<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="10126" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/10126?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-23T14:17:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="20566">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/033364949b85b6cced7399f2a7510e76.pdf</src>
      <authentication>8224b86ae6631f348ea0d2c0b063384f</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="32357">
                  <text>'

Page-12-The Dally Sentinel

Com!!Uinit;r Calendar Items
appear two days before an event
(and the day or that event. Items
·must lie received wen in advance
:to assure publication in tbe calDdJ
e r.
·•
FRIDAY
. RACINE - The Racine Church
of lhe Nazarene will hold revival
:wilh Rev. Dave Canfield, through
Sunday at 7 p.m·. nightly and at
10:30 a.m. and 6 p.m. Sunday. Rev.
Joy .Sizemore will provide ·special
music. Public illvited.

Jamboree in Fairplain\ W.Va.
Maricley at,ll a.m: Public invited.
·
· HOBSON • Sam McGuire will
. POMEROY • Wells Cemetery be at the Hobson Church of Christ
will be cleaned Saturday. Anyone and Chri . U . Suiida
wanting to save flowers cr decora- .
Sball moo,
. Ymomlions should remove them by that mg. Sunday school at .9.~0 a.m.
time.
Pas~r Theron Durham mv1tes the
publiC.
· POMEROY • The youth groups
POMEROY • Rev. Eddie Buff.
of Trinity Church will hold their
ington,
Gallipolis, guest preacher,
annual egg hunt Saturday at the
Chureh, Pomeroy,
Naomi
Baptist
parsonage on Mulberry Avenue in
Sunday,
10:45
am.
Pu~lic invited.
Pomeroy from 2:30-4:30 p.m. •

MIDDLEPORT - There will be
. a round and square dance at the
POMEROY : Good,Friday ser- Old American Legion Hall in Mid·
vice at St. Paul Lutheran Church in dlepon on Saturday from 8-11 :30
Pomeroy wiU lie at 7:30p.m. Rev. p.m . Admission is free. Children
George Weirick invites the public.
are welcome with adult supervision. Bring soft drinks and snacks.
SYRACUSE. Holy Week ser- Melvin Cross will be the caller.
vices for the SYr.u:use Charge Unit- Music wiU be by CJ and the Couned Methodist Churches lii'C: Good try Geml~en.
Friday services at Asbury at 7:30
p.m,; Easter Sunday sunrise serRACINE • The Racine Legion
vices at Minersville at 6 a.m. Post602 will hold its annual Easter
Brealcfast wiU follow in the church Egg Hung on l!aturday at noon.
The even I will be hel_(l rain or
social rooms. Public invited.
shine.
l!YRACUSE - Good Friday serPOMEROY • The Meigs High
vices at the First Church of God in
School
Class of I 978 will hold a
Syracuse will be held Friday at 7
meeting
Saturday at 2 p.m. at the
p.m.
home
of
Tom and April Smith,
RIPLEY, W.VA.· The Libeny 1691 Lincoln'
m Pomeroy.
Mountaineers will perform Friday Plans will be Heights
made
for
the claSs's
at Skateland in Ripley, W.Va.
15th reunion.
RUTLAND - The annual Good
POMEROY - The Ladies Auxil·
Friday all-night gospel sing will be
iary
of the Chester Volunreer Fire
held Frida)' at 7 p.m. featuring 12
Depanment
will hold a halc:e sale
groups at the Freewill Baptist
Saturday
at
9:30
a.m ..arKroger's in
Church i.n Rutland. Everyone welPomeroy.
All
donations
will be
come.
accepted. .Donations may be left at
LONG BOTTOM • Good .Fri· Newell's Gas Station in CheSICI'.
day services will be held at the
l,l.UTLAND - There. will be a
Long Bonom United Methodist dance at the Rutland American
Church at 7:30p.m. Rev. Normilll Legion Hall on Saturday [rom 8
Butler will be speaker. Everyone p.m. to midnight M,usic will be by
welcome.
Pure Country Band. Public invited.

..

.

Eastet time is the time for eggs
and the time for eggs is Easter
·
time.
It must be true since the Middlepon Community Association has
prepared about 1500 eggs for its
annual Easter egg hunt to ~ held at
POMEROY ·Easter sunrise ser- Hartinger Park in Middleport Sunvice, Mt Hermon United Brethren day.
Church: Texas.Jtoad, Pomeroy,
The big hunt will begin at 2
Sunday Ill.6:30 a.m. Brealc:fast fol- . p.m. and all the organization needs
lows. Sunday school, 9:30 a.m., now is lotsa lcidS. It is stressed that
worship at · 10:30 a.m. Robert lhe event is opeilto aU youngsters;
Sanders, pastor, invites the public.
not just lhose liviilg in MiddleJlon.
Interesting that lhe assocl8tii&gt;n
REEDSVILLE - Sunrise ser- haS taken over the annual egg hunt
vice, Fellowship Church of the It was done for years on end by the
Nazarene, Reedsville, Sunday, 6.:30 Middlepon-Pomeroy Rotary Club
a.m. Breakfast follows. Sunday whiclr gave up staging the hunt a
school, 9:30 .a.m. and worship at few years ago.
. ·
9:45 a.m. Rev. John Douglas
The eggs actually are plastic and
invites the public.
inside of each is a prize 'worth at
I · least a dollar. The golden egg will
RUTLAND · Sunrise service, be worth $50 and the .silv.er egg
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church.. worth $25 to the children finding
Sunday, 6 a.m.
.
them lhis year. There will be four
age groups involved and the cosLONG BOTTOM " Mt. Olive tumed Easter bunny will give each
Community Church, Long BoUom, youngster under two an egg so that
sunrise service, 6:30 a.in. Pastor will save parents the struggle wilh
uwrence Bush invites the public.
those too young. And, by lhe way,
no parents will be permitted in the
MIDDLEPORT · Silver Run search areas. Once more, the faithBaptist Church, Story's Run Road, ful Middleport fii'Cmen will be .on
sunrise service, 6 a.m. Pastor Bill hand to BSSJst with the hunt
Little invites the public.
There, lhat talres care of everything but the wealher;
· POMEROY • Aillside Baptis~
•
Church, Easter cantata, 11 am. and
Seems lilce lhere' s a lot of action
6 p.m. Rev. James Acree invites in Middleport lhis weekend.
lhe public.
On Saturday evening from 8 tD
II: 30 p.ln., there will be a free
POMEROY - Hemlock Grove dance held at the old American
Christian Church, sunrise service, Legion Hall on Founh St. Music
Sunday, 6:30 a:m. with breakfast will be by C. J. and the Country
following. Worship at 9:30 a.m. Gentlemen. No alcoholic beverPublic invited. .
ages are ~rm it ted. Children are
welcome if Iiley are accompanying
SYRACUSE • Syracu$e First . adults. Residents attending are tD
Church of God, sunrise service, take their own soft drinks and
6:30a.m. Brealc:fast follows. '
• something for 'the snack table.

detennined ' Thursday if · the
Women's Auxiliary at Veterans
Memorial Hospital actually will
reach the goal of selling 19 dozen
eggs on their three good egg trees.
As of yesterday afternoon, tbe
auxiliary had sold midway into
their 17th dozen of eggs so they
might yet make the goal. At 8ny
.rate the lhree good egg trees are
attractive decorations about the
llospital and the auxiliary has been
!Q.ICCCSSfUI wilh lhe project even if
the eotire 19 dozen eggs don't sell.
The white trees decorated with
pastel eggs bearing the name of
your favorite good egg will be used
at tbe hospital for a wedt or so following Eastet. You might want to
be a !ale comer in helping the auxiliary reach the goal. Cost is $5 per
n..me on each egg and you can still
take pan by visiting the lobby or by
sending the money and name to the
awtiliary in care of the bospijal. So'
many of your have been supportive
of the auxiliary which does so'
much for the local hospital.

..

NEW YORK (AP) -· A crew
filming AI Pacino's new movie,
"Carlito's Way," was ejected from
lhe Times Square subway s!lltion
for damaging property and disregarding passenger safety, transit
officials said.
"They seem to feel they have
carte blanche to do what they
will," said Bruce Lane, a Transit
Authority superintendent. .
· . The agency frequently accom·
modates film makers shooting· on
location in lhe city. But Lane tQid "
New Yorl&lt; Newsday this film crew
wore out it$ welcome by disrupting
. subway trafric, knocking lluge
holes in ll Brooklyn station ceiling
and then trying to saw down a pole
on a train m the Tun.es S!juare sta·
lion, apparently to get a beuer camera angle. ·
Martin Bregman, lhe fUm's producer, said lhe Transii Authority
had been "totally uncooperative,"
. but he would not discuss details
. until lhe ftlming in New Yorlc: was
complete, Newsday said. ··
· The movie i:e-stars Pacino and
Sean Penn, and is directed by Brian
DePalma.

-·

YoL28, No.8
Copyrighted 1183

SPill~

__ __

The·quality·you
expect at an
unexpected price.

1 .

. $)8,999.

.

PITY ME RECLAMATION • Roeks and
· flirt are llelng hauled from tbe Pity Me site as
'··work coatloues to reclaim the area struck by a
• rock sllde.ln May, 1!191. Some rJI tbe •~~Jcril!l ·
are belnJ UJed for construction· of a road IU'OIInd

.a...BI

GRAVELY
SYI,IM

I

1

I
• cruise contrC?I• rear-window defosger
• power driver seal • power antenna • driver air bag
• anti-lock brake!i • power windows • power door
locks • rear-door child st'CUrity locks_• AM·FM stereo ·

. .

I
i

'

'"'

. I

'

500 I. Mill, PO. .IIY, OH. ~ 992·2174
I

.~·"1-· c~

...

.,.I

c

•

·'

..

'

..

.. ,

•

•

\ ..

.

.·. .,. . '"'r~r, . t,l'.,ll('n!f

.•

.

'"'l~.. ftfl• ~~~."""~ "-r~lrllf "~.....
.

-

14 Section 1'22 PagM

Aprll11, 199~

A Mulllmedllllnc. newapaper

tbe bill wbUe tile rest will be fill for a aearby
strip .mine area sc:lleduled for reclamatiOQ "WOI'k
later. (Tlmes-Seatlnel Pboto by Cbarleae .Hoe·
~ . . ,f..
Riebl
'.
..........
~

...

ramp at,Athens, the patrol said.
Fellure's hand, v;hich was outside ·
the .cruiser's l"indow, -.yas report•
edly smashed between lhe two cars.
Fellure was treated at O'Bieness
Memorial Hospital and released.
Cross also faces Athens COililty
charges of driving while intoxicated and a felony charge of fleeing
and eluding. He faces Meigs County charges of fleeing and eluding,
assault and running a stop sign, lhe
sheriff's depanment reponed. ·
Cross remains in the Athens
County Jail jn lieu of$50'000 bond
imposed by Bennett eros's is being
represented by Athens County Publie l)efender Patrick McGee.

injured in Friday wreck

GALLIPOLIS - · A Cheshire galion,
Y. Saunders:37, 909 Wiuson Road,
Gallipolis pollee
woman and her three passengers
Bidwell; was westbound on
A Liv.erpool, W.Va., woman Sycamore Street when Martin, whO
were injured in a one-vehicle accident Saturday morning in Cheshire was cited by Gallipolis police Fri- was northbound on Second
Township, Gallia County, lhe Gal-, day afternoon following a two- Avenue, failed 10 stop for a stop
Iia-Meigs Post of the State Higli- vehicle accident on Second Avenue sign 81)d struck Saunders' vehicle
(State Route 7).
way Patrol reponed.
in the side.
. Kimberly R. Lee, 22, and one
Joyce A. Balser, 22, Route I, · No injuries were reported. Saun~nger, Jerry A. Litchfield;34,
was cited for failure to yield from a ders' vehicle sustained moderate
Point·Pieasant, W.Va., were not stop sign Brter she pulled from Sec- dafllage and Martin's vehicle sustreated for lheir injuries.
ond Avenue onto Sycamore Street tained light damage. Both vehicles
Transp&lt;ll1ed to Holzer Medical and struck a. westbound vehicle were driven fiom the scene·.
Center by Gallia County Emergen• driven b)o'Lanita R. Hall, 29, 1626 ·
cy Medical Service were Trina T. Woodsie Road, Patriot.
A Crown Ciiy man's vehicle
Lee, 29, Wagner Lane, Poim PleasNo injuries were reponed. Both sustained heavy damage Friday
. ant, and Sandy L. Lee, 24, Stale vehicles sustained moderate dam- evening in a two-vehicle accident
age and were driven from the on Second Avenue (State Route 7),
Route 248, Chester.
'
Trina was admitted and was scene.
Ga!Jipolis police reported.
reponed in stable condition SaturCody T. Boothe, 19, 10597·
day. Sandy was treated and
An Ashton, W.Va .. woman was State Route 218, was southbound:
released.
cited by Gallipolis police Friday when a vehicle driven by Sara I.
· According to the report, the afternoon following a two-vehiCle Colvin, 16, 104 Fraley Drive, Galvehicle was northbound on State accident on Eastern Avenue (State lipolis, whose view was obstructed
Route 7 when it went off the righ1 Route 7).
by a vehicle parked in a no parlcing
side of the road and over a squ~ll
· Jacqueline 0. Nance, 25, 52125 zone, pulled out of an alley !DID his
embankment. Kimberly told the . Ashton Upton Road, was cited for Pl\th.
patrol a southbound vehicle came . fl!ilun; to control.
.
No injuries were reported and
left of center, forcing her off the
According to the repon, Nance ·'no citations were issued. Boothe's:
· roa.L
··
told police she was southbound vehicl~ was towed from the scene.
Kimberly was cited for no driv- when a vehicle driven 'by S81)dra L. Colvin's vehicle sustained moder:
ing privileges. 'rhe vehicle sus· . Daugherty, 34, Route 2, Point ate damage and was driven from
tained heavy, disabling damage and Pleasant, W.Va., pulled out in front lhe scene.
.•
was towed from the scene.
of her, causing Nance to run off the
left side of the road.
Two vehicles sustained minor:
A Umgsville woman was. cited , Daugherty told police she felt damage Friday afternoon on State'
Friday afternoon by the patrol for there was enough clearance when Route 7, Gallipolis police reponed. ·
failure to colitrol ~oUowing a one- she pulled onto lhe highway.
Michael K. Hathaway, 41, 810,
vehicle accident m Salem Town- . No injuries we're reported. Maple Street, Middleport, was,
ship, Meigs County. · ·
Nance's vehicle sustained heavy · nonhbound in a left-hand turn Jane
According 10 the report, Lorena darilage and was towed from the when a vehicle driven "by John R::
L. Oiler, 18, 31645 State Route scene. Daugherty's vehicle was not Ellinger, 39,509 Founh Ave., Gal•'
325, was w~stbound on S.R. 124 damage. .
•
lipolis, pulled from a driveway off·
when she lost control on the wet
.
. lhe east side of the road and struc!l.
road and we'nt off lhe right side.
A Chillicolhe man was cited by him.
.
~he then attempted to pull back . Gallipolis police Friday afternoon
No injuries were reported and · .
onto tl!e road and went off the left follow.ing a· two-vehicle accident no cilalions were issued. Both vehi'
side.
on Second Avenue (State Route .7). cles were driven from lhe scene.
No injuries were reported. DamThomas A. Martin, 35, 253
age to the vehic1e was noi IiSied; Western .Ave .. was cited for failure
Editor's .note: Names, age~
The accident is still under. invesii- to yield from a stop sign.
and addresses are printed as they
Accordinl to the repon, Cathy appear on ofllcial reports..

clamap. '

SMITH NELSON.MOTORS, INC~

.

Parlly doody. High In mld·IIOI.

.

GALLIPOLIS -The Gallipolis when it ignited a shower cunain.
Volunteer Fire , Department . Seventeen firefighters respondrespOnded to four calls between ed with three trucks, but the fire
Friday night and Saturday 1110rning: was out on arrival. Damage was
A furnace malfuliCtion under a contained' to lhe cunain.
The depanment was also called
house trailer owned by Otho
to
a
car fU'C S:30 Saturday .morning.
Wolfe, 47 Dolphin Street, Kanau·
Eleven
fli'CftghterS responded with
ga, ignited surrounding insulation
one
truck
10 Jackson Eswes, 536
at 10 p.m. Friday, the department
J
acbon
Pilc:e,
Gallipolis~ and used
reported.
.
Fourteen firelighters responded
with two lf\lclc:s and extinguished
the blaze with 30 gallons or water
The fire caused S100 worth

• Choice of wire wheelcovers or aluminum wheels
.• special 90th AnniversafY badginy.
Test-drive ··~ 90th Ar\nivNsary LeSabre today at
yOur Buick dealer. You may be su rp~ised to discover
how much Buick quality you ~a~ afford.'
",

.I

.

Weather........... ~ ...............A-:Z

Gallipolis FD answers four calls

, cassette, wilh seek aod scan • OynaRid~ suspenSion
• PASS-Key* 1heft-deterrent system •lpw·liltover trunk ·

Huinor writing focus of workshop

'I

Mlddleport-Pomeroy~alllpoii&amp;-Polnt Pleasant,

·Sports..................;...........Cl-8

.

•

• ATHENS · Once again, Ohio c~ance to appe~ on stage at the
'university Professor Mel Helitzer Front Room coffeehouse to sell
.is offering Humor Writing through , their mawrial to a live audience.
the eo,nmuniversity pr~gram.
· Tho class meets for eight ses,
Wriling is an essential oommu- sions beginning Tuesday, Aprill3, .
nicati()n sli:ill that is vital in the frol)l 6:30-10 p.m. in 211 Scripps
business world. The technique of Hall. Don't ·miss .this chance to
combing writing with hu~o.r can study under an excellent ~fes;;or
.be Ieanied and adds creatiVIty to . and very funny guy I Regtstrauon
. pi.ecellbal may ~1se be dry. .
de&lt;~dline is April6.
Pilnicipants of thts class gam
For more infonniltion or to reghands-on experience wilh . writing, iste(, contact the .Ohio University
criliquinJ, producing ~ I!Crform· Office of Contiriuing Education a.t
'1ng. wriuen comedy !llaterial. The 593-.1770 or toll-me.in Ohio at 1Jinal clasa allows stu4en1&amp; the 800-336-5699. ·,
...

Along the river .............. Bl-8 ·
Business/Farm................Dl-8
Classified ......:................D4-7
Deaths .............................. A-7
EdiloraJ .............................Af'i

Gallia County's religious history
is recalled· James Sands· A-2 ·

F~ur

UD SIMND
lOUIS

conditioni~S

.

"

,_:___,

This 90th Anniv.ersary Buick LeSabre ls built with
the same kind of attenlion to quality that has made
LeSabre the best-selling full-size car in Amfrica.• The
'same kind Of quality that tfas given LeSabre the
highest resal~ value in its cla.')S ...
And right now 11llthis quality comes ar a most
· unex~ted price: Si8,999! '
!I you need further proof Of.LeSabrC 1SinCredible
quality and value, look at th is ·
parllallist of what you get:
• 3800 V~ engin~ • air

~

ATHENS • A Langsville man ·stems from a high-speed chase
charged in Athens County with one, from Meigs County 10 Athens last.
count or felpny a~gravated assault Tl\ursday which eventqally
against two State Highway Patrol in\&lt;olved units of the Meigs and'
troopers was bound over to the Athens County sheriffs' depart· ·
Athens County Grand Jury by ments and the Alhens Post of the
Athens Municipal Court Judge · State Highway Patrol..
Douj!las J!ennell at a pnehmmary
&lt;;:ross !lliegedl.Y fled from a
heanng Friday.
.
Melj!s Clll!nty sheJ:iffs. deput&gt;: folErnest. L..Cross, 27, ~s .accused . lowmg ~dispute w1th his ex-wife at
of assaulnng troopers Ketth fell~ her residence n~ar Pomeroy. The
and Je~emy Mendenhall wuh h1s troopers became mvolved when the
car durmg a htgh-speed chase last chase brought them to Athens
Thursday.
County.
Fellure, a passenger in Menden,
Aggravated assault is a firstdegree fe!ony _punishable by .up 10 hall's cruiser. was injured as
25 years .m pnson and a max1mum Mend,enha!l attempted to pass
fmc of up to $10,000. The charge Cross vehicle on the Route_682

Pomerov, OH.

LESABRE

Inside

Trade·of Charlton for Mitchell
questioned . . Fred W. Crow • A-6

Langsville man bound over
to Athens Munlcipal Court

Mon.-Fri.II:OO..S:OO
Sat.II:00-12:00

WORLD OF CHEMISTRY - Pomeroy Elementary
an
aSsembly Thursday on "Our Wonderful World or Chemistry." Tbe
event was an educational assembly oa the different chemicals
solids, liquids, etc; Student volunteers· assisted with the different
experiments. Pictured is Jennif'er Heck and Phil Potter during one
or tbe experiments.
•
.
.

C-1

Charged with ~ggravated assault

GRAVELY TRACTOR
SALES &amp; SERVICE

204 Condor SL

75 (.'l'flts

Indians drop 5-4 tilt to Blu.e Jays

Party held

THE 9 OTH A N N I v E. R s A R y B u I c K

oriental arid American designs 'by
Myrna Cordray.
For the program Dorothy Smith
read "When Easter Lilies Bloom."
Easter poems were read by other
members and resideilrs ·were aslc:ed
their favorite flowers.
Favors and potted marigolds
from Mary Rose's greenhouse was
given to everyone presenL '
.
Betty Milhoan presented a red
rose to Ada Holter, an honorary
member.
The club will tour the Riverview
Farm Herbs, Route 338 Racine
and Rose's Greenhouse.' Bashan'
on Apnll7.
'

Happ·' Easter

·- ' - - - 4

.

Smith presents program

Preserving
the past ·
through
'yesteryear'
-B-1

. LOS ANGELES (AP) Sponscaster Ahmad Rashad will be
Margaret Parker, president of host of "Caesars Challenge," a
lhe Meigs County Pioa~r and His· daytime game show that.debuts in
torical Society, reports that the June, NBC anniiunced.
organization can certainly use a Jot
Contestants will answer qUesmore volunteers.
tions and unscramble ;words as Iiley
While the society and the orga- compete for more than $25,000 in
nization's museum operate effi- . prizes and a grand prize luxury car,
ciently, fund raising and museum the network said Wednesd;ly. The
operations rely entirely upon vol- half-hour show wiU be taped before
unteers. The society needs mote of an audience in a showroom at Caeyou to be involved. Your ideas and sars Palace, a casino 'hotel in Las
assistance are really needed, Mar- Vegas.
· 1
garet repQrts. There lii'C numerous
Rashad, 43, was a Minnesota
commit~es, all of which could
Vikings wide receiver before he
stand some good indians, and there became a spons commentator.
are other functions which you
might want tD help out )Vith. PerYORK, Pa. (AP) - Movies are
haps, you have a new idea about a terrible these days and it's the fault
program, or)lll exhibit Whatever. of young people, 54-year-old film
If you can help please call the critic Rex Reed says.
museum or stop by and let the soci- . · "Most of today's moviegoers
ety know your interests o~~nd how . are estimated to be between IS and
you'd lilc:e to be involved. . .
20 years old, which exp!Qins why
RACINE - Racine Baptist
You'll be pleased to lc:now lhat
Members wilT be glad to hear so many sub-mental abominations
Church, sunrise service, 6;30 a.m., .· Pomeroy's Pauline Mayer is doing from you. And you Icnow, the old
breakfast, 7:30a.m. SUJida.y school.. · great following .hip replacemenl saying, "Many h~nds make light are be~g passed off as bogus enter·
talnments," Reed told several hun9:30 a.m. Easter cantata by adult surgery at St. Joseph Hospital in work"..
dred
people attending a Junior
choir at10:45 am. Public invited.
Parkersburg, W. Va. Her room
League lecture Wednesday.
.
number is 234 and the zip as I
POMEROY • Sunrise services recall is 2610 I.
I hope the Easler season. is so
will be held at 7 a.m. at St. John
good for you that r.ou have no
Lutheran Church, Pine Grove
A surprise graduation and pizza
In case you've wondered, and I cl)oice but to keeRgDiling.
Road. Breakfast ~ill follow at 8
pany was hellf March 29 in honor
you· bave, it was still not
a.m. at St Paul Lutheran Church in
of Fred Thompson by Msrly and
Pomeroy. Worship services will be
Debbie Morarity at D&amp;M Pizza in
at 9:30 a.m. at St John and II a.m.
Syracuse.
'
at St. Paul. Rev. George Weirick
Thompson graduated from
· invites the public.
Hocking College on March 19 wilh
a 3.8 average overall.
MIDDLEPORT - Sunrise ser·
Refreshments of pizza, pop,
vices at Hope Baptist Church in
. cake and ice cream were serVed.
Middleport will be Sunday at 6:30
· · Attending were Mar~y, Karyn .
a.m. Public invited.
and Matt Thompson, Racine; Bob
'and. Alice Thompson, Pomeroy;
MONDAY
Marty and Tonya Meadows, Port..
LONG BOTTOM - Cemetery
land; George and Dale Thompson,
clean-up will begin in Olive TownPomeroy; Paul, Linda, Jeff and
ship on Monday. Anyone wishing
Missy Darnell, Pomeroy; Tom,
to keep flowers should have them
Terri, Todd and Tara Hawley,
removed by that time.
Pomeroy; Dave .and Tina Neigler,
Racine; Bill, Ramora, Rayan and
CHESHIRE · Women Alive
Billy Young, Pomeroy; Scou Hill,
will meet Monday at 7 p.m. at lhe
Racine; Mary Byer, Syracuse;
Kyger Creek Club House. There
Jamey Nelson, Racine; Marty,
will be a devotional spealc:er and
· Debbie and Brittany .Morarity,
Racine.
·
· ··
craft ddlnonstrator. Refreshments
will be a soup bar.

RACINE -'Good Friday services
HOCKINGPORT Th
'II
at Racine Baptist Church will be at be a round and square•dance
ereatWI
the
7 p.m.
Reynolds Building in Hoekingpon
POMEROY • Easter. candy is on Saturday from 8-!!: 30 p.m. fea·
wring the country band "Out of the
available until Friday from the Blue." Ronnie Wood will _be the
Future Homemalc:ers of America caner. Everyone welcome.
. and the home economics students
. at Meigs High School.
REEDSVILLE - There will be
TUPPERS PLAINS • The Tup, . an Easter egg hunt at the Forked
pers Plains. VFW Post No. 9053, Run ~portsman Club on Saturday
Ladies Auxiliary, will sponsor a at2 p.m. Public invited. The hunt is
round and square dance Friday open to children ages 12 and under.
from 8-11:30 p.m. Music will be by
True Country Ramblers. Red Carr
LOTI"RIDGE • Country music
will be the caller. Everyone wei- night will be held at the Lottridge
come.
Community Center on Saturday
from 7 p.m. to midnight All bands
MIDDLEPORT · The Return are welcome. Refreshments will be
Jonathan Meigs Chapter, Daughters available. Everyone welcome.
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at 1:30 p.m . at the
PATRIOT • The MGM District
home of Mrs. Daniel Thomas, Mid- Cub Scout Pinewood Derby will be·
held at Soulhwestern Elementary.
dleport ·
. LONG BOTTOM • Faith Full Registration 9-10 a.m. For more
call
Connie
Gospel· Church in Long Bottom information
will have preaching and singing McCormick at 379-2860.
Friday at 7 p.m. with a communion
SUNDAY •
service. Pastor Steve Reed invites
PORTLAND
, The Portland
the public. Fellowship will follow . .
First
Church
of
the
Nazarene will
Easter sunrise services will be Sunfeature
a
dramatized
version of
day at6:30 a.m.
"The Sermon on the Mount" on
RACINE · Good Friday services Easter Sunday at 10:30 a.m. by
will be held at lhe Racine United Rev. Kenneth Maynard. Everyone
Methodist Church at 7:30 p.m. A welcome.
cantata will be presented by the
MIDDLEPORT · Sunrise cantaSouthern Cluster Choir.
ta, "He. Is Risen," Middleport
·SATURDAY
BURLINGHAM • Burlingham Church of Christ, Sunday, 6 a.m.;
Modern Woodmen will hold a 8:15 and 10:30 am. worship; 9:30
Potluck SaiUrday at'6:30 p.m. at the a.m. Sunday school.
RACINE • The Racine Board of
. hall. Ham, eggs, rolls, coffee and
Public
Affairs will meet Monday at
pop will be furnished. Bring a cov. POMEROY : Sunrise service,
10
a.m.
atlhe annex.
ered dish. Everyone welcome. ~)\sell Run Holiness Church, Sun·
.
day 6 a.m. Communion. Sunday
POMEROY · The DAV and
PORTLAND - Cemetery c
sehool, 9:30 a.m.: worship, 10:45
Ladies
Auxiliary will meet Monday
up will begin in Lebanon Township am, an~ 7;30 p,m. Ro~ Manley,
at 7 p.m. at the DAV Hall, 124
on Saturday. Anyone wanting to pastor, mvttes the public.
Bilttemut Avenue, Pomeroy.
keep flowers should have them
REEDS Vll.LE • Easter sunrise · POMEROY • Pomeroy Elemenremoved by t!Jat time.
,
,
service, Eden United .Brethren tary PTO will meet Monday at 7
FAIRPLAIN, W.VA.- The Lib- Church, Sunday 6 am., breakfast at p.m. in the school gym. The lhird
erty Mountaineers will perform 7:30a.m, Sunday school at 10 a.m. grade classes will be. present !he
Saturday at the Jackson Coun1y "The Empty (:ross" by Robert program. Everyone welcome.

Members of the Wildwood Garden Club met recently with resi·
dents of Overbrook Center in Mid·
dleporL
Kathryn Miller presided at the
meeting which opened with the
club creed 'in unison.
For devotions·, Betty Milhoan
announced the spring board meet·
ing on April 17 at Chesler United
Mcthodist ·Church at noon with a
pollock luncheon. The Ohio Association of Garden Clubs spnng
regional meeting will be April 24 at
the Holiday Inn in Gallipolis. The
afternoon program will be an
arranging demonstration, "East
Meets ~est," which will compare

by Bob Hoeflich .

..

Sunda.\

People in
the news

Beat of the Bend...

.

..

Friday, April 9, 1993

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

- -.. ·;. .-·-Community calendar
.

.

.I

.

ot

ShoiUy after .11 p.m., tbe GVFD
was called 10 tbe scene of an acci·
dent.on Bastem Avenue to wash
gasoline oft' the street. Seven fire.
r.ptera IQIIOIIded with one truck
and UJed 3'0 &amp;•lions of water 10
clean the lite. The accidelit report
was not aVIilable It pnu time.
A ciaarette wu listed as the
caue of a 111181llim atl2:20 Satur·
day morning. According to tile
. report, !he cijjaelkl wu in ID ISh·
tray lillin&amp; Ul !he edae of I bllhiQb
at tbe Julie Kerwood retidenc~~;.
.State R9ute 7 North, Gallipolis,

200 gallon~ of water tO extinguish a
fue in the engine companment of a
1981 Dodge Omni, owned by
Robert Bush, 113 Woody Road
Patriot
·
·
'
The fine, believed to be caused
by a baclcfli'C through the vehicle's
carburetor, caused $800 worth of
damage. ·.

�.
Paga U

Sunday nm• . Sentinel

Pomeroy . Mddleport Gallipolis, Ott-Point Pleaant,

Aprll11,1!113 .

OHIO Weather

WEST VIRGINIA Weather

.Sunday, Aprilll

Sunday, Aprllll

•

.
Accu-Wea!her• forecast for daytime conditions

and high tempmtures

r---

IMansfield Iss- I·

Court to create i
task force on '
•
racial bias

Tri-County briefs___,

. I

I

• lco1umbusls1·

- ...
FRONtS:
T

,.-

COCD

•

WARM

f

·

SYRACUSE - "Don't pay before !he work is done," urges Meigs
County Sheriff James M. Soulsby.
·
Wednesday afternoon. three subjeciS approached a S)'racuse resident ~ng to cut/trim tJ;ees at her' residence. They gave. an estimate, but wanted payment in advance and stated !hey would return
at 8 a.m. to do !he work, the sheriff reported.
.
Mter some discussion, the resident gave the ttio a $200 check,
Soulsby reported. The check was cashed and !he work was never
done.
The subjects were _in a van pulling a chiwer. They gave !he
name General Tree Service of Marietta.
· A neighbor reported !he next day one subject approached her and
told her !hey would be running a chipper and it would give off a lot
of dirt. He told her !hey would back.the chipper in !he drive but !hey
drove on up !he road and never retunied.
·
Soulsby reponed an investigation is continuing and ,':!~ed resi•
deniS to obtain license plate numbers so that !he individ
can·be
traced. Names alone are not of that much value due to !he fact !hat
!he names might be false.
"Know who you are dealing wi!h and do not pay in advance,"
. Soulsby said.

NATIONAL SUMMARY'

New England is in lor a wet Eilliter, and lhowefll: willa&amp;O stretch from the DaKota&amp; to Indiana. Look lor

KY.

llurrias in the highest mourtain&amp; of Morfilllll. with ahowelli in the lower elevations and along the
Wa&amp;hif1o!i1ton c;:cast. How&amp;Ver, plenty of ll,U'llhine 1111 above·normaltemperaiU1'86 n il store from
Southern C81itomia through Texas and to tt. Carolina

~
, . ,. , ......~ ...
ShowBTS T-stoons Rain

Rain spoils Easte~
holiday activities

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy

Via As~ted Press GlaphicsNel

••

C1993Acc u·Weather, Inc.

Weather

•

Monday through Wednesday:
South-Central Ohio
By The Associated Press
Monday, a chance of rain. Highs
Sunday, mostly cloudy wi!h a
A weak area of high pressure
chance of afternoon showers. High from !he upper 40s to the upper passed over Ohio Saturday night,
~5 to 70. Chance of rain 40 per- 50s. Lows between 35 and 45. with mostly clear skies and lows in
Tuesday and Wednesday, fair . !he 30s, according to !he National
eent.
Highs in !he 50S. Lows in the 30s.
Extended forecast:
Weather Service.

:: EXPRESS CONCERN - Gallia County
• Farm Bureau President Paul Sboemaker trav·
; eled to WasbinKton D.C., with 80 other county
· Farm B-u presideots March 9-11 to upress
·Pteir coaceras about many topics illdadiDI the
:new admioistration, wetland policy develop·
ineots, rural bealth care, federal finance' and
. :.envir011mental rqulatioas. Shoemaker also met
:with new U.S. Department of' Agriculture om;clal$, members of the U.S. House Ap-iculture

A low pressure system 'that was
over !he center of !he nation early
Saturday moved into the Ohio 'Val- ·
ley on Sunday, causing skies to
become mostly cloudy.--Showers
over much of !he state cancelled
most of Saturday's outdoor Easter ·
holiday activities.. Thunderstorms
were reported over southern Ohio.
Highs were in !he 50s over nonhero Ohio and the 60s in the 80u!hem pan of !he state.
Rain feU across all of Ohio Friday might in response to a low
pressure system to the southeast of
the state. The rain ended over westem Ohio early Saturday momin~ .
Rain continued over eastern OhiO
early Saturday morning, but the
area covered by the rain was
decreasing.
Rainfall amounts from 8 p.m.
Friday to 5 a.m. Saturday were
mainly between one-quarter and
one-half inch across !he state.
Around thiHiatlon
Cloudy, damp weather shrouded
the Northeast early Saturday, while
unsettled weather buffeted the
PacifiC
Northwest, !he Rockies and
Committee and officials or the Farm Credit
western
Plains.
·
Couocil, Commodity Futures Trading CommisRain
fell
early
Saturday
from
sion, Federal Republic or Germany and U.S.
Washington, D.C .. to Portland,
Environmental Protection A1ency. Pictured left
Maine,
across New York and Pennto _right are: Gallia Conaty President Paul Shoe·
sylvania
into O~io.
r
maker, Athens president BIU RUSsell, U.S. Con·
Snow
advisories
were
posted
1or
gressman Ted Strickland, Hocking president
Ernie Bowers, Ross president Tim corcoran, . Saturday in· the Cascades and
.Siskiyous in Oregon and for the
Lawrence president Jack Nelson and Jackson·
mountains of Wyoming, while
Vinton president Ed Scurlock.
wind advisories were posted for
pans of Wyoming and Colorado.

(}allia's
colorful religious history
.
came of it.
The early laypersons in this
church, Matthias Gray and Christina
Roop,later became associated with
!he Universalist Church which beC3jlle the p!Woininant religion in
Vinton Jrom I 830 to I880. .
Universalism was organized in
Gallipolis in 1819 andauracted many
oftheFrenchasadberents. The basic ·
teneiS of Universalism was to humanize Jesus, thus &lt;lenying Trinilarian doctrines held by most other
Protestant groups.
Unive,rsailsmernphasizeduniyersal salvation for all mankind, teaching that !he Bible was only a pan of
.
!he literature inspired by God. The
only preacher of Universalism in
Vinton we know of was Robinson
Breare who was born in Yorkshiie,
England.
In his early life, Breare was a
Methodist preacher in England,
· Scotland and tlien Nova Scotia.
Breare dedicated !he fust Universalist Church in HalifaX in 1844 a
,
•
·
. G '.
oew yearsbe~ore·he.settledm ~ha
-et&gt;unty. Umversaltsrn appears to
have died in Vinton by the 1880s
. when Methodists and BaptisiS were
fmaUy aUowed into !he town.
In 1830 !he Presbyterian Church
came to Huntington Township with
!he founding of a Sabbath School by
JamesGlenn.ln!he 1850sand 1860s
there were two kinds of Presbyterians here - reformed and free. The
latter was an offshoot of work done
by John Ranki~. ·
Free Presbyterians were, very
strongly abolitionist. The p1oneer
Pr~byterian was Hiram Howe, who
came here from V'ermonL Howe
even organized an academy in Vin. 10!1 in !he 1850's.
~aptisiS organized' their fust
ch111Chin !he township about 1852 in
the Pleasant Hill community also
knownasMt, Tabor.Revl.Z..Haning, .
who was later connecled wi!h the
· worlc to establiJh Rio Grande College, organized Baptist pm~ehing in
· the borne of George Deckard.
The church was called Ple&amp;S!IIIt
Hiii;Brush, so mimed becau~ the
women mel in the smaU log chiiiCh
while !he men met out in !he brush.
The official name wu the First

fc;e

Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy
C1993 1\ccu--lher, life:. ~

'

.

.

Governor cr'iticizes city effortsr
to keep company downtown ·
.

.

TOLEDO, Ohio· (AP) - Gov. 900 employees, says it also may •
George Voinovich says local Offi· leave downtown because it hasn't :
cials need to be more aggressive to been able to negotiaJe a new leas~: :
keep Jt ·corpotalion downtOwn, but on Its building.
· ·
•
the mayor disagrees.
·
Last week, Ohio and Toledo :
, "I feel very good about !he way offered .to.buy LOP's building for ·
we've been worlting with 'the Slate Sl million and lease it 10 the com- ·
and governor. We've submitted an pany 10 .Wuce operating costs. The :
offer to LOF (Libbey-Owens-Ford) _state also agreed to invest $3.5 mil- :
and haven't heard anylhing back," lion 'in improvements to the build- ,:
Mayor John McHugh said Friday.
ing and surrounding area.
:
Voinovich said local leaders
The city would receive a
need to offer incentives to the $500,000 state grant and a $4 mil- ·:
glassware company.
lion loan from !he state.
"I think, franldy, unless we get
The Toledo-Lucas County Pon .:
the city and pon- authority to the Authority, the lead economic :
rable, they're going to Michigan," development age~;~cy in the area, ·
he said.
. . did not participate' in the negotia- :
The company is considering lions. The cicy did not cqmmit any ':
moving to Michigan because tax dollars. '
.
LOF's parent company, Pilking!Qn
Voinovich said he talked to Ron ;
Brothers PLC, based in England, is Skeddle, LOF:president and chief ·.
cuttin~ costs.
executive officer, about Engler's :
"I m not tryil)g to fmger point. visit.
:
All I am saying is that in any sue"The sense I get from Skeddle ·
cessful deal, everybody has j!Otto is that he's very happy with the :
coope~te and ~ up, ~ 1f that effon I have made ... but I !hint .;
doesn.! h&amp;J!PCD! we ~ gomg to lose he's a little disappointed in the 1
!hem.. yo1110vtch S81d
· • response he's gotten from !he city :
Michigan Gov. John Engler met and pon authority " · the governor
with LOF officials on Thursday.
said.
'
"We talked about what kind of
''I'm frusttated and swprised !'X :
~gement .we co~d ha~e lllld ~~ what I've seen,'' Skeddle said. • I 1
o~uons available m M1ch1gan.,
expected to see more lea.dersllip (
~1d BYf?'l Quandt, the company s and coming together. What we '
v1ce president of human resources.
need is a strong leader. If we had
About 350 employees work at one we'd have a ·different '
.
appr;,ach," he said. ·
i
LOF's downto":n bui!ding.
Owens-Commg Fiberglas, w1th
· ·

-

,,

MONDAY, APRIL 12'cy)

·:.2

~
r:;a

FOR HOME USE
Sales
- Rental - Service
'
•Hospital Beds
•Wheelchairs
•Bath Safety Aids
-ostomy Supplies
•Diapers &amp;Chul(s
•Lift Chairs
•Hu!ldreds of Other
. Items in Stock

CarryQuts cited for underage sales
GALLIPOLIS -Two local esrablishmeniS were cited Friday for
. selling alcohol to underaged customers.
Cited were Marchi's Carry-Out, 144 Third Ave., Gallipolis, ,and
The Pony Jl:eg, 1321 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis.
.
According to a repon from !he GaUipolis Police Departlllent,
officers assisted ageniS from !he Ohio Department of Li~uor Conlrol Friday from 5 p.m. to II p.m. in observing local establishmeniS.
, A GPD sp&lt;ilcesman said !he owners .of bu'sinesses cited by !he
' (lepanment of liquor control are scheduled for hearirig and, depending on their past record, IIley can be fmed. have !heir license suspeilde9 or be closed down. ·
Also cited in tJie operation were David E. Bragg, 18, address
unieported, and a 17-year-old for undera$e consumption and Joshua
l-f. Haislip; 21. S17 1/2 Fourth Ave., Gallipolis. for open container:

~

WIN! WIN! WIN!. _
A $500 Gift Certificate will be awarded to _the
person coming closest to guessing the weight of
the largest cut Blue Topaz in the Northeast
United States now on display in our store.

Big Selection of 1
Ct. and Larger · ·
Diamonds

•

"

,&gt;

"

i•

.

•Amethyst •81. 'IOpaz
•Tourmaline •Ruby
•Emerald •Sapphire .
'

Tal Free
1•800-458-6844

':'rat

.
&amp; Up

Jcdsa1
286·7484'

,

Stop And SIDell Tlie N.Iagnolias.

•

.'

j

"I

•
•

Peoples Choice Tours The Old South

Mailbox vandalized
Ricky Stephenson, 2799 County Road 72, Crown City, told Gallia County sherifrs deputies someone vandalized his mailbox and
burned the mail inside.
,
· ·

GALLIPOLIS - Individuals wanting to submit !heir declaration
of candidacy for Gallipolis City Commissioner must have the prop- ·
er forms completed and turned into the Gallipolis City Anditllr's
office by 3 p.m. Wednesday, April 14,

Wilson named to Selective Service
GALLIPOLIS- Stephen B. Wilson or Portsmouth was tecently
appointed to represeni Gallia County on the Selective Service System Local Bolud. Board members are nominated to the office by the
goW!nlor and appointed by !he Selective Service director.
Should the draft be reinstituted in the event of war or,antther
emergency, the local service board would be respo~ibJc: for ~id- ·
ing claims for cell8in classifi~t~tions, such as c;onsc~enbous ohJCCtion., hardship and religious ministry.
·

Egg hunt rescheduled

··

.

GALLIPOLIS ....:. The.amual Basler Ep Hulit, qnally sched•
uled for Salllrday in the Gallipolis city~ has been posiJIOI1ed.
The event, sponsored by the GalliDOiis parkS ani! Recreation
· Department, Elks Lodge 11107 and the Glilipolis Emblem Club, will
be held II a.m. April 17.
·

Edltar'• note: Name~, 1111 mel IICid-. are pt!ntecl • tlley
alllciiJ npc1111. .
·

.

·

.,
j

- . ~em phis
Monday, june 21 -Saturday, june 26

Nashville - New Orleans
•

City officials post deadline

I I

.

$400

j

. ''

..'
•

1-

•
Kentucky bluegrass • Shopping on Nashville's "Music Row" • "Mr. Sax", Boots Randolph· • New
Orleans'·French Quarter • Cajun cuisine • Antique shopping on Royal Street • Jazz on Bourbon Street
• Chicory Coffee and Beignets • Going l&gt;lit on the town in "N'awli~s" • Cruising the Mississippi on the
Cre'ole Queen • Beale Street in Memphis, "The Home of the Blues" • Elvis' Graceland Mansion • First
· · class accommodations within walking distance of most major attractions • And much, much more!

.
Member prices start from only $565.
· For complete
Choice Coordinator, at (304) 6 75-1121..
. details, call Mal)' Fowler, PeOples
.

...

•''
' I'

..'

..

I

I

.!
'I

I

••

Peoples Choice means chqice travel opportup.ities and
choice fmancial benefits for persons 50 and over!

•

•
A division of the Peoples.Bank of Point Pleasant, Member FDIC.
Mini.mum depaoit balanao required for POoplea Cholee membanblp.
•

•
•
'

..__Caii_...,_AA_,.._,.,___

•

Gemstones
By the Carat

r-~------------------------~------------------~--- '·i

GALLIPOLIS -GallipOlis police iSsued two Citations overnight
Friday. Richard D. Condee, 24, 99 Garfield Ave., GaUipolis, was
cited Friday night for no headlighiS and operating an unsafe veliicle
and Rodney W~ Geiger, 39, 8020 State Route 554, Bidwell, was
cited early !his morning for no operator's license.

1................. : ......... .'..........'..

'

Available

Police cite two

ap,.., •

~@ ~:...

.

Our special REMOUNT AND GEMSTONE SALE

HOME OXYGEN THERAPY..

Gallipahs
446·7283

~.

.

'6··

:'J·'

REMOUNT·AND
GEMSTONE EVENT

GALLIPOLIS - Kendall Mullins, owner of Kars Unlimited,
n 1 Vine Street, Galli~lis, told Gallipolis ~&gt;Diice someone smashed
!he glass out of'a.vehicle under repair at h1s business and stole the
car's stereo. The vehicle is ownl\11 by Ron Litter, address unrepon-

.,

&amp;
. ,:,.LSI 12-t
f

. Paul Davies presents...

Respiratory Therapls.t - 24 Hour EmergeiKY Service
·we Iii Medkare, Medkaid, etc., for the patlenl.
.
'
H orM Owned and Operated

Car stereo stolen

.

~

C!'!-.@
·;:;:;;

MEDICAL SUPPLIES

-

i

~
©
"""
r
' ie:-,
.
?·~

SOLITAIRES-SET IN OUR STORE-ONLY 99.00

GALLIPOLIS- A Gallipolis .man was taken into custody early
this morning by Gallia. County sheriffs deputies for driving under
!he influence.
Chad M. Burke, 21, 164 Kemper Hollow Road, Gallipolis, Was
later released on a summons to appear in court.

.

~~

charge.

' Man taken i~to custody for D.U.f.

. ·'

cO~

affords you the opponun,ity to· CI'I:ate a unique ring of
your · own design from our amazing selection of
hundreds of mountings at savings up to 33%. Of course
the advise of our expen craftsman of over 47 years is no

GALLIPOLIS -Local authorities jailed three men overnight
Franlt A. Thompson. 26, 3941 Millstone, Columbus, was. arrested early this mommg by !he state highway patrol for no operator's
license and speeding; Felipe E. Beacli, ~! 1409 Eastern Ave., Gallipolis was jailed Friday night on a mumcipal court order for f&amp;lure
to pay' fines and Tunolhy B. Queen, 31, 6 White Ave., Galli~J&lt;?lis,
was arrested by Gallipolis police for disoroerly conduct by intoxication..
·

THE . BODYGUARD •

,.,..

Hospital news

Authorities jail three

Mother sentenced

Singers

IASTDA.Y

POMEROY - Units of the RoUie 338 for Henry Hill who was
Meigs County Emergency Medical transported to Holzer Medical CenServices responded to nine calls for ter; 5:21 p.m. RuUand Fire Depan-assistance Friday.
ment and ~uad to Langsville for a
Responding were: 8:23 a .m. motor veh1cle accident. Lorena
RuUand to Main Street for Kath- · Oiler was transported to HMC; .
leen Tillis who was transported 10 10:10 p.m. Pomeroy to Pomeroy
Veterans Memorial Hospital; 8:57 Nursing and Rehabilitation Center
a.m. Middlepon to Village Manor for Susie Windon who was taken to
Apartments for Caroline Miller VMH; 11 :53 p.m. Middleport to
who was treated at !he '5cene: 8:55 !he Middleport Police Department
a.m. Tuppers Plains to Smith-Baker . for Chris Rayburn who was ttansRoad for Melinda Smith who was poned to VMH.
treated at !he scene: 2:18p.m. Mid- ·
dleport Fire Department to South
Fifth Street for a transformer fire,
VETERANS MEMOlUAL
Columbus Southern Power CompaFriday's
admission - Mar(ha
·
ny was notified; 4:19 p.m. MiddleClonch,
Pomeroy.
pan to South Fifth Street for MariFriday's discharge - 'Allen
on Minor who was transported to
Eichinger,
Pomeroy.
VMH; 5: IS p.m. Racine to State

COOLVILLE - About SO Coolville area resideniS voted "no" to
locating an infectious medical waste incinerator adjacent to !he former Best Photo building during Thursday night's village council
. meeting.

'

The task force 's review may be ~
expanded to include sentencing; :
Moyer said.
.
.
,
The task force could be made up ,
process. s·bown are, from iert; Jason Parsons,
of 17 to 21 members and may :
Amber Slaven, Adam Barrett, Tomie Shalfer,
·· include representatives of several •
and judges Lawrence Grey or Athens County,
branches of the NAACP and an
William ·Hai'sba of Pickaway County and Earl
organization
of black judges. · -.
Stephenson or Scioto County. (T-S photo by Jim
Fneman)
, .. . . .
. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .,

EMS responds_to nine calls

Residents reject project

ations after having sustained losses
resulting from natural diSasters.
ApplicaniS will not be eligible
The. fllSI organized church in
for
EM loans to cover damages and
Huntington Township of Gallia
losses
to any crops planted which
County was !he
were not insured, but could have
lf4lcyon Society -'"""''"'-"
been insured with FCIC crop insurformed by Abel
ance or multi-peril crop insurance.
Sargent. Rev.
FmH~ emergency loans for
was
Sargent
physical property losses may be
unique in as much
made to repllll' or replace essential '•
as he had 12 disfarm buildings, livestock, and
ciples, all of
equipment.
whom
were
for
emergency
Applications
''
loans may be made at the local
women.
County FmHA offices serving the '
Sargent started his miniSUy in
Marietta and used magic and other
contiguous counties . Interested
illuslonstodrawacrowd.Oneofhis
farmers unable to locate their local
County FmHA Office may contact
favorite tricks was to wad up sulfur
!he State Office at telephone num·
inabagandtossitintoafueinorder
her 614-469-5402.
to~emonstrate the powers he had.
"" Applications for physical and
:One of Sargent's early followers
HAMILTON, Ohio (AP)- A production losses will be 'received
went on a long fast, believing !hat if
woman who was convicted of unti1November.l7, 1993.
he died, Sargent would bring him
drowning her 6-'month-old daughb~~Ck to life. He died. Mter !hey
ter has. been sentenced to 16 1/2
W~Ited _seven days for Sargent. to
years 10 ttfe in prison.
bnng hun back, they finally buried
A
di
to
Hardesty's
Atlas·
.
Lise Wayt, 22, of Fairfield, was
RAZED
DURING
WORLD
WAR
IITlie
First
Huntlnl(lon
h1m. ccor ~g
COLONY THEATRE
•
Free Will Baptist Church building stood oo ML Tabor Road tfom
sentenced in Butler County Comthis gro~p laid out. a town called
mon Pleas Court .on Friday to serve
1905 until around World War II when It was lora down. UniverFRIDAY THRU THURSDAY
Leafyema but no!hmg ~uch ever
15 years to life for murder and I
salists and Presbyterians bad churches ill Huntington Twp., ill the
11'1111 COSTIIII &amp; WHliiO IIOUSTDI
1/2 to 5 years f9r child·endangering
19th century as did the Salvation Army, bot the rlfst church in the
Ill
•
· '
township was Halcyon.
for the May 1991 death of her
(USPS 525-800)
Churches were built here in 1867 sprung up in the township. The first daughter, Marina. Judge ·Anthony
Valen ordered !he sentences to be
SHOW TIIIIES'
Published ca.ch Sunday, 8251'hird Ave ..
and in 1905. The church became Pentecostal preacher here started-a . served
consecutively.
FRI.-SAT.-SUN. 7:30 l 10:00
Gallipolis . Ohi o, by Lhc Ohio VAHey
inactiveaboutWWIIwiththebuildchurch
near
Ewington
in
a
house
MONDAY TK!IU THURSDAY
Publi1hing CompanyfMullimr.dia , Inc.
Dr. Richard Burkhardt, the
Second c iRSs pop!II.Jt@;e paid at GAIHpolill ,
ing lorn down.
during World War 1:
. One Enning - 7:30
county coroner, ruled.the child died'
OMo 4.5631 . Entered as St'lcond clRsfl
Admlulan 11 .10 • 44t-111123
TheBaptistChurchinVintonwas
Thepreacherwassomuchagailist
of drowning.
mailing matter At Pomeroy, Ohio, P08t
established in the·early 1890s. The !he U.S. involvement in the "Great
Office.
flfst Methodist Church in the town- War" that his pacifism was seen as
.Member. The AssociAt-ed Pre&amp;'\ , and lhll
ship
was also al Mt. Tabor. Standing ireasonous. He was run out of !he
Ohio Ncw!tpapcr ~..oci~~ol1on , NationAl
-Ad" crt i•inM RcprosenlRlivc, Oran ham
from 186710 ;~bout the World War 11 count)' after being beaten on a couple
I
News paper S~l es. 733 Third Avcnut..
era was a church in a grove of oak of occasions..
Nc"!' York , New York 100 17.
trees at !he top of a low hill.
JAIIMIANII ..,..,.., lAt. &amp;SUN. I
SPHING VALLEY CINEMA -,
SUNDAY ONLY ·
IAINI~·IHifrTUIIDA'
MethodisiS
established
a
church
44~ 4)14
SUBSCRIPTION HATES
J~ Sands is a special correCtft c.RI'IPlCAftl AYAII.UI.al
• .. .,
By Carrier or.Motor ltouW
·at Ewington at about !he same time. spondent ofthe SundayTbpes-SenOne Wer.k ........... ...................................90f
In fact Ewington put up a building a tillel. Hb address is: '5 Willow
One Yoo r...................................... _ .. $46.80
few years earlier. The Cluistian Drive, SpringboroOR 4~·
StNGLECOPY
PR!CE
"
Antioch Church was built near EwSunday...... ,...............~...................75 C&lt;1niM
•
I
ingtonabout 1877.Laterinthe 1800s
.
.
No aubseripUons by mail pcrmittt:d in
Vinton hadaSalvationAnny chun:h.
Are AM whern motor carrier !lcrvice i11
A Church of Cluist was organnailable.
ized in Vinton in 1900andabujlding
The ,Sunday TimeB-Se nt.incl will not b~
,
-ri!RpoMible ror advAnce p11ymenlll madt.
erecled in 1905 under !he direction
to ca triers.
•
of David and William Haskins and
SHED 1895
MAIL SUIIIICRIPI'ION8
•'
Henry
DeVore
.
.Sandoy Only
Ope Ve14T..................~ ....... ...... - ........ $47.. ~
A Cluistian Union Church was
All lll. .ll 01
Sill Mon.lhfl ......... .'...... -................ _... 12".79
es1ablished at E'wington about 1919
The Ohio Vlll_ap
~
' Dolly •nd Sandor
and
later
at
Fairview.
The
Church
of
1
MAIL SUBSCRIPI'IONS
HuntingtQDFreeWili~Chun:h.
Cluist In Christian Union with head,
· l•kfc Coant:y
'
Thef1CSin1embers. besides Deck-'
1:1 w..ko ......................................... S21 .84
q~Wters
in
CircleviUe
was
organ•~o~~t•
of
1111
CIYIIW.•
_ 2&amp; w..~u~ ...,...................................... S43.16 . 'llld, wen:: Eooch Deckard, E.P. ·
••
5~ Weou ..................... ................. :... $8-4. 76
ized as a denomination In 1909 at
SJ•
••11L
17
I
·
•
•
--=•s.r
••
.,
ow
Cll
Holcomb,
Basler
Ha!tsook,
John
1
R.loo O.lsldo Coanly
·
.
,..
.Marshall as a breakaway· from !he
' "' _ .
'
r.-.
Monte Md Dorolhy HMidne
13 w.. ~u~ ...... :,........ :.... ,.. :·..................$23.40· 1· ·. Holcomb, William Hartsook, Richca. 'ID UIDI ~ Cl._
" .
Cluistian
llnion
Chun:h
(organized
·
Ariel
ThMlr'e
,_ . . , _ Dft&amp;ILII.
~
26 Weeb.
$45.50
ard
Calhoun,
JOileph,lfarVook
and
62 Wcelo! ................. :........................ $88.40•
in 1864 'atColumbus).
.
4212ndAve.,O.polle,Oh. .
M.D. Dickison:.
Pentecostal religio,ns have now ·
In_r._...._.

J ~:~ABU

•-- MEET WJTH JUDGES - Meigs Junior .
High School students met with judges or the
Ohio Fourth District Court of Appeals Wednes·
day when the appeals court met to discuss cases
from Gallia an.d Meigs County. St11dents rr.oin
John Arnott's and Mick Childs' class cross
examined judges about the judicial and appeals

POMEROY - Spring is clean up and paint up time, Meigs County Sherirf Soulsby said.
.
. ·
Area residentS, especially if their mailbox needs painting, should
place !heir address nwnbers on !heir mailboxes or at some consptcuous place at their residence so that, in case of emergency, the
squads, foe departments or law enforcement officers can quickly
locate !he residence.

COLUMBUS - Farmers in
Athens; Belmont, Gallia, Jefferson,
Meigs, Monroe and Washington
counties, who suffered phys\cal
and production losses due to a
· severe winter storm and snowfall
which occurred on March 13,-17,
1993, may be eligible for emergency loan assistance from !he Farmers Home Admtnisttation (FmHA),
the rural credit service of !he United States Depanment of Agriculture, Susan L . Lant, Acting State ·
Direc10r of !he FmHA in Ohio said
Friday.
FmHA emergency loans to eligible!e farmers, ranchers, and agriculture operators ·are to enable
!hem to return to their nonnal oper-

~~ru£L

IRrnateS.

.Time to repaint mailbox numbers

Presidential emergency declared

.

By Jim Sands
Special Correspondent

Frurries

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - !
The chief justice of the Ohio ·
Supreme Coon said he will meet ;
" Wednesday wi!h 'black leaders to :
· discuss a task force !hat will look •
into allegations of racial bias in !he !
judicial system.
:
Thomas Moyer plans to discuss . ·
the task force and recommenda- ;
lions !hat black leaders made a.t a 1
meeting wi!h him on March 31.
,
They asked Moyer to create a :
minOrity summer internship at the :
coon, a field ttip program for W'ban ,
youngsters and a program to train i

'Sheriff: 'Don't pay in advance'

SrATIONARY

' VA.

W. VA.

I.

MIDDLEPORT - There is apparently a person or persons operating in this area that are soliciting money supposedly for !he Middle. pon Fire Department, Middleport Fire Chief Jeff Darst reponed.
According to one report, the caller was a female who offered a
sponsorship or !he Middlepon Fire Depanment in exchange for a
monetary donation.
The Middleport Fire Department does not solicit money by tele:
pllone and has never offered a sponsorship in return for a monetary
donation, Darst said.
'
II is unknown how 111any bUsinesses or individuals have been
contacted regarding !his, however anyone who has been, or is Contacted in the future, should notiry local law enforcement, Darst said.

60

...

Sunday Times-Setftinel/A3

Beware of solicitors

OHIO

,,

•

.

PA.

•

Local

Aprilll, 1993

MICH.

..

•

•

.

WI

Accu-Weather• forecast for

•

.

•

�I

•

.
April N, 1993

.

'

1

Ohio/W.Va~

'

Aprllll , 1993

Sunday Times-Sentinel /A4

•

Iraq cries
foul in flap
over·policy

. COSHOCTON (AP) - Three
people arrested at a Ku Klux Klan
nilly wib go on trial May 14.
·, Charles M. Lewis, 33, of
(:oshocton, is charg~ wilh resisting arrest and aggravated disorderly conducl. His brother, Raymond·
T. Lewis, 27_, of Coshocton. is
charged wi lh assault. Katherine
Wilder, 19, of Yellow Springs, is ··
Charg-ed with criminal damaging
and resisting arres1.
They plead~d innocent in
Coshoctop County Municipal
Court this week. Municipal Coun
Judge David Hostetler sc~edulcd
lheu trials for May 14. .
.
Sheriffs deputies estimated lhat
t,poo people- mainly Klan opporfcnts, college students and residents - attended lhe rally April 3.
Seven Klan members marched
diiwntown in lhis cast-central Ohio
city.
~- The arrests were made when
s!lme people started throwing rocks
at officers and Klansmen, authori·
lies said.
:· Also arrested was Wyman
Miller, 43 , of Strasburg, who
pleaded no contest to aggravated
diSorderly conduct. He was found
guilty, fined $75 and given a 10day jail sentence. The fine and sen~ce were suspended.
. • Arraignment for Richard A.
· J.:arntz, 20, of Dover, who is
charged with disorderly conduct,
had not been scheduled.
'

Workers
seek
•
•
to ditch unzon

•

.

··: SPENCER, W.Va. (AP)' ~
Some of the 60 workers at the
· ·BFGoodrich Co. plant have peti·
tiOned the National Labor Relations
· Board to allow lhem to vote on
· abolishing union represemation.
"We do have a petition dated
Man:h 31 that says the employees
rui longer want to be represented by
t~ union," board representative
Claude Harrell said. ·
-: BFGoodrich Co., a specialty
cl{emical company, is based in
Akron, Ohio.
~- Harrell said ·30 percent of a
local's union members must petition for change before an election
,tail be held.
i The· Glass, Molders, Pottery,
flastics &amp;-.Allied Worke.rs union
tepresents th.e work,ers , Mike
~obens, President of Local 305,
•declined to comment.
I A hearing on the case has been
~cheduled for April 13, Harrell
·said. No ,election has been .scheddled.
· The workers' contracts expire

lhe NAACP's southeastern regi~. al direc!OI'.
A'ILANTA - The Rev . BenJesse Jackson had been a finalist
jamin Chavis, a civil rights crusad- but withdrew as a candidate
er who serv~ four years in. prison Wedflesday, citing a proposal that
m the _1970s m a controvers_tal fire- would give the NAACP board
born bmg, was chosen Fnday to greater control over daily operahead tbe NAACP.
·lions.
·
Three board members issued a
· Chavis , 45 , of Cleveland,
re~l~;~ces Benjamin Hooks, who is scathing response Friday, arguing
reunng afler 16 years at the helm that he dropped out because he
of the nation's oldest civil rights ' reared he would not be chosen 10
or~izati~. .
.
lead the 84-year-old civil rights
Chavts brmgs to th1s post a organization. ·
wealth of talent, enonnous personal
In their siatement the three
coural!e.an~ a vibl'lll!~ vi~on f~_the boar4 members sai~ that it is
assocJ~Uon s fublre_. said W11lmm "highly likely " that Jackson
.F. G1bson, cha1rman of the " would not have received the neeNAACP's 64-m~mber bo~rd: "l essary majority, vOte" , fiad he
look f~rward to his energe~.c lead- stayed in tbe contest
ersh1p m the years to come.
Chavis ex1ended a call to JaclcChavis no~ i~ executive ~irector son to unify their movements. "I
~f lhe ~omm1Ss1on for Ra~1al Jus- call on all those outstanding
~ce, Uruted Church of Christ based African-American leaders considm Cleveland. I~ .rece~t years, he ered as candidates for this job to
p10_ne~~ed the envu~nmental join with me ... in strengthening
rac1sm . .movel!'ent, wh1ch hol~s and expanding the NAACP.
that toxx: matenals are stOred diS·
•'We must now put behind us all
proport1o~ately m and near black lhe tensions and anxieties. Now is
commumlles,
h ·
~ h I'
N · tb
"I accept with humility and t e ume •&lt;_&gt;r .~mg. ow lS . e
, . h 'd h d' .
h
f ume for uruty.
w1t . pn e t e 1sunct . onor o ·
Chavis said he would continue
sel'vmg you ~. execuuve dm:c;~r of the work he began wilh the Unilal
the NA~CP, Chav~s 5!'1d. ThiS Church of Christ in organiZing
symbohzes the ~eg_mn~ng of the .. truth movements" among street
~~C~ ~nd revttahzatJOn of the gangs. He said he also wib travel
Chavis was selecled
a year- next week to South ~entral ~s
·
r
Angeles m hopes of easmg 1CJISlons
l~ng se_arch that generated much related to lhe trials of police oflidiSCUSSIOn about lhe_ future of t!Je c~rs accused of unnecessary vio~00.000-member Nanonal Assoc1a- lence against Rodney King.
non for the Advancement of Col"I am not a sttanller in the
ored Peopl~.. .
'hood," Chavis said, usmg a slang
The deciSion .came .at _the e~d of term for inner city neighborboods.
a ~ylong meeu~g a~d •.nterv1e~~ "These young brothers and siSiei'S
wuh the three fmahsts. Chav1s, need aucntion."
Jewel Jackson McCabe, head of t.~e
· Chavis joined lhe civil rights
Nauona~ Coahtmn of 100 Black movement at 15. He was impris~
Women, and Earl P. Shmhoster, oned in North Carolina from 1976
~'ense
to 19so as _a member of ·the so'J •
y ·
called Wdmmgton 10, convicted of
By SONYA ROSS

Associated Press Writer

DOE studies nuke plant cutback .
DAYTON- The U.S.' Department of Energy wants to cut the
1994 budget for the Mound nuclear weapon's plant in Miamisburg
by 24.2 percent instead of lhe 18.6 percent announced last week.
· Plant operators learned this week !hat funding for Mound's environmental restoration and waste management would increase only
$3 million, to. $48 million next year. Earlier, Mound had announced .
its environmental budget would increase to $57 million.
The extra money would have added 140 environmental jobs and
would have helped to limit Mound's overall job loss to between 50
· and I00 positions.
.
'
The new figure means Mound's total budget would be cut by $39
million from $161 million this year.
About 1,600 workers are employed at the plant, which produces
triggers for nuclear weapons.
'
- The Associated PresS

)'IU1S~1
GUIDI

HOIIIl HOlUM!
1400-462·525S

'

I

I

'• ..rwTT'nm....-.;,.....,:......,....,...

, OPENING DAY
SUNDAY; APRIL 11
Gat•s Opt• at 'li:OO ·
Races Start at 1 P.M.

'

IASIIIS.TAIINER
. OFFERS
. •Over 100 Styles in th~
latest models to choose
from
•Color cOOrdinated ties and
CIIIDDleiDUDds

•Free Brochures
•Free Consultation
•5• employees have a
combmed total of over 80
years of experience in

OPEN lUES., WEn. .. THURS. EVENINGS TIL 5:30 P~M.

·,

.,

332 SECOND AVE.
GALLIPOLIS, OH • .

No alcoholic beverages.
Not reeponllble for Iones
or accldenta.
For more info. 388-9300
or388-9617

(614)~576

. OPEN MON. &amp; FRI. TIL S

..,.' .·,
..
'.

..
j•

I

'•·

THE ANSWERS YOU NEED...
AS CLOSE AS YOUR PHONE!
•

1993 &amp;·Me SIERRA

:$12,750

•Illness or Injury •Physician Referra~
•Health Care Events •Support Groups
A specially trained R. N. is on duty to answer your questions on

oaur ravck
oaurPJUa

health
care &amp; Inform you about available. services
.
'
. ..•.• .
11 am-1~ .pm 7 days
a week,
l
•

See ·aerb Smith Ot' Vernon Harvey
.

•

OHIO

..

1

•

••

•I
r

•

•,

•

'

.

-Weddings
.....House Contents for
-Family Reunions
Homeowners Insurance
-Graduations
-School Events
Transfer Smm, Super 8, 16mm, Slides Pictures
. to VHS Tape.
Also mass produce VHS tape to VHS Tape
Call for More Information
614·446-6939- 614-448-7380

..

'

HOLZEQ MEDICAL CENTER

SMITH'S GMC TRUCK CENTER, INC. ·

'

.

.• .

.

...
'

You need

I lI .

.. ,'

•

•

' ••

ofthese.

•

'

;

•'

THE STELL-\R F"l'\D A\".-\.IL\BLE THROUGH STAR BANK
Now }W t:an fD1l to new h!i:ltsin lhe iudAJJz&amp; .nJ lJJW...,;,C sdar ~ risk. )1~ )00 have easy ~mSS til yoilr m;ney wheri you llel!'d it 'Ire
perlirmance in a !lbi'amlind faDn "lllelWllr FaalaN l+ lllqh Stellar Fund shines on its own or serves as the oore ria~ investc
ment Jq!3Dl rnM wa~ it's an affilllable way to invest-just $!,(XX) t:an get
Star Bank alkJq }'ll ID iJMit lioe Z • in 11ri• IBRts,
wit1rut thl bunlm «i ~ ml niilliioic he oii116mllilllk
JWstarted AM, ifyou~ thl funds for yoor IRA~ }'ll won\ be
'l1is unKjlle five.plintnUual finl,..a.= *'•,meclemioualllul . dlargR!Ibe annual ..U)Ol&lt;it custOOy fre that ma;t ffiA aawn!B chaJge.
TolD! out om about 'Ire &amp;el1ar Fund or anyrithe Idler qualitypruc!Jm
rl diversificatin liB prtio is . . chillld - . : . . lmls,
'-·- -~--·
.·
.
"'~
~
.
•
.
il
tilt Star Bank lmeslllert Hrtmlio, caD or stql-~ )001' neigh1niml Star
Uu.t:mlUUJ.III ,9BOJI1bes, !Iaiii GIWIII: Wu:~ -IIIII!J 111m11D *'*- ,
with eipelilmd Jl' s • tlllls n• i c IB!uf dJell he-.
liD rfieyrla~ Wben it amos to~ yoorfinancial gmls, Star can get
'Ire SOOI1ar Fund aims ID nw•imia- JIU'II!Iam llllei - · ·_.}UIIIT to a tlyq start.
·
'
1

Your Complete Vide.o Taping Service

'

4.3 , V6, 5 · apeed,
1tandard Irena, air,
AM/FM
atereo
w/ca..ette, SK &amp;
SC, Clk., eliding
rear window, GVW • 5600 lia.

'

fit'leo r;M~~~

j

.

.

'•

"

FOR THAT VERY SPECIAL
PROMNIG.H T

fitting tuxedos
•Prices starting at '29.95
OIJer 100 Styles to Choose From. ·

VINTON UCEWAY

The final defense attorney was
adilress lhe jury Saturday, followed by the prosecution'.s rebuttal. After thejudge instructs !hem
in the law,jurors wiU get the case.
The defendants -Powell, Offi·cer Theodore Briseno, fanner Officer Timothy Wind and SgL Stacey
Koon - are charged with violating
Kin'g's civil rights during the
March 3, 1991, beating captured on
videotape by an amateur can)era·
man. If convicted, they face 10
years in prison and $250,000 in
fines.
The verdicts in the federal case
could carry enormous consequences. Rioting erupted last year
in Los Angeles after a state jury
acquitted the officers of nearly all
charges in·another trial.
Two defense attorneys Friday
sought to separate their clients
from the rest.
•
.
In his summation, Wind's auorney, Paul DePasquale, urged jurors
not to be fooled by King's compelling testimony, when he said he
didn't deserve lhe beating 'and tlllt
ofrlcers may have chanted a racial
epithet;
.
,
,"Thry Rodney King of March. 3,
1991,.was not lhe man who came
into this courtrOom, well-dressed,
well-composed, well-spoken and
well-pracuced to obrain your.sympathy," said DePasquale.

Lottery numbers

r'

REV. BENJAMIN CHAVJS ·•
board.
·
·
"The almost unanimous feed~ ·
·back was that his style of leader~
ship just would not work lvilh th~.
NAACP.
.

lO

'

.

of Jackson, T.H. Poole, vice chairman of the search commitlee, said
some board members were worried
~Jbout Jackson's image as a mavericlc.
.
" Mr. Jackson is the freelance
operator," Poole said. "lt was
style indicated by history. Ii had
nothing to do with skills.''
Issuing the Stalement with Poole
were Kelly M. Alexander Jr., president of Nonh Carolina liranches,
and Franklin Breckinridge, president of Indiana branches. All three
are influential members of th e
board.
The board members said they
had· received many calls from ·
"branch leydership and citizens in
general" who "expressed grave ·
concern" over Jackson's "administrative ability and temperamentill
compatibility" wilh lhe NAACP

menL''

I

135 PINE .STRE

a

~im~ombing ·sron: m llllreSt !hat
shoot 1ha Nol1h C.oliua city.
The 10- Dine black men and
one wbille-- wen: tiled by
AmJJCSty lqlc:matinial as ~ first
case ol US. political prisoners. A
fccfem appeals coun ovcnume4
lheiramvirJiom;jn 1980.
ln 1984. Chavis was Clergy
CXIClldinalor for Jrism's pesidentialcampaign
He bas a B.A. from die UnM:rsity OI;.North c.rotina, a divinil}l
degree (roin Duke University
Diviliity Sc hd ml Ph.D. in theology liual Howad Univmity. He is
married and the &amp;tbcr ol six cfrildrm.
In n:a:nl 'IINleb, lbe' 5l:attb narrowed to the four ciodidates,
rhongll JDUCb of the anrpioo went
toJrison
In die Friday S12'ti!J!!DI critical

·h·

By MICHAEL FLEEMAN
Associated Press Writer
LOS ANGELES ~ Rodney
King is a liar, and was a dangerous
· man who had to be clubbed by
police because he resisted arrest,
defense lawyers said as the end
neared in the federal trial of officers accused of violatin$ King's
civil rights.
.
"These officers do .not get paid
lO lose street fights," said attorney
Michael Stone, who represents
Officer Laurence Powell. "They
are·expecled to win. ... ·
"They are, after all, a thin blue
line that protect our law -abiding
communilles from the criminal ele-

May31.

'
: CLEVELAND (AP) - There
'f'lere two tickets sold naming all
five numbers drawn in Friday
*ight's Buckeye 5 drawing and
~ach winning ticket is worth
SIOO,OOO,the Ohio LOttery said.
; The winning tickets were sold in
Reading and North Jackson.
Here are Friday night's Ohio
Lottery selections:
Pick J Numbers
' 6-8-0
: (six, eight, zero)
Pick 4 Numbers
' 2-6'6-3
I (two, six, six, three)
BuckeyeS
3·7c33-36-37
(three, seven, thiny-lhree, thirtysix, lhiny-seven)

~

De
rans
King ·as··trial
·nears its end

•

.

i

afre

.
'

Nation/World
NAACP's ~ new leader knowtt for activism·
'

.

Klan rally
protesters
to face trial

'

_,.........

'••

•I

...

'

•

'

••
~

••
•

~

•&lt;

•.''
~

''

STAR
. .. Reach a the Stat

''·

.

MFnel.-.rl·FUND.

· .orwriteLI-idli1'vril·llll
••t. .
' .."l•r18llnld-.1a'IJS81a-. . NA,P.O.~lll8,Cin~ti,Obio,45f13.8972.

,.......=.._-::c::.: _.....

--..-· --·--

•

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

tn:rllf

n.~"-m·no~··ll'~ol!:lll~:..d •• ...., ... '

.'''·

�..
~

Aprilll,

.

•

1993

WA"PPGIU!il- One lNXIIIs

~NC

-

I

7

81! Third Ave., G..Uipolls, Ohio
(614) 446-2342

. 111 Cour.t St,P

4 ....

(61~} ~!1516

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

LETTERS OF OPINION arc welcome . They Sbolillllbe 11eH i1bD
·300 words. All letters are subject to ccliting and musi lbe ~ 'IOiOh
naine , addre.ss and telephone number. No uns\gned Roneu ·..um lbe
published. Letters sbould be in good taste. addre55ing n.- . mn
personalities:

-

•

: . It's happening now, resttaining ~ ch.oou\f lie I
•
(fhile prompting concessions to regi
pessues ..:J iiDierc:a p 2 •
~ adminisualioo 's laX atld budget JliOIIOSIIIs.
~~ The explanations are as familiar as die comprollliie •
u:
· ~~ it takes to round up· VOleS to get such IIICISIRII dH ; 0 g
• .- So, for ex$11ple, die administration bas offered 13 ..p 2_. ....._
~breaks OD PresidentCiinton's JR~ encqy~~a, ••"£ ., .....
i!D across-die-board levy with an exeeplion only for • · • ar-'a •
~lar 1119 geothermal power.
-: In reform ~· die 63 frcslunan House !)! ••• • •
7 lllll:ir •
"' enda in an e on to broaden !heir suppon. 'Diey" •i( z ' fie i6:a ~
lishing VIP congressional parking at w~
7 Aiop-1..
ling it trivial, alth(lllgh lhat is the pert travelers 'li1pllt tnt. 5ar 61 illll:y
on lallnpaid mailing privileges.
.
, · The freshme11 had vowed to be a .fon:e for~ • a , _.
WJtile they s~ short of rebellion, ~Y are p.stii'!K b-. r
~ Democranc leaden oppose.
e; ' Their J~:form plan seeks a 25 percent cut in die WI!Ji •
Js
~er ~~;t ~ve y~. Bu~that CO"!~CS with a. f~ W7
k
~~ o
31 es w o prov
consutuent semccs.
s
g
~lance for helping votets deal with .the govemii!C'JI!l iiiliidl. il -..
:pips congressmen deal·with voten.'
.,
'
~

._..s

•

*" .

7

z-

7

,

g.s

S: ~: A conservativ~ critic argues that ''lhe ~coastitpeat :srn.iDe .......

aiiould be ended for -die sake of ,reform. ' 'Caaewart, !he\· 1
·
• Ive problems, is Congress' No. 1 occupalion," aaillor&amp;icFda • •
a new Heritage Foundation book, ''The RlliiBJ Ons" lk S11JS .
ongress should concenttaiC on legislatioo 110 llllikc 10'
· .-k
of fiXing problems one voter at a -time.
.
t:T"()n:.:c--the budget, to placate WesiCm seoala'S, Oi!dQn ~~~ I a~ ...
her minin~ grazing fees on federal land use from llis iliilill
£
, allhoug his spokesman said the adminisiJatica :llill ; 7 " a.:
7

Con~ssional negotiaton .put back some of the ~-li .... p
,increases Ointon had proposed freezing, a change dlat• w a pej
'five-year budget savings from S8.billion to $12.7 ,billioo 1Jsll6 w 2 _.,
:well be revised again, but the revision in the budgct1"'81J1....,
'f
cession to federal employee unions that had lobbied ....
.
· iFII:
OLA freeze. ·
And when the broader question of freezing fcdeal iJSIY ID lld)t 0£1 fie
deficit was challenged in the Serwe, the vote •gliinst 1be •' • a 'Only 51-49.
.
: The budget resolution Congress p•wd before its "spill&amp; ~~~~~=*•-•
!S2.8 billion in fann program spending the House illld :a:d., 0£1. . . , _
•.tiaton said that, 100, was aimed at gail!ing votes fol' dsc a7 • P*W
;so. too, was the administtation decision to exempt fliCk c• • • • a
(Cthariol, .;nadc from com, from the proposed eneiiY iiU.
1 The budget decisions so far are preliminary, •n¥"10 •1 :r De ~a
:.,ills in Clinton's deficit reductioo plan are slil1 beinc AdfM·. '111: 7 's •
~solution is an oulline of spending and laX levels, afimSRp.
• Tradeoffs and compromsses are a way to buildbaolc;jqg...t._..-..
also are a signal from this Democratic president ldla ~~e·s" I . I
~ bargain to get things done, avoiding the hard line dial lllllllk.....,.. b
the last one. 16 years ago.
1 At the start of his l!llministration, Jimmy Carter ,ICI!lGss pep
!lis with no room for maneuver, whic:h led to his ddea • a dilllt~t
cancel politically popular federal riven and Wll« ;m~ _. • a..,_
'rilibusrcr in which Democrats joined in stalling his&lt;e:llaJJ 1•' z
l But th~ also is a risk in ttadcoffs and conccssillns, :Am: llsll Cl!l
tncourage othei' interests to demand their deal lara:, .as ·n Jl! . . . s-comm.itteeS .write speci~c tenns on ~nding and~ :n-:s Baa
p.e lobbymg will be most mrcnse. That s when ·me .,.,. · ••• -.iii.
ve to draw, and enforce, its boundaries on bargaining.
7

_a_..

rrooy

ere

J
I

'

'

...

'

:' ~------------~~----------------------,
I

·Berryls World

I
I

.

.

;

s

r

Spring meanderings
•

J -

or closer in Charlton. I suspect lhat cr&amp;cal of the Reds organization in
Osl M I ;. April S. a 2 PM
the new general manager will ' hiring a 32 year old as general
- Ctw - . . ...,!iedi Monone but to do so he will manager. A general manager bas ·to
=-~-r !
~I.JilllleOf . acquire
have to trade Belcher or Sabo for know the abilities of not only his
Osl jllfll'- . . . IRJIW to be - this player. Stories coming out of playen hilt those of the opposition
before making any trades. Looking
a fiww" 7, '
' n team and
at
fuJure tnides, fans, you have
+a-M p.e Adewta udl other
some
reason to be w&lt;rried.
ia ii5 :li · · • r.aJe for the ·
.
The
above portion of this article
•7 z
7-, ~ Rals. did not
was
wriuen
on Monday afternoon,
+ ... dlecom- the training camp indicate that our April 5th. ta'tl!r
the Reds played
ills Jal' ._.....,.. sude· some
new general manager is going to do Monrreal. Would you know, Rupe,
· n a ••
L
:W p
MS, La.
is this. Sabo, in the writer's opinion, the star of that J!liiiiC was Mitchell.
is one player lhat the Reds should He not only beat out a hit, he also
~ _. y_, l'tftz is; the new
retain. Sabc would play notwith, tossed out a player at home plate
&amp;II
nee al~­ .standing
any injury that he had. As and had two base hits. This is an
a7 Qoi• .,. fiml aadl in hu ·
a
matter
of
be should have had excellent start and he should be
zslac • Jf &amp; 32 Jea ol'dJ man• his injury fact,
healed
before playing awarded the game ball:
•
aaal . . . . .
last
year.
This
man
is
a
t:ype
of
Notwithstanding
I
have
not
· a 7 ._ pu ed several player a manager needs to mspire changed my mind one bit on this
.
. . - ..... ...,U'liDS his his teammates because of his hus- trade. Mircllell is at least 25 pounds
j
z ia Vc l7srm.. At the tie.
The question is, did general overweight. I would bet tliat his
die lllllk of O'Neil
manager Bowden make any inquiry weight would be closer to 275 than
into tbe health of Mitchell before 225.
making this rrade? Mitchell only
Dale C. Wamer stateS that I am
GK . . . a.a k scaioutr qucsplayed
I
00
games
or
less
in
'1992
going
to hjlve to eat a lot of Crow
tis 2 K 2 • inc-ingood
for
Seatde.
In
most games he had a !his season. I hope I do but I will be
"
al
r
•
--•-"Jie
. .J
-*
physical condition that prevented grcally surprised if this haopens. '
.. - JllaiiL. 4'1 ... flow: his playing more. I would bet all
Rupette. you should- be very
- . , llsll ,._kwiwcd lsr: had a
the
tea
in
China
lhat
Bowden
did
happy
that the ladies OSU basketh 7
lmeisllis fallladllie also
_
not
make
apy
inquiry
into
baU
team
was not defeated until the
1sas a wciak 'JIQWcl!l'- I saw
Mitchell's
heallh.
Then
the
obvious
final
game
of the NCAA touma,
'£ n ·.n_,...,..,,is.def.. ". I .
. .. Birdie lraded
qucstio~
arises.
Why
did
B~wden
.
ment.
The
girls
renlly plryed an
fOUL
£
..., D
has ace left handed pttcher? outstanding game. . ., ·
c " •
r cwtband- ~e
D1d he not know that he would
There was a tremendous tumout
aldidJi*r DIE w•\
have
to
get
another
l~ft
handed
in
fan support when the team
&amp;liE
'I • rl!lbeReds
.
pircher
in
Charlton's
place?
'
a;:ived
at Port Columbus. I am
. . . . . . illll:y diiiEliiDIM: a' left
As
stated
before,
look
out
for
a
wllndering
why the Mayor of
n 1 7,.: ... lkyaaclassitrade&lt;
of
either
Sabo,
Belcher
or
Columbus
and
of
ry •a · 'lkJ7 lild a SIOOPti perhaps Bip Roberts. I am· very Ohio were not inthetheGovernor
welcoming

.;1

FredW. Crow

_ . , . • • §

Jr.:

7

~---:.r~-:t:-::~

-·.-UUIU! . an

..,..lliis"

y-s. ""ra•ioNI

committee. This is the first lime
that a girl's athletic team fromOSU received .. national suppon. If
the male athletes are not careful the
ladies basketball team will be #I in ,
the eyes bt all OSU rooters.
.
As you may guess, the OSU,·
male b1got fans would say that this _
female team would not beat a good ,
class II high school team. What do.,
you think; Rupe? What do you'
thing Rupeue? Would the basketbaD team beat the boys team from
either Southern or Meigs High
School? I do not want to get into.,
this argument but you can 'write to
this paper if you have an opinion. •
From left field: Why should,
· everyone u'se white' toilet paper? :
Answer next week.
From right field: Beneath this..
stone, this lump of clay, Lies Uncle •
Peter Daniels, who too early in the:
month of May, took off his winter
flannels. (from a tombstone in
Medway, Massachusetts.)
•
In God We Trust, ·

Carry on,

Fred W.Crow
Editor's note , Long-time
Atlorney Fred W. Crow is the
contributor or a weekly column
_tor Tbe Sunday TlmeszSentinei;
Readers wishing to applaud, crit,·
icize or commeat on any subject
(except religiqn or politics) are.,
encouraged to write to M.r ,
Crow, in care or tb~ neWlipaper. ·,
.' '

'.

.!..!.::{,

. . . _ , W4

,•

•

•'

j

I I ........

;::t

•

,•

,.....

public school system.
Par~do:xically,

kids ·from
lndochmese reruJec families who
had arrived in this country only a

Ch k S
tone

0

riclla!:,'

P'£ .._ :.::.

,ft;.;;: ,._ ..._

k:wd---·

W

.:I

'

'•
•

,'1 )

.r
r
!

1
'•.
.'

I.

~
...- ·'""'·
'I'll have the Militant Feminists' Lunch.-

7

sliD

*:

.

. l.

•

. ·'

'

.

'.

.~

-· CINCINNATI (AP)- It ViOuld
~e more than ra_m to k_eep the
.faithful ~rom maktng theu Good
~day clunb up die Motmt Adams
hillsu~ toward Holy Cross Immac,
ulala Ch';lfth..
.
.
. The_ntualp~~Fnday.bas
· Jt bas SJ~ the Ctvil War, desptiC a
steady rasn. ..
The Rev. Rschard Parks; pastor
or Holy Cross Immaculata Church,
I~ ti!e first group.'9' ti!e srcps at
midmghL The tradinoo IS to say a
pra~er on ea~h step toward the
Roman Catholic c~~h ~at overlooks downtown Cmcmnau.

·Millard F. Addis

Sunday Times Sentinel Page A7

ascend hillsi~e

"When·! got to tbe top of the
steps there were to 400_to
peopie on the steps praymg, _ Parks
said.
.Nancy and Tom -Hoppius of
l:'ebron, Ky., said i~ -:vas the lOth
ume lhey have partiCipated m the

fffJ

step~

up the steps, Tom Hopptus lcePt ·hiS
brewery job longer than he expect,
ed. When he was finally let go, he
found.a new job rightaway.
· ''The Loid bas been very good
to us," Mn. Hoppius said.
· Parks was pleased that the
crowd included many young peopie. ·
''It's encouraging !hal the tradilion will bC ~sed on to younger
generations,' be said. ".We'll have
rour to five generation families
prayingthestepstogether." ·
· . The journey is meant to symbol,
· ·

in prayer .~ize Christ's ascent to Calvary!:
where he was crucified. .
.,
Many participants made tho
356-step climb from the botlom of I
the hill. Some joined the climb at~ :
street .abour halfway up !he hill, :
climbing about 150 steps to the •·
summit.
. .. . . .
. ·:
Church officials 'estinialed tliAt i ·· ·
7,000 people prayed the srcps Jasp
year. The Cll'ltom began dll'ing the :
on Good Friday in 1861, when ~
worried relatives began praying on .
tile steps for an end to the Civil :
War.
:•
'

, GALLIPOLIS- Millard F. Addis, 86, 914 Fmt Ave., Gallipolis, died
Friday, Apri19,J993 in J:lolzer ¥edical Center.
,
.
· Born April 21, 1906 .m Lawrence County, soo of !he laic Banon and
ritual.
·
Meuie Nance Addis, he was a retired pipefiuer ror die l'4iser Aluminum
"We
began
praying
iJse steps
··Corp., RaveJtSwood, W.Va. He was a 1ilember of die FJJ'SI Chun:~ of die
when
he
worked
at
Weideman's
Nazarene in Springfield, Pipefitten Local No. 97, and die Spnngfield
Brewery and it was about to
Mas!Jnic Lodge.
.
, .
close,"
Mrs. Hoppius said. "We
• Surviving: are his wife, Vemena Murdock Addis. whom he mamed
thought our luck would change·Jan: 21, 1928 in Ironton; IWQ daughterS, Mrs. James (Lf11d_l!ll) ~iedel of
and
it did.' ~
•
Leesburg, Fla., aDd Mrs. Robert (Joyce) Tho"!!as of G~lhpolis:. six grandAfter
that
fust
Qood.
Pri!lay·
trip
children, Mrs. Barbara Mellott, James M. ,Riedel, MIChael Riedel, Mrs.
1oyce PhiUips, Mrs. Debbie Smith and tlric Thomas; 11 great-grandchildren and one great-great-grandchild; and two sistm, Mrs. Ocora Boggs
of Columbus, and Mrs. Kathryn Beabout of Dunedin, Au.
• He was preceded in death by two brothers and two sisten.
,
.
:I
Services will be II a.m. Monday in the McCoy,Moore Funeral Home
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - . won't serve officially until the U.S.
': ,
"This .guy, Clinion, st11rted headquaners of !he 1980's;
Welherholt Chapel, Gallipolis, with Pastor Denny_ Coburn pfficialing.
Branstool, a former House•
Bill Cli~tton's presi~ential cam- Serwe confarms his nomination, he picking up speed" and it made a
Burial wiD be in Ohio Valley Memory Gardens. Fncnds may call at the · p!lign created. a 'spark that helped said.'
member and senaior for 16 years;
difference, Branstool said. ·
chapel Sanday from 3-5 and 7-9 p.m.
He leaves an organization that
the Ohio Democratic Pany gei out
commented
on various olher sub-:
Clinton spoke at a "Chairman's
has
about
$300,000'
in
the
bank,
of debt, departing Chairman
Circle" fund•raiser in Columbus in jects at his final meeting withj
compared wilh $206,000 in debts December 1991, before he was · repo!1a'S as chairman. , •
Eugene Branstool said Friday.
•
Bradstool held a news. confer- when he took over Jan. 25, 1991.
• considered the favoriiC for die pres, • However, he refused to b~
Branstool, in a speecl11ast week idential nomination. II dre\1' a big pinned down on personal prefef.!
ence during his last day in office to
'
to
the
pany's State E1lecutive Com· crowd . at $1,000 per person, ences for Ohio's 1984 races for
lalk
about
his
two
years
as
chair· POINT PLEASANT - Mary Vurl (Cottrill) Randolph, 89, of Leon,
governor and U.S. senator.
•
,
man
and
his
new
job
'BS .assistant mittee, credited the turnaround in • BransiOOI recalled. ·
died .Thursday, Aprij,8, 1993, at Holzer Medical Center in Gallipolis fol- .
pan
"to
our
good
friend!
in
labor,
secrerary
of
agriculture
in
Clinton's
Branstool
will
earn
·
'
abotif
He
said
there
were
other
factors,
lowing a brief illness.'
who stuck with us when times were such as the savinas from a move by $115,000 annually in his federi
Born September 12, 1903 in New Brighion, PA, sbe was a daughrcr of administtalion.
tough."
State
Sen
.
Harry
Meshel
of
· lhe party into a more modest offu:c . post. He can1ed $65,000 a year as
the late Rev. Lee A. and Theodosia C. (Pickens) Cottrill. She was a memHe
said
Friday
that
Clinton's
ber of the Good Shepherd United Melh,odist Chun:h, the Colonel Charles Youngstown will become chainnan campaign also helped because he from its Columbus skyscraper chainnan.
I..cwis Chapter-Daughters of the American Revolution, Anne Bailey Monday as Branstool reports for stitred· enthusiasm hope among traHomemakers, the United Methodist Women, and the Friendship Circle. A duty in Washington. Branstool
•
ditional pany contributon.
1922 graduate or Poi.nt Pleasant High School and a graduate of Marshall
Univers_ity, she was a retired school teacher with 35 years of service.
She was also preceded in death by her husband, Otis B. Randolph, and a
b,other, Clarence Courill.
·
Survjvors include two daughters, Mrs. Vala Sommer of Fern Creek, KY,
and Mrs. ·Rita Craig of Columbus. OH; a son, Douglas L. Randolph of
Leon; a sister, Virginia Orr of East Bank, WV; two brothers, Charles E.
Cottrill and Clair L. Cottrill, both of Point Ple&amp;San~ 11 grandchildren; 19
SARASOTA, Fla. (AP) - At . and the Twiggs, who have seven
great-grandchildren; and one great-greatcgrandchild.
Service will be held Monday, April 12, at 1:30 p.m. at the Good 14, Kimberly Mays likes to gossip other children, would have visitaShepherd United Methodist Church wilh Rev. R.C. Browning officiating. ·about boys and talk on the phone. ·uon rights. But after five visits,
And after five-years at the center of Mays cut off further visitations,
Burial will be in Morgan Cemetery in Leon.
a baby-swap batlle, she wants a say saying they were disruptive.
, Friends may call at the Wilcoxen Funeral Home Sunday from 7-9 p.m.
in where her life is heading.
The Twiggs respondy!l by
Kimberly wants t.o "divorce" claiming Mays abused Kimberly
Ernest and Regina Twigg, who and seeking custody of her. Mays
have been fighting for visitation · denied the abuse allegation and a
, REEDSVILLE • Melinda E. Smith, 87, a resident of Reedsville, died rights since learning in 1988 th~t judge refused to take her away
Friday, April9, 1993, at her home.
she was their biological daughter.
from him.
s........ $30~
Born in Crlindon, Wis., she was the daughter of lhe lale Alex ~d ElizAn attorpey for the .man who
trial
over
the
Twiggs'
visitaA
abelh Whisman Johnson. She auended the Success Chun:h or Christ: · ·· raised Kimberly sirice birth, Robert tion rights is set for AugusL
She is survived by two SOilS, Carl Sinith, with whom she resided, and Mays, told a judge last week of the
came up with the idea
Benjamin Smith, lndianapolis, Ind. Four grandchildren and one great- teen's plans to tty io terminate the of aKimberly
'ldivorce"
several months ago
. grandchild survive.
.
· Twiggs' parental rights.
afrcr
asking
Darlena
about adopting ·
Besides her parents, she was preceded in death by her husban!l, Harold
Although Kimberly has been in her so the three would be a family,
Smilh, three brothers and five sisters.
..
the spotlight a third or her life Mays said. Mays' rust wife, Bar·
Funeral service will be held Tuesday, 2 p.m. at the :White,Blower while the .two families battled in bara,
died of cancer in 1981.
Funeral Home, Coolville, with Rev. Joe Hoskins pfficiating. Burial will ~ourt, sbe remains in many ways a
John Blall:cly, the Twiggs' at10r,
be in Chester Cemetery.
· mystery. She has given depositiqns, ney, ~ida divorce ~ould be "a
' Friends may call at the funeral home Tuesday from 12:30 onlil the but bas never testified in court.
senseless sblnt.''
time of services.
Mays bas_shielded his only child
Mays cautioned Kimberly .about
· from publicity. Kimberly has been the stir it would cause and warned
allowed to answer reportcirs' ques- her about living witli the consequences, but she decided to press
age. ahead.

Departing chairman says Clinton helped erase debt ;r

Mary Vorl Randolph

Teen at center of baby
swap wants a normal life

Melinda·Smith

$199

R dh
0.

and growing up ·in a single-parent genetic supremacy, would have a '
family."
. field day with !hal correlation.
•,
Actually,
something
is
radically
Atag~ 5, there is a 9.1 StJread in
IQ points between "persistently wrong with an .educational system '
that perpetuates such a horrible •:
poor'' kids and middle-income inequity.
That is why I prOpose thai •
uc
ldds,
all
standardized
or noon-referenced ;.
The researchers also 'round that
few. years ago are s~assing the . "penisrcndy poor" kids carch hell tests below the secondary school
ach~evemcnt_Ievels of kids born_to with all kinds of anxieties and level be abolished for eight years;;
· third-generauon Americans.
stress (fear, depression, moodi, . The only value of a standardized'· '
I wrote about this educational · nen), all of which lower their t~sl is that it enables parents to·;
-'lc alc;s . _ . that paradox, and several of you either grades.
·
compare New York with New.l
• lise ati4' . . (..S llOsc three wrote or teleph~ned for informa,
I',ve got a radical proposal to Mexico and New Jersey. Period. . , ·•.
-~
..t)
~ve t1on about geumg a copy of the counrcract this educano11111 crisis.
Instead, students would go ·~
, ., Tlaoe; - ..,
study.
·· ·
Before presenting it, however, let through the first eight grades with •'
~
Now: a year l.aler, Michigan is me leave you with one stadsdc tllll , only crilCrion-refcrcnced tests, die -;
tills •
T
-~ bKk wsth an'?ther study that its you have never read anywhere else, kind sllldcnts have always lakcn to .
_,.. researchers claim ~vcs that "per, because it is so inflamnworily con- sec if !hey have mastered the material taughL
·.
.
,,
II:IIS _.fie • 7 ·s I ' !!Ci.woal sistent pov~rt ' is the primary
troversial. .
..
· to a lable pub~ · We al.sQ ilccd to learn what can .;,
, I • ck.
2 •aa iQibaft
·
cause of 19 .IC~;
. Accordillg
a;.....a .
I
say
clatm,
because
kids
by
the
Ed•qriOIJII Teldng Service, be done to assist ramilies - espen '1\
. _., .... die hom I
.
rv .
- af!F 7•
~
· owa--mcome rcfugee,Asian SAT sCorel correlate very hl&amp;hlY cially low-income black families:·: .
• af
P \Wisdom""'. f~J!Ii.Iies arc stlil.l!'athemalically with medial\ famlly inecmc: The - to a~t and incorporlite some, ...
~ng '.tbe ecpu~ve butts of all
higher the Income, lhe highe{ lhe,. of tbe Altan family 'values and to
Fi!3l..
. • - Ilk IIOIIe of mlddJe,tncomc k1ds - white or scora; tbe lo.,ver the income, the develop an educational sysrem thal·:'t
liE · •W' t Tq cdKasio.nal black - in the public school sys:
lower die ICCICJ,
educatel low·illc:ome minorltle~ u t.
I
il* . . .
CC
•
17
£OIIICS
ICOl
·
'
.
Y
l
_..,,le
.
..,
..
,
h
.
edJan
"
• •
~ ..
•
..
e .............. w osem
po!lucdvei_Y u mlddl~ and IIJ!per. •"i
·-aflleOii
)~IMi_:"iiM
"Family income," says tbe family~ 11n1 below $10.000 liiCOIIIO whileS.
·
' i4
Until we do lhlt, lhe only ihlnt"'
r !"':' 1 f; -. -• *• ' Y .i pa~ ·. Univcni7, .of Micbipn's Ore&amp;. J.
11e0re JUaber 0111be SATI tllln
• • • a • • a . a llllit cllil, Duoc:ail, ~~~ a far IIICilO Powerful black klda whoao aaedl1• f~Jnil~ we will produce u we lsead inro r., _ fl. S •
.W. .._ ..,_ · cmelarc ol a cllild's IQ·at qe S incomela above 150.000. AnhiD' the Zllt c:enuy is a lOll pneradllJI
y;
. . _ _ F ;ill lise A
... ' matemll educatinll. edmieiiV Jcnun. archiii!CI (I tbe tbeorv or of "CNJemlc falluiu.
- * i s ad ·. eextboolt
u =!':,!~~':v:~
;;;"~o·
LiOCL"
. ':'"Jk r , •*• tilE Consewa'IIIith a J'Wit•
· -2
75llliJ' ... slla.Ws IUtrong
Wli .,..
-krsua povCS!ty and'

,

•

•

..

I

,.,

I
l
'l

I

5

C~urchgoers

,.

I

·The poverty/lo~-IQ · connection

!.,
•

-

•

som_.,.,,. __

b

-

7

ByWALTERR.MEARS
. ("
~.:
AP Special Corres,..aeze
·~
· WASHINGTON- This is siiJIPOSCd IQ be die~ ~·' 5
... t ~bits die bard, and old Washington ways

EDITOR'S NOTE- Walter R. Mears, vic:lt pr . ,
_.
st (or The _Associated Pr• ;s, has reported o• W=' • &amp;"
ational politics for more than 30 yeilrs. ·

r

..-»es:

•

7

I

. . . .

Not everything is new in
this springtime of change

E

By Jack Anderson
.: and
Michael Binstein

M

--

A MEMBER of The Associated Press. ana llbe Amaricm
Newspaper Publishers Association.

Sunday Times-Sentinei/A6

· Powell's firm didn't mince
words .in ou,t,Iining its plan to its
new clients. Health-care reform is
the co~erstone of the president's"
cconom1c program, and we all rec~gnize that the Clinton Administra•
~on has chosen the pharsnaceutical
mdusuy as his 'public enemy No:
1,"' according to a copy of the
original proposal obtained bv our
associare Jan Moller.
"We need to sow enough do_ubt
about the pretenses of the Adminis·
tration's assault on pharmaceutical
companies lhat Mrs. Clinton's task
fon:e, other adminisualion poliCy. mall:en and key lawmakers will be
obliged to give serious considerati~ to our arguments," !he propos, .
al slales.
. .·
Powell's memo suggests drug
companies are willing to pull out
all the stops to Jel the administra·
lion to lake notice of their plight
Besides recruiting "third-party ·
signen for op-eds in key publica,
tions designed to reach key lawmakers in Washingk)n," !he coalition also plans to counter the
Administtalion 's grass-roots cam,
paign with one of their own. "We
will launch a targeted grass-roots '
effort to influence the decisions of
key lawmakers IIJld to counter the

-hi.

·.._,_.&amp;doC

PAT 1NHI1IJII!:AD
Assistant P.u'b11 ' -c
7

HOBART WILSON JR.

• Execuilve Editor

make ameRds with the public·and

Pomeroy-Mid.dleport.......Galllpolls, OH,.,Polnt Pleasant, WV

&gt;

Administration's grass- roots
P ,,
CliMan's llealth· with key policy-makers. Some,
machine," the memo StateS.
~ 1 ' c is J:Uealed to !he such as industry giant Merck &amp;
Though we were unable to reach
X
lbll&amp;yisb in the C!)., have gained favor wilh the
_!'owell directly, a spokesman for~
ri··s e
ue e1evarmg
one of RX Partner's member com'' I
ul"' 10, new levels.
panies, Charles Fry; said the focus •:
De 'llliiii:B
.!ailS see11 the new
of !he campaign was public rela-··
; . _. iil"s wcaailig Democrattions, not lobbying. " Our effon~
ic• •
really was to get a monologue':
W,l\t dl.is;apime cxamplc.
turned into an absolute deharc" oii
l k - 1111siieBuax pas sec:rethe role of drug companies in'
.l!iDilmy Caner
heaJth,care refonn.
·
• • • Now, lit l*llitt in a new administtation by agreeing to
Fry denies, as does the PM)\.
w ., • Z I 'li tdaM~
lhat the group was formed out or
• firm • limit future l'rice increases to the
'
l'b dim.._ ap die cause of rate of inflauon plus I percent on
any animosity between the PMA
GK ~fie -acfwinistntion's a)l its drugs. Others, frustrated wi!h
and its member companies.
......., '""-~•"--A' what they view as lackluster lobby,
"Everything we do is· coordi'l!lted
---~~- ing tactics by the indusay's major
j .. ~
wilh the PMA ... it's just a group of
.INIIt · 7 •y is IIDDm in need of mouthpiece, the Phannaceutical
interested .companies that want to
44
j1 ia lhe CJU"- Manufacturers Association, have
do what the PMA was uilllble to do
·
at this particUlar lime."
...... lhln·Ameri- shifted tactics.
Cl' S I
•iipK dime maken. A
Enter RX Partners, a coaliticn of
Powell might be picldng a fight
ilccd~ or spinliag: prices and six pharmaceutical fmns thitt has
with James Carville, Clinton's
-krp
bve fed given Powell's fmn a $2 million
campaign sttategist who now ac:ts
n
· .._lie ...,fnisuation budget to reshape the industty's
as an informal adviser. Carville
_. 0 &amp; · ID ll:dwc opem sea· image through a combination of
recendy warned that any Democrat
Hillary
and
"direct
out•
public
relations
who opposes the president's ceo-,.
. . . C .! •e •
"·
cr 's hti"CIIe
task .reach to )iolicy-makers." The camnomic pian can expect to be rreated:
iiEE is •iiddJ CliiJiCCIOit:d to make paign is being orchestrated by
accordmgly by the White House.
..U
co· • •Jtescription Powell, who is getting help osi the
One senior administration official
recenlly told us that the same rreat~.
lllnlp a • s ••
the overall project from several of his senior
kiiiiiP*' a
ment can be expected ror thoset· ·· ·
staffers. Powell has also enlisrcd
n "s fW! 1mgJlt ha$ sent the advice of another prominent
who oppose the health..care plan. ·
*-&amp; LWJ iies snamblfng to -Democratic strategist, Bob Beckel.
Effons such as Powell have''
-~-------~-----------,.--:-----:---;~~;J;i::;;l
caught few members of Congress
by surprise. Rep. Ron Wyden, DOre., a leading critic of the indus'.,
try, thinks these efforts pale in
comparisol) with what's to come . .
" By hook and crook, drug compa"~
nies are Dying to get out of a majoC:
·national reform effort. Once the,
, .. plan gets up here in -May; that's •
wben _dle fats in the rue...
.,
While Powell is seeking to takC:
· the drug companies' argument
straight to the people, phannaceutical giant JohJtSoti &amp; Johnson is tak,
ing its case strllight to its ,share"
holden. In a "Dear Siockholdcr"·
letter, J&amp;J laments the attacks lhat
Dernocralic policy-makers havelevied against the drug industry.
"In a climate of threats and mis,.
leading rhetoric, it has been
claimed lhat phannaceutical com ..
, panies earn too much profit .. We
disagree." The letter ends with a
call to arms: "We trust that you
agree with our position and, if so,
hope you will share your views'
with your elected representative.'' "
Jack Anderson and Michael
Binstein are writers for United
Feature Syndicate, Inc.

"'5

A Dlmloa of

.

April 11, t993

Commentary
Drug firms opt for ·an-

•

•

f

•) ·
am ami .y as

·

tight- k.nit as they come,.

WASHINGTON (AP)- Sip- ·
ping drinks ala privarc party hours
after his son,in,Jaw became president of the Unircd States, Hugh
Rodham was too tired to tallr. much,
but what he said stuck with hi,s old
friend. ·
,
"He looked at me. and quietly
Sjlid, 'My daughter is a real special
girl,"' said MJinny Grubb, 83, of
Scranton, Pa. ''He dido 't say much
else !hat night. Didn't need to."
Rodham's "special girl,"
Jiillary Rodham Clin10n, is the oldest of three children. raised by a
loving, funny, rcasing and sometimes curmudgeQnly father, and a
molher who stayed home with the
kids and larcr became the idol of
her only daughter.
The children put careers on hold

.
and traveled hundreds of miles in
the last three weeks to be at the
bedside of their falher, an 82-ycarold retired drapery ~r 'lrlso died
Wednesday after suffenng a stf9ke March 19.
They were raised in the Chicago
suburb of Park Ridge, a place
suaight out of a 1950s TV sucom.
Most of the familieS were white,
Republican and large.
"There must have been 40 or 50
children within a four,bloclr. radius
of our house and within f(lllf ;years
of Hillary's age," the first lady's
molher, Dorothy Rodham, told The
Washington ·Post in January.
"They were all together, all the
time, a big extended family. There
were more lsoys than girls, lots of
playing and competition."

lio~ltl:~u~hr:t~i:X:.~r

~J~~~i~~~=~ ~~:~p~~=~

'l•

her life.
"But there's still a little girl
there who likes to cuddle," he said.
She likes boys and boating, can
be a ham,~ is active in g~nas­
tics and volleybalL
"But tallr.ing on the phone is her
greatest pastime," said Mays, a
roofmg salesman. ·
· The ordeal has taken a toll on
the lean, hazelzeyed eighth-grader.
For a time, sh.e became moody,
withdrawn, argumentative and her
grades slipped, Mays said. She bas
been in counseling and is now back
on track, he said.
.
Mays and his wife, Darlena, me~
with teachers Thursday about
preparations for Kimlply to move
from middle school to high schooL
"AU indications from reports
were that she was moving along in
pcisitive directions in every walk of ·
her lire." Mll¥s said. •~She h
socializing wonderfully; she is well
liked; she gets along with her
peers; she gets along with her
teachers. She is doing very well.''
Kimberly was switched at birth
believe sanctions are wonhwhile with the Twiggs' child in a small
and necessary despite their unin- Florida hospital ·in suburban
Wauchula. ·
·
tended victims.
When the other child died of a
Expecting sanctions to-topple
tyrants is "too tough a standard," heart defect in 1988, genetic tests
Chapman said. In his view, it is showed . she wasn't the Twiggs'
enough lhat they build international biological child.
consensus against tyrannical
In 1989, the families agreed
Kimberly
would remain with Mays
regimes.
.•

"'/

'

0

E.
.

program.

Rather than hitting the seats of
power, the blows sometimes have
landed on the heads of !he humble: '
In Pori-au·P~ince, Belgrade and
Baghdad, the wages of Sinful governments are paid by citizens struggling to keep fed, clothed and
healthy amid growinll shortages
and soarin$ inflation.
~The miJOr goals of !he sanctions
- !he ouster of Saddam Hussein,
peace in Bosnia, the return of an
elected Haitian president - have
not been achieved. In fac:t, sanelions may have bolstered the
reJimcs in Iraq and Serbia.
Some specialists in international
relations question whether the
Security Council. no Iqnger hindered by 'superpower confmnlation,
hu aclminiltered its tough judg- '
menta without lhinkin&amp; deeply
'enough about their eff~.
. Others, auc11 u Johri ChC' •a
scholar at the International nsllwte ·
. for SttaiCJic ACfeirs in London,

J-..«
\$~00\'

lUll \ QUICK SAVINGS REBATE

IIV
PAY.

. .

.

=-HOME
rl
. . OWNER
,

......

.........,

··'

... ,.....

•

lfs never been easier to enjoy .the unequaled performance and reliability of
a Trane Weathertron" heat pump system. Just buy a Trane XL 1200 heat
pump, air handler and electronic air cleaner before May 31;1993 and receive up to $250 in Quick SaYings Rebate checks
on the spot.
·
As one of the world's premier heat pumps, the
XL 1200 comes with an exclusive manufacturer's
10-year limited warranty on compressor a~d coil,
plus two years.on parts. It also has a high efficien~
~.: ·' , ·
cy rating of up to 13.0 SEER Hurry. to _your Trane
dealer for up to $250 in Quick
· ·,
Savings Rebate checks today.
, _ , .,

c,.••

· $I 50 on XL 1200 HP. $50 on air handler. $50 on EF air cleaner.

·. •S4-1'74-I296
,__ _ . . . 177 ....
Mulch ~vllllble

;:::....-....

Offer not available' to con~ractors and builders.

...

WARNER HEATING
A.No.· cooUHG
'

CHESTER
1~767-4223

v

f

·,

.

It's Hard 7b Stop A '1hlne."'

Bulk

.'

•

GD UPTO $250 BACK'INSI'AIIIlY FROM
YOUR PAIIIICIPATING1RANE IJE*I •R.

S.U&amp;ed l

'.

,.

~z::--~=::::;:;-)

DID YO
KNOW•••?
.LAWNLORDS
MOW!!

.

.,
.,

.,

Some experts question
whether sanctions work
By ARTHUR ALLEN
Asllociated Press Wriler .
An AP news analysis '
,
UNITED NATIONS- From
its carpeted chamberS ()n the East
River m Manhauan, lhe U.N. Security Council has upended millions
of lives in the past two years with
edict upon edict intended to punish
pariah states.
·
Washington has led the way as
the council ·used economic sanc,
lions to hammer on the govem,
ments of Yugoslavia, Iraq, Haiti
and Libya, amorig others.
. U.S. officials now are weighing
sanctions against North Korea for · .
its refusal to permit inspectiOns that
might reveal a nuclear· weapons

.,

'

J -.

·'

�,

Ott Point PteUant. wv

ApriJ.11, 1883

llftl
PEPSI·COLA
PRODUCTS

STORE

. Monday thru Sunday'
......,......a.AM·1Q PM

.,.,

2 LnER

aonu

.

·.

·. . ·

.

April 11, 199~.

"'
•

•

•

~

•
,.•

~

.

-

•
•

89(

.· 298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH: .
WE RUEllE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
'PIKES &amp;OOD SUN., APR. 11 THRU APR. 17, 1993

~~ .. ~tntinel· Section B;

Along the River

•

'

RC COLA .
PRODUaS ,
•

24 PAK 12 OZ. CANS

. $459

.(HICKEN . .

·

Leg Quarters.....~...............La.
CHICKEN

. · .

·

-

Breasts. . . . . . ~. . . ~. . . . . .La.

SELIO

·s189

B~ELESS BEEF

Steak~. . .~-·---·La.
BEEF
. . $289 ·
Steak. ~. . . . . . . La.
~ELESS BEEf . . ·
$499
R1beye SteaLu.LB. .·. .
BONELESS BEEf BOnOM
· . $2 59.
Rou Steak..........ta. .

·39-C

•

CREAMETTE
ElBOW "
MACARONI

-· .

CHICKEN

.

2 .s1
CREAMETTE
.
. SPAGHETTI. ~ -

Liver

'

.

LB. BOX

2

$1

·ARGO PEAS
or GREEN .
, BEANS
·16·17 oz.

51

4
Bananas. .~...........................
. La. 39
BROUGHTON'S

·

$ S9

1
PARKA! . :. ·
$
Margar•ne.....__La. 3 1
MORTON •
_ ' . (
. . $119
Chips___--:.REG~
TV D•nners. . . .9.s-1ooz. 69
. _.
$ .ORE·IDA
·
·
·
Mlxes.... oi 2
.
. 1 Crinkle Cuts....:.-.32 oL ·.99
. ·c
.---.2°A. Milk. . . . . . . . . . . . .GAL.

·DOG
FOOD

'

' .

.

s.199 s1zt .. ·

-•

"..

·20 LB; BAG

....."..

$299

•

LUNCH MEAT

89.~ !i

I

. .

conoNnLt

TOMATO JUICE

.· 2/$1460Z.

BATHROOM TISSUE
12 ROLL".
PAK

$2.49

DOMINO SUGAR .

.· $ )69

· take hqme. Here, Tuppers Piains .Elementary
fifth-graders work on their projects. (T·S photo ·
by Jim Freeman) ·
·

.

•

:
By JIM FREEMAN
Teacher and student approved
•
. Tlmes-~ntinel Stair
Students and teachers both seem
• POMEROY - Candlemakin~, to like the program.
quilting and basketweaving aren t
"I think i\S great," Tuppers
JISUal subjects for todafs elemen· Plains Elemenlary Teacher Patricia
'fllrY school sbldents. ·
Chapman said. ''The ki.ds look for; However, most Meigs County ward to it." .
. f
I fill out the registration orm
fifth-graders are exposed to those
'Skills, and more, for one day and send it back as soon as· it
. )hrough theo'Yesteryear' program comes in, Chapman said.
:!Jeld at the Meigs County Museum
Students unanimously agreed
,m cooperation with the museum that 'Yesteryear' was a pleasant
'.and the Meigs County Board of . and educational distraction from
Education.
.
.
the day-to-day classroom expe'ri-

.

become .adults.
In fall of 1985, the program was
An interesting factor in this pro- changed in that, instead of taking
ject is that 19 percent of the stu· the program to•the. schools, the
dents who panicjpated in genealog- schools came to the program. Furical research choose this project ther, it was decided to offer
again. This emphasizes that stu· 'Yesteryear' to fifth-grade students
. dents want to learn about tile palit only.
·
to be better prepared for tomorrow
After dates are confmned with
in addition to being interested ln ·each school, the RSVP staff and
their heritage.
volunteers concenttate on develop. .' Yesteryear' is structured to ing the 'skill' sessions for children
en~ourage all students to prepare which Include proper work space,
wntten reports about their 'an' or hand-out materials take-home pro'skill' or for the teacher to have jects and visual ai~.

.... · ... iuir~~:~t~e~;o~ro~d!cft~~~~~- ·· ~~i··ve· ntlver ~ad·c:-- noodles · ~~ ~~n~~=iJ~~ --q~i~~~~o~~~~;~Js3·'J~~~~
t~m the Retired Seniors Volunteer be. fore," Molly Hemes, a Tup~rs English, speUing, writing, researth . ing ca~dlewicking embroidery
gram (RSVP) who come dress Plains Elementary student S&amp;ld. and history. and are di~layed at steociling, chair caning. genealogi:
in. dressed in historical attire, to Nearby, a f~llow stud~t. ~rystal the museum. School wmners ~e cal research, leather craft. tin
:demonsttate trades and Skills com- ·Bennett, mtrrored Hemes com- honored eac~ fall at a ftCepuon punch, Victorian Christmas omamon in early Meigs County.
. .menL ·
.
.
, hosted by RSVP a,nd fiiUSeum rrients, scherenschnitte and ra11 bas·
RSVP Coordinator Jeanne
'fhe poruon .o r tul!e sp.ent on lnJSI,eeS.
.. . •
:
•
ket making, Each work stiluon is
·Braun 'stressed the importance of . Metgs ~unty htstory u ~JOYab~e _ .~The p,oar~ J~rpo.se ts to limited to five students which
volunteers. .
to the children as they h'ear prevt· preserve colihty htstory. and teach allows students the time and indi. "We couldn't do a thing without ously unknown ll!les .of their~ Appalachian cnlfts," RSvP Direc- vidual attention required to com~
the volunteers," slie said
of ~e county. A sense of pride m tor Alice Wolfe said:
plete their projects.
·To ensure that students learn on~ s past must be ~ught before
One of the maJor goals and
Each ·ve~teryear' wor.kshop
from the program, -Braun said she chtldren can have pnde m them- requests throughout the years has includes two work sessions with a
'asks quesuons afterwards.
· .
selves and surroundings wlien they been the sharing of senior know I- snack break between sessions a
'·
. ~dge bf providing arts and craft museum tour and a short hist~ry
~~uon to grade school students lecture about Meigs County.
m Metgs Count.
Each student has a take-home
Apparently "Yeste~ye~· is .a project at the-end of the session.
su.c~~ful program. It ts Its~ m For example, in leather craft , a
the Dtreetory of Interj!eneralional leather coaster and wrist band· in
Pr~gra11_1ming" pubHsh~d by the tin punch·, a picture suitable 'for
U~JVers!tY o.f Missou_n m Kansas framing, and m quilting, a pillow
~ttywhteh picks.and lists outstan~- . top. In addition, each child rc;;ceives
mg m~rgenerauonal programs m a wtitten hand-out which includes a
the Umled States.
·
history and ell:planation of each
· craft.
'
. History or program
'J.'he Meigs County Retired
'Yesteryear' now in its'eighth
Sentor Volunteer Program (RSVP) year involves 264 students from 12
received initial funding in 1973 and sch~l.
now has an enrollment of 300 vol·
The program also seems to pack
unteers with more than 60,000
hours of volunteer time contributed
yearly. .
·
'Yesteryear' was conceived by
Braun in 1985 and a traveling ' ,,
'Yesteryear' spent one-half day
each at four grade schools in the
county.
Much like today's program, vol·
unteers and staff demonsnated and
shared the art of quilting, kraut.
EMBROIDERING
Cheater
Elementary
fifth·arader
Kesha
lllaking, a one-room school, music,
'
1
· Counll worlui on embrolilerlnl a deslp wllh some pldance from butiermaking and shoe cobbling,
. RSVP volunteer Dorotby DoWDle. (T·S photo by Jim Freeman)
except that they conducted the pro. gram at the schools.

.

plenty of bang for the buck -. Life Christian School.
Serving as RSVP volunteers are
RSVP has expenses of about $600
each year the program is held. A Dorothy Long, Helen Bodimer,
charge of $2.25 per student which Donna Grate, Gladys Brothers.
covers the costs of the individual Betty Wcyersmiller, Rev. Willianr ·
· take-home project is absorbed by Middleswarth, Eva Robson,
the schools.
. catherine Crist, June Ashley, Pat .
Schools participating are Wehrung, Nettie Boyer, Geraldine
Riverview, Chester, Bradbury, Cleland, Dorothy Downie, Helen
. Tuppers Plains, Harrisonville, Fisher and Margaret- Parker, presi·
Pomeroy, Rutland, Sali.s~U!Y· dent of the Meigs County Pioneer
Racine, Syracuse and ReJOtcmg .and Historical Society.

·

· TIN PUNCHING - ·~atthew B11yles, a Tuppen PlaiDs Eleme:ii~
tary ftfth·grader, uses a hammer and awl 1(1 punch a deslp on a till
sheet during a recent 'Yesteryear' presentation at the Mf1JS CouniJ
Museum. (T·S phOto by Jim Freeman)
'
-- ·~
~r,

.... ,

.,

••

.."

GROUND

BEEF

.,•

•
'

•

-•'

•

•

••
'

••

~

\

•

j

'•.

10 LB. PACKAGE

•

&lt;

•

..•
•

,,.

,~.

...
•

."'

.'

GROUND_ ..,.
,.
CHUCK

.

•
t

•w

.,

.l0 LB.. PACKAGE
.

5LBS...

LEATHERWORKING- Students taking
part in the ' 'Yesteryear' leatherworking work·
shop made a change purse and wristband to

•

•"

10.7S
II

•.•

.

•

--~~_.~
. IMIA~-=~-::.:=.~:~--::.-:-...- - - - 1
·------ivvrvlt-----....

•
•

-••

~~~CAN

·r~

•

..

•

.

.•
.

SUNSHINE
..

of RSVP Volunteer June Ashley while Leah
Sanders, right, works on her own basket. (T-S
photo by Jim ~reeman)

jPreserving
the
pastthrough
'Yesteryear'
-

•••

LB. JOX.

•

$ 13~

, . BASKETWEA VING - Rag bask'et weaving
-' is one or the many skills demonstrated during
; the 'Yesteryear' program. Here, Carrie Sheets,
• left, works on her. basket ·under the watchful eye
' .

,·s15
. 90.· r~
·•

.

tro•l, Aadrew Rolli••• J .. tla Delacna ~

. •.

Stne Weeb lltldJ aid ...... (T-1 , . _ 'J ·
Jllll .........)
.•
:
•

•

,,

t•'

•.

'I

�1

.

..

....

-

~

....

.·

'

nmn-sentlnel •

I

'

.t

April 11, 1993

1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis; OH....Polnf Pieasanl, WV

POINT ,PLEASANT -

The

Jllrellts of Susan Hayes and Slulwn

~'$)' announce the enpgetl)elll
children.
_____ or their
and forthcoming ..m..,.;.....

susan is lhe daughter of MJ:. 111c1

~~~rw:-.S~
a 1992

Scllool,

gradua~. of

PlrketsbuJg Beauty Collep aild is ·

SHAWN PETRY: AND SUSAN

Tu-Endie-Wei Park in Point
Pleasant. The ceremony will be
open for all .friends of the families
who wish to share in the celebration.

Program slated
.
. .

By EDNA WHITELEY

GALLIPOLIS - The following
are activities and menus for ·April
12-16 at the Gallia Coun1y Senior
Citizen's Center, 220 Jackson Pike.
Monday, April12
of Gallia Academy H1gh School
10 a.m.- Walking
and is owner of Southern Dry Wall
10:45 a.m. - Laugh in
in LOuisiana. ' ·
11:30 a.m. - Blood pressure
Grandparents are Alfred and
1 p.m. -Chorus
Zelmalee Vallance, Wilbur and
Tuesday, Apri113
.Louis Dennis, Charles and Grethal
10 a.m. -Walking .
Patrick and the late Tom and
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. - Quilting
Corinne McNeal.
The open church wedding will
10:30 a.m. - STOP/Exercise
·12:30 a.m. - Matinee ·
. be held May 15 at Faith Baptist
· Wednesday, April14
Ch!Jl'Ch at 2 p.m. A reception will
9 a.m. to 3 p.m. - VITA
follow in the church fellowsh ip
10 a.m. to 3 p.m. - Adult day
room.
care
11 a.!JI.- Birthday parly
I p.m. - Garden club
.
Thursd~ April IS
bart.
!Oa.m.-W
·ng ·
Wedding plans are incomplete
10:45
a.m.
Bible
study
at this time and will be announced
·
II
:30
a.m.
Quilting
at a later date.
I :30 - Blood pressure
Board of trustees
Friday, April Ui
10 a.m.- Walking
· 10 a.m, to noon - an class
1-3 p.m.- Craft class
Me:nus consist of:
Monday : Baked steak/gravy,
buttered potatoes, carrot/raisin
salad, bread, tapioca,
Tuesday - Beef tips/grav,y,
whipped potatoes, sliced beets,
bread, icc cream.
Wednesday·- Porkettes/dressing, whipped potalOes, green beans,
coleslaw, dinner rolls. cake' and ice

Dennis-MeNeal
GALLIPOLIS - Kevin and San-

lira DO:nnis of Gallipolis, announce
the engagement and upcoming
marriage of their daughter, Wendy,
to Shawn McNeal, son of Fred and
Garnet McNeal of Louisiana.
Miss Dennis is a 1990 graduate
of Gallia Academy High School
and is majoring in Business and
Accounting at the University of.
Rio Grande.
Mr. McNeal is a 1_9:90_~ua~

·· BUFFET
This Particular Sunday Buffet,
~· We Will Be Offering:
•Honey Dew".Ham
(sauce optional) &amp;
sliced to order
•Bar-B.Qued
Pork Ribs
•Leg of
Lamb
(w/mlnt

You never know.

But, you can always
be sure.
.

-

---"""":

.

sauce
optional)
•Prime Rib
of Beef
(sliced to order)

_. ·Roberts-Capehart
POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs. Her·man Roberts, Pomeroy, announce
the engagement of their daughter,
Linda J aye Roberts, to Ron Allen
Capehart, son of Ruby Capehart,
Chester. and the late Edward Cape-

creani.

MONQMENT
COMPANY
INC.
COUNfY

.Marinko-Siirivers

'

.

1

kindergarten registration·dates
WILLOWWOOD - Regislration
for kinderganen in the Symmes
Valley District wiU be May 4-6.
· Parents may register at the
building closest to where you live.
Symmes Valley 112 (WBterloo) will
regisier May 4, Symmes Valley #3
(Scottown) will register May 5, and
Symmes Valley 11-1 (Mason) will
register May 6. The time fpr each
will be from 9:30 a.m. to 3 p.m.
. Parents "! ust bring t~e child's
tmmumzauon record, birth certifi.cate, and Sociitl Security number to
"the registration. ·
·
Tho~e registering for kinder-

ReaeMJationa
Encouraged!
~ tfUP

,•·

»e ...., a

on

Symmes Valley announces

57·59 Court St., Gallipolis
446-9545

!

; MIDDLEPORT - Tammy
A reception at Confluence Park
·Marlnko and Jeffrey Shrivers were in Columbus honored the couple
united in marriage at Linworth before a wedding rip to Disney
Road Community Church in World in Florida. The couple
Coiu.mbus with Terry Lewis offici- resides in Columbus.
ating. ·
. The bride is a 1984 graduate of
.· The bride is the daughter of Mr. Lake Catholic High ·Sc.hool in
,and Mrs. John Marinko, Mentor. Mentor. She is attending Ohio Slate
·The groom is the wn of·Mr. and University in Columbus working
Mrs. Bernard Shrivers, Middleport. on a master's degree.
· Rebecca Takoe, Toledo, was
The groom is a 1983 graduate of
maid of honor with bridesmaids Eastern Hjgh School. He has
€hristine Ceriboga, Cleveland, arid recently obtained li master of art
Diane Bonnell, Alabama.
degree in psychology. He is also a
,: Mark Shrivers, Middleport, student at Ohio State University
served as his brother's best man . ·worlcjng his doctorate. He teach· 'Ushers were Jay Marinko, !)roilier es freshman psychology at Ohio
of the bride, and Scott Applegate, State UniverSity. ·
both of Columbus.

•

~ Oscar's 1?Jstaurant

. MEIGS
DISPLAY YARD NEAR
POMEROY-MASON BRIDGE
JAMES A. BUSH, Mgr.
PHONE 992-2588
VINTON, OHIO
DISPLAY YARD
MAIN ST.
JAY and JOE MOORE, Mgra.
PHONE 388-8603

Thursday - Spanish rice, cheese
cube, succotash, cole slaw, bread,
sliced pe;~Ches.
Friday - Shepherd pie, broccoli,
spiced apple ring, bread, oatmeal
cooldes.
.
· Make reservations by calling '

•Turkey •TIIIpla Fillets
eCre~m Baked
Chicken.
•Fried Shrimp
•Salmon
Soufflet
•Noodles
(homemade
chicken) ..
·•Mashed Irish
·Potatoes
•Deviled Eggs
•Assorted Salads
&amp; Vegetablft
•Soups &amp; Homemade
Bread •Desserts

MR. and MRS. JEFFREY (TAMMY) SHRIVERS

For o/. of a Century•••
. OSCAR'S, OF COURSE
Remem~er, Et~ery Sunday u "Thanlugiving·Day"

LOGAN

8

:!:
..•'1!·-

·Meet the Team·

. garten must -be 5 years of age by
Sept. 30. 1993. Kindergarten is
required before entrance into the
. fust grade.
.
,
·The school nurse will be present
· to' check immunization records and
birth certificates. Immunizations
required by Ohio Stale Law are I
measles; I Rubella, I mumps, 4
'DPT,,and 3 Polio. The binh ~ertifi­
cate must have the state seal on it
and a Certificate of Birth from a
hospital will not be accepted. A
biith certificate can be obtained 81
the county health depaftm·ent in
which the child was born.,

GALLIPOLIS - The Mid-Ohio
Valley Chapter of the Society for·-,
Human Reso~ Management was
recently nouf1ed \hat the chapt~r
has been awarded ~e I992 Supeno~ ·Ment Award. !b1s award recog~1es excellence ~~ chapter ope~anons and a ~mument to prov1dmg outstandmg prognuns and ser:
vices to members .of the S,ociety for
Human Resource Mana{!emenL
Ronald L. Peters, vice president
for Member and Cha)ller Services
of the Ohio Society ,lor Human
Resource Management, in his lener
to Arthbr D. Fulks, Mid-Ohio Val. ley Chapter president; stated that
" by achieving this award, your,
chapter distinguishes itself as an
outstanding organization dedicated

By SAMU£L MAULL
Associated Press Writer
NEW YORK- A baby sitter
present on the day Woody Allen
allegedly sexually abused his 7year-old daughter said Allen and
the girl disappeared for 20 minutes
and the girl was missing her under· wear when they retumed.
Another baby sitler also at Mia
Farrow 's Connecticut home on
Aug. 4, the day of the alleged
abuse, testified Friday that she had
seen Allen with his head on the
girl's.lap.
.
Kristi Grou:ke recalled putting
Dylan's underwear back on the girl
after she reappeared with Allen.
Farrow had warned her to keep an
eye on A:llen when he waS around
Dylan,Grotekesaid. .
.
The sex abuse charge came
eight months after Farrow learned

,•"'!'· ..

••

E~ T~

Day
Vendor?s Fair

0

POMEROY - The Meigs Counthe fol. lowing stops next week:
·
Tuesday - Americare, 11:3012:~0 p.ni.; Darwin, 1-2 p . ~. ;
Burlingham, 2:~0-4:30 p.m.; Wildwood Estates, 5-6 p.m ..
. Wednesday - Racine, noon-4
Falls, 5-7 p.m.
~:~~~':·~-· 1 J,T1uppers
Plains, 1-3
p.m_:;
4-7 p.m.
CANDANCE HARRISON and KEVIN ULBRICH
Friday - Maples, 11:30-1 p.m.;
,.,
•'
Overbrook, 1:30-2 p.m.; Pomeroy
Pike, 2:30-4:30 p.m.; Baum Addi·'' .
tion. S-6 p.m. ·
•
'
Saturday - Rutland, 9-1 p.m.;
the
Carleton
Church
on
p.m.
at
• POMEROY - Mr. and Mrs .
Charles Van Cooney announce the Kingsbury Road in Pomeroy. All .Danville, 2-3 p;m.; Salem .Center,
3:30-5:30 p.m.
wedding of their daughter, Can- family and friends are welcome.
dance Hartison, Pomeroy, to Kevin
Ulbrich, Shade, on APril 23 at 6

ty Bookmobile will make

..

'

,..

Harrison-Ulbrich
.

'

·Food distribution·
·. dates announced
•
.: MEIGS-GALLIA - The Gallia-·
Meigs Community Action Agency
be' distributing applesauce.
butter, vegetarian beans and dried
beans to persons holding food commodity cards on Tuesday at the fol{owing locations:
. Meigs County: Meigs County
Fairgrounds, Tuppers Plains Fire
Station, Page ville Town' Hall and
ihe Racine Fire Station.
·
: DiStribution will begin at
approximately '9:30 ~. m . and last
until noon or until the supply is
c;xhaliSied whichever comes first.
- oallia County: Gallia Co~nty
Fairgrounds, Gallco in Cheshire,
~ · Carmel' Baptist Church in Bidwell and the Crown City Fire Sta-

FREE

THE ROYAL PALACE ·

}mODLAND .
r.- -· ': l

$2 00"~

1

I 1
lri
I OFF I~
I FAMILY I
I COUPON

.
...
. Distribution will begin at

IBI!G.~

I YOUPAY

approximately noon and last until ...
2:30 p.m. ot until the supply is
~Uired, whichever comes (ust
Persons pic_king up for others
must bring a 11gned note from the
person in addition to their rood
canmodily_card. .
. .
Jlring a b~J or contaiDe,r for

·

. 1, $10.88

.

· ~: THE FACTS ON AIDS - Bettina HuJihes,
~'lllrector or the Jackson County Red Croao'II'IS
:.the maio speaker ror the AIDS iia Appala~hla
~~onrerence sponsored by the Sodal' Work pro:' ram at the Unlvefaity or Rio Grande last week.
ughes presented facts and pertlaenl informa-

.

.'

I

.

1.(12ll00111)

· .

,.
•

•
0

'

.

-~ - : -

,,

'

.

~

-

GALLIPOLIS -· Juaquime J .·
Justice, housekeeping aide 111 the
Holzer Medical Center, was named
· March Employee of the Month
according to Charles I. Adldns, Jr.,
chief executive officer.
Justice is a graduate of North
Gallia High ~chid and joined the
hoUsekeeping staff in March, 1984.
Justice's nomination to be
Employee of the Month was $Ubmilled by the evening shift on the 4
West Nursing Unit.
A resident of Vinton, Justice is
the son of Lassie Nell Hall of Gal-

Cincy schools may start
early AIDS education
. CINCINNATI (AP) - · Cincinnati Public Schools ·may start
teaching kindergartners to avoid
contact with blood under proposals
· for earlier AIDS education, ·a news·
paper reported Saturday.
Recommendations· for earlier
and more detailed AIDS education
are included in a draft of revisions
to the system 's curriculum on sexually transmitted diseases and
Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome.
The Cincinnati Enquirer reported that it obtained a COP.Y of the
proposal , which is sull being
reviSed. The proposal could be submitted to the school .board for .
action later this year, the newspaper said.
·

lipolis, and the late Harry Justice.
He has one brother and four siSterB.The GREAT program was initi;;
ated seven years ago at the Holzct
Medical Center to emphasize guest
relations, education, attitude and
teamwor!&gt;, which are reflec~d in
the care and concern shown for
patients, their families, visitors and
co-workers throuj!hout the Hospital . This is the s1xth year for the
~mployee or the Month recogni"
uon.
As March Employee of the'
Month, Justice received a $50 U. S:
Savings Bond, a special parking
place, his name engraved on a per-'
manent plaque in the hospital'S'
Main Lobby, and his picture hanging next til the GREAT plaque.
·

Applications being
accepted by FAC
'

GALLIPOUS - The French Art
Colony, 530 First Avenue, is .
accepting applications for its Juneexhibit "Appalachian Traditions in~ .
Fiber and Reed."
This invilational exhibit, open to ' ·
public entries welcomes crafq,a&lt;'
sons in the area to display their·'
quilt and basket creations. Can :
446-3834 for an application for:;
the exhibit
. All.French Art Colony pmgrammmg IS offered through suppon of ·
the Ohio Arts Council.
,
••
'••

REVIVAL

..

· RACINE FIRST BAPTIST

CHURCH

. APRIL 11·14 ~7:00P.M.
CHARLES NORRIS· Evangelist

,.

~.

SUNDAY: "The Resurrection of Jesus Chris..
. .
MONDAY: !'A Walk lbrough Hell"·
TUESDAY: •Ahab an.d Je:rebel"
WEDNESDAY: "The.Man Who DisajJpeai'etl"

•

•

SPECIAL MUSIC
SUNOAYr Jan and Kathy! MONDAYo Nancy, Janice and
Barbar,, TUESDAYo Aaron Thatcher! '
WEDNESDAYr Tonya Hunter, Dorotba &amp;: Frank

NURSERY PROVIDED

..

.· r .

'

•

~

'

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
.

Veterllll l\lltiWWIII Hoepilal

f

41001 .

)

..

t

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

I 2ADULTS,

POMERJ~D4~~ide Ba~tist

'

will

•

.

tloii about AIDS, with additioaal useful data
provided throulb videos. The conrerence, ni'oderated by Soc.lal 'Work major Patrk:ila Slayton,
focused on lncreaslag aWIIreness aboatthe dise~ In southeastern Ohio.
·
.

Public Affairs will meet Monday at
CHESTER - Pomeroy OES
· · ror mspecuon
·
· at 6 :30
urch, Easter cantata 6 p.m. ev. 10 a.m. at the annex,
pract1cmg
lemes Acree invites the public.
· ' POMEROY _ The DA v and p.m. at. Chester Masonic Temple.
'•
·
Ladies·Auxiliary will meet Monday Offlcen Ufged to attend.
;~ RACINE - Revival through at 7 p.m. at the DAV Ha. II, 124
POMEROY • Ohl'o Eta Ph 1·
A
p
Simday at Mount Moriah Church B
Chapter, Beta Sig1ma Phi Sororily
Qf God•.Services start 7 p,m. Spe- uuemut venue, omeroy·
' ~il'! singing ~ghtly and preachmg
POMEROY .'Pomeroy Elemen- will eat at The Olive Garden in
. bJ Rev. Blevms.
·
.
tary PTO wil( meet MQnday at. 'l Parkersburg, w .va. !'ieet at
~.
:MO!"'DAY ·
.
p.m. in the school gym, ~ thirtl : Po~e!OY park1_og J~t ~, 15 _p.m.
~: LONG BOTTOM - Cemetery . grade"classes
15e present the. Notify Becky Triplett 1f pl~mng to
~~-up _wil.l il!Cgin in Olive Town- propam. Everyone welCome.
attend.
·
iliip on Monday. Anyone wishing
~·keep fiOIVen should have them
BURLINGHAM_ The Bedford
RUTLAND - Rutland PTO
lllbloved b') that time..
·
meeting
7 p.in. First grade will
Township 1'rUIIeea will meet Mon••
da 7
....
...,1
have a prognun.
CHESHIR1·•• Women Alive
y at p.m. II u"' town..... .
. '
...
II meet Monday 81 7 p:m. at the
TUESDAY,
•
REEDSVILLE . - Revival
er Creek Club HoUle. There
HARRISONVIr.,LE
Har- through Sunday at Fellowship ·
1 be a d'evolional· lpealter and ris911ville Senior Citizens blood Church of the Nu.-ae lllnill&amp; 1
demonatntor. Refreshments JIIOIISIIre Flinlc ll town houao from p,_m ni&amp;btly. Rev. David Myers,
Ube a.50\IP bar.
10 a.m .. ID nooft. Lunch wiH be Iaiit«, apociiJ 11DPIIIIIP11y.
"
· ·
served tOr IIIOinbors after. All wcil• Rev. Jolm W. DouaJu livilel the
:· RACINE- 'I1Ie Racine Doetd of come.
public.

.

'

'

The Home Health Service Jlt ' Veterans Memorial
Hospital stands ready to be• "At Your Service.
Established -in 1971, our Home Health Service i's
· designed to provide quality health .care in the comfort
of your own home. Our se~vice makes it possible for
you to spend les~ tj:rp.e confined to a hospital or to
remain in your own home for as long · as possible
before; perhaps, having to move into a care center.
The .efficient, capable personnel of our Hom~ Health
Service are licensed in Ohio and West Virginia a-Ld are
dedicated'to "caring fory~u and
you." · . .
.. about
.
· Jf we .~an he_o.f help pleg_se giye !!,S a call at 992-3231
-or· 992'_2104
'
, .... -- - - ~· "- - ·. --~--.:..:..- ··· ·......· · · ·

" eigs County·. cale.ndar -o f events

1.

Dr. Ed Berkich from the
Reds · Dre~m Team!
\Autographs ll·am ~1 pm·v
.
~Photos with E. T ..
.

that Allen, with whom she has ruid
a 12-year personal and professional
.,relationship, was sexually involved
with her oldest adopted daughter,
Soon-Yi ~vin, 22. .
.
Both SideS have S81d a panel of
sex abuse experts from Yale-New
Haven Hosp1tal cleared Allen of
the sex abuse charges. The report,
which Farrow and Allen asked .to
be kept .secret•.. ~as been given· to
·Connecticut prosecutors deciding
whether .to bring charges against
Allen.
Allen and Farrow are fighting
for custody of theiJ: biological ~n:
Satchel, 5; and therr adopted c,hlidren, Dylan, and Moses, 15.
Also Friday, an attorney for ·
Allen testified that Farrow's attorney 'proposed a "down and dirty"
$5 million payment from ·Allen in
return for dropping charges that the ·
filmmaker had molested Dylan.
. Irwin .oTanenbaum, one of
· Allen's attorneys, testified the deal
· was laid out at an August 1992
meeting, shortly after Farrow made
the allegations of sexual abuse
against her former lover.
'Tanenbaum, who has represented ·Allen for more than two
decades, said tie rejected the deal
and walked out.
Allen's trial attorney, Elkan
Abramowitz, portrayed .the proposal as extortion.
Alan Dershowitz, a· Harvard
University law professor representing Farrow, said Abramowitz'
extonion allegation ljiBS "totally
false."

0

tt:.:ih

tion.

yoiU' commodiues.

.

·~

..

AT YOUR SERVICE!

Prizes, Food, Information~
&amp; ·Giveaways!

Kids Tickets at ·
Area Merchants and

will

I

At Holzer Medical Center
Monday, Aprill2, 1993·
French 500 Room
.
.11:00 am ~ - 4~00 pm

to the professional ~vancement of
human resource managers."
As a result of receiving this
Superior Merit Award, the local
chapter will be eligible to apply for
the Pinnacle .Award which·is the
highest honor a chapter can receive
from the Society for Human
Resowce ManagemenL
The Mid-O~io Valley Chapter
of SHRM, which is composed of
human resouice professionals from
Gallia and Mason counties, meets
on the third Wednesday of each
month at noon at the Stowaway .
Restaurant. Human resource managers are encouraged to attend.
For f!IOre information contact
Fulks, at 1-304-882-2126 or Phyllis
Mason, Secretary at 614•245-5353.

Ba}Jy sitter decribes Woody Allen's
.behavior on day of alleged abuse:

' '

Schedule posted

~~

MARCH EMPLOYEE • Cbades I. Adkills, Jr., (right), clalef
executive officer or Holzer Medical Ceater, con1ratulatt1 :;:Juaqu,ime J. Justice as the liclspital's March Employee or t.l
Month.
·
,

Society receives award_ Justice honored by HMC ~

"'Enjoy our BuHet, or order from our menu."

446-7000 before 9 a.m. on 'the day
you wish to auend.

At 8 p.m. a ll-member ensemble of the Ohio ViiJasc Sing~ will
perform Civil War songs particularly popular in the North,. interspersed with anecdotes and stories
about the songs. The authenticallycostumed troupe will use banjo,
guitar and piano accompanimenL
The Ohio VillaJe Singers, also
of the Ohio Hisloric:al Society, are
directed by Priscilla Hcwetson. The
troupe beaan in 1974 to use the
pPrforming arts - music, dance
ru.J drama - to inlerpret the history of 18th and 19th century America Careful research and superb talent guarantee performances that are
not only historically signiflcant'but
. also delightfully entenainipg.
Tickets, $5, are available
at Peddler's Pantry, 340 Second
·Ave., or at the theatre .the night of
the performance.

'

Sunday, April11 - 11:30 a.m.-8 p.m.

Center scheduled announced

WENDY DENNIS and SHAWN MCNEAL

GALLIPOLIS - Authentic and
appealing. Those words describe
the evenas scheduled at the Morris
and Dorothy Haskins Ariel Theatre
April 17, the fust day of the Civil
War Soldiers Homecoming in
downtown Gallipolis.
A fust person impressloil workshop will' take place at 10:~ a.m.
In charge of the cost-free session is
Michael Follin, of the Ohio Historical Sociely,
.
Follin describes the fu:st person
impression as "recreating a rple of
an individual who lived in a time
period you are going to portray."
Attesting his sldlls are Dr. Thelonius. Balthasar, Squfre Enos Miles,
Brother Jonathan and Dr. Moriah
Mott, 18th and 19th century characlers Follin developed and can
· call up in a heartbeat

EASTER SUNDAY

HAYES

Sentinel~

Ariel joins in .Gallia ·
County Civil ·war
Homecoming events

POMEROY - The Me1gs Histora licensed cosmetologist. She is ical Society will host a program
employed by Hyer &amp;: Ullleplse, fel\turing Kay Cecil, local antique
Altomeys at Law.
collector, on, ~ 24 at 2 p.m.
Shawn is the son of Marie Petty
Mrs. ~~~ will offrs hts profes-..
of Mason and Darrell Pcay of New sional opinion of various items
.Haven, He is a 1990 gradnlte of which are brought.to her.
Wahama High School and llltendcd
This program IS for the benefit
the · Mason County Thchnical of the public. F\Jid out if.~'s
%hciol having graduated widl a teajlOI belOngs 10 the chma c:abmel
. certificate in weldiitg. He is or tn .the window sm·as a flower
employed by American Alloys, Inc. contamer.
,.
.the wedding will tab place 81
A dQnation will be received at
4:30 p.m. on Saturday, May 15, 81 the door.

·,

....

.

Hayes-Petrie

Sunday Times

..

11 S E. MemoriCII Drive
·Pomeroy

·991·2104

••
'

,,

•

"''

�.

•.
I

nmea Sentinel

wv

OH Point

-

•
.

·-

.

•
•

ADirll11, 1913·

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

Aprll11, 1993

-

Sunday. nmes Sentinel-Page 85

-Names in the newsWASHINGTON (AP) - Fawn · Country Theater in BransOn last
Hall, Oliver North 's former -secre- year, but developer David Green
tary. is engaged to Danny Sugar- ran into money trouble and filed for
man, the author of books about Chapter II bankruptcy protection.
rock 'n' roll.
Cash sued.
,
Miss Hall, 33, and Sugarman ' The settlement approved Thurs;
will be married in a smaU, private day calls fot Cash to get $400,000
ceremony April 16 in Los Angeles, now. The rest will be paid once the
where they lioth live, said his pub- remaining 70 acres near the theater
licist, Lori Rick, at St. Martin's site along Branson's main strip are
Press.
sold ·court-appointed trustee Danny
"They' ve been together for
Nelson said.
couple of years, • • said Plato
The Ozarks town is home to
Cacheris, former attorney to Miss nearly three dozen music theaters
Hall.
.
.
and has bcu;ome a major tourist
Miss·Hall was North's secretary awaction.
'
at the National Security Council·
office in the Wlite House complex
LOS ANGELES (AP) - The
for all)iost ~ars. When the wife of comedian Bob Hope bills
Iran-Contra
brolee, her JCS- herself as Dolores Reade ·Hope on
timon y during televised congros- her new album, bu( she says it's not
sional hearin$s ma&lt;!e her an a feminist suuernent.
overnight celebrity in 1987.
' 'I'm not a feminist, but I've
Su~erman co-wrote a best-sell- .used Dolores Reade a Jot, and I
ing btography of the .Doors' Jim apl?rove of women using their
Morrison, "No One Here Gets Out m31den names," Mrs. Reade Hope
Alive ," and cl)ronicled another said. ''Worilen have always· done it
rock group in "Appetite for in Europe."
· Destruction - :rite Days of Guns
Born Dolores DeFina in New
n' Roses."
York City, she started singing at 5
•'
•., and in the early 1930s appeared in
SPRINGFIELD, Mo. (AP) Manhattim supper clubs as Dolores
Johnny Cash was awarded $1.6 Reade. She married Hope in 1934.
million in his lawsuit against the
The album, her ftrst at age 83,
developer of a never-completed features old standards and some
theater complex ~g his name.
newer malerial by such songy.'riters •
A bankruptcy JUdge approved as Cole Por1t{, Billy Joel, Melissa
the settlement Thursday between Manchester and Carole Bayer
Cash and developer David Green.
Sager.
Cash was to headline the Cash

..

a

MR. and MRS. CHARLES J, (BETTY) LAMBERT

Lamberts celebrate anniversary
TUPPERS PLAINS - Charles J. lis.
and Betty (Brqwn) Lambert,
He is retired•from Kaiser AluReedsville, will be honored with an 'minum, Ravenswood, W.Va. ;
open house in observance of their where he was employed for 22
50th anniverSary on April 18 ·from years.
2-4 p.m. Mr. and Mrs. Richard A.
Mr. and Mrs. Lambert have one
Lambert and friends will be hosting son, Richard A. Lambert ,
the event.
Reedsville, and two grandchildren.
Mr . and Mrs. Lambert we re
Relatives and friends are invited
manied March 21, 1943 in Gallipo- to auend the celebration.

.

MR. and MRS. GARY (LINDA) EVANS

Couple celebrates 25 years
RACINE - Gary•'' Denny" and and Jamie, honored them with a
Linda Evans celebrated their 25th party at their home.
.
Also attending were Melanie
wedding anniversary on April 6.
They were married April 6, Adams, Michelle McCoy, Henry
1968 at the Reorganized Church of and Carolyn Salser and grandson,
Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints.
Jordon.
Their children: Becky, Michael

Anniversary open house set
RUTLAND - Ernest and Mary
Lambert will observe their 44th
wedding anniversary Monday with
an open house at the Rutland
Church of God from 6:30-8 p.m.

The event is hosted by Sherry and
Bob Gagne, Jacki and Caitlyn
Topf, Michael and Mary Lambert,
Paul and Irene Lambert. and Debbie
and Glenn Brown.

OU offers exercise classes
ATHENS - Some grea~ spring for teens and adults is great ·for
exercise classes can be done in the learning and perfecting water
water. Swimnastics, swimming skills. This class meets on Toesworkout, and swimming lessons for days and Thursdays, April 13-29
teens, adults,.and children are a few for beginners, and May 11-27 for
of the classes offered.
advanced beginners, from 7-7:3'5
Swimnastics is a shall~w-water p.m. in the Aquatic Center. .
The children's swimming pro.woiicout that includes aerobics and
total-body conditioning. No swim. gram provides lessons for all levels
ming or floating is,required. This and at a variety of times for youngclass meeLs for seven weeks, 'Mon· sters ages 4-12. In addition, springday and Wednesday, beginning board diving lessons are held for
Apr:J 12, from 6:30-7:30 p.m. at ages 8 and up.
the Aquatic Center.
Little one's and their parents can
If you' re an accomplished enjoy a warm water program at
swimmer who Jilces swimming laps Beacon School on Saturday momwithout interruption, try Swimming ings beginning April17. Water Fun
Workout. This class offers swim- for Toddlers is designed for ages 2mers a variety of different work- 4 and Waterbabies for ages 12-24
outs at varying levels of intensity. months.
This class also begins April 12 and
For more infonnation or to regmeets from 6-7 p.m. on Monday ister for classes, call the Ohio Uni·and Wednesday nights.
versity Office of Continuing EduNo one is ever to old to learn · cation at 593-1770 or toll-free in
how t9 swim . Swimming)essons . Ohio at 1-800-336-5699.

Astronauts take photos as
instruments continue survey
By SUSAN-HIGHTOWER
streamed down to scientists, NASA
Associated Press Writer
kept up its slilJggle to fix a dataSPACE CEN1ER, Houston relay problem involving ~ prime
Discovery's astronauts snapped ozone monitor. Engineers traced
pictures of Earth as equipment the trouble to the high-data rate
aboard the spacuhuttlc took ozone channel on a shuttle antenna.
·readings and the spacecraft soared , . The ozone monitor, capable of
into its third day in orbit today.
measuring 30 to 40 ·atmospheric
The five astronauts, who are ~ases. cannot transmit those readsplitting 12-hour work shifts, tested mgs to Eartti without chunks of
a computerized cameca system that information missing, and its onprovides the latitude and .longitude bOard recorder has room for on! y
of photographed targets on Earth. another few days of data. The
At least four of diem also crowded eight-day mission lasts until next
onio the shuttle flight deck late Fri· Friday.
day to capture some spectacular
"Currently, we are losing no
shots in what com·mander Kenneth science data ... it is not an impact,"
Cameron dubbed a "photo fren- said Randy Stone, mission ·operazy."
tions director. "It will be an impact
"We ... saw the Aral Sea and " if we can't fix it in the next two
the Himalayas, and went down days because wc;'JJ start running
through IndOnesia and across Aus- out of tape on the recorder."
tralia, so we were up here all just
The chief scientist for the expershooting away Jilce mad. It was a iment, Michael Gunson of the Jet
lot of fun," astronaut Ellen Ochoa .Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena,
told Mission Control.
Calif., said his instrument was
The crew monitored ozone and gathering all the data desired so far.
solar instruments aboard Discovery · ·'The only difference is we
carrying out the mission' s main don' t get that nice, warm, fuzzy
focus: studying the diminishing feeling about seeing data down on
ozone layer.
•
the ground," Gunson said.
As those measurem ents

•

431 WEST MAIN

POMEROY
.
.
992·3636

·.

·. MARATHON .

.

OPEN 24 HOURS •·SEVEN DAYS A WEEK

•
I

.

.

School Nurse R.N. (B.S.N. Preferred)
and

'

' .

Licensed Speech Pathologist
Full·Time Employment. Must serve children and
adults with a wide range of handicapping
conditions. Call or write:
GALUA COUNTY BOARD OF MR/DD,
P.O. Box 14, Cheshire, OH. 45620.
(614) 367·7371

••

'

'.

I

Applications will be accepted through
April 19, 1993.
·

,_.·Samethi11fl Special
for~

•PICK 4

•BUCKEYE FIVE.
•INSTANT 'GAMES
.

. I·
'

The Family Birthstone Tree

.

•

This Mothoo' Day give her an elegant
anc;l _lastlng remembrance of whet
she Cherlshes most. her famly. EV81Yones' nome and blrthdcte Is engrcv~
on a rich bronze plaque and beside
each, name Is their sparking birthstone.
It is beautifully framed and Is the perfect gift for Mom on h&amp;f special day.

EARLY VJSIT - McClure's Restauraot was one or m10y stops .
the Easter Bunny, sponsored by Sceolc Hills Nursiog Center, mllde .
last week. Pictured, clockwise, are Tyler Hannon, CJ!rrlssa )Vofe, •
Cheri McClure, Darci•ann Roberts, Nathan McClure and Michael
Haney.
•

Meigs announcements

.

•

•

Powers, librarian at Meigs County
Public Library.

Yard sale slated
Enterprise United Methodist
Church yard sale .scheduled for
• Retired teachers to meet
Thursday and Friday. Located on
The Meigs County Retired
U.S. 33 one mile from the Beacon.
Teachers
will meet Saturday at
Cancelled if raining. Fabric, rugs,
,
noon
at
tire
Meigs County Public
rods and ends.
Library for a luncheon meeting.
Call992-3887 for reservations. · ·,
Pinner planned
There will be a dinner at the
Senior Citizens Center on Mulberry
Height in Pomeroy Thursday from
5-6 p.m. Cost is $4 with the menu
featuring oven fried chicken ,
augratin potallies, lima beans and·
com, cole slaw., roll, bishop's cake
9 A.M. TIL 7 P.M.
and beverage. Following will be
music from The Classics. A free
will offering will be taken for the
musicians'. Public invited.
'

THE PUT-ON SHOP
258 Third Avenue ·
GalllpOUI, 08. ·45631

614-446-6560

•HOT &amp; COLD SANDWICHES
•FOUNTAIN DRINKS
•McHAPPYS DOUGHNUTS
•MOVIE .RENTALS
•OTIS SPUN
R co·oK.IES

•

Hair Happening
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

· 446-3353

•

APRIL 14 &amp; 15

•

SPRING BlAST OPJ'

Concert scheduled
Tile University of Rio Grande
Chorale will present a con~ at
the Senior Citizens Center Thursday at 1 p.m. Concert is free and
open to the public.

'

z BIG DAYS':" WEDNESDAY El THURSDAY
LULA, THE CLOWN, WILL BE HERE I

HAIR CUT .••••.....•••..••••..•.. ~ •••• $5.00
SHAMPOO, CUT,

~PUBLIC. TEiiPHONE

..

COLOR············-·~············~·· $15.00

j
'j

TRU

·Gardea dub to meet
Tit~ Armateur Gardners Club

will meet Wednesday 7 p.m. at
Presbyteria}l Chmch in Mlddl~
with Mis. Edwatd Burtett hosting.
Garden movie to be shown by Ruth

•
•'

'

- 'J.'J .

•

ROSE HUGHES

,,

,.
•

•

1 ·,

II

•
'

I
I •

'

pi,RN'fY·OJ' ROOM TO n1JIN AROUND!

•

'

•

__,__,_,.......

__ ..---. ,.
•

.' .

'•

I

. ·v

.,

..

w 4....:-

.

-·

I

•

�'

.

·-

'"'

........... .
~·

'

••

•

I o

'

•
.o l

.. _. ..,.,

''1' •

"''

•-

,,.

-

.

'

Pomeroy--Middlepi:lrt-Galll~liS, OH-Polnt Pleasant, wv

Peg• ·B&amp; Sunday TlniH Sentinel

Aprll11.1913

Aprll11,1893

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ott-Point Plea~nt,

wv

Construction scheduled to begin
. . -.... 31 on Inventors Hall ofFame

Sunday Tlmes Sentinel

.

7

.

·
A}\ROf:'l , Ohio (AP) - Con · the totaiP,
The a.r ..;;u i+ hJe a6Hillll
strucllon IS scheduled to begin
•
Aug. 31 on tbe $38 million home waH wilbmellaotsdrt??Ji!
01\g Slid bw •• , 1lil . . . . ; .
of the National Inventors Hall of
Fame.
attention to msill. die .....:y ~
The hall currently is located in a nee.ded to put Slaff ..a edalliu .
patent office in Arlington, Va
inside them- 6r ilapras ill •
.
.
•
· John Ong, chairman of tlhe Cen- April ·1995.
ter's board, , said Friday that
' 'In my eapea:it:aaz. il is aDcr ;
$920,000 in new pledges from ·10 raise bril:k ... AlcrQn companies had made 'it pos· monar iSYiSiblc.•• Oil&amp; said. He •
said !the ·~ is lq;" • g 1D Jnal: '
sible to SCI the construction date.
Tl)c pledges have put the center forsupponcru ••"k-dMna.
:
withio $8. million to $9 million of

..._die

. L~ADS STAINER· Angie Oueen, MLT (ASCP) at H~lzer
Mechcal Center, is St!!n loading the slide stainer In tbe Hospital ·
Laboratory.
·

0P~RAT£S MACHINE· Cathy Hoore, Holzer Medical Cente~
MLT ,(ASCP), operates the coagulation machine which measures
tbe blood's anti-coagulant level
·

Medical'L~boratory

Week

to be observed at HMC ·
GALL_IPOLIS • Holu:r Medical
Center wtll be celebrating Medical
Laboratory Week, April 11-17,
BCC?rding IP Vug1l Bentley, event
chairman. , .
..
As.Bentley pom~ out,. We who ·
work m the Holzer Medical Center
Laborat&lt;~ry want to ~mphasize to
the pubhc ... our pallents and :our
potent1al pat•ents .. : that med1cal
laboratory pr~fesswnals are the
.detecnves of,disease, as suggested
~Y th1s year s Lab Week theme,
You~ L~borat&lt;?TY,:, Where · the
Invesngano_n Begms .
He connnued, "~lmost everyone has ~.d a medtcal test, more
than 9 billion tests are performed
each year, yet .most peopl.e are.'
unaware lllat tramed professionals
pe~orm ~ tesl:!:and oft~n pl~y a ·
maJo_r.role m savmg thetr lives.
B1ll Gouckenour, chief tech!Jol-

MR. and MRS. BILL (LOUISE) KUGHN
~

.

ogist in the laboratory com~ented,
"Our laboratory professionals want
to increase public awareness of the
important contributions that we can
make to health care. Now, during
National Laboratory Week, we
have llle opportunity to emphasize
the vital importance of laboratory
investigations · into. changes ·in
blood, urine or body ceUs in diag·
nosing health problems."
"This can be the key to detect·
in'g l'roblems in time to take pre- .
venuve actions or intervene in the
earliest and most curable stages of
disease," he added.
·
·
During National Laboratory .
Week, posters will be displayed
throughout tlhe hospital, reflecting
this year's theme, and a SPCCial display tablc.will be set up in the cafeleria entrance hall for visitors and
staff members to view.
·

FAC ex~bit explores arts,
culture, heritage of Africa
.

Local Couple.to retl•re

GALLIPOLIS • The French An also takC advantage of the 1ntemaColony, 530 First Avenue, invites tiona!. exhibit. This is a day set
you to bring our class or group to aside·and dedicated to the disabled
. the An Colony during the montlh of children in the area. Through conGALLIPOLIS • Bill and Louis
.
~
9
~pril to view this year's interna- tributions by Bill Medley, McDon1 years, tional exhibit, "A Visit To The aid's, al!d Becky ~othgeb llle chil·
.
·
d
.,
f
th
radio
sermons
or
tlhe
past
Kugbn, mmtster an whe, o e as well as his religiOUS articles . G ld ,.._ " Stud
ill fi
1Hill Church of Christ, Gal·
h· h
· 1h G 11
"vasL
ents w tnd on dren will enjoy lunch. an an activi111
•'-'ng from located Daily
w IC Tribune
appeared
a ipolis
~ pan in a s1mple
·
and TheeChapel
Hill . display items that dep1'ct the arts • ty an d w1'II ta~e
lipo • will be -·~u·
work the last of April and will be C . th
•
lcl
I'1 culture, and heritage of Africa.
African dance.
ouner,
e
church
s
wee
Y
pub
'
Each
group
wiD
be
given
a
tour
Bill Medley mun•'cipal J'udge
.reiW'J1ing to Annis
ton, Ala.
cation.
The
couple
are
writers
for
f
the
h'b'
d
f
Ri erb h'
' the French •Art
1
ing
1
·
o . ex •t an o
v y, IS· and member of
The COuple have been w-...
..,...
gospe publicanons.
t h
r h F h Art ·'· Colony, tillces great pride in sponThe ~blic is iiwited'IO anend a to tc · om~ ? · t e . rene
with the church in Gallipolis for 19
years. Although Mr. Kughn will be
Colony. Individuals w1U be able. 10 soring this event. Medley tries to
Jetiring, he will continue conduct· farewel patty honoring the coople pracuce the ancient art of making interact with the children· of the
.
in the fellowship room of the an Afri, can mas
. . k and wd.l be treated ·county when he can.•
ing meeungs, 1ectures and semi- Chape 1 H'' ll ,..h
· 0 ff to typ1cal cu1sme from the area.
" children of Gallia
'- urc h of Ch nst
"I want the
narsTbe Kugbns will be returning 10 Bulaville Road, C:ha~el Dr. , on
The IOilr wiU last approximately County to lcnow that the court sys.
Anniston where they lived for 19 S~day, Apri1 1S from -4 p.m.
o~~ hour. Groups will ~able to terns are here to help them and .
years while worlcin- with the Cen- · Man
vlsJt the FAC from Ap!'l 13-29, there is no reason for children to
ua1 Church of Christ. It was there
Tuesday through .Fnday · To fear the judicial system," he said.
they reared their two son, Kenneth abusing drug
reserve a day and t1me for your
All French Art Colony programarry
The
couple
also
has
~our
gro,u,
P
please
ca1.
1
446-38,34,
.
·
.
ming
is offered through support of
and B
grandchildren.
,
can't
Very Spec1al Arts day Will the Ohio Arts Council.
Mr. Kughn broadcasted daily
CLEVELAND (AP) ...,. A man
with a pierced ear and a taitoo on·
his left arm that reads "Dunney"
says he lost his memory after
smoking marijuana and the halluci~ryH
PCP.. . f ·h.
e sJUSt wruung or 1s mem·
ory to come back ," sa.id Lois
Baron, spokeswoman for MetroHealth SL Luke's Medical Center.
The man has declined media
requests for interviews and photographs. Because of the privacy
request, doctors cannot discuss the
case. she said Friday.
·
" It's up to him if he wants to go · ·
p~blic , so the doctors abide by his .
w1shes. He doesn ' t want 10 talk 10
· . anypile, and he said he will not talk
to a~~yone," Ms. Baron said.
Cleveland police said the man is
black, between 18 arfd 20 years old, •
and about 130 pounds.
Missing person repons did not
provide clues to the man's identity,
police detective Denise .Reeves
said. The man carried no identifica.
tion or other items that could help
SHERRY MECKSTROTH ·identify him.
. She said police accept his claim
of amnesia, "since the hospital is
FOOD STAMP
'
• Linda L. King, Chester left
keeping him, under observation for
has be~n hired as the !lutrition education at the Meigs C~unty
that."
~xten~1on Office. Fundmg for the food slamp editcatioa program
Police will ·no longer be
m Me1gs County bas been renewed making the birin1 of King posinvolved, unless further assistance
sible. Pictured with Mrs. KinlJ is Cindy. Oliveri, County Extension
MIDDLEPORT • Sherry King is requested, Ms. Reeves said. . .
~gent, Home"Economics/Cbaumao. The purpose of tbe program
Meck51101h has been promoted to
Dr. Robert White, director of
1s.
t~ b~lp food ~tamp recipients stretch their food .dollars by proassiSiant vice-president of One Val- neurosurgery at Metrohealth Medi·
v•dmg
mformatmn through educational programs and activities.
ley Bank of Huntington, W.Va. She cal Center, said careful testing is
.
.
has been employed by the bank needed 10 verify amnesia.
since 1979, and is presently a comWhite, who. has no conneciion
mercial loan officer.
· io the man's case, said lhal at least
JI.IU:~
She is a native of Middleport mild forms of amnesia are relative·
and the daughter o( William and ly common with alcohol or drug ·
Come In and Get Your New Look by These Operators:
Naomi King. She graduated from abuse.
Adrah Neai.;..Wed., Thurs., Fri.
Malone College in Canton with a
, The (Cleveland) Plain Dealer
B. S. degree and completed her reported Friday that a police report
Gladys McClelland-Mon., Tues., Fri., Sat.
masters from Marshal! University. ~aid . the man·:ctaimed to have
Sonya.-Lester..Thura:, Frl:&gt;
She also. graduated from Wes1 Vir- ·smoked a marijuana cigarette laced ·· · ·.· ..,.
ginia School of Banking ·and with PCP. He IOid police he passed
Beth Br~dbury-Mon., Tue8., Wed., Fri.,
Robert Morris Commercial Lend· out and Woke U)l without memory.
. TINNING:
.
ing School.
,
The U.S. Drug Enforcement
Sbe is captain and loaned execu- Adm lnistJ:ation 's handbook on
· 10 Stasio's for $15.00
·' .
. tive for the United Way of the drugs says PCP causes illusions,
~iver Cities, corporate volunteer
. Welk·l•• Welco._ - :r-"~•·• Noun 6.......
hallucinations and po&lt;ir perception
for the Huntingaon Museum of An .· of time and distance. ·
·
open door campaign and treasurer . The man rei:alle'd meeting ·an
for the Buffalo Elernenwy PTO. . . elderly couple who took him to the
227 2ND AYE. • GALUNLIS
, She resides in HuntingiOD, W.Va., hoSpital, where he was treated for
witlh her two children , Nicole and drug-induced amriesia, the police .
. 446-1209
Open 9·7
Aaron . .
report said;
·,
. ~hi:Jhl~lhl~lhl~~m~:lhi~:Jhl~~~~~~-.i

°

PRICES EFFECnVE
MONDAY, APRIL 12 THRU
THURSDAY, APRIL 15

I o• CORDLESS
YARD TRIMMER
•

CHECK RESERVATIONS- Sdllater,'IU"trr wiclt... ·c tf •
Sharon Bowman, (nanding) · portifolia •ae..,- Ill tile Ollie
executive secretary or the GaiUa Compaey, aed PI ' C!ellne.
County Chamber or Commerce, Canlieal G.-. ......._ c.e 111e
witlh Stacy Cal6ban Wallen (seat- clla•ber etr- PI 44' ISM ,_
ed), check out reservations. for reservatiaes.
•
the upcoming Sfith annual meeting or the Gallia County Chamber of Commerce, to be held
Thursday evening, April 15, at 7
p.m. in the Rhodes·Center at tbe
University of Rio Grande. Dead·
line for reservations has been
extended to Monday noon, April
IJ
12. Tickets are $17.50 each.
Guest speaker is John L. ·
•

••

sat.

mile on

·"

•

'

..

1

alngla charge. UL

IIIIPfOV8d. REG. 811.811.

IESIOF IICI
.,AT llftiiAIS

VI.OlETS or SPLASH
BEDDING ENSEMBLES

! •

SALE $8 a Gallon
LHetlrne warranty. Tinting IIYallablit.
REG. 15.811 .

$

$
.

'OFF

RUBBERMAID®
STORAGE UNITS

·EKCO® 2 PK.
COOKIE SHEETS

'

99

'

The Cellular One
Service Guarantee
•

Receive 1 Hour of Free Tnne
Offer Good March 15 -~ ~

•

•

1. Quality. If you're not satisfied with the (Jially ollie
call in your home coverage atea, call us and lile'l
give you credit (one minute air time).

3 oz. akelna
In popular colora.

TAMOR® STORAGE
CONTAINERS

BOLD.HOLD
STYLING PRODUCTS

. DIAL 8 PK.
GOLD SOAP
.

EA.

2. Service. If we can't repair your phone iQ an how wring a 'scheduled appointment, we'll .;ve you a loaner
phone- free. You pay for air time onty.

3. Value. If the phone doesn't meet yourerpectd ons in
the first ·60 days, we'll buy it badk.' You pay only for
the air time you've used. ·

~ · · J?!e One·Yo~

...,

·c., COUnt on

1•

99

C

HI·DRI PAPER
TOWELS

sar:~~~~

••

•

•

FOR

'

Antibacterial deodoi'llnt 10ap.
· REG. 4.44 pk.

Hair aprt1V, gel, mouaH, more.
REG.1.99 ea.

WINTER FASHION
CLEARANCE

%

$

OFF
110 ct. roUe.
REG.sOoea.

108 ct. '

REG. 1.09

Already Reduced
Rad Ticket 11wn1

For microwave.
REG. 3.89

tt.n..,..ory by • .__ . _ tdocll only. No

·

.•

"
'

Limited.to store stock Onlyl No rainchecks. While quantities last.

-•
•

•.

.

DOUBLE COUPONS*

•

'

'•

'

I

•

~·

IWWJGA.OIIO

FOR

FOR

.

t TAYtOfrol

UPPERRt.7

2 $

AO 1112 PK.
POPCORN .

c

2

..' ·B• 1.
-:i ··Eleetrenlat

Clo-•1

.

2 $

..-n cflecb. Shoel not

'Cuatorner muat algn 112-ii.Oulh-.._cl.

CELLU.LA

ULTRA TISSUES-

Economic• I.
131 oz. ala.

s-thru. NO: 7620. 64 qt. aize.
REG. 9.99

'

I

,

•
•
•

I

99

Vartouaal~•· ·

PURE X
DOERGENT

••.

OFF
REG. 6.88 TO 38.99
Sale 6.28 to '27.89
V.rloua alaa and atylea.

OFF
REG. :3.98 to 14. 99
Sale 2.50 to $10

c

. REG. 4.88 to 14.89
Sale 3.341o 10.04
21x34" &amp; 24x40 rug•, contour and
lid cover.

%

Jlakar'a Secret no n·atlc k cookie
.,_., REG.U9

DAZZLEAIRE
CARON YARN

%

%

2Sx44" alze, REG&gt; 2.99
*Hand Towel, reg. 2.28 -1.80
"Waah Cloth, reg. 1.69- $1

Chooae 6 pack' C or D and 12 pack
AA batterlea. REG. 1.811 pack
Additional $2 lllllll-ln Reblle on pkg.

AREA RUGS

OFF

REG. 12.81 to 59.88
Sail 1.70 to 40. fl
Comfortera and ecc-orlea.

'

99

!

ALL BURLINGTON• -

RHAPSODY
·BATH RUGS

MIDWAY TERRY
BATH TOWELS

EVEREADY FAMILY .
PK. ENERGIZERS
..

Remote ·control and on·acraen
programming. Jllo 23511900.
REG. 189.811

With remota control. 181 channel
compatibility. Modell vary. ·
REG. 248.811 '

$

%

GOLDSTAR®
2-HEAD.VCR

ANY 20" STEREO
COLOR TV

.

Bump heed line feed. Cut• up to 1

ova stuDEm ·

a ,':'m. .·
, EVA'S BEAUTY SALON

.

%
OFF

'!"'II

SflUNG IS

•

$

who Tiemem·bers
says he
remember self

Promotion
announced

LIFETIME
LATEX PAINT

..

·~

..

.41300 LAUREL CLIFF RD.-.

OPEN MON.·SAT. 9 AM·9 PM
SUNDAY II. AM·6 PM
'
.

•

ROY . .
·

'

..

,

'·

•

'

'
I

'

�Page

Aprll11, 1993

Pomeroy MiddlepOrt Gallipolis, OH Point Pleaaant, WV

BB Sunday Times Sentinel

District forester speaks tQ
Qpen Gate Gard~n Club

1:

"

Toronto, San Francisco
among baseb,II's winners

~

TO~ON'f&lt;?

Gilmore hospitalized

· Extension·office receives education gt:ant

'

People in
the news

PASTOR and MRS. MIKE CHAPMAN

Easter program planned
GALLipOLIS - Door of Hope
· Ministries, loca1~d at 10 Airport
·Rd ., Gallipolis, behind the Blue
Fountain
Motel,
recently
announced its new times. for ser•
vices.
·
Sunday school begins at 10:30
S:m. and Sunday even.ing services
begin at 6 p.m. Tuesday Bible
study hegins at 7 p.m.
·
Sunday, Aprilll an Easter cantata program ,will he presented, featuring Dave Freeman and the mus1c

'

:

department, and singers Milde
Chapman, Debbie Hall, Peggy
Oliver, Barry Duty, Jackie Freeman, Lois Chapman, and David L.
Freeman, at 6 p.m. Mike Chapman
is p;~stor of the church. Other April
activities include a songfest with
Darren Smith. special teen program, mother-daushter banquet,
revival and dedication services.
Anyone needing transportation
to the church can call 6754862 or
446-2820.

''

......,.,

'399 W. Main

1

,

.

'

..

f

'

.

By MARY FOSTER
would he easier to he Gary Smith." sional," Ni~ldaus said. ""It's one of
NEW ORLEANS (AP)
On the tour the name attracts the things you learn by playing in
There's no mislalting him.
attention only early on or if he's these tournaments. Something .you
The blond hair, the distinctive playing well, he said. Otherwise, can'tjust hear about" _
Even when people are talking
stance over lhe ball, the walk.
there are legitimate stars around for
about how much he looks like his
No question he's a Niclclaus on people to fol19w.
the course. Not Jack. Jack's son
'Besides, one of the things he's father or the similarities in their
Gary.
.
.
learned as a pro is how to deal with games, the younger Nicldaus says
he just Dies to put it out of his mind
••pe()ple tell me all the time I pressure.
look a lot like him,' • Gary Nicklaus
"That's pan of being a profes- and
and
his best.
.., , said. "I just hope I can set to
where I play like hun."
f
So far, the Nicklaus ~ style has
been !here but not the results.
While Jack bas earned more
FLYING TO THE 'PUCK- Tampa Bay's
Ruutu's teammates to tbe boards durlug the
than $6 million, been the PGA
Brian Bradle1 (19) pins Chicago's Christian . first period or Saturday's NHL coutest in
Player of the Ycar five times, AthRuutu (~nter) while teammate Marc Bergevin
.Tampa, Fla., where tbe Blackhawk&amp; wou 4·2 In
lete of the Decade, won 18 interna(25) goes for lhe puck while knocking one of
tbe Lightuing's last home game·of tbe season.
tional tides and is a member of the
World Golf Hall of Fame, Gary is
just trying to work his way up.
Gary Nicldaus, 2A, cumed
1991. So far he has not quaiifie~ "-· ­
By ED SCHUYLER Jr.
ny and trainer Tom Bohannon, splir Derby ~avorite and 8-5 choice to for the ·PGA Tour but has made it
LEXINGTON, Ky. (AP) horses approaching the eighth pole win the Blue Grass, struggled home into three tournarnents and earned
Prairie Bayou became the likely and won by two lengths over Wal- seventh in the nine-horse field, I 1 two paychecks this year.
. Kentucky Derby favorite and put lenda.
lengths behind the winoer.
In March, he tied .for 61st in the
winning jockey Mike Smith into a
Dixieland Heat, unbeaten in his
Smith also rides Anthony's Dal- • Doral-Ry4er Open and tied for
bit of a predicament Saturday by five previous SIIUU, finished third,' hart, who is the favorite in next 58th at lhe Honda Cassie, collectwinning the Blue GQ~Ss Stakes at another nose back and three-quar· Saturday's Arkansas Derby. He has ing $5,427 in winnings. He failed
Keeneland. ·
ICrs of a length ahead of Sea Hero. been given the option of chOOsing to m,ake the cut at the Freeport. ' Prairie BaYDQ, a member of the
Corby, unbeaten in his rmt two whether he will ride that colt or the McMoRan in New Orleans last
powerful stable of John Ed Antho- starts as a .3-year-old and the early gelded Prairie Bayou in the I 1/4- week.
mile Derby at ChwchiU Downs on
"I'm getting beuer every
Ma L
week," Nicklaus said. "I ean tell
~e Bayou, who raced the I when I improve and as long as I
:: PITTSBURGH (AP) - · Art the Pirates in 1919 at age 12 as an 118 miles in I :49 3·5 on a fast am,l'll stick with iL I don't have a
MeKennan, an emp!Qyee of the enand boy for players. He became track, won his fourth sll'aight Slakes timetable, but if I get to the point
' Pittsburgh PiraiCS since 19!9 and a a bat boy the followins year and and his SCCQIId in three weeks. On where I don't feel I can get any bet·
public address announcer since later was a Forbes Field usher for March 27, lie won the I 118-mile . ter · and what I am isn't good
·
enough, I'll give it up. You're not
• I!48, will end a baseball career the 1925 World Series and operat- lim Beam at Turfway Parle.
He
chllf8Cd
between
Dixieland
going 10 sec me out here at 40 if
tllit spans nine·deCades by retiring ed the scoreboard for the 1927
Heat
and
WaUenda
w)th
'iitde
more
I'm still struggling along."
World Series.
tolla .
than
an
eishth
of
a
mile
to
go
10
He says he's been playing golf
~Kennan, 86, was the PiraiCs'
An outstanding athlete until
talce
the
lead
and
d(aw
away
to
for
as Ions as ·he can remember.
f11lltime stadium announcer at beins stricken by polio in 1930,
capture
the
$310,000
winner's
learning
from his father ,at fli'Sl and
FOrbes Field and Three Riven Sta- McKennan also wss the assistant to
·purse
and
return
$9.40,
$4.80
and
always.,enins
moic than his share
dium from 1948lhnlll&amp;h 1986. The the direciOr·oflhe parks and recreI$St seven seasOns, he has operated ation for lhe city of Pittsburgh until . $3.40. Wallenda, ridden by Herb of anenltoR.
McCauley, passed Dixieland Heat
..I've -been in the spodisht my
the game-in-progress scoreboard he retired in 1972.
nearlng
the
wire
and
paid
$10.60
whole
life, if I played well or if I
for all games and announced SunMcKennan was promoted lO
and
$S.40.
pla}'ed
poorly," Nicklaus said. .
1111Y games.
.
· public address announcer in 1948
Dixieland Heat, the Louisiana
The anenlion wu 8fCaler when
.; McKennan will retire after after AI Schlensker, lhe superinten·
announcing the starting lineups dent at Forbes Field, was impressed Derby winner, .returned $3.60 to he. was playing at Ohio State, be
show,
'
said, In those daya lhe name stood
.. ~ to·lhe Giants-Pirales..game. .
by his voice on lhe telephone.
The first four finishers appear· out and people crowded arotllld to
.-: •'This was a very difficull deci- · MeKennan 'received the "Pride
- I HATE THAT! .,... Australian Grt~ Norma reacts to 1 mliled
sion for me," McKennan said. "I ·of the Pirares" •wllfd last yea;, an headed for the Derby. Sea Hero is watch him. Or to waK:h his father
birdie c•lp 1bot 011 the tlllrd lllole dlirla1 Satlll'day'a tblrd·roand
was reluc~t to do it because it has honor that recognizes lifetime con- owned by 8S-year-old Paul Mellon, warch him.
~
at the Muten TouraDeot at Aupltll Nadolllll Golf CIIIIIID
"There wore sometimes a thoubeell sll(:h a large P,Brt or my life, tribulions 10 the team, and will be whose 71-ycar-old ttainer. Mack
Autuata,
Ga. lbe lblfd round 1ot atarted later tbaa acliedulecl
bill I feel I must for health reasons. inducted into ·the western chaDICr Miller, said before lbc !ICC lhlt he sand people there just to see him
becallle
or
tbe c:ompledoa or·lbe raiD-delayed secoad I'OIIIId earlier
It'li all been fun."
.
of lhe Pennsylvania Spans Hall of · and Mellon would like to take a watch me play." NicklaliS said.
lbat
mor.nlng.
(AP)
·
•
~ot at the Derby.
"Sometimes then I wondered if it
McKennan began working for Fame on May 2.

SYRACUSE VILLAGE
Mail to: Syracuse Village Craft Show, PO Box 218,
Syracuse, OH 45779-0218
'

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

·-

NPC INSI(~NIA

Prairie Bayou wins Blue Grass_ Stakes

LR.IIIOH
For Women
PLAYil.a. THE SHOE CAFE
.
'

Lafay.tte MalloGalllpolls

~CKeDD3D

446·9585

CAiPET &amp; UPHOUTERY CLEANING

EARLY BIRD
SPECIAL

25% '*-nl

For

·~-=~

'

WY013372

GetAHead ·
·Start On

';

PRE-~ER PERM SALE $29.95 ~

Your

Effective Marth 29-AprillO.Walk-i'ns Welcome

1·100·300-tllll• OH.
1·100·227-tSIS

.H81r HaPP9J1U1Q

We Ill ... f8rlcs tllat
.,..;s ......

Flna FMrlc

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
446-3353
•

"'

..

Gary Nicklaus father's .virtual twin

=__

.

'

Phone::_ _ _ _ _ __,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ .I

Number or lOft. spaces needed ___ x $15
Total Fee:__________________-'------ I
1}'pe of craft or item for sale:..·- - - - - " ' - - - - I
Make check or Money Order payable to: ..

992•2164
\

Adme~=--------~-------------------

Do you need electricity? YES__ No_
·_

ANNAPOL.IS; Md. (AP) - '
GALLIPOLIS ·- Good Hope
Two poFtrail$ of Ross Perot were· United Baptist Chwch sunrise serremoved from an alumni display
vice, 7 a.m., with Rev. larry Haley
case at the U.S. Naval Academy
spealcing.
shonly before a visit from President Clinton. Coincidence, an
GALLIPOLIS - Faith Temple
academy spokesman said.
Independent Church Sunrise SerClinton had lunch with midshipvices, 6 a.m. Rev. Joe Gwinn, pasmen on April 1 in Bancroft Hall, · tor. Regular services at 11 a.m . .
where Perot's portraits were dis- with Butch Greenlee preaching.
played. The lunch was prior to
Clinton's addressing a convention
KANAUGA - Sunrise services
of the American Society of News- at Silver Memorial Baptist Chwch,
paper Editors at the academy.
6 a.m., with Charles Nece preach"Those displays regularly get ing.
rotated. The disp1ay was changed
three weeks ago, which was two
GALLIPOLIS -Edna Chapel
weeks before President Clinton · Chwch services, 6 a.m. with Men:y
agreed to speak at the academy," singing.
academy spokesman Lt. Steve
Coffman said Thursday.
VINTON -, Vinton Full Gosj,el
Perot graduated from the acade- Church, 818 Main St. East. sermy in 1953: His portraits were vices, I 0 a.m., with lhe Rev. Dean
replaced in the display case by a Coon preaching.
portrait of Marine Col. Charles
Bolden, a NASA astrona(!t whose
EVERGREEN - Trinity United
son attends the academy, Coffman Methodist Church, SR 160, sunrise
said.
'
services , 6:30 a.m. Pastor C. J.
Lemley will he preachins. Nunery
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) service is available during every
Homosexuals in the military will Sunday worship service at 10:30
be the topic of Gen. Colin Powell's a.m.
commencement speech at Harvard
on June 10.
CENtENARY
Centenary
United Christian Church services.

[j

"

R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply Co.

1

CHESHIRE - Old Kyger FWB
Church sunrise services;6 a.m.;
Sunday school at 9:30 a.m.; wor~
ship at 10:45 a.m. and canwa at 7
p.m. with lhe Rev. Bob Thompson.

~ ASI AIOUI 011

The Store with "All Kinds of
Stuff" for Pets, Stables~
Large and Small Animals,
·Lawns and Gardens.

'

I

I

~ii

.Detroit, Chicago NHL victovs

CRAFT SHOW·

..

C~er

·
(AP&gt; - . Joe
hit a three-run ' two:run
Ute ninth.
,
homer m lhe e1ghth ·mmng,_raUymg the Toronto Blue
Cooke, a lefl-hander who is taking Doug Drabek's
Jays past !he Cleveland Indians 5-4 Saturday.
spot in the Pirate~ rotation, root a 14-inning scoreless
Caner s homer off Ch8rles Nagy (0.2) came afiCr
streak from last season into his rust start but it lasted
Devon White led off with a single and·Paul Molitor
only three baiterS. · ·
'
,
walked. The ~omer was th~ first. of th~ .year for
After Carreon williCed with One out, Cark hit a 2-2
c.~· who did not connect m spt'lng tiainmg after
fastbaU over the right-field waD for his rtrSt ltomer of .
h11Ung 34 last season.
the seasdn and fourth in his last 13 games against
Todd Sto~myn: (1~1) :-vas ~e.winner, giving up
Pittsburgh.
·
.
f&lt;?ur runs on _rune h1ts. m ~1ght mnmgs. Duane Ward
. The Pirates needed only one hit to lake a 3-2 lead
pitched the runth for his third save.,
.
in the second on a pair of waUts errors by second .
Paul Sorrento hit his second two-run homer in two
baseman Thompson and first baWnan Clark and Jay
days during Cleveland's three-run fourth inning.
Bell's Rlll single.
Albert Belle and Carlos Baerga had consecu.nve douA_stros '· Mets.3 -: At New York. Doug Drabek
bles before Sorrento homered on the next pitch for a
surv1ved a shaky stan for his IOOth career win and
3-llead. .
.
.
. .
fust victory in a Houston uniform as the Asttos beat
The l~d1ans mode 1L 4-2 m t!le fifth when ~ny
the New York Mets 6-3 Saturday.
. Ll?ftpn sm~led, stole second and scored on Felix Fer·
Drabek (1-1) ouipitched Dwight Gooden (1-1),
mm s smg e.
. .
..
who aUowed five runs and eight hits in six innings.
Ed Sprague drove m lioth runs for Toronto :-"'th a
He also threw a wild pitch.
doubl~ ~d a groundouL He has seven RBis this seaLuis Gonzalez had a single, a double and a home
sen, ~1x m the ~ttwo games. .
·, .
run· for Houston. He also drove in three runs, scored
G111uts 12, Pirates 5 - At Pittsburgh, Will Clark
three times and stole a base.
hom~red and drove !n four "!"s and th_e S~ FrimcisDrabek, 100-71 lifetime, gave up three runs·llfld
· co Gl8Rts s_topped Pins!Jurgh ·s ~n-operung threeeight hits for the complete game. He struck out throe
game wm!'mg streak w1th a 12-5 viCtory_Saturday..
and walked three.
•
The 018Rts had lost three m a row smce wmnms
Gonzalez 1¢ off the third with a single, stole sectheu ~ner..
.
.
ond, moved to third on a grounder and scored on
Fonne,r Pirates star ~itry B&lt;,~nds had a qu1et. after·
Scott Servais' sacrifice fly. Gonzalez hit his ·third
noon, g6mg .Q-for-4. _His rookie replacement ,m left
homer of the season with one out in the fifth and
field,. AI Manin,. hit ~ts rust maJor-league home run.
added a sacrifice fly in the ninth· off rookie Mike .
, Pirates .rook1e Slarter. Steve Cooke ~0-I) ~ul~'t
Drap«:r.
.
.
bobbles the balf iu tbe second Ianing or SaturMERCED SCORES- Pittsburgh's Orlando
hold .a 4_-2 lead as the G1ants won desp1te gewng JUSt
Twins 3, Royals 2 _ ·At Kansas City; Mo., the
day's Natioual League game in Pittsburgh,
(6) slides, into San Francisco catcher
Merced
rour mnmgs from starter Jeff Brantley.
Kansas City Roya1s feU to 0-5 and kept pace with the
wbere the Gianls won 12-S. (AP)
Kirt Manwaring aud scores wbile Manwaring
paye ~urba (1-0) aUowed one run over !hree-plus
worst stan in team history with a 3-2Joss Saturday to
relief1nnmgs and added an RBI do_ubl~ for the vtctolhe Minnesota Twins.
·
ry. Mike Jackson~~ Dave R1ghetu rm1shed up.
·After Gene Larkin's RBI double put Minnesota
Th_e G1an~. trtuhn~ 4-2, br~ke through for fo~r
ahead 2-1 in the seventh. the Royals blew a chance in
runs m the fifth despne wasung Royce Clayton s
their half of the inning. .
It was the last home game of
DETROIT (AP) - Paul Yse- . Wayne Presley's goal at 15:20, but
leadoff double .when he was thrown out trymg to .
Kansas City had runners on second and third with
the
Red
Wings
regained
the
lead
Tampa
Bay's inaugural season.
baen's
33rd
goal
broke
a
5-5
tie
advance: on a p1tch that bounced away from catcher · no outs but Phil Hian struck out, Curtis Wilkerson
with 2:27 to play, and the Detroit · when Ray Sheppard SCI!red with 16' · Th~ Lightning won 12 games on
Tome ~nce.alk d . h hi C . C Ihe
d Dar . hit a grounder to. rust base that Kent f!rhek turned
.
theu home 1ce.
Red Wings beatlhe'Buffalo Sabres seconds left in the periOO.
oo ~ "": e pUIO - Iter nug o ,nan
•
into a double play .
'
Paul
Coffey's
power-play
ma4e
·
·
Roenick scored both his goals in
.
6-5
on.Saturday.
•
rt:!J LeWissmgl~ahead .ofMarkC~n sRBidouKirby Puckett singled home ·a run for Minn~sota
it 4-2 at 2:31 of the third, but Buf" the sec~nd period, including the
sebaert
toolc
a
pass
from
Y
.bl~. &lt;;lark made II S-4 ~1th a two-run smgle an~ Mat~
in the eighth, making it 3·1 against Kevin Appier (0Sergei Fedorov, split .Pat falo ro.okie Doug M~Jcdonald game wmner on a pOwer-play at
Wilhams _follo~ed w1th a double for the G1ants
2). Brian .McRae singled in the Kansas City eighth,
and Alexander ·scored his ,first NHL goal 19 sec- 13:33. The goal gave him a career._fourth s~ght h1t.
.
.
went to third on a walk and scored on Hubie Brooks' ' LaFontaine
Mogilny and rifled a wrist shot onds later to cut the margin hack to best pomt total of 103.
, The G1ants ad~ed thr!lC r~ns m the ~1ghth and
pinch-single.
·:
·
Chris Chelios got an assist on
over Grant Fuhr's shoulder for lhe one goal.
. three run~ m ~e "'.~th off relievers Denms Moell~r,
Willie Banks (1 -0) gave up seven hits in seven
Three
minutes
later,
Riendeau
the
play, establishing a new Bl~k­
game-winner. Ysebaert also had
· malcing !Us PuaiCS debut •. and J?enny ":'eagle. Kin
inqings. He struck out six and walked two. Rick
stopped Dave Hannan's shot, but ·hawks record for assis~s by a
two assists in the game.
Aguilera got foilr puts for his third save.
.Manwanng had an RBI smgle m the eighth an,d, ~
Detroit ddminated lhe first peri- Cohn Patterson scored on the defenseman with 55.
Brian Bradley .scored his 41st
od, but was stymied by Fuhr, who rebound for his fourth goal.
Hannan put Buffalo ahead on a goal late in the second perind to
stopped aU 13 shots.
The period's only goal came at very similar play to Pauerson 's end Chicago goaltender Ed
13:56, when Ysebaert's pass was goal, but this ,time it was Hannan Belfour's bid for a league-high
intercepted by LaFontame, who knocking home a Gord Donnelly eighth shutout. Shawn Chambers
beat Vincent Riendeau .for his 52nd rebound for his fifth goal at9:33.
added a power-play .goal in the
goal o{ the year.
Gerard Gallant tied the score for third for the Lightning.
The Red Wings finally scored lhe fourth time a1 H:J4, knocking
Belfour faced 29 shots in the
on Fuhr in the second period when a loose puck past Fuhr for his lOth g8me, including a Tampa Bay seathey Look a 3-2 lead.
goal of the season. '
soo-low four in the rli'St period. Pat
Their first goal came at 8:52,
Blackhawks 4, Lightning 2
Jablonski made 31 saves for the
when Steve Chiassoo retrieved his
At Tampa, Aa., Jeremy Roenick Lightning.
own rebound and slid it to Vladimir scored. twice and Joe Murphy
A seUout of 10,425 watched the
Konstantinov •. who tapped it in for added a goal and two assists as ~arne at Expo Hall, jhe 24th capachis fifth goal.
. ·
Chicago heat Tampa Bay 4-2 Sat- 1Ly crowd in 41 Tampa Bay home
Sergei Fedorov made it 2-1 at urday.
games. The crow&lt;j remained on its
13:ll, punins a wrist shot through
The win kept the Blackhawks feet well after'the game as the
Fuhr's legs for his 34th goal.
tied for first with Detroit in the Lightning players skated a victory
Buffalo retied 'the score on Norris Division. Chicago has three lap ~d gave away their sticks.
games left, w~ile Detroit has one.
·

-

'

C

Aprll11, 1993

'

SUIICia7, AprU 11 ·
10 a.m., with the Rev . Jake Frye Homemuef' s Extension Council
CROWN CITY • Easter 11111riJC preaching and the Short Family meeting, 10:30 a.J!I. at the First
service at Cro'&lt;:
Methodist singing. Rev. Jack Holley will he Presbyterian Church. lnteJ:llaUonal
Church, 6 a.m.
Sound Trio preaching and the Siaplcton Family high school students to share mf!'rmation concerning their respecuve
singing and · will be singing at 7 p.m.
Rlv &lt;JF \ NDE , The Open Gate easily removab~e. Do not scribe a house, will c~nel the win~ away Church Choir will
countries.
Afternoon program
teaching will be by Pastor F.red
Garden Cub held its March meet- wound to a ven1caf eU1p5!'. Rather, from y~ur home. The spaCID$ of
,_,.,
CROWN CITY - Sunrise ser- includes muing block doUs $3/ltit.
,...,.....ey.~
ing at the home oMnn Day with 9 round off sharp edges and remove , trees w1ll depend on the vanety
_
. ·
vices at Liberty Chapel Ch urch , Bring glue, sticks, gun, scissors and
members and 4 guests present. loose bar~. Above all prune proper- used.
. .
PORTER - Clark Chapel Swann Creek Rd., 6 a.m., Sunday , ex tension cord. Potluck dinner at .
Devotions were read by Nancy ly, she Sllld
Trees remOYe.J;.l\fJl_\1.!\~ '~~-'de_ Church sunrise service, Commu- school at 10 a.m.
rioon.
Skaggs "April Day".
·
' ..
Carefully operate mowers !llld 11nd add oxysen to ""' au. rees
Cindy Jenkins. District Forester weed tnmOC!ers around the base of remove d~st and other _polluttu:'IS nion and foot washing, 6 a.m.
GALLIPOLIS - Hallmark OrnaMonday, Apri112
•
for Gallia County Soil &amp; Water u:ees. Avo1d heavy use of herb1- from the arr and make 11 bealth~er
'
'
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County ment Collectors Club meeting , 7
RODNEY - Rodney Churth of
Conservation gave the program on c1des near trees.
..
to breathe. Trees and other p~IS
Animal
Welfare League meeting, 7 p.m. at Bossard Memorial Library.,
fore!&gt;t and trees.
,
The educauon,~ exh1~11 was by teduce the.IIJ!IOUIIC of water I_JoWIRS God to hold Easter play "Mary •s p.m . 1\t Buck~~ Rural Electric New members welcome.
She showed slides about the · Karen Thomas., .Funcuonal Uses mto the cuy s sewers, curbtllllhe Point of View," 6 p.m.
Company office.
·
care of t he forest and animals, .of Plants m the Landscape to Con- overflow at sewase treatment
GALLIPoLIS • Gallia County
.
CROWN CITY - Kings Chapel
growins of-trees and their uses, serve En~rgy" . ~ha~e trees sa~e plants . Tree~ screen unwan~ed
Library Board of Trustees
District
CRO~
CITYGuyan
Valley
logging, and the care ihat must he costs for a1r condlUonmF a .home '.n v1ews and no1ses. T~ees prov1de Church sunrise service, 6 a.m. Baptist Churth revival April 12-1_6 meeting, 5 p.m. at Bossard Memolaken to preserve forests.
t!'e summe.r. If you dO!Il au ~~d1- f~_and sheller for birds 8l)d other Revival with Rev. Mauhew Henry, at 7 p.m., with the Rev. CurtiS rial Library.
7:30p.m.
How to protect our treeS? Plant tmn your h~me, shadmg trees can anunals.
.
.
.
Sheets,
th~ right tree in the right place. mean the difference between beaiT~e O~GC Reg10n~l Spnng
, GALLIPOLIS - Backwoodsman
GALLIPOLIS - First Church of
-. . .
· Will it fit that space jn 20 years? able and unbearable temperat~. mee~ng will be held ~pril ~ at the God,
109 Garfield Ave., Easter
GALLipOLIS - D1vorced ~er- Muzzle Loading Rifle Club meet•
Do not injure trees while planting Plant trees (40 to 50 feet 11 matun- HohdJiy Inn, G~Jhpph~ . T~e sunrise services at 7 a.m . Larry . son Support ~roup meeung, 7.30 ing, 7 p.m. at the Bossard Memorithem. Be careful of roots. Make the ty), 15 .to 25 feet from the east and OAGC ~ty Stm.ng ~will Drummond will be the speaker.
p.m. al New Ltfe Lu~eran ChiJ!Ch. al Library.
planting bole large e nough and do west s1des of ·the house to shade be Apnl 19. w1th the ume and
,_.,.
SR 160. Free babyslllmg serv~ccs
not over.-arnend tJi: soil according roof and walls . Remove lower place 10 be l!lnounced later.
Commllnity caltndar items
RODNEY . - Faith Baptist provided. For more informatio.n
to fenlcins.
'
branc~es to all~w summer breezes
G~ hmt f~ March: S~~&amp;.~er
.
appear
two days /Ufort an tvtnt
Church to hold Easter sunrise ser- call446-3808 or446-4889.
· se sure t~e tree has proper and wmter sunhght to pass thro~gh . . planung_of Glad1olus. bul.~s from
and
the
day of that tvent. Th1y .
vice,7 a.m .• and musical presentaamounts
of
water
and
essentilU
eleUse
~round
.
covers
and
planungs
·
now
until
June
~ow
for
a
long
miUI
bt
received
by the Gallipolis
1
G ALLIPOLtS - Narcotics
tion "Scenes of Easter." 10:45 a.m.
ments-noL too much or too little. Be fo~ s1te coohng. Drafts from .lellky season of now~rs. Remove dead
Doily
Trlbllne
In
advam:e
for pub.Anonymous Just For Today Group
wary of construction damage. espe- wmdows and poorly InSulated leaves and debns from YO'!" ~n·
GALLIPOLIS - Prospect Bap- meeting, 7 p.m. at Grace Umted /iC1ltlon)
cially root damage. Putting dirt up walls make .a house feel colder. mals beforenew growth begms.
tist Church slinrise service, 6 a.m. Methodist Church. Use Cedar
help ~educe drafts by block- Spread CC?mpost ov~r your ~en
against a tree, is damagins:
Street entrance.
Pastor Carl Basham to preach.
Remove dead wood promptly. Do mg cold wmds. Trees should be an~ cum mto.thc .soli to ~nnch the
not top trees except as a last resort P.lanted along the north a~d west · enure garde_l). . .
. .
LOGAN - Narcotics AnonyMIDDLEPORT - Bob Gilmore
NORTHUP - Northup Baptist
If filling cavities, do not scrape out s1de of '!'~ Yllfd. or in t!Je direcnon
The April meeun~ Will mclude a
mous Courage to Change Group
·
f
th
Chwch
sunrise
services,
6:30
a.m.,
decayed wood down to fresh wood. of previlllmg Winter wmds. A row tour of Hersman s Mushroom
moeting, 6:30 p.m. 81 1st Church of was taken by helicopter rom e
with
the
Rev.
Larry
Hall,
guest
Pleasant Valley HOSPtial Thursday
Do not paint. Remove only what is of evergreens, 25 feet from the Farm.
minisiCr.
Christ.
9:!5
E.
Main
St.
,.til
Mount Carmel West Hosptial in
•
.
Columbus where he remains in the
RUTLAND • Silver Run Baptist
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County cardiac care ilniL
Chuich sonrise services. 6 a.m.
. Deputy Sheriff's AssociatiQil meet-.
•,
ing, 7 p.m., at courthouse. MemIn 1731, Benjamin Franklin rounded
BIDWELL
Harris
Baptist
POMEROY - The Food Stamp Chicago.
. .
bers urged to attend
help food swnp recipients Stretch
the
Library Company or Philadelphia,
' The progr.un began in Ohto last their food dollars by providing Church sunrise services, 7 a.m.
Education Program in Meigs Counwhich
was the first circulating library
Tuesday, Aprill3
t y has received its funding renewal summer, when Meigs County was information through ,educational Ralph Fulks to speak. Sunday'
in the New World.
school at9 a.m., worship at lO.a.m.
'for another year according to Cindy selected as one of ten pilot coun- programs and activities.
GALLJPOLIS - La Leche
League to meet ill 10 a.m., St.
, Oliveri, County Extension Agent, ties. The program is coordinated by
Linda L. Kin11, Ch~ster, was
Ohio
State
University
Extension,
EUREKA
Christ
United
Louis Catholic Churth.
·
The basic monetary unit or Albania
Home Economics/Chainnan. This
hired as lhe nutrition educator. She
is the lek; in 1991 it look 5.77 leks to
. · has .worked previously with Gallia- Methodist Chwch sunrise services,
program is funded throug_h t~e Meigs County.
The purpose or the program IS to Meigs Counties Head Start pro- 6:30 a.11.; breakfaSt at 7:30 a.m.; ·
GALLIPOLIS - Gallia County make a U.S. dollar.
Regional Food Stamp Office m
Sunday
school
a1
9:30
Lm.;
Easler
gram as a home visitor and also
does researth work for River City . worship with choir eanwa at 10:30
a\m.
Easler Seal Society.
Funding for the program in
GALLIPOLIS - Door of Hope .
Meigs County provides for a staff
·
MinistrieS,
io Aiipon Rd., behind
A Craft Show is being held atthe ·Syracuse Municipal Park on
person and educational materials
Blue
Fountain
Motel,
Cantata/EastSaturday, May 8, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. with proceeds to ~-to
such as newslellerS, displays, worker program. featuring Milci~ Chapthe London Pool fund raising project to help operate the fac1hty
shops and pamphlets.
· Mrs. ~ng and Mrs. Oliveri will man, 6 p.m. For transportaUOn call
in 1993. Cost for each 10ft. space will be $15. Craflers will be
675-4862 or 446-2820.
. develop materials to he shared at
permitted to set up beginning at 9 a.m. The ~t ~how is be!"g
,,
local grocery stores during the rlllt ,
held in conjunction with the Syracuse Ball AssocliiUon'S Openmg
MERCEIWD..LE- Mercerville
ten days of the month, conduct
Day ceremonies.that includes a "Parade of Playen" ~g!nning at
Missionary
Baptist Church' ser·
classes with' seletted sroups, dis·
11 a.m. followed by a series of ball games lllhe mumc1~ park
vices, 9:30 a.m.. with singing by
tribute information at commodity
throughout the !laY· The Big Bend An~q~e Tractot Cub will .also
the Exodus Quartet.
sites and prepare newslettCJ:S and
have a display at lhe parlc. Persons wlShmg,ID rent space:' !or tile ,
handouts to be shared with food
craft
show are invited to complete the following and mali ll with
"'ADDISON - Addison FWB
swnp recipients.
the
appropri'
ate fee by April 30. Anyone needing additional
Chwch sunrise services, 6:30 a.m.
All educational programs and
.information
can cont!ICt Bill Roush . (614) 992-5~.15, ~ Don .
with Steve Rollii!S speaking, folactivities comlucted by· The' Ohio
SkU!er(614)992-7503.
·
lowed l!Y breakfast' in the baseStale University Extension are
ment
•
available to. all potential clientele
I
·•·I ··SYRACUSE
VILLAGE CRAFT SQOW
on a·nondiserinunatory basis 'with'
· CROWN ClTY - Elizabeth ·
I
out resard to race, color, creed;
Chapel
Chinch
sunrise
services,
I
religion, sexual orientation, nalion6:30 a.m .; Sunday school at 9:30
al origin, sex, age handicap or Viet!Name~·----~~--~----~---------,
a.m.; worship at 10:45 a.m. and 7
nam-era status. ·
p.m. Singing by Exodus QuaneL

:rrees

~imts- ~tttthttl Section

Sports

Gallia County calendar of events

1

to retire today

'

'.

\('

�.

.
'

•

•.

Aprll11, 1993

'

p~-Sunday nmes sentinel

1\roch~,

ttasts.
.
.· .
.
. Aroc~. !!laking his ~lg-league
de~ut, claim~ be was~ t nervous,
while Brownmg, making hiS first
appearance since injuring a knee
July 1, admitted he was tense.
Calm won as the CwdiD&lt;IIs belted
the Reds 8-2 on Friday nighL
Gregg Jefferies hit a pair of tworun homers and Hector Villanueva,
another offseason acquisition,
added a two-run homer for the Cardinals, who won their thiJd straight. .
Geronimo Pena !Kided two doubles, Ozzie Smith had a run-scoring
single and an RBI triple and Todd
Zeile,had two hiasfor St. Louis.
'But the big· news was Arocha,
who defected to the Unite,d States
from Cuba in 1991. The "27-year-

. ..

.

Pomeroy-Middleport

Aprll11, 1993

03Uipolls; OH-Polnt Pleasant, WV

'

'•

:·

''·-•.

',, .

mcludmg the three

homers - and all e•ght r~ns m 2

He was ternf1c, St. LOUIS
.
manager Joe Torre said. "He gets
McARTHUR - Visiting Eastall four of his jlitches over for em plated seven runs in the last
saikes."
two mnings to post an 7-6 Tri·V~Arocha, who uses teammate ley Conference baseball victory
Jose Oquendo as an interpreter, over the 'Vinton Co11n1y Vikings
said .he wasn't anxious about h1s ThlJ1'S(Iay evening.
first starL
Despite the change in the time,
"It was just like any other the long-running game was called
game,·· Aroclta said. "Tonight, for darkness in the sixth inning
every pitch was working. I was afler Dennis Eichinger's Eagles (1putting the ball where I wanted . 1 overall, TVC) had already plated
to."
'
one run and had the bases loaded
Arocha spent last sea sol! at with one ouL The EHS·run did not
Triple-A LouiSville, where he was count as the inning reverted to the
12-7 with a 2.70 ERA.
fifth-inning totals.
St. Louis touched Browning for
Vinton County took a 1-0 lead
in the hottom of the· first, when
Raw lings singled, Huston walked
and Rawlings came home on a sacrifice by Jenkins.
. The Vikings went ahead 2-0 in
the second .when Houdashelt
w~ed, Ward walked and walks to
Campbell and Rawlings forced
home a run.
In the fourth, the Eagles scored
three times, when Tyson Rose led
off with a single, Robert Reeq
reached via an error, Wes Albaugh
walked and Pat Newland drove
home a run after reaching "on an
error. Randy Kaylor sacrificed
home anot,her run, then on a play
on Kaylor, Arbaugh came home
with the third run.
Vinton County added three runs
in the fourth , for a 5-3 score as
Campbell and Rawlings each
walked. Huston drove home Campbell on fielders choice in whieh
Huston reached safely. Another run
scored on a sacrifice fly and anoth"
er on a passed ball.
In the fifth, Eastern grabbed the
opportunity they needed as Jared
Ridenour walked, Joey Coates was
hit with a pitch, Rose was hit and
Reed .reached on a fielder's choice,
forcing home a run. A walk to

.
then Kay or smgled home another
two runs before ~m~ thrown outat
second to end the mrung.
Now leadmg 7-5, Eastern and
TySOI) R~se W!lf_ked out of a scary
fifth mn~ng, gtvmg up one run on
.an RBI smgle to Rawlings.
Ea~tern se~t five batters to the
plate m the s1xth befor the game
was called.
.
. .
. Rc;&gt;se was t~e wm~tng
mrehef of Davtd Koen1g (3
and starter Wes Arbaug)l (2
for four

10 hils -

mg.~utthreean4~~~gJUS!ODC:

. · (See NL on C-3)
.

strik~uts and 10 walks.

.

. Wmseman,. Bartoe and Rumble

puch~d for Vmton County. They

combmed to fan seven and walk
five.
.
Eastern hmers were. Matt
~owen and Tyson ~ose wllh two
smgle~, Arbau.gh a smgle a)ld Kaylor a smgle. Vmton County was led
by Rawlings two singles and a sin·
gle by Jenkins ..
Inning totals .
.
~1em: 0-0-0-34 7-6-3 ,
Vmton Co.: 1-1-0-3-1 = 6l3·2

=

a

IN CONCERT AT THE

SATURDAY, APRIL 17 - 8 P.M. ·

- • BaSeball • -

TIC~ETS:

Children (18 &amp; under) $6, Adults $8
AT THE DOOR $81$10
available at: Melga Co. Chamber of Commerce on"'•

SL Louil ..................3
New Y..S ............... .2
Cbicoao................... .2
M - ................. .2
FlDDda ..................... !

~ports. deadlines

•

••

CINCINNA11..........1

3• .250

.... .................. .1
SonFranc:llco .......... l

3
3

V8 eng., P. steering, P. brakes, auto .
overdrive trans., cassette, tilt &amp; cruise, P.
· windows &amp; P. lockS, cloth split seafa, tilt &amp;
cruise, rear defroster, cast aluminum
wheels, 14,000 miles, extra cle.an, power
driver seat, extra clean, aii coni:!., P. d1.1al

'
~

1
'

18,

lOW 1

1912 FORD

. ,

NOW

with 38" mowinR d.ck.

•
EulemDI ......
Team
WL ....
BonM ...................... 3 I .7!i0
MiJwaukoe ...............2 l .667
T -....................2 1 .667
CU1VELAND .........2 2 .SOO
New YOit ................2 2 .500
DcuviL .....................l

.,

••

buyen en10m's Rcvolvin&amp; C,harge Pian.
I
,

.. ..

r

·I

I

25

.00
30

.19S
.676
.616
.416
.466
.425

I.S
13
22.5
:14

•-----..SO :14
............. , ____45

DivllioD
T"• ....................... 3 0 1.000
Callfomia .................2 I .667
Soaatc .....................2 I .667
a.icqo ....................2 2 .SOO

1
1

1.5

-

I.S

... ...............2
o.t11ancl ............ - ....2

•a,

Kanou Cill' ......:.. :...

··

,.

o

2
2

4

.soo
.soo
.000

21

LA. ~---36 31
LA . .....,.____ 34 39

*CRUISE I TILT
*AM/FM CASS.
*POWER SEAT .
*POWER WINDOWS I LOCKS
*AND MUCH MORE!!!
*lOW. MILES

ONLY S178!! PER MONTH.

us AVAILABLE AT THIS PRICE"

1992 TAURUS OR SABLE
'AUTO
*AC
*CRUISE I TILT
*AMIFM CASS.
*POWER SEAT
*POWER WINDOWS I LOCKS
*AIR BAG
'AND MUCH MORE!!!
*LOW MILES

l7

'

.

v .... Mia&amp;. 7:30p.m.
Atlaola.,a.dor ,7:30p.a

..__.-.uo,.....
OU&lt;op• w;..,l:30...,.

·~

35

"WE l'U:1U j YOUR . BUSINESS"

Baseball

CIDCAGO WHITE SOX - Ploud
Tun ~ oucficldcr, an lhc 15-d•y dil·
ablcCilill. ReeaUed Michael Huff, out·
fiddcr, from Nuhwille ollhe American

Doovw•LA. aw-,lo-.30 ......

So:- 10:30 p.m.

Todajo'&amp;l,_.

Aaoc:UtiOil

!low Y - • - I p.m.
haaii•W t "
lp.a

•

NalloAIILulut
HOUSTON ASTROS - Signed JcU
. D.. Robinaon, pitther, to • minot-leiJUe

u,... ·-.:!':30pm.

"'

Saaloa LA Llba, HOp.m.
~ ........... p.a.

""

'

-*NHL*h01d&lt;WLTPILGFGA
• -- ss 21 6 116 ~7 2160

~n
y-Wo •· .... ... 40 33 7 r7 313 Tn

"""'""'- .
NEW YORK ME'r.s - Announced
.... ......,..... Mod: o....,., pildoer.

BasketbaD

WALii'S CONfERENCE

NaUoul •+ethell Auodatkwl

· NEW JERSEY NJri'S '- S;p.J Dove
Hoppen.. CCIDIC, to I 10-diJ QOnUiellftd

.

Deus~

"""'

- - , ...... 39 ~ 6 14219Tn
N.Y. hi I "'- 31 'IS •6 12 312l76
N.Y . =-- 34 ~ II 79 lOO 297
f'tri' ~ -·~ n " tt ?S m. 3tt

--

SPECIAL APPOINTMENTS. ACCEPTED FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

AnMrican La1_ue

' Orloado•Mil- , ......

.

'

~ 614·221~888

.L L. W. CENNAMO .·

m

ATTORNEY AT LAW
8Eut~StrMt,
suneaoo
Columbus, Ohio

WLt: ..... GFGA

m

y-Deaoil ...--... 4S 21 · ' 99 3.!1
,.a.;.o,o __ .... .. 2S It " 266 221

1·800 886 OLAW
(1-800-886 0529)

Calllomia 7 , llcuoit s

Scaatc 6, Baltimooo 0
Milwaukee 6, Oak1ud 5

They played Sahlrclay ·

,..

Q..EVEl..,\ND (Nap 0-1) at Tororuo
(. ,.. Q.O), I :3S ~m.
~ (Bonb Q.lJ) .. Katuu City
(Appior Q-0), 2:35p.m.
.
Mil••llkoo (BOAN 0-0) at Oaklaad
, (Wcldol-0), 4:05 I'""
·
New York (Ito)' 1·0) at CblCIJO

The Most Efficient Hut PuMp in the
M•n•f•ctur~ Housing Industry.

·.

'••m•~•'"••
In
1mIIEIIIrl.

-·-

. ( B - 0-0), 7:05 p.m.

B...,

•ow813,298

(~

rau t .QJ,I:3S I""

1-0) at Teau (Lol·

Bitlt.imote (Suacliffe 0-1) at Selule

(~ 0-0).

10:05 ......

.

- - (Wolla Q.O) "Colilmai.o (Fuo
nD 0-0), 10:05 , ....

,.New

~:e (W-o-n .. Oaktaad

(llitlopo ~. 4:05 p.m.
O.Uolt (KN...r 0.0) at Califaraia

I .(I). 4:CIII ,.....

~

Bat'
~ ().0) It ....... (ll
Joltrila&gt;l·O), 4:35,....
m

'·

~·NBA•- ,

Fe.ttn.:

USED VEHIClE
NO REASONABlE OFFER REFUSEDII

•10 Yr. Ulnntlhdllt..t W.n:anty .
&amp; Copeland Scroll Com-

preuor
•12 S.E.E.R. efficiency .
&lt;D••Ign•d for your

Co'-man, llltelthenn &amp;
·ulllerFUI'IIKe
ofrN&amp;tl........
. •Finaneclng available for
~ryone no matter what
utility company you ar•
on. ,
.
•Very lffordab'UILDft ......

l

244 S. Church
Ripley, WV

'•

.._tiM

, SEE RICK TOLLIVER, TOM MILSTEAD,
GUY SAYRE oil TIGER SAYRE
•

•

- will t17 to ..... or ...t the DeaL
.
FOBACHJODDUL ..
SEE BOB ROlli or .JA.Cit ROUSH

' DRIVE·A·LirTU'
SAVE-A-LOT ·•

.Jilf!!li&amp;IMFL ~

.

llitacla ;FOUl' . , . . deal on a New Car or TrUek and we

'

1992 MUSTANG ..................................Convertible, All Opllons! ........................s12,495.00
1991 CORSICA LT..: ..........;'...............4 door, V-6, Auto., Loaded!.........................'7,800.00
1992 MAZDA PROTEGE:.................One Owner, Air, Cass................................'8,995.00
1991 TOYOTA COROlLA DX........One Owner, Auto., Ac.:........~.................... ,'7,800.00
1987 FORD CONV. VAN...................Ralsed Roof,30,000 Miles, Loaded! .........'9,9§5.00
1989 T-BIRD SUPER COUPE.........23,000 Miles! Every Opllon!....................S11 ,495.00
1991
Door, Auto., AC, Cruise,
24,000 Miles!.....'7
•

ULTU HIGH EFFICIENCY
HEAT PUMP SYSTEM

Minnelolll, KaftAI City 7

•

.

1985 F-150 ....... ~ .....................~ ..............4x2; Auto., XL T..............~.· ~···~ ....................s3,800.00

Friday's scores

..... - .'J'......,l:l.aJ!Vl'I-'ND 10
Tu.u 3, Bol&amp;on I

1989 CHEVY C2500...........,...............V·8, Air, 4x4, Low Miles!............................'9,995.00
1990 BRONCO II .................................XLT,;A/C, Power, One Owner! ...................'8,895.00
1986 BUICK REGAL LIMITED........V-8, Loaded, Very Low Miles! ...................~,995.00
199ZEAGLE SUMMIT... ...................Auto., AIC, One
. Owner! .............................'7,500.00
1'988 CHEVY CORSICA.............;......V-6, Auto., Air..........:..........:........................14,500.00
1990.TEMPO......:....................:........... AJC, Cruise,-Tilt, Clean!..............................S5,500.00
~987 THUNDERBIRD LX ...Rare V·B, one Owner, Sport Bucket Seals, Very Low Mlles..15,995.00
1988 .DODGE SHADQW...................Auto., A!C, Low Miles! ................................'3,500.00
1991 TAURUS GL..............................Auto., A!C, •Cruise, Loaded!......................'9,500.00
1991 CAPRICE CLASSIC............;...V-8, Auto., One Ownerl... .....:.....................18,500.00
1988 ESCORT WAGON.................... Aulo., AIC, Low Miles! ...............................S3,5oO.OO
1989 FORD TEMPO............AII Wheel Drive, Auto., AC, 49,000 Miles, Super Cleanl.14,995.00
1985 MONTE CARLO.......................One Owner, V-8, Loaded! Super Clean!....'31500.00
1989 5-10 PICKUP......:......................One Owner, Air, Topper .............................S4,800.00
'

prd. to aaecmd 10-day ~n -

BAIKRUP iCY.

.
319 263
321ll70
336 2!N
323 771
267 347
191

CAMPBELL CONFERENCE
,...

OPEN "'ONDAY·FRIDAY, 8:00A.M.· 7:00·P.M.; SATURDAY, 8:00 A.M.·3:00 P.M.

- • Transactions * -

I

l'l!iC:t--'-

'PMT BASED ON 8800.00 FINANCED 60 MTHS., 7.99% APR WITH APPROVED CREDIT! TAX. TITLE EXTRA!

N.Y. lalaadU&amp; al New Joney, 1:40
1""Minna:ota at St. Louil:, I :I0 p.m.

CLEVELAND 11 New Jcnc.y. 7:30

Mo.-y-...... ........,_ 41 26 7 103
, _ _ ,,_,. 1(1 21 6 100
~---- .. 7:110 91
31 32 10 86
--·--.. 2S ., s S5
Oaawa ._,___ 9 fir .. 22.

.''8 UNITS IN STOCK!''·

Tamp~ Bay d OUeaao. 2.:40 p.m.
Winaiprcat Edmonton, • :tO p.m. ,
· CalpJyatVancouver.S:JOp.m.
OUawut&amp;o.con, 7:10p.m.
TomaioatHialotd. 7:10p.m.
~II Buffalo, HOp.m.

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

T-

TEMPO ··TAURUS - TOPAZ
FACTORY RE-PURCHASE VEHICLES

-

91

....,_,. UU..A.~ 1115

ftil

. 1993

Today•sgames

s-Jolll.'T1
Jlltooaiatl,llolnw'TI

.....

us AVAILABLE AT THIS .I'RICE"

BUffalo ~llctioit. I :10 p.m .
~ao •t 'I)mpa Bay, 1:40 p.m. .
Hald'ord 11-QIMbec, 7:40p.m.
OluwaatN.Y. lalanders, 7:40p.m.
N.Y. Rqcnal Pittlbuqh, 7:40p.m.
NPr Jcney II WahinJUD, 7:40 p.m.
B~1emat ~·8: 10p.m.
.
~II Toron10, 8:10p.m.
SL LaW. otMinn&lt;ooca, UOp.m.
'A! AJ'!&amp;dcl•• SmJ01e, 10:40 P.m.

~-

a.-ts.

32S 323
309 310
23S 323
213 404

Frlday'sscom
10, N.Y. Ranaca 4
c.J&amp;uy s, v......-1
They played Satuntay

l7

.m

86
83
60
24

NcwYOik"ll,~~6

cassette, air cond., tilt &amp; cruise, P.
window~ &amp; P. locks, P. driver seat,
rear defroster, cast aluminum
wheels, extra ciean, low miles •

I

•

.

.

.

X•800•964.· 3673

Our Service Department Ia Open Mon.-Fri. 8-5; Sat. B-12
Muffler Shop Mon.-Fri. H; Sit. 8-12

.!!:c:::======

*AUTO
*AC

~tsl!arF

~ll4,W +· ftr9.5

W~~&amp;.ern

'

Thro

I

3 .000

'

lOW

j

.S
2

Blllinu...................o

3

.
GB

.250

'IUHO

10 1993

r. .

CLEVELAND (til. Clorll 0-0) at
T-10 (Mcnll 0.1),1:!5 p.at.
(f..U 0-1) .. tt..o.Cil,
-~-Q.ll). 2:35 ......
YCIIIt (Kan.-o Q.O) "Otica·
,. (Mol)o...tll-0). 2:1! ~...
(Daofto 0-0) II T - ( 8 -

.

.110
.241

DoiiM alGoldal

1.AJ1 An.-. (R. MuWta l..Q) at At·
lanu(Smollz0-1~ 7:10pm,
·
CINCNNATI (Pulh Q.O)" SL LaW.
• (fc..UbuoyQ-1), I :OS"P,m.

Power Plus"' engine with electric start.
• No money down, no payments and no interest for
fi
11 • R 1 · c
quali 1ed buyers on oro s evo vmg harge Plan.
'Ask your dealer for details.

985~3301

Dottaa.
_____
... »
65
tf
· · - - · -··

~1115.-~

Tod&amp;IJ'II&amp;- '

·BAUM LUMBER

16..5

- -(1.-

GREEN

·Haven't }UU. dooelWinrtaTom loilg ~"

-'61
.432

· · ----- " IS

o.O,

AMERICAN LEA(}UE

6.~

•·l.llab---·---'-42 32
Drawu ______ 32 42

=-.i~::.~· i· ~13

&lt;S..-u

13,

3

10
7
8
2

TOPAZ

-OR

zn

y-1:... Anp " 31 33
y-W'IIIIIlpis....... 31 36
Q:lmmiOtl ......... 26 47
Son'-............ II fH
x-cliocbcd divisim til1c
•y-dmdted pla,.,tf bonh

Frlday'siCGI'el

p.m.
Howton
0.1) tl New Yodl
('1'111111&amp; 0.0),1 :.00 p.m.
0.0) "Colondo {8.
H&lt;wy Q.O). 3:05 l':'"'
.

$9,995

1992 TEM

Smy1he DIYIIIon
y-VarJC:Ulvc:r ..... 43 '29 9 9S 125 26S
y-Calauy .......... 41 29 11 93 308 rll

WLN.Ga

y .........

'

,,3s

IS

--

GoWcioS... - ..c-31 42
s.c.
___ _n D
:r.: .. * , ......... bath

, San Dioao (Bon" 0-1) a1 Florid•
(Aono.....,0-1).
OaiciJO (Ouzrn.lll ..()) ll ~~~ 1 ': hi•
(Scblllinal.Q),I :1!_p.m.
San fftnciaoo (B\1111011 hO) 11. Pit11 •

• This Toro• yard tractor feature s a big 16 HP Toro

•

.250
.250

buqh(Wolodiellli.O),I : ~

Was

~~~999

24

.~

hdlk-

2.5
2.5
2.5

.OUC.JO CMarun ()..1) ... Phillde!phi•
·
(MuJhnlldcl -1-0),'7:05 p.m.
Su Dieao (Eil•nd
A\ Florid•

'

· 15,184.

CHESTER

~

2

Loc AnaoJoo ~ 0.1) .. "'""'
(0. Moddtu: 1.0). 7:10p.m.
. CINCNNATI (Rijo l.Q) ll SL lAuia
• ' tlob..... Q.O), I :Oil p:m.

trans., air cond., AM/FM stereo,
cassette, till &amp; cruise, P. windows &amp;
locks, P. driver seat, P. mirrors, rear
defroster, cast aluminum wheels,
14,500 miles.

246-it Yard frt.ctor

.l70

!NW Q.l), 3:05 .....

(llouahJ.G), 7~P.""

4 cyl. eng., P. steer., P. brakes, auto.

"

aua ...w

2.5

Today'•P-

;:e~ubrnissions
~~~!~; 'certain deadlines far·- + ····-·····-·---..:.... _..___,
WHEEL.HORSE'
will be observed. The
• Hurry in while selection is at its best

e

#

1112 FORD·TEMPO IL 4 DR.

posted

,jleadline for photos and relaled arti- ·
'J;Ies for basketball and other winter
~ports is· the last day o~ the NBA
•Finals.
., Likewise, the deadline for sub:ffiissions of local baseball· and
'ioftball-related photos and related
lflicles, from T-ballto the majon,
ItS well as other' spring and summer
~rts, is the day of the last game•
:of the World Series. The deadline
for photo~ and related articles for
CooibaU and other fall sports is the
§aturday before tl)e Super Bowl.
4
These deadlines have been insti:
.~ted to give' readers plenty of time
get their photos back from the
· otography studio of cho~ and
give the staffs the opportumty to
publis~ these sports pho,tos and
articles during the appropnale sea·
son for that sport.
··

.• -

3.8 V6 eng:, P. steer., P. aulo. trans.,
AMIFM stereo cassette, tilt &amp; cruise,
P. driver seat, P. windows, rear
defroster, cast aluminum wheels, P.
locks, 13,000 miles, like new, air
· cond., P. dual mirrors.

WAS

the bottom line•••

y-T.............. _ 42 rT II 9S 210 lll
~ :14 11 11 267 266
Atimucol... :...... ~ 3S 10 so 262
T...,. Boy ....... Z2 S2 6 SO 230 316

sq..w. ...........

14

· · - · ----41 :15 .651
.-SM ........ .- 45 21 .616

Son ..........
~)
Pi..-~ 1).0),1 :1! , ...
flouiiDI'l (Drabek ~1) at New Yott
(Goodaa HI), I :40 p.m.
·
Montroal (D. Mulino~ 0-1) •• Col·

3.8 V6 eng., P. steer., P. brakes,
auto . trans., AM/FM stereo

IIIIV Mlli

.250

DolnOL..- - - -·- 36 l7
Mil......_..__.-27 ~

T-

1.5

(B...., "

1192 FORD ,.AURUS IL 4 DR.

woos·

3

2 .SOO

They played Sahlrday

'93:

•

I
l.S

.667

.soo

13.S

a

WESTERN CONFERENCE

l'llubouih 6,
5
-7,NowYod:3.10;,;,p
Aduu 2. Leo Anaolol 0
SL Uolll, C1NC!NNA112

NTS,

•: The Gallipolis Daily Tribune,
;I'he Daily Se,tinel, the PoirJI
'fleasant Register and the Sunday-·
.:rimes-Sentinel value the contribu·
.o.Jions their readers make tO the
sections of these papers. and
:mese contributions wiD continue to

1

2

..514
.50'1

I

.

.5
.5

San-

....
•••

GB

C..londoll,Monlrcll4
Son Jliop 2, Florida I

S14,99s

'nL

r.t.
0 1.000
I .~
1 .7SO

L

w..urn DMAoa
Allaoto ................... ..4 1 .800
LocAn-..... ....... .2 3 .«10
Calan.~ -·--············ .1
2 .333
S..Diooo .-............. 1 2 .333

•

&lt;:· EHS added a single run in the

.

_

' au...,. II, n.li..toJ,w. 7

In business for yourself?

~nor.

W

Frldaw's"""ra

For VC, A. Hammond doubled, Inning totals
~· McARTHUR
Eastern
'jepelled a late-game rally ·by Vin- while K. McPherson, Morgan , Eastern: 002-210-3 = 8-64
Vinton Co.: 100-000-2 = 3-54
10n County to post an 8-3 Tri-Val- ~hillips and Smith each singled.
:"ley Conference softball victory
''Thursday evening.
/ Vinton County took a 1-0 lead
~ n the first when Angie Puckett
"'Nalked and came home when Mary
{.lullins reached on an error.
~· Easterit_(2-0) took a 2-0 lead in
:;the .third when· Carrie Morrissey ,
ofeached on an error, Amy Redoviw• ·
·:Walked, Jaime Wilson walked, then
:.t.l:orrissey stole home. Rachael .
.Hawley then slammed a long sacri1 ice fly to left field to bat in the
Tax Relieffrom America's Tax Team
&lt;Second run.
: • Eastern added some insurance in
\)he fourth inning when junior farst
~aseman Penny Aeiker slammed a
GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
: olo home run to lead off the
SECOND &amp; SYCAMORE
• 618 EAST MAIN ST.
:Pame. Later, Morrissey walked,
446-0303
992~74
~tole second and came home on a
::;Displayed
ball, hii to right field by ' ...__ _ _ __.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.J
•Amy Redovian.

:: P.am Douthitt's Eagles scored
'hree more runs in the top of the
-seventh to lead 8-1, then repelled a
':two-run VC rally in the bo\tl&gt;m half
:pf the frame.
____ " . Shelly Hendricks (2-0), the win·
;ning pitcher, had two strikeouts and
two walks.
; Teresa McFerren suffered the
loss despite fanning six and walk'ing five.
;. Eastern hitters were Aeiker with
•ll home run and single with two
'RBis, Hawley a 'double and singles
:by Wilson, Nicole Nelson and Hen'
• :11rlcks.

•

l'hiladoljiiUo .............3

Tickets
Rutland Village ~all, Quality Print Shop In Middleport 11nd Fruth
Pharmacy In Middleport, Galllpolla and Pt. Pleaaant.
Sponsored by Rutland Village and tha Melga County Chamber of
Commerce.

~

:tifth, when Wilson dou~led and
,tame home on a hard-hit ball to
~6hort by Jessica Karr. Morrissey
~arne home and Karr reached on an

._ ...

l'iuoburJh ...............3

during Friday night's National .League game in
. St. Louis, where the Cardinals.won 8·2. (AP)

'Eastern ladies down Vinton County 8-3

.

,

•
- ll 36
IAdiooo ------37 36

Q

NATIONAL LEAGUE

Tem

Newlandfu~¢homeanoth~~ru;n~,~~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;:~~~;;~~==~==:
BACK TO FIRST - Cincinnati's li'ip
·Roberts (right) gets back to rJrst base ahead or
~: the tng by St. Louis first sacker qregg Jefferies

Always.chec

Scor·eboard

RUTLAND CIVIC CENTER

a

~·

____;.....:__ _ _ __

1/3 innings.
·
.
doubled again, Smith tripled and enced a real heartbreaker.
"I had the jitters in· the first Jefferies smacked 1 second home ,
The Rockh.s made their home
inning,'' Browning said. "I'm 1101 . nm ow:r the left fJdd wall.
debut a memorable one Friday as
making excuses, but I was nervous ·
In the SL Louis third, ZeiJe dou- Eric Y OQllg ind Charlie Hayes hit .
at the start.
bled and vrn.nueva llomelecL
farst-inning home runs at Denver's
· "Everything I threw was up and
The-Reds got their second run in Mile High Stadium in an 114 'Iilut
overthemiddleoftheplate."
the fifth as RcgcieSandcrs tripled of Montreal before a National
· Jefferies, acquired m the offsea- off center fielder Ray Lankford's League regular-season record
crowdof80,227.
son from Kansas City, now has gloo;eandRobemsingled.
.._ three home runs. He said he's
Lantfonl strained his left shoulColorado had 18 hits, including
pumped up by the Cardinals' 3·1 der nmning into the w!lll on .the a career-high four by Young. Winstart.
triple llld left the game.
ner Bryn Smith, a 37-year-old
"It's exciting, being on a team
Villanueva. who speaks Span- right-hander ·who had elbbw
that knows it can win," he said. ish, got a ~ to play inslead of surgery last season lllld arthJoscop"Last season, we got off to such a regular catcher Tom Pagnozzi ic knee surgery just six weeks ago,
bad start."
· beca!JSC Of Arocha's difficulty with shut out the Ex11os on six hits
· Torre and Jefferies both got a English.
through seven mmngs before giVkick out of Jefferies' Opposite·f~td
"Pagoozzi is the best catcher in ing way to reliever Willie Blair. ,
homer over the right field wall in the league. but tonight Villanueva
The J.tockies lost their farst two
the farst iMing. .
hei11C4 a lot." Arocha said. ••Jtwas games against the ~Mets in New
"It was supposed to be a hit- easiCI'IOcommlDiicate."
York.sc&lt;iringonlyonerun.
"''om:.said he plans to let ViiAt Mial"i, Florida was within
and-run," Torre said. "It's the best
hit-and·run I've called."
lanueva catch Arocha .at least for three outs of its fust shutout when
. "I was just trying to StaY. in on Arocha'snextcouplcofswtS.
San Diego's Gary Sheffield
it," Jefferies said.... When I hit it I
Pella has hit in all four games, sparked a two-run ninth inning
farst thought it was foul. The ball . going 8 _ffll 13~ I .615. "'!JI'ing aver- with home run off reliever Bryan
must have really been carrying. I'm ag~. Zei1e also has hittn all four. , Harvey (0-1) as San Diego won 2not big and strong enough to do gomg 6 COliS.
· 1.
that."
Elsewhere in the NL it was Col"This is a tough one." said
The Reds took a 1·0 lead in the . ~ 11, Mo~llreal4; ~Diego~· Florida f11311ager ~ene Lachem~n,
fttst on singles by Bip Robc:ns and ~ 1; Chicago 11, Philadelphia . whose team .has lost three stta1ght
Barry Larkin and an RBI ground- 7; Pnasburgh 6, San Franctsco 5; after winning its opener. "These
· out by Kevin Mitchell, who then ~O!Jston 7, New York 3 in 10 arethetoughestkindtolo5e." '
.
Gene Har(is (1-0) pitched two
left the game with a tight right mmngs; and Allaara 2, Los Angehamstring.
les 0.
.
innings for the victory.
The Cardinals responded with a
. Rockies win, Mar6as lose
Cubs 11, PbiUies 7
three-run f111t. Pena opCned with a
Both .the Co~ Rockies and
Philadelphia had its three-game
double then scored on Smith's siit- the Ronda Marlins added another winning streak snapped as Derrick
glc and Jefferies followed with his farst to a growing list. ·
May hit two homers and drove in
homer.
- - Tlie Rocfies won their first five runs to power Chicago in
In 1M Caldinals' second, Pena game cYCI' ~ the Marlins ex.peri(NL eads on C4)

E as t ern gent s ed ~e v·In-t on
' c oun t•y 7-6 .

old right-han~ .al\o-:ved {our h.its
~ two runs m elghtl~n~gs, strik-

Sunday nmes sentinel-Page C3

Pomeroy-Middleport-Qalllpolls, Oii-Polnt Pleaiant, WV .

(

NL games ...__!;&lt;c;:;::ont=i,.=ted:..::from.:;::.::..:::c-.::!.2&gt;_'_·....;__

Jefferies, Villanueva help C~r~s . hand Reds 8-21oss ,

: ST. LOUIS (AP) _ St. Louis
Cardinals rookie Rene Arocha' and
Cincinnati Reds veteran Tom
~rowning were a study in con••
·
••

'

•

•

I

.
"..' "'

.

t,

'.

II,

,,

..

'

.•

'Ill .

...

�/

P~~ge

C4

\

Pomeroy-Midclleport-Galllpolls, OH--Polnt Pleasant, wv

Sunday nmn Sentinel

Aprll11, 1993

•

Aprll11,1993

Pomeroy-Middleport-'Galllpolls, OH-Polnt PteasaAt,

wv

Sunday llmes Sentinel-Page C5 •

Sprague's four-~it night helps
Toronto beat Cleveland 13-10

~

.

J TORONTO (AP) -

Manager
Gaston has said all along that
tie's willing to put up with an ocassjonal error at third base as long as
Bd Sprague makes up for it with
his baL
: Sprague dido 't disappoint Gaston or a regular-season record
crowd of 50,533 Friday, eslablish- ·
ieg career highs with four hits and
four RBI as \he .Toronto Blue Jays
their 13th home opener in 17
!lies. They beat the Cleveland Indi~.&gt;ito

won

ahs 13-10.

: Sprague hit the club's first home
run of the season, a solo shot to left

far a 3-2 lead in the second inning.
fie added a single in the third, a
double in the fifth a run-scoring
Rlll grounder in the seventh and a
two-run double in the eighth.
: "I think I'm still improving
defensively," said Sprague,
ctwged wit!!' an error when he tried
to short-hop Sandy Alomar's
bOuncer in the sixth.
· "But as long as I'm able to separate my offense from my defense,
I ~hould be OK.''
t_ c:;aston has no doubt about
:SF,!gue 's ability at the plate.
1 " We always thought he has the
ability to move up in the order,"
Gaston said. "This guy should hit
20 to 25 homers, or maybe more.' '
Albert Belle led the Indians'
offense with three RB Is, including .
• a lwo-run hqmer for a 2-0 Indians
leU in the top of the first. He
added a·sacrifice fly in the sixth as
!hi Indians scored six runs for a 9-

71f.ad.

'.

,.. ··• · ·•"The- way both cl'ubs were ·
s~inging the bat today it didn't

[O()k like that lead would stand,"
the Indians' Ted Power (0-1) said.
. "Maybe we got too pumped up
and were trying to throw the ball
by everybody."
:cleveland starter Jose Mesa
allowed six runs on six hits with
two walks over 2 2/3 innings.
T6ronto Slarter Juan Guzmari' gave
up a career-high 10 hits, allowing
•'

eight runs with five strikeouts and
one walk over 5 I/3iMings.
Mark Eichhorn (I -0) allowed
one run on two hits in I 2/3
innings.
Duane Ward relieved Danny
Cox with the tying run-at the plate
in the hinth and got Kenny Lofton
to ground out to second for his second save.
After Belle:,S__ bomer put the
Indians ahead, the Blue Jays pulled
even with a pair of unearned runs
in the bottom of the fusL ·Glenallen
Hill misplayed Paul Molitor's Oy
b3ll to right for a three-base error,
allowing ~von White to score. ·
Carter followed with a sacrifice
fly to lefL
,.
Sprague's homer put the Blue
Jays up 3-2 in the second before
Toronto added three runs in the
third on Carter's run -scoring
ground-out and RBI singles by
Darrin Jackson and Pat Borders.
Roberto Alomar' s RBI single
put Toronto up 7-2 in the fourth,
but the Indians chipped away, scoring a run in the ftfth on Lofton's
sacrifice fly and six in the sixth on
Paul Sorrento's two-run homer,
RBI singles by Lofton and Carlos
Baerga, a bases-loaded walk to
Felix Fermin and a sacrifice fly by
Belle.
·
In other AL games, it was Seattle 6, Baltimore 0; New Yor!c II,
Chicago 6; Texas 3, Boston I;
Minnesola 8~ Kansas City 7; California 7, Detroit 5; and Milwaukee
6, Oakland 5.
Mariuers 6, Orioles 0
Fernando Valenzuela was perfect in his ftrSt game back, even if
it was only for one inning~ ·
Valenzuela returned to the
major leagues for the fust time in
two seasons Friday night, wanning
up for a scheduled Tuesday night
slalt in Texas by pitching the seventh inning of the Baltimore OriQies' 6-0 loss to the Seattle
Mariners.
"It was a little bit different
coming from the pen," Valenzuela
said. "It was a little"bit strange.
But it turned out fine. Everything
was wotking pretty good."
Valenzuela got a groWidout and

two flyouts at ihe Kingdome in his
first big league appearance since
June 12, 1991, when be was with
the California Angels."He pitched
in the Mexican League last rear.
" He got his work in ,' Baltimore manager Johnny Oates said.
"He got an inning's wor!' 8J!.d he
got people out,"
Erik Hanson, who .had a major
league-high 17 losses last season
and was winless in his last II
slarts, won in his flfSt slalt of 1993,
allowing seven hits in six innings
- including five doubles.
' •l was overanxious, Hanson
said. " By game time, I had no
energy left."
' •
Ben McDonald, a 13-game winner last year, was chased after jus\
I l/3innings and 12 batters. He
wallced seven - three of them
scored - and gave up only one hit.
Baltimore tied an· AL record with
15 left on base in a nine-inning
shutout loss.
Rangers 3, Red Sox 1
Nolan Ryan began his farewell
season by scattering foJr hits in six
innings and striking out five. He set
a major league record by appearing
in his 27th season. '
The game marked the last opening night of Arlingtoo Sladiuni, and
a sellout crowd of 40,188 attended.
The Rangers, who won their third
straight, move to a new ballpark
next season.
John Dopson gave up five hits
one in six-plus innings . Rafael
Palmeiro and Jose Can8eco hit consecutive home runs in the sixth.
Yankees 11, White Sox 6
Bo JackSon hit a pinch homer at
Comiskey Park in his 1993 debut,
his first home run since Sept. 21,
1991, against California. He hadn't'
appeared in a regular -season game
since Oct. 5, 1991.
Bob Wickman was the w.inner
but lasted only five innings, allowing five hits and four runs. Loser
·DoM Pall gave up three runs in the
fifth.
Twins 8, Royals 7
,
Dave Winfield hit a three-run
homer and doubled twice for the
visiting Twins. He has three
homers and nine RBis this week.

~·

·' ..•

1

'

\

Sportsmen's clubs seeking · ·
exemption from new sales tax

AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Sports- and are subject to taxation if their
men's clubs have been dealing with puipose is ' to provide facilities for
a major headache since legislation use of guns or shooting," he wrote.
applying a sales tax to types of club
The name of the club is not the
memberships was passed last y.ear. determining factor. Hanson said.
The new law meant more work The words "gun cluJ&gt;' in a name
and more aggravation for volun- wo_uld not automati_cally CO!ll~l
teers-::..-intliiscaseclii1&gt; treasurers the club to tax membership dues.
- when volunteers are hard to
Hanson said he disagreed with
find.
interpretations of'the' law calling
Now, however, comes an opin- for taxes to be paid for use of club
.. (Continued from C-3)
ion from James R. Hanson, general facililies and properties. Those
counsel for the Columbus-based could include a tax on fees charged
Pbil8delphia' s home opener.
Darren Daulton hit two homers Wildlife Legislative Fund of Amer- for use of a shooting range or a tax
and drove in five runs , and John ica, that ought to relluce the pain on targets purchased.
Kruk and Lenny Dykstra each and paperwork.
The tax applies to transactions
" The new tax will not apply to by which a membership is granted,
· homered-for the Phillies. The Cubs
most sportsmen's and conservation maintained or renewed, he wrote.
al~ got home runs from Jose Vizclubs,"
Hanson wrote in an opincaino and Mark Grace.
Sportsmen 's club~ exist for a
' Reliever Chuck McElroy ( l -0) ion distritiuted to such organiza- variety of reasons other than pure
tions throughout the state.
~ the victory with 1 213 scoreless
sport and recreation.
"A club is subject ta the tax ·
mnings and Randy Myers finished
Most clubs deal primarily with
for his first save as a:Cub. Phillics -only if it was organized and exists . matters pertaining to conseryation
for the p111p0se of providing a spe- as well as the promotion of huntstarter Ben Rivera was the loser.
cific recreation or sports activity ing, fishing and trapping. Their
Braves 2, Dodgers 0
At Atlanta, Pere Smith scatrered for its members," Hanson said.
efforts often center on educating
Gun or shooting. clubs are and providing activities for chilthree hits in eight innings and
drove in a run with a sacrifice fly to specifically mentione_d in the law dren.
lead the Braves over Los Angeles.
, Sid Bream homered in the second inning off Pedro Astacio (0-1)
as Atlanla won its third straight.
. Smith (I -0) was 7-0 after being
recalled from the mino~ last Aug.
2. and the Braves won all II of his
S13rtS en route to wiMing their second consecutive National League
57-59 Court St., Gallipolis
championship. Mike Stanton
pitched a perfect ninth for his sec(614) 446-9545
ond save.
.
·
Pirates 6, Giants S
"Open 7 Days A Week"
; Barry Bonds made a successful
return to Pittsburgh as a member of
Mon.-Sat. 11-am-11 pm
San Francisco, but Pirates rookie
Kevin You'IS upslaged him , driv. in' in four runs with a_ ~ingle. and
go-ahead two-run homer in the
eighth inning.
·Bonds showed his old team an~
mates why the Giants are paying
hilJl $43.5 million by going 2 for 4
~-9
Witll a double, triple, RBI and three
runs, but the Giants bullpen
co!lldn 't hold a 5-4 lead after a
· three-run rally in the top of the
eig),tth.
'
~ob Beck (1 -0) took the loss.
TO MENTION A fEW: .
Bl$ Minor (1-0) gOt the final out
·~rolled Tlllpla Fillets -It Is said that this
of ihe eighth for the victory,
•:
Astros 7, Mets 3
Is thellsh served at the Last Supper.
~t New York, Eric Anthony
•Scallops -oyster Stew
drO'Ve in the go-ahead· run with a
sinile in the I Oth inning and Ken
.Crab Meat .Clams •Shrimp
Caminiti added a three-run homer
1.C1reole •Broiled Salmon Fillets
off.-loser Anthony Young as Hous1011:beat the Mets. The Astros won
(with/cheese -lemon- wine sauce)
for the flfSt time this season afrer
•Frog Legs •Squid
losl'ng three straight games at home

' let

me
analyze your
insur.mce needs'
witha&amp;ee
Family Insunmce
MOUND MEETING - Clevelagd hurler
Jose Mesa (Iert) gets a reception on the mound
from pitching coach Rick Adair (center.) and
catcher Sandy Alomaf Jr: In the early
or

Checkup.,,

Friday night 1s American League game against
the host Toronto Blue Jays, who won 13-10.
Mesa was shelled for six runs qn six bits and two
walks in 2 213 innings. (AP)

Kirby Puclceit added a two-run
homer as Kansas City dropped to
0-4 for the second straight year.
The Royals were 1-16 at the start
of last season.
Mike Trombley won despite
allowing singles to five of his fust
six batters. Loser Mark Gardner
was tagged for seven runs and
seven hits in five innings.
Angels 7, Tigers 5
Kirk Gibson hit a grand slam for
his ftrSt home run since last April
-20 and the third grand slam of his
career for visiting Detroit; which
dropped to 1-3.
Mike Moore was chased after
just I 1/3 innings, allowing four
earned runs and six hits. He has
give~ up. ~i~t earn~ runs and 12
hits m SIX mrungs th1s year.
Julio Valera got the victory,
pitching three hitless innin~s. Mark
Leiter was the loser, allowmg a goahead single to Greg Myers in the

CAROU
SIIOWDIN
342 s.c..l AM. '
G &amp;1l1,0l
"-'446-4290.
11-.44 ..4511 ..
Farm

Rutland's Williamson finishes
among top five in W·WMS act.i on

seventh;· · - ....... ~........... .- ............. ~~ .............
Brewers 6, Athletics S
Dickie Than drove in three runs

By SCO'IT WOLFE
and third, but before the melee had'
Times-Sentiuel Correspondent
ended Parkersburg's Mike Balzano
MINERALWELLS, W.Va.- and Francis tangled hard against
There was surprise ending to the the wall between three and four .
Pepsi 40 feature for the STARS
Balzano also recovered to hold
Late Models at West Virginia down fourth. '
Motor. Speedway as Rick Ekert of . S~aver began a ralJ , that
York, Pa. powered by /&gt;teve Shaver , a~ to assure,him of VICtory,
of Parkersburg W. Va with just method•~ally passmg cars ms1de
(our laps to claini the $5,000 to win _ and outside on his victory jaunt,
paycheck in an elite field of 47 but fuel problems haunted Shaver
cars.
with four laps to go, allowing a
~ Pomeroy driver T.R. Collums hard-charging Eckert to take over.
)19Sted an 11th-place finish in his . Fr~is was on Eckert's tail at
debut in the Pure Stock class. Rut- the f•msh, followed by Balzano,
hl'nd's Rick Williamson posted a Davey Johnson, Moran Chub
thi-rd-place finish in the UMP mod· F~ank, Darrell Lanig~~;n, Bob
ifed feature.
Pierce, Shaver and John Amncr. ·
Alter looking like a runaway for
T .R. Cullums placed lOth in his
Donnie Moran who led from the heat race, his first time ever in a
initial green flag, the 10 .caution race car. 11Je rookie driv~r. driving
fl)gs needed for various spins and the PreciSIOn Automot•ve car of
tangles took the hopes of victory Darwin, moved from 20th to fourth
away on the 31st lap. Moran, who place in the feature before an acciheld a comfortable lead, despite the dent relocated h1m on the lad.
cautions, began to sputter as a '
Cullums finished lith out of 28
nisult of low fuel.
cars as Jeff Yeager posted the win
• A 10rrid three-way race between over Jeff Russell.
Moran Shaver and Ashland, Ky.
Mike Balzano, in brother Dave's
dtiver 'stevie Francis developed. UMP Modified, won that division's
With Moran slowing, Francis drove ' feature. Rubie Hatfield was second,
hard into tum three, where he and followe~ by. Rick Williamson of
Moran langled, allowing Shaver to Rutland m thll'd.
take the lead . Both Moran and
SUMMARY
Francis recovered to hold second
STARS· Late model~

for visiting Milwaukee, which rallied from a 4-3 deficit in the eighth
when BJ. S'urhoff hit an RBI single
and Thon added s sacrifiCe fly off
Dennis Eckersley.
Josias Manzanillo, fourth of six
Milwaukee pitchers, got the victory . Kelly Downs (1-1) was the
loser.
,

NL action ...

-AQU
IS

Enjoy 'our Daily Luncheon Buffets
11 am·2 pm,
our Dinner Buffets froin
pm, or •order off the menu."

Jeff Bagwell hit a two-run
homer and Eric 'Anthony a solo
slid in the sixth to give aous!On a
3-0' lead befme the Mets tied in the
-botiom of the inning on Tony FerIJIII!dez's two-run triple and a wild
pireh by Slartcr Mark Portugal. .
· Doug Jones (1-0) was the wmn1Jt in his third appearance of ~ e

"'
'
'

WHATEVER YOU DRIVE - WE HAVE THE nRES IN STOCK TO FIT YOUR NEEDS
P235!75 R15
P235/75 R15
30-950R15
31-1050RI5
LT265/75 R16
lT 265/75 R1b
9fJO R16.5
LT235/75 R15
LT245/75 R16
LT225/75 R16
LT235/85 R16
P235/75 R15

-Many Vegetable, Casseroles &amp; Desserts

to P.hihidelphia.

Jell(lll.

'

'8.50

ALL THIS &amp; MORE FOR
Always 30 to 40 Dishes - Desserts Included! ·

WRANGLER RADIAL
WRANGLERI'J
WRANGLERI'J
WRANGLER RTS
WRANGLER TO
WRAN.GERlD
• G 182
WRANGLERI'J
WRANGLER fJJ
AT

S2
X2 EXTRA LOAD

·c
"B'
·c.
·c
.·E·
·c
·e·

"C'

"E' ·

fJJ

X2 EXTRA LOAD

$79.95
89.95
110.95
89.95
101.95
100.00
100.00
102.95
126.95
I 14.95
116.95
74.95

"
••
·'
•

·

'

.

•

'

.

,...

plar,.

I '

.,

Ho me: Office~: Bloomington. lllinms

llllUIAN( ~

Like a good neighbor,
State Farm is there.®

"~..........................................~· ..'
Scott's quick
•Electronic Filing Available
,:
KOofHarris
•Direct Deposit of Refund Check
earns him title
.-.
For complete, professional individual and
in U.S. Box-Off
'
business tax preparation assistance call
'

''

PHOENIX (AP) - Joel Scott
recorded a 45-second knockout
over Rodney Harris to win the
superheavyweight bout of the U.S.
Box-Off Friday night.
Scott, of Albany, N.Y., set up
Harris with a pair of jabs, threw a
right hand and then ended the
match with a solid left hook. Harris, of Cleveland, got off the mat
early In the count, but referee Joe
ViUa stopPed the contesL
The VICtory earned Scott an
opportunity to represent the United
States at the World Boxing Championshiops next month in Tampere,
Finland.
Scou' s knockout was the last of
several dominating performances.
Russell Roberts, of Gretna, La.,
was in control from the outset as h.e
beat Arturo Hoffman , of Dad e '
City, Fla., in the 112-pound bout.
Roberts knocked Hoffman down
once and forced another standingeight count later in the first round.
Roberts continued to throw roundhouse rights but was unable to
bring the match to an early end. ·
· Hoffman repeatedly worked
Roberts against the ropes in the
second round, but was unable to do
any damag e. Roberts cut Hoffman 's lower lip early in the third
round. After a pause while Hoffman was checked by the ringisde
physician, Roberts appeared to gain
momentum which he kept through
the end of the bout. Roberts won
47-18.
The hardest fought match came
at 178 pounds where Antonio Tarver, of Orlando City, Fla., outpointed Frank Vassar, of . Spokane,
Wash., 66-26. Tarver won the first
round, but was stunned in the second b;y repeated left hands from '
Vassar. Tarver recovered, however,
and the two fought evenly in the
final round.
.
·

Lynn E •.Angell
.,/

Certified Public Accountant
736 SecoRd Ave.

Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
(614) 44G-86n
Open 9-5 Weekdays, Evenings and Saturday by
appointment.

'.
\

'.
• '

.I

t

...

'

"

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

..
' ,_'

'

'

'-

Effective AprilS, 1993,

.

our new office hours ~ Middlegort will be:
'
MONDAY-111URSDAY

MONDAY-11IUIISDAY

8:30 a.m. 10 4 p.m.

8 ..... 10 t :30 p.m.

FRIDAY

l'ltiDA\'

8:30 a.m. lo 5 p.m.

8a.a1o6p.m.

• SA11JIIDAY

SA11JRDAY

8:30a.m. 10 12 p.m.

~es

J

s ........ lZ •.•.

FDIC

'

'

.,

''

5 speed, air, sunroof.
$4296

$95 Mo.

-

'This is the vic10ry shuffle," he
said, grinning broadly.
,The plaintiff, identified in eowt
records as Victoria C., was not in
court when the verdict was
announced.
. "She expec~ed justice. This is
notjusticc'to' her," said her lawyer,
Victoria Vreeland. "It doesn't
elimin&amp;IC the facts about what happeftcd to her...
Victoria C.'s lawyers-said they
pl111ned 'to appeal to the 9th U.S.
Cin:uit Cowt of Appeals on several

426 VIAND ST., PT. PLEASANT, W.VA. :~ 675·3930

'

•

; By PEGGY ANDERSEN
issues, including the decision to after consensual sex with .one play• SEATTLE (AI&gt;)- The validity consider the release agreement sep- er.
The 36-year-old mother of four
of a release agreement signed by a arately from the rape allegations.
woman w~o says she. was gang. "We weren't allowed to . present told jurors she said she signed a
t.qled by Cincinnati Bengals play- any evidence of what occurred that document agreeing she would keep
quiet about the alleged assault in
. ers in 1990 was upheld on Friday night," Vreeland said.
exchange
for $30,000.
by a federal cowt jury.
Jurors leached a verdict after
The
document
was signed about
• The verdic-t upholds the ·about six hours of deliberations.
a
year
after
the
alleged
aSsault at a
"Release of All Cla•ms," which They listened to II days of testiSeattle-area
hotel.
She
filed
a civil
frees all parties of liability. The mony.
in
April
1992,
about
six
lawsuit
Victoria C. said she was ,raped
jury's decision liars . the woman
months·
after
signing
the
release.
from seeking further 'damages.
and sodomized by a dozen Bengals
"We are relieved by the cowt's
verdict," Bengals general manager
Crossword Puz~;le on Page D-2
Mike Brow,n said in a statement
Friday. "For some time, this has
been a considerable burden on
everyone associated with the Bengals. Now that it is over, we can
focus on !he business at hand without disttactioo." .
Outside the courthouse, Elbert
" lclcey" Woods, a former Bengal
w!to was one of the defendants,
demonstrated the dance he once did
on the sidelines after a successful

'•'

VANS

F_irst he~t: Jerry Rice, Jeff
Robmson, Bill Baird.
Second heat: Dou$ Hall Darrell
Lanigan, Steve FranCIS. '
Third heat: Steve Shaver, Scott
Peltz, Mark Myers.
Fourth heat: Rick Eckert. Bob
Pierce, Steve Barnett .
Dash: Balzario, Moran, Johnson,
Meadows.
,.
Consy: 'Mike Smith, Aaron
Scott, John Ainner '
Featur ~: . Eckert , Francis,
Balzano, Johnsoq, Moran, Franlc,
Lanigan, Pierce, Shaver, Flinner,
Barnett, Scott Rice, Baird, Myers.
Pure stocks
First heat: Jeff Russell, Ed
. Lickhart, Rod Cunningham.
Second heat: Ken Meadows,
Terry Tanthorey, Lee Goff.
.
Feature: Jeff Yeager, Russell ,
Ed House, Edward Lockhouse,
Cunningham, Tantorey, R.J.
Roncaglione, Chriss Clegg, Robert
Good, Pat Gillian, T.R. Cullums.
UMP modineds
First heat: Danny Dean, Hubie
Hatfield, Lee Wigal
' Second heat: Mike Balza no,
Rick Williarn!!Qn, John Burdeue
Feature: Balzanl , Hatfield,
Williamson , Jim Dandy, Robbie
Evans,Chris Fordyce, John Burdene, Clifton Cochran.

.FederaJjury upholds release pact
signed by m:ystery woman, Beftgals

'

. FRIDAY IS
"FISH.&amp; SEAFOOD NilE"

Insurance Companies

WORKING ON HIS GOALS - Tbe University or Rio
Grande's Matt Powell (33) is seen in a familiar position - shooting for the basket - during the Redmen's District 22 Division I
game against Malone on March 3. Powell came to Rio Grande
after a high school career in which be became one or the top five
career scorers in eastern Ohio. At right in pboto is teammate Jerr
Brown (44), a member or the squad Powell credits witb his success
at Rio Grande.

89 F-150 LB

Automatic., air, low mllea.
$4485

8 cyl, 4 spftd, atereo.

$101 Mo.

S6485
'

$142 Mo.

•ro~yments buf'CI or1

11 to:! down
ITidt. Stt salltpf'"Ot'l for
dtta•l' l"l u~ WI 1: lit!.

cuh

01'

AUT~~
CHEV. MALIBU
2 Dr.. V8, auto .. ah11p.

,.

"DISciJ~I Ill! IIRflfrftf•

. .797-4931

Cor-&amp;82&amp; JohneonRd.
The Ploln1

,J

' '

"!

'•

�•
'

t

OH-Polnt Pleaaant, wv

Page C6 Sunday Tim" Sentinel

.

..
"

-~

,;;

•

In NBA action,

Daugherty·helps
Cavs beat Bullets
for playoff berth

Maggert leading Masters
field after rain interrupts
second-round action
By JOHN NEJ.,SON
_
AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - A host
. of veterans thought they might
catch the Masters rookie napping.
But Jeff Maggert's two-round
toiBl of 7-under-pa"r 137 held up as
10 golfers, including Ray Floyd
and Jack Nicklaus, finished their
rain-interrupted second rounds
early Saturday morning.
Maggert might have been in
bed, but he was still leading the
Masters. On Friday, he shot a Sunder-par 67 that included an
eagle-3 on the'•lSth hole, !Uid that
w~ke up the crowd before rain
~pta~.

· I dtdn t really expect those
g&lt;jod things to happen to me so fast
on the back nine," Maggert said.
"Before I knew it, I was 10 the
lead."
Floyd and international veteran
B~d Langer of Germany both
we.;r: at 6-~Jnder for the tournament
and on the 17th hole in the same
tl¥,osome when play was interrupted. Langer parred out for a 2-under
70:.138, one stroke back, bur Floyd
bo'geyed the 17th, shot 1-under 7·1
and was at 139, two baclc.
Nicklaus, meanwhile, one of the
first-round co-leaders and a sixtime Masters champion, was on the

14th hole at 4-under. But he made
bogey at 14 and 17, three-putting
bolh holes. He finished the second
round with a 3-over 75 and was
five shots back at 2-under 142
along with Greg Norman and
Fuzzy ZOeller.
"We'U just get after it," Nicklaus said as he and his caddie, son
Jackie, got into a white chauffeurdriven Cadillac and left Augusta
National late Friday afternoon.
Instead, Augusta got after Jaclc.
The cut was at 3-over-par 147
with the third round scheduled to
begin at 10 a.m. EDT.
Dan Forman, stranded on the
course with two holes to play Friday, fmished his second round at 3·
under 69 and was 6-under for the
tournament at 138 along with
Langer.
Chip Beck' and Russ Cochran,
both of whom finished their rounds
Friday, were tied with Floyd at
139. Beck shot 67 and Cochran had
69, and they were two back of the
Masters rookie Maggert.
Lee Janzen, another first-round
co-leader playing with Nicklaus,
finished with a birdie on No. 18
and was alone at 4-under 140 after
shooting a )-()ver 73 in the: second
round

Pittsburgh defeats N.Y.
Jlangers 10-4 to set new
NHL winning-streak mark
By KEN RAPPOPORT
NEW YORK (AP) - Give
Mario Lemieux and the Pittsburgh
Penguins an inch and they'll talce a
m:ord.
"They're an explosive team they take advantage of any mis take," New York Rangers goal·
tindts Mike Richter said.
i• The Rangers made plenty of
llfem Friday night, and the Peng!Jins capitalized for a historic 10-4
vjctory. It was their 16th straight,
~lipstng the IS-game record establiahed by the New York Islanders
itj!981-82.
1 "We'~ showing a lot of characlllr the last couple of weeks," said
Umieux, who highli~ted the Penpins' power show With five goals.
rThe Penguins, whose last loss
'!'PS March S to the Rangers at
tvt•dison Square Garden, have
o11tscored opponents 92-46 during

'*it

record sueak.

I "We haven'! had pressure on
us," Penguins coach ,Scotty Bowman said. "You might as well
el(joy it going down the stretch.
Maybe there was a lillie more press~ on us tonight because of the
rej:onl, bul it's a different kind of

~sure."

_ILemieux has been a big part of
~ Penguins' success.· Since cominc back from treatment for
HOdgkin's disease, the Pittsburgh
captiin has 28 goals and 25 assists
for 53 points in 18 games.
tHe has scored a point in e.very
J8!lle ,of the "streak, getting 51 on
21 goals and 24 assists. Friday
nijht marked the second five-goal
g1111e and 31st hat trick of

Lemieux's career and,improved his
league-leading point total to 157,
14 more than runner-up Pat
LaFontaine of Buffalo. Lem1eux
has played in 22 fewer games ·than
LaFontaine.
"Mario certaii)Iy gets open very
weU," said Richter, who played the
third period in relief of slarter
Corey Hirsch, playing in only his
fourth NHL game. "He's a great,
great player."
The fans at Madison Square
Garden though! so: too. After
Lemieux scored his fifth goal in the
Penguins' five-goal deluge in the
third pedod, the fans gave him a
slanding ovation.
They were probably too stunned
to cheer in the second period, when
Lemieux really pul on a show scoring an even-slren$th goal at
4:43 from the right cucle. on a
power play at 8:09 on a one-timer
from the left circle and shorhanded
on a breakaway at 16:05.
Lemieux then scored from outside the crease at 4:14 of the lhird
period and al II : 15 on a break-·
away, as the Penguins broke open a
relatively close game with their
lhird-period burst
..
' It was only a S-3 game after two
periods as Adam Graves, John
Mcintyre and Tony Amonte had
scored for New York in the fltSt 20
minutes and Joe Mullen had_the
C.rst of his Lhtee goals.
Along with' Lemieux's two
goals in the third, the Penguins also
got two goals from MuUen and one
from Jaromir Jagr. Alexei KOvatev
seated New York's final goal,
which was 100 little, 100 late for the
fast-fading Rangers.
•

'

Despite broken pole;

Almost

Reds' Morris to
sit out until June

By Jim Freeman
Times-Sentinel Staff

0

cation of Meigs County
.t"rophy WhJ•tetaii a mystery
.• ft
} t •
~ er .~ mos nine years

New, lised

•

CINClNNATI (AP) ~ Cincinnati Reds flfSI baseman Hal· Morris
had surgery Friday·on his separated
left shoulder and will be sidelined
eight weeks.
Morris wiU rest four weeks, then
spend four weeks in rehabilitation.
Dr. Melvin Post, a shoulder specialist, operated:on Morris at RushPresbyterian-St. Luke's Medical
Center,in Chicago. .
Mon:is injured the shoulder dur•
ing a tight in a March 30 exhibition
game against the Cleveland Indians. He and Indians pitcher Jose
Mesa, who touched off the fight by
throwing a fastball behind Morris'
head, were suspended for three
games each and fmed $1,000 each
by the ruling executive council.
The Major League ·Baseball
Players Association said Thursday
it will appeal Morris' suspension. If
the appeal isn't heatd before Morris ill ready to relum, the suspension could not take effect until the
council issues a final decision.
Me$&amp; decided not to appeal his

_

1992 CHRYSLER

5TH AVE.
V-6,

~

Loaded

1992 DODGE ·
SHADOW
4 Door, auto.; l!ir,

stereo.

1992 DODGE
SPIRIT
I

4

cruise,

..

auto., air, tilt,

1~93 PLYMOUTH
GRAND VOYAGER SE
V-f1, auto., air, tilt, crulae,

1992 PLYMOUTH

penalty.

ACCLAIM

and 11 aSsists and Clarence Weatherspoon scored 27 points for
Philadelphia.
Charlotte led 75-65 early in the
third period before Hawkins scored
12 points during a 21-8 spurt that
gave the Sixers an 86-83 advantage.
·
The teams were tied 97-97 with
9: 17 left before Mourning led an
11-2 burst for a I 08-99 Charlotte·
lead.

4 door, auto., elr, power
windows, locks, tilt,
cruise, factory warranty.

.,

' '

The Gravely 14-G riding tractor is job-eqgineered
to deliver fo11r seasons worth of professiQnal results.
•
•
•
•

·:

.$6498

Over 20 custom attachments.
Strategically located controls.
Dependable all-gear direct drive.
Kohler commercial grade engine.
11"u11• steel dack.

.~

•.
,,

..

IETIII. PRICE"

....'

4699*

5

•

'~

,,

··.

BRAVELY VALUE PRICI!

:'

ADDITIONAL SUGQQTED
VALUE DAYS PRICES:

Professional
1G·G/50" Mower
18-G/50" Mower

Protasaional·
20-G/50" Mower

*""""""'

-=.::===::.
1-YEAA UMfT£D

.

S5CJ99*

,'

S5899

•

~199

·'..

~

' H)'drautiea t40p additiOnal
Not wat\d with any other promotion

·I

81JAAVELY

I'

·-••"

,.,lnl..ow-A~

JUCIOIIMI
.

:i

on.,.,,, •or.,.,u••

-~

.

"

MANNINO K. ROUSH D/B/A ..

·:,~

,.,..

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 C.•'r St.

PH. 9?2·2975

\.' '

PntU'If, 01J10

.,.
/'
•I

I

I

. ,, POMEROY- In 3 ~all room
db the second floor of the Meigs
(!ounty Museum on Buuernut
A,'venue in Pomeroy, in a small
n{che, hangs a piclure of what is
. censidered the largest deer ever
triiiiCd in Meigs County ..:...:. • 39'A?int bucll:.
" The deer, since it was killed in
W77, has 'been a 1opic of discussian surr.ounded in mys1ery, the
fjrst of which were the circumstllnces surrounding its demise.
:. The deer was cheeked in at wlujt
iS: now Ellis and Sons BP service
~tion in Middleport, according to
Probate/Juvenile Judge . Robert
Buck, who was Meigs Cou01y
COurt Judge at the time, by a man
v.iho claimed to have kiUed the deer
oli Nov. 17 using a bow and arrow.
· , Tbe deer, according to former
Meigs County Game Proteclor
Apdy Lyles, was killed in Salisbury
Township near State Route 7
~tween Middleport and Pomeroy
br a SO-year-old MiddlePort man I
have chosen not to identify.
After examining the deer and
questioning the man who claimed
to have killed it, Lyles said hill suspections became aroused afler
he3ring conOictiflg accounts of the
kib.
; At thai point, Lyles,_now an
attorney with the State Ftre Marsllill's Office, said he submitted the
dcler to the late Steve Molner, a
criminologist with lhe Bureau of
Criminal Investigation and ldentifi·
cation, wbo examined the deer and
cbncluded it was shot not with a
bj:lw and arrow, but with a gun.
• It seems the man shot the buck
-..lith !120-gau~e ~ug just before the
OI'CIIIng of OhiO S deer gun season.
-1ttemptlng to make the kiU appear
I~gilimate, he allegedly stuck a
hunting arrow through the bulle!
holes before reporting the Itill.
: As a result of the investigation,
!-}.'les said he charged the man w•th
killing a deer with a gun out of gun
stiason - a minor misdemeanor.
: The public was outraged over
tile illegal killing of the trophr
bpck and demanded Buck s~t a
high bond, Lyle said. However,
frOm a legal standpPint, the size of
tli deer m&amp;de no difference.
· The crime is the same whether it
ili,Yolves a trophy buck or a spike
biiCJc, Lyles explained. After plead·
ing guilty, the man .was charge~
SISO plus costs, court records indi~···
"":"During a recenl interview, Buck
said he waa then presented with an
irilerelling llilernmL
·
"On one hand, due to standard
fodeiture ptoc:ecdure, I couldn't let
tilt guy koq~ the deer. HOwever, a
debr of !hat magnltgdc dosorvod
more than Just bcing1018ed in~ a ,
trash help, . Bilek illusaated.
The 101~ Pramt tbetdeer to·
'""' Meigl Copnty Muleum for per~dllpliy, ·
• Aftllr
Meip Coun·
ty41 . .~.;;: ._yloa oollect14 en01q1I - y to have the troplly deer'• head permanently
mpunted wltll. the llllderatanding
thll the deer WOilkl be diiiPJayed In

....__h,...,

which had received saugeye releas· walleyes on the Maumee River
es. Our management policy was to near Toledo. A mishap involving
eliminate any lake from our saug- the tailgate of a pickup truck the
. eye projecl where gr~wth rat~~ studenls were usins resulted in
were found to be unsatisfactory,
D'Amore's new fishmg rod being
sai_d Dav_id Bright, lhe D_ivis~on _of broken. D' ,'\more said he ~
Wlldhfe s soulheast Oh10 d1stnct the rod after losing about 18 mches
fish f118!UIIlOment supervisor.
~fits length, ~d ~ it while fishBut m subseqoent years, anglers mg the followmg mght
, began catching saugeyes IIJl to five . _ .!&gt; ~Amore and several other
pounds. Based on these reports, the Iroc!Cmg Tech studen1s were
Division of Wildlife resumed among a group of 15 anglersreleasing saug_eyes-into Lake Logan i';ICI~ding Finefrock - who were
m 1990 wtth a load of 17,000 fin· ftshmg from the beach at Lake
ger!!ngs.
Logan on March 29. D_'Amore was
Our manageme~t work at Lake supposed to take a g1rl out on a
Logan has resulted m what I can a date at 7 p.m.
truly remarkable trophy saugeye
"I went there about 5 p.m. We
fishery which was neither designed were ftshlng for a while and nolhor planned for. These large ing was really hitting. But then, one
·saugey~,like Mr. D:AJ?ore's fish, of the guys caught a saugeye and
are -sw--o:tvors o~ ~- 101~ saugeye my !OO"'ma~ ":lflted ~ stay and
release m 1984, sa1d Bnght.
conbnue fish'!!&amp;• he SB_Id.
On Feb. ·.29, 1992, Lancaster
The fisheries and wildlife teCh·
ironworker Bernard Finefrock nology mpjor, however, stopped
Jan~ the current Ohio and IGfA . fiS~ing and sat. on the beach for a
all-trickle record saugeye, wlrich while after losmg 100 many lures.
measured 31 inches and weighed Once another Sludent Iande~ a
11 pounds, 1S ounces.
saugeye, D' Amore resumed fishing
On Manch_ 28,_an angler landed a with the broken rod.
saugeye wetghmg more lhan 10
D' Amore subsequently hooked
pounds at Lake Logan. •
his potential record fiSh within 10
Meanwhile, D 'Amore and a feet of the beach and landed il safeHocking Technical CoUege dormi- Jy within 60 seconds.
,
tory roommate were fishing for ·
"Oh yeah, it looked bigger than

mine. I said , ' There · goes my :
. ·
Finefrock witnessed the catch. ~
Even the Division of Wildlife fish. i
eries biologists in 1\thenS measured •
the fish and interviewed D' Amore. i
Two days later, another Hock- : ,
ing Tech ~nt, Steve Sclfubert of •
Rayland in Belmont County, land· ;
ed a saugeye that measured 28 314 1
inches lllld weighed 10 pounds, 3 •
ounces - another of the surviving 1
saugeye rmgerlings releasecl nine
years ago in Lake Logan:
,
Schubert said as many as 90 :
anglers were crowded on the beach •
.
at the tune.
. .'
"What we have at Lake Logan ;
is a very opporlunistic type of •
saugeye riShery ," Bright said. "It's !
just not going to be that often fiSh 1
of these sizes wiU be taken."
. The Division of Wildlife ;
released 33,500 saugeye fingerlin$5 •
in Lake Logan in 1991, 68,600 m :
1992 and plans to release 34,100 :
thill spring. From 1990 10 1992, the :
Division of Wildlife has released 1
more than 20 million saugeyes in !
more than SO .Jakes and streams •
around the state.
'
As forD' Amore's jilted date: "I ,
told her what hap~ned, and she '
though! it was neat, ' he said.
l
record,' " Fincfroclc said.

'

I

!·

Munk relishes oceanography outside laboratories

.ln.the Open

FOULED- Clevelaod ~~ter Brad Daugherty (43) ftods his shot 'i'
blocked aad bls arm Jirlpped by Wasbiaatoo rrootmaa
'
Graat (Grot was called lor the foul) during Friday night's .. u·~. ,
1ame In Richfield, Ohio, where Jhe Cavaliers won 114-95 in oa•rt•j
because or Daugherty's 28 poiats and 14 rebounds. (AP)

ProfessiOnal

\'

.

I

._(

PAIN CONTROL CLINIC
WEIGHT CONTROL

(304) 675-1675 •

By JOHN WISSE
Division u1 Wildlire
LOGAN Ohio (AP) - For a
record saugeye, maybe anglers
could forget loved ones and brealc
their fiShing poles.
Thai unlikely checklist might
put 19-year-old Daniel D' Amore of
Swanton into the record book as
holder of stale and lnte[Dational
Game Fish Association alll-tackle
world records.
The saugeye D •Ampre caught
during the la1e evening of March
29 at 340-acre Lake Logan Stare
Park measured 29 inches and
wei~hed 12 pounds, 7 ounces on
cerllfied scales al a grocery in
Logan.
The story begins June 14 !984
when the Ohio Division of\Vildlif~
released 21,328 saugeye two-inch
fingerlings into the lake. It was the
first Jake in southeast Ohio to
receive the fish - produced from
the crossbreeding of a female walleye with a mate sauger - as part
of a research project.
The experiment failed, or so
thought state fiSheries biologists in
the division's Athens district office
who were supervising the project
"Growth rates of Lake Logan
saugeye during the mid-1980s were
the worst among our Ohio lakes

' • MISSING BUCK - The deer rt!Jiarded as the Meigs Couaty's
premier tropby buck was stolen lrom tbe Meigs Conaty Museum
during the weekend or August 15, 1984. Earlier, area sportsmen
donated the money to have the deer head mouated as sbown here.

FAMILY PRACTICE

\

Sunday Times· Sentinel/C7

D' Amore hooks record _saugeye at Lake Logan

ROBERT M. HOLLEY, M.D.

TO ACCOMMODATE THOSE WORKING PEOPLE,
WE ARE OPEN· 'TIL9 ·P.M. ON TUESDAYS

•

-~,

'

game,'' Denver coach Dim Issei
By CHUCK MELVIN
said . ,"Danny Ain~e hits the
RICHFIELD~ Ohio (AP) ·
Brad Daugherty wants it known jumper, and it's over.'
It was the Suns' second straight
that there ' s more to his success
one-point win 81 home, their lOth
than sheer size.
"If a team plays good defense, ·consecutive 1riumph overall and
it doesn't matter how big or how gave thCill a franchise-record 58th
small they are," Daugherty said victory.
Barkley, despite 9-of-25 shootFriday night after he 1iad 28 points
and 14 rebOunds as the Oeveland ing, had 26 points, 19 rebounds and
Cavaliers beat the undersized 12 assists, while Majerle scored 20
Washington BuUets 114-95. , . points. Chris lackson scored 20 for
The Cavaliers made cei"tain the Nllggets.
Trail Blazers 109, Laken 105
Daugherty got the ball repeatedly
Portland handed Los Angeles its
because he was guardecl most of
the night by rookie forward Tom sixth consecutive loss as Terry
Gugliotta. The 7-foot, 263-pound Parler scored 22 points, including
Daugherty bad a considerable four free throws during a decisive
advantage in experience as weU as 7-0 spurt in the final 39 seconds.
size over the 6-10, 240-pound
James Worthy, who led the Lak·
ers with 26 poinls, hit a lhree·
Gugli,otta.
The Bullels have been short- pointer at lhe buzzer to conclude
haoded at center SinfC losing Pervis the scoring. · ·
· Ellison to a sprained knee in late · SuperSonics 111, Klap 97
Sam Perkins scored 19 points
February.
"I've been put into lhat position and Seanle beat Sacramento foc its
the last few games," Gugliotta 50th victory.
Shawn Kemp, coming off the
said. "I've had to match up against
a big center. He (Daugherty) is a bench for just the fifth time this
good player, arid he's tough to stop. season, scored 18 points for the
We tried to run a double-team at Sonics, who never trailed after
him and make him get .rid of lhe openi11g a 30-1'8 lead in the first
ball. But it's not a one- or two-man quarter.
sbow. It's five guys· running an
Rod Higgins led the Kings w1.
offense, and anybody can burn 22 points, including six threeyou:•
'
. pointers, and Marty Conlon had ·a
Even so, the Bullets put up a career-high 19 foc Sacramento.
fight throughout the flfSt half, with
Bulls 88, Hawks 87
Gugliotta and Harvey Grant seatChicago snapped Atlanta's 10·
ing 13 points each to help Wash- game home winning streak by
ington to a 59-58 lead. Daug~Jerty outscoring the Hawks 28-10 in the
scored ,IS points, keeping Cleve- fourth quaner, capped by Scottie
land close.
PipP,Cn's three-pointer with 15 sec·
Realizing the Bullets were onds left
unable to Daugherty, the Cavaliers
Michael Jordan, who outscored
poured it on, gelling him the ball Dominique Wilkins 30"26 in a
time and again during the flfSt few matchup of the NBA's top two
minutes of the third quarter. He scorers, scored six points m the
scored eighl points during a 12-4 final 3:32. Jordan had just eight
Clevelal'ld flurry that made it 70- points at halftime. ·
63, and the Cavs gradually pulled
Stacey Augmon, who scored 24
away.
,
points, made a free throw with 3:20
They led 90-76 entering the left to give Adanta an 87-81 advan·
fourth quarter and maintained a tag e. That was the Hawks' final
double-figure margin the rest of the point
·
·
way.
Magic 95, Timberwolves 92
" Larry Nance grabbed 16
Nick Anderson, who missed 12
rebounds and Mark Price had 12 of his ftrst15 shots, made a fS-foot
assists for Cleveland. Grant had 16 jumper with 2.2 seconds to play as
points and eight assists, while Orlando won at Minnesota.
Gugliotta and L~ Stewart each
After Anderson's jumper made
scored 15 for Washmgton. Gugliot· it 94-92, the TimberWolves' Chuck
ta grabbed IS rebounds.
Person -as Michigan's Chris
"I think they wore us down in Webber did in the NCAA title
the third quarter." Grant said. "For game - caUed timeout when Min!he first two quarlers, our guys nesota had none remaining.
played their hearts out. We jusl
Person said he realized the
didn't have enough down the Wolves had no timeout.s remaining,
suetch 10 contain lhem, because bilt he "!bought getting llle ball at
lhey're big and strang, and they halfcourt was a good trade-()ff for
keep sending big guys at you.''
the technical foul shot, which Scott
The win clinched Cleveland's Skiles converted to rmish the scorfiflh playoff berth in the lasl six ing. However, Person was mistaken
because Minnesota did not get the
seasons.
"It's nice to go out and do it ball at halfcourt, and Dou¥ Wesl's
yourself," coach Lenny Wilkens final three-poinl attempt m1ssed.
ShaquiUe O'Neal had 29 points
said. ''We want to continue to play
well alid keep the momentum for the Magic.
West scored 23 points and
going for the rest of the season."
The Cavaliers have won 16 of Christian Laettnet 20 for the Tim·
their last 17 home games. Wash- berwolves.
Pistons 105, Celtic&amp; 90
ington lost its third straight.
Detroit beat Boston for its fifth
Elsewhere in the NBA, it was
Phoenix 98, Denver 97; Detroil atraight victory as Isiah Thomas
105, Boston 90; Charlotte 122, had 43 points, 10 assists, eight
Philadelphia 113; Chicago 88, rebounds and five steals.
Thomas took a career-high 35
Adanta 87; Orlando 95, Minnesota
shots
and made 17 of them as he
9,2; Seattle 111, Sacramento 97;
and POrtland 109, the Los Angeles fell four J?Oints short of his careerLakers 105.
best scormg total for the Pistons,
Suns 98, Nuggets 'J7
who snapped an eight·game,losing
Even when things go wrong for streak at Boston Garden.
the Phoenix Suns, things usually
Reggie Lewis scored 28 points.
1urn out right for them.
•
and Alaa Abdelnaby 20 for Boston.
The Suns' starters missed 43 of Joe Dumars, who had more than 30
65 shots, the Denver Nuggets' front points in each of his previous four
line combined for 37 rebounds and games, added 21 fer the Pistons.
The Celtics led 63-61 in the
Phoenix· trailed 97-96 Friday night
when Charles Barkley missed a third quarter before Thomas took
shot with less than 10 seco!lds to control, scoring 12 points as the
go. .
Pistons closed lhe quarter with an
But Dan Majerle outfought. !he 18-8 surge for a 79·71lead that
Nuggets for the offensive rebound Boston never threatened.
1and passed the ball to Danny
Hornets Ul, 76ers 113·
Ainge, who swished a 20-footer
Alonzo Mo~ng had 33 points
with 2.9 seconds left for a 98-97 and 14 rebounds, and la!T}' Johnvictory.
son had 25 poilliS and 14 rebounds
· ~ Dan Majerle c·ame up with a
as Charlolle moved into seventh
huge offensive rebound, and I think place in the Eastern Conference.
that was the biggest play of 1he
Hersev Hawkins had 71t points

[POINT J&gt;LEASANI' MEDICAL CENTER)
zsTii &amp; JEFFERSON AVEI'WE
POINT PLEASANT

Outdoors'·

Aprilll , 1993

I

In the years since he stumbled
into his first job at the Scripps
Inslitution of Oceanography, the
sofl-spoken scientist has become
famous for getting out of the laboratory and ontO the sea for experiments lhat have revealed secrets of
waves and tides and ocean circulation.
He was an early user of scuba
gear and among\ the rlfSt to employ
high-speed computers to study geophysital data.
Munk pioneered the use of
ol' Sitting in his home on a cliff
sound
waves to explore the ocean's
overlookin~ the Pacific Ocean,
Munk said m a recent interview structure. Now he is leading.an
that his scientific specialty easily international experiment that could
settle the debate over global warm·
. ing by using sound waves to tnick
· "But if you enjoy learning new changes in ocean temperatures.
things,ifyouenjoybeingoutofthe
In January, Munk received
laboratory like I do, you'd have an Columbia University's Vetlesen
equally good time whether you Prize, s6metimes 'called the Nobel
became a glaciologist; or a meteo- Prize of eaith sciences, adding it to
rolo~t, or an oceanographer or a his long list of fellowships and
geologiSI~ '
awards, including the Nalional
·

.
· · .
the museum, whtch happent:,d m
June, 1978.
Deer ~olea
· For more.than SIX years, the deer
head hung m ~~ second f!oor of
the museum.-viStted occastonally
· by admlring deer hUlllm. Unfurlu·
nately, lhat practice came 10 a
screeching hall sometime during
the weekend of August 24·, 1984.
During the weekend, according
a complaint filed with the Pomeroy '
Police Department, the deer was
stolen from the wall w~ it hung.
"Person or persons unknown
broke window m rear of building
entered building and removed deer
head from wall where it was hung,"
reltd the terse police report.
According to currenl Museum
director Margaret Parker, the thief,
or thieves, entered the museum
through a window in the museum's
library. After removing the deer
head froin the wall, they left the
way they entered.
The deer head was the only
thing stolen, Parker said. They
even tidied up when they left
Although several suspects were
questioned, no charges were filed
and the theft was never solved.
Soon after, a security system was
installed in the museuin 10 prevent
future thefts.
, And then.M
Whenever the topic of the missing buck is discussed, one question
that always arises ill "Where is the
deer now?".
According to one unconfumed
account, a deer head of the magni·
tude of the 1977 Meigs County
buck showed up at a taxidennist's
shop somewhere in ~est Virginia
shortly after the thefL
,.
Reportedly, lhe deer was scored
by one scoring agency and decreed
the largest dCcr ia West Virgiriia. a
position it reportedly held for about
two or three weeks before beins
disqualified.
• Apparenlly the man who
claimed to have shot the massive
buck was asked by the scoring
, agency 10 provi!ll! a picture of the
-deer taken before the anden were
removed.
coune, he was unable
to provide the picture.
uwn further investigation, so
the story goes, the man claimed the
deer was sold to a man from the
southern staleS.
ArOund that time, or sometime
thereafter, Lylea said be was con·
tacted by one scoring agency IICCk·
ing information about tbe deer.
According to Lyles, the orpniza·
lion rejected its inclusion mto its
record book. Hedidn't.know if the
call'was COIUiected to the West Virginia incideiiL
Other accounts claim the deer
head was sold to a man from out
weat, or in Texas, for a tarp IUDl
or money. Some say the deer is a
little cloaer to home - Kentucky,
West Vitginia or maybe even ltele
in ~i&amp;S County.
.
SO 'how big - the deer'11n the
m~J~e~~in, a card under the picture
of the deer 1111e1 il had lhe molt
pointl of any of the 20,000 deer
ldlled In ObjO in ,1977.

or

I,

By CONNIE CASS
LA JOLLA, Calif. (AP) - II
might have been ice, or air or earth,
.but it was the sea that captivated
WaltcrMunk.
Munk, one of the world's best
known oceanographers, wandered
into the Sludy of oeeans as a cal·
lege physics swdent lookin~ for a
summer job near his girlfnend's
coastal home.

the!~~ir.~!~amemoryand

~~~~::::na::~~~~~~id

Medal of Science.
The Vetlesen jury called Munk
"a senior statesman in the field of
oceanography."
·
"He's full of ideas," said

Arnold Gordon, oceanography pro- ;
fessor at Columbia. "He opens up
whole areas of research. Much of !
what we are doing now in oceanog- 1
raphy are things he staned."
..:

;.

.Two-deer registration expanded ·
in Ohio from J~ne until August 'k
1

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) after Aug. i 3 in time for the begin~
The state has given up in frustra· ning of the archery season on Oct: ··
tion its plan to require hunlers to 2.
regisler only in August to kill a
Delivery of second-phase persecond deer during the end of mits will be directed toward servi .
November.
ing those who inlend to participate' '
The Division of Wildlife was in the one-week firearms season, '
allowing hunters to register only which begins Nov. 29.
during that month for a special per·
The Division will be offering:· t
mit
two-deer permits in all 88 counties.
The idea is to lower the state's for the fll'St time this year. In 1992, '
growing herd of deer.
·the permits were issued in 67 coun;
Few hunters remembered to ties, those exempted generally
apply for the permits in August, so beinl! in northwestern Ohio.
·
the state has decided to change the
plan in its third year.
·
Beginning in June, hunters may
begin buyinf permits during the
flfSt phase o the application peri·
od,'which ends Aug. 13.
A second application period will
begin Aug. 14 and end Oct 15.
"There's really no reason 10
wait until the second application
period and hunters are advised not
to," John Wisse, a spokesman for
1he Division, said. "The wise
hunter wiU apply ~ soon as p&lt;lssi·
ble and &lt;;onsequently put himself or
herself in exceUent position to get .·
their first choice of a bonus permit."

But the second period should be
helpful in getting more bonus-tag
' hunters into the woods and in for·
warding 'more moneyto the Division's bank account The bonus' tag
is $16 in addition to lhe $16 deer
hunting permit.
Wisse said the permits will COD·
tinue to be issued through a county·
by· county quota system.
The number of permits to be
issued for a county is determined
by Diyision biologists charged with
deciding how many deer need to be
removed from a specific county in
order tQ keep the herd in that par·
ticular area in check.
·sow hunters need to be aware
that the Division does not guarantee delivery of the permits sought

•

"Choice of the Pros''
8HusQvama
A Elll' AUIIIU

IODAYS

s-JaCIIII

.,
,,
''

.,"I

,,•

23LC TRIMMER

a.1

ALL SIZES LIMESTONE
PLUS RIP UP

"

cu. tn., 11 cc 1r

NOW ONLY $329.95

• 0C8.L1N1 PIMBITO 1I1DtT AATOO
• PIUI.&gt;1DK Srtl.£ ~ll)j SlStlM
• NRMIClliAT!D OM IIIIIIE
• IEiiHil'MIH 1lf IUoM lXII NIN

-we Deliver and Spread LbrielltoM"
CRTIO

•Mason Sand
•Top ·Soil
•Concrete Sand
•FIJI Dirt.
•Pit Run
•ShriK:Ided
Top Soli
· •Drainage Gravel
• •Pea Gravat
•Straw
. •Drainage Tile ·
-culvert Tile (all sizes up to 5")
•Block
and Mortar
Mix
.
.

TILLER

SIDERS.EQUIPMENT CO.
304·675·7421 '
'

\

'

US 35,
HENDERSON, ·WV
.
'

I

�.
•
•

•

~P~ag~e~C8~~SU~n~da=·~y~~~m~es~~Se~n~Une~I===============P~o~me~M~y~M~Id~d~le~po~rt~G;a~l~lpo~Us~,~O;H~P~o~ln~t~~;ea;;aa;n~t;,~W~V~==============~~~======~A~p;tl~l1;1;,:1~;;; ~

Redmen carry 4~0 standing as.MOC schedule continues
RIO GRANDE - "Given our
practice situation and the fact we
were inside for a month. we're hitting the ball pretty well," University of Rio Grande baseball coach
Dave Oglesby commented on this

week's action as the Redmen swept '' were to host MOC rival Tiff~ Sata Mid·Obio Conference double- urday . .Prior to that meeting, Rio
header with Urbana and fell in a Grande was S· 7·overall and .undesingle varsity game to Marietta.
fealed in four startS ~n the conferThe Redmen also lost.in a JV ence.. '
contest with Marietta Thursday and
"We only lost 4-3 to Marshall .

Redwome~

split with Cedarville
· to go 2-6 in conference action
RIO GRANDE ·_
allowed the

Mid-Ohio Conference schedule, win as the Redwomen were bit
which saw Angelo Forte's Red· with two errors and the hosts with
women drop two 10 Mount Vernon· one.
· Nazarene and split with Cedarville · At home against Mount Vemon
prior to Saturday's home double- Tuesday, tbe R~d women were
header with Mount SL Joseph.
edged 54 and .4-3 in spite of some
"We're hitting the ball and imJ?ressive hiiting perform•nces,
fightin~ some injuries, but we're wh1ch included a total of 13 in the
.not"givmg up," Forie said. "A good opener.
sign is that we're completing the
Peart connected on all four
toughest pan of tbe schedule."
attcm pts at bat as Stull and Jane
The Redwomen opened Thurs- Jess each went two of four and
day with a S-2 win over Cedarville contributed a double and RBIIO the
with a' nine-hit attack that quicjdy g~e. Robinson was three for four
put them in the driver's seat. Starr · ·w1th an RBI. But a IOta! of three
Philpot (S-S) allowed nine hits errors ~ed the team's chances
from the Yellow JackelS, who were as Amy KriiZWiser, two for four for
• led by Julie Run's three for four the Couaars, slamined the ballfm: a
performance that featured a triple, double, triple and· two RBis. J.:ori .
double and single.
Brown contribuled a triple, double
For the Red women, Heather and RBI on her two fer four show·
Brining came through with a two ing.
for three showing and an RBI to
Julie Ray had tbe win and
advance the cause, while Shelley Philpot pitched for the Rcdwomen.
Whitaker was also two for three: Mount Vernon conne~ted for a
ROBIN STULL
Julie Sroufe took the loss from the total of 10 hits and committed two
pitching mound, while the Red- emn.
.
women committed two errors and
Mount Vernon
the ftr~s
Cedarville one.
going in the boiiQm
of the bill
The .Yellow Jackets bounced with an 11-hitatiiiCk, led by Brown
back in the niJJbtcap as fluu went with two doubles on a three for
two for four With a .no of RBls to · fOIIJ performBD;ce and Amy &lt;;~­
lead Cedarville 10 a 13-3 win. Char on's RBI resulung from her hitnng
Peart (1-2) was unable to stem on~ of three allempts. .
.·
another
nine-hitter
from
the
hosts,
Rto
Gran~
CDWltered
wtth
wtth
. RIO GRANDE - University of
·Rio Grande softball co-captain although Rio Grande advanced seven hils. Brining was two for
:Robin Stoll shared District 22 anti early with eight hits. Robin Stull three with an RBI llld Savannah
; Mid-Ohio Conference Pia~ of the recorded a home run and a pair of Ross, one for three. bad an RBI.
·Week honors with CeQarville pitch- RBis on two of three attempts to Philpot took the loss while Diana
:er Julie Sroufe fer her efforts dur- sparlc the run, while Kelly Robin- Kirkplllrick pi!Ched for '!fount V~­
son assisted by going two for three non. Both teams commtlled a Jllllf
:ing the week of March 29-April 3.
of errors.
.
Stull, a senior catcher from with a double.
The action pul the RedWOII!en at
:Jeromesville, went 13 for 23 at the . Mindy Humble, three for four
·plate for .565 batting average to ·with a triple, and Sroufe with a 7-10 and 2~ tn the M~ pnor to
·pace Rio Grande to a 3-3 week. In three for four showing completed this weekend: Followmg Salur·the six games, she bad a hom~ run, the hitting highlight~ for day's game wtth MSJ, they are to
'
·silt runs scored and was a perfect Cedarville. DiAnn. Miller had the bost Malone Tuesday.
four-for-four in stolen bases.
• During the week, the Redwom- ·
en swept a non-conference twin bill
·from Otterbein, dropped- a pair to ·
Shawnee State, and splil a doubleheader with Tiffm.
The Redwomen started last
week eighth in the 12-member disirict and fifth among the MOC's
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP)- NCAA for transfer rules an.d did
eijlht members, with defending dis- lnslead of a 3 on his Obio State the logworlc on the search. His son
tncl and tonference champion practice jeJsey, Bret Powers should considered Tennessee, where
Shawnee Stale leading both organi- have a question mark.
M~.ie. eventual~y landed afcer a
zations. Rio Grande was 7-10 over. It's not just that be's an bnef stmt at Oh10 State, and the
all and 2-6 in the 'MOC prior to unknown talent for lhe Buckeye . Buckeyes.
Saturday's non-conference game fooiball tcam. There are the ques~wers, a former Pac-10 all-acawith Mount St. Joseph.
tions about his past and about what dem1c selllCUDn, ~anced a .change
would prompt nim to move more of scenery and chmate. Ohto. State
Lyne Center slate ·
than 2,000 miles from Arizona offered a similar offense, somt
RIO 6RANDE - This week's State for a one-year shot at Ohio familiar faces and a medical school
activities·schedule for Lyne Center State stardom.
-his postgraduate goal.
is as follows:
Along the way, fate has played a
So he committed 10 the Buck·
PoolhQUrs
couple of tricks on him. Afcer he eyes last fall. How was he to know
Today - closed for Easter
transferred, the starling job sudden- that a day arter. the transfer was
Monday - . S-7 p.m., college ly opened up at Arizona State- announced, McGee would be
swim
too late for him to do much about
arrested by police for robbery and
Tuesday - 5-7 p.m., college it
be suspended from the team? With
swim
.
And after transferring, he still third-stringer Grady Benton out
• Wednesday- closed for class
finds llimself No. 2 on the depth with an injury, Powers. was 24
Thursday - S-7 p.m .• college chart- just what he was last fall at hours away from being named the
swim
Arizona SUite- at Ohio State.
slalter by defauiL .
·
Friday-5-7 p.m., open swim
"I'm only going to look for"That's not a role I came here
Saturday - closed
to accept." Powers said.
ward; rm not going to look back,"
Sunday, April 18- 1-3 p.m .
Bul, with one season of eligibili- Powers said. "I'm nol going to
and 5-7 p.m., open swim
ty remaining, the clock is ticking dwell on my decision."
on Powers' college career.
He says that il still might not
Home athletic: events
He started two seasons ago for have mattered had he moved up to
Tuesday - Softball vs . Mal- Arizona State under head coach starter at ASU.
one, 2 p.m. (DH); softball vs. ML Larry Mannie, completing 127 of
"I could have stayed there and·
Vernon Nazarene, 3:30p.m. (DH)
234 passes for 1,500 yards and ll played an!l staned, but 1 wouldn't
Thursday - Softball vs. touchdowns with eight intercep- have been happy," he said.
Urbana, 3:30p.m. (DH)
tions. But then Marrnie was fired "That's what it came down to."
Saturday - Softball vs. Walsh, and replaced by Bruce Snyder.
Now, after running the BuckI p.m. (DH) .
~t fall, Snyder an~unced that
eyes' scout team last fall, be is secSunday, April 18 -:- Softball redshtrt freshman Gamck McGee·. ond to Bob Hoying on the depth
vs. Lalce Erie, I p.m. (DH)
had beaten out Powers for the start- chart.
, . ,. ··
ing quarterback job. Faced with
"I haven '1 had a chance to
Note: A11 facilities in Lyne Cen- backing up an underclassman until prove myself," Powers said of the
ter except the pool will be closed to graduation, Powers, with help froiD mtroductory phase of his Ohio
the public until further notice liis father, invcstigaled a transfer.
State career. "They don't really
because of work on the llew gym
Powers' father, a retired high know anything about me .... I've
floor.
school administrator, called the
•lot to prove."

two weeks ago and we hit the ball
well against Marieua, so I h!tve no
· problem with that kind. of effort,"
Oglesby said. "~fensively, there
were a few breakdowns, but all in
all, things appear 10 be going well
for us. But we have some conference games we need to win badlf."
Rio Grande's non-le&amp;llue meeting with Marietta resulted in a 74
loss as the Redmen mounted an 11- ·
hil auack bul suffered from three .
errors to the Pioneers' defense. The
game gave some of Oglesby's
younger pJayers to shine at bal. as
Shannon .,Bossert wen~ three fbr
four with a pair Qf doubles and
Conrad Waricka was two for three.
Eric Mcleap ended wi!h a two' for
four showin~ to complete t~e
team's top hiltlilg. .
Allen Elliou (0-2) allowed
Marietta 'eight hits, in which Bob .
Eddy was three for four and Brandon Heller went two for four to

•

1ltim.es- $entin.el

Section D .
Aprll11, 1993

~

•
:

Fragile oil deal to be topic of key OPEC meeting

:

~

:
•
•

i'

:
•
:.
:
~

•
•
;
•
:
•
:

1

:
•

·

By DAN BLAKE
ing a seasonitl drOp in oil d-emand.
OPEC's ability to band together
AP BusinesS Writer
The International Energy Agen- for production cuts generally wanes
NEW YORK- The temptation cy and others estimate OPEC as the price moves into the $20 per
)D boost revenue by pumping more .exceeded its March production barrel area, said Marion B. Stewart
oil is again tearing at the Organiza· ceiling by about 700,000 barrels of National Economic.Research
lion of PetroleWl!,Exporting Coun- per day and that Iran w~ to blame Associates Inc.
tries.
for nearly half the excess.
A basket of representative
· Complaining that other counAn OPEC committee that moni· OPEC crude oils, which the cartel
tiies are ignoring tbe latest quota tors members' adherence to quotas uses to track prices, slipped 10
- which is designed to force is due to meet Sunday, the day $16.60 per barrel fn late January
prices higher through restrained before a broader membership meet- and· reached as high as $19.19 per
production - Kuwait has threat- . ing. The agreement \VIS carefully barrel on March 5. The reference
ened to open its oil taps wide. Like put together in February intending price bas been around $18 per bar~orninoes, other OPEC countries · to push prices higher.
rei in reeent days.
.
could toss out the agreement and
''This weekend meeting
Light sweet crude, the U.S.,
begin pumping as much oil as they becomes important because it will benchmark grade of crude oil, on
· can sell.determine how closely they adhere the New Yark Mercantile
Although some see such a see- to the agreement," said Thomas Exchange is generally abouf$2 per
.• nario as remote, cartel ·members Blakeslee. energy specialist. at barrel higher than the OPEC price.
' .11how few indications they will be Bfody, White and Co., a commodi- .
Kuwait has threatened to return
·; able to abide by an agreement ty. brokerage. "It could be detri- lto full pr
. eduction of about 2 mil·
.: . in~nded to push prices higher dur- mental to prices and the cartel.''
.Ilion barrels per day at the first hint

another membe·r is ignoring the duction cut was raised as a serious
accord. Such a move cou ld give possiblity in January.
other members, hungry for shon·
TICKER: GM Hit Again
term cash, an excuse to boost pro·
The government asked General
duction and depress prices.
. · · .Motors Corp. 10 recall4.7 million
Kuwait is rebuilding following pickup trucks with side-s;lddle fuel
the Gulf War, Saudi Arabia and I&lt;Ulks, but GM balked at the idea....
Iran are devoting 'more moner. to · G M also is putting top officers
their militaries, Nigeria and L1bya under contract for the first time,
face economic problems and worried that exe,utives who left
Venezuela has its own political · last month may be spilling secrets
instability.
10 Volkswagen AG .... Ford
A sustained drop in energy Motor Co. Chairman and Chief
~rices could also douse arguments Executive Officer Harold Poling
that President Clinton' s energy tax received $4.38 million in compen"
is inflationary, Blakeslee said.
sation last year. ... United Airlines
But the energy markets aren't agreed with Boeing to delay orders
,convinced prices are about to skid for 49 airplanes ·by up to three
lower. Despite the implications years and reduce capital spending
from Kuwait this p.asl week. crude by $5.5 billion .... Southwest Airon the Nymex fell only 40 cents lines said it would begin nying into
per bartel and is still about $2 per San Jose, prompting a partial
barrel above its price when a pro- retreat . there by American

•

THE GUSS HAS RIZ,
.

Airlines . ... The Justice Department moved to drop federal
charges against Clark M. Clifford
and law panner Robert A. Alunan
in connection with Bank or Credit
and Comme~ce International ....
. Kazakhstan and Chevron Corp.
signed an agreement to develop.
one of the world's largest oilfields.•
UPCOMING: Tax Day l,ooms .
Financial markets will be closed
Monday in London for EastCf
Monday .... The Commerce Deparv
ment repons on retail sales for
March on Tuesday .... Thursday ito
the deadline to file 1992 income
tax forms . ... The Labor Depart£
ment reports weekly jobless Claill\S
on Thursday .... March industrial
production and February mer- •
chandice trade figures are 10 bil ' .
· released on Friday.
•

•

THIS IS WHERE THE· GOOD DEALS IZ!"

•

•
•

tf/

·:Rio Grande's
~ Stull shares.

us1ness

1:

''SPRING IS.. SPRUNG,
.

•

.~

lead the hosts; offense . Don R.J . Trainer hit all four of his
Schaly's crew limited themselves auemplS and Ronnie Wallace was
to a single error for the conceSL
two for four.
.
Rio Grande dropped the JV
The Redmen held themselves 10
game 7-3 but managed to get t&gt;ne error an~ Urbana suff~ two.
around Casey Staton's pi!Ching to . The losing PI!Cht"f was B.enmg~.
post five hilS.: Four of them were
Jason Wnght s ~o RBis on a
recorded on one for three perfor- · two for three show10g.aparked the
mances by Greg Edaar, Shayne Redme~_~ on IQ, vic\(l'Y ·in the nightPrice Ryan Rau;liff and Rob Shar- cap. Eric Parrish was two for (our
fenaker. The Redmen committed in Rio Grande's eiaht-hit attack.
two errors and Marietta had none, which Urbljna allemptcd to miltch
while Eric Wallliad the loss. ·
on a total of six allowed by Phil
Leading hitters for Marietta Kuhn (2-1).
•
were Toby Shamblin .and I on
Urbana's Waylor ~e his .two
Mate&lt;;zun each two fcir three. Rio for rhree record count wtth a pall" of
Grande's iv record went 10 3-1.
RBIS, while Trainer, who also had
The Redmen put away Urbana the l.oss, "!'as one for tw~ with,a
6-4 and 8-4 Tuesday netting nine doul)Je. Rto Grande agam bad a
hits in the opener as 'chad Camin ' . single error and the Blue Knights
.went three for four ai bat and commilled two.
McLean was two for three. The Following Saturday's Tiff10 conBlue Knijhts reeled off 12 hits in tcsl, lhe Redmen are to go back on
spite of the effort by Mike the~ 'fl:lesdaY ~~a doubleheadVoorheis p-2), but only because er wtth OhiO DomiDlcan.

..

•
•

~ weekly honor

Powers.fights younger
players, fate in struggle
to be starting QB again

•

· For Your Speeial Prom Nilht ·
•Complete Lines of Formal Wear
from 5 Different Companies
•Free Brochures
•Expert Fitting
. •Prices Stinting At $29•.95
"·--200 of Olk Own Tuxedos.on Hand
for lmmediate Rental atBest •
Pri¢es in the Area.

~·

'

BRAND NEW SILVERADO PICKUP
Stock U551

Stock 112479

Stock 12544

WAS $19,042

LOADED.
WAS $19,595

WAS $19,492

SAI,I

BVYNOW

$14,971 s15,4l9

50

Tbe stOre ls cipen seven days a week from 7 a.m.
to 10 p.m. The phone number is 2561506. On
hand for tbe ribbon c:ultina were, 0 to r): Jerry
L. Haner, Clay Township Trustee, Wanda Kay
Waugh; ~entral'c:ommitteewoman, Leon an.d
Mary Lou Greeae; owner~, Jerry Rusk or tbe
Bass Busters Association, Harold Saunders, Gallia County Commissioner, aad Charles Barcus,
Clay Township Trustee. (Times-Sentinel photo .
by Krls Cochran)

• . RIBBON CUTTI(IIG • Grand openin1 cere• monies were held Thursday alternooa ror
: Pirates Cove Fish and Game, located In Eureka,
' two doors snutb or the Gallipolis Locks and
. Dam. Tbe. store will specialize In artiDclll ball
\. and live bait Including minnows, night crawlers,
~ ·. dug worms, meal worms, wax worms Georgia
·;. ' Wigglers and leaches. Owners Mary Lou and
• Leon Greene plan to add to the needs or bunters
' in the area lncludln1 coon, deer aad turkey
•• bunt1n11. They are the parents or three chBdren.

BVY.NOW

s15t497°~

LET CAVALIER

•'• '
GRAND OPENlNG PRIZE - Winner of a
recliner at the new Furniture on the T store
m Middleport was Nancy Roush, left, of West

New business opens in ~iddleporf.

-

••

~v;r
···. .'

MIDDLEPORT · Middleport's · the· new furniture store and the employed at the Kyger Creek ·:
newest business is Furniture on the antique 6'usiness, Grogan is Power Plant.
·
T, owned and operated by Larry

&lt;I

~

·~

~

andLocated
Mary Jane
Grogan.
in the
Grlleser building

$15 700·.-...

a1 the corner·of Mill and Third, the
store will feature "everyday low

Stock #2458 ·

some antiques.
Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tuesday through Saturday.
In talking about their ~usiliess;
the couple say they wiU emphasize
low prices every day rather than
using the technique of higher
marked prices and fequent sales.
Mr. and Mrs. Grogan have been
in the business of wholesale
antiques, buying, refinishing and
resale, for many years operating all
over the eastern pan of lhe IJnited
States. They have operated tha1
business from their .home on Lincoin Street in Middleport. Mrs.
Grogan has also had 10 years of
retail management. In apdition to

$17I 145.

WAS '21,731

BRAND NEW
OLDSMOBILE
88 ROYALE LS

•
NEW BUSINESS OPENS· Steve and s•erl
' : Pyles have opened a new sportswear store Inside
: the upper section of the G. C. Murphy sCore, 348

,.'.

•

•

Stock #2316

WAS'~ ·

Second Avenue, Gallipolis featurhig T·sbirts
from Capitol Grapbics and Eds West, bats from
Apex·!. and Signature. Soon, tbe new store wUI
oiY'er a tullline ot Umbro sportswear.

;Farm Flashes

BRAND
NEW OLDSMOBILE ACHIEVA
•
WAS $16,411.00

SALEI ·

Stock 12517
•

$13,600

By EDWARD VOl:LBORN
the SI.OO per pouncl price. A group
GALLIPOLIS • A reminder of of 25 head of angus and black
: the beef meeting scheduled for 'this baldy steers weighing 500 pounds
: Monday.evening, April 12. The sold for $1.07 per pound. Steers in
' sessioo will feature two topics from the 500-600 pound range sold
: tbe recent sacellite conference at mostly in the 88 cents to $1 per
: lhe University of Kentucky. The pound range. Eleven head of cross'lopiCI will include "Using EPD's bred heifer calves .weighing an
' in Selectina Bulls" and an average· 3S8.pounds topped the
, "Overview of Estrus Synchroniza- heifer sale at 97 cents per pound.
· tion". Gallia County Cattlemen's Throughout lhe sale, it appeared
~Association D~tors will bave a . that buycn were p&amp;)'lng a prenlium
' meetina following the educational for not only lliin hght calves but
" · session. The meetinJ will be held · also for thiclcer kinds of caule thai
' at the C.H. McKenzie Agricultural would finish in the 1100-12!)0
Center and will start at 8 o.m.
pound we~· t ralloe.
0
~
. The 24th Annual Ohto Perfor.. ·
Gov. eorge Voinovich has
, mance Tested Bull Sale will be proclaimed April J.l-17 as."Dairy
' held on ·Saturday, April 17 at I · Spectacular Week" throughout
p.m. at the BeUe Valley, Ohio loca- . Ohio in honor of the largest spring
'lion. Somi: 148 bulls have been cat- dairy show in the United States.
~aloged for the sale. Bulls from len The "spectaculll'" ~ill be held .~t
diffmnt bleedl wUI be IOid. Some the Ohio State Pauarounds m
,four bulls in the sale completed the Columbus, AprlllS-17. The event
' 112 day .lilt wilb over five poillldl will host ~our breed sh.ows and ·
,of gain·per day. A Umiled supply of sales featurina more lhan 500 hetd
:catalop ani available at the County of dally Clllle. Obio I!IO'IUCOI 546.
:Bxtetlllon Office.
..
mllllon &amp;allons or niillt annu~lly
Tbe· traditional sprlnl.feedor and is ranted In the UJp 10 nauon•
;e,lfsales are apln com111111ding ally for the· numl!or of ml"" cows
;ftjp ~ u the demand for"~ and tho producuon of mtlk and
:~e" develoill. Tho April7, ~ milk producll. Milk p~uction
:14 sale 11 Hilliboro Prailucen Cea- tanks l!mong the top mcome
nearly one th~ soun:ea. for inCO!M in both G.. lia
' ves and a llltal of
1,400 and Meigs Counllel.
:
includina ~ bull,
Edward Vollborn Is Gallla·
·ltifer,.111d holstein calves. Some CountJ'siiJ'kultllre a~tnt; 1!1'1·
:J2 pelllDIIt of. the Mlllteell weigh· · culture.
:~g 500 pounds or less sold over .
·

!

'

..

·.z

'e

'

{

•

•

.

'·

'

..

~..

.
:.

•

•

petitiO OS

GALLIPOLIS · Gallia County also is considered 10 be a farmer
farmers interested in election to the . . for those purposes.
Farmers Home Adininist{atioil
Nominating petitions, whic!l
County Committee have until May must be signed by the nominee and
19 to get their nominating petitions two eligible farm voters, and other
signed and turned in, FmHA Coun· information can be obtained at the
tY, Su~rvisor, Lawrence E. Bess, FmHA County Office located at "
· S81d Fnday.
Ill Jackson Pike, Room JS70 '
One person will be elected for a · ·Gallipolis, Bess said.
·:
three-~ear term in the three person
FmHA County Committees
comm1uee ~t the July I, elecnon.
perform a variety of duties, includ. Be~ S81d any .one who has an ing making decisions on appliInterest m a farm 10 Galha County cant's eligibility for FmHA farm
as an owner, tenant, or sharecrop· loans. Two committee members are
per is eligible to run for the Com- elecleJ by county fanners, and the
mittee seat and to vote m the elec- third is appointed by FmHA.
•
tion. A spouse of an eligible farmer
·
'

::Beef meet•Ing set .Mon day;· Divit!end reinvestment announced at a.nth~nual OVB m~eting
: bull .sale slated Apr··· 17
,~tockflast sp~g
,~mcersreolechitedValbylethe
.•

.'

M ay '19 d eadJ•IDe fior

~~~~:;c~e~i'f~~~i~~~e~T~~~~s~
· ~DOminating
plan to sell good used furniture and
·

lUND NEW OLDSMOBILE
ROYALE •88

2 DR.

Columbia. Here she accepts the chair rrom
Larry and M~ry Jane Grogan, store owners.

~ray

Stock 12549 ·
WAS $18,058

Thomas Clothiers is•••

Your Forma·l Wear Headquarters

••

'

'

,I

GALLIPOLIS - Ohio Valley
Bane Corp announced at itS first
annual ineeting on April 7 the formation ofa Dividend Rcin~esbnent
Plan.(D.R.I.P.).
The program will permit ~holders to direct all or a rtion of
their dividends to the p~hase of
stock. Shareholders will also be
permitted to purchase additional ·
stock up 10 an amount of $2 thousand per quarter.
Penonnel of the Bane Corp or
Ohio Valley Bank classified as
insiders will be limited to a rhaxi·
muin of 1•000 in lltOCk per quarter ·
in addition to what their dividend
will purchllse. Complete details
will be mailed to shareholders in
ill be . 1
J
d the 1
une,
an
Pan
w
mented with the August amp
I9 93e·,
· quarterly dividend dale. It was
announced that f~tture dividends
will be paid qlllftcrly on a Febru·
, Ma , August and November

s

~u1/

Ohio Vallty Bane Corp is a one
batik holding company, with The
Ohio Valley Bank Company its
subsidiary. President and Chief
EXecutive Officer James L. Dailey
welcomed sbarebolden to the
meetlnl held it. the Morris and
Dorothy Hiskins Ariel Thea~ in
O.Uipoll$ and Introduced special
guests Rob Lucu and MlkeRarlclt.
Lucas is the Bane Corp's SEC
(Securities and Exchange Cornmlssion) attorney from the firm of
Vorys 'Sa~er, Seymour llld Peale
in coiumbua, and RariQk is from
Crowe Chizek, tlte Jane Corp's
new,lndependenlaUdltors. .

•

During the business meeting, thousand for 1991..Wilh
sale of costs whenever possible.
shareholdet1 elected directors ' nc:bw
and e C?taln- .•
board ,o f
James L. Dailey, Morris E. Haskins ~ uuon. rom net mcome, ~P!
"""'torso . . o
Y.Bank attts
and W. Lowell Call to three year m 1992 10~~ by $4.5 m11lton annu:U meeung on Apnl 7, at the
terms, expiring in 1996. Under by- to $20.4 mil110n. ·
.
bank s ma10. office were:. James L.
laws of the Bane Corp, three direc·
'The book: val~e of Qhlo Valley Druley, pres1dent and ch1~f execu- ·
tors will be elecled annually, The Bane Corp stock Increased $1.63 to ll~e officer; Jeffrey E. S1111th, execOhio Valtey Bane Corp board of $36.19 per share based on 5~$ uuve v1ce.p~1dent and ch~ef opec- .
directors consists of nine ·nembers, thousand shares outstandmg !n au~g officer; C. Leon Saunders:.:..
the other members arr. Keith R, 1992 versus460 lhousand shares m semor v1ce pres1dent, trust offic~r ~
Brandeberry, RobP•. H. Eastman, 1991. .
.
.
,
and secretary to. the lxJar4; Wendell;:
Merrill L. Evans, Wllrren F. Sbeets,
Dun!!g ~ preSident s message, B. ~homas, w1ce prestdent and;: ,
Jeffrey E. Smith and Thomas E. Mr. Oatley 10formed sh,areholders semor lo.an offl~er; Madge E .••
Wiseinan. These gentlemen in of the growth last year IJI the .~ew Boggs, vice preSid~nt ~nd c~-· ~
addition were elecled to the board markets now served by OVB. We tiOller; Sue Ann Bos~. v~e prest- • •
of direcwrs of Ohio valley Bank . went up 633 depos1t accounts m den~ •.support s.em~es d1vision; ~ ~
with Frank H. Mills, Jr.• while C.H. Jackson and W~v~rly ~ast yeat....we . Patnc1a L. D~vts, vt~ president, :::~
(~asey) M~.Kenzie was named aoddedur
JacSkiso3.3nO
mtf1fililcoenanmdloan$s fmroil~ ~~~ge~e~t tnforrnal!on s.yste!':'s :
directorernentus.
.
· .
d1vts~on, Michael D. ~~1s, :- 1ce •
Officers of the Bane Corp are· han from our Wavf.rly Off1ce. ~res• dent loan admtnutrauon· · •
· new
· ka v' ~ H. art •.vtce
· ,Pr;tSident.;:·
·
· ~ :•
James L . ~ailey, president and· Th.at·.•salmost $23 m1 ll 1'on 10
atnn
chief executive officer; Jeffrey E. 101111S from those two new offices 10 branch admmtsttah?n div1s1?n; E.; ;
Smith, executive vice presidellt and I992 ·.
. .
R1c~ard .Ma,han, v1ce pre11del)t. ;
secretary; and c. Leon .Saunders,
Oatley tndiCale&lt;! the Bane Corp lending divtston.
,
·; •
senior vtce president and treaSurer. has been pleased wi'!J the trans1Uon
L:a"'Y E. Mill~, vice president ;~
In other business, Smith report- from 1992 to the f1.rst quar~r of a~d tnte~nal aud.ttor; Wayne L. ···:
ed to the shareholders the statenlent 1.993. OVB, accordmg to Oatley, Niday, v1ce presldCl,Dt and funds .:::
of ineome and explained the SEC'.s ~m~ 198? has gone from complc:l- ma~uem~nt; W1~ham J. Gray ••.•
new proxy . requi.rements. Net tngtts building. ~d renovati~n pro· asststanl VIC~ p~1dent for corpo-; :
income for 1992 was $1.~5 million ·grams to acqumng, offices 10 new ra~ comm.'!Dlcauon~; Larry E. Lee;; '
' $2.94 per share. This represents mar~ets and for~ms a one bank asSIS~nt VICe pteSI~ent lor teller:'
a .decrease in net income of $252 ~~din~ compan.y. adjusunents and operauons and secuoty o~cer. · :;
thousand or $1.01 per share from mves~~ts-wlnch were ~ecessary
· ~ryan w. ~. !W'S~t vice •: .
1991. Cash.dividends issued during ~o . posmon .the communuy bank prestdent and adii)IOtstrauvc ser- • ~
1992 totaled $90 thousand or mto.lhe n~tcentury. .
yices offiCer; Jenmfer L. Osborne.;' •
$1.83 per share. This was an
·In. elostnB,. he reiterated the · assis~t vice presid,e nt and resi-. : ·
increase of $171 thousand or 9 B.ank s CD!J1m.nment to quality ser- cjenual real estate manager;; :~
cents per share over the 1991 divi- VIce- a long tune 0~ trademark- · Ric~ard D. Scotl, assistant vic:e "'
dend and dividend ~share ·
. throujlh compreh~s1ve empl'?yee · pn:stdenl and trust oflia!r: PhyUis .,
Eaminp and casb divicb.ds per. traimng, ~ducl!uon. and testmg; P. Wilcoxon, ,8$Sistant vice preal- '
share were based on weighted aver· · coupled wtth uuUzauon of the
dent and' dtrector of human
age number of shares outstanding est. technology ~0 augmeQI cus
resoum:s; Pelste J. B!~fP. .....
of 528 thousand for !992 and 457 tomer servtce and to reduce labor
· Continued on b-11
*

96

or

Jat:

., '

·,

'

'

"'

~&gt; ·

~

•

~

�Pomeroy-Middleport Galllpolla, OH Point Pleaunt, wv

! 00 years ago April 7

_

ANSWERS TO

.

SCRAM·LETS
PAMPER
JE:STER '
QUIVER
CONCUR
DAMAGE
UPWARD
UNDER WATER

Raging-inferno devastate.s ~Iifton {and its futu_re)

By MIDdy Keams
side of their home wilh a Railon gineer born in Baden.· lost his
OVP saa« '
pail of water in each hand while the home.
ClJFI'ON • More than a century Other side was in Dames. For·
James L. Knight • Knight was a
ago the town of Clifton had a nail ·tunately no lives were lost. but he · fanner who lost 8 brick building.
factory, keg factory. copershops, lost two pel While mice in lhe fire."
A.N. Williams • Williams lost a
two salt factories, a saw mill, lhrec
Edwards' grandflllher must have dwelling, as well as 8 store.
grocery stores, tftree saloons, been Ol!e who alerted the residents
P.A.
Schwarzwalder . ,
- church, Masonic Lodge; black- of Middleport, Ohio.
Schwarzwalder, whose family was .
SIJlilh shop, lhree story brick school
Being wilhout a fire deparunent, originally from V8varia, lost a
&amp;uilding, three coal mines, tele- Clifton was vinually helpless building that was occupied by
phone exchange, office buildings, against the inferno. The Middleport Amos Dyke. Mr. Dyke, a cooper by
shoe shop and a levee for river people quickly ~nded to the trade, lost all ·of his household
ttansporllition.
call for help; bringmg one of the goods plus a calf.
· But • what it didn ' I have was a few fire engines in the area across
James H. Smilh . Smith lost his
fire department.. . ·
·
lhe river on a ferry boat. The river dwelling and a store.
One hundred years ago on April was so rough·'lhai the wave$ ran
Mr. Lathey • Mr. Lathey lost a
V, 1893, shortly after noon, much over the deck of the boat.
.
dwelliilg occupied by John French
Of Clifton burned to lhe ground,
Middleport's 6re engine did and William Russell.
):Vhell the main fire ceased ap-- some good, however. Stationed at
Harriet French · French lost a
proximately two and lhree-quaner lhe corner of Mason and Olive dwelling.
hours later, one salt works as well streets, the Middleport firemen
Allen Lewis • Lewis, an occupa·
as 52 other )&gt;uildings, including managed to save at least one house. tion laborer, lost his house and
ihree stoies, 26 dwelling houses,
At lhat point. lhe flames veered · bam, plus all household goods ex·
and lhree barns were gone.
eastward along Olive Street 10 cepl a piano.
,
In the 1700s, prior to the Revolu· Columbia and High, and out
Charles Meeks • Meeks lost all
iionary era, large land grants Columbia. At one point it burned household goods and clothing.
originally surveyed by George all lhe homes between a saloon and
BJ. Redmwi • Redman lost his
WashingiOO were issued to various church causing one person to hoiiSC, occupied by Chatles Meeks.
Individuals. Among the landowners rematk "she burned from hell to
Samuel Tully· Tully, who was
~ Jacob Peck and Theodore J. heaven."
born in Missouri, lost his house.
Monlague. Their holdings included
Homeowners moved their per·
Mrs. Hughes • Mrs. Hughes lost
ihc sile lhat was eventually to be· sonal belongings out onto the a house lhat was occupied by Mrs.
~orne Clifton.
lawns, but much was devoured by Peck.
.
Established in 1853, Clifton was lhe blaze before they had a chance
William JoSeph • Joseph lost a
Originally a coal mining town with. to carry lhem away.
dwelling occupied by Richard
~enement houses erected for
No Jives W\7e lost and few in· Woodrum, who IC6t all personal
FIRE AFTERMATH . • The picture above
l(lllllloyees. B,ut it soon bec_ame ap· juries were reponed, but estim~te~ belongings.
.
·
shows
Clifton following the fire that destroyed
parent lhat other resources were of property loss was devastating
Harvey Cartwright • Cartwright
the
town
on April 7, 18!13; All that remained
available. Salt production began in and few residents had insurance.
lost a dwelling.
.
were
tbe
cblmneys
of what once were homes,
1868 when two salt furnaces, the · Among the injuries reponed
Sterling Mine Company • The
Virginia and Bedford . Mines, were were to W.R. Powell, who burnt his company lost 16 tenement houses; . stores and factories. LBrRer than the county seat
erected and put into production.
feet, reponedly while trying to which were all occupied.
- Clifton was larger than the walk on a hot tin roof; Joseph
Hiram Hysell • Hysell, as OC·
(;OUIIIy seat of Point Pleasant at the Powell, whose arm was broken
cupant of Sterling Row, lost
lime o( the fire. The population was when a ladder feU on it: and Mrs. everylhing.
IIOIIIId 2,500. Essentially a "boom Mary Peck, the town carpet weaver.
Slalldard Nail Factory • Built in
town", Clifton was prospering.
Peck occupied a house owned by the 11\(iQs, lhe factory was
: Past accounts froin the Mason Mrs. Hughes . and lost nearly destroyed.
Crossword Puzzle
County News said the fire broke everylhing, including a con·
Ohio River Railroad • The
out in·lhe boiler house of one of the siderable amount of carpeL She be· · railroad lost a 1001 house, one box·
ACROSS
90 Dry, as wine
wells of the Clifton salt works. AP' . came almost frantic, was severely car and most of lheir tools.
Sum up
91
· parenlly the fire originated by the burnt, and was almost . killed. She
Mrs. Doriska Jennings ·Jennings
1 Gain
92
Declare
)luming soot from the stack of one was rescued by John McLane of · lost a dwelling.
7 - chamber
93
Places lor
of the pumping baueries at the Middleport
10 -jongg
Mrs. Mason • Mason lost an
worllilp
- • ~onlagUC Salt Company falling on
Ajso, Isaac · Moore was said to empty ice house and wash house,
13 Chooaes
96 Erase: printing
·lhe old building in connection. Ac- have been blown off Roger Reece's and her tenement house was scor19 'Advance In rank
1 99 Rational
. Cording to, the newspaper, it had house near the railroad and had his ched,
•· 20 Morael
10, - -cleaning
21 Time gone by
~ght fire in the same way two or wrist ~rained and was "btherwise
In addi,lion, the United States
104 Oahu wreath
jhree times before, and a fresh injured .
.
. ·
22 Rues
Post Office was destroyed and
105 Nlghtblrd
24 More mature
inter cistt.m had been-tapped and a Sam Tully, a bachelor and his Central Unioil Telephone lost all
107 Turf
25 As far as
piece of hose put next to it, to be widowed mOther lived together and instruments.
108 cravat
27 Myiell
Turk Edwards also wrote in the
Jeady in case of fire. The fire lhis lost their hon\e and moSt of their
109
Evergreen tree
28 Bkonberry ID
lime caught just as the engineers possessions. Mrs. Tully had con· Mason County history book that his
110
_
C
Mplan 29 Agave plant
grandfather's
school
years
ended
at
111
The
1811
30 Italian seaport
:ffi;a!~
the fire to the tracted for insurance with John R. lhe time of the fire. His · family
112
Caudal
31 Stove part
lnain works which was situated in Rayburn of Point Pleasant, and bad bought an old school building lhat
appendage
32 Repair
ihe lower pan of town next to the sent him the money the very morn· had escaped the fire and covened it
114
Broader
34 Habllal: comb.
liver. Blowing a perfect gale up the . ing of the fire. It was a long wait _into a home. Turk's grandfalher
116. Neat
, form ·
"ver and toward die hill, the fire for Mrs. Tully until Saturday, when quit school to go to work in a brick
117 .. All My Children"
••
she received a eard that' her in·
36 Waistband ·
immediately began to · sweep surance had been accepted.
yard to help support the family.
character 38 Fish bait
118
Greek
letter
aiagonally across the town, right
The old brick school house was · One can just imagine _lhis was
39 DanQ&amp; step
120
Insect
l]vough the business center and used as a retreat for those who were true in many families. ·Children
40 Down: prefix
122 Gratuity
who preyiously had the luxury of
some of the best residence portions in need of shelter.
41 Moderate
123china
attending
school,
and
who
probably
44
Bergman
I
D
·
~ the city. ·
When the · fire ceased, many
124
Equally
fished
on
the
banks
of
the
Ohio
af
•
48
Tear
The flames were so intense that properties were destroyed. Among
125 Above
47 "- tu. Brule"
.
the trestles of lhe salt works collap- . the property owners and die items ter class, had to quit to go to work.
·
127 K-N linkup
48culpa
sed. It fell across the tracks of the lost were:
Those who did not have insurance
129 Rotatee
49 Japanase36
Ohio River Railroad and "heated
Theodore J. Moniaguc • The en· had io stan from scratch rebuilding
131 Squander
Acroaa
and kinked" the rails so .dial new tire Montague Salt Works was lost. lheir lives.
133 Roman 51
50 Pigeon pea
Ones had to be placed lhere before as well as a three story brick buildA
13&lt;4 River In Italy
51 Base·
The burning guestion still asked ·
trains could pass. The southbound ing leased by lhe Clifton Store; a
136
Naglltlve
53 Babylonian dally
irain due at I:30 p.m ..was dejayed dwelling house; a building used by by residents of Clifton is what lheir
137
Hearing
organ
54 Concerning
until nearly 6 p.m.
,
Mr. Holland as storage room for town might have been today if it
139
Scottish
river
55 Sicilian volcano
, The regular course of lhe fire cooperage; · the building which had not been for that f!lteful day ·
140
Sholhonean
57 Exptoalve inlls. ·
was headed off on lhe east by the housed lhe Masonic Lodge; and a 100 years ago.
Indian
59 Russian
hill and on the north by a ravine.
brick building occupied by Thomas - Thday Clifton is a small, residen· ·
141
Small
amount
commune
Charles "Turk" Edwards of MeGookey and Tom Parker. Me- tial area, remaining unincorporated,
142
Negative
pl'lllx
60 Declaim wildly
Mason, who is now deceased, gave Gookey was a boss in lhe _salt with many feeling it is just a liu!e
143
"-Fly
Away"
61 Tin symbol
145 Sailor: colloq.
an account of the fire in the "His- works, while Parker was a water suburb of lhe already small town of
62 Sprinkle wllh
147 MoUifles
lay of Mason County, West VII'·
hauler lhere. They lost aU personal Mason. But the residents of Clifton
flour
know lhat was not the case a cen·
151 Evil
ginia", 1987, that was passed along . belongings, plus $50 cash.
64 DoCtrine
152 Norwegian
10 him by his grandfalher.
GeQrge Clifton · Clifton lost ap-- tury ago. ·
66 Mock
currency
''Wben my grandfather was 14, proximately 12500 to $3000 worth · Many communities have been
68 Capuchin monkey
153
Atlllellc group
almost the entire city of Clifton was of salt stock and $4500 stock of struck by devastating fires in the
70 Energy; strength
155
AHirmative
past, and rilany have drawn strenglh
desrroyed by fire, including his goods, plus one horse.
72 Hole
157 Transactions
parent's home. He remembered
John McLain • Mclain, a from them, rebuilding wilh vigor
73 Start
158 Male
and
becoming
beuer
lhan
before.
climbing lhe bell tower of the old teamster, lost his home and had no
74.Cry
159 Sea In Asia
However,
Clifton
was
not
one
of
Clifton school building with a -insurance, having just recently pur·
77 Circle part
160 Printer's measure
lhem.
78 Foot lever
friend and ringing the bell. He chased the property.
161 Faroe Islands
80 Instruct
recalled sitting on the roof on Ofl!l
Peter Zehiers • Zehiers, an en·

9 · Wanted to

·'

.__!...

...

82
83
65
86

Petition
Fondles
Lead Hlray.
Word with plow
or engine
67 Rachel or Sela
88 Suitable

Whirlwind
·183 Monks' hoods ' .
165 Exterior
167 Hebrew month ·
166 Tellurium symbOl
169 Absurd ; stupid
171 The Ram
172 '&gt;'teb-looted birds

....

Old lumft..-., gilII,· china,

Palol: All Old U.S.

hom••• ~

.-

or Poillt Pleasant at the time, muy residents &amp;tiD
wOnder what tbe town would be like today if
tbat illferao bad DOl takeil place. Tbe picture
was loaned to tbe Oblo Valley Publlsbillg Com·
pany by Clara Williams.

. , Public Notice

_,

Answer on Page C-5
173 Rain and hall
115 Secrot writing
176 Garden plant
177 Icelandic writings
178 WriiH
DOWN - - - ·
1 "- Benjamin"
2 Lassos
3 Sign
4 On behalf of
5 Tag player
6 Head. In Paris
7 Proceed
. 8 Limb
9 Precipitous '
10 "- Dad"
11 Mature
12 Singer Don 13God~of

discord
14 French article
15 Urge on
' 16 Ship's
complement
17 Choir voice
18 Talee
19 Correct
23 Chinese skill
26 Aware of: 2 wds.
29 Chinese currency
32 Roams almleaaly
33 Amount awed
35 EaStwood 10
36 - of Bethlehem
37 Merriment
40 Pawl
42 -julep
43 Mine entrance
,45 Oxen
48 Mal de52 Marry
56 Concurs
58 Indian lent
59 Distance measure
60Esteem
62 Arbltary
commMd
63 Avoided
65 Nickel symbol
66 Ten years
67 Those Who Write
compoaltlona
88 WMken .
69 Exlal
71 Draws out
73 lnfl,,mmabla
hydrocarbon

75 "-Town"
76 ''The ~urning - "

79-Caron ID
81 Fulflll
84H-hreoort
87 Armed conftlcl
89Jog
92 Agllo
93 Tavwn stOCk
94 A - 10 'stand on
95 Booty: along
97Baaa
98 ·P..,.,.. liJr print
99 "The39 -··
100 Ventilate
101 "Will - Story"
1Q2T-a'org.
103 Wonder about
Idly
106 Rovellngo .
. 109 Locate
113 P r 115 Roman gods
118 Pilch
119 Rutber tree
121 AllOwance lor

"

"
r

-·

123 Wlllfllt8
124 River llland
125 Joins
126 Controvenlal
128 Wrostilng pad ·
130 Sewing
• lm"'"'"""la
132 FOIIOuued
133 Cover
134 1971 Wortcl
Sariea winners
135 Egg dlah
138 Beam
141 PrOhibit
144 Anderoon ID
148 ~oild tire
148 Untidy
1411 Father
150 Encomium
151 Rewa's
152 Anematlve Word
154 Form ·
'
156 North ""*leon
roll
158 Tllllloland
1511 Competent
162 Humc:- center
184 Be vtctorloua
168 Koppat or Donlon
167 VIper
170 llehokll
174- prde

JERRY WRAY
Oiraclor of Tranaportalipn
April 4, 11 , 1993

· p bUC Notice
U
n E TO
. CO~CTORS
STATE OF OHIO
OEPAR111ENT OF
:TRANSPORTAllON
Columbus, Ohio
March 2t ,11113
_· Con_traciNoS..Ioe Legal Copy
~
UNIT PRICE COtllRACT
NGH41N (ZS)·
'
2
Se ..:v-""~ ) 111 bo
rec.t.ad et r:.r:"!rn::of die
director · of tho - Ohio
. Department of Tr-·
.... Ohl 0
portatlon, CoIum..,.a,
•
until 10:00 a.M. TUMdey,
· April 27 • 1113 lor
lm..,ovamonhl In: Alhenat
Gallia, )locking, Meigs,
Monroe, Morgan, Noble,
Vinton Waahlngton Coun·
""· Ohio for Improving
aectlon ATH-3I..O.DO on
Unlliad Statee Roull 33 and
other varloua route• and
I I
oec lion o by app y ng re1ro-,
reflecilvo polyMtar foot drY
pav-t marldng material
for center linea and lane
linN.
The Ohio Department of
. TranT.\talion hereby pollfl.. 1 illdders lhet It will
ofllrlltllliHIJ lnouro than In
•ny -tr110l enlond info
this adver·
P yrauanl to
.......... L I
I,
" tla sllltnMS
onlorp,._ wiJ 'il!t llforda!l
,full - - n l t J to aldtmlt
blclo lri ,..ponH ID thlo
· inviiDtloiiiiiMI "II.not bo
Ill ""
dlocrilll •~ 1111'1net on
the grOUIIda of ~ color,
:!,.fd~~=1 °;!":.Jn

•

...
.

··-·.or

'
wblch nourished ia the ton or Cllttoa In the
. latter part or tbe 1800s. It was destroyed by fire
on Aprll7, 1893. .
· .
·
.
·

'

Yeltsin finds headaches on ·camjJtlign·trail

.

..

..

'•

· • MOSCOW (AP) - - ~oris - g~t an earful. 9f complaints from . April 25 refetenoum. . · - . _ . ·
Yeltsin stumbled Saturday m hiS dls~ntled shoppers.
. ·.
Instead of battling n.at1onahst
campaign for·a nationwide vote of
Sun, .the 62-year-ol~ president ·· and pro,Communist Jegtslatprs .'"
confidence First, he made an his· ¥amely pushed ahead With his take- the elegant halls of the Kremhn,
. IOrical err~ lhat would embarraSs . II· IO·the:people campaign, which . Yel'tsin is taking lhe fig,ht into lhe
-any Russian schoolboy. Then he . prom•ses ~ IRJCCI_so111e freshness muddy streets . .
·,
. ,
.
·the . ·
. . mto Russ1an
. poht1~s. before
.

'·' .

·

101

JO&lt;it
b for
.. LJMlnllllulll
wT. r -· ~.. • prot
avo oen

~·=--=-:

::=i:

l

I
I

allondarda are aubject to
Federal, 8-, Md SI)A, 124
DirecllvM.
The above Ia a aummory
ol O.llla-Melp CAA JTPA
programming lor PY '13.
Complete programming
dotolll are available lor
revlaw by the public. For
further Information, pi-•
call lhe Gallla-Melga · CAA
JTPA Admlniatrallve Office
in Chnhlre, 317·7342 or
992.f6211. .
Glllla·Melga CAA lo en
Equal Opportunity/Affirm•
live Action Employer.
APRIL 11, 11113

..

_...

•

;

.

..,~ §

Cll.a

Public Notice

funded ~oat Ia comparable
of Tranapol'llltllm and tho _ to tho coat ol olmilar.
office of lito Dialrlcl Oeputy trolnlng at publicly funded
Director.
·
fiiCIIIII•, (3) On-the-Job
JERRY WRAY Training, nrloo per
Director ofTrMaportalion controct . ·
·
Aprll4, 11,111113
B. Tille n/' 5%: Thlo
_.;__ _;__ _ _ __
program will eerve Older
. PubliC Notice
Workers 1111• 55 and over
_.;...._;_;.,.;,;;,.,;.,;,;,;.;,;i.__ with ocllvitlea olmlla; to
NO ARGUMENTS! .NO NAGPUBUC NOTICE
thoao for IIA pluo work GING I Just TM M1te 01 Your
Cholcolll 1·1100-820-G054 Ext.
In accordonce with tho · .,........_
.
5540 $2.118 Par Min. 11..1 lo 11
r...,ulromoniD of the Job · C. Tille IIA 1%: Thia Yro. Unlotar Co. (102) 831.0015.
• .,
Training l!llrln.,.hip Act of r,rogr011' wll oerve odulhl ·
11182, Saallon 104, lho
n long IDrm training at 4
Giveaway
following Job ·Trolning r,ubllcly funded siDto ,:..,,....,~~:.:;.;,:..::-=""',..,.Program lo available for
nalitullona for pool-high :,:;••~.,:~~::" ~::
public revlw. ·
school training. Portlcl· twollor,ll4 441 011~
- PY '113
panta In thla training
Brtnany Sponlat, 5 old.
GALUA COUNTY l
program muot be In long 111t
•IWML 304..a71-1817 aft•r 1
MEIGS COUNTY PLAN
llorm training. Four (41 y•r 4pm.
The lronton-uwronoo dagroa program• are Fomalo Pill Bull pup, will -loa
1
Slaod wotch d"SS, profor lomiiJ
Thlo
1
without chlld,.n, 304-112.34115,
Iunde.
.
aervoe eligible youth 14-21
F,_
khtel"'l. 304~51-1120.
(2) Tho Gallla-Moip CAA Y•rt of ago during tho
will deliver program summer. achool br••k Kitchen Aldo Suporba Dial\.
acllvlliot for tho following through Work Experience, wuher. 114-441-1411.
Job Club, other car. .r
JTPA lilloo: Title IIA,
Dno monlh old ltmole Chow,
IIA 5%, Tille RA 8%, Tide JIB, planning exploration 114-1411-2433 anytlmo.
Title IIC, and Title Ill 0 ctlvlliea, and romadlal
1
EDWAA.
education.
,
6
Lost &amp; Found
(3) The Ohio Buroau of ' E. Tille IIC: Thlo p&lt;otrilm · =-~;;:.::.:.;:;,:..;:;:~,.,...Employment Servlc .. Will i ....... eligible youth 14-21
FDWMI: coon ~. blodc, sprovide intake and roferrol : y..,. of ago. 111 Job etub,
;:,:'0;':fl:.~~,..,
aarvicu to dellnmine and · 2 _, Woolxa 121 tt.oroom
verify the ldeittlllc~llon of Tr8inlng
111 1
FDWMI: email \,.' '"""''" clOg,
ollglblo ":r:licMia.
I mailnum of 52 weoka ,.. . . lr:/=~ /',;,g,~:O.
4·-:-=--,.""7--:::-(4) Ga lla·Melgt CAA pr...-- , . .r, but not "'' 2_'2.:::.::
dollvoro 1111 program• In oxaead 104 weoka por
Found: Wrtatwatch on
accordance wllh tho policy liodlvlcluol Flrot
Avonuol Clalllpollo. ""'""d
allotod In i1a llaroh 21, 1*· erlilfon will 11e g1var1 to . tat. ea 1 Wllh O..Crlptlan,
publlahlid EEO·AAP Bhlloo lunclng
ollenta
.......
448~404. ·
·
ment All Facloral and Shlto SMiling 1... 11w1 •
Yard Sale
lawo conoornlng , Civil Baooiolaureaa.. - • at 7
Rlghta and Equal Op· non public' training flo.
portunlty era followed and ollllloa wHI lie p&lt;oratod In
Gallipolis
adhered to.
. ordar · thai tho JTPA
!unclad ooat 1o 'a omp.-.ble
· (5) Gatlla-Melga CAA u &amp;VICinity
a ,doubl-ntry accounting 111 tho _ , of - ailnllar
'
oyotam to lna~re aound tr-~• .... 111-"'llcly funALL Yonl lain """ lo Palclln
11 a1
tr 1
11
-.... ,....
Advonco. DEADUNE: 2:00 p.m.
sc con
aoooun ng, r.atlllloa (I) On-tho-Job the day biro.. lha Ill Ia Ill "'"·
audll, and debt oolleoll~ Training:
v.... ·
per sunday oolhlan • . 2:00 p.m;
procaduroo and tho proper c-ool, (4) Youth · Try Frtvlay.- llonulay oolhlan • 2:00
p.m.8aturday.
dlaburaal1nd accounlng of Out, Z50 ~ mulmulll.
lunda received In ao· ~ 11 EDWAA: Thlo PfOIII!Iftl
corchnce with r•redi.W. ~- dleloo ... d workira
Pomeroy,
and ragulallona.
· who ·- UMIIIPloyod duo
MiddlepOrt
111 piMt
(&amp;I Progr- aoUvllioe por fo 0 IIIIo - aa followo:
o'-in" •-llv d . . lnolu~
&amp; VICinity
Ala
Ia aac1 .....,
- .. _.
••- u
"' ,...,.
Aol-amenl, Job Club,
each ol ..nt plan tho
and Claaaroom Training, All Vanl 1o1M lluol lo Palcl _ln·
11Chlovamant of oareeriJob vorl• ID a maximum of 52 Adva,... Doodllno: 1:0CIIIm tho
day tho ad Ia to run,
goalo, and ao • fir1t atop . w.... por program yoar
lvvnctay oolbJan. 1:0tlpm l'rtdaJ,
to olaaarooM training. · but nol ID acood UM Monday odlllan
!O:OOa.m. .
Aao••IIJ•nt lo uaiod 111
w.... per Individual. Firat ..lurdOy.
. help appllilanhllollenta
-~•lion
will
~
Thundar 111'!, , ...., _ ...
h
ell
,_
aooeas ot or 1un ng
given .ID funding ollenla
sou,... and tervloeo In . ':!:~ loll than _ a --·-at~---"""' lha . . _ . -OM
.
the JTp~
fllrlcllng·· .
at
unalllol!l help duo to lund
11011 public
lllio wAI M prorolad In ·
Acllv
length ol 'l1lllo:
-~ ... JTPA
A...,.._ iiA: (•) Jolt .... ~ •
.,._ .....
· ,_ · '
_,a~
luncladMotlo.-pnble
3 WHIIIc:\Cinoro1o
11e o0at of olmilor
Training (
varloe to a
tralnl- 81 ..:.o~oiloty funded '
lllllldmum of 2 WOlke per
·
111 111i'ia ..program yoar, · but nat to . 171
llolga CAA wilte ·
104
lndlvldul.
Flret
oonaldo
.aA ,114
. Aclnllnlslnlllva
oxoNCI.
weelca
"er . eubJwlt
tleofroliloally
to the
erotlon will W giVen fo En-: lhe oharootarlalioe of
funding ollento . pos·
and p..-olpaniD
. aeoaing leila . 1han • ID tho oxtant ID whiGh .,.
•-alaurwto, e•ID • 1 ootlvitloe lll..t t!le r..,_t

!'l

p~om

ntto

•-1'

(CAn .,.._

tr,:;'£

•-lei-

°•

=

11..........hlnlnu-·...... -""', ......... _..

Uml=-•

GaiUi

I· :~~~~~~~~~

.,Pii:..nta

· erd" that_ the · .ITP_A

7

~11,1

telephoned,

and

c...

funeral home.

~

'

.....

..

s

I

J••hlll·

The·

Hannan
Rinky . Dink Athletic
A~eciclatlon would
thank th• foUowlngl
buolne..ea lor donat·l
lng the trophiao to
Hannan Traca Rlnky
Dink Tour·namanL
5th •
&amp;th Grado
Baoketbell: lot place
phy, Harold Montgomery
(Montgomery'• Barber
Shopl; 2nd place trophy,
P - B.-n Inc.; 3rd plaool
trophy, Burlile Oil Cotn·l
pony.
4th Grade Bao1katball:
tat piiiCe trophy,
Grocery,
2nd place
trophy, Nancy Fouatel;
3rd pl... trophy, •~•ft•;. 1
Glaa (""ne'Cox).
.
5th l
6th Gralhl
Cheerteadera: tai, ·2nd,
3rd place trophlu,
Nichola Wrlghll PIIVIng.
·4th Grade Choerluder~: tat; 2nd, 3rd pf..,e
trophiaa, B. P. Ollor
CompMy (I.Mry Miller~
Buolneitoea Oonallng
lmlvt....l TrophiM: Willa
Tiro Company, River· City
Farm Supply, Bmllh
Buick, Norrie · Northup
Dodge Inc;, Federal
Mogul, ~rench
Matlroao lnq., B.P.
Company, · Nichola l
'Wright Paving, Nancy
Fouolol, Burllle Oil Com·
p.. y,
Buainooaeo Oonallng
to tho Conc•lllori: Food
Marl 211, Johnaon'a
Super A,...,Joa, llloDon·
aid'a, TIIC!O Bell. Bit llear,

'

mMeUDOGtOfO.
Paaais:
tfiOWAIID

...

April12. 19315
KATEJIISO'II
Apri122, 1911
.......

Adas I
Vi

lr ,. 'Gil) Of
MICILU!L

IM.YID
IIINDY

WI' S(lM

I

0

II 'I PIJ,-

---.....

thooe who called at lbe

Dairy Queen, Pond•ror'

tOI

c.• UW"U

I ....,[

caniB, tbe pallbearen,
Pastor Allen Floe, thote
who

ell

..

their
sincere appr'eclatlon ror
tbe kindneaes ohown al
lhellme or ber death. For
those who sent food ond

7

lg

t..

....... ,..
lbnyS'all6

"'dU.-

......

, . _ tk .a:

....
-.
11111'*-a.c-ror

~I

-·!II:.
.. · a..._..a

, _ _ . . . . ,... 1:

-li-.a

. . . . ,..-.-ldbl:.

.....

s..-oe ~ IDitt-

... ...,. fila: .WOitkt I

wk:u•~•

... .......

UJWIIIIIG
.!plY

Gil"

o.••·l;

,...._.....
--....... ille---.....Ide

ApollO
..............
IOI&amp;flloNL
A -f ar, • ..., . . . . .

........

_,..~­

~

I

~lain lYe,,-· 1ao::b: ~~;"':~
Qalllpolla T•
Candy, .Wand(a,
ger'a, Ru, Plzu . H111.1
l.ofobl'a llcC~ F-"1

Spring:;:=~~

land, _ Fruth
l'ftacy,
Frllo r.., (A•cly
Qo · Mart, lmog.ne
Church,lw...,a.
alao want "'' th.•llkl
Condor Grllcllng tt.G,..,II
COX) for ol....... allOW
the
and Guyon
Townehlf!
1W.ti.lln)l
for 11!11111111 oln... on

.• ..

we

IAotlll'

~

.

"'

,.....,

•liP,_

.

levals arid perforMonoi

...

~·

.

_
......
......
..La
D

Edith Hinson

PubliC Notice ·
,,. on ftloln the' Oe~l1rnenl

......
,
-t~

L

II!'

wilb., fo

'
'

__ ...__ni - . A -

_ _ .._•MIE'-:~

.The family of

trill"""

''

--·PI

7

the bkl INIIPIIal. "The cMia
oal for n•pletlon of tllle
work ohall lie .Ill lorfh In .....,.......
flloll- ~otlnd '#.
th. . ! tlngpNpual"
_. hllle wAI be proralld In · (II All,. . .._ lu~clna
,..._ _. ....,......,,

..

11 · Help Wanted

' PubliC Notice

Announcemc nts

~f.=~::. lite Diolrict Deputy ~nifty !1~A=~~~ti~! 8.re:':'1a:

,.

Employmenl Serv1ces
.

KIT 'N' CARL 'VLE® by Larry Wright

NOTICE TO
·coNTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANBPORTAllON
Cotumbuo, Ohio
March 26 , 11113 ·
ConlnlciS.tee Legal Copy
No.ll3-307
siNIT PRICE CONTRACT
NGH.QOON (27);
STP-FYe3(2)
Sealed Propoaala will be
r40Celvlid at the office of lhe
director of the Ohio
Oeparlmenl of Trano·
portation, Columbut, Ohio,
until 10:00 a.m. TUMd8j,
for
-April 27, . 111113
lmprovomenhl In: Athena,
Gallia, Hocking, Meiga,
Monroe, Morg•n, Noble,
Perry, VInton, Wuhlnglon
Counliea,. Ohio
for
Improving aeclion ATH·SO.
4.!17 on United Sllotee Ao111el
50 and other vorloua roulloal
an&lt;! oecllona by applying
retro-reflective faat dry
pavomont marking material
for canw llnat, lane lin••
and edQe lin•.
The Ohio Department of
Trariaporllolol) hereby noli·
flea oil b.-ra lh81 It will
affirmatively lnaure than in
any contract entered Into
purouonl ·to lhla adver·
11aemenl, minority b:l;~~:=·l
enterp&lt;ltM will lie 1
lull opportunity to aubmll
bide In reaponae to lhle
Invitation and will not be
dlocriminalad agalnat on
the groundo of race, color,
or national origin In
conatct.etlon lor .n IIWard.
Ml. nlmum· wage ralea for
1hia prolect have been
pradelonninad u required
by law and oro oat forth In
the bid prop001al. "The dahl
••• for completion of thla
work ohaU be aet forth In
the biddng propo..l."
Plana and apeclficolions
are on •In the Department
of Trlniportation and tho

•

'.

_,.,;,.;::...,;___ 1

Buy

Wonlool tO 11\&gt;y: l*d moblo

.

.

WATER."

COino, Gold ""'--' ..._ Colna,
.Gald CalnL ·11.U. Coin lllop,
1111- AVWIUO, Galllpllla.

.n'

.

·

Hen~ed husbandtolrieud, , ....
e~rag1n9 m~ wife 1b tallre .,,_
diVIng lessons. 'Why?" ._ ' iaid
asked. "I . keep thinking; ._ ,_..
_pecked husband 9""1111ed., ..... quiet
II Will be When sbe"s lACJ&amp;i

-.
..-.-.-.
.._
1-. -

Tap -

•

~

_

....... 1

Wonlool
to bw: old - · mclor
arid
,..llar,114'8112-723t.

.••

LEADING INDUSTRY DESTROYED BY
The above en'"vlngls a reproduction or
an authentic statement, or bill head, whlcb was
used ·by the Standard Nail Works. lb,e Steel mill .

•

11

Wonlod To Buy: Junli Autoo
With Or WithoUt ......... Call
Llrfr UWty. IM 311 1303.

'

FIR~·

.

·

SCC\\~lA-. &amp;EZ.S
_. - ~ ~-••

S1 Mill Dill Dl

..llnlohllig, Ooby llaotln, . 114'
112·11141. '
'· ,.

SUNDAY PUZZLER

=

Slnlllyn

OH-Polnt Pleaunt, WV

Aprll11, 1913

1'

...;..: -- ....

'

-~

u •• , .. .......... •~-

~·..o.
,,,

~

y .........

\

..

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

�Times

14

Sentinel

wv

Ott-Point

Business
Training

32 Mobile Homei

35

tor Sale

Lots&amp;

8

Aprll11, 1993

PubliC Sale
&amp; AuctiOn

PUbUC$ale
&amp;Auction

8

42 Mobile Homu
for Rent
Ccc

1183
Fairmont llabllo · - ·
'Mx1U, 2 lecii'OOI"' 1 a.t:ta.

Wanted to Do
~r ond Iobeii WDII&lt;, by lho

18

hour,

~

Eloc. Holt,

5 P.M. 114-44f-30U.

rate, 8'14-1143-8123

All reat estate advertising In
tl'\ls newspaper Is sutJJ&amp;ct to
the Federal Fair HoU!dng Act .

or&amp;1444U2H.

E6R TREE SERVICE. l 1 i ,

Trimming. T- Romoval,

ol 1968 vmlch makes lldegal

Trimming. Fr• &amp;tlmat..t I
387-7NT Aftor'4p.m.
GMerll lawn ca,.: mowl~.

lo advertise ~any prelerence,

make anv "sudl prelerence.

Po•la't Doy Care Conlor 1
Block Wilt 01 HMC On Jackoon

l"his newspaper will nol

~mltatlon

7S·lh7.

MIN

·p-

448-4210.

Step Br Sttp Lawn ea,.,
p~a

c~

Llwn Serv~, We Do It All,

&amp;14 441

me.

loOo, building
loor
tputmenlt,..,.. remc3tltd,ln
RapiM, •rtou. lnqul"- ant,,

Tllrw

ortgin; o.r any lnlentlan to

don'
haul•":: loQo lo lho min JIIOI

lfodditn 814-448-6227.
chool- !School Ago 614-44&amp;8224.
Small Englnt Ropolr And TunoUp, Two And Fow cytlo, 614-

ilkl-.~

sex lamllal status or national

814-1112-5173.

or discrimination:

~nowtngty ICCepl

advertisements for real aslate
which lsln vk)latlon or the
. law. Our readers are hereby
Informed 11181 all dwellings.
advertised.ln 1Ns newspaper

are avaHable en an equal

36
Call 1-IOO-J'88.54lll For Colorod
BrOr:hun
On ·Capo Cod
Homoti
Coli 1-400·1'88-54111 l'or lion ln-

lonnation .on -

t....,

Dloee to tOI#IIn, 11ot..

~~~.

Business
Opponurilty
INOTlCEI
.
OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO.
,.Comlnoncll lhal you do buolnojoo with pooplo yoo kr»w ond
NOT to ••nd money ttvough the
m.ll ·unlil you ha~a lnvutlglted
tho olloring.
AUSUN I WOLFF TANNING
•
BEDS
New Commordoi,'~Homt UnHI,

2583, e.8pm.

.

HILLTOP SECWSION

• 3&amp;00 Square FMI ContMnpory
.Home 00 17.1 Acr• mil WJth
Pool And2 Bamo.
• 83 Adjacent Ac1'81 mil Avail·

abla

·

,.,

~~~~~~~~

2 firma In MMOn County. 66112
acr• w/hDuM. eo ac,... wlfarm
itow;e. Good cond. 304 451 1118.

41 A,

a Room, FuH Buornonl; 2

Batt., :I

Ia~ ,

Work Shop,

W/Garogt, Crib. 114-446-2360.

~

~-~~o,c'!ri~R..::',=.

,

WHh 22l2l Plr1J Room .

c-. TheOnonclo
AOcWe Within 3 Mil"
• CoaiiCI Bill

sbdnn. houoo

In

PU BLI( AUOION

:X:::·
lull ldlohon, . ..,.....,
m_.ZIIi' doc&amp;ra: ~_;;:,~
;:,:~._,
10..1 oloclrtc,
-·
VtloroN
u..-w

.

Po. .l I'CIUIO, Mlddlopon, Ohio
~• ..._. m~c:t,lnee

currently

ploo:od 11 -lthod '-tlono
$2,100. ..nou. · lnqulrwa only,

304-47&amp;.8158.

.

Aroo, Ook

Carport,_ N:, 0..

H11t,

Full

Booo-.Roconllyllornodolod
~· Prleo: f&amp;I.IIOO. 814-

Real Estate

32 Moblla Homes

31: Homes for Sale
ntLAc. • Bedroom Houaa Rl.l'lll
· Wa•r, GrMt Hunting, d5,ooo,

114--2.

5:

-r

Drivo,
Brtck-, B o d - 1 112 Bolho.

Spring

for Sale
$112.17 por monch lncllldlng oix
monlho ' - lol rwnt. 14x7V,
ct.llvorod and HI . •p, -"lrllng
ond ottpo, 1-80CH137-1825.
1182 141170 llobiia Homt With
1 Bllh, 2 Bod- ·

Happy Ads

8128 Expondo
rooma,

Cen1ra~

2&lt;1-1282.

Air, $10,000, 114•

:Congratulations ·
·Sandie Camahan
and Tracey Holman,
lor passing your
·· Olio Peace
Officer Test!

C~nsignment

•
•
•
LOCATION: From Gallipolis. Ohio follow Route 7
north approximately 3 miles turn left on Georges Creek
and go approximately. one mile ·then turn right on
Maddy Cemetery Road.
Due to the death of my husband Joe Lawson, the
follo~ing will ba sold:
:·
HOUSEHOLD: khchen table &amp; chair~. 6 unit gun
cabinet, Hobart meat grinder, meat cutting table,
vacuum cleaner, ana soma smaller hems.
TRUCKS &amp; ~QUIPMENT: 1980 Ford Pickup with
du-nip bed; 1972 Ford Dump Truck, Ford FlatbaCI whh
winch &amp; bQom, Caterpillar D-4 Bull Dozer wl winch, MF
Industrial Tractor wnoader, Super Long 3pt. Hitch Back
Hoe (like new),. Lo Boy Dual Axle Trailer w/loldup
ramps. Shp. 80 . gallon horizontal Air Compressor,
Lincoln Welder,' Hobart Tig Welder, acetylene hoses,
ks &amp; gauges, all types of welding equipment and
supplies. bellows, anvil. welders table, one lot ~~
stainless steel, '2 hoist, portable crane, bridge deckiiiiJ,
3 sheets plate me1al, car lift, utilhy pick up rack.
FARM MACHINERY: Shaver Post Driver, 3 pl. Post
Hole Digger, MF 3 bottom plows, 2 bottom'plows, oliver
2 row corn planter, dual axle trailer, flatbed wagon. G. E.
J;liding Mower, Troy Bih Roto Tiller, 7' Blade, 5' Rotary
mower, one rqw cultivator. older grain drill. older hay
condilioner, one lot pressur~ treated fence post,.one lot
new metal fence post, bench grinder. s· Bolary mower.
300 gal. fuel tank, 1000 gal. fuel lank on skids, water
trough, one lot of pipe, one lot metal, JD Hactor (lor
parts), old baler. one very large lot of shop hand tools.
NOTE: This is an extremely clean &amp; large auction
w~h qualny tools and equipment.
TERMS: CASH
(fDNCESSION STAND

Saturday, April 17, 1993
10:00 a.m.
Located on St. Rt. 124 in Portland, Ohio.
Bring in and we will sell it.

Dan Smith·Auctione.er
57-68-1344
Rhett A. Milhoan, Apprentice #5926
Johri Smith, Apprentice #5518
Not responsible for accidents
or loss of property
Cash ·
Positive 10
Refreshments

· FOOD AUCTION .
SPECIAt AUOION

I
'

.

Clemmie Lawsan, Owner
Lee Johnson-AUCTIONEER
Crown Oty, Ohio
Phone: 256·6740

.

THURS., APRIL 15, 1993 AT 7:00 P.M.
At BOGGS AUCTION HOUSE
Rt. 35, Gallipolis.
Happy

Aprilll, 1993
ANNAJ.

or plenty
Guess wbat1.
Our Mommy

SHOEMAKER

(Aimet Glassburn Brown)
is twenty

Love Sbo!lbJII

and

•

Happy

Easter

"40th"

Anna~

your gentle face
and patient Smile. ·
Anna, sadness· we
recall;
Anna. you had a
kindley word for each.
Anna, you died beloved
by all.
The voice is mute and
stilled the heart.
Anna, you loved us all
well and true.
Ah. bitter was the trail
to part
From:· A mother .
husband , sg good as
you.
Anna you are ·not
forgouen by your
loved one's,
Nor, Anna, will you
ever be.
As long as life aQd
memory .last
Anna, we will alway s
rememb er
you
alway's.
Anna, we miss you now
so much
Oui heart's are sore,
Anna, as time goes by
we
,
Witt all miss you more
every day that past.
Anna, you alway's had
a beautiful smile,
And your gentle face.
Anna no one can ever
fill your vacant place.
Sadly missed by

Butch
Twenty· Two Yeats

• ·have come and
gone since we said .
· "I Do" ~
Happy Anniversary
honey "I still
believe In you."'

.'
I

'~

'

DIVISION OF INTEREST
"OPPORTUNITY KNOCKS AGAIN"
HISTORICAL LOG CABIN
ON APPROX. 243 ACRES
TO SELL IN TRACTS OR AS A UNIT
TIMBER AND OIL .&amp; GAS RIGHTS TO SELL
SEPARATE •
MEIG~ COUNTY- POMEROY OHIO,

PUBLIC
AUCTION

SATURDAY, APR. 24, 1993-12:00 NOON
Owners want immediate sale. WiH •ell on location at
Box 361101 Rocksprlng1 Rd., Pomeroy, Ohio. Take
St. Rt. 33 north from Pomeroy to Co. Rd. 19, turn
right to Rocksprings Rd. (Co. Rd. 20) turn l~ft to sale
site. Loo~ lor the RED, WHITE &amp; BLUE BAIER
AUCTION SIGNS.
TRACT t1: This historiCal log cabin, which has been
partially remodeled, has a family room whh a huge
stone fireplace, large kitchen, two bedrooms 'and full
bath on·the main level. The upstairs consists of one
bedroom: There is a partial basement wilh woodburn·
er heat, well water and a septic system. The outside
conslsls of approx.. partially wooded acreJ. Taxes
per haK as • unit are $392.86.
TRACT 12: Approx. 8 acres. TRACT 13: Approx. 7
acres. TRACT 14: Approx. 32 Acres. TRACT IS: .
Approx. 52 acres, TRACT 16: Approx. 94 acres.
· TIMBER: Approx. 190 acres of various trees. Siz~! to
b.e cut12' and up with one year to remove . .
OIL &amp; GAS RIGHTS: To tall separate. All other min·
aral rights to convey whh property.
AUCTIONEER'S NOTE: This is an excellent oppor·
tunity to purchase some choice real estate that has
unlimited possibil~ies.
FOR DETAILS OR FREE BROCHURE, CALL
AUCTIONEER PAUL .E. BAIER Office- 2161452·
6563 or ReL 2161875-5152.
·
TERM&amp;: 15% depoe~ sale day on each parcel, tim·
bar and Oil &amp; Gas righla. Balance •t transfer of
deeds. A 5"4 buyer's premium will be added to 'the
final bid price. .
.
NOTE: To sell parcels than as a unit, and will sell
whichever way nata moat to the seller. All information
cootainad herein '!fa&amp; derived from source~ believed
to be correct. · •
"
SALE BY ORDER OF ED GENHEIMER, BETTY
KNIGHT, RACHEL M, SHERIDAN, &amp; JUDITH G.
VANICA. AU':Tto.- • l!r..v:rmorJ • API'IIAIOE115

SATURDAY,
.APRIL 17, 1993 ·10:00 A~M.
•

LOCATED ON RT. 331N HARTFORD, WV;
AT THE HARTFORD COMMUNITY BUILDING
1?, MILES.NORT..H OF POIIi-T PLEASANT, WV
3 pc. 1940's Oueen Anne living room suite sola, ladies &amp;
gen~eman 's chair recendy re-upholstered with a. I ""ivet, nice

4 drawer Clark onl. oak spool cabinet, library labia, oak

so

i
stand, round oak table. magazine ~c!&lt;s. small 4
drawer chesl, oak book shelf, old buffel, mission oak grandlather clock, 8 day oak kiichen clock, iron coo-coo clock,
mantle clock. I 5 jewel Elgin pocket walch, 15 jewel Hamplon
pocket watctl, wristwa1Ches ladies and mens, several pieces
McCoy ware, 2 Walt bowls, blue Shirley Temple pitcher,
Fenton coin dot vase, child's Depre.ssHJn cake set, Fenton milk

glass hobnail, glass Planters peanul jar, over 50 pieces
Qeplession glass. miscellane 0usglasswarQ, Hatliekl &amp; McCoy
whiskey decanlers. New York Central railroad Janlern. B&amp;b
railroad lantern. wood Coolator ice box, 1.t "z• cast iron Aunt
Jemima door stop, cast iron;•Mr. Peanur door ~top , William &amp;
Aepparn ·gal: slone jar, Grtswald skillel, food grinder, advertising tins , clay marbles, sa'il &amp; fi'PP"' shakers, old toys,
old magazines and books, severar dated truit jars, Jumbo
peanut butter jars, milk botdes, old Christmas decorations arld

bubble lights, old coSiume jewolery. old postcards, quilts,
linens, se""ral kinds of small oollecUbles, linware. anti"' a goH
clubs. old Army binoculars. old wagon and sc!X&gt;ter, broad axe,
bucksaw, several old hand 10ols, l/2 HP air compiassor.
several boxes of miscellaneous will be sold by the bO&lt;,
microwave oland. Coppertoneeklclricrange,comer cupboard
1

·

·

'AUCrfOH C:ONDUc:TED BY

.a'ICK P·UBSOR ADc-riON CO.

B~other Eddie

ABSOLUTE AUOION

Sales

· 'Husband, Rpg,er
Sboema.ke,r;
·Special aunt, uncle,
Nannie &amp; James,
SPecial brolher~in·
. Son Charlie,

Not Responsible For Accidents Or Loss Of Property

Terms: Cash or check with proper 10.
Auctioneer: David Boggs, Lie. 4596
Licensed and bonded In state of Ohio.
/ Phone 446-7750
.
Not responsible for accidents orlon.of

mother Ruth;.poug

law, Milce,

Love

Box loo~. can food, all kinds of meats, all
in·date, plus much more.

and more.

LUNCH

M~SON, wv
~

.

Saturdav,,, Aprill7, 1993
10•00 A.M

Auction

. 773•5785
'

.

AUCTIONI'ER: RICK PEARSON
OWNER: L.. B. SAYRE.
TERM.S: CAs_H OA CHE~WITH. I:0. OUT OF STATE ~ERS tr.IUST
HA~ "CURREN-T BANK-l.i:TIE R OF.CAEOITI NO EXC£PTIONSr
Not Rtspor.•~lt,for acdl1tn\t Or~ o{J)ffJPI:InY · · . · ' .
Lkenled ~ ~. in OhiO, K_,tUciq', 6 Weti,'VIfglnla 1166

..

2 bodroorn -

-

......._on,
••r.tor

&amp;
....,... ~ aiO.
~ --

for Rent
1 bocl100111 aplo, iloocllocllion,

1 hd GOUII UnfumliW Apart"!1111, 11... l Relrlgtralor, No
Pola, . , _ Wator lnc:illdod,

1100 Dopooll, -1-#!l~
~bod~Oollipolll

·

Forry,

,_-·too,-

2bdnn. lljlla., lOIII oloclrlc, IP"
pllancoa ......_, laundry

IO ocllool
In ,...,., Applloatk»M nalllbll;

at: Vlllaat ~a.-. Aolo. 141 or
0111114-f112-3TI1. EDit.
• Aporlmonllor ront Roclno tru,

1 or 2bd"''rilor':fr romodliod,
tor -...
uon, cau 814IIIIU~

N uc c0 R

l--,-l--,lr.:--,I-"TI: --rl---1

Henpecked
husbang
to
friend, "I'm encouraging my
6
1
wife to take scuba' diving lesI
L-...L..-:-L--,-.L-~-:-L---1 sons ." "Why?"
the friend
asked . "I keep thinking ," the
G A D M E· A
. henpecked husband grinned,

.. .I

I&amp;..1-:e~=~=-·~"T~~~:I~~L.~r ..J-r~~9:. :~~~-~~!~t
_-

I

w u D ,R A p

I l I I I
l 0

.

•

.

.

~,

.

I

G)

' . . ,,

.......

Pit

I

,;.,

-.
cb,.
-T-.
nu -. ·

• Whlre acrylic plastic staclcing chain. US mfg. (Malibu)

bo&lt;:.k $5.95 ea. or IWo for $10.00.
.
.
• 6 tie web aluzpi.num chaise lounge folding chain $11.95
IWO for $20.00,

• Large thick &lt;lhaisc lq.ungc cushions, reg. $29.95 eLno••l
$15.95: rwo for $28,00.
Half cedar baml planters reg. $19.95 now $14.95 ea; two
$25.00. Thn:e other •tylcs wood planren, IArJe, good prica.

I ~· setcoat fiberglass lilb and sbuwor combo, whire and
oolon $159.95 ea. 2 and 3 ~ · whire and colon $199.95 ea.
1 p:. •hom only $169.95; 2 and 3 pc. $189.95
• 4 'x8' tteated lattice $7.95 oa; 6 pc. •p-$6.95. 4'x8' trollll&gt;d

¥'1'11. T....

Sla

•

lhick llnice panel $16.95 ea.

• Insulated glasi panels ~ several sizes, some lpw~E.. s~uJ

Air ConcltloMt,

$15.00 to $2.9.95 ea. Large size•, values Ia over $100.00 ea.

IM:JU-1

Tool 1'nD.-..

Few

• Large selection of minors. all plare glass, •quare and u•~•, 1 ..
beveled edges, low prices.
• Bene conunodcs US mfg. 31! gal flush, longllll&gt;d, reg.

-.up

-----T.V.
.... --.
-

;;; ::. i1i

~In
I Clhlo,
$1110.

now $59.95.

LaJge selectiOn of nails ail.d deck and drywall screws 11 low

Good'Pz:ices

&amp;-.114--

........
..,.
Dd2.,.11,_
' -.
YouUIIWMS.eMt•lm.

.....
............. -:.

·'.

•

'

Real Estate Genenil

Real Estata Gerieral

PROFESSIONAL SERVICE MAKES THE DIFFERENCE
VIRGINIA SMITH, BRC*ER........:...... 31S 1121
EUNICE NIEHII, REALTOR ......., .......... 44f.1n7
RUTH BARR, REALTOR..- •.••..........~722
DEBORAH ICITES, REALTOR .........._.4 * LYNDA FRALEY, REALTOR~................411 'W
MICHAEL IJILLER, REALTOA.........,..•Ut BIOI
PATRICIA ROSS, REALTOA•••..•.•...•. .24HII7tl

R-tor ront.- ot month.
Starling II 1120/mo. Gallla Holtl.
114 44f:.l510.
&amp;looping roomo whh cooking.
Allo bailor · All hook·•PI·
Cell aflw 2:00 p.m., 304·7'13-

5851,llloonWV.

WI(MA

•

1154. BEAUTY 1nd the BEST lllraellve and
- - c:ourr1ry home wtn 65 ....,. mil, 3 bodnns.,
fluOIIR &amp; 00, llmly nn. w-ngli"Pia&lt;&gt;a, 2
..S ~ "" and encloood porch. Eqoippod
lllchan, new 3Cbl40 garaga. lovety
canle bam.
- . bo
11111 ~"-"·

-y ·- --I3-.
For ,.111 OOINMI'dal
or - · loclltlon
nft1Y
..........

•wn.

""""'or

Courl- In Rlptoy, WV. ldlol

with - - porldng
11
·-parking
· Roorfrom North
Ollljlloyao

guners ere new. central .. r. A very good buy and lhl
owner waria an oner. $18,000.

~lerchandtse

1660.

OVERLOOKI11G THE IIEAUT1FUL OHIO

RIVER -Cozy and warm bungalOw, 2 or 3 btam.,
eaHn ·ldlchen, range and rtfrlg ., au~. fu•
basemen!, oil ancf woodburnlng furnace , well
insulated, Nieo loiiUid 1 ea( ·
'

Household

~.
MOM All·'

APARTMENT BLDG.
INVESTIIENT - Good monty . maker IN TOWN.
Large apl. bldg. wlh 3 two bedroom aptt. TNs
property has beorr well maillailerl R - prleo .

•'*

bo -n lo IPPfOOillt,
123 Cour1 II, Rlploy, WV. 304-

II. -

~nyl.

h12 Cai!lll

1630. EXCELLENT

1863. MAINTENANCE FREE 198!1 SKYLINE
ROYAL COVE MOBILE HOME - Rental iol,
landscaped, dodoS anu lence. Cullom b•ll
wlh
all lhe ell'lru, cathedral ceilings, Insulation, bullt·ln
hu1ch. &lt;las~ bool&lt;caso llll walunls, Wllk-lnclootl, 2
bedrms., 2 bllho. roof newly coaled, down- and

-ion

51

SGT.IWOROI....- ••- .......:MU101
WILUAIIBON, ASSOCIATE.....:MI 111170
JAMES WILLIAMSON, ASSOCIATE•.•.24M07V

STEVEN

411 • For LeaN

In

Stoclt 14.41 Yd. ollohon· Cor·
ptlo, At. 7 Nordr, ·-~·
VI'RA FURNITUII£ ANO AP-

.

PUANcEs

ettueu• OA 111,ue 3158
Em.,.im.Onl Conlor'a .1141 br
u.a
W•k~:: akahafvlll Start·
1ng f;ZI.Hj • 1 lnon $121;_lola

tl34. 81--L.EVE:L HOllE - 3 ba.. OOiaa, At..Jn

kitchen, lg. lR, 2~ balM, 1 K . nt1. Ill Sllille

po

Clll_ ..

,Wotk· Co11to And End Wllh
DoorO f1tl tl!!i I' Tlblo Wllh I
Chtlra

'=

Mil• OUI 141

-

-=

441 ~Dill,,.., llaokbum. .
GOOO 11110 APPUANCEI
w.~.~.!........

"':i

•

~::~~~~~~~.
1·
fD0.4
•

........... "'

-In.,.

"*'-

roncll homo
-*J'-. , _ corr¥Mt141d • toiOwl: new 1bennO Mlldl:
oocurlty rtoon, 11011 tldlnQ. 11tro1y - · -

.No o.,..tt On Ronl-z,o,pn;

-nod.

•.,.-.---·

· Tllit , _ .. -

-f712.FOUR
r.........,.
-"'""BEDIIOOM HOIIE.211ATHS- -

On !.lncoln

Nothing Ever
For
Rofoitt!olo&lt;, .... IM-

3 0 f 4 - - - - -.2 -

1Mng ....... -

w~ ; Wlllllorl,

· N;
t¥~~~=
loiow 'Sliver Blldgo Piau
Or 4
Pllro.

arion.

1861. NEW LISTING - LOOUIQ RIA A HOllE,
SIIAI.L BUSINESS,ond ~ ACIIIEME7-8oo.

Arid Clltn f;2la Or '010.113

.

_ , .. o n l r y oomonl • - Mel ped. -

L.OTS OF ROOM TO HIOE 1HOIE EOGSI - Or hatch

· tlem eggol Room for chlckena, dogo, came, oven tho
kidol Thla 71.33 .era f..m ,;th 1 :1 alory horne has room

for -liver yoU have. HOlM f•tu,.o 3 bedrooma, both.
Fanll oilers ponda, ..,_, oio, bam, chicken hdUao, mHI,
mHk houM, walland tP.C. !VIler. I..C'C~ near Ch-.
Aeldng $96,000 (mlko ~ oller).
·

loolilng

··-·~

IIIII -

=••as.

.
'
teSI. 25 ACRES FARM FOR ONLY 143,01101 Tlllt prloo nOI Otilf lndudas 1111 Mel IIOUIO.
bulaloo all olllio: mlnorll r1gtla. bo• """'·
llloYO ground pool, ...... dllh llll boaulllul Ylow.
Clll now. Yoo don1 w.nllo miss lhil one.

11153-.
and a1op

tHO. COUNTRY COTTAGE W11H IWVATE
LOCATION - 2 BRo. living rrn.. k8. w-nlry,

Cablntlt, ltOI'IIgt building Wlcwpcwl. 2..6 acrM..
$38 ,000. Vlrglnll3118«rr....... __

"

v

'

-

LAKEVIEW IIIIIDIVISION - A CHOICE
!'L'ICE TO .aD - 21o 5 . - or II•. Drive
11&gt; Rd. 10 ~ LMa Or. 1o Lolrovltw Cl,
~2 . . 10--.·-ollnttand

FRESH AS SPRING! - Thia home in Middl.,.,rl hao it d
and moot io noar ntiW - ca~ting, peint, ,;ring, gonorol
ropein. Owner k•p• Ilia 5 bodn&gt;Ont, 2 alory home wall
maintaintld, Aifo f..tureo 2¥. batha. fi,.placa, woodbum er, I car garage wlworklhop, llhad, patio wnumiiUN.
Spacious 3,130 oq. It IMng space. ASKING tei,OOO.

"

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

'
Tlf ...... of thllib. AI .......... M''llble.
...... . . . .""""" alor:lrlr:lly, ....... .

.A

li:tM .........U IP!Ifr. C - lo

- . C011m1Y IJVI1IG - You w!1 111&lt;e 1illl 2 BR, ·2
-Kalin 1 1 M - - llldiOn. IIIO holt. IR oi12
•U25,111111. aor.., 01r1tr M.ti.

COLL.ECT Aj.ITTI.E NEIIT EGQ ,; With lhil ·2 unil ron~1 ·

apl building. Good inveotmanl property/good f11Gnlhly
lnoome. $13.000. Mike an offer.
·

auppliluncfmuchmcn.
• '
.
AUTO: 1979 Ford Fairmont · 4 dr 'linyl)op, &amp;cyl.,lomalic wllir,
'7&amp;7BICIUII mles.
.
.
· "
.

I

EVERY BUNNY LOVEll THAT VACANT GROUND You oan do a t you 10ant, juol hop M~Vnd or conalnrct •
hQme or "oomethlng" you die~ whotto do wllh 28.2&amp;;
..,., on SR e84 noar Harrisonville. Juat S1e,ooo.

.,,

AUCTIONEER: FINIS .,IKE• ISAAC , ..
. . Phone: 1614) 318·9370 or 318-8180
.

1100 13314153

Real Estate General

..

m•s or wr: Wll OllOCAl Clll&lt;l· AU Qillas w.

..•

. 614·384-3645
. Good for April only!

~a-•

• lltuto
&amp;RJdaaL

·

Wellston, Ohio
Rouis: 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
Closed Thursday &amp; Sunday

Odllnp'-1 _ _ _

POITERY: Paden City. Frankoma, Nippon, Ke1am ik: Wslk!r,
Hager, Hamilton &amp;Jones, McCoy, 3 gaj arock, stone Clflning jars,
bowls, stein.
·
FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES: CjJ: Refrigoralor·FrHzer 19.6
cu.ft. ,.NorQe remq .. ~washer, Fngidare d.yer: brass twin beds
(complete), hospilllf bed. dble bbokcsa bed (complaial, wood twin
beds, cheoll, llands, marble 10p coffH loblt, IDCktl, 21taf kllchln
labia, drop leal Hlr'llsllablt, wood oerving cart, swivel roclwro,_
recliner, ~~thile c:ouch &amp; love oeal, Ullholsltrod chairs, ·Realistic
radio, Singer and Neochi '"'"~~ machineo. RCA B&amp;W lV, Zerti\lt
cojar TV. ilagna100x AJ.I.FM lllnlable, typewriter lable, Baby Ban
clock, bent will lower sland. deok, many smtJI elac. ilomsand
olher miac.
METAL AND ~ITCHEN : Pewlar, silver plait, nickel lilvt1, tin
bread box, Whitman's moe. tin. lin &amp;alum. maos. CUPI. misc. tiris,
glaU &amp; melallunnelo, Weslinghou11 alec. roaster, Wtarever slod&lt;
flllll. Hubbard &amp; Bolknap food rrOiis, Majtolic Dutch oven, many
IIIUil eltc. illlms. oi{tera &amp;colandtn, wood handle kilcltOn utensils,
Alcohol &amp; Stitno food -mars, granRa roasler, many other kilchtn
i1tms. '
•
MISC: Kodak 3Smm can.a, P1ojecti!Jn scrHn, 360 Polaroid
Clllllra, flle):ing cards, poker ships, linens, sewing notiona, IBM
ellc. typewriter, CUlling irona. firtploct HIS, shop vac, 4 rn,lal
lhelvlng unill, hand tools, folding mellllabla &amp; bench, cleaning

•

Penn's Warehouse

............ $50i - o i l

.·

OONT BECOME A BASKET CASE. WHEN IT COMES .
TO SELLING/BUYING REAL ESTATEI COME TO US, .
IrS PLAIN TO SEE. YOUR BEST SOLUTION IS:

. .'

..
'

..J

prices.
•
, • 'jNe now have a craft and piece goods and wallpaper SC&lt;:tion.

A' tnd$200;AirC r c •
- .
.......... $40; ...... .

EStala of N&amp;ilit'bboi!J • Execulcr: Francis Burdon; Execulrix: ; ~
Esta Volbom: Probaie Cc&gt;urtcase 119971 ·
·
l.ts. Scarbiny was 96. Site had a large mllection of late 1800's
and early 1900's ilams (moot of lheM in excellent condition). A
parbllisti follows.
• '
COLL~BLES: Picture frames, wood jawal.y box, porcelain
·dofls, small .wooden maul, scissort, socii darners, paper CUittl,
wooden file boxes, 7)(35 binoculars, Fr. binoculars, lamps. c:ydono
IHder, chandeHtl, jawel.y. fllllical jewll.y box, fllllical tutnlabfe,
loot locker. nail keQ;caMd ii'DI)', 2Wagner Krusty OOII\ pans, -.1
bulttr pat mold, s~llots. Duplex flour aiflar (wood handle), Hohner
harmonica. Hotz harmonica, ink wall and nibs, desk school btl,
adv. ilems (ltlttr openero, shoa horns, nail files, combs (some
wlcelluloid handles!. hand minors, fruit pic:kar, aktlelon fltys, ht.mp
back trunk, Beauty &amp; Skenglh 1897 khr. bd. siaamerlrUnk wlttays,
copper kettle w/stand, Perfec:tor scala, wooden planes. H.W.
Hayden's 1851 brass budcet, t Daisy S 1 Nolional washboard,
c:offee grinders, GoobeR cherry pilttr, Rtadi~ aP!ife pHier, sllaighl
razor. old quills, feather tick &amp; pillows, ftuling IIGn; Sad ilons &amp;
handles, ice IDngs, powder horn, nome flour, sugar and burlap
sacks, wickM baskels, umbrella holder, br111 and pearl handle
umbrela, cat)dle mold, CoffmanGaiWpoli cigar box, old elor;. hair
d.yer, Whiting ·slaroosoopic viewer, split wood oval box, Slrand
padded loot stool, &amp;hoe bullon hoob W(celulold handlaa, Galipolis •
1ce pickS, Marieltl Mfg.c:o. fi~llr, 2 miniature Grandflllher displ;~r
clOcks for pocket watches, lngersol, Hamilton, 3 WtJiham, Grusn,
•
C&amp;DS watcllts.
.·
COLLECTIBLE FURNITURE: Priinitille wall cabnel, 3 dr. dresser
;
(key, glo'll boxes, c:arvod pulls. swi'lll "".·nor), 4 dr. ch10t wlllJmed • ~
frorillegs, 4 Benlwcod chairs wlwicktr bac:l&lt; &amp; 5081, window chair, 3
rocktll wlcane back and seat (carved rosas in back). Singe1
sewing mach. frame wlnwbla top, VicJarian ma1bla lop lable
w/caslars, 8 chairs w/laptllry bo.llol!ll (hand carved rose in·back),
~~ICI 'chai1, lge. golden oak upholstered rocker, prossed back chtJ1,
3 dr. dresser~ ~amt lnd be'lllad mirror (tumod legs ~ont
and up 1o lop of rr0rror in roar), Shtrelon nigh! sllnd wid.-. oslo
&amp;walnul lem &amp;lands, reading ttay,
·
GLASSWARE: Halls, Joltnion Bro., Alt Kino, Anchor Hocking,
marbles, paperwei~ls. s&amp;peppero, Homer LaU(I11in,Royal china,
Fosloria, Cambridge. pressed glass, etched slemware, '4 pc.
Heiiay, pink and g1Hn depresaion, cryslal, sev. MH cellorl.
pilr:ltera, candy dishaa. chickons on nal, Fenlon;.Japan tool~
holdsra, Ooo. Japan, Japan, 2 Rio Grande Collego Atwood Hall
Memorial plaits, India, elched dble, handkld.c:ompoll, Norilake,

• '.:1: -· '" ...

$1.2.5ea.

• 50 gal. plastic clean bands $7.95 ea or IWO for $15.00;
for $28.00.
'
.
·

. ..... I~Jt~~r~or~-.,;
W

114 First Ave., Gal&amp;polis, Ohio,
..
(2 blocks S. of Park)

' • '

available.

Fiberglass ·brick and stone panels IO"x48", Hko PortnalllOOIO,I
nod, gray, tan. Reg. $15.95 ea.. now s~nds $2.99 ea.
Tn:al&lt;d tanrhcapc: timbers $3.69 ea.: 2.5 pea, up-$3.49 ea.
Ooseout .2. cu. fl Rod CYJ&gt;t&lt;ss mulch $1.49; ·40 lb. ,..,....5 .~. 1

19111 . . Ellc:lrk ........ Ou.f

Saturday, ·April·24, 19~3,

••••• ,

• Treated boards 2''x4"x12' - $3 .79: 2 "x6"x8'ta..$3.75;
2''x6''xl2.'tg·$li.SO.
_
• TRI!ed Colonialspindels 2.''x2"x36" • $1.99 ea.

Tllo _ _ ... .....

ESTATE AUOION

'

• Treal&lt;d deck boutls I "x6"xt0'-$4.70; l''x6"x12'-$5. 19
•Treated dog ear fence boards 7/t6"x4"x6"-SO.
dog ear fence ponell 7/16''x6'xB'·$2t.9S ea.

John

:o;o;••::::: ...=c'5 -~
-....":;;r;
,... lu.., .. - Aid .......t' •·CJ.
tuna

Rick Starr
Nigh! (614 ),998 -2515
· Day 99B ~SJ.!7

BUILDlNG SUPPLIES
Buyouts - Closeouts· Surplus

Whole Sides....$1.49 lb.
FREEZER WRAPPED &amp;
QUICK FROZEN
Cal for appointment Ia ha""
row beef, pork or sheep
slaughlered, cui, wrapped

~

.

Jady Swine Farm
Joey Dresbach II
i6·14)884..S47

16 1~ j . 9B6-6465

S~LE

-. .-

"

-FOR MORE INFORMA liON CONTACT.

446-745i

10:00 A.ll

'•"o•••

F'R t~ " " ' '"' ~h•~IU

Aucttonee r Memn WOOdruff

PORK HICKORY
SMOKED IF YOU
DESIRE.

Kenneth Swain Dian Callahan
Phone 446~3159

IKBISID . . IIOIIDID OHIO,
.... w. VA. tl t30

W111!lngton C.H.,
Ohio

and quick frozen .
WE WILl HAVE YOUR

swi•IN
·AUCTION SERVICE
H

·

r~'fC'Ma Co,
hirgroundl

FREEZER. BEEF

.I

wner: rS. OrY n nennan

Blenko.

~ew loc•l l on :

U.S.DJ\. Choice lnspeciBd

Complele the chuckle quoted
by f1lling in the missing words
. you develop from step No. 3 below.

several crystal pitchers &amp; mugs, lots of
pressed glass, several boxes of glass. If you
like old glassware don't miss this sale.
Automobile; 1979 Dodge St. Regis.

J...., -

' 5:00p.m.

MEAT
PROCESSING

-

•

Salurdav , April 24th , 199J

Gener -Genelies,
Don Black

be when she's

it will

~

,~f\MPION DRIV
(J "f' . Club Pig Sale

Gallia County
Fairgrounds ,

1·

~lo T.~,
_._, - · .
•6crow1ve, aM-

ator,
2.58· 38.

Robbil For
!:"00!.~1 Slza SmaN, E x - ......,._,UO,I14-44&amp;-220t. • ·

LAMB.SALE
APRIL 16, 1993
7:30P.M.

.................. _

11'71-1tl'1, (M;~U~~;, . . . . . ..
IIIIJidolhl. 114-111 4128.

Whlto

FIFTH ANNUAL
FORGEY CLUB

~

bed, pineapple bed, old school books, 4ft
oak china cabinet, 5 spindle back chairs,
Homer Lofland dishes, Iron skillets, dutch
oven, old kitchen cupboard, 6ft pie sale,
stone jars, several pieces Hisey Patterns,
glassware, bud vases, 2 round butter
dishes, carnival plates, depression pitcher,

.

N ; rllrl lrllto lin._4:_00.18, $10;
11Wil'-7l211aflor.,.....

Colloo
. - .1100.
- WIA\
..- .'
Td)lli.

I

311U801.

Pow. atttrl.-,g pump 1l7t Ford,

t

101 Sllth a IWn Ill. - ,
NWUd-'ed 'WiMW app'lrncn, '
ldlloo l1111iorrlocl, rtapooH ,..

mow.,., on• Lawn Boy,
oloctric 11111; lll•eo and _.."" oeu rna
11'" Uwn Boy, ..YWII llpoo lor Otlo, !'~.! prloo - ..

Lown llowor 14 HP GT,
,Yarl Drlvo, 42 Inch $400, &amp;14-

_ ..- _sno. PI:?
....,.,•••zsa
•
3

44 . Aplinment

heater, metal beds, 2 beds, 2 b;v · stools.
Sears refrigerator, 40 in. Hotpolnt Range,
Kenmore Washer,- utility---cabinet. metal
cabinet, several boxes of dishes:
Antiques: Tredal sewing machine, metal

M N 1 HI

OM

Coin 21 LlD Cl : ::.:
ond K-411
••••~szw

7

Mlscallaneou1

MerchandiN

othlra, R1clne Mow., Clinic,
114-1411-2804.
.

wv.~

11121-lor · -

Bladen. .

0

Push

.. - " ' Polre ...... 2IIOt
..Itch ' . . . Pollll ,.
" --

Cllllh............. ........

54

Miscellaneous
Merchandise

IOI~propolled,

...,__ .....

$115m0.
114-385-

~· 304-m-~31 or ~~

54

54 ..scellaneous
Men:handlae

~. . . ~cr.M

- . S250.

Call lor ...

Sunday

RISU.
~O.:.O.M;CcALIIIIi.

1 yw wom~. 11..,., lld~lng,

T•ma: Caah or check wllh poelllva 10. Out of Stat.
Bur-• nead Nnk letter for aheck IICCept•nce. FOOd
,IIVIIable.
,
Auction-, Mark Hutchlneon 814-IIN7!18
Ucenud and BonctecrliiOiilii
Bualn- Partnw, F..,k Hulchlneon 81WI2o4341

,·
IEFIESIUIIIIJS . ..fOOD WIUIAYAUIU. ·
THIS AD Will ALSO
•lilT'. Wlll'l NPII.
. APPW
'
.
i

0 words
Rearrange Ihe 6 sere mbled
·below to moke 6

Whr •poy
- Rod-.
you wtth
Clll
own
1111- 141111

CL.EL.ANO REALTYI

'

JLVPriUfta

ouosr ITIMs.

.

Merchllnclse

Twa bl*oorn tl'lll..r lor Nnt,
.,. 1112 5038.

Floor models, tabla top models , receivers;- table top
apeakera, tuboa and parts, tube lester&amp; and other misc.
~ama. Approximately 100 redios .lotal. Sea lui Ad In April
12 Antique Week.
~

Saturday, Aprll17 at 10 a.m.

--·I__

S©\\.ct\}A-Z£t.trs®::::

. . . . . 1111 poid, 304fl5.24Morllll-2471 .•

AucUonlng ihe content• of an ~JclnKIIO•NfM!Ir ehop.
Moat •II radloe · lleted work •nd are In orlgln•l
conciUon.
·

PUJUC AUOIQN ·

..sc:ellaneous .

PUZlLU
_ _ _ ___.:._...; Editod by CLAY R. POLLAN--- - - - -

simple words. Prinl leiters
ea ch in its ,line ol squares,

T•ke US 50 &amp; 32.W. of Athene, Ohio •nd exit onto
50 W. towill'de McArthur. Auction I• • quarter of
mile on 11111.

tmll Of CIDil
NOT llSPOitSIU IW A«1D111n

'

2 Bollw; Anllablo 111 01

llay,I1W7NU4.

~-!:,_JIJ wardrobe,
Listing in Part: Hotpoint Dryer•. tnel,al
II11_.!!:!~~!:!~!!~:!:~1-t00-~:3~00.!E732~4~.
Not
~~ecldant. or lo.. of 'property.
cumbustlon air stokermallc

s,r:o.......

INI3·Voncl.

' ·

,,._211Uf11r4P.M.
llooutlful

'MilO 3 . . .

. , . . . . . .:

-

Location on Bladen Mercerville Road. 3
miles from Mercerville &amp; 4 miles from

RllhCho
•· 1 Rem
GalllpoU.,
Eat.t.Ohio
&amp; Auction Co.

Fram $1H.OO. l.Ompo" IAIIono, Connoll AI: Donna $...,_.
... , 111.
noponm 1o:
AQ'~ 111 ar..._ Monthly ~.,.....,..
Roa!lll:Slion lnlormallor) AI: Charoltit Hill Lakl Eototo Lal ~~.. 7211E. P - . 0111o
L.ojo AI $!8.00, Coli Today FREE
111, 2.08 Ac:m, MIL Equallntw·
NEW Color Co1alog. 1-80CJ.4e2· Rlvorfron1 EnJoy Tho Viowt Im- " ' In And To Lake, Dtm &amp; Spill TWo _ _ , houoo In
11W.
maculata 3 Btdroomt, 2 lliltha, Way. List Available Lol, $15,500,
1144112·7&amp;81 anor
.
Patlo
Room, Heat Pump1 2 614-388-D780 Aftor 5 P.M.
~..
ln\IMt In Your Futural Snack
ISodll Ato $1,000 Willy Potonlial, ~·· Many lloro Elln o 4
Mil• Solllh 01 Eu..U, 17711
1-1111·11118.
8
Public Sale
Stllo Ro&lt;rto 7, $55,100. IIMIIILocal Vending Routo: $1,200 A 71112.
&amp;Auction
Wotk Polon1iai.Mual Soli.,_

.... ..

$UNDAt APRIL 18 AT 11:00 A.M;
AUANY, OHIO
.

JAY SHEPPARD, AUCTIONEER

:=:·~~::=.~.'!:!'.::~

01-Rio

SATURDAY, APRIL 17, 1993
10:00 A.M.

THAT DAILY

ANnQUE RADIO AUOION

-Barb•• Porco, Executrix of Eat.le

1

• 4 Bedroom Hama Qn 4 Acrn
All

-mo

304-117W671.

bed-,

21

--------

s ,._ , both locltod Rt. 211,

apptlaneet, II•
largo lal, nloo

Four
1 112 blitho, Z.
car gllf91 eeniFWil alr, t.mlly
raom ana bnomenl
wllh
finoplo01, lnground pool1 on 5.1
acrn rlu.r Rllelnt, ID14-94P..

Rentals

r:::-Nq~"=.·~~=-

nalohboiltooa. 30H7W8I7.

Financial

·~

Holrlo, ! : ' - To
~nn
1
22 Soiling $30GIIIo.
•
4 , _ &amp; blidr, ciO!ro to

3 bedroom brick nnch, Galllpolla Forry. B,.nd now Lonnox
IIN1 pump, -

s:;:::

7104 ...~,

2

blltte, located on lot In Racine
near •chOOia, , very Net,
130,000, 114-Q411-2203 or 614-

tochod

~:,r.

41 Houses for Rant

11110 Cla)'lon SacUonai, hoot
pump. deck, thr• ._.oorn, twO

Mll-2045.

WRimowgrooo,~.

=·

44BLaiC..I
- - lily 111.· 814-8118-

-ballroom,
nomopNge.
on 314 ~!!.~~~'!"
-..nop,
fruh
tt:l-5w.l.

ClppOI'I,Unlfy baSI S. .

11 Wklo

HOIMI Wt Take Tr.-..nt..

Real Estate
wanted
Bodroorn Homt, Doublo

3

ESTATE AOOION

HUTCHINSON AUOION INC.

Location: 336 Third Ave., GalllpoAI, Ohio. &lt;
To eettle ..tate of E. RIIJ Belley the following wll
be eold.
FURNITURE: Two piece sectional, chair, floor lamp. end
tables. trained plcluills, 2t" color TV. Zenith, recold AllY·
er, RCA console AWFM 45 player, 45 nnp reco(dt, 33
rpm albums, Alrgulde wall barometer, Contour chair
lounge (vibrator-slide), chalae lounge .w/cuahlons,
Airtemp AIC (window 1 year old), floor pipe stand and
GBD, Yellow Bowl, Dr. Grabow pipes, card table l 4
chairs, wall ahalt, fila cabinet, box' gamaa, two pieco
blond BIR suite,. boudoir lamps, st!lel clothes ~nat,
BID Duslbustar, electric clock, three piece 8/R suite,
Ironing board, floor box fan, day cot, sat colonl&amp;l ·
Homestead dishes, kitchen labia &amp; three benches, two
Irons, misc. kitchen tools, H!!Over Ha(ldivac, Eureka
I c:or&lt;llaWIIY, Altar Queen.
.
TOOLS: Floor band aaw (smali), 4Y." joinlar, Racial saw,
a• table saw, Wen hand drill, wall cabinet wlhand tools,
wood tool box, some lumbar.
·
.
OTHER: AMF exercise bike, walker, cane, Bundy clarl·
net, Elgin gold wrist W!ltch, Schlick lighter, ila tacks,
· ·
ri ad
nd ·
ld tool ·
~:~~~~=~· elect c ger a soma ya
~-

Wmllatlon or (jiscrlml~llon ·

G - Porlablo Sawmill

Plkl M.f e A.M. -5:30 P.M. II
Ouollly And hporionee II Tho
11 Conc•m · For Your Child'•
. Core. Call Uo Fot' A VioH. lnlanl

1tae Skyllno Holly Rldgo 14l70,
"" ..... 2 b o i l - AJC,
cavorod pordr, kltchtn loland, .
llorago -~r:,rpoo1nlng,

based on race, oolor, religion,

w.....lng, .. c., fully ln.ur.cl1
614-tta""n.
'
.

can

u-._..lng. Af1ar

0H Pcilnt PIMMI'It, WV

HENRY E. CL£LAII)........................................ t12-1111
KATHY CI.ELANO............................~............. ttJI.Ittt
TRACY IIAINAGER....................., ••'...-...............141-2431

.•

OFFICE•• ~.-............ ~.-••:.............;........................·1251

r

_.- ..-·

1 . J11W Ul1'llla
- S,...._
h i Add
.............
15_&lt;11
__
_
_ _ ..

.....
!:!!:;

--

- . WICMI1' UUD -

c-

In,

s-

. 1121. COUNTRY PLWURE - 3 bodroomo, LRiJ
.,_.. ooHnlllchtt1.11111i
. · 1111jlj
~am "'";'-~*lion
..... m1. Con b4i .,.....,_5roHing

" '·--·

.

�..
)

Times Sentinel
55

Building
Supplies

61 Fann

PomeJ:Oy-Middleport Gallipolis, OH Point Pleasant,
LivestOCk

63

Llvnlock

63

64

Hay &amp; Grain

wv

Aprll11, 1993

Aprll11 , 1993.
71

11 Autos for Sale

Autos for Sale

71

._ -

IIIUI21.

SIS

76

Auto Parts &amp;

S1fl .

Qronde, OH Call 114-

Serv1ces

Pets for Sale
64

Hay &amp; Grain

81

Trans port at 1011

Ground . . com, your Nekl,
304-f75-2443 aftor 4:00 Pll.

RACCOON CREEK
.pJ:IIMITIVE CAMPSITE$.
900 :

HOme
lmprovemems

-

Har 1or oa1e rilund boleo 114.
=-~
$1.50. 304 ~

"-·--···--·
Hl"'*r-

N:H. Reglol-

Real Estete General

AcCUittrle.l

1t171 Fonl Th-~, runo
g,_, 1150; 1111
van,
311, runs giMt, $100; 14.a4:1-

llocl!. briclo, olp.,., win·
-\............... Claude Win-

wv

Ott--Point

Autos for 5ale

Relli•nt~a~

MC 4 Month Old Mole

Real

Real Estate General

Coeur.

General

Real Eetate General

HOUSE FOR SALE
State RL 141 - Lma1 a-, FUiily a-. Eat-In
Kitchen, 3 bednuns, Z batlls, Z car 1Plf111~ central
air, eledric bea1lsidin&amp; :Z aae flat loC/pnlen spot.

·~
N/f.C -on Terrlor, 1om: Fob

~._1~~-Molee, Pilei~. 114~.. ,

Ru11ell D. Wood, Broker ...... 446-4618

MC EIIQIIell Spoloogoo openlol
• Dieck ond WIIMo, · octc, gi'N1 fllmllr polo,

Phylll1 Mlller...........:.••••••••••••• 256-1136
J. Merrill Carter ···-···········- ···379-2651
Tammie DewltL•••••••••,. ••••••••••441-1514

D~Hr.~Mi Plua
114-~Z 31104.

A1CC

N/f.C Fleglol- ...... pup,
~ flwn DDIDI;IIII, lwkll. oki,
taO, 114 115 3107. '

AKC

Asgk'u'Gd

1-800-585-7101
(614) 446-7101

'

253.

Charyl Lemley •••.••,•.•; ••••••••••.•_. 742-3171
Sh4tryl Welter .....-367.0421 or 992~583

Real Estate General

Hond lod boby Cockloilo, $40.

40 ACRE FARM! -Fencing, bam, 2 stol)' vinyl
sided home with 3 bedrooms, family room,
living room, bath, cellar house, 1 cer detached
ganaga, county water plus dolled well. W111\in
short distence of Gallipolis.
1526,. _ •

-Old.

-lor.,...,
l1
c-

property. House
apartment
could be converted to ono large
home. Nice double lot. Call for mo111 details.
153'7

11112.

c:....

Shar.Poi

0111 - . . . two .......

oaf--.114-MNm.

-·pc-

~··

sr

,.

Pui11El1par1Mrill

ciNmeol
- - a rZildllen
•
.
, - _,..,
h~
Ntt:• w'-lMd. Stop by Criminal
AICG!Wto .... l14 4413302,

&lt;II_,

--·Rallnd
llarlln •
Gulloro And Much Man- ~

Avallablo Prfcoo- Hummingbird
Mu-le, J&amp;Uon, OH 8*•

.....

FOR SALE: SPINET -CONSOLE
wanted, Relll cnalble
' ,...,. To Moko Law Monthlr
,.Yfi*ML S.0 l.ocolly. Coli: 1·

-lor-.
'

•

•

304-11'11-31111.

61 Fann Equlpmeot
month

old

\811 La Baron, 4 door, 81,000

ft. ntnch oftera 3 large

row rnounlecl com IPICMr. 1H7
Don. II Oldomab11o. Edloon

....
--~~--·
Allo
Chalmor 3 ,_ nc INI com

ptantw wlmonltor, goOd cond,

304~211.

Ford 1310 lractor, 20HP, 4 wheel

PI, 3

dr••
point h"•';!.!d~ tlreo,
1!J0 llaurw. S5500.
1130-A
Flnill1 m~~ ·ft., $750. SOli

o. 3~51:1

onorspm.
Ford lily bolor, good cand"lon.

szooo. 304-4511:-1671

~ Lumina Z-34. Com...-, Eauf~J 3,500; ......

1111

D1i11 Allor UliP.II. lf4-ZS6.1411.

REAL ESTATE

205 Nonh Secollil Ave.
Mlddlaport, OH

SALEM STREET - Good investment proptrty,
older 2 story consisting of 3 BR, ball\, FR end
mo111. 3 sowago and water hookups on
property. Cell for more info.
1511

NEW USTINGI APPROX. 4S ACRE FARM Within minutes of hospitel. Just oft SA 160. 2
~&gt;..:~rooms home will\ bath, 2 silos, pole barns, .
plus several buildings and sheds. Fenced
pastu111. Call for mort details.
1541
LOTS! LOTSI LOTSI - City schools. Situated
close to downtown. Call today for mora
information.
14110

NEW LISTING! WOODED PRIVATE SET·
TINGI - Over 4 acres and doublawido setting
on 1 pennanent foundation, 3 bedrooms, ·2
bths, lilling 'room, dimng mom, kitchen, family
room, olectlic heat, 1 car ganage. Grton
Elementa.y, GAHS. $30's.
1505
LOCATION! LOCATION! LOCATION! - 242
LARIAT DRIVE - Blick ranch style homo, 3
BAs, 2 ball\1, basemen~ FR, LA, kill:hen and
dinlg area. Low utilities. HouM 18modelod
1987. Must Ma to approciate. 103' x 191'1ot.
1505

·.

T - .._. ..,..,
11\100· 114 IIH271.
El!Muot,

11171 Fonl ~~p $1,1110. 3041'111&lt;1232.

PoMEROY - Children'• Home Rd. ~ Country living
close to town. This nico and neat ntneh has 3 bedrooms
and family room with woodbumor. Homo has large.
rooms, nice otonage buildings, and a beautiful yanl. Close
to tho hospital, ochoola, and s1Qros. For only.
'

a-&lt;olol, Ford,

_.._.
-

8llolt

or

Dodgo- pickUp
1ong. No NOt.

-Tl-.·-

Motorcycles

.

'

Two Troll llkoo, tzzt Elich, Or
$400 8o41L l-1-41t0.

PRICEO FOR THE BEGINNERS $29,900 - 2 BAs, LR-W/FP,- kill:hon, bath,
utilily, very close to lown.

CITY UVING - Come in and IQOk at this
extra nice homa. Equipped kitchen, FR, LA,
OR, gas furnace, cant. air, FP, patio,
womhop.

t224. TAKE A LOOK · AT THISfl Located on Second A.vo., walk to store,
church, school and shopping, 2 stOI)' home
offers kitchen, LA, DR, FA, 3 BR, 2 balho,
gas heeVcantml air.

PANORAMIC VIEW OF OHIO RIVER
VALLEY - 2;484 oq. ft., 3 BRa, 3 botha,
g1118t mom combo (kilehen, LA, DR) 8' dock
all around 'houso, haat pump, buildingo on
property. Too much property to advoniH.
Cell. .
'

EVERYTHING YOU
AT
A REOUCED PRICE OF $74,100111
Very convenient location. Conlenery area.
This home o"ers 3 BRa, 1y, baths, LA,. DR,
15X30 family rrn., full basement, FP,
• at1aohod garage, cent air.

QUIET COUNTRY SETIING FOR A
SPLENOID HOME - All blick ntnch, 2.374
acres mn, 4 BRs, 2 baths, largo kilchen, 2
covarad pon:hes, deck, heat pump, 2 car
garage,

ST. RT. 141 -Just minulea tot own, homo
o~ars 3 BRo, 1~ baths, lR, DR, unattachod ... . 414 THIRD AVENUE - 415 BRs: 2 betha,
ldk:han, DR, LR, .alUm. aiding, gaa hill,
garage and nice ganlen opal. Call for mo,.cont. air, naw cotpal (1103)
·
detaia.

CHERRY . ORIVE - 2 6Rs, 1 bath, LA,
kltcl)en, gas hea~ citY water, used as ron tal
property. $29,000. .
(888)

ATTENTION RAST TIME HOME OWNER .'... 121 GilVin SlrHI- Nice home offoro
3 B(ls, LR, kilehen, FA, bath &amp; laundry rrn.
alum. si&lt;ing, n!C!' yard.
'

{

.

REMODELED OLDER HOME - ·1y, atory,
3 BRa, ldlchon, beth,· FR, oituatod on· 4
..:nto mil. Col Ruth lor locotion.
.BEAIITIFUL

HOME

LOCATED

ON

NEIGHIIOAHOoO ROAD - ...100 - 4

BRo, 2 balha, equipped kitchen, LA, FA,
heat pump, con...v air, 2 cor at1ached
"'"""' 2 Iota with houile.

\ REDUCED TO $43,11001 _ Gntat for now ,
home ownora. 3 BRa, 1y, beth a, LA,
1ldlchonldlnlng combo, laUndry rm., c:ily
ochool dlalltcl. Mlnulot to ll&gt;wn.

. RACCOON

AO.AD - 3 BRo, bath, kitchan,
dining room, 2112 cor unat1achod garage,
beautiful wooded 4.5 aorao. (884)
.

FOR IAI..I! - . COAL Tlf&gt;PLE with all
l9odinll facliiH. 1.887 It riverfront. Coli for
rilont 'dalafla.
.

,.

{

' !.&lt;

. CHESTER - Take over an ongoing rwolaurant busln"a
with potential for oxpanoion. Seats 38 pooplo, and oom. .
fully equippetl. G111at locotion, ol Stale Routo 248 and
Routo 7. Large paved
parlclng lot plus oxtna palfting
for trucks. Fun hook-up for moble home as a 1111idonce
or extra income ao 111ntal. Concntte block building for
storage.
REDUCED TO S75,000

w

soulh or.':(-:".;ntnde. $11,900.

4

Real Estate General

BALL RUN RD. - All by you'r ttlt In tile co~ntry - '
dHcribao fllo hOmo with 3 badroomo. largo lv1ng room,
dimng room, lilting Ill' .52 · Has an oldar 1'1 hou..
ocross tho road and91har buUdinga.
· 17,100

.

.

'

' -"- · ·- .

car gantge.

~W"'~\)\~G-".883

NOW IS THE BEST TIME TO SELL .IN YEARS!
'OUR LISTING -INVENTORY IS LOW.
OUR BUYERS ARE WAITING.
INTEREST RATES ARE LOW.
HOMES .ARE SELLING AT. A PREMIUM
AND QUICKLY.
CALL NOW.
'
NEW FREE 9' •• qx '17

zs PlQI atOWING MEAlLY ALL

LOCAL REAL ESTATE USTtNGS. 1M COLOR, IS NOW
AVAILABLE. PLEASE· STQ' BY 01.111 OFFICE FOR YOUR
QUAUTY CONSTRUCTED, WELL MAINTAINED 2
BEOAOOII RANCH IS A GREAT FIND! FIREPLACE IN
LIVING ROOM, SNACK BAR SEPARATES KITCHEN
FROM COZV DINING AREA. CARPORT. LARGE LOTI
BECOME A HOMEOWNERI $46,500.
IMPRESSIVE BliCK RANCH- GREAT VIEW OF THE
OHIO RIVER FROiot THE FAMILY DINING OR UVING
ROOM. FIREPLACE IN FAMILY ROOM AND UVING
ROOM. 3 BEDROOMS. 2 BATHS, MASTER BEDROOM
FEATUI'IES DRESSING ROOM ANO SLIDING DOORS
LEADING 10 PIIYATE PATIOII'OOL AREA.. EQUIPPED
KITCHEN HAS SNACK BAR. THERE IS AN I~RCOM.
ATIIC FAN, LOTS AND LOTS OF CLOSET SPACE,
ATIACHED GARAGE, MI,ICH, MUCH MORE. CALL
FOR AN APPOINTMENT TO "VIEW THIS HOME SOON.
NEW USllNG!
.

ranovated 15 room, tum of
century home
1oca1oc1 only 11 milo• from town. Hi bodf4!0"1'•·
huge 1~ room and dining room, rice kitchen
..... cannng kitchen, remodeled ball\. 1
attached garage with mud room, laqje uto!lty
mom. Nice large lot 1n quiol commu..ty.
LiniiiiSI pouibilitieslor only $38,ooo_. 1112

car

HAS FOUR RENTAL UNITS. LOCATEO IN THE CITY.
$48,000.

In a .
3

bodraom hom84 oWero a
lor
• lot Lalli' llilcllennMiily room area wilh
cethedrlll
and okylights, living room, 2
ful balhs, .......t In porch, at1aclhed ganoge.
Large lot. City ochoolo. $58,100.
1200

'*ling

1177 15' _ , . , Tri Hull Ski

,_;E...,...,
13,1100, -1·
. . )fl .rohnOan
·

fronl

~.

SZIIOO. 1-1411-.
0128,

"'*'

::t,~S::O~

living room,.
laundfY room and
in ailic that could
be convarted inlo
Nice covered
front porch and largo patio, a ono car
and mora.

=·

...

:;::-a:,:•

ELEGANCE
muot-thio
into the _ovoroi~od
room with 2 fil8placea.
kill:han and bath. Upatelra
badlooma, pfua a Iorge bat&gt;
wlllllpoollr.A&gt;.
Ample outdoor antoloaturing ~ ocrMIIOd in
·oun patio, 2 cor garage will ahod end 2
otalo. Colloclay lor your dhanco to own
your "Mini Tana•. Priood at onlY, $72,QQ!).. 1101

- Buy lor lnva-t
~~~~
polentiaf. CION lo town. Smal pond.
typo urit JHQVidol good lnoomo. 128,100.

-Old,--

7e'

.

.

446-3644

Auto Pans &amp;
.AI:CIIIOMI

WISEMAN BROKER- 446-9555

Loretta McDade - 44ti,., 1;
. B. J. Hairston - 446-4240 ·

DARUNE 8TEWART.................................ft2~
SANDY 8UTCHER................_..................H2..J371

. 'JERRY SPRADUN0.,.....................(304~-MII

Pat Cochran- 446-8655

OFFICE.................................._.. ..................Ift.. .

•"

I

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE, INC.·

Wauu."18 .a.t 1111110 Super • 2
CO!MIIIon,
Col BM'441-

DOmE TURNER, Brokor..................- ••..llt2·AII2
BRENDA JEFFERS..................................Ha-3011

/' .

~~~Dl

GREEN
acre• ~ ~~ _.ant land.
aroa. P•S~\.:.,.,~ng loU $25,900.

POMEROY - Union Avo. - A one story home with ·2
bedrooms, kitchen and now beth on tha first floor. The•
Is a large flnlohod room in tho baoomont. Hao·2 I'Oichoa,
co1pon, end a largo now deck.
S25,000

POMEROY- Yale SL - !'IMCI • lot for a mobile homo or
a new houN? At the end of the street lo a large lot ]uat
waiting for.you with~ al utlltieo evollobfe.
S1,00o

.5 .

r: ·_ry""' .red 1 m•1•

RANCH - Very otately h~me
Hilla lake Eohlteo oHors a
way of life. lllrga apacious rooms
3 bedrooms, deluxe HI-In kitchen,
room with veulted ceiling and blick
fi::"::·, and largo lYing room. Loadt of
•
tul advantage of tie 460 ft. of
1ako tnonla!l"· HUGE full nk out bfoomont
doublao living
Wnoa'*!·. 2 car garage
plus garage door entrance to ba-nt
worlcohop. u . i n - • - OX1arlor aflowo
you lolourw t11no Ill wtch .,. gHN gntcefully
llfido In and out of the laka or go after that
lunMor ball In the lake. 52 loot traatod dock
with atrium dooro oW .,..r ouile, u Will ao

1fl0
Mole .......
-·
1tl~ Chock
IOOHP, Momi!Y
outboard,
troller, vory aaod -ion;

•&lt;

NEAR GREEN ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
- Well mamtained homo offers 3 BRo, LA,
FA, Kitchen, math, 2 firapjaco a, olectnc
heat, cent. air and 1.12 acres mn.

BUll"'~· .0 LOTI

~2:13

75 80811 &amp; Motors
for Sale

...

acres

:plr=.=~.ry

........

ATTRACTIVE HOME .. VILLAGE ·oF
CENTERVILLE - ConvonlenUy locetod,
ownoro hiiYa
work to make thla •

IDEAL

13 Honda HO Nlghl Howle 114-

Yamoha 210 L rKing maiO&lt;·
, . - . Wator ~. -IIY aaod
conciMian. Tam - . , wllf Nil

INVESTORS - Raccoon Road, 40 A. mA,
mostly
per monlh income
from mob~•

AFFORDABLY
BEAUTY! Largo LR/DR
combo, nice kitchen with
laundry aiM, 3 BAs, 2 baths.
$29,1100.

-

VICTOIIAN 'limE APARTMENT 'Hc:iUsE PRESENrlY

'

'

uaa 1M 1011

~

NICE COUNTRY HOlE-' ON APPAOX. 10 ACIIESLARGE liVING ROOM, EAT-IN KITCHEN, AMPLE
CABINET SPACE, 3 BEOROOMS, DEN. 2 CAR
GARAGE, KYGER CREEK AREA. BETIER CALL
SOONI $52,000.

Real Esta1e General

OLD ,CHEVY.OLDS BUILDING - 420 '
fmnt on Saeond Ave. end e2' frontage· on
Grape.

OUR TOU AlEE Nl•mER

FREE COP\'.

WILLS HILL RD. - A small homo that - . be bought .••
is or owner will finish. Has a cathodnl ceHn..~~. large IMng
room, dining.,.., kill:h9n, one bodroom,utility a1111. Now
heat pump, mollly drywafled. All new wlling ,end plumb·
ing. $28,000 UNFINISHED $33,000 finished

POMEROY :. Rockoprlnga Rd. ·- A b-tiful country
ootting can be yours when you purchaH Ilia 3 bedroom,
1 beth 1y,
home with a fuR basemen~ Spanish look
interior,
a large bam that has f1nishod
roomsupot~~. ~liNJJson,~~·4

NICE FLAT LOT 314 aero mn .with 1988
j110bila home in veri good condition . Priced
,;, tha 20's. Cell Aulh for details.

!S

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE TRY

. COOt
• • 12:00

11171 Cllavy PU, Sllverodo, ~1 1
F..... llolor, T n t , . -... - -

74

.

rl]

•

S&amp;S,uuu ,,

IN 1/lNTON VILLAGE- Hort you will find this
3 BR, 1V. bath ono story home wilh living mom,
kilchon, laund&lt;SI &amp; den. A detached one car
garage, blown~n insulation and mora. On a
·127lx11 5/ comer lot. Asking only $30,000. Call
today for your appointment.
• 14118
'
Raccoon Township ...... ....................... 118Ac111s
Raccoon Township .............................. 80 Ac111s
Harnson Tqwnship ........... ................... 81 A0111s
. Oh1o Township ................................... 133 Acres
Huntington Township ........................ ... 16 Acres
,
tWESTYACO

lonl Condlllon .
$11,000. •
-t:GO P.ll.

OF THE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES, SUPERMARKETS, MOTELS AND RESTAURANTS.

PLEAIWIT. VALLEY ESTATES- URQI!
·HOME otters 4 BRa, 2 batho, kill:hen, LR,
, FR, ~ao fllrnaco; fireplace, _centntl ilr,
attachod garage, pool.
.
311 ACRES, MINUTES TO TOWN - Nice
homo on property foatureo 3 BRa, balh, LA;
kllchon, bam, lob'!CCO b-.

,

llclora, Mlr...,.. Sool, Trunk,
CrUioa, Aur~
.
, IEllcel-

1888 Fonl Air Star _ , l c
OVonlrlvL toe,
.Clanclltlon, · - - -·

.
COULD WANT

2 full batho, stone
~~~ in LR, huge FA,
pool. $109,000.

W.,.• 1. . Chrl. llh Avon~
Dr, IAothor Inferior, loiC..
'

ll=nR MORE INFORMATION ON OUR ENTIRE LISTINGS PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES BROCHURE AT 50MIEI

Real !state General ·

I

11t12 CIVIIIer Coupe, 511)., anY
fnll', CIIMfte
take
over
~·· ttiil mo., 114-1411-

COMMERCIAL LOT - Pomeroy - At tha comer of Main
St1111t and Spring Ave. A gl8a1 16CIItion for lll~ot eny
good business. Approx. 88_teet fron.mg&amp; on ,MaJn Street
and 182 fNt on Spring StrMI. All utilitiel 8VIIIablo, .....,.

..

NEW USTING - BUILDING LOTS - Minutes
of Holzer Hospital. Oft SA 160. Five (5) ac111
tracts. One tract includes pond. Road frontage.
Restlictad. Call for details.
1540

Ford Plck-UI&gt; Dlok Roglotorod
Angus Cow • Bull Call, Grovhy
Bo• With GNr t14-371-27N.

.

'

FOR INF'OAIIATJOH ON OUR ENTIIE USTINGS

OWNERS WILL. CONSI&gt;ER REASONABLE
OFFER! - Quality built 4 bedr.om ~anch style
homo with fantastic view of 'ohio River. 2~
baths, besoment has finished family room.
Situated on 1 acre lot with paved drive .
Pomeroy a111a.
1528

NEW USTINGI PRIVATE! - $43,1100.00 Nice home, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, several feet ·
of cebinot space in kilehon, complete iwlh
appliances induding dishwasher. Uving room
and laundry, 2 aero lawn. Overaized one car ·
garage. Enorgey officiant electric haat pump
with central air conditioning, ·
1534

BRICK BEAUT'II 3 BRa, 1112
batho, LA , kitcl1en with dining
area, ancloMd patio. Fu II
baMmenl. $110,000.

PICK UP THE FREE QUALITY HOMES BAOCtllR .
AT SOlE OF liE LOCAL BANKS, RETAIL STORES,
SUPEIIIIAAKETS, IIOTELS NG RESlVARAHTS.

·.

roalotorod

Umouoln bull, ,$i00. :lo4-V37·
2:123.
4Qa. John OleN chlel trector
wlcob: ,_., dleool lnlor,.Uon 2

logodlorlor

.~

.- s rrv1. CALL TO SEBII

'.OFFICE 992·2886

HOME AND 30 ACRES - Stone and wood
sided bam styled home with 1\ol ball\o, 3
~&gt;..:~rooms, family room , living room, kill:hon,
full basomant, ~nage. Land rollng, appmx. 20
tillable acres, fencing, pond, bam and other
outbuildings. Extra nice. Call today.
1510

Fz&gt;rm Suppltes
&amp; L1vestock

1T

sn,soo.

l.udod 18,000 llsg. 114-:JN.
28511.

1112 MudiN!LC Hilchbock, 5
~.AC,
Tl..,., IUw lot·
. ~ Condhlon, f950, &amp;14-

PIANO

IOWZI'-3345.

largo FA, LR, DR, eat·in
kitchen with TY room .

room, dining room, kilcMn end bath locoled on

COMMER~IAL - Lois of opportunities. Block
· building will\ 2 pertmontl. Over 1 acre •.Mobile
home site with ,88ptic and water. Perfect lor
small
store. Groat mom and pop
1518

HAPPY HOLLOW ROAD - Is IIIia 1:.1 story
log homo with basement. 3 bediDOma, 2112
baths, family room, living room, kitchen,
laundry AIM, skyfigh_~ ~lrte system, covel8d
porch, heat pump, central air, 12'x12' building
and much mo111. Call lor details.
1425

.

lll'fiiiQ VALLEY HOllE
boaots 4 BRa, .2112 baths,

,LOCa.., on State Roull7 at

PH. 446·7699 or 446·9539

mo,.

Musical
Instruments

•• •
T

114-387-01112, 814-

payment approx. 7
Excellent condition,
Creek, 23 ft. tntvel trailer,
system, and elecllic. Fishing,
111laxing.
VACANT LOT 121100 OF AN ACRE RNANCING. GIMI place to build a new homo
DreamHome) or place a trailer on is lot. The rural
system and electric service is available at tHe properly.
270 feet frontage along Eno-Vlnlon Road.
1688
BUSINESS OFFICES I. SALESROOM FOR LEASE
DOWNTOWN, 2ND AYE., CLOSE TO COURT HOUSE

~EADINGHAM

EXECUllVE HOME! - 2 stol)' blick Colonial,
3 BR, 2~ beth a, full finished buemont electric
heat pump w/oolar heating eystem. This house
has amenities too enonnous to mention. Cell
today tor
information.
1488

-ed: robbll clog, prolor pool
- · pert -.;1'01, no

. ,SOD.

SOLD

NEAT! CLEAN! COZVI - Ranch ~lyle ho1110
with lrinylliding, one cer ganaga, 2 bedrooms,
livin~ room, kitchen, bath, laundry,
43
aent lot Nice for just alarting out or
uo and take alookl .

(POMEROY) UNCOI!N TERRACEIII - This
-homo has lots of chantcler and tho lady of the
houa. has lots of good taste whon it comealo
ntmodeling. lh a 2 stol)' home with 3 big
bedrooms, nice sized living room and plenty of
space in the kitchen and dining area. Full
buement and large attic. Roof just 2 yrs. old.
Talui a look lor only $24,900.00.
1522

30W71-Zm.

gilt-

ASklfll,

mlloe.J..JIOod ccnd"lon, 12800,
114---ll17.

Mole Sholll~!~nlaturo Colllo)
()Ill . · Alor 3:30, •

Real Estete General

R•al Estate General

Real Estate General

MEIGS COUNTY

....,_ llnol Dono Puppioo,
,...,. In Color .,00, · -

Real Ea1ete

1NT P - Bonnovlllo, •••
cond, M,!lOO, 080. 304-67SZ722 « ITS-557'1.
1811 Ocdge Do~"tona Pacifico
Turbo, LoW Mllugo, All Eloctrlc,

-11,-4421.

commercial

VACANT I •· .0.9.14 acre•
dose • ~'\; One oil well.

Judy Dewltt. ...........................441..0262
Martha Smlth ••• - ······•···-·····--37'9-2651
Cathy Wray ............................ 446-4255
Cindy Drongow1kl.-••.......... 245·9697

Doberman

or

wiring, ,_-or-'"·
lla ...r Uconoecl ollc:trlclan.
R - r Et.ctrtcal, WV000308,
304.a75-1'111.

poin! _.., -point INIIe

-

'.
Sunday

'

Carolyn Wasctl- 441-1007
Sonny Garnes - 446-2707

\

�r a 11

Pomeroy-:Niddleport--o,lllpolla, oli Point PJeeaant, wv

- 1nme• sentinel

~•

Lo~

5

b

c

•a._.

~ Fair ,Housing

By Lisa CoiiiDs,
be eligible for price suppon loans
Glllla ASCS
on com the farm must have pa!!iciGALLJPOUS - Glllia County paled in the 1992 Feed Gnun Profiii'IIIClS are reminded of the .avail- gram.
ability oC 1992 crop loans ·on corn
All 1992 sOybeans arc eligible
and soy beans throuJ!h May 31. · for loan, The price support loan
Through the availaMity of loan · rates for 1992 in Galli&amp; County are:
· programs, farmers with eligible
Corn - $1.60/Bu. and Soybeans
.grain stored have the advantaae of - SS.lOJBu, The loans have 'a niJ\eoperatin' capital ai a reasonable month maturity dale with variable
price while the grain is stored for · monthly interest rates. The April
later__sale_or_livestock feeding. To . 1993 interest rate is 3.375%, which
will apply throughout the ninemonl)l loan period.
The loan
Continqed from D-l
tant casbier and ttust aarinmstmtor;
Michael' C. Davis, assistant cashier
and Rio Grande Office mimager; ·
Martin M. Dean, assistant cashier
and linancial analyst; Sandra ,L.
r !wards, assistant cashier and
electronic data processing officer;
Ohio Valley Publllbbal Co. Leave your name,
Hugh H. Graham, Jr., assistan}
address md .teltpboae ·number wltll yoar eard
cashier and Jackson Office mana&amp;·
or IetUr. No
calli will be acee:r::!. AD
er, and credit counselor.
·
Robert'T. Hennesy, assistant
._ __ _, 1
contest entr(es .
be,,....._ n to
news- ·
cashier and installment lending
paper olliee by,4 p.111. eadt Wednelday.ID cue
N Ka•"~ Mass'
•
r
•
h
--'--'"
...
11
by
lottery
manager;
·
ww:u
IC, 8.SSIS·
01
o a t.e, t e ......er .. '"' c osen 11
•
tant cashier and ~ining officer;
Next week, a ~elas Couaty.farm wll
be rea·
Billy J. Meado.ws, assistant cashier
tured by the Melp SQ!lmd Waler C~rvatioa
and special services mallager;
District.
'
Linda L. Plymale. assistant cashier
and pioof and ttansit officer; ,Tom

crops to work for the producer
while they arc stored. Many fanners thin that this program can provide benefits onl~ to the grain producer; however, the livestock producer can oblain benefits through .
the use of the program also, The
Iiveswck producer can use this program to oblaiil opemling capital at
a reasonable rate while the grain is
stored for later feeding. '
Once the ~rain is needed for
livestock feeding, the grain can bC ·
released by repayment in 10181 or in
part as necessary for feeding. ·
If you have eligible grain stored
and are in need of short term, reasonable priced financing, now is
the lime to contact the Gallia Coun. ty ASCS Office at 446-8686 and
discuss the benefits of-the Price
Support Commodity Loan Program. •

--GdNES .

::r=.e

nity but not to others.
aspec18 of the fair housing laws.
Consistency in equal opponuniYou'll fllld thai when you work
GA1.1J1m.I5 - ~~~ is Fall' ·
"- of t h e
n · a ,. n A ciiDe to reDect ty in housing advertising practices with any. of the mem...,rs
tk ri&amp;ht of every throughout an advertising cam- Southeastern Ohio Board o( Realpaign is the key.
.
tors to sell your home he llf she
:
•IIWII!,. 1M ••lj Mid· use
Realtors are commiued to C9,ual ~I be.quiek to ensure &gt;:OW' hOme
-tal c z II.J- ni~~ntb _also
die ...,..·IIIJilver- opportunity in housing and beli~ve ts advertiSed to everyone m town.
Sonny Glr!les Ill president or
~ _. Tlllc '¥DI of tile Civil that the best way to avoid potenlial_ . . . Jla..ti die Fairi Housing Iy discriminatory situations is to tbe Soutb~ern Ohio BOllfd or
Ad oL 1988 which become fuUy latowlcdseable of all Realtors.

•* ·
•

..._ - ra· f

•

:I.

5
'

,,.. cannot

api•st on the

·illlliiK _.-., n+w; n:ligioo, sex,

t' a n t

BMP wor,ks ho.p sc_·h.ed uIed

lll£iliu or famil-

menL
The tmining will include infor.- • lie alllll•ne of the real
mation on House Bill 88 (which
'i•ws; "MXk withdeals with nonpoint source poilution), bl!sic hydrology (water
a Jill CIIGJ' dily. ManyFair
of stumpa_ge
Once prices?
they get those prices, movement on skid roads), o~ra:-. . . _ - ia l i e - of nondis- what is.the best and most economi- tion and management plans, map
. · - - ill priat.lld\rcnising; cal way to get the timber out? ·
reading and pre-planning skid
, 5 f • , - - ~~. proWill the landowner be satisfied roads and landings. The day
·illl's, billboards, . with the condition of haul and skid includes a morning session in the
:. . .*roads and landings once the sale is . classroom and an afternoon session
• lftma
m rta market· . put to bed?
will be held at an actual logging
~--ilrlll:laR,saleDt~tal
What conservation practices site.
.
.
p a lJ, . . , . . ad~erusm_g must be considered to minimize
Loggers who complete the
- 7' ~ • .-11 Ill w!W CX:tent IS soil loss and ensure water quality? · course will be given a certificate.
-_,. FtpnU:I'i as unpor- ·
House Bill 88, which came into The certification gives loggers the
_i5 .... i5awraiacd in that effect in November of 1992, extra advantage the.y need with
z
requires loggers, skidder or:tors, . landowners to assure them that
.Sz "'! 'ea. ~t tilt· ·ciml!er cuuers, and sawmil &lt;JWDCtS
their limber and laild will be man· .:::.....:.. I •
_.. "l~.•....:.:.,,'!::tya to specifically address the l!ISt three aged under the bi$.hest conserva,...
.......... -questions in the above, paragraph tion Sl4Jldards poSSible. The cenifi.
;.: . a
.
on a voluntary basis. Timber har- -cation you receive here wiD also be
F
.._wa dit use of vesting is being ever viewed .with a accepted by the State of West Vir-..... a
-.1! iD liousing more critical eye due to todays ginia.
a - -•·=:'lllent in all environmental movement
The day will begin May 21 at
The
Clinton
Adminisuation
is
the C.H. McKenzie :Agricultural
...
£
;:~ thatmatenthe-·
• •-I . · •
fixed on a greater environmentaL Center at Ill Jacksiln Pike, Gal·
7 'li:: ID neryone awareness.
Jipolis, Ohio with rqistration (cof: aa 7 r _i5•a ~
aioF. li .
In order to help loggers come to fee and donuts) from 8:30 to 9:00
lian
'• dire g~on,
cap
.
-..
,. or . terms with the new demands on am. The morning session which
limber harvesting the Ohio Forestry follows will consist of classroom
. . '$ - dill:•li thJII of print Association, Gallia Soil &amp;. Water teaching of the baSics of Best Man•I' I M
f' IDlmPet list- · Conservation Distiict-ODNR Divi- agement Practices. A hot catered
IU!' IBlt iadicatc or sion of Forestt.y and the Ohio lunch will be served at noon and an
-..,a
limitation or Power Company will hold a Best afternoon session at an actual log- --*:1:; !beFiir Hous- Management Practices Clinic on ging site will conclude the day's
ils A
I
For example, May 21. Logsers who attend and activities.
1
IIIIIC"!!IPPIJJI7 of c()mplete the clinic wiU be certified
Registration fee is only $5.00
5 3 h•• 5 - wllicli rache8 a by the LogserS Standards Council which will cover a hot lunch and
nonula- of the Ohio Forestry Association. all handout materials. Prc-registnl- ·
1 • •
a 1 of
._ die. .--r
1tii1i1 ._,.~a discrimmatory Best Management Practices are . tion is requested. Please call 446'
if iili5 _ . ncfusi~Iy for concerned with erosion conll'OI on 8687 or stop by the Gallia Soil &amp;.
- - llldllllll odlers. logging jobs. They are common
Water Conservation District office
_._ .., I
•a!qic place- sense practices that every timber
at II! Jackson Pike, Suite 1569, •
1 ~. dislribulion harvester needs to know to stay Gallipolis, to register or for more
_..._. • Jllllill kocliures, etc., ahead of the environmental move- information.
,._tlllt1111J'G111Yq! thal housing

)
7

5 •

-

ill

~--=·=s:iz
- =-~=oL~*:~Fcderal

GALUPOLIS • Gallia Soil and
Water Conservation Distril;t' s
demonstration with their newly
purchased John Deere Diskchisel
which was scheduled for March 29 ;
· at the Rob Massie Fann was ciwceled due to weather.

)Vaverly Office manager; and
M
. u
K. T'•........
·
~·•h'er
·
1
_ ~-··
_ 1•
an°d JL&amp;.u
~-..~-n"'Pit.......,eoasm~~
Harden obse·rves 20th.
The board also made the fo ow•
EP
ing committee assignments:
anniversary With A
Executive: James L. Dailey,
chainnan; Jeffrey E. Smith, secreOAK lflLL • Donald B. Harden
wy; Keith R. Brandeberry, MerriU · of Oak Hill bas observed his 20th
A new tentative date of April 12
L. Evans, Morris E. Haskins, C. . anniversary with Appala.chian
has
been set for the demonstration.
Leon Saunders and Wendell B. Power Company. He IS a mainteOn
hand
speak will be Bob Hen·
Thomas.
nance mechllnic for the company's dershot, to
an
agronomist with the
Audit: ·J(eith R. Brandeberry, Centralized Plant Maintenance Soil Conservation
Service, and a
chairman; Larry E. Miller, secre- (ACPM) group. Headquartered in
·
representative
froin
the Greenline
wy; W. Lowen Call and Carrol H. Point Pleasant, ACPM provides
III, the equipment dealer from
McKenzie.
maintenance service to A~bi- whom
the plow was ourohased.
, Marketing and Long Range an's Mountaineer and John Amos
Planning: Rober-t H. Eastman, Plantll, Cenb'al Operating Compa' chainnan; William J. Gray, secre- ny's Philip Sporn Plant, and Ohio
Time of the event will be
wy; Merrill L. Evans, Jeffrey E. Power's Gavin Plant.
. , between 2 aild 4 p.m. at the Rob
. Smith and Tom R. Shcphe~.
A Navy veteran, Harden hol(ls Massie farm on Buck Ridge. Rd.
Trust: Warren F. Sheets, chair: an associate degree in business Call the Gallia S&amp;.WCD office at
man; C. Leon Saunders, secretary; adminisuation from Gallipolis 446 8687 to confirm whether or
MorriS E. Haskins!'&gt;~rilnk H. Mills, Business College. He is married not the demonstralilln wiD be held.
Jr. and Tlto~as E. wiseman.
.
and bas two sons.
·

5

7

_..

-

GALLIPOLIS - Loggers are
faced with new challenges every
da
y.How can they get the best

5

world

7

-

•

F

7

demonstration
canceled.-

·, out there. But thank goodness

7

._

7

·there are·still a few things you can

"""'"

-.,ell:.,

•

344256

'
VoL 43, No. 242
Copvrlghled 1m

.

risoners riot

l!ive inmates killed, eight guards taken hostage
Sunday at maximum security prison .in Lucasville
. I

From staff and wire reportl
LUCASVILLE, Ohio (AP) 'Prisoners at a maximum-security
·prison were told today they will be
:allowed to talk to" the media if they
:release one of ei,ht guards taken
·hostage after a not that left five
:prisoners deal.
. At Ieast450 Southern OhioCOr•rectional Facility prisoners were·
:.banicaded inside a cellblock on the
:northwest side of the prisc!l, wbich
·houses 1,819 convicts, s~ about
.-3 p.m. Sunday. The prison is in
:SOUth-ccnb'al Ohio about 70 miles
'SOUth of Columbus.
.
:: Atlesst 18 people -. 10 guards
and eight prisoners - wen: injured
:after a ftght csealated into a riot.
•
:: Michael SangiacomO, a roportcr
Jor The (Cleveland) Plain Deal~.
·was taken into the prison early
:.today to talk to the prisoners, but
,was not allowed to speak with
· them, be said.
· : Nesoti.ators who would not
identify themselves apparently are
:using the media as a negotiating
. :tool, Sangiacomo said.
"Before they would do an.y'thing, they wanted a guard
:n:Ieased. Once that happened, they
would tbeli allow tbein 10 give me
:t~.F demands," he ~d.
· He said negotiators also told
him that the prisoners are getting
tired.
A prison officw took Sangiacomo back inside at .about 10: IS a.m.
EarlieJ, Sangiscomo, selected as
a pool replrtrS, was allowed in the
prison and. spoke by telephone with
a prisoner, whose name was not

'&amp; ann Cll!lai oppor-

..__.. . .
• ...., ...,. .....verusmg
·_,,

'Jk •

v

7

5

.-:

•

5

watch your father gave you that his

=

I

atr.d .
·~

.

5

•

c~b:=orethni-

•-

•crn:g

or

.c

.,dllcconunumi:y. without

e z ,II!:,
.....- p "'fS, IIIIJ

_reac~ng

father gave him. Or your favorite
recliner, with the fabric worn through,

:- WHEN YOU UY·AzWAY YM
POOL FOI TillS
LOW 1992

--a.:m::c:~; ~~·
,

being wrong. Like that old pocket -

FREE MERCHANDIS

_

•Wi reg_ard. to equal

•.,,
1

II

right where you set your elbo~s
every night around six to watch

AII'IIIIJI .

.

Ill !lOCI

POGI (sj ,. WAIWIIII . - . I • - .... VACUUM
lf&gt;&lt;&gt;J,., - · TI5T liT, rwiiiiiBCIIIIIIIM

H~k= I

Cellular One~ is like that. Take

2973 Piedmont Rood-Huntington, WV

•

j

.

'

'

•

phone for sixty days and if you don't like it, we'll buy it

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

back: If you
experience any unsatisfactory calls at all,. you don't have
.
to pay for them:- If it takes more than one hour ..to get your phone

'Wood{anc£ Centers, Inc.

fixed at any Cellular One ser\rice center, we'll give you a

ONEOFTHE MOST COMPREHENSIVE &amp; PROFESSIONAL MENTAL HEALTH AGENCIES IN SOUTHEASTE~ OHIO

free
loaner phone. And on top of all that,
you get
'
.
. 60 minutes

Woodland Contora II funded In ptirl by lhl o.lho-JaclciOMAolgo Boord ol
Alcohol, Druv Addiction and Monlot -nh sorvlcH

•

. .AlE
IIISURANCE
PUlES PROCESSED
•...,...a::tfilliriMiiSIWdlt~Dn

- -c-.
a

&lt;:~rehensiYe

PROTECTED
Adolescer-.

CounseiW!g &amp; Thorapy

&lt;:hltWen's ~esidenllal

a-~~

JACKSON . ··
- ~-ST. .

Home._

E.~Aut. ~rograma

oQotla Molgo Hoa&lt;lott~

· -caMManagemert

.

That's right.. ~elluli!f One's kind of like that old pickup

Columbia trustees to meet

.

your dog. It's one of the few things in this crazy wotld
•.,

I

.GAIIIPOUS ..
·GZS RMP'IIlE

Emoi~Dia:MIJd

Ph- far 61) dtlys.

.'

1I (

I

I ' I

/

:

I

' I

J /

I

I I

fI1

1 I

..
'

' '

..

•

I

'

Police prob~ accidents· · ·

· · · ··. ·

=-

owned by

,

~~==~
ille ~1oc or !be Flnnen Bant lb!Jut
10 un. lluvella Bldltlo, 76, of
pullina; into I pU·

'

304-675-2722
1/

·,

Two minor accldentl with· tlo citations were lnveatipted by

N4te Communications 1
,
Pt. Pla11at
.
,

·

j=·

Authorized Agents .

. 992·21

'

. Two suits seeking cash judaments were recently filed in the
Me' County Coon of Coinmon Pleas. · ·
.
·
~ Oblcl Casualty !nJurance Cotitpaqy of Columb~ is seeking a
54.672.90
from Charloae l'umon. Pomeroy.
. ..
The. Firat
. It National CC Bank of Pleaaoton, Calif•• is
seeJrin&amp; a SS, .45 Judlmetlt -from Kenneth R. Uu, Pomeroy. .

•

I

_.left
Nir~~ Ol a •
cGatlallld oa,... 3

· ing place when she llrUCk

· ··· · ·

I /I 1
~..,.,.,

'

Judginents sought

' .

The One You Can. Count On ·

MULBERRY HEIGHTS
, . .

~~~~-

Ti-y • CeJiuJ~~r an.. · .
you, we'll 1&gt;11)1 h l&gt;«:k.

.CELLULA

POM.EROY

. ·800-252-5554

The Columbia 'roWIIIhip Board of Truslea ,will hold a special
·· meeting WedneSday at 7:30 p.m. at the. fire station to pay the interest on a repair bill.
.

'

TP0 AVAilABLE

.GAUIPQUS
CALUNGAREA
lOU FREE DIAL 1
.
lTHEN
.

5

If !t~ DOl ria/It far

you can always count on.

446-5554

OUTSIDEOF .

The S!llem Township Volunteer Fire Departmen_t responded to a

of free airtime, just to make sure you're completely happy.

SCALE-CERTIFIED BY STATE OF OHJOoEVENING APPTS. AVAILA!!LE

24 HOUR-.
. CRISIS LINE

·

fll'C this mommg at the Kenny Sorrc.ll restdence on Molehan Road ncar Salem Center.
·
The fire department was notified at :12:45 a.m.' according to the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Service.
No injuries were~·
A repon was unavatlable as of press time.
(

•

oSuporvlold HOuolrG lor

·

structu1e

and fishing and airing out
you keep . around for hunting
.

•Benlar S.rvlcee
o £ y - &amp; ToiiW!g
•Adul Cornrrllnlv Tl'llnlnQ

.Povdiolhlrlpy

••IE••IF•W
- - · , •VIdin'sAutltaneeProgram
-orOut-Potlori Troatn\ont
...,
~AII&gt;TlTLE

.Pal~ervk:e lor1ha

· Structure fire reported

'

RESIDENT
PSYCHIATRISTS
PSYCHOLOGISTS &amp;
SOCIAL WORKERS

PATIENT
CONFIDENTIALITY ·

thaD 1!00 colorluf$~ eap, eacll CGDtalalag
a dollar bill or a
certlllc:ale. Firemen were
on llaad to lllilt a lluc11JD1 tbe clllldren who
were divided by ace levelllllld d)reded to deSign
nated sections of tbe park.

READY TO GO • More than a thousand
boya and girls tllt'ned out Sunday to take part In
the annual Easter Ea bunt_litaaed at HartlniJCt
Park II Mlcldleport. Tbe M~leport Community Assoclatloo sp~red the bunt ror tbe. more

our service guarantee for instance. Try a Cellular One

Pllllll: 384-428-4711 ......fit. 1:31-5:80, SI!L 1:3•2:11
WE SHIP U.P.S. DAILY

7

+

t~e evening Qews.

HOLIDAY POOLS, INC.

vtewe u
5 ,, • •"J'- Alnod\er" example. is
lilt . . . a 1191: o 13Cially !Jlixed
hwa6erliSeiOlone commu-

. 511 1
&amp;ol 11

a...........

T • •

_,.- .....or
A

available. Negotiators stopped the . cerned ihat they had not heard from
call when the prisoner began listing the ~ighth hostage, also a ·male
demands.
guard.
.
Prisoners released the bodies of
Ms. Kome~ay said the hosta~es
the dead early this momin,.
· . told authorities they were bemg
.Two of the dead were Identified treated well. She did not know
as Darrell Depina, 35, who was where tl)ey were b&lt;iing held.. .
sentenced from Medina County for
At least one of-the 10 InJured
rape and kidnapping, and Franldin guards was talcen to Grant Medical
Farrell, ·49, from Lo01_in County, Center in Columbus, when: he was
for aggravated arson.
in fair condition, said hospital
spokeswoman Bev Hefflcen. Ohio
Southern Medical Center in
Portsmouth, about 10 miles south
of the prison, treated and released
10 people from the prison, said
spokeswoman Elizabeth Blevins.
She didn't know how many were
prisoners and guards.
·
It was not known where the
other injured ~le were treated.
About 200 pnsoners who didn't
want to be part of the disturbance
were nfovcd from a .!Mtation yard
C!U'ly today to an adjacent gymnasiuin, Ms. Kornegay said. Water Jlld
' Shlirron Kornegay, spokeswom- elecuicity to the cellblock were
an for the Ohio Department of shut off, she said.
.
Rehabilitation and Correction, said
The prisoners have given negothe identities of the others were not tiators a list of 19 demands, includreleased.
ing a request to ~ to the media;
Ms. Kome~ay said authorities Ms. Kornegay said. She would not
believe the ftve prison~s were ~uss the othel' dem8nds but sai&lt;!
kiUcd by IeUow prisoners. Some _of IIIey dealt mostly with prison rules.
the rioting prisoners are armed wtth . The not,started when Jl few pris.
' from. .......~.
I.
batont.taken
··w
onm-bogan fighting. ~
"They suffered ex1ensive ers:betame involved, Ms. Korneinjuries," she said. "I think it'$ gay said. Seven guan1s were able to
probably prcuy obvious who killed escape the cellblock before the
them. Our staff wouldn't do th!lt''
prisoners toot over.
Seven male guards being held in
Ms. Kornegay said the prison
the prison were able to aet wonl to had been preparing to conduct a
authorities. ' Authorilies were con·
CoatJnued on pap 3

in jars. And the weatherman

-. . . _ . ,

•-

.

.

· sunset. Kids catching fireflies

5

'

1 Sectloto,10 P.gee .25 _, .. .
A llultlmecllt Inc. Ne•a piper

Pomeroy~Middleport, Ohio; Mon~y; Aprll12, 1993

count on. Like sunrise and

',

Law toDIBbt Ill mid~

Clur. Tuaday, IIIOSIIy sunny,
blab In lower 60s.

I .

·

5

-·n=

Super Lotto:
47779711 17723
Kicker:

PageS

7

.._ r

Pick 3:
299
Pick4:
8824
5

·Disk chisel

!;s~~=~c:~!
A. Strickland, assistant cashier and

Mon. th being observed

Langer ·
captures
Masters

interest commodity loans offered .

Dividend...

FAD? -1'1111 week's illygery
....... - . . ._, 1M Ga11ia Soil 1ad Water
.=
LIE lor;.• is laCitld
sclaaewbere in
• Ia
11 1
F C
bY- Klidull wlall Ito par c •
...... 'IJ c•t t . .y do 10 by paslnc
.. --" or d rop otr your
~ • •
- JJ._.
- · ...,,
.. ..., Zllldly Sutmel, 111 Coort St.,
f
I!IJO&lt; ...._ 457.0, or the GaUlpolis Dally
n, ·, 1115 nir• Ave,, Gallipolis, O•lo,
,-_,will~ $5 pme rrom .the

-Ohio Lottery

Apr1111,1883

•

·

Secret report.says Hanoi withheld
U.S.
POWs
information
·about
.

NEW YORK (AP) - A secret
document found in. lhe archives of
the Soviet Communist PartY sug •
gests NOrth Vi~ was holding
more than three umes as man.y
American prisoners of war as it
admitted to near the end of the
Vietnam War, The New York
times reported today.
'The discovery of the document,
authenticated by members .of a
joint American-Russian commission investigating the fate of &lt;_lther
American POWs, may complicate .
Hanoi's efforts to establish diplomatic relations with the United
States, The Times said.
North Vietnam, was holding
1,205 American prisoners of war in
197;2, according to the document,
while officially saying 8l the Pans
'j!eace talks that the number was
only 368.
The report, marked "Top
Secret.'' was written by a senior
North Vietnamese general and
delivered to the Communist Party
Politburo in Hanoi in September
1972, The Times said.
Several months later, under the
peace acCQrd between North Vietnam and the United States, S91

prisoners of war were released
from North Vietnamese prisons.
Hanoi then claimed no other Americans were imprisoned and has
mainlained that position ever since.
"On the basis of this, we can
conclude that tnoro than 700 t\mericans had been held back by the
Vietnamese at the time of Operation Homecoming," said Stephen
Morris, a researcher for the Harvard Center for International
Affairs who found the document in
the party archives in Moscow.
_ "This is the biggest hostagetaking in the history of American
foreign policy and we still don't

know where the hostages are, what ·
happened to them, if they are still .
ali ve. ..
The White House announced
S'aturda.y that retired U.S. Army
Gen . John W. Vessey Jr. would
visit Vietnam on April 18-19 to
assess Hanoi's cooperation in
accounting for missing servicemen.
. The United States sliD lists mon: •
than 2,200 servicemen as unac- :
counted for. More than half were · .
known to have died and their bod· · ·
ies were not recovered. The fate of :
the others is not known, according .
to the U.S. government

Student dies S:tfter. falling
from OU dorm window
'ATHENS, Ohio (AP) - A fall
from a fourth-floor donnitory willdow that kiUcd an Ohio University
freshman was accidental, authorities said,today.
.
'
Laura Bansek, ·19, of Grafton,
fell from a window in -Crawford·
Hall af about 9:4S p.m. Sunday,

said university spQ)cesman Bryan,
McNulty.
·
·
Ms: Banselc was pronounced
dead at O'Bieness Hospital. Athens
Coun1y Coroner Robert Buus said
Ms. Banset died of head and neck
injurieS.

The fall was accidental, said
campus Safety Director Ted Jones. .

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="347">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9641">
                <text>04. April</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="32359">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="32358">
              <text>April 11, 1993</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="2453">
      <name>addis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="4858">
      <name>coal tipple</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1468">
      <name>cottrill</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="126">
      <name>johnson</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="638">
      <name>randolph</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
