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QRearrongo
of tho
four tcramblod · words bo·
. low to form four almple -dt.

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EVENI~

1
1

' 8:00(D llonenu: The Loat
EDIIDdll

i

·=

(J) (I) • (I) •

Gil Hen

()) . . . ....... Delby

:IIJ r.!::'&amp;'IElQifH8
&amp;:- .

ARE '(OV SURE
THERE 1-lASN'HEEN
SOME MISTAKE?

CereD DR

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NeweHour

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7:30. (J) F.iiiiJ Feud ' . '
()) lolling WCH1cl (0:30) .

(I) ·~ Tonight

.

e(JJ USATOCIIy

........ .

llll •liZ liZ Jeopa~w....tdr"'~ Q
(!J Major Leag~~e •

IOl Clolaftre
OJ) len;IGft

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Heaven Mark thinks the
pooch auddenly at his side is
Jonathln In dlsgulaa. 1;1
Unllmffircl.
Hydrvpt- RIICing Thunder
On The Ohio (r)

()) 1•

(I) Perfect ltrrongera

IIJ) Pr~oteNeW.

·
9 MOVIE: J.W. Ill (Po)

(2:30)
..
11J MUrder, SIHt Wrote

· Joey's alkS him back Into

w-.

!D (!) W111 "'"'
Q
(J) IOl MOVIE: 'The Keep'
NBC Movie Of The Wejllc

e

(2:00)

()) U.R. Olympic Featlval
(I)
(I) Mr. Belvedere

e

When a new news director
takes over, .• ge bacomas ·
an anchorman. (R) Q
&lt;Zl Japen How Japeneee
absorb outside Influences
and maintain native cunure.

~ Evening A! Popa
IIJ) IMTJ Kll)ll Uvel

0 Hltchcook Preaenta Don't
sen Yourself Short

WHEN J!M I)U5T STANDING
Al&lt;oLwWITH M'f HANDS
IN MY POCKETS. .

ANOTHER OF UFE15
MYSTERIES IS 'W'\-IY I
601"Ht:R10 TAL.K 10 HIM •.

e

(I) Someraet Gerdena
The arrtval ol a striking
married woman hilariOUSly
enlivens ·a ·San Diego senior
citizen's condo. It all goes to
show that you're as young .
as you feel. (0:30).

.9

Ra~ .Bredbury

The Wind ··

,.._.,.

• VlclaaCowltiY .

·

10:00(D 700 Club

~~20/201;1
(JJ Smltlltonlan WCH1cl
Examine the quest to

understand and Control the
~netic basis of life. 1;1
IIJ
Newa
0 The Hltl:hlllker Together
Forever
·
10:20(1) NW~ Wre111ing Po-

1!--.

BARNEY
1 CAN'T MAKE OUT

WHAT PAY MY SISTER
Z.ONIE MAE IS COMIN'
TO VISIT!!

IT SAID

''THURSDAY''

AFORE IT GOT
SMUDGY

Hour .
10:30 II) Amerlcu Maatwra Follow

Franklin's musical career
from her lllrly years to the
present. Q

I

•

(!J ......, Miller

9Nnr•

. '

0 W...-1 Eric finally
comes lace to lace with the
real leader of his bloodline.
a Cfa111c 11oc1o: Willi
•

1111 NeWI
• .(!J Aleento Hall
IOl Moneyllne
I!)) Tatea FI'GIII The Darkllde
Q Miami Vice .Red Tape

ASTRO•GRAPH
BERNICE
BEDEOSOL

.....,~•

J

•

Many reetrlctlone and tenllons will be
Hfted from yrur lhoulder In the year
aiMiad and a fun qqe ooulcl b8 In the
offing. New lrlerldll IIIII lntereeta
will c:ommiiiCI jour lime IIICI attllnllon.
LEO C.lulr ...... 22) Do mont llltenlng thin talldng tacley In a dllcuaalon
you·~ have • ..-.tnformad friend.
What II told 10 you could be very conllructtve. B.! I jump cln fife by Under•
llandlng the ~ wllloh •• governing you In the ,_. .-ed. Send lor
'l(IUI' Aatro-Grapll ~IOnl .today by
.
.
.

-

mailing $1 to Astro-Graph, c/o this
newap!IP'II', P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,
OH 44101-3428. Be sure to state your
zodiac sign.
VIIIGO CAua. 23-llept. 22)·An objective
you've been very, anXloua to achieve Is
reachable at this lime, but It looks like
you will have to do ltln smallstagee. Be
both patient and perslllant.
UIRA Clept. za.oct. D) An Important
ob)ec;l IenOn can be leerned ioday II
you utilize your abiiHI.- as an Qbeerver.
Watch the winners of the world to Whll you can effectivelY lmHate.
ICORPIO COct. :114 Now. 22) Becauee
you're not apt to be deceived by out·
ward appearanc:.e today, " will be very
dltncutt lor ~to try 10 pull he wool
over your eyee. ·you'll- people and
thlnga for Wll8t they are.
IAGITTAIIUI CNCIW. 1:1 Deo. 21) Belore mlklng 1lltljc)r Cleclllon todly, rehash the 1-. Clown to the _ _, detall with your 1'11118. Other lllnta could
tum out to be ext~ helpful.

r-

CAI'IIICOM IDeo. 22-.len. 111 Be
IOnlble regarding your expectations
lor your ellorts toelly. What you do will
be ICknowtedllll(l, but not - r l l y
on an el8borete ICIIe.

,.

..
"
AQUARIUI C.l8n.. 20,Ftll. ftl Because
·~

'

you'tllnstlnctlvely k""" how to put oth·
ers at eaee and get them to talk about
thernsetvM, you'll be a gueet BNBt at a
soc:1a1 aatherlng tode~. .
PIICEI Cl'eb. 211 Ill ctl 211) Your
ti10UIIh!ful conoem tor loved ones will
be keenly ~ toelly. Their locus will be on the llttJe thlnQI you do lor
them thll show you sincerely care.
ARI. . Cllerah 21·Aprll11) You should
do very Willi today lnvotvemenla
that require • creellvely or Imaginative
twill; Apply your Ingenuity Bl)d resourceful,_ to the Iaika at hand.
TAURUI CAprll211 ..., liD) 8e eatlalled
with smllt jjllna today Instead of lookIng for 1 big ecore ·that might not be
forthcOming. The imporlllll tHing II to
llay ehead of the PM- . :
01. . C.._; 21:..1tme 8) II shouldn't
be too dlftlcult lor you to Hnd people to
be IUpportive of your lnt-11 today.
You'll have 1 way of making your allalra
more enllelng llwltheire.
·
CANCIII C.luM 21-.ltllr 22) Tllla could
be the right dey to 11111111' remind one
who oww you ~~ IIIII Ills long
put due. Your a.-lor making arecovery look gool! now.

Stereo.

GL
BTE

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~To le ~Du.naed
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aUlA
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7121

• • CIIIiiiiACheee
12:00 (J) The iiiUe I The Grey,
Part 4 of I (Hill(I ;00)

ES

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'Tonight

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1at!t. Plrl VI: JltoniJVM (R)
(2:00)
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ONewaNigbl
MOVII: Up The • Cl dii!IY

(RI(1:30)

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12:20 (J) Night TriiCite Stereo.

DVCHGNGTIC,

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A MAN

WHo

HAS

LEARNED UTI1.E, GROWS OLD liKE~ OX:' HIS

_FLESH G'Q~. I)UT HIS

DOES NOT

GROW.- DHAMMAPADA
.. d'

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DAILY CR:YP'I'OQlJCn'Es-Here'1
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to be attached. By Saturday momlll&amp;, the dock
WI!S complete ~din the river, readytobeusedlor

•
•
·
h
•.
h.
·
otnov··I C .tn :t e·.race

the Ohio Bass Circuli Tournament Sunday.
(Times:Sentinel photo by Lee Ann Welch)

.
t'
h
j or 1990 Oh
·. · w uovernors . ip
e

ByMARGARETCALD~ELL

'

11:20 (I) Night TriiCita: " - Plaly
Dltnctn' StereO.. '
11:30. (J) Gil Tonlgllt 8e.ow

UNDER CONSTRUCTION- New docks for the
GaJBpolla parldroat were being constructecllnte
Friday afternoon by · city employees. Here,
workers ease a slip of the new dock to the ground
~

•

' ·

·

~.

composer
5 Strike41 French
breaker · .river
9 L~arning 42 Construct
' 1o Bailee . 43 Biblical
,,
· skirt -'
prophet
11 Before
DOWN
(Lat.)
1 Actress Bow
12 Webster
2 Integrity
YHtefday'a ,Anawer
· or Cicero 3 Miutary
15 "VhtE! Je ·
rules
14 Estlinatec:t 28 TV's • -.
4 Pagoda
18 Deserve
·She Wrote"
18 Go wrong
ornament 22 Table
30 Libyan city
17 Singing
5 Inclement
scrap
32 Come
syllable · 8 East
23 Hockey's . ..about
18 Curve part · .Indian
- trick
33 Melville
19 Rosalynrl' s dish
24 Curl
. · nOvel
daughter · -,...;...
one's lip 38 Cronkite's
20 Cereal ,
standstill 25 Kitchen
"You 8 M.V.O.B.
item
• There"
plant
21 Aust.
13 O!!j~~~28~Faahlon 39 Court .
parrot .
rr
231mmense
24 Austere
26 Married ..
27 Thomas ··
or Conde
28torre
film role
29 Central
American
tree ·
30 Faulty ·
bomb'
311n need'
of dieting

7·21 ' '

II You Cen Be A 8trtr

() =i-

+

35 Before
38 Attempt
37 Recompense
39.Fiog

llll ' .IIJ

(J) (I) . • (J)

.....
.....

.~F~Iry

WC!Itl'llln JICk .
11:00 l]j ..... Cheee

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..... ,

1 Converse

I

AXYDLBAA:X

II~ON'GFELLO

One letter stancia for another. In
for the three L's, X for the two 0
.aJI(Jitrophes, the len,th and formaU
hlnls. Each day the code )etten are

le A Is used
etc.

( CtiiiKingF...... ~.Inc.

ng1e lttters,
. words are all

t.

.

GALLIPOLIS - The jobless
rate In VInton County was down
· for June 1989 and up In Athens,
Gallla, Jackson, Lawrence and
Meigs counties. according to
figures released Saturday by the
Ohio Sureau of Employment
Services;
Among the state's 88 counties ,
the unemployment rates ranged
from a low of 4.0 percent In
Geauga County to a high of it.7
percent In Guernsey County .
The comparable . unemployment . rate for Ohio was 5.8
percent, liP from the 5.1 percent

+QU '

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS 40 English

e

8:30 (I)
(I) Full HouM Aller
10 years, an old lOve of
her IIIII. (RIC

Area jobless rates.· up.

NOiml

CROSSWORD

Reither's ChOwder
8 Naehvlll Now

13 Soctiona. 86 Pag•
A Multimedia Inc. New-er .

Middleport-Pomeroy-Gallipolis-Point Pleasant. July 30, 1989

.... ·
. '

L-----------_.

i(NR)•liZ
llna, Part 1 Of 3
(3:00) ·''
.

ONEOF LIFESMY5TERIES
TO M515 WH.Y I FALL
DOWN .••

Vol. 24 No. 25
Copyrigh-.c:J 1989

•

,_.,

'

I.,.

7:3&amp; Cll Mejor teaoua .......u
1:00 (J) The 8lua I The GniJ,
Part 4 of I (NR) (1 :00)
(J) S Hlgloway To

9:30 (I)

•

Dealer:-

Cbllee

Larry learns that Balkl's
Island of M~s Ia rea_lly a
planet. !Rl · . ·
~ .(!) O.C. ,- -IR ~lvlew

OP

-

+1714
More often thaD DOt; about 68 per-·
cent of the time, . five oulstllldlag WEST
. iwr
cards of a suit will lpllt J.2. Tbat's +It 52
' +1:117
uselul'kDOWJedce blat you lbould al- • s
.AIOI7
tQJ7J
ways strive to ~ftU'II!er loelcalln- · t tt 10 1 5 '
. +A.
leretta!l. Ill today'a deal, North made · +Q J 10 1 5
an 1111111.._. ·eompetltlve ·ralle with
SOI1l'll
only a doubletna · bonor ·m pertner:a
•Au
'
slllt. When West COI!Ipeleli one .level
· .QJIIU .
higher, South loot tbe Hit and bid
tA
three hearls. Let's - bow he made
+HI
the contract.
. -.
·
Vuln8rable: Neither .
The rlpt play at trick one wu . .Y
lor declarer. West would hardly lead
the qaeea of clubB wblle bOldln&amp; the .....·
EMI
It
ace, ~ S!luth ~~~ low ud wu reIt . , •
warded wbea
bad to win the ace.
Back came a dlamand. Declarer won Pus
Jt
P•
the ace and played alleart to dummy's
All~
king. East won the ace and played anOpenlna lead: Q
other diamond, ruffed by declarer.
Now what?
· : ·
,
East bad started with &amp;·lone ace of
club! and certainly oaly ' four ella- had to be t-f In the major aulta at tbe
monds Iince Wtst Would not compete start. So SOilth played a low lpllde toto the thtee-k!velln dlamonda without ward clumm:fs jack; ~ 11M!
four-card SUPJI!II:I· ~t would that kiJII&amp;Iid plaJlid a tblnt dlunond. Deleave East in spades and bearta? Since clarer nalfllil, led to' damm)"l lpllde
his bidding ,.-u ,slartdard, Eut would queen and pla)'lld the live of llearil.
ablolulely open the bidding with one Whea be put Ia 11M! Jilile, be was able to
spade if be held five earda In lbat suit. plc!t 11p Eut'a rematnm1 traiiiJIII ud
Declarer's ·coacltlliooa wu lbal East make ajae qldta.

8 Top Cerci
7:05(1) Andy Gritnth.

MEEKLE AND

•

BlliDOI ·'

OMo..,..• .
g AllciY Grfllllll
.
.
0 Mlull.VIce 01.11 Where
Bu- Don't Run Stereo.

9:00

-

.

• 0 WIOIP In Clftctnriatl

(I) •

-

Wiring - Jumpy - /(nock - Ntlfi'OW - MIRROR .
Humility is the nnse you experience w!Min you check
· you1118H In 'a ciQth!ng store's thr...way MIRROR. , · ..

1111 eiiZ liZ 'YiJIHI 01
F-"itC
'

at Cloolc 1

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IN HoNo~ oF Y~
.~
f/IAN'( fouNCE$,
i
Wl''f ISSUING ytJv
~
SCENIC C#fE~IC$ WITif :1
TI'IE fLYING WALU,..PAS i
. oN Tt4fM.
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. . SCRAM LnS ANSW.I IS .

(I)
(I) Cu!fei1t Alllllr
II) ~ MacNtn/ Letver

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7:10 (J) Father lllurphJ
• (J) PM Mag •IM
•.
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(0:30)

&lt;

Complete the
bv filling In tho mialng ·words
you develop from step No. 3 below.

PIINT NUMIEII!O LElTUS
IN
SQI.IMIS ·

a ·,...~

8:3&amp; (I)

'

Variable c loud'Jneas .
Chance of rain 50 percent.

SportB .. .......... .......... . Cl-6

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ehuckl~ q~otod

e
'.
~ tlifSf
r r~ r r 1: r '1'. .,
1 ~~V:.•.'""~ '_I I I...J I I I· I·

..3.

Along the River .... ...,_ Bl-8
Buslaess .......... ... ........ .. Dl
Comics- ................. . .Insert
Cl assUieds ......-. ......... .. 113-7
Deaths .... ...... -.............. i\3
Editorial .. ,................... A2

our town:
Fanners Market in
full swing.•• Page B2

Overheard . in bus depot;
"Change Is inevitable, exCtP..i
if you are dealing with a machine."
· .

. TINGHK , .
1--,.lrl~~lr"'""l"'"".·-.,~_;.;..TI-l

~::~..... 1;1
eon\UII

5

~:~;:~;~~:~:~-.,

1:30 • IIl G NIC NlghiiJ Newa

What do I know? ... A5

Page 81

C-1

Inside

Beat of the Bend:

1

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I

t:OS (I) Allee

(!)'3-1·1

2

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f
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r"'TD__,O~""N.;...,;;E-L'Tr-11

(!) R. . . . Ralnllow Q'

ABOUT
'(OU SO OI=TEN !

8

,-·r.o. :.A,_v.:. n-z-=L~~ •.
. I I· I . 1

(l)Ciull~

T~OU6~T

.~ teams prepare for '89

Old trunks
in the attic

'-"*'

FRI•• JULY 28

50 cents

- - - - - - l~llo~ lor CLAY I . POLLAN

VIeWJDg
o

Sunday

TlmetHienUael Staff
, "''"9.'\~P,'OL~ - Although the
. prlinar.les ar.e still ten m~nths
away, the gubernatorial race has
· begun In sOutheastern Ohio as
.three · -Republl&lt;:an candidates
have brought their campaigns to
Gallia County. ·
The :county's most r ecent vis·
· itor, Robert A. Taft II, Hamilton
County Commission president,
and Cleveland's Mayor George
Volnovich, who made his way
south during last November 's
race against Sen. Howard Met·
zenbaum. are the key candidates
for the governor's seat, accord-

lng to some top Republicans in , It's hard to predict . But 1 think
either would be good for the
the county.
David T. Evans, cilalrman of Republican Party."
. the Gallla County Repubnl!an
Taft . . Vi!&gt;•sil..
Executive Committee, said local · Local atto~ney and · fonner
policy prohibits the local party Gallipolis Municipal Judge
James Bennett said he would like
from offl~lally endorsing 11 candi·
to see Taft In the state!louse over
date for the primaries.
Voinovlch.
But like most of the local
"I would like to see someone
Republicans Interviewed, Evans
from
this end ofthestatesltin tile
said he sees Taft and Voinovlch
as the key players in next capital," Bennett said. "I think
we're ready for a change In the
spring's bat tie.
statehouse and I think Taft can
"Either one would make a
do the fob. For most of his adult
great Republican candidate,"
life he has been In public service,
Evans said. ' 'They have different
and
I think he has the makings
qualities and are supported by
(See TAFT, paf{e A5)
- different areas (of the state) so

Solid waste disposal district
fee structure being question~
By NANCY YOACHAM
Tlmes-SeaUnel Slall
POMEROY _ "Why should
anyone h'ave veto power•" ques
tlons Meigs' County c'.ommis·stoner David Koblentz regarding
a stipulation In House Bill 592Ohio's new law regulating solid

positions. AsoiFridaynoonehad
filed In Columbia, Scipio, Salem,
Rutland, Olive, Orange, Letart,
Lebanon or Su tion Townships,
where two terms are up .for
re-elecllons In each one.
However. In Lebanon Township, five candidates have filed
for the two terms which are ·up
for re-election.'
One petition has been filed for
the unexpired term of the town·
ship clerk In Olive Township.
As . for levies to lie on the
November ballot, the Salisbury
Township Trustees Friday flied a
petition requesting 0.2 mill levy
for maintaining and operating
cemeteries.
Frymyer reports that petitions
can be picked up at the office,
anytime betwen 8: 30 and noon
and 1 and 4,: 30 p.m. , Monday
through Friday or, upon request ,
will be mailed.

September 1990, with a proposed
surcharge fee schedule of $1 per
tQn for dls lrlct garbage, $2. per
ton or Ohio garbage from
.
·outside the dlsirlct , and $3per ton
for out-of-state garbage. These
surcharges would be paid ln .
addition to regular landfill dump1
.

:;:~u~~~a~ultl1~~~t~~:~ ~~~~~·~e

waste districts must be approved
by t~e largest municipality in
each county.
Ko)llentz represents Meigs
c
t on th Policy Committee
·• ouay
e,
for thr• siJ!-county solid waste
district w!llcl! includes Meigs,
Gallla,. Hocking, Athens. Vin!On
· and Jackson Counties . The dis ·
trlct recently proposed an operating budget of $360,000 - lon a
period from March 1989 to

riot even discussed.
•
Meigs County Commissioners ·
do not understand the reluctance
nf the City of Jackson to support
the
lee schedule, especially since
¥
the · rest of Jackson County, a's
well as the other counties in the
district. are in favor ofthe$1, S:i,

$3~~~~~~~e. sald

pro~d

City of Jackson is
the
bucking the fee schedule. Jack- fees would pay for the costs of
son Mayor Tom Evans considers o(ierallng the entire district and
the lee structure too high and developing a 10-year plan for the
Jackson City Council recently district, as required by House
passed a motion blocking the fee · Bill 592. Koblentz said that
·- f th d I
ti 1 · ted
I tslr
thef
structure or e lstr ct.
·an cpa
rece p
om
ee
Although the remaining five · schedulemaytotal$450,000onan
counties In the district halj hoped. annual basis, but that' from that
the Jackson City Council inlght amount',' many district-wide ex rescind Its motion during regular
penses would be funded. It may ·
meel'lng tHis past Monday, such
become necessary to open solid
was not the C!lSe. The subject was.
(See SOLID, page AS)

Mine may he located near Pomeroy
POMEROY - An application
from Addington Inc., Ashland,
Ky ., lor a coal mining and
reclamation perm it for property

Meigs election filing deadline nears
. -· ~~~~:~~e;ft;;:hesg~~n~~;~
Board of Education, one for the .
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
three terms up on ·the Meigs
·
Tlmes-Sendnel Staff
County School Board, and one for
POMEROY · As of Friday only
the three openings on the South15 residents had filed petitiOns
ern Local s ·c hool Board. No one ,
for th~ 49 local township, village
and school board positions where . has filed for the two positions on .
the Meigs Local School Board .
terms are up lor re-election in
As lor vtllage councils, to date
November, according to Jane
Frymyer, director of the Meigs · only one person has filed a
petillon for the four council
County Board of Elections.
member
openings on Racine
The filing deadline is Aug. 24 at
Village
Council.
There have been
4 p.m. at the Board of Educations
no filings for the openings on
Office located on Mechanic
. Rutland or Syracuse Council
Street in Pomeroy.
where four seats are open on
Frymyer reported an apparent
each, nor for tile two seats on the
lack of interest In that only a few
Board of Trustees of Public
of the petitions already picked up
Affairs in Syracuse, a nd the one
are stili out for Circulation. It's
seat on the Board· of Public
not like there are lots of petitions
Affairs In Racine.
out there wailing to be filed, she
In Bedford. Salisbury and
said.
·
Chester
Townships, only one
To date only one person has
petition has been filed In e ach of
filed for the two board member
the· townships for the truste!!
openings on the Easterq Local

of a percent from 5.4 percent :~o
rate In May.
In a six county area of 6.0 percent In June; Meigs, up 1
Southeastern Ohio, the work· .. percent from 6.8 percent to 7.8
force totaled 87,000for June 1989. percent In June; and VInton,
Of that number 80,800 were down .9 of a percent from 9.2
employed and 6,200 or 7.1 percent percent to 8.3 percent In June.
were not. That's up from 6.7
On a comparable basis, unemployment Is down in all six
percent In May"''\189 .
Last month, Atl)ens County's counties from June 1988;
Athens County's rate Is down A
unemployment rate jumped .4 of
·a percentfrom5.7percentlnMay of a percent; Gallla, doW!! 1ll
to 6.1 perce.n t in June; Gallla, up percent; Jackson, and Lawren~
.8 of a percent from 6.6 to 7.4 counties, down 2.7 percenl;
perce11t In June; Jackson, up 1.4 Meigs, down 1.9 percent; an'd
percent from 7.9 percent to 9.3 Vinton, down .9 of a percent from
percent In June; Lawrence, up .6 an annual basis from June 19811.

ment of Natural Resources.
Dlvlslorl ot Reclamation. The
application was. filed June 26 and
a copy of the jlermit Is on file In
the Meigs County Recorder's
office.

The permit Is requested for a
period from July 1989 to July 1994
with four surface acres to be
affected during the first year of
operation, and 52 .4 acres during
the lifetime of the permit.
The acreage for . which the
mining and reclamation permit
Is requested is in the Five Points
area of Salisbury Township.
According to the permit application, mining could affect 52.4

surface acres of property and 660
acres underground. Also accord-;
ing to the permit application, 25
properties in Salisbury Township
and 27 properties In Chester
ToWnship could be undermined.
Underground operations by All-:
dington Inc., If granted the .
permit by ODNR, could range
from 100 to 250 feet deep.
Addington Inc. Is said to be
owned by Ashland Oil.

Street project-at virtual standstill
.

By LEE ANN WELCH
Tlmes.Seatinel Staff
. GALLIPOLIS - Work on the
Gallipolis streetscape project Is
at a virtual standstill. and some
downtown merchants say busl·
ness .Is boomlilg.
According to the contractor. he
Is waiting on approval of the
concrete miX before pouring can
begin on the Court Street sidewalks. Rob Holbrook of AGE
Contracting said he expects to
have a report back from the
tes ling laboratory early In the .

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week. After approval, the sidewalk strip next to the buildings
can be pbured.
Ron McDade, manager of
Columbus Southern Power Company, said his crews are staying
ahead of the contractor, and ·
removing overhead llghtpoles.
He also said a new electric line
Will be built behind the 300 and
400 blocks of Second Avenue to
pick up some customers on State
Street.
Columbia Gas anticipates replacing the main on State from
Third to First Avenue In approxi· ·

mately ·two to thr ~e weeks,
according to John M; (Jake)
KoebeL
Other than that, Koebel said,
his workers are waiting on . the
contractors to pour concrete.
· About half of the 300 block of
Second Avenue Is without a
sidewalk, but they are having '
special sales at their back doors, ·
and business Is brisk. Merchant$
have been 'planning for the
disruption to the front of their ·
stores, and want to get customers·
used to parking In the municipal
lot and using the back entrances:

CrQssing the ·river·: a tax ·break or breaking the tax .law?
By MICHAEL SHE.A RER
Times-Sentinel Staff •
GALLIPOLIS - West VIrgin!·
ans who are crossing the Ohio
River to. buy their groceries In
Ohio In an attempt to avoid their

Rutland
Furniture
founder dies
RUTI.AND - l'vfelgs County
businessman Arnold M. Grate,
'71, died Saturday at his home In
Rutland folloWing a brief, undisclosed lllneu.
Grate was the founder of
Rutland Furniture and Bottle
Gas Co.
Rutland Furniture will be
closed Monday and Tueaday.
Services Will be conducted
Tuesday, 2 p.m. at the Ru Uand
Nazarll!le Church, with his son.
(See RUTLAND, "11e A3)

state's siX percent ~ales tax on
food may be technically breaking
the law.
·
When people from West Virginia buy food In Ohio and consume
it in West Virginia, they are still

iia ble for the. sales tax and should
pay a use tax to West Vi~"&amp;inla,
said Ron Stone, unit manager of
the West VIrginia Taxpayer
Service Division.
"Anyone who purchases something out of state needs to remit
the tax to the .state," Stone said.
" However, we have a tough time
e!lforclng the law."
Despite the fact that the food
tax should be paid to West
VIrginia, regardless of where It
was purchasf1d, at least one
Ga!Upolls grocery,store has seen
an Increase In Its number of We.s t
Vlrglna customers.
"We have seen a considerable
increase in the number of customers frOIJl West VIrginia since
the tax was· enacted," said John
Jarvis, co-manger of the Krogers
store at the Silver Bl'tdge Plaza.
Out of Krogers' estimated
11.000 weekly .customers, Jarvis
estimated that ''several
hundred" people ·cross the stlte
Une every day to avoid the six

CROliSINO 'ftiB 1UVBR - TerB7 Dt111ner
cheeb out culltornen at .Jolmloa'• SUpermarket,
131 Second Ave. The • ..,,. manager Brent

' (See CltOSSING, pa&amp;e A5)

.Joltllllon lAid many West V~rRtna re~ldentl have

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beeur tartlleetateU..&amp;~Ibu)'tlrelr...._. •.
In Oltlo Iince Weat VIJ'IInla ellaCted a ...........
ItAIM tax on food. ('ftrnes.Sentlnei JIMIIa ..., , .
Mlcheel Shearer)
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�30, 1989

July

. Page-A-2
.:July 30,

1989

·Time for ·lackadasical OSHA to step in

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A Division of

S. Tldrd Ave.·, f'..elllpella, Olllo
(614) f4i-ZMZ

111 Court·St., Pomeroy, Ohio ·
(614) 9!1~21116

ROBDT L. wtNGETT
Publlsber
HOBART WIU&gt;ON JR.
Executive Editor

PAT WHITEHEAD

Assistant Publlaher-CootroUer

WASHINGTON - American
workers have been exposed to job
hazards because the federal
government hasn't been looking.
out for their Interests.
When . Congress passed the .
Occupational Safety and Health
:Admlnlstraiton Act of 1970, it told
the states · they could enforce
their own worker ·safety laws.
But, just In' CiiSe, Congress
created the Occupational Safety
and Health Administration to

look over the shoulders of tile
states and make sure everythi!IJ!
went smoothly. OSHA would
directly monitor workers safety
In states that didn't have the~r
own:programi'and would,act as a
backup for the Others.
AI)Out half the , states took
Congress up on the offer and
embarked on their own worker
safety laws. But, just In case,
Congress created the Occupationa! Safety and Health Admin·

A MEMBER.of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press Alsocla·

tton ind th~ Am«lcan Newspaper Publishers Association.

LE'NERS OF OPINION are weleome. ntey should be less than :now~
long. All letters are subject toedltln.&amp; and mutt be signed wUh name, address and
relephone number. No unslglled lll)!tters wUI be published. Lette!S should be In

10011 taste, addressing lsiiiOS, noc peroCIUlljUes.

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Backstairs .· at
the White House '

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI Whhe Route Reporter
WASHINGTON- White House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater had a
longing to go back to the farm-albeit only for a vacation-after he
had seen Par-ee. ·
Aft.er the presidellt's return from his 10-European swing, Fitzwater
suffering from jet lag and an attack of nostalgic, decided to go home
to Abilene, Kan. and to sit on the famUyporch and watch the world roll

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"The wheat has been harvested," said Fitzwater, tilled with
glowing m.errlories of his boyhood days on the farm. He thought It was
a good time to go home when the neighbors and friends would be
feeling good about the crop and the work done.
So he decided to bag it, the high life of the .White House for a few
days, and to take a break. If only for the sake of renewaL.
He does not regret deciding early on not to be a farmer when he
turned over his father'·s combine.
The balding45-year-old weight fighting Fitzwater has a' high profile
job, but he-says he is always happy when he does not see his name In
the newspaper.

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. He realized that his passion for anonymity might have gone too far
when he was In f!olland, the last stop on the presidential trip, a man
came up to him and said: "Haven't I seen you somewhere before?"
"I'm the president's pr~ss secretary," replied Fitzwater.
"Oh, Larry Speakes," the man exclaimed with a smile.

Schools should reinforce values George Plagenz
,,

I was there to give the
Invocation at the Business Show
dinner. My prayer went !Ike this:
Although he has lost one of his deputies in the press office, B.J.
"We ask thy blessing, 0 God,
Cooper, to the Republican National Committee, Fitzwater does not
on all those of us who carry on the
plan to fiU the job. He is simply moving staffers up the line In new
business of the workaday world.
slots. He wjll have three deputies, Instead of four.
May honesty and Integrity be our
Alixe Glen, one of the deputies, a longtime Bush aide, will move Into
watchword.- and may a sincere
Cooper's office closer to the office oft he press secretary, and will take
desire to Improve the quality of
on some of the briefing chores.
human life motivate us In our
'·
eQdeavors.
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• No one has used the White House more than President Bush and his
''Above all, may everything we
'family. And few predecessors have established the mansion as a · do be well done. !ttfor thine eye to
home as m4ch as the Bush menage.
·
see. May this be the reward we
The tennis court has never been more used. except by White House
seek- that we have pleased thee
with our work:"
presidential s.taffers perhaps in other regimes. The pool gets a dally
workout from Barbara Bush.
We were a mixture that night of
The upstairs family quarters are alive with children and puppies .
Protestants (of all stripes), Cabnly dipping into the history books perhaps to the days of J'eddy
tholics and Jews - maybe even
Roosevelt is the family scene comparable.
atheists and agnostics. None of
The photographs of the grandchildren are prominently displayed
the 250 guests walked out during ·
on the walls of Air Force One and on the table behind the president's
or after my prayer.
desk in the -Oval Office.
I mention this incident because
we are told ihat In any gathering
President Bush manages his own news in contrast. to the Reagan
of people of different beliefs,
administration where the top aides manipulated and controlled the
some are going to be offended by
Image making.
prayer. (Could anybody be ofBush laid down the law early in his administration that reporters
fended by prayer. (Could anybwere to be seen and not heard at so-called photo opportl!nlties In his
office, where incidentally. photographers are always welcome and
reporters rarely are.
. Butthere are times when the president wants to make a statement
without holding a full fledged news conference. When he does he
retains the right to suspend his rules for a few minutes to get
. ORANGE COVE,Callf. (NEA)
something off his chest
The word that the president will allow questlbns during the picture
- AI first, the vast sub-surface
taking is passed to repor.ters just before they march into the Cabinet
aquifers provided more than
enough water to Irrigate the
Room or Oval Office.
crops grown in California's San
But it is always on the president's terms to speak or not to speak.
Fair enough. At the same time, reporters do not obey his edict. They
Joaquin Valley; That was In the
still ask questions. Oftentimes get an annoyed look from Bush, who
early decades of agriculture here
then turns his back on them and proceeds to elaborately explain to his
- the 1930s, '40s and '50s.
visitor how he has these new Tules ...
But as the corporate farms
grew and more wells were sunk,
There are occasions when only the still photographers are called
and they go into the Oval Office to make a picture.
the volume of water drawn to the
As in every administration In r~nt times, the picture is the thing,
surface far exceeded the amount
and they do often wind up In the newspapers.
restored underground through
natural recharge mechanisms.
Barbara Bush, who promotes education as one of her major
When the aquifers were de· projects in the White House, dropped out of Smith College her first .pleted, agribusiness turned to the
year to get married. But Anna Perez , her press secretary, sl\)d that
San Joaquin River, diverting for
the first lady has "no regrets" about anything in her life.
Its own ·needs 98 percent of Its
Perez said that Mrs. Bush's life "has been so rich with five children
water. Tactay, the once-proud
who adore her and a husband, who Is the man of her dreams."
river that ·gave the valley Its
•'She doesn't regret one thing she didn't do. " said Perez.
name Is a garbage dump.
At the same time, Mrs. Bush admires Mrs. Dan Quayle, wile of the
Its almost dry bed now serves
Vice Preslden t, who is a lawyer, has worked and wants to work a gal n. ·as a receptacle for used tires,
And the first lady does ap·plaud tile changes that have brought on
abandoned mattresses, empty
more opportunities for women, Perez' said .
motor all containers, unwanted
As for college, Mrs. Bush, who had every chance to continue her
beer bottles and assorted other
education, "chose not to," said Perez . "She doesn't believe In ·refuse.
regrets. You live your life. Her life has been immensely fulL"
"Agriculture has Its right to
exist and·needs Its witter to do so.
The first lady has settled In for the summer season at the ·Bush
.. . Most of our economy 'spins
Kennebunkport. Me. estate on the Atlantic Ocean and there will be a
around It," notes Jllll( Wasser·
steady trek of family, coming and going all the time.
man, a columnist for the Fresno
Mrs. Bush tries to have one big fainUy reuillon.tn the summer )ime,
Bee. "But It galls me to no end
and she will be staying at Kennebunkport until Sept. 5. The president
that the greedy buggers· just flat
arrives for a three-week sojourn on Aug. 18, returning to the. White
out grabbed the whole river, shut ·
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House after Labor Day .
It off entirely and sent It all to the
fields."
With the groundwater exhausted and the region's largest
river drained, the rapacious
farmers successflllly demanded
'
that rivers elsewhere In Callfor·
By,Unl&amp;eti Prea r.ternatlonal
· Today 'is Sunday, Jtily 3(1; tbe 211111 day of 1989 with 154 to fonow. , ~Ia· be diverted .to lrrtgate ..t!lelr
The moon Is waning, movt!lll toward Its new phase.
crops. Tbday, a network of
The morning star Is Jupiter.
concrete-lined aqueducts, conThe even~t~g stars are Mercury: Venus, Mars and Saturn.
structed as part of expensive
Those born on this date .are under the sign of Leo. They Include federal and state water projects,
carries rurface water Into the
"English novelist EmUy Bront. In 1818, auto pioneer Henry Ford In
region ·from rivers hundreds of
1863. baseball player.manacer Caley Stengel In 1890, English
·sculptor Henry Moore In 1898, actor Edd "Kookle" Byrnes In 1938 mlles a.)llay:
Altho)lgh residents of the Los
(age 51), film director Peter Bogtlanovlch In 1939 (age 50,, singer
Angeles area, .for example, often
Paul Anka In 1941 (age 48) and bodybuilder-actor Arnold
Schwarzenegger In 1947 (age 42).
find themselves accused of wail!·
lng water to fill their sw.lmmlilg
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On this date In history:
pools, water tllelr lawns -and
wash their cars, five of every six
In 1937, the tmerlcan Federation of Ra~jo Artists was organized.

ody be attended by something view, ·was quite the reverse. bring more of the qualities ·that
have a beneficial Influence on a
that holds up the ideal of the just Nobody seemed to care what I
worl\er and sound workman- was praying. I .always . had the child's life Into school and
society. It means that the values
ship?) For this reason, among feeling nobody was listening.
But If I don't share the fears of expressed In the home must find
others, there are thOse who find
prayer In the public schools those who feel that religious residence outside the home as
Inappropriate and an abridg- freedom Is a·t stake In the school welL
Looking at it from another
ment of constitutional rights.
prayer Issue .. neither do I believe
Others express different fears with those on the other side who perspective, It may be one of the
jobs of, the schOols to "bolster"
about prayer In the classroom.
think the way to raise a crimeThey see the bogeyman of free, drug-free generation is to tl!e moral f()undatlons laid down
govemmentl!l Interference and,, . open each school day with a In the home.
Those of us who are· parents
"tyranny" - "stateW.rltten pray- · prayer? One i'easdri Is that a good
have
often heard our children
ers" Insinuating their Ideas ·into home1llfe tbday Is . not enough.
our children's Impressionable Those who say tha\ religion come home from school and say,
minds. ·
should be tallghtln the home and . "My teacher said .. , ." ,
What the teacher had said was ;
It 1s mostly the American Civil .at church· but should be kept out
Liberties Union that considers of the sct10ols are forgetting this something we had been telling
our children since grade one. But
fact ,
this a real danger.
After children reach a certain It had no Impact untU ' It was
,When I arrived In Massachu·
setts. I (lnmyroleasclergyman)
age, some psychologists now say, reinforced by thelr.teacher.
Since a youngster may be
would frequently give the prayer what they have learned at homt&gt;
Inclined
to reg~.rd as unlmpor·
that opened the dally sessions of will be about 30 percent deterthe state legislature on Beacon minative of their behavior. The tant whatever is omitted from
HilL No one in that governmental remaining 70 percent they see school, the schools can actually
body ever tried to tell me what to around them in the outside world undermine the influence of the
say.
(good and bad) will affect their home by leaving out any mention
of religion.
ble,
from
my
point
of
lives
to a much greater degree.
The trou
This means we must somehow

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How·.agribusiness

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lstratlon to look over the
shoulders of the states and make shqulders, has looked the other
sure everything went smoothly.
,
way.
OSHA would directly monitor
The Labor Department Is just
worker safety In states that
now figuring that out. A depart·
•• didn't have their own programs ' · ment
audlr.a dmits some flaw~ II)
and wo11id act as a backup for the the systein. In New Mexico,
others.
complaints about serious work.· ·
-About half the states took place hazards were Inspected
Congress up on the offer· and · · quickly by the state only 10
embarked on' thelr own worker percent of the time, and OSHA
safety campaigns. But OSHA. never caught on. In New York,
Instead of looking over their . only 40 percent of all serious
complaints got prompt attention.
In Michigan, nine significant
workplace dangers were allowed
to exL~t for a least three years
and state Inspectors sometimes
downplayed the seriousness of
safety problems.
Regional OSHA offlc!als in
' charge of ov~rseelng the New
. York ' workplace safety plan.
rarely Investigated when, the., •
numbers looked suspicious ..The
same was true In Tennessee.
,
Mary.larid was an exception.
When the numbers tipped OSHA
to a problem, Inspectors got out
of the office and learned that
Maryland was not Inspecting
high-hazard manufacturing In·
dustrles enough . Marland
stepped up· the Inspections.
But In . 129' cases nationwide
when OSHA should have been
alarmed by ·the statls\lcs, only 30
were properly Inspected.
OSHA can't complain that it Is
strapped for money .or people.
The agency spendS about $4
million a year and pays .more
than 300· people to watch i the
states. properly contrite after
the stlnglqg audit, OSHA has
promised to ~o better.

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the rivers dry

gallons of water consumed In and other toxic heavy metals as
California are used for agricultu- well as pesticides, herbicides and ·
ral purposes , primarily for other agricultural chemicals.
Much of the contaminated
Irrigation.
When federal money was first water was long drained Into the
appropriated for water projects marshy Kesterson Wildlife Re·
In 1937, the growers In Orange ' luge at the northern end of the
Cove were among the earliest to valley - but the birds born there
organize themselves ln.to a recla· since the early 1980s often have
matlon district and qualify for stunted wings, twisted beaks and
government-funded water.
Public Notice
As Its name !mplil!$, Orange
Cove's leading orange trees,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Tuppero Plains-Cheti·
although other crops are grown
tar Water Dllltrict il holding
In the orchards, vineyards and
a public meeting for the pur·
fields of the community almost 30
pote of review of line lo'ca·
miles southeast of Fresno. ·
tion1. tank sites and other
pertinent information con·
In 1949, the Orange Cove
cernlng Ph..e IV Project of
Irrigation District became the
the Di1trict.
•
first recipient of water from the
Thlo rnHtlng will be hl\ld
Interior Department's Bureau of
in accordance with requireReclamation under terms of a
"*''"
of FmHA and w~l be
held at the office of the Oio40-year-long contract.
trict. 39681 hr 30 Road •.
Now that agreement Is the first
ReedlvHie, Ohio at 9 :00 A. .
of more than 300 federal water
M. on Tueoday, Auguot 1 .
Any and/or all lnter&amp;lted
service contracts to come up for
peraona
ere herebY nOttfied .
renewal during the next 12 years.
to attend. For fUrther details
The struggle'over Its extension Is
on Information to· ba reljkely to set a precedent applicaviewed, pi-• contact the
office prior to the meeting,
ble to farmers recelv lng
It 986-33115.
·hundreds of billions of gallons of
(7!
30 1tc
water annually not only lp
Public: Notice
California but throughout, the
PUII:JC NOTICE
West.
The Melu- County BHrd
More than a dozen environ·
of Mentel R-.latlon/Dev·
mental organizations and a small
elopmental
Dlabllhlao It .
plaalng for ..lo.a 111811. 119
but Influential blpartis11n group
peeoenger Ford ochool buo,
of senators and representatives
luo II equipped with 1
lpslst that tbe Orange Cove
Thom• bo..,_, Ford gooolln'l
contract should not' be renewed
Mtllne.
,
without a formal· determination
Aealod llld1 will be
oelved at the Melgt County
of Its environmental Impact.
IIHnl of Mental Rolli. .
The Environmental ProtectiOn
lloft/Develepmental DloeAgency shares that position,
llllltlao,
13, 0 ciorlwtOtl
placing It In opposition to the
ltrwwt, P.O . loa 307, ha8·
Ohio 417711 untl 4:00
Interior Department. That unus·
p.m. Auguot 28, 1989.
ual conflict could require a
IIIIo will be opened at
decision on the Issue from
4:11 p.m. on Auguot 21th.
1tn.lwlwofthebuowllbe
President Bush.
a •rded to the hlghwot bid· One example of the environmental problems assoCiated with
Tile 11M county Boord
the water projects: The excess
dMion/ Dev·
labllltllo,...
water that flows through the
valley's soil emerges lact!d with
....... to reject ""'
. . . . . .. . . .j
arsenic, selenium, cadmium,
. 30, 3ri'lef 1, a, 111. zz.
lead, stronttdm, sllver, mercury

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Robert Walters
single eyes.
Because selenium Is suspected
of causing those and other
deformities, the drainage has
been. closed and the polluted .
water Is being shunted south
again. "The valley," notes one
observer, "Is stewing In ItS· own
salts."
Public Notic'e
PUBLIC NOTICE
The Villogo of Rio Orondo
, will accept 1ealed bids on e

1 983 Plymouth Cruller. Interested people m8y lnapect
the Vehicle Monday-Friday

9:00a .m. untl3:00 p.m. at
tho Rio Grande Municipal '
Building. Minimum bid wit

be 1499.00. Bido con be
mailed to: Village of Rio

Public Ill otice
PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Galllpolit City Plan·
nlng Commllolon wHI hold'o
public' hoorintt on Tu•doy,
Augult 16. 11189. ot7:30 p.
m. In the Munlelp~l BuRdlng,
618 Second Avenue. Gtllipollo, Ohio.
.
,
Tho m-ing wll be held
'on behalf of Mr. Nell 8andoro.l21 FlrotAvwnuo, Gwl·
~polio, Ohio who clloir• to
conetruct an Gpen . breel:·
ew1y B'x30' ond 1 goroge
34'x24'. ·
·The property lo locotwd
In 1 Hlltorlc Reolclwntlol Dlo·
trlct wnd roqulr• the reviewal ond -ovoJ by the Gill·
llpollo City Pfannlna Commloolon.
.July 30

More Legals on
Pa

Sunday limes-Sentinei-Page-A.:':J

Area news b r i e f s - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ,

.Meigs EMS answers seven calls

Gallipolis woman cit_ed in wreck

US 35 resurfacing project to begin

POMEROY - Seven calls for assistance were answered on
Friday by units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services. .
'
At 12:27 a.m., Syracuse transported Melanie Rogers from an
auto accident on State .Route 124 to Veterans Memorial
HospitaL Racine was called to the same accident at 12:27 a.m.
and transported Raymond Klein Jr. from the scene to Veterans.
Memorial HospitaL
Pomeroy was called at 4:39 p.m. to 139 Butternut Ave. for
June Lunsford who was taken to Holzer .Medical Center.
Syracuse was called at 4:17 p.m. to Van Me.t er Hill Road
where Judy O'Neil was treated at the scene of an auto accident.
Racine responsed at 4:17p.m. to the accident on Van Meter Hill
Road where they treated Norm11n Shettler.
At 7:39 p.m., Racine was called to State Route 124 for Lisa
·
Bailey who was taken to Holzer Medical Center.
Pomeroy at 10: 43 p.m. went to 1675 Lincoln Heights for Terri
Houser to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

GALLIPOLIS- Gallipolis Pollee cited Tere~a A. Beaver, 19.
1274 Eastern Ave., Galllpolis, for failure to yield the right of w,ay
after an accdlent at noon Friday at McDonald's, 1715 Eastern
Ave. No one was Injured.
.
Pollee said a 1978 Buick Estate stationWagon driven by
Beaver pulled onto Easter·n Avenue and collided with a
northbound 1978 Buick Estate stalionwagon driven north on
Eastern Avenue by Kimberly A. Ireland, 18, Rt. 1, Gallipolis.
Damage was moderate to both vehicles.
Pollee arrested Debra Lynn Rhoadlls, 18, Middleport, Friday
on a charge of pettY theft at Ames store In the .Silver Bridge
Plaza. Rhoades Is accused of taking two cartons and five
packages of cigarettes, total value of$27 .61. Rhoades will have a
hearing Monday In GalliPoliS MUnicipal Court.
Billy J. Williams 37, 2103 Chatham Ave., Gallipolis, was cited
for speeding.

JACKSON - Work Is scneduled t!l begin the first week of
August on the $2,569,674 resurfacing of US 35, west of Jackson,
according to Olstrlct 9, Ohio Department of Transportation,
The major portion of the project Involves resurfacing the
entire two-lane section of US 35 between the Jackson bypass and
the four lane section of US 235 at Rlchmondale .
The project Includes a new parking lot for the rest area under ,
construction two miles south of the Ross County line, as well as, ,
resurfacing of two miles of old US 35 from the Jackson
Corporation limit to the US 35 bypass.
The work on US 35 w!U require traffic signals at two bridges.
Traffic will be maintained until the project Is completed.
Shelly &amp; Sands, Zanesville. Ohio, Is the contractor for the
project wh l~h Is scheduled for c'ompletion for June 30, 1990.

Vinton County plans TimberFest
McARTHUR- The first Vinton County Timber Fest has been
scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 5 at 10:30 a.m. at the VInton
County Fairgrounds, one-fourth of a mile north of McArthJ1r.on

.

m~•

The TlmberFest will present the tl~ber Industry's vierwpolnt
on timber harvesting and environmental lsspes. In addition.
competition, displays and free rides for children will be
Included.
.
·
·
For more Information, contact Peter C. Grlessm.ann, 4-H
· Forestry Extension, at 596-5212.

EMS declares surplus equipment
POMEROY - The trustees of the Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services have declared two vehicles and three radios
as surplus equipment. The Meigs County Commissioners were
apprised of the equipment In Wednesday's regular meeting:
The surplus equipment Includes a 1919 four-door Chevrolet
van, at a sales value of $500; two, high-band radlps, valued at
$400 each; a low-band radio, $300 In value; and an 1983 Ford
vehicle, valued at $800.
'
'
. Other county agencies have expressed Interest In the surplus
Items.
The commissioners approved the purchase of the 1979 van for
the county's litter coptrol program; The van Is to be purchased
with contingency funds which will be reimbursed at a later date·
by the litter program. The county's juvenile office Is Interested
In the radios and the county highway.department has expressed
Interest In the 1983 Ford.
Payments for the equipment will go back Into the EMS
budget.

Open door' session cancelled

Fire department .responds to call

GALLIPOLIS- The open door session by a representative of
the Office of lOth District &lt;;ongressman Clarence Miller of
Lancaster has been cancelled for the month of August.
Miller sa id the next regular visit will be Tuesday, Sept. 5, .
from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the Gallia County Courthouse at :
Gallipolis.

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallipolis Volunteer Fire Department
answered an alarm at 3:13p.m. Thursday at Fifth Avenue In
Kanauga, however It was only controlled burning, according to
Fire Chief Ray Bush.
Fifteen men and one truck responded to the alarm, the 115th of
the year .for the Galllpo.lls flrement.

Judge Crow steps down from case
.
. POMEROY - Meigs Common Pleas Judge Fred Crow Ill has
stepped down as presiding authority In the cases of Robert A.
Lemley , et al, versus Michael J. Calabria, administrator of the
estate of Nicholas Karazas;·deceased, et al; Otis McClintock. et
a!, versus the Racine Ball Association, Ell al; Pauline Gay
LaBonte versus Clell LaBonte Sr.; James B. White versus
Barbara K. White; and James E. Lucas versus Wallace Reuter.
due to conflicts of ,Interest 'resulting from his former family law
practice of "his former term of office as Meigs County ,.
Proseuctlng 'Attorney.
-·
Also, an appeal of a decision regarding the InstallatiOn of a
sprinkler system has been filed In Meigs C9m.mon Pleas Court
by Meigs Manufactured Hquslng, Inc., Pomeroy, against the
Board of Building· Appeals. Columbus.
'

.

Marriage license issued to couple
POMEROY - A marriage license has been issued in Meigs
County Probate Court to Lonny Dale Ross. 20, Portland, and
Gloria Jean McGhee, 30, Portland.

Dissolutions filed in Meigs court
POMEROY - · Dissolutions of marriage have been filed In
. Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Dorothy Debra El)ls,
Middleport, and Gary L. Ellis, St. ClalrsvtUe; .Rhonda Stout,
Albany, and Jjm.my Stout, Alliany; and ,by Cathy Lane,
· Middleport, and Steve Lane, Mlddleporl.'
·'
. , ,.
A divorce action has been tiled by Ronda Green, Albany ..
against Paul E. Green Jr., Nitro, W.Va:; and by Patricia Miller,
In care of Wayne Cleland; Rutland, against Jack Miller,
Rutland.
·
A restraining order has been Issued against the defendant In
' .
the Miller action.
·
A divorce has been granted to Edmund Gilliam from Jeanna
K. Gilliam.
·
· ·
Ronald T . Holter and Linda L. Holter have been granted a
· dissolution.
'

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. . -Area .deaths----------

Potato chip vendorfin:ed, sentenced
GALLIPOLIS ~ Allen Wayne Forth, 37, of Huntington.
W.Va. , was fined $350 and costs Thursday in Gallipolis
Mulnlclpal Court on a conviction of drug abuse.
·
Forth received a suspended 90-day jaB sentence and was
placed on six months probation. He also was ordered to perform
10 days of community service.
A potato chip vendor, Forth was arrested June 9, 1989, after .
selling 75 white pills to an undercover drug agent. Officials said
they confiscated 500 to 600 other pills In Forth's possession.
Forth was accused of possession of Lorazepam, a a Schedule
IV Controlled Substance, In violation of Section 29.25.11 of the
· Ohio Revised Code. He pleaded not guilty and the case had been
, cqntinued.

Rutland...

(From RUTLAND, page AI)
more of Rutland; · and several
·
the
Rev. Gene Grate officiating.
aunts. uncles and. cousins.
BIDwELL - Brandy Nicole
Burial
will be In Miles Cemetery,
He was ·preceded In 'death by
Allen, 5, Rt. 2, Bidwell, died his paternal grandfather, Lester
Rutland.
,
Ttlursday at Children's Hospital Roush, and his maternal grand·
Born Aug. 28, 1917, In Meigs
In Columbus.
County. he was the son of the late
father, Bud Nance.
Born July 10, 1984, she ·Is
Earl and Julia Cobb Grate of
Graveside services w!U be
survived by her mother Phyllis Sunday, 2 p.m., at the Letart
Ewlngton. He is survived by his
Allen and step-father, Gary · Falls Cemetery, with the Rev. . wife, Mildred !Vance) Grate.
Johnson.
A member of the Rutland
Glenn McMillan officiating,
Also surviving are one brother, Danid Shane
Nazarene
Church, Grate was an
·
Brandon Allen; one sister.
of the Gideon
active
member
RACINE - Daniel Shane, 79,
Shawna Allen; and one step·
Society,
and
had
been
a member
Main !';tree!, ftacln.,-, died at his
sister, Tina Johnson.
of
the
Rutland
VIllage
Council.
home Saturday aftern.oon.
Services will be Sunday ,1 p:m.
He was also a member .of the
He was a 'r etired riverboat
at the Kuhner·Lewls Funeral
Fire Deparlment at one
Rutland
deckhand and was affiliated with
Home In Oak Hill with the Rev.
time.
Parsons officiating, Burial .will the Mount Moriah Church of God .
In addition to his wife, Grate Is
lie also was a lifetime member of
be In Gallla Cemetery.
survived by three sons, Herbert
the Racine Fire Department.
Grate of Tuppers Plains, David
Nicholas D. Roush
Born In Ripley, W.Va. he was
Grate of Long Bottom, and the
the
son
of
the
late
Frank
E
.
and
RACINE - Nicholas David
Rev.
Gene Grate of St. Charles,
Ana
Rollins
Shane.
'
Roush was born and died on
Mo.
Wednesday at Ohio State Unlver·
He Is survived by one daugh·
Also surviving are seven broth·
slty Hospitals In Columbus. He ter, Ann Miller of Middleport;
ers
and sisters, Robert and Paul
was the son of John and Regina
two sons, DannyShaneo!Middle·
Nance Roush, Hill Road, Racine. port and Steve Shane of Burle· . Grate of Marlon, Ohio, Herman
In addition to his parents, the son, Texas; and one sister, Mrs. and George Grate of Rutland,
Infant Is survived by a sister, William (Hazel) Fox of Letart Wendell Grate of Pomeroy, Ova
Ashley Marie Roush; paternal Falls, Ohio.
. · Lyons of Ellsworth, Mich., and
grandmother, Carrie Roush;
Other · survivors Include 11 Eva Hersman of C!tstalla, Ohio.
maternal grandmother, Edle grandchildren. several great· There are also six grandchildren,
Nance of Rutland; maternal " grandchildren and several nle· a step-grandson, a great grand·
daughter, and several nieces and
ces and nephews.
great-grandmother, Leola Gil·
Services will be at 1 p.m. nephews.
Friends may call at McCoyTuesday at the Ewing Funeral
Home. Burial will be In Letart Moore Funeral Home in Vinton,
on Monday tram 2 to 4 p.m. and 7
Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral to 9 p.m. The body will be taken to
home on Monday from 2 to 4 p.m. the church two hours prior to the
Publlslled each Sunlay, 1125 ThlrciAve..
service on Tuesday.
Galllpolll, Ohio, by tlleOIIIoValleyPuband 7 to 9 p.m.
.'
.

Brandy N. ADen

llahlng Compony/Muhlmedla, Inc. secotld cla11 poota11e Dlld at Gallipolis.
Ohh.. 45631. Entered u .eeond clus
ma1llnK rnatter at Pomeroy, Ohio, Post

Grande.

ATTN .: CRUISER BIDS
P.O. lox 343
." l!io Grande, Ohio 46674
Or con be dropped off at the
municipal building at the
hours lltlltad above. Bids will
bo opened and read on Au·
gull 1, 19B9 ot 7:00p.m .
For information call 11~246·6822.
Tho VHiaga of Rio Grande
hu the right to accept or re·ject any and all bids .
JULY 26, 28. 30

r - - - -.

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

Oil lee.

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Inland Dally Preu Association and the

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Oeneral and Qynecological Surgery
Yearly Female exams
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Tile Sunday ;1meo-Seotlnel wUI aot be

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mode to carrlero.

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Spires honored for
35 years senice ·
CHESHIRE - Donald B.
Spites, Yard Supervisor at the
Ohio Valley Electric Corpora·
lion's Kyger Creek Plant, re·
ceived his anniversary award for
35 years' sevlce to the company ,
as announced today by Raymond
H. Blowers, Jr., Plant Manager.
Spires joined OVEC on July 22,
1954, as a Laborer In the Yard
Department, where he served In
vario'us positions, and In 1981 he
was promoted to Yard Supervi·
sor. He lives at 626 Burnett Road,
Gallipolis.

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Sou lit Central Ohio
Variable cloudiness, with scat·
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Extended Forecast
Monday through Wednesday
A chance of showers through ·
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Page

A·4-Sunday Tames-Sentinel

Pomeroy

July 30.' 1989

GALLIPOLIS - The Gallla lng to an outdoor slgn at Skyline
.
GALLIPOLIS -Three divorce
County Sheriff's Department Lanes Bowling Alley, SR 7 at
petitions were flied Friday In
was called Friday to investigate Kanauga.
GalUa
a breaking and enlerlng and
Officers said there was ex tenCo rt County Com,mon Pleas
major theft at the Food Shop on slve damage to the sign and 82
u ·
Cbarging gross neglect of duty
SR 7 at Crown City. ·
.
letters · valued at $100 were
and extreme cruelly, Marilyn
• Nancy Angell, who opened the missing. The sign cost $625.
Halpeny • 1110 Second Ave., Gallishop Friday morning i:or busi- There's no dollar estimate on
poUs, Is seeking a divorce from
ness, discovered and reported damage to the sign.
George E. Halpeny, Rt . 2, Point
lhe BB!:E · and theft of money.
Arrests by the sheriff's departPleasant, W.Va. Married Janu ~lgarettes and lottery tickets
ment Friday night and Saturday
ary
.1, 1987, the couple has no
~long with a blue trash can.
morning included:
chlldren.
The plaintiff Is seeking
• Officers said the bburglars
Mitchell D. Coleman, 32, Rt. 2,
restoration to her malden name
took $100 in cash and $36 in Bidwell, felonious assault·, held
of MarUyn Reapp and her per~hange; 75 cartons .at $11.53 a
In jail for a hearing In Gallipolis
sonal possessions.
oar ton for a lola! of $864.25; and Municipal Court.
Donald Leroy Neal, Rt. 2,
~lx books of lottery tickets,
Daniel R. Darst, 25, Rt. 1,
Crown City flied a petition for a
valued at $400 for each book a GaiUpolls, and Ronald Lee
divorce from Yolanda Jean Neal,
!oial of $2,400. ·
'
White, 30, 1148 Second Ave.,
Middleport, on grounds of gross
: The. total dqllar value on the Galllpolls, both for disorderly
neglect of duty and extreme
lheft was $3,364.75. The sheriff's con~uct after warning, Issue~
cruelty. Married August 10 , 1984 ,
department Is investigating.
summons to appear in municipal
the couple has three children
: Sharon Stanley of Point Plea- court. David R. Jividen, 27, Rt. l,
Theplalntlffwantsadlvorceand
sant, W.Va. , reported to the · Galllpolls was arrested on a
an equitable division or the
Sheriff's department at 3:30a.m . bench warrant for disorderly
couple's debts and 'personal
Saturday that somone one took conduct after warning.
property.
tier wallet while she was at the
Elwood C. Grose, 45, CleveBllly Donald Smith, Rt. 3,
Green Gables, SR 7, Kanauga.
land, Ohio, was arrested on a
Bidwell,
charged gross neglect of
1'he wallet contained $40 and
charge of driving under the
duty
and
extreme cruelty In his
several Important credit cards.
Influence, and was held In the
petition
for
a divorce from
county j all for a hearing in
: The wallet was later found by
Patricia
Ann
Smith,
J esup, Ga.
municipal court.
·
Gaiila Cou nty Deputy Sheriff
January
18,
1969, the
Married
Lawrence E. Bond, 35, Rt. 1,
Robert Nance in the grass
couple
has
two
children.
The
o'utslde the Green Gables, how- · Cheshire, was arrested on
plaintiff
Is
seeking
an
equitable
$er, It contained only $18 and all charges of disorderly cpnduct
division of debts a.nd personal
and resisting arrest. He was
of the credit cards were missing.
property and permanent custody
: The sheriff's department re- released on a summons to appear . of the children.
in municipal court.
Ci'!lved a rej)ort Friday of crimiRal mischief or criminal damag-

TWO Meigs residents injured in
• POMEROY - An accident
early Friday morning on SR 124
in Syracuse was investigated by
the Meigs County Sheriff's
Department.
' Sheriff James M. Souls by
(eports that Melody Rogers of
Syracuse, was· eastbound on SR
124 when she lost control of her
~lckup truck and went. off the

Hospital news
Holzer Medical Center
Discharges .July 26 ;.,. Mary
Arnold, Elizabeth Bailey, Jennifer Conway, Rhonda Curtis,
Robert Davis, Chad Dudding,
Donovan Fulks, Mrs. Michael
. Griffith and daughter, Mrs. Alan
Harris and daughter, Lora nine
Jones, Mrs. Robert Landers and
son, Roy Payne, Charles · Rad·
cliff: D!!borah Roush , Dixie
Roush, Roy See, Linda Young.
· Births .July 26- Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Boggess, son, Gallipolis.
Mr. and Mrs . Charles Chapman,
son, Long Bottom. Mr. and Mrs.
Christopher Gee, daughter, Oak
Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Barry Jividen,
daughter, West Columbia. Mr.
and Mrs. James Kessler, daughter. Hamden, Ohio. Mr. and Mrs.
Ellis ·sparks, dau ghter,
I:.angsvllle.
• Discharges .July 27- Matthew
Baird, Marteena Baum, Jery
~las, Patricia Blankenship, Julie
Ann Calvert, Mrs. Richard
Chapel and daughter, Jesse
Quncan, Jared Humphreys, Wyoma Icenhower, Allee Loom Is,
Franklln Richardson, Dorris
Rudy, Rita Scarberry, Edith
Speakman, Roger Spurlock,
Shelby Trowbridge, Ruth Webster, Reba Wilcoxon.
• Births .July :7- Mr. and·Mrs.
!lana Bentz, a daughter, Middleport. Mr. and Mrs. Darrell
&lt;i:ampbell, a daughter, Gallipolis. Mr. and Mrs. Danny Jacks, a
son, Long Bottom. Mr. and Mrs.
Tim Jenkins, a son, Pomeroy.
~r . and Mrs. Scott Long, a
daughter, Wellaton.
·
: Veter~• Memorial Hoapltal
: FRIDAY ADIP? ...,. Teddl Smlllr, RaCine; Raymond
~Ieln, Syracuse: Joe M: Bolin,
Rutland.
: FRIDAY DISCHARGES .j'ohn McKenzie, Constance
Meschar.

.

road on the right.
She traveled along the berm in
front of one residence, got the
truck back on the road and then
skidded off the roadway on ihe
right, striking and damaging a
tree In the yard of another
residence.
Syracuse and Racine EMS
units transported Rogers and
Raymond Klein, Jr. of Shade, a
passenger In the vehicle, to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rogers was cited for failure to
control and reckless O(ll~ratio:n .

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.ful secondary coach for many
#ars, Dr. McKay led teams
which garnered eight championships In 14 years of secondary
coaching.
·
Iri addition, he has always been
recognized as a student of tile
game having authored numerous
articles on basketball tundmenlals, strategy, psychology and
organization. One of his articles
was selected for a speclallssueof
Scholastic Coach Magazine and
he was one of only' 15 coaches
featured along with Chuck Daly,
Lou Carnescecca, Digger Phelps
and Jack Ramsey, some very
recognizable coac h es In
basketball.
A star in high school a nd at Rio
Grande College, Dr. McKay also
played extensively at the AAU
and semi-pro levels. He was
recruited for Rio Grande · by
· Newt Oliver who, along with the
fabulous Bevo Francis, put the
· tiny college on the .map In the
1950's.
Dr. McKay's ast)lte knowledge
of · the game was frequently
solicited by organizers for
summer basketball camps and
by young coaches just entering
the profession. That basketball
acumen was tested In the World
Games against Austria, Russia,
China, Japan, Canada, Taiwan
and South Korea.
Some of his roster ,players
IQcluded Kenny Sanders of
· George Mason U., Dave Jamer·son of Ohio U., TY Canlno of'
Central Connecticut, Phil Gamble of the University of Connect!·
cut: Norman Roscoe, leader In
assists .in the CBA last year, arid
Derick Polk, a seven-footer who
played II) Australia last year . .
Now other than coaching the
U.S.A. Team, Dr. McKay devotes his time to teaching at the
Youngstown ' State University
graduate . college and to his
family Ann, and their three
children , Victor, Cynda and
Sally,. their spouses, and his
granddaughter, 11J!elyssa.

percent tax. He added that this
Increase in West Virginia customers Is helping his store's
business along with other stores
In the Silver Bridge Plaza.
Bob Eastman, owner of Ohio
Valley Supermarkets, Inc ., In
GalUpolis, Pomeroy and West
Virginia, said his Ohio stores
have r.ot seen a noticeable
Increase In business. However,
his West VIrginia stores have
seen a loss ln•sales, he said.
Since the lax was enacted on
April\, Eastman's Twin .Rivers ·
Foodland store In West Virginia
has seen a "moderate" loss in
. business while the Point Pleasant, W.Va., store has had '·' a
very slight" decrease In sales, he
sajd. .
"The tax has had a negative
effect on border stores On West

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"It's something they should be
aware of and they should voluntarily remit It (tax) to the slate," ·
Stone said. "We don't aggressively pursue them because we
don't have the resources,"
The grocery store. Indus try
es dmates that the typical fourmember American family
spends $4,000 a year on groceries.
With \he six perce'rtt sales tax,
-· people In West VIrginia will
spend about $240 more per year
for food.
·
Despite the tax·increase, Stone
said his department has not
received a large number of

complaints from consumers.
"We don 't seem to be getting a
great deal of complaints," he
said. "Mos·t people realize that
slate government needed more..
money and have accepted the

tax. "
As for the people who are
crossing the slate line , Stone sal(!
they can voluntarily pay the lax
money In thl! state. He added that
many people are caught not
PaYing the tax when they are~
audited for other reasons.
WestVIrglnia offlclals can ask'
grocery stores in Ohio to collect
the tax rrom West Vlrglnlil
residents and to remit the-t;u tp
the slate, Stone said.
· ''We strongly encourage them
to do this, but we can't requlrl'!·.
them," he said .

Women Need
Insurance, too!
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• Health Insurance
Plan for a·secure future with
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Phone: 16141 241-8319

-A FRATERNAl LIFE INSURANCE SOCIETY
HOME OFFICE • ROCK ISLAND, ILLINOIS

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Walkers/Canes
Ostomy Supplies
Urinary • Incontinent Supplies
Surgical Dressings
Jobst Hosiery Products
.

·Wheelchairs '
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Patient Lifts
Lift Chairs
Bedside Commodes

•

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''

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•

Medicare &amp; Insurance Billing Done

'.

SALES AND RENTALS

565 Jackson Pike

446-2206

Dee Dillon, R.N.

Gallipolis, Ohio
Herman L. Dillon, P .T.

Owners

POIIIOY

.

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COUPON
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. ·Please send me FREE booklets showing memorials I

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LOGAN MONUMINT CO~
VINTON; OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO
•

GAWACOUNTV
DISPLAY YARD
JAMES A. BUSH,
MANAGER
PHONE 388·8803

MEISCOUNTY
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
LEE L. VAUGHAN, MGR.
PHONE 992·2&amp;88
I,

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Name

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Delivery &amp; Set-up Available

You now have the chance to
select exactly what you both want.
Our qualified counselors can show
you a large selection of Rock of ·
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It's no secret that we are constantly on the
move ro make Veterans Memorial Hospital,
.
your Hometown Facility, the best it can be.
Our nospital is consistently being improved and-r~ecora.ted to
makJ rhe appearance more arrractive for our patients and visitors.
, We are progressive in secvring additional state-of-the-art equip- ..
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Not only do we offer you excellent medical care and trearmenr '
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•...
-------~----------------------~-----~

Page-A·5

Simplicilg

HOSPITAL

The Store With "All Kind of Stuff"
For Pet•. Stabl•. Larg11 &amp; SrneH Anlm.a., Lawn• &amp; O•rden•
Off• Explr• December 1, 19SI
,

Stone said people. who are
crossing the state line to shop In
Ohio probably do not even know
about the West Virginia use tax

'

.VETIRANS·

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

'

'
for a good government." '
.
flffe will run.
.·
Bennett said that although both
"I don't see Riffe as a viable
Taft and Volnovlch are electable candidate,': Burleson s'ald. "I
-: equipped with the ability, think the Democratlc race will be
ex·posure, and money - Taft Is between Ferguson and
from this part of the state.
Celebreeze."
Gallla County Commission
At this stage of the game, no
President KaH Burleson, who has , Democrats have declared their
worked with Taft.for the past five candidacy .
years through the state county
Of the Republicans In the race,
commissioners association, said Taft Is the only candidate to
he thinks It Is Taft 's running name 'a running mate.
mate, Franklin County CommisOnly Taft, Volnovlch and U.S.
sioner Dorothy Teater, who wlll Congressman Mike DeWine (Rgive him the winning edge In _the Cedarville) have officially destate.
·
clared their candidacy.
"Dorothy Teater will give him ·
Republicans unofficially c-amstrength In central Ohio," Burle• paigning for the Republlcan spot
son said. "I think that team wlll on, next November's ballot Incarry a lot of weight with the clude Paul Pfeifer (R-Bucyrus),
.county commissioners In ·the who visited Gallia County last
state of Ohio."
spring, and Ohio Senator Ri· Gallla County Commissioner chard Finan of Cincinnati.
George Pope said he thinks that
According to a spokeswoman
no matter who's ahead, both from the Ohio Republlcan Party,
Volnovich and Taft will stress the the filing deadline Is Feb. 22 to
Dr. Joe McKay, well known -In
problems with the present the Secretary of State.
the Meigs County area and the
administration.
husband of the former Ann Rupe
"Both candidates are stressing
of Middleport, has really bad an
the problems · of the Celeste
experlepce this month,
adminlstratlon and the corrup'
'
tion among the state o!flclals,"
'
Another reason to love Fldo. A P&lt;.Jpe said. "Both see a need for
Dr. McKay has been the head
basketball coach of a team survey has shown that dogs are change In the statehouse and
participating In the Seoul, South the most affordable way to both are for better education. But
Korea, International World Tour- diScourage burglaries. Now, If they both will hit the Celeste
nament Basketball Games from you can just get hbn to stop administration hard, which I
scratching long enough to bark a think iS justifiable."
July 16 through July 24.
A very complete and success- little. Do keep smiling.
Pope said that although Taft
has the name recognition, Volno(From SOLID, page Al)
vlch has been elected mayor In
SUN STAR SERIES GARDEN TRACTORS
.
• •• _
___:__:..:.:..:..._:_..:=....::.:._~--AYIIIIIIIItln 14-11-116 20 H.P.
the heavily Democratic• Yodel (SunS tar 20} • HtXSepower (20 tip)
populated
nortlfeast
corner
of
the
• Key el.ct,tc sl.rt
~Ot'e transf~r stations within the costs of operating the district .
• A.utometlc tr1nsmltslon.
-the district, and If the closing of Without the fee structure, the ' slate', which carries about oneNo dutehlng, Infinite apeer:l choice.
• 42", 48 " or80" stlaf1..Crlven mower
landfills becomes necessary counties will · be billed for ex- third of the voles.
l avaU&amp;tllt ..Axte-mounted to fottow
And the opposition?
within the district, the money penses on a percentage basis,
ground contour.
• Tight 26" t.urnlr1Q rallua.
So
what
will the. Demcicrates
'
could be used for that too, based .on population. ,
?
.,
• Full-time pOwer llftrlng.
• Dual pedals to aid tlghllums; two
Koblentz said.
The district has already hired d 0 .
transmission speed range11 ; .ad dlf·
Evans
said
It
depends
on
Normal day to day landfill legal counsel and engineers to
ferentlallock for additional traction.
• High-back, thlck-cuah lonad 1111.
operating costs will come ·from develop the required operation whether Vern Riffe, Speaker of
• Fully enctoataenglne.
·base fees charged at the Individ- plan which must be submitted to the Ohio House of Representa• S~afl-dtlven allact'tments for dependllbl•
power tranafer.
ual landfills.
·
the state i;y next June. The tives, wlll pick up his gavel and
• Elactric PTO. EnQ_age and disenglge
run
for
governor.
a111chmenls with flip of a switch .
Athens Mayor Sara · l:len- dis trlct wtii begin receiving
• Hydraulic lilt, raise and lower
If Riffe dec'tdes not to run In the
drlcker Is seeking an amendment Invoices frOII) legal counsel In
allachments eflorttesslv.
to the soUd waste law which August, which the counties will gubernatorial race, Evans said
Snkt• Up ta '1 500. ""'"'"'h-..,. iftt•ett
the Democrats wlllleave It up to
allows one municipality veto have to meet, and by September,
uot~ Jan. I, 1990 to .....Iflod lru''"·
Ohio
Auditor Thomas Ferguson
power over the district, Koblentz expenses will begin for plan
REED'S COUIITRY STORE
and Attorney General Anthony
said. Apparently, Hendricker, developers.
4th &amp; MAIN
and other officials on the disIf Jackson City Council does. Ce lebreeze.
IEEDSVILLE, OHIO
"rll look closer to Celebreeze
trict's poUcy committee, feel the not rescind the motion blocking
PH. 371·6125
veto of the fee structure will .the fee schedule, it will take a. because Ferguson Is associated
place a hardship on all counties minimum of 90 days to place by name to the bar exam Issue,"
Evans said.
In the district, since the costs of an_other schedule In operation:
But If Riffe decides to run, he
'o perating the solid was t.e district After fees are eslabliShed, there
will
have a tough baitle on his
would become the responsibility must be a public hearing which
hands,
according to Evans.
of each county If the fee structure ' requires 30 days advance notice.
"He's got everything to lose
Is not approved.
Another 60 days would then be '
Each county In the district needed for the counties Involved and nothing to gain," Evans said.
Burleson said he also doubts
_signed a contract guaranteeing to approve prOposed fees .

.

Phone(

HEAnNG AND COOUNG

915·4222

NMO----~--~----~~--~-· ·

~~----·
~--------------CIIY-~---'""-ZIP _ _ __

II IIJC :R: ,..cOmplete
H.! .LP. COfttnlcl.
·

.

'

year protection jlian that covers labor and

Sunday Tames--Sentinel

,.,a,
it
(From TAFT, page AI)
Jl 'J ···~-------.-----~-

'

rnclude the Homeowner.; Extended Lahnr
chatilc.'i uri all rcpt~irs.

. . .

Make yo.u·r choice
y~~
together.

THE"...

~ 10 S.E.E.R. EFFICIENCY
The SIOHP is Heil's most powerful, mo"
~GREATER ENERGY SAVINGS . ~cient heat pump. Buy one now and we'll

.

VIrginia ) since they have lost
business to the , Ohio stores,"
Eastman said. He added tliat the .
reason his Gallipolis stores have
not seen an Increase In customers from West Virginia Is that
his stores are not located next to
·
tirldges.
''They are flve or six miles
from bridges," he said. '
Johnson's. Supermarkets, 735
Second Ave., has seen a slight
Increase In purchases by West
VIrginia residents, said manager
Brent Johnson.
''We're getting maybe twice as
many," Johnson said. '"We've ·
gone from maybe 20 to 40."
Meanwhile, Mike Marnhout,
owner of Sav-A-Lot Food Stores,
said his Point Pleasant store has
seen a slight decrease In sales
since the tax slarted.

SECRET

(lilrl&lt;1o

.

II

IT'S NO .l

- .. - -CO!WFORT ASSURED
DEALER

.

·Solid

Gi... ••

accident

On Saturday, deputies arrested ChrIstopher C. Cole, Brimstone Ridge, Coolville, on Meigs
County bench warrants for failure to comply. He Is being lodged
In the Meigs County jaiL
Dale Riffle of Letart Falls
reported Saturday that his residence had been entered and a
VCR taken.
Also on Saturday, Patrick
Snyder of Racine, reported that
he had tried to start his Weedealer when It caught fire and
burned.

By BOB HOEFLICH
POMEROY - . Darned II I
know .
I do , know,
however, that
you only have
this ·cQming
Thursday and
Friday to register all of your
entries for open
class events and competition of
the Meigs ,County Fair: That will
be from 10 a ,m. to 4 p.m:, both
·days, at the Fair !lQard Office on
the Rock Springs Fairgrounds.
Mary Radford, fair board secretary, will be handling the registrations for the first time since
succeedlng.Muriel .Bradford.
The rules are, of course, I( you
aren ' t registered for the open
class competitions then you're
out of luck for the lair which Is the
week following regis !ration. Of
coqrse, after the fair the summer
exits quickly with the slart of
school am! all that good stuff.
Membership tickets for the '89
fair are nciw on sale. The
membership ticket, you know.
en titles you to admission and free
parking for all five days of the
fair.
Tickets this year are $8andcan
be purchased 'from the Sugar
Run Mill, Swisher and Lohse
Pharmi!CY, Gloeckner's and
Dave~s '·Exxon In Pomeroy; the ·
Middleport Department Store
and D. J. 's Trading Post In
Middleport: Joe's Country
Market In Rutland : Baer' s
Market In Syracuse; Wald Cross
and Sons Grocery , In Racine:
Baum Hardware, Keebaugh'' s of
Chester and C. &amp; D. Pennzoilln
Chester; Nita Jean· . Ritchie,
Tuppers Plains; Phyllis Larkins,
Long Bottom, and Whaley's
Grocery In the Darwin area.

WHY YOU SHOULD
INVEST IN A
CENTRAL TRUST
6 MONTH CD.
NOW!

is available for a
If you've been
limited time only.
holl!ing ~?ack wait·
For more infor·
ing for a great rate,
this is it. But you've
matico contact
got to act fast.
. your nearest
This o!feffrom
Central Trust office
Central Trust.
.. cal
446-0902

~~~.q.

.

'

(From CROSSING, page Al)
•.
Cross :ng•••--~------------------

What do l know?

~~~~~·

Lila van Meter, Janet
Maintenance-custodian: Patrlcia Buchanan, James Cowdery,
Carrol Kimes, James Pellegrino,
and Charles Sargent.
.
Plans were discussed ror the
three Informational meetings to
be held In the district in August.
. Emphasis of the meetings will be
· for school officials to meet with
voters to air the question of how
to handle the- dislrict's finances
- whether the district should
seek an Income tax or an
additional property tax In the
November election
·
Voters of the financially
t~oubled district have three
· tlmes turned do~n . by large
margins a 12.4contmulngope~at ­
lng levy for general operating
expenses.
.
The first meeting 1s scheduled
lor Tuescjay at the R1vervlew
Elementary school, the seconl,l
ror Jlo1onday, Aug. 7. at the
Tuppers Plains, Elementary
School and the th1rd for Thursday , Aug.lOat Chester, al,lat 7:30
p.m. The Chester meeting had

. .

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

Beat of the bend

.
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
originally been scheduled for the 1989-9() fiscal year. PermanTimes-Sentinel
Stall
Aug.l4
but was changed so as not ent appropriations were adopted
natl, $23 and costs; Michael
,.POMEROY - Thirty-seven llcense; · Stanley Bar towlck,
EAST
MEIGS
Substitute
.
to
conflict
with the Meigs County for the following funds, bond
cases were processed Wednes- McArthur, $75 and costs, three . Brandeberry, Rio Grande, $21
non-certitled
personnel
was
emretirement, uniform supply , conFair.
'
d.liY In Meigs County Court.
and costs; ·Perry Varney, Columdays In jail to be suspended upon
ployed
and
plans
furthered
for
sortium
lottery, dental selfIn other business at the meet Fined w4;1re Scott Joseph proof of · valid Ucense, no valid
bus~ $23 and costs: Allee Kautz,
three
Informational
meetings
on
funding,
1989
DPPF, 1989 Excess
Ing, the reslgnatton of Cathy
McDonald, Columbus, court operator's Jlcense: $10 and costs,
Pomeroy, $21 and costs; 1;3arry
school fuMing at the Thursday Johnson as Chapter One reading Lottery, ~989 Title Ill, 1989 Title
costs, 30 days In jail suspended to expired tags; Carl Moodlspaugh, O'Brien, Shade, $22 and costs;
10 days, one year probation, a Middleport, $25 and costs, resll- Sheldon E . Lowry, Athens, $23 !light meeting of the Eastern teacher was accepted effectlve VI -B 1989 Chapter I, 1989 Chapter
·
restraining order Issued, contrl- tution ordered on each of two and ·costs; Jan Lust, Columbus, Local Board of Education held at July 11. Steve Wood was ac- II, and 1989 Drug Grant.
the
high
schooL
The
board
awarded
bids
to
cepted
as
a
tuition
student
rrom
byting: John N. Willison, Colum- charges of passing bad checks;
$22 and costs; W. G. Farmer,
Hired for use on an as -needed Meigs Local and Robert Mar- Brogan-Warner Agency for stu- bus, costs, 30 days In jan Kim Cardillo, Langsville, costs,
Pomeroy, $23 and costs: Michael
basis
only for the 1989-90 school shall was released· to attend dent accident Insurance,
suspended to 10 days, one year restraining order Issued, disor- Bennett, Parkersburg, W.Va.,
.
year
were
the following:
Broughton for mUk products,
Meigs Local.
probation. restraining order derly conduCt; David D. Stone, $21 and costs; Linda George,
Food
service:
Sandra
Bowen,
Warehouse Tire for tires; Sohlo
The
board
voted
to
locate
the
Issued, contributing; ,Kimberly
Pomeroy, $75 and costs, 30 days New Cumberland, W.Va., $22 and
Darlene
Buckley,
Joann
Calator
gas, oil and grease: and
newly acquired, state funded,
Turner, Coolville, $75 and eosts
In jail suspended to three days, costs; Gergory Hayman, Long
way,
Pa(ricla
Calaway
,
Debra
Storck
for baked goods,
additional developmentally han:
three days In jail to be suspended one year probation, no motorcy- Bottom, $~1 and . costs: , Terry
Drake,
Linda
Edwards,
Donna
A
speclalioeetlng
of the board
dlcapped unit ai the Chester
·upon proof of valid license, no cle en&lt;lorse_ment: 90 day license Craft, Lima, $24 and costs; ·
Jacks,
Theresa
Marlclnko,
Inzy
was·
set
for
Aug.
11
at
8 p.m In the .
school.
' v~lld operator's license; Chris- suspension, no In·s urance; Pa· Judith Loinbardo, Washington,
Approval Was given for the high school cafeteria . Attending
Pa., $22 Rl)d costs: Gerad Long, Newell, Laura Nice, Susan NutUna Sharpe, Albany, $75 and
trick L. Smith, Rutland, $100and
ter,
Sharon
Pooler,
·
s
usan
Pultreasurer
to obtain advance were Jim Srrllth, president·
Masslllon,
,$26
and
costs.
costs, three days In jail to be costs, 10 days In jail suspended to
lins,
·
Jeanette
Radford,
Linda
draws
against
local tax monies Kathy M~nlcke, vice preslden{,
Bonds
were
forfeited
In
county
suspended upon proof of valid two days, two years probation,
Schultz,
Patricia
Thomas,
Lila
from
the
County
Auditor as and members, Ray Karr and I.O.
court
by
'
Larry
Bissell,
Long
license, no valid operator's 11· domestic violence: Eddie G.
Van
Meter,
Wanda
Wolf,
and
money
becomes
avalla
ble during McCoy.
Bottom, $300 for DWI; Frederick
cense: $25 and costs, restitution - Grimm , Middleport, $25 and
Nola
Young.
ordered, passing bad checks; $10 costs, restitution ordered, pass- Cross, Parkersburg, W.Va., $50,
Bus drlve!'t: Kathy Barringer,
failure to display valid registraand costs, expired registration:
Ing bad checks.
Bernard, Gary Dill,
Elnora
tion; Mqnna Miller, Tupper
Alicia C. Council, Langsville,
Terrance Clark, Portland, $75
Bruce
Myers,
and Archie Rose.
Plains, $55, failure to dlspla_y
and costs, three days In jail $20 and costs, Improper passing;
Secretaries:
Joann Calaway,
suspended, one year probation, Dave Dunkle Jr., Dexter, $5 and valid registration; Dohrman
1100 DiSCOUNT
Edna
Householder,
Diana Nelno motorcycle endorsement.
costs, unsafe vehicle; David Reed, Reedsville, $55, Improper
ON ANY
IN·GIOUIO POOL
Arlx, Pomeroy, $10 and costs, no passing; and by Kelly Sprinkles, son, Jeanette Radford, Lila Van
Donald Stelnmentz, Racine,
'Barboursville, ·Ky., $55; Jerry Meter, and Janet Werry.
sso DISCOUNT
$100 and costs, 30 days In jail valid reglstratfo·n.
Educational.
afdes:
Sandra
ON
ANY ALUII!IIUII
·
Raines,
Scottown,
$47:
and
DaFined for speeding were Ro• suspended to three days, one
ABOVE
GROUND POOL
Bowen,
Darlene
Buckley,
Joann
niel Wheeler, Kenova, W.Va.,
bert L. Riffle, Pomeroy, $32 and
year probation, no operator's
!iMWOICD lHtl ..,.,"1
Calaway, Patricia Calaway, Jlll
costs: Jerry Mullinix, Cin&lt;;ln.- $55, all for speeding.
Holter, Diana Nelson, Susan
Nutter, · Susan Pullins, Jeanette
~ .

Three divorce
petl•(I•OnS.· f•Jed
.I

.

July 30, 1989

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

Meigs County Court _ _ __ Board plans meetings for funding

Sheriff probes B&amp;E,
theft at Food Shop

.

•

�•

.
Pataa A-6-Sundly limes-Sentinel

\

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

July 30, 1989

•

EASTMAN'S.. Your Independently Owned

river

Low .. Prlced Supermarket

FRESH LEAN

ittttinel Section
July 30, 1989

•

Ground·
•.'

....

't'

'·

SPACE•.•We've reallocated our Porn·
eroy store for your shopping ease•

..
•

TENDEIBEST

S LIS. OR 'MOIE

Meat Wieners
120Z.
PMG.

Chuck
Roast

LB.

89(

$149
VALUES ••• We're now stocked full
of . savings to give you what you
really want - LOW PRICES!!

HOLLYFARMS GRADE 'A'

Chicken
Breast Quarters

LB.

••

STEADY HAND -Beth Vaughan-8chnelder Is seen here doing

LOW PRICES
,..•
•

.•

.

"

AS ADVERTISED

POMEROY -Have you ever a llttle bit of hard work and
wondered what could be done creativity you can have a nice
with that old trunk you might . piece of accent furniture that
possibly have stored a,way In . may serve as a coffee table, end
your attic, basement, g~rage, or table, or even a television table.
Vaughan-jlchnelder has been
wherever yo11 might k~p s1.1ch
refinishing
trunks, like the ones
articles?
pictured,
for~
about five years
Well - II you have then Beth
now,
and
truly
enjoys the chalVaughan·Schnetder has ·the
lege of tackling the task.
answer lor you. Refinish It! With

59C

$199.

'

.

•

•

-.,. ,.
•

AS ADVERtiSED

2

3901.$5·89
CAN

White

99

Potatoes
10 L8. BAG .

. FRESH BROCCOLI
IUN(H

GOlDEN RIPE BANANAS

3 1.1s. Sl

89C

.

•

~

-

the lid. In all instances where
old trunk in her aunt's attic. She possible , Vaughan-Schneider
liked the piece but was unsure tries to keep these picture scenes
what to do with It - so she had a · intact.
Vaughan-Schneider begins the
man refinish It for her and when
the tru11k was finished she fell in refinishing process by replacing
love with 11 . At ~that point she , any missing parts - such as the
decided to start going to auctions 1 handles. If just one handle Is ·
to see If she could find some good J:ll~slng, lt has to be taken off so
deals on the old trunks and that .fWo new ha~tdles, stained to
perhaps refinish them herself. match, can be put In place. Since
Well - she found out that she most of the old trunks have wood
could and could do a pretty good on them, some of which has been ~
painted, they have to 'he stripped '
job of It too.
Vaughan -Schneider says and then sanded.
From this point Vaughan·
there's something about working
on the trunks In that once she Schneider begins to the paint the
starts working on one she can't trunks. She paints her trunks in
leave It alone until it's finished. many different ways. Some are
Depending on the condition of the accented by painting the corner
trunk Vaughan-Schneider can pieces, clasps and hinges, and ·
finish one in approximately a some of the trunks, depending on
the mate{ lal the trunk Is made of,
total of 24 hours.
When looking for a trunk at an are completely repainted. and
auction or othe'r . places , accented with gold or silver '
Vaughan-Schneider makes sure paint.
After the outside of the trunk Is
that they have the lids or tops.
Usually the handles are missing, completed, she be'gins the job of ·
but she says that's easily reme· finishing the inside. This is done
died. She has a book from which by tacking material, or lining, to
she can order all necessary trunk the inside of the piece with ·
·
decorative tacks. This not only
replacement material.
She stated that most of the old gives a neater appearance but
.trunks, ·which can be purchased also protects what Is put In to the
at auction, are missing the trunk for storage.
What does it cost to refinish a
original key to the lock. If you're
lucky enough to find a trunk that trunk? Well, that all depends on
has the original key, It is worth what shape the trunk is In, but
Vaughan-Schneider feels a trunk
more than one that does not.
that
has been refinished could
Something else that makes a
trunk more unique Is If It has a
picture or scene on the Inside. of
It all started when she found an

"

$

U.S.# ONE

99C

...

•

•MT. DEW •DIET PEPSI

\24 PACKS

Pepsi
Cola

$

I

..

•

..

Text. photos
ON THE INSID.E -This trunk shows the ttn'lng that Beth
Vaughan-8chnelder puts Into the Inside of the pieces that she
refinishes. She did this particular one for her mother, and It Is
decorated in gold and black.

by
Julie E. Dillon

24 PACK
12.-0Z. CAN

MEATV
•

"

...•

"

. . . TQ;liAl,J. SA
'-•CI• OUT ftiUI PLUS
•W. A•erve The Right to Umlt Qu~~ntitiH •Prlc11 Etlectlve Thru Sit.. Aug. II. 1888 •USDA Stamp• OIHty Accepted •Not A•ponllble for Typoar•phlc•l Errore

,,

,/

&gt;!

' .

"

•

.Trunks a~en't , . just storage, they're creattve

Y.ELLOW TAGGED EVERYDAY

AS ADVERTISED

the accent palnUng one of her many trunks. This Is one of the final
steps In the refinishing process.·

.,,
."
••
.•••

1'1;)' """

Three t'f'tl.nk.s ready for transformation
j.

~

' t

getting into it more for other
people. This Is a hobby she enjoys
doing not only for herself but for
other people as well.
·

sell for approximately $400 .
Although the trunks she has done
so far have just been lor family
and friends , she wouldn't mind

t

'\_

·'

I

c

A FAVORITE -This trunk Is Beth Vaughan-Schneider's
favorite one. It has the original key and she has relinlshed It by
accenting the black trunks metal comers, clasps, and hinges In
blue to malch the color scheme of her home.
,

�•

..
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~P1~·~~~~~B~-2~~S~u~nda~y~Ti~•m~es-:;:Sel:n~t:in~ei~======~~~~~~~~~~~~Ohio~·-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

•

July 30. 1989

:In our town... _·._______

On tht hunt for Gallipolis history

: By DICK THOMAS
didn't have corn this year. She
:· GALLIPOLIS- It's that time says the corn patch is too messy
• of year ...summer .•. vegetables
ond ~roublesome to clean up at
-lrom the garden
the end of the growing season.
· ll n d
t h e
Me. I wouldn't know . What do you
F a r ·m e r s
think I am ... a farmer?
: Market. EveryI did something last weekend I .
. time I think of
hadn't done for years and yearst he Farmer's
.. .went to the Kyger Creek Little
r,l:arket, I think
League Tournament. I hadn't
• of the late Ivan
been there since 1971 or ~72 and
Fife, former Gall!a County Dep- that was as · a team manager.
)lty Sheriff. who, after he retired Things have changed. The place
was very Instrumental In get ling looks great. It brought back
, the farmer's market started.
memories.
.
• This 'year's Farmers' Market,
During
the
12
seasons
I man•' .on the.First Avenue park front Is aged a team; I suppose! had the
: just getting started good. Lots of ·bes t set of team parents any
·. farmers waiting for their corn. manager ever· had, not to men: Ed Martin told me Frld!!Y he had lion "a fine bunch of kids." I
!l lot of white corn coming on. never knew it was so much fun to
Ed's a graduate of the Class of watch the · parents during a
. 1936 at Gallla Academy High game. When I managed, I did
· School.
·
have time to pay any attention to
: : My wife didn't raise any corn the stands.
· Jhis year, We've depleted her six
I wish I'd had my tape recorder
f'ows ,of beans, saved some for with me the other night. There
winter of course, and are waiting was this one woman, I'm not sure
.for the tomatoes to turn r~ . We when~ she was from, butshewas

100 percent behind somebody.
Throughout the conteSt, she
constantly chattered things like:
"Go-go-go", on a passed ball;
" three up and three down",
words of encouragement when
· her team had a slight edge; " use
two hands", when the right
fielder stretched from here to
there on a one-handed catch;
"don't worry about the runner",
to tile pitcher with a man on
ba~e; "good eye", to the batter
who let one go by; '"er ya go" ,on .
a, cal~ strike;, and "don't lose
him", to the pitcher on a full ·
count" .
Yesslr,itbroughtbackmemo- ·
rles of days when. Maybe I'll go
back to the Kyger Creek Tourna·
ment next year, this time as a
manager. Managersarepeeullar
beings. Watch them sometime.
Managers lose more games than
players. I know from experience.
4-R
Blllee Pooler ol
demonstratloaw for lbe Meigs County Extension
1 re'm ember my second year at
Country BurripklnsClub gave one of 17 demonslra·
Service were Jean Braun, Russell Moore, and
the Kyger Creek Tournament, In
lions Tbursday afternoon at Pomeroy VIllage
Mary and Roger Gilmore. Blllee's demonstration
trhe middle, 'GO's.• 1 played the
Hall.
4·
H
project
Judging
Is
underway
now
In
was entitled •"All About cats." She discussed
next round game bl!tore I won the
preparation
for
'
t
he
opening
of
the
Melp
County
neutering to control population, diseases, and the
one· my team was _playing. .Just
. ·..------:~~----..----~--!"
.
Aug.
1~·19. Judging lhe
Junior
and
Senior
Fair,
dally care l!f ber three year old cat, Tommy.
doesn't make· sense. Don't ever
.
"' L "'"'1
save your best pitcher, or "there •
may not be a next round. 1 s ummer's gone.
.
SUNDAY
reunion wlll be held at Star Mill learned the hard way.
The last time I saw Tom
• GALLIPOLIS- American Le- Park In Racine on Sunday with a
I must say some of those
Spencer play was August 31, 1979
gion Auxiliary 69th birthday Is covered dish dinner to begin at pictures taken at this year' s at Cooper Stadium, on West
·sunday, post home on Bob 1:30 p.m . All relatives and Kyger Creek Tournament were Mound Street at Columbus when
446-2000_
: McCormick Road, cocktails at
friends are Invited.
very good, and I told that to G. Spencer was in Trfple-A ball with
•
•••
Introducing
• noon, dinner at 1 p:m. All
Spencer Osborne, who's on vaca· the Charleston Char lies.
: 1\uxilairy, Legion and SAL
CHESTER-The Chester High tlon a nd is due back tomorrow.
The guy In the Foodland
Daily Lunc_h Specials, Tuesdays thru Fridays
: members and families invited.
Class of 1931 will. hold its annual . That boy has the right angles.
parking lot looked like I knew
• Ladies bring covered d ish and reunion on Sunday at 12:45 p.m.
Hot Dogs. Variety C)f Sandwiches &amp; Salads
Everybody In ·the Syracuse him. I did, but, I hadn't seen him
· dessert.
at the Chester Fireho]Jse. All area Is proud of " their lads' •, who for several years. He looked like
FlEE LUNCH DEUVEIY w/15.00 MINIMUM
teac hers and classmates won this year's Kyger Creek · a real important person. He was .
:: BIDWELL - Layman Day welcome.
-·&amp;SWELL IS OUR DEUCIOUS
Tournament. · The "Boys From It was Hugo Pierotti. And, then
• Service a t Mount Carmel Baptist
Syracuse" broke out of the Final the woman I saw in the store. I
&amp;
POMEROY -The Angelaires, Four" with a 5-3 win over thought I knew her. I did. but I
: Church on Sunday. Morning
•
. service at 10:45 a.m ., afternoon from Lancaster, will give a Cheshire and won "all the wasn't sure. She was Esther
: Service at 2 p.m. The Rev, gospel music concert at the marbles" with a 6·4 victory over Pierotti. I told Hugo about It.
9 Pc. Bar-B•Q Chicken, Pint of Baked Beans, Pint
Matthew Watts is speaker.
Pomeroy United Methodist PSM of Point Pleasant. And,
TheP!erottlsare,orwere,here
of Oven Browned Potatoes, Pint of Cole Slaw
Church beginning at 6:30p.m. on publisher Bob Wingett smiled from Ocoee, Fla. They come up
·: GALLIPOLIS FERRY, W.Va.
Sunday. Rev. Don Meadows "all the way to the office".
twice a 'year. He was asking
and a Two•Liter Bottle of Pepsi.... ·
5
·:- Revival begins Sunday, 7:30 invites the publ!c. Also on hand
How ahout them Reds, 4 to 2 a bout people. Hugo used· to go
p.m .. Mt. Calvary Independent will be a group of young people over Atlanta Friday night · at fishing in Florida with my late
We will dose at 4 p.m. daily .during the
. Church. Rev. Russell Taylor and and adults from Spartanburg, Fulton County Stadium? seven· father-in-law, Dale Miller, when
Gallla County and Mas~ County Fairs.
: ~ev. Lewis Wroten preach .
Ind. They will be working wlth teen Innings, longest game ever Dale and Zelia spent the winters
•
•••
the Pomeroy church on a one between the two clubs. Of course in Ocoee.
1st house on Georges
:: PLINEY, W.Va. - Grubb week workcamp. The program is both teams are fighting to stay
I remember ohe time Hugo
CrHk Rd. off Bulavile
the quarterly family night honor- out of the National League West took me out on the Ohio River In
:Family Singers willl&gt;e at the Mt.
Pike, Gallipolis
8 I r.
Unio n United Methodist Chu rc h,
ing those who have had birthdays celiar which at this time belongs his 'boat to take pictures of the
;$ und ay, 7:30p.m.
or anniversaries during the pre· to the Braves.
most ·beautiful waterfront bevious three months .
Quote of the day - during thr. . tween Pitts_burgh and Cincinnati.
; : GALLIPOLIS - Steve and
Reds ' famous losing streak, "I' ll That was . before they put that
,MONDAY
: ~te lla Myers family reu nion is
bet Pete Rose isn't betting on.the concrete slab they call a parking
• Sunday, Raccoon Creek Co unty
ATHENS - The executive Reds these days, " from Mike Iolin. And, I've got a 20 by 30 inch
· Park shelter 2.
policy committee for the solid Scherer, summer intern at the framed photo at home to prove it.
waste district will have a special Gallipolis Daily Tribune and
Talk ahout ioDation! Court
meeting bn July 31 att 2 p.m. at Sunday Times-SentineL
.: HARRISONVILLE -The Harcosts have even gone up. Munlcirisonville Holiness Chapel will be the Athens County Extension
And, how ahout Tom Spencer's pal Court Clerk Sue Perry said
offering a missio nary service on Office located in th e Athens
Cleveland Indians. Up In Munici- Friday, a new state law has
• Sunday at 11 a.m. with Rev. and Health Department on the fair- pal Stadium on Lake Erie Fri· raised municipal court costs by
')\1rs. Leroy Adams Jr, going to grounds on West Union Ave·. in
day, the Indians slapped the Red $2. So, if you .get hauled into
-Africa.
Athens. Contact Dean Kahler at
Sox twice, 3-2 and 2·1 to close the court, let's say for speeding and
592-3219 for Information.
,•
gap to 3 or 3~ games behind the your fine is $10, you'll pay an
-·
POMEROY
The
descendBaltimore Orioles the American · extra $31 , or a total of $41, for
,.
ca nts of the late Tommy and Mild a
RACINE -The Southern BoosLeague East. Spencer IS first court costs. Last week the same
,.Jane (Hudnall ) Gilkey will hold ters will be meeting at 6 p.m. on
base coach with the Indians. I fine would have cost you $29, or a
: _their 19th annual family reunion Monday at the high school. All
to Cleveland before the total of $39 .
· o n Sunday at the Route 33 South parents a re urged to attend.
roadside park. A potluck Iunc h
· will be served at noon. Those
TUESDAY
MIUCREEK
WONDERSPORJSWEAR
a ttending are asked to bring
POMEROY - Drew Webster
fi\BIIIC
CALICO
IJNDER'"
;; a ole service and folding chairs. Post 39 of the American Legion
Bleached and
PRINTS
FIJSIBU
POTPOURRI
-Friends a nd relatives · are · will meet Tuesday at the post
unbleached.
Our price
Our prjCes
·.welcome.
CJWTWEB
home. School representatives .
Our price
$2.99yd.
from
$2.39 yd.
Our
price
who went to Buckeye Boys State
$1 .79 yd.
Limit 5 yards.
u_mit 10 yards.
$1.69 yd.
· : CHESHIRE -There wi ll be a will give a report. Dinner will be
reunion lor th e family of Elbert served at 7 p.m.
a nd Della Gillilan, at the Kyger
SALE
~~ reek Park on Sunday 'with a
$100
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle·
.
YD.'
dinner to be served at 12: 30 p.m. port Alzheimers and Related
:rhOse attending are to bring a Disorders Support Group will
povered dish and friends and meet at Overl&gt;rook Center on
f'e iatives are invited.
Tuesday a t 3 p.m. Bring a friend.
miSP
SELECT
LOVELY lACE
Public Is welcome. Group leader
PARJY
T4FFETA
KNRS
li\VORfTES
RACINE -The Manuel family is Shirley Finley .
Our price
Our prices
Our price

..

)

Second photo in Preservation Treasure Hunt.

____
.
.
,
;
. mun,;t:11 "-'enda
" r'

-W e Will Pay You To Get
.•To Know Us Better

Com

Fields Country

Bar~B-Que

Gallipolis
Preservation Treasure Hunt

w

First photo in Preservation Treasure Hunt.

..

BAR·B·Q RIBS

CHICKEN

FAIR WEEK SPECIAL:

$1 09

4

w

See You At
Th f .1 I

Prizes To Be Awarded During the
Old Car Exhibit August 12th.

Gallipolis Preservation
Treasure .Hunt .Cont•st
Fourth

in Preservation Treasure Hunt.

10°/o OFF

I'

.

eazo. ~!/11 d
GOING OUT .OF BUSINESS

'

Prescription Shop

50°/o-75°/o OFF
ALL DEPARTMENTS

•Photo #8
•Photo #9

$3.49 yd.

•Photo #10
•NAME
. __~---~---~~~~~-

Sixth photo · in Preservation Tr,asure Hunt.

.,I

..

271 NORTH

With 25 empty

MIDDLEPORT,

bObbins. Limit
two. Ours St .99

: '-----------------·--~~--------

Our price
$1 .49 box

~

ENROLL. NOW

DMCIII

NEEDI.fWOIIk
FLOSS

FOR 12 YEARS LEADING THE OHIO VALLEY IN (HRISTIAN EDUCATION

"""W~,-,

•Photo #7

' '

•TEACHING CHRISTIAN MORAL VALUES
•70% OF GRADUATES GO -lO .COLLEGE
•BAND, CHOIR, SPORTS PROGRAMS
•CONTROLLED DISCIPUNED ENVIRONMENT
•CHRISTIAN TEACHERS WHO GIVE INDIVIDUAL ATTENnON

. Ourprice
33Ceach

.

'

4~

I

I

. . . . . . . . .. .

1/ 2 Ol. PAINT

WillERS

Our price
$1 .99 each

t

•Photo #6

•

. SM4U . 1-YD.BOXED
NEEDLEWORk HOOk -'NO
FlOSS fADDY LOOPW'E

992-6669

412 SECOND- DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS

GRADES K-12

•Photo #5

•ADDRESS - - - - , - - - - - - - •TELEPHONE ~--------_;:__ __

3,000-ID.
CONE
THREAD
White. black,

Entries U mailed must be postmarked· no later
than August 9th, 1989

beige. Limh 6.
price $1 .99

Si\LE
5-JOOu.

SALE
S'JOOu.

DOUBLE·
1'&gt;\CED SAriN
. RIBBON

fASHION
ACCESSOtn'
84SES

6, 6, ancl1 ()oyda.

Ours!llleea.

Our prices
$1 .00-$2.00 ea.

1211BBON
ROSES

2~

2~

BIJNCH OF
Our price
99¢ bunch

2~1

"We Care About Your Child"

Ninth photo in Pr!lservation Treasure Hunt.

SCHOOL
II nNOTHY 1: J5

Seventh photo in Preservation Treasure Hunt.

Entries may be submitted to:
Galllpoils Chamber of Commerce
16 State St.
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

•

OUR LEASE IS ABOUT TO EXPIRE
EVERYTHING MUST GO

.. ·.t-

_..,.~,

)

THIS OFFER GOOD ONE
WEEK ONLY ....

DRASTIC REDUCTIONS
STOREWIDE

•Photo #I . - - - - - - - - •Photo #2
•Photo #4

2!!3

MANY DIFFERENT STYLES
AND COLORS
TO CHOOSE FROM!

Fifth photo in Preservation Treasure Hunt.

•Photo #3

ANY
SILK FLOWER
ARRANGEMENT
IN STOCK
NOW

$3.99 yd.

Third photo in Preservation Treasure Hunt.

I})

"July sa.,ings"

$3.49 yd.

The Gallipolis Retail Merchants Association will
be sponsoring the Gallipolis Preservation Treasure
Hunt July 30th.
Prizes will be: 1st Place; $100 worth of Gallipolis
Gift Certificates; 2nd Place. $60.00 worth of Gift
' Certificates; 3rd Place, $30.00 worth of Gift Certificates. In case of ties there will be a drawing
among the right answers.
In order to win. all ten photographs must be correctly identified as to the street address of the
building and the location of the item(s) photo·
graphed. All entries must be completely filled out
with name. address and day time phone number.
. Entries, may be subm,tted at the Gallipolis Cham ber of Commerce Office. 16 State Street, Gallipolis. Ohio 45631. If mailed, must be postma"""d
no later than August 9th . All entries must be in by
August 11th.

SILVER BRIDGE SHOPPING CENTER
STATE IT. 7
GAWPOUS, OHIO

Tenth photo in Preservation· Treasure Hunt.

•

1

j ..

•

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Page-B-4-Sunday Times-Sentinel

'·

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

,.

July 30. 1989

July 30, 1989

Ohio-Point

Engagements

Iesiak-Lohrer
POMEROY -Shari Lynn Stephanie Lesiak, sisters of the
Lohrer and Theodore Joseph groom, and Laurie · Nolan, as
Lesiak were married on June 10 bridesmaids.
at the First United Methodist
The bridesmaids wore IridesChurch of Troy, with the Rev. cent emerald green floor length
Mark Montgomery and Rl!v. taffeta gowns. The ·dresses tea·
Eugene Vonderhar performing lured a V-neckline and fitted
the ceremony.
.
dropped waist bodice. They car·
The bride is the daughter of ried bququets to compliment the
William and Carla Wilson Lohrer 1 brides with alstomerla lilies and
of 811 Maplecrest Drive, Troy, 1 delphinium blossoms.
and the granddaughter of Mr. ' Bradley Fields served as best
and Mrs .. ·Russell -r.. Nelson, ' man with Mfchael Lehrer,
Pomeroy. The groom is the son of ' brother of the bride, and Timothy
Theodore and Carolyn Lesiak of Lesiak; brother of the groom, as
985 Oak Lea Drive, Troy. •
groomsmen. JeffreyDrlscoUand
Escorted to the altar by her 1 Paul Mater served as ushers.
father, the bride wore a formal: ~ A' dinner · reception
and dance
'
.
length white satin gown. It had a i was held at the Antioch Temple
hand beaded neckline with 1 a ' In Dayton.
·
fitted dropped-waist bodice of . The bride Is a graduate of Troy
beaded embroidered schiffll : High School and of Ohio Unlver·
lace. The beaded satin butterfly r stty with a B.S. In Journalism,
sleeves were accented by lace and a M.S." In Communications.
~auntlets. Embroidered schlffli ; She Is employed as Midwest
lace edged the full skirt and ·Marketing Representative for
encircled tlie cathedral train. Edgeli Communications in
The bride wore a pearl edged Cleveland.
fingertip illusion veil attached to
The groom Is a gr!lduate of
an iridescent · and pearl floral Medina High School and Ohio
ba,rid. She carried a cascade of University, and-the Akron School
cymbidlan orchids, roses, statlce of Law. He is employed as a law
and Ivy accented with clerk for Judge Pantel Quillen in
stephanotis.
the Ninth District Court of
Appeals in Akron.
Karen Mlller was maid of
They will reside In Cuyahoga
honor - with Lisa Lesiak and
Falls.

Skeen-Phillips
GALLIPOLIS- Mr, an.d )VIrs.
Ronnie H. Skeen of Gallipolis,
are announcing the engagement
. and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Susan Kay
Skeen, to Donald Dale Phillips,
son of Mr. and Mrs. ·Wayne
Phillips, Gallipolis.
An open-church wedding Is
planned for Aug. 19, at 7 p.m . at

'

the First Baptist Church in
Gallipolis. A reception will follow
In the church fellowship room.
.Miss Skeen is a graduate of
Gallla Academy High School.
Phillips is a graduate of Gallla
Academy High School and Is
enlisted In · the United States
Marine Crop. Stationed In Quan·
tlco, Va.

'

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KAY SKEEN, DONALD DALE (&gt;Hil.qPS

• .I

THEODORE~ANDSHARILYNN(LOHRER)LESIAK

'

.j

Sanders-Hamm

2

1

1-5, Monday _9:30-8 Only
Carl's Shoe Store Pre-lnv~ntory Sale .

LARGE SELECnON

The Down Under Restaurant
OFFERS

"Start to Finish" Dining
A Glass of Seleeted House Wine
Cup of French Onion Soup . Au Gratin
Tossed Garden Salad
,Choice of Roast Prime Rib or.
Fillet of Sole Almondine
Baked Potato
Freshly Baked Bread
Chocolate Mousse or Sherbet
choice of 8 different colored
grenltN. Wha~ your raqulramantt miiY be, coml)late
1

Mtlafaction i• allured with Rock of AgN.

Mon., Tueo .. Thuro .. &amp; Fri. 9:00 a.m. 'til 4:00 p.m.
Other Houro by Appointmont-448-2327 or 193-8588

STANLEY A. SAUNDEIS MONU.NTS
... 446·107

'

By C""-RLENE HOEFUCH
POMEROY Remember
Paula Gomer, daughter of Paul
·and -Bernice Gomer, .who lived
:1n Middleport
'for many years,
attended school
"here and ' went
:on to graduate
from Oh'to
I University?
• Well. -a few years" ago she
married MaJ. Ceasar Sharper of
:the U.S. Air Force, who's a
:special project officer with the
Directorate of Space and Stra"tegic Initiative Programs, at the
:Pentagon. By virtue of his
·position, the couple have had
some extraordinary experlen·
ces, including things relating to
-the inauguration of President
,Bush and Vice President Quayle:
, At that time Maj. Sharper was
a military aide and escort for the
;U.S. Attorney General Richard
.Thornburg and also participated
1in numerous Inaugural events
including the opening ceremony
.and the swearing In ceremony at
;the U.S. Capitol and the parade.
·He was. of course, joined by his
'wife for the Inaugural ball.
' Paula is currently a special
education teacher in the Wa.shington, D.C. school system and
the . couple live in Washington
:with their son. Ryan. Previously.
they had lived In Colorado
•Springs, Colo. where M&lt;1j .
Sharper was assigned to NORAD
'under the command of Middle·
port's Gen. James Hartinger.
retired.'
_.__.._

WOMEN'S

Spring .&amp; Summer Shoes

. 7s0/0 OFF REG. PIKE
.

15°/o OFF

Men's Dress &amp; Casual Shoes

20°/o OFF REG. PRICE
One Group Men's Western Boots

S30-$4o-sso·
Women's L.A. Gear Tennis

S2S-S3Q.S3S

VALUES TO $57.00

SORRY,
NO LAYAWAYS
AU SAlES FINAL

SUNDAY 1 TO 5
MONDAY
9:30. TO 8

____ __

THE SHOE CAFE

351 ftiW '"'

'

'

Women's Handbags

••••••• 01.
••

#995

.

Monday, July 31 thru Thursday, Aug. 3
Reservations Suggested

5:00 p.m.-10 :00 p.m. -

CLINT EASTWOOD
IN .

f

Miss f{itchie is a graduate of
"Eastern l:llgh School and Is
employed with the . Middleton
Doll Company In Coolville.
Hendrix Is a graduate of
Eastern High ' Scliool · and is
employed with Blaney Hard·
woods of Ohio, Inc. In Barlow .
A reception will follow the
ceremony at the bride ' s
residence.

Community corner...

.

FREE!

Wedding policy

Rock of Agel offara you

REEDSVILLE ~Roger and
Carolyn Ritchie, Reedsville, are
announcing the engagement and
approaching marriage of their
daughter, Amy Marie Ritchie, to
·Leroy Paul Hendrix, son of Leroy
and Judy Hendrix, Tuppers
Plains.
The couple will exchange wed·
ding vows at the St. Paul United
Methodist Church in Tuppers
Plains on Aug. 5 at 1: 30 p.m.

Opoen 7 Days A WHk '

Sund~y

. ...... ,. -•._a-...

Ritchie~Hendrix·

Many Rafarancas
992-SWIM·
446-0498
102-Cotirt St., Pon.itroy, Oh.

'

·--- ....--

AMY MARIB RITCHIE, LEROY PAUL HENDRIX

Installation,
Pool and Spa
Chemicals

.

GAI.,UPOLIS - Cheryl Lo· groom, and Alysia Davison,
wlette (Lettle) ·Stewart, daugh- neice of the bride were ·nower
ter of Mrs. Pnyllls Stewart, and · girls .
!,
Donald Warren Swyers, •son of
Angle Bond, nelce of the
Mr. and Mr~. Warren Swyers, groom, . and Amber Davison,
MurrayCity,OhlowereUnltedln nelce of the brJde were ring
Marriage on June 17th at Grace bearers. ,Each wore mauve tea
United Methodist Church.
length dresses -and · matching
The double-ring ceremony was shoes.
·
preformed by Rev . Joseph
Jonathan Schenz, Nelsonville
Hefner.
was best man. Groomsmen were
Mrs. Edle Ross was organist, Bob McDonald; Columbus; . Mike
wlth Andrea Keisling, Cincinnati Bishop, Jim Peacock, Nelsonand Aaron Saunders, Gallipolis, vUle; Natu Patel·, ,Chillicothe;
soloists.
Tom Taggart, Nelsonv!lle; and
Given in marriage by her Brad Woodsman, Lima were
mother and escorted to ihe alter ushers. All wore white tuxedos
by her brother, Jody L. Stewart, w 1 t h mauve t i e and
the bride wore a full length white cummerbund.
satin gown with semi-cathedral
The bride's mother wore a pale
train with a sabrina neckline and pink overlay lace tea length
CYNTHIA ANN (HAMM) SANDERS
a fitted bodice with basque waist. gown, with matching accessories
The cut outback was in shape of a and mauve corsage. The groom's
· he art, with pearl pendant mother wore a street length
: strands, full length sleeves with dress II\ mauve with matching
Flower girl was Emily StanoRACINE -St. Paul the Apostle
· tuck pleats accented with pearls. accessories and mauve corsage. Church in New Middletown was Vtch. niece of the groom, who
-.The skirt was trimmed with
Guests were registered by Lisa the setting on Saturday, June 10, wore white matching the bridal
:-ve nice meallions and florentine Cotton of Columbus and Sheila for the marriage of Cynthia Ann dress and carried a nosegay of
· lace with of se{]uins and pearls. Bond, sister of the groom, Hamm. Struthers, and Brian J . carnations.
The back of the train was of dis trlbu ted programs.
Best man was Mark A. Zaluski.
Sanders, Twinsburg.
. florentine lace panels with
Immediately following the cewhile
ushering guests were Mark
The Rev. Timothy O'Neil offi· shadow lace, with a large satin remony a reception was held in . elated the ceremony for the . Suszczynski, Bill Stanko, Ron
: box bow.
the church dining room. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E.
Schadel. and Jim Zaremski.
· The bride's veil was a hair clip brides table featured a three tier Robert Hamm, Struthers, and
The bride attended KenDelle
· of silk rosettes with pearl sprays cake with fountain, wine goblets, for the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Beauty Academy and is a li·
:and short tiered veil of english with a miniature bride and Ronald B. Sanders, Poland.
censed managing cosmetologist .
iliushion, the bride wore match- groom given by her grandpar·
The groom attended Young·
Soloists for the ceremony were
ing pea rl earrings, and a dia- ents_Mr. and Mrs. Gothard.
stown State University, is ~
Shirley J. Hamm, mother of the
. mend pendant necklace made
· Se:'v ing at the brides table bride, and Jill, Chrapcynski,
salesman for Loveman Steel
were Monica McCormick, Patas- Struthers.
from her aunt, Opal Payne.
Corp.
: She carr ied a cascade of kala, cousin of the bride, Andrea
Those attending from Meigs
Wedding guests were greeted
miniature mauve and white Keisling, Lisa Cotton, and Kristy at the St. Nicholas Church Grand
County were the bride's grandrosebuds with babys breathe Koby, Columbus.
parents, Mr. and Mrs. VIrgil
Hall in Struthers before the
entwined, tied with small satin
The couple received a casette couple departed. Upon their
Hamm. Racine; Louise Michael.
bows.
tape of the ceremony, and return they will reside In
Racine: · and Mrs. Roger Leifheit
F.lowers for the wedding party videotapes were taken by Karon Twinsburg.
and daughter, Dorothy,
were des igned by the bride's McCormick, aunt of the bride .
Pomeroy.
The bride wore a gown styled
s ister, Mrs. Tamara Davison, and Bill Swyers, brother of the with a white lace bodice. long
· Gallipolis.
groom.
•'
fitted sleeves ahd full skirt
Mi ssy Whal ey, Ga llipolis
Areceptionwasal~oheldatthe
flowing to a ·cathedral train
served as matron of honor Gallipolis Shrine Club.
created by her grandmother.
FOR
' brides ma ids were Kim SaundThe bride is a graduate of Martha Febinger of Youngers. Gallipolis, Tracey Boggs, Gallia Academy High School and stown, accented with a box bow .
Buy the First Pair of
·Columbus, Vicki Oliver, Virginia Rio Grande College with a degree She wore a handmade cathedral
Shoes at Regular Prite
. Beach, Va. and Tamara Davison. in Medical Technology, she is . length veil and carried a cascade
Each wore tea-length gowns in employed at the Athens Medical containing white roses and stefrom the Sale Group
ma uve and matching shoes. Lab as a medical lab technician.
phanotis over her mother's
and Get Your Second
They carr ied fans with silk
The groom is a graduate of Bible.
•· ca rn atio ns in mauve wit h baby' s Nelsonville York, and is emPair of Equal or Lesser
Honor attendant was Elizabeth
breat h.
ployed E .C. Babbert Concrete, Ann Hamm, sister of the bride,
Value.
Missy Bond, neice of the Ca nal Winchester, Ohio.
while bridesmaids included
Karen Sanders, the groom's
sister; Danlelle Suszczynski,
Trish Zaiuski, and Lisa Schadel.
The Sunday Times-Sentinel Thursday, 4 p.m .. prior to the
Attendants were dressed in
regards weddings of Gallia, date of publication.
light green aqua crepe du cherre
Meigs and Mason counties as
Photographs of either the bride tea-length dresses, and the honor
LAFAYETTE MALL
news and is happy to publish
or·- the bride and g"room may be attendant the same In emerald
GALLIPOLIS. OH.
weddin g s tories and photographs
published with wedding stories,
green. Each carried a single
wit hout charge.
if desired. Photographs may be
white rose.
However, wedding news must
either black and white or good
meet general standards oftimell- quality color, billfold size or
ness. The newspaper preiers to
larger.
publish accounts of weddings as
Poor quality photographs will
soon as possible after the event.
not be accepted. Generally, snapTo be published in the Sunday
shots or instant-developing phoedition, ihe wedding must have
tos are not of acceptable quality.
taken place within 60 days prior
Questions may be directed to
to the publication. Material for
the editorial department from 1
· Along the River must be reclevect
to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
by the editorial department b
at (6141 446-2342.

__,

WESCO PO_O LS

DONALD WARREN AND l..E'ITIE (STEWART).SWYERS

SwYJtS. -Stewat[

COLONY THEATRE

And speaking of former residents, the Rev. John Bryant and
his son, Trell, of Florida were
here last week visiting Trell and
Edna Schoenleb and other
relatives.
Anyways, it wasn't just a social
visit, 15-year-old Trell, who is on
the Jet Ski Orlando Racing
Team, came especially to race In
the World Tour Jet Ski Race
which took place in Huntington
l.a st ·sunday. They came . here
aiter having participated In
competitions on Long Island,
N.Y.; and Chlc.ago. The competl·
ttons consist of speed racing on a
course as well as free style
racing with tricks.
Young Trell who races in the
expert class wlll be moving into
the pros soon. He Is cu rrentiy in
tjle top 20 In the world.

TRIA.NGLE
Houston!Galveston
Corpus Christi/San Antonio
October 3-7. 1989
'

Fly to Houston and
travel by tnotorcoach to
beautiful Gllveston on
. the Ciulf. On 10
Corpus Christi
and Padre Island,
then to San .
Antonio. Fly hom~
from here. We've
c:hosen the best time of
year tp yisit Texas and have · .
the ultimate of good times planned for
the entire tour.
Call AAA Today!!

---------?: 'you made her day!
•

Those 66 birthday cards, all
those flowers and gifts really
made Helen Reynolds' 95th birth·
c:lay something special. And
topping It all off was a visit from .
her son, Wllllani, of Kalamazoo,
Mich. who came for a week.

--l-------, The Rutland July 4 celebration

lALLI POLlS

was a big success and o::redlt
really goes to all ,those people
who volunteer their services like auctioneers, Dan Smith and
Keith Molden, who sold off the
pies and cakes entered In the
baking competjtlon.
The grand prize pie wu
purchased by D.J. Tradl~ Post,
Middleport, for $55, and the

Agency .'
360 SECOND AVE.

446-0699

446-2345

•

11

•

.

grand prize cake was purchased
by Dan Smith Auctioneering
Service for $50.
·
Now that's expensive dessert!

.

Statistically, we've just passed
the holiest week of the summer in
the Oli o Valley, so says the
Alliance to Save . Energy. And
with temperatures hovering In
the high nineties ·most of the
week, It would seerrt that's right
on target.
Keep your cool, and haye a
nice week!

PINK CADILLAC

ONE EVENING SHOW 7:30
ADMISSION $1.50

GP 13

SPRING VALLEY CINEMA

MARTHA LYNN TUCKER. RUSSELL LEE DENNEY

446 ·4524

Tucker-Denney

,. "' ""~ ,., .•

l&lt;l!U'l J~ 11'~~ 1

BIDWELL - Mr. and Mrs . . Tucker of Columbus, to Russell
Charles R. Tucker of Bidwell, Lee Denney, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Ohio are announcing the engage- James M. Denney of Bidwell.
The open church wedding will
ment and forthcoming marriage
be
Saturday, Sept 2, at 6:30p.m.
of their daughter, Martha Lynn
at French City·Baptist Church. ·

OES

m~ets

·

S~hool . meeting

POMEROY - Pomeroy ChapRACINE -The regular meetter 186, Order of the Eastern
ing of Southern Local School
Star, will meet Tuesday at 7:30
Board will be held Monday, 7
p.m. at the· Shade River Valley
p.m .. in the high school cafeteria .
Lodge, Chester. Grand Ruth
Night will be observed with
Shirley Hiller, Grand Ruth of hte
Grand Chapter of Ohio, to have
the program. All past and present officers of the station of Ruth
"of Pomeroy and other chapters ·
are invited to attend and re·
quested to wear their chapter
dresses.

-KIDS

!

SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45631
MEMBER AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY

AUGUST SALE

@

Living Room .Suites In Stock
AI At Pric11 So low, YN Won't hlin1 YHr Ey11l

Htw 2 Pilce Early ,
Amlrican liv. Rm. Suites
lu1- lotoil
suus
suo

TWIN

tllG.

•nts

1999

Teenagers today face a lot more pressure than their parents did when they were
young. The pace Is faster, bolh at school and at home, and there's often less support
to guide teenagers through the problems and social stresses they encounter as
a part of growing up. Add to this the Intense peer pressure many adolescents
encounter, and the problems can show up as erratic, uncontrollable behavior.
abrupt mood swings, or even trouble with the law or thoughts of suicide.

'

Our Adolescent Treatment Program can help your child and your entire family work
through the problems and re-establish supportive relationships. Our e:otperlenced
staff can show your son or daughter how to e:otpress feelings positively, work to
rebuild damaged lines of communication, and reduce the stress every ,member of
your family Is e:otperlenclng.
Raising kids today often calls for parents to make some tough decisions. The most
critical decision you may ever have to make Is to ask for and get the help your
troubled teenager Is desperately calling out for.
You can ftnd the help you need through our Adolescent Treatment Program. You can
schedule an assessment at no cost. Call us now.

S59•s.., ...
lnMnprlng

St. Mary's Hospital
The Adolescent Treatment Program

(304) 526·1579
Day
14 Hours A

•

�..
Page-B-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

..

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'

July 30, 1989

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

,..July 30, 1989

Engagements

I

•

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

\

·Ihle-Lucas
TERESA

LYN

JOHNSON, PAUL LEON COLLINS

Johnson-Collins.
JODI JEAN HALL. JOHN RANEGAR

Hall-Ranegar
GALLIPOLis - Mr. a nd Mrs.
Jerry Hall, Gallipolis. announce
the engagement of their daughter. Jodi Jean Hall, to John
Ranegar, son of Mr. and Mrs .
J ohn Ranegar, Cheshire.
· Miss Hall is a graduate of
Kyger Creek High School. She
attends the Univers ity of Rio
Grande, majoring in English and
His tory, ·minoring In Secondary
Education.
•
Ranegar is a graduate of

Kyger Creek High School and Is
employed by Appalachian
Power. He attends the University
of Rio Grande, majoring in
Industrial Technology.
The open church wedding is
scheduled for Saturday, Aug. 12
at the First Church of the
Nazarene In Gallipolis. The ceremony begins at 6:30 p.m. A
reception will be held at the Elks
Lodge Immediately following the
ceremony.

POMEROY -Mr. and Mrs,
accounting.
James W. Johnson, Pomeroy,
Collins Is a graduate of Eastern
are al)nounclng the engagement
High School and DeVry Institute
and approaching marriage of
of Technology apd is emjlloyed
their daughter, Teresa LynJohn- . with Huntsman Chemical Plant
son, to Paui Leon Collins, son of
In Belpre.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles L . Collins,
An open church wedding Is
Reedsville.
being planned for Aug. 26 at 6: 30
Miss Johnson is a gradu&lt;.te of
p.m. at lheZionChurchofChrlst
Meigs High School and Is attendon Route 143. A reception will
Ing Hocking Technical College
follow at the home of the bride.
where she is studying

RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Charles N. !hie, Morning Star Road,
Racine, are announcing the engagement of their daughter,
Melissa Kay Ih)e, to Todd Lucas,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Larry Lucas,
Athens.
·
Both attend Ohio University.

GALLIPOLIS- Activities and
menus lor the week of July 31,
tbru August 4, at the Senior
Citizens Center, 220 Jackson Pike
wm be as ·follows:
Monday - YOGA. 10 a .m .;
Chorus, 1 p.m. ;
Tuesday - STOP / physical fitness, 10:30 a.m. ; Tuesday Matinee VIdeo, 12:30-2:30 p.m. ;
Wednesday - Cards. 1·3 p.m.
Thursday - Blood Pressure- ·
/Volunteer, tO-noon; Blblestudy,
11-noon; Herbalists. 1:30-2: 30
p.m .;
· Friday - Art class, 10-noon;
Mini Craft Class, 1-3 p.m.
Every day activities are quiltIng, pool, shuffle board, rug
weaving, horseshoes
Menus are as follows:
Monday - Beef barbecue,
green l&gt;i!ans, french fries, cole
slaw, tapioca pudding;
Tuesday - Beef Tips with
Gravy, Whipped potatoes, sliced

,,

.'

•''•
.-

....

·'·'

.

.~

SEE US FOI DISCOUNt -·
PIICES ON DIAMONDS
DURING FAll WEEKI

SINCE 1933

TAWNEY· JEWELERS

SPRING VALLEY PLAZA
GALLIPOLIS, OH.
(614) 446-7494
Toll Free 1 -800-272:

422 SECOND
GALLIPOLIS, OH.

Tent revival set
PORTLAND - A tent revival
will start Wednesday, at 7 p.m.;
beside the store.tn Portland, and.
continue for an unspecified
number of days. The evangelist
for the revival will be Dave
Carpenter. Everyone Is
welcome.

r

Special

slon

We offer complete tuxedo rental Hrvice to help you look your belt on
that special dav.

MR. AND MRS. CJ,.EO CHEV ALlER

$29 95
HASKINS·
TANNER
332 Second Avenue
PIICED FIOM

Chevalier open houSe scheduled

PHOTOGRAPHY

peaches, bread, brownies;
Wednesday - Ham Loa! with
glue, au gratin potatoes, California vegetable medley, bread,
pineapple crisp;
Thursday - Chicken thigh,
buttered lima beans, carrot &amp;
raisin salad, rolls, sherbert;
Friday - Macaroni and
cheese, broccoli, sliced tomato
with cucumbers, breacJ, lemon
Jello cake.
Make reservations by calling
446· 7000 before 9 a .m. the day you
wish to atte~t.d.

t

JOHNSON ANNIVERSARY- Mr. and·Mrs. Emerson C. Johnson,
Portland, will celebrate their 40th wedding anniversary on Aug. 1.
The couple, married on Aug. ot, 1949, has four children, Sandra ,
Johnson Folmer, Pomeroy; Ray John!IOII, Racine; Ronnie
Johnson, Po~tland; and Johnnie Johnson, Pomeroy. One other son
Is deceased. The couple also ha&amp; five grandchildren.

Wedding plans are Incomplete. ::
' ·,.:1

B-7

Senior Citizen Center
schedules week's activity

Anniversaries

MELISSA KAY IHLE, TODD LUCAS

Sunday limes-Sentinei-Pega

HOURS
Mon. &amp; FrL 9-1

CENTENARY- Mr. and Mrs.
Kenton, Ohio; Bill Chevalier of
Cleo Cbevaller will obServe tllelr
Columbus, Ga·. ; David Chevalier
50th Wedding Anniversary ,on
of Enosburg Falls, Vermont,
Aug. 5 at the Senior Citizen . Larry Chevalier of Toledo; ChaCenter from 1 to 4 p.m. The event
rles. Chevalier of Dayton and
Is open house and the couple · Mrs. William Stanley (Janice) of
requests gifts be omitted.
St. Parts, Ohio. They have 16
The couple were married Aug.
grandchildren and several great12, 1939 at the Ohio Chapel
grandchildren.
Parsonage by the' late Rev.
Chevalier · retired from Betsy
Tracy C . Martindale. They reRoss· Bakery In 1976 and they
side In Centenary.
attend the First Church of the
They are the parents of ~lx
Nazarene.
children ,
Lee Baum,

Tun.-Wtd.-lhurL
· &amp; Sat. 9-S

08Uipollt, Ohio
.'MPn ·.. ll'f•ar SinN&gt; 1866 ..

David R. Ayers, M.D.
Family Practice
'

'

Office Hours: ·
RICHARD SAHLI .
Deputy Director OEPA

'

Monday through Friday
8:30 a.m. - 5:00 p.m.

WHOLESALE MEAIS
69 Sycamore St.

446-7059

BULK MEAT SPECIAL
50 lb .................. all for $45.99
lndudes: 20 II. Ground Beef
20 lb. Chicken legs
10 lb. I&amp;Xon

GRILL SPECIAL

1 Bo~ Hoagie Steaks ·
1 lox Ground Chuck Potties
1 lox All Meat Wieners

$23.99

Family Planning
It Makes Sei1se.••
Confidential Services:
Birth Control ·
V. D. Screening
Cancer Screening
Pregnancy Testing
SONIA KEARNS, FRED ZUSPAN

Kerns-Zuspan
ELIZABETH I.YNN PERRIN, JAMES BRADLEY JOHNSON

Perrin~Johnson

I·

reception willt.ollow at the Hauck
POMEROY -Mrs. Gay M.
House.
Perrin. Pomeroy , is announcing
Miss Perrin, a graduate of
the e ngagement and approachIng marriage of her daughter . Meigs High School, pursued a
major in graphic design a t the
Elizabeth Lynn P errin, to James
Un lversily of Cincinnati, and Is
Bradley Johnson, son of Dr . and
Mrs. James H. Johnson, Cincln· . ,employed as art director at
Jacksort-Ridey, ·Inc. in Cincinnat!. Miss Perrin Is the daughter
nati. Johnson, who majored In
of the late Rev. Wilbur H. Perrin.
business at the University of
The couple will .be married
during a 5: 30 p.m. ceremony on Cinc innati, and Cinci nnati Technical Co llege, is associated with
Sep t. 30 a t the Old Armstro ng
Chapel Church in Cinc innati. A Whal en Builders of Cincinnati.

Auxiliary to meet
POMEROY - The Ladies
Auxiliary of the Fra ternal Order
of Eagles, 2171, will meet Tues·
da y at 8 p.m . Me mbers are a s ked
to bring a covered dish for pot
luck.

RACINE -Mr. and Mrs. Bria n
Kearns are announcing the ap·
proachlng marriage of their
daughter, Sonia Kearns , to Fred
Zuspan on Saturday, Aug. 5 at
6:30p.m. · The open church wedding will

take place at Clifton United
Methodist Church with a reception following In the social room.
Miss Kearns is the grand·
daughte r of Mr. and Mrs. Carroll
Teaford, Racine.

Store closed

Trustees to meet

RUTLAND - The nutland
Furniture Company will be
closed Monday and Tuesday due
to a .death in th e lamlly.

PORTLAND -The Lebanon
Township Trustees will meet
Tuesday, 7 p.m., at the township
building.
·

REEDSVILLE - The Olive
Township Trustees will meet
Friday, Aug_ 4, 7:30p. m. , at the
hom e of the clerk, Barbara
Hannum.

HOWARD BAKER
SAUNDERS INSURANCE INC.
"We Manage Your Ri8k"
437 Seen Awtnue, GaiHpolls

SINCE

Opposite the Post Office

19 S1

NIKE TRUNK

Mon.-Tu•.

Sliding fee scale. No ~ r.tused services becaust ~f inability to pay.

PLANNED PARENTHOOD
-OF SOUtHEAST OHIO
POMEROY:
236 E. 'Main St., 2nd Floor

GAWPOLIS
414 Second Avt. 2nd Floor
992-5912
446-0166
8:30 to 5:00 Mondoy-Friday 1:30 to 5:00 Monday~Friday
Closed Wednesday
1:30 to 12 Saturday
Closed Thursday
ALSO: .b:kson, Chesapeake, Athens, ChHIIcotht, Logan &amp; McArihur

-1:30 tit 4:30

POMEROY - Aaron and Iris Route 1, Kentwood M.H.. Quin·
Kelton of Quinton, Va., former
ton, Va., 23141.
Pomeroy residents, observed
their 55th wedding anniversary
on July 17. Wh lie no observa nee
was held on the ·occasion, the
toward an assoc1ate oegree
DAVID J. SHAFER
couple plan to join Mrs . Kelton' s
Airman David J. Shafer has through the commu nlty ''College
sister and Mrs. George (Martha)
Shiveler for a vacation at Myrtle · graduated from Air Force basic of the Air Force.
·He is the son of Patricia A.
train!Jig at Lackland Air Force
Beach, S.C. where they will be
Shafer
of Rural Route 1, LangsBase, Texas.
joined by the Shiveler's daugh·
· During the six weeks of train· .vllle, Ohio.
te~ ; Jayne. and her famljy.
His wife. Trlcla, Is the d aughlng the airman studied the Air
Mr. and Mrs. Kelton have a
ter
of Nell E . Starr of Rural
Force mission, organization and
daughter Kaaron · Austin, six
160, Radcliff, Ohio.
·
Route
customs and received special
grandchlldren and two greatThe
airman
is
a
1986
graduate
training In human relations.
grandr·hlldren .
In addition, airmen who com· of Vinton Couri\y jilgh School.
Their IV:alling address Is 1610
plete basic training ea,rn ~redlts McArthur, Ohio.
,.·

THOMAS CLOTHIERS

SumMer Ptogress Sale
The. Jackhammers Are
Busting Our Pric·es!

Trustees to meet
~UPPERS

REMINDER .
TRAILER TAX DEADLINE FOR
MOBILE HOME OWNERS

''

PLAINS -T!Ie
Qrange Township Trustees wlll
.fl'leet . In . regular session on
·T uesday at 7: 30 P·lll· at 't he home
of the clerk, Dorothy Calaway.
•

:Po~d bank closed ·

,,

- RIO GRANDE -The Calvary
llaptlst Church food bank will not
P,e open Monday as scheduled.

Friday, Aug. 4, 1989, 10-4
· COME IN AND SEE THE
COMPLETE LINE OF FALL
NilES INCLUDING
FOOTBALL CLEATS

CHA

N SHOES

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STORE

(MIN'S.suns)

'

'

I·

The next time something ugly gets on )lOUr carpet,
get on )lOUr phone ant;l call Stanley Steemer.
We're the best alternative to stain reSistant carpeting. Our truck -powered, deep-cleaning system
removes ground-in dirt and stains your vacuum can't.
And for those of you who do have a slain remstant
carpet, we're a gOOd,way tokeepyourimestment
19oking,great.

DIES

.

.. -"'··
·---·-

· We, the undersigned directors, attest the correctness of this Report of Co!ldltlon
and declare that It has been examined by usand to the best of our ~ow ledge and belief has been prepared In conformance wltll the lnttructlonallstted by the Board of
Governors of tbe Federal Reserve System and the State Banking Authority and Is
true and correct.
Paul E. Kloel
Fred W. Crow, Jr. - Directors
Ferman E. Moore

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

.,

--~----r-~-------------~

Additional Rooms

85
8
ONLY 29

1 • Mid-summer Speol1l

· s1sea· ~:

ONLY

Wltll Llllnl"- l "Hallpealll

L·IIIIPICI • uler.clld 1110me oouilt II two.

·l

s3gea· ..·l

SOFA OR. 2 CHAIRS

State of Ohio, County of Meigs, ss:
Sworn to and subScribed before me this 26th day of July, 1989.
Jo Ann C~p. Notary Public
Jo Ann Crisp, Notary Public, State 1&gt;f Ohio. My commission expires July 17, 1993. "'

I

1

(Sectlonll• Extnll
COUPON EXPIRES 1/31(!1~

,THIS COUPON EXPIRES l/31188

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of Pomeroy, Ohio And Foreign and Domestic Subsidiaries, at the close of business
June 30, 1989, a state banking Institution organized and operatiDtr under the baa kIng laws of this state and a member of the fi'ederal Reserve System. Published In
accordance with a call made by the Sta&amp;e Banking Authority aild by tile" Federal
Reserve Bank of this District.
Federal Reserve District No. 4
State Bank No. I050X
ASSETS
Cash and balances due from depository Institutions:
a. Nonlnterest-bearlng balances and currency and coln .................. 2,167,000.00
b. Interest-bearing balances .... .... .. .... .... ..•... .. .. ...... ...... ........... ... ........ 550,000.00
Securities ....... .. ...................... .. ................... , ..... ........... -... .. ............. 21,256,000.00
Federal funds sold and securities purchased under agreements to
resell In domestic offices of the bank &amp; ollts
Edge &amp; Agreement subsidiaries, &amp; In IBF's:
Federal funds sold ................ ..................... .. .. ... ......... ... ................... 150,000.00
Loans and lease tlnanclng receivables:
'
Loans and leases, net of unearned Income ....... :........32,180,000.00
LESS: Allowance for loan and lease losses ... .. .. ........... .238,000.00
Loans and leases, net of un'\arned Income,
·allowance, and reserve ........ ... .............. ... ......... ..... ... .. ...... ............ 31,942,000.00
Premises arid fixed assets (Including capitalized leases) ...................... 689,000.00
Other real eState owned .......... .. ........ ................... ................................ 68,000.00
Intangible assets .. .. .... ......................... : .... .. ........... ......... ..................... 104,000.00
Other assets .................... , .... .... .... .. ................... ........................ ...... .... 739,000.00
Total assets .. ... ... ... ......... .. ........................... ......... ....................... ... 57,665,000.00
Tot al assets and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C . 1823(j) ....... 57,665,000.00
LIABILITIES
Deposits:
a. In domestic olflces .......................................... .: ....................... 52,318,000.00
(1) Nonlnte rest-bearlng• .. ..... , ... .... .......... ....... :..... .. 5,689,000.00
(2 ) Interest-bearing , ...... ....... ... ............................ 46,629,000.00
Other liabilities ..... ....... ...... ..... .:........................ ........... .......... ... .......... 504,000.00
Total liabilities ... , .......... ... .................... .... ........................ :.... ..... .. ...52,822,000.00
EQUITY CAPITAL
. (,;
Common stock (No. of s hares a . Authorized ................. ...... 200,000
· ·
.
b . Outstanding ................... .100,000
500,000.00
Surplus ... ... ;................•... :.; .................. ........ .................................... 1,000,000.00
Undivided profits and capital reserves .. ......................................... ... 3,343,000:00
Total equity capital ...... ........... .... ... .................... .......... .................... 4,843,000.00
Total equity capital and losses deferred
pursuant to 12 u.s.c. 1823()) ..... ...................... .. .......... .. .. ............... 4,843,000.00
Total liabilities, limited-life preferred stock, ·~nd equity capital,
··and losses deferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1823(1) ..... :... .... .... ....... ..57,665,000.00

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STAILEY

Th• Baek Dior I• Alway• Open I

Valey Dri111, Pcmt PINNnt, W.VL 25550

I , Roger W. Hysell, Vice President/ Cashier of the above-named bank do hereby declare that this Report of Condition has been prepared In conformance with the ln.structlons Issued by the Board of Governors of tb_e Federal Reserve System and the
State Banking Authqrlty and Is true to the best of my knowledge and !&gt;ellef.
Roger W. 1-lysell-VIce Pres,dent-Cashler

..... l..llf.JZS-5131

S IMWEAR

The family ol pro{.llioncls

Farrners Bank and Savings Company

Larry M. htz, Gallia County Treasurer, re·
minds owners of house trailers that the last
day to pay 1989' Second Half Trailer lax
without penalty Is Monday, July 31r 1989.
After that date a 10% penalty will be placed
on the taxes.

MEN'S
SPORt
(OAtS

.,1.1
PLEASANT VALLlY HOSPITAL
I ¥-1

CONSOLIDATED REPORT OF CONDITION FOR

AT CHAPMAN SHOES

• DIKOUNTS •

Thurtday • Saturday-8:30 t112 Noon
JOHN H. SAUNDERS - BETSY SAUNDERS CANADAY
HOWARD BAKER SAUNDERS - CONNtE HEMPHILL

not~

SHOW

REFRESHMENTS • DOOR PRIZES ,

446-0404
:K'-IJ"Io &amp; PIISONAL

Kelton anniversary to be

----In the service ------

'

Trustees to meet

AAI\ON AND IRIS KELTON

Suite 12
PVH Medical Office Building
(304) 675-6015

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;Pa~U=l~I-~.:·~~~~.JI:"'iito~dl~r~n~.m~~:·•~S=JI~Itinel~.~=====~P~OI~m:•~o~y~L~M~·'~ld-~cl~epo~~rt~G~alli~'pol~is~,~O~hio~·~Poi~,~~t4PI~ea~sa~nt~',~W~.V~a~·==~=;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;;;=====~~~uly~30~,~19~8~9~.:
Katie'! .komer ·
.Correction

A teal ·dream team...
. 8y K.U'II: CROW
SYRACUSE . -

A "dream

team" II there ever was one.

The little •·
·
lea,ue team I
· am referriJit to
· Is tmown as Syrac\ue Hubbai'd's . GreenhOUJe. They won '
tour titles.
~arvin and his boys and what
they aecomp)lsh~ wlll eo down
In the annals of history In the
vU~p of Syracuse as the wlnnlng~t team ever.
.
ream . members, their coach
Ml!fvln McKelvey, &amp;l!d asslsUlnt
coaches, Bob Crow and Kenny ·
Bl:(ckley, did not ·have the word
· lose In their vocabulary.
.Team ntembers were given Ute
~tlliStructlons ani! advice that
. could poislbly be elven to S!!Ch a·
flile group of boys. And I dO mean
a filii! group of you~~Csters .
The boys and the c~aches wer.e
. eentlemel! from Sll\rt to finish .
We are deeply erateful to have
such 'm'en coaclll~ and leadlne
our youi!C me~~.
,
.
.
Marvin McKelvey certainly
wel!t_lleyond the call of duty when
It came to "his boys" . ·
·
• To,start off the season they won
. the Ble Bend Youth League with
a 11·0 record. This wun'i
enough. They won the Big Bend
. 'Youne League Tournament beld
at MasOI!&gt;W. Va.
·
By this time they were juSt
gettil!g their feet wet and their
appetites were not completely
satisfied..
'
The l!ext tournament was the
Bill Hubbard Memorial. They
aeatn walked · away with the
championship In their pockets.
The Bill Hubbard Memorial
COI!tlnues to maintain Its fine
stal!dard.
The next down the line was the
· Kyger Creek Tournament sponsored by the . Kyger .Creek
Employes Club. The Kyger
Creek Touri!Bment,was a "Class
Act." Very professionally done.
In fact, we feel that the Kyger
Creek Toimament was one of the

fl~~est.lt was well organized from

start to fll!lsh. And what a neat,
clean facUlty. Yougeqtlemendld ·
yourself proud.
·
Needless to say the team. won
lite Kyger Creek Tournament
defeattne Pt. Pleasant PSM 6 'to
4. Against Bidwell they bad a
trtple play that ·was executed
perf~tly .
•
Now I . would be remiss · If I
·failed io mention others that
as sis ted .with the Syracuse program such as .Bob Deemer,
Marilyn Deemer, Unda Fisher
and Ralph Day . They all did their
part and thel! some.
Now the ol!e who we don't want
to forget Is Ponnle Hubbard, the
team's ~ponsor. He justcpuld not
do enough for t))e "boys".
He treated them to meals on
two different occasions, bou&amp;ht
each team member al!d · the
acces8Qrlzln« and geu'er&amp;t fasblon tips. here,
nianagers very . at tta.ctlve
1&amp;.\VTY TIPS -The 1181 Miu Gallla County
Trena Jeffers dlscliii!M!s analysis with · two
jackets, and Wednesday nleht,
coate.-.b aUeaded a beauty tralnlng seminar,
contestants. The · «&lt;ris also received prior
drove the entire tea111 ~o Belpre In
directed by· IJeiwd~ntrol colllultailtl! Bobbl
Instruction In modeling.- ·pobe, Interview teehRood lilld Trena · Jefters, held ~nUy at the
his huge recreational vehicle.
l!lque and commnl!lcatlon skUls. (Times-8entlnel
I forgot to mention that the
W~1111 Agency. ·They learned &amp;bo\lt cleansing
·
~ ·.
team h.a s el!tered an all star
teclinlque, makeull appUcatlon, colOr analy!lls, . · photo by t.ee·.Ann Welch)
tournament at !lflpre.
·;
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By the limE: YOll read tills they ·
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will have played Ol!e eame and
possibly two that were schedu.led ~
GALLIPOLIS - ·The Sel!lor
a11d· solicits job orders from all
for yesterday at Belpre.
Job
Bank
Is
an
employCitizen
emP.Ioyers
'In the community who .
I would llke to Introduce you to .
ment
agency
which
gives
free
are
seeking
dependable help, call
· these floe young men. They are
service
to
employers
and
appli446-7000
for
more ll!formatlol!.
Ryan Wllllams, Kevin Deemer.
cants
50
years
of
age
OF
.
o
lder.
. The Job Bank Is available 5
Robby Crow, Jay · McKelvey,
Tile Job Coun:selors, . Grace
daysa week from 7 a.m. to3p,m.
Mason Fisher, Ryan Hill, Cass
Lemely and Frances Bryan,
. Cleland, Tyson Buckley, Jay
attempt to .get job orders in the
Day, Pa\11 Chapmlll!. Jason Pancommunity,
hopefully for each
' .&amp;:-""""gia and Adam ' Triplett, and
f.' •. /·-:~~;;r-.
;
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·
.
applicant.
Jeremy Fisher and Jerrod Clay,
Many people have the mismanagers.
taken
Idea that job applicants
goode~.
I know there are hundreds of
work
as
unpaid
volunteers.
Oth·
youngsters, boys and girls, out
flood
ers think that some state agency
there In sportsland who played
pays the salerles. That Is also a
their hearts out and made their
false
assumption.
coaches very proud. We are just
The
eaned wages are paid by
as proud of you toa:
tbe
'mployer.
'
" Hats off." to the boys · of
The
Job
Bank
does
not
set
the
Syracuse. and may all your
wages,
however,
It
Is
assumed
dreams be as'fullfllled as this one
that the employer will pay the
was.
same rate to a job.appllcal!t as he
When IJ comes time to put
or
slie would pay to any one else. ·
away the balls and bats .·just.
The
Job 13ank welcomes appll- '
remember to remember how
ca,
n
ts
with
any marketable· skill ·
sweet it was.

b Ba.nk het-hs. seniors work
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. POMEROY -An afternoon
get-together was held receQtly at
'the Middleport Fire Station in
conjunction with the ~¢1gs class
of 1969 20th reunion :
Mrs. Emily · Sprague, Mrs. ·
Daisy Blakeslee, and Mrs. Rita
Slaven, high school teachers of
the class, also attended.· ·
Door prizes. maroon t-shiits
with Meigs class of '69 In gold,
were won by Ka:thy Morgan
Moore, JUdY C9ttrUI, Cathy ,Bai·
ley Cooper, Bob Burdette; and
Cathy Rus5E!ll.
· The room was decorated wit.h
·maroon and gold, 6«l's mu ~ic was
played, refreshments , Including
a . maroon and . gold cake In- ·
scribed with "Welcome Class of
'69" were served, . and' magnet
favors were given to each classmate there.
·
During the evening, the classmates attended the Meigs High
School alunpil banquet and
dance. At the banquet, the '69
class. represented by John
Krawsczyn , presented James

Revival slated
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;July 30, 1989'

Esasky paces Bosox
pas• .Cleveland, .5..()
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CARPENTER ..,... Revival si!r-i·
vices will be held at theMt. Union c
Baptist Chuf!!h, Aug. 2-6; with '
MerUn Teets of Jackson as the ;
evangelist. Services will be held :
at the church located two miles '
sout)l of Carpenter at 7 p.m.

insurance... :.

Diehl, former principal at M.H .S.
with a plaque In hon.or of hls
years of service to the school.
The group' also had class pictures
taken at this time.
On Sunday. the class attended
l! famUy gathering at the General
Hartinger Park In Middleport,
where the classmates, their
spouses and children spent the
day swimming, playlneputt-putt
golf, and a picnic. dinner prepared by Everett Holcomb and
·
the Meigs FFA class.
The planning committe!' for
·the events col!sls ted of John
Krawsczyn, Dennis Ault, Mike
Mullen, Van Johnson, Max Whl·
Hatch, Judi Cowan, Connie Dod,
son. Sandy Butcher, and Sheila
Harris .
.
Attending 'the reunion were
Sheila Childs Harris, Judi
Brewer Cowan, Connie Hatfleid
Dodson, Cyl!thla Mills, Teresa
Cascl Carr. Cathy Bailey Cooper,
Donna Wilson Pullins, atid .Max
Whitlatch, all of Middleport;
Sandy Stewart Butcher, Mike

L1ke a good neighbor.

State farm is there.

Mullen. bennls Ault, John
Krawsczyn , Bob Burdette,
Sharon McCune Warner, Susan
Lanning Well, Lymi McGuire
Arms, and Benny Wright, all of
Pomeroy; Van Johnson, and
Sherry Hutton Roush, Syracuse;
MarY, Jane Jenklnsoq, and Bob
Rice, florida; ·Kathy Morgan
Moore, Newark; Lois Ann Sauer
Harkins, Athens; Ruth Ann Lacey Hammond, Kentucky; Mary
Long O'Brien, and Rich Hagtterty, Gallipolis; Dean Weber,
Logan; Judy Cottrill, Carroll,
ft.onnle Tat·terson, Dennis Gllkt!y, and Barbara White, Colulnbus; Cathy Russell Bauer, Minnesota; Evallne Arnold McEally ,
Amesville; Skip Logan, Albany;
Kenda Chaney Wllllams, Sam
Robinson, and · Ronnie Vance,
Rutlilild; Recka McGuire Elder,
Huntington, W.Va; Dot Neutzllng, Bidwell: Jackie Robinson ,
Marietta; John Smith; LangsVille; Randy Syeks, Kitts Hill; ·
Becky Taylor Tannehill, Heath; .
al!d Linda Wehrung Gilmore,
Wisconsin.

STAll FARM

Jennifer Chapman is seen wearing
·Daffy ,Biking Shorts and Cover-up~
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preparatll!ll for the season conUnued Friday be
was trying to outrul! his "oppo•ltlon" at the
Qengals training camp. (UP I) ·
· , · .,.: . . . II#:!!Jh•"l';'.;"'•·· . , ·~

He added: ''To my teammates,
MENTOR, Ohld (UP!) .,... FulI
apologize
for c auslng them so
lback Kevil! Mack, under Indictmany
problems
and causing this
ment for cocal~~e trafficking,
orgal!lzatlon
so
many
problems.
returned ·.. io .the Cleveland
I've
made
a
lot
of
mistakes
In my ,
Browns Friday after a monthlife
and
it's
ilnie
fQr
me
to
take ,
long ·'drug · rehabllltatlori .
responsibility."
program.
.
Mack spoke little of the proMack was arrested last month
ill one of Cleveland's most gram at the clinic, other than to
say It ·was, In many ways, as
, notorious drug districts, allegedly with $500 worth of co- demanding physically as train·
lng Cl\mp.
·c.a lne and drilg paraphemalla In
"I got a pretty goOd workout,"
hls pockets.
he
said. ·
· I!efore rejollllng • hls teamalso ~ld not reveal
Collins
mates, he appeared at a news
detalls
of
the
program, but said
conferel!ce with his wife. -Ava,
"excellent
job'' and
Mack
did
an
Browns owner Art Modell and
1
was
·:very
easy
to
get
along
Dr. Gregory Collins, director of
wlih."
the drug rehabllltatlon program
"He took fuU advantage of the
.at the Cleveland CUnlc
progra!Jl and worked very hlird
Foul!datlon.
on hlrriself. I certainly think he
· 'Wearing dark pants, a white
shirt and a gray tie. Mack spoke came out far ahead as a result of
the treatment," Collins said.
softly, often looking down at the
Mack will travel with the
table. On the advice of his
Browns
when they leave for
lawyer, he refused to answer
Englal!d
Sunday for an Aug. 6
ques Uons .a bout his legal prob.
exhibition
game against the
lems, the circumstances of the
Philadelphia
Eagles, but likely
arFest or when he started using
not
play
.
will
cocaine. ·
·
Mack Is a in ember of the Inner
. ·:I'm very embarrassed by
· what happened," he said. " I feel
Circle, a drug and alcohol assls 1r
ance group founded · by . Sam
. I let a lot of people down. "

Wyche douhts·. Wilson's :claims ·Of ;
Bengals Super Bowl eve drug party
WILMINGTON, bhlo (UP!) - . to see·action In the Super Bowl,CII!ciMatl Bengals coach Sam was the only player to miss a
Wyche said Friday he doubts team meeting on Super' Bowl eve
Stanley Wilson's claim of. a . and shortly af.ter was found In his '
Bengals drug party on Super room sufferln.g from cocaine use.
Bowl
and also doubts the · Wyche. says his observation of
claim wlll hurt . the team, this all the otl}er players at that team
season.
meeting, coupled with his obser'
"I think It will have zero vatlon of Wilson after the meet Impact on the 1989 Bengals," said lng broke up, makes him believe
Wyche. "Idon'tthlnklt'sgolngto that Wilson conducted his own
bother us."
private drug party.
Wllson, banned from ptaylngln
"Everybody was II! that meetlast Jal!uary's Super Bowl after lng but Stanley," recalled
he was discovered using cocaine Wyche. ''And they all had a ron Super Bowl eve al!d since rived early for the .meeting.
"We were all . joking around ,
banned {rom the NFL; claims
·several other Bengal players with that nervous tension you
were usll!g drugs with him on have before a big game, when
Super Bowl eve and says he plans you're saying things that won't
to tell the story In a natloMI be funny again, but thatnlght you
magazine later this year.
had to get a laugh out. And we ·
Wyche says he Is very suspl- would certainly ·have noilced
somebody who was out of sorts.
clous of such claims.
"F.rom what I'm hearing, And we didn't notice anybody .
Stanley Is claiming they were
''It's almost Impossible for me
having a pot party," he said. J o believe· that ,{ll!ybody could
"There's something amiss here. · have been using · drugs before
MY belief Is that II did not take that meeting. Later, when l saw
place.
Stanley and saw the state he was
"Stanley may , name some lri, ·well, he couldn't have been In
. players he clal.m~ were ln_v,alved that . meeting room al!d us not
II! something. It may come1down · known he was In trouble: No way.
to Stanley's word against tl)etrs.
':Whereas, everybody else in
Those players will havel. to .that room seemed to be ready to
answer to It and I'm sure they'll . play footbidl. You could have
be happy to do ihat and then we spotted drug use. I just don't
get right b.a ck to football."
think II could have been hidden at
Wilson. who had scored a tliat · tlme. Nobody was In the
couple of touchdowns In Clncil!- . state that we found Stanley ln."
natl's divisional play 0ff victory , . Bengals general manager Paul
over Seattle 'three weeks before Brown says Wllsol!'s claims
the Super Bo~l anci had expected could lead to libel lawsuits .

"There's been .some threa·
tened lawsuits, because this
could put a stigma on a guy's life
If It Isn't true, " said Brown.
'This Is sordid,," ·
Wyche calls .the whole episode
"unfortunate." · · ,.
"It's unfOrtunate it happened
to Stanley and· It's unfortunate
that we lost a goOd player. and,
really, a pretty good guy who Is
no longer doing what I know he'd
love to .be doing - playing
football/' said· Wych!l. "He's. In
Phoenix now , working In a
gre&gt;ery store . . Somebody ought
to learn somethll!g from this
rather than write about 11."

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GRAND BLANC. Mich. (UPl)
- . Payne Stewart went on a
10-blrdle binge, Including four In
a row , Saturday for an S-under 64
and one-stroke lead. after three
rounds of the $1 mlillon Buick
Open.
Stewart's round left hlm with a
three-round total of 14-under 202.
Secol!d round co-leader Hal Sutton shot hls second consecutive
4-under 68 to go 13-linder.
.
Stewart's 64 was just a stroke
off the tournament recoi;(I shared
by' Robert Wrenn. Denis Watson
and Trevor Dodds.
"If I get my putter hot,"
Stewart said, "I can shoot
anything on this golf course.' '
Veteran Bol) Eastwood shared
third at 205 with first-round
leader Leonard Thompson (69)
and second round co-leader Doug
Tewell (70) at Warwick Hills Golf
al!d Country Club.
Weather conditions were near
. perfect .(or low scores with no
Wind, low humidity, temperatures ·below 80 and scattered
. clouds.
Steve Elklngtol! s.hot a 7-ul!d~r
65 to put himself In contention

Ferry miry play pro ·
basket ball in Italy
'.

FOXFIRE VILLAGE, N.C.
(UP!) -Danny Ferry, the No.2 ·
pick In the NBA draft , said
Saturday he ·might play In Italy
next season Instead· of with the
·
Los Angeles Clippers.
"l don't kMw where 1'1) be
playing next .year, whether
Rome, the Clippers or another
team In the NBA," Ferry said
from his Bowie, Md. , home on a
telephone hookup with reporters.
"l know there's some talk
a bout me bell!g traded. When the
Clippers drafted me I know their
thinking was twofolc\. They
thought I cpuld help the team but
they alsq knew they could trade

me."

·

Rutigliano when he was coach ]I!
1982.
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An unknown number of play~r ~
have been mem beTS Of the grmlp
- · the. first such program In the
NFL. Tlie only other player
publicly Identified as being ln.the
group was running back Charles .
White, wl)l) also had a cocaine
problem and was later traded )o
the Los Angeles Rams.
·· :
.Collins said he Is confident the
Inner Circle - .r un by himself,
former wide receiver Rickie
Feacher and trainer Bill Tessel!·
dorf - would be able to keep
Mack motivated.
.
After !)Is arraignment Tu~ ­
day , Ma'c k's lawyer, Gerald
Gold, said he felt the case would
not come to trial until January.
But Cuyahoga County Common
Pleas Judge Richard McMona-,
gle Thursday set a pretrial
hearing for Aug: 14 and said the
Ttlal could start30 to45daysafter
that.
Gold had no Immediate comment. Mack, who could then be
facing trial In the middle of the
football season, said he wuu!d
"deal with II one day at a time, a§.
• .. ·
· It comes."

•
S·
t
wart
·
takes
lead tn Buick Open
.

Baines' leaves White Sox ·in five-player trade

.-

.$2750
1

PRAcTICE CONTINUES - Cincinnati Ben- ·
gals running back lekey Woods Is trying to make
hlllaeeond year as~ proaiiiUceallfulas hli rookie
year.benthe~nJa!sw~~~-~the_8uP,"~Bow~;Aa

eve

LEVI'S
WEEK
9 DAYS; JULY 28 THRU AUG. 5
REG. S28.00

'

Mack·apologizes to teammate$

That's
StateFann

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CLEVELAND (UPI) .._ Nick lead. In the third, Wade Boggs lead. Jerome Wa lton opened tl!e
Esasky belted a three-run homer singled; took second on a walk to Inning with a slngleandscored llno
Saturday to back a combll!ed Jody Reed and scored oil Rom- ·· Sandberg's 13th homer. Smith
then doubled·, moved to third o,n·
two-hit shuto\lt by Mike Srnlthson lne's single-for a 2-0 lead. ·
Cleveland's
only
hlts
were
a
an
Infield out and scored ·o n .
and Rob Murphy Saturday, lift·
Ol!e·OUI
single
by
Pete
O'Brien
In
Andre
Dawson's sacrifice fly to
lng tbe I;los ton Rei! Sox to a ~-0
the
fourth
and
a
two-oui
single
by
center.
Berryhill foUowed wltli'
victory over the Cleveland
Indians:
·
· Jerry Brown In the fifth . .Smith- hls .third homer to ·make It 4-:!.
Esasky llit ..his 17th homer of son retl1'ed the last 10 l)atters he After two more singles, . White·
.the season and ·ran his RBI total faced,l:lut was lifted for Murphy hl!rst was relieved byJef( Inn~ ..
Smith and Mark Grace singled
.to 61. Smithson, 5-9, struck out . at the start cof the l!ll!th.
Cubs 10, Mets 3 ..
home Fllns In the fourth Inning f~r -:
two aild walked three In eight
In Chicago Saturday afternoon a 6-2 lead. Clilcago ·a dded three.
·tnnlngs. Murphy retired the side
Dwight Smith slugged four of the runs In the sixth, on Grace's ..
· II! order In the nil! th.
Indians starter.Bud .Biack, 8-8, Chicago Cubs' season-high 18 Infield out, Berr)'l)lll's single aQ!i
pltchl!ll41-311!nlngs, al!d gave11p hils; and Ryne Sandberg and a di&gt;!!ble by Vance Law for a: 9-2 ·
,
...
sevel! ~Its and five runs. He Damon BerryhlllhomeredSatur- lead.
day
In
a
10-3
rout
that
handed
the
Smltl)
doubled
home
the
Cubs'.
struck out four and walked four.
.,
Esasky's homer made It 5-0 In New York Mets their fifth final run In the seventh.
· .
·
The Mets led 2-0 In the second
'the fifth. Kevin Romine led off straight loss.
Greg Maddux, 11-8, pitched his when Kevlil Elster homered with
with a 'slngle, but was forc'ed 'at
secol!d by Mike Greenwel,. After fourth complete game and has two outs, Whitehurst walked and
scored ·· aft!'r Juan Samuel
a walk to Dwight Evans; Esasky won 10 of his last 13 'starts.
•drilled a 2-1 pitch over the left · Wally Whitehurst, 0·1, making doubled and left fielder Smith
his first major league start, dropped the ball for al! error. .
field fel!ce.
.
the loss while giving up
New York's third run scored In
suffefl!d
. Singles by Greenwell and
nine
hits
and
four
runs
In
2
2-3
the
seventh, WheQ Mookle Wilson
Evans . and a walk to Esasky
on first baseman Gt.aInnings.
reached
. loaded the bases In the second.
Sandbery and Berryhill ho- ce's error, took third 011 Dave
and ;m RBI Infield out by Luis
Rivera gave the Red Sox a 1·0 mered In Chicago's four' run Magadan's double and scored Olf
third Inning, erasing a 2-0 Mets' a groundout by Howard JohnsOfj.•

price-

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· ~·

-...~·

"Good Set-vice.

"

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'

L.A •.·cLOTHING

Meigs High
. class·reunion held
.

Cl{ESlilRE - A corrected llsF
of winners In the recent MGM :
Dis trlct Cub Scout Olympics 'Is as ·
foUows,
·. ·
.. .
·Tigers, Jeremy Parsons, flrsi. . .
alld Kevin Smith, second; Wolfs,,
Jeremy Ball, first, Jerrod Ball, :second, al!d Nathan Sayre and ·
Ryan McFann, . tied for _third; :
B(lars, Travis Swartz . and Na•·.
than · Radford, ·tiro for firs t/
Joshua Starcher; second; and
Ryan Ramsburg, third; Webe' :
ios, Eric Dillard, first, . Er.lc ,
. Hollon, second, and Dave l{ap- ney, Eric Hlll and J11stin Fields, :
tied (or tlllrd. . ·
•·
Pack leaders and parents were .
the winners of fun game$ which"
were part of the Olytnple events. :
,.. Fun game· winners Included ·a .
tie . In the hog ca!Ung contest :
·between Teddy Swartz of Pack .
256 and Tammy Plantz of Pack :
222 . The winner of the auto relay ·
was Pack 256. .
· .·· · ~

.

Sunday io wear the colors of the·
with a 206. At this event last year,
the Australian entered the final ·~nearby ' Detroit Lions, bounced ;
back from his only two bogeys :
round In a share of the lead
with birdies. He bogeyea tbe ·
before fadll!g ' with a final round
181-yard par 3 eighth hole but ·
77.
birdied the 413-yard par 4 ninth. :
He had seven birdies in hls
. He put his teeshotln the trap on -:
bogey-free round to share sixth
the
182-yard par 3 17th, blasted .
place with Pat McGowan (69).
out to 25 feet and missed the putt ·.
Stewart, 32, of Orlando Lake
for a bogey . He got it back with ·.
Mary, Fla., birdied the 431-yard
hls fourth birdie of the back l!lne
par 4 second ~ole from four feet,
on
the 435;yard p_ar-4 18th. :
the 187-Yard par 3 third from 15
feet, sank a two-foot bird on the dropping · a four-footer to go
401-yard par 4 fourth and an 14-under. ·
· Stewart, a four-time career
18-footer on the 437-yard par 4
winner, already has won the MCI.
fifth .
.
That dropped Stewart to 10- Heritage this year, finished seunder and gave him a.slim lead In cond In the Honqa Classic and
the blrdje race for first -prize third in Jack Nicklaus' Memorial
to help put him ninth on Ute llst
money .of $180,000! ·
Stewart, who wears old- with winnings of $478,322 this
fashioned plus-fours (knickers ) year .
On)y a nine-year PGA Tour
in colors of NFL teams, birdied
the 584-yard par 5 seventh hOle to veteran, Stewart has won $2.884'
million which is the 11th largest
go 11-under for the tournament.
The Missourian, Who plans total in golf history.
'

Redskins' quarterback .
admitted to hospital · ..
'

Wllllams. reported' to tralniri~
camp last Sunday. but watched
pitcher Wllson Alvarez and· out·
Baines ts second In RB11819) and
Fletcher led Texas In batting In
practice from the sldelll!es whlie
. ARLINGTON, Texas (UPI) third In doubles (267). He Is a each of the last three seasons,
Mark · Rypien shared qtiarterHarold Baines, all-time home fielder Sam Sosa In addition to
four-time An:star, Including this and his .280 career average with
backlng duties with reserves ·
run leader for the Chicago White Fletcher. who Is making a return
Stan Humph r ies and Jeff Gra,
Sox, SaturdaY was, traded to the to the White Sox. Alvarez has ' year'; al!d has been selected the the Rangers ls·slxth•best In team
, ·'
.
'ham.
:. ·
Texas Rangers In a -five-player . been assigned from Class 1/&gt;A ' league's outstandll!g deslgl!(ted history.
'I\IIsa of the Texas League to hitter II! the last two seasons. He
l,\1:anrlque, 27, Is batting .299
deal.
Meanwhile three .ttllanta F~l­
Wl!Uams,- under the care of . cons veterans reached lanBaines, ~ lO-year veteral! who Birmingham of the Southern · Is two hits shy j)f 1,500 for his with two homers and 30 RBI In 65
League,
and
Sosa
has
been
career.
.
games.
He
ha~
started
49
games
team
physlcan Dr. Charles Jack- , "mlnute contract agreements a114
has played his entire career with ·
son,
wlll
be contlned to bed and
assigned
trqm
Oklahoma
City
of
Fletcher,
who·
turns
31
years
for
Chicago,
ll!cludii!C
48
at
wlll be on hand Saturd,_y wh~
. the team that drafted ,hlm first
placed
the AAA American .Assoclatlol! old on Sunday; Is in his sevel!th secondbaseaildolle'atthlrdbase
In traction to soothe the
overall II! 1977, Is considered the
the NFL team hol(ls Its first
to Vancouver of the t:&gt;aclflc Coast major-league seasonJie was ob- while at'so seeing some actlol! at back Injury that has kept him out full-squad· practice.
American League's top deslgtalned by theRal!tersalongwlth shortstop. The rtgbt-handed bat- · of the club's first week of trallling
l!ated hitter al!d Is a!1lol!g league League.
Mike Kenn, a live- time Pro
Bal~~es, 30, Is · bitting .321,
pitcher Ed COrrea In a 1985 trade ter Is In his third seasol! with the camp at Dickinson College.
' leaders In several otfel!slve cate-Bowl offensive tackle and Pl'E'SI·
WUUams, who turns 34 August,. dent of the NFL Players Assoctasevel!th best . II! the .American with the White Sox for Texas White Sox, and also has pla&gt;:ed
gories. He and Infielder Fred
League, Wtth · J3 hiimers. and 56 • pitcher Dav.e Schmidt and In- . for Toronto, Montreal and St. 9, Injured his back while running
Manrtque, In Anaheim. Calif.,
tlol!, has signed a 3-year ~~let
on a treadmUI at· his home II!
where the White Sox are playll!g RBI rn 96 games. The lefl-hal!ded . fielder Wayne_ToUesiil!.
Louis. ·
,, .
Startll!g free safety Tim Go~t):
batter also Is among league•;:
Wblle slowed by 11nkte and
Alvarez, 19, started the·yearat · zachary, La. The Injury was
the Cailfornla Al!gels, go to
also slglled for an additional t1t!e"'
Texas for shortstop · ScptL leaders In on-base percel!tage . · fl~~ger ll!jurles 111 83 games this. Port Charlotte In the Florida Initially thought to be a l!erve
years, and backup quar~k·
Fletcher and two promlsll!g· (3rd, .423) , slugging (5th, .505) seaso11, .Fletcher has a .2.19 . State League,' going 7-4 with a . problem, bu 1 110 certall! dlagQoScott Campbell aa'l'eed· to ,8
al!d
walks
(8th,·
60)
and
l~ads
the
.
battil!g
average
with
22
RBI
and.
·
.
2.11
era
In
13
starts
before
bell!&amp;
sls
has
beel!
released.
·
one-year
deal.
minor league players. Baines
The
ctub
sala
wtutams·
tlospland Manrtque were expected to. White Sox In most offensive 110 home runs. II! eight games . promoted to 'Tulsa Julie '12. He
The Falcons said t~M;:~~!q!-t~n
.
· · si11ce coming offlbe disabled list was 2-2 with a 2.06 era ·ln seve11 1&lt;11 sl&lt;ly will last "approximately squad practIce wiU
categortes.
join the R811gers for SaturdaY,
In addltlo.l! to leading the White earlier this month, F!etcher has . starts and joined tbe Rangers o~~e week" and his status for · players, with
night's game against the Mllwau'
practice Will not be determll!ed first-round
· kee Brewers.
'
Sox with 186 career home runs; five hits In 32 at-bats.
JuJ.v 21.
un ttl after his release
Texas' ·gives up lett-handed
Sal!ders sllll In
CARLISLE , Pa. (UPI) -The
Washtngtol! Redsklns revealed
that quarterback Doug Williams
was admitted to Arlington (Va. )
Hospital for a week because ofa
back Injury sustained durtng
offseason conditioning.

0

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••• Paga C-2-Sunday Times-Sentinel

llomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant,
~

w. Va.

Griffey leads Reds to 4-2
•
m 17 inning mara\hon . '
ATLANTA tUl&gt;I) -Ken Grlf- hold a lead In the 14th Inning,
fey singled home two runs with ' Improved to 4-1. Bob Sebra
two out In the 17th lnniDg Friday tossed the 17th to notch his first
night to ll!t the Cincinnati Reds to save.
a 4-2 victory over the Atlanta
Cincinnati right fielder RoBraves. ·
lando Roomes set ;1 major-league
· With two oui, Mariano Duncan record for mostjlutoul,!; by a right
reached on an · error by third fielder, recording 13'..
The Reds went ahead 2-1 in the
baseman Ed Whited off loser
Sergio Valdez, 0-2. Tcidd Benzin- 14th off .reliever Paul Assenm·
ger then reached on a two-base acher. Scotty Ma~ison led off
error ·by shortstop Andres Tho- with a single, moved to second on
mas. After Eric Davis was a sacrifice bY Joe Oliver· and
walked intentionally io load the scored on a double by pinch·
bases. Griffey singled to right to hitter Joel Youngblood.
score Duncan and Benzinger.
But the Braves tied score In the
Norm Charlton, who failed to bottom of the 14th off Charlton:
Lonnie Smith led off the inning
with a triple .to right and scored
on a sacrifice fly to right by Dale
· Murphy.

· In the firSt in able Friday night: Treadway's run
gave Atlanta a 1-U lead, but the Reds won4-2 in 17 .
lnaiDp. (UPI)

'
WASHINGTON (UPU r- Top
seedS Tim Mayotte and Brad
Gilbert took different paths to the
semifinals of the Sovran Bank
Classic Friday, with Mayotte
cruising past Simon You! and
Gilbert struggling against Paul
irliling. With a man on, Damaso Clark blasted a solo homer In tht&gt; Chamberlin.
Garcia hit a drive to the top of the seventh, powering San Fran: May 0 tte, the top seed and the
fence In left but Coleman jumped cisco. Roblnsbn, 9-7. did not walk world's 11th-ranked player, '
a batter and struck out seven in downed Australia's You!, 6-3, 6-~.
to make the catch.
In the fourth inning·, Coleman recording his second complete 111 a .Quarterfinal encounter.
· had off the Inning with a single game. He retired 15 of the finall6 GI-lbert, ihe second seed and the
but his being thrown out by batters he faced, Jim Clancy, 5·8, world's 14th-ranked player; outNelson Santovenla snapped his was the loser.
lasted Chamberlin. the lOth seed,
Padres 2, Dodgers 1
record of 44-for-44 In steal at6-7 (7-5).• 6-4,6-4 h\ 2 hours and45
At San Diego, Chris James minutes. ·
tempts this season. The last time
·
he was caught was Sept ~1. 1988 doubled home the go-ahead run
In Saturday's semifinals of the
by Damon Berryhill of the In the -eighth Inning and Bruce $297,500 Grand . Prix event.
Hurst, 9-8, out-dueled Orel Her- Mayotie plays 11th _seed Todd
Chicago Cubs.
''Santoventa threw me out with shlser, 12-8, to lift the Padres ' Wltsken, who rallied to beat Jim
a good throw," Coleman said. over Los Angeles, T)le victory Grabb, ranked 135th, 4-6, 7-6
"He Is one of the most consistent was the Padres sixth In seven
(.7-4), 6-3. Gilbert faces unseeded
games 'against the Dodgers this Richey Reneberg, who" downed
catchers In the league.:·
St. Louis added a run In the season.
12th seed Ramesh Krishnan of
ninth on an RBI single by Terry
In41a, 6-1, 6-1, In 75 minutes ."
Pendleton.
·
€hamberlin was playing his
. Sports briefs
Cubs 6, Mets 5
first tournament since reaching
At Chicago, Dwight Smith's
Television
the cjuarterflnals at Wimbledon
two-run 'homer highlighted a
The International Olympic . before losing to eventual chamfour-run seventh jnning that Committee awarded the Japa- pion Botls Becker earlier this
carried the Cubs and and handed
the Mets their fourth straight nese television rights for the 1992 me~~~ berlin and Gilbert traded
Winter Olympics to Nippon Hoso
loss. Calvin Schiraldi, 3-4. won In Koykal.
The Japanese network service breaks in lhe first set •.
relief, while Mitch Williams to paid $8 million for the right to - then· Chamberlin squandered a
get his major-league leading 26th
the competition from AI· 4-0 lead In the tie-breaker before
savE'. Howard Johnson followed sho.w
bertvllle, France.
winning the set when Gilbert sent
with his 26th homE-r.
Track and Field
a forehand volley Into the net.
Pirates 10, Phlllies 5, 1st
Olympic pole .vault gold medal- Gilbert fought off four break
. At Philadelphia, Bar.ry Bonds,
Sergei Bubka Is not Included points and benefited from a
Bobby BonUla and Glenn Wilson · 1st
on the Soviet Unioh team for next controversial call to hold serve In
each smashed doubles to spark a' month's European Track and · t he sixth game, then broke
four-run first Inning and help the Field Cup at Gateshead, Eng- Chamberlin in the ninth g11me
Pirates to their sixth straight land. No reason was given by
and served out the set.
win. Neal Heaton, 2-7, notched
the win while Ken Howell Soviet officials for Bubka's exdropped to 8-7 in defeat for clusion from the Aug. 5-6 meet.
Philadelphia. Bobby Bonilla had
three hits for Pittsburgh.
Ph lilies 6, Pirates 1, Znd
At Philadelphia, rookie Charlie
Hayes slugged a mammoth
three- run homer to end a string of
112 homer less innings at the Vet
~
that highlighted a five-run fourth .
inning that led Philadelphia In
the nightc}1p. Greg HarriS' Improved to 2-2 in · retlef for the
Phlllies, while Rick Reed
'
dropped to 0-1 for the Bucs.
Giants 3, Astros %
•
At Houston, Don Robinson
scattered seven hits and Will

SAFE AT HOME- Redl!l' cathcerJeffReed has

:
•

Mayotte, G~bert
· reach semi-finals
'
.

.~he ball knocked away by Atlanta's.JeftTreadway

•

:Power pitches Cards to wm
·1ly United Press lnternatieaal

To some, being a fifth starter In
• a to tat ion might not sound like an
lmportant'job, but for St. Louis
pitcher Ted f'ower he knows the
Importance of being a fifth
starter.
'
· "Me being the fifth starter, I
' "know that I have to do my job,"
said Power after he and two
· «uevers combined on a 2-0
live-hit shutout Friday night over
: the first-place Montreal Expos.
-The game drew a crowd of 41,722,
_the largest of the season at
OlympiC Stadium. .
•. Ken Dayley allowed a hit In the
· .eighth before Todd Worrell
. Jlllched a hitless nln.th for his 14th
· ·.save.
.; ;·: Power, 3-4 yielded four hits
.: through seven lnnuigs, while
, walking three and striking out
' 'One.

' ; Pasqua! Perez, 5-10, took the
'Joss despite holding the Cardinals to one run and five hits over
eight Innings.
'· "That was the best game that .
·' Pascual has pitched in two
: years," said Montreal Manager
: · Buck Rodgers of Perez, who
:· walked one and struck out eight.
, ."It is a shame that we lost. He
: had such control of his pitches.
•· Bu I the story was the Cardinals
&gt; pitching. They just shut ·us
, down."

·

• Power and Perez had two-hit
:: shutouts through six innings
:· before the Cardinals took a 1-0
• lead in the seventh. Ozzle Smith
: and Milt Thompson started the
: • inning with singles, placing
• runners at first and third. With
· one out, Thompson stole second.
·. Shortstop Jeff Huson dropped the
bail on the. play for an error,
: allowing Smith to score from
· third.
.
Coleman, who saw his major;. league record of 50 consecutive
·: successful stolen bases end In the
. · iourth inning, preserved the lead
; · with a leaping catch In the eighth

I

, .

SOMERS POINT, N.J. (UP!)
tournament.
- Nancy Lopez, second on this
"It's s uch a toll out here, when
· year's money list. shot a 3-under- you are trying to play week after
• par 67 Friday to hold a one-stroke week," Lopez said. "Taking a
.. lead after one round of thE' week off helped a lot. I really felt
; $225,000 Atlantic City Classic.
goOd out there."
·
•. Lopez collected five birdiE's to
King, the leading money
:- offset two bogeys and take the winner in 1989, said she did not hit
; lead In the three-round tourna- the greens on the first three
, • ment over Betsy King, Chris holes.
Johnson and Elaine Crosby. Nine · " I started out shaky, and didn't
:: other players were tied at 1- hltit solidly," King said. "I made
.: under heading into thE' second a lot of putts. I haven't been
:; round.
hitting It that solidly on the
• Two- time tournament winner range.''
Juli lnskler, who bE'at Beth
: Daniel in a playoff last year and
·, also won the Inaugural event In
: 1986. was at 4-over 74.
• "This is the best r l've ever
614·221-0811
; : played in my career," said
• ' Lopez. ''I hit the·ball very well. I
L.
• made good pars on 5 and 6. I
AnORNEY ·AT·LAW
played well and putted well,
336 S. High St. Columb•, 011.
: although I three-putted on two
LOCAl COIISII.TAOON
·: greens.
·
KNIGHT, IIWIN LAW OfFKES.
; "The greens are small," she
POMIIOY, 992-2090
· said. "You have to be hitting it
In '-•Y with
: well to score well here."
. &lt; Lopez, who has 40 career ATTORNEY D. A1(1Wl. IIWN
• victories, said not playing last
: • week
her ·
for this
\

:

1313 EASTERN AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, Ott.

R&amp;D Video

446-7621

.lOCATED NEXT DOOR TO ASIUIID IUII.PLAIIT

PUBLIC NOTICE

NOTICE is heraliy given that on Saturday, August 5,
1919, at I 0:00a.m., a public sale will be held at 105 Union
Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio, to sell for cash the following colla·
feral:
1981 Ford Escort Stationwagon · 1FAIPOI218T259417
)914 Ford Escort L 4 dr. HI
· 1FAIP132XEW290555
1984 Ford Escort SW.
1FAIP0929EW130605
The Farmers llc!nk and Sovings Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, .
reserves the right -to bid at this sale, and to withdraw the
above collateral ·ptior to sale. Further, Tlit Farmers lank
and ·savings company reserves the right io reject any or al
bids submiHed.
··
.
'
Further, the above collateral will be sold in the condition
it is in with no exprtslld or implied warrantiis give~.

outing was held on July 21. The
GALLIPOLIS - The Last bracket wlnnner and the first and winners In the 15-17 age group
Chance Carry-out will sponsor Its second place overall finishers. were Anderson of Jaymar, low
second annual round robin soft· There also will be a "D" national gross, and Nick McCarty of
ball tournament Aug. 5 and 6 in birth given to the top finishing Jaymar, low net.
Gallipolis.
·
''D" team.
Harris had the low gross In the
It will be open to all ASA "C""
Entry Fee Is · $80 per team. 13 and 14 age group and Brent
and "D" class teams In the area.
Each team ·may hit their own . Sang of HVCC had the low net. In
the 11' and 12 age·group Hart won
Due to success of last year's ball.
entries onlY ' 15 entries will ,be
Fore niore Information call lOw gross and KraWsczyn had the
accepted thts year. Each 'team Mike Canaday at 446-7538 or low net. · . ,
w.ill play at least four games.
Gary Harrison at 446-4059.
In the 10 and under Hysell had
low gross and Pullin had the low
Awards will be given to each
net.

~al

•' ..

Viovl Siding Sale!

learned footwork techniques, dlcussed mental training and took
part In lnndivldual workouts.
Hamilton Is the daughter of
Dan and· Gall Hamilton of "Rt. 2,
Gallipolis..
,
'

Open gym
scheduled

Fits most Coleman. Miller &amp; lntertherm
Gas, Oil lit Electric Furnaces.

•
•
•
•
•
•
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•
•

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be a volleyball open gym session
at Meigs HJJih School Monday,
July 31. from 8:30 until 10:30 a.m.

~

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SEE US ,OR ALL .YOUR
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girl participates in camp

ATHENS- Lori Hamilton, a
senior at Gallla Academy High
School was among 50 girls who
participated In Ohio Un lverslty's
1989 Lady I;lobcat Players Basketball Camp, from July 20-23.
The camp, dlrecied by Amy
·Prichard, Ohio University's head
basketball coach, provided ,
campers With three days of
Intensive post play Instruction on
all phases of the game.
Campers practiced head fakes,
protecting the ball and the three
point play, along with passing,
ball handling and pivoting.
In addition, participants

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hole to earn a third place tie with
In the 11 and 12 age g~oup
TALLADEGA, Ala. (UP I) -A Bodine's Ford . Jarrett 's Pontiac never won a Winston Cup series
Anderson and left Hamilton as . Jason Hart of ·Riverside and
four-car
wreck Friday during hit some debris, a tire went flat race. "We really want that
the 1989 winner. This left Ander- Adam Krawsczyn of Jay Mar
practice
for
the Talladega 500 and he wrecked In a turn.
$114,000.
son In second, Adam Breaklron came Into the round se.perated by
1n third andS mlthwasfourthjust only two points. Hart took a forced lineup changes fpr Sun"If It was $114mllllon this team
day
's
NASCAR
race.
Pearson
had
qualified
No.
18,
couldn't
try any harder than it's .
ahead of Plhl Hovatter.
four-stroke lead on the sixth hole,
After
all
qualifying
set
the
No.
20
and
Jarrett
No.
28.
Bodine
trying. We could spread it around
The 13 and 14 age group butKrawsczyn came back with a
featured ·more good competition · one-over score for the last three · starting 41-car lineup, Bobby Uni:ler NASCAR rules, Hillin's ·and It would soothe some of the
Hillin, Larryj. Pearson, Brett backup vehicle will be In the 38th pain of not being able to be with
as going Into the final round Jay holes,
Harris of Jayrnar Got!. Course
Hart managed .to hang on and Bodine and Da eJarrettwrecked spot, Pe~rson's In 39th, Bodine's our families as mucli as we'd! ike
and Mark Georgi of HVCC were beat Krawsczyn to win the their vehicles during a practice . In No. 40 and Jarrett's In No. 41 . because we' re working so hiird."
Talladega 500 pole owner Mark
Martin won the pole for t)le21st
!jed. Harris took a .flve shot lead season competition. Krawsczyn run and their back-up vehicles
.and managed to hang on to a two finished second for the day and were sent to the rear o.fthe l(neup Martin will atempt tq follow up Talladega 500 Thursday with a
his fifth pole position of the year speed of 194.8 mph to pace the
shot lead on the final hole to the season. Eric Roderick fin- for Sunday's race,
by Winning what would "be his field of 41 at the Talladega
assure himself of a first place !shed third for the day and
The
smashes
happened
when
Superspeedway .
biggest race.
finish for the year.
· ,
season.
Hillin's
Buick,
originally
In
t)le
If
he
wins
Sunday,
not
only
will
Qualifying In the first five spots
Fourth place went to Scott
No.
14
spot,
was
drafting
off
he
earn
more
than
$70,000
but
after Martin Thursday were
Steve-Deweese of HVCC man- Hyssell and fifth went to Brain
Ricky
Rudd'
s
Buick
while
they
he'll also get the $114,000 Unocai Darrell Waltrip, Ken Schrader,
aged to beat Harris by one shot Anderson.
were passing Pearson, Bodine Challenge check that will go to a Bill Elliott .and Terry Labo'iite.
and won the day's event. Curtis
In the 10 and under.age·group
and Jarrett.
pole-silter who wins the race.
The rest of the top 10 were Harry
Capehart was tied with Deweese J .It Hysell finished first and
Hillin tried to pull back Into line
''The odds get greater every Gant, Davey Allison, Morgan
going Into the final hole, but an Zach Pullin came in second.
and he and Pearson's Buick time out that we are going to win Shepherd, Dale Earnhardt and
errant shot dropped him Into a
The Parker Long plaque
tou~hed. wrecking them and
a race," said Martin, who has J&lt;yle Petty .
three way tie with Travis Tol- winner went to Harris of the 13
·"' ....
liver :and Robbie Chase . 'just . and 14 age group. This award
ahead of Georgi, Carl King and . g~s to the Individual with the
Aaron Grate.
highest point total In the top two
The final standings had Harris
.
' of
.
In first, .Georgi . In second, and ·~
The award Is named
In honor
Deweese, Capehart amd Jeremy the first cllampion, who was
VIckers In third.
tragically killed , in an auto

Softball tournament
·

Ferrellgas

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KING OF KINGS
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GALLIPOLIS - The fourth
and final regular tour event for
TriCounty Juniors was played on
the Riverside Golf Course In
Mason,
W.Va.
T
his final tournament s iayed
true to form as the tight competltlon featuring more high quality
golf.
The three way logjam In the
15-17 age group found third place
Sam Hamilton move Into the top
spot, but the deciding factor was
a birdie on the ttnal hole by fourth
place Ryan Smith. Goinglntothls
final outing, Hamilton trailed
leader Jamie Anderson by three
points ;»td Adam Breakiron by
two.
·Hamilton fashloried the best
score of the day with a four-over
par 40 to take first place. This left
Anderson needing to finish second to. win the overall
tournament.
It appeared ·that he would do
· this until the final hole · .when
Smith almost had ·a hole-In-one
and tapped In for a birdie and a
second place finish with 44

The Reds tied the score 1-1 in
the seventh off Atlanta starter
Pete Smith. With two out, Jeff
Reed singled and Ron Oester
reached on an Infield single to
knock out Smith. With Jeff
Richardson pinch-running for
.Reed, Herm Wlnnlnghham laced ·
a single to left off reliever Jim
Acker, scoring Richardson.
The Braves had taken 1-0 lead
In the first off Reds starter Ron
Robinson. With one out, Jeff ' .
'l'readway doubled and scored on
a single by Lonrile Smith.
Robinson sul'rendered two hits
over six hinings walking two and
striking out two. Pete Smith .
allowed seven hits over 6 2-3
innings, walking onean&lt;!,trlklng
out seven.
·

OPEN 8:00 A.M.-4:30P.M.

Lineup· finalized for TaU~dega race

Junior golfers .finish season

PROPANE GAS .

BANKRUPTCY

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

•
wm

Sunday Times-Sentinel-Page C-3

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

ATTENTION!

j·Lopez takes first-round lead

.
..·•·

July 30, 1989

July 30, 1989

..
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Pomer:oy·

July 30, 1989

W.Va.

'.

Indians sweep double-header from Red Sox

1

FIRST - Wilb 11mpJioe Mark lohnsoa looking on, the '
Milwaukee Brewers' Rob Deer· slides Into borne head first,
upending Texas cathcber Jllfl Sundberg, as be !!COres. Deer's run
was one of three Brewer runs !!Cored In the llrst Inning. Milwaukee
won 15-3. (UPI)

1 . . HEAD

·:_ Book alleges l)rug use
:by N.C. State players
. CHARLOTTE,N.C. (UPI)-A
controversial book about North
·: Carolina State basketb~ll says
: former · star Chris. Washburn
·: played while high on c~alrie and
players received gifts as well as ·
' substances to mask drug use.
The Charlotte Observer
reported.
"Personal Fouls," written by
· Peter Golenbock, quotes a player
: as saying N.C. State Coach Jim
· Valvano knew Washburn was
. playing on drugs. according to
the newspaper, which obtained a
· copy of the book Thursday.
Arthur Kamlnksy, Valvano's
lawyer, said neither he !lOr the
, coach WOUld comment until haV·
· ing read the ·book.
: "Wash would play games on
· coke," the book quotes a teammate as saying. "The first time
. he'd play great, and then the coke
· would wear off, ana in the second
• hall, he wouldn't do a thing. "
: Washburn, who left N.C. State
· after his sophomore year, has
: been permanently l;&gt;anned from
. the NBA for substance abuse
durin~&lt; his professional career.
The book also says a "sugar
. daddy" supplied players with
· IJ)Oney, clothes, stereo eljuip·l)'Jent and substances to mask
, drugs in urine tests, The Ob. server reported.
: Albert Lanier Jr., N.C. State's
·vice chancellor for university
·relations. dismissed the book in a
statement Friday.
• " A quick review of 'Personal
Fouls' by university officials

-.. -·· ~~-

:,&gt; c;;"l...;...
· &amp;,....

-

Indicates the book Is a work of
fiction and has no relationship to
the reality of the f,lne basketball
program at NCSU, ''Lanter said.
"Therefore the un'iverslty does
not find any reason to further
address the book - point-bypoint or In general."
Golenbock quotes former Wolfpack Manager John Simonds
extensively, but referred anonymously to many of the players
he claimed to have interviewed.
Golenbock said that was
"something I hate to do, but In
many cases the only way I could
Impart the Information and at the
same time protect the source.
Almost every conversation I had,
I taped. The tapes are In a safety
deposit box."
"Personal Fouls" Is being
published by Carroll &amp; Graf
Publishers of New York. Simon &amp;
Schuster announced in February
its Pocket . Books division
dropped tlie book because It
fa,,lled . to meet publishing
standards.
The university and the office of
the . North Carolina Attorney
General threatened legal action
if Simon &amp; Schuster published. ·
Carroll &amp; Graf won publishing
rights at a· new bidding and
announced publication plans for
Sept. 5.
The original dust jacket distributed In January accused
Valvano of exploiting his players
and claimed wrongdoing In academics, drug· testing and finances, among other things.

-

By Unlled Press ln~rnatiOnal
out three while registering his post his first major-league vic·
After watching Clevellmd's third complete game 61 the tory and Kent Hrbek drove In
three runs with a double and
Rod Nichols limit the Red Sox to season. Clemens Jell to 11-8.
home run. Dyer, 1·2, gave up two
six hlis and one run In 8 1-3
Blue Jays 6, Yankees%
Innings In the second game of the
George Bell doesn't care what ·runs and six hits while striking
Indians' double-header sweep city he plays ln. After all, he out two. Loser Jeff Robinson, 1-2,
Friday night, Boston manager . figures he's gonna get booed at went 4 2-3 Innings, allowing four
Joe Morgan wondered what thehome and on the road, so It really runs and seven hits.
Orioles 4, Royals 3, 13 Innings
right-hander was doing In AAA doesn't matter .
At Kansas City, Mo., Joe
for most of the season.
It seemed to make a difference
"That kid's sneaky, Nichols," to the Yankees, though, as Bell Orsulak singled and scored on a
Morgan said after the Indl;ms l,llas ted a home run .and drove In wlld pitch and two errors In the
won · the nightcap 2-1 to move three runs to propel the Toronto 13th Inning, helping Baltimore
above .500 for the first tline since Blue Jays to a 6-2 triumph over break their elght·game losing
May 7. "You see a kid plt(:h like the New York · Yankees Friday streak. Loser Jeff Montgomery,
that and you wonder what the hell .night In New York.
7-2, threw a wild pitch which
he's doing In Triple-A all year."
''They boo me here, they boo allowed Orsulak to score when,
What Nichols was doing \YaS me everywhere,'' says Bell. .on the play, catcher Bob Boone
recovering from a shoulder In· ''The more they boo, the better I threw wildly trying to get Jlmjury and walling for a cnance to get."
Traber at second .. Mark Wllllambreak Into .the Indians' solid ·
"George Bell Is playing well son, 7-3, worked three Innings for
· ·
starting-rotation. An Injury that and doesn't care If he Is booed on the victory.
placed Greg Swindell on the the road," said Toronto Manager
Brewers 15, Rangers 3
disabled list was the opening CitoGaston. "Helsmorecomfor- . At Arlington, Texas, Paul
Nichols needed, and the•Indians table on the 'roajd."
Molitor keyed a six-run fifth
activated him after they won the
Bell, who had not homered Inning with a triple and a sln_gle
first game 3-2 hehfnd a five-hitter since June 13, hit a two· run shot and Greg Brock drove In three
by 'l;om Candtottl.
In the top of the fifth Inning, after runs. Tom Filer, 2-1, allowed five
Cleveland has won eight of Its singling home a 'run during hits, three runs, walked two and
last 10 games and Is alone In Toronto's three-run third. Bell struck out Jlone In seven Innings.
second place In the AL East., the now has . 60 RBI on the season, Loser Mike Jeffcoat, 5-3, gave up
first time since 1976 the Indians despite hitting only 10 homers six runs and six hits In 4 1-3
have been In -second place· this thus far.
Innings.
late In the season.
Twins 4-7, Tigers 6-3
Angels 6, White Sox 5
At Detroit, Chet Lemon hit a
At Anaheim, Calif.. ClaudelL,
Brad Kommlnsk.hlt a towering
two-run homer In the fifth Inning two-run homer and Tracy Jones Washington lifted a sacrifice fly
of the second game qff loser Wes drove In a pair of runs. Rookie to score Jack Howell with none
Gardner, 2-6. Nichols, who right-hander Kevin Ritz, 1·1, out In the ninth. Bobby Thigpen
pltched two: thirds of arj Inning In allowed four hits and two runs replaced loser Donn Paul, 3-2.
an appearance with tile Indians ·through six Innings while strlk- and Washington hit a 2-1 pitch
earller this month, Is H.
lng out six and .walking six and deep enough ·to left to score
He needed relief tlelp from Mike Henneman recorded his Howell from third without a play.
Doug Jones after glvin~ \IP a solo third save. Frank VIola, 8-12,
Byran Harvey, 3-2, notched the .
homer to Danny Hee11 with one took credit lor the loss :
victory:
out In the ninth. Jones gothls24th
In the second game, Mike Dyer
·Athletics 8, Mariners 7
At Oakland, Calif .. .carney
save, tying hlltl wit~ Milwau- survived, some early wildness to
kee's Dan Plesac for the league
lead, but not . without some · . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
difficulty.
:
In the first game, cat¢her Andy
Allanson hit his second home run
of the year, a solo shqt to left In
the seventh Inning, to score the
game-winning run. i
· Candlotti, 9-6,.has given up just
two runs In three starts since
coming oft the disabled list July
18. The junkball lspeclalist
walked just one batter,and struck ·

Toledo race results
TOLEDO, Ohio CUPI) -Tom
Moore Jr. guided Fllrtln Crystal
to a gate- to-wire victory in
Friday night's featured ninth
race trot at Raceway Park.
Fabio W finished second and
Bret 's Easter Joy came in third.
The winner covered the mile In
2:00 and returned $6.60,$3.80 and
$2.40 In notching her third consecu live victory at Raceway. Fa blo
W paid $6.60 and $2.60 while
Brei's Easter Joy returned $2.20 .
Little Mint captured the first
race and By Seedling triumphed
In the second to set up a 6-3 daily
double combination that was
worth $23.40.
A crowd of 2,598 wagered
$254,861.
..

-

¥

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

4' X 8'

Swimming
A woman who became tile first
. person to butterfly stroke across
the English Channel failed In a
similar attempt to swim the
narrower San Pedro Channel
from San·la Catalina Island In
California. VIcki Keith , 28, was
pulled aboard her chase boat 6
miles from her destination, after
19 hours and 19. minutes In the
water.

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ERS

41

In the coming months, we will
publish an entire newspaper section
focusing on Youth Baseball. Make sure
your "Hall-of·Famer" gets proper recognition by sending a photo with the
completed coupon. If you find that you
need a photo, we can take it.

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CHAD YOUNG • Or..., Drogons
HT· 4'1 ... 80: Mo¥ 20. 1981
Throw• Right. Bats Right

I

BOYS' PRE-WASHED

REG. '21.50
f

LEVI'S S1849

FREE

Check With Us
Belare You Buy!

I

PRE•WASHED

FREE

r----------------------1
.
Your Ticket To
•'

.

ALL STYLES OF

lEVI

I s ON

I

SALE

·'

Team Name:--------

WORJC PRODU~TS

.- -

COST PER PHOTO IS ~$500
.,..' ..

. WIRE ·MESH

.
..
PHOTOS WILL BE APPROXIMATELY
THE SIZE AS PICTURED ABOVE .

.

Hei1ht: - - - - . . . . . , - - - - -

FAMERS"~...­

GaDipell• Dally Tribune
125 Third Aven••
G.allpell1, OH. 45631.

.. .

Parents:-------- -

Mail Your Coupon To

.r---"HALL OF

~~~
~

Birthday: - - - - - - - I Throws (R or L):_ _ _ _ __
I
I

I1

Bats (R or L):~._
. --.....,.---.:··.c:
Fi!l our your application, then sJop by our

1 front office to si1n up. ' We accept Cash.

1 Check, Mastercard, or Visa.

·

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

.f'allipoli; BaUu ltihnn~
446-2342
..

-~-~·~····-----· ··----~------·-·--~

-~-

---·- -- -- . --·-

sza.so

COMPLETELY ASSEMBLED

6 DAYS ONLY July 31 st~Aug. 5th
St.orLeg

·

'16 cc SINKER...».QlL ..

t. LEVI'S WEE
REGISTER TO WIN

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

_____ _

•

4x4 4.40 6.67 7.79 8.00 - 9.67
4x6
X
X 11.20 11.95 15.36
1x6 1.90 2.35 ·3.os
X
X
5/4x6 3.00 3.55 4.45
X
6.15

'C OACHES SHORTS
GYM SHORTS • SOCKS .
-~
BALL CAPS • BAGS
T-SHIRTS • &amp; MORE

MIDDlEPORT'

8
2.20
3.20
4.19
5.43"
7.36

2x4
2x6 ·
2x8
2x10
2X12

"YOUR 'COMPLETE'
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
STORE"

.

Sunday Times-Sentinei-P8ge-C•5

PRIISDBITREI7EDLUMBIR

PRESSURE
'REA7ED LlftiCE

Sports briefs

WILL BE CLOSED MONDAY
AND TUESDAY, JULY 31 ·
AND AUGUST .1 DUE TO A
DEATH IN THE FAMILY.

.

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

..

Lansford singled home Stan
Javier with the bases loaded and
nobody out In the 11th Inning, for
Oakland's first extra-Inning win.
Gene Harris, 1-4, took the loss .
Todd Burns, 6-2, pitched the final
two Innings for the victory.
allowing a run on two hits.

RUTLAND FURNITURE CO.

.._.

July 30, 1989

.•

~~·~"x&amp;"xt0/10

. "'

S'x150'

$4399,

WELD wlRI: MESH .

~,J'~

-

8'0 X 1'8"

PillCO

8'

. 10'

12'
*300G

KINGSFORD VlNYL
WINDOW SHUTTERS

14" X 35" ...... 8 13.59 PAOli
14" X 39"...... 815.29 PAIR
14" X 43"......8i6.14 PMa
14" x ,47"......•17.89 PAIR1
14" X 51".... ~. 8 19.59 PAIR
· 14" X 515"......82Q.39_PAIR
14" X 59"...... 821.99 PAIR

•
•
•

�July 30. 1989

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

~Watts
I
I.

continues Oklahoma State . tradition ·at 'Buick Open

GRAND BLANC, Mich. (UP!)
- BUick may soon become the
car of choice at Oklahoma State.
Two Oklahoma State gradu·
ales, Scott Verplank and Doug
Tewell, finished 1·2 in the 1988
Buick Open.
Another ex-Cowboy, Brian
Wat\s, offered additional credentials to earn a sponsor's exemption Into the 1989 Buick field. And
he has made the most of the
Invitation.
The (our-time All-America playing in his first PGA Tour ·

Majors

Oklallonu. .....................u a
·
Frldq's Reeulh

By UnJUod PM~" IGift'•tlcu..
AMERICAN LEAGUE
.

.,.,.,

AAA Alll.ulcr

W L Pet.
Battlm•re

Pawlwket 4, Otbahoma City I
.ffllo II, ToiND S
lo.-. 4, ~h:rut•WII.,. Bar,. 0
..... _ , _ . S. Colwnbuil l
1 lftkr . . I&amp;MII.Aiqaw

Gil

l.f M .141 -

.. .,.,;,............$1 M .Mil
TorontO .......................11 $1 .5t0

S\1
4

Rocheflte~

Mllwaulll'e ....................f.t $3 .1118 I
BoNioa ................. .. ...... .f7 11 .1811

I '

» .

New York .............. .. :.•..n
.tiS 1 ~
Detroit ............. :..........M 61 .an 111 \tt :

Wesl
Cldllorllla ........ ,...........l!: 3t .Itt Oakiud ......................it 41 .Sill

SutUe .................. ~ .....-IR
Chlt&gt;qo .......................n

~

st

Frlt~Q'~&gt;

.-li' 14
..atl 19 ~

OpUo~• ouUJI&amp;dl'r
Gar)' Var!ille to Iowa of tilt! Amf'tkllft
~lat.lon CAAA); ~ailed upoudleldPr
Darlti.Jad&amp;liOn lrom lowll. ·

Deiroit -

lo BalllmorP ferplkJier Brlu
DuhO • • .
Ho1ullo• - Rt'l~d pl&amp;cher Bob
KnpPpH; ~~ llrllt h~mu • oiltflelder
Gre1Gr0M1 &amp;o'J\Ie.oaolthe Pacific Coasl
Ll'IIPl' IA.tA~; r.oc-.UHIIIN hiUII!man·
oudleNrr Hlliry Splmu from TUCIIOR
•••outflelc:IH Eric' Ant bony lrorn Col urn·
haH of the,Soulbe.-. Lf..,at&gt; CAA J,
Mll~kell' Named Bton · 0~11\'lf'
ln.trudor
KpPl'lalllll!dpmenl ~~eeut. . ·
Monll'f'.ll - Plllced !III!CGnd h~man
Tom Fot.y on lhl' 15-diQ' dlllllllkid liM ; '
'un:IIMed Infielder .Ju!Hr NoMa from
lndl.ap oil" of lhe Aml'rk an A.11~t«l atlon
CA.AAI.
,
N_. l'ork ~AL l - Optkll_.d plleht'r
Dale Mohort'l,c lo "C ehmh•• ol 1be
lnler111Uonal 41tK'K' (AA.A); recalled
lnltlder R~llly Velarde ltmn Colwnbalh

Bo~:~ ton ~• Clenlarid
MIRIW"Kota at Detroit
L.lllruon&gt; ;U Kan•" City

u•

Sullie .tal OakiMd

C'l!h:atG at ValllorNa
Mllwau kee Itt Tl'JC»; nl ~

NATIONAL LEAG UE
Elll-il

W L Pd . GB
MOnlrt'al ................ .. ...$8 ~3 ..57!1 Chlc•ro .................... ...$6 -IS .55-1 21...!

-1s .:m

5

New l'orL ........... .......$3 -17 ,5JU

5

Pltt!INJ'II:h ... .. ..............-15
Phlladelphh ... , .. .. . .. .39
WPtil
San Fran li!ii"O .............11
Houtun .......................n
San Dl~~ ···················· iiO
Los An.:elf!!'i .: ............ ,...-411
Clncinrull .. ........... .......-l:l

H .-141

13 1~:r~

Iii

1!1

.3!10

42 .592 -

u .513 3
53 .-18~ II

.56 ..al~ . 13!-1

:15 .-111 1 3~ •
1\lhuda ........................ -12 61 ..&amp;OR 19
. Frl~lO''" ~MuiiK

YorkS
PIUHhurrb I, :tnd

flndnnat 1-4, 1\Uanbl ~ . 17 Inn.
Sun Fnnl'l:ooco 3, Houst on 'l
~an lli•·~ 2. l..oioi An~ll'!oo I
.~u llla.r'~ Game'!';

st.

l..oul~&lt; at Montrelll
Pltt!'dluflh ;d Phlla,dclphha ·
Clnc·ln ... ll Ill ,\tiUI\tLI.

GB

15 .S~!J -

5!1 .-491

91ft

62 .u!l

17 ~

~

.3941

19 ~

" ' L l'cl .

COB

folamhu s ... ....... .... ...... 311 ·Ill .517 RlchmoOO ....................;i.tl -411 .:s-1"7 'ndr:waaler . ...................39 52 .512 'l'r,

Tolrdo .........................~!! 3:1 .47~
AMERICAN A.."iMCJ('IATION
Ea.&lt;ilt&gt;rn
WLPd .
-1:1

7~

Dalla!J -

SlpPd

q~arterhacll

Stt'\'f'

f1Hcller.
Det roM -

Traded olfeni4Yf' IIIW'nu&amp;n
Curt Sia~r to ~all if' lor WI undi!!CIM~&gt;d
dralt c:hokt'; · ~;II(Md Unebd"r r Tim

47 . ~65 ~
5:1 .5:!:1 !1 1.-1
l l .$ 1~ 10

L P•·t . GB
36 .495 57 .4K'l 1'-'t

Gret'n Bay - ~lped roroei'h~tcll Mllfk
Lre: Wlllved wtdt&gt; ruetw&gt;r Scou Hollon.

.
•

"

.

'

"'HOT

Tulll.'IO!'OpG.

S40,oS60
OFF

ALL

81 toyota Cellca, nd, automatk, hat&lt;hbo&lt;k ................ S24tS
IW Ford Eo&lt;Ott 4 door, AMIFM - ......................... $3495
85 FD&lt;d Eocort, 5 opHd, air, ot~rtti ............... , ... , .... INtS
82 Honda Civk Wapn, 511pftt1 .. ................... , .. , .. llf911
86 Dot11• Ornnl CLH, 511pftd. ohup .... , , , ,, .. . .. : .,SfttS
82 Toyota Celica, aut.,....k, .air, AMfFM tltnO .....•. .' •••• ,IMIJI
85 Oltla Calala, aultlftUtic, air, AMIFM ....... , , . , . , . , . ... . . SfttS
86 Pontiac Sunblrd, a-aolc, air, AMIFM alonG ........ ,Pf95
81 Ch&lt;vy Sprint, nlotlld.ic, air, AMIFM ttltnO ............ ,...,
Ill Mazda J23, 5 apftd,low miiH .................... ,.' .... P995
8! Toyota Caavy, lOaded, aharp ................. , , ·, , , , . . . ,
87 Plymouth Suadatb 4 door, oulomatk; air ..• , ... : , , . , .. ," " '
Ill hntiu Crand Am, 5 llpfttl, low milia .. , .... ,,; .. " ... IMI5
15 Ford Tempo,1oltl, ouloautic ........... :, ., , ,,,,,,SfttS
17 Olda c;atala ......... , ........ , .. ....................... IMIS
19 Tempo CL Z d001, hpHd, air, tUt, mil....... : ...... , .. . .
19 hrtllat: !!ttoblnl IE, nd. ahatp .... , ......... ,..... .........
It Fori M....... Ntl, n - k , air .... ....... , .. •.. ,, , ......
17 Ply-Ill lellul, attiOmati&lt;, a!rl 4 tloor. ,................ tlfH
It Oldo Cutlou ............ ioadod,IVI: . .. , . , , , , ' , , , ,...,
87 Ford Thunderbird Turbo .... , .. . , .. .. . ............... IIIH
83 Ford Thuaderblnl, blue, low mlln .. ........ . .. T .. , , , . . ,
17 Celobrlty Station Wopn. low OlilH .. ................... INH
13 Celebrity,
olr, tilt, mtiH ............. , ..... ,SfttS
M l•ld Rwl, 1 DWMr, MW Cll' trade • .••• ,., , ,,.,,, o., ••. ,
15 Pontlat: Cnnd Prla, lot1dod. oharp .... .... .... ........... INH
15 AMC Ea1t. .... rt..n ....... ; ., , ,,,;,·.............. llltS
17 Celebrity, ,olr, lilt mtiN ......... .... , .... . .... l , ... , . , .
76 Chrys~r New \'orktr, 28,000 .. u.... , •.• , , ,., , •• , . , •••.•. ,.,.,
85 Oldo •· lew •llftl ............... .. ............. , ..... IIIH
14 Cod Iliac Eldorotlo, loodod ........ .' , .........1-.. , , ... ·"'"
84 0141 TGIO =ctn. ................. . ""·········•• ;,,,, •••• ~ .....
It Codllia&lt; Sotloo Dntlle ..... , .......................... tMtl
17 LeS.bn
21,t110 ..Un ........................... hi,..,
112 luidt ....L - . dnn, 1 - m .............. .,, ...........
15 Clwvyo ..0 a p I, loldetl. black ..•.•••• ,,, •• ,,.,,.,.,, ......
. 85 Chevy Caval lor, olllo-k. air, Ill~ moloo .... , .. , .. ; ... . .

••-If&lt;,

RIDERS
.up T.O

$300
OFF

··

We've Got The · ~~:- ·
New Or Used Car
Or Truck To Fit
YOUR ··
BUDGET

- ·st_..-d sal('ly MIIU'
Prklr a.nd UPi Pnd .Jon Brlllldr!i: placed
linf'hllCII.er DuiYIP Bld•dl on lnjurPd lbit.
KantMK City - Sirned fn' l" IIJP:tat wtdr
ret'f'hlt"f Alherl Bell.
LA RIUI1" - Sl~d t•enler Na\'y

MOWERS

.

ENDS MONDAY, JULY 31ST ' .-~}REE~ .

w-.

16 Pontlat: rr
..-!"'!'Aat.lo.
" Ponlia&lt; !!'

lltot:k. 1o1ot11t1 .. , .. ; .:·...... ..

SN.Q
116.13·
.... U '

W.H
197.28
ttOI.M

11111.14
IIOUS
1112.37
I1U.J7

1..7.11
1171.13
l1tU2
1117.U

,.._.
t•37

._.
SW.14

•-•

11U.21
II,.Jt .
lltf•
tJIUJ

J111.21

flQ.Jt
1181.14

h!.UJ
h;tO.JJ ,

......

~.. 11. FREE A .

·:SODA!·

.,'I;\....,..,.

. ,. POP·"'.

•
•

Computer class to
be offered in fall

Junk bonds

RIO GRANDE - An "IntroThe assumptions supporting duction to Computers" class will
many junk bond deals were be offered this fall by the Adult
•
based. on the continuation of the Service Division of the Gallla·
•'
GALLIPOLIS - The Wall· long economic ex!ianslon of the Jackson-Vinton Joint Vocational
1980's. · Financial de-regulation . School District.
Street Jourrial recently rPnort1!'d
apparently has shifted the nature
'tJlat almost $3 b!lllon wnrth
The course is geared to those
of business contractions away with little or no experience with
c. ompanies'
from broad economic declines to computers and Is designed to
1\.lgh-yleld bonds
"rolling" recessions across in- build confidence in the operation
h·ave stopped
dustries,
sectors and regions o! of the various types of programs.
paying Interest
the country. ·
(\\' are ·mired In
Students will learn the basics
As a result, default rates are of how to operate word process(9rced restruc- .
likely to Increase In proportion to · lng, spreadsheets,, and data
turings. This
the level o! junk bon'd financing bases using IMB personal com· s.even month todone and the extent to which any pulers. A large percentage of the
tal compares with an
average of $4 billion during the business contraction was expe- class time will be spent gaining
rienced tn ·particular industries, hands-on experience in the oper!!liSt lew years. Furthermore, an
'\ddltlonal $4 billion of "junk sectors aild/or regions of the atlon, Input, and retrieval of
ti&gt;ndl" can be found on various ' ~ntry.
•. ,.,. , , r " , . ..,;AWI&gt;rtnatloti. :
. · ..
· ,
"··;.credit Wlltc~" IIsJs:.:· , " ·
~~~addition, wniletlili'_segment *'The class will be taught by
of the bond market has grown Dennis Franks whose previous
1 Currently. the spread between
junk bonds and Treasury yields
tremendously in recent years, experience Includes training II·
Is almost 6%. Despite the wide
liquidity Is becoming strained as terally hundreds of people In
yield spread and climbing de·
investors seek to avoid or reduce ·Southeastern Ohio on computers
fault rate, junk bond enthusiasts t~eir exposure. These factors are In the past stx years.
;vgue that this sector of· the likely to force s~reads to widen
The 30-hour course will be held
market o!!ers superior total further In the period ahead. .
from 6 to 9 p.m. Tuesday and
return. In contrast, we would
(Mr. Evans Is an Investment Thursday ' evenings ' beginning
~rgue that considerable risk still
Broker for The Ohio Company In Sept. 19., at Buckeye,Hills Career
remains for junk bond Investors.
Its Gallipolis office.)
Center. Cost of the course is only
•

Affordable Transpo~ation Sale.:~ ..
.

to l!e completed between Dec. I and the first of the
year. Construction work Is beln&amp; done by Carter
and Evans. Dr. Strauss' office Is currently located
·at 529 Jackson Pike: The new faciUty's address
this winter will be 789 North &amp;ute 7.

Money Ideas

,,

. ···· .

'

By Staa Evans

f.chko named R &amp; M group president
!DAYTON - Robbins &amp; Myers,
I11c. has announced the appoint·
ment of Jeffrey J. Echko as
group president of its Motion ·
Oontrol Group. He replaces RO.
~rt G. DeVInney who has left the
c51mpany to pursue other
laterests.
; Echko will have lull profit and
loss responsibility for the company's electrlcal 1 m0 tor and
!¢rvosystem p~oduct lines with
facilities in Ellen Prairie, Minnesota; Gallipolis, Ohio and Crewe,
E;pgland . ·
.
•Daniel W. Duval, President
a'hd (;hie! Operating Officer.
stated "Robbins &amp; Myers Is very

fortunate to acquire, an indlvl(\·
ual of Jeff's managerial quality.
He brings to· us strong general
management and leadership
skills which are critical In our
efforts to complete the turnaround and future growth for this
business unit."
Echko joins R &amp; M from E .E.I.
Capital · Corporation, a private
Investment firm where he served
as president. Prior to. that, he
held various managerial positions wuith Midland Ross Corporation. Echko .has both Bachelor
and ,Maste~ Degrees from Kent
State University .

{;;allia employees are honored
~ ALBANY The following
employees from Gallia .County
are being recognized for their 15
years of service at Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Division
this month:
• Herbert L. Cordell, longwall
machine operator at the Raccoon
No. 3 mine. Cordell, resides In
qallipolls with his wife, Debra,
and has five children, Herbert,
Kenneth, Michelle, Michael, and ·
'I'IIfany. ·
~ Ronald L, Kisner, inalntell,llnce supervisor at the Raccoon
No. 3 mine. Kisner resides in
Gallipolis with his wife, Sonja,
d)lughters, Kelly, Jennifer and
Hrlstlna, and son, Scott.
•Gary L. Lyons, mobile equip-

ment operator at the Raccoon
No. 3 mine. Lyons resides In
Gallipolis with his wife. Pamela,
and,.has three children, Rachel,
Amanda and Jesse. ·
Larry D. Petrie, plant operator
at the Raccoon No.3 mine. Petrie
resides In Vinton with his wife,
Florence, and children, Larry,
Deena and Cassandra.
'

G·RAVELY. TRACTOR
SALES AND SERVICE

204 CONDOR
. POMEROY
Wo Offer bc.llent ·s.rwlco .. Parts to lack Up Our
Sal11 lo You, Ow Yaluotl Custoa~or. .
Lawn&amp;

G•d•• Equip 1nt Is Our lusilloss Not Sltllll111.

992-~975

,

Manning
K. Roush, Owner
..

• MIDDLEPORT -Bruce
P')sher, funeral director and
preneed. counselor at Fisher
~neral Home In Middleport
lfcently received . the Foretliought Belt of the Beat recoenl·
tt;ln pin for hit work In the
IJI!need funeral service indus·
try, Fisher at fen Forethought
funeral platln!ng to families In
· tJ!e surrounding area.
. :nte award recognizes the
efforts that the Fisher Funeral
f1ome baa put forth in establish·
lq new standards and lnnovationa In funeral service. A certlflc~te recoplzlng Fisher's career ,
1¥!hlevernent accompanied the
!lllkl' lapel pin.

people will want," he said.
Thus far Finley's biggest share
of business has been costume
POINT PLE'ASANT - By day deliveries, with most being at local
· he's a mild-mannered college hospitals, offices and parties. About
student working toward a degree 80 percent of his deliveries have
i.n engineering, but by n lght he's been ordered anonymously, he said,
a turkey, rabbit.. gorilla, or but most of the 'victims' have
maybe even a skunk, depending "taken it in a good heart"
on what ·suit~' liis need.
Usually Finley opens up for
He•s Brett Finley, ·of Kanauga, business at 10 a.m. each day, but
Ohio, who about three weeks ago said there have been times when he
opened Balloons &amp; More, a novelty made costume deliveries at 7:30 in
store of son that deals with custom -the morning.
costume delivery of balloons, bal"I have been (present) at just
loons and more balloons; plil1y about everything (in the area) that.
supplies aDd decoratiOns; and has happened since I opened, " he
handmade crafts that · range from said.
wooden furniture to even the
Finley said the most embarrassdaintiest of hand-sewn articles ing thing he has had to do up to
made by local craftsmen.
now was a delivery to one of the
"! gal the idea from reading local banks where he had 10 dress
catalogs and looking at a lot of dif- up in his turkey suit, play banjo and .
·ferent things." Finley said, adding sing 'Lucille' .
that it took about a month to get
'"! was up for several hours the
things rolling for the store. He night before trying to learn a few
opened the shop around the begin- chords on the banjo," Finley said.
ning of July with some input in the
Generally Finley only has one
Second Annual Main Street Fair. assistant help him with business
Finley had four employees dressed operations, which cover Mason and
up in costumes for the parade pass· Gallia County, but said once things .
ing out candy and also had a booth begin to pick up he will probably .
set up outside the store, loc;~tcd at hire a few more. He'll, be leaving
' 420 1/2 Main St., Point Pleasant
for college around the end of
Finley said for Christmas he has August, which means he 'II· have to
several different types of glassware hire a rcplace!llent for himself.
alid handmll(je bedroom suits and
.cheSts lined up to .beosold. He also _ Finley has a total of 12 suits and
already has a Santa suilto use for 60 different balloons that ' he uses
for deliveries and said he is in the
costume deliveries.
process
of having Batman, Mickey
"You have to have something

·Mouse and Minnie Mouse costwnes made.
Currently Finley operates his
store using only the first Ooor, but ·.
said he's trying to get work on the •
second floor completed to lise it for
storage and maybe an apartment.
Finley's mother, Ruth, owns Balloons &amp; More, which is siwated in ,
the front half of the building where
her business, Counterparts, is
located.
About 10 to 12 people walk into
Finley's store each day thai are in·
terested in the handmade crafts displayed in the store's windows or to
inquire about having a 'special·
delivery' made. Finley said he does
deliveries at just about anytime of
day.
Finley predicts that Valentine's
Day and Christmas will be the most
popular holidays for deliveries because ol the specialty balloons he
has for the occasions. Thus far most
of his deliveries have been for
"
birthdays.
In the future Finley hopes to he
aole to arrange a type of ca1ering
service for those interested, but
only as far as decorating;··dclivcry "'·""' ""'" '
and entenainment go, He said he
doesn't want to gel into food ser-

vice.

The price of his packages are
based on what the customer requests, the room size and. the number of people present at the function. He added he would like to gel
involved in pany entertainment

also.

.

'

$60.

Persons Interested may regis·
ter duTing August by contacting
Adult Services at 245-5336, or by
sending a check or money to:
Adult Services, P.O. Box 157, Rio
Grande. Ohio, 45674.

Meigs employees
are honored
ALBANY - The following
employees from Meigs County
are being recognized for their 15
years of service at Southern Ohio
Coal Company's Meigs Dlvlsloh
this month:
George A. Bunch, faceman at
the Raccoon No. 3 mine. Bunch
~esldes In Pomeroy with his wife,
Joyce. '
Lloyd D. King, outside su'pervl·
sor at the Raccoon No. 3 mine.
King resides In Pomeroy with his
wife, Eva, and has four children,
Brill, Phillip, Brian, and Mona
Frecker.
Doyle J. Saunders, surveyor at
the Meigs No. 2 mine. Saunders
resides in Bidwell with his wife,
Sharon, son, Doyle, Jr., and
da ughier, Bobbl.
Franklin E. Sisson, outside
supervisor at the Raccoon ~o. 3
mine. Sisson resides in Pomeroy
with his wife, Carol.
James W. Stewart, mobile
equipment operator at th,e Raccoon No. 3 mine. Stewart resides
In Rutland with his wife, Kathy,
son, James W. II, and daughter,
Beverly.

UP, UP AND AWAY -BrettFinleyofBalloons .
&amp; More displays few of the 60 different balloons he

shop, located at 420~ Main St., Point Pleasant,
has been open for about three weeks.

uses lor custom costume deliver!"". Finley's

GALLIPOLIS STOCIIY ARDS
lul:y t1, 1181

~orne recognized
ON THE SPOT FINANCING

'

Livestock report

lncal funeral
division of Fuqua Industries

Sept. 5. Entries should be received by Sept. 1, at the Gallia
SWCD office at 529 Jackson Pike,
Room 30S:C.
Photos may range il;l size from
3x5 to SxlO. First Place is $25,
Second Is $15, and third is $10 for
each category.
For an application contact the
SWCD office at 446-~7 or stop by
the organization's booth at the
fair:

Kanauga resident opens new
novelty store in Point Pleasant

'

Intl~~m~poll"

PUSH AND SELF
PROPELLED

conducted.
Farm City Day Is an opportunity for individuals to come out
GALLIPOLIS - The Seventh from the cities and visit a
Annual Farm City Day Is set for . working farm. With this In mind
the two categories for the contest
September 9.
farm scenes and city scenes.
are
The host families are Herman
Soli and· Water Conservation
&amp; Bernice and Lloyd and Marlene Wood. Their farm is located di.strict officials wo11ld like to
In Perry Township on Gage Road show through the media of film
the many farm and city aspects
and St. Rt. 141.
.
For the second year a photo- of Gallla County.
The judging will take place on
graphy contest will b.e

Live Remote
Broadcast-WXTQ Saturdqy, July
2.9
.
.

.

Host families named·for 7th
annual Farm-City Day Sept. 9
By Constance S. White
Gallla !IWCD .

' . NEW DENTAL FACiiiTY UNDER CON'STRUCfiON IN KANAUGA - Work 11egan 1~,
_week on a new dental faciUty In Ka,nauga. ·Dr.
John E. St~uss, Ofthadonlc, said the new
:one-story, fuU-alzed buement faciUty Is expected

pmV~tm .

" 'alllh lD a ... yrllf, JU million unlnu1.
Denwr - Sii[Rl'd llnehacker ~lmon

July 30, 1989

By DAN ADKINS
OVP News Staff·

Foodlall
Atlanla - Slpd oflf'TI!Ii\'e tal•kko Ml kt&gt;
Ke nn. fre e Mfl'tJ Tim Gordon ud
.quarterluu:k St·ou Camlflell.
Chh:q;o- Slped ,;a(dy INn Duer,;on
and ruMinr bafk Mlll'k Grern.
Clevrland- ReiR!Itated h.IDhad!.Knln
Mllck 11fter 11 molth-lo• rellabllllallon

Wllltu.

GR
.609 -

..

,Revolution In Afforilable .Transportation

llnr&gt; C6al' h.

\\' L P el .

~-

' He's getting a foot In the doOi:
tpis week.
•

PAYMENTS

lrtim Soulh Dakota for 11

lll'\'I'Rth· tound Uttl draft pl~k.
Ut~th -SipdiUllrd Theodon! "milt'"
EdwardK.
·

O 'J";rllathletlc lr.tlrrrH.
Ru•e r,..- Named fiUd Dunnoftensl\'t&gt;

E;uo;li&gt;rn

lndi!UIIIpolls ................ 6~
Rulflllo ... .. .. ....... ... .. .....61
NasJivlllr .............. : ... ... i\11
Loul ~\ltll•• ................ .....i7
Wf'sU'fn
\\'
DPnwr ................ ........55
0m ~t h II ..
• ....••.•5 :1

~veno

""

-Section

.

.

·

Princeton- Named Robin Cardin and

AAA ,\LLIAN('E
IJ'I;TERN,\TIONAL l.L\ GIJE

Pawlildwt ................... u·
" "!'stern

Eric

out."

"imts· itntmtt

'

been in Platteville and took his you have to do, but It's not thl!
l!rinalysls test Friday morning. wise thing to do," he said, "When
He also met with team owner you take people of. their caliber
Michael McCaskey In an effort to who playl!d excellent football for
renegotiate his thr!!(!-year con- . us, you'd love to have the!ll here,
tract , s lgned before last season, you'd love to have them playln~.
They've been an integral part of
but has not attended practices.
Ditka aqdressed the holdo.ut this football team for a long time,
situation after Friday after- ~~~~~!rei·~ln the ca.s e· or Stev.e
t-1
That would be a ve{y
noon's practice. ·
void to 1111.'' ·
'l&gt;nvthinP

tow ·

Nc"' l'ork - Naml.'d Jf'lf Van Gullly
~~ entl'r

Farm/ Business

receive some mall bearing
Watts' return address.
''They m lg:ht notice me a llttie
more if I have a good weekend
here," he said. "I'll write sonie
Jetters for tournaments In Sep;.
tember and October and may~
\hey'll say , 'Hey, he did pretty
good at the Buick, let's give him a
chance. ' Hopefully, I'll get tj)
play more before the year IS

~

Geo~~

Ne111· York at Chh:u11:o
Sun Franl'i~o 11.t Hou!l.oft
Lo,. i\fl~~tel"' al SIUl Dlto,;t)

Ntnnt•-WII .......... ... , ..u

PLATTEVILLE , Wis. (UPI)- behind him and start concentratChicago Bears All-Pro strong Ing on football.
"It he doesn't, It'll ,be awfully
safety Dave Duerson ended his
brief holdout and signed a new tough on him," Dltka said.
contract Friday, but the plight of ''There's going to be some great
veteran defensive tackle Steve competition out there. You know,
what's done is done."
McMichael remained unsettled.
Said Duerson from Chicago:
. Duerson, entering his seventh
season, made $375,000 last season "I'm happy to remain a Bear .
I'm looking forward to another
and was reportedly seeking a
successfl!l
season for myself and
contract worth $1100,000. a year,
·making him the fourth-highest- · for the team, "
paid Bear defender. Terms oft he
Duerson last season made his
fourth straight Pro Bowl appearnew deal were not revealed.
"We got him signed. That's ance. He finished 1988 second on
the team In tackles with 105.
good," Coach ,Mike Dltka said.
He Is expected to ·report on
'.'We're looking forward to getting him here."
Saturday to the Bears' training
site at the University of
It was feared the holdout by
Duerson, 28, the leader of the Wisconsin-Platteville but will not
Bears secondary, might be begin practicing until Monday,
lengthy. The two sides were after an insurance policy Is
reportedly $100,000 apart, but bound.
The signing reduced to five the
neither appeared ready to g!ve
In, and there were some bitter number of holdouts In the Chiexc;hanges between the two . . cago camp - veterans McMI·sides. Duerson, who at one point
chael, safety Shaun Gayle and
asked to be traded, had put his William Percy, and rookies
chances at remaining In Chicago Trace Armstrong and , Donnell
at 50-50.
Woolford.
McMichael, placed on the
Ditka said he feels Du'!rson
needs to put the negotiations
"reserve-d lei notreJ.lortllst," has

w;llblbull (_'OLI.Ch, ·

Obtained

said Watts, who received ~orne
words of encouragement Friday
morn lng from Tewell, the
second-round co-leader. " Now
that I've made lhe cut. I'll .Just
keep trying to do the best I can. ·.
"There might be s.ome pressure on me because I received an
Invitation that so many people
wanted,· but pressure really · Is
just what you put on yourself."
Continued· good play, he concedes, might put pressure pn
fu lure tourl)ament directors who

Chicago's Duerson_ends hold out; signs_contrac1

Collerf'
lndlauall - Namtd Cltrol Ste\'rDNOn
women'K c r~ounlry coat•h.
New l 'ork Unh•er.~lty - N"IUnl'd Dun
Su Ui\'LI.O Kporb lnlofmlltlon dll't'dor .
Northt&gt;-~r n - Named Bob Deran«&gt;y
~d Glt&gt;n t,:low.nucd .~key llllltl!itnt ..

St . Loub t , Mootrt'al 0

~yra tU :ot" .. ....... ......
Iii?
Koc ht~tllr ..... :...... ........ ~:J

card at the Qualifying School, afternoon will! n Invitation, I
has primarily played on the 1989 felt like It was miracle. I was
Asian and Australian circuits very happy."
Watts' driver has balked sevwhile waiting for a break back
eral times early in the tourna.
home.
·
.
. ' 'I just qultehaven't gotteh the ment bui his •abiUty to recover
opportuntles I'd hoped for this has been outstanding. Watts has
year ," the native of Carrollton, · hit greens at a pace above 85
Tex. said. " I'd been writing percent for the first two days of
letters, trying to ·get In any the $1 mUllon·tournament at the
tournament rcoul.d , but you can't Warwick Hills Golf and Country
expect any.thlng. When Steve Club.
"My goal was to come out here
(Wright, the Buick General
Chairman) called me Sunday and plliy golf as .b est as I cal),"

PllhlhUJ'II'h - Opl••d .aUIII)man
Seolt UtUe to Buffalo of tH A.merlcall
AM110elalion CAAA); purrhued the coalnlli ol pltl:herMIJuoSmllh trom luHllle.
st. ~IIIII - Calk-11 up plk' hel" Ricky
Horlon from Louinille oil he American
,\s!tiX'IaUon (AAAJ .
Ba1111dhMJI
NBi\ - R.t•lnstaled ~rd .IWIIIchell
Wlaln11.
Sa .ro,... (C8.4.) -

it. Pb.IIMdl'lphlll 5. b'

Phlladt•lpNPII 6.

TradH laftelder Kt&gt;llh

Mo~lud

Oakland 8, Suttlr i, II bin.
Su rdiQ''K Gllmts
TllrMtn at N,. Y·orll.

Chlca~~:o 6, N~:w

_...,,

811 ort;s Tnru•cUo ns

Cbl('ap !NL) -

Frld11.3 'KlteKIIIIIft
rlnel1111ll 3, Bo!ilon ~. IIIII( arne
ClntiAI!J.!, Bos11111o I. 2Ddll'une
Deh'Git i, Mln~oea ol,lat aune
MJnlftl&amp;ll 7, Detroit 3, 2nd II' atr1t
TorOIIIo I, New \'ork t .
Mllwu Wt 15, Tesu&amp;K J
,
Balli more"· Kana~ Ctt y S, 13 Inn.
C1111Mn1a 5. O.lcaco s

lit. Lo•~ ................. .....n

11. Tl ~~!Water a

Rlchn'ie• I, S)'rall'tlllt!
.tm~rkan A!iMCiado•
Omalla 11 Dtnwr 8. l.t Inn.
Loulnllle 12, Nadwllh- I

TratlSactions

1~

Tnu .......................... ss 4i ,$4, l
Ku'*'Cil)' ................ -35 f'J .SSt 1\la
Mlnlll!e'iOU ...................50 5!: .-IH It~

Plit!llu-wh

event of the year - fired a
5-under 67 Th11rsday .and followed with a par 72 Friday, good
enough to make the cut and
guarantee his first PGA Tour
paycheck.
• Watts was the top Individual
finisher at the 1987 NCAA Cham- ·
pionshlp,' leading Okiahoma
State to the team title, and
finished in the top 40 one year
later as the Cowboys tied for
second. He entered two· PGA
. tournaments following · college
but, after falling to earn his Tour

lowa .. ............ ..' ............ ,J7 tl .Ill "'
.:11.! II %

Ch~vl!"l•d

'

.

WINS

- Roeky R.

Bupp, a lnlarance qent for
AmerloaD General Life and
Accldeat lttaurance Compall)', dllplaf• a plaque he
woa for -beln&amp; one of the
compuJ'• lead.lng apnta.
Rupp, wllo worka Ill Melp
Conal)', qualllled for &amp;be National Lelllen Club IU1d won a
trip to Lu Vegu. Nev. He
flnllhed flnt Ia tbe Ohio
rellon for lbe award baaed on
11811!1 and aervlce. (TimeeSe1111nel Pllolo)

Trendi·Feeder Oattle·•tead,-i Veil
Ca.IYH-Iiteady, Butcbeir Cew•lteady .
- m Frame I 8 I 111.....:
-lbo, ...:..................... IUIHII.IO
-lbo. .............................. 118.10
-Jbo, .................... ,.... U...ItLIII
- l b o . ....................,......III.IMLI6
...'llllla. ...........................11.-.aLID

-lbo......................,,.,.......11.16

. .m Frame 1 a t Hel.ltn:
- I t a . """"""""""""' U... IILI6

-lbo. ..........:.......................16
- l b o.....................,......11...."-16
-lbo............... ,.....,......11.111-81.16
--lbo............................14.111-78.16
_
.... ...................... ,..........11.15
_
... llleen ... hill:
_ , ........................... ...11. .....16

· 1-•Cowo:
'
VIUIIIIO 41. ...14.11; llao•ortCoUer
fi.IMLII; u.111 WI!IJitl low ..... ..,.,
tL. .WIIj__llilf•t&amp;te 11.• 48wa.
-l•lal:
Vlllllloll n ....U.II; Canner/Cutter
11.-.16.
Veal Calveo:
Cltelllf/,-o

87.11.

.__II; Modllm .._...

a S5 cub prise from lbe o•1o ValleJ Pablllbl111
Co. Leave your name, addreu and telephone
number witb your card or letter. No telephoae
calls will be accepted. All contest eatrt• ahoald
be turned hi to the newspaper office bJtp.m.each ~
Wednesday. In cue of a lie, the ·wllmer will
cllo~~en by .lottery. Next week, a Melp Count)' •
farm Will be featured by lbe Melp Sol ud Wa&amp;er :
Conservation Dllltrlc&amp;.

MYSTli:Rl FARM - This week's mystery
farm, fea&amp;ilred by the Galla Sol and Water
Conservation District, Is located somewhere In
Galla County. Individual• wishing to participate
· In the weekly contest m_ay do 10 by gue•fllng'tbe
Jjii'JII's owner. lust mall, or drop off yeur guess to
the Galllpoll&amp; Dally Tribune, 825 Third Ave.,
Gallpoll&amp;, Oblo, 41831, or lbe Dally Senllnel, Ill
CourtS&amp;., Pomeroy, Oblo, U'ID,and you may win

,

be :·

.,

�•

Paci~&amp;-0-2-. Sunday Times-Sentinel
PubliC Natice

PubliC N otiCB

II\IVITATIOI\I TO BID
Grande CoHege Reo
Grande. Ohto wtU tccept

R1o

buR for the following pro
Ject Park1ng lot Paving for

Roo Grandi! College Roo

Grande. Oh.o, according to

log a I Co Ill o 89·638
UI\IIT PRICE CONTRACT
F 7(43)

Epling. Architect. 423 So
Avenue

Galllpol11

Buk will be rece.ved for
Gen•al Trad• Contract
Seoled bodil wil be re

Sealed propouls wtll be
rec:etved at the offtce of the

until Monday, August 7

ment of Transportation Col
umbus Ohto unt1110 OOA

ceNed at the Owner aOif•ce

1989at2 00 PM allhefol

M Ohoo Standord Time
Tueodoy August 22 1989

IOWM'tg addr•a Ftnance Of

flee. R1o Grande Collage

AMen Hall Rio Grande Ohoo
• 46674
Buts rece1ved after that
t•me will not be accepted
.. B1da will be opened ana read
• aloud et that ttma end at thllt
place lntereated part181 are
~ tnvrted to attend b1d open·

• •ng

Bidders may secure cop1as

• of the proposed Contract
Documents from the oH1ce
of the Architect begmnmg

July 17 19B9 atthe follow

mg baa••
1 One copy of the Project
Manual plus one set of the
Draw1nga upon payment of

826 00 depos~ Addotoonal
cop~e~ can be obtamed upon
payment of 825 00 per sot
2 Doposrt wll be refunded
upon return of the Project
Manual and Draw1ngs post
~Bid.
1n good cond1t10n
withm 30 days of b1d open

ong

3 No part•al setsw111 be ••
•ued
, All bids to be accompa
n1ed by a b1d securrty '" the
form of a 10% B1d Bond
executed on AI A Document

A310, 1970 Edollon or a

Casheer s

ilmount

m

Check
of Ten

an

Percent

I 10%1 of the total sum bod
payable to R1o Grande Col
]ega

The Owner reserves the
nght to retect any and all
buts and to wa1va Irregular
tty 10 the buis and 1n the bid
dtng
No b1ddar may withdraw

hos bod wrthon thorty (301

days after the act !Jill date of
the opan~ng thereof
Upon award of contract
successful bidder will be requ~red to subm1t a Perfor
mance labor and Matenal
Payment Bond executed on

AlA Document A311 1970
Ed1teon g1ven en the name of
the Owner m a spec1f1c

amount equal to 25% of the
Contract Sum or a Casheer' s
check m an amount of 25%
of the Contract sum payable
to Rto GHtnde College

JULY 14 16 23

2lJ

Public Not1ce

.

PUBLIC HEARING
NOTICE
The Meogo County Com
miSSioners are plannmg to
submit a grant for a Recycling Donat1on Center Oper
at10n through the Oh1o Ut·
ter PreventiOn and Recy·
chng Program DtviSton of
Utter Prevent1on and Recy
cl1ng
The purpose of th1s pubhc
heanng 1s to determine 1f
such an operatiOn would duplicate the efforts of adver
sely affect the econom1c
standmg of e)tiStlng recy
chng operations businesses
and / or mdustnes
The date for the public
heanng IS set for August 7
1989 The scheduled t1me 13
1 00 p m locatton will be
the Me~gs County Board of
Mental Retardation facdtty
located at 1310 Carleton
Road Svrcuse Oh1o
For addtttonal tnformat1on
contact Ke1th Black Metgs
lndustnea Inc 992-6681
(71 30 IBI 1 2 3tc

Director of the Ohoo Depart·

for tmprovementa m

Jackson and Gall Ia Coun·
tie&amp;. Ohto on sectiOns JAC
361460, GAL35000 U
S Route 35 Coty of Jock·

ton. Jackson and Galtla
Counttet by gradmg, dram
~ng.

reaurfac1ng w1th uphelt
concrete and structure re
pa1r
Project

in -

l.angth 78 959 51

or 14 964 mila Work

Length 80.049 86 in - or
15 161 mil• PovWidth 2 at 24 -

.....
-•a •

H•1whold gooda, miK HIIM,
rMn&amp;. womene, glrla clotMa

Ono milo ,_ Lingovlllo, CR
lomiiO
wHh lag. A-oro IO 10, Dollar, Rd. 10 11117. Aug :Z.S.
4.

Hugo 2 lamllr Clolhlng

women.

chliJNfl), houNhota

Emallent aondltloi'L Ar.
ballflh AddHion,
Plolno.
TolbOit'o. July 31ol, Auguotlll.
ll:amL~

Yard Sale

7

(mo~ 1

Large

behind

no-

gara• MIL

~•man•

ChLI"Ch Df , Chrilt,
Rotdovlllo, OH. Auguol1ol, 2nd,

Gallipolis
3rd, and 11h.
&amp; VIcinity
Lola ol kldt, baby clolhlo. 1ol •
of Aug. t-? 1-MI mlloo oul
2-lamlly, Aug lot, 2nd~ on 2nd
Qoorgo'o CrHII, 7110 ml orr RI.T AI t43 Aaln canceiL ,
Rain cancela.
Monday, Jury 31, Tunday,
Autust 1 too am to 400 pm
3 lamlly gorogo oalo Aug 3rd~ 8!10 Laurol Sl ,lllddlopo~
4th, llh, one mile ott Rl 1
Routh Lane
Yard oalo Auauol tot, 2nd, 3rd
101 Pte~ St lllddlepolt.
3 family yard aaJe. Monday, July
31 only I 10 5 on Adomovtllo 8
Public Sale
Rd. Neor conoo llvooy
&amp;Auction
ALL Yant Salta Must Be Palc:lln
Advance. DEADLINE 2 00 p 111. W Yo. Slllo Champion
tho dey baloro the ad It lo Nn. AuctlonHr Rick Poore"!'" l Suncbly HHion • 2 00 p m
Fridar Monday edition - 2 DO oad In Ohio ond Wnt vorglnlo
Booking -lone, 304-Jn.
p m Saturday
1711

Ga~e

Sale, 2nd, &amp;. 3rd t-5 N

qu~red to fda with h1s bid a
cert:ified check or cuh1er's

check for an amount equal
to five per cent of h1s btd, but
m no event more than fifty
thousand dollars or a bond
for ten per cent of h11 btd,
payable to the Dtrector
Bidder muat apply on the
proper forms for quahfica
t10n at least ten days prior to
the date set for openmg b1da
1n accordance with Chapter
5626 Oh1o Revtaed Code
Plans and specificatiOns
are on ftle m the Department
ofTransportatton and the of
f1ce of the D11trtct Deputy
Director
The D1rector reserves the
r~ght to reJect any and all

bidS

Aero.• from Memory Garden•
Cemetery
Uoad lllrnlluro bY lho pi- or
August I 2,3,4 10 000 m·5 00 entire houHhold' alto aeUing

p m Counly Road 5 In Brad· lt1·112·2451
buoy 1111 houeo on ~ghl paol

school Children clothfnp. all
aiJu, hOUHhold hen, fur.
nllure, curtain•, bedapreacll &amp;:
much more

11

Auguot 2nd, 3rd.

I

00.5:00

Route 33 four lane, Township
Road 27 Watch algnt

Bob¥ Homo, lora, mllomHy

clotfln and tote more Next to

L&amp;L Tire Bam, Flvt Polntt

33851 Plno

1,2,3.

Grove

Rd. Auguot

BERNARD B HURST Gar~ge aaJt 3 family S R. 124
DIRECTOR Aonnle SaiHr reeldtnce 1f2
JULY 30 AUGUST 6
milo poet High School July 31,
Aug. 1&amp;2 H .
Announcements
4

(ilveaway

2 year
Sl'llpherd 1 year
small
lemale Housebroken, good wllh

kids 814-992 2250

3 loveable Yellow Klnene
Mother Cat 304:.675-3037
3 yr old male Collie, ua
children, call after 5 00 PM,

675 7559

4 KHtene to good home

675·1199

I puppy e

months
lemale To good
home Gentle 2 year old white
German Shepherd female 614-

Employment Serv1ces

11

Help wanted

Help Wanted

N1n1• Home Admimstrator POSition aYIIIable due
to admmistrator's retirement Ohio N.H.A. l.i:tnse
NIISI. home located InS
W Oh1o, 98 bed Med~e~id
Celtified I.C.F. ·A Plulanthrupic (50HC) Nws1"
Home.
ADDRESS RESUME TO;
Search Committee
P.O Box 1926
Spnn&amp;htld, Oh 45501

July

30, 1989

11

parience
dable&gt;) 1-315-

NaUon11Servlet firm ae1b exp
.,_rt·tlmt merchandlzars for lnVIntory • ordering for Oalllpoll• Car necunr.y Call Mist

P·2741A

Help wanted

Pa~ ~lmo

Memu.6i2C.llextension
(refun-

2 nurus ald., shap al•rk, lnquiN at Odd8 and End• Shop,

ANY AVAILABLE
WEEKDAYS?

Amea H00.366-3884"

ll lddlopo~

lncomo. 811-112·7$83 Monday
thn&gt;ugh fridily a OQ.I1 00 0111.
ACCOUNTANT • Akzo Chemlcol,

Phlebotomist part lime 30
hra!Wk,
contact
personnel

R D. onty wanted 18 hours per
WHit W.l C aounatllng.: Melga

year old Spayed. To good
home. 6t4·742·3049

• WANTED •

EXPERIENCED SERVICE PERSON AND
TOTER DRIVEl &amp; 2 TRAINEES
FOR MANUFACTURED HOME DEALER
NEEDED IMMEDIATELY

We offer ' 18.000·' 28,000 annual oncome
patd vacation, hosprtahzat1on umform
monthly bonus, excellent working cond1t1ons
We expect career mmded md1v1duals. willing·
ness to work. dependable transportation to
work neat appearance. good work record

range

FOR AN APPOINTMENT
14-385-4367 -ASK FOR DAN

quollflad concldolo wiN bt 1
degl'lld Reounlant wHh 1 to 3
_rooro oxparlonoo, prolorobly In
AVON • AI orooo, Call llolllyn

S.._ marklllntt oHlc1 work

FuN limo Haply 10 CLA 8o• 005
Oalllpollo o.ny Tribune 121
Third Avo., Galllpollo, OH 4SB31

Woavor30W82-2BI5
Adullll'oulh cerrior lor

dollvooy
ol CholleOton Oazoao, Bond Hll
Road/Jackaon Avo ean
Ken Planl HOO lla-4110
Interior Ooolgn Spoc:lollot
Hardman'a Home Center Is aocot&gt;llng oppllcatlono lor on Interior Doolan Spaclollot. Individual te[IICIH muat

work

Sai....Mark.tlng-offlce

Ful~tlmo, Ropljr Box 005, Ool·
llpollo DtiiY Tribune, 125 Third
Avo Galllpallo, OH 4$831
"*'"V lof baelllo ochool Sol._ lo call on milling
clolhoo and Chrtolmao? Work ln4uolrlol
aecouniO
In
your -• ~ thowlng SOuthtutam
Ohio
1nd
hive Babpltttr ntedtd-- my home, of Lloyd liiomo Docoi, neighboring Weat Vlrglnle area
In for evening ahlft Two children 1 lathlono, loyo, glfto, Christmas Preler
erperlenced, tggi'Htlve,

p,.viout
expartenct
mNiurlng and H.tlmatlng carpee, vtnyr ancl cuatotn dFapea

and 12 '114-387.o212 before

dtcorlltlona. FrN $300 kit. Frtt
training, ~per tuDDA... No col·
loc:llng No dolfvi~ng. , ~~.

2p m.

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

CRUISE SHIPS Now hlrlno all
poolllono loth oklllad and unoklllad For lnloi'IMIIon ooll 111-

booking

DilnaS.nd.,.

514-MI-'""'

C

IM;y

Aulotonl eochor at
School and Chap11r
1&amp;:';::::·..:-::~~-~Aooding Toochor 01

whh

Army National Guard part-lime

uperl1nca.

~'875-3MO

5335 or &amp;14·185-3561

or I'BOO.fi42-3B19

Near

storee and hospital

•

•

•

•
•

Pa1d leaves and insurance available. Th1s 1s a nonexempt pos1t1on w1th a standard work week of hours
of 8:00 1 m to 5:00 p.m.
Interested persons should send a copy of the11 resume, mcludmc the names and addresses of thrH
references before the deadline of Aqust 4,1989 to:
Ms Phyllis Mason, Personnel Off1cer
The Un1versity of R1o G11nde
P 0. Box 969
R1o Gr1nde, OH. 45674
The Un!Vorsily of Roo Gr111do 11111 E4•1 Opportun1tr
Afllrllllllvo Adoon Empl.,.,
PO 11069

• ~~~--~~---------------' (~------------------------~\'

room. 14200 Loellod on roniOI

1o1

near Horri1011VIIIo. 111-712·

:11133.

Child -• 2.3,• 4 year oklo

Acroet from Park In Middleport
Rtlertnce tupplltd. 814-H2-

Raaonable ratH Aeterencu
All .... 1180
WHkenda Catllt4·245-578e.

450 2nd AVE.
446-6806

Will do hoUM cl1enlng, have

rolorOIICM, 304.S71-727T.

j'ROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIF~ENCE _
VIRGIIIIIA SMITH BROKER, 388·8826
RUTH GOODY. REALTOR. 379 2628
DIAIII CALLAHAI\I, REALTOR, 258 6261
LEESA CLARK, REALTOR 367·7823
EUI\IICE NIEHM. REALTOR. 446 1897
RUTH BARR, 4411-0722

._.30 101 DII1Aik£T Rela•ed atmosphere We llllnk ~ou wilt ilgree ttns

home has a very retas ed atmosphere and tov!!ly netghborhOod Th iS 3 bed
room ranch OHet"s cou ntr~ h~e ~ilchen w /b rea~ IBSt bar 11as com forta ble stZe
tam1ly roomw/lreptace tnRJOund poq.t l6x32 btackloQ d nvewa~ 2 w gar
age Iron! covered porch back patiO 3 ac m/1 of beautWuIflat land apple an d
che rr~ trees ras oberr~ strawbemes and gr apes Also has a n1ce barn
Located m Green townsh1p IUS! 3 lew mm Irom town Sound5 hke you r k1ndof
IIVIO&amp; RIVe me a catt today
jfJI3. DRAIIIATIC IODERN - That s what you w1tl say about this tovetycolo.
mat 2 storwhome. Jt s a show place h&amp;S approx 3600 SQ It llv1ng space 4
bedrooms 31, b&amp;ths lull~ eQUipped kt w/breakliiSI bar 2 gorgeou s fir eplaces lam1ly room 1ec room Futt basement wrth another ktchen stoc ~ ed
pond barns stabl es refr e; h1ng pat1o tnground pool 22x40 w1th steelln'ler
Att m1nerat riRht S lree us 10 2ac tn /1 One ol a ~md. but don t take my word
lor 1 - see lor yGUrsel'

2

jf447 MltYDAY IS AHOlt DA._ 111 1hiS tovey home you w1l feel like yoo are
on vacatiOn every day Has llroorm 2 baths has AC at lurn~ew/ce nha l hu
m•d•huhon 2 gorgeous f1replaces I w1th 1nsert the othe1m master betloom
has glazed bnck with w~d cherry mantel and custom made scr~ n lovely
pool tus14 yr old l8x32 al l custom made drapes krtc'hen hasJennA1r range
built1n Nutone k!chen cenle1w !hal t attachments mlercom system w1ap a
rouOO screened 10 porch unat1ached garage wll:h door opener Has seveq
buhlmgs atlwllh elec Barn has 5 statts I )' ac mil pond 12 ac m/1 Start a.
new l.v1ng adventure today Call for your pnvate showtnR.
NEW USliNG: Just mms hom downtown has 4 bedrooms l R

28~2 0

kd

w/new elect range retr g. plenty ot dosets w/hghts and shelves patura gas

heat

1

ac m/1 localed ori Netghborhood Road Green

Sc~oo l

Otsl r ct

In Memoriam
In Loving Memory
of Esta Marie who
left us 7-24-86 and
George Andrew
Daylong ll-13-84.
Gently we pther and
treasure them all,
Unseen, unh8ard, you
are always near.
Still loved. still m1ssed
and
Still so very dear
lovingly remembered
and sadly m1ssad by
family, Granvel, Juan1ta,
Jack1e, T1m. llopr,
D1x11, Sam Wlmsley and
John. Marg~e and Joy
Skidmore

3 Announcements

SWEEPER REPAIR
;;-.!~~~~~~. -STAIITFRHOME 211ory 2 JBRs OR /FR
I ~~s lur nace fitCH $20 s Some fur

AU MAKES AND
MODELS

COUPlE 5ac m/ lmobtehome
ref gas hea t plus woodOO IH 1

MARTIN'S
FURNITURE
and MORE

w/3 BR • lar~e closets lR ? ar ~e
on ground level Lower level or bsmt
bath
washer / dryer 2 ran~es 2ret beau t fu 115 ¥44
car atiao:hed.,)JOoe. Att new plumbm £ lac m/1 att grassed and lewPI
plus 6 car bern Who
tor anythm,'lmore1' Call tor tocahun andpr~ee
J431 KIIOTTY PIJIE LOYER Close 1n Knotty p1ne ttwoughout w11h beamed
ce111nl\ LR w/carpet bath 3BR eat1n kitch en ~ ar a~e basemen t Cou dput
a mobtte home on land at end ottongdr1veway as rental proJ)!!ny rl so dest ed

Call lor morP.

992-6872

~nformahon

1423 ~ ACI£ '-'l 12'x60 mob1te home w1!h 12' •60 addit iOn LR'J 8Rs
lone ltrat master) bllh e1!1n klchen UIJfrty room $15000

, Mil LOTSDfiOIIIIIIIIDEMDDUTSIOE Dou01ewodewoln2ocrtsmll 4
bedfooms 2blttts 1aF/Aiurn1Ce Uchenw/ bi!r dmmgarea 12 car~ar
, t Ill! Clf!
\

222 East Main
POMEROY, OH.

WAREHOUSES
W/OFFICE
FOR LEASE
Rt 160-Formerly
Motor Clr Brokers
4800 ~ It Whse.
plus 20 x20' Off1ce
189 A
Completely, Fenced

----

1528 Elstern Ave
Bl Evans Motors
41 6 Sq. Ft. Whst
Plus
28'x31' Off1ce

CAtL 446-3994
9-S len. thru Fn.

Evans E~ltl, Inc.
)

large building

Laval 1011 7 mllto North of Hol-

z• H01pltal 114---ee4t
Norlh

Canlrol FL 10 ocreo

F1nced and
croea ftnctd wtlh bam with
outbuilding• 3 br:, z tiath hou•
CHIA. osking $119,500 For In·
formation ~-481 ·2868
prime Hlture

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

ESTATE
AUCTION

MONDAY,
JUlY 31, 1989
6 P.M.
AT THE GARNET
DEQUISE FARM
UTILE HOCKING,
OHIO

HARTFORD • t ...-a, belli, '~'­
Call Cpiloel,1o811'412-

PUBLIC AUCTION

Thursday Evening, Aug. 3, 1989
6:30 P.M.

R&amp;S SALES

MAIN ST , RUTLAND, OH.
Porcelam f1gurmes, bisque p1eces k~chen ulenals aulomollve care prooucts auto speakers sockB" sets wrench sels
body fender tool sets cosmet1c &amp; sundry 11ems slal1one'y products books toy~ Fenloo McCoy &amp; Ruby ~ass sewmg
machmes clocks watches oak doors, wheels (mag&amp;chromel
dosplay case (6 hghtedl shelvmg &amp;display racks, Franklin f1
replace plus many 1tems too numerous lo mention
DIRECTIONS. From Pomeroy, Oh. take S.R 124 West
to Rutland Sale 1s on lla1n St. Sips Will be posted
OWNERS ROGER &amp; SANDY SMITH
AUCTIONEER· COL. W. KEITH MOLDEN
614-742-2048
Now Bookma Summer &amp; Fall Sales
Nol Responsible lor Accidents
Cash
Eats
Pos I D

ESTATE AUCTION
THURS. EVE., AUG. 3, 1989
5:30P.M.

Located north of Pomeroy, Oh1o on St. Rt 33 Take
Co Rd. 18, Kmgsbury Rd. to the'nght, then stra1ght
across old 33 to the home of the late Mary L MeredIth at 37720 Rock Spr1n1s Rd Watch for s1gns
"HOUSEHOLD"
20 3 Fng1da1re sode by ~ de H D Hotpomt washer &amp; dryer
D1x1e electric range, Subu1ban bottle gas healing stove
chest of drawers, m1sc cha1rs. telephone stand GE color
TV wood &amp; melal cabinets desk. stands, magazme table
lamps pictures, (ans pots pans doshes eleclncal apph
an ces lm ens &amp;etc
'ANTIQUE OR COLtECTORS ITEMS
H1ghback bed wardrobe organ slool round lable 4 rose
back w1cker boltom chaors clock oak off1ce chaor hutch
famtmg couch ,iron bed hall tree chesl ol drawers dishes &amp;
etc
'MISC"
Lois of 8 track tapes birdcage lawn cha1rs &amp; etc
DOUGLAS LITTLE-EXECUTOR
Case #26314
DAN SMITH-AUCTIONEER-614-992-7301
Uc11111d &amp;Boltded m Favor of Oh10 &amp; WVa
Ohio license #57-68·1,344
WVa 515
Member of OhiO. W Va &amp;Nll1onal Auctioneer
• Assoc1111on
Cash
Ells
PositiVe I D
• Not Responsible for Accidents or loss of Property "

EVERY FRIDAY 7:00 P.M.

Corner of Nye Ave. &amp; Main St.
Pomeroy, Ohio
Consignments Taken 12 Noon-6:00
P.M. Day of Sale
Eats - Cash - Positive ID
"Merchandise Pickup Available"
Auctioneer: Col. W. Keith Molden

2 Miles North of Point Pleasant,WV
In The Camp Conley Addition.
Located

Watch Far Signs.
The Estate Of The Late Woodrow W.
Russell Will Be Sold.
HOUSEHOLD Som cod &amp;jjb1 riilrigmalor, 5 pc maple do nella sal,
maple comer cabine~ 2 pc LR sulle 3 pc Mahogany Colloe table &amp;
and table &amp;at, desk, Zonollt B &amp; WlV 61eroO ( pc maple paolor BR
suole, meple diiiSser maple llrin bed lrunk linens 5 anlique qu1hs
whilpooi'MISher &amp; doyer same as new Sear! ehesliype deep lreeze
sl&gt;ne II"' Irons eann1ng JIIS, rugs poi &amp;pans ~"l coal &amp;woods-.
SO'Ieral p!CIJIIIS dehumidofier, ~~""' ol sail &amp;pepper shakers, Awn
bottlas camma's hen on nes~ anlque G I .»&amp; &amp; h• """"'"' lOOP
metaJ cars world money bank, ongraham manfe cloc~ 2 old guilars
cars, bonks, croo:l&lt;s, 22aulo Remo"lllln ml&amp; B&amp;Dsaw, Sears ballory
charger Vise Craflsman elec1nc chaon saw, ~ullodl chain saw
WIUa'd rolobNer,l.awn Chiel rotltillor, walk beh1nd Glavely taclllrwilh
O!IOW8nleck &amp; Allaclomonts, plus much """" 1973 Buic:l! E~ 225
2 door hard lop

Auctioneer Note: Thlsls AClean Auction Bring A
Chair &amp; Spend The Day.
LUNCH

AUtTION CONDUCTED BY
RICK PEARSON AUCTION CO.
MASON WV
ADM DARREL RUSSELL

n3-5785

TERMS Caoh or Check Wllh I D
Not RHponalble For Accldenlo or Lou Of Property
Ucentd &amp; Bondad In Ohio • WV 166 89

738 SECOND AVENUE

mra-

prox 4 ac,.._ WMI Paint Aotd.

0 -3

CONStGNMENT
AUCTION

Iota,

mobllt hom" permitted. Public
W•ter, prlc.. rtducltd. Clyde
Iowen, Jr: 304-57&amp;-2331

304-863-8895
304-428·7245

1 Card of Thanks

Tht fam1ly of Frances
T11mer would hke to
thenk everyone lor then
ki•dn•s and sympathy
....fll. tilt Ill~• ltld
dath ol thtlr mother.
Thanks to each who
sent flowers, food and
praytrs
Speaal ti!Mks to Rev
Andrew Parsons. Rev Den·
ms "-sons. Dr Chh111H',
Peal' YtMIIIf, pallbuers
SciiiiC Hills, Matt WilliS
and Willis Funeral Home.,
Anna , Paulme, Ev• &amp;
Bon me

Aahlon,

&amp; Auction

From Rt 50 &amp;7take 555
31h miles to Washmcton
Co., 248 go lh m1le to
Decatur Twp 189 S1gns
posted.
Will have
knock·down wardrobe,
freezer 6 oak cha1rs,
square oak tible, wagon
bed, stone )ar w1th free
hand, blue &amp;white porcelaiR coHee pot, refn·
gerator. cook stove. table &amp; cha1rs, beds,
dressers, TV. pots &amp;
pans. wnnger washer,
cast 1ron, lots of yard &amp;
prden tools. 11 glass
eqs. 1ewelry, lmens,
quilts, lots Rlore I urn &amp;
m1sc household gobds.
Guardian,
Wilma Hall
PATRICK BLOSSER,
' AUCTIONEER

18 Wanted to Do

I

:

1111 Uft time 23ft Mator Home,
11,000. 33,000 ICIUII mllet, real
good ohopo cau 114-2511o88tl
1171 Flomlngo, 12l!BI, 3 bed·

Will do baby ollllng In APPIO
Grove uea anytime. 304-5782118
Will do babyoltllng In my homo
Point PINMnt arM. 304-1751401

Gallipolis Developmental Center 1s located 10
Southeast Oh10 (along the Ohio R1ver) w1th1n one
hour dnve of two ma1or umvers1t1es.
CONTACT HUMAN RESOURCES DEPARTMENT , GAL·
LIPOLIS DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER GALLIPOLIS,
OHIO 45631 TELEPHONE (614-446-1642)
AFFIRMATNE ACTION/EEO
MR/ 00 DOES NOT DISCRIMINATE IN PROVISION OF
SERVICES OR EMPLOYMENT BECAUSE OF MANOICAP RACE
COLOR CREED NATIONAL ORIGIN SEll AGE OR ANCESTRY

The Umvers1ty of R1o Grande announces the openmc
of a POSition for a Commn1cations Center Operator.
Reportmg directly to the D1rector of Busmess Af·
fa1rs, respons1b11it1es of th1s pos1t1on include operation of AT&amp;T System 75 switchboard, mon1tonnc
lona distance calls; momtonna equipment operalions, recommendma commumcat1ons needs; tramoperators as needed; provldln&amp; lnforcenter services for the 11111Vtrs1ty and performmc general receptiomst duties.
Qualifications for the pos1t1on mclude h11h school
diploma. or equivalent; effective commun1cat1ons
sk1lls and prev1ous pos1t1on-related expenence preferriC!.

dillon. Call 814-192-5851

avallabll

The Q MR.P IS responsible for overall fmlitat1on.
development and coordmat1on of the delivery of active treatment to a livmc area of md1v1duals w1th
mental retardation. MUST MEET FEDERAL REQUIRE·
MENTS FOR Q M R P and MUST OBTAIN STATE Q M
R P CERTIFICATE WITHIN 6 MONTHS.

The U01vers1ty of R1o Grande announces the ope01n1
of a pos1hon for a D1rector of •Alumni Relations
Reporting directly to lhe AsSIStant to the Pres1dent
for Development, respons1b11it1es of th1s pos1t1on
mclude promotion and ~nvolvm1 active part1c1pa·
lion of alumni 10 events and act1v1t1es of the U01ver·
s1ty ~nciud1ng student recruitment. program and
events fund raiSing and other such areas connected
w1th alum01 relations
Qualifications for th1s pos1t1on 1nclude a Bachelor's
Degree required With Master's Decree preferred, excellent commumcallon and orp01zat1onal skills, with
emphaSIS on wnt101 SkillS, previOUS fund raiSing IX·
penenct deSirable, ability to ruot1vate people Personal Computer knowtedp and expenence helpful
Position available 1mmechately Salary commensurate With education and expenenc:e. Preference Will
be &amp;lVIII to R1o G11nde Collece Alu111m
Interested persons should send a copy of the1r re sume, uJCiudlnl the names, addresses and telephone numbers of thrn references w1th a letter of
mterest before the deadline of August 15 1989 to
Ms. Pllylhs Mason, Personnel Off1cer
The University of Rio Grenda
P.O. Box 969
R10 Grinde, OH 45674
Till UniVIfliiJ of llo a..... IS In Equal
O,poltllliiJ/Afllrmllwt Acl1on EmpiiJIIr
p 0 11045

otiii"'IIIB

12x55, 2 bedroom. Good con..

Will babl'lll In my homo

Real Estate

ADMNS'IRAnVE ASSISTANT 1/Q.M.R.P.

COMMUNICAnONS CENTER OPERATOR

Nlee 3 bedroom home 1 bath,

garogo and lorgo lol, Oalllpollo
fO(IY. Prlcad mi&lt;l 40'o 304-675-

0920 Ruaonabl• ratn

RE.StOENnAL lNVUTMI:NTS COMMEACW. FARMS

-

kHchln 2 ~~er• Junction 1&amp;0,
K~rr Rd. 11 min fran Galllpollt

If 4-

Etten•lve

No drinking, no amok ng Must
be reaponslble Call 114-992·

Monthly paycheck, 20 yar
,.drement, colltg• anlatance

Elemantary:

1811
2 br, houeo, Iorge living ri&gt;om •

Room and board tor lllHrly 1 112 ml trom Holzer Hoophol
AIIO hondlcopptd ond lolol 110,000 e11...,...11B37 or ell-

care Retaonable, 814·992·no4

New rultlo 2 br: horne nHr

Crvwn CHy. l28,0o0 CoD
2511-BSIII.

Salary commenauP'IIe

banoiH packo'ao Conlael Opal
Holldoyo Cor • Phone ne.... Qru
...r, At( DON, lakin
oaoy Call 1-eoo.m-ton, ""' e. Hotpllal,
wv 304-67!1-3230, ...
lor lnlormollon 6 eotolog •
Ill
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE IN· Wanted Reliable woman to live
OtVIOUALS NEEDED Join lho In
and cart tor tlderlr, eoul)lo

DH
Elamen-

Hll under no obllgaUon to real
...... ~-y Call 301-158-

br,

KH, heat
p!lmp,
In-around -.CHy
Sc-*70;boo 114-241-1375.

WANTED· Fulf,.llm• or peri·Umt
laterld NurHa to work wtth
atrlc realdtnt• In an I C F.

U... lEu commlulon I
bonuen, all In time tor the

luchl~atlft

304-4175-7541

Uotlng.Po~oorbtook-3

brlck-2 .balM, LA, FA,

Qalllpollo Dolly Tribune 825
Third Avo, Galli polio, OH 151131

NOW TO EASE THE
CHRISTMAS CASH CRUNCH
Rop- lhe popular Morrl·
Mac line ot Toyo, Homo DOcor 6
Olllo lor all - In your oparo

Ao per A~lclo lioTronefaro ond
Vaconoloo, loCI n a, Pooling,
of lho Nogolllltd •aroement
tM IlLlA lnd lhe
Boord of Educollon, lho llolgo
a.-1 School Dlotrlel Ia ~
lho following naoncloo lor Ho

Now have vacancy for etd~rly
man or woman bctllent care.

Now

telf motivated lndlvlcfull Company twnlshta tranaportttlon
All reaumtt will bli conaJftred
Reply to Blind Box Cl1 004, Clo

PLAN

771-a507, txt. H111.

at Br

pe~lto

Situation
Wanted

12

mllto from POint Plouanl,
lorgl! .. pareto gor111o; Ap.
proxl-oly 1 aero lol. "304.e751321

32 Moblle' Homes
for Sale

111 N Park Drive, owner can

Stona are now accepllng appllcatlona for all poaltlona

HOUSE .. 1 tot ·~ hme, At. 2.

I

1725.

Polnl Ple•t•nt &amp; Mason Gino •

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

31 Homes for Sale

12x&amp;O mobHe harM tor •1•,
plu. tot whh worbhed on Jack..
oon Plk- 1o 31 Coli 811-

146-1001

The Galha-Me1gs Community Act1on Aaency's
Home Energy Assistance Proaram has an Immediate openmg for a bookkeeper/computer
operator at its central office 1n Cheshire. A minimum of 2 years expenence m bookkeepmg 1s
requ1red and computer knowledge essential.
Expenence m Federal proarams preferred Post
h1gh school education des1rable. Pos1t1on requires 1nd1v1dual that works well under pressure. Ability to work w1th others a must Send
your resume to Gallia-Me1gs CAA HEAP, Box
272. Chesh1re, Ohio 45620 by August 4. 1989.
For further mformat1on, call 367-7341.
EOE

DIRECTOR OF ALUMNI RELATIONS

31 Homes tor Sale

EOEIAA

WV, Production FociiHy. Tho

County Hoallh Dopl 6tl·8i2·
1828

Real Estate

Ploaoant Volley H!&gt;O!&gt;IIol, ~o!nl
Pl1111n~ WV,
304-41711-4340

GALLIPOLIS DEVELOPMENTAL CENTER, A LI CENSED ICF/MR FACILITY SERVING 300 PERSONS WITH MENTAL RETARDATION, CURRENTLY HAS OPENINGS.
Wanted

21

Inc Allzo, a wo~d INdor I~
•peclallty chemical• Htk . .
countlnt lor Ha Galllpollt Fe!'fY,

949-2052 or 6t4 949·2433

Small dog Female, MaHese, 4

Business
Opportunity
INOnCE!
OHIO VALLE¥ PUBLISHING CO
NGOmmendll
that )'OU dO
buolnooo whh people,you k,.,
and Nor 1o oonc1 monay
Nuroe, Midnlghl ohiH Starting 1hrouah tho moU unt1 you hove
hourly
wage
For
new lnvtoBgoled tho ollo~ng

500

laborolooy No ohiH work. APPlY

In peraon Mtdleal Plaza, 203
Joebon Pika, Galllpollo 8 30 to

Sunday limes-Sentinel-

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Position• now ~~V~IIable Futttimt AN Supervisor midnight
shift. Starling hourly' wage lor
new graduatal$10 75 dlfflrtntl•l
wllh exp Vacatlan, Holiday, Sick
ltavt,
Insurance
benelltt
tvallabll FuU-tfmt LPN Chl!1e

graduattJ$7 45 1 differential wl1h
exp Vacation sick INve. In·
auranct benet{ts available ConlAd Pinter•• Car1 Center 555
Jackson Plk• Call 614~4~
7112 Director of Nursing Eo E

Part.. lme medical lab ttchnlclan
for a tutty equipped phyalclan'a

I •mbltloua people nMded lm·
mediately; LOCI! blanch of
national network marketing
company Excellent part-tlmt

HE!Ip Wanted

11

11 Help Wanted
5350 111r doy --Ina l'hordorol Pooplo call you No IX·

ol Cloy School Rl 7 Boob, glrlo 9 Wanted to Buy
knowtadge ol kHchln dnlgn
bike, couch, ovena, ..c
;::::~::::-~~'::":'::::""":--:-:- 1110 1 pluo. Bonelft packogo fnCompiOII houteholdo of lur· cludto paid vocotlon, lila ond
fooe all biddilrs that rt woll af Somothlng lor ovooyo...otd • nMuro • onlllj- Aloo wood &amp; madlcol lnouronco Submll
now;
houttholdh anllquoo0 cool '-taro. Swoln'o Furnno.. ,..ume to lab Wintz or Mlkt
ftrmetNety ensure that 11 any
Hch, loaa 1 Aucllon~ Third 1 Olive, 11~
contract entered 1nto pur- booka, ,....
Dayton, PO Box 33, PI Pll, WY
lenltra, stabilizer bar, mise 441-3151.
suant to th11 advertiSement, Aug
25850 or coli 304o871-3567 lor
2,3,1 1 ~
Announcing
m1norttV bustness enter
Opening of New book excha• FumHuro and oppUIIIICOII by lho oppolnlmont
pr~aes w1ll be afforded full
gel11 Clay Street, VInton OH
pi-=- or •ntlre houuhold. Fair monullelurlfto oupo~ IX·
opportunity to submrt bode
orlcoo baing paid Call e1..._ perloneo I • plut E x m res ponae to this env•tallan
~151
Pl. Pleasant
banoiHo. Solory •om-roblo
and will not be discrimtnated
Junk ca,. wHh or wHhout wHh oxporlonco and quolll~
&amp;
VIcinity
aga1nst on the grounds of
motOJII Call Llrry Lively 114- callont Send mume to Akzo
Chemical, Inc Controller, PO
race. color or natiOnal ongm
Back Yord Solo1 331'!. 3318 and 388-11303
Box 1721, Qolllpallo Footy, WV
en consideratiOn for an 3320 Howard Avl ~riday and
QuiHo
25515-1721
EOEJMFH
award
SIIUrdily
Pre 1040 quiHa Any condition
AVON
I
All
Aruo I Shl~oy
Mtntmum wage rates for
Caoh Plid Coiii14-IIIZ.SU7 or Spears,304-675-1429
thll project have bee,. pre-.
Pomeroy,
etl-5112·2481
determined as requued by
Middleport
TOP CASH paid lor 11113 modol
law and are set forth tn the
and nawar ua.cl care. Smith
b1d proposal '
&amp; VIcinity
Real
Buick-Pontiac, 1111 Eattem
'The date set for compleAvo,
Galllpollo.
Call
et~-4~~2
family
yard
aale
July
31,
Aug
tiOn of th11 work shall be set
112 1-t/2 mila out New Urn~~ 2282.
forth 1n the b1dd1ng propo
Rd, Rullond
UHc:l fumHure and houMhold
sal •
Phone 111•112·
Each btdder shall be r• I family Auauot 1o1, 2nd. ;g:~onco:
The Oh10 Department of
Transportatton hereby rtotl

More Legals on
Page A2
11

Pomeroy,
Middleport
&amp; VIcinity

Lost &amp; Found

Contract Sales

Drawtnga and SpectfiCB
t•one prepared by Mark T

Ohoo 411631

6

I\IOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbuo, Ohio
July 2t. 1989

Nottct•a her.tty 91ven that

cond

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Po1nt Pleasant. W Va.

•

July 30, 1989

446-6624

•

,

ISAAC'S AUCTION HOUSE

JacksOn St., Vinton, Oh., Sats. 7:00 P.M . .
ANTIQUES AND COLLECTIBLES
PARTIAL LISTING K1tchen cupboards assortmenl oflables
rocker p1ctures records f1le boiC ammo box S&amp;P shakers,
bread box baseball cards, glassware (Fenton. carmval depressiOn and more) popcorn popper gramteware dmner
bell boot 1ack loys and lois more commg 1n Saturday
'
Empire chest ladder back chmrs, lrun~ desks llling cab1
nel, quoits sloneware Spnng Holl Da1ry m1lk boltles hangm g
lights wooden boxes glass lea cann1s t~r p1lcher &amp; bowl Pe
tepmnt d1shes candy glass gun lanlern drill press and
bench marbles BB gun Russell sleel Tabils ol Gallipolis
clolhes brush soldermg machone for 1ewelry makm&amp; late
1800 s glass mmnow trap early 1900 s brass mol or boal
hand pump, feed scales and lots more
Conslrnments tlklll 1-6 PM Saturdays Other days call
lor mlorm111on We ~ave out-of town buyers lookmg for
good ant1ques, collectibles and bousehold goods Con·
tad us 1f you w1sh to sell
A1r Conditioned Bu1ld1n&amp;.
Auct1oneer. Fm1s Isaac, 614-388-9370
Not Responsible lor Accldenls or Loss of Ptopllly

PUBLIC AUCTION
SAT., AUG. 5, 1989
10:00 A.M.

Th1s 1s the personal property of the late Armond Turley which has been moved to the
Meigs Co. Fa1raorund where there w1ll be
parking.
HOUSEHOLD
Drop-leaf lable sewm g machme stereo new marble top
slands m1sc slandtables lamps, melal double&amp; s1nglewar
drobes dressers desk, halllree beds Fn£1daire red washer
&amp; dryer bar stools lawn cha1rs all kmds of good electnc ap
pllance (electnc kmfe Osier k1lchen center. carvmg set
loaster oven m1xer Preslo mm1 processer &amp;more) p1clures
telephone sland, display case m1sc d1shes. pots &amp;pans
ANTIQUE &amp;COLLEtrORS ITEMS"
Several droP: leaf tables cane boHom cha1rs ch1na cabmet.
corner cupboards cuckoo cock, 011 lamp desk, stone 1ars.
p1dures m1sc chocken &amp; turkey 11ems M1ckey Mouse phone
&amp; lamp dolls wash bowl &amp; potcher oak bachelor chesl jno
m1rror) 2 baby grand poanos (needs repa11) small spmnmg
wheel Gulboransen organ (needs repa11) rockmg cha1rs,
wheal Clldle, m1sc tables oak school desk. kerosene lamps
lrunk. lots &amp; lots of d1shes &amp; several onenlal1tems. brass
buckel &amp; lOis more
"TOOLS'
2 HP 2 gal Sears Crafl(llan aor com preSser, Sears Craft man
10' radial saw, brand new 9' Rockwell table saw &amp;10' band
sk1ll saw 12 speed \1 'A dr1ll press. B&amp;D 5' bench ~nnder
B&amp;D Prof W1ldcal 7 HD 3 hp sander compound 8'A · m~er
saw ~ hp gnnder 6' level ~ hp gnnder. 6' level 'h hp pad
sander eleclnc &amp; hand slaple guns wei &amp; dry sandmg
gnnder cabinel clamps 18 24 &amp; 36" ndged p1pe wren
ches hand dnll press, lold work benches, floor tack tool
boxes hand trucks acetylene torches &amp;cart. work benches
new saw blades &amp; router blades, lots of hand tools
"MISC"
Hosp~al bed, whee! c~11r, p1t1ent bed hit wtiJht hftmg
bench, comm diSh wallier, 3 compartmentS S Sink. hand
pump w/brass berrel~ae asst. boll~ nuts. electncal ~ems
.large C clamp, ReJ!
scanner1 CB rad1o several RC
clocks lots of trophi(IS. gull clubs sul of armor, w~hmg
wells exerc1se bi~cle &amp; lOts, lOla more
OWNER-FEilMAN E. MOORE
Cash
Eats
PosHivt I D
DAN SIITH-AUCTIONEER......&amp;14·992·7301
"Not RNpouilllt lor Accld111ts or lou of Ptoptrty"
lietnHIII llonded In F~ar of Olllo &amp;W. VL
Ohio LICtiiSI 57-88-1344
W VI 515

--

NICE FOR THE PRICEI $29,000 00 -Localed at
312 Central Ave R1o Grande Remodeled I slory
home wtth 2 bedrooms fu ll basement newer
carpet ea11n lutch en 56 x204 approx lot
IMMEDIATE POSS"ESSION
#2746

HOT SUMMER DAYS - We don I mind and you
wool when you moYe 1nlo lh1s spac1ou s ranch
w~h 16 x32 1n ground pool Econom1 c heal 1ng
and coolin g would f1t any budget Make your
appointment looay $62 000 00 You UIall 1 love

CONVENIENT- 61 MILLCREEK -L1v1ng room
eal m k1lchen 2 bedrooms new roof and hot
water heater, and more" Perfect for couple
starlin g oul or retor1ng
#2755
50 ACRES - Close to SR 35 Approx 6 miles lo
town Callloday
#2713

LOT WITH IMPROVEMENTS all ready for that
mobile home Kyger Creek schools Approx 2
miles from town Asking pnce $6 500 00
#2757
QUALITY THROUGHOUT ISwhal you II fm d mth1s
3 bedroom bnck ran ch Formal dononga rea, 2 full
balhs liv1ng room, great room w1lh wei bar, 2 car
attachad garage and lois more Call loday for
appoinlmenl You'll be 1mpressedl
#2756
'

m

REALTOR•

I

BEAUTIFUL FARM SETTING- Seven room bnck
home ~rth 2\? balhs Apartmenl bUilding used for
carong 101 elde1lyand handicapped people la rge
modern barn used as feeder p1g bus1ness localed
1n Guyan Township Approx 50 acres lev~ toll able
land surrounds farm buddongs Call looay lor
ShOWIO&amp;

#2739
NEW LISTING! JUST WHAT YOU'VE BEEN
LOOKING FORI - 3 bedroom ranch wrth a lrttle
acreage (approx 2\! acml Full basemen! 2
baths elhe~ent eleclnc heat pump wolh cenlral
aor attached I car garage plus 12 d 6 approx
unattached garag~ cable TV Approx 2 m1les from
Holzer Hosp1tal
#2768
REDUCED - NOW $32.500 00 - 2 MOBILE
HOMES - 1988 FLEMING 2 bedrooms bath
hvonf room range refngerator draperoes centra l
aor 989 RICHARDSON 2 bedrooms balh, Iovin g
room completely furnoshed Front porch Bolh
mobile homes are underpinned N1ce Hat over I
acre lawn Owner will cons1der selling mobole
home separately
#2754
WHY WAST£ MONEY ON RENT? when you can be'
making paymenls to own th1s well cared lor ranch
home w~h 3 bedrooms, formal dining area large
kolchen pal1o door off dmmg area to approx
12'x20 deck (e'je( lawn approx 90 x150
Affordable at $42500
#2752
IN PlfASANT VALLEY ESTATES you will lind th1s
lovely 3 bedroom bnck ranch w~h formal d1n1n g
area hvong room w1th fireplace complete krtchen
dh newer appliances. 2 car attached garage and
more Call today for more 1nlo1mallon #2731
ALONG RACCOON CREEK - Large lot woth
frontage 111d easy access to Raccoon Creek
Unl1n1Shad 2 bedroom structure wtth most of
fm1shmg millen~ mduded For more details and
pnce callloday
#2751

I'

ALONG RIVER WITH FRONTAGE AND v'""" .... .
Older I ~ slory remodeled fr ame home 3
bedrooms balh 3 enclosed porches lorced aor
heal slorage buoldm ~ l1SI1n g proce $23 500 00
#2766

WELL CONSTRUCTED LOG HOUSE - fully
equopped kiiChen dinon gand hvon garea wrth noce
woodburmng slove Really an eye calcher 3
bedrooms 2 baths large workabl e garage 42
acres ol lan d and mu ch more Please call for
pari oculars
#2765

WANTED!!
NEW
LISTINGS!!
1981 BARON 14 x70 MOBILE HOME Excellenl condrt10n Ga1den lub and shower slail
on bath Range relr~geral or washe1 an d dryer
oneluded 1n sale Call for more delaols $11 900 00
#2762

FARM - Approx 119 acres wolh sold older 2
slory home Barn and semal bUIIdongs Salem
Township $55 OOD
#2736
ACT IMMEDIATELY'- Th os ISa ho me of elegance
1nsode an d oul 8 rooms 2'? balhs 4 bedr ooms
Spartan Deluxe m ground pool fimshed 2 bay
garage plus one detached gara ge So much more
We are anx10us lo show lh1s home to you Shown
only al appoontment
#2761
NEW LISTING! - TYCOON LAKE AREA - 2
bedroom mobile home 10 good condollon storage
bUilding la1ge pa110 Jusl perfect for that qu 1e1
gel awayl
#2767

JUDY DEWITT ..... BROKER ...... ... ................ 446-814'7
J. Merrill Carter :..... Realtor : ................... ...... 379.21 84

�(

Times-Sentinel
35 Lots &amp; Acreage ·

44

Woocllnd, 132 acrN, 135,000,

Apartment
tor Rent

51

· Household
Goods ·

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

Rt. 7, belOw Eureka, Call 614~411•fttr 7 p.m.

36

July 30, 1989

Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.
54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1 unJden aattelitl IY"Im.
PINM contact Credtt Thrift at
Amorico, 114-441-4113.

Real Estate
Wanted

54 Miscellaneous

54 Mlscellall4!ous

Merchllndlse

357 Magnum, with new e~~rrylng
living quarteN ancl awning. 0111, full boX ot ehelll, 12511.

Aolttoy eool ond wood burner

Wflh blower. Oood eondhlon.

114-3...11124, 114-31W058.

$1800.114-742·2552.

Merchandise

CAII 114-742-311~

-Big Dakota Faim HofM built an
yourtot, $24,915 &amp; Up. Call G14888·7311 .

ct

Big Dokoto Form Home buln on
lol, $24,811 A Up. COIII147311.
'

Drift bOor rotrlgorotor. K~ ond
olr
$100. 304-713-9172. ..

ln-.

For Solo • Concreto ond Pioottci
nptlc tanU. All 1lzt1. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
- · OH. 1-800-537-8528.
For Sale Qlblon Fra.t Fr11
Refrigerator, 5 yB, old, may be
- n ot Rio Orsndo, coli boloro
2p.m. 114-446-2879.

Eltate

45

Rentals

OFFICE CLOSED SUNDA
DUE
TO OPEN
HOUSES!
.
.

41 Houles tor Rent
t8A tum. houM In tht clly,
$175/mo., 2BR lurn. mol&gt;llo
homo, $200/- 114-446-41ot,
379-2740.
2 .... bedroom,

d.coratR,

bllth,

n.wly

beautiful

carpet,

46 Space tor ~ent

J .D. Dour. canopy, e way blade,
U,500. or W"h lowboy $6,500.
114-378-2561.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

MTD 11 hp rtdinr lawn mower

SWIMMING POOLS $1188
Summer apeclal on U poole.
Hugo 19x3t pool. Hugo dock,
fane. , filter &amp; warr~ntyo. Instal~
latlon I financing au liable. Call
24 hrl: 1-800-345'0Mt.

with snowblldt, yrs old , run1
good, $600.00, 304·895-3422 ·~
for a,oo PM.

Mirrored headboard 5 ehelvea,
king •Ill wate;t;."d, wavel•••
monroos. $300. 304-576-2101 .

New J•cuzzl tub, 191t JHp CJ.

7, Chrome whMit, automat~ .
1M3 Toyota 12,000 mllet,
Hon~a biG nd 3 whnler, 21ft.
Motldoy . Romblor Sako 3~6,
New biownlng hlglum aulte 16,
18ft. Star..Cratt aluminum boat,
Morcury 10hp.l14-4411-7018.

Gallla •nd Ma~en County Fair.
Sidel'l
Equlpmant, 304-675-7421.
'
Whlelchalrt • rww or usltd. 3
wheeled tltclric ecootar. Call
Rogers Mldlcal, 1-800-686-2104.

MOllOil
IUII.DIIIGS, INC.

·

Roinlngton Model 700 30-06
rifle. $250. Old Walnut mantlt
clock with porcololn llcol$150.
814-446-4045.

Merchandise

String trimer, chain aawt, lawn
mowara all on lilt during the

OVor 1,000 hordback booko.
R..sonablt. Mutt take all. &amp;14·
388·9n&amp;.

54 Miscellaneous

Ex..U•ce-Siaoe INS
167711. 60 East

lcirllours'fill-. WY 25504
(all

Toll fr• Morton, II.

Wood Kltctlan lablt, 6 chairs;
bl•ck vinyl shutter~~; wood
hutch. 614-258·t614.
Cannelburg, Ind.
Specializing in Pole
Buildin91.
D81igned to meet your

CHO~~t~FA1nJ ~~tORS
FREE ESTIMATE on
post bldgs . and package
deale. Save hundreds.
- even thou aands of
dollars.
lO&lt;al Salts Representative

DONNA CRtSENIERY
LS.R. lox 166
Gall&amp;poli's, Ohio 45631

Country Mobile Horne Par!t,
rafrlgt:l'ltor and stove on Un· Route 33, Nanh ol Pomeroy. S.lf-defro.t refrigerator, whitt,
coin Hill. $185. per monlh. 114- Lott, rental-, pafta. aalee. Call · $125. MoJ!og holvy duty outo.
114·992·7479.
Wither, $100. Speed Queen
192-3054.
auto wuher, $15. 110 electrla
3 br., House Central Avt., Rio 47 Wanled to Rent
dryer, apartment 11ze. $65.
Grande $225/mo. 114-388·9946.
Cht" h~zer, give away. 614742-2352.
.
3 ~r., home Up~r Rt. 7 nur Wanted 10 LeaN or rent 3br.,
hame
In
Kyger
CrMk
School
thcppfng ctnltr. $275/mo. plus
Sofa and chair, $200. Exe~~llent
security deposit req'd. 114-44&amp;. Dlolrlct. 114-446-1958, or 614- condition, 304-882·2052.
446-8968.

For R•nl: Houu In Rio Grandt,
$275/mo, pluo dopooil. 513-393-

=263:::2.:.....,,.....,-----~ I

49

House &amp; 3 or more acr.., 10
roome, 1 bath, wuh room, rural
water .Qn At. 7. 614-256-6571.
Nice
Fumiehecl
1
br.,
Mouool$225 Mo. Soourlty Dop. &amp;
rei. 614-446·1759.

Pomeroy, 2 btdroom, gu, oft
strMt p.~rkfn9., big . yard, apDtlanees, famtly room. 614·H2·
~15.1 or614-742·2972.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Merchand 1se
51

Household
Goods

AITiana FrMZtr, tlereo, Quasar
T.V., •m•ll television, lawn bay
mower, eltetrlc weld-..ter. 614446·7608.

Amana microwave ant. Bras•
!Md. long sora~. dresser, &amp;: quHn

2 br.,. AC, fuf:nlshttd, beautiful

size malt &amp; 1:1S. Call 614..t461171 .

river vl1~1 In Kanaugt, Fotttr't
LAYNE'S FURNtluRE
Mobllt ttome Pari. 614.-446Sofas and chill,. prlc~ from
1602.
$395 1o $995. Tobloo $50 ond up
2 br., spacious, attached family to $125. MldN-bodo $390 10
room AC, appfiancn fumlahtd $595. Recliner~~ $225 lo $375.
2 miles trom Holzer $250/mo. Lampe S28 to $121. Dinettn
plua ulilllln. O.posh and retar· $109 ond up to $4115. Wood
nects Nquirtd. 614-446-9625.
table w-6 chalre $285 to 1795.
Dosko $145 up to $375. Hutchn
For R8nt, trailer, AI. 218. 256- $400 &amp; up, bunk IM&lt;(e complete
6551.
with mattre11 $285 and up to
For rent or sale, 1988 2 bed· $395. boby bods $110 Monrooroom 14x70 mobile home, 304· ••• or: box 1pringt full or twin
$78, llrm $88, ond $98. OuMn
675-7988.
solo $275 &amp; up, King $350. 4
dra~ chest S69, Gun Cabintls
44
Apartment
6, 8, &amp; 10 glln. Baby mattf1Utt
$35 a $45. Bod tromH $25,
tor Rent
Outen Size $35 &amp; king frame
1 bl., with stove 6. refrigerator, $50. Good Hltetlon of bedroom
metal
cabinllt,
no petll$1 79 mo. Water In- suit••,
cluded. $100/deposit. Call 614- htadboarda S30 and up to 165.
90 dayt tamt as ca1h with ap446-3617.
proved c,.dlt. 3 mi. out Bulavllte
2 bedroom apartment, Galllpoli• Rd. Opon 9 A.M. to 5 P.M: Mon,
Ferry, WV. 304.&amp;75·2548.
thru Sat . Call614-4~322.
2 bedroom apls. fer renl. Car· County Appliance, Inc. Good
peted. Nice aetting, laundry used appliances, T.V. aets. Open
tacllilies available. Cill614·992· B a.m. tc. 6 p.m. Mon.-Sat. 614e
3711 FOH.
446-169_! 1 • 627 3rd. · Ave. Gal2 bedroom, In Racine. Gas, oft llpolla, Ul1
SIUIOt parking. Call 614-9492420 evenings.
2 bt.• apl. 1 up &amp; 1 down, Upper
Rt. 1, water &amp; garbage pilld.
Oep. req'd. Kanauga lrea. 614•
446·3940.

. VI'RA
FurnitUre &amp; Appliance•
Rt. 141 In COntonory, 1/4 mi. on
Lincotn Plko. Mon..Sot: 9 o.m. till
I p.m., Sundoy 12-5. Opon 1111 I
p.m. for appolnlmen1t. e1 4-+tlo
3158. Financing available, ptut
lnlltenl caeh re&amp;.tn up ta $100.
Booool lntoroprlng. SIHpor
IOta, $348. BatHt IWIVII rock•r
$148. 5 polea wood groupo
$318. BlddlngtmottrHo oot $91.
Crib monrooo $28.95;' 7 ploco
B11tatt pa.tor bedroom eulte
$198; 4 drowor chut $44.85;
Sunk bodo $148 or $12.45.
Dlnotlol tobto &amp; 4 choirs $148.
Hutch I1Hi complet1 line of
oolt &amp; country lufrllohlngo. Ook
CurrJo Cabinet Curvtcf glan
Iron! with clow loot $279 . lr
$15.14.
Wood
microwave
coblnot $128, rogulor $249. Air
compi'NSOI'I 191; gun cabinet
$198, 30 day warnmty on tlove,
refrigerator, wathtre, dryers &amp;

.,,

1124 E. Main StrHt, Pomeroy.
Houra: M.T.W. 10:00 a.m. to 6:00
p.m., Sundav 1:00 to 8:00 p.m.

614-092~2526.~

Bur., nil or trade antique• a
colectabln. S11 Dick or Sally
al Ed't GallipoUt FIN Market,
Sat/Sun, or call 61~41-7612,
dally after 6 p.m.

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

LIKE NEW - Brick and frame ranch has 3
bedrooms, I bath, family room willt cathedral
ceilln&amp; beautiful frreplace, above-ground pool
with deck for only $49,900.
#704

AFFORDASLE HOUSING DOESN'T HAVE TO .BE
BORING- This spotless 2 bedroom ranch has so
many specral features rtwill not be possrble to lisl
them all here. But, here are afew- 8 moster suite
that is a real retreat, anew 97% efficient gas pulse
furnace wrth add-on heat pump, an above ground
swimming pool, artist's studio or home office wrth
rts own heating and arr condilionrngsystem above
a 2 car garage, 4 75 acres with fruit and nuttrees.
All thrs and more for $60,000.
#509

. • 'x,

NEW LISTING: :'CHAR II" with 1 capital "SEE"Colorful flower gardens. stately evergreens, stone
walls peekrng through the ivy, ,large maples
generously shadrng a well kept lawn and an
attractive covered llagstone walkway creates the
property setting for this charm ing I ~ story loaded
wrth character. Includes 3 · bedrooms. formal
dmmg, I \7 baths, fireplace. fam1ly room. 3 car
garage. E!cellent locat1on, very convenoent yet
very prrvate. $89,500.

Apartment
2218.

tor

rent

304-675-

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON
ESTATES, 536 Jackson Pike
from $192/mo. Walk to shop &amp;
movies. Call 614446·2568. EOH.

Furnished

2

bedroom

apt,

Real Estate General

3 OPEN HOUSES
Sunday
1-3 p.m.
July 30, 1989
DIRECTIONS: South on Route 7,
last street on right before Clay
School (follow signs).

35 ACRES IN HUNTINGTON TWP. Excellent for
remote hunting camp or hrde-away. $25,000.
#112

Gracious living. 1
room apart monts

#111

Manor
a('ld
Apartment• In Middleport.
$182. Call614-992·7787.
Large upstairs apt. 238 First
· Ave. Kitchen stove, refrlg.
$260/mo. plus dap. Ulllit iat &amp;
ret. No pets. 614·446..,926.

Nice neighborhood, 1 bedroom,
$250. plus electric, 304-675-5329

·.\:¥

efler 6 :00 PM.

... SMART 3 BEDROOM. 2 bath ranch
which features large combination kitchen/ family room with fireplace, 2 car attached
garage. $62,900.

One
bedroom
apartment,
ujllltln pt~ld $60.00 1 -11,
deposit roquirod. 304·675-31 00
or 675--5508.

ACROSS THE STREET FROM FOODLAND!- Yehl!
on 4th Avenue. Walk a~where downtown from
lhrs well-kept bungal . ~w vrhyl sidin&amp; storm
wondows, modern rced·air gas furnace. This 2
bedroom homers rn very good condotron. Excellent ·
for retirees, singles, newlyweds. Owner rn nursing
home $5,000 price reduction. Was $29,900, now
$24,900!
#107
COUNTRY COMFORT- There's a splendid view
in any drrection from this 2 story home near
Champoon Farms on Rt. 554. Home Includes open
kotchen and living room, 3 bedrooms, one nrce
bath and utility room, Over I acre of fairly flat
ground. Possible 9.5% laon assumptron. Priced at
$34,900.
.
.
11224

On• br., untumlthed apt. nmge
rolrlg. P&lt;""ldod. Wotor,
uwagt, &amp; garbage paid.

a

4345.
{,,. Townhouee Apta,· 2 br., 1·
t/J batho, CA, dlohwoohor, dlopoool, pnvllo otocloood ptltlo,
pool, playground. Water, uwar,
I traolt lileludod. Stoning ot
fllttlmo. COli 114-317·7650.

Ulltumloltod

3

bodroom

=.':r'c., .~r.mmlv .....

cueumbtre,

Corn, tomatoes,
beans. 614-843-

5313.

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

400 gallon Mueller S1aln-teal
oleelo Milk Tonk. 614·388·9946.

2 pure bload Dactlahund $125

Butt Coc •or Spaniel
I
egu ar
" •
puppltll$150. 614·245·9122,
Tamt rabbit• tor sale. All sizes
and coloro. Jim King , Long Bol·
tom, OH. &amp;1 4-843·5274.

8 w.ei old Blu. Tick puppl••·

Two 8 wk old Seal Point
Slam111 kinans, $50. each. 614·

21-WH

k
So
KHten•. $50
814 4SlameN
46 0065
old Nch.
alpolnt
or 446-2467.

R

0.17 AC trador with mowtng
0111chlno, rake A AC bolor $485~1
165 MF troctor $41116, 850 N"
round biter, $2995. Owntr wiU
tlnanct. Call 514-211-0522.
Economy Power King g•rftn ,
tractor, 12 hp hydr•uflc.; 48 in ,
mower, now blade. turn plaw,
$2,000. 304-675-4435.
Farmall C.Tractor, 2 12• P ' - '
disc cultivator, rune good.
$1000. 614·388-8183.

New Holland Slurry Mantaur
used 1 yr., 18ft. Patz·
s ro &amp; unloodor,
uMd 1 yr.,. l14S~readtr,

~~~~======J.:388::-9::i=46=·=::;::=====
Real,Estete General

446-0065 or 446-2467.

57

Musical
Instruments

AKC Roglotorod Cocker Sponlol
pupplet. Butt color. $150. 304773-5492.

12 ctlannel Yamaha 300 mixing
board with road caae, 2 Peavey
Monltof'l. Puvey 260 monhor
head.
2
Shure
SM58
mlcrophon11. 614-882-6137,

AKC Shonn. Soble ond whl1o. 2
male, 1 t.male. Highly lntal·
ligon!. 814-892-5088.

Individual

guitar
11rioua gultartat.
Brunlcarcde
Mutlc,
Jeff
Wame..y Instructor, 614-44&amp;8077, limited openings.
~lnnel'l

Lowrey Genie Organ, $400. Excell•nt Shape. 304"-67~3173 .

Plano for Nte. Also retrlrr•tor
and old lll:eam.r trun with
draw1r1. &amp;14~949-2281.

wrth 186 feet !rootage on S.R 124
Living Quarters
three bedrooms on back of large
bu sr ness buildin~ Buy with stock and foxtures or wrthout.
CALL FOR MORE OETAILS

.. . 2 STORY BRICK AND FRAME. 1760sq,·
ft .. 3 bedrooms, 2 bath comfortable home.
0.6 acres. $64,900.
-

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

87,ACRES, 11/L- Vacant land located rn G1een
and Sprrngfreld Townsh1ps, tust off U. S. Rt. 35.
Fronts on townshrp road and old U.. S. 35. Water
an d gas available. Land lays mostly roll ing w~h
ejcellent building locatmns. Has hr gh hill area
wrth nrce view. City school system. Best location in
Gallia County to burld and live. Prrced at $89,900.
H340

So what is a ''fair" price ·ori real Htate7
The term ueed by mongage lenders. appraiaers, and real ettate brokers to· iden·
tify a "fair' ' price is " fair market value" .
The definition of "fair market value" is
"that price which a buyer it willing to pay
and at which pric• the ••II• is willing to
ootl, both porties boing knowledgoble
about the subject propany and neither
party being under any time preuure to
buy or sell.

I.

.

A good staning point for dat•ni'ining a
feir price might be an opinion of vllue,
alto known as a " CompetitWe Market
Analyeia" . Such an anatyail u181 infor·
matlon on 1imilar propertiet which are
1) "For So)o" now, 2) olroody " Sold".
ond 31 "hpired" tpropertln which did
no1 oetl). Propertleo "For Solo" now indi·
cate what the competition it aaking.
Proportleo olrMdy "Sold" ohow whot
buyera are willing to pay. And propeniet
which have ''Expired" indicate what
buyers are not willhrg to pay. By comparing slmller propertiel in each of the three
categori81, it' a poaaible to arrive 8t an
educated opinion of "fair m•ket value".
H you are thinking ofeelling, call todty for
o FREE Market Anolyoio. Wowouldwel·
come the oppoftunity to tall your home.

OUT-OF-STATE OWNER IN A BIND! - Must let
thrs 3 bedroom brrck and frameranch go NOW• 2
baths. famoly room, fireplace. nice bath and utilrty
,room. Over I a~re of fairly flat ground. Possible
9.5% loan assumptron Pnced at $34,900.
.
H224
GREEN TWP. ACREAGE- 10 acres wrth apP.r~_x,
half ol those cleared and flat, remamder wooded.
Creek running through property. $16,500.

#411
NEIGHBORHOOD ROAD- Great buy for $24.900
on eludes thrs 3 bedroom home w~h livrng room,
eat-on kitchen and bath. Carport and approxi·
mately 2 acres ol ground Close to city. Gas heat.
H227
CUTE AND con.:... Situated on a prrvate lot near
Clay School. Featu ring2 bedrooms, eat-in krtchen,
washer and dryer hookups and alumtnum sodm~
Call us today for an appointment.
#603

MIDDLEPORT

l)OPS!- Owned ouoted wrong priCe tllr they sa•dsell
tl an yway. Beautfful home. 3 bedroom and e~tra large
hvrng room. full base"len\. lull e~tra rrver lfont lot. ex
cellent loca\ton Agenl owned W1y un derprteed m liE
$30's
WE CAN HELP WIIH FINANCING-CALL US

••

, o••••tu•on

I

•

_

AUOR~ F. CANADAY. REALTOR
ROBERT E. GORDON. REALTOR '
MARY FLOYD. REALTOR
OFFICE : 25 LOCUST ST.
GALLIPOLIS. OHIO

114 ACRES WITH RIVER FRONTAGE - Very few
like thos outstanding farm just 5 mrles from own.
Apprdx 500 feet of rrver frontage offering 3 or 4 of
the best homesotes 1n the county, right on the
rover . Plus 110 acres of hollland whrch includes a
beautiful rrdge overlookmg the rrver and the Ohio
Valley. A serene farm pond in the moddle
surrounded wrth woods makes this unique rn
Gallia County. Good 3 bedroom, 1 ~ story home
with formal drnin&amp; frreplace, new furnace. full
basement, 2 car garage, large barn and tobacco
base. Owner woll NOT sell rover frontage separate
from the farm.
#116

MIDDlEPORT- PRICE REDUCED- Good Street,Thr s noce
t ~ story home featu res 3 lo 4 bedroom s, modern k1t chen
w~h d1ning bar, all slorms and many other features. Includes
trarler lot. Call for appointment $25.200.00.

.
IF SPACE IS A PROBlEM."TAKE ALOOK AT THIS TRI-LEVEL.
9 ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS. 2 ~ BATHS, FAMILY ROOM, FOR·
MAL DINING. HOBBY ROOM OR DEN, OVER AN ACRE
WOODED LOT. LOTS OF PRIVACY HERE,. EXCELLENT PRICE
$65,000.
..
.
If YOU WORK AT HOllER HOSPITAL YOU CAN WALK TO·
WORK FROM THIS 3 BEDROOM RANCH, FAMILY ROOM IN
BASEMENT, NICE SCREENED BACK PORCH . CONVENIENT
LOCATION ON RT. 35. SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT.
'

IIIDDLEPORf - Excellent start home with
rncome from upstairs apartment House needs a
l~tle frxrng ~p, bul when you are fin ished, you can
sot on the brg front porch and en1oy theriverview .
Priced at an affordable $25,000
TREES A PLENTY - on this 10 acres of ground
located in Vinton County County water avarlable.
·Septrc has been installed Perfect for your mobile
home or modular home. $8,300.
#710

•

PRIME LOCATION - 2 STORY BRICK HOME IN CITY. 3
BEDROOMS WITH SPACE FOR POSSIBLE 4TH 2'? BATHS.
FORMAL DINING, FAMILY ROOM, VERY NICE ENTRY WITH
OPEN STAIRWAY. LARGE LOT WITH INGROUND POOL, PRI·
VACY FENCE . ONLY A FEW BLOCKS FROM DOWNTOWN EX·
CEPTIONAL VALUE AT $89, ~0.
•
PRETTY ] · SEDROOM RANCH WITH ATTACHED GARAGE.
CENTRAL AIR COND .. LOW COST GAS HEAT AND EVEN AT
THE LOW PRICE OF $45.000 THE WASHER AND DRYER,
RANGE AND REFRIG. AND DISHWASHER ARE INCLUDED'
LOCATED ON JAY DRIVE. JUST A FEW MINUTES FROM
HOllER HOSPITAL
HARDWARE STORE _ COMPLETE WITH INVENTORY,
EQUIPMENT AND REAL ESTATE ESTABLISHED BUSINESS
LOCATED AT COURT AND THIRD DOWNTOWN GALLIPOLIS. IF
YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FOR A GOOD INVESTMENT, CALL
SOON!
. S&amp; OOO _WOODED LOT ON RT. 1218. APPROX: 2 ACRES.

HMIIAII TRACE SCJIOOIS.

POMEROY - 5 acres, vacant ground on top on a hill near
town. Great locatron for a house or trailer. $3.900.00.
SIIITH RIDGE - Approx. 35 acres of vacant ground, woth a 5
to 10 acre hayfield and !herest on woods. Approx 1500 H. of
road frontage. $16,900,00..--':
MIDDLEPORT - Commercral buildm g lor a place of
busmess. Call for more det11ls. ASKING $49,500.00.
LETART AREA - Approx. 2 acre minr farm wrth small barn,
.fencmg to the sheds. plus a 1978 modular unit w1th 3
bedrooms, satellite dish, 2 good garden areas. Orrlled water
well. $17,500.00. MAKE OFFERI!

ATA PRICE LIKE THIS YOU CAN OWN YOUR HOMEEASilY .
$26.00D FOR A 3 BEDROOM RANCH. FRAME WITH BRICK
TRIM. FULLY CARPETED EXCEPT KITCHEN AND BATH EAT ·
IN KITCHEN HAS RANGE AND REFRIG NICE LEVEL LAWN,
SOU1HWESTERN SCHOOLS.
YOU CAN BUY THIS HOllE CHEAP BUT BRING YOUR HAM·
MER IT NEEDS SOME REPAIRS. 2 BEDROOMS NICE SIZE
LIVING ROOM AND KITCHEN. LEVEL LAWN AND IF YOU LIKE .
CHERRY PIE THERE ARE 3 CHERRY TREES FU LL OF FRUIT.
JUST OUTSIDE CITY. LOOK AT THE PRICEIII $14.000

NSOI

•

446-3636

RUTlAND - A
hou se with several outbuoldmgs.
acres of groond . some lruottrees, garage, and is very prrvate.
Home has 3 bedr ooms. one bath. $29.000.00.
NEW ·LISTING - POMEROY - Nrce home wrth 2 to 4
bedrooms, 2 baths, WBFP. carpet and NGFA he~t Full
basement and nrce yard

GORGEOUS BI·LEVEL - Very attractive 4
bedroom brick home wrth over 2800 sq. ft. of
gracious living space. Includes features l1ke a
beautiful cherry Wrtchen any woman would love
w~h Jennarre range, large family room woth
lrmestone frreplace across entrre room. 2 large
attractive baths and much more. Energy effrcrent
heat pump, 6" exteroor walls. extra rnsulatron 2
· car garage. Located l 'h miles from town ni a
semo·prrvate setting on .77 acre landscaped lot
#228

Loretta McDade, 446-7729
Phyllis Miller, 446-8346

RUTlAND- 26.2 acres in the cou ntry. 6 rooms. 3 bedroom
home Pr~vale and seclud ed Needs some work. $28,000.00

_ .•. . _ - -·

1

. .1. J3. WiHman, . ..r.klr

LANGSVILLE - Ran.:. l:vme wrth krtchen. d1nrng room,
family room, 3 bedrooms. 21,(. baths, wrth carpet. NGFA heat
Pant and satellite dish, and lar ge metal building

:® 1CANADAY REALTY·

· TERRIFIC 2 BEDROOM - I bath. lrv1ng room,
super krtchen, enclosed porch. I ~J32 oval above
ground pool. 2 bu ilding;;, rns~lated, workshop,
newer roofs, house rewired and plumbed. Vinyl
sidrng, I car garage. Central air. Small orchard
SeHrng on over 3 acres for $54,900 rn North Galli a
~,.hnnlc:

MIDDLEPORT- NEW LISIING

CLOSE TO CITY PARK - 3 IH!B-ooms. remodeled
ktlthen, lots of good features. Needs a IJttle work. An
excellen t opjXlft urwr, 10 the 18's.

Real Estate General

. Real Estete General

"We' re hare to get as much u we canyou ·~· he;e tb buy it 11 cheap 11 you can
- whit om I bid7

Wiseman
Real
Estate
. (614) 446-3644
...
David Wiseman, 446·9666
B.c J. Hairston, 446-4240

BURLINGHM ;_ HALF WAY 8ETWEEN
POIIEA 01 &amp; ATHENS
A HOliEr FOR THE IOJIEY- S1c.e. serwtee slal!Ofl
~age. on Sl Rt 33 Excellent local JOn. Could be about
only servtte area between Ravenswood and Athens
Don't ovtrlook lhtS 6 you Rnl your own busmess A
rell moneymall!l 11'1 mtd S20's.

A seuonld land auctioneer used to begin
each of his auction alas with the phra1e

'S LEADER·

Ono bodroom tumlohod opt,
wtry c111n and nice. No peta.
304-t'll-1400.

Cllll 114-441-

Produ~.

$2,795. aoo Ford tractor $2150.
Ford Front-4ncf loader. $415.
614·286-6522.

•

MAY DAY! IIAY DAY! - Owner sinking under
stress of 2 payments 3 bedroom bi·levef offers
livin g room , famrly room woth frreplace, farge
krtchen. bath and large lot. Asking $51 ,000.
H705

WHAT'S A FAIR PRICE?.

EASY LOAN ASSUMPTION! - Tored of rentrng?
Why put money 1n your landlord's pocket when
you could be buildingequrtx in your own home' It
doesn't make "cents". Thos very clean 2 bedroom
home offers nrce k1tchen and bath, deck and
fenced yard Excellent proximrty to everython~
FHA loan rs easier toa ssumethan you mrght think.
Owners have 2 houses and 'only need one. Great
opportunity. Prrce reduced 1to $39,900' .
#702

75xl25 LOT located in Rodney Village II . Good flat
lot to bu rld that home Y.Ou've been dreaming of.
$5,200.
.

~eq'd,

NEW j:OUNTRY LISTING - Brand new home rn
the quret of the country Lo cated on Rt. 175 this
home has just recently been frnrs~ed and is
waitrn~ for you to (llove in. 3 ~edrooms, I \7 baths,
large lrvrng room, dining area and eat-in kotchen
with custom cabmets. Full basement for extra
room 2 car garage Heat pump wnh central air.
Lar ge flat 3·4. acre lot. Proced to sell at $59,900.

ATMOSPHERE, CITY CONVENIENCE
~ Located 1ust outside the city limits on Spruce
Street Ext. , this well marntain ed maontenance free
home has both. Not hampered by closeneoghbors.
yet close. enough to walk to town, this ranch
features 3 bedrooms, bath, hvong room with
fireplace and full basement. Perfect home for
small family. $49,900
#225

WILL TAKE ATRAILER IN ON TRADE - Very nrce
doublewrde home on acountry lotrncludes 28x40
. garage lrdeal for weldin~ auto shop, etc.). Home
Includes 3 bedroom s. 2 baths, screened rn porch.
and os on excellent cond1toon. Only $38,000 and
wrll consider your mobil e home as trade on.
#233

LISTING ON LeGRANDE- Very nrce and well
kept 3 bedroom home on pleasant neoghborhood.
Wrll make an excellent buy for someone Be th e
hrst to see this charming home whrch has a hvong
room. nice eat-in kitchen, cathedral cerhngs and
more. Prrced at $45,900
#212

O.potit

JS. R

Rtglltl!'ld mall Wast Highland
Whlll Ttrrler puppy. Born 4·1~

..

MAINTENANCE FREE RANCH - 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, large kitchen and dinrngarea, lhermopane
wrndows and.attached 2 car garage.Srtuated on I
acre, only 12 miles from town. Prrced to sell at
$48,500.
#701

Furnished Apt. 1Br, $210,
uUiilies pd., 701 4th:, Gallipolis.
614446-4416 after7 p.m.

r.

Purtbrld Siamese' klntn~. 6
wkl. old. 614-448-4885.

Frnh canning peachea. ti14446-Bm after 6 p.m.

61 Farm Equipment

Pets tor Sale

Dragonwynd Collory Konno!.
Peralan,
Slamtst
and
Hlmal•yen klttene. Chaw stud
MrYice. 814-44 ...3844 ahtr 7
p.m.

mo

8 track recor·
conaola, n1w Victor
X,K•KA Ban detector. ~dl.
2" botl. 614-44'-

reterenca and toeurlty depotit
,..1 raquire~J. New Haven, 304·882·
3267.

Now accepting appllcationt tor .
2 bedroom apt, tully carpeted, '
appliances, water and trash
ickups provided. Mainlentnce
rN living clase to ahopping,
bllmka and schooll. For mort hl·
fOrmation call 304-882-3716. E·
~ual oppoi1unhy hous ing. Sec·
t1on 8 accepted.

Miniature Schnauzm ~ 2 males,
1 11ft and papper; 1 black and
gny. $150.00, 6 w••k• old. Call
304-576-2483. Aak tor Jennifer.

Blackberrln tor aale, 304-G7S.
1138.

10" Skit Ban Saw. 21" Tara S111

PICKENS FURNITURE
New/Used
Household furnishing . 112 mi.
3 room furnished apt, ground Jerrlcho Ad. Pl. Pltasant, WV,
floor, private entrance and call304175-1450.
parking, outskirts of Henderson,
all utlhtes Included $275.00 per
month. 304-675-6730.

1980.

Groom and Supply Shop-P1t
Grooming. All breeds. All atyles.
lama Pet Food Ouler. Jul11
Wobb. Calll14-446~231 .

1,450 OHvfr Tractor, 13,150.
Vtrmllr round My ball•r

Vegetables

«216

refrigeralor, 1$180/Mo. plus
deposit. UtiiHies 6. reference, no
petl. 614-446-4926

5
room,
bath
upstairs
apartment,
3
room
bath
downstairs, apartment. Cays;
614-446-75n, Eve's: 614-446-

Fis h Tank, 2413 Jackson Ave.
Point Plusant, 304-675·2063, 10
gal Ut up $14.99 •nd 10 gal
comptltt $43.25.

61 Farm Equipment

Fruits &amp;

58

. .

'· '
PEACEFUL LIVING ON RACCOON CREEK Perfect settrng for relaxation and enjoyment of
Ra ccoon Creek 3 acres, m/1, wrth good access to
the creek and plenty of roorrl for recreatron. Log
home mcludes 6 rooms oncludm gbasement large
deck overlooks the wonderul setting. Perfect for
weekend get-togethers or full time country Irving.
$42,000.
#2]1

238 Firat Ave., 1 br., riverview,
kitchen
with
a1ove
&amp;

35 W. apt 2 br., 1 balh, private
enclosed patio.
Close lo
grocery s1orea &amp; shopping center,
water,
sewer,
trash
provided. $265/mo. Call 614·
446-Bn7.

:•,A' &gt;!.,;~ ~· ••
DESIGNER HOllE - This one is for you of you
want the latest in design and livability I Only 2 yrs.
old, thrs 1400+ sq. ft. round home makes entering
each and every rpom a treat. It has so much to
offer everyone -4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room, family room, krtchen/d1nrng, patio, decks.
storage burldmg that you'll have to see to believe.
lots of trees, lawn, prrvacy, scenrc view. Just
$52,900.
#412

56 Pets tor Sale

89, HOI ptlptlrO. $100. 614•742·
2947.

56

:.0.-882~91.

~,,

Valley Fumlture
New and Ulld furniture and apo
plloncoa. Coli 114-448·7572.
Hours 9-5.
·•

=
Buy or eefl. Riverine Antlq.,. ..

VIrginia Truss, roof true' " built Ia order, Aaute 21, ana
milo North ot Ripley. 304-372·
9323.

Cuto, full blooded PIU BuN pupDIM to DOOd home. $30. Phone

.....

dHpfrtUirl.

53
-.:._~A~n;:t~lq:.:u:,:e:.:s:...,...::-­

w...

AKC Coqkor Sponlol pupploo.
S2SO. ThHI pupe are beautiful!
614.-892-5f!83.

.,

For Lease

,.,...-.,---,-;_;_;_;_,...,._..,.
Yery nice tp~cloua 2nd floor, 3
br., apl. untumllhld. lion I
retrlg, hlltorlc home downtown
$275"/mo. Utllllin oll1ro, rot.
roq'd. Coli It 4-441-4421.

Block, brick, aew• !'~pet, win~
dow., llnltll, etc. Claude Win~
ters, Rio Grandt, OH Cell 614,245-5121.

Both partntt _good etralghl
Coon Hounda. $50. uch. 614848-2171 .

6189,ar614~65.

3 br., houoo In · GrHno
T-nohlp, rei. roq'd. 114-4466541, aher 5p.m.

Building
Supplies

55

each. 114-446-4045.

Searl 31 cu.fl. upright frwrer.
Good cond. $300. 614-446-1568.

carJ)etlng,

bedroom

54 Miscellaneous
Merchandise

1-100-447-7436

Pomeroy. 614·992·5858.

2

Going out of busln111 1a11.
C.kt end candy 1uppJy ahop,
Harrltonvllle. Save up to 50%.
Sale atartlng Augu11 1·15. 1514742-3033.

(Hope To See You _'fhere!)

Sunday Times-

Ohio- Point Pleasant. W.Va .

54 Mlsc;ellaneous
Merchandise

54 Miscellaneous

Merchal)dlse

2 hots• 0901~k Inlier. I ft.

July 30, 1989

MIDDlEPORT ..:_ Nice I floor ranch homelocated on a good
street. 3 bedrooms, bath, ni ce level lot. $23,000.00.
RUTlAND - LONG STREET - I floor hou se, 3 bedrooms.
bath Needs some repair . $7.900.00.

$39,900 PRETTY HOllE - NICE LOCAl iON IN THE COUN·
TRY HOME SETS ON A KNOLL ON AN ACRE LOT. 3 BED·
ROOMS. KITCHEN HAS NICE DINING AREA. ATTACHED GA·
RAGE. ALUM. SIDING FOR EASY CARE. SOUTHWESTERN
SCHOOLS. APPROX. 7 MILES FROM GALLIPOLIS.
ONE OF THE MOST BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH HOliES IN
• THE COUNTRY. 3 BEDROOMS. 2~ BATHS, LARGE FORMALI
LIVING ROOM. FAMILY ROOM WITH FIREPLACE, FORMAL
OINING. KITCHEN HAS AMPLE CABINET SPACE AND IS
FULLY EQUIPPED, ATTACHED 2 CAR GARAGE PLUS DE·
TACHEO 1 CAR GARAGE, PLUS CAR~ORT lARGE ENOUGH
FOR BOAT OR CAMPER. IN-GROUND POOL. LARGE LEVEL
lAWN. VERY NICE'!' .
HAVE YOU EVER DRIVEN OUT RT. 218 A FEW MILES AND
ADMIRED A BEAUTIFUL 2 STORY COLONIAL TYPE HOME
OVERLOOKING RACCOON CREEK? WE HAVE JUST LISTED
THIS PROPERTY FOR SALE 4 BEDROOMS, 2 BATHS. HUGE
LIViNG ROOM WITH FIREPlACE, EQUIPPED KITCHEN WITH
DINING AREA AND A FANTASTIC VIEW OF RACCOON CREEK.
ENCLOSED BACK PORCH, LARGE BARN, PLUS APPROX. 20
ACRES. CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT.
LOOK! COLOIIIAL BRICK WITH NEARLY 7 ACRES WOODED .
lAND. CITY SCHOOLS. $55,000.

POMEROY - Three' lots wrth aone story frame home. Has 2
bedrooms, dmrng room, ohe 'bath, forced aor heat JUST
$6,000.00.
'

MIDDLEPORT - 2 un~ apartment building in Middleport.
Good rental income. Good ne, ghborhood OWNER WANTS TO
sm NOW. $24,900.00.
POMEROY - Approx. 3'h acres. vacant ground Good
building site. Close rn. Water may be available. $7,500.00.
MIDDLEPORT - When the work is done· and the pr ice is
small: ot's perfect for you' 3 bedrooms, fGurpped kotchen,
insulated, vinyl sidins. lar ge lot. $22,000.00.

POMEROY- PRICE REDUCED- Lincoln Heights - 2to3 •
bed room home m e~cellent co nditionr Large play area for
krds-approx. I acre lot. Call for appornlment. $31.500.00.
HYSELL RUN - Really nrce ranch wrth a gor geou skitchen,
huge lamoly room, bog hv ing room wothfn eplace. plusatraoler
hookup All qu ~et and peacefu l on approx. 20 acres
$49,900.00. Tanning bed an d supplies may also be
purchased.
POMEROY - Th 1s 2 story frame home has 2 bedrooms. 2
baths completely rem odeled. and washer and dyrer. couch
and chaor, kotchen table an.d ch aors go wrth th e property.
PRICE REDUCED $28.000 00
ST. RT. 33 - Rrght on Krngsbury Road. 2acre buildingsites
Water and elect roc avaolable MAKE OFF ER $6,500.00.
POMEROY- ST. RT. 33 - One acre burldrn g or mobole
home lots. water and electrr c avaolable Land contract with .
$500.00 down, 15% mterest for a 5 ye ar term. Monthly
payments of $107,06 on balance ol $4,500 00 TOTAL PRICE
$5,000.00.
POMEROY - FLATWOODS liD. - 10 73 acres of vacant
ground. Wou ld make nice home srle Call ~or more
informatron. $21 ,500 00
FIVE POINTS AREA - Three one-acre bu1idon g s1tes. Elec.
and water available. Good localron lor your new home.
$5,900.00.
POMEROY- Commercial lot. Appr ok 108 foot frontage on
Main Street. Noce co rner ·lot on heavoly traveled street.
Approx 200 feet of depth. MAKE AN OFFER!'

.

MIDDLEPORT - Large co mmerclll bu oldm g, could have
many uses. Call fo r more in form atron. MAKE OFFER
FLATWOODS RD. - A neal 12&gt;60 mobile home on a
acre lot wrth storage buifd,n gs plu sa2 car garage.
TP water. gas forced air heat. ·range. ref. Nice front deck.
lmmed~at e possessoon $27,900.00
~eaut rf ul1

HARRISONVILLE- Really nice 14x70 Schull mobole home
with 2 bedrooms. frreplace in liv rng room. equrpped kotchen
dishwasher, b1g 2 car gar~g~ storage burlding, and a nice
1.06 acre lot. REDUCED $30,000.00.

IIINERSVILLE RD. - RACINE - 2 story hou se with 2
bedrooms, bath, carpet, paneling and rn Southern School
District. Recently remodeled and rn good condrtion .
$29.500.00.

NEW LISTINGS NEEDED - Selling fOUl prapllrtr is u
important to us as it is to rou. List wrth us far Best

RUTlAND - '3 vear old house with large garage, free gas to
house plus a 197Q Holly Park trailer 14"x70' with Expando
and room added on. Large metal barn; satellrte drsn ana
many other features. Must be seen to be appreciated. All in
good condition. $79,500.00.
'

HENRY E. CLELAND ........................ .............. 992·6191
JEAN TRUSSELL.. ......................... ..................94t.2&amp;10
DOTTIE T~RNER ......:........................... :.........91 ·5112 •
JO HILL ........................................................9114411
OFFICE .................................... .....................992•2259

Resu~s.

~

�Ohio-Point Pleasant. W. Va.

Times-Sentinel
61 Farm Equipment

71 Autos tor Sale

1i71. Lincoln Mark IV. Good
Saw chaine to ftt any uw buy running
condition with aome
one gat one frH drawing, Oi:lllt . aurfact rutt.
Fl111t $500. 114M
and Mason County lairs. Sldera
SHI2.a5!M.
Eq•lipmonl, 304-87J.7421.

Dooro ·hoy balor.
25,000 BTU orr condhlon. Booldo Lolli! Gro&lt;!o School. • •

T14 John

63 . Livestock

1171 Cutlua . Sup.....,, V-11,

auto., good c:ond., 304-175-5318.
1078 Ford Fi!i;monll$600. 614·
246..122.
1971 Mustang II, H.T. V-1, PS,
PB A.C M hed edhlon
4otO. • m · ·
• ,._...

e

71 Autos tor Sale
1982 POfllloc Trono-Am Bilek,
Bolt! lnlorior. T-Topo, PS, PI,
AC, PW, new tlree, low mil-.,

1161 Cougor loldod 38 000 GOVERNMENT SEIZED Vohlcl11
ml'"c now ~ru, 18,000. firm. !ram S100 Fordo. 11-doo.
c - n n. Ch"I'L Surpluo.
~t&amp;-5471.
8 - Guido (11 IOHI7-IOOO,
1111 ca:uaar, toaHd, '3a,Ooo E.rt. 11-10180.

nma like

new. Aaklng 15100.

N19olllblo. I1._...17R.

ml,.., New llraa. ...ooo. Firm.

304-e7&amp;-5471.

z.u,·aU.o, v..a. uc: cond,

1982
304.a7W198.

1981 Hondo Accord bl 4 dr.,

1983 Comoro. N~ oondhlon.
VI
• C PB PS
eng1ne, I ut0 ·1 ""·
·•
,
•
$a~OO. I14-112·72al. .

lim. ShOD. 814-441-7'74 doyo,
114-44H4U ovenlngo. .

Fuel lniectlon, aH optlona, ntw 72 Trucks for Sale

Hdan 5£. L011dtd, IUIOmttlc
shift. llko now. S11n. 614-112·
1719.
1184 ChtveUt 4 speed, 11,500.
IXC C!"nd, 304~75a7101,
1U4 HIUin Sent111, ucell1nt
condHion, I tp..d, air, AMIFM
cnutta, tnt wheel, new tlrtt.
304-675-2188

~~~~~~~

1!185 · Choraor $2500 18~
Ctwell•lr S2500, 1178 Chewy 1
owner S1,000; Trade or Mil. 614256·1270.

1985 Plymi:lu1h

Aa.lfant,

Trans, AC. 4-dr.. Ex.
S3750. 114-256-8251 .

IUIO

cond.;

1~7 Dodco Shldowii' outornollc,

cona.

air .
AmiF
ca..tUt
star.o. 41,000 mi. $4800. 814-

:Jal.tm.

198a Rod, Chryalor LoBorron
Turbo, loldld, 614-4411-3930.
1181 Camara RS , tvtry

~dllt

option, V-1, S11L~.oo. 114~

2062orl14-446-1uo5.

APPOit&lt;ITMENT-Coll 992-3267 .
Bids to be mailed to J. J. Davis at 93 9 Ash

St., MiddleP91't, Ohio 4S760. .
Owner

II=.:......
~

462 2ND AVE. REAR
446-4206
· : "'""'•• ......... OFFICE HOURS
Mon.-Fri. 9:00-5:00
Sat. 9:00-12:00

alr, PS, PI, like new, 1,000
· mllll. 304-e75-37".

_4427 oftere:oo p.m. .
1971 FOld olckup. I cyl., oton·

1178 Chivy c.ao lruck wllh 17ft.
rallbacll bod. Tllltl truck II 10
ahllrp-lt
rMcl 1ncf write.
$7,:i9U11 2111522.
.

'*'

/Ill/'"'·

///i/JII/1/ii//1'

I acre on St. highway with

. TEAFORD
REAl ESTATE

2 BR trailer. 2 car J!llllt
with hoist &amp; crane, all
aarace tools &amp; equip·
ment. Must sell by AU&amp;. 4,
1989. My loss. your gain.
Will consider ,iny offer.
I mile eat of Rt 7al Ches·
ter on St. Rt. 248.
C. E. LASHLEY
47003 St. Rt. 248
Lon&amp; Bottom, Oh. 45743

'

Pomitray, Ohio

(6141 992-3325

Call For A Great Deal....

·

rruck r - r . 1n1
• ford ancfDodgt. $250. 614-367·
· 7252.

f'RI~E REDUCED $10,000.00
INVENTORY REDUCTION SALE

Owner has mowed lo Wisconsin lo become president
of a small college there and has one house too many.
In order to obtain quick sale owner has auth 0rrzed
me to make the follow in&amp; offer of sale:
First persoo with acceptable financing who offers
the sum 91 $69,500.00 will own lhis hous_e.
.
Here·is whal you get for 'your monll': four bedroom
home, .with family room, located within easy walkin&amp;distance of schools and·shOppinJ
.
This home will be·apprecilllld best by 1 couple wilb. at le~t two childen, who are I ired of drivln&amp;alleast 20
mlltrS a day to and from school functions 111d INrll or INrnd
practice. . ·
·
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY
r CONTACT OWNER'S ATTORNEY
ROOERICK 446-8880

• 1162 Ford F-250, osklng $2.000.
• 614-446-2351.

·'=':-:-=-=-==:-:-:-....,...,.---,
• 1917 Ford F·150 4x4 pick-up, 1

1
•. cyl. 4 opd. dull ran.., CUllom
• whletl, AMIFM, cruiH, bed·
• llnw, elnce new. will consider
: fiiOIIol
trodo. 814-4411-1761
• befoN 4 :30 WNkd1y1, 114-24$-

ISUI1fterlp.m.
-•..'·1981
Ford Aorootor Von. Elllroo•
.

• Wllf coneldlr latt model car 11
•poymonr. S12,500. 614: 985-4418.
·.
~

1181 Ford .Converalon van E150,

~

loaded, 17,000 mil... 304-675-

~~

4802..

.,.__

Motorcycles

· 11112

Hondo

mOiorcyclo

.. CM250C. Excellent .conditlon.

CALL FOR DETAILS

• ~oconiiY 1onod up. 4020 mlroo.
•. 114-9411-2034 ovonlno-; 304, irn.a126 doyo.
-: 1912
Yam1~a
150-good
·. condJ&amp;700. 814·3all-11011.

'

.·

1181 VZ4to, S1100. 304-1112·
3397.
·
.
1917 Suzuki AM 250 run• and
look axcollonl. S1iii0. 304.a758539.
.

Rt. 35 Cyclo Solos, 7 mlln
Mttllh of Hendlfllon~ dlscounta
ltrwtt blkn, tltO buy anything
new. Pol1rl1 4 whHitra, during
!I•Y 0&lt; Juno ond gil $200.00
WOf'lh , of Potari• ICCIIIDriM
tno. Ptrono 304~75-4130.

Bon bool·1167 Llndou 16'5"
whh Morcury 35 hp molor whh
power trim and auto oil lnJtc·.
tlon, · Mareury Trailing molar
Shoreline ll·•nar phil more. All
~~ condlrrot\ .. con 814-992·

Auto Pans &amp;
· Accelisorles

1.172 modol 4n onglno wnh 400

turbo tranamlulon run•

t9117 2711. Criu.Crooo obln
cruller, many thlnp rfolltorld.
as,ooo, 114-24J.I122. .
1972 17 ft. Storcroft Tri-Hull
loll. 125 HP, Evlnnrdo Encino,
oomplole lop upholollfY.
13500. Colt iil4-211-1311 oftor
7:00p.m.
1175 Rana-r a . . Boat, complololy oqUippld, 15 Evlnrude, 2 • • battarJ-. Drive on
trailer, new tlr..,
cond. Call
onyllmo114-388'9tl 8.

••c.

35n . Coachman HI, Park Travel removal, call304-t75-f331.
Trailer. $3500. 61~367.0447 or Rorory or cablo roof drilling.
114.049-2640.
.
Molt wtlll Compl8ttd Am•
For Salt Camper 25 ft . wtlh air. Pump aaiH and •rvlce,

Ul·

614-256-6551.

185-3102.

.

~

Services

350P P onrTroc Englnolo, $275,P350 .
ont1ac ransmlll n $75, on·
rroc Morgo, &amp;14-367-769&amp;.

81

POOR BOY TIRES, 304-1175333_1_, front ond ollnmont $18.95!
4,0ou good ultd tlraa, um
tlra. new tlrH.
' · ·
U...t pick up ·beda. Ford! ChiY/
Dodgo, lhor1 or to-, 304.e7s.
5".
...

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarana

a.

Campers
Motor Homes

18 ft . Travel Malter Camper,
SIMpll
ohopo.

I. l;=uny contained. GOod
$1500.

1971 Ford
Cougar, New tlrn new battery.
»sa. 3091 a McEihlmoy Hill,
lllddllporl.
'

25ft. Coachman Bunkhouat.
Good cond. Slllpo 1. S3,500.
114-317·7212.

'

SWEEPER and AWing ma~:~hlna
Mldae motor home, 28,130 N~S~Ir, parta, and auppUH, Pick
mllae, GMC motor, double air· up anG ....Ivery, Davia VacuUm
complltt, exc cond, · price
Clea111r, on• hilt milt up
Nducod, 304-675-4437.
Go«gll Crook Rd. 11._...
0214.
' .

u - no oil, $500.00. 30U756141:

79

wllh
lrollor. 3H.P. onglno and lralllnit
motor. Oars, liM Jackett ana
I!"Chort Included. $BDO.' Cait
814-112·11011.

23/4 POINTS

Home
Improvements

Local reterMte.. tumlahld.
FrH ..um•t ... Call collect 1·

IM.

814-237-0488, day or night. R 0
gera8a. 1 t m e n l
:;W:::.••::.•rp=rooc.:t:::.lng:!:. :.....,_.....,.....,_
Eloclrlco~
roofing,
khchon ·
bathroom replacement, framing,
concralt, dryall, ceramic Instil·
latlon, all remodeling 304-e752440.
'

til·" IIGUil"t.

OPPDHIUIIIITY

PROPERTY - Nosta ~r s tocl1mb. all on one floor plan. 3
ooms, modern k1chen. separate dinmg room. Fenced
ard, garage,
and workshop area. Gasheat. cen·
Ext ellenl
2 lots. Pr~ced low 40's.

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. _Founh and
Qolllpoll~, Ohio
Coli 11.....aa.. or 81._...

P'n•

4477.

.

Plpo h In or Plpo II oul. C.W.

Oa\liton Plumbing .&amp; Trenching

dnllna &amp; water llnll, 614-44~

0159. Mornlnga or Evenings.

27ff.1D81 Sunltream motor Ron•a TV Service, apectallzlng
hQme.
Air
condlllonar, In Zenith also ~trvlclng moel
gtntrator, reduced In price. 114- other brandt. Hou11 Cllll, also
112·7321.
some tppllane• repalq, WV
304-57&amp;-23!18 Ohio 614-441·2 454•

0 • •

0 0

Bonnie Stutes - 446-4206
Tammy Moore- 367~7760.
Crystal Richie - 446·3638 ..

Graham Upholstery Canter, 303

Hilltop Dr. Call for appolntmtnll
• Hllmoln. Coll614-448~38.

VIRGINIA SMITH. BROKER. 388-8826
RUTH GOODY, REALTOR, 379-2628
DIAN CALLAHAN, REALTY. 266-6251
LEE-SA CLARK, REALTOR. 367 ;7623
EUNICE NIEHM, REALTOR . 446-1897
RUTH BARR, REALTOR. 441!-0722

BOATERSIIII"'"":r. llorcruloor,

Precis on Mobile
Marine, we come lo you. 1~1'-'

259-8871. Now ond Ulld Po~o.

PARTICIPATE IN THE LOW INTEREST LOANS. WE
DO NOT DO IT LIKE EVERYONE ELSE, WE DO IT
BETTER. COME IN FOR ALL THE INFORMATION
OR CALL 446-6806. _

.·..

NEW OWNERSHIP
NEW MANAG ENT
...._______
WITH ~-YEARS OF·EXPERIENCE

.

····. . '•.. Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

Phone: . (614) 446-0008

A REAL .
acres,
an atlractove country style home
a
couple of mil es from HMC on Rt. 35. Features
include 3 or 4 BRs, bath. LR. kitc~en. DR and
FR. fireplace, gas heat. 2 car garage. Thereos
a ·30x30 barn and mobile home pad on
property. Call for
details.
.

652 Second Avenue ·
Gallipolis, Ohio

BIG BEND REALTY INC •
•
•
Jim Cochran, Broker

514 Second Avenue-

OWNERS HAVE RETIRED AND WANT TO
MOVE TO· FLORIDA....which means you
could have the 'opportunity to.purchase this
beautiful home. Lo cated jusl at the edge of
town and offering the loll owing ou tstanding
features: 3/4 bedrms .. 3 baths, large LR
w/stone foreplace, beamed ceilings, floor
length wmdow s lor great river view, lovely
roomy kitchen, drneue, family room with
woodburning stove, rec. room.
- Located wrthin two blocks of crty ·
conlents included for $35.000.00.

THIS COULD BE YOUR DREAM HOllE Owners have given this beautifu l Cape Cod
style home lots of TLC Features include 3
BRs, 2 baths, LR. eat-in kilchen, dinette, FR,
full basement. 2 car garage, heat pump,
cenlral air. Located in Mercerville area.

HAVE YOU ALWAYS WANTED ABEAUTIFUL
HOllE ON FIRSr AVENU£1- Makeptans to
view this home which oilers 2 baths, large LR
with firepa ce and view of river, L·shaped
kitchen, formal entry, FR. summer porch,
lovely lawn, on river. ·

YOU DESEii'IE TD OWN A HOllE LIKE THIS
- Just off St. Rt. 35. Corner lot This home
offers kitchen, JennAir ranRe. OW. dowble
ovens, family room wrth FP, LR w/fi replace,
dinmg room. fen ced rear pat io, HP/cent. air:
one car attached garage. carpet.

UNIQUE 2·STORY - 3-4 bedrool]ls.'Conveniently located
• along 3rd Ave. $32,000 00. . ·
NEW LISTING: 10 acres, Perry Twp Som e timber. Buy now
for $10,000.00
·
3 BEDRII. HOllE within Vin ton Vi llap 1.5 acres. 6 rm
hous~ .. $27,500.00. ·
·
3 SEDAM. HOM£. liv. rm , ea\-in kitchen. wrthin Vinton ·
Village. 2-car garage, appr ox. 1 acre. $32.000.
THIS HOllE HAS BEEN GIVEN LOTS OF .
TLC ..... This home and 1.112 acres m/1
offers 3 BRs, 1!? baths, LR, equlppt!dkrtchen. dmette, attached garage brick
front steel siding,
'

SONNY GARNES

IN PORTER - Grocery store, 3 bedrm. home, 5
Call for more information.
OowiNTClWN INVESTMENT PROPERTY: Brick structure wrth
rental apartments. Also, adjacent melal storage/utilrty
"'"' ,E,.s_t.
rental 1ncome, $820.00 per mo. All priced for

Our (&gt;ffice is one of m·er
6,000 CENTURY 21• officl's
nationwide. This makes
us part of the largest re:1l
estate referral netV.'ork in
the world. and giYcs us
access to more huyers for
your home. Call today.

•

'

MAKE THIS YOUR CHANG£ OF ADDRESS!
- Attract ive home just minutes from town
oilers 1368 sq. H.. 3 BRs. 2 baths. eat-in
kitchen; dinette, tamily room, living room,
laundry. cathedral ceilings, fenced yard. Call
lor an appointment.

PRICE REDUCED 8Y U7.000n! - 73 acre
farm in Perry Township. Very nice home
offers 3 BRs, 2 baths. LR, krtchen. carpel.
et ect11c heat, woodburning stove. There is a
40x60 barn, cellar house and several other
buildings included. Call for appointment.

PRICE REDUCED!! - If you have been
looking for a home that will give you room lo
stretch out, this is rt. Features in this home
are equipped kitchen·, formal dining den,
living room with fireplace, dinette,
3 BRs. The full basement is finished
bath, laundry, roomy, attra ctive

LOTS OF EXTRAS HERE- 1.52 acres plus a
beautrful roomy homeand just minutes from
town or HMC. Home features 4 or 5 BRs. 2',+
baths, LR, 18x26 fam ily rm . w/fireplace wet
bar, gas heat, cent. aor, 2 car garage all
brick.
'

REALTOR
446-865 5 En.

REALTOR
446-2707 Eve.

REALTOR
171

' 118 ACRES LOCATED IN GREEN TWP., Graham School Rd
Super View! $44,000.00.
·

Commercial location. 2 story, along 3rd

NEW LISTING - IN VINTON: New bu1lding mob1le home.
an d n1ce level lot All in one package.
Very well conslructed building iscurrently tleing used as a
buson ess. Would also make an excell ent workshop. Mobile
.home has living room, eat-in krtchen. dishwasher. 3 BR's.
ni decks (front an d back) and level lawn. For the Price-

You Will Simply Your Seai'c!h For Your
Place..... By Coming To Our Place.
LIST WITH US!

Mowr.y't UpholstMing .., ..
vlclng tri county ar111 24 yura.
The
· blat
In · fumlturt
upholollring. Coli 304.a75-4154
for fret eatlmatM.

Loans are available on a fair and equal basis
-regardless of race, color, ancestry, national
orig~n. religion, sex or physical handicap!

•

FIRST TIME BUYERS CONTACT US FOR LOW,
FHA/VA INT~REST RATES!!

Upholstery

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE

•

ELEMENTARY - 2 acres more or less. Very nice
nome w1th great VIew. Fa m1ly room. lrvongroom. large back
deck 3 bedrooms. lar ge lam1ly style kitc hen.

NEW
Nice homeon i
.
and partial basementon a qu iet street Noce neigh
Level lot, 4 BR's
2 baths, dining area off kitchen, wrth a very well buiit frr~
place. Home has viny l siding and a tar ge deck for those quiet
summer cookout s. Priced·Right.

87

450 2ND AVE.
446-6806

446-3644 ••

~ REEN

FOR RENT: Aug. I. Can take possession: Nice 2 bedroom
home, 160 area. $375.0tJ per month. Security Deposit and
references. NO PEfSI
·

Hauling,

HoUH and trailer repair. Under·
pinning, polndng; lnoldo ond
out, plumbing. Will polnl
colllnoo. 814-992-5858.

tpeclallwt

PRICE REDUCED TO $65,000!- Beaut~ul
l-shaped brick. All rooms large. Eat-in
k1tchen, formal din in&amp; LR w/ FP, 3 BRs. I ~
~aths, attached g~rag e.,

3 ~CRES , moreor less. Green Twp. Good mobile home or
buMng srte.
·
.

LOVELY HOME. REASONABLY PRICED - This home oilers
3 bedrooms, 2 fu ll baths. spaciou s liv rng room
decorat1ng options Modern k1tchen with applian
dining room. S1tualed on a level lol approx. 4
town. Call for an
1
to see.

.Water.

re..ORIIbll ratn, volume dt.
cotJntt, 2,900 to 4,000 capac"v,
clatarne, paola, wells, •tc. Clll

Exporilncod drywoll hinging
and finishing 1110 repair work,
con oft or a:OO PM, 304-675-6457.

/lnliuunl oril(irl ., rt •liJli rm • .w.f ur f1hpi,·ai1Hrllfti cnt•·

-

Great opportunities to build ...
LAND

A &amp; A Water Service. PoOls, cllttrna, wtlll. lmmedlat.. 1,000 or
2,000 gliiOI)IJ delivery. Call 3Q4..
675.a370.

304-117&amp;-2118

l .uan.~ ar~; nrnilnhl1• '"' rr f nir mhll'lptallw.~i.~ rl'l{nrtllt•j;.~ uf rm ·''· r·ulnr.

RUSTIC A-FRAME - Wooded lol, pnvateandsecluded. Fe ares 2 Ig. decks on upper level. One from the master bed·
room. also fr onl pat1o on lower level. Watch I he deer squir·
rei. b1r ds. etc. Great view. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths. 1,440 sq. ft.
Ji IIVrng space, 24'x30' ~arage &amp; shed. This one is verv
unoque. Lot of trees and flowers. Amu st to see Poss1bl eland
conlract. Pro ce $36.000.00
OUTSTANDING BUY!- FARM HOUSE - Nice 3 bedroom.
barn, pond. tobacco base. somefru 1t lrees and buildings, 40
acres more or less. very quiet and pict uresque. Gentleman's
farm. Make usan oNer1

245.a285• .

•

"'-"Too ·

- Very mce brick home. 3 bedrooms, lull
IDas•eme_nt. attached garage. Moslly level acr e lot, wit h shed
lrurt trees. II you are choosing one hou se lo look at tod ay
would be a good choice!
..
·

J I. J Water Strvtct. Swimming
poola, c'-tema, wells. Call 11(·

82

,Plumbing &amp;
· Heating

commerCial

85 General Hauling

W.tteraon'•

'
Rtlt'l'dr." -

or

wiring, ntw aervlca or repairs.
LlctnMd tltctrlclln. Ridenour
Electrlc•l, 304-175-1781.

loptlo Tonk Pumpltla S90~Golllo
Co. RDN EVANS ENTEAPHISES,
""ckoon, OH 1-1100.537-1528.

30 YR. LOAN

-

Elactrlcal &amp;
Refrigeration

AnlcMntiJI

226 .

a.

75 Boats Motors
for Sale
14 ft. Alumlrium Johmool

84

Home
Improvements

Campers &amp;
Motor·Homas

m
L.J::!

•,

.-

79

Fetty ,.,., Trlmmlng1 atump

')'6

BLACKBURN REAL!Y

'

75 Boats &amp; Molars
for 5ale

7.99°/o MORTGAGE MONEY

@

IIIII ' " ' ·

175-5•.

now on tuM u~ ana ATV~• and

74

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE

Ill !/Jill 11111·/i'

Vans &amp; 4 WD's

' 73

1162 Hondo CX500 Cullom. Ex·
· collont condlllon. $895. 814·11411: 2181.

G. Bruce Teaford
992-7614
Richard .Valentine
446-9872

1113 Hondo 650 Cullom Cl(
lhart drtve, water cooled uce~
ltnl condition. May tradt 304-

. 1988 Ford F-150 XLT Lorill
: INCk. LDidtcf, IJICelltnl COftoo
. dHion. ledllner, Nnnlng balln:t..

Ganeral

· JULY 30-31, 1989 ·
GOOD BUILDING
SITE OR BUSINESS

1N2 Yamaha maxim 750. 10,000
mlln. Now llro~, good .con4.
11200. 614-44Hvd.

ae•000.

. 5 opdl tuol lnjlc:llon.
: 114-24o-52!M.

doni . on l -. 1160 Chivy
pickup. 4 _ , drivo, outo. 614!149·2749.

OPEN HOUSE

Motorcycles

· 1D87 Ford Ranger 4x4, manual,

: an. "'-rat•••

216 E. Second St.

three bedroom colonial. Upper Second Avenue, Gallipolis. Ready lor im·
mediate occupancy .
·
NOW- PRICE REDUCED TO '39.9001 •"

XL, $I,500.

1911 ChtY)' 8·10 pickup, V-t,

Gooa

cond"lon. $2000. Col 114·985-

WE NEED
LISTINGS

rostrYII tilt righ! Ia rojoc:t anr and all bidL

REAL ESTATE

1971 ChoYJ C.10, 1/21on, I cyL1

Scottedalt, automatic.

75~~~r

• Coiii14·MII-20451o -

NEW LISTING - Good 2 or
3 bedroom home w~h full
basemen!. fully carpeted
and large living room, 2 car
block garage. Nice location
in town for just $18,500.
NEW LISTING- 2.34 acres
leveled for construction.
Owner will sell or trade.
$4,200.
COZY - 2 bedroom home
with new furnace and roof.
Full basement and large
• front porch. Want onjy
$18.000.
REDUCED - large home
wrth 4 bedrooms and 2
baths, full basement, large
porch, and back patio. A
good buy at $26,000.

Newly

IY

SHOWN

30...U.

Real Estate General

Sealed lids Will It IICtived Until
AUGUST 15, 1989
on the •ave pictured farm and log country
home lll2 + acres) located on
, Cremtans load, Harrison Twp.
Gallic! County, Ohio

ucel~t,

1

6~ 3J.~

air.· loth c.rw A·1 condlllon.

1885 Dodge Charger, 4 cyl., 4
apnct, exira clean, low mllaa,
well maintained, new bt'lklt1
ahocka, atruta.·and mora. Prieta
lo IIIII II only S4000. Coli 304675.a53t. '

Transportatron

run•

,por. l700. 30_4-aa2·3397.

304-875-8132

1183 Plymouth Aenant. 2 door

~9.

1174 CheYJ ·h iH ..,., 1 cyl, n..,.

.
1163 Plymoulh eon, good cond. 1981 Plymoulh K Car, auto. &amp;
air, .1880 Toyot• C.lica, aulo. 1:

1971 HOndo 750 uc oond. 304175-2714.

HI~ In lho tlold 11.00, 304-675-

llocllonlc opoolll1i70 Doc1Qo ~
24 $100. 114-441-3131.

. ·198D Oahlun ICing Cab with~~

1976 llorc- I!Onz Dlnll
woror truck. 2,000 gollon tol!k,
rudy to nolf. 114-44J.4018.

74

7

Sunday

Ohio-Point Pleasant, W. Va.

72 Trucks for Sale

Real Estate General

72 Trucks for Sale

71 Autos for Sale

71 Autos for Sale

July 30; 1989

July 30. 1989

75'x120' BUILDING LOT IN RODNEY II SO: Reduced from
$5,000.00 to $3,500.00.
WE HAVE BUilDING LOTS in Rodney Village II and Mills
Village. Call lor more information.
2 LOTS WITHIN GREEN ACRES SID. One is 84'x148',
olher 75'x148'. Purchase eijher for SS.SOO.OO
21.5 ACRES. NEAR NORTH GALLIA SCHOOL No structures.
Located along Frank Rd. $18,900.00.
3 LOTS LOCATED NEAR TYCOON lAKE i50'xli5'J . Can
~urchase o
_n land contract. $2,000 down. 10%Interest, pay
$129.69 lor 6 yrs.

IAIIE UPIASH ~ITH YOUR FAMILY -

Lovely b11ck home wrth pool just oil Rt. 35.
Other fealures rndude equipped eat-in
k1tchen, LR, 10x27 family room w/stone
frreptace, gas heat and cent air.
12.5 ACRES 11/l fronts on Symmes Creek
Bollom tiled. Tobacco base.
·
$15,000 -: 19.143 acres m/ 1. Approx. y,
mrle from coty ltmrts. All ulilrties available.

THE WOlD HERE IS "LOCATION" - Older
ACRE CHURCH . CAMP FOR SALE home localld jusl one block from downtown.
buHdings, induding dining hall
Home hal been remodeled and offers 4 or 5 carelaker's trailer, cabins, pool, church
bedrooms. LR, kijchen, 2 balhs, unaltached · bu~drnJ·
garage and shed.
' 36.5 ACRES 11/L, ClAY TWP. - Frontage
LOCAT.£D ON RT. 619 in Meigs County this
on Frrendly Rrdge Rd. Old hou se on land
property contains 21.04 acres. m/1, and a $19,500.
.
small home. Owner anx10us to self.
SMALL HOllE with extra lots 3 BRs balh
HARRISON TwP. - 11.872 acres m/ 1,
$21,000.
•
•
•
waler tap. $10,000.

LOAN ASSUMPTION - $2,500 DOWN - .

!1% FIXED RATE- 3 BR. bath, living room,
kitchen, altached1 car garage. Call !Or more
details.
·
·

141 ACRES 11/L, HUNTINGTON TWP Approx. I mile of frontage on Raccoon Creek.
Some bottom land; black walnut
- 67.496 acres, m/1
. i wooded building

5.6 ACRES located billow Gallipolis Dam, along Hazel Ridge
Rd. $4,900. (Can purcllase on .land contract.) $1,500.00
down, 10% inte,.~ pay $100.00 per monlh.
TIRED OF CUniiG GRASS!! Move into a condominium
alon'- Grape St. Only 1 blocl&lt; from pocer¥ and_downtown.
Qualrty t~~nslrucled. Hell pump. Custom cabinets. Drshwasher/disposal. Tax abalemant pr@'am. Call for an lfl'
pointment to view!!'
.
1.02 ACRE LOT alongKiicker Rd ..near Centenary, $8,000.00.
HOUSE: Third Ave. $45,000.00.
SELUIIG YOUR IUL ESTATE IS ..GIUSIIIESS... CALLAII ·
EXPERIEIICED WOOD REAlTT Sli.ESPOSOII.

:

:Put your trust iu Number One:·

i11nd,. tradcma~kt Of Ccnlury :l1 Il eal t·:,t:•lc Coq)f• ut~ul.
~ual OtJPOf\YDk)' F.tnt~r
: o\CII OFFICE IS INOOI'IlNilENTLY OWNim ANil Ot•t:I! ,\TEIJ.

We Need Llstlngal
'

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T.m•S:a:~il~m~-~--------_J~~~~~~~~~~~O~NO~-!~~
-~~~~W~.~V!•·~----~----~~~~~=--Ju~3Q.

THURSDAY IS SENIOR .CITIZEN'S DAY AT VAUGHAN'S·

Giants lose
io As~s, 5-2

. . SIMI DISCOUNT 01 ALL PURCHASES ( ~-=~~:) '

BUCKEYE CARD OR DRIVER~S UCEISE

t

.I

J

Ohio Lottery
Pick-3
701
Pick-4

64ll
Super L(,tto
11-12-22-26-28-39
Kicker 087091

Page 3

I

Clear tonight. Low In mid
60s. Tuesday , mostly sunny.
High in m Jd 80s.

•
'

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ZZL

SUPRIOI OLD FASHION

-

SHANK PORTI·ON
HAM

69&lt;

$199 u.

$2·79, LB. ·. ·.
"

11 Ll. 01 MOlE

99&lt;

.

CIISPY SIIYE

·

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CARTON OF
3 DOZEN

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99C
REDSKIN BOLOGNA!!.••
aAml DIPPU
·
$ C9
'ISH ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7

AIMOUI

2/51

19

401.
CAN

JIFFY CORN BREAD MIX

4/Sl

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8112

I

ARGO

$

HOME
. GIOWN

JUMBO. MUSK
MELONS

10 U. lAG

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Units of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service were
. kept busy over th,e weekend as units responded to 17 c~lls.
·
Continued on page 10

.. i

i

•

(

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•

.

EMS has 17 weekend callS

•
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The Mld·Ohio Valtey Amateur Radio Club Is planning to hold a
course to assist In obtaining li license for novice operators. The
course will consist of Instruction on technical aspects of
amateur radio (ham radio), as well as Instruction In learning
Morse Code.
' 'l'he course Is tentatively scheduled to begin In October.
Individuals Interested In attending the clas~ or those ~eeking
more tnfonnatton regarding local amateur radio should call
Dick Moore, 614-446;1457 after 5 p.m .

.U. BUNCH

FREESTONE
PEACHES .
.. . ..
;., ........

..

Club offers radio operating clC1$S

ICY GREEN
BROCCOLI
.

.
,.

. -HOMEGROWN

The deadline for filing entd es for open class events and
compettton at the Meigs County Fair Is Thursday , Aug. 10, and
Friday, Aug. 11, at the fair board office on the Rock Springs
fairgrounds, 9 a.m to 4 p.m. Mary Gilmore, secretary, .will be
handl!ng the registrations.
, ,;'
.

-

·$ 119

Marc Cohen, a coal analyst
•with Kidder, Peabody and Co. tn
New York, said the carefully
worded union statemef\t may be
usei:J tater to back up a union
move to Invoke provisions of the
Industry -wide contract . that
wouid jlondone a strike .
" What he's saying Is that we
have a problem with the 1950fund
and thiS Is our excuse to go out on
strike," Cohen said ..
Under the 1988 contract between the union and· the Bltuml·
nouus Coal Operators Assoclatlon, the parties must settle by
collective bargaining any diS·
pules deemed to be "national In
character." If the Issues are not
set tied, the union has the right to
cai! a national strike. ·
·
The analyst said If the two
sides bargain over the benefit
.fund and the BCOA - as
expected-refusestopaymore,

'l'

'

, ~· ¥'!~~~~~a bin propo~d that
ISrael exchange Obeld and all .
other Lebanese Shiite Moslems
held by Israel for all Isra'e lls and
foreigners being held by radical
Lebanese groups.
Higgins was one' or 17 Westerr~ers believed held hostage In
·Lebanon, Including nine U.S.
. citiZens, most of them held by
Hezbollah or its offshoots. Five
Continued on page ·10

contributing to it.
. - Trumlia's announcement · fol•
lowed a heated two-day meeting
oft he union's International Exec·
utlve Board In Virginia.
He also said the union Is
adopting a ''wide-ranging pian ' '
to resolve the retiree health care
problem and place Increased
pressure on Pittston to begin
goodfalthnegotiatlonstoendthe
17-week-otd strike.

Pittston refused to sign the 1~88
· ..BGQA .contract and Its negotla·
tlons ·with the UMWA have
broken down several times,
leading to the strike In April.
Trumka said Pittston " Ute·
galty'' ceased contributing to the
pension fund, which provldfls
pet~sion and health benefits to
about 130,000 retired and dis·
ab!ed miners and their
dependents.

~:a~~~~-f~~~~~~otestbycaliing

l'
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h
k Depression moves north
0 ICe pro e s oottng, t ree wrec s
through Gulf ,o f !\Jexico

Filing deadline Aug. 10

I·

.

·

P,

....--Local. news briefs---.

A~OUI

.

·

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.

oz.

1
PEACHES
.
. ..
$
I ~ 2·/59C 99.C2~.~1.
~OTJED . MEAT •••••\"'.~~•••• 21 1
26 QZ.BQI

$199·

•

THOROFARE. MUSHROOMS
.

89 C

·

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.

12 PACIC

2 UTEI .

VIENNA SAUSAGES 1.~1.. 21
.

S Ll. PIG.

~NI_O,.S

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. $·599
..
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.

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The videotape delivered to
Western news agencles·in Beirut
The Pomeroy Pollee Depart·
"about an hou r after the deadline ment has reported three separ·
showed a man who appeared to ate auto accidents and a shooting
be Higgins hanging from a Incident over the weekend,
gallows Inside a room. The man
On Sunday at 5:22p.m . , Dennis
In the color videotape was
Butcher, 380 Second St. , Pome·
dressed In klpxWkues and his
roy, received a gun shot wound to
legs were tied.
the leg when Tina Butcher
· The Organization of the Op·
allegedly fired at him during a
domestic dispute according to
pressed on Earth claimed to have
the police report.
hanged Higgins Monday but
there had been unconfirmed
Fottowing the dispute, the
reports that he died during
report said Tina Butcher, left the
torture s!lorUy after he was
scene In a white Ford with a male
kidnapped In February 1988. The subject and· three children.
group had threatened to kiii
Chargt&gt;s are pending and the
Higgins twice before the ·most
Incident Is under Investigation:
recent ulttmallum .
On Sunday at 1:29 a .m . Bonnie
The two-minute tape rel eased .. Lemaster was Involved In a
Monday. included a close-up shot
hlt·sklp accident on the Super· ·
that showed Higgins's face
America
parking tot In Pomeroy.
clearly, and a United Press
Her 1981 AMC Eagle received
International reporter and other· damage to the left rear panel on
journalists said they were sure
the driver's side. The Incident Is
the dead man was Higgins.
undeF Investigation.
'-'The American spy was
At 10: 15 p.m. Saturday evening
hanged at 3 p.m . 18 a .m . EDT) ..·.
ori
Kroger's parking lot, Steve
to make him a Jesson. " said a
Lane, Middleport, driving an '81
to the video·
statement. attached
'
Butck, ·l&gt;acked Into Trudy
tape. _"We reiterate our stand
Swartz, Middleport, who · was

CO-N/GREEN BEANS

·

·

~~~l~w;sh~~~~re::~~~Is~~~m

THOROFARE- HALF CASE

CT. PIG.

CHEF BOY ~I-DEE LASAGNA or
SPAGHEnl '&amp; MEAT
BALLs·••'.t·"'·••
.
.

.

•

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enterlainment.along with 8everal speakers InCluding Larry Ward,
Beltalre. Distrtct 6 president. Meigs Mines 3 and 1 are on scheduled
vacat19nthls week and It was reporled that workers ofM!ne2w\'r!!
on the]ob. ·

BEIRUT, Lebanon , !UPI) :-r , . tllat.• ~ jQbjddl mlllt ~ , . ....~1\e~-borae.l~l.l~ ,
t1'ht ltn ~lranlan extr,em.Jstsrhold· ·•hed-atonl('W!th1ils two brothers ; · mando fOrce kidnapped Oilellf
lng Marine Lt. Col. William · (relatives) because what will and two of his- relatives early
Higgins said Monday they ktlied happen next will be worse.
Friday from a Shllle village In
their hostage and released a
"'Let America and Israel southern Lebanon and then flew
videotape showing a man they s h o u I d e r t h e w· h o t e them to Israel. Obeld Is a
Hezboltah leader llelleved to
said was Higgins hanging from a responsibility."'
gallows.
The captors' one-page typew· have masterminded Higgins's
The Organization of the Op· rltten statement said Higgins kidnapping.
pressed on Earth , an offshoot of was executed because "'the crlm·
,'\bout 45 minutes after the
the pro-Iranian HezboUah or Ina! America did not consider our terrorists' 3 p.m. deadline to kill
Party of God; said Sunday they threats as serious ."
Higgins, Israeli Defense Minis·
would hang Higgins al 3 p.m. (8
a .m. EDT) Monday if Hezbollah

'

oz.

,;.,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- T·h e United Mine Workers
union may be setting the stage
for a national coal strike over the
status of Its bene(lt fund s, an
industry analyst said Saturday.
The analyst's comments came
after UMW President Richard
Trumka criticized a federal
court's rejection Friday of a
request from the trustees or the
union's 1950 Benefit Fund to
order the coal Industry to in"'
crease Its payments to the fund. .
Trumka said In a prepared
statement the dispute over the
fund Is " national In chat acter
and affects the entire coal
industry in the United States. "
Although the benefit fund case
Is not dire~ tty related to' the
UMW strike against the Pittston
Coal Group In Virginia, West
Virginia and Kentucky, Trumka
saldthefund 's$37mllliondellclt

• . . execu~~..]
k•d
Lt. C0 I H Iggtns
~, 1 nappers say ~:::n·~e:!'c.~~o~c~~~:~~a~;o~!~~
·

~· ..

51 19.•

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••

l

MINERS HOLD RALLY AT RUTLAND - Neart,y a thousand
miners and famUy members gathered on the -Rolland ballfield
SatW'day evening for a show of.wfton l!lOildarlty. Representatives
.of the AFL-(:10 Labor Union aad several union locals from Ohio
and West Virginia were present. Tliere was plenty of food and

LB •. BOX

'

3 LB.·.·$
JAI ·;;

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'

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NEW WHITE
POTATOE$ ·

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$299

,

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$
lOLL SAUSAGE •••••••••••·89C LOTSA POP .....'!••••• 2 / 129
2'12 Ll.
$499 AIMOUI
.
. $
LINK SAUSAGE •••••••••••
TIEET
•••••••••
l~.~~·.......... 119
3 US. 01 MOIE-111.1
. 99 C

1

480L

BUDGET FROZEN TWIN POPS

1-U.

U.S. NO.1

'

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GALLON

24

PORK LOIN

WHOLE STICIC

, ., I ,. ,

CRISCO OIL
"

;.:

$149

$139

4 LB. BAG

BROUGHTON'S COn AGE CHEESE

I

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PININSULAR
SUGAR
. .

.

.

~~~.$6 99
112

1,-

'

HILLANDALE SMALL. .EGGS

'

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'

COUNTRY STYLE RIBS

li.

,'

.

511. PIG.$ 8 99
5 LL

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LI.PIG.

~~--.-~~----~~----------~~ - ~~,~--~-~~.--------~--------CARDINAL HOMOGINIZED-MILK
- THOROFARE ·CRACKERS
.

CHOPPED SIRLOIN PAniES

-·-

.,

SaladGLAZED DONUTS .:~.z.~. S1 99

$]89
;·

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99
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8
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FIANKIES ••v.a"""··

.

may be
setting stage
for national
coal strike

..
I.

Sl
29
P.OTATO CHIPS........

26 Cen"

A Multimedia Inc. Newipaper

.'"

·cHOPPED HA~' ••••••~... $1 .49
. Ll. . $299.
BOILED HAM. ···········~··

GROUND BEEF

'·

1 Section, 10 pages

•

DUTCH LOAF, PICKLED PIMENTO
or BREAKFAST LOAF .

'

' ., .

16 OZ.-8 PAK RET. BTL

HONEY LOAF /PEPPER LOAF

· ~---------··--------------~--~

'".

COCA-C:OLA

SUPERIOR

lL

.

.

.

$299 Ll.

LONGHORN CHEESE ••••••

SUPEIIOI

Ill
•••

..

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'·

•

driving an '81 Buick Skylark. parking lot In an '86 Ford
Swartz's vehicle received dam· Mustang, when Betty J. Mollo·
age to the driver 's door . and was · han, Radcliff, backed from a
cited for having no financial parking space and Into Hale's
responsibility. Lane's vehicle vehicle, damaging the r ight rear
. was not damaged bu I he was passenger side. Mollohan 's vehl·
cited for Improper backing.
cle received damage to the rear
Finally, on Saturday at 10: 07 passenger door on the drlvQr' s
a .m . Naree Hale, Dexter. was side. Mottohan was c ited for
traveling East on the Pomeroy Improper backing.

Charles Gaskill, 81,
dies after long illness

MIAMI (UPI) -The National
Hurricane Center placed parts of
the Texas and Louisiana coasts
under a tropical storm watch
Monday as a tropical depression
churned northward through the
Gulf of Mexico.
Hur'ricane specialist Max May·
field said the depression was
expe cted to strengthen during
the day . It had sus tal ned winds of
35 mph with gusts of up to 45 mph
early Monday .
"'It Is right on the verge of
becoming a t ropical storm now
and It wouldn't take too much
strengthening to make It a
tropical storm ," Mayfield said.
"'The main area we are• con·
cerned about now Is Louisiana

Charles N. Gaskill, 81, of 295
the Wellston Minstrel Show
South First Ave .. Middleport,
which Is sponsored by the Rotary
formerly of Wellston, died SunClub.
day at the Holzer Medical Center
Continued on page 10 .
fottowing ex\f!nded Illness .
Born on Aug. 16, 1907 in
McArthur, he was the son or the
late Peter and Essie Chatfield
Gaskill.
He attended Ohio Wesleyan
Un,verslty and Ohio University,
and graduated from the Co tum·
bus School of Embalming. He
was associated with his father In
the P. Gaskill and Son Furniture
and Undertaking Business In
McArthur. He later owned the
Gaskltt Funeral Business In
WeiJ'son. oJ:ieratlng It for
over 40
years.
· ../ .
Mr. Gaskill (Charlie, as he was
known by his many friends) was
also coroner of Jackson County
for 48 years.
He was a member of the HQpe
· MethOdist Church of Wellston,
the last charter member o·f the
Wellston Lions Club, a member
and fonner president of the
Wellston Rotary Cllib for over 50
years. He also belonged to the
WellSton Ea&amp;les Club and ' the
Red Men Lod&amp;e, was ·a member
of Masonic Orders, Blue Lodge of
- McArthur, Chapter Council,
Commandry and Aladdin Shrine.
·WEEKEND EVENT SUCCE88FUL - Sales
He was the oldest member ot
were' brllk aad lola of lttera&amp;ure 111111 f•von were
the Fair Greens Country Club
dlatrlbuled to tbe ~everal huadred resident&amp;
and setved for many years as
attendlal tbe flrllt Be•d Area Clearaace Sale 111111
secretary of Jackson Couniy
Trade Show held over tbe weekend Ia tbe Melp
Fair Board. He will long be
Hlllt 8eho91 eafelerla. About IO:bulln-• from·
remem~ tor his perfornian·
· Melp ud Muon CounHea were set up In bootba In
ces of 24'lyEars as lnlerlocutor of
tile cafeteria ud the adjacent halls. For

and the upper Texas coast."
,
. At 6 a.m. EDT, thecenterofthe'
depression was located near:
latitude 26.3 degrees north and'
longitude 91.7 degrees west, or·
about 280 miles southeast ot:
Galveston, Texas. The depres-' ·
slon was headed north northwest
at a bout 12 mph, the hurricane
center said.
The depression Is t:ie fourth of
the 1989 Attantlc·Carlbbean hur· ·
ricane season, which began June
I , and If its winds reach 39 mph,lt
would become Tropical Storm
Chantal. Another depression also
was reported swirling In the
Atlantic about 1,500 miles from •
the Lesser Antilles.

mercbula It wu a chance to ~ell · tbelr
end-of-uoa ctollllai ud llhoea or to lift a
special prlee on everyday product•, while for

pro~~vt~d:ecl:e:x~~po;=·~·cre:..,:.

thole ~enlcea.
In oilier builD-,
It
tbelr
Mike Gerlllelt,
that a 8urvey a&amp; tbe cl- of the llhow
thllt exblbltara were ple-d alld would like IO•te
tbe event on a aeml·aanual buls•

'

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        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>shane</name>
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