL ESTATE

47 Wanted to Rent
41 ACRES - Tr ee farm I
more rnto
60 MIL BEAUTIFUL ACRES - Gre aiiOI lukm g or hunlmg.
Grandma Gatewood htked here Tr arl s are alr eady th er e, wrth
Dea ul,ful rock lormal1ons Askm g $21.500
#116

HAPPILY EVERAFTER- Is how you'll live in this
lhree bedroom 2 story home featuring a beautiful
open sla~rway, beamed ceilings and brick fireplace wilh w!de raoed hellrth. Entertaining can
confmue right outside on the fu lly screened
porch . Vinyl s1 d~n g and replacement windows will
appeal to your pra ctical side. Priced at $77,500.
#500
OVER:LOOIUNGTH EOHIO RIVER . 2.478 A. AND paris
1 of GallipoliS Spac10us Y·shap ed bnck ranch with
I Gas. lhll beaut1fu l home has a lormal sunken 1
wrth one end a s\one frr eplace. Also a hr eplac e rn
amrly room . 3 bedr ooms. dtnm g room. beautrlul krtchen
an eaHn area. 2'h baths. 2 car garag e. Out side pond. I '
Dream House Phone now to see 1hrs one.

61.....-•-'111711.

BROOKS IDE DR . - NICe 3 bed 1oom1 balh ~anc l1 "'l h nwt'l
srdrnR, !01m rly room l ~undry room . ga~ t1 eat 7 car rarare and
more AsktnR only $42 900
#1 \ 3

3 J&gt;Wrooms -

448-3427.

Country-Big Ban&lt;I-Rock. 114- 2 white ba taM hltdboarda.
902-6657 Marc Fultz..
otngto •~&lt;• m. - · o.. ...,.
dom c1ao11 us. 10 apood
Top Cuh peld. Old tul'l)llura F!Moplrlt, glrlo iikyCto, oxcolcuboardt,
quills,
oriental, lont ccndHicm. $80., 3 opood
ptllntlnga, toys, ar antlra utale Columbia glrta bicydt, axcetcan colrect 304-525-3275, or 304- lant conditiOn. 814-085-4181 ~~
•., 5 :30. M-F.
523-e854.

Country Mobile Homa Parll,
Routa 33, North of Pomeroy.
lo!"~.!.""tllo, parto, uiM. CaH

nice. Consider Human Sa"rvlcn
or HUO. 402·112 24th Sl ., Pt.

POMEROY , OHIO
992 -2259

Real Estate General

304-77'J.

Commii'Cial Sign Spaco Rt. 35
WMt

Stutes Real Estate
Bonnie Stutes 446 -4206
Patti Hawk 446-1967

wHh cooking.

AIIIO tl'llltr epac.. All hook·Upe.

CITY SCHOOLS- 3 bed room. ! ba1h ' an chwll hl,.tn groom
krtchen. lull IJasemPn t. r.f: nt ral ;w I car gJrage. I car ca r
port. A s&lt; ~n g $~ 9.000
#119

44

5:xl Utility traUar, tllt bid, 15
inch wh•l•. U11d 1 year. 114-

Furnished
Rooms

SINplng -

S400 deposit . Rate~nc• . 614378-2628 Of 614-446-7075.

and ...t.rencH. 304-576-2260.

886·7311.

Roomt tor nnt • WMk or month.
Sttr11ng al $120tmo. Gallla Hotel.
814-11580.

00

m3

for ren1 , water snd
gartbage pr~ld, $150. depostt

Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Big 5 '*!room farm hom1 buill
on your lot. S35,tSI&amp; I up. 114-

bedroom lptll. for rent.

45

GREENFIELD JWP. - 3 ned roomran ch wrth ga1h $~~a~
1
ter. gas heol woodbu rn er 5 acr es mi l n Y
#239

Uka new 4 or 5 BR, 2 baths, 1

Trailer

54 Miscellaneous

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

$225 month. Oopcoll roqulrod.
614-H2·2218 aflal I p.m.

NORTHUP AREA - A"'" 1 bedroom VIII I I Sided homew1! h
balh. gas heal. 1'7 garage on 50 aCie lal A lk~ng $ 2990 0

acrn of land. $400 per month,

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

rivtr, CA, hilt, Ret. 6

9686.

I:

11 1-216-688-4918.

VIUagt

Rlvtnlc1t
Apenmants In Mlddttpon. From
111111. eau &amp;14-m·7787. EO~.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

0338.

furnished. Good
ct.. n condition. 1 child, no

Scenic lot tor,.le 314 milt north
1 on R1 . 3, 588. Call
ol Addison Oh . $10,000 Call Eu1 ~~~~~:._---:--,.,-:-:-

Ill

54 Mlsctllaneous
Merchandise

Sunday Times-Sentinei- Page- D-5

Nicety furniahld mobile home, 1
mila below town, ovwl~~1

2 bedroom,

2 B A 322 Third Ave. No pete.
614-446--3~8 or 614·25&amp;-fg(l.l.

53

Antiques

441.0331

Mx70 3BR., 2 full bit hi, In
65 Ac:r. ., tabKco
tlmbtt', country, USOirno. plua Dep. &amp;.
rural water tap, city achools. Rt . Rer.r.nc.. 614-+t&amp;~5M.
219. 4 ml from G.lllpofls. 2 bedroom mobile home, fur·
$19,900. 614-256-1560.
nlahld, $100 deposit ~UI
Excellent Building sn 1 21.8 uUIIIIH phon~~ 304-475-6512 or
acres, ci1y 1chools, rural water. 675-3900.
No trailer. St Rt. 325 1 112 miiN
trom Rio Gr1nda. 6!4-245~ 1 7.
2 bedroom trailer large priVIte
lot, 304-e7S-1220 ahll' 5:00 Pll.
Lot for Nil. a.o~.. cr..k 2 Bod
Ro.td. 112 1cre mn. Euy acctP
room trail•, tumlshed,
to water and al...trlc. Cable alto AC, washer &amp; dry~O month
75-48~ .
. alt'allabla. Call &amp;14-256-5i51 after plus utilities, Ref.
39.

6 p.m.
One ac:,.. traiJer lot wtth county

es-rtrnenta
and

Nlcoly Fumlohod Mobil• Homo
In clly. CA. Sulr.bla lor 1 I*·
.... Rol. IDop Raqulrod 114-

Mobile Homes

water, Mpllc tank and electric pat•. New ~awn. H.U.D. 304hoo« up. On black lop road. 882-2468.
Partially tanced . Owner will par·
llally tlnanc., $2,900. aaking 2 BA &amp;. 3 BR, $200, &amp;. $210.
price. 304~75-2722 .
monthly plus depo.lt . Stove,
rt~frlgarttor. Water, trash p1ld.
Route 2 .lthton, 1 ac,.. k*, 3 0" Morgan C.ntar Rd . 614-388-

IDEAL FOR ALARGE FAMILY- ~ bedr ooms. 3 balhs. lormal
living room an d dmmg, moder n kitch en. !am 1!y room Ver ~·
n1ce home. large back deck. 2 ern ga rage Allot th 1~ ;etl~r1g
on an acre plu s. Gr een Elementary Sc hools

53

&lt;lraclouo living. 1 and 2 bod-

MtiQI
Memorial
Garden•
Vataf'lona Section. 47A lott 3&amp;4.
l3,ooo lorall. &amp;1~5:1-a464.
38 acrn 2 mil.. from vtnton.
Good
No utnwar

REDUCED TO $71,500- RIO GRANDE AREA. Owner needs
to sell this farm as soon as poss1ble. lik e now" Give us a call
for more details. Price has been 1educed and add1l 10nal
acreage can be purchased

Apartment
for Rent

rtltrletlona. Information malltd
on requut. 304-675-.!i253, Jotln
0 . G.rlach, no elnga.wklt

2 Iota. Vaults and hudlton.. at

REDUCED, REDUCED

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

for rant. 2 bedroom epartmente
In New Heven. Kitehtft, fur·
nlahld, carpeted, rou pay
electric. Wt pay wltar, NWage,
lrMh. Pta'faround for chlldr.n. WNCH BOXES. Kldo Ontyl
CloM lo · ElamMdlry tchoola. Poylng up to 1150.00 1oo JotBatie Nn1 1111 1 monlh. 304- aon's box . Hlgt\lrlt price paid
882-37'11. Eq•l Houalng Oppo&lt;- lor vinyl and metal boxes.
tunlty.
Before you throw II aw1y glv. It
IWIIy or Hll 11 to cheap. Call
Fumllhtld
Enlclancy
1:175 614-992-6657 Mare Fultz.
Utlllll• Peld, 101 FoUnh Ava'
Galtlpollt, 614-441-4418 afla; RECOAOS. !3'e.45's·78'•EP'17p.m.
·'
50'a~O'e,
Je..CI11alcal·

3 bedroom unfumlahed •pi,
r*ghborhood, 3QooW')S:.

2 to 3 BR's, Duplex on Slate 91.
from High Schoot.
Deposit rwquired . ~~ ~IIIH)045.

Across

Small 150 eq. ft . houu, 3BR,
Upper River Rd. 614--446-3a40.
living room, Nt·ln kitchen, car· 2 lwnllhed effk:lencln. All
pel, privata drive, downtown Lllllltl• peld. Share bath. $90 or 2: BR . Apl . For Atnt, Nlc., Good
Ot:!tll&amp; $340 wtlh r1nga &amp; 1150. tit Sac:ond Avs. 614-448- Locefion. 304-875-5104
Re r:;tor. $325 without. Plut 3145.
S30o
. o.p. 514-4411-4332"""
forTomTope.

35 Lots &amp;Acreage
loll I

Houses lor Rent

Pomeroy. :Z bedroom, buam•nl,

of

1-800-129-40451or detalle.

Skyline

41

w. Va .

David Wiseman. 446-9666
B.-J . Hair~on. 446-4240
'

Clyde B. Walker, 246 -6276

Lorena McDade, 446·7729
Bill Tod~. 446_-3443

~

�Page- D-6- Sunday Times-Sentinel
54 Miscellaneous

Merchandise
CIN ranc.

811e Huaquwm11
trlmm•,.~ 10'4 over COlt. Palnl

Pluo, 30oH71-4084.

twm...

Oamaaed mobile

ThunGorblrd

ELECTROWX SALES I SER·
VICE 304-475-1457.
Gray

.ot.

Netlonal

wi1h

reclln1r, $550 phont 30C..S7ti2941.

Little glrla clott•• sin 5, winter
and summu 50 bll.. h.y. 304615-1484.

P.A. Syotom, Bogon

wllh

3

model

mlkn

80 A,

&amp;
speaktre,MannUIII
lypewrtter,
eleclrla adding machine burrougha
large,
electric
mam~n~ machine and attne lla 1: Ink, 4 lrack real to I'HC
tape ..corder, 304-675-3421.

Portable lighted algn Wll.ttan
$299. FrH delivery. Plait~ le1·
tera $47.50 boa, HI00-533-3453.

61 Farm Equipment

64

100 Alii• Chalrner XT with 4
Bouom plow• and gr~ln driU
$6350. 014 AC wklo ~0111 3 ot.
HHch Wlburh hog f:IMO. aN
Ford WftMNI hoQ t2291 Owner

120 1ono pnonlum Allollr hor
1911o 1n drr wilh p1uo

will ftnanoe. 114-286~

1971

304-e71-

body,

2H8.

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.
Hay &amp; Grain

1tro lnour- Q!1111 H ond
-Pliny,·3lJ4.tfJ.2ota.
....,.., "Form, lit. 36,
Hoy 1orRound

.

Bolio

24UHI
JD 350 Doar · 1877 lntornatlonll truck. ! ax•l factory
Lowboy. C.N aher ! :00. 614-71$22466.
N• Holland 317 tanlil manl.ft

spreader. O..hl 6!1 grlnd11 mix.,.
both ••c cond, so.r--m-t2't5.

63
100

In tho Flold.

IM-

Transportal tab

lflll IIQI.OT, IIIII -or lind

II. Cllovy Comoro R8, v.l. 1114 11otou1y T-. noodo

OU.r

lflll Manto Colto,

toying pullllo
Rd.

~~.,J:':ft':rs~~.KoHon

~

1

I:OO Pll

SIO.

tnoo. -

~.=~~·

=.~

llblo.AU'~ 12~

~~~!~
-

= .rz=, •;'o, ....,

P~x.

,......_~.

for Sale

~~-

50

Real Estate General

m.uH lllor I :00 PU.

1

Servic es

marbles,
clocks,
watches, rings, post ca rds,
glassware,
bultons,
call
anytime, 675-2260 ask for Andy
Jackson.

Home
Improvements

CIII30WIZ~

~r.~-mlloogo,
--.

·-

,..

... Plumbing
ondHoollna
-ondPlno

-

1!!!.c;::,~ plollu-up.7
_4.;.__Mo_t_o_rcyc...:__lel
_ _ _
Uu -

=-·
4~: -~-·r_"_bo_"_-_~_-_"_so._ll:.'""__"J._:.:_.:._:.:~75-':7242:-_·_-_-_- . .h
bodDodao
molalDoll.
tool
bo-. 15,000. -

Oood=~__..,IIIMI

1818NiooonPuiOifNX,Bioc:k,T·

IH1

Hotloy

llltllmo guoronFroo ootlmlloo. Call oolloot 1·
IJ4.2S7.04111, dly Of night.

84

Ung.

-~~~
Of '"fllln.
u....irod EloOIJiollno. Puquolo
Eloolrlo -114-44W71ll.

Electrical &amp;
Refrigeration

Rogoro -mont Wolorproe&gt;

-

76

:-

oxo - . a,ooo• . .•

...

Real Estate General

-

Auto Parts &amp;
AcceiSOrl81

3-ondtrano.Cho-4

______ _ ___

bomll, 4

volt
t...... 302 4 -

F- C I

' lnno,
Truck 4opd. Borry 1114-44~78.

Real Estate General

NOW ON Soll£11 YAIIAHA

COMliE~tr~~!~~::RTIES 446·3636J\t~

GoHipollo, Ohio

114 ..... 3111

IM. !MM roloroncoo lurillohod.

Gordnor'o Homo lmprvvomont:
AM. a Com, Aoollng, polnllna,
J:i'~lo dooko, olld ole. 114'
Hlo IIIMI Hor c-trucUon, . .
will do -~ono.~_~. oldlng,
lid 6$ r~
phanblnj,
111:0., No ~ too ....n. Cal aftlir

roo....

Com....lof

lnd

...... "'...

Dr

wl~ng,

,_ -

Real Estate General

DAY REALfY

eo~

BASEMENT

WATEAPROOANO

11114 O..Niol Cullom DoiUio,

Rell Eeiate General

Plumbing &amp;
Heating

82

Improvements

111811 C11ovv Cnollor Z· 24. LDw
mlloogo. Ub - · Coli 114-4411171, Ito 5 p.m. ollor 5114-4411111.
11117 Fonl LX.
Evory op11on. Collomla -·
48,000 mlloo. W. $5,185. 114:112::,::-t71:,:1.=._-o-:--,:;::-c:::--:-=

S unday limes-Sentinei- Page- 0 -7

Dovta
Sow-Yoc
..
G-voo Croolt Ad. Porlo, oupo
ploo, pickup. lind r~o~~...,. 114441 ..2114.

- ----1
81
Home

J04.I1I.
11t1 Fon1 T - XL. oft• 5:30
0

HOMES,
25 LOCUST

GAlliPOLIS, OHIO 45631

*****

FIVE STAR HOME - TWO STORY REDWOOD
STRUCTURE. QUALITY AND BEAU fY THROUGHOUT. 9
ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. FAMILY ROOM OFF
KITCHEN ON FIRST FLOOR PLU SRECR EATION ROOM OPEN·
lNG ONTO DECK ON SECOND FLOOR. FORMAL DINING
ROOM, LIVING ROOM HAS FIREPLACE. SPINDLED STAIRWAY
IN FOYER. 2 CAR ATTACHED GARAGE, 3104 ACRE SIT£ WI LL
BE SURVEYED. WHEN SOLO. HOM£ IS COMP LETELV SUR·
ROUNDED BY TALL PINES AND OTHER TREES ON LY 10
MILES FROM CITY fiRST TIME OffERED $115.000.

eomm.cJII

wl~ng. or ropoln.
u...o.c1 -rlolon. R Eiootrlco~ 304-tll-1711.

WA'II!AUHNERI. loloo, Plllo, 1:00 woolrlloJs . , - llol ond

': Ill Htll. s.mo., AIVERIIDI MARINE, Rl. 7 ( K-.) Dolltpollo, 011. 114-

llun.~

~!a.

79

Seaf'tl riding mower, 38" cut,
good condition. $325. Manual
tread mill, like new SBS. Eurdsa bike, $15. New Basun
glas s /bras• eoftH table. $'100.
Electric hospital bed. $200. 614-446-8158.

Wanted·

81

Good Condlllon. 01111 2168.

Refrigerator,
stov•modem.
Naw wringer was her, antique
o ak dresser and round cotfN
table. TWin beds. 614-446-0121.

SWIMMIN G POOLS
HURRY · Wa'ra ovftf'Siocked!
Many slz" and a hapu available
now aT tremendou•
sailings. Trade your old car,
hoal, cam~ar, etc. Financing
a vail able . Ca ll 1-600-841-7665
iC025) .

Cempel'l &amp;
Motor Homes

:a n. Air • - · Willtoko trodo.

101:;;oo.:·::::(1:1:14:·rr-:•'*::·-_Colt_,_._~·_::_11:_*__:_ :~our:
~~=n=u·=~=···:~m.
:::A::r2=.b838=''=n=a.='d='na=-- ~:::z:"':t:.,41 1:::::.. ===:P:·m.:.l:4F:
====r.t=.l:~:-::·1a=AU:_uf"'CC"
_..._.,..__._
__
1
Real !::~late General

79

.;.Aifi:.:;:.::D;:;d:.,.1:~:::,~;,-:.c;...:..:Ho"'n;;.,.....,'"',..
-im,-.-~~,

=:.o~~":...:=
~;i!~:t.~..:. 1: .....
lnt-.
-7tl~

lroallan rNNnd. Block
At;,
... - , . _ K - l14-lll2· 17 DudGo $ha- olio, Wfllr.
22111
·
moo, 15 Chow. Conllor olio,
71 Autos lor Sale
Cllo¥y Blulr. - ·· wlolr. 12500. For Solo or troclo.
21,000 Ollloo Loodod. • Ooo4 - nmo
Cuolom - 1 1. 114- CONVEEB
B ATIBL£-1118
..-; IICII,
!!!'.
Dodgo Om71
nt,
Sooclolo 11 - · · Auto • ..... 304-e7H • ••• • '
1NIIROC Z loodod, · 1t85
-..,
PU.
Poatloo Otond
nlco, GOYERNUENT
SEIZED-1114
Lo Siren - - 1185 DuciGo Chorgor, Olio a olr, INm 1100. Fonlo.
114- IZioo.tlllllct..ollo,oulololr, eoo ..11oo. ChoYyo. Sulpluo.

'

Autol for Sale

po~o, :::'i.e~..::~=: :'.t~= J"..!. :::..~

~~;.:.:.

~~~ ~

Livestock

Domln~uo

a... • nmc~~~y.

71 Auto• for Sale

==400,101(.=
H::;
_,, . :::'.....,

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.
75 Bolli &amp; MoiOI'I

71 Autos for Sale

71

July 22, 1990

July 22. 1990

DONT DRIVE BY - MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TOSEE INSlOE. THIS 4 BEOROOM HOME HAS BEAU TifUL WOOD
WORK. EXCELLENT fLOOR PLAN, LARGE fOR MAL LIV ING
AND OINING ROOMS. KITCHEN IS EQ UIPP£0 WITH JE NN
AIR RANG£. NIC£ WOOD CABIN ETS FAMILYROOMWIT HFl
REPLAC E. 2 CAR GARAGE. JUS TAfE WMINU TES FR OM CI TY
$94.900.

Clmpel'l &amp;

MotorHom81

579 JAV DRIVE - An racti~e hom ewtthm m1·
nutes lrom shoppmg and hospttal this hom e
offer s3 BRs. I ~ bal hs. LR. equ1pped ortchen.
dm111g area. gas heat.. cent air. 2 car attached

garage. 16'x32 ' pool

WarehouH carts, hand ca,s,
dock pi-J.1114 ltagel-jysrar F01k
u tt, 88
colt, $3900, •xc.
condition,
own.r. 814-448-

IT'S SURE TO PLEASE THE
Eyecatchm g home located JU St off Rt 35 with
1.411 acres of well manr cured lawn and
garden. All brick construct ion. Attract~ •
features rn clude 3 BRs. 2~ baths. ful~
equipped krt chen. lamily room wrth fireplace
!insert in fireplace). LR and drn&gt;ng room. heat
pump/ cenl. air. . va cuu m system, 1 car
attached gar age wrth e\ectrtc opener. Ca ll now '

THIS IS NIFTY IF YOU 'RE THRIFTY - If ISWl EVERYDAY
THATYGUFIND AGOOD HOM £AT ALOW PRICE. VERVCON·
VENI£NT LOCATION AT 1016 SECON D AVE NU E IN GALLI
POLIS. THIS 3 BEDROOM , 2 STORY ISDHIN IIELY WORTH
TAKING TIM£ OUT TO VIEW $32.000

100 ACRES CHESHIRE TOWNSHIP - Newer
home offe;s 3 BRs. II\ baths, el!Uipped
kitchen, LR. FR . gas heat. cent air, rear dec~
central vac. system , TV Slltelm~ 40x60 metal
bid&amp; w~h 16' doors free gas $147.000.

FRONTS ON THE RIVER - All brid ranch
style home wrth many attractive leatures,
living 100m w~h fireplace. kitchen w~h OW.
range. oven and refn~ . I ~ baths. gas heat,
central a11, carpeted and hardwood floor~ 2
cat attached garage.

GOI THAT FENCED IN FEELING12Bl ACRESor BEAUTIFUl
WOODED LAND ISASURECURE GO CAMPING. fRAIL RID·
lNG. HUNTING OR HI KING. ALL ON YOUR OWN LAND 4
HOUSES ON THEPROPER TY $124.500

uotlr

BLACKB-UltN REAL'TY

2359.

Building
Supplies

55

Block, brick, Hwer pipe•. wtndows, Hnt t ls, t ie. Claude Wi nters, Rio Grande, 0H Call 614:l45 -5121.

56

Pets for Sale

1 ytllow ctowMd Amazon p1r·
rot. Appro1. 1 yMr old. Talka.

1900. whh cogo. 814-m·5320.

Om gonwynd C.Hary Paralan,
Siamese and Himalayan klttena.
614·448·3844 after 7 p.m.

WORTH THE MONEY' APPR OX 71 ACRES fOR $34 ,500. 2
BEDROOM HOME . LAND ISPARTIALL YWOQD[Q. SOMEPAS·
lURE AND TilLABLE. FRONTA GE ON PUBLIC ROAD 2 BED·
ROOM HOME ON PROPERTY

ALL BRICK +1.15 ACRES +SMALL POND
- and rust 5 mmuts to downtown - Lovely
home al \he edge ol town oHers LR wrth
woodbur nmg lrrepla&lt;e. very nrce krt chen.
dinette. bath, carport. gas heat/cent arr.

,

) I ·i Second A venu e

..'. •,

'. ·..

basement. many mme !eaturesalso. Ca ll for an

appotnlment and detatls 11

Garman Shephard. 10 wHka
$200. HIP cert ified, 4
generations. 4 ma l81. 614-388-

·i) (J )

I

6,000 SQ. FT. WAREHOUSE PLUS 1,200 SQ.
FT. OF OFFICE SPACE - Very nice building
located just off Bulavile Rd. Overhead gwage
doors, ramp, Ol'erhead heaters in warehouse.
lour nice offices, Ioyer and reception area.
Situated on 1 acres of land. Can our office tor
more detailed information

Phon e: (() l lj ) 1i -'i(J-000H

__ ~

-----:

9911.

G:dlipoli s, Ohio

Ranny Blackburn, Broker

Fish Tank, 2413 Jackaon Atte.
Poln l Pleas.ant, 304-67~2063 . 10
gal set up $14.99 and 10 gal
co mplete $43.2S.
o ld.

-

. -~·

DUE TO THE SALE
OF SEVERAL
HOMES, WE NEED
NEW LISTINGS .

REDUCE 0 PRICE! WAS $75.000 - NOW $69,900
CHAROLAIS LAKE ESTATES
A rare opportun~y to design and complete the tntenor ot a
home in an excellent neighborhood at an affordable pnce.
The completed entenor of th~ I~ story tog home tncludes a
dec~ 2 car garage and bassemen!. BU'fl!r would own !/20th
of an B acr e ~ocked laoe wtth lull privtleges.
11401

WISEMAN REAl ESTATE

GIVE US A CALL IF YOU WOULD BE INTERESTED
IN SELLING YOUR HOME .

,-~~::-c

Groom and Supply Shop-P..
Groomi ng. All breed1. Alllt ylea.
lams Pat Food O.alar. Jul ..

446-3644

Webb. C. ll 614-446-0231.
Wa nt ed mala Duhund tor atud
ser~~lce lor a mlnarura ona yur
female, 304-675-3526.

Real Estate General

83.1 ACRES , MI L NEAR MEIGS MINE #I. Old er two story home w~ h vmy\ s1d1n&amp; Storm
wrndows. Two small b!lns.

m

21

Marlin
cue 3
Marlin 22
abOut other gun

OWNER HAS RELOCATED AND WANTS TO
SELL IMMEDIATELY - Oak Drwe. all bric~ 3
BR , I ~ bat hs. LR. k~ c hen. DR.Iul\ basement
gas heat.

Regular JIM Customers
reealva more than thay're
ged tor. JIM Plano S.rvlca .
Wa rd 304-882-2325. AU

JUDY DEWITT

446 -8147

Fruits &amp;
All BRICK- JUST Off RT. 35- ClOSE TO
HMC AND SHOPPING- Attractiv ehome in a
nice neiihborhood offers 3 BR s. bath.
equippedkrt chen, LR, din ett~ fir epla&lt;e, new
carpet, 2 car atta ched garage. gas heat and

Vegetables
canning Tomato. for S.lt • a._
ready picked 56 bua hol or 4 tor
$20. Baughman Farm 7 1!2 mi.
south ol Gallipolis on St. Rl. 7.
4-7 p.m. only. 614-258-6535.

Rous h's
Strawberry
Fann.
Beans, plckJu, cucumbtrl, ote.

2 mlln beck of N. . Hn..,,
W.Va. 304--882·223l

Farm Supplies

SMALL FARM FOR SALE - 50.15 acres m/ 1,
Clay l ownshrp. Home on property offers
ap pr oX!malely 11 00 sq. ft . 3 BRs. bath. lrvmg
room. krtchen. Qur~ s ett m~ front age 011 two
roads. Call tor deiatls

'

Ford 6000 diesel wit h mowing
mactlln•. rake, baiiH',
Ford J ubil ee whh loader S2500.
3020 JC 14950. 2010 JO CUI·
tlva talo r &amp; plows, $2850. OWI"'Ir
wiJIIInance_6 14 -286 ~ 522.

smo.

•

$21.900 - 30 382 acres mil. 12&gt;60 Vmd~e
mobile home w~ h ex panda. 2 BRs. I bath.
kttchen. LR. county water. sman bar n

HOME AND TWO LOTS - 3 BRs,
bllh, k~dien w/range and OW, LR. carpi!!,
elec. heat, I car detached garaga Situated on
two lots. Very n•ce

CRtSENeERY
E.S.R.. Bo• 186

DO NNA

GIANT PRICE REDUCTION - BEAUTIFUL
LOG HOME and 27 acr es. moreor less. loc,ted
rust alew minutes lrom townon apnvate lane
Ntce view. Home offers 3 bedrooms. bat h.
k~ c h e n an d livmg room. wood and electric
heat. 15x30 detach ed garage plu s 20x30
barn.

477 ACRES - 13.500 - Clay Twp Hazel
Rrdge Rd
EAGLE AO . - RACCOON TWP. - .39 acr es.
$6.900.
11. 88 ACRES - Harrison Township. Will sell
small er tract.

NEW LISTING - STATE RT. 160 - TRILEVEL HOME WITH LARGE LOT - Attractive
home leatures 3 brs. 1 ~ balhs, lR, k~chen .
tamily 100m. two decks, attached gmgt Call
tor an appointment

offers 1120 sq. H., krtchen, living room,
carpet attached garage wrth electric door
'. Call for an appointment.

S24,900fff - Very attractive )lfice lor a nice
home. Two or three bedrooms, bllh, LR, OR,
k~chen, carpet, part basement, laundry room.
NEAR NORTH GALLIA H.$. - 21 ~ a cr es mil,
Morgan Twp. Frank Ward Rd. - $17.500.

PRICE REDUCED TO $35,900 NICE RETIRED COUPE WHO
WORKING IN THE GARDEN
- 2.6acres m/1 of le¥elland. At
offers 1 BRs, LR, k~c hen, bath and a 24x30
unlt!Jclted block garaga

AN~io~r:~\fi!~:~!!

'

. .•.
•

, A

'

LOTS OF POTENTIAl - 67.496 acres. m/ 1,on
Crouse-Beck Rd., nice wooded buiding srtes,

.I.

~ •.

____

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

BEAUTIFUL BRAND NEW HOME IN
TUCKED AWAY NEIGHBORHOOD!
Thts 3 bedroom doublewide is ideal for you. 2full
Exqutsrte
3 bedrooms, 2~ bath home tn greatlr&gt;
baths. family room, lormal dininllc Master bed·
roomhas walk·in closet and bath wrth gar~entu~ cation \\ story With apptox. 2,374 q. ft. of hvtng
Sttuated on a ni ce le¥ellot I•PPIOX. 86x171) . space '• approx. 2B'x24 garage. Famtly room, for ·
Oon't ·let all th1s tool you. Pnced at ONLV mal living room. dmmg ar ea and much, much.
$12,000.00. City schools'
#28l 4 much more' Crty school~ Call today lor complete
. . g.
#2848
IIStm
REDUCED!! - $10,000.00
$$$$$$$$FARM
Appr011. 71aaes in all. Corn rib, metal tree st•ll
PRICED IN THE liD $20's
barn, stora•e buHdini por1d and sprma..tobac.co 4 ~ acres just outsideGalliP.olis ely i mrt~ 5 rooms
basa MilhtnR system and mmeral fights m- and bath, 3 bed room~ ct(y water and nat. gas.
cfuded. PLUS 2·3bedroom home wHh livine room. und needs to be de¥ eloped. House needs some
bath, formal dinin1and more. Clll todtl tor com- tender Iovin&amp; en This on1 is one that ~~m
plete listinJII IDEAL LOCATION
112135 own as reasonable as posstbla

STARTING UP!

'

2.4 ACRE TRACT - COIIIIEICIAL SITE Located on Upper Rt. 7 across fr001 the new
shopping center.

379•2128

·'

'

....

Discover the love and beauty in this home. Treed
lot. 1~ story con struction, ~ rooms. 3 bed~ o ~sl
18
1~ baths, drilled well. Only $22,500
LOOKING FOR A FAR117
Approx 12B acres srtuated at Addison Township
Large barn, 57'xl20' metal buildmg he house,
tractor and equipment shed. 4 ponds Vmyl Sided
remodeled 3 01 4 bedroom home. Eas1acr es f or
more det ails and locatkln, ~ve us a call t(lla,.
M2821
LOTS WITH IMPROVEMENTS
Each tract IS over 1 acres w~h septic systemand
rural water on each. Good location' Cal l looa1 lot
more information.
12125

~

$15 000 - 87 ACRES Mil, Hamson Town·
ship, front s on Little Bullskin Rd.
141 ACRES M/l, HUNTINGTON TWP. Approx. I mile of fromage on Raccoon Creek
So~e bottom land, black walnut.
$15,000 - 8.7 ACRES M/l. Hlrrison
Township. Fronts on little BuHs~n Rd.

This 4 bedr ooms. 3 bath well consttucted frame/ bri ck bi ·level oHers relax ed comlort throughout.
[ quipped ort che n wrth beauttful cherr1 c abinet ~
2 car garage. alii his and more nestled m4 shady
acr es
S213'

.'--'' ' ..
• .r•--"'

36.5.ACRESII/L, CLAV TWP. - flontageon
friendll Ridge Rd. Old house on \and .$19.500.

448-0008

·-- ..

"GOOD GOLLY',
LOOK AT THESE ROOMSif!
1~ story home w~h 4·5 bedrooms. 2\ivmg rooms.
lor mal dmmg and fam ily room. 2 k i t c hen ~ part tal
basement, all srtuated on 2 n1ce level lot~ + garaga storage building and barn Call today'
#2134

SO YOUNG &amp; BEAUTIFUL!

Ruth Goody, Selee At~ociete

614-256-6518
r

NEW LISTING!
BOAT DOCKING PRIVILEGES!
Are mcluded wrth this 3 bedroom mobile home
and 1\oh !appro• .70), ca~e TV availabto Crty
schools. Call t(llay lor m01e details.
#2160

PRICE IS RIGHTI!

$15,500- l't ACRE+ HOME =
A GOOD BARGAIN.
3 bedrooms. bath, dining room and more. Call lor
more detBIIS.
12809

Ranny Blackburn, Broker

Golllpolio. Ohio 4&amp;831

PH.

441 -0703

379 -2449

NEW LISTING!
ROOM TO DO YOUR OWN THING!
4~ acres accompany thi s 3 bedroom, 1 bat h low
maintenance vinyl Sided ran ch Large breezeway
2 car garage with auto-door. Family room and dm·
ing atea. 25'x15' barn. (Could purch ase an add•
tiona! 11\i acres) . Call at once'
#1858

NEW LISTING'
DIVORCE YOURSELF FROM THOSE
PAYMENTS'!!
When you cou ld be pay 1ng lor lhrs newly remo·
deled 3 b~d10 om ranch , livtnR room, bath. torced
au gass heat. newer dec ~ area nes tl ed among mce

shade trees on appr ox I acre lot KYGERCREEK
SCHOOLS'
#1861

~J'•

~

$15.000 - 19.143aetes mi l Approx '.\ m1le
hom crty ltmits. All u\tlrttes avatlable.

even t housands of
doll ars.
lo&lt;ol Soln Rtprntntatin

NEWLY LISTED! CONVENIEJTLY LOCATED
AND AFFORDABLY PRICED!
This 3 bedroom raised ranch is located approx. ~
mile lrom c~y . Offers ll'lin~ room, formal dintng
and more. Has been extenstvely remodeled, nice
carpeting, and vinyl s1din~ Large deck Priced in
the $20's.
H2850

~

14.77 ACRES - Extra large pond. 3 m1les au\
of Vmt on on Rl. 325. $\6,500 '

post bldgs •.and peclcage
deals. Sa ve hundreds.

NEW LISTING!
YOU CAN BRAG ABOUT THIS
Gorge~Jus bnck home 1ust as soon as IOU take one
loa~ you'll be sold. 3 bedrooms. formal dining &amp;
l• v•ne rooms. 3 bath~ fami~ room. fully equipped
kitchen. 2 car gwage and separate 24'136' gar·
a g~ pond. private settin~ Ex ceptional~ nice
home with a lot of amenrt ies +over 4 acres Ctty
schoob 1
N2157

._
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,
.....' ......_~'
.:·,
~ .. ·..
. . . ..~·~
. ''
-'
.·.....,....

MOnON

CHOICE OF 10 COLORS
FREE ESTIMATE on

448 -4255

. '._....,

BUILDINGS, INC.

Ca nnelburg, Inc . 47619
S pecializ in g in Polfl
Buildings.
Des igned to meet your
needs_ Any size.

SA M HOFF MAN

,-

Merchandise

D. C. Metal Soles, 1m.

TAMMIE DEWI TT

·'·'

MAYBE IUOUR PRICE RANGE - Very nrce
home offers 2 BRs, LR. krtchen. bath. attached
small hothouse, concrete block shop
lot

54 Miscellaneous

13233 I .R. 180
Ashland, K1. 411 01 ·89 39
(at\ l oti fr et Morton, t\1.
1-800·447 -7436

446-6624

CATHY WRAY

'

lOOK AT THIS! JUST $34,9001 - Very mce
home near Green Elementary School
Att111chve leatures indude LR. kitchen
w/stove a11d reh 1gerator 2 BR s. bath. 2 car
attached gataga Call trxlay

ATTRACTIVE OLDER HOME IN THURMAN $34.000 - 1650 sq. ft. home offers 4BRs. LR.
ktt chen. bath. 2 FPs, unattached g~rage,
satelhte drsh. vmy l " dm g

Ga llipolis, 614-446-9717;

Wide sel ection new &amp; uMd farm
lraclo,.. &amp; lmplemen la. Buy,
sell, trade, 8:00...5:00 wtekdaya,
Sal. U/1 Noon.

446 -6624

·- ..

61 Fann Equipment
WMI

JEANNIE TOLLIVER

'

ATTENTION INVESTORS OR FIRST HOllE
OWNERS - $16.900 - Very nice home in
Thurm an. used as a rental at present time.
very well taken care ol 3 BRs. bath. LR.
kitchen, FR, OR .. storm windows, some
remodeling done Call lot more details.

&amp;livestock

Jim's Farm Equipment, SR. 3&amp;.

J. MERRILL CARTER
379 -2184

-.

central air.

THIS COU lOBE THE ONE FOR YOU! I - Very
attractive home srtualeli on 1.9 acr es.
fe ~u res mclude 3 BRs. LR, ortchen, 1 baths.
full basement gas heat. car pet and hardwood.
ulthty bid&amp;

CBho~en

738 2nd AVE. GALLI POLIS

~ ·.

Ounrovln Frull Farm lust oH St.
Rt. 681 East ot Albany. Wo accepT food ll amps. Ami sh
product s, grttn bea ns, homo
grown
11Weel
com
and
1omatoa1. 9-7 dally, c:IONd
Monda y. 614...&amp;98-6298.

Real Estate Genl'ral

Reel Estate Gell8f81

·Judy COewiH -

REALTOR ,

PRICE REDUCED TO 165.0001 . Beauttful
L·shaped brick. AH rooms large. fat·mkrtchen.
lormal d tmn ~ LR w/ FP. 3 BRs. 1'h baths.
attached garage.

aboui"J&amp;M".

58

Real Estate General

$29,900 -LOCATED IN CITY - Older home
offers 3 BRs. bath, LR. ortchen, gas heat c1ty
water and sewer. Call tor an appotnlmenl

Musical

57

SUGAR CREEK ROAD - If YOU I HIN K I. HOME WIIH
ACREAGE IN A GOOD LOCATION IS MORE T H ~N YOUR
BUDGET CAN HANDLE - LOOK AT THI SPROPERTY THI SIS
ONE VOU CAN AFFORD NICE 3 BEDROOM RANCH HAS
VINVL SIDING. COUNTRY SIZE KITCHEN WITH OAK CAB\
NETS. RANGE AND REfRI G, FORMAL DININGROOM, FU LL
BASEMENT WAS HER ~N O DRYER. DETACHED 3 CAR GAR
AGE. LARGE fRAME BARN. 30'X40. EQUIP BLDG AP PROX.
56 ~C RES $60.000.
SMALL FARM IN OHIO TWP .: 21 ACRES. MOSTLY WOODED,
lOBACCOBASE NI CE GARD EN AREA. IHE HOME ISONLV5
VEARS OLD AND iS VERY ATT RACI\VE 3 BEDROOMS. 2
BAfHS fORMAL DI NINGAR EA EQ UIPPED KII CHEN, LARGE
24.13i GARAGE l8'X40' NEARLY NEW BARN If YOU LIKE
COUNl RY LIVINGOON1 MISS OUI ONTHISONE'$58.000
COUNTRV SETTING - THIS 3 BEDROOM RANCH OffERS
PRIVACV AND ANICE MODERN HOM£ FAMILY ROOM WITH
FIREPLACE fORMAL DININGROOM. EAT IN KITCHEN, CAR
PORT , APP.ROX. 3 ACRES. 2 MILES FROM RIO GRANDE
$55,000.

NEW LISTING! 35+ ACRES
Barn, tobaccco base, and minwal rights ar e in·
eluded. Approx. 28 acres pasture and tillable
land. 7 acres more or less wooded. All acreage~
fenced. Land lays very wen.
12156
THINKING OF BUILDING?

Get a 1ump start oo bufdiniYour new home by fin-

ishing this recently constructed 28'x70' frame
home shell - 40 acres partial\1 wooded, tillable
acreage. Several feel of road frontage. CaB torfay
for loc.!tion and more details.
12146

DO YOU WANT MORE FOR YOUR MONEY?
Call us to see thb appealinll988. 14x56' mobile
home sHualed in quiet area. Nice well mainttined
lawn. 'call toda1 tor more information. 12133

COMPLETElY FURNISHED! .
19BB Fleming Mobile Home - 1 bedroom s. hv ~n~
room, bath. eal ·in krtchen. excell ent cond rt roo
Vou can keep coolthts sum mer wtth the central
arr Call lor complet e li stm ~
#2843
ONE OWNER LIQUIDATION
VACANT ACREAGE
Margan Townshtp ......
.... 46 Acres
Morgan Township .
.344 Acres
Raccoon Township ......................... 188 Acres
Raccoon Townshtp ..
123 Ac res
Huntington Townshtp
...... 19 Acre1
Huntington Townsh•P
.... 12 Acres
Huntington Township
... 80 Acres
Hunlingtoo Township
. 50 Acres
Ohio Township... . .......
.... 133 Ac res
Harrison Township. . ............ .... ... 81 Acres
Clll Today lor location and More Details.
HWYC
ABSOLUTELY GORGEOUS INSIDE
AND OUT
Livmg room, family room and forma l dmrng room.
3 large bedrooms !large walk·in closet off master
bedroom), 2\\ baths. Oversized 2 car garage
Equipped kitchen. Mamlenance ltee vinyl siding
concrete drive. Presgtigtous neighborhoorf. Keep
cool this summer w~h lhe club pool'
#2131

$9,900.00
1 Bedroom one story home lotated in the village
of Vinton. Nice large lol b•n. partially remodeled
12U6

ATTENTION!
Owner s have reduced the price$5,000 Remar ka·
bl e older I ~ story extensiV ely ••modeled home 3
bedrooms, livin g room, newer nat. gas furnace,

st ora ge buildmg and over I acre lawn. #185 2

TREED ACREAGE'
Approx 5 acres with bnck and lra rn e bt ·level
Bedrooms. 2 full baths. family room. lormal dm·
ing, equipp ed kitchen. Elhetenl electnc heat
pu mp/central ail. 1·car attached Rarage, pond
and more. Call today' City Schoo lslll
#2844

WANT A DEAL!

$29 ,900
Gwner has reduced the price of lhrs cute 3 bed·
room ranch home. Just recently pamted inside
an d out. Carpo~ w/con crete driv e. kitchen/ din·
ing roo. mcombination.\mmed•ate possesston. Call
toda1 ' Make htm an offer'
N2830

. ' ''

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'I

�P~0-8-Sunday Times-Sentinel

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

July 22, 1990

Limber pole event at Vinton
TimberFest scheduled Aug. 4

MYSTERY FARM - This week's mystery
farm, featured by the Meigs SoU and Water
Con.servatlon District, Is located somewhere In
Meigs County. Individuals wishing to participate
In the weekly contest may do so by guessing the
farm's owner. Just mall, or drop off your guess to
the Ga!UpoUs Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave. ,
GaiUpolls, Ohio, 45631, or the Dally Sentinel, Ill
Court St., Pomeroy , Ohio, 45769,and you may win

a $5 C88h prize from the Ohio Valley Publishing
Co. Leave your name, address and telephone
number with your card or letter. No telephone
calls will be accepted. All contest entries should
be turned In to the newspaper office by 4 p.m. each
Wednesday. In case of a lie, the winner will be
chosen by lottery. Ned week, a Gallla County
farm will be featured by the GaiUaSoU and Water
Conservation District.

Lawn-care law seems to be working
Columbus, Ohio - A turf
specialist says Ohio's new lawn care notification Ia w works, but
It may not be the last time the
lawn-care Indu stry faces regula tion In Ohio.
This Is the first full season for
the law requirin g lawn -care
companies to post warning sig ns
after pesticide applications a nd
to Inform people a beut chem icals
used .
"Companies and custom ers
have received it well," Pound
says. "Some companies say the
signs are a bit of a hass le to post.
but most realize the law goes a
long way In improving relations
with customers and neighbors ...
The law resulted from citizen
demands to know when law n
pesticides were applied by pri·
vate firm s and what those
applications contai ned.
Some groups are co ncerned
abeut possible health and envi ronmental effects of lawn pesticides, although there's a lack of
data In this area, Pound says. But
at least now property owners
know exactly what's being put on
their lawns and passers-by know
to keep off the grass a fter a
chemical was applied.
"There are s till groups in Ohio
that want stricter regulation s on
the use of lawn chemica ls,"
Pound says. "Their dema nd s
Include having firms offer more
timely and detailed information
to nelghbers . A few peop le have
even lobbied Ohio legislators to
have some law n pestic ides
banned.
"I think the new rules arP a
good compromise. They inform

misuse them.
The law also does no t pertain to
chem icals applied to grow crops.
maintain public utility property,
or control termites and other
pests. Fertilizers are not classified as pesticides, and are not
covered by the law .
Before Ohio's new rules began
in June 1989, lawn-care com pan ·

ies were not required to Inform
customers or neighbers abeut
details of their pesticide
applications.
Now , when a com pan y applies
pes tic ides to a lawn in Ohio, they
must leave detailed information
with the property 's owner.
That includes the name and
type of each chemical applied;
concentration of lhe chemical

and its application rate; any
special instructions on the chemical's label ; the company's name
and telephone number; and the
date and time of application.
Companies must also post
signs for 24 hours on the lawn
saying pes llcldes were applied
and tha 1 people and pets should
keep off. The signs list the
company's name and phone
number , and say nelghbers ma y
be notified of the application.
"If a company Is to apply
pesticides to the lawn next door ,
then on the day before applica tion. neighbors who have written
the company should receive a
mailing staling the time of
application and the firm' s name
and telephone number, " Pound
says.

Dr. Beamish gives lecture to staff
members of Woodland Centers recently
GALLIPOLIS - Dr. Patricia
M. Beamish recently presented a
lecture to the staff at Woodland
Cen ter. Inc .. entitled, " Children
In Crisis: Psychological Emergencies of Children."
Dr. Beamish currently holds
tow positions with Ohio Untver·
s lty In A!hens. She Is an assistant
professor In the department of
counselor education and a counse ling psychologist/assistant
professor with the counseling

and psychological serv ices
department.
Recognized nationwide for a
variety of presentations and
publications, Dr. Beamish Is a
licensed psychologist and a licensed professional clinica l
counselor.
Among her many awards, Dr.
Beamish was most recently
selected as "Couselor of the
Year" by the American Association of Mental Health Counselors.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) The big hit at last year's Vinton
County TlmberFest was the
limber-pole event. A pine log,
secured at water's edge, was
extended 18 feet over a pond.
Contestants raced the clock to
reach the end of the log before
falling Into the pond.
The Umber pole and other
traditional forestry events high·
llght the second annual TlmberF.
est, Saturday, Aug. 4, in McAr·
thur. The program beglns10a.m.
at the Vinton County Fair·
grounds, a quarter-mile north of
McArthur on Ohio 93.
Admission Is $3, and Includes
entrance to the VInton County
Fair, operating at the
fairgrounds.
Timber Fest also features concession stands and craft dis·
plays. During the program,
children can enjoy the amusement rides at the fatr.
At TlmberFest, teams of five
will compete In forestry events
for more than $2 ,000 in cash and
prizes, says Peter Gnessmann,
forestry associate with the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service.
Other contests include the
two-person crosscut and the post
throw. In which people try to toss
posts between two stakes.
Grlessmann encourages novices to form teams and compete In
TlmberFest. The team registration fee of $30 Includes a commemorative T·shlrt for each
entrant. Teams should contact
the Vinton County Extension
Office by July 27 to register.
"We're showcasing the timber
Industry In Ohio with a day of
publiC activities," Griessmann

says. "People can lear n how
trees are cut for timber and how
they grow ba ck, renewi ng a very
precious resource.
"Timber mean s different
things to people. Trees offer
shade, beauty and wildlife cover.
Timber Is also a renewable
resource that sustains famil ies
and communities. The cost of
goods sold from Ohio's wood
products Indus try is more than $5
b!Uion· annually."
Vinton County boasts more
than 190,000 acres of private
commercial forest land . More
than 70 percent of the county is
forested. Local sawmi lls handle
47 million board feet of lumber,
predominately hardwoods. eac h
year.
If all that wood were loaded
onto logging lucks. the convoy
would stretch from McArthur to
nortllern Col umbu s.

Gri~.?ssmann

says.

floa ted to the mill , with help from
loggers who bala need on the logs
and directed them into the mill

Griessmann

says.

Mo st

were arraigned over the wee·

•Portable Commodes
•Walkers, Canes, Crutches
•Wheelchai rs
•Alternating Air Pumps/Mattresses
•Traction Units
tU:.N.S. Units-Pain Control
(per M.D. prescription)
•Battlecreek Tread Mill
•Patient Porta-Lifts
•Hospital Beds/Siderails
•Trapeze Unit
•Bedside Tables
•Oxygen Concentrators

Specialist says
wheat crop good

wa s srt at his F'riday arra i gn·

ment al $10.000 with 10 percent
cas h to be posted by th e defend
ant personally . Hendricks wa s
found to be indigent and Meigs
Coun ty Pu bli c Defender Charles
H Knight was appointed as his

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE, INC.

565 Jackson Pike • Gallipolis
446-2206
Open 9-S Mon.-Fri.

State Highway Patrol.

Four Meigs Count y res id ent s
two-car accident on SR 124

Troy Yankuns, li, Po meroy,
was trave ling eastbeund when
hi s 1980 Fo rd Mustang went left

Saturday afternoon .

of cen ter and struck a wcs t bound

ONE DAY

Dry, sunny weather

LEFT

will return to Ohio

50°/o

By Unit ed Press International
Now tha t the wrPkend Is ovrr.
sunny and dry cond i tions will tw
rrturning to Ohio.
Thr we ekend' s miscrablP
weathe r ended on a drama ti&lt;'
notP Sunday, whrn a smoll
tornado touched down in Ni iPs,

~2~L~5s

lNO.II nono

DRESS SHIRTS
IU

$1 099 OR 2 FOR $20

GROUP OF lONG SlEEVE

$1 099 OR 2 FOR $20

S1899

STIAIGHT LEG

01 BOOT LEG

$2299

damagf' .

bv mid -morning . Some light

The tornado. with u·inds of up
to 72 mph, caused .some light
tlamage to a commerc ial se ction

ra in fal l w as to linger
f'astrrn co unti es.

knocking down a tJ'('('
and som c powf'r lines and trarin~
aluminum sidi ng off srvpra l
buildings. No injurirs wrrr

gr t a firm grip ow'r weathN
('O nd itio ns O\'C'r al l of thC' statr b.v

$1 099 OR 2 FOR $20

d&lt;.~ y ,

wi t h s kie s al rrady c learing
in thr

A high pr0ssure S)'Sil'm should

Monday nig ht. Sk 1es will c lea r
and cool tempera tures wi ll vi.sit
thr sta te ovrrnigh1 . Su nshi nr

T h r :-.lational \\-' ra ther Service
said there al so werr report s of
spve ral "m ini· tornadoes" i n nor·

.s hould th en br a bund ant on
Tu esday.

th east Ohio and north wes t Pen-

10s,

ns~: l vania

Sund ay afte rnoon and
evenln g, but no inju r ies wrrr

rPa r h thP uppPr lOs to mid ·KO s.

reported.
Sunda v'.s day long rai nfal l had
th e entlrr .s tate under a flood

wPek. it will br fair Wfldnesda .v
and Thursdav. wit h a c hancr of

After earlv morning low s in the

Tuesday's high s

s hould

S2599

the right. Her 19Rl' Che\Tolet
pic kup truck sustamed heavy
damage. T here were no injuries.

Saturday, July 28, 1990

gatPd thre e arridE-nts ovr r thr
wf'ekend

The first accide nt happened
around 4 p.m. Saturday on Go ld
RldgP Road. According to the
rl'port . .John D Brick les, 18.

Reg1stration Hou11: 8 AM TO tl ~OQN

AWARDS PRESENTED AT 4:00PM
DOWNTOWN HUNTINGTON

Pomeroy, was traveling cast on

lOth Street &amp;. Veterans M emonal Blvd • Huntington, WV

Gold Ridge Road and saw a red
car coming toward him ln a

S1ree1 Machines and Mowriud Bikes. e1c.

• Models Through 1970
• First 150 Entries Receive Dash Plaques

curve on I hr wrong sld e. lie
reportedly pulled to the right lost
control and went off the roadway
and s truck a tree. Brlckles 1978
Ford Bronco susta ined heavy
damage . Peter K. Brlckles, Ru tland , a passenger, wa s tr ans·
ported to Veterans Memoria l
Hosp it al.
The second acclden I occu rrcd
around 4:45p. m. on County Road
34ln Sutton Township. According
to the report. Martha L Camden,
Fleming. was travellngwestand
swer ved to miss a dog . She
apparently went Into the ditch on
the left then crossed thz roadway
and s truck a ditc h and bank on

FREE ALTERATIONS
OPEN FRIDAY &amp; MONDAY TIL 8 P.M.

• Ist &amp; 2nd Place Winners Receive Trophies
• Public Welcome
Prtludlr Spuruurrci Br

GT~tiethSt~~k
HU~TINGTO~

·-- · --- ~-~ ..-- -·-

A MilTON . WE.IT

'

·- ----

\'IRGI~IA

.

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

30 DAY LAYAWAY ON SALE MERCHANDISE!
·• · -

-~ - • • · -

.I

•

dlff('rencc in the tw o coca i m•
c ha rges. according to th P MPigs ·
County Prosecu ti ng Attornry's
office, is du P to &lt;:t la rger amount

being so ld . On the chargP of
eng agi ng in a pa t !Prn of corrupt
activity. bond was sf•t at :10,000:
f ir st drgrcr felon y corflinr tmf
licking chargr at $30,000 and
sf'cond drgrrr frlon.v trafricking

at

$10 , [)(~1

.JoycP .Jewrl! wa s round to bf'
i ndigpnt and wa ~ rPfPrred to the

juana. a felony of the third
degree. At Sat urday's arraign ment. Hill' s bond was set at
$10,000 with 10 percen t authorized to be paid persona lly bv the
defendant
T wo other dr fend ant s await
ar ra ignme nt hearnigs, and are
rurn• ntly in t he custody of the
Mei gs Co unt y ShPri f f ' s
Depar tmr-n!.

Hobart Cundiff. MirlrllqJOrt,
was &lt;HTl'Sted O\'('r th f' wf'rkrnd

on four cou nt s of tra frirking in
marljuana. Two of tlw cou nt s arP
third degree fplon!Ps and two arP
four th drgn•r frloniPs.
Da nny Haggy of Pomf'rny was
arrPstrd on a charge of traffick ·
ing in marijuana. This co un t is a
fourth cleg rPP fPion y.
Dilnn y Dav is. a r e sident of
.Ja c kson County. was indictPd on

Friday but has not been a rrested.
Acrord ing to Warner. officia ls
anti cipate that Davis wtl\ b&lt;&gt;
arres ted or will appear voluntar ·

Meigs Cou nt y Publi c Defender 's
offi ce for rrprr sentation.

car driven by Larry 0. Seller s.
Jr , 19. Portland, head on. Both

ttw cocai ne charge was se t at

Mrnford Jpwe!l Is ,1waltlng .'lf'n·

cars sustained major damagP

Jackson County group upset
with district's limitation policy

Yankuns and Sellers su ffern!

was in sf'rious condit ion a nd in
in tPnsi ve car e and Seller s wa s in
fair cond ition as of Monday. A
p&lt;.~sspngrr in SellPr s' c ar. kat ina.
Wo lfe. 17. s uffered minor injurips
and was &lt;.~ I so taken to Grant by a

wcond LifeFli ght. Her condi tion
had yet to be determined . Yan ·
kun s' passenger. Tommy Lan''·
was takl' n by Meigs EMS to
Vc'IPra n' s Mem or ial Hosp ital
No ne of those invo lved wrrr
wearing sa fetv belts acco rd ing to

the state patrol
The Rac ine Fire Department .
Ba&lt; ha n Fi re Dcpa rt menl and the

By BRI!\/10 J . REED
Sentinel News Staff
A .Jackson County group i.s
displeased wi th the decision of
th~ multi -coun ty Solid Waste

According to Assis tant Prose·
cubng A11orne.v Linda Warner.

commit tee to limit landf il l co n

ing to AgnPs ! . Martin . a
spokcsp&lt;&gt;r son for fhP organiza
tion, the committrf' has brcn
activf' in their work sinrt' tht'
dis tri r t "s inception. and from
tha t t imr has PnrnurJ grd thP
d istr i ct to r on sidf'r a dL..,t rlc t

s id era tl ons to two f acllili es .

owned landfill

Managpment

Dist rir l' s policv

Ear lier this month, th e policv
rommitteP of th f&gt; At ht"ns. Ga l lia .

~a r lin

s a_\" ~

t hJt on(• of rh e

Sy racuS(' Pmergen cy squad rr ·

Hoc king, Ja ckson, M&lt;' igs and primary o bj rr ti vps of th r co m ·
Vi nt on Cou nties IAGHJM\ ' 1 mlttc r is to m ake thL' public
Was te ManagemC&gt;nt Dis tr ict, awarf' of thr quanti! \' of out ·or
voted to considl·r on ly the appli· di str ic t and out ·o f·s tatP giJrb 3g( •

spondcd to the acciden t. One

r atio ns of Mid ·A rtleriran Wa str

fireman. V\'a yne Lyon s, w as
trratPd f or heat rxhau stion . Th r

Systems and Kilbargcr' s Construction Compan y, beth private

Me1gs Cou nt y Sheriff 's Depart ·
mcn t a nd theOhioSta te Highway

Pntities, elim inating an applica

Pa t ro l a lso rrspo nd Pd .

No one has been ci ted for th e
acc id ent and the inciden t is s till
und er

invrstigation

Ca lli a -Meigs
Patrol.

by

th r

State Hi ghway

110n from Sands Hill Coal
Company.
The Ja ckson Co unty Environ ·
m''nlal Committee fee ls that th r
district sho uld givP serious con ·
sid Pra t ion to t hr idea of a

district -owned land fil L Accord

t hat w ill com r int o thP di stri c t
undrr thr l and f il l proposa ls cur
rrn tl ~' bring con sidrrN I bv the
poli c ~' committ rr .
··1 don't think that thf' g rnf•r;d
public is dwarr that RO prn ·r' nt o f
t hr trash th at romrs into 1he a r·ra
wi ll br comr ! r om ou t of thf'
distric t '", Martin rxpl;lined .
" Sin er thr daih· tra sh Uurdf ·n
of the r ntirr di str ic t is pstimat f·d

ily Davis L&lt;currcntlyoutonbe nd
Cont lnw•d on paRe Ill

10 h(• 600 ron .s a da.v, t hC' propo.sf'd
will potcnt ia llv takr in
four time" rn orc out uf d is trict or
out of sta ft' tra s h than tht.' cnt i r r
di...,rr ict produn's"
VL1 rtin . who t' \pl&lt;lins th&lt;Jt thr
.l('f&lt;(" ha ... lwl' rl in Pxis!P nn • for
sPVPral vP&lt;:tr s. o.u ldPd that tlw
rornmiti PP fppJ.c., th&lt;tt i t is "wrong
for tlw dist rict to nnl cnnsitll'r th r
potrnli .1 l lor a rti strirl ·uwrwd
fari lil y ...
Ma rt in s a~' S that thr · co mm it
!PP "'a ppPa r s In IH' hPadf'd to
loc king in lht ' \ "P I"\1 '\· i\ which !hi•
govf'l"nin g law wa s dPsignPcl to
prP vPnt - namP ly. qu t·of·st;:lfi'
l&lt;.~ndfill s

I r:1sh ...

Thr gnvrr nin g 1.1\\' t hat M&lt;:~r tin
rPft'r S to is I ~KH's Housr• Hill ~ y ~
which stairs that rac h f'DLHll\'
rn us t partl c ipatP in ;1 so lid wa stP
managrmP n! rt i strict to tktf •r
m Jnr po lirif&gt;s govr&gt;rni ng t hr•
d 1s pm&gt;al of it s solid wa s II'

Cont inued on page 10

Deputies of the Meigs Countv
Sheriff' s Department invcsti·

• Judging in 25 Classes
Anrique Cars · Modifides • Rods

wa s indict ed on flvP coun ts: four

charges of trafficking in mari-

felony; and anoth er count of
aggrava ted trafficking in co
ca ine. a fi rst dcgrl'l' f&lt;•lony ThP

r harged with t ra ffi ck ing in mari ·

Looking a head to thr end of the

Antique Car Show
Rcaistration Donauon : 13.00

arra ignment , hand was sri .1 1

$10,000 with 111 pPITent cash to be
pas ted personally bv I he
defendant.
Steven Powrl l. Midd lepo rt .

a seco nd drgrf'e

charge is a second degree fe lony .
Rond was set at $20.000 w1th ten
percent to be posted persona lly
bv the defendant
John Hill of Middleport was

Deputies probe three
weekend auto wrecks

PRE-WASHED LEVI'S

KNIT SHIRTS

~~L~5s TO

~~Goo

LEVI'S JEANS

DRESS SHIRTS

~3~L~5s TO

WRANGLER JEANS

The northwest. i n fact. n '
rC'ivrd th e first repr ievf' from thP

cl oudy and ra iny weather Mon-

or town,
OFF

tween 2 and 4 in ches fe II. bu I on I)'
minor flooding was reported

degrrl' felony At the Saturday

i n coca ine.

ll•nring on a pr rvious dru~
char gr .
To ny Hutton of Rulland wa s
indirtrd on one coun t of aggra ·
vated t rafficki ng in coca i ne. lhP

juana and one cou nt of aggra ·

Grant Hospital in Co lum bus by a
Li feFl ight helicopter. Yankun s

watc hformuchofthrda .v, bur no
serious flooding was rcportPd
The heavies t r~:~ in wa s in thP
northwest r'o unties, wh{'r(' bP·

co unsel.
.Joe Powell of Mitldleport was
indi cted Frlday on two counts of
traff!r klng In marijuana , a th ird

$20.000.
Rod Clonch. Midd lrport. wa s
ind 1cted on two counts oft raffle k·
ing In marijuana . both third
degree felonies . At the arraignment. hi s bond was set at $10,000
wi th ten percent cash to bz posted
personally by the defendant He
was found Indigent and was
referred to the Meigs Co unt y
Public Defender.
Menford Jewel l and Joyce
Jewell, both of Langsville, arc
rac h charged with one co un t of
engaging In a pattern of corrupt
activ ity, a first degree felony; a
co un t of aggravated trafficking

va ted traffickin g in cocafne .
Bond on eac h manjuana charge
wa. set at $10,000ond t!ie bend on

serious i nj ury and were taken to

where a 1981 twister kill0d nin"
pr o p!~
and cau sed maj or

reported.

GROUP OF MEN'S

the scene of a

Four Meigs residents injured
in two-car accident Saturday
wpre injured, two seriously, in a

present

··---------

\' ankuns, and Larry Se llers wen• takt•n to Grant

Wll'

two-car auto accident on Roule 124 near Portland

Medicare &amp; Insurance billin~ done.
24 Hour Service - Free Delivery

GIOUP OF MEN'S

But the smarter move for Ohio
farmers this year may be to lock
In a minimum price contract at
the local elevator. This way
farmers can deal with local
businesses and have a chance to
get additional price Incentives or
lower drying fees for delivering
grain with low moisture levels.

Saturday aftt&gt;rnoon around 3 p.m. Two LifeFlight
units wer e callf'd and Wayn e Lyons, Tro,y

Hospital in Columhus. On the Sl:ene W(lre the
Kacin P l"ire Deparhnt•nt, Bashan Fire Department, Syracuse emt-q{em·y StJuad, Meigs County
Sheriff's Deparlnwnt, and the Meigs Gallla Post,

ACCIDENT SCENE - Thl'

SPORT COATS

SUMMERFEST '90

the Meigs Coun ty Grand Jury,

.'t

kend In Meigs Cou nt y Common
Pleas Court.
Arraignments were held before Common rteas Judge Fred
W. Crow, Ill.
David Hendr icks, Langsville,
is c)larged with trafficking in
marijuana The charge is a
felony of the third degree. Bond

COMPLETE STOCK
MEN'S SUMMER

with

indicted at Friday's session of
f

shoots

JULY 23rd

Huntington Region AACA Car Club

By BRIAN J. REED
Sentinel News Staff
Te n defendants. eight of them
alleged drug offenders. who were

occurr pd in winter . When rivers
rose in spri ng, the logs were

MONDAY,

COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP! )- Cor n
and soybean prices have fluctu ated 10 to 20 cents a day in the la s t
several weeks due to weather
conditions In Midwest and Southern states.
Dean Baldwin, grai n market Ing specialist at Ohio State
University, says farmers would
be wise to protect their profits
given these co nditions Strong
export demand should keep corn
prices well abeve $2 a bushel, he
sa:ts. and soybeans should stay
well above $5 a bushel between
now and harvest.
But weather problems In major gr.owlng areas could a!ways
change those figures .
He suggests either buying a
"put" contract on the fu rures
market or contracting a min·
lmum price with a local grai n
elevator.
Normally, Baldwin would sug·
gest the "put" as the best way to
protect against declining prices
while l,eavlng the opportunity to
sell the crop for more If prices
.rise.

Ten are al'l'aigned;
eight on drug counts

THE MEDICAL SHOPPE NOW RENTS

homeowner misuse of lawn and

4. ~·------

t il'S,

Clearing tonight. l,uw near
60. Mostly sunny Tut,.day.
lllgh In low 80s.

1 Section . 10 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Monday, July 23, 1990

Did You Know?

mers and nelghbers. And they
allow people the freedom to
contract f or pesticide
applications."
The law doesn't req ui re property owners who apply chemical s
to their land to post any warnIngs. Some researchers consider

Corn, soybean
prices fluctuating

Vo1.40, No.305

Copyrighted 1990

grea ter awareness and unders tandin g of the timber industry
and Oh io's renewable resource.
trees."
TimberFest even ts evo lved
from tradit ional loggtng activi ·

tured produc t - lumber. Tre~
vo lum es are exp ressed by the
beard foot. a unit of wood 12
Inches square and one inch thick.
Timber Fest part icipants can win

people about activities around

PRESENTS LECTURE - Dr. Patricia Beamish, left, Ohio
University, confers with Laraine Newsome, coodlnator, Crlsllne; Emergency Services and Crisis Intervention Unit Woodland
Centers, Inc, Jollowlng recent lecture at Woodland Centers.

Page 4

Ious to promote its business and
also educate the public." Grlessmann says. "Folks will walk
away from TimberFest with a

logging along rivers and coasts

COLUMBUS, Ohio tUPI) Ohio State Cniversity agronomist .Jim Beuerleln says Ohio'
wheat crop has had some disease
problem s that may hurt yield s a
bit but in general the crop should
do well.
The Ohio Agricultural Sta lls·
tics Service reports that 92
percent of the crop had tu rned
golden by J uly I and har vest was
In full swing this week.
Agricultural economls 1 Allan
Lines projects the Ohio winter
wheal harvest at 74.2 million
bushels, up 18 percent from la st
year.

Daily Number
995
Pick-4
8991
Super Louo
15-21-24-29-30-31
Kicker 112209

condary manufacturers, is anx -

The timber industry is unique
in measuring its raw ma terial strees- in terms of its manufac·

them and increase comm un lca·
tlon between com panies, custo·

garden pesticides to be a seri ous
problem that educatio n efforts
have not curtailed
They say many people do no t
read the labels of pesticides and

a chainsaw by correctly guessing
the amount of beard fe et in a
loaded log truck on s ite.
" It's not easy." he says. "Last
year's truck was loaded with
2,003 beard fee t. but volume
var ies depending on the diameter of the logs and how the truck
is loaded ."
Area sawm ill s, logging busi·
nesses and Hocking Technical
College have provided much of
the organizational support for
TimberFest.
"The timber industry, which
inc lud es loggers , mills and se-

Ohio Lottery

Kyger Creek
tournament
•
continues

'-

--

The third acc ident happened
around 6: 15 p.m. on Sund ay on
Success Road. Accord in g to the
report. Steven R. Barnett, 17,
Reedsville. was traveling west
on Success Road when the wheel s
of his vehicle ra n off the edge of
th e paveme nt in the curve . When
he ca me back onto th e paveme nt
th e vehicle slid si deways and
went off th e roadway on the left
side into th e ditch and lawn at th e
Tim Gumph res idence. Barnett
and his passenger, Lori Falls. 17 ,
Owl Hollow Road, were tran sported to St. .Joseph Ho spi tal for
treatment. There were no ar rests. Barnett's 1988 Dodge Ram
pickup susta ined heavy damage.
In other ma tters , George Mor ri so n. Sordon Road, Long Bot ·
tom, reported to the department.
that he had twenty 14 planks and
four posts stolen from the Izaak
Walton League Farm In Chester
Township.
\

CONTEST WINNERS- The first annual Marauder Punt·P88s &amp;
Kick competition was held Saturday evening at Marauder Stadium
In Pomeroy. Awards were Kiven to the winner In each grade and
the overall winner. Award winner• Included (1 -r) : 4th grade,

Franco Rom uno; ~th grade, A.J. Vaughan; 6th grade, James See;
7th grade, Donald Goheen; 8th grade and overall winner, Jeremy
Imboden, and 9th grade. Matt Clark. Pictured In the back row Is
Marauder Head Coach Mike Stagp

'1. '

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